l a t 'Ienln' nnity (tu-au 18H) allie 08.. per yen! (nana-d) Il ndvnned s- ’en! (dcllva'ndl l. Idv-nee. î: Casas-dis and u.“ a. u. 8.A. tilt Cincle. Dalton. Psôlaldena. Gnardian wili uot ho issued on J K. Clrrlc. Antenne Edltcr. Saturday, Juiy le; hein; Domta ion Day and a public holiday the . Il. "une". Éditer u! FINI-lot. Mon day . ' li LU X Helps Business Girls Lux ia vety simple and easy to use. Just make a bubbiing ialher itom tbc thin white siiky Lux flakes. which meit quicixiy. then preas therich suds through I and through your nice garments. Siik atocitings. biousegunden‘weat. dainty irocits. anyti’iing yon prize too much to trust to ordin- nry wnshing—tiiey cari be . cicansed and look na good as new ii you bath them . in Lux. A few minutes in your room t'a ail the lime needcci. Lux t's aupteme lot washin: fine gnrments. il il soid only aenied packma—dust-ptoo‘ i LEVER BROTHERS lJMiTED Toronto Sec our wlndow to‘day for 'oargalns. Ses our now line ot‘ Flashliqhts. Ths hast at [cheapeat prices. Wc ars now sble to suppiy complets or 100 differeni radio parta‘on our llst Including ths lowsst prises. Complets Marconl set Si90. Weatlnahouu set 0240. and other acta 0170. com- pletc. The ahovs acta are ali 2- stages oi amplification. S. MOIsaac & Sons 168 Queen atroce THERE Is A LOT or MANHoon msua._ RANCE COMPANIES. eaorecr! UNDERWRITTEN BY VOUR OWN Life insurnnce should he a partither ihnn as a Liboral or a Con- your family's guarnntee' ut a chance to live right alter your death. An income tonn of your plans and of lnsurance ls u wise provision Buy a Greai-West da.”. Hyndman 8: F6. Ltd. Managers for P. E. I. Ths Oldost In P. E. l. AT Carter’s Bopintote 250 Iaprlntal by BEST 01.50 «l azod alch. oua FRICE ONLY 01.00. All stroneg bound In oloth. MAGAZINE! Lataat NEWQPAPERI an luuod. souventa aooxa and P087 canna, uns-Tonne STATIONERY, FOUNTAIN Carter &Î;00., Ltd. \ î l FRIDAY, JUNE'30, 1922. UNITED FARMERG ' i . .4...‘ i ; ___ ‘ ‘Mr. J. J. vMorrlson. Secretaryi got the United Farmers oi’ Ontarioi lites pnid our province a visii and‘ inddressed a ÿ i lof ’l‘rade ltooms . iyesterdny's Gual'dinn . i I meeting of i’ariuera" and others on Wedncsdny even. im; in the (‘hairloiletown Boni-0' A summarized,l report of bis speech was given in: ’Mr. Morrisnn la a fluent speak-I c, nnd la hroader in his gcneral, vicws on .poliilcal maiters thanitlons. Of this amount tiie pulp were those ut his politica! cuit; who visited us some lime R50. He‘ooo horse power, in addition t0 ‘preaches ths gospet of coupera-âme 476,000 horse power generated i iive endenvour on ilie part oi thsi the tanner has heai-d preached" from every platiorm and trom the! 'cxponents oi every political party: l {oi' the tal'mers. Thore was noth- I over “37.000.000. This invesimem. Canadiitn fal'niers. a gospel w'nichicompanies. Other industries nsed cent development or water panier .Whne seekmg me 90mm“ 5‘11’90" lalbly Wiiih that ot other countries. l . ‘In the vmonthly latter of tbe qusi Ban‘k oi' Canada Just te... caivsd soma idea la given (il the wondert'ul development n! this power in Canada during the past i'ew yenrs. According to this :et- ter" ii is estimated that the present time there is investiin in hydroslecirlc plants and syatems. d in the production and dis- of elecarlcnl onergy, a! engage trihutiocin repi'esents a horse -pnwar oi 2,013. 000. genorated in 282 central stn. and paper industry used over 100.- direciiy ‘hy the ipuilp ‘and pfipël‘ nver 274.000 'liorse power. ’i‘he re- in Canada compares very tavor distinction for a school toucher in empires ot the pust. 'l‘he now stntes any part of radio sets. Ovar a, a Western ÿlFarmers. and de'plores the exisi. 703.000 horse power. with consid- àof Commons. Should bis program _io‘r an Eaatel'n and Western Sec- ‘ ‘eastem and western demands are ' ,‘as wide a'part as the pales. Liie Policy. the most popular “Made in Cana» Insurance| Anancy AUTHons. regain“ prico ‘ and ,-. __ _ ____.__.__;itically nothiag that has not bee'lifor examplo: In 1902. Canada ad- -» » I ' "i|promised or denounced by evel‘ylded 47 horse power per thn'm‘m ‘ lLiheral date on and Conservatlve candi-. the eve of an election. :Just what wing of the Progressive lur the United Farmers pat'ty Mr. . Morrison holds to he has not marie “'Ïï'iclear. He is not a disciple oi Mr. ä‘ËCrerar and La evidentiy not' en- -.;.>;Yamoured of Mr. Drury. He is a 5“United Farmer" but vvith whom «'Ïunited he has not expiained. Ha advocates an Eastern Section and Section of United , . ,ence of four parties in the House ilon materiaiize it is probable Ïthat we shall Fmore have one or two parties in the House. for j in Prince Edward Islnnd we iare ail either iarmers or farmera’ sons. ail living off the prodttcts uf ithe fairm. In every consiltuency in the province we have the priv-; Eilege oi’ helng represented in thei ilegisiature .hy'a fermer, if we so desirs. \Vhether that representa- tivve be a Llhernl. a Conservative. a Progressive or a L'nlted Far-mer. lite la thc same man atter election Éthat lie n'as .before being elected. How the tagging of him as a Pro-4 igresslve or a Unltod Former. raï servative is golng to alter his pn- iitical or economic convictions has .rct to be explained. Wo quite ogres with Mr. Morrlsnn that thereyare now four parties in the House nf (‘ommons and that there This is equnlly trueÿof our provincial logis- lature and no sood can lie accom. plished by multiplying the parties. is hnrness for only two. lVOLUTION With the clearing away of tbo forests in the habitable and inhabi- ted portions of t‘he globe came the necessity o! lookins elsewhere for fuel supply. The supply came .Il in tbe discovery of coal. a discov— V ery and a development constitutinz a stary as wondertul as that of the Ara'hlan Nigbts. iFor v150 mars coal has hein the central factor in tbe indusuinl world. tlic mainapring of industriai and {commercial magrets. And now the coal ars is coming to a close. ma vpmduction in the enormous quantities necessarv io A carry on and other contributory ‘ factors have so increased the cost of coal as to malte its use altnost prohibitive in futither develap— ment and the use ot a substituts iias become necessary. 'l'lie sub— stitute is now on haad and is ta.' itan ihe pince ,in the lndustrini worid trou! whlch coai la bains drives by i prohlhtva cost. That ÿ .(‘ompare the lCanadian record. 'mg new Ï“ ma 9'03"““1’119' prac‘ with that ot the United States. I‘oi tbe population. in comparisOn with an addition in the United ‘States ot 26 horse power in t'ne i itigure was 198.. and the Americai: Ifigure 51. lu 1‘920. the Dominion {installed 200 horse power. and the ÊUnited States 93 horse ponter/per tthousand oi’ ihe population. l 'With these important additions. the developed Canada now totale weli over 2. same year. in 1912, the Canadien water supply ot era‘hle construction under way. THE CHARLOTTETOWN' GUARDIAN TiiE GillllliITTEiilWii 'GIJARDIANÊ i Notes By Tilt-W”; W In Œsr off schoolhoy daya tlie wri— ter rooalls a niap ot tue wurld which bung upun the northern .vall ot lite schuol rootn. in which ths continem or Europe was colorad red. Tue learncd toucher—b6 was a .Mastær ut Alts. which was a rare l i chose days—«once during the gui-î graphy lesson he remarksd that iti waa propeiiy ao colored in as mucni ns l‘or thousands oi years Europcî had been the scenanit ahnost per-. petual warfare and blocdshed. Had' ho lived in the days ot the recen' Gieat Wnr lie niight have tound additionai reason toi- that contti nents‘ crimson colorin’g. I liow that old niay has since been changed. in the mntter o! na- tional honndaries if not in colorsî So late ns 1914 thet'e wcre nineteen‘ sovereign nations in Europe. in the old inap to which we reier there were tewer titan that (or thc Bnlkan stntes were then under Tutu kish ruie. Now there are twentyn seven sovereign states in the Rcd Continent, owing to the nlne now states that have becn curvetl by tlto sword from the wret-kedand ruined are Poland. Czeohoslavia. Jugo Slavia. Austria. Hungary. lnthuania Latvia. Eathonia and Finland. Fori the sètting up of thees uew statss Britain'and France are mainly res' ponsihle. but that is another story. How many of the boys and girls in the advanced grades od our coin mon schools Can now nanie the sovereign states of Europe. detine their haundarles and nsme their capital cities as the boys and girls of seventy.odd years ago wsre re- quired to do and did? Not many nerhaps and not many of those cf mature years. Perhaps after ull it ia jus! as well that we should be more interested in the New World 'lian in the Old World. 'i’m' in tho Western Hemisphere there is a now heaven and s new earth. compareii with poor old diletracted and im- pove‘rshed continental Europe sttl' redder than hefore with the siaugn- ter cf her thousand hattles. Close at hand and close togethcr. :I‘his gives Canada the distinction ot having the largest per capita' development ot any country lin thei World. _with one exception ut Nur way. The nsar future should see iremendoua strides in this vitallyi important lndustry. Canada hi tu amoum and seasonal distribu- tion ot rainl'all, and also i't‘om the slandpoint of the nature. extent and location ot ihe sources. In the past, prospective wnter power sources have ibeen thorongiily in. vestigated and intelligentlv admin- Eslered. it la scarcely possihic‘tn exaggerate the vital importance of this industry. not nnlv in rela- tion tn iis use i’or liglit and lient, but more particula-nly in view ol lis tremendous value in lite devel. other natural opment oi’ our resourcea." And so the world moves on irom 'one stage in another, front une cra a product oi' modern discovery, has ot‘ supply. coal. and is now drawing to another. mectrical enorzy. outgrown its original source upon ihe immense and almost un. limited water sources of the world Thess too. in the course or axes wili have become insuflicient to carry on but othsr sources wili be What they aliall he it were vain to conjecture and as im- possible as it was to jour painted forsiathers in the wilds ot Brltstn to ioresee the introduction ol steam and siectricity. availahla. ——————.o-.—————— OANADIAN FISHERIEB Ths current issus or industriel Canad. (ives, mach valuable formation rexat‘ding the industrial development in our lister provinces Nova Scotia and New Brunawiclt. An article on “'l‘he Flsheriss of the Maritime 'Provinces" by Protessor Edward E. Prince. Dominion Com- missioner ot Fishsries. gives soma valuabla information on this sub- ject. Tram it wo lsarn that t‘he total value af ths whols o! the Do- minion Fishsries for 1020 was 040. 841,330. lot ibis amount Nova Sco tia contributsd 012.742.050; Naw Brunswick. 04.483.746 and Prince Edward island 01.708.728. Dur in substtuts is ydro—clsctric sur” a. 4 come the i‘wo greater Nortb Amer. ican national anniversariea. Domi—_ nlon Day and rlndependonce Day.;, We nre more interested in July First. the day WbiiCh aaw the begin. . ning of the Union or! ail Britis'n ,North America. in the Dominion oi.precedented sca‘le. Canada. Our neighhors across tnej as lndependence Day. Our Nation; al Dny cames three dnys earlicr. Tliey date from 1776 and we irotn 1867. whilch makes the Repi'ibiic 146 years old and ihe Dominion 55 years old. i Ours is the older Fini; and the older Liberty. toc. althongh we bosst but iittle oii the tact. our na-i tionnl pride in such things beinx| less effuaive but not iess deep and enduring thon thelrs. Our Flng lias hraved the battle and thi hreeze for more than a thouaano W Dsily Selections ior Gu’stdian Rendus From tns w. 0. Louson cotisation no A SONNET. God speaks tu heurts of men in many ways; Some ‘the red banner o! the rislng sun iSpread o'er the snowclad liills has taught his praise; Hi: word in children's hearts and children's gaze. And some have found him where low raf‘ters ring To greet the hand that helps. the heart that cheers; And soma in prayer, and soma i pertecting 1)! watchiui 'toii through unreward- ing yeara: And soma not less vainly sought Hi. volce. and with hist silence have heen taught— Who hear his chain that thein to he bountl. And at the eud. in finding not, have round. s “Enslish rSpec‘ator. n are His who bade ths avsrags value ranced frorn twenty to thil'ty and forty mil. lion dollars. Thora bas bosn no cf our fisheries in tha' put toit years with the sxcsvtion of Nova Scoti. wblch increassii front silht perceptible incraass in ths valuo millions odd to twaive millions od . ' lionnt Evetest Climbers Gîte op liie Atieapt lit la annonnced that thc attempt to reach the psak oi' iMount Evereat has ibeon abandonna. Ibecause ta continue t-he effort would only re- siilt la usedasa trasedy. il. is s. glorious l'allure, and when the ex- plorera raturn our literature :may ho ennlched by soma s‘uch imporish- aihle record as that wh'ich record'ed the noblest (silure in history. that ni Captain Rohart 'Scott to be the tirst to reach ihe South Foie. We have litt‘le douibt that ihere wili Ihe e'xpeditions. in .tho i'uture.t 'i‘he al- uiost impossëbllity, cth the utter tmpossibiiity. oi’ succesa. wili not‘ dater other adventurers. They lwili aeek to profit by the l'allure o! t‘ho ‘ preeent expcdition. whlch has coma with‘ln n few >liundi'ed leet ct suc- cess, perhnps wvitliln il himdred feet. But that las: hundrcd ieèt hna iprovetl more dlt’llcul‘t than the 28,000 .i’eet that aven! betore it. We presume that human muscles and hu'mnn lunga were unequal t0 put- ting .iorth tlie final terrine euort whlch waiulld 'have m‘eant success. Thc Last Hundred Feet. lt seems probaihle that t'he fail- ni'e was due -to the tact that at titis tremendous heig'ht even oxygel could not atupply the lunga with sufllcient air to enalblo tlie .niuscies l0 funttion properly. and that the bitter cold was a fatal handicap} It seems alloue-t certain t'hat the‘ ilnail few hundred feet were of a nature that would have been forma idsible ut hall the height. it Miss always taken i'or gratited that the lnst few h'undred ieet would have tolbeimade at a rush. lt waslknown t'hat it would ‘be an absolute impair. sibility for the climbers at titis height to do stii'l cliimnblng such as would have ibeen easy enough for them ai ot'her altitudes. dit wias a gatnlble ai hest, and the inountain peaik has won. The last rush iwould be conupartuble in some respects to a rush through a iburnlng woods. The cliniibers lw‘ould know that it’ .t-hey could not win in n short ieugth nf time. they could uot win lat ail. H'uman fiesh is no .tnui-e proqt agaiinst L'hs intense cold oi’ thediigh altitudes and the rsrity ot' the air tban it 1s proot agalnst tire. Îbe Most Desperate Feat. The Mount Everest exipeditioni was the best equipped and mo'st' carefu'lly planned - that ever set forth on s. similar cxpedlteion. and ilioug'h it i'vai'led it is to he remem- het'ed that it was attempling tlie most deaperatefeat in alpine lila- tory. Tho preli-m-inary arrange- ments were carried out on an un- and, .with the lielp of hundreds oi’ "l‘ibelnns and eminêntly tortunnte in her wate-“lbomer wm' un“ dnys inter. cele- lheirim-u'les. Tlie lutter can ascend power "assumes, bath in respect brute me” (Marions Fourth of July,to altitudes ot 20.000 i‘eet without years. [Slavery was abolisheu‘ in tha Bnltish Dominions almth iifty years hei'ore tlie sitar!le wcre struck off lite dusky hands oi’ thc Airo-Americans in tlio great "iree" Republlc beaide us. This la no mean boast. I: we were disposed tu be hroggarts ol Freedom. but let that pasa. It is perhaps wnrthy oi note that our union was establiahml in penne while tho nation heside us achlm‘cd lis national statue uftei' seven years of wnrfm'e. lit. is also signifit‘ant ot' the sentiments and temper u! the Canadien people that ninety onc years alter the Dccinration of lndapendence and notwithstnndintz that conspicuous cxample we Colis- dians of our own free chnice deci- ded to adhere to the monarchical form of governmont. Our neigli- bL-rs had chusen tha Repuhlican mo- dal, but they alao s‘ave to thelr Pro- sident much more power during hls official term than is entrusted to a British King. Tlie Presidenit ta the choioe nf onc political party. while almost always une hailf the nation stands opposed t0 tha Exo. Some the sweet silence when tha “une Head Wh° 1' Chœen' 0‘" day 15 dans; King is not a partisan. but free Some alter lovelesks lives at lensth from and ahovo ail parties. Wc “"9 W0“ prefer our monarchicai system quite as much as our nslghhors va. iu's their own, and both are satis- died. ‘ _ 'Raverting to that old redcolored map of Europe with which we be- gsn. let us rajoice that ,slnce 1776, a period of 140 yeau; ibère have boen but nine years of mllitary nitrite between the greater Angio- Suon nations. Burin; 137 yeai-s there bas been ponce betwesn them. and botter still. tor 108 yeai‘s past the pesos bas been unbroken it la must creditable t0 Britain. to t‘ and oqually s0 to our great neighhor that thi la ao and that. alon: 1 commun boundary ot more titan four tbousand miles there is mot a fort or a‘cannon. And by mutuai agrecment any_tqture dif- .- arbitnttlon. 80 we may rest in ma! navet become, in; Il. “promus tan 'years ...p.’ au" Nov Brunswlck and P. il). ‘Island "minis; practicslly, tlts saine. '. u-- arily low prices. Better quai economy news this Summer, for the qu ‘prices are heard in many ltnes. Of course, we’re going to’ fight again'st' them—that’s our duty t0 our community—part of our regular day’s work. But one thing seems to be quite definite, las the market shows now. PRICES ARE NOT LIKELY T0 GO_ DOWN AGAIN _- * Ciearance 1 “Daysi T0 PEOPLE wno ,KNow frHIs STORE l “ Th e’s a bi er meaning thon .ever to titis sticring' l er gg otations of higher' ‘ SOON ity... . . . . . JUNE 30.1922." 2 t.‘ That means that every lowered price that we oi’fer during these Clarance Days—just to clear our countera and shelvesæmeans the most positive saving for the fortunate people who buy ail th needed gonds they dan, while these limited stocks are Selling at these extraordin- 500_Yiards Gray Cotton ............... 8c per yard 500 Yards Heavy ‘Grey Cotton . . . . . . . . 12e per yard 300YardsPlaidGingham 272 Yards Plaid and Stripe Gingham'. . . . . . . . . . l9c DraperyChintz 25cpcryard 235 Yards Cotton White (English Cotton) . . . . . . . . _. . . . .12c per yard 14cand16c 15c .... 30e per yard Pinkujamas,worth75cfor.................50c PinkBloomers.... . ...29c Ladies Summer Vess .. 5for 81.00 Better grade..... ..4for81.00 '75LadiesVoileWaists.. 89LadiesHighClassWaists.................79c 100 White Waists 98e 790nlySpecialWaists.....................81.48 AllWaistsuptoS3.95for..................32.75 100 Gingham Dresses, house or street' wear. Worth uptoSB2.50for...... ...... .......... (stances must be settied in peacein] bobo that. tho man of North Am- 3 , un ‘ that of campe. red with the biood M lits pooples aimanterad in Il!" 3100.: 4 ' and........ .. inconvcnience, hui onnnoi live nt a luwer altitude thon 7.000 feet. 'i‘he 'l‘iihelniis thcmselvos (lu trot. go niiy iower titan that if thoy cnn heLp du! and those who have [mile down toi sen level have not liasled‘ long. 'I‘liey porishetl .i'i'om ilic pressure of the heavier air and its suspcniledimois. titre, literally (lrorwnetl, while men at lilgh altitudes lind themselvea gasping and munarently Pxperiencv lllig nll the sensations of ilalt out oflwater. i l On ths Mountain Pcaks. Ai t‘hese .grent heights a nnmlbing lassitude takea possession cf the climiber. ‘To raine a t'ont over tho. smailest obstacle requires n tren mendmis effort, and he llas the acn- sation that there ls a. ton-poitiul tlunizhel'l nitnt'hed t0 euclt oi’ ‘ilis hanth. A irmpid «moral detcriorn- tion seems to set in. comparable ito coholic or drug tiend. -’I‘he wil-l l’aile to respond t0 the net-essuies oi tha situation. and it is from this causa .t-hat imany climibers have-met itheir death. The early vindivldual dlimers. those who conquered the European peaks. one one. were, compare d witll me climhers ol' to- day, «pont-ly equippad. They avers without oxygen. oi’ course; without proper clot'hing; without electrlc batteries nnd senrch‘lighta; without the hest i'ood in the must compact .iorm; without the Imovinz .picture cameraa that nwould show iliem tlte dimcnltica that lay ahead and tho est way to surmnunt them, and without t'he iittle army of earers. whiose duty it is to save them ev- ery possible fatigue. g. t “.4 . m..î.’l.‘“wt‘i»" i ‘ i See Eastern Window. Men’s Union Underwear at ........._ .. 31.35 Separate Giarments . Men’s Suits, Tweed, 9510.00 Men’s Sailor Straw Hats, 81.75, 82.25land J. . . . . 82.50 PatOns Limited tltat which afllicts a conflnmed al- Otiiers at 81.75, 52.25 a d ......... Speciol Dressy Dresses for any occasion 83.50, 84.50 The Oxygen Tanks. Hit-herto thc hlghest cllmib evor mnde without tlie use ni oxyigen tanks wus ihnt ol the imite ot .the .‘\i)l'llZZi, in 1900, when he rouchcd [25.000 i'eet. in the liimalayas. Thut lilill‘k luis bccn surpasscd without the tanks Iby t<he prenant explorera. Apart from the question as to the physicid confonmatlon oi ihe ipeak l‘or the vinst .few hunilred tient. the question os to whether the onygen tanks would turnislt the clltnbers with assistance commensumte with tho. toll and troiible if carrylng ilmm along interested soientists. it would appeur that this question la to lie answered in iihe negat'ivc. Mayiho. the man who flrst touches t-he pPilk of lEverest wili do sa ar- ter itliirhting from a balloon or on ainplane. Canvass Bally Sandala in 0270 and Canvaaa Boots, 01.00 and lnfants White Kld Boots 82.75 35.00 65e ' ,' mania '. Î 315.00 v i Gillers’ View Points! TH E AMEHICAN LANGUAGE. (ilî‘rom an iExchange.) “d spaak tour langunges." bosst- od the doorkeeper of a 'hotel in nome to, a .guest. "italian. Franch. lilwilinh and mmerican." "But English and American are the smme," .protested the other. "me at ail.” rapided tho door- keeper, glancinx ont a't the weath- er. “if au 'Englishman should arrive at t-his Imom‘ent Il s'hould taik l'iko thie. toh, il sny, .what shocking wes- ther :we're ltiuvimgi' 'But to an Aim- erican, ‘i'tl remnrk. ‘Por ths love o' New White Shoes at GOFF’S For Ladies’ Canvass Fiappar Pump 03.00 and .................. ..' ..... .. 03.20 amsl or covarad heala, 03.00 ta ........ .. Canvaas Oxfords, 01.00. 01.50. Excsllant valua ut 01.00. Canvaas Oxfords, patent trtmmad lnfants White Blippara Mlasas Whlts Oanvasa allppsra with alk soi Chiidran's White llk Sandais ................... .. . Man's Whits Canvasa 0mm at Iowsst prioss. POLIGHEU Whlts polisnsa for canvass and sII klnds o! luth"!- 8taxon. lace", Whlto—O, Fu-Jl, atay Whlu EM- n°- U. N. o. Tint Tablats for ail klnda ot œiorad ausds. U. N. O. La Balla for White Kid. Hui Enamiia. quuld Drssslngs, Vlaaoi. Dubbina, au. HIADQUARÏIR! FOR HOLEPROOF H00! cors BROS.,LTD. Mike! .Soms day, uiin't ‘it? Ouest! ibis is tlis second flood. alil inigh‘tl' ” buttan and buokla atrapa, an- .................... .. 09.40 t 02.05 00° and