tai ifs “ rites. soon? ° gQQ-Qaoc- ~- ‘w '40 of ‘4 0400 ooowo-QQQ-Q Great Special a Exhibition Week Offer From Sept. 27th to October 2nd we will allow a discount of 20 p. c_ on all AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES with the ex~ ceptlon of tubes and tires Now is your chance to secure all requisites money. and save Grease Cups. Vulcatiizing (‘etiienn Spark Plug Files Valve Lifters. Spark Plug l-loldt-rs’ (‘ciiientless Patches Radiator (Taps. Priming Cups Valve Grinders Tull Lumps Grease "Guns. Wheel Pullers. Pedal Putts. Brake Roll Supports Electric 'l‘aps llzittcry Testers. Motor Vim Lock Washers. Radiator Covers Fan Belts. Brushes Auto Polishes. Auto Mats [limiting Board Mats. ‘ Vulcaiiizers Brake Lining. Tire Wad. lltisty Patches‘ Auto Lenses Radiator Cement. Windshield Cleaners. Anti Rattlers Spring (‘overs Fiander Mirrors. Pumps Goggles. 4 Neatsfoot Oil‘ Sementol. Decarbonlzer. (‘filler Pill!- The above is only n partial list of the many items which we have to offer. While attending the Exhibition this week. drop in and see what we h ve in this lihe_ , TllE ROGERS HARDWARE c0. LTD. 305992-31 Iii» . Charlottetown Exhibition Tl iis \Wcck _.__0__. Today the 28th inst., the i txiiiiiitioii OPENS It has been decided to have the fol- lowing programme for Tuesday and Wednesday :— " m. 1w Tuesday, 1 p. nit-The following classes of horse races will commence: 2.16 Class Trot with 9 entries. 2.25 Class Pace with 19 entries. 2 p. m;—Jtidging of Light and Hea- vy horses, Swine and Poultry will commence at this hour sharp. l, Wednesday, 9 a. m.—-Judging Hol- ..< steins, pure breds will begin, to be fol- ' lowed by judging in Jerseys, Guern- seys and Grade cattle as time will per- . * mit. Judging of horses and all unfin- >. ished cattle and swine will also be continued. Sheep judging will com- mence at 9 a. m. Wednesday, 1 p. m.-The following horse races: 2.30 Class Trot with 11 entries. 2.11 Class Pace with 10 entries. . l 2.40 Class Pace with 22 entries. Further programme will be pub- lished later. ~-1 04004 ~~ o- " ma cnliiimrra-rowu surmount. ctmiinir coiiiiiiiit l“ llll-I oiiiiiiouuowii ouiniiiiii UES A , E" Efiisn 28,1920 '"‘”‘ _— ACCOMMODATION FOR VISITORS. The provincial exhibition opens in Charlotte- town today and if premonitory sympthoms are to bc depended upon we may look for a very large attend- ance, probably the largest seen at any former ex- hibition. Nothing further need be said about tlie ar- rangements; these have all been completed to the satisfaction of the management and, so far as the general conduct of the fair is concerned, the very best maybe looked for. There is one thing however in which the citiz- ens generally may help to smooth over and to avert difficulty. This is in the matter ofaccomodation. It is quite probable that our hotels will be taxed to their utmost capacity, if not beyond it; quite prob- able that many visitors may find it difficult to se- ctire sleeping accommodation. Citizens who can snare rooms during the week have been asked to communicate with the central - committee at the office of Messrs Reddin Brothers and although there has been a fairly generous re- sponse it was felt yesterday that still more room will be needed and we trust that those who can at i-lll do ‘so will communicate today. It is of the great- est importance that all visitors to the exhibition are comfortably housed while her and that the impres- sions they carry away with them will be such as to bring them back again. The provincial exhibition is i perhaps the city’s biggest advertisement and its ef- fectiveness lies in the comfort, the enjoyableness and the satisfaction of the visitors. If there are any tnore rooms to spare we trust their owners will report them today. --¢.- 04 l’l{()l)ll("l‘l()N XXI) (‘()NSl‘i)ll"l‘I().\'. The question whether the margin between pro- duction and consumption is widening or narrowing is an important one both to the producer and the consumer. In the matter of industrial development there is little to fear. Industry will always find a market for its product and the people are always as- sured of their necessities in this line provided they have the wherewithal to pay for it. Moreover indus- try is always in a position to regulate its output ac- cording to the demand. On this score, therefore, there need be no uneasiness. In the matter of food production the situation is entirely different. Food is a necessity, the para- tnount, unavoidable necessity. Even clothing and housing might fail to meet the demand and the pop- ulation continue to live on, in misery perhaps, but still able to live. The onlv alternative for food is starvation and death and the question of the width of the margin is a vital one. The farmer who would find his household larder suificient for only three months whereas his next food crop was a year off would feel very uncomfortable if he were not assur- ed that the product of other farms was available. His » position would very closely parallel the position of the world today with the exception that the surplus in the world's larder is sufficient for only a few weeks and there is no assurance that the “neigh- bors" farms will be able to keep things going till the next harvest. " The seasons go around the world continuously so that, somewhere, always, there is a harvest being gathered and each country in turn contributes to the world's larder but at no time is the food supply more than sufficient for the next few weeks. Should the supply fail in any one of these links in the chain famine would be the result. And the production in ve_ry many of these links is changing. Some coun- tries which were formerly large exporters now have their own ever increasing home markets by reason of growingcities and the flow of rural population to the industrial centres. Consumptive demand is in- creasing rapidly. The world requires more food to- day than ever before. This is especially true of meat consumption. the spread of civilization and conse- quent higher standards of living contributing large ly to the cause. Statistics show that the world's live stock IS not keeping pace with the requirements Many countries have reached their maximum of pro duction while others are steadily reducing their ex- portable surplus. This is Canada's opportunity. Stock raising offers an illimtable market but the in- dustry must be specialized. The market demands not only an increasingly large supply but a better qual- ity as well. vQ-QoQi-‘oo-coo-cvqn-o. SORRY l'l.l(iill'l' OF LIIREIL-\I.ISDI l The Ottawa Journal says :—- ' “The sorry plight in which the once powerful party ofvllauricr finds itself under the leadership of Mr. MacKenzie King is strikingly illustrated by ex- amination of the by-election results in English- speaking Canada since Mr. King was elected lead- cr. Following is the record :—- - Assiniboia—Liberal candidate overwhelmingly beaten. Stormont-Glengarry—Liberals failed to put up a candidate. Carleton-Victoria-Liberals abdicated to Farm- North Ontario-No Liberal candidate. Temiskaming—Liberal candidate Qlecisively beaten. g Colchester—No Liberal candidate. St. J ohn7-Liberal candidate lost deposit. _4 When one considers that four of the seven fore- g going seats were Liberal in 191l—three of them were strongholds of Sir Wilfrid-some idea is had of the extent of the Liberal debacle in Canada. l EPS It is housing for an accepted fact generally throughout Canada that Liberalism, in as for as it applies to federal matters, is a defunct quality, and that issues of national government, if there are any. stand more as between rho present Government and the agrarian .move ment than wl-lh any other influ- ence. The Liberal leader, Hon. MaoKenr/ie King, alone and unaid- ed hy any of the iformerly big men of the pnr-ty, is peddling his an- tique doctrines throughout the country in the vain ‘hope M reviv- ing Lbs old time party interest, but with so little encouragement that the was constrained to admit tlie "lessening power" of his "divid- ed" iparty. It is therefore taken for granted in well informed circles that the old time Opposition is 110W a negllgable quantity, and the con- msl. i: it can be caliled such, will be between the Crerar Grain Grow- ers organizations and the Nflllmlfll party led by the lion. Arthur Melghen. Tho success of the Far- tiiers’ movement is overclouded If! the wide divergences of opinion witliln their c-ivn ranks, differences which are so DPOLQOUYICGIE as to de- stroy every prospect of cohesion. particularly belwcen the farmers of Eastern and of Western Clinadii. ‘lilils is due to rite fact that prac- neatly in every instance their in- tcrests are almost dlametrltrally op- posed to one_ another. The West wan-t the short haul for their grain to the United States inillers and markets, their agricultural ‘imple- iiionts purchased from across rlie lino to be llllllllllell almost free of duty, the loss of revenue to be mitdc up by taxation of income upon the established industries of the East. Farmers in Eastern (Tanadn in their wisdom are not taking Mildly to this policy, and while concessions in tariff matters are now being of- fered to imee-t their oblections, they are still‘ looking askwnce all what they consider rather drastic and mm sided propositions. The East- ern farmer has no prospect of sale loi- tits soft wheat in the American tiiarkc-ts where it is n-ot wanted. nor does he wish to have his hiome market flooded with the soft Whemt lflours froim Minneapolis mllls- whiloii is low priced and often unsaleable in their own markets at any reas- onable price. Neither is lie am- bitlous for the American fruft BTW" ers to exploit the Cutiuilluti markets at a seas-on when our own fruits are iln iibitntla-nce iipon our own or cliurds. The intuitlgetrt. farmers ‘cast of Winnipeg have been seri- ously studying these xii-utters, and as a result the paid asllfllvffl ‘W110 tire over-.ru-ntilng the coun-Iry in their cilforts to stimulate farmers’ sentiment gintto political actions, are not meeting witli the whole- some Bn-COUFHECJIIOIII which they anticipated. Another View which tltougliful farmers are taking, is the suicidal llUllU] of creating a state of c-pen “nurture with their customers, the purchasers and consumers of their products, and of bringing city into conflict witlh country, agriculture igalii-st industry and labor and an election contest in which to at- tain success they would huvc to overcome an udvcrso majority of thirty to forty per cent. U-iizcss Agriculture and industry cun go hand in hund together, recognizing rite claims of each upon the other. and exercising their joint energies b OifOfi-O-OOO- QQQQ-Q-O ' Daily Selections Guardian Readers "iu-ninmd by W. I. Lennon. o-oo-oooo-o OPTIMISTIC VOICES. When you're feelln’ grouiiliy, Let -‘|lie Bllnlllrlfli! in; When your face gets feellii‘ liaril. ‘Track lt with a grin. Don't be 'fuald o’ wrinkles, 'I‘cai~ loose with your mirtlh; An ol-ii ifaco, laugbter-wrinklctl. is the sweetest thing on eiirth. “lilo/asters do a lot of crowing, but ill iis the ‘hen that meets the demand for eggs." Profiling is like a rocking chair, you can do i1 great tical of nglta- ling in it without getting any- iilierc. Dr. D. E. Croft W - a Some people seem to raike up all the sororws of tihe ipaiil; to them. they add burdens of the prasena; then they look ahead and anticl- psta a great many more trials than thtiv will ever experience in the future. D.L.Moody. A glad heart malieth s cheerful coitntenace; But by sorrow of heart the spirit is broken. Proverbs 15:“. lt nlnit no ttac to grumble and coni- l! fl. It's jist as cheap and easy to re- ice; When God sorts out the ivest-lter and sends rain, p t. a- Jovian Wlllgcomn Riley. ',S'EPTEMBER.28, 1920 MEN'S WEAR FOR EXHIBITION If _vou want the best in Mia's wear vi it "The Haberda sh. r y"- the store that has always the newest and most dependable int-r- chandre — the store that s ills onlv what is correct- thestore with a reputation. l riiiii llllllllllDASllllltiY” 1 in hats adian hat the “Feu New Velours $8 a New Tweed Hats $4 $5.00. black only $6.00. ., ‘I HENDE Best In _l'lats We stock only the best “ Borsalino " and “Stetson" are i ur leaders, while tor a cheaper h at we band's the best Can- N e w stiff‘ llais, Big Showing oi the Latest in taps $2.50 to $4.00 Ben and i! Clo es t Fall Suits Just Received And we think you'll like them. S. B. or D. B; firn fitting suits in quiet rich dressy patterns. sitittble for fall and winter wear. \ Sizes 35 to 39 at most reason- able pica; $85. to $45. lrtttm styles in vniny different colorinzs. d‘)! nd $l0. .50 and COME AND SEE TllE NEW 0VERC0AES You'll like every one of them. We show plain green’, plain grt y and plain brown Meltons with a sprinkling of rough surface cloths handsomely ti-iltiri-d in the very newest models, and we want you to see them. 'l‘liey are priced reasonably for tlie class of coals, v $30. to $50. ' Young Men's Fall Overcoats in smart colorings $25. to $30. Grey Chestertields for the older min, fall weight and extra vzltic at $30. i h Young men's models in More conservative models mostly- Priccd from $25. up RSON 8: CUDMORE 101 GKAFTON STREET in working out tlie problems of production and supply with a direct aim t-0 industrial nntl agricultural development, ‘then the country's future is most unpromlslng, and both tltcsc ittllttstrles (loomed to suffer irreparable injury. it is the corn-thou sense aspect. of the situ- atlon that is taking hold of the fiir- tnevs of Eastern Canada, who to a gradually increasing extent tire turning dawn tihe proposals oi’ llveslorn salaried agitators for po- litical ltostlllties, and directing their attention to social organiza- tion, for the betterment of their call-lug along tlie more reasonable avenues -of economic progress. lt; was because of this that 3,400 con- stituting about half of the farmers ti.’ Colohester, N. S., and a still larger proportion in Albert County, N. B., accorded their votes in favor] ol’ tlie hrostl principle of National] Government, tind in sitpport of Premier Meighen and lPlS party who stand for equality of all classes trades and races, tind against their contentions for cliiss representa- tion and faction control. Tito United Fatrntcrs Gtiltlc, lit its issue of September 22nd, duct". justice to tlie sober sense oi’ our l'. E Jltililllil farmers, in acknow- ‘ivrligliig that tiliey too are slow in jumping tit the agitators hook iinil are showing some tllsiposlllon to investigate as‘ to the outcome of tlie barb behind. it points out. that in economiic development cooper- ittion amongst our farmers has re- sulted in n remarkable pfilgfét-is in several branches of tihelr Ycnlllng, notably as ln the cuccciis of our egg circles. lf our fu/rnicrti who \\_._\.\\~.-, H "llillllYS "t. / gKlflNEYQ’ t 4 ll \ \\\_.\\_,- i kitmti Efli|-l)-F~1|\l"l_/\ l“ l f, nib" I'M‘ ill; r"/\lll_‘l’l '. '1 ‘Hui Fire insurance Risks placed with first class companies at mlnlmum rates. llyndmati 8t Co. Ltd 59-61 GUM!" 81-. Charlottetown The Oldest Insurance Aqen-cy In P_ E. l. I I-"ZP-“m ' ‘ __ . litivc ttiiudn our e g (zlucles, our Vince, ltziil iiisteiiil l)t'l‘l\ pol-lerltig butler and cheese factories, our with politics wliiiri- would tliii hog untl- live stotrk production tind lmlmely flllilllllra of our =proilucls our capturing of exhibition prises "mi? ——-———— tlio reptifatlon builders of the pro- tftiiilliiutitl from Page 'l‘wo I: ‘ _ I—-— . ..___._ ~':r"._ .. . gvovmolloofirolmroovmouivnosn-ovoontkilwti-Mkfl lit-Quayle d You can't blame us for being proud of the New Edison Diamond Amber- ola, the only Plionog'rapli of its kind in the world. You never have to change needles when you own a New Edison. Hear this wonderful phono- graph. You'll hear for yourself what ' ’ tat‘. 1 A.E.Toon1 K