-.~..~.va.-n-.».., ,..,.,_ I tat: tit Sitting EIIIM ._. ; mauled m»... i IIuit-u-tivel Limited. ova“. rill cllllllltlnnlllllll tllitllllliifi ulllnrluullqllogfuooldelt. ; fl-K-Ouub- ~fl J- I- lunett, ills» n1 Plblulun Annual-u Ii! .4 "l"! tie-MM llmnuei i hllvunuu mun ‘Illlillhllvulcn n-"lwlf-‘i-f if!» amen. B, “Fm_a_msll . n2 mm 8m, 8r. Jen, u, n, ‘It ll with plenum that 1 write w MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 1921 ~ Iyouofthegreuthenefltl received , - in the use of your medial" "Fruit-a-divex", flgdg m,‘ [my Ilia-I. I w‘: a ‘no! jmfn” (o; I"? 7B1!!! from Nev-wan Hula/la "dcWuffllivu. Itrled everything, jut no l-‘tihtfiftif-l’ l" ‘“‘“ ‘ “t” 4"" "H"! level-ml ‘nxeu, I was wmvlwlv relieved of these troubled sud have been unusually well ever IIMW- Mine ANNIE WARD. -. fitlmuboxjfor flrlfl,irlfl 53mg’, Lt A“ dealer! or gent pogtpflfl y,’ PREMATURE COMPLAINTS. During the period of dry weath- cr l-mently the blue-ruin cry was very generally heard. ll. was pre- dicted that the hay crop would ‘lg ilfttle if any more than a twenty- fivu per cent crop and that the 5111i! and‘ root cmpn would be little better. The lhay crop is now practically all harvested and. generally speak- lug. it is almost as good as last Year's and has been harvested in better condition than in years past. The gvmin crop also gives promise of being an excellent one and in all! probability" the root crop will as \ 7Q. ifiaayft/M Zéday lY HYNDMANS THINHER ~ usual lncasure up to the average. ilropllcts of blue ruin are also at present engaged in expatiating up- on the poor prices in store for our farmers‘ during the coming autumn. fllose predictions are as ‘ikriy to ‘fa-ii of fulfilment as tho=e regarl- ing our crops. The worst things we have to encounter arr: those which never happen and it is folly to divell upon them. This province has never yet experienced a failure in crops and it ‘has seldom experi- enced pri-(‘Bs wihlir-h did not yield n! least THE LIGHTNING OF MISFOR- TUNE OFTEN STRIKES TWICE IN THE SAME PLACE- INSURE Lightning Insurance will protect son"? pmf“ m ‘he pm‘ your balm and live stock as well as your harvested crops. And Fire in- surance 'ill protect your home. Ami llife lnsurztnce-~_vou'ti better , _ _ talk the virhole insurance. question "HUM": “M” b? gamed by propm” m,“ ‘hm ‘m lsizing blue ruin. it ever a coun- I enjoyed the fulfilment of the |‘.{ll"i7ml$€ that "aged time and har- ‘vest shall not fail." that country is Prince Edward island. rlucer. There is so far no reason to anticipate either poor crops or poor prices for this season and -tr_v ‘rm: onnsfi-r msumtncz AGENCY' IN P.£.|. ,1‘ . » PHONE 67 ‘ v - —~———¢0->—~~—— 6| QUEEN 5T. ‘ cHAIILOTTETOWtLREI. wmc“ '5 THE 67'“? Nut tun? Liberals long since the illcKeuzie hoped to use the lFnlud Farmers as a stile by which ‘to climb ovcr to the treasury bench- gins, The recent success of the Unit- ‘cd Farmers has sotllcwyhat altorcd situation and the luttcr llsplrint; to use the their isitile. parties are ticpending upon each Puma! con/loo. Ileguntly turniulel. I rooms with bathe. j Nuke it your; lune in chartvttotovvn. , for fin uuiuiol m9 are Liberals nu in any case the two other in tille hope of climbing over amiss-curing the coveted seats. As in who z-btiil ilonlinaic the combin- ation nothing is being said by the in iercstctl purities and it matters lit- .tl~e to (‘anada whether it shall be Mir. (‘rerar or NfloKcnzie King. if unfortunately the zidlninistrniitrn should tutti intn the hands of eith- or. it wvruld be tato to ignore the fact tlhal. the intended amalgamat- ion is n mtrnace to (Zanadn, The group of political adventurers in mers" undcr the leadership of M-r (‘rera-r has a specific policy for western Canada, That policy is the elimination of all duties on urtic- im used or tonsumed in but lwl ~mamiractureti in the west. The west has no manufacturing industries; tits product is muinli‘ "i119"! “M ‘it has no fear of competition with (b6 cum-u on... .\’ici\'cnzie King with no hope of win ping out (p 1th own merits. is seek m; an alliance with the [Lnitcd Far pliers in the hopethat the united Liberalis-ln. forces may dominate the next par- liament and that Libertarian: domin- ‘late the farmers. Tne Liberal pol- trade. out icy Should the two groups Irvin there would inevitably be such a demolition of the ltarlff wail as ‘would leave not only Canadian in idustry but Canadian agriculture at the mercy of the United ‘States. Quebec, which at present is the ‘centre of MacKenzie King Liberal- lism and practicality’ iisolatttl in Can- is an indefinite free. adian politics. is by no means en- amourcd of the free trade policy either 0f Mr. King or of Mr. tfrcrur, The province prnfitclbnlorc pos- sibly than any other province in Canada by tho National Policy. Not only has its illiiltilftlclllfillg increus. cd but its agricultural develop- ment has been enormolL-ly hclpcd by the protection given to its mar- ket gardens, its (iairying, poultry etc. if Quobec considered only its fiscal pol-icy it would never adopt the free trade policy of hizlclienzie filing Liberalism; if would stand by tile protective policy which has built up its industries and its farms and which gives employment to its sons and tiaughters. But the prov- ince is anxious to be freed from its lpresent political isolation and the temptation to unite forces even with a party with which it has notlhing in common except to gct ilitp power is ‘sufliciently alluring to set ‘its politicians thinking. Tile Inenalce of the proposed nmltimmation is one that vitally affects the -.\larltime Provinocu. The iljnited SllilPS is nnw barred and bolted against all our zigricul-t till-at products- IVirit would ha]; pen if we puiicd down our tariff wall and allowed ourselves to be inundated with American produce? "What would happen our home intartceta which now oonsulne eighty- five percent of our produce, it our manufacturing were flooded with the products of Unit»- od States factories‘! A ivlw monts‘ serious thinking will con- intiustries ino- vince even the narrowest partisan that. the triumph of either lilac. Kcnzle King Libertllisnl or Iinlted |Farnlers or both combined would uuian uuin not only to tfanatlian industry but to Canadian agricul lure. the. l-vcst. lrtismlttled, "(Initcd Par- the balance of our nice I'm of HAMMOCKS ONLY 25 lF/onle time ago we comtur-ntcd upon the fact that the Report of the Prohibition (Iotlttlll-“fiififl. "OW a most. important ticllrlrtlnent of the public service, was not laid he- fore tile Legislature as in the case of all other (hPhilFllll"l'l[Hi reports. and in uctlnrd with the llriliillci‘ ‘if ‘Ill illllfll‘ governments in the civi- tizcti world. Little by little. how- ever filings are grntltlally leaking ollt._:lnd causing the public brkih lo think and wondcr. lillln of nr-w light was shed tilpon the subject by the publication of p, a very remarkable resolution pas- u‘ i sell by that burly, and t-ltill later by a lcttor from their secretary, pub- lished by direction of the chair- man of the commission. in which n small gllnllnerinz of information much more of which the public IITQ looking for and ltavc a right to get, has been given. One tilting is now established as n fnct and that is that "resolutions" have ‘icen adopted by the Vomniisliion. hut is it possible that the only subject platter before. them to be treated by resolution was that of a condemnation of the Slimmer- sitia Grand Jury for their proper performance of a pilhltc duty, and for which all the right thinking people of the province applaud thnm? There hm: been numerous complaints in connection with the administration of thin ileprtrtment left. Prices range from $3.15“ up and 25 per cent. off. Here is a chance to get a good strong, well made HAM- MOCK at a very low price. Carter 8: Co. Ltd cameo 2:... OPTICAL mus ctutvntuc Our Lens Grinding plant -—the only one on the is- land-is daily en aged in manufacturin t e vari- oua kinds of enaes, used in correction oi‘ defective vision. There aée 1:01am! lays in wui n or‘: a’ lenses‘ notiivnslvpfirv BER ICE, in the motto of our establishment. G. F. ilutclteson onemdrtetaflllloh I [lately a‘ Current Comment voiced from platform and through the press; what of thcnl? I Hits there been no action and no "resolution" in rcgartl to any of thmn. and if so wily are the public kept in ignorant-c of the “whyH-l and wlterefores" of at least the most inmorttlnt of these? They would or should be elnbotlictl in the report to the Lieutenant Gov- iernor. and in accord with llto or- dlnllry proccsses of civilized gov- ernment they should be lnld be- fore the people. in their publish- ed remlution, the (‘onlnlisslon dc- claret! that there was “no inter- ference“ on the part of the izovcrn- ment. with the (fmnnlission in the enforcement of the Act. but that statement is just lnnocon; 991mg); not to cover the whole ground. People have been asking If certain obstaclvls have not lbeen placed In the wily of the enlorcenlenl of the Prohibition Act by the gnvern~ merit. as for instance in the en- muragement of lmportattons by private interests under their semi- iicense taxation enactment nnrl further again in the matter 0t the release of convicts under the Act. no frequently from prison. Han there been no action or resolut- ions o! the board on those most important questions? There tn nothing of the secret or private character in fheae matters to Jilli- ' u...» ilamleti A Has infected Others To a certain taste. urt conlilts in making things appear as differ- ent as possible from whet they really arc. The farmer's daughter constructs her pin-cushion in the eimilitudo of a pink rabbit; the gardener lays out a flower bed to resemble as closely zls possible a Turkish carpet; the bortit-ulturist transforms his trees into a parlia- ment of peacockfl. ill?! and WWII- pinesfsayti the New York Timeli- So in the art. of criticism; Shakes- peare's Hamlet is not Shake- speare ‘Hamlet, but the pedantic. oridncring, "wisest fool in Christen dum," James I. And tile Villlucr ‘veto-olives Miss Wdnstunlci/‘s "llam- let and the Scottish Sutcchsion" as "the most fruity contribution ify their being withheld from the public. The Patriot tried to tnako His Honor the Lieutcnaht Governor the scapegoat for jail - deliveries but “that. cock Won't fighlP-IOI‘ everybody knows that HIQHWOI‘ only acts upon the advice of ros- ponsible advisers, espgclaily in platters of this nature. We do not question his power to act upon his own initiative, but we most enlpbtlticzilly‘ question his ever lla- ving done so. ‘those partlonl have only lbecn granted. as we take it. lrpon atlvice of the government or their accredited representative. nr upon the advice of the Prohibi- tion (‘QnlInisz-iiOn. or eonte one speaking n-pon their authority. Were there any rcstliulions upon this question or any of those mat- ters. and what explanation 0f these extraordinary‘ things ill there to give to the poo-pie‘? ii is gen- crzllly understood that convictions for breaches of t-hc Act are procur- ed ll,\' the’ (‘ommissltln Illrouttb tllcir official, but after this in what department is the disposal of offenders dealt with, or in the plnlncst of words, is there a divid- ed authority. and has the govern- ment extracted the sting both front the Act and the Commission. by taking over to themselves its atlminiletration nftcr convictions have been matte? in a lctter to the Guardian from Mr. tiienry Smith, sex-rotary of the Conlmission, an explanation is cf- fcreri for the titlvnnce in the sell- ing pYlCg of liquors on the grounds that "the duty inlposed by the g0- vernmcnt at Ottawa. $10 per gal- lon" czllletl for it. Like the Pat- riot. Mr. Smith tlmugtlt, no doubt. that it would ‘to a nice piece of strategy‘ to make the Ottawa gov- ernmcnt iltc sca-pcgoat. in that he stepped outside-of his tifficizli Iliili‘. Nor will this little red ber- rlng hclp llilll in tllc least. for he has not shown ihlltitile increased tiutl’ has advanced the cost be- yond the $50.(l00 margin of profits as garnered into the public treas- ury iiiiil your, nor has he in any wavy covered the burning and vital (lactation raised lby the Grand Jury at Sumnlnrsittc of making the Christian and tclnperancc pcuplc "f Ulla‘ brovincc. the profit making fll-iiflrlitcrs in this infamous traf- (lifl The skirts of the govern. nlcnt which hc aims tn prolect, stilt contains the Stains nt perfidy l0 "l0 people in the nlutter 0t sci. (in: i.\l'Si’i~1(."l‘ED LIQUOR-S AT AfVflfAi. (‘()S'i‘. and still further 0t’ so increasing the profits upon the contralbtlnti st-uil‘ as to make the business a literal bonunz“ m the rapidly increasing number of bnoticggelws, vwhg are Drying their nefarious trade with more. persis- tcnce and openness titan ever be. for. - . Daily Selections Guardian Readers Iurnllliol by W. l. Logo; WORK “Thank God cvor morning when you get up that vuu have sonic- thing to do which must b0 done whether you like it or not. Being forced to do your boat. will breed . you temperance. self-control. dih- gencc. strength of will, content and n hundred virtues which tho idle will never know.‘ Kingsley. 0h. cheerily smile And Wait awhile. For the storm will soon be over; 'i‘ht=re‘a n bit of blue tn the sky for you. 'i‘here‘s sweetness clover. yet in {he Oh rest and wait. . Though a burden glcat On thy heavy heart ls pressing; For a hand of love Will the cross remove, And leave instead n blessing. »Jcan Dwight. Franklin. to all _' the discussion of Shake- sneutp‘ for ‘a; hundrptfyeflr-W "Fruity" is tho‘ right" wont The itietorioni pnriillBL i of the flims- iost. it is trud tha Jaineffathor Durnley, was repu to have been murdered by B ihwcli and that Bothwell thereupon married Mary Queen of Scots, but hero the par- allel ends. Not Alike At All. . Far from being deprived of his right lo the crown James became King of Scotland upon Mary's abdication, in 151-17, at ' the age of 13 months. Bitter as was the pill to Elizabeth and all Britain he was the heir to the English throne. acknowledged and uncontested. His brilliant. adventumsome and romantic titothel- is as far from resemblng the pliant and supine Queen Gertrude as in the "vain. dlssoiute, PTBEUIIIDUOD and foolish" Darniey trolll resembling the ina- iesty of buried Dcnmark. Bolli- Bothwell, instead of contesting either the Scottish or the English throne with the young King. turn- ed pirate and died insane in 1578. when James was 12, At the time Shakespeare was engaged upon "Yllamlct." James‘ Queen mother had been dead some tourtecn years, As for James in tho char- acter of Shakespeare's Prince, he would not beguilo a lfzlrnleris daughter to stick Dlns into him. Yet the critical Polonlns gazes blandly and murmurs in ildnlira- lion, “Yery like a ivllale!" Part of Danish History. Equally intractable to bliss Win- stanleyls pilfposc is the history of the play. The story in its main outlines had been known to the learned since Saxo Grammaticus and his Danish liiatoru written in tile twelfth century. it. hnd been popuiarizeti with grout nuc- ccss in Hollie-Forest's "Hysteria of Hamlet," published -in 1570. This story was tirtunatizcd not latter than 1589, and n-it by Shakespeare but, by Thomas Kyd_ As played by Shakespeare's company it ac- hieved an immense qlopulzlrlty. Far fronl being conceived as hav- ing any subtle political signific- ance’ it was reveled in by the popu~ lace and parodied by the wits as u crude tragedy of blood and re- venge. In an “Eplstle" printed in 1589, Thomas Nash wrote: "Eng- lish Seneca read by Candle-light yields tmlny good sentences, a5 Bloud is a begger, and so forth, and lf you lnircat him fairevin .1 frosty morning, he will aiioord you whole Hamlets, 1 should say immi- fuls, ot‘ tragicall speeches." The Play Revised. in 1596 'i‘llomtia Lodge speaking of “an incarnate devil,“ says tlmi he “looks pale as ye" visard of ye ghost which cried so inlseraily at ye Theater like an ttistcr wife. llanllet, revenge.“ This phrase rings satlricaiiy long after Silako- spears discarded it when rewriting the old play. in 1618 Rowland wrote: 1 will not cry Hamlet ilevenge my grooves. But i will call Hang-man Re- venge on thecves. ‘In; all likelihood Shakespeare had long been engaged -in fill-blah- ing up Kydfia "iialnlet" (Kyd hav- ing titsalppenrcd or died) in (irtlcr to keep in touch with the advanc- ing tlme. A lpartiai revision. con - tnining much obviously Shake v epearean matter. was published in 1603; a widely different and vir- iually complete ' version following in 1604. James came to the English throne in 1603; but by that time Gertrude tMnrY had been rend lhlr teen years and Claudius Bothwcll twenty-five _\'('H1‘B_ iltcilnrti Bur - bage, who in all probability played Kytfs Hamlet in his early twenties as “a violet in the youth of lttrillly nature." had ~gona so far in the way,_oi sill- fleuh that Queen Gert - rudtiilfitlérlbedhfnl as "fat and scant of breath.“ Novelty and topi- cal allusion is the’ last thing any tne would look for in that ancient ploy. Can't Make lt- Out- Tho depth of Miss Winstanlofs critical acumen may be sunset! by the fact t-hatfasideufronr-her tlwo- ry, she finds the popularity of "Hamlet" "inexplicable." She has no eye for the Sarliou-likt- skill of Kyd in constructing effective "sit - nations " no heart for the pllltlllflf delight-in stories of ghosts and re- venge, of llne-fiptln intrigue. of drown-lingo, poisoning; and muiti - tudinous slaughter. Even less must she suspect the. perennial fresh ~ n”; and charm and pathos of Shakespeare's PrInrw-"a charac- ter.“ writes A. B, “lalkley. so beset by ‘hostile circumstances, so na - turally tlebonair and ‘swi-et‘ den- pite those circumstances. that nr actor. however incompetent. has been known entirety to fail in ti." . g , V ' _ A War Memorial ‘ t‘ - "' = i» 5:: t r (l: <w~-"ii-lttilievtntwv Today sees the inauguration of a war memorial which constitutes the fbut public example of one of Italy}: leading sculptors, Professor Marin Ratclli. The monument wnsists of n mumive pedtment o! Sicilian granite, surmounted by a great globe of’ tbronze, bearing the nantos‘ of tlhe heroes commemorat- cd, and a winged bronze statue of Victory. twreathed and bringing sheaves of palm. it stands in from of the Tabernacle chapel at Atberwetwytlq a resort to which the sculptor is especially attached, and commetnorntca ‘sixteen men of the parish who fol-l in the Great War. it is not often that we add a new instance to the list of ital- ian artists who have fallen in love with this island or ours-as (‘o- nova did with Waterloo Bridge— but of ‘Signor Ruteilrs praise we may well say leaf of laurel, to vise the pictures- que language of his race and cui- fing. He has compared the noble swecp of Cardigan Bay to the Bay of Naples~a superlative tribue from an lta‘iian~_ and says: "the scenery is not too wild, but con- tnins just that harmony which charms the eye and rests the soul" Aberystlwyvtil has responded by the commissioning him for the town war memorial. The Professor lulu four times been the‘ winner of the sculture prize in the. National Art Competi- tion of Italy and the Grand Prix do Rome. and on one of H1859 cc- casions the Dante group which he ftolne has also awarded him its Grand Prlx for purchasing Ills trusts of (‘rispL lio- tncnlco, Mnrelli. David Lubin. (founder of her international Ill- stii-utc of Agriculture) and the proscnt Pontilt’. lie was Gold Mo daliat tit the \\'0rld's Fall's of St. ilouis and Barcelona, and hy resolu tion of a Roy-at (Iomtnissittn, his medalw-or rather tllc replicas - have been exchanged with thc chief nulnlismutit: collections of Part-F, London and Berlin. A Sl- ciliun ‘by birth and n pupil nt‘ .\io~ relli. tlic lqfilfflfifittl‘ stildictl at Rollie. i-‘lrlrent-e and Venice, and in the t-oursn of his [Gill's of study and inspiration has visitcti Paris, London and Greece. TTilVPilPTF and critics are well rlcquzlintcd with his Annunciationfountain in marble at hionreale, in his IlfliiVG island; his King iiumbcrt ntonu- llrent. at (fatania; the (larlllaltli ind Crispi monuments at Paler- mo; his fountain of the Nzlizltls at Home and the Ba-ptlstry of (‘omis- co (Tltlhcdml. Ho is .1 Lruc son of the sun-kisser! South, and is idolized by his pupils and friends. lilo That sentence instinct with sent-v- ol the theatre and divination o.’ the drama, is worth all the incu- brattons of ten thousand expinittwa of literary mares‘ nests. ttltat it is a golden’ sent in was bought tby the Staitc|lll9 Bilulilllwlll 0i "T" We for home's Gallery 0f Modern Art.'m9lll°l1}'- qmrucdns “m1 i5|WlIiUll should be added to the col- lection as pearls are addadito g ‘p44; __ v-’ n - 0m 1 v‘ P v string. . HS Hollies tin which such songs are ‘ ‘ ‘sung, homes ill ivhlch fathers and mothers sing such SUDgS first to land then with their children, are (Collctlrtl ftiollitor) lamong the greatest influences of "Wlrv." asks 2i cillltenrporary wri civilisation. More important titan ter, “do so few pliffilllfi Iltllvildlljfl ' the songs or the singing is the M. sing either to or with their chil-‘blt instilled in early life of finding dren?" Site goes on to urge a ro-lplcasurein simii) finding associa- vlval of this flue old t-ustoln. tlult Within the walls of home it- Perllaps, as she suggests, the sell. phonograph. with its music-making facilities. or the alttumublle and the movie. forever dragging people from their homes. or Jazz with its LONDON. July exotic and difficult cadencles, have ‘ u-"ll- l-‘llilsulllorlrli Suffolk 5PM. 11 H V z , is ln tho ntzlrket. Tile orlzinal (r vcn the of ‘Swfwlpdilfi ind the I Elizabethan design or ‘he mansion "Mm “r (“muy Smgmg "m" m” suffered extensive alterations in American homes. lthe 18th century. and it Combines 0m hymlls of noble verse and Queen Amie or very early Georg -‘ nobler music. beautiful old ballads ‘an rlmmres’ Glvmhm“ "a" 3'3"“ m m‘ , of 3.x"), 1 t I t in a park of 180 acres. near Aiarlva- Se lg’ ' l e ‘u “or 0c ford station. on the main road fronl mPltltly- “f0 t! "iltlflllle Dill‘! "l London to Imwcstoft. about oiizllt and illiles fronl the sea. A sunliial which belonged to and bears the arms of Elihu Yult‘, who endowed the Yalc ljniversity. and other works oi‘ ‘art adorns the grounds. *¢'“ ,' vvql Family Singing. --_---¢oo____ ELIHU YALE‘S SQJNDIAL ZSQElctnhatn livery little while new music 0f rcai mcrit is produced “unuxennns _ A Store Full Oi Bargains Ladies White Boots $3.50 and $4.00 reduced to . . . . . . . ..$1.9B Ladies White Pumps . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .$1.5O HP Ladies‘ White Oxfords . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . ..$t.87 up Balance of our ties and straps at a big discount. We bought recently and have now on sale B. R. Holman‘: stock which we are offering at about half value. Men's Patent Dancing Oxfords . . . . . . . . . . .. ‘$10.00 for $5.00 Men's Patent Leather Dancing Pumps . . . . . . ..$9.00 for $4.50 Ladies’ Patent Oxfords (American) $7.85 for $4.00 and thousands of other bargains in Men's. Women's and Children‘: fine or heavy boots. from 25c to 3-13.00 per pair. HEADQUARTERS FOR HOLEPROOF HOSIERY. The belt hose for the least money. daily. New goods nrrivfn g Goff Bros, Lt . b 9 D§OO§ O-OO‘O-E&OQ—Q-OO-§O OJ-O UO+OO§§QOGGfOO§§ The Car That Has Oar. famous Delivered BRllCE STEWART s. c0 Come to Stay This wonderful Lightweight Car that ls giving the ut- most satisfaction to pleased manure daily, In the unique distinction of giving the Highest Gasoline Mileage of any And the most comfortable Car to drive ln- due to the Three Point Cantilever Spring. Th‘! iu the Car the farmers are looking for. All upholstery removable. Call today for a demonstration. ROCK sort-om Farce $1060 to Any Part of the Inland