Ill osm- amnion. dornlngjinlly (fouled IQ Q88 III YIII (—IIIOI)_ .-.__¢._-_ amour-Ila.‘ )UII In ndvan -—__ ' ll rel ls .. '.:'....'"'...".'.."....' .. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1922 MEETING room ......." '- '".:'::::..""t' -' advance. U. l. ‘ UQIIGIISQ fitilills, with the air brcnlhetl tlirrltigh the nasal , gslrr, rlml dlftTl/j‘, mi! only 'wllh Pros l‘ WH ETHBR its a Cough. Cold. Son‘ Perfection Butter - i pioneers-mass _ rsnssrtor ievsiivsoovs-Nssns rrwst - Throat. or a revival of the old Bronchitis the Pups brsdllrcable remedy, i5 tho one most speedily fli-‘flllvo- The Peps war is to strengthen the bathing passages and ontl tho danger ‘flan: it illtCir. the chest and lungs. y. when a Pep-r tablet (llxifllrfifi lfl the qmnth powerful tncdtiillal fume! are liberated. ’ As tho diagram shows, these chest-strengthening ‘ITRHlllZIHCS mingle cavity (l) and mouth 1'1) and are carried aver the tongue til) iutn the throat l4)’ whence the; p.115 direct dim-n the wind- pipe l5) into tlic lung< Druggy mixtures Anti syrups are liirflk-i tire hcrnlist- they go riuuli the gitl ~z H?) lltlt) tiicstnrnltch. The Prim blTlllllfrl/lft.’ liir-rilcllles lion'- itrtmr-Iivll fruulhu m Hlu IhroJi attil bynygg/“nl mbqg, but Ih-‘v [irlruffittr to lhc i- Ilfrlllcnl lgccsscs. ulitrre discus! [arms arc likcllwsl In b: 4 Pep-i not milv zttt 3S i! P0“ (‘Tim ttvrmr cidc ltlll they spectiliv Sliltllll‘ and llenl any stirvnr-ss, lffltitlldil. or lrlilulnmutttln; they mnltr l)lt~ill ,_ at There l5 n0 more \J||l-illlt‘.\rl[ ai||~t throat trmllllcs. *‘ nstirn . ttleurisy gird run-irritants Frrr- 1mm hurmiul drugs. Peps an peliefll! silt: in: Glllltlfull. of "l Plan For-ant In Ivory Homo." o/ all -eal¢r< or PcbaCo . Toronto. 500.. 31,,“ 1,, _ l/ flufllf ll nlorfrrmad I-‘lrlili Ilu ‘I. package for Ic. slump. Crocks Filled _ With let We are now prepared to call for crooks and fill them with Perfection Butter and; Tho annual meshing of the awe"! Collllly Liberal Conscrvn live Association takes place t div in the Market Hall. it will a "Ncl-ly business meeting to re- view the work of the past year. towaiect offilcers and to attend in organisation and other necessary matters. g it is important tlbat each poll in the country be fully represented and that others as well as d810- Elites be present. A cordial invitcl tion has been extended to lady voters and it is hoped that, they will be exercising the fran chine nest summer. for the first lime i" B Provincial elect-ion, u; many as possible make lt a point to be present. The general election _wlll held next ysarhand -it is import- ant that definite preparation made for it. The only effective pre Duration is organization and tod't_\"s meeting the strengthen-ing organization will be nne of the principal items business. The political situation ln the province is well known; record of the the present live. encrgetic ;of the present govcritlnl-tli. of them w men be a pointed to look after the organ- |izatlion of ouch oi the polls ho let the light in on tho doings This b8 he the past three years. with their drift into unknown and unknowable dcbt, is before people. ‘ - tr th-is drift h to be checked i“- iore the province goes on rocks there must awakening and proper preparation for the election. Let today's meet- ing he an carnest business one; vibe ‘the ‘m.- a. general and return them. Phone 848. - Central Creameries, Ltd. l‘ Noted Physicist i ;, - and Scientist '\ _ cotvimc T0 P. s. ISLAND ’ Dr. c. w. Saleeby. M. 0., r. n. s.. ed vigorously The province of 01' London. England, will spend h; h 1 1| . brce days, uctober 21-24 on Quebec w c Ben a u repre rlnce Edward Island. His first meeting will be at Hun- tor River on Saturday. the 21st at 7.30 p. tn. at Charlottetown on Sun- furtlher announce- day the 22nd, ment of which will be made later 9n Tuesday even in g, mainland. The bearing oi‘ this noted scient- ist is an opportunity oi‘ a ills time and all who possibly can should take advantage oi‘ lt. vv-OOO-Od Daily Selections ioi _ ' Guardian Reidets "rom the W. I. Launoa ' collection .- c0000 a , gym/tires roar-rte ssssznr Father in Heaven, known Our mniiy hopt-s and fears, ur heavy weight of mortal toil, .., 0hr bitterness of tears. ,Wo pray Thee for all asent friends "jiwho have been with us here, “And in our secret tieart we name The distant and the dear. ‘For woary eyes. and aching hearts ll And feet tltart from Thee rove. c sick. the poor. the tired. i116 fltllall, wglpray Thee, God OI 10116. VKHJNEY at Montague on Monday evening the 28rd, at Kensington on Tues- day afternoon and in Summerside leaving on Wednesday morning again ior tbs to Thea urt- tlie few National Railway Board. Soiue o entitled them to and they llrvtesl but threatened a revolt if ; the Board and its a result have the assurance of Mr Konzie .Ki11g that their Mar a letter to Mr. George Parent, M- P., for the district of Quebec (my. who had voiced the districts dis- appointment, Mr. MacKanzis King replied ~in a manner very clearly indicating "that the government ls at. least susceptible to pressure. He wrote in part as follows: “You will have noticed that in giving a statement to the press at the time the announcement was mulls 1 was careful to say that the action of the government must not be considered as final, bu that addition-s or cbangns migltb be expected after there bad been: opportunity for conference Sir Henry Thornton and other members oi the Board. it is un- derstood witb Mr. LaPointe that immediately upon his return there will be further consideration with respect to the personnel of the Board. Meanwhile be assured that the interests of our Quebec friends, have been in no way overlooked‘ idone. ‘the people may be depend- . led upon to do their duty on elec- Prince Edward Island is one provinces! though rental-ion of Liberals to the House. oi Commons not only Drflieflled the! were not given more members on they claim will be favourably considered. ln with l lrient as made." Concluding hi b" While this is not a direct _pro misc it ls at least the proverblu "nod," which ."ls as good as lain‘ the promise will be kept. What has Prince Edward 8S dlvidually protested or threatened revolt? Has our irrovlntlial gov- ernment made a kick at being left out in the cold? Have our Libero‘ ‘lflwslfllilers said anything to 1151p their province in this respect’! Before the federal election one of the Liberal promises was that this province would‘ be represent- ed on the Board. Has that promise gone with the German "scrap "of Paper” and the lire-election pro- mises of the federal and provincial Liberals? . ._ We need representation on the Board. Why not kick and get it us Quebec is getting it? V ll! ll of .~,_ ._.._-<0>.___. FINANCING THE FARMER Elsewhere in this issue will be found n summary of legislation in tlu different provinces of the do n‘ :50: for financing the former. Frr "to snnmury we arc indebted tt-‘thi (ktobcr number oi the Can- atiflur Pacific Railway lllllletlll_0ll_ "Agricultural and Industrial Devo- |l0Dm8nt in Canada." it will be observed that p. every province. except. Prince Ed ward island, the provincial gov ernment bus made provision finance the farmer. The methodal mdoptcd are interesting and i namely. till "line of business. In lending such assistance the government it. not doing an aci of charity or benevol- ,ence. it is doing what. every gov- ernment hus a right to do, namely, developing the country. in Prince Edward Island, al- though our farmers are generally better able to help the govern- ment than the latter ls to bslp them. yet there are many cases in which a loan would be a great value in improving the farm, in procuring better stock, in buying more land. or 1n any of the many things that would be done if the needed cash were available. ll’ our vacant farms are ever to be re-occupicd and cultlvatedsome means must be employed to loan money on easy terms to prospec- tive purchasers. it is being done elsewltcreisnd can be done here. While conditions bore differ widely from those in the other provinces. especially in_ the fact that wE have no crown lands to give away or to sell at a nominal price. tha methods adopted by the others may servo as s guide to legislation which is much need- ed bisre. in any case it is up to the government to adopt such measures as will eventually lead to the reclamation oi our_ vacant farms and the fuller development oi our poorer farms. 4 l O Notes By ‘i110’ Way What is designated "an epoch- rnaking discovery," and one that bus s. deep interest for our own Province, n related in tho London Daily Chronicle. A scientist ut- tmjal, to tho Fisheries Board has rotmd dist by ‘brooding Oys- ters in, little concrete tanks ttlc stupenllmls wmtc of baby oyster- i 4 vivors in the million to several hundred thousand. The Chronirflo also states that. "commercial firms are taking the matter up. tanks are being erected and the results will shortly manifest themselves in the _fish inongetu’ price list.” We indulge tits hope tihst on the plan thus suggested something and will in no partlcularbe pro ludlced in view of me announce- lettcr he urged enquirers “to kind- ly await Mr. LaPolnte'a return." a wlirk," and We feel quite sure that the member for Quebec accepted it as a definite promise and, not only that. but we are quite cer- Is- land done to get representation on this Board? Hus our solid Liberal representation, collectively or in- iin| 8i- to assist the farmer- ln tbel our slsltér provinces thought hllfiyldgvelnptnglfl of his farm, to help were not as fully represented ttsjim 0V9,- lhe 51mm," places whkh the 811011011 they EBVB i0 i119 Pan-flare to be_ encountered every water boundaries here and no for- est pastures for those lordly crea- “ rlbll r some interest to sportsmen to know that these: son for moose bunting is now open in New Brunswick and Nova Sco- tia, that over there about 2.600 moon's are killed each yell‘. BM!!! .r.~rs from the United States. hunting of big game thus prolongs the tourist season ‘in the provinces, to the profit of guides hotel proprietors. merchants and others. _ » our cool northern climate are un- exccllcd for producing this lus- cious bivalve at its best. But the oyster has many foes, the waste oi‘ spwwn. has been prodidgious and replanting in the open waters. although tin part successful, else- "where. has been a failure with us. so far. l Details are as yet wanting be- yond the few facts above set forth. The large concrete tanks spoken of lwoulrl obviously involve s con- sldernble outlay. Some analogy suggests itsclt‘ between the oyster tank and the fox‘ ranch. Naturally our waters produced the best oys- ter in the ‘world, just as our for- ests naturally produced the best £llV8f4bl8Uk fox. By enclosure we multiplied our foxes a thousand fold. As we enclosed our foxes to prevent their escape, and have" them at hand when we wanted their pelts. so by a similar meth- od may ws nut multiply our oys- tars and shut out their destructive foes ‘ ideas of this sort_ germinate slowly, but they are worth think ing ovcr and being tried out by ex porimont. First oi‘ all the fullest information possible should be ob- tained and our governments feder- al and provincial might easily get it and make it pwbllc. If oys- ter culture ca-n be made 8llCt3ESB~ ful, it would tnean much for Prince ‘Edward island and ior the Marl time Provinces. Governments are slow to move in such matters. Prl vate enterprise built the first fox Jar All W0 bsvono moose wltbln our sures. None the less it may be of gunning‘ Associations of British‘ 1011mm‘. lat] and the National Council of- wumau o! Great Britain Ind ll"9'l land arc now tryillg l0 d0 "1"" . m, prism; Government has fflilfill In, namely, to force from the 8o- vlet Governmlontfsome relllrlmln [or the outrageous treatment M'- aordod -Mrs. Stan HartiIuB. R "W" one half of them by visiting nun- The sister known British journalist, who villi imprisoned for five months in Moscow. She was fill-all“ l Wm‘ being h spy, but was never tried. and only obtained 11¢!‘ "$95M" when the British Government made a trade agreement Willi Russia, and insisted upon the r8 lease of tBrltlsh naiqlonals bald i, there for alleged political often " 1:35 Mrs, Hard-high account other tliliflferlilgs ls asdsmntng an tin dlctnrent of Soviet rule as any we have come across, and ls evidenc that tits men who are ruling Rus- sia today are not misguided B11- mwtasts lbut veritable monsters ‘.0 whom torture and nlurdflr are regarded as mere necessary and justifiable means - to perpetuate their disthtorship. It is plain, too, that they recognize the fact thfli only by lying on a collosul scale will they be able to re-establlsb rs lad-ions with the outside world. and that a foreign journalist who will not enter into the conspiracy while Vlsllilllg Russia goes in dan- ger of bis life. a g , We have a-tnutnber of men's heavy win- ‘ ‘ter overcoats which we did not dispose of during our fire sale on account of mg W!‘ seasonabie, and which we are now offering at $7,00, $8.00, $9.00 and $10.00. Also a few better lines at $15.00, $18.00 é and $20.00. ' Also a number of boys’ ‘heavy winter 0 overcoa-ts which we did not oifer during the fire sale, in sizes to fit; boys from 4 to 17 d years, not more than two or three coats of a pattern, They come in peat brown, grey, and green patterns. Offering at $3.50, $4.00 é $5.00 and $6.003 I Also a few better lines at $7.00 $8.00 and $9.00. Men’s all-wool Heavy Winter Over-coats, double breasted style, all-round belt, yoke ‘lined quarter and half-lined, also Polo lin- ed and plaid backs. Plain or leather buttons _tt;hey come in all _the latest shades of brown and greya Speglal . . . - o. . . .$Zr).00 Welcomed at First. _ i Mrs. Harding. who was an ox- perlenced Journalist and foreign w“ spotttletit. was accredited to ' The New York ~World in 1920 for i1- ihe ‘purpose of visitilng Russia. She ‘l was not anti-Soviet; in fact, her l leanings were the other way, and this was the reason wlhy thaRus- stains gave =her permission to 8Y1 ‘l . . . . - ter the country after similar re- ‘ Men’s W9lglll3 Suits Ill p131“ and fan“ qtlosia for two other New York ¢y tweeds, 1n browns, greys and greens, World correspondents had been re sizes 36 to 42. Special . . . .$13.-' fused. She want well recommend ed by friends of the Soviet, and _ her earliest recaptiion was mos‘ " cordial. A man named Mogilewsky was attached to her as ltiterprc tar, but it turned out later that TWO EXOEPTIONAL VALUES IN _ MEN’-S surrs - Men’s fine tweed and worsted suits, very dressy style, in neat patternsof browns, ‘ranch. Who will build the first oyster tank in Ca ‘llan waters?‘ That dlstlinction would seem to belong of right to the homeland; ‘of our world-famous Malpeques. . wan has proved that Canada is V land of great opport.lrnlr.lps_ I fl ‘tarsllire, England. twenty ago. _a sickly youth, ‘yours old, without funds‘, but rich "a tention by a short speech at afar- ‘ mars’ convention. Once in the limelight he iwas made a director of an elevator company, then its secretary and inter its manager. Thence onward his activities and his honors were multiplied. Ho was appointed l-‘ro- vlIl-clal Treasurer, and elected to the Legislature by acclamatlon in 1916 when he was 31 years oi age. and in 1922. after the retirement of Premier Martin, he was called upon to loom a cabinet which ne did. He holds the offices of Pre- mier, Provincial Treasurer and Minister of Railways Hts official salary is $7,600 in addition to $1,800 sossionnl indemnity. T c r B d o ‘Over 30,000 tounists passed through St. John during the puss- ing season. by boat, train and mo- tor. Five thousand foreign motor cars were registered there within the past few months. compared with the very limited numiber that crossed by the car ferry into Prince Edward Island. High freight charges and the worst pos slble methods of transfer from land to water carriage and Iback again account for this contrast and our perpetual loss of tourist -——-—<-0>-.—-- MAJOR PERCY J. CANTWlELL ‘NOMINATED FOR CONGRESS PROVIDENCE. n. L. Oct. 16. ~ Mai. Percy J. lCsntwell of Edge- wood, former adjutant of the Am- srlcan Legion has accepted the h Btnta Convention. m” yet be don; to restore ’our mice productive and vuluable but now depleted oyster fishery. m o- lltacan-bsrsducsdnromttvosurg ‘bss been demonstrated t-hst, our estuaries slid coastal wstors and so icc metro an . gtltrbtltbar liven i‘ great deal War he followup hi; trnllqikqiprlh- tolu, . " - 1.7.3. l. Motor Csntlwell llsa never taken DIP! ill. llflllflfll ‘ill till! s tlmoftdllogrlillid ins for st allploynisnt, ._ la-ftcr‘ reaching Moscow slie he was n mcniber of the Cheka. _ the Russian secret service system. j: To herastonishment bwo 'dfly! was. inforlmcd by Moglllewsky that sltc - was n‘ prisoner, She was immed- ____ lately chapped into a filthy Premier Dunning of BBSKBIOlJB-Iwltlltlllt any preliminary examina- Hlfllearttcdtilat she was suspected of m. came to this country from Lelces-[baing a British spy. Site was ac- years] cusod of having done secret scr scventoeiqvlce work for the Government ill Des lMorts" because of the _C!iinn at the time of the Boxer ro-I 0g we officials to 51311 a motor may dmer m details Orrin 001E859 tandj db8tBlglhtglllnBdt pui-“llbelliog, sillthoxih Wliiflndtliiz Eng‘ u i d x , l _ ' _ -pose. e g0 a 0 W n anmeicurre. s e s a c peep on l] or er not represented on the cdlllfllililLopgr-dflon the 31m is the Hamel t low wages. when he mm 16am. land‘ Her note ‘books were “mm ed the game of pioneer farming hednedwiud a line of poetry was held took up o. homestead, regained hlslto utterly condemn her as boltig hesltb and mode success in till an expression of regret for ing the soil. Then he attracted a» Czarist regime. The line was: was told that her case was closud and that. she would leuve her edit puly to stiffer execution. But became plain that her case was not. closed. Almost daily sho wits viet, wished to regain her freedom she ing and going. She was also told that her position woul-l be most congenial if she remained in Mos- cow and wrote special articles ior the New York World, in which she would send stories IDPBDHP-Bd refused those offers, and so kept in solitary confinement in a vermin-infested cell. Her food con- sisted of an evil-smelling hot. wat- er, in wlliiob were herrlngs’ eyes and fins. Mrs. Harding says obvious attempt was against her reason. for she was not allowed uI book or pallet". SM vr sufficient covering cold, Ibttt all the iin.e l the eye of a spntry._l-‘e;s_ring_.,t)lut the solitary . confinement would drive ber insane. sbc wont on is none, and twice Mrs. Herding rs- M __ . , sorted to bhe hunger strike to sc- "i" Billion in Climmunicatc with mésglvogdantlviellll’litslzlétisigzurégf cure human mpnbuhm thr- Brltls-h station. youid unset boulevard. ‘He was born 1n . §°,,f,f,,°","{ao',,',gg°°g°° ‘fl-hgnd and ' P" ’ - r ‘fill-n y or my o-3°S...i“'.‘..'3€‘lr'3"‘é‘;.3'l2222 i1.’ "“' "“""' °" "W" \”:°°t- "°" W" “rm- i=- im. From m1 up to wbooworld ‘ - A m’ “d l" “‘"'°"F"°""°"-‘ m" or, tho pfllttti w» mud for . , , .~ ‘merit wireless telelrraplis to com Qtscbtlpns, sad s tot of shooting 1,, “m” m,“ , u; m ° - w-r oil-- or vt-rti- or» r-Z, “rind. iiifle, thtr limo when the. Polish advance-mot until r. Edwards l“: rattan. w,” ‘w, affair tile scheme will o t p coll tion“wliatevor. Later on +1 i‘ :4 trick °°"c.ir running at the moment of ax- thut any last words of the victims might not be ‘heard. Thcre were bctwccntwti and three thousand prisoners. and Mrs. Harding says that the place was like a huge hotel, writers guests were continually arriving and departing, the latter having their destination in the "Garage Des --Morts." Some of the prison- ors trad been tlicro for many years, wholly forgotten by their jallers. Many of them knew of no charge against them. They were impris- oned un suspicion o1‘ ‘being hostile to the lSoviet... the ‘Gone! are the woods of Arcady and over is their antique 50W. nvited to Become Spy. Three days aftor '~' it A Sensational Charge. when Mrs. Hard-lug reached England she was wholly broken down, and it was not until time alter bar return that lsho made the charge that her impris- Qlllnelll Mls due to the treachery of Mrs. Marguerite Harrison, an American correspondent who was doing some special work for the Associated Press and several Am- erlcfl-n nil-pen. Mrs. Harrison is at present in China, and it has been lmposslblcto sccuro h statement, isited by an emissary of lihe So- wtto told her that if she ouid do so on condition that she cmainedin Russia and acted as spy upon the foreign correspon- ents, Eonccsslon hunters and titers who were constantly com- -for some _. .WiiLL LICENSE WOMEN ‘passed examinations in KlIBOlDKT T0 TEACH THEOLOGY .Now the Archbishop has an- nounced his willingness-at his 'IrON‘DON, Oct 16—'l‘he Arclibls-‘dlscretlon—to grant to women hop of Canterbury has given liccns who hold this diploma a license to led women church teachers a re- touch theology. They must be coin flcognlzcd ecclesiastical status. For muulcants of the Church of Eng- Jsome time he has granted tliplo- llflntl and satisfy him as to their imas to those women who have icapaoity and fitness. ___;L___ "We Have Saved Without Stinting" DAVID BRADEN. _ g to look back upon, and something to look forward to-my wife and I,” says David Braden. “We’ve enjoyed life to the full, have had the things that make life worth living, and yet we have saved. “We chose the better way of saving. All my salary every year was spent, except the moderate sized cheque that gird my Life Insurance deposit to the orth American Life. That annual pay. “We've somethin fromdier. Mrs. Harding makes it plain that foreign Journalism who are not prepared to spread Soviot Propaganda are not wcntcd ift Rus- fllfl. but that lt they will publish lil the Western press 3 few 5m. eritl falsehoods, they are perm“. ted to gibe their hoarfs content at communism. Sire docs not bclieva that the death by starvation J! ~-, om given twenty million Risssihm would ShBJIOKIILSO Leuine and ‘Trotsky to r9- ---l.» un u tlnqirlsh their It'll) "D011 iiho coun- ry, er by the Soviet. tShe steadfastly was the tnent represented our ‘savings’ and the balance of my income was ours to spend _ on a happy lifetime. q “All these years served the double pu It protected m wife - and ‘protection.’ and children against the possible loss of theiivbread-winner, and now that my policy ha" matured, I have $10,000 in l cold cash. While others were putting aside their little hundreds year by year I made sure of $10,000 by megng of " Endowment Lifednsurance. This will keep us two in comfort the-balance of 3:5 gavs- We will enjoy life to the very Our booklet. "T - t you can do just ss ‘iii-til’: §§§5Zr that cheque has rpose of ‘savings’ Allcld," t. 1.“. did. nomination Drofered to him by lllrflgfir etflllfi. Ind bbis had the “Av UN": UP CANADA the Democratic State Central com- rcsulb-af her being TBMOVBd to JMPERIM‘ RAD“, -‘ mittee, to bo a candidate for ‘Con- the m", control prison. where |[,ON,DON Och] n. , ‘ - _ » da ‘l has i552‘; ti. -- M“ "i" M "r to" “hi: Pit-i- cllned the convention nomination u L ‘ PM “"9" °i mmi" 5°‘ ma“ t" “k” ‘"1 i‘ l‘ im- tMn-lor Cantwelt will be Opposed clcty from the Czsrlst official to fir!“ "wk" “fhiime- APPBYIBB in the "gm by tome,- geymor-mlm the street walker and murderer. ‘"13"; hB‘_°":,l'°“d-" 5°" mile i0 ard S. Aidrlclr of Wsmvirk. who But any society was batter tlltan QM Afiumuanlqmth man‘ Egypt was nominated at the Republican ' o" 63'1"“ h“ been naked to build s powerful lwards. of the‘ Canadian’ Govgpfiz‘ N ' i ‘ i . 0 Clstrldttotovvl n "s o u - ‘h. And llnnr-zf‘ ‘"131! m.’ NAII. w- it himself ss to Cgllgd .1‘ lcourse.