A Cheque for live Dollars wlllbeeenttotheeuthoroi wht, in the opinion of the i Illltor, ll 't.he most interest- ’- In; letter for publication. All : muelopes should be address- ed "Letter Box,” care of the Illitnr, "The Charlottetown pllxtiner, P.0. Box 39. Char- ‘ Jottetown. Communications _ ‘must be original and exclus- tve. Preference will be given ' to brief lotteru bearing name nnd address for publication ' and dealing with questions of uyublia roller. especially re- i plunges-realms and its probleui.‘ ' ’.‘OOO-O§OQ_OOO4—OQ-QO-O000-0-Oc¢o eo-olooQ-QQ-Qfifi ‘ y... a l‘ tlon of every line of Jewelry marks our stock. ‘We will be pleas cd to have you call N. Tanton , . PLAYING Q (ZARDS Wlthllut the 50c. TAX. noun. PURCHSE BEFORE AUG . 1ST AND SAVE TillS AMOUNT. l We have u nice assortment of Congress and other series g of cards that had lnland lle- . venue Stamps prefixed be- fore the present tariff went into effect. We are given until Aug. 1st to dispose of these Stamped (Jarde after that the I tax must be added. w.r. wruurn . Queen Street. i Beautifully Decorated JARDINIERES AND if "VASES in‘; English Pottery Just" RECEIVED, l Very appropriate for Gilt Making. otter a. co. "i eurmvsroe jfir srtocrr wrrui vnutoo nvu odious or 1r flghteen thousand gallons in ten uhn without lowering the wall a is-li". " ' , - Trask Artesrau Well .60. Ltd. enormous uor oousiliml to several 118m" liquor. WATER rowan Ann FUEL ruminants ‘The Commission of Conservation has issued in pamphlgt form an ‘article by Mr. Arthur V. White, ‘the Commission's Consulting Engineer, on Water Power and Fuel Problemmwhichscontains most in- teresting information on the subject. The necessity of substituting cheap power for the increasingly ex- pensive coal power by whiclfl-manufacturing is now carried on he assumes as generally recognized and at the outset he deals with some of the subjects which for some time past have been considered by the Commission. Among these are the applications involving the use of additional water for power pur- poses from the St. Lawrence river; the increased de- vclopment of power at Niagara Falls; detailed water power investigations in the province of New Bruns- wick, and cognate matters. 'In elaborating the subject several strikingly in- teresting statements are made. One of these is that Niagara Falls is capable of furnishing 1,800,000 elec- trical horse powcr; another is a statement by the f-‘ucl Administration of the United States as follows: “Every _year the miners g0 in_to the ground and dig outcoal and the railroad. ships it for hundreds of miles, dragging back the empty cars until the amount mined is two and a quarter times the earth 21ml rock removed in digging the Panama Canal. It took sixteen years to dig the Panama Canal. The miners will dig two and"‘~aihalf Panama Canals this year; ‘ . In this connection it may be mentioned that Ca- nada imports from the United States, every year on an average, 22,500,000 net tons of coal out of a year- ly consumption of 34,800,000 tons. The power available from Niagara Falls, of which only a fraction is being used, is only a very small fraction of all the waterpoyver available in Canada for the production of heat, light and motive ses. The drain upon our coal supply is yearly in- creasing and is being expressed not. only in‘rapidly increasing prices but in scarcity as well. Is it not time that the energy now going to waste in our‘ riv- ors, our falls, our tidal waters, were harnessed to supplement or to substitute our decreasing coal suppby? Mr, W'hite’s excellent treatise, a synopsis .of I which is impossible in the space available, shows the necessity of this conservation and the means by which it may be accomplished, and those interested in the subject would do well to send for a copy WlllCll we have no doubt the Conservation Commission at 0t tawa will supply on application. We have rivers in this province whose power is being wasted while we are contributing our share to the extravagant waste of coal. Our rivers can be s harnessed and, sooner or later, they shall be. The i subject is an intensely interesting one and what ahs already been done elsewhere is a revelation, while the future holds out promises of indefinite- develop- ment. * a A PRIMITIYE REMEDY The Patriot’s proposed remedy for the present unfortunate political situation 1s a somewhat prim- itive one. It admits that all the Llberal pre-electron promises have been broken but asks us to forget it. Those who mention these broken Liberal promises, it dubs as agitators, Bolsheviki and Bashi Bazouks. The farmer who received a solemn promise from nis Liberal candidate that his taxes would not be ll";- creased is a Bolshevik if he. complains when he finds his taxes doubled. The Patriot forgets that there are two sides to this as to almost all questions,‘ the side of the party who secured the gorvernnlent on false pretences and is playing the part of the ruthless oppressor, and the side of the injured and the deceived. It would make it very much pleasanter no doubt, for the former if the‘ latter submitted quietly and slavishly_and said nothing about the injury and the deception prac- tised upon him. But the latter has lllS rights and _1s not going to be lightly pushed aslde as a Bolsheyrl-z or an agitator. _ '= ""WV. The fact is that this province has been duped and deceived as never before in its history. The Pat- riot and the government know this and the ‘peo- ple know it.-The gruelling the Liberal government is undergoing today at the hands of those whom 1t so shamefully deceived is good, wholesome proof that our people are honest and Will not submlt tame- ly to dishonesty on the part of others. Whatever the outcome of the present agitation may be, whether resignation and another election or a modification of ‘the legislation enacted, it will stand as a _warn- ing for all time to come to all politicians that~ 1f pre- election promises are made onlyto be defiantly brok en they will have an indignant electorate. to deal with. There is indignation, ,bo1b_rt_g indignation, throughout the province and t ere 1s good cause for it, and neither the Patriot's ugly names nor its ex- planations will allay it. . y . . ANQTHER 5m l-muon ‘all’ the border. The shipment U" . cont llled 42 barrels and nine cam of whiskey, valued at about $9.000. power for railways, industries and household purpo; IPRDUERLCTON. July 2S.-One o! the largest liquor seizures In this province has been made by Liquor Sub-inspector Dalgle st Bu" Luke, Madawsska county, on Thursday eveninl- \ Actlnp upon a "tip", Sub-Inspec- tor Dingle seized a carlosd oi ilq- The shipment will arrive here next week and will be stored In the departmental buildings. ‘ The Cbler inspector stated that on Tuesday evening inspectors Delnmings and Never; had raided "several of the houses along the her der lines and secured quantities of The mum u roman euuf atleastitiasavlagaletetusnse things. la the laagifif immortal Samantha. . p would say that lte-"njigq. 0R Frldlrdk column! with ma! um wasn't. ’ clean NOD10 tmreulf- And-rite mwrflulrv earl usly Mme: was ecueelyio he pocted from an old time lecturer 0h Murlllllstie otllim. lt jeeme to have’ forgotten lta boyhood teaching that "slicks and stones will break the bones. but‘ names will never hurt." and indulges lg the pastime ad nasueuum. Just look at» its choice vocabulary, "Midsummer Madness," ' "slush," “monster? “mask is torn from its face," “Bolshevlsm,” "howled." "howls." ‘lflashl-balouk," "hate- . fulnecsfj’ “rages and epues." "ve- nom." "guerilla," “spoilt disorder iy," "brlgund" and "hrlgandry," and "a jackass lu lion's skin." Who ever read such adjectives, in poetry or fiction. And all this in .1 single issue of an insignificant little daily. . O That ltfanger is not feigned is ‘evidenced in the wandering range and incoherence of its ramblings. Before one subject ls disposed of it jumps to another, and then leav- ing this unfinished it Jumbles off something entirely foreign to either. It is lunar control, or "Midsummer- Madness," in very essence. And why does the Li!» eral rage and the Patriot imagine “Clln things? Simply because we havecompelled it to swallow its own medicine, and because the people are making elaborate pre- parations for a state funeral, with the Bell Government and its press apologist laid out upon their dwn ‘bier. it says that: "Comparisons aro odious" when its changeable wzhaructcr, from bombnst and honstfuiness to abject terror and fear, is likened unto the noted Jack Ketch, and they surely must be when the similltude ls so true to life. ’ Its appetite for slander ls so keen that the home supply ls lrv- sufflclent, and it must libel and misrepresent the character-pot the poordliasblbasouk, the volunteer clement of the Turkish army who are no louder of "bakshish" than the raiders of our Provincial Trea- sury, and certainly not as coward» ly in their warfare as the Patriot and its Government devotees, There is not u llnc in the Liberal organs editorial, "Again With Us." that is not infinitely more appli- cable to its own political aggrega- tion than .lt is to the Turkish sol- dier. There ls however an ele- ment of safety in slanderiug at such 1011s reuse: he is nor, likely to hit hack. When "Cain complained of the llflfdsllllls oi’ his sentence he was told that "sin lleth at the door." li’ it were not for this consequent result. the Patriot and its Govern~ meat would not be in their present throes of tribulation. lt is not because the? tlld "exactly what X00000 Duly Selections Guardian Readers ’ - I "'""'"'"§ BY W. B. loosen. , fiOO-OO-OOOb-Oi4-QO-bbfiOweeea THE FLOWERS OF MEMORY l love a Garden, flowers Whoreln to pass u span of per. ' fumed hours, As for the thought that allwa-ys comes to me That ‘tls a treasure-house of mom- ory. The scent of rose that summons back some day 0f loveliness in times long passed not so much for‘ away; {l b" u! "Illlnonotte that brings to mind Some reminiscence o; a Joyous n r M runny with its rouglsh face in. vests My heart with dreams of chI'.1- hood's merry jests; ' The viotiet brings hick rare yum,“ l o Glad Guys of old that tcemed with Youth and love; All‘! 9'91’? lily acts my soul astlr Willi ‘lhfillllhts of friends of regal cheract r l-vus passed sway. hut cherished still, and rlcur _ As In the vanished days of Yes. " Jv-rvmr, My life is one long, daily, hour- l!’ record oi t-nswercd plllyrl. but‘ Physical health,“ for ‘mental over- Ilflllu. for , guidance given mar- vellously, for errors and dangers averted. for enmity to the Gospgl subdurrl,_for food provided at the exact hour needed, for everything the/t xoes to mike up life and my poor service, l can testify with a full and often wonder-stricken awe that l believe God answers prayer. I have Plkived during long decades while lions, as far as moms holp sod presence are concernrrl, that portion or their; pro-election pro- ‘lrumme. some it their mistakes mlxht have been overlooked and Ynoarluued. But they persist- cutly see flagrantly‘ sinned his ‘WQIJIIIIIIQ which came within their touch. the deceived people could stand it no longer. and they de- mand that the trust. handed a year m. to Hon. Ir. Bell and bla col- leagues. which they have ‘o gross- ly violated, be returned to them again. I I lt looks as if Mr. A. E. McLean is a victim of the look-both-weys disease. lie is probably not sorry for what‘ be said st the M-t. Carmel meeting, for lt was staged to ‘please the audience, and tliero is a federal nomination in prospec- tive. 'But’he does appear a trifle sorry that his remarks have ap- pearcd lu pTlut, to bo-read by the whole public. and by his“ party leaders lu particular, and so he must try and straighten out the tangle. His letter in the Patriot however does not in the least alter the situation, or make it any bet- ter for either himself or tho Gov- ernment. He makes no deniul of the report of the meeting in sub~ stance, but tries by explanation, oi! some of its harshness. It is a difficult gnu/tier to play to two galleries at once. end we. might suggest to Mr. McLean that his outspoken candor at the public meeting ls the safest of the two reeds for him to hung to. U O O Premier Bell and l-lon. W. M. Len, Commissioner of Agriculture, both represent the Bcdeque Dis- trict. Already their constituents have culled on them to resign, and petitions are now in circulation through the district, asking lils Honor the Lieutenant Governor to dissolve the legislature. Pettlfog- glng politicians, who have no re- gard for the decencies or proprie- lles o’! public life, and interested only in what they can pull out of lt, have been found who would lgr nore this altitude of an electorate. but no One claiming u status of stntesmunship, and cognizant of his responsibility to the people. would hesitate e moment to corn~ p,‘- with thelr wlshem. The mere polltlclan._willlng to nialre himself the laughing stock and contempt of the outside world, would refuse. but will lion. Mr. Bell, occupyluE the position of one of Canada's provincial Premiers, incur the pe- nalty of such continent wide no- toriety by attempting to hold on lo a position against the request of those who elected him to his seat’! lf he does, it will be without a pa- ralell in history. O I I -The Patriot seeks to _make s point by contrasting the education- al program of the Conservatives with that adopted by the Government. It compares liberal provision which Hon. Arsenauit proposed to make, from the government," with what was provided by the bungling School Act of last session. The childish logic of one argument, or inference which they wish to draw. l ls that money paid by the district direct to the teacher IS NOT A TAX UPON THE PEOPLE, whilst money paid to them out oi the Treasury would mean increased taxes upon the people. What rot to dish out to sensible people. its next conclusion is that these great- er salaries paid out of the Kcnerul treasury to the teachers, would in- volve u heavier taxation than that imposed by the Bell Government.‘ if the Arscnault Government were to pursue the extravagant Incl-hulls adopted by the present Liberal combination, there might he some- thing in the IPBLIIDK’: contention. But that was not the Conservative platform. Their proposal was to tax only for educational purposes. sud only to the entent of 375.000- Tlrey had not tho slightest lnten tlon of taxing everything TANG- IlBLE AND INTANGIBLE to the tulle of about $400,000 for the pur~ pose of increasing their owp salar- ies aud sesslonni ludernnities, and of finding offices and employment for an increased horde of useles ' officials. There is a vast differ’; sncc between the two proposals. ' ¢Q->_____. CIRCUS CAMEL8 FIGHT‘ I TO DEATH IN CITY STREET hlllflKl-"ION. Mich. July 25.—- Bflvoral thousand women and children worn thrown lnin a Muir when two camel» fought until our was killed during the Barnes Cir- mrv street par-wir- hero. Spectator-v dashed for "afely as the‘ animal! fouxhl with hoofn and teeth. Gran’ Robertson. their leer, was thrown from one of animals 00d answers Prlyerf-Msry . ‘Siessor of (Salabur. ' a-v-i ‘~ ‘- ~ ‘ro-ull-wl with a broker is; and other luiurles. Attendant) [attacked m.» llllmlill with eiubl but were unable to stop the fight. the 0f ‘even a fair ._, and a little sophistry, to smoothe ' is ovum view _sernj»e ‘ Q. i fillnbllog putt. (Tommi-o. _a_smtumm spirits will- always "M! V!!! torllk their llvee. Never- belell.‘ It is seldom i! ever in the nubile interest fur s man to nix. on life u a "matter or eeprice. res WUHIOVH" giine mote notoriety bun remotes a rule. he is a mun vitb on over-developed ego, ‘v1.95; abnormal‘ self-confidence explains Ill llldwlly- The beet ever said for ulm ll that he is anxious to make money quickly for legitimate pur- poses, but when was lt desirable to rave» a sensational advertisement ;iven to that manner, of making money! The crowd that watched a. visitor from the ‘Old Country lash himself to pieces on tlic rocks may have got a thrill or two out of he performance. But the whole pectucle was fer from edlfylug. Shore was n “Roman holiday" at- rosphere. We have come to regard and young. The authorities of On- tario might well_1cohsider putting a stop to this gambling with Death rt Niagara Falls. . {-3- Magnanlmeus (New York Tribune) Thepreportenwas sent. out by u ertalu city editor to question a well-known amateur sportsman who was being lued for divorce. hours luior and said: "Hoes, l can't zet anything out of this fellow. He's u big whale, and when l rang the bell and- asked him how about this divorce action he just reached out and clipped me on the jaw and mocked me down. l waited around rwhile and brushed myself off, and 'ben I tried lt again. lie came out and said: "Ob, you're here again. rru you?" and he took me by the ~oliur and threw rue down o flight of stairs. So l guess there's noth- ng doing on getting anything out ‘If him, boss. I'll come right in." "No," said the city editor. "You ‘.0 back and tell that big loafer he -uu't intimidate me." Good Prospects (Calsary Albertsn.) There ls‘ good reason now to be- lieve that the crops will be good his autumn, _a\nd tlrero is every cason to believe that the prices will be excellent. it would be un- future. but these are pleasant thoughts after a couple of unfav- orable seasons. relow Niagara Falls the other day‘ -uch thing's as relzradlug, for oh] _ rho reporter eallod up/a couple ob wise to discount any such hopeful i I llllnnrd’: lrlnlrncnt for llurnu. Eta . The, reason some‘ of us do» M! make a success, of our llvi a ll that we don't worlrae much with ourheaduuwedowithourh ds- ed There bu been prevalent a nest mistake concerning work. Wehsye sometimes thought that it was 0f the two distinct varieties. audhave scorned the one while ltrlvlnl for the purer-provided we~had in seek e ey ‘a ' he real ‘truth n ma: all werkl e a ‘ There’: one thing’ trrremember. Def >_ . is finally struck ' fu rk deserts. is head workv-if we do it the very |' f: isn't only tgareflpnt minim We take that. ‘ best way it can be -.doue. No wonder we hgve disliked our work when we have decided‘ that lt didn't take thought or initiative or planning; that we f‘could do it with our eyes shut." ’ Some of tho results of effort to- day look as If thakwss just the way they had been done. ' Work “hated". as some of us‘ say we hate housework or sewing or shop work, or whatever happens that counts.‘ _ our comfort when the present min," utfl seems" - _ h by bornew-‘iflillftiggigp n fully brink add _ strength; burdens. ahirked hriu only weakness ol- character- and dig. content. .' l _ _ A Queer. lsnft 'it,‘iI6w meuy timer . _ we seem not tfeliijdwhether we g ‘gain strength pr weakness in our-T. (_ modernist. - < N» THE vague for Knitted Cont: ha: been ‘maintained. by producing something diflzrrnf each season ‘um! by 0-‘ feeling the making of there coal: so that fheyireluin f air rmurlnu: and give excellmf zuear. The noon: “Ballonfync” an a Knitted Coat i: a guarantee of its high qualify, and on woman who examinzr the new models weer: schooling _ find an irresistible charm in their doinhnerszfhsir ascrnahng color: and their chic design. W: an shoumrg d n: rumrl- nmrt of than coal: for this season-mew ' nssmwrs us...“ Sluice ore first Seen ‘a Balloon“? designs, new colon, but lh: some old dependable Ballonlyna quality. . ‘S. llifloDONALD? ‘.©©OC who o (so Last fall a l?’ l‘) s’ of premium. \ 0t‘) Wind Storms Are Becoming a ‘More Severe . of recent years in Eastern Canada. ‘ ' , , great man t‘ b d1 d i ' "‘"“"" ' Prince Edward Island. y prove?’ [es were" a y amaged m ' ». As many people know, ‘a Fire Policy does not coverdamv. s... l age from Windstorm, but this risk can be covered under a se- parate Windstorm or Tornado Policy, at an exceedingly low rate or School is blown ofi’ now-a-days amount to make the necessary repairs. Why not protect yourself against such floss? A We will gladly furnish rates and particulars on request. Hyndnlan & Co. Ltd. The Oldest Insurance Agent-y" in. lonabie men's Oxfords, and Boole. mnashlp sud up-to-dnte int. s F For this week only we will silow big discounts on all this S We will also ply the in, ©©@©@©@@© rut o. ‘ ' @'@ c .. When the roof of a House, Barn, Store_ Factory, Church.» , 1t costs a yery considerable 1 . l orrhrrnorjrrrrowx li.1~:.I., ' an‘. _w-s =$~==f_*"i n- . R ofsgotl i; A . J llflllfiit up-tu-dule high gradc and. falh~f We also offer the ladies our best Pump and Oxfords 812.75 and ‘$12.00 for $11.00 and 810.00. Ladies, please examine our $5.50 patent, hig-h heel. white welt Pun p, good quality _ Nothllll like it for the price. _ Iult rsaelvedr-Petept l-eya lei ties, the last word iu- Indies‘ Elegant Footwear Headquarters for lloleprooif a GOFF. BROS.” if i of leather and work- . P-k ‘Mr ‘in; w ws- N- wg," V” ,,,.