glib, is Mr. Meighen’s sin. No greatencompliment - National "Pojlicy which has made Canada rich? A be-"iiepresented-ih the Canadian cabinet by a respon- -Wél§ht and without influence in parliament. Thel f0" piciientatioii. for a . . i... luv-i. ‘ ' r v rm. and‘ i PR f * 1 : iEIGfiEXTIFJ‘ The lfQmI68S,'_0r'rfltll¢l‘ that portion of it ‘fl-IS no .e eavorlng to, derive some strength ‘ . limb scattered groups as may be induced’ to win their lot with it, 1h discovered a new ‘ , v erhhjpjglien. He isa Tory,'tliey e. , AHalifaa; Lihpral organ of this stripe, res,‘ ferring to the Premier's speec at Truro _-a few _ago,’says--and“the Patriot jubilantly re- ec ges it-thatithe Premier “in the course of his or»- h revam» ed the very essence of good old Tory allllfrifle. dé Wering a series of "arguments which ‘quid have sounded perfectly natural from the £041 h of Sir John A. MacDonald or Sir John Thomp- ‘ This, to this particular group of so-called Li- _ be paid the HonorableArthnr Meighen than to flagéthat he delivered a speech worthy of Sir John A. Donald. '_ What would Canada have been today Without the National Policy of which Sir J ohniwas thefather, the policy which the Liberals at succes- sive elections denounced and at successive sessions leftlseverely alone? .W,here would our Canadian in- dtlstries have beenwithont the- fostering care of the I The argument that Premier Meighen’s policy is founded upon and is part and parcel of that of Sir J91!" A} Mfl¢D0n&ldg,_wi-ll not, we imagine, make In _ enemies among-the electors of Colchester, w e it is supposed to do duty at present. What the pe le of that constituency are chiefly concerned wi at present iswhether it will pay them better to sible minister or by one of a small group without opposition to AMcCurdyin Colchester is factions and opposition the McCurdy in Colchester is factions and mischievous and those who are promoting it are no friends of Colchester or of the farmers whose sup- port they are n0w_ pleading for. The constituency no doubt realizes this and we have no doubt will act upon their owncommonsense one election dav. They ‘haye everything to=gain byvthe election of Mr. Mc- Curdy and absolutely nothing t0 gain by the election ofyhis opponent. * . . /‘\ ‘i125? v FARMERS‘ ORGANIZATIONS v 1 3 . Lil-iii 1' >7 "‘ ‘ nail, of tho‘ noblnaonibsiidlagl , on cljw» have»: uai .'. nésnjisvaislof isms and another whsrslnita lalatorfy recorded and U‘ Whom in ltn epitaph to be writ- tan._0ns by one the foundations the pint, ,nrs being removed uif-p live pl to grander structurns. the" prlus nd glory of thsprsssnt upd tbsfuturn. What does tbs pso- tils of today know of the Chnrlotts 10711-01‘ the Province of seventy ol- a hundnd yearn ago. The rorsat lands ths long cahili,‘ tbs wayside inna or the stage oonchsa of pra railway days. The buildings of. nnnu forged nsin/ hand nlinaa wood, and hand inortiaed sashes. which when constructed were look ed upon antrlumplis of genius and of a slas and proportion to inset the requirements of indefinite years l0 come. Yet they are melting away” Unwept nnhonoured »(in histolry) and unblung." v We once had ‘ill Historical and Antiquarian Society in Charlotte- town. It too seems to have follow- ed these landmarks into silent history. Where are its records. whatever they may be of local history? The island has had an intensely interesting past. with rrialiy exciting experiences the air-mow. of whit-his lost and for» gotten. Interest is being revived in anotter of preaervillglthe records of current events.‘ lllotflong ago the Dominion Archivist read a paper before the Educational’ smote at Fredericton, N.B. iirmfyihlch he pointed out how far that provlncx was behind other places, notably Novu Scotia in the preservation of records and traditions in which they were without a sliigle county or town history. ln Nova Sculls nearly every town and country has its records o! past and current events and its monuments to keep alive the story of notable events. Shouldjtheiie .not be some effort to chronicle important happenings of our Island home to place upon some imperishdblehiage a record of transactions and occurencen i from day’ today which will port? ray the province oi the present to the genera-lions that will follow. Amongst our sons and, duughters ‘ l‘ ‘ It is gratifying and encouraging to find that the practical side of our farmers’ organizations is bein more ‘and more emphasized. The marketing an transportation of produce. the production of ‘the most profitable crops the best methods of ‘produc- tion are the questions that are receiving the lmost sympathetic and studied attention. Now and again wehear of farmers political parties but our farmers in ‘the Maritime Provinces and especially in' Prince Edward Island, are not serously concerned over this side of the question. Group government, whether the groups consist exclusively of manufacturers, of commercial interests, of farmers, of laborers, will meet with little acceptance in a countrv whose in- terests are all intermingled and bound togetherin a common cause. No single group in this country of» ours can successfully legislate for itself and the other groups, nor can any one of them legislate for itself to the exclusion of either or all of the others. g » Where for instance would a farmer's political Hronp lead us to? Take the average farm home in Prince Edward Island as an example. There are three or four sons; two or three at least of these have taken up other callings, medicine, the law, the church, a trade, etc., etc. In the greatmaiority of cfis only one of the. sons remains on the farm. j Is h 2'5, o become a memlber of a political group whose i estsare‘ antagonistic to or out of harmony with of his; brothers? Should each of the others e himself with the group to which he belongs and ' a political partv? The one would be as reason- able as the other. Group government would lead us nowhere hilt to anarchy and lawlessness, . ~ » In an agricultural country like ours, where. ag- riculture feeds each of ourother callings; where each of the others is necessary to the development (if-agriculture; where no single calling can stand Without the co-operation of the others, the group system lwould simply be suicidal. Our farmers are the Hreat majority; they should be the majority. in our legislatures, not to the exclusion of the others orgeven to dominate them but to insist upon ‘the rights of agriculture. e...‘ To seek to array country against city and city ‘ ‘nstviountry in a political sense is the work of u . ' ‘daily politician. The majoritv ofthose living in| shines are of_ rliral descent. Where else can. they gdjiut to the cities, since the average far-m cannot uhport in comforts vigorous, grown up family? The" causeof the country is the cause of the citv and yiqe yersa; ‘the one cannot prosper without the yqrfliwhatisineeded is to keep the balance true. ' . ween both by intelligent, honest and capable re- school. REOPENING Title (liiv schools re-open on Wednesday next - ,t,_ g children who have been rusticating "m. ‘ lug-back all sunburned, refreshediand ready for Bovsand girls, you ‘have-had arirlorioua ho- $110 ' appiest of your l m, for the last holiday ways t e best. ' Now for work, crown the holiday there have been distinguished men and women, those who have taken prominence in our development |and many -who have distln uished themselves ill other lan s, but their biographies are unwritten and their en-ploita unrecorded. Our re~‘ [cords of the French occupation and those who figured in the trans ‘fer to British possession the deeds of vulor and the" enposurhs lo hard- ships in those earlier days are lmost incomplete_ and not available in printed form. The legends of ‘hidden wealth and Bhostly appear 311995 m-Q unwritten and unpre- sel-vod. Some mounds of clary and lexcevated hollows point out lhs crude fortifications of those days pbilt they are not marked by monu- nient and ars being leveled by time ‘Our pas-t is rich in suggestion and we can not afford to ignore our -trnditi0nil. But who wlll move in the ‘matter? l l In connection with the vocational training school a kindergarten is urgently needed. wherein press gslinpletons, who in the worries d ‘Ivsxations okpublic office hav wandered from, their iarlier con- ' W» - . I atasasaa-askan} ..,¢ Daily Selections '. .- flliarlliall Rtadlers . Furnished by W. I. Loilssn. 400-696000000-00-0044000“ MIOTAKES m DAILY Llvmo (Prov. 27:27-34). “l-lavs you had a kindness shown‘! Pass it on. ‘Twas not meant for thee alone, Pass‘ it on. ‘ Lei it travehdmvn the yearn bet it dry mother's tears, Till in, heaven the dliezl appears. this: it ou." i -A fitting parody has been arrang- ed thull:-— "Have ycu heard a bltof gossip?‘ Pass‘ i; on. ' Twas not meant for thee alons iPaas it on. Let irtrnvsl down the years, Blinding. many eyemwllh trurs Till in hell the tale appears. Pans it on." ‘ ~' lesson. _ , ll you took a card and kept your. record on ‘gossip each day for a week it would keepyou from na- lfeihling yourself when‘ the Holy Splrlt spoke to you of gossip. Now the l-foly Spirit la truepand calla our attention to such mistake In 'daily living. The Holy Spirit wants the lira-n: Christ to i» madejllnnie‘ feat within us and bin corrsotiolih are ‘to discourage as with all folb effort. l0 that we will let ins lawful do the produclngof this Christ-life hoard. Doss your record IIIOI‘. constant fnilunf Then look a1 Ilia rseonl, perfect in ability to keep you from falllnl. Than why, lfjlggzgggshanlaigcyand, make your work aa- 23‘. ’.‘;‘..';i"‘.t'..°'.§' Will.” "a... maker? ~ ‘ laid by our fathers the gloi-y of a the neighbouring province in the . Enough saldf Got your lgorniplf ,- .,.‘l ._.» "if ire-Mina is !" ‘thqflodllltionta ~_ , f nnedlpnftaXss upon the" the organ of fiction an imlianw inhaler: itself in the dsnasailgnnn anosJIWs told tbs fiovsrnmsnt in. homage; tint. ditloir do tllslrgsvsrwhohnlngfin as of in: other Joins- 11mm" ths-‘peoplo gwhleh they have ‘not been able magnifying power" lees in lhls an T0 PAY Taxes, niin sxtravaganv‘ from our columns,“whieh has no more relation to theaubject they lt would be a generous and per haps not unprqlgalbla act on the part of the Government to provide a short course for our evening friend if only in those simple ex~ undorsttind. A mainland journal says “Pity the sugar profiteer" and points to tlie claims ‘of the trade that the _slump in sugar prices threatens ruin with bankruptcy to a number of "large holders. The average con- sumer will not be in a pitying mood. The idea will be rather one of rejoicing that such thieving sharks, ‘who ‘have ‘sought, YiTIUIlQQ themselves upon the life‘ blood of the people, are shorn of ‘their pow- ers for further rohbeny. The one hope will wedominate that when these get their discharge from the courts-of insolvent: , that they will not have sufficient -of fund-s left to gamble even. in empty sugar liar rels much less. in thsbtugal- so ltldJspensa-ble especially .to the poor. With the full knowledge that Qlie sugar supply was ample for every requirement lhens trade par- asites fastened themselves upon the fountains of nupplyvcor’ Brink and tying up every large lo they could grasp with’ their tentacles. holding it up until prices were jacked up to three or four time! the actual value. And now that the bubble isbllrsling they are whining to setups the punishment they so richly deserve‘; an: lehthem Bet it to the full, so dli-mnable an of~ fense cannot be too severely B!" plated. - But all ‘sugar holders are not sharks. Unfortunately thousands of wholesalers and relflilflffl- ca"? ing- only a sufficiency to melt ne- cessary current trade. req“"°m°li.lil will be hind» to unluw-v ._wiier~ They were obliired t‘) bu‘! 8i 41195" high prices and carry a necessary amount of stock to tvlllllllflhmf rcgu-lar trade, and in .a few. Page’. under the proliteers threats of fur-I m,‘- m-un udvonceiu a somewhat larger stock than usuulhfilld "P95 which they will new its forced l“ nits severe loss. Yet the 111M" do not always discriminate as the! should between. the" ' hwmmll" traders _and the nnirim banal"- There are too many pfirchascriinéo a parcel of sugar Over the 00“ _ who blame, and honestly believe. the grocergals-beln! ‘Wlwllfllble 5°’ fths hllh price- ?‘ - M- . . ‘>1 it is scoundrels of this time W" bring. leglQlnlle...|P9€Qll5“°" “ml honest lnvestlrientinvo unmet ills repute. There la§a vast difference between the speculator Wrchalillm such articles as, butler cheew» surphls and ‘pleu[¥, and holding lion. and the ‘ unliritlcilvleii who buYIJIO .1". l"? F" _ hang‘; “you .0!’ lwrrow money 3°. w, 710]‘, in the trme of nlwflm" IIOIICHY .for the sole DBPW" 0i .hointinS:l>l‘|°,°B up w "mm" “'1' .urea_ If; enrich themselves b)’ ‘hi? system of airway. upon i" aimsmli‘ in; public. Trade aviation" "e today the aubiBfl 0i 5'9"" ‘may than ever ‘boforefiu the hlllflfr 0i ‘Oflnfldfl. ln a 95°F‘ ‘lmfll l“: b3 n national election l?“ “n “ should learhtn diaclinlnnte between right and 11'0"!» °" l°‘?‘l"““‘ "m" QIJGAR? Kmbler y his mrllwll.‘ Aug. ‘Hr-u. l°'""' inept expnrnon the nasal-rims “(m says that while susfli’ PH?" nlie tumbling in the United State!- .e.flld'llll wholesalers, ljolrbera an. sonar. maintain their united from to the sflectflhat it isn't golnl down in Calida. ifs prophesies that "u, '1" b; jfoflflfl ten cents ‘a pound in the not lilnant future. i Theprerenl situation in Canada is that sugar lafaelllrlg on all aver pen‘ of twcnlywtlx cents n pouifd, rstall, i ' _ fAny-iman who thlrlka that )0 can "71" Vkpdp hound, honor than lila wlfaia ' I foolish it pa _svaa Iaafinaa it legal =iansa that they wars collact- ,- ithioh wire not assessed and tlll- I fiollsotabls, which we flilgliorted by. ; oitatlon of the law and the facts - .~ jto refute. The double sighted ro_-_» ~ ' niincer of the Patriot with 8am‘) Wailers microscope of Ahextm - ‘ADVICE T0 THE PEOPLE NOT . , lydevotes its specs to quotations ~ discuss than chalk has to cheese. . pressions‘ which even our childilen _ meats fish ail/leak! "l “mm” “l ' ,1,” gm- iils‘ legitimate profits glv 5i m in thlfperlodi of non-produc- t" Maturity "My 11st,. Ill) enlca-awaignpar), spat. ‘t. Yield whips: cant. H -=.|. c. uacxl g .. 1. -. f, . > NTOOIQGO. l-lallfax, Inlllsmbara; Montreal Stock ‘ ‘itnhangs J. Rowland Paton Oorraapsnhont for Prince .. Edward ‘Inland ’ , 180 Great Gaorgs Stress ' f-afnttatbwn 1 l: i 9000000 5 V» TH_E_J’_U,[\_KI8H worqau ,San Franolaco Arqonaut. -;' The Turkish‘ woman is being emancipated. Almost any man- may now look upon her. face and live. She still wear the yashuiak. she wears her appendix, an a. sort of record of obsolete Junctions. She throws it back and exposes her countenance. And a very pleasing countenance it often is_ Theo-e has always been 'n 500'! deal of humbug about the yashmalr anyway_ Mohammedan law says {lint llle face o fihe woman must he covered, but lt does not say what wlth_ It does not prescribe the opacity of the veil, and some ~ lln and nearly" all transparent. as was notjdble to afford the finer‘ uhaterlalspnnd with them the yash- could see nothing of the face and werejet to speculate as to its "fleauty. Elderly women and wo- flpf to favor- they-denser materials " d to hope for lrfovorable guess ' _the actual beauties were noi easworlr. Even the changes of jgpression could be through the yashmak. "it is the wor that has done the miracle. The Turkish women had to do the work of the men, and fliers were monyylrlndd of work at could not be done while wear- g the yaahmnk, Turkish opinion i-ongly disapproved . of +lzklwnlvlhlhfi telephone exchange, their own.handa_' lTliey needed Q18 money for one thing, so they shrew-sway the yashmak and went lp work, Qther Turkish womeh who liadto ‘work, in the fields gouud their lgborYunbearahle if this)’ retained the yashmak. no they discarded lt_ ‘The religious au- oned, but it ruade ho difference. Qgalnst-the dictates of convention. ft was observedoalso that the Tur- drawvlng fhemlurtains that were in- ilc gaze. A crlohokql! mun f (Londonlllhrua) ‘ . prescribing. o-chaliis of acsns, ‘a ihangs of dist, or a change of cii~ lists. ‘Pliny know that ths human aya- tlem psriodtcallyrequlrea it. ' _ ., It i_a nathar.a,pltyy_ that they do phage of mind; bind‘ ssaiawhsi-a on ‘routs T, If ti!!! would try a chant? 01 hut“ pnjlldklsl and idsaa,_tha|7 fould lis astonished at lbs rsaultj m place-lira; inlalu even. find . ,1 their-neighbors were quite do- isht folk. and that romances still ' 1's in ordinary llfs. d], l-q alwdys tbs llver- that w» w»; rr- s h eh llltarnrymilanljolairnav that‘ ‘llllfldflhlfllllf of insomnia I7 ' I ' ,6! hil OIIIUIIJ‘ '1 _v - -.-,~ .{ » o_ I i Others’ ‘View. Points; I but she wears it very‘ much an pLthe veils wereiof the. finest mus- . ‘glass. "Womeirof the poorer class ". '- ‘Qak Mas-lotion"; real veil. ,You ‘ Nov 1-1.’; " f. ipsn who were not beautiful wars . Qnposed to leavp llnylhrng at all to ~ women - , I '* Willy even in America there have _ been cases of feminine rebellion - ‘~ tended- to hide them Irena-Pills nuh- " l Phmolmgara, la- the ..ltab.lt of ." jun minis freaudntlil Mvlli _l' ‘i Plwplb ‘airs ‘dialling ruidlyabousf fa ill directions-do lbs Highland)‘ , _ i-‘to,tla_s‘(!optlnent—ln a duped-l; so attempt to lsavs boredom bs= _ i.» Thoyi seldom succeed. ' , , ‘ ' ' ' ‘hind. slluiinsllng a lot v'of worli- I‘ filo worliliwonld appear a differ-V ‘ ' nii.o s.illo1i c in ‘l-.. r ,. \ u». " .,Mother beams a smile of contentment asshe . sends, A lileiyilii i5. boys off to school, knowing they are comfortably and becoming! ly dressed. ‘She also knows that her boys like. their ‘new-Clothes- because they fit both their person and personality. They're real BoysWQlpthes because they coine from a real Boys’ Store, ,1 it tlwiiiw Weill. .0l¢ihitr... i-‘ " Hats, Furnishings‘- ‘ l"':‘”l”"*" lilil. ‘Boys Sample Suits, sizes 6 tot years, t About 25 Patterns iii lllenlog Special lyllili_l_liey,lapst,j$lli_l.llil 20o itnrlrigixil tlooi)’ novssnirs THAT ltibxir ofiiifvl‘ A FORTUNE,'AND PLEASE BOTH ‘Pl-IE nor Alvin, llis,,__,.,_ , Mirrirriil, 'l‘l__-lEl’ COME IN Au. THE L=\'l‘l*lS'l‘ Pnjifrljrilljpi hurl-thrills AND ‘srrhiiai, I-ipl. FACT THERE is A snnivi. 0F THE COMPLETE OUTPUT on oivfion THE LEADING‘ MANUFACTURERS OF BOYS AND_ YOUTHS’ COME IN AND LOOK THEM .0VER AND TAKE‘ ‘l --i,r.' YCILOTIIINTW YOUR CHOICE OF ANY SUIT IX THE LOT FOR $10.00. FIT BOYS FROM a6 TO 16 YEARS. ' ' " '“"~‘-We have others as ifear “Boy-proof” as possible and they ~will stand all the hard knocks and scrapes that a red-blooded [boy is aptto give them. Sizes 6 to 18. $12. $13.50. $15. $18. 1e20, $22 mill $24.00. ' A scar-tau. Kluuilla BY one? FlIOMOWN ouN '2;in.i_i.ni'nuni', oulyhgiusuit 25- mtuled byJa-Ihut ‘from his 0W" rpm in the bush on theQIIBbPC; side of Lake ‘Temiekemlns. ~whll° on a rulnaliliiyiih QP- Meir?“ j ‘~'.~:~:;»-i-.': - discerned ' ' lit the wvornen tooirthe matter in? ' " thorities rembnetrated and threat- '. s ‘liish WOMGQWBHLBHOWHIQ laxity ' in other respectsnhThey rode frse- . 1 ly in public conveyances and they were‘ not .5" "caréfliflis 0f] _ “iii ' Al 4 l: . , .l:> ‘ . HoleproofCol n‘) r .t. y. x . also... bel _ bo needs except “Fill "' N. ‘L I f fhirh ‘asfiIiI Pattern-f, k501i .1191 Liaise-i 8w Belllhe body nr "Jim McMillan, well known drlllerof the North Country, was brought here lust night. Dr. Bell-hull become lost in the woods and fired a_shot to attract his com- plinlolfs. attention. in" reply he heard another shot and n few mlnu tea later was horrified to find Mc- Millan sitting on ll log, quite dead. ’l‘liefphot had entered his right side‘ G) (i) Q suits. NEW STYLES . NEW MATERIALS Come - here. f i (it ' pair and 7 ~ \ Q68. Q;‘gv-' ,-.:,k,\..-‘. l. 1 and g get‘ your boy , " silica Suit up to'$20.00 f dyblack’ holsegextra strong, made f Scipair. _' ' » inn PAl-“NS I-IMITEDP i and lliid penetrated his heart. The ,,. accident happened on Monday but "‘ Dr. Bell was compelled to wliltwlgh ,5, his dead companion until Tuesday -‘" McMillan wlia a native of Naval _Sc0tia. 38 years of age siidyresldsli i with his mother at Norlb Cobalt!" “nil llluilililsllial" - -l New shipment of school ‘boys f} . . . m" ' y.‘ in 2 ll ‘ wraps uni-i‘ -‘. a -o.a lulu‘ . fitted l lSiu{d.y , Wgeaiiplig, " School boysfst‘ r l t. '- yoiviril-Aboyito iisfor his newohap; We can ‘suit! Iitlilyflil ail-to price: Boys shirts, boys’ ' Z bovsieioilarséfina lit-complete iinefofeverlltliirifiiai‘ . c: . 7th‘). tau .