v- l — paw-cu»... c § " “i (IATUIDAY 1o A. u.) ‘airline row: m. liuicii ilESlilTji 1 res days after you start takin! olphonol. the famous nerve and , I n remedy, you will commence to 0t! a difference. Life will seem ter, you will be more confident. will notice a vigor that has been nt for years. you will have anger will power. Phospbonol de- - I roys the powers that would destroy . ur youth. Price. $3 a box. at ali . gists‘ u!‘ if not obtainable direct m The Scobell Drug Co.. Ltd., 91 flruggists of lf not obtainable direct g For Sale by E. A. Foster and Victor Ooyla. 5 i-ASfililN vBayer" is only Genuine ‘ t“. k Es % . Warning! Unless you see 111B name "Bayer" on packaze 0r 011 tablets you are not getting genu- ine Aspirin at all. 1n every Bayer package are directions for Colds. Headache, Neuralgia. Rheumatism. Eamche. Toothache, Lumbago, and for pain. Hand tin boxes of twelve tablet cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Made in Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered), of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidest- er of Salicyllcacid. fiance 620th‘ fiutei TORQNTO 1 12.5’ Elgaangf lhlgllill 25° ROOMS ‘I00 with Pnvsts Baths BURDPE/LV PLAN I. WINNETT THOMPSON. can utral LADIES’ i ‘ NOVELTY Another Assortment 0f Classy Styles Just in. See Our Window Alley & Co- Ltd. NOTICE T0 ADVERTISERS iThe cooperation of adver- Utiing patrons is requested in the direction of getting "copy" into the business or- iiclrbefore twelve noon on the day previous to publication. (Saturday 10 a. m.) Very of- ten the receipt of a large ad- vertisement or even regular changes after that hour serves to dlslooate the regu- lar work of getting the paper made up in time to catch the mails-and not infrequently Inch sds are at the last mo- ment left out. This situation is not of ser- vice to either the advertiser or our readers and we, there- fore, request that coll? be ‘waived in the business of- ‘ be NOT LATER THAN 12 NOON ' 4-0-00-64-09-946-0 e040 OGQ-NO4OO THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN illlZ llllARlllTTt-TUWN GUARDIAN 5|: Charles Dsltel. President. D. advance 05.00 In us: t K. Currie, Associate Editor. _ (lellwlol) u 110s!!!‘ Dally (YIIIIQ: 1.1881) 8J0 hnlc YQIL. J. ll. nus-lets! Editor and Publishers adv-aloe Ill 312$ [OILS-A- TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1921 GERMANWS CASE I Now that Germany has accepted the ultimatum tendered as a i115! resort by tho Allied Government! it will be interesting to note the effect of thc terms “P011 Germany herself and upon other countries. those oi the Allies included. with Wllltll she is to compete in the industrial and commercial worn. The terms are ‘briefly. that Ger many is to-pziy annually in cash the sum of four hundred and elgh-l ty-seven million dollars to thp A";- H011 governments and in ad‘ dition a tii-i-nty-fivs rrr cent tax on all her exports. These payments are to continue until she has paid in all the sum of 533.750.000.000. The terms arc adinittcrlLv stil- be little iiymrathr The terms she but there will with Germany. imposed upon France when that country was at her mercy wiilnnz be forgotten. nor will it be forgot- ten that she attempted to place the world under her fcet as she is today. in a measure at least, under the feet of those whom she arrogantly attempted to crush. She will receive no sympathy. The only question is, what effect‘ the “Z5 per cent export tax will have upon German industry. “Cun sliiz-‘coni- pete with her European neighbors witii this handicap upon her. l The Germans people. They had. previous to tho are a shrewd war. practically dominated thc in dustrial trade of the ivorlti. Under a "25 per cent handicap thc prs.‘ liability‘ is that she will not, for many years at least, be a compet- itor wiih her European neighbors in the world markets. On the oth- er hand she will restrict hcr in- (lustries very largely to interns‘ ileveiopmcnt. She will exit"?! "*5 former enemies Ollt 0f lhflli‘ 25 P" cont export tax. Her attention will be (lircctcti towards home building. towards developing hcr own resour- cos. towards ‘becoming internally strong. And she has room 01101180 and population enough for such dc- vciopmcnt. Eventually she will 01'1- tico the capitalists of other suit- ions to share in her industries and she will become a self-com- tuincd and self-sustaining count- ry. By the time her full debt of llllflff-HIFEC and three quarter m."- lions is paid off she will. bccauso of this protective expo" m"? 110 sufficiently wealthy and internally developed to again dominate. more silcccssfully than ever, the world's industrial trade. RURAL INSTRUCTION (For many years this island cn- joyed the distinction of having an Educational system second to 110110 in Canada. Our country schools, were. with very few exceptions, suo cessfully conducted and there were few indeed. if any that did 110i contribute their quota of men and women to the ranks of the learned professions. Unfortunately. howev lthe services to little as possible and so do her‘ er, the successful the school was the worse it was for the community. The and women thus educated W810 obliged to seek elsewhere for 4 living and for the practice of their profession. instead of helping to build up the country that educated them they went abroad to build up other countries. and to lhfl cre- more _\'011ng men dit of our little province we have sent abroad more educated men and women in pr0p0fl1011 l0 0111' population than any other province in Canada. Tho aim 0f.0111‘ educational sys- tem is not to train mcn and worn- the boy cn for usefulness elsewhere; country that educates a or girl has the first claim upon be rendered by that education. and licre it was that our educational system fell short in some respects at least. We educate very many of our best young men and women away from their native province, away from tiiefarm, away from the calling upon which we depend for our liv- lng. ln recent years we have ‘been making spasmodic efforts to coi- rect this error of our past. We have been trying to educate the boys and girls to the farm. This process is also liable to miscarry. it. would be. a serious mistake to attempt to train iboys {and girls in that laying the farming during the itluio should be devoted to foilndations for a general educat- ion. tiie kind of education that all mcn and women require in what- ever calling they may adopt. Ou- aim must be to give them sucll a groundwork in the public school as will fit them for any callingl To force their inclinations towards farming or any other tmde or pro’- fcssion would be to place :1 handi- cap upon them from which they would never recover. Every trade and every profession is full of failures and misfits because thcir choice was made for them. not by them. in a purely agricultural country like ours much can Ihc done by the prhdcnt teacher to influence the child towards the farm. The pleas- ure and profitabieness and useful- ness ol‘ farming may be dwelt up- on to tho advantage and the guid- ance of the ambitious boy or girl. The independent life of thc far- mcr as contrasted with the do» pendent and uncertain ilfc in the city may be-profitably pointed out and the contrast will appeal ‘he dliilil. (The; essential matter is to give the child a generous educational foundation upon which to build a life of intelligence and use fulness and, in such a country as ours there is no calling in which intelligence and usefulness can be more comfortably cultivated than in farming. This idea kept contin- uously ibefore the pupils will do more towards turning them to the farm than all the homliles that can be preached to them on the grow-lug of crops and the feeding of stock. to About the scarccst commodity to -bc found in the areas of the rampant lllberaiism of today is that rare article (zonsistsncy- While itheir practical leader, Mr. W. S. Fielding. is moving an am- endment to Sir Henry Draytonks motion for supply. calling for im- mediate tariff revision. the Liberal press outside are howling blue murder over what they claim to be an unauthorized interference with rthe tariff in ithe few matters already dealt with under the ne-‘ cosslty of carrying out our treaty obligations with other countries. - Last Thursday's ‘Patriot had a two column lint. sent ‘them from Lib- eral headquarters at Ottawa of in- creased duties on certain articles which it would wish the public to believe meant increased cost of these articles to the colistnnor. 1n point of no it 1| nouiing of the lain. and aim no m usisl t1"- PW“ .- “will?!” ‘ Current Comment 0 pie purely for dishonest party pro- paganda. knows this to be thc fact. but yet they keep up the practice. The real substance of the matter is that Canada was fortunate enough to be able to ne- gotiate a special trade treaty with the West indies. which will stimulate trade Ibetween both coun- tries to the special advantage of the Dominion. By the tcmns of vthis treaty the products of both countries were to have preferential tariff treatment to that given to outside countries: the potatoes. manufactured ar- ticles and other products of Can- ada were to vbe admitted free. or at reduced rates of duties. into these profitable markets. ensur- ing to our producers the most in- estimsblo of advantages. We in return were dbligded to permit other countries, in upon similar terms into Canada. That elect might be given to the conditions of this treaty it be- came necessary to revise the ts- rlff on such articles as against many p cases countries which do not produce them but only sells at second hand, and this is what the Government. has done. 1t cannot and does not add to the cost of the article. which, coming from the indies the natural place of production. at lower duties than prior ito this treaty, must of necessity be cheap er instead of dearer as the result 0f this vastly important deal. And yet the hard~up busynbodles of the ‘Mackenzie King clan would try to exploit it untruthfully for political cifcct. Thc Toronto Globc. the father 6f Grit gyration, has dressed up one of the old time hogefs in brand new clothes and sent it out to frighten the people. 1n the sales tax it secs a gigantic ma- chine which will operate "in res- traint of trade. both domestic and foreign." ln common sense does the Globe or anyone else know of any system 0f taxation that will not have just such an cffect in pro- portion as lt is applied? is not the cost of the paper and twine around the merchant's parcel, to the extent ofits value just as much a "restraint. of trade" as any system of taxation ever yet dc- vised? Has thc Globe devised or even suggested any method by which a revenue can bc raised. outside of the Mackenzie King hot air processes, ivhich will pay the interest on our iblg war debt, or provide for the inevitable cost of carrying on the business of the country? iNeltlier ithe _ llllberal leader's wind bag utterances nor the Globe's senseless tirade could be cashed for a ten cent piece as contributory l0 this revenue. And we have ncver yelt heard. or known or (lreanied of aimetliotl of revenue ‘Tfllslilfl, PROPOSED BY A CON- SERVATIVE (lOYERN M E NT , which did not meet thc some or similar objections from this twis- ty Toronto Grit organ. But wc have noticed u directly opposite demeanor. towards ine- thods lilciitical with those intro- duced and carried out by Conser- vatives. "when later they were adopted. or stolen, BY ‘THE LIB- ERAL GOVERNMENT 1N POW- ER. We have this amply illustra- tcd in thc National Policy which from its introduction 187i! up to the accession of -thc Laurior Gov- ernment. was thc one subject of perpetual abuse and attack in its columns. but immediately. when its friends not only adopted hilt increased its severity. the (llobc becziimo its most. quiescent admi- rer. and giontcd ovcr the abundant prosperity of tiic country .undcr Daily Selections Guardian Readers Furnished by W. l. L°ulon_ KOXOIOIOIU AN IDYL 0F MAV As I was passing down Happiness Valley. l met a rare maiden called May: Lo, where she mnvcrl. what a riot of living. And tum-ult of joy,fllled the day! Her dress was of green and dande- lion yellow, ‘ller face was with giadnesa aglow. Her voice set the vale where I wandered a-ringing. With blithest of greetings"- "Helgih-O! " Pun was astir for .1 hoard his clcur Dining. Joyously pulse and deli; lWay heard it. too. trippllng light to the measure. Possessed by the magical spell. Daffodils nodded to clvcs fairy ifoot-steps. Where nymphs had troddon, vio- lets grew, Pastures were vocal wth flocks‘ happy ibleatinll. Arcadia no fairer land knew! through dingle Applelbiooms qulvercd with bees‘ busy humming. At glance of her wakening eye; And hark ‘twas the fllcker's fine lllt of laughter. Speaking his full heart out to the B Y. l caught the oriole‘s wonderful warble, With his flash of flame in the green, And Love was abroad with her joy to hallow The psradisiscsl scene. Out of it all Peace sang like an anthem. From each lifted voice and flow- er, _ And each little leaf that leaned to the breezes- "Good is the Giver. rich is His dower." Till my heart bowed low in Happi- ness Valley— Held by the rush ‘of the raptur- ous sens. ‘l-fushsd into awe by the face of oeeoss. citrus fruits. spices and $1 will: sfetincts the Rilhest, tin-tile midst of s holy throng. - ' Zxg-"Qt . A v its beneilclent influence. And so tomorrow. if. by any unfortunate accident or mistake on the part of the people, ithe Msckenlle King combination should reach the thrones of office. instead of re- pealing these laxes which the)’ now denounce. like our own right- about-face Bell Government, they would not only be retained. but in all reasonable probability largely increased. with the Globe and the- combined Liberal press shouting themselves hoarse in laudatlon and glorification of their act. Miss Pankliurst Now Becomesfl ilutlioress '1 Not long ago tlierc appeared ‘in the following advertisement: "Miss (‘hristabelPankhurst (ow- ing to the victorious termination of her leadership in the cause of “Iomelfs Political cnfranchlse- ment) seeks remunerative non- political work." Miss Pankhurst probably had many responses to the advertisement. One which it is known that she accepted was from the Weekly Despatch to write ah lstory of hcr life and of the fight for tile ballot. Several instal- ments have appeared, all of them strikingly huniorless. Miss Pank- liurst writes with great severity. and surely reveals the tempera- ment of the fanatic. She regards the struggle for the ballot as one ofthe most important events la English history. it is not likeiy that her own judgment of what she has accomplished will be con- firmed by more dispassionate ob- servers when they have the time to reckon tho effects upon English political life of the woman voter. But would the ballot have been gained had the leaders not work- ed themselves into a sort of frenzy and convinced themselves that the very fate of civilization tlcpcndcil upon their success? The Real Leader. Miss Chrlstahel was thc rcnl loader in the struggle. Hcr mother was thc pioneer of the militants, but for the two or three years bc- fore thc war she was spending s0 much of her time in prison that it was impossible for her to direct the movement. Then, when sjc was released, she was obliged to lrcst in order to recover from the effev-IB 0f her hunger strikes. Hcr (laughter was also arrested more than once, but in March, 1912, she escaped to Paris. and from there directed the efforts of her suffra- gcttes. Though Miss Pankhurst would not desire to give the iiii- prcsslon. one gathers that when tho war broke‘ out thc militants were about on their last logs. Tllcy were being imprisoned. and thc fact that gently nurtured wt.- mcn would smash windows and serve a jail term instead of pay- lhg a. fina liad ceased to be a nov- elty. The public wus wcarying of their antics. Their offces were lic- ing raided and tho Government was about to make it an offence 1'01‘ 0118 to subscribe money to [ha cause. Miss Christabcl hiid bccn chased out of the country. li ""0815 llllfll-Zetlier probable that the niilithnt movement would have been a failure had tho war not in tcrvened. Then Cams the War No one has dlsparaged thc work of the suffragettes in the struggle with Germany. Mrs. Pankhuri-it and her daughter proved as loyal to their country as they had been self-sacrificing for the cause of thc suffrage. They realized that ii Britain lost, the vote would never be theirs, nor would it matter if it were. So they urged all their sup- porters to forget the vote for the time being and turn in behind the Government. This they did, and it is for this reason that thcy have the franchise todliy. it wns not their peace-time arguments Ol their peace-time strategy that, won the vote. it was the fact that. they Proved loyal and helpful in the war, and the general knowledge that without the women, the war could never have ‘been won. w...‘ men were given the vote as a re- ward. Mlen. we suppose would hardly consider the IbOOfl ndequaw The Pankhursts, however, are pm oi’ that opinion. To them nothing is of real importance in political affairs except the right n1 woman to cast a ballot. Not Prof Iteers. In one of her articles in the De- spatch. Miss Pankhurst pauses to a Pacific cinder track. A‘ Callflyr. nia youth. still under age, smashes four world's running records in one afternoon. of s. second from Don Li-pplucntfs Cflflg for the 100 metres, n mark ,tlll‘f)llKll uii-inr, an lllVClChill‘ smok- He clipped a fifth ~ ed as a world-mark l7 YPMS 1180 by Archie Hahn; bysin equally fleeting space he lessened thc time for the 300 yards which had stood for a full quarter of a century since Bernie Wcfers covered the distance in 30 3-5 seconds, and he took a full two seconds i'roiii the record for 300 metres made by a French runner in 1908 and a Hun- garian in 1913.‘ And on tlic way the marvelous sprinter from the far coast equalled thc time Ior the 100 yards held jointly by Drew and Kelly. and for 220 yards credited officially to three HDBCdSlOIS Wc- fers, Lippincotkzind Craig. What runner before has done so much in a angle day? The famous Eng- lish runner, W. G. George now Ii. his sixty- third your, who has for lowed the runners of thc inst 40 years with close attention. ilcclar- es that Charles W. Paddock or the University of Southern California, is the fastest sprinter who has .cv- or been sccn on any track in the world. Centenarian Hygiene. (Manchester Guardian) The Kurdish porter at. Constan- tinople, whom a ilcutcr pics-sage reports to lIilVD reached the ago of 150 years. is said in the i-‘illllt! desputch to betray an zistonislilng appetite for swcctiiicats. One ma}, therefore, prbsume that lic WUlllil not attribute his lungevibv to Silli- pliclty and moderation in dict. 'I‘lic stories of alleged ccnteniirlans would. indccd, lend tn nothing but confusion if anyone attempted to base upon llioui a sy cm of hyg- iene. According to Bailey's ' cords of Limgcirit)” John ilussey who lived to llll. took nothing for bcrukfzist during thc last half-cen- tury of his life cxccpt balm-tea sweetened with iinncyqJuilitli Ban- ister. imotlioi" coiitcnurian. livt-ri during hcr last G0 yriirs on his- cuts. lirmiil and zipplcs; John dc la Sonu-t rcuclicd of 1th) thc iigc- cr; John Wilson. at llii, ziltiiclit-d grout llll]lOl‘l1lll('(- to his having for 40 years suppcii off rllil$lllil tur- nlltfi; 3171's. Lcwiion who vxt-ccilr-rl 117 before silo joined tlic iimjiirityg never waslioil for four of catching (wold or some drcuilfiil ilisordcrdiut ‘llttfllllbflrvll hcr facc and neck 2lll' ovcr with bug's lurd. liecuusc that- was soft and lubricating. in ilistrussing the subject in his "Sitfo ‘Studicsf’ tile lutc lion. Lion-l t-l A. 'l'0ll(illlfl‘f‘lle mentions the) czisc of u lllilfl who alone zininng‘ his colleagues, enjoyed thc bust health in an uiiliciiltliy- iuiiiiiifiic», turc, and who il$l‘l‘llli'il his good] fortune to his iléllly practice of| bathing in water us lint ‘us liu' Clllllll Fleur it. lie l‘0l<'l‘s also to an‘ uld smugglcmi i-cpuioil ccntciiziriun who was onco uskcil by n ('(.‘l'l.2ll|l poor to whzitlio llllfllllllflll his grout age. “Really; my llortl." ho rcplicd. “l can't toll. l llSWl to get my frict. wet every diiy and was drunk nearly cvcry (lay and W315 drunk nearly every night." Iiir. Tollemzitrhc recalls also that Lord Tcntcrdcn, thc judge, wlicncvt-r vcry old persons ll|lllf‘lil‘i‘ll liofiin- iinsivcr thc "rruilc suggestion‘ that she and hcr inntiicr prufiictl by thc suffrage ninvciiicnt. Uu thc i-ontraiigy, Slip shows llliil. ilioy arc worse off with rogartl to iliflllilj’ than before tiicy launched thc cam- paign. Thcy have liud tn bcgiu llfo ovcr again. She (loos not mon- tion the fact that they arc hnili in 11 110501011 i0 nilfll u much large-i‘ income than ‘before thc agitation made them famous. Candnr obli- z_i.____,._i________ (Continued on page eight) ' THE OlD GRRDENER SllYS ‘While some flowers will grow readily in poor soil zinil under rather atlverso tronili- tions, there llfG titlicrs which insist upon liiivlng good rich ground and plenty of sun- light. .ln tho latter list iiro two of the most popular gur- den subjects. the (‘liimi as- ter and the scarlet sage. lle sure that you use plenty of fertilizer where these jiltllltii are to grow and if you cun mix some ashes or soot into the soil it will help to pro- tect the asters from the in- Sect pests which work at the roots. Two other popular annuals which need rich soil are the giant caster bean and the ‘balsums. .5 l) o b its ' KID NEY p; / J‘ fir‘ qti .- i‘\lr~1/\'T' ' that had stood-for nine years; he lowered by two-fifths of s second I, F ‘ ‘I. nrl"‘-':i1' hi"! nfw: - ) r. . p , lcllfll" ,‘| imll ll" f hl/lili 1i‘-' /-. MAY‘ 17, 1921 ?__f I anatlzfs Greatest Clothes Values E offer you a chance of a lifetime to buy Spring Clothest-this is the most won- cle to FC-lothes _a_t a Low - Friend - v , Making-Money-Saving - Price, rful opportunity for you secure good dep-e-nda-m we advise you .to be here early - girsastisiazrniizm go first. g You c2 find clothes in the lot for Sunday or Everyday wear-garments that have been returned _t_o us from our 4_(_) Quality Tailor Shops or were UrTcalled-for _e._r_e_ included in the assortment, many of which were ma Yes, there are a. number of blt-i-e serge de to sell at prlaas 112 to $45. Uncallcd-Fo r1: s: I90 a Q ,¢ .2 m suits—il_l 8322811.; matter- what your build welian fit you. ' -_-—-_--——- s. Your Choice One " Pirice ' ONLY All Serge uitts Values UP $45 Included t to ODD ODD ODD COATS VESTS PANTS Your , Choice _ 95 Your =7- Choice iii hizilii English These Prices are Less than the Cost of Material alone §z_-Scotch ollen £9; 15.8. Richmond St. ' Charlottetown, P. E.I. ' . W0 Onl-oi-Tewn Men{ ' man dell b :&:IIII'IIIEI Ohylalncsiled-For 8m: In: Overeos Sale. -