g": - I ..t.“ g on FOU!_’ LU p p irllelps Business Girls‘ ' A few minutes easy simple work in your room and your dainty blquse-rypur eilkcn underwear and‘ stockings — can be Lux- bathed and made like new. ,< Ufrofessional Cards LlMoEaciioiift-lplitl) g__ BY‘! IPEOIALIOT Office-Over 187 Grafton ltreet, lunnyeide Houre 10 to 1. and 2 to I Eveninqe by appointment iW. Miles Garrison, ii. D. ‘ha; upon-tees»: on; ilnltae ~ Qllllrlllfl ." IQeeleIl-e In Pnlbenen nece- "" alibi-into. I e i ea e on ‘P ee Bonn-e»! ‘ ‘biw- Ilnnt i‘, . r ,4 ~ Telephone lli. Fis. J. Palmer, K. C. ‘ Berrietere, etc. - Innis of Nova Beetle Building Charlottetown, P. E. I Money to Loin iirlt mtsligii, m. JAIRISTER; SOLICITOR- . - MWiey to Loan " V. Cameron Block ' ‘Charlottetown, P, in lelue one-run Vuonusoe pup-smug; n like». Dm- Ito. n-ctel Emanu- . Hertqegm. er». e‘_ Win. tsetse. IIIIIII. F! . ‘wonderment. i '_ _ LFIIIQI. n. |. .1: "A. MacDONALD ' ' ‘ eel-mm, eeilelur, so: ,_ MONEY TO LOAN ‘ Ollom-Illey luiiling’ OIIIIIOGWIWII. Dr. C. ,0. Archibald Graduate on I. I. Poet Illluntc dutch IclooI-all noenitet ,‘_ anytime lienlcel to lye. Ier. Ieee an 15m». ._ Kilian Borer ' Bailing‘. Oreo: ‘IQPII. ltreet. eepoelee Inarliee OHM . Telephone l“. _ oe~_loure--l to Ll e. I. l to I elu- Ilay no consulted on‘ leer-e at ‘ u mum»- on.» l .-¢—o-__.._ ’ . _... __._._.-_-..a-.- f "AFB". '3.‘ HESSIAN trainee», flatware. Nphry Iuhile i‘ "' ‘frsousv 1o LOAN emeeliu ‘. ,5‘, I. ieienI , tumor. tr.» c; flflwaioi" me Kearney-nu.“ IIOIaNO- 1 GIIIIOMII ‘lo-pit 1 . 4 dietinctive ti”; of eelectel Virginie lea! p. b no! O1 ‘jigalmer 8r Palmer H. L. Palmer ITO" IQ “ulna nllie. "III! Jill Inel-eeeoptenee e9 . - , an. g limo-nu. amen wit‘. mini 00°" Morning oust-man "wit, not b» Friday m... statutory holiday 911° publiahod on ‘fifltilffllly MOVEME- THGRspAYQMAoCtfg-i, i921, . wig-r"- moriién rsumoarilcu If?" " ' ‘ ‘. To those who have heard ol"l'6I_fl_ the self glorifying upeeches, of tho various member); of‘ the. govern- ‘merit during the debaleon the ail- dress, the speech of All’. J.-D. Stewart published eleewheru ill 151B issue will come as a welcome change. not because it is mainly n. criticism of the government and an exposure of the Liberal panyfls pff-l-GIBCHOII misrepresentations, but because it deals with cold ‘in- ‘Zilr Stewart handled the government speakers t-orlirovcrtihle facts. without gloves and his speech made splendid the mrlny visitors who were in the a impression trpon litiusu at the time. it also ivas- =1 \'(‘.l'_\' cold anti very uncomfortable douche to the men who had been I ilnring the We commend Mr. Stewart‘! speech to the careful pet usal of our readers who wish to know the unvariilehed truth about the campaign which landed the Boll aggregation where it is today and what it has been ilfililg since the election. glorifying themselves previous week. ---_--¢o}--_- A REQRETTABLE FALLING OFF Yesterday in the course oi an article’ on another subject. we rt ierred incidentally to the falling off’ in the number of children itt- (Pilillllvg school as compared with a. mirniber of years ago. The com parlson who made betiwoen the years i888 and 1920. in the toi- mer year the nuniber of pupils en rolled 22.478 while in 1920, the number was 17,354, o. decrease Lu 32 years of 5,164. Since the date mentioned the dc cline has been continuous until the figures quoted for 1920 were reach“ cal, l'l"ne figures plviba-loly show a continuous decline in population; probably also they indicate than more children are being with- drawn from school at an eayrller age than formerly; they mldoubr edly indicate that families- steadily growing smaller. For [he early withdrawal of children from school there is a remedy. ntunoly the enforcement of the‘ compulsory ilttcniltmce clause. For the othert two there is probably no remedy .\i‘t-n'antl lwomen will emigrate; W315 01ft! men and women will through pride or selfishness or both, defer sett- ling down in ‘homes of their own and ("lllldlcv-ls homes will he it»- r-reaslngly the rule. "fhis in one of the ishrndks grow in-g misfortunes. Too many of out ynung tieoplc lenvc the trollntt-y for the city, here or elscivltcre; too many of our young men remain oh the father's farm without any op- portunity of making a. home of their own until after the father's death,.-when the time for homo making has gone ‘by; too many put off the home making untli H10, can afford to begin housekeeping where their parents left off; and s; the tragedy of childless homes con tinuoa and so our population con llnlloeiiodedlliie, j ‘ ‘- There h» room for hope that the falling oft in population since the lest census year will not. bouts _ great a; that-between 1901' and ‘i911, when it declined by nearly ion thousand. Thi-r-ivill be reveal Ml by the-Honolulu about lb" ho‘ talt yé _l_g,‘wnc w. on next Juno. _ ouearronsai-e ilmrierv i ‘Zjfhfirligvr ‘llhrneymi-Lm , mica-anoint innit Iiiiillne (‘Jigriof ‘llsfiwvlv I. I, IIIIII ' odlfltiwiiéntleyt _ ‘w. l. OENTLIY, K. O. '-.-,9-.""~"'7‘° ‘The anxiety of‘ the Boil Govern merit regarding tho stondardizut ion of the Prince Edward island Railway ls reallypnthetic. Wheth or this anxiety in» actuated by n patriotic desire to promote the kin-i forests of the ‘Province or of tho party is a fruitful topic for rpecui atiotl. One thing. however. i; ‘very eyidoiri, namely that lbefilgveljil- .All8\I'|i1/ll!‘ down and out for the. will’ c . SIIQhFOVEIIIDIQIIPG BT10?" 1° extoriftiyorg or rights from the Du minioii Government than h a" w,“ gums“ ‘tligfshadow, of’ a Rape that the ‘hivoij or the rials; 5.11mi b; rgfused in order to afford further oppofitinities for fulfil-find ing‘: Ilonilliefore Glim- G-fb‘ Hughes introduced his resolution on Tuesday to re-affirnl the resol utlou of last session on this ques tion lt was known that the (‘har- lottotown and Sruuuucrsitle Boards of Trade and Messrs Kennedy and had ‘been Meuservy moi/IRE ill the mutter and. it’ the hell govern ern merit k nolvs ethyl-h int; it. ought - to know that ___tht-'tie and these gentlemen have far more influence at Ottawa than the Bell Gover! eminent has. The influence of the Boll Ottawa worse than nil; it has on every possible'occasion antagonized the Ottawa government; it has friends at Court and if the obvious purpose qt itgfrequent petitioning was not the double one of demon strating its own great doings and tho little doings at Ottawa, its ac- tivities might be less harmful than they are. it has not yet given any evldende of being able to prevail at Ottawa. in fact the evidence is all the other way. government at 1'8 --—<'o»@-—--- THE KVOIHLD‘ S UIVREST vwhether the present whirlwind in Europe will develop into a greater storm andmore destruc- tion before peace is- restored it would be 41861955 to try to predict. Peace will eventually come, the dt. bris pow ‘whirling in chaotic fury around thrones and nations and peoples, will eventually settle down into the calm of peace and usefulness n4; the earth itself hat settled dawn into quiet ‘plains and productive hnrvkwt fields after the earthquaking shrinkinga and cool- ings out or which it has evolved {The past six. yeans- have witnesa ed convulsions in Europe to whlcii history furnishes few parallels. Thrones have tumbled, nations have been shattered; millions of people have endured theagony of war, of famine. of pestilence, and these destructive forces have only been checked at one point to break out. at others, Russia leseethlng in revolution with no leader insight except ‘stir-h leaders as ursvadtliiig to the roti- fusion and tile distress. __\ people living under despotism ‘to wlilca they had become lnured through succeeding generations suddenly found themselves face to face with the open doors of liberty; liberty became‘ n license and the country is now seething in a mad search for the liberty they hail so gagrrly snatched ut only to find them- selves fetterctl by the more cruel lvrimny of unbridled and unreason- ing liberty. -l’eace and "liberty rim rot far off in Rllssln. Yet Russia will evolve out of this. chaos, m; the earth has evolved, ‘but. the pro- cess will lhe olow and-painful. Greece, under the direction of her oncc deservedly de- Doaed~ _ King. _-. is v _ seek ltlga quarrel with her old time enemy, Turkey. and war between tho two appears tn he inevitable. present and ready to make peace ond- to live m, peace with her form- er enemies. Germany, the cause of ull the turmoil and the dos-truc- tion is still definnt ttnd unrepent- ant. bullying and pleading for mercy from her conquerors. and Of every trouble Ila takes heed, Content to let my Father know. For lGod my daily load will hear. v ‘And still -be near; - Mly greatest joy, in all life-Is woes: continuance nf unionlrimTlhe amind, roe i ‘. From the standpoint of purely proyllnclnl intone the address of Mr. lPater Brodie, was, beyond doubt. tbebrainlast deliverance from the Government side of the Home. The difference between him and othersnvas that instead of lsudarfdn of the Government and abuse oi’ the fiuardlnn he devoted bisliilne, lo, vile-discussion of im- portant public issues. With regard m‘ the indemnity question he had not changed his mlnil. Without holding that taxation was unneces- sary. or that members were not worth the $600, still he had accept- ed the position on those terms and saw noreaspn why be should in- crease ‘it at the taxpayers expense, and ‘having told-tile country that taxation was not ilecessary, even after they had found out that they were needed, he thought they should not ‘have gone so. far with- out the people's consent. He ap- proved nient road system, which was be- ing carrled out by the Bell Gov- ern-ment, but felt that outlying dis- tritets, aside from ulaiu roads, should participate in the benefits. The Poll tax he looked upon as in the nature of 8 hardshlppand in- dulged the hope that. it would he reduced to two dollars. Mr. Arsen- aulifs suggestion to certain mem- bers to "Put tlltelr coats on," he misinterpreted its heing “boots on." whereou a government mem- ber made the thrust "What. size do you take." ' Discussing educaltion, he compar- ed our school readers, which are unchanged in the lust fifty years, with those in the schools of Swit- zerland, Den-mark and Holland Daily Selections . Guardian Readers Furnished by W. 8. L°ulon_ OIORXOIKOI MY FATHER Knows’ By HERBERT SIMMONS My Father‘ knotws what ‘things I need, t ‘Tls better so; Though rough wind; blow; They cannot harm, for at Jill; aide. Still pleads the Lord, once crucified Yes, pleads for me. Oh prcciolts thought! lNought can the wrong, His promise, "I'll forsake lhce not" Shall tune my song; So, lglildly singing, on l go, And though the years and cure. I need not four,- bring toil The precious truth; "My Father knows." TO BE KEPT “Keep Going." 'l‘here arc. no more cowardly words than "give "Keep yolir head." 'l‘r:iin your thoughts flfd sOlillefs are train- ed. not to ilv into .1 pflllii.‘ and scut- ter iii-in! .ly i_n tho hour of |[l'_'l'il and dlili lily tout, to he firm, - i let-Md. alert ready lo light li r lgil. "Keep clean." Let no Siltlllllllf-I nbstitcie pensuade you that your path must diverge, even for ll few stops, into the mire. Then: 1.,‘ :, clcnn way lu everything worth ltuv- int". "Ke-vp faith." Above and beyond all else, keep faith; fnith in tho fnthorltoofl 0f God, i011“! loving. tender presence of Christ. in the overruling of the Almighty. and the flnnl tfilllfl/Dh of light .—-Selet-- lcd. - ____._,i________ and when she awaken to real peace her dream of world domination will have been fongotten. in ,Grcat ‘ Britain pence and the love of peace still dominate ‘ in spite or warring and distunbirig elements. gPulitlcnl unrest has shaken the coalition government which carried the empire safely through the alarm o! war, but, "whether the present political crisis rcsullm in a return to tllc party system or in u‘ practical. healthful sense of i114‘ great rultlorlty may be tlependl-ri upon to pornlit no unrest or' agit- ntion to antlangel- the niilionrll lifaf The world storm will pttva, as of the Doiu-lnion Govern- ‘ ~ Patriot, and the Premier has pllh- tlream of world domination. Ger-land those man! '19s “ win-mils back’ into other storms havo plifleltlll, and calm rmlfpcrica will follow. '\Vc. who sec bill .1 small sccllnn of tho greul whccl which is working out out destiny’, rutist hc plitliilill. “Pit.- mllls ol’ iltc goda- grind slowly," disturbances are hut that "divine event in which the pleading tho menrllcanfs excuse of poverty lo cs-cnpo her obligations auditor. promises and to gehbnck again into world commerce. and stlllpdouibtless, _cheridhlng the l i I intent’: method 0t attack u-tiun tewe authorities is not conduci baliitiiitrlrlissvllsrtdtsgt... i t‘ quills-sign. “IQ-breath! ‘mavens’ ‘incidents in the evolution towards g pflqbgfiy-fflditbOlbgoh-t ohbglmodtné from miatsr-"tlmt “divine '_irvsnr to which trip for; was it the celebrated Manifes- wllere by obiect lessons. 51013604 by pictures o! furor-animals‘- and him work. the children bed a prictioel education in useful em- ployment lntenningled in their regular studies. He was also in favor of establishing induarlos. that great tumiimsiital policy of the Conservative party, and be- lieved that instead of exporting our‘ hides and skins to be manufac- liiirnd abroad into boots, shoes; Piraeus and other articles, the Cole-bile!!! should subsidize a foc- tory for tanning and making these thing; la our own province. Ho defined it a sorry~ day for P’. E. l. when the potatoe flour mill pm- jeot was knocked out. That com- pany have built their mill in New Brunswick and were now paying- the fanmers fifty cents for ‘their potatoes while we have over a tnilllon bushels in our cellars without prospect of a market. He Strongly advocated flax cultures ‘within the province, following tihe line of argument presented some months ago by the Guardian, and which would most certainly he of the. greatest advantage to agricul- ture in this ‘province. His grasp of matters of farming interest es- tablished it as a self evlitlont mis- ‘taite that his serv1ces had not been a-t the outset enlisted as Commissioner of agriculture. Following Mr. Brodie ivas one of those unfortunate exhibitions which ltappily ls of rare occur- ‘en-ce ill representative assemblies-l. yvlficli, instead of being made the pubject of sport and levlty by members and supporters of tho Government should rather have elicited their sympathy and regret.‘ There is a veil of charity designed as a. special covering for the vii:- tims of misfortune and compas- glionately we dnaw the iscreen be- tween the public and tihe irrespon- sible actor. with our (lee-pest sym- pathies to the Georgetown fllstrlct for the accident that changed their [We hesitate to llfllnde this species of human frailty before a mixed and critical people. Mr. blather- ‘ztll followed with a repetition in ‘toto of the program pace set hy the flllhfll‘ speakers adding nothing ,of~ interest to what had been al- ready spoken, and nothing new apart from a reference to the lime- stone crusher, established in his district, which would be a great. convenience to farmers, and n. spe- fittl inference to, tho Albertan- O'Leary road, built under the Fcd-_ eral Highways Act, which would be of thegrclartcst benefit to the travelling public. Mr. H. D. McLean, of Sourls_ is one of the practical though not ostentatious speakers of the House, who after passing the customary coltrteriles, took up the different questions tinder consideration. lm- portant amongst these was the ‘question of last year's finances Vlvhiich all the speakers on the Government side of the House had most studiously avoided, and more particularly the minority‘ report of the Public Accounts Committee, which the Government had moot. deliberately stipprcsaed from the people. That report. he pointed out. was the actual <record of facts elicited under oath before the Committee, oi which he was a mctrtlrer, ulld illfillldvli u correct abstract of of» ‘provincial finances, which, because -ll repudiated their own cookctl statements as sent to the people, they did not want to fat-e the ('(lll(|0ill|lil.'.i0ll. if, said Mr. Mt-Lcail, the finances of the country were in tho condition ivhlolt they represented‘ wily did they refill-u. to submit thcm to an outside audit? .»\»s it now statitls we have nothing in support oi’ them but the mere word of the llcly (Unclaimed being held res- ponsible for anything said in his. press, UNLESS BACKED UP BY AN ORDER-lN-COUNCXL, or the ‘resolution of the whole Liberal combination. Mr. Mclieaiu siltertlndtted the House with an interesting repre- sentation of Premier Bell in his dual character, before the election and after, and notalbly after the election when he entered the Pre- rrriors‘ office, and in rt ventrilo- quial dialogue talking in hla na- tural volt-c and ANSWERING THROUGH HIS iiAT, bungling up- on the wall. hcurltued with himself the pros and cons of his position. This interesting dialogue hoa m- roedy been published _|n the Guar- dian and is well worth pct-mini. lir- lhc Premier assuming the roll! oi Alexandr-r tho (lrcait. and cutting with his political sword the tic"? tilnn knot or Sdnntorium difficult. w-hlnh in his deficient genius he could not unile. in this coon-i.‘- tlotl the lloti. Mr. Nash had cum- plained that ‘when they tool: charge there was not even n. "scrap of paper" to be found. What scra-p of paper was he looking representation at the last election. _- olno Inndc (considerable sport of’ g . Slate “ Surface Back Coating Made by or Cameos. Lmmv eat Vleieril emu. Ienveeii i"- IOIJIII ‘nun, nuns-u . ALBANY L. H. i). McLeod AI.BI'IR'I‘()N CARDIGAN THE $1INDARD PAINT COMPANY H. Myricl: Ex (“)|\ i. _|. H. Macnonzllil 3t C0. ens their life. This coating prcvcnts tiamagc from swcaiingfit servcsi as a binder between two rows of shingles, it adds} weight and strength to the shingles thus rendering‘ them more resistant to the ravages of high winds. RllbCTOld Strip Shingles carry a weather surface of evenly crushed slate immovably embedded 1n the top coating. This slate comes in a pleasing red or zit-_- It" is SfiffiTil say that no roof can he, more attractive than one finished with Ruberoirl Stri tractivc green. Shingles. One of the dealers listed ilrrt‘ is near you. to show you samples and quote prices on ER-OID- roorltie-wlllllietlss‘ RU-BvER-OID Dealers in PRINCEE EDWARD ISLAND RU- i‘l I .~\R l,(i'l"F-ET()\‘VN Roltirs llalrlwzirt-Ur», Ltd. HUN FR iflYlilf l). M. McLi-oil rrl.~ KILMUIR .\'|. i". Nltiiliuxlll , (I'|.l§1\ RY Kenna-fly h" Cu. ' Ruberoid Shingles Are Coated On Both Sides Ruberoid Strip Shingles are thc_on/_v shingles made in) Canada that carry a back coating-irfczvtttire WhlCil greatly increases their protective qtudities’ and length-i .l- i»; Ask him‘ SOURIS Fitclits Brits, litt- llugllcs (‘on Ltd. SUMNIFRSIDF. glllCiiili‘ {k Srmvurt, Ltd. W i" |.|.| N(’IT()N .'\l'kt'liiiilli $4 (‘MUNICH Ltd. A pieces‘! Was that. the document that this imitation German Chan- cellor was seeking to mutilatr- and destroy‘! I Referring to the charge made by the Hon. Mr. Nash, alleging “mud- slinging" by ‘the Gliilrdlltlly he pointed out that it ivas not any- thing of this character, but "THE ARE SO GALLING." He recalled the electiion of iillb, when the their Commissioner of Puhlit: Works liud his ilunle dragged tliroturlt the tmld and mire and genuine “mud-sling- ing was indulged iii by the Patriot tiéwspaper, that. their whole com- paigti wishvugcirdii that kind of material, and that the present Premier. Attontey General and Commissioner of Agriculture. ill the next seas-ion of Parliutilcnt took hack al ltlierltargcs tirade‘ i1 that election. under the t-oiupulsiou of all investigation. Hi- vcry point- edly said: "It is no‘. nvt-tvsa-ary for the (luartlltln to make ally false at:- cusotlolts against the Govern-pleat.“ iiiiliilllnillnlumtillltzviisiuiltziiiiti; lllllill the situation, land himself, had. deliberately out the thing in TRUTHS DRIVEN HOME THA'I" This is generally udmibttatl through- out. the country. liven If we wcrr disposed to do so, the solid facts and indtsputahle truths ore such a tax on our space. that we have not room for them nil. without the ne- cessity of resenting to the kind of stuff the Patriot is t-otlslarltly slinglilg at its renders. The Question Is Who Will be Head 0f The (LN. BL? o't"r.\\\'.\. Minx ~who will ltead the twinatiiiln hitlional llml. way systcm when the rtnolililllil- lllilillllllllllll llllllmIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllili ntiott board of nlnlltlgcmoilt ll} cur- ; ricd out‘! is the qiiestion" thin-is on .all lips in parliamentary circles all this momclii. Several posslbilL tics have been mentioned. ll might be Grant Hall of the 4‘ l‘ R. ill might he S J Hunger-ford. gciwrzil ‘manager oi‘ the (lanadiltnrtNtu-th. IP11]. it uiighl ho John E Dlllfylll- pic. Grand Tlunll it might he P l" ifiuiclius, firmer gcnz-ral mortal-lei‘ [of the govcrnlut-nt lines. ""l is no word from the government ourcvs to ltlilluitie ill-til stelectlllll if any one of these men has "been even cuulcillpliltetl hut' iilercds ‘smoke?’ and where there la amoko there is tisunlly "fire". ll, is known that the members of tho government have been in confer. once with Mr. Gutelius during tho past few days. in point of fact ll. scents that‘ tile former head of C G R was here on Saturday. N0 ‘Move Yet In G. N. R. Reductions 'l‘ORON'l‘0, Mar. 23.—~—'I‘her6 is little likelihood that there will be any wage reductions on bhe Calla. tllnn National Railways until after tho United States wage rates are‘ "Pllfillllr-itctl. ut-o|':llng' to general utatlagcr Hills. The downward division of iviigcs of C N ‘R contem- plated, however, possibly to the cxicnt. of til-only per cent. This rcdut-ilons ‘would not wipe out en- The I i lllliflllilllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllfilfllllillllillIllIllllllllllllllllllllllll Q Breakfast - A Duty or a y Pleasure i? Therés real joy in ‘the mornl preparation for the work h the menu includes ' ~ rape --Nuts lhe full nutriment of wheat and malted b81163’ in ‘this unique food Provides unusual nourishment with- ‘ out hardening the, stomach. ng mealand genuine ours that follow. when tirely the increase granted under he second award of McAdoo-sche- tile. ‘l“‘!.'u i ‘iiili-"lilloli?! Nfllii lhnllinlr “WWW-u u. u; ' --_. aha. -_._. _ e l"' ‘llllivlll-illlillllll ' tmv -v to. and was it the ffitnoi." tllet lie ‘i nee unable to unravel, end to eeve ‘ A Ready to serve from the package with cream or! goodmllk. Sweet with the natural sugar of the grains, self-developed ‘in the making. A KY9"? bfgakfastrisrit a pleasure. try Grape-Nuts 77161958 Reason Made Canadian Postum (‘areal Coltthlrllndsor, Ontario.