t. l filrvli-yidw/ I‘ ' 2......" inn I-II pourtwlll advance 4L u angina.‘ ‘a J-otiw or‘ oseeir with fwearying persistence the .7 rttolisnay, AUGUST 17, 1922 ‘Dpflll them and the probability’ l1 that not one of the rive Liberal candidates will ever see the legis- ebeio-nokoooeuoeeu-e». I lad to lilo beat delonse tualcau he Watt-lot day alter dot" repeats the tiogé-or in it's own language, _ _ ‘hoary lle“-——thlt the Bell gov- Orllhtalt has brought to an end lature except u a visitor- -— -—-<Qo>~i-— VALUE OF PUBLICITY v “are of deficits," and brought In an era of magnificent surplus- A i-loulton, Maine. exchange re- ports the proceedings at a recent 10'1"‘ ye" they “d a s“'7"““|\iichigan seed selling activities" u 11M “n” ibwnmy o! “molesting of the Aroostook Potato statement is so evident by the Government's own published of ficial- statements that it only noeds to be mentioned to show! that. it is another/deliberate at idelray ‘he “P911595 °f a °°'“9‘3" “mm to deceive the peopm lent man to be “sent to the south 'Gr0wera' Association. An interest- ing feature of the meetzng was an otter by the President of the Bun-F gor and Aroostook Association to! {tor one, two or three months tlur ‘an’? ng the potato seed selling time They: ' lin the interests of Aroosloolt seed, ito counteract the Wisconsin and ._'!‘hs tLiberal party came power in September. 191a. claim that at the close of each tol- \ ~: _ , ‘c lThe Association accepted the of ' ler and is; us looli at it: The Public oourltsare supposed to be correct. immediately opened up According to these the guvern- _ _ mommunication with the Univer~ lllant, at the end of it's first full; year in office, after all it's taxing: “flair” had been Bmabnslzfljged President made a further otter which also was accepted, namely _ h “adlthat it. the Association raised a bW-U deposited, at tll-. end olifutld to carry on a publicity cam- slly oi Michigan to select a man. The generous and public gpirit- and operation. after first year's stiriilus 1920,_paid interest to the amonntillfligu in the interests of Aroop- . took seed potatoes he would per- of ysssstss; at the ‘and 0f 1021.‘ sonaliy contribute a like amount. they paid $58,686.93; at their last, session they appropriated for in-l _ terest for i922 the sum 0i 859.687.5595! Potato growing states in the 00in lillil, the last your of tliuiunion. The agricultural activities, Conservative regime the iimountl‘)! ‘he ffllllllli’ lire largely Center-i of interest paid was $49,679.53. t"! l" P013!!! EYOWiIlB» They know roi- the present year i922 tlloilh? value or publicity and pav,lllfldé their money by it. As our pur-tlPadelfl know the present potato Aroostook County iq one Di the \ intends to and has appropriated for that Bell government ‘ and pose $59,687 or approximately $10.‘ 000 more interest on provincial thousand dollars in interest ail five per cent represents an addi- tion of $200,000 rsl tax collecting, surplus-making‘; government claim they have re»- ducad the debt oi the province produced a surplus every es they have increased our in- iercst by. sioooo mi three years. and. the debt on which we are paying tbut interest ‘by 3200.000 is it not time‘ they had stopped making thati kind of surpluses? We have repeatedly drawn the: attention of the Patriot to this pe- culiar effect of Bell government surpluses and it has invariably re- plied with that ridiculous chest nut- “we have the tbest government the province ever had"l These things are plain and open to every reader of the Patriot; they have the Public Accounts to, refer to, they have their own com-I mon sense to appeal to and will not be led astray by any red her- ring cry of the Patriot that we have the best government the pro-‘ vince ever hu-i or that Frontier Bell is more firmly seated in his saddle than ever before. This is only one of thewool pull ing devices resorted to by the gov ernrnent organ and by members of till.- government. The plain fact of the case is that ~the government. through it's or by the mouths 0t‘ it's prophets who are now candidaling, dare not tell the truth. lf they did there would be no bye-elections as by their own confession they’ would stand t-on- demned tbefore the people. either organ The government came into power by deception. by mislead- iiig the people‘, by making promis- ‘el which they never intended lo ' make good. Now. for the first time they srelsce to face with the people imfive bye elections. they are fol- lowing t. the ma? old trick. Will thdllpeople swallow the same bait aacolld time Indications from the different polling districts pro- ‘miss: that they w-lll not. Even old time Liberals who swore by seed 5mm“! bum?" ‘l! "ll! Plll- on, according to the vlnce originated in the efforts of who learned the business in Al‘0'lB took Countv and his Prince Eu. but for many other: who followed]. his example. I Aroostook County. like all coon" tries to the south oi us, is ohligott, yeul! if by int-l: IAJHII.’ surplus-I'll buy it's seed potatoes at leastumt wrward that the "Qllillllllllly in the north. Princel Edward Island seed has appealed Bllflllgly to them \and, if we take ‘he Dfflller steps to secure their trade, we can have it. The Aroostook Association is spending money in llijroplgdlldd‘ for the extension of it's business, They consider it to their advant- age to engage a man specially for lhe purpose of drumming up trade; to open up a big Publicity cam- llfllgll in the newspapers of the countries whose trade they are at. ter, and this lathe only way to secure the trade. The Pflllltvlllrflwers‘ Association oi’ Prince Edward‘ island might take a leaf out of their American -C0usin’s lbook. We want their ‘"116; IIPQQY our seed Potatoes have ‘made a 800d reputation there; the trade is ours provided We go after it. We have competi- tors, many of them; thdy are as much>allve to the value of pub". My as the Aroostook people are and unless we go after the trade in the only practical way thero is, namcly. by publicity, not only not going to get it but we W0 ilftl ore likely to lost what we have. <-—-—<-o-@_____ EDITORIAL NOTES The street-sweeper is a‘ great institution but in a city which is occasionally "bone dry" like Char lottetown, it should be used judi- ciously. When used on dry streets l0 ilatber up the dust, which it cannot do, it is considerable of a ‘nuisance not only on the streets but in the adjoining houses as the dust floats for a long time. May we suggest that the sweeper he used only when the streets are damp. either after _a rain or alter the watering cart? lStrawberrias gone. gone, cherries gone, blueberries going, apples and corn coming, the harvest on. the byeelections raspberries , tbpJnrt-y lave turned their backs coming. the‘ government going, through a ladder, and that t; Notes By lie in; i Any novel-tiniest is ‘thirty entit- anade loi- it and eaiwvwly nt e.- dtllllll. tlalen. ll in llltiltilflfd I source ol satiinactiou lo rend in the columns oi the Patriot from time to time the arguments put ioluard in support oi the Bell Government by its able-st ties: tu- toi-med and most likllflll (lelender. Such a dtclvhlld was put ViDIWaITZ 2|! the Government organ on fueai day last, dealing at the outset with the increase of taxation since tbs pier-cut Administration came in. The article. in question states that the taxes on income, land. foxes and the war and health illi- llost amounted to $65,259 in 1919 and that in 1920 "the total ani- ount collected under the much It»! used Taxation Act amounted to: $141029." The article goes on to‘ stale that "this is July a email margins over double the old taxi" us if that were a iiiatter of satis- faction. it will be seen that more than doubled taxation is here ad- milled to have been brought ab- out by the Government in‘ 1920 as the result of their Tax Act. This fact is thus puts. By this time 11920) lasso? was paid for interest on the public debt. which interest has \ since considerably inrreased. There followed ‘increased cost oi ernmenl." soaring price; of nateriol and so or: Furoly "lose were reasons fur adopting a strict economy such as had been promised the péclplg, but ha; gov- all erninent of the day. These were‘ the opposite of reasons for en-I luring upon vat-t projects of rond improvement, involving u vast iii- crease in the public debt and tliollttliliirzlbly delivered. lt‘ lie did lll’ interest and sinking fund charges which the Premier has told us have‘ will go on "for 15 lo 20 years“ imitate-s ui’ today are tar below tile lstandard oi‘ the debates in Sir John (JOIIIQ. For l5 to 20 years this inust go best defence the Government can make, Province are under mbrtggiqg public_ orl the‘ tlnance be more ridiculous absurd than this" But it is - [best defence the niost skill-ill ad"standlngr and mm 0i vacate of the Government‘ make. The silly statement road provement scheme “would cost. the people a cent" is now stressed as li was. The elec- furs refused to believe ii. It was too ridiculous. it. has been land- ed out of court. not‘ I But the advocate and defenderl or the Government tells us that! the people and not the ruling po- wers are to blame for. existing conditions! We quote: "It is a cmimion zulyving that the Govern- ment pays the hill and this is not curbing the expense for not giving value for the money. Many people treat the Govern- ment money as a proper source of plunder." This if true. is very wicked, on the part of thes “many people." We take it tlla they are of course among those who supported ‘the partly and helped to bring the Bell Govern merit into pouer in 1919 Surely no member of the Opposition could hope to plunder the treasury since that date! The Patriot's indictment is lhPy who "treat the govcrniilent money as aproper source of plun tit-r." And why do they do this‘! May it not be that they are tols lowing only too closely the exam- ple of their leaders? ‘Fliose load- ers, having taxed every-tiling tan- gible and intangible. that the peo pie possessed, legislated three hundred dollars a piece into their own pockets out of the treasury that they declared to be almost tirst fruits of the Tax Act had been gathered. So alert and en- terprising, were they that, they gathered the first fruits of the "plunder!" Whether this was or was not “treating Government money n a proper source of plunder" many of those supporting the Govern- ment so regarded it. Plunder was" in the air and they wanted some of li. They were not content that "w. plunder should he si e .ail summer is ra_ili—dly passing. Only a few more weeks are left to en- joy the glorious summer and that! we'll be sorry we did not. mall's ‘more use of it. I .printer lo publishuany account ol‘ the placed beyond dlg-‘proceeditigs of Parliament and even a tremendous change since then. ment and out of it is deteriorating. not been given them by the gOV-itiespite all this publicity-perliaps l.\lflt‘d0llilltl'S tiny and belore. liven considered a sufficient reason for _ Pi“! thus obviously directed against "om m. w_ ‘_ “um” "many people" who were in the. collection Government party in 1919. it is '9"°**99'°""°**°*"°'°'°*' ‘ empty. They did this before the PARLIAMENTARY QRA1 ORY (Vancouver World) A recent incident in a provin- cial Legislature iu the East, in which s nienibsr oi Parliament claimed that he had been misre- porisd and also that the importance of his speech had been ignored by the press, calls attention to the considerable dependent-e ofPar- liainent upon the press. Publicity is. to an increasing extent, its lite and soul. it is true that the work oi leglsiating could be carried on even if its debates and the results ot loose debates were not report- ed, but the amount of bole-and- corner work that this would lead to can hardly be estimated. And the electors would have no" idea what attitude their representatives were taking towards public ulst- ters or the arguments they had used until long afterwards. Yet it is a tact that in the eighteenth cen- tury tile British House ot‘ Com- tilons was so averse to having its debates reported that it unanimous‘ ly decided that it was a “notorious breach of it privilege oi tile House" for a reporter to furnish, or for a ill the time when Charles Dickens was a member of tile press gallery the accommodation tor reporters was hopeless and they had to take their notes on their knees. 'I‘.ie at~ titude of legislators has undergone Now publicity is the very breath oi‘ lite to most of otlr legislators anti is becoming increasingly so. Yet public speaking in Parlia- becnilae of ll. N0 visitor certainly would attend the British Columbia Ia-gialnture expecting to heal‘ flights oi oratory or even speeches would come tlwliy very iliucli tlls~ tiilpolllleti. At Ottawa. too. the de~ in the MOUIEI‘ oi Parliaments there has been great deterioration. A iew ‘ , :53)‘ ‘h? "Wu" "W"!!! IIHJFSEZ-Illlosebery left parliamentary liieqtenacity ‘ in m" impi-sggward Island experiment proved 31AM‘, this is called “paving as wcqAmi Lord [iaiiom- itintsgii i5 not it,‘ paying debt. And yet. our Libra-ill“! success not only for hlmselillgo!“ CW“ "m-"mllg "1 fluent speaker. There are still brll-l liant debaters, oi‘ whom Mr. Churchill is, perhaps. the most out- i t i l great elo-. . - , . _, . confluence and force, m- whom pfeunet-Eltltfliél in the lite ‘oi ilie Blllgflildlln. firstwtmd George is the fine," exampie lurktsh domination tor hillf a iiill-. lllhlbul oratory ill Parliament has ceus- h-‘llllllll ""1119 ed to exist, and is very seldom‘ nmmeard on the public 1JlilliOrlll eith-dllilcllcfilly n0 01h" Cam"? “'35 er. The absence oi‘ for-m and style’ and the utter carlestless oi‘ deliv- ery is n feature of speeches iii llie Mother oi Parliaments of today. A sort of‘ conversational slyie has been adopted. Too much eloquence in legislative debates is bad. An utter absence of it is worse, he- cause it marks an absence of in- terest and a failure to realize the importance of debate in the arriv- ing at decisions. that twent through should he all- oted to lilein-bers of the Govern- ment and the House, while only what stuck on the rounds of the ladder was ‘to be tile share 0f the rank and file of the party- And wll-y should the Honorable Defender of the Government blame them for this? I-IWQOpQ-v-Q-Qovoa-Q-oe 4-00-00- llaily Selections lot i Guardian iiealtlels IN A GARDEN \ What can they know of the things know 0r see ol tlie things I see, When l climb lo titc lit-ight ul’ 1119 garden at ulilht, And they will not clinllb with me‘! ’l‘llsy never shall catch the link: ling tune, Of tile foxglovels rosy hells, jasmine vline, Nor watch the sweet peas‘ drow Whilg, the pale- hued iwliispered cull To the blue delphinium by wall ls a thing they llevcr can hear at all And yet it is not hard to be A part of the garden pageantrv . If the heart climbs too, set frFe. phloxes' the But what can they know of the things l know Or see of the things l see, If I climb to the garden’s end oi today the flavor sndwilen like Lord Bailout" still nlnln- titties llicllt debt! than w“ paid in 191a Tania tot-mei- Pt-itme Edward isiunder‘ during that period extending in lain. to some extent, the traditions Slave. 'l‘beir contribution to Bill- 1937. or i942 the revenues of thc-‘ol oratory which practically CEBH- gurian character tolled to he carried on alter Lordibeen coolness, pvncticaluess niltLMl‘. Slums. it would now be lllljll-"lhw l‘ Altai til R es - “A country largely of peasants. scornful‘ of idleness and pretence, m producer» of "lull is Wrhapatpleased with llie Auggtultitlu of rhi- hoot. by the School of asrlt-ullure- the world’: best known symbol oi luxury. attar oi roses-such," says a bulletin trom tile American Nst- ional Geographic Society, “is Bui- garia. The country has recently come into the public eye and its agrarian character has been more strongly emphasized by the meet- liig iii Sofia, the capital of u con- gress oi small tariners to discuss the taking of even more radical. stops toward making Bulgaria sllll more truly a peasant state. Bul- garia is often considered merely Think o! Baby‘! fill, i: ten time: more sensitive. - covered all 4over_ with an iulg which would drive oven you almost crazy. . . Wouldn't you do ingot anytliliigto nvs the poor helplelglittle thinghmg this unnecessary " ring. Koiu-Koniadoea much more than just sooth for a slitlrt time the wa ‘the; powders do—lt really halt! It drivel the rash away and keeps akin a healthy pink. Kora-Kelli: forms a waterproof velvety film which protect; vvbile it heals. rangemept with the Lieutenant Gov- my the tlnunclal. as troll as the his- ernor could be made-die taken for‘ .toric and artistic vain.- of must-Ilium, the proposed museum, while the art galleries, etln. 2 was hlgsll)’ new buildings are used, as at pre- lmpresseil as l have lately‘ b9911- Guardlan's tflfferipblilhlll, .\lr. The old Government Home, itsel‘f Cruicksliank. that a museum should a standing memento of the S004 01‘ be ia-itoblislted tn (‘ha-i-lottetowiifli titties and manners. now past and There are, without doubt, tilnusunds gone forever, might with very little of men and women in Lolidau. Paris: expense. be converted into a rel-op and Edinburgh. every duy living ati tacle for tlhe things that would E0 the hotels. attending the thea- to make up an attractive mhselllll- trims, filling the taxis, ‘buses and The present condition of Govern- trsm-cars, buying in the stores. nlent House property cannot be lllllll scattering their motley right. and lei-t-wlho would never g0 near relics of the past, the curiosities in i nature. and the works of genius. l-tl That it should to reflect any credit-upon the Lieu- tenant GOVPTIIOlTOI‘ the Government those cities if it were not for theiof the Province for the time being‘: institutions iii which arestored the or me citizens of Charlottetown. 0 the people of the country ill lillge- be tensntless and. ' The very first application will con- vince you that Kora-Koala is wonder. fol fur prickly heat‘ and diaper rash, Get a box toils! ll luv out; note. luis been truly said that humanity neglected with the lencoruubonl at large has “a great love tor the in a sta-te of wreck and rulll. - one of the Balkan states; But past, whit-h alone is eternal and llil‘ front every point of view deplor- fciiuilge-gtble like death. and yet at able. (Yoiitiust. tho wcll kl-‘lll 13W!" ‘vlmtevfl n5 “m” and "5 "muefimthe some time worm and joy-giving. of private citizens on one aide of it certainly is not colorless, and ityiiite ||fg_" ‘file-re can -lle ilo doullt Brighton Road with the uucill-tlvat- . _ . . . - ~ - - - w’ deserves m stand an it; own leeLillNil a llllhoflllll would be for Char ell lltlds, the lllllisllwfitlll and lcul The difference between tile Bulgars! and the Turks are obvious and 500i years oi domination by the latter! did not serve to eradicate them. ; [in Canada Mingled With‘ Slave t ‘ i There is almost as much of a racial gull between the Bulgars and the Greeks; null their differ- ences are accentuated by an ant-- lent etiiility dating ironl the time when the Bulgars were a threaten- ing spear-point against tho Greek Byzantine empire, stld later when tor a space Bulgaria was tributary to that same Byzantium. TAB Rou- lnanians lo the nortli are Latins and they. too, are racially distinct from the Bulgars. it is only toilic Serbs and other Jugo Siavs that l.ie Bulgnrs tire related, and that re lationsliip is not close enough to have brought about a friendship or lusting cit-operation. in ll illlrnsc. the Bulcurs are Slavs who are tili- fereiit. Tile very name Bulgur is ol‘ non-Slavic origin. ll was brought ll by ‘fttrltlr conquerors from southern Russia in 679. ltclativel_i' few iii uuiilhel", tiie Buigzlrs ilierg- ed themselves with tile SlilVS and adopted tilt- Slavic ltinittlilge illltll customs. They were but llie silicc whit-ii gives the Slavic ilulgtlriiins that dint-reli- incl? brothel" irolil seems to liiive- l Limited Holdings Agriculture has tilways held first‘ i larlliiintg still more: the Bulgars, for: ct-ncral among leit open to them By weeding out tile upper classes, too, the Turks made Bulgarian agriculture more and more a peasant activity. And now, by legislation. the Bulgarians themselves are emphasizing farm- ing on a small scale. A national luw limits tlieestate taut an in- dividual may bold to a maximum oi‘ about 74 acres, and most oi‘ the holdings are much smaller. Another law aims to abolish a leisure class by requiring’ all adults between certain ages to itvork. The peasants are now almost completely in con- trol of the political vlllaChlllfilflt’, with one of their number holding the premiership and with a mark- ed majority in the Cabinet and the national assembly. Bulgaria long suffered not only from Lie tyranny oi‘ the non-Christian Turk, bill ul- so from the diplomatic intrigues oi‘ the Christian powers of Europe. Russia liberated the country from the Turkish yoke by the Rilsati- Titrklsh war oi‘ 1877-78, and rpro- posed toset it up as an independ- ent nation witli considerably more territory than ii has today. But other powers, tearful oi‘ u strong state in tile Balkans, compelled (lite transfer oi areas to adjacent stilts-s divided the territory thlli wits left lllbo Bulgaria and ldnstern Riliiit-i- in, and placed botn buck under the stizerainty of Tilrkey. Bulgaria. a semi-independent principality, niec- ted u Germain prince for its ruler und remained much tls it was urea- tod ior seven years. l"? us...“ Nor sci- white candy- tuft like 4 A Bad Name faces m_“_ ‘they never may lenrii the bed- tiiiie song Tlicn by tl coup (Petal Eastern 0f the thrush that thrills in the Human“ w“ annexed m [he "rm. cipality an arrangement accepted ay bonnats. by_ Turkey. Full independent-e Nodding down from the trellis came in 1908. when the then lllle. Prince Ferdinand proclaimed hint- self czar, like the Bulgarian rul- ers oi‘ tile country's ancient golden age. Poor leadership during the last decade has given Bulgaria a .bad name with much of the oiltsidc world. Alter the war in which Bul- garia. Serbia and Greece defeated Turkey in 1912, tnere was s wtlr over the spoils between Bulgaria and the other former allies, with Roumania finally" intervening alone. Anti they will not climb wlth_ me’! I “Edna Ddead, in The New York Times. _ against Bulgaria. The responsibil- ity for this conflict, whether right ly or wrongly. has generally been laid at tile door of Bulgaria. Dur- lottetoivn and for Prince Edward‘ wreckage on tlit- othl-I‘! island. as The Guardian has re- marked, “nu invaluable acquisi- tion." Nor is there any city and province that Things artistic interest. i l i could colltributel iiicillrble ilisgruce. it-urios of more varied "historic until that the ladies of lnatle| well as the ilieii. is it not evident tllut sonietliiilg must; _bv tioiie for tllle improvenivtit. nl hov- ernniettt House DFODPPU’ If the pro- vince and its llwllli’ 11"‘ m “°'""'l’e ‘The wonder is (‘liurlotteltvutn as ilu not protest when Indiana roamed the woods and against the mlunalvc uukelllill "ll" fished upon tile brought hove from oversals by the ellrly l-‘rcucll. Scott-ll. lrisll anti Eng- lish settlers in ‘the dsltind; things shore. utciisilsl p0ill'illlt'8 of this tine old ilrtlllPPLY- and tletunitti that tile lit-lids llioflvll) 0i Govwnnlpiit House trout (l(]\fll:u maul Pmitl wPilllllllll- ma“ mm illzltio and il-sed here ill the Oltléilimigiri oi Victoria Purl: and be kfdll llmm, representative of the (‘Dlldl- ii“ tit-cont iintl ilrcseilizi-blv cilntlittull iioiis til-at. then prevailed; ttlilligs ' for ilic benefit Zllltl t-roilil ut ‘llltlpftl- brought here i'ronl distant countries tviiire at. large llllil for tlie eliilll" by ships’ uzliltalills and others whose nit-tit or summer visitors. homes were here, could easily be obtained. indeed, tho iliicleus of a lllllsPllm, now lililtlt-ll away, lhlll I l lit-Ill)‘ l0 tile hi-iisfit of i The proposal] that lllll (lovarli- tilt-tit House shall llP ('(lil\'Pl"I\\'l)llh;l0- ‘u. lllllfivlllil and so liitiiut-itiirt 0t he iuiilhi- set-ills. lit lllund, t-utlld be iouull lu the PfGVlll-Illll events, til bt- lvorlll) 0| l‘"l\*~‘“l“"' cial Building. llllllllill il-mlhlll lo 11W llllefilillll- B?‘ ' America. its well its irulil the Ulliletl forte Mr. Stet-us haul built the Bunch Ignites uiitl other iutvls oi‘ ‘Fillliitlil, n< ll)’ Grove lllit there were litany wlioi tttttl tshat the ne-ilplt- oi‘ the ilrtiviiice i" . tltullglit llliri the Old Govei'niileiiii=--- "TT House, with its new 2ll)l)lll‘I0ili»lill'Ufir uliuhl. udvtlnlzigeoilsly‘ to this coul- mutlity, be utilized as a Sllllllllt-i“ hotel, ulul llllill. till arrallgeiiii-lit‘ niiglit bu urrivetl our Licuteilitltt (iovserilor would ])i‘()Vll|i"‘ll willl a new and ' resilience, while the ti‘ \' Vlt*\\’ 0i‘ the lllllqill-l lletitlty’ '7 at iiiitlei- which‘ 1.‘. ‘ilioiis 'i‘ili-rt= i-zili bu» no tllllllll. that ‘if tilt-vb wore ailtliiviill illlrili-iitius AUTO , INSURANCE IS THE‘ MOST INIPORTANT‘ HTTO ‘ APCPJSSUXKY We will write you n blanket thsiti-nnt-c policy illulcfllut; you in (lYPry wuy from iiiinucial loss. vi.“ will t-ujtvv your tiutnllig more ii _vi;i| don't cal-r)’. m" Mun Worry with you its at pussu-lliltir. q-i... tutti-st insurance lnvl’. b}. isliititl Agency I - money Lest You Forget llyndman 8t Co. Lid. nlautlgers for P. E. l. There can be iiotiucstion tlittt liizllly _ persons at home and wl)l'(]iiil would itpre vtlllllllvllifillfilll‘ _\\'llll _ lllllfll‘ The OM"; “taut-gm; Aqengy ||| ‘freely t-tultrihilie urtit-les of verlu which are natural. Print-c latltiutt P‘ E‘ l. that lvotllil go to make up a very itr-lsltiltd would. ort- lonl-Z- hi‘ llll’ llfllm‘ tore-sling collection iii u lllllfihlllilflqi- i‘i_-~'ilf‘l of >'lillllllt*i‘ tourists irtllll . - established here. But ivheri- to es-iti... \\‘t limits-u illlll tioillieiu south ‘would _\+-.il .itl~i _\l ll. llllllll ll llltl they wviuiiti PXllilllil, llS well the i'llllili‘l‘ they would at‘- W.L.C. ‘illiillllt-ll‘ oi‘ UN‘. i(.‘.tl’.lll. iii the lllllilll- 1Q Let Us Remind You That Goffs promise to meet all lowest Pric” ‘Wmed l" ‘M’ city on regular staple boots and shoes. ‘ - siulzlliuti, its sea-water, bathing lti-v militias. with the park neat-by, woultl |\ auililll" u stiniillsi- hotel after viii-w,"- tliiiis. oi‘ British Coltiiiitbizi. But in view of the ltdiiiirzvble eiilPrili-tst- 0i,‘ we "ever make anniversary Saki to t-urry out tllivt iticu~ at lciisl llil-, til trllt- llPi-‘(l oi‘ a second luvuo slim-i nit-r ltoici for tourists bus been do"? mtlilstrilteti. Meantime, the olil (luv-l BllllilPlli House iiiiitllit~it an ill‘- We don't have to, for our prices aretalways best. Do you want a pair of our 57-00 Merl? HlP BMW-m" $3.90. This lot will all be gone in u day or "l" 3"" "l" "i never be replaced. I l. it ing lite world Will‘, pi-rlitiiis, largely,‘ because oi‘ the llniiteiizollt-rii blooiiflf I of tiii- lluigziriun t-zill‘. lililuuviil iiu-i 0d up with iicriiitliii‘, Austria until , Turkey. But lili‘ ilrl-st-tll prcliiir-lni 20 per cent. off all our already low priced uten'$ 0X‘ lords. ' 20 per cent. to 5O pcr cent. off all women's and cnlid- i-en's white oxforlis, ties, straps, stc. wits opposes] to this step and Vliiifil imprisoned betrlitlsu ul ills opium-l, tiuli. ills altitude probably l'l'lll*i‘li ell tlliit 0| ills tpilfiy, which i_>' 110W‘ overwhelmingly in itUWPl‘. New goods arriving daily and always pricedgt i716 -. lowest margin of profit possible. ll There is ll teniiltttiion to cunsid F3 er Bulgaria, toilL-Iiiilg Greece as it,‘ does, a southern tzouultgv. But its“? illlllllllP is tipproxlitiutcly" tliul nil lowu. Though Bulgaria |)l'Ui|il<‘i‘.s‘ l the usuul grains, fruits. tubal-co and‘ live stock oi‘ its part oi the wiu'ld.| it is bcsi known tor its t-xti-nsiie culture oi‘ roses tor the iliztiiuizii-ttli" oi‘ the ilinlous and vzllulilllu iiltuv o1‘ roses. The number oi‘ acres 0t‘ ms es cultivated lot‘ this iltirposi» in Saturday ends this big sale of Men's Wear and t0 make this week the best one we are cutting prices away down. Bulgaria hits approached 20,000. All ucre ilroiluces about 4.000 pounds ol_ rose polttls, blit this grout built oft Plenty of goods left i0 choose from. Nonedtimaged and the smoke smell has disappeared. iletitls yields only about. twenty ONE THIRD OFF ONE Headquarters for Holeproof Hosiery. (.01-‘l~*- - -BR os.. LTD. ~§$ Not a Southern Country ounces ol‘ iiilur. Tile stilotibls- ilro- tlnct from ll whole ni-rc is till-rc- love little more lllilll one imuiltl. 'l‘ltis much-sought essence, iiotvov- or, is worth from $60 up per iluunil lti Bulgaria, tltltl many titties more tlniii lllill in foreign t-oiintrlcs. I .:__4o>__-_- ONE MILLION DOLLARS FOR PROMISE BREACH QUARTER SAILATOGA SPltTNGS. .\'. Y.. Aug. 1li.»— Qllt: illlllltlll iiilllllrs _ (l-ii-lIlilKPS is sought 5))’ livalrilllr- Sluts 9h. rowan Foniliiiiv, u lancer, ill i‘. suit fut“ branch of‘ pfllllllst! algutnst Overcoats Flirts 1'5"‘ -lll.\"li -'.<i i Sllmlllialllfiy \l’llli_t"tlt‘t~l‘)\\;llil|tt:y:_|“i:vi'tll*il- Trousers S, oves lug to the stzilvlileltt lli bliss Fun» Riaincoats “spenders Millie's aittoviiey, (‘lliilvlc-s l<‘ii'o- (‘Ollarq stunts, of Now York city. iltiring Underwear .t é‘ the lii-gutnciit oi n motion iii the u] ,- ‘ (‘.1199 before Jllsblvn llcilry V. Hats (‘l b ‘dseg iloret iii Septctiitbcr teriii hot-c Sweaters ' u Bags today. Trunks lti his argument Attorney Fire- Neckwear slime, stuiotl thill on Oi-luiwv 2S, 1920, \\"|lllll4*y prmiiisctl to iiitlrry Miss Foniriilie. after ll courtship which comtuencotl iltltfllll Mtly 25. i919. The wedding tiny. llo sttitl. lvzla fixed for Ocltllior ill, IIIPPD days nftr-r the alleged protiiisc was lilzltle. but the liiurringe ilovilr took place. Tlinso sutteint-iits were t-ontliietl ln n ‘manuscript prmcntell to Judge Horst by Miss l-‘ontliiiieflti attorney with the sole remark, "This is our complaint." The complaint wna not i-tittti ypf. ltrtlly in court nor were other than tile written statements mode. Dllrlflg the flute 0f the ullilged courtship, sltltl tho tlttornt-y. Whitney made rr-pestcti pron-lines to marry Miss Pflllf-Illfle, who. ha‘ said loft-r gave ‘birth tn n son. Miss l-‘ontaine is still willing to marry Whitney, lie said. l (lull-fl, etc. Shop Today and Save ~ ‘ Money OPEN EVERY EVENING . A. BRUC \