llyudman 8t Co. Ltd. FlllE ll llll it lllilllll llllllIBlE imu-r ‘Walnut llu , llllllll l_llll_§lflllllll I24 Csuuruu 9n, lion-ran; "For 8 years, I suffered eorutantl! I011: Kidney Dina-wand Lin! Trvubla Ky health was miserable and nothing u. the way of ordinary medicine did me any good. Then I started lo nu “Fruiunivu"- and the eflect was remarkable. Al! (h; pglnj’ Headaches, Indigestion and Constipation were relieved and once more I was well. All who suffer from sueh trouble! should take “Frult-a-tivcs" Madam HOIUIIDAS FOISY 50c a box, 6 for 52.x, trial size 251 At dealers or sent postpaid Ilqit-yi-ivu Limited. off-lit. -_ sGo M filmy Blue=jay to your druggist The simplest way to end a corn is Blue-Jay. A touch 5109511"; pqm instantly. Fhen ihr- corn loosens and comcs out. Maiic in a colorless cit-at liquid (one drop docs ltl) and in cxtra thin plas- ters. The action is the same. Pain Stops Instantly chasm: “Did you have Io pay nnythink‘ to that man you run over thc- olhcl day?" - “No- he imppcnnrl to ho u rclu tion ol my husband's. lortuntitlalyf“! (f: _\_;_—.;| haalhit. ‘- IJiK-OIIIII» u: nliinlnrmnwu GUARDIAN .I-IIIIQ llflllllPiilllflt ‘Lfllfiniéfltl. Dilly (billed IQ" U$ Norah; U“ lunar (mailed) la advaaee_ 2:161!!! (delivered) in alala and it“ to U-tl. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1922. GOOD BEGINNERS We in this province may safely lay claim to the title -of Good Bl! ginncrs. We have wiss and meritorious undertak- ings. We begun an industrial cam- paign some years ago which pro- mised to fill new industries but the war came and other things happened or did not happen. and the industries dill begun maul our country with not arrive. We begun sum? years tlgu to develop our tourist trade and we res-eluted well and wisely’ but today the people whom we had hoped to their summers and their money with us do not know where Prince Edward island is. For some years induce to spend another that one ot‘ the‘ great needs. possibly the greatest need. 0t and we “resoluted" that we should this province was immigration ‘go after immigrants and stock un ‘our vacant farms with them and replenish our population. Today. if an immigrant came to our pro- vince innking for a farm wc-are quite sure our provincial govern- ment could not tell him where to ilnd ouc. At any rate our govern- ment has not Indicated either at home or abroad what it would tin or could do tor immigrants if tht-y came here. \Ve have many needs; we need industries and we have all ti" re- quisites in raw materiel. .11 trans- portation. ln_m.'u~. power for a certain class of industries but we ntust stall them for ourselves. ot~ hers will neither start. them nor 0-00-Q0-000o Are You Handicapped l l By Defective Sight‘! ! l Perhaps your eyes may be defective, although you are not aware of the fact. If you have difficulty In do- ing what other do easily, or lf you have trouble In seeing what others see clearly,‘ it la time to have your eyes exam- lnsd. Do not delay, for delay ll dangerous where your syel are concerned. I We will qlvc you expert ad- vice. G.F. HUTCHESON v poobeo l ‘+0 use» Fire Sale All shades in stock, sold at half price. $1.50 to $1.75 shades for 75c. 3 light fixtures, com- plete with shades $7. 2 light; fixtures, com- plete with shades, $6. S. McIsaac & Sons 16l Queen fitreat Phone 7224 l DON'T GAMBLE wlTH TH; FUTURE. FIRE INSURANCE IR WHAT YOU NEED Firs Insurance la a safeguard dlvtltfld by sound sense. We rep- rlunt aouml and rsllahla lnaur- ance companies laaulng panels; fast afford you complete protea- h. ' l. tlallon for them but whn knows ' mhonf ' knows whether we have them or l to do for them. ' can make an honest living among lnvrxsl in tit-rm if we have not suf- flclcnt faith to invest in the-m our- > selvcs. we have ‘lpurists will never We need tourists "ml ' all that are looking for. but tire)- the attractions [come in us unless they know Zwhvre we are and what we have ltn nflcr by way of compensation ifor coming here. 1f we wunt tlicln Iwe must give them some idea oi I where we are. what kind of coun try we have. what climate. wbut information should ken it. ‘room for a limited number. are. what they would cost. what marketing conveniences they were going to live if they vaslon this autumn immigrants with or without fami- lies. what would we do with tlieru or for them? We need immigrants. we need 15.000 of them to make up nur loss of population in the past 20 years and we have farms and accommo- Who even thosP farms’? not’! Who knows whether they are tivttiiahle at. a reasonable price? if ‘we are going to get the lim- mlsrants we need we must first of all find out what we are going what farms we can offer them, what assistance we can give them. whathope we can hold out to them that they us. This. the government must at once ascertain before we can even move to bring immigrants here and this must ‘be taken up at once if we are going to particip- ate In the federal government's im migration policy as our sister past we have proclaimed to one. general attractions. Tn give thlfilname of the law. be our first. step and we have talked about lllnf jamborce. hitting blindly hero for many years but have never la-ltmd there and missing the reall We need immigrants anrl have ;culprlts. There is something wrons. The We administration 0f Justice in the have some vacant farms which. it‘ '. available. would be bought by im- migrants lf they knew where the)‘ were within reach and how. generally. came here. Suppose we had an in- of say flftylhonesl summer's work. that boats led. boats along the waterfront are being plundered. and even such parts of the wharvea as lure not fastened down are away. Worst of all no arrests “are made and apparently elfhrts are ,made to discoverthe "thieves. A reign of lawlessness appears to have settled down upon the com- muuity and it is being calmly 100k ed upon as a "wave of crime." for which there is no remedy and which will pass eventually it we let it alone. We are probably no worse in this respect- than some of our sister cities but we are worse- thau we ever were and that should be sufficient to arouse us. No doubt statistics can be pro duced showing that there are few- er convictions today than there were some years ago and the in- ference drawn that there ls less lawlessness. The conclusion is not a logical one. 1f there are vfewcr convictions It only means that more law-breakers escape. That some law-breakers will es- cape ls inevitable; garden thieves. like the poor‘, we shall have with us: some men always will get drunk as long as can be bought or stolen and as long as but they True an liquor moonshine endures. should not all escape. occasional arrest is made: an un- fortunate who on his way home finds that the qulred unaccustomed curves since he had last seen it and tries to take short the curves ls taken to the police cells sidewalk has ac- cuts between wit. drunken driver on‘ country ‘ ' street may run amuck 1- l xgcrnr lhe lives of others and "y with it. Occasionally one . housantl or more who ccetlthe auto speed limit is rested and fined for cutting corner at an obtuse angle or driving at what appears to be in excess of the prescribed speed limits. but the nine hundred and ninety nine go on cutting through tile whole ten commandments. We areevery day "straining at gnats -. BX- Bi‘- l for land swallowing camels" in, the Justice appears to be 0n a sflrt past two or three years has falloil lamgntflibly and unless we awake and demand a better enforcement of law we shall soon be on a level with the worst of our larger cities. . That thieves can enter a garden at will and get away with a man's cannot safely be left’ on nur water fnont, that moth-mg can be left lying loose in a ‘back yard 0f 9V9" on a front lawn. is not crellllflblt‘ to our city and is clear evidence that either our Pvllm 3°?” l5 not sufficiently larse for their d"- lles or that the law is no font!" a terror to evil doers. Whatever the cause is it is up to the civic authorities to investigate and pru- vitle a remedy. SOMETHING WRONG School readers. which retail in Nova Scotla at from 30 to 60 cents, are reprints of Ontario readers w.hlch are supplied to the dealers of that province from 4 1-2 to 12 cents each. Yet the distribution of school books is made in this province through a Government bureau. Tho infer- ence is plain that there In some- thing wrong with the bureau.- at provinces are now do. preparing to For loourlly and lervlca at equitable rants apply to thieving,- are being stripped of vegetables LAW-LEQBNEIO Complaints come from practic- ally all over the city of petty gardens and orchards probably the same thing that ls wrong with the Government—lack of efficiency-Sydney Post. What about school book: prices in Prince Edward Island‘! 1 EDITORIAL NOTES was otoss-r msul-uiNct t Aoancv m r. s. l, and fruit, stores are being enter- ligating conditions for emigration The Italian Government is loves might he successfully put on! land in ‘Canada in colonies. but the er perlmeut ought git...‘ this". it is to b» noted that the war between Greece and Turkey is s continuation of the Great War which began in 1914. Nomlnslly Britain also and VKSOIISEQIIQIIILT Canada] are still in a state of war with Turkey. the peace trea- ty belnlreeu Britain and Turkey agreed upon Germany and lter allies never been ratified. " m casnmnnupwulcuanpmuj“ having the world as well as one of must serious import and conse- quence that in a. brief campaign ion pf s11 their lost posscsslons than a hundred has been characterized ‘ifan and has ‘been during that period shorn of the greater part of the territory it formerly sessed. but the invalid etlil plays a tremendous fighting force at home and large control over the sympathies and passions years past gravity to the IBrltalu and thc British Empirelbecause 0f many millions of Mohzmmeduus who live under the British flag. Asia Mlncr the wane of recent battles. is’ made up 0f the trcnie western part uf the contin- ent of Asia and is in the form 0f a peninsula. about. as large France and has a population of some 30.000000 souls. It lies lmmed lulelyg south of lhe Black Sea and the Dardanelles. and is bounded on the’ divest and south by the ivaters of the Mediterranean -Sea. For lmmemorlal ages it has been the battleground of Asiatic and European conquerors and of the contending tum“ of neulnehtsnl. Judaism, Christianity and Mohnm medanism. The recent Greco-Turkish cam- paign. was conducted in the wes- tern half of Asia Minor. which covers an area of about 50.000. square fillies. comparable to thr txtent of the three Maritime Pm- vlnces of Canada. Within this historic ground and at its north western margin is the site of the ancient city of Troy. whose ten year's siege, dating 3.000, years ago. is ltnnlortnllsed in Homer's illad. Within arid about. the scone lof the recent fighting are» the laltes of “the seven churches which ‘are in Asia“ to whom the Apostle ‘John addressed thc Revelation. The seven churches, it will be remembered, Iwerc located respetz- lively at Ephesus, Smyrna, Perga- mos. Thyatlra. Sardls. Philadel- phia and Lnodlcea. They were all Prince Edward island. Some 270 miles east 0f Laoliicea. the most southern ,0f this group of unclen churches. was Tarsus, the seaport ht which the Apostle Paul was horn. His eplst-ies to the Ephcs inns, Colossizms anti the! Galatians wvere addressed to churches in the same group. although‘ with the exception of Ephesus they were not included among the famous seven. The Mohammedan religion dates its origin more than six hnn tired years since the Christian: era. The followers of Mohammad are not' lvloiators. Professedly they worship the same Gnd as Jews and Christians worship. They deny the doctrine of the 'l'l'll1ily. as do the Jews. but. ad- mit that lMOSBs. Elijah and our Savior were eminent prophets of the true God. Another rwlde con trust between the Christian lalth and the Mohammedan ls that. the Mohammedaus believe in the pro- pagation of their faith lby the sword. And there are now half as many Mohammcdann approximate- ly as Christians in the world. To them every war is a holy war. Yesterday titers was a rumor on the street not continued that war had ‘been declared by Great Britain against. Turkey! it opens alarming posslbilltlm if true. Oi soon to occur, for Britain, for Europe and the war tired and debt burdened world. Late news tells o‘. Constantinople threatened ‘by the vlctorlouu Turtklsh army. with on- ly 7.000 British troops and half as many French and Italians in Barrison there, lbut a British fleet 116M’ at hnflfl. The danger lg pp patently imminent. _.__-._.____._.__ in Canada. Italy ha; to have a m. sum" " Bmlsratlon to maintain equilibrium sl home. and the Uni - 9d States is shutting off nil hut a small purl. The Northern Italians to be carefully made. after the defeat 01' it is a matter of surprise to the the Turks have reg-lined possess- in Asia Minor. Turkey for more as the Sick pos- dis- of the Mohammedan world. This last named fact is one of the utmost the PX’ KS within an area t-wlce the size oil but we can all t.n a store up The Public Forum This eeluna la open fer the discussion by eel-respond- ants of questions sf Inten “c. The Charlottetown Guardian lose not nuisa- arliy endorse the eplnleaa axpneasl by ita can» _ pondontl. gqqq-o-o First Year Passes Sir.—-1 have affirmed that 60 per cent of the Plliills who enter in the first year of Prince of Wales college fall and see- ing that Pedagogue has called this statement in question. I shall endeavor to prove it. in 1919, 1920, 1921 and 1922 the following numbers tried the en trance to the College- viz 420. 420 436 and 565; of these, 177, 139 154 and 224 passed the senior ex amlnation. counting those will" were conditioned in one subject and ‘:5. 34. 54 and 25 in the jun lpr. The junior students may left out as they stay in college as a rule till Xmas. if one counts in only the Se» niur. this tnakes of matrlcuiants cent and 40 per cent. ff one counts in the seniors and juniors, one gets 5d per cent. 41 per cent, 49- % per cent and 47 per cent. This shows that. the entrance examin- ation is fairly severe. vFrum the fact that the Principal of the College does not give in his rz-port the number in each year. it is impossible‘ to get ab» sollltcly accurate percentage failures. 1t can safely bmassumed that practically all the matricul- auts enter the first year. As they are in college for a yell!‘ the 1'9 suit would appear in the year fol lowing their entrance. a in 1920. 1921 and 1922, the fol lowing passed the first year nl 177. 13.0 and 154. This worked out in DPPYQIHREBS works out 44. 57 and 5G percent or Irf failures. 56. 43 and 44 per cont of failures or about 4S pcr cent. ‘ This practically proves my con tentlon that approximately 50 per cent of the students who enter in the first year at Prince‘ of Wales (‘tillcfi-le fail. l am nnt concerned with second and third years. As to the statement of the Prln Iillliil. he said in effcct within my r-wn hearing concerning those who failed. that In alter life they would thank him for their failure us being the best thing that rnulrl happen them. which would he‘ all right if the number of fall- urcs were reasonable, but they are not. Now. sir, i think with my ma- themltral hand. i have prdved my ‘case. but it would be interesting éto knnw where Mr. Pedagogue got “his statistics. ;‘ I am- Sir. otcz. l EDUCATIONALIST. the t t Others’ View Points; NEW HOME FOR .THE .BANK OF ENGLAND (London Spectator.) The British Public, even that lvery small tporiion of it that we call cultivated, has recently and most, justly begun admonished for lls ignorant neglect of architect- ure. The spokesmeu lnr the new Architecture “Club have said hard and salutary things of ‘both pm“ and public. lbut have also added advice and action to their crlllc ism. Now that even the "Register 9d Reader" fllimears to have Ibeen genuinely stirred by the proposal '0 rflblllld the Bank of England an unusual opportunity seems m have come to the club for the ex erclse of its function as guide in matters of public amenity. Some conuorate declaration would no doubt also be welcomed by the bank's governors, who are clearly a-Ware uf their respnnsii’ ity to the public as trustees "t u national monument. Their ch19; trust. however, is of course a fin- _-_._-_..g lmilaily Selections to?“ Guardian ileallets ‘TOM "IO W. I. Lqugg" collection ave-op»- pane...‘ _. WHAT DO YOU '.' fNl. ADI/KIT! ‘Evll- wnkms. undulnti - get such a. hold nn one tiioutgllld; are once indulged. What d0 you think about when we have no particular work to distract our attention - Are our thoughts anti true? lf not, be sure thing wrong, rm- Bhflllld "y to leach ourselves to turn our thoughts from earthly ills, so should W0 also try lo keep our thoughts from thing; 5km“ ""1 "m"! "w thins»: which soil the beauty or our souls, as earth will destroy the beauty of our 800d pure there is sumo. even as we bodies. . Let us think of something else if we are tempted to lei our thoughts go astray. 'We cannot all have a t d beautiful thoughts ma an 0i’ our own. certain extent the beautiful ..:l. . ,1)!" " "' be 42 per cent, 38 per cent, 26 per of college. viz. 77. 79 and 86 nut 0i with the logical beauty of struc- tural articulation either with-or without a dress of quite frankly thoughts Superficial of other people ln our minds to lcored in the plaster or dwell on the pure and beautiful we shall do well. merely planted on on the streets. are some lovely The new veils _ for th and pare really part of- the and why not be read | selection is at its best. Our suits are the acm daintiness that makes a dressed woman. AMONG THE nLousss . complete without at leasta couple. BOYS’ OUTFITS FOR SCHOOL are a specialty with us and the bo dressed when thier suits are bought at ’___B_A_TONSI LTD. hat. SPORT COATS, SUITS AND FINE FURS IN DISTINCTIVE MODELS You will want your sport coat or suit from now on y for the chilly evenings models for all and Autumn Miilinery Modes Show Color} and infinite Variety With Feathers flaring vivaciously, Ribbons doing ,' all manner 0f clever tricks in trimming and needle work where ever fancy places a bit 0f color. _ _Patons aredaily opening the choicest early autumn miilmery and already many of their sport hats are seen e sport hats are very smart f! when the e_0f style with that touch 0f suit so irresistable to the well your wardrobe is not 3's know they are well anciu-l one, and we can have ‘but small patience ‘with the ianuticul archaeologists Mho insist that the fabric of the bank must be helu sacred and untouchable and that. its owners must, on no account lay hands on it no matter now the cramped and inadequate old build- ing luuy ha-itupcr their business. Lt may be twken as settled that. the bunkis in urgent ncod of grcutly increased and more conveniuntlly arranged accommodation and that further decentralization is imprac- ticable. Tho-re are niretidy some half dozen dupurttticnts tof the bank scattered about the city Lt- the great embarrassment of its business, and it is partly with tho object of concentrating some’ of’ these satellite offices within the main building that reconstruction llnd expansion are now proposed. A thank has special and peculiar needs that. make a scattered or- ilunlzatlon particularly wasteful and inefficient as well us tire- some, seeing that sn Illllllll of its intricate business deftlamls perso- nwl interviews and the inspection lind checking for nil snrts of bookis and documents Any pnlivy that sacrificed efflclcncy to Hen“. mcnt is surely as undesirable as it ls impossible when it ls our national finances that are invol. vcd. Sir John Scene was rm exceed- ingly able architect and an ingeu lvus and sometimes inspired ex- perimenter both in construction P1111 ln design. as ls made manifest in the present bank ‘building Based on Greek work, his highly individual style was developed with u rare economy of means and an exploitation of structural fines that ores masterly. In the domed and vaulted chambers or which he was so fond one clearly lmls his delighted preoccupation decorat ion, perhaps 809D ENGLAND AND SUNDAY GAMES (Halifax Herald) English newspapers bring the information that a movement des- cribed as a social revolution is making headway in London in tav- or 0t‘ a "Sunnier Sunday.” Tho Puritan ldcu oi‘ u Sunday that pro» liibits everything in the form ut’ London public parks are to bc thrown open for games cl‘ all klfllls on Sunday afternoons. By u voto of or ol‘ the games. And ll is cx that lhc idea. will quickly sp other cities. One argument from the standpoint of the advocates of an opcu Sunday is that. two of the great religious bodies, Catholic untl Anglican, have always been toler- Untll Sept. 14th..ws are boots for school children. Don't buy until you ass women's and children's been These are all marked at CV6 l‘- HEADQuAaTsns l-‘oa outdoor exercises or amusement iufllllliglofi." to be considerably rcinxcti. and thelmvfllll l0 b0 l1 kllllfllfl" --- -.____.‘ unt in their views that when the practices ol‘ thc church have been ‘fdllly. willingly and gladly" ob. servell- Sunday is lreo, like any oth- '11‘ (lily. for ltarmicss recreation. The 11811301‘ oi‘ course, is the ex- treme continental Sunday; but the movers for the social revolution think there is a safe middle course which will not hurt the British. they say. "was never These arguments Eftppear to be firevniilns. and with the condition that. the freedom is only to be ex- seventy-nine to forty-nine the Imn- willed w the afternoons. the 1M- don County Council declared in lav- don pat-ks are to be opened for pectedlcricket, tennis. baseball, bowls, cro- rcud to’ qucl und other games. Golf will also l Special ‘p Reductions. For School Opening i on all Boys’, Misses’ and children's boots and shoel- have its innings. it is quite a step tnrward for old ilondon to throw down the burs around its public parks and let the people play gumcs on Sundays. giving big discounts on all ours. . Arriving daily, man. for fall wear. the smallest margin of profit HOLEPROOF HOIIIIIY “OFF l3R°s~ .