1 t- _llji __ _._ _-Lf .1 Li.;-k' t " gf? ~l_‘l:r'\ 5 ,_‘_j_;»_.~;i _ l.-lift-its-¢ 3 T;;.=5~f 1 in .fl-. |l` .rc ‘l liz? Mil; `- glin Ti if.: 5- .-;.J> _ -1. _fig-1:‘:` ' ‘ riff: -r-1"-; .~:‘_:_jf_'_%ff-- §',’§.’*_iii-I '- -1 _;_ “I-3* f"5’i5-$’i"‘.f’*" t 'if 1.: ,_ 3. 1. _ .__i.'-_,'_ _.yr .- ; »z`_,:§_t l---_-it ‘ ,.-Full.-2'. 5 'il 'gr get i_:- _. if;-_rig it ‘I ‘ _V %s»_l,.‘z_.ri,ff- ' 1~ it i'l‘--"fel" 1-* -ff » ,-‘-‘hills ».-.-ri .T iii" } i ‘ 1 i ¢ '» I' £“,,."'. "3r.:`.‘f".l wi ,__i_-_ :_,f_ "ir 5-"’ _ _._» \__|__‘_ * <1- ‘li‘;»?,1i~'i`“i. l- f <‘ ;’~‘~‘.--,ii _.._..__ Mk ____-____,;¢_ EA' 1 1 D Office at erton, 7"" °"°° "°' °”"“'” "Y the finadbial posintion as f ` when the Conservatives c Branch Offices at Oumemr- "to D'ec_ 31,1916, the end Montague. I cial year. - 23, 1917 “TL "`;"";"` 'AT' K """"`_"""':"""W ' On Dec., 1911 there was owing I vi Bay and for their Outstandiii Liabllltie by the Jifro nc_s_on;account ._ _ -_-_-_-,,.-.~~.~¢._-_.L ,,,,,,, oi Debentures ..`. S _ _ _ 3 _ s ..._ .. _ _ 9_ BY'ELECTI01` ` Due Bank aid Lopns: .2_... .. _ " _ ctive candidates, Hon l0utstandlng Liabilities Of course those famihar with the understand and ____ 'argument ‘ ~ for Cardigan ilu) Udo (aiwms qi- sy , _ ._ . _ '°" U' '~ 5 and_expend In algllhis spectacles of war which I_ re have ooked upoa_ these two_ years _ PBM. 0- noblest spectacles of all is lden metal of oun soldiers’ and ‘ ans, by__.wbicb we are attaining tory fislprecissly -the means by- victor . as b n _ . the ‘ r; the the v wi_iic _ _ y li ee attained lit. tiie déys of Raleigh even until now. __ The Wprk of the*Hui1. -:` maui! with _human ideas, that Geimany___about which Carlyle gabbled, and Matthew Arnold, th first of our eca ' ’ 8c - ssrbif-ef,-.-f/`»»/if A id? ` -. . ' i 9% .lie All Sport ‘H 1 98C, all ` Ladies wh1tevO_1le,_ __ Untrirpmed Hats, 98c.-ii All on-Eng * hibiiieilbfi-thats. 4» Silk- and Wash " Waists,-98c.` _fi _ d _dents, vaunted con tinually, but we have seen it become detesta /.11 ( s’_<<< #'5- » duly nominated on Wednesday last gest m-ajority_he_has ever-polled-and -- Mr Improvement _ ._ .__ 1912 . . . . . . . . . . _ 1913 . . . . . . . _ _ ' 1914 . . _ _ As tp the result of the polling there has _ necsiers. been no doubt from the beginning. Pre- mier Arsenault will be returned by the lar- . .;_ .. sio.44:i_vs _ $462,984.53 506553.39 525,555.19 the wounded to be rapidly evacuated and cared for under the most trying Dr. Andrew Mcphail very ably edit- ed the Canadian Medical Journal and ble by reason of a carnal and s ritual vulgarlty, no truth ln_the House Dresses 98c. - e Y Di _ perfect organization which enabled' 'inward parts. __This people. which was once great, took its place at the mill like a climatic conditions. In days_nf peace me-inness anil cheapness for any Phil- istine. It losi_all sense of beauty- 9V V also thi- University Magazine, and Evil is yet their good. But l think i blinded giant. turning out en _ et I see no sighs of rr.pcntani~e ,_ ,gwhile little .less than a crime at a time Stewart will carry his district _by as large a .vote _as that which this constituency has `ven tio his illustrious predecessor, ex- glremier, now Chief Justice, Mathieson, at _ every election since his entry into the poli- _ - tical arena in 1900. There is no reason why _it should be otherwise and the campaign has fully demonstrated this, has cleared _ the air _of many misunderstandings that ' may have been caused by the misrepresen- tations .of unscrupulous oflice hunters. .__ The campaign, while wholly unealled for. ._ _ _ _ . 1 1 when men’s minds are engrossed in greateri 1915 19f6 ‘. `*. 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 ` EXPENDITU (including payments _ Sinking Fund.) _ things than elections and' when men’s IM, ,,,,,0,,,,, _,Md ,mo S,,,,_,,,g and 113161115 Sh0l.ll(1 be dCVO11€(`1 tO Fund for reduction of De- _greater things than running an_ election benwrs Debt ~ ~ ~ - ~ - ~ -- 'which could wcll have been avoided, has ' had the effect of showing where both par~ Less a_____u___ _md w____e___uce ties stand and on what grounds they seek ,,,,,_,,,,,,,,,,,g ,,,,,,,m,,S _ "fthe suffrages of the people. The recordsiof _ fboth political parties have been reviewed \ ‘» -and their respective claims to the confi- SURPLUS' dence -of the people have been laid before -the people. 'thc Liberal party had a trial I.0f twenty years and during that time ran the country almost to hopeless bankrupt- A cy. Mr. Bell's platform, as published the other day in the Patriot and afterwards referred to in the Guardian shows exactly - - o ’ Ill where he stands--or rather where he does f not stand-in relation to the interests of and Permanent works It will belseen that he province. Itjwas a hopeless muddle, a Sm_p]_us of $22-7_795_54 -foolish attempt to disprove the correctness 3 of the External Auditor’s reports, a mix- P ing up of the Public Accounts in an endea- a ._ vour to show that there was no better- _ment of the financial position of the pro-. p Vince as compared with the twenty years' ` )0( . 470,729.80 _ 506.79425 RES. into $488.512.19 490987.47 514,982.73 567.85249 506,070.63 $2.568_405.51 _ 901110.29 $2,~l77.79.’i_L'2 A _ 15_621,g3 $2_452_1';3_39 less dcaiily than a partial truth hi _ ' $2'472'617~17 Space prevents our reproducin his n rich vein of sound philosophy herlted fiom his Scottish ancestors E ‘brilliant lecture at all fully. aim as the readers of Canada are well ac- quainted with the achievements of all units in the capture of Vimy Ridge, we will reserve our space for the lecturei's comments o " n the war and _on the psychology of the Hun. TM G¢l‘§\ie1 8ci¢nflfic Spirit. z` _.. He attackedithe “unmitigateil scien tltlcsplrlt which is the peculiar pos- session of the enemy and is happily allen tn our race,” and continued: ‘~"l`liat spirit is not our in~ heritance, _vet none have done more than we for the advancement oi' real science. _ . _ Let us grant to the uttermost that the ursuit of science is the pursuit.of 63th. The German cares nothing for the pursuit. be is all for the result, unaware`that any glven~truth by itself is half a lie. _ . l_ie which is only half a lie is far w ch is believed to be the whole truth. Even to science the`scientific his books have shown hlni to possess in. righteous ,iudgmcin of Gotl arc about do witness thc' slgii that thc just and to fall upon harilencri and unrepcnt ant sinners, and that this Caliban whlch'yet, alas! squats athwarl the pleasant land. shall soon quit this earth and depart to his own place in ‘the cold void of history. Two hunilr ed years ago he saw the work of the Hun in Scotland. You know hlin as the Duke" of (‘umbcrland; by common consent we still describe him as the “Bloody Butchcr.". Mlstrust then your lesser breeds: _vour young By rons, \vho cursed when Waterloo was won; your young Wordswortlis who cast upon red caps of resolution, as many in these days are casting up their caps too soon; mistrust vour bodies. who seize the moment to pl into cffcct their vagaries. Depeiid upon the safe. solid sense which you have ip_herited_ from your fathers. These hre no times for experiments. We have been saved informer times, and we shall -be saved again ii` we put our trust in the old unaltered blood, in the passion, the piety, and the prc\\'&s of the linc."~Canada. _T DUTCH SHIPS HAD _ HUN PROTECTION. \-s. - U77?) '~i '_ \ ‘¢¢// fsiasstusi _- l _ _ _ _ - f PATON 'S Ltd / I derskirts, h98c. Black Sateen Un- _____§§;§,6--, Balance of white `_stfiese.,i>§;i_¢""~r§s ' wash Skirts, 98c. . _ _ » lilbwent QI I9 9 ` i 'intelligmftsia/’ mere bores and busy-_ " Cana The Willis Piano is made by Caiiadian workmen, in zi _ i__;.__T__ - ~_~ I- _ ' f ~ CANADIAN Piano rit is fatal; it becomes "dogmatic ctual improvement in provincial ilitioiis made in last 5 years iprovement of $10,443.7 s 10,443.73 Sp, P Amount expended on (fiipitiil Account in con- _ __ ._ _..$ 2212795.54 the Da then sterile We huye always and _ _ ' _ ke t_in mind that there is a spiritual of four German ships near the coii_=i w in the natural world, whilst the of Holland, the Times naval corros- qu __51____, German, lacking a philosophy of life, pondent says: . “ °" ' 'l takes what he iilclies and develops it l the cold void of abstract science. la n Thai is the _Genesis of his Super- and territorial water of Holland avr man. a monstrosity developed from getting into areas protected by Ger- lentatlve hypothesis of our 'own man mines and submarines. from rwin_ _ _ _ We live not by irutli which they reach_ Cuxhaven and tl'l€I`€ WHS 3. H611 but by illusions and the hu-man heart Wilgelmsaven. ln" other words, 8_ as Vouched creates those illusions which alone th L0i\'D()N-Regarding the capture “lt is freely stated that steamcrs den with coal leaving Rotterdam esé vessels are practically convoy- i‘ by the External Auditors and proved 51.76 expended -.on capital account ‘and ermanent works, and mount by which the public debt of the rovince has been reduced. of Liberal drift into bankruptcy. No sane an in the province could read that plat- orm without pity, if not contempt, for the ' A Jl`S'l`Il"IABLE an who tried to climb by it to the pre- __ _ iership of this province, and no sane man a would wish to see the province take the t frisk of going back to it. During the past I '- five years we have had uninterrupted pro-‘ gress, our financial position, notwith- p ~ tanding the criticisms of Mr.-Bell and his p ieutenants, has been infinitely better _han ever before in our history. Our pub- ic works, our schools, our agriculture t ave been infinitely improved as compar- ed with former conditions. In short no- T hing has occurred that could persuade ny sane electors that “to swap horses” at 3 his stage would be the part of wisdom. n nder Premier Arsenault we believe the I. good work begun by his predecessor will e be ably and efficiently carried forward. On the other hand Mr. Bell has not shown d 'ither in the Legislature or 'during the C ampaign that he is any improvement on t ' or even the equal of-his Liberal pre- ecessors and their record is one that the rovince has no de_sire_ to revert to. C _ alled upon by their roadmasters for help A _word of caution is necessary. Every- 0 main away from the polls in the belief that E the two Conservative candidates are ' "going to _bc elected anyway and that one y will be the betterit will be for the pro- eals of the Liberal brgan, those reserved or circulation at the last moment, those ent out in the hope that they will not be We are not breaking espondent when we state that the boast bout the good roads in own and North Tryon 'esident by one of these districts. We ublish his most justifiable boast with leasure and in the hope -that it will inspire others to' similar good- work. May we not conclude the people of these districts take pride in heir roads and boast about them that they iave roads that they may well boast about? he districts named are among -the most rogressive in the province and their roads re an index of their prosperity. We do ot know the political opinions of our cor- l espondent or of the roadmasters mention- d but we venture the opinion that th_e wideawake farmers of the districts named o not care a continental what political amp the roadmasters belong to so long as hey do their roadwork in a workmanlike manner. We may venture the opinion also that when the people of these districts are m th d , _bod_y should poll his vote. Let no one _re- ogthfnngllf hsotiggiaecrkolln overnment or the government’s road act ay get the blame _ _ _ The good roads of which our correspon- or two votes will not signify. Every vote dent proudly boasts are . ill be needed and the bigger the majori- roadmasters alone but t _ _ _ the district for no roadm U09- And One WOW m91‘.9-the 13155 213' efficient and willing, can without the hearty and port of the people. . It is not too much tosay that where- _overtaken before the election, are to be ever there is a bad piece a credit not to the taken With Plenty Of Salt- fault does not lie with the roadmaster. It _ _l ( _ _ _ ° s o THE ('01\ S_ER\ A'l'I\ E Sl..-RPLLS _ i ~ . s » In the course of his various speeches in brought up to the working point by the de- Georgetown district Mr. J.J. Johnston termination of the pe0p]_e to have good ` ” roads. If the roadmaster is impossible their five years of oflice the there is always the last has_ gone behind $90,000, him-but no wideawak the astualfl fact is there has been farmers will submit to actual improvement of over $227,000_lcarelessness on the part been trying to convince the electors ____*/:_:___'______ ,... ._ - . _ _ _.,-1.,,.,._,”"__"`“____ _ may be quite true that are not as agressive as they ought to be but be stimulated and their agressiveness can ' _ iifliil e community of by us from the Public Accounts and a gross “”"~" '° "ve “"“ ““°""“ me "’"'"‘ made- up of '$217,- $10,443.78, the BOAST faith with a cor- was sent us by a that it is because winter, few if any the hope that the o all the men of aster be he ever S0 there is none, _ _ _ ln these three make -good roadsf sympathetic sup- of road all the ome roadmasters resort-discharged indifference and _ make life tolerable. -_ _ _ *Phe _stren- gth of the English race lies in its cap of illusion. _ _ _ The German, on the other hand, has deliberately shut him- sclf out from the world of imagina- tion. and thereby has lost insight and sympathy; as a consequence he sees darkly, judges falsely and fatally. He cuts himself off from the trees of life, and by becoming a scientist he lhecomes abeast `withl'mt"a back- | ground. Work of the Medical Service. - Dealing with his own particular branch of the Service in the course paredness for war. but the Medical Service leapt up fully armed when_ trenis likelihood of meeting British the first call sounded. For long years cruisers." _ the R.A.M.C., had worked upon the probleni, and found a' plan. This plan has -been adopted in Canada. and was well understood; the best of the pro fession volunteered and many of them ing in ihe B091' 8\'Il1Y SIEHIHBI U19 l. had some previous training in millt- British. Henry Craemer_ now 38 years _ ary affairs. _ _ _ The Medical Sefr- old. enlisted in the British army to~ vice, above all other services, has day. He asked for General W. A. K done its perfect work. It has yielded White. in chamg of _-Pr%i-sh reohiit- _ ar-my without sickness. I have nev ing here. and` freshen d the* gen* - 811 El' so a curiosity, and brought stoppage of leave upon the battalion which pro- duced them. _ ` The End Not ln_Elght. Anticlpating= that his audience would wish to know from one just returned from the Front his views Ui the course of the war. he said:-- “The end is not yet, nor is it even in sight My counsel to you is that you should close _vour eyes to the end. I-00k \lP0ii war as :L normal condition. / Forget it, as ali normal things are for gotten. '('eiisc praying for a speedy end and' peace, else you will acquire list lll0r€ ffeflllefllly OI' Ufgemly “liked- what ghe Fnench call the psychopathy”`!or in God‘s Book thlm U18 H806 Of of the barbed wire. Peace and the end- D0l`S|SWl_l?00~ will come when. _your unharmpered arms shall have performed their task. A; one time there was ground for alarm and excuse for panic, now years we have seen grow up the most perfect military organization 'the _world has ever known. lt hasarlsen out oi' tlieir,l ie, out - of their tradi- tions, dui of tdeir way of doing things. the tradition that each man shall .go upon hls~owri way. with unimpairad liberty, to think, believe and talk as he likes, to trade as he likes. to work or refrain from working, with perfect assurance that in time of need the old dull instinct and dumb sagacity of fthe race will arrest itself, that every- one will fall into ordered ranks and with unhasting vigour proceed upon their appointed way `evenu` unto the end- All these years l have beard a cry of selildepreciation and -self- pity that we are not as other men-- even as the Germans are _ ,. __ . We have put the matter to the test, and it will -be time enough when we have of a -roadmaster.- V of the lecture, Capt. Macphail said: danger zone through the Scaggerack l Albany, Sea11e'__;.“You have heard much ci our unpre-- ` seen n case ot’ typhoid. and the ei-al's memory regarding" the charge _i few infectious cases' are of the na- at Ladysmith and we (L Ct-!'r'S_ SUMO- ‘- ture of chlldren's diseases- measles, quam interrogation bf Boer" prison- 45 mumps, chickenpox. _ .. Trench ers, "l was one of- -_ltlfem.`l= :Cl`B_9l11Qf _ feet in the first and second winters said. "l don'; hate the British any _ were likely to cripple the anmy. Last more and l what to/ HSN- 8880151 me ‘ winter the method of prevention were Germans." Crae‘mer._.wos»,acceD’-ed f0|` sure that a case of trench feet was the. cavalry. assesses » fn __ _° _ as O iiiiiiflt -so is tha't.'l sought fo that is_ arbsoiut-_ sly an1l'Inqualitiedi;" t-i“ue. " ' ' I. i~Ivq‘y%iere and 1at.»All -times - the tai dcinadll- _ for the man who plows his - Ladies furro -to the end. ial ed into. German ports. “Owing to the limits of the earlier British 'danger zone, which is drawn six miles off' Terschelling region. where the risk run was short. but when tho zone was extended south t.o a point just north of Texel this brought it closc up to Dutch t?rri- orial waters and the dlfllcu ties enhanced. _ It is necessary that vessels en~ gaged in what might be described as`contraband trade should either stick to territorial waters entirely. wh-ich. considering the shoals and sand banks of the Dutch coast. is f not without risk. or run through presumably the ‘mined area of the ` British danger zone. lf they at- tempted to carry cargo outside. the to the Baltic it meant a run of eighty miles out to sea and the ex- I @.....__.l__ FORMER BOER SIGNS UP. NEW voitk--woiindsii-while neat- ._ vs( Cana If owned solely and wholly by thing to you, you will select the WILLIS. And you can buy it on easy terms-pay as you play. dians. patriotism means any- ' A. E. ioouizs, Q----1 st: Q ooooooocvbi-vooooeoe nun ssi.£cT`lo`iisf cuiuiaiiin misses .- o-wud ' f ' =' - furnished by ' w; a. nausea. ooeoeoeoooeeseooo +- I . UN'r_o THE EN_o_ Tlieieis' no giace in 'all the long And, mailer. what, the .kingdom_ p 'At vtgiuies it seems a dlstressingly ~ Midsummer-Sale L.__l _Til *_ *il _ I L__TT m’ /.f-\_,_,`»¢\,\_,_`»\_,`,\A,`,~_».»_~_f~ _-\,\,_.- , .\/-_,_-_f\\,..-. .,. ».,_ ALONE - ' So long as a man is uninsured he stands alone- isolated in his endeavor to provide for the con- tinued well-being of those who look to him for ‘_ support. But the moment he takes I`nsurance,he links hands with thousands of others having the same end in _view,_ and what he could not ach- ' ieve alone, _is easily and surely accomplished ‘ by cooperation. _ ` _ The Great-W est Life Policies are issued at low 3 rates, Zand remarkably high profit returns are _ being paid to Policyholders. Full information will be supplied on request. State age. _e Great-West Life Assurance' Co-. _ ' Branch Office, Charlottetown ` HYNDMAN & CU., LTD. Managers,`P. E. 1. _ ` _ souv- A W4’ -_.. On al ost every page it is ilterat- Lafligs ed andy elterated that any .man who $12 puts his-,hand ~to.‘thepiow--and"then., L .s turns Qiabk -before the long (urrow._ls_ last! séioc flnlsheti___gs,untit for the Kingdom. ' ‘ rl. C. 991'.. $1’,?l5. ii .00§gc'ss 20 pci- cout. _ _ iuii__s House Dresses $2110 |955 30 s_i_ousEs Ano ski`R'rs'. afiies M-lddy Blouses _$1.255 S9613. at-Reddin’s DRESSES ~. |_AD|E3 H685 Street Drcs.=:es $51.10 tn House Dresses (while thcy ____ f___C_ Prices during this sale. ' WHITEWE l"M\r.v Striped Skirts spec- GE1' vouns i». \.`a A- _ in Cotton. Lisle. and Cashmere ivllli Bool__- und all Silk. _Special ~ An ` ' " All \Vhliawear- in ('hild'§ Dresses Undnrskii~ts. Nigh Gowns. Coriet "Q\'_l‘_I‘u~;_- loss 20 por cent. _ iznblo ihiiiiii-i_ less 20 'per-cent. __ 10W@|ll18 less-_ 10 per cent. ' _ _,_ Special values in Print- Cotton 12 and lic. - _ long one. and the temptation to quit Mens Overalls now $1.65 for $1.29, is strong. - Mons Working Shirts 85;; for 39,- °BU'i" QU'lfl`TlNG IS -REALLY NOT Mens Outing Shirts Cream a Ad Easton, ii, only seems se. white ssc. “ Stbpping before one's task is done. Mens Soft Front, Shirts $135 fo in mos; uncomfortable and unsatis- $1.10.' ' ` ' factory. ~ - 1 _ it is better to push on. 5 BETTER FOR. ONESELF. Life has _ little comfort if controlled by flabby irresolut_ensss.\ \ And -better for one's task. NOTH-‘ ING OF' GREAT MOMENT GETS DONE EASILY, and the Work of life S '_ that both God and our conscience 0" "_ \VlLL (‘»AI.Ii (10019 will be the w0rIr`. ' - lost to re-cast any element! of our] lite in a Germanic mould.” ' ir; ' ' ._-.ii --'---I » ICALLY AND FAITHFULLY. mr ii "° b°9'"° ~|"'Y 23rd and ends July Sm” Q"°°ll Square, RAIN COATB.` “- All “Merprosr costs in stout, Laa- '°°' M9” and B0ys less 20 ber cent. - saaoains in ' _,J _,Silk Sweaters. skim, umimv . orsets. Dress Goods, Mullins ite- _ sm. _ ' __ _,-_"_-g_; L. J. REDDIN _ Ohposiici I3" I ' 164 Richmond S; on omcq' ` -~-" nm we ans sravnp wii/rn. nano- 1821_7_23Mwm_ '°°" ..§5...lZ.' ..~ J _ t ._ \ _ _ ' \ _ _ ` ,-\_~_ ._ :_ _ __ i _ _ __ i' _ __-_ -,_ _~___ __ _ _ “‘ - . . _ I _ ~. .- . ti- .in-E ogg. |- 1