AGE i »--,/, “OUCH! Ho'.s"l'.IyComs,Bllnic1-ls and Callousecl, Qcrning, Tired ahvllu| Dolly (founded 1881) £00 53.00 per your (lulled) In ldvunee I'll: Charles Dalton. Presldcll. l). K. Currie, Anooollle Editor. "was csowmmwiveiillllm ~ * ' flit lllliiltllTTETllWll llliAlllllAN pol your (delivered) In Cuuudnfiund $4.50 J. IL Burnett: Eilghr_sEl_Ptsls‘lIsl'er. Feet Hurt- é —what shall WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMEIER 27, 1922. I D0?" use GYPSY FO0T RELIEF N0 more inconvenienu-I 110 blasters, liquids. pow-tiers, muss nor bother! .-\pply'iri one minute. then walk you likl- and work on your feet a = lung as you wish Tlll- vxl i ullrltint: pains and IPIIIH‘! from warns, lmniolls, ilfllltlllfifls. and burning, sore. tlrl-ll fVflL vanish as if by nmgic! THE EXHIBITION Today will be one of the three biggest days of the exhibition. Yes tcrtlay the placing of thc exhibits u‘as completed and considerable judging was done. The number of entries in practically all classes is large, Ill lnally cases larger than usual and the whole agricultural show promises to be worthy 0f our record t-rtip years. succenful The formal opening takes place Results Guaranteed _ in every case A Wonderful g" “‘ “. ‘i ".31 Secret From Mk" Mid m this city by the Desert, H ,_ ]_ _ . _ ‘.11 l.“ __ J p,“ Aw.’ Ill. vl \\'4l'.\l2ll'.~l, , t it. plovlnte \vl l lbLUlIfhL gut. wilhF-oo‘ llll‘ »l<ti‘l\lIl|\11il _ I ‘ [It'll ‘-: PI-hllnuslt‘ anti everything points to an Troubles. llllulli-s ljnlll; tit.“ l,tll.. and ‘llllvf ttlilil lilllgglstsnUnjuyablp and pl-Ofilapp. d3» |L ,5 today‘, tht- horse races will begin, the lnlllu‘a_y' will be ill full swing. the largest band ever heard ill .t-vcr_v mans dllty. whether cxililli- ‘for or slit-claim‘. whether farmer. every man is a' possible. criminal. "No one is safe from a fall—'-it is strong he goes further; that even the man who prides himself on his high principles is not kept on the straight path by principle but the fear of being found out. only the temptation enough," he declares. Iutleed, and contends Fear. in this doctor's opinion, is the most powerful agent in_the pre But the author ends on a pleasanter “The he says, depend scrvation of the social order. note. morals of humanity," largely on the tfilillllli-i I16 Eels at the mother's kilee." He is a profound believer ill the uplifting power of the home and maternal influence, and un- consciously gives backing to the A. S. M. Hutchinson's recently publish- which nloral propoundcd in Mr. t-d novel, "This Freedom." ‘lllurrlulnl. mechanic. lahruw-r. and of l'Vt*I‘_\' ironlan to be present to~ lhe “Renilew” Oil Engine " ITH no electrical igni- tlon system. no car- buretor, no magneto, no batteries, no coils and no wires to worry and give trouble. . A "Rcnfrew" Oll Engine pays for itself in a year. through its saving in fuel. It burns any cheap fuel, from coal oil down to fuel oil. It i5 built to suit the needs of the Canadian Farmer. Write for our Catalogue “M-Q" and instruction book The Renfrew day and hclp by their presence andl I their pttlrtlliilLlt‘ to make the Ex- i l l l l l I illIllILIlln :1 success. . m? “THE FEAR O‘ HELL" “'l‘hl- fear o’ licll ‘s tlle hangmallfs whip to hold the wrotch ill order." the‘ sung llobl-rt Burns. Sillcc abolition of licll by nlotiern ther- ‘lngy another alld possibly grctttl-r ‘the ‘ancient hanglnzlllls whip——tl: ‘ is.‘ Ifcal" of being found on)‘. tfllll this Iii-at‘ has taken the place of ‘la despicable fear Ila‘ we ma'y-and Lit is no iil“-l‘1‘ despicable that the lfl-lll‘ Iiurns spoke oi’, it is with‘! ‘ll $1ll\lllil‘_V fear. a bulwark of so’ l ‘t-il-l). it. perhaps tumportlr)‘. gun" . . , 1 anll-l- oi Illlllll’ ilonesty and molt ‘Hilly. Who tll.l ‘ills publicly stood‘ for u high slollllllrtl n: tnoralityl ‘would hl- found out ill u piece of Machinery Co., Ltd. Sussex, N. B. Head Office and Works. Rcnflrcw, Ont. Montreal. P. Q“ Milwaukee. llulestlonilhle colli- Tile ill profit shar- pctty lhit-viilil. puny or unscelllly‘ conduct? will to participate lint: hr. better still. profit lllonuptllY. illlii)‘ bc.,as (Jarlylc would probatbl)’. _ iii/is" U. S. A. fpul i1. itl the innermost heart of :lls but Illt‘ fcal‘ of being found out ‘has a restraining ‘influl-nce, alt least up to a certain amount of (profit sharing or profit monopoly: ‘Beyond this limit there may be . ldoubts as to the efficacy even of . IIOHI’ book above rcfcrrcti to says: lure alivays extras-ling our conduct. [whether in private or in public ‘life. We are all constantly invent- ing reasons in defence of our in- tercstls or inborn character. giving way to ldeccption, In which the iutiivitlual conceals the real foundation of his ' “Swift ' ““ [this fear, ' , \ A book has recently been pub- lished by a London, England, mcdi cal tisychologist. on Misconduct. Vice and Crime. in which he up- St. Lawrence Sailings (‘IIIGIUIUI Ill. — Sill 'l‘Il.\\I|"l'0.\-~ ll.\.\llll ltt- Ol-l. H. til-t. ill. .\'o\‘ 2s. . linlprl-ss oi i-‘ranl-i- int QIUNTIIl*il\ll—llIYI-IIIIWIUI. .22.t ,.\'.l . Vlctoriuvl I —(il.l\,'iIl(I\\‘ . Nov i8 Ml-tuunlnlt .. Tunisian’ NIU§'I‘RII.-\Il — NOI"I‘II.\.\II"PII.\' -_ .'\\"T\\'I".IH' Ht-pt. ‘.55. Nov. 22 til-l, _ _ “l"l‘1tI|| IIIIPIHW‘ only 'l‘\\'() lll-ll.li‘li'l‘l<‘l'l. \\' " INI) liI lirlttiiu . H123 Apply‘ to Inn-ill N. ll. 4" Kine EL. St. John, N. Allvlll." rat's- REAL YOUR LIVE AND THE LIVES OF THOSE YOU LOVE Why not insure your was a tangible borrowing value. That ls one reason why‘lt ls a good Investment. Buy the Great-West Policy. the most popular “Made in Canada". Security and Service. ilyndman 8t Co. Ltd. Managers, P .5. l. Oldest Insurance Agency in P. E. l. Ths . l‘;lIi‘|!l‘t-,~4~4 of llritainl‘ Zilnntvalln Aiontclnrc Mont rose Alllllll-lll-sll ,\Il-lil:l "HLISI-IS 'r~l It Illa)‘ we |i<-~ IIIIIJ)’. Illat. Puma. Agent, If. INSURANCE PROTECTS Ilfc and their future. Llfclnsurancs always holds the time honored idea that we shall have the pleasure of re- ferring to at greater length ill the future. y Dr. Hollander, the author of the “We conscious or unconscious. hyprotwrisy. This pructlss of sclf- thoughts by a series of advcntiti-| ous props, is termed “rationalism, tlon." "Ilationallsatiotl" is a nl-w one and may help us to discover an ":-.;d;::: ltiinll for some of the out- :Ll:ltl mg differences I)t‘.l.\ii'l*.(!ll our ..‘..ldll;." and our week-day taxcurv] s ..;l.< lulu the broad flclds of com~‘ llitntl‘, industry and citizenship. —-—<a>——— I some soul-i l Mail will behdellvered from New! York to San Franc-taco in 28 hours‘? promises Paul Henderson, postal official. could not keep up with the mail plane. The “Swift" cani fly faster than L00 miles an hour. but tires (llllICkIy. It is less than 20 years the Wright brothers were first t0 soar in an airplane, yet man al- since‘, ready flies faster and higher than any bird. Also. more safely. for Hender- son announces thtrt the alir service this year has flown 2.000.- 000 miles without a fatality. mail I Notes By The ‘Way i One of the difficulties which lit-set the reader of the desputchts from the Near East these days is the apparently double-hustled char acter of the present. authority ill ‘Flu-key. We see mention nlude, ac rasionttlly of the Slnblllne Porte, the Sultan, and his ministers who just now threaten to resign and luore frequently of Mustapila Kc mal Pasha, the Nationalists, tile Angora GUVOPILIIWIII, and so on. therefore be helpful to stale that the Sultan and his mln isiers are the recognized govern ing authority in Turkey, with its scat in fjollstatitiutrple. This nu thorlty is variously designated the Sublime Porte, the Ottoman or the Turkish government. The Nationalist pllrtv in ‘Turkey is a sort of reform party, with Mus ‘tapiia Kelnal at its neao and the commandler of its armies. its headquarters is at Angora in thclcen trr. of AsiruMlntir or Anatolia. Hence lwe have Kclnal Pasha. his army and following sometimes spoken 0f as the Angora government. With n large and victorious ar nl‘y at his back. KPmal has much more reul power than the Sultan to whose authority or wishes he gives lbut scant recognition. The allies are com-pelted to treat with him rather than wibh the Sultan a fact of which the Sultan and his, government have complained i Tlloy object that the joint Allied, note offering terms of peace was,‘ addressed to Kemlll. the National» lot lender and not to the Sublime Forte. But "the Kemnllst govern- ment" is also spoken of as some- thin! which "the Constantinople “(up government" is desirous not to em harass. Agaiin we read in a Constantin ople dcspatch that ."l.he Allied note ignores the Sultan's govern lnent and renews the‘ fear that the Hultzln will be forced to ulrlicatc.“ Also in another despatch tfronl Constantinople that if the Sul- tan's ministers resign, as they ilave threatened to do. Kemal will send a Governor-General to (ton stantinople. All of which goes tt show that Kemlll is really the dominant authority in Turkey to tiny and that the Stilton counts for but little Ill the present crisis either m Turkey or in the estima- tion of the Allied Powers. At this writing there are still ‘hopes of a peaceful settlement as betlwecn the Allies and tho coin mander of the! Nationalist forces But the litullbleheallcti authority as lhetyveen the Constantinople government unrl the sn-callcd An.- gors government cannot he con- tinued in its present shape. Kern» sl is amlbitlous. resoilutn, strong 1n himself and backed by a dew» ted army. it will not lbesurprls- in: if he asserts himself and u- aurps supreme power, whether the present negotiation for peace Ire to lbc successful or not. ' ‘ The ‘Sultan is weak ‘In himself. and the Nationalist party is strong and flushed with victory. Tile mat- ter of who shall rule in ‘Purkey is one for the Turkish people. in which the‘ Allies are not likely to interfere. Their present interests contra upon the desire for restor- ing and maintaining internation- al peace. There‘ is little sympathy on the part of the Allies s The Public F0 This column ls open for the discussion by correspond- snts of qusstlsns of lntsn sst. The Charlottetown Guardian docs not muse, srtly endorse tbs opinions expressed by its some‘ _ pqndsnb. OO Rsilwsy Trouble -Sir.—~The people living near Clyde Station about three nliles west of Hunter River, have been unjustly treated in the luatter" of Railway tlccmnodatiou. Uip to a year or so sgo—perhups less than a year there was a switch at Clyde’ which served the farmers who loaded potatoes, grain anti lumlber as vrell as received mussel mud in cur load lots. For some reason un- known to the public tilis switch was taken up and now any thing in the line of lllilllllfll‘ or farm Drfldllre must be hauled to either Hunter River or Fredericton. This is a gross injustice to sly the least. But this is not the whole of the‘ story. The writer is cred. lbly ‘informed that the ‘Express from Cll-arlottctauwl in the morn- ing and the late train to the city in the evening do not stop there- citller to take passengers on or let them lofi. It Just means that any passenger who lives a few minutes walk from (‘iyde station has to come to Fredericton or Hunter River and walk hack or after the train. as the case may he. There ir- no road nearby that 111115 hnrztllel to the Railway so’ I mic training a tpaddfir ‘should have‘ is that of s full highscbool course or it's equivalent." l grant that. But where do our high schools coma in? And do not the pupils before they enter Prince of Wales College at all have s full high school course. consequently, he is beating the wind. 1S0 all they have to do st Prince of Wales Coll else is to give the pupils a. normal training. This is the only logical conclusion to be drawn from his premises. He speaks of consolidation of schools as one thing that will help. l agree with hip) thong-h it will not give relief to the system that prevails at. Prince of Wales College. zHow can a measure of consoli- dation be brought about? Will he get any act of politicians to take their political lives ill their hands and tell the people of certain schools that they must abandon their schools and join with other ldistricts to form a consolidated lst-huol. That would never do. But 11 P130916 Call‘ be made to realize the inlmediate advantage to them of such a measure it might be dollc. Now. I would ‘propose to allow the work done now in the first year at Prince of Wales College to be dune at the high schools as they now exist or at any Primary school for that matter. When peo- ple see that by joining in with those High schools they can have a larger measure of education for their children at home that should JHPSQIY 119111 them to realize the atlvllutagc of consolidation of their school with a better one. 'B‘ul ‘to bring about_ consolidation .ol' lscllools by act of Parliament alone would largely defeat consoli- dation ‘ Th9 fastest bird. named l. ill tlie old da "s there were man - that a passenger thus droppedl < 5 ‘ 3 ‘ . - ilent Grammar schools * down c/tu chos a to o nort - ll JOXLD ‘ " a“ ‘ ' g h A m (“they were called. one need men- und a ilalf and take the road West‘ - v ‘ tlon only the schools at Summer to Fredericton, or go cast. to Hun-Islam ‘Mulpequu. the ‘manning: tr-r River, as the case nvty be.‘ ._ . This is solnvthiilg that soniebotly‘ filing rsszhgltn “ad the E31"? H , , I, . . - -:z 1e exce cu. "Ill-fl o cxlpaln, if irossible was done at the“ .01 ~ . k that the Silllfifiltfflfill to the people lll Ivor u i < -,, . , > , sulloos, and the many briliant stu- _m v mm) of (‘Mp mnwn" duuis‘ that came from thenl. I ‘ H I in 8"‘ etpgAssENeERrvftlllllll propose to‘ lTl-Ofilllllilsl] Th‘. Gmrmfll, is mrflmmd bv|schotils like theur wherein pupils Sllnurintelldent T“ , Gnu“ that would do the work now done m . , > . . the r-i-son why tho switch atltim m} war at Iflme of Wdms (Hyde has “m hp?“ npOrHlpd|(.nllr-gt. The schools I have nlcn since the standardization of tllislnmmd together with onmrs ‘ section of the line, is the insuffi-‘lthm-l},nnimud u Con“? m - ,- .' Mom “mount nfwmsmpsg 'owhi(:h,|llllll'h flom surrounding tllstlltls 1i ivmlld l-Zivre act-omnlodmiu“I,came. In those days cnnsolidaititln Fm, this reason the Rmnwiw I)E_|\\’ZIS lint heard of, but. nowadays l lmmnpm am ‘m! fey‘, juslifizn, m llo not but doubt that. itroulll be rvplatting it. Though neither o‘ mfilfuhrte ‘mom ‘it led“ m bum" the trains rl-fl-rred to ‘n DIIQZI‘ i" '- . 10mm. cm‘, n, ply,“ Simian, twat; l am_ sure. thatvlhe tt-llchelis .1: ill‘?IIIOFIUIHILZ.i1\l.ll[(3l‘lll)0l1Ztlltlwiévfiillfidour lhg,“ sclmolfs wqulfl_,-\vfi(;o“:f' twins whim d’) Rum‘ ,.I,h(_ mnmnmtlle exlrll wolk as a illVLIhiOIlpffl i n, nasgfinger ‘mmc f" PLUM gmithe lntinotonolusgrilltl of Dltiljdfllll- mm in the "mum" or me Dnparblllélllll; ‘foréllalgrlculatlllm fol flint?‘ ml-llt dot-s not justify‘ the stopping n, ‘I [35 ‘o, Y“ fgn HKHQYH‘ In ‘ of a hen“, laxprnss ‘min m a HIlLIIIPYVlOTK yearns-tel‘ _\i..l.l, plan. phi)" g" mo". the larger Smtionilifllll) without variation. l m- l_.l_edm_i(_mn _ y I am sure I d0 not doubt that, ' the tmltr urH of Prince o‘. \\‘tllc.~‘l L College are t-tlnscictltious and Ililffl‘ A LCIIPI’ OI Credit |wnrklng individuals. but they are‘ nvorlting under an indcfeilsiblc sys-reconecmoigo _ tom. a syslenl, that in my opimom, Mmmled a rum i“ dlws notgive the pupils an equallhehl i$ir.—Thl-.rc are different kinds of letters of credit, but. tnc one we want to speak cl‘ today is the cre- and fair "HIIOW. dit dllc Mr. Henry Smallworftl forlour schools will not the l-xcclll-nt road he has just conusystcnl, and it. is plclctl from the Hiilsbol-ti liridge 11111 H1181‘- n the Bullhury district. He has 011B 111ii-‘T1‘§11"1 taken off the hills and raised uyumighty lllcky for lht‘ "ovinl-c that thr- hnllows. and made the crooked I am not supcrintr-z: ni‘ [fidu- patbs straight. Having lately rode cation. Well I wish to assure OVQI‘ lottettnvn llllfl Soul-is, and was; as but (lonsolidatinn of- lllPIltI ‘ this systl Ill thinks ll if l ivert- l would sec to it WHY we speak of is the ht-st f'in.,sulijécts WOllIlI be elllrllizc-l and‘ isllerl job we have seen. lVir. Snluiidthtlt fervor failures would obtain wood has about fillisllctl his work 111. PTIHCB 0i ‘V8105 011mm‘. 0r 1 (in Tea Hill. He has LllfIlPfl that would know the reason why. highwawfor the travelling publicivg Where docs one interested find lbetween church and the present Prnvincialddalr held ‘ding, which was built. ill 1R»i~l.'grtiuntls. where it was continued manner they thought best, new grounds withstanding the mfrcsllnlcnls the The. al- fllll at those cohol was good, and thcrc were no if a man look a litllc ‘toll mmlschooi and afterwards out at ilct-Hsguus covered with every description much he félt drowsy and went lo There was andlgreat fun a1. the lFair, and I irould that,” film 1M7, bllt I was not present zlt were acquired. ill. latter it WIIS held on the [now occupied rtsry, where lit was left fur 1H1‘ as Summersitie, we have (ffllnellhfll. the 65 per cent p355 “will time. Then in the sixties l‘. was dancing engaged lll throughout the] to the conclusion that the rolldvbc lowered, tho value of lliflercntfilelfl at the highway between {marl} 3n] n01 hgnkering rm- the jnlplFnrm back of lllP Protestant l-l\lll+‘~‘o1'.tcll"t, where liquid refreshments[clcep-—£hat was all. to a pleasant place to travel, and \VP'WOlll1I advise the city and 10ml zovcrnlnent to let Mr. Smaliwnotl take in hand the road from Rail- way crossing to Hillsboro Bridge which has been a disgrace to both city and local government for scv- that >i would limit educ-ation to the. elite.‘ All I have done is . to call attention to the history of the 3rd year, anti the number of pu- pil-s who lukc advantage of it. It ill becomes one intcreslctl to dis- tort my worlls, seeing that l have for ~ not practically brought the 3rd year under fire at -illl. except uu- iess normal training cannot be ob . tnlrled in any other way. To save the 3rd year, f would rather have ‘the work done now in the 1st year dons at home at the different high schools, ‘In conclusion, I may say that "one interested" started out very well. hut towards the end he show ed his sting which materially lowered the effect of his letters. i am. "Sir. etc. EDUOATIONALIST. eral years. We are lSir. etc. JOHlN McDONALD, and HAMMOND KELLY. tlicsldents of Bunbury School District. (Patriot Please. Copy) ' Cnnzllidziecl ScIlooIFEIc. Sir.——One interested has written u letter. the sanest of all those that has been written in defense of the system that prevails ‘at Prince of Wales College. I not.- ice, however, that he does not lie- soon-i fend the 65 pcr cent. puss. nor the slmw‘ and Fa", crude system of allocating values “—- to the different guhj..¢q_.,_ | Slr,~<Wi‘tll TOIGTGIDCB to M-r. W.I.. .11.. mvncfltps fhg gplgllflln‘: (mCottotVt-i reminiscences I would like three years at Prince of wrlleslm flay a few words about early 6X- (Yollege. which I do not thlnklhlhltiolls and agricultural shows in would do. The cost would he eu- C11111'1"11910W111 1118119 111 111.1’ X1115- llroly too nlllch. session copies of newspapers of lie states that "the least acado- 11857, giving tlhe prize lists, and my l Profits lo Policyholticrs —loom large as a factor in choosing a Life Policy. The record of the Great-West Life ii thi». re. gard ls an enviable one. The rapid growth n int Jol l- pany has always been accompanied by COFFC.|IO' 'tn| in- crcsaes in assets and surplus, due to elfflclcnt and econ- omical operation and careful amt advantageous invqgimeng 1° Pdhyhfllderu‘ funds. ITS PROFITS TO POLlCYHOLD- ERS ARE UNEQUALLED. insurance This with low rates, unquestioned security and at- tractive Insurance plans account for the ever increasing popularity of Great-West Life Policies. Writs for rates and particulars. The Great West Life Assurance Co. Branch Office llyndinail 8t 00., Charlottetown Ltd. Greece, whose blundering aggres- nivenons precinitated the present conflict and her own disastrous Msnagsrs, P. E. I. '. ... JU- ‘ “Nomcnkalltswlto CVVorrg You sir, must realize the coming of that certain day when death or in. capacity for work Will cut off your present income. _The distress ot your loved ones 1i you should be taken-the suifenng and humiliation which they might have to face-do you not see it? Do you imagine your wiie doesn't see it “ NLY $760 left after the bills are paid. It will not last long. Then, there's the mortgage. The payments on it must be met 0r I'll lose our home. If it were not for the children I could go out to work. But what can I. do with them? I will have to do something —but what?" Banish this spectre of worry from ' your home. Make certain that alter you are gone your widow willreceive --»regularly—every month-as long as she ‘ lives-a cheque to provide for her every need and to give your g children a proper start in life. "ExaggeratecP you say. Not at all. All around us we see _women and . children adrift—leit destltutebecause of man's very human tendency to "put off till tomorrow" a responsi- bllity which involves a little self-sacrifice. You can do it by means oi an Imperial Monthly Income Policy. Today-while you are insurable-ask us to tell you more aboutlt. IMPERIAL LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY of Canada HEAD OFFICE TORONTO P. A. Brunch Manager, Prowse Blclgn, CHARLOTTETOWN Comm/ll llllllllullllplfilillllllllllltiling, i i...‘ U" l le dc . the Drill Shell ck i848 . Charlottetown lFair in olll ‘The Fair itself, so far as ex the on the was a l~‘.lir illll _V4‘illl' bcfllrrqto ho Ilt‘l(l ‘tlill tho behaviour was excellent. lutf 'l‘here was more .b_v Queen Square Fairs than nowadays. The sr|ll,al‘o‘iighta. some were served without stint. iiollzl.ntl's Grove llp lillltlay, and to all houlis of the night. GLORIOUS AUTUMN TINTS RADIATE FROM WEALTH OF New Fall \ Miilinery For weeks ‘we've ‘been - feasting our eyés on the golden rod, asters, and other brilliant blooms of early Autumn, but now that Nature is laying away her paint brush the artists of apparel have taken her Autumn hints for the glori- fying of millinery and gowns. And first of all is the MILLINERY! Gorgeous in colorings--exquisibe in dainty adornments-magnificent in the artistic lines of the shapes and trimmings, Patons hats are Fashionfis first complete expression. Discriminating folks who want lux- urious fur coats will find our selection complete in style, size and furring. Ex- hibition visitors are cordially invited to make this store their headquarters. y PATONS m). ‘ and-were concerned. was over at unc English two _vetl.rs later I attended lhc first o'clock, so tfhe patrons were (iovcrnnlentlllberty to enjoy themselves in the Jli Nut- (fltyllllnuetl ‘on Page Ten.)