v‘ -TOll8y a 4i by to pi . slide you ' Jill of ~lli ' Out of fllenially - Lack the ~ duties? F I l-nlstered , thematic You no 1~nlc—un ' ifan. Prii L4 Sold at Fl I oiier Royalty“ » itate of ' iiuaied ».iles iri :liools z ‘ ew will uilddngs _' ' l oiitcr lliver ,t‘o 1 ‘a liigl lnilhiii-t- y; rfnvth l) a fills fur lli‘(l lieli‘ jflflflfiltt‘ . .lll.lI'(.‘l]PS - n one of_ in the‘ l iow and "lump in p a, mod mp; F-‘or furih f: John wi f ‘ Louis Mi ' plliany. ' J William ‘ lVe take Jhe Plant l For info: » hint 533. izANADlAr . Kl Above f» can supply r a ghisao ~1-29M f0$_ w‘ _ 7,’, Clean H1 .h l “ill s rrjitinn Rn.- ‘l :._ We d (‘oinini- rl ier stucl . iouseliold _ many years held the top place for J- I- Illln“; Illlt! D- K- Oink.» Annclnlr Milton A (IOVIIOM 1S1) “.00 pol your llellvolbd) ll {ah-m II ill nu tanned. l; u- . In our-n. and uwo lol- u. 14.4. * TUESDAY, MARCH 2,‘ 1920. T Ill Publlnhon PRODlTE rnivi-rs. - I ___,___._ . Half a million pounds of Danish butter were landed in New York the other day and sold wholesale there at fifty cents per pound. The prevailing price of American butter in New York is, or was previous to this importation, 70 cents. In Toronto and other Upper Canadian cities butter is selling at about 80 cents; in Charlottetown, retail, at 65 to 70 cents. In Europe the demand for butter is almost un- limited and the supply by no means ‘suiiicient. So scarce is it in England that the ration system is still in force and the limit is an ounce or two a week to each person. Denmark, taking advantage of the exchange situation is able to sell butter in New York at a larger margin of profit than is permitted by The Danes are thrifty farmers; they have for butter, cheese, eggs and bacon in the European markets, always coin- manding the highest prices for all their products. Their dairy cattle are, or were before the war, the best type of cattle in the world and their record for milk production is about twice as high as that of Canadian cattle. The Danes are now our competi- tors not only in the European markets but on our own ground. They are only now getting on their feet after the (listurbed conditionscreatetl by we may rest assured they are sufficient] progressive to re-establish themselves in their form- . er position in the worlds markets. Are we ready for-this competition? Are we able for it? These are questions that must be faced by Canadian farmers in the very near future and the sooner the better. Prices of farm products are at present abnor- mally high; abnormally because the conditions which raised them are abnormal. We are filling a vacuum caused by five years of destruction and of n0n-pro- duction and until this vacuum is filled the relation of supply and demand will be abnormal, reverting gradually to normal as the supply approaches the de- mand. - e supply is gradually nearing this stage; the devasted countries in Europe are beginning to produce and they are a thrifty people. With cattle destroyed, markets diverted, farms unmanned it will take them some years to catch up but they will catch up and they will get back to their original markets. Before the war our principal competitors in dairy products in the British Market were the Danes and they held a higher place~than we. They will be our competitors again» 1n the meantime we have an op- portunity to get into the European markets and to establish ourselves there. Iii that market there is only one thing that counts, namely, merit. This merit must be achieved and our place in the market secured before we can hope to successfully meet competition. The time to do this is now, while there is room for our products. At present we have a good home market but we have. no guarantee that even here we shall not meet foreign competition so it be- hoves us on many grounds to be up and doing. In this province particularly our only salvation is to maintain high prices for our agricidtural pro- duce. With high prices, even abnormal prices for our farm products, prosperity in all other lines is assured. Quality will assure us the best prices the market any- where can afford. Attention to quality then and the greatest possible production is our hope and all our energies should be directed towards producing more and better goods. .P.\'I‘RI()'I"S l'lfl'll.l'l)la‘ TO FREXZIEI) l"l.\'.\.\'(‘l§ ' CURRENT CORTMESFI? Hon. Robert Rogers ln his ad- dress nt Ottawa commented upon u strange coincidence, that when Lib- erals are in opposition they agiz ate ior things but never Ifulfll their pro when in power. How in. cinnly true is this in our own prov mce. Hus the Bell government redeemed or attempted 1o redeem trsingle pro election promise? in ical ‘fact they are doing in nearly everything the very thing iiu-y most severely denounced when in opposition. They were prolific in charges against the agricultural de- partment. What have ihey done in law in England. i 111011! the war and- . y thrifty andH-y the late government adopted The Patriot’s editorial explanation of affairs at Falconwood, in its yesterdays issue, is well headed “cornered at last.” It now admits that the material for the needed repairs at Falconwood were on hand in July and August last, and asks with the assumed innocence of a child newly awakened, “What busi-- ness, what right, had a defeated government to pur- chase, $2000 worth of material after ithad lost the confidence of the people?” Has the Patriot forgotten that at the very (iutset of this controversy it was plainly told that this material yvas purchased in the early summer of 1919 before the election, although not delivered until July and August? The Patriot s assumed amazement will thus deceivekio one. , It pleads as an excuse for the Bell government s neglect to begin operations with the repairs on hand, that it had ho money, not a scrap of paper even, when it assumed power and that it was confronted on ev- ery hand with debts etc, etc., and_so it permitted the disgraceful condition to continue through a whole winter _till February 9th. Well, any consola- tion the Patriot and the Bell government can get out of that admission they are welcome to, but it will not satisfy an intelligent public. _ _ The Patriot labors hard to find “an insult to the Commission” in the Guardian's statement that “1t should not be too much even for the intelligence be- hind the Bell Commission to understand, etc, etc.” As the Commission do not carry their “intelligence behind” them, the Patriot should have been able to put the cap on the intelligence referred to. .It ishardly worth while arguing with the Pat- riot. The people now understand the situation thor- oughly. They know the C0mmission—that is, what was “behind the Commission"--was a sham and a delusion engineered solely for political effect and to pave the way for the Bell governments entry into the frenzied finance which now evidently confronts for agiicuLure? They vehemently railed against that “iniquitous iii- ccnie tax.” and harped against par- ly appointments to office. Now, in power, the hearisinan‘: axe ls ever glittering nnd swinging. while the tax. oifce is working ovlerilrue on the job to wring the lust cent out of the poorest of our people. 1913 the Muihieson Govern- amenrierl the income Tax Acl The bill, as explained on the floor of the house was designed to prp. acct the pour man's bread-end ‘nui- icr. At ihai time living costs were @7161!!! and $500 of n man's ivnges. ii his lncom. did not excccd $1200 was exempt. ‘The distinct spirit oi the act was to exempt the living oi’ the poor man, no matter who li> was. War broke our and costs or‘ living more than doubled up. Th: letter of the Act di-d not mcel these conditions. in this Qmpfgqa". ‘he spirit und rcfused to oppress ihc poor. l: Will only zignlnsl those ziblc im-pay. enforced But the tax reducing economists have a different programme. They want and must have money no moi tcr who suffers. The iiiniinml and helpless returned soldier, who (lid not exist ivlicn the act was Lllmellfl- cd. receiving small Living pension now, learns that this is not “xii- ury or wages" uiid not legally en- titled to exemption. A ‘farmer who when living was cheap sold hi1 farm and retired to the city‘ _-to live on his small ‘interest from the proceeds has the same story pitcn oil up to him. The widow. with small children to raise and educ- ate, with n four or five hundred dollar income from rents or pen- sions, has no exemption. The wage earner or soldier man whose iii comes are of [he adjustable charuc tei" are the only ones exempt. un- der tux cifii-c interpretatlonsTnos-c whose incomes are fixed mm impos slble of increase are as much up against the irebied cost of living 1s tire those under salary or wag- rs. (fity school teachers; nre uiter iil~ creased pay. Fxlucatlon of children- ls the ‘best asset We can give them Our teachers must be put at least on the same plane with other wage corners. Our Slliool Board should .~'.*|- to ii that this is done. Is this the opporiiiie time ‘to ask {he City to tux tliomselvr-s more heavily ioi this purposei Has the local gov- nrnment no: promised the teachers nn incrraasi.» oi’ salary? if the school zict ‘is to in‘ amended and n nu“ scale of salt rlcs fixed. is ii propos ed to (llscriininzite, against urban teachers? ‘Fliese large centres are now paying big supplements t‘ their teachers. They are the heav~ iosi contributors to, and have the >O-O-O-§-§Q§Q§~O-O-O-O§ brOOfi-OQ &O4 Daily Selections THE- cnanmmnrown‘ cantons '. ‘I’ " strongest balms upon tliegrovln- olul l'_0V8Illl8.Ar§ citle; and 15in: m be wiped out oi government con- sldoration? The Falconwood situation is not a subject for lest or Ihuffoonery, not even, if "the actor were clever. A clumsy clown-like application of the misspelled, title of a fifty cent novel without analogy to the sub- lcct. punctuated with exclamatory notes. may please the lower order of Patriot readers. if they have such ' The great hulk oi‘ its read er, are without doubt intelligent, and to such the “Japhetl” burles- que, on such :1 subject must be ab horrcnt. This ls a new, moose, and gen uinely liberal method of caring for public documents. It! the matter is as important as the government appears to believe , if publicity was necessary, the proper course was to furnish a copy 1o all island newspapers. AND T0 PILESIQRVE Tl-lE ORIG!.\'AL in the office of lhc dvpuriinen! .By what right ‘are such ilocuments handed out to uny pnriy paper tor political purposes? if this report reci-Eved the some inutila lzion at the hands of the Patriot. as the fact. 0t‘ the case received who! a mangled (lOCUDIGIIL would h" now on file or in the hands of the Premier! -—-——<-0>—--— vb-O-tb-O-O-Ooooo-QOQOOQ-OQQQ-oo i 0tliers.View Point ‘§@~O-§§§O~O O-§OO-O~§§§O@O-O-§§ G BRAWM AND BRAINS (Oitayvn Journal) Aiiiircliists; who tell workmen that they should own the plants in which they labor and should gel ill ilic procceils from their toil hold oi’ little iii-count the brains that uiunage the plants. ’i‘hcy cal. ‘t injustice that one man should get thousands if iloilrirp for his work while the v/orlinien gets hundreds. And yet liiror iisclf recognizes the value u! superior brains and ability in its own endeavors. Lub- nr pa-js the heads of its organiza- ions handsome salaries ungrudg- lngly because it believes they curr. lhcin. A New Ynrk newspaper has "revealed the interesting fiurt that thchead o.’ tho ‘Dockbuiiders’ lin- ion of Now York and New England ls paid $1,500 a month or $18,000 a your. The mon who contribute to :hls saLiry earn about $200 a uioirth. Mr. Goinpers’ salary us hood oi’ the American Federation of Labor is $10,000 a year. ’ Mr. Warren E. Stone, president ‘of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Digni- eers, is pull a like Slllll.‘ Many oth- t-r union bonds draw gorrespondhig 1.1;; PHlHFiE-T. 'l‘liey are paid by the workmen for their ability, just as capital pays for ability in its indus- try. if the argument that the earn" lugs of all sliuuld he alike holds. .\ii'. Gonipers should be paid lli". more for "the very great services he renders organized labor than any of his ordlnarv assistants. , A CONVENIENT ATTIC (London Sphere.) Mr. Hem) A. Lyttoii, of D'0yl_.- Carte Opera Compiny, whose sea- son at the Princess Theatre is fast drawing to a close, tells a Lanca shire sitar)‘. The husband of a wu~ mun in one oi‘ the spinning ills- iricts had committed suicide by hanging himself in the attic of their cottage, and ‘one of her particular Furnished by W. 6. Louaon O40-O-O-O-¥§-OO THE CUT-DOWN TROUSERS Guardian Readers (By ii. .-\. Guest) When father couldn't wear them mother rut tlicm down for , me; She took the slur-k in fore 8111i Ill’!- friends was telling her sister that she must go round and see the poor wlrlmv. The other advised her on no account to rotor to the unforrun ate incident. which brought forth the reply. "I shouldn't think of such a thing; ll shall only talk ‘Waiiilsuiiilhiiuclci’ in Biiiiiug Rules in his descniptlve article on tho CarpcntlenBeckett prize fight, Mr. George Bernard Show remarked that, under the old ruin, Bnckett could have been brought. to the mark alter bis knockout, and could have continued. He did no: intimate that Beckett would have Drovod a match for the Frenchman, but merely that after being down [for ten seconds he was little the worse for ii. and might have ‘con- "111164 l0 flbhl. lhad he been allow- ed a louse» period ‘fOP recupera- tion. This is interesting to lovers of boxing in view of the fact that Mr. A. G. Hales, noleri English war correspondent, sporting writer and amateur boxer. declares that the ten seconds rule is all wrong. and that if the sport. is to <bc rev- ived. the rules ought to he amend» ed so that u man knocked dawn wlll liuve fifty seconds in which to gather himself together again. The “P951111 ‘Will be that we shall haw longer confer-ts, that spectators will set a better run for their money. and that there will be a-fairer [all of the i-cluflve abilities of the can tcstnnts. Answering in advancg [hp argument that this will make foi brutality, hepoints out that a rel- crce has always gho power to cud a match when it is plain to him that one dfihe boxers is out-class ed. ‘ ., Boxing n Greit Sport He mikes these points in ‘the course o.’ iii article in the Nation- ril News of London. and begins by roniurklng that: Boxing is a grew. 5llOl'lI i; is now recognized us one =11‘ the udccipn-i pastimes in the most important centres of the world. it ('£_ll'l‘l)i'.' classified us the "$11011 Oi‘ princes." fig liorsehacing has so ion-z ‘been nominated the "FWH 0f Dflncos," as horseraclng excellence, the young man's 311mm and n VET)’ Splendid game when carried out UIIIIGTIDPODPT conditkmg for it ilvmands much in the way of sail-restraint from its votanles, To bo a successful lboxcr, either an}. "W"? 0F Divfessional. a man must live 5i clean life. Every itghi: (ought With U19 gloves l5 a "gm-mop in “c. iion"——eacli battle cries aloud to the thousands looking on: "Illve like real men; lire clean, control the beast that. ‘is in you, muzzle your uppeflltes, both of flesh and spirit.‘ There is another side fb boxing, quite apart from the sporting side. l! is a business all’ great and grgw. lug importance. When ‘W6 see purg. 93 l/Prglng upon 100,000 pounds put ‘~11! by romoters 0i’ championship events we must realize that. boxing is a Ibuslness. Ahd, its far as the financial element is concerned, it ls the most important business con- necteil with athletic sports, Ten Seconds Not Enough Mr. Hales continues: l seen nearly every mun from Jem Mace to Jimmy Wilde.don the golves: from John 1,, to Pal Moore: have of note. from Carpemiler to Ledoux: from ‘Peter Jackson to‘ TilYby Watson. in Britain. France, America, Australia, New Zealann nnrl Aifrlca, l havo followed up “sport on‘ princes" and loved .11, and love it still and l don't want it (c die. and it will dlo if the present "knock out" rule is persisted in, for ihe public is sick to death of pay- ing big money to watch one-round. fights. No man living can make sure that a battle hetwcentwo biiz "W! 1-‘? l-Zoing to last more than a few seconds whilst we cling loyho csscnce cf the Queensbury rules, about. the weather, etc," S0 my“, and the essence of those rules is, that a man shall be cnunred o"; ing licr call she commenced the conversation by saying what a lot of W8[ weather there had been late ly. “Yes," replied the widow. "i blessed the weather today. ‘l wis and licnmicrl them ut the knees; They fitted rather loosely, but the things that made me glad Were the horizontal pockets that those $009 old trousers had. They shone like patflilt leather just where ivell-worn Breeches do,, But the cloth in certain portions was considered good as new, And l know that. I was envied by full many ll richer lad For the horizontal pocket; that those good old knickers had. They were cut along the waist line, with the opening straight. and wlde,. And there wasn't any limit to what y)ll could get flislde; They would hold a peck of marb- les. nnd a knife and top and string, And snakes and frogs and turtles; there was room for every- thing. Then our fortune changed a. little, and my mother said that she . Wouldn't bother any longer flttfng father's duds on me. Bin the store clothes didn't please mo; there were times they made me sad. For I missed those good old pock- the people. .-_.._..... .4... at; that my father's trousers had. V ' obliged to get on with my wash- ing. and there is no chance of dry ing at all." "Oh," ‘chimed in hei friend. "but you have a very nice uitlc for hanging thing's inf’ >—— THE TIGER AWOKE (London iDally Mail) Most old speeches of pflllllClfliH mnke weawlsoine reading, but ln Clcnicncoavs speeches of tho cris is the words seem touched wiili living flame. and even though the emergency has for evcr passed, can still siond the blood pulsing. The secret. of his success was that he iaiuhfully served great aims. "l um not here to lodk after my rrwn political ilortunes; l um hero to wage w-nr," was one of his say- lngs: and lie was true to ft. Happy the notion that in the hour of trial W"! 011d such a ‘mun to lead her, and Happier still the man who has been alble to render such service. As the years reccde and from il-i- perspective of history the greatness silood, there can he only one verdict upon him and liin rwvrk. He did what shall not the fOIIOI, and now "he tbelongu to the ages." of his achievement is better under- ivhcn down for ten seconds. Our fathers knew ‘hettci- than we knovi in this respect. They gave a man n liulf nninule. when knocked down in which to recover. and the result ‘W18 U10)’ not good» battles in re- turn for their money. l am no slav. lsd believer in things past, but in some matters the "old brigade" could teach us a thin-g or two; hm: this ds one w.‘ them. No sound, thor- oughly fiet mun can he beaten b7 one punch if he's game. providing tie has n raiisnnabic time iln which in pull himself together. The One-Punt?!» Arrlag is the ton-second limit u reas- testo. full. l YBDIQQO“ before. .1! is the piiii _ "' iwbo paiufwo ni-slill uneu/y already of "fluke" lights. and u ion; s; the ten-second rule remains lhQTlllO of the same we shall luvs them. Give us Willie for our money. We have a right to de- mand it, arid we do demand it. The fifty-second rule would make the game a bit slower to watchpn some respects, but for better tc have it thug way than lust one stiti‘ punch and l‘ fiosco. Charley Mltoficllh Idol Mr. Hales concludes: 1 do no. want Lohclfé ‘credit "roi- thls 8s an original idew-lit- came‘ to me year-i portunity to secure for next winter's chances free- We will apply to all l3ullivan ' purchase. If this car is will also give you five absolutely free. If you have an "l, train thefiatd Qliuley Mitchell. - , . s . He had been giving ma‘: imou. and we ant clilati-ing over Iboxlng in general, and Charley said: "The téu second rule willl lrlll the gin-me when the big purses come; the pub llc will not stand for it." And he added: "Make the rule fifty sec- onds instead of ten in all cham- pionship bouts for big or little men and you wfllfinot Egg l 011311191011- ship oi England lost or won under fifteen rounds." I ‘have ‘made I vary close study oi‘ public boxlnk since then. and I fully endorse the great fighters views, and conald- er- the time has now ‘fully arrived to ask those who control boxills and those who 6115189111 i5 5°? 'We are-the onl How miny kernels you spendwith us entitles y ou lo one guess. worth or in carload lots. B _¢*_+++0+'0-o++o+o-o nvoow ow-o o e+40vo+0+44+o+++6++++++>r~v0 0 ‘0004-04 "9*'"++N4 The Pocahontas Coal Co. y Coal Dealers that are giving you an 0P- 1920 Chevrolet Touring Car absolutely lice. a sport of '§'li'v‘ll1l,0b'd"lt om 10in issue and amend r the rim“, ten-second ruin. The prompts; y“ takes his cont-ago Jnboth imp‘ ‘ and insk the chciilcwill ‘m, a. golden blrvclt, for the p c will flock to thlt hail where Hi9, are reasonably cnnured of being a]; lowed to gel. fairly info tlletr onl; before the ‘co-called fight (T) l; 1| over. The. rule l iinve prev xvduid not entail unnecessary b", iali-ty. A referee always has m,‘ power to slop a battle when ii i, obvious one contcifinnlt has m, chance. The rule would brood my! erno_cs,_not bruhlltirjlud 11 faced; good, clean; loft-hinder! thou" would come in its Waite. ' . . . girancs-ia. i920 of Pot Barley in the jar? Every dollar Egg i, Plat e your Oldfl‘ coal for your house or business and get your will deliver the coal when you are ready. This coal sold by us, whether \ou buy One Dollars e sure and ask for ticket at tin e of won by any of our patrons on our ticket. vie account with us drop in SGCUYG yOlll‘ EUCSSCS. ALL COAL CITY SCALE WEIGHT , Yards 8c Wharf Foot Prince Si. Phone 747‘ 73i7-3~2-Mttlai Dollar Call in fand unable time? it is not. says Mr. Hales. A hit on the chin properly applied will drop the gumest and fittest/i. mun on earth for that pcr lad." and thirty seconds inter he may be as fit as n daisy, able und ivilling to continue the match- liut in iihe meantime he was coun- ted out. There is only one curr- for this stoic oi‘ affairs. and that is to exteni ihe time limit from ten seconds to fifty seconds. Then we should get some real boxing mar chea: men would learn to box all’ over their opponents and the one- punch artla: would disappear. Ev wry one inierested in boxing must sea the danger of nauseating "the public by chort, .. notational “con- Leave your ions of coal delivered in your cellar and pay same ard Uptown Office r86 Queen “St. ' Phone 748 C. W. ROGERS, Manager. QQ-O f4‘O4-f§ V! Q Q Q § 4'4 4-O-§§§-§§4'§§4§4§-§4-§+O-§ O-OPO- P. 5*. W9‘ QQOQ-OQQ4I§§QQ 5 i?" _ 1M GUESS NOW Order Your Suit Here. osit on it Entities You to Guess on This You Dep Gra Chevroletllutoiiiobile l ask to see our goods. Gét our Prices. Look at the Latest Styles. Measure. ~ Deposit as much as you like and Take the Chance of winning a Car. M. ROSS Merchant Tailor- ’ ‘ ““ ‘ - 13v’ . -. creeeufi-u; 12904-91118201181. .. . v1 9 ‘ vvé‘ vvvvv v¢¢v%¢4 Every One xx A A AAQAAAQAAAAAA wvv v v vvv a 0 r o o o o O Q 9 6 Q O 0 Q o 9 U C Q t $ i vw wasaafl“ ¢—O4—Q _ — --.~. .... .. . gym-mo..-