1 .,“.,-t- n4» I niiohivrsants, 1921' AINTINESS of costume b°8ins with Mercury ‘Underwear. ' Never was underwear so precisely fashioned to p|'e.. serve the lines of the figure, It m5. Perfectly. not by stretching but by correct design. The trim is near, The covered seams cannot irritate. The garments are unshrinkable, am] entire satisfaction IS guaranr¢¢d_ The elasticity, warmth and comfort of soft, fine, pure wool cashmere of finest quality obtainable can be fliloycd in the correct Weight for fall or winter. Underwear "lemvutltllzé;zeisiirde.eziéers Canada FOR MEN. womsu AND CHILDREN I55 L___ A Sure Relief For Women's Disorders 10 DAYS’ TREATMENT FREE ~ Orange Lily is a certain relief for all disorders of ‘women. it Is applied local- ly and is albsorbed lntn the suffering tissue. The dead waste matter in the con- gested region is elpelled, giving immedlsite mental and physical relief; tihe blood" vessels and nerves are toned and strengthen- ed. and tthe circulation is rendered to normal. As principles, and acts on the actual location oi the disease, it cannot help but do good in all forms of fumals troubles, including delayed and painful menstruation, lnuoor- hoes, felling of the womb, etc. Price $2.00 (per ibox, which is sufloient for one month's treatment. A free Trial Treatment, enough dor 10 days, worth 75c will be sent Free to any suffering women who will send me her address. lncloss 3 stamps and address Mrs. l/ydla W. Iadd, Windsor, Ont. SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTQ EVERYWHERE - For-titles The. Lungs it is therefore Moment predo- sid we have tn relieve all sil- sfliss to the system lie inns, mdhun and lren nib so lolly needed in eonqm flan-wile the Crsosotn It con- Mlns sterillzes and gmvnnlaes, es it were, the tnblmnlsr lesions making s cure possible. Try VIN MQRIN, it has proved hvalnalle la may eases similar to yours-its s wonderful remedy. t On sale everywhere ‘P QUIIIO DI. ID. MORIN l Gil, LIHITII L a. R. snow (Iharlottetown Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest rate. Good Strong Stock ContPl-niel- i Every 0ile Should What the- (Contlnued on Page Nine) have delivered in this campaign. Your patience was evident from the hesiiiniiis and a heartily thank °“- I "W" 70in that if government 5 ml-"Pfifiii. the policy we pursue W" b9 I D0110? of moderate “i719. fair protection on every ar- ticle. That is the principle we "Mid on. and by it we homo. M you think we have done cre- dllflbly by Canada in the last few 70ers. l lhtoirld like you to give evi times of that fooling by your vote. if ws have not. it is because of me of two things: either ws had‘ lacked the capacity or we had not the will. Well, you know who we l"; y0u know where we have Bqq.‘ ma cfiaiihorlnrowu GUARDIAN Read This Tariii Issue Means revive first of all. Decide the issue rlslit. and much at the unemploy- ment that now dallson the coun- try will be relliovflpdhsnd thousands of meta will get w: to the work from which they have had to de- part. v Yes, the future is bright, and the heart of the Canadian peo- ple is sound; and l cannot doubt. I-J will not doubt-that the Can- adian people on December 6. when ; hey decide thlsall-inrportant. this vital, this far-reaching question that goes to the root of our prO- verity and determine our future for decades to come, will do it in a way that will approve and con- flfm the wise tpollcy laid down in the past. thus acclaimlng themsel- stood on the vital issue that shook. ves worthy sons of the Fathers Wh) this Dominion in the last eight‘ made thisgreat and glorious 00th,‘:- vesrs. and. you will not conclude try. i come in, "What is the con ~ Charlottetown? One pac _ _ because of American competition. e tens of thousands of dollars‘ worth of s pork on hand, unsold because of the Ameri- we dld not have tho will. no one 0811 say we had not the will. What- ever our capacity has been it has been exerted to the last limit of human endurance to carry time country through the most direfui and baffling period that ever con- fronted the ‘Plilylic men of Canada. We had not: the nonmal trend of events that preceded 1914 to contend with. We have had more new problems every week and month. and two have had more er- rors to avoid, and more tremen- lous decisions of policy to make zhan any government has ever had and we have done it with this re- sult at least, that in the outcome we find the condition of Canada marked as the best of any country that has besnthrougli the war with us. is that only a phrase, or is it. a fact’! The opposition will doubtless say we have laid country rprostrate under a debt oi‘. two billions. But our debt is just a quarter per utpitad less than Britalnfiig‘ just a third of New Zealantfs; nearly a third per capl- tad of Australia's; and our finan- cial position on the score of reven- ue and expenditure is sound. and has been sound every year of the war. And observers in other coun- tries writers of other nations - agree that there is no country that stands in a Ibetter plsitlon finan- cially than Canada. Have you heard anyone that says different- ly‘! lf you read the words of any- one dbserving this country you gather what the Government has ‘done, aided by our soldiers. The glory. of course is all theirs; we do not. claim any whatever, but we do claim to have dons what was right and ask to be absolved from blame. Observers, watching what. we have done, all agree that no country has set the example to Canada and if there la one who has expressed a different opin- ion I have never read ‘It. And ,these are impartial observers, not ipartizang In Canada; they are men ‘who have studied affairs in Can- Iada, l was in Great Britain this summer and I should like you to ycunlfer with the leaders of finance ‘over there, and if you unscented zthat Canada was in a perilous, ;pfogl_fafg condition they would ‘laugh at you. The future of Canada is MI dark; It is "bright. Decide this ls- sue properly and confidence will lbs restored and men will go ahead with assurance. We gill" not es- Z cape the aftermath of the war, we are not escaping it. With millions of- people In Europe unable 10 bily. and with currencies universally dilapidated. we cannot exile“ h‘ ihave production going ahead of all the rest of the world. But we shit“ tthis province proportion than that of mer parties is to admit p0 of duty to our markets. even under our dition of i-ng firms hav ast year’ can overflow into the Can What value of pork value do Canadians buy Total Porlgfresh Total the l The pork question is rel than in any 0 because the volume of produc other _ is well known, the policy of both the Liberal and Far- rk and pork products free What Mr. Crl-‘rer Would Do. Mr. Crerar, who in some parts of the country does not ears to talk tariff, also discovered some of the mushroom issues of the last thirty days. and is now talking economy for all he i worth. But do you know what his platform says? it dealer" that when they get lntio Dower they will buy the Canadian Pacific Rsllwsy and all the coal ‘mines of the eountryl (Laughter ; and applause.) So these are the » apostles of economy and reduction of debt whom you are asked to put in to supplant a government that | has carried you through these last‘ eight years. Now, l have occu- pied a lot of time.- Velclis: Go on. A voice: You have a lot of tim- ct. Mr. Meighen: I shall draw your Z attention to a few things that have happened in the last few months. Ono would think. to hear Mr. Wood and Mr_ Crerar talk, that once we ltnke our tariff down the United ‘States will take down theirs and will stay down. Well, we are oI fered in i911 some reduction in certain things in their tariff if wt reduced some things in ours. Wt rejected it,--in my judgment anso lutely properly; and If the same thing were before thlg country t..- day l would say: Have nothing to do with it. That country is our biggest competitor; and‘ it is so mighty industrially that if we get into any entanglement with them it will in a short time mean our destruction. Suppose you had a lumber mer- chant here in this town of George- town and there was a big lumbs‘ merchant i-n Charlottetown doing |flfteon times the business all over the iDomlnlon. While he distribu- ted goods all over the country. he could do it far more cheaply be- cause of the tremendous scale on which he did so. Suppose ha said to the smaller merchant: Look at my business. I am reach- ing out with my goods right up to Fort William, selling here. there and everywhere. and you have on- ly a narrow range and are selling nt a great cost. l will make an arrangement with you to handle all your business and will take something for doing it. The b18- ger man will find, after a while. that he cannot dispose of his own surplus to 55y nothintl c’? the 0th" feilow’s, and the smaller man, hav- lng called in all his agents. will lng the course proposed by our op- be worse oil’ than ever he was. Now that is analogous t0 the "MB situation between Canada and the United States. Just let ils make THE PDRK QUESTION atively more important in ther province in Canada, tion in pork is greater 1n farm products. And as Does American pork HOW present duties? It does. the pork market; now in ker has gone out of business Two other pack- adian market. and of pork products do lanadians sell in the American market and What of the same line in the States? Here is an official statement, taken from the latest Canadian Year Book, page 386, showing the imports and exportsof pork for the year ending 31st. _ March, 1921: Pork fresh, chilled and frozen . . . . . . . . . $ Bacon, hams, shoulders and sides, corned Pork, dry-salted and in brine, . . . . . . . . . 0 1M PORTS 3,862,311 1,545,380» 2,172,715 $7,530,406 EXPORTS T0 U. S. Bacon and hams, shoulders and sides y. . . . $03,960 Pork, dried and salted . . . . Pork, pickled and in barrels 6,599 15,246 316,151 ____...--..... .-.--es. _ .-.........- ..........s541,s5oi What say our farmers to these figures? With ‘nil the chief national questions. ieven and a half millions worth of pork coming from he States and less than a quarter of a million worth of llll‘ pork going to tihe" States, do they want the duty .-aken oil, as the Liberal and Farmer candidates say they will do? We cannot believe that our Island farmers are so unwise. If not, should they not vott for the government candidates, who stand to protect hm mrk ' ti ~- an arrangement with the big fel- low and let it last for a little while. and let another government come In In the United States and reiss the tariff wall still higher, and where should we be? Would it not load. in the course of time. to the swallowing up of this coun try by the United States? A voice: Sure. that condition as certainly as day follows night. and we should tlnti ourselves more interested In what they were doing with the tariff in Washington than ht Ottawa The peril of the very independence and integrity of this country in follow- Mr. Mslghen: it would lead to pononts is so manifest that every statesman in this Dominion that aver got very far, that aver stu- died the problem and saw the iwholo drift of that policy. has warned the people of Canada against it. Even Sir Wilfrid Lau- rler did once, but he was lured by Mr. Fielding into the mistake made in i911. Edward Blake saw it in 1891. and he manfully wrote a letter to the cleetcrs of Durham and told them that the very cuursel now proposed to you by Mr. Kin; would mean the swallowing up of the Dominion; and lie told them that in language Just as plain an any man could use. l ask the Liberals here. who have the same interest in their country as Blako had. and which every man who ever sat. in a post of responsibili- ty ever had since the seventies,“ l ask you to take to heart the warning of Blake and never forget you are Canadians. Never slack- en the resolve that this country shall march on not as the adjunct of another but as Canada. Keep llrm the resolve that Canada shall not place itself in any position in which it will be at the mercy oi‘ another nation. it is said that the Fordney tariff is a punishment for our not having accepted Raci- procity in 191d. That is nnn- sense. lf the United States had wanted to punish Canada for not having accepted Reciprocity, why did they not do so immediately’ instead they took down their tariil‘ in some cases because they thought they could handle our goods and i-t would pay them. The fact is that the Fordney tariff has been imposed against every coun- try impartially. We had recipro- city with them In wheat and flour both ways and it lasted lust six months, when they imposed so cents of a duty on wheat and 20 per cent on flour. They never,‘ suggested to us that they intended to do anything of the klnd_ We also had a treaty with them in re- gard to potatoes and this spring they put up 25 per cent a bushel on this product. Why dld they not respect that little treaty? Simp- ly because they thought it dld not pay them. Therefore, l say, lei- every man and woman who loves Canada declare. without equivocal-Y tion, that we shall not bind our-i solves to any competitor but shnlli march on to our own destiny. i he ____~4Q4C>~———— I a POLITICAL SHORTER t CATECHISM. l Mr. Melghen. Q.~—Who is Mr. Moighen? A.—An Ontario boy, now leader‘ of the Government and the Coali- l tlon party which brought Canada | finely through the wnr, and that‘ holds to the long-standing national l policy of the protection of and ile- l vclopmcnt of home industries. Q-What docs his party include? A.~The best men of the old Liberal and Conservative parties. Q.~~llave Mir. Mcighen nnri his colleagues a united and definite policy. A.—Yos. a plain united policy on Q.—-And does Mr. itielghon say what he thinks? A.—lleiloes. He talks Protoc- tlon to the Western Grain Growers Conscription to Quebec’ Britishistu in Canada, and Cnnadianisni when he goes to England. Qr-Whut are tho chief points of ttack on Mr. Moighen by his adver- saries? ' A-Tlfat he Introduced the Mili- tary iServiee Bill in Parliament to stand by the Canadian army in Europe. and that he introduced the railway purchase bills which were necessary to save this country from the greatest ilisustcr in its history. Qr-What is Mr. MQiKlIQ-IYS vase in a nutshell? A.—That what he has dnnc. thinks and will do, you know. That what ‘Mr. King lius done you know, and that wliat Mr. King thinks and can do, you guess. That the best Mr. (Irerur hns tinnr». was dons in alliance with Mr. ‘Melghen, and that what ho will d0. you guess. 0+eo0o+++oo++++»u»0» “COMPASSLESS 0N r UNCHARTED 85A Mr. Maiilhsn has asked me on the platform whether I am ready. If returned to power to put my platform of 1919 In- to effect. Having In mind tire marlnerwho Is to take ‘sis slilp out into the unknown lens, I regard the platform ss-a chart by which I should be guided. I sm not an auto- erst; I am not going to take the whale business of fluv- smment Info my own hands; but will surround myself by the ables! men I can find, and In sollsettvs wisdom find the compels needed‘ to point the way the ship of state should tlksfluMr. King's speech at w Y - PAGE WPIRWM‘ MI tlBAN If I f“ ~'- -..._ ,‘-_.~....1~ag, he. .;- A NEW CHEESE ORIGINATED lure of 90 ilegret-s i”. \\li('ll .t i, !-'.'l- |ll‘('fl trii-ti. it is ;| riigtinp; “my AT TIHE CENTRAL EXPERI- m-teti anti cut. The curds a UIPH hlilléllllt: lltqlllhllifln In llil- phigpgg MENTAL FARM, OTTAWA, cooktwil at u lilllllltlflitllfl‘ oi’ 115 il0~ industry; and the ])l‘t'.~('fll. intrica- lirecs F.. zinti afterwards." lnilultlt-il and prcsst ti. “n! Iht-m, lions‘ lift‘ that it will very popular fitfillhlflfi. flli‘i'l Willi a llExpi-rimentztl l".li'lIlS' Noll-i in UllL A new. medium high flavour Dtiililil sizes. rt-zuly ior the tlirillg o cheese has bin-n originated hy iii»; room. Tilt‘. prowess of curing i=. uni- “Hm.- (h, )1,“ m“. _,.,,,,,- "my. I’. Animal lluhbanrlry Dlvisinrl or the oi‘ thi- most inlpurtunt fc.'ituri-s in var?" ztskt-ii llitrizs. "til-eat." ri-plied ‘ Dominion Expcriiileutlil Farms the. sfiitirrissiul nilinirf-icluit: ill this “limb- ‘ .4 "Ii runs so Slllflllllll)‘ you can't. Syslcui. it is mlloil ".\li~illi~m' high class product. {W} H V“ H ‘m Ur lump w" thirese," or "Le fromlitt- Mcilluin“, ‘Fills new cheese possesses a vory van-t Mrnq}. 1L Pprfpl,’ ignition: ‘mu 1 ,__~ and. is lmirlg miiilufrictiirctl at rlzv Dltlllnlfij; and ilclicntt: flavour with mink. smell a lllllll.'_ Anti .~]ll‘i\ll. wily ' (‘antral Expeririinutaii Eurni. Ot- no oirlecllrlnuble (lilOllF, and hi...‘ ll “diillcs. You can't st-r- it, ‘ tnwu. The process of lllétllliillL- been pronounced a very suporinfi mt-‘vill-f“lmfiflllli‘ i‘ _ Wiiliiifrl ‘ i turn is. briefly as follows: prntlilt-t by the numerous exports Casi?“ _ '.m [may] ""‘f',' Ii’ j . } 'I‘I1e milk is liciilinl to ii ildllilvfflfllllil t-nniloisst-urs by whmn it llil-i film-lip" ' l ' ‘mm ‘i ‘S ‘ ." --— "A Credit to Our Canadian Pride" i. "2 QHYX oxibrds for outdoor weer combine the smart modish- ness characteristic of all Onyx “shoe designs, with stout foot protection and durable weer. (They humanize with (he latest dress fashions, adding that touch of completeness in style to your outdoor COStUIlU. some- times hard to get in oxforcls of the walking type. ' (Tile)? have all the sterling qualities which you have learned to expect in Onyx shoes. Sold in the better stores throughout Canada. Alley 8' Co. CHARLOTTETOWN. M07500“. anaAaAAAAAA