Edited Text
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The Peopleâs Paper
Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew
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CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1922
By Mall, Canada,
Annual Subscri,
B.S Saver
GHAUDIERE FLO
D0 MUCH DAMAGE
(Special to The Guardian)
BEHAUCEVILLE, Que., June 21.
âRegular traffic in the Quebec
Central Railway, between Quebec
and Sherbrooke was resumed yes-
terday, and the National â high-
way Wag said to be once more
opened to vehicles after three
days of fiood conditions in the
Chaudiere River, :
Damages. suffered in the county
of Beauce are considerable, the
chief sufferer being the Brown
Corporation, over $125.000 worth
O03
Local representatives of the com-
pany have commissioned all the
tugs they could get, and the lumber
is being salvaged between the Is-
land of Orleang And Quebec.
(News received: â from Scott, St.
George, Beauceville ang St. Marie|!
are of reassuring nature, The
river had risen twenty and twenty
five feet over its normal volume,
The fact that the: current of the
river. did not have the etrength of
the usual spring flood prevented
houses from being washed away
but small bridges haye been torn
of logs having reached the St. Law-
rence after the âbooms gave away.
off, and in many sections seeding
will have to be started anew,
AY THAVELLE
(it
VICTORIA, June 21.âThe_ voy-
age of the liner Makura, which ar-
rived here today from Australia
was marked by a singularly tragic
incident which shrouded the ship
with a canopy of gloom after clear-
ing from Honolulu.
iMrs. J. Wardrop, a Toronto lady,
who was travelling from Auckland
with her husband, fell ill during the
voyage and succumbed to acute
Brightâs: disease on June 6, three
days out âfrom Honolulu. Dr.
Edwards, shipâs surgeon, minister-
eq to the sick passenger, but she
was âbeyond medical aid and passed
away cn Tuesday â atternoon last.
- BURIED AT SEA
the body of Mis. . Wardrop was
consigned to the waters of the
Pacific, Capt. R. Crawford, the
Shipâs commander,
the sburial service,
Toronto for New Zealand, gailing
At 5.30 o'clock the following day
officiating at
The was was
5 years of age
It was about six months ago that
Mr. and Mis, J. Wardrop left
by the Makura.
ing to Canada
home.
âTam all alone in the world nowâ,
said the bereaved husband, who
was competely boken by the tragic
death of his wife.
They were return.
to visit their old
WAKES CANADA
HCHO
LONDON, June 21âT
ure today of the new 21,000-ton
liner Empress of Australia from
Glasgow for Vancouver marks the
final step in the Canadian Pacific
plans to capture the ionâs share of
the Oriental traffie from both its
British and United States compet-
itors, According to a statement is-
sued by the company today, the At-
â lantic Empresses will âbe linked up
with thely Pacific sisters by âmeans
of special transcontinental trains,
so that passengers will reach Yoka
hama a fortnight sooner than â if
they had taken the Peninsular
and Oriental route through the
Suez route. â
These atrangemĂ©nts â will make
Canadaâa highway between Europe
and the Far East and already the
diversion of a large amount of trat-
fic. is assured. This is a success
won despite strenuous efforts ' by.
United States Shipping Board ves-
sels to compete for this traffic. Tao
Admiral Line, which operates the
U.S. vessels, is the C. P. R.âs
he depart-
one of the others being the minv-|
layer Koenigin Louise. The other
four were all sunk during the war,
and the Empress of Australia is the
only ship afloat with this
ment. Its working will be watched
rby Admiral Roome, the
expert, who is making the voyage
for this purpose, He has
pronounced the gear a marvel
German engineering skill.
MAN
AY 10 ORIENT
keenest competitor on the Pacific
but so far, it has been unable to
equal the trans-Pacific record held
by the Canadian line, a recent
attempt to do so having been defeat-
ed by the C.P.R.âs Empress of
Russia which beat its own previous
record made in 1914.
A unique feature of the Empress
of Australia is her turbine reduct-;8overnment by India,
ion gear. The Empress of Australia!
formerly named the Tirpitz after!
the German Admiralty chief of
submarine notoriety was one of
five German vessels in which this
gear was experimentally installed,
t
equip-
C.P.R,
already
1
of
MINERS ARE TO BE RELEASED
SYDNEY N, 8., June 21.âAfter
serving about three moaths of
their two and three year sentences,
twelve Cape Bretoh miners now
held in Dorchester penitentiary for
rioting and looting at New Aber-
deen last January, have been order-
ed released, accordingto the Syd-
ney Record.
The men affected are William
Tarbot, Fred Tarbot, John Doucette
.D, A. McLean, Edward White, Alex,
Vinger, Joseph Gero, John Zenzyk,
Peter Moseychurch, Neil. Connolly,
Thomas Connolly, All of â§ whom
were serving two years sentences
and William Minal, who got three
years,
The offenses for which they were
imprisoned occurred on Jany. 22
nd, and subsequently, when a
crowd of miners incted by âRed
agitators in Glace |Bay, attacked
and looted a store of the Dominion
âCoal Compahy of Now Aberdeen,
doing damage then estimated at
180,000. âThe prisoners were sett:
tenced by Mr, Justice Russel] ear-
ly in March, f
Shortly after thax were sent « to
the Pen, petitions for their re-
lease were clféulated and largely
signed and the prayer of the pet-
itioners is: now granted by the
ustice Department, the sole con-
ditions being that the men report
once a month to a magistrate and
find wonk ag soon as possible after
their release,
Cc
0
a
e
t
f
PENNY BANK:ACT AMENDED
_ BY HOUSE OF COMMONS
OTTAWA, June 20.âThe House
today gave third reading to an am-
endmentito the Penny Bank Act :by
thé provision that a proportion not
exceeding one-half of moneys rec-
eived on deposit elséwhere than at
taeâchiet office may be deposited in
such chartered banks âor financial
institutions as the Minister of Fin-
ance may designate. The amend:
ment is made Ppl for the
penny banks of Toronto.
CANNERY INSPECTION
ending the Meat and Canned Foods
Act, with special application to the
ond reading in the House of Com-
mons: today.
other things, that fish and shellfish
packed in cans shall be subject to
inspection during the waole course
or at the warehouse of the first pur-
er, or of the first jlealer obtaining if
from the packer. Another provision
gives to the inspector the power to
close any cannery . immediately if
he should discover
conditions are being neglected.
EGYPT STRONG
facture of antiquities 1s
scae in Egypt, particularly at Cairo
that it now has a place in reports
on the industries of the country,â
fa Hgyptian
famoug Wgyptia i
an interview in âthe Dally Chronicle.
quities are often so
he otates, that even
by them, Large sums
have been paid for
were considered genuine treasures
but have now been
spurious or of
strong is the 8
the authenticlity of
various bronze and gold ornaments
and other articles alleged to. rave
been found in
collectors are afraid to risk buying
them, and in an excess of caution
often turn down
ure undoubtedly genuine.
the forgeries: have largely ruined
the market for Wgyptian historical
treasures. â
h
IS MADE FORE STRICT :
OTTAWA, June 20.âA bill am-
t
anning of shellfish, was given sec-
It provides, among |Âą
t
j
1
}
f preparation and packing, and at
ny time thereafter at the cannery
haser, and shall be labelled with
he name and address of the pack- j
that sanitary
0
Dp
8
â$â
ON, ANTIQUITIES.
LONDON, June 21.âThe manu-
carried
orward on such an extensive
Professor Flinders Petrie, the
archeologist in
The forgeries of Egyptian antl-
well executed
the most ex-
are deceived
of money
artivles that
sNenced. collectors
icton has been commissioned
âLewis Connors, President of Con
nors Bros., Ltd. who have an
tensive fisheries plant
Harbor to make the
surveys
work today,
Foster was unable to give the
legation much encouragement.
was pointed out by the delegation
however, that there was
volume of business in prospect. for
the proposed railway in connection
with the fisheries and other opera
tm:
the countryâs obligations.
the Indianization of the
training Indians for service in all
ranks thereof so
Army may be officéred by (Indians;
the amelioration of the conditions
of laber. and the
the most suitable lines,
of the new iparty
constitutional methods, and
out resource io any methods likely
purpose of securing any of its ob-
$47 CONSCIENCE MONEY
note attached as follows:
just false customs entry made some
time ago,â over the signature âJ.
Smith,â
WOULD ESTABLISH ARISTOC-
lishment of an aristocracy of brain
instead of
birth,â it is stated,
chjects of the proposed reform of
being sponsored ih the
Commons by Olaude Lowth
Another. New
Railway For N.B.
(Special to the Guardian)
ST. STHPHEN, June 21.âPre:
liminary surveys for a line of rail-
ways from Black Harbor, one of the
deep water harbors on the Bay of
Fundy coast in Charlotte county,
to connect with the shore line div-
ision of the C. P. R, at Renfields
are to be commenced at once. A.B.
Hanson, Civil Engineer of Freder.
by
ex:
at Black
preliminary
and will commence the
An examination of the construct
oin of the proposed line of railway
has been going. on for some
and some months ago'a delegation
from Charlotte county waited upon|â
the
proposed a guarantee of bonds. by
the province under a
that the road would be operated by
the Canadian Pacific Railway. The
time âvas not apportune for such a
time
Provincial Government = and
suggestion
proposition, however, and Permier
de-
It
a large
tions, where was was also the pros-
pect of an extensive ocean traffic
from the port.if it was developed,
The proposed railway would be ap
proximately eleven miles in length
Indian Moderates
âCreate New Party
DRPLHI, India, June 21.âA new
political. party, calling ttself âThe
National Partyâ has been organiz-
ed in the Indian Legislature to
give embodiment to the ideas of
the Indian Moderates, Under th?
leadership of Sirâ P. 8. Sivaswaml
Iver, it-is-seeking to extend its r-
ganization into the provinces and
districts,
The new party stands for âthe
attainment by constitutional
methods of full responsjble govern-
ment in India as an integral part
of the British Empire.â It is -op-
posed on the one hand . to those
Rritish interests which are seeking
to prevent the attainment of self-
and on the
other hand to the aims of extreta-
ist Indians whoare . seeking to
ale India an independent repub-
do not limit them-
lic and who
selves to constitutional methods.
âThe immediate objective of the
party [s full autonomy in the pro-:
vinces and thy transfer to the Leg-
islature in the central government
of the control of all subjects other
han defence, political and foreign
affairs, and ecclesiastical matters,
subject to adequate safeguards for
the protection of the vested rights;
of persons already in the service of!
he Crown, and the fulfillment of
Among other policies favored are
army iby
branches of the defensive force and
or entertaining the commissioned
that tre Indian
development of
he resources of the country along
Leaders
hope to attain
heir ends by peaceful, orderly and
with-
o result in ylolence. The party
S$ opposed to the policy of produc-
ng convulsions in the internal ad-
ninistration of the country âfor the
ects,
âal a
RETURNS TO GOVERNMENT
OTTAWA, June 20.âAn amount
f $47 has been received by the De-
artment of Customs as âcon-
clence moneyâ from Toronto, with
âTo ad-
ââââ4-
RACY OF BRAIN INSTEAD
OF ONE OF BIRTH.
\LONDON, June 21.ââThe estab-
aristocracy of
ig one of the
the
he âHouse of Lords, which bill is
House of
er, it
of the
ses that
pr
doubtful origin. So
uspicion concerning
scarabs and|t
tI
Egypt that many|t
antiquities tha:
Thus
pror
House of Lords shall be chosen by
merit alone, and
peers of the realm âby merit alone
to be the first members of the re-
constituted House,
200 others hy merit. (
the realm, other than the lords of
parliament, shall!
that the heredi-
ary system ho abolished, except
in the case of a royal prince.
The existing lords, according to
he bill shall select one hunired
and these
lorda of parliamentâ shall select
The peers of
3
Being the
Chaplain, Can
«Continued
CHAPTER 21
THE CROSSING OF THE CANAL
DU NORDâSEPTEMBER 27th
1918 ; {
When I got to the sunken road
above Inchy J found that No.
Company of the Machine Gun Bat-
talion had a little sandbag house
there and were waiting for the at-
tack. I went in and the young of-
ficers and men made me at homes
at once. I divested myself of my
pack, coat and steel helmet and de-
termined to settle down for the
night. Suddenly a shell burst in
the road and I went out â to see if
anyone was hit. Iâ'wo or three men
were wounded but not severely. We
got them in and the young O.C., of
the company bound up their
wounds and sent them off. âThere
was a row of these sandbag huts
of them was the entrance toa
dugout in which the 1st, Battalion
and the General of the Ist, B.idage
from. the rooms on either side. Tha
whole place was crowded with men
and the atmosphere-was more than
usually thick. I made my way down
to the end where thereâ was u
Apumy which bad been put thera by
the Germans. Here the men were
filling tt eir water potUes and I got
a fresh supply for mine, Not . far
from the pump a sewsteps âled
down into a. room whers 1 found
the C.O., anda. number of © the
âofficers of the 1st, Battalion. it
was nbout 2.4. m., and they. were
having a breakfast of tea and ba-
âbacon and invited me to join thei
After-the-meal was finished the
Colonel, who was lying on a rough
j ded, said. to me, âSit down C:torm
and give us some of your. nature
poems to take our minds off this
âbeastly âDusiness.â It was so
seldom that I wits invited to recite
my own poems, sd such an oppor-
tunity could not be lost. I sat
down on the steps and repeated a
poem I wrote among the Lauren-
tian mountains in the happy days
before we ever thought of war. It
is called âThe Unnamed Likeâ
âTt sleeps among the thousand hilis
Where no man ever trod,
And only nature's music fills
The silences of God.
Green mountains tower above its
shore
Green rushes fringe its brim,
And o'er its breast for evermore
The wantan âbreezes skim.
Dark clouds that intercept the sun
Go there in Spring to weep
And there, when Autumn days are
done,
White mists lie down to sleep.
Sunrise.and sunset crowped with
| gold
The peaks of ageless stone
Where winds have thundered from
of oldw
And storms have set their throne.
No echoes of the world afar
(Disturb it night or day,
But sun and shadow, moon
star
Pass and repass for aye.
and
âTwas in the âgray of early dawn,
Whea first the lake we spied
And fragments of a cloud were
drawn
Half down the mountain. side.
Along the shore a heron flew
And from a speck on_ high,
That hovered in the deepening blue
\We heard the fisk hawkâs cry .
Among the cioud eapt solitudes
(No sound the silence broke
Save when, dn whispers down tho
woods,
The guardian mountains spoke.
Through tangled briish and dewy
brake,
âReturning whence we came,
We passed in silence and the lake
We left without a name.â
There is not much in the poem,
but, like a gramophone record, it
carried our minds into another
world. For myself, who remembet-
ed the scenery that surrouded mo
when I wrote it apd who now, in
that filthy hole looked at the faces
of young men who in tiwo or three
hours were to face death in one of
the biggest tasks that had heen
laid upon us the words stirred up
all sorts of conflicting emotions.
be eligible for
echt
[ well received that I ventured
Ă©elction to the House of Commons. anotherâin fact, âseveral more, and
The recitation seemed to be 8&6
APOE IN THE GREAT WAR
Reminiscences
Recollections of the Veteran
(Copyrighted In Can ada by F. @,
Book rights reserved).
against the bank, and at one end
}running from right to left, lay the
ooo
> (Special to The Guardian)
ROKHAMPTON,
and
cote and. âRisley
Robecio and Colombo in
doubles, 6-1, 6-4, 6-0,
q
on F. G. Scott
MONTREAL, June 21.âThe
then I noticed 4 curious thing. It
was the praeternatural silence â of
my aduience.:Generally speaking,
when !l recited my poems, one of
the officers would suddenly re-
ember he had to dictate a letter
or a despatch rider would come in
with orders. Now no one stirred.
I paused in the middle of a poem
and looked round to see what was
knock this week,
cond time this season, a huge
80 of this fruit was brought
port. The Canadian Pacific
the biggest consignment
brought to Canada,
BRITAIN. WINS
June 21,âBri.
tain won its third mateh from Italy
in the David Cup play when Kings-
defeated Di
the
mon market in Montreal got a sad
when, for the se-
car
into
liner
Montreal from Naples and Genoa is
now at shed eight, unloading 30,000
packages of lemons. It is probably
yet
CINCINNATI,
clusive Maketewah
6-2 ;
Scott; L this afternoon and despite her
emon screams and struggles wag carried
S Abundant to an automobile standing nearby
and whisked away,
POPC OOES (Special to The Guardian) âThe automobile, with â engine
le} running and a man at the wheel
course near Ryland avenue, where
a player would come close to the
roadway, As Mrs, Marshall, Mrs.
Louis J, Huck, wife of | a former
brewer and two |. women, compan-
ions neared, this point, the car
swung off the roadway and on to
the sward. Three men leaped from
the car and without a word, seized
Mrs, (Marshall. âThe chauffeur had
the matter and there to my aston-
ishment I found that everyone,
except the young Intelligence © Ot-
ficer was sound asleep. It was the
best thing that could have happen-
ed and I secretly consoled myself
with, the reflection that the one
who was unable to sleep was the
officer who specialized in intelli-
gence. We both laughed quietly,
and then I whispered to hit,
We had âbetter go and find some
place where we too, can get a little
rest.â He climbed over the © pros-
trate forms and followed me down
the passage. We lay down side by
side on the wooden floor and [ was
just beginning to succumb to the
soothing influences of my own
poetry when I thought I felt little
ed German trenches. Here
O. of the 8rd, Battalion opened
ment went down into the
es. I stayed on the hill looking
the wonderful scene through
German glasses. On the
quarry beside the village
a machine gun. Our 3rd
had taken â the place,
in on the General and the Brigade
Major and then climbed up _â the
steps and went to the machine gun
hit.
their guns cn our hill and
THE ZERO HOUR
, order. IT had hardly uttered
The night was now .well advanc-| words when
ed so it was time to shave and get
top of the bank above the roail
the savage roar burst forth. It was!our advance had
a stupendous attack, Field
heavy guns, and siege
sent forth their fury, and. ma
guns poured millions of rounds i0-)gth,
to the country beyond the Canal
evidently
ÂŁUNS,'checked for a time. While
was a splendid
and landing near us: that we went Jost a brother in the Battalion
back under cover till the first:the early part of the war.
burst of tie storm should subside.}«tow old are you, Cope?â
At that moment | knew our | men
were crossing the huge diteh aid I
prayed that God would give them
victory. When the barrage â had
lifted I started down towards the
He
hind another whereâ a-German
machive gun. must have caught
thein a3 (ney advanced. A young cf-
ficer of the 2nd, Battalion was dy-
ing from wounds. Two or three
decorations on his breast toid his
past record in the war. While i was
had picreed his steed helmet
way to the aid post.
A CRITICAL TIME .
ig station. lic
tne way to the d
aa in his face.
had a frightful we
not know at the time how _ badly
the dressing station was not far
up to me in the military hospital at
St. Anneâs with a new nose growing
comfortably on his face and his
cheek marked wth a scar that was
not unsightly. âThe last time I
met you, Sir,â he said, âwas near
the Canal du Nord when you s'ow-
ed me the way to. the dressing
but made signs that he wanted
Division were on our right
they had been tied up in
Brigade had their right flank
tore his beauty.
ACROSS THE CANAL DU NORD
I climbed down to the bottom
it in which men were walking and
the sappers were at work. Some
crossed the great Canal du Nord
Our battalions were now moving
up and I joined them, avoiding «
part of a field which the men toid
me was under fire of a machine
gun from the mill at Marquion, The
country was open and green. The
day was fine and once more we ex-
perienced the satisfaction of taking
possession of the enemy's _ terri-
tory. Before us the ground rose in
a gradual slope and we did not
know what might meet us when
we arrived at the top, but it was
delightful to go with the men feel-
ing that each step was a gain, When
we got to the top of the rise, we
had a splendid view of the country
beyond. Before us, in the distance
nearing the village I looked over
numbers of little figures
he said he thought they
âwith us. The 5th, Battalion
through Hayncourt and found
âmight be of any value. Their C.
â10th, disappeared going forward
âthe Douai Cambrai road.
noon. The sun was setting, and
on
straight Arras Cambrai road with
stood there was a number of desert-
the M.
an aid post and the chaplain weny
about looking for the wounded. Our
villaga
and got into some forward trencn-
my
left in-a
of âMar-
quion IT saw two Germans manning
Brigade
and some
Highlanders were âwalking on the
edge of the quarry just above the
Huns, of whose. presence they were
unaware. I saw the enemy suddeniy
on firing as âbefore. It was not lony
before the German artillery turned
1 told
some men of the 2nd, Brigade who
were coming forward, to take cov-
er in the trench or go in extended
the
a shell burst, killing
one man and. weunding in the thigy
âyeady for zero hour. A little after;the one to whom I was talking. {
r bobs + *|much longer a special museum and
five we had some breakfast and, went over to him and found that a ai ne ice Beat ene i
about a quarter past I went to the) no artery had been cut, and the London to house his presents, In
if chaplain of the 3rd, Battalion got the
and waited for the barrage, At 5.20; him carried off. Down in the valley!,, 4
been
T was;
batteries! trying to sea what the trouble was
nea young officer, called Cope, of the
Battaion came up to me. He joe h
young. fellow and
So many things were flying about looked so clean and fresh. He had
I said,
re-
plied, âI am twenty.â T said, âWhat
a glorious thing it is to be: out here
at twenty.â âYes,â he said, looking
towards the valley, âit is a glorious
thing to be out here at twenty but
Canal, passing through a field) Âąn/q should like to know. what. js.« 4 â
5 ; § 2 L 5âJumboâ who'got very seasick in
my way where T found lying aboutinoiding them up.â He had â hardly|transit and only vecuyerad after re-
doad and wounded men. Four Orlenokeu when there was a sharp peatod applications of ââHootchâ
five were in astraight line one be-\ orack of a machine gun bullet and
he dropped at my side. The âbullet
and
entered his brain. He never recov-
ered consciousness and died on the
ing sufferers, a ser-
Percaunecubste ghee from the]. The 2nd, Brigade was now mov-
direction of the Canal and asked] ig forward, so T went down the
hill past a dug out which had been
used as a German dressing station.
A bit of shell âhad dug into i SWihe, BRS GHA pate i pee for himself. I think he was asking
Chem Carty ine Of Nis none. 7a wounded waiting to be + carried) {0 carry him, but I saw he
f i aske t he| off. Just before 1 reachedâ the}, i \
ha eial Deed aeraig Minick ty nin Arras-Cambrai road I came to the eee lle to race his ay
but he suid he was all rigtt aa|ttench where the ©.O. of the Sra} oy over the fields „ Pe I Fath
: aan ; Battalion had established himself. °~ > flelds when I met a
ony in:
yh shaplain and I were â talking ; Âą
off. I often wondered what became Gi an iviass ; fins ond Battal: batteries. The men halted for a
of him, and 1 never heard till the ion Re ait with â iad wound |test and sat down by the road and
following year when a man came eh vad aaa an officer came and said to me,
in the throat. He could.not speak,
write a message. We got him some
paper and he wrote, âThe situation
on our right is very bad.â The 4th,
and
Bourlon
Wood. So now our,advancing 2nd
âs ation.â I wae indeed glad co find _ jlike me to spend the'night with
him alive and well and to see what Hi aie wai Wasâ beeen ae them. He said he would, so. I de-
ance he to res-| °° Lai botataheatites hed) a
surgical science had done Gade thas Hebel DUMISIOR SOROS termined not to go. back. Some of
had also been checked in their ad-
vance. I crossed the road into the
field, where I found the 5th and j
I went on to the Canal and found) ot, Battalions resting for a mo-| °° of We started.
that at that point it âwas quite dry.) ment before going on to their, ob-
jective. In front of us looking very
peaceful among its trees, was the
village of Hayncourt which the 5th,
hae riley at se ging toy Battalion had to take, The 10th asain
the other side, an ad the â3°Y) Battalion was to pass it on the! @TpAWA, June 20.âT
of feeling that the Canadians hau) jor and go still further forward. less expensive and expedite aeons
We all started off and as we weru
the fields on the right, and there,
to my dismay I saw in the distance
in gray
which I knew must be Germans. I
pointed them out to a sergeant, but
were
French troops who were in the line
went
the
village absolutely deserted and the
houses stripped of everything that
made his headquarters in a trenca
âto the north of the village and the
It was now quite late in the after
i 1 feared that if I did not go back infor the destructive work of ene-
Its rows of tall trees. Where We time I might fitid myself stuck out miesâand other natural causes,
only to step on the accellerator
when they returned with the strug-
gling woman and the machine
dashed away.
Recovering from
ment, golfers and caddies leaped
into machines parked along the
course, and attempted to give pur-
suit. No sooner, however, had the
alarm been given on the golf links
than the police received a teleprone
message from Earl Lempe, a
plumber, who â said that he was
driving toward Cincinnati he saw
a car, approaching © which he
thought he recognized. In the
back seat, he said, âhe saw 'Mrs.
Marshal held firmly in the grasp
of two men, He made haste to a
telephone and informed Mrs.
up
: their amaze
at
WOMAN GOLFER WAS
KIDNAPPED) DURING MATCH
Ohio June 21.â
Mirs. Clara Marshall, aged 30, was
seized on the golf links of the ex-
Country Club
Was manoeuvred to a point on the
aoe
police, He also mentioned the
name of the man he sayé he recog:
nized, :
yMirs. Marshall filed suit for
divorce from her husband Albert
Marshall, proprietor. of the Grand
Dansant and the Toadstool Inn, on
April 25. Extieme cruelty wag
charged, âThe Marshalls were
married last July, but have been is
separated. several months. Mrs,
(Marshall has been making her
home with her father, William
Schawe, treasurer of the Krippend
dorf Ditman Shoe Company,
As soon as theâ police learned
that Mrs, Marshall had a suit for
divorce pending, they began a
search for her husband to see if he
could throw any light on the kid-
nappers or on the motive back of
the abduction, \Mr, Marshall it is
said, is very fond of his wife and
deeply regrets her attempt to get
a divorce, but so far as is known
he has never given any indication
that he would resort to. kidnapping
to prevent her from having her ?
will.
Mrs. Huck, one of those with
whom Mrs. 'Marshal! was playing
golf at the time of the abduction .
said:
âTt was all over bef. anyone
fully realized what nad Hpoened
I did not get a good 1 at the
men who seized Mrs. Marshall and
put her into the machine, but I am
quite sure I had never seen any of
them before, So far as Iam aware
no one whoâ âwitnessed the affair
recognized any of the men.â
had made their headquarters. {things crawling over my face. It{hide themselves, having noticed} Marshallâs father and then told the
went down the steep steps into alwas too much for me. I got up|the approach of the Highlanders,
long dark passage, lit here andjand said, âI think Jam getting and when the latter had passed the 5
there hy the. light which cam.e,crummy, so I'm going off.â I looked|!wo Boches re-appeared and went
LONDON, June 21.âIf the Prinve
of Wales continued his world tours
good.old pre way days Kaisers
and Kings exchanged diamonds or
âtitles as tokens of official regard
jand respect; But the. âPrince of
+Wales, in his travels of thousanos
âog miles as the special ambassador
King and country to the out
lying parts of-the British Empire
and to friendly countries, has â ac-
cumulated something more substan-
tial than titles and things that ap-
proximate the value of diamonds {f
they were knocked down for sale on
the auction block.
For instance his Indian zoologicai
collection has just reached London,
including an obstreporous young
in
Before âJumboâ would consent âio
being hoisted off the ship in a spec:
ially contrived cradle he had to be
NEED) SPECIAL PLAGE
WY
fed large quantities of sweet. crack-
ers and then it took eleven men to
put him ashore and start him for
his new quarters in the Zoo in Re:
gentâs Park.
(But besides âJumboâ there was a
collection of birds, tigers, leopards,
snakes, a small black bear a black
panther and a rhinoceros, This re:
presented the tvestock handed ta
the Prince in token of regard by
the Kingâs faithful subjects in In-
dia if not from Ghandi and his fol-
lowers.
This is the first consignment of
the Prince's gifts to reach London
since he visited India, It still â re-
mains to be seen what he mas beea
presented with in the land of the
Mikado. In his trip to Canada more
than a year ago he was acclaimed
several kinds of chiefs by the In-
dians and had his baggage greatly
increased by snake skins, charms
and a regalia to which he was en-
titled as. Chief Morning Star, ete,
to wear, and which were placed on
exhibit when he got back.
there for the night «without
food oy cover. 1 thought
wise therefore to go to
any
it was
Deligny's
ine gunners were established. In
the road at the entrance of Hayne-
court, I, found a young
wounded in the foot and very sorry
could walk and so showed him the
company of our light trench mortar
âCome and cheer up the men, Can-
on, they have dragged two guns
eight kilometres in the dust and
heat and they are al fed up.â I
âwent over to them and luckily hay-
ing a tine of fifty cigarettes jin my
tu
Mill.where I understood the mach-| §
German] §.
{CONDENSED SPECIALS
§
RATES,
or over,
count as
one word. 10 per cent. discount for
cash. Address forms part of ad.
and must be paid for. Special Rates
Furnished Room ad., 75c for seven
words for one week. Situation
recat for seven words, 6c per
meek,
âWASHING DONE'AT HOME, AP
ply 15 Bishop St.
WOMAN WANTS WORK BY DAY
Apply 8 Rileyâs Lane.
-
*WOOL WANTEDâHighest cash
price paid for «wool. Apply EB.
B. Love & Son., Charlottetown.
pocket I managed to make them go
in round. I asked the ©.C. if he would
the men asked me if I knew where
they could get water. I told them
they might get some in the village
(To Be Continued)
Fe a ee
DIVORCES TO BE CHEAPER
BY PROPOSED AMENDMENT
proceedings is the object of an am-
endment introduced in the Senate
today by Senator Proudfoot. Chair-
man of the Divorce Committee. If
this. proposal âis accepted the ad-
vertising cost will be considerably
reduced, and divorce bills will be
Placed ona basis similar to that of
other private bills. During the Sen-
ate session the Government Leader
expressed the opinion that proroga-
tion would be possible by the end
of next week.
to
0
i nye
THE PLANT LOUSE.
sf ee
to] The little green plant louse,
progeny in one year that mumbers
T'well into ten sextillion, were it not
known a6 the aphid, would havea]:
*POSITION WANTED BY YOUNG
lady in store, Write âBâ co
Guardian,
âOFFICES TO RENT IN THE
Bayer Building. Great George
Street. All latest conveniences,
Apply atthe Studio.
WANTEDâA MIDDLE AGED LA:
dy with fairly good educationa:
to help in Rural Post Office and
housework, Apply Guardian Of-
fice,
âFOR SALE AT CRAPAUD,
house, lot and out
Conveniently situated,
bought less th
dollars, â
FOX RANCHERSâFEED âPpEER |
Ness Cod Liver Oil Biscuit, be-
cause they contain more fat pro.
tein and Wime than other bis-
cuits, Order today, P. W, 1, Fox
Biscuit Co., 50 Oorchester Bt.
*MEN WANTRD â we WANT
4. few real live représentatives
in every city and town in Cana:
da to sell automobile stop dig. ©
'âpreverits acci-
buildings.
can te
an one thousand
The Peopleâs Paper
Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew
ere
DAW
Read by Everybody
ââ$â<<
CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1922
By Mall, Canada,
Annual Subscri,
B.S Saver
GHAUDIERE FLO
D0 MUCH DAMAGE
(Special to The Guardian)
BEHAUCEVILLE, Que., June 21.
âRegular traffic in the Quebec
Central Railway, between Quebec
and Sherbrooke was resumed yes-
terday, and the National â high-
way Wag said to be once more
opened to vehicles after three
days of fiood conditions in the
Chaudiere River, :
Damages. suffered in the county
of Beauce are considerable, the
chief sufferer being the Brown
Corporation, over $125.000 worth
O03
Local representatives of the com-
pany have commissioned all the
tugs they could get, and the lumber
is being salvaged between the Is-
land of Orleang And Quebec.
(News received: â from Scott, St.
George, Beauceville ang St. Marie|!
are of reassuring nature, The
river had risen twenty and twenty
five feet over its normal volume,
The fact that the: current of the
river. did not have the etrength of
the usual spring flood prevented
houses from being washed away
but small bridges haye been torn
of logs having reached the St. Law-
rence after the âbooms gave away.
off, and in many sections seeding
will have to be started anew,
AY THAVELLE
(it
VICTORIA, June 21.âThe_ voy-
age of the liner Makura, which ar-
rived here today from Australia
was marked by a singularly tragic
incident which shrouded the ship
with a canopy of gloom after clear-
ing from Honolulu.
iMrs. J. Wardrop, a Toronto lady,
who was travelling from Auckland
with her husband, fell ill during the
voyage and succumbed to acute
Brightâs: disease on June 6, three
days out âfrom Honolulu. Dr.
Edwards, shipâs surgeon, minister-
eq to the sick passenger, but she
was âbeyond medical aid and passed
away cn Tuesday â atternoon last.
- BURIED AT SEA
the body of Mis. . Wardrop was
consigned to the waters of the
Pacific, Capt. R. Crawford, the
Shipâs commander,
the sburial service,
Toronto for New Zealand, gailing
At 5.30 o'clock the following day
officiating at
The was was
5 years of age
It was about six months ago that
Mr. and Mis, J. Wardrop left
by the Makura.
ing to Canada
home.
âTam all alone in the world nowâ,
said the bereaved husband, who
was competely boken by the tragic
death of his wife.
They were return.
to visit their old
WAKES CANADA
HCHO
LONDON, June 21âT
ure today of the new 21,000-ton
liner Empress of Australia from
Glasgow for Vancouver marks the
final step in the Canadian Pacific
plans to capture the ionâs share of
the Oriental traffie from both its
British and United States compet-
itors, According to a statement is-
sued by the company today, the At-
â lantic Empresses will âbe linked up
with thely Pacific sisters by âmeans
of special transcontinental trains,
so that passengers will reach Yoka
hama a fortnight sooner than â if
they had taken the Peninsular
and Oriental route through the
Suez route. â
These atrangemĂ©nts â will make
Canadaâa highway between Europe
and the Far East and already the
diversion of a large amount of trat-
fic. is assured. This is a success
won despite strenuous efforts ' by.
United States Shipping Board ves-
sels to compete for this traffic. Tao
Admiral Line, which operates the
U.S. vessels, is the C. P. R.âs
he depart-
one of the others being the minv-|
layer Koenigin Louise. The other
four were all sunk during the war,
and the Empress of Australia is the
only ship afloat with this
ment. Its working will be watched
rby Admiral Roome, the
expert, who is making the voyage
for this purpose, He has
pronounced the gear a marvel
German engineering skill.
MAN
AY 10 ORIENT
keenest competitor on the Pacific
but so far, it has been unable to
equal the trans-Pacific record held
by the Canadian line, a recent
attempt to do so having been defeat-
ed by the C.P.R.âs Empress of
Russia which beat its own previous
record made in 1914.
A unique feature of the Empress
of Australia is her turbine reduct-;8overnment by India,
ion gear. The Empress of Australia!
formerly named the Tirpitz after!
the German Admiralty chief of
submarine notoriety was one of
five German vessels in which this
gear was experimentally installed,
t
equip-
C.P.R,
already
1
of
MINERS ARE TO BE RELEASED
SYDNEY N, 8., June 21.âAfter
serving about three moaths of
their two and three year sentences,
twelve Cape Bretoh miners now
held in Dorchester penitentiary for
rioting and looting at New Aber-
deen last January, have been order-
ed released, accordingto the Syd-
ney Record.
The men affected are William
Tarbot, Fred Tarbot, John Doucette
.D, A. McLean, Edward White, Alex,
Vinger, Joseph Gero, John Zenzyk,
Peter Moseychurch, Neil. Connolly,
Thomas Connolly, All of â§ whom
were serving two years sentences
and William Minal, who got three
years,
The offenses for which they were
imprisoned occurred on Jany. 22
nd, and subsequently, when a
crowd of miners incted by âRed
agitators in Glace |Bay, attacked
and looted a store of the Dominion
âCoal Compahy of Now Aberdeen,
doing damage then estimated at
180,000. âThe prisoners were sett:
tenced by Mr, Justice Russel] ear-
ly in March, f
Shortly after thax were sent « to
the Pen, petitions for their re-
lease were clféulated and largely
signed and the prayer of the pet-
itioners is: now granted by the
ustice Department, the sole con-
ditions being that the men report
once a month to a magistrate and
find wonk ag soon as possible after
their release,
Cc
0
a
e
t
f
PENNY BANK:ACT AMENDED
_ BY HOUSE OF COMMONS
OTTAWA, June 20.âThe House
today gave third reading to an am-
endmentito the Penny Bank Act :by
thé provision that a proportion not
exceeding one-half of moneys rec-
eived on deposit elséwhere than at
taeâchiet office may be deposited in
such chartered banks âor financial
institutions as the Minister of Fin-
ance may designate. The amend:
ment is made Ppl for the
penny banks of Toronto.
CANNERY INSPECTION
ending the Meat and Canned Foods
Act, with special application to the
ond reading in the House of Com-
mons: today.
other things, that fish and shellfish
packed in cans shall be subject to
inspection during the waole course
or at the warehouse of the first pur-
er, or of the first jlealer obtaining if
from the packer. Another provision
gives to the inspector the power to
close any cannery . immediately if
he should discover
conditions are being neglected.
EGYPT STRONG
facture of antiquities 1s
scae in Egypt, particularly at Cairo
that it now has a place in reports
on the industries of the country,â
fa Hgyptian
famoug Wgyptia i
an interview in âthe Dally Chronicle.
quities are often so
he otates, that even
by them, Large sums
have been paid for
were considered genuine treasures
but have now been
spurious or of
strong is the 8
the authenticlity of
various bronze and gold ornaments
and other articles alleged to. rave
been found in
collectors are afraid to risk buying
them, and in an excess of caution
often turn down
ure undoubtedly genuine.
the forgeries: have largely ruined
the market for Wgyptian historical
treasures. â
h
IS MADE FORE STRICT :
OTTAWA, June 20.âA bill am-
t
anning of shellfish, was given sec-
It provides, among |Âą
t
j
1
}
f preparation and packing, and at
ny time thereafter at the cannery
haser, and shall be labelled with
he name and address of the pack- j
that sanitary
0
Dp
8
â$â
ON, ANTIQUITIES.
LONDON, June 21.âThe manu-
carried
orward on such an extensive
Professor Flinders Petrie, the
archeologist in
The forgeries of Egyptian antl-
well executed
the most ex-
are deceived
of money
artivles that
sNenced. collectors
icton has been commissioned
âLewis Connors, President of Con
nors Bros., Ltd. who have an
tensive fisheries plant
Harbor to make the
surveys
work today,
Foster was unable to give the
legation much encouragement.
was pointed out by the delegation
however, that there was
volume of business in prospect. for
the proposed railway in connection
with the fisheries and other opera
tm:
the countryâs obligations.
the Indianization of the
training Indians for service in all
ranks thereof so
Army may be officéred by (Indians;
the amelioration of the conditions
of laber. and the
the most suitable lines,
of the new iparty
constitutional methods, and
out resource io any methods likely
purpose of securing any of its ob-
$47 CONSCIENCE MONEY
note attached as follows:
just false customs entry made some
time ago,â over the signature âJ.
Smith,â
WOULD ESTABLISH ARISTOC-
lishment of an aristocracy of brain
instead of
birth,â it is stated,
chjects of the proposed reform of
being sponsored ih the
Commons by Olaude Lowth
Another. New
Railway For N.B.
(Special to the Guardian)
ST. STHPHEN, June 21.âPre:
liminary surveys for a line of rail-
ways from Black Harbor, one of the
deep water harbors on the Bay of
Fundy coast in Charlotte county,
to connect with the shore line div-
ision of the C. P. R, at Renfields
are to be commenced at once. A.B.
Hanson, Civil Engineer of Freder.
by
ex:
at Black
preliminary
and will commence the
An examination of the construct
oin of the proposed line of railway
has been going. on for some
and some months ago'a delegation
from Charlotte county waited upon|â
the
proposed a guarantee of bonds. by
the province under a
that the road would be operated by
the Canadian Pacific Railway. The
time âvas not apportune for such a
time
Provincial Government = and
suggestion
proposition, however, and Permier
de-
It
a large
tions, where was was also the pros-
pect of an extensive ocean traffic
from the port.if it was developed,
The proposed railway would be ap
proximately eleven miles in length
Indian Moderates
âCreate New Party
DRPLHI, India, June 21.âA new
political. party, calling ttself âThe
National Partyâ has been organiz-
ed in the Indian Legislature to
give embodiment to the ideas of
the Indian Moderates, Under th?
leadership of Sirâ P. 8. Sivaswaml
Iver, it-is-seeking to extend its r-
ganization into the provinces and
districts,
The new party stands for âthe
attainment by constitutional
methods of full responsjble govern-
ment in India as an integral part
of the British Empire.â It is -op-
posed on the one hand . to those
Rritish interests which are seeking
to prevent the attainment of self-
and on the
other hand to the aims of extreta-
ist Indians whoare . seeking to
ale India an independent repub-
do not limit them-
lic and who
selves to constitutional methods.
âThe immediate objective of the
party [s full autonomy in the pro-:
vinces and thy transfer to the Leg-
islature in the central government
of the control of all subjects other
han defence, political and foreign
affairs, and ecclesiastical matters,
subject to adequate safeguards for
the protection of the vested rights;
of persons already in the service of!
he Crown, and the fulfillment of
Among other policies favored are
army iby
branches of the defensive force and
or entertaining the commissioned
that tre Indian
development of
he resources of the country along
Leaders
hope to attain
heir ends by peaceful, orderly and
with-
o result in ylolence. The party
S$ opposed to the policy of produc-
ng convulsions in the internal ad-
ninistration of the country âfor the
ects,
âal a
RETURNS TO GOVERNMENT
OTTAWA, June 20.âAn amount
f $47 has been received by the De-
artment of Customs as âcon-
clence moneyâ from Toronto, with
âTo ad-
ââââ4-
RACY OF BRAIN INSTEAD
OF ONE OF BIRTH.
\LONDON, June 21.ââThe estab-
aristocracy of
ig one of the
the
he âHouse of Lords, which bill is
House of
er, it
of the
ses that
pr
doubtful origin. So
uspicion concerning
scarabs and|t
tI
Egypt that many|t
antiquities tha:
Thus
pror
House of Lords shall be chosen by
merit alone, and
peers of the realm âby merit alone
to be the first members of the re-
constituted House,
200 others hy merit. (
the realm, other than the lords of
parliament, shall!
that the heredi-
ary system ho abolished, except
in the case of a royal prince.
The existing lords, according to
he bill shall select one hunired
and these
lorda of parliamentâ shall select
The peers of
3
Being the
Chaplain, Can
«Continued
CHAPTER 21
THE CROSSING OF THE CANAL
DU NORDâSEPTEMBER 27th
1918 ; {
When I got to the sunken road
above Inchy J found that No.
Company of the Machine Gun Bat-
talion had a little sandbag house
there and were waiting for the at-
tack. I went in and the young of-
ficers and men made me at homes
at once. I divested myself of my
pack, coat and steel helmet and de-
termined to settle down for the
night. Suddenly a shell burst in
the road and I went out â to see if
anyone was hit. Iâ'wo or three men
were wounded but not severely. We
got them in and the young O.C., of
the company bound up their
wounds and sent them off. âThere
was a row of these sandbag huts
of them was the entrance toa
dugout in which the 1st, Battalion
and the General of the Ist, B.idage
from. the rooms on either side. Tha
whole place was crowded with men
and the atmosphere-was more than
usually thick. I made my way down
to the end where thereâ was u
Apumy which bad been put thera by
the Germans. Here the men were
filling tt eir water potUes and I got
a fresh supply for mine, Not . far
from the pump a sewsteps âled
down into a. room whers 1 found
the C.O., anda. number of © the
âofficers of the 1st, Battalion. it
was nbout 2.4. m., and they. were
having a breakfast of tea and ba-
âbacon and invited me to join thei
After-the-meal was finished the
Colonel, who was lying on a rough
j ded, said. to me, âSit down C:torm
and give us some of your. nature
poems to take our minds off this
âbeastly âDusiness.â It was so
seldom that I wits invited to recite
my own poems, sd such an oppor-
tunity could not be lost. I sat
down on the steps and repeated a
poem I wrote among the Lauren-
tian mountains in the happy days
before we ever thought of war. It
is called âThe Unnamed Likeâ
âTt sleeps among the thousand hilis
Where no man ever trod,
And only nature's music fills
The silences of God.
Green mountains tower above its
shore
Green rushes fringe its brim,
And o'er its breast for evermore
The wantan âbreezes skim.
Dark clouds that intercept the sun
Go there in Spring to weep
And there, when Autumn days are
done,
White mists lie down to sleep.
Sunrise.and sunset crowped with
| gold
The peaks of ageless stone
Where winds have thundered from
of oldw
And storms have set their throne.
No echoes of the world afar
(Disturb it night or day,
But sun and shadow, moon
star
Pass and repass for aye.
and
âTwas in the âgray of early dawn,
Whea first the lake we spied
And fragments of a cloud were
drawn
Half down the mountain. side.
Along the shore a heron flew
And from a speck on_ high,
That hovered in the deepening blue
\We heard the fisk hawkâs cry .
Among the cioud eapt solitudes
(No sound the silence broke
Save when, dn whispers down tho
woods,
The guardian mountains spoke.
Through tangled briish and dewy
brake,
âReturning whence we came,
We passed in silence and the lake
We left without a name.â
There is not much in the poem,
but, like a gramophone record, it
carried our minds into another
world. For myself, who remembet-
ed the scenery that surrouded mo
when I wrote it apd who now, in
that filthy hole looked at the faces
of young men who in tiwo or three
hours were to face death in one of
the biggest tasks that had heen
laid upon us the words stirred up
all sorts of conflicting emotions.
be eligible for
echt
[ well received that I ventured
Ă©elction to the House of Commons. anotherâin fact, âseveral more, and
The recitation seemed to be 8&6
APOE IN THE GREAT WAR
Reminiscences
Recollections of the Veteran
(Copyrighted In Can ada by F. @,
Book rights reserved).
against the bank, and at one end
}running from right to left, lay the
ooo
> (Special to The Guardian)
ROKHAMPTON,
and
cote and. âRisley
Robecio and Colombo in
doubles, 6-1, 6-4, 6-0,
q
on F. G. Scott
MONTREAL, June 21.âThe
then I noticed 4 curious thing. It
was the praeternatural silence â of
my aduience.:Generally speaking,
when !l recited my poems, one of
the officers would suddenly re-
ember he had to dictate a letter
or a despatch rider would come in
with orders. Now no one stirred.
I paused in the middle of a poem
and looked round to see what was
knock this week,
cond time this season, a huge
80 of this fruit was brought
port. The Canadian Pacific
the biggest consignment
brought to Canada,
BRITAIN. WINS
June 21,âBri.
tain won its third mateh from Italy
in the David Cup play when Kings-
defeated Di
the
mon market in Montreal got a sad
when, for the se-
car
into
liner
Montreal from Naples and Genoa is
now at shed eight, unloading 30,000
packages of lemons. It is probably
yet
CINCINNATI,
clusive Maketewah
6-2 ;
Scott; L this afternoon and despite her
emon screams and struggles wag carried
S Abundant to an automobile standing nearby
and whisked away,
POPC OOES (Special to The Guardian) âThe automobile, with â engine
le} running and a man at the wheel
course near Ryland avenue, where
a player would come close to the
roadway, As Mrs, Marshall, Mrs.
Louis J, Huck, wife of | a former
brewer and two |. women, compan-
ions neared, this point, the car
swung off the roadway and on to
the sward. Three men leaped from
the car and without a word, seized
Mrs, (Marshall. âThe chauffeur had
the matter and there to my aston-
ishment I found that everyone,
except the young Intelligence © Ot-
ficer was sound asleep. It was the
best thing that could have happen-
ed and I secretly consoled myself
with, the reflection that the one
who was unable to sleep was the
officer who specialized in intelli-
gence. We both laughed quietly,
and then I whispered to hit,
We had âbetter go and find some
place where we too, can get a little
rest.â He climbed over the © pros-
trate forms and followed me down
the passage. We lay down side by
side on the wooden floor and [ was
just beginning to succumb to the
soothing influences of my own
poetry when I thought I felt little
ed German trenches. Here
O. of the 8rd, Battalion opened
ment went down into the
es. I stayed on the hill looking
the wonderful scene through
German glasses. On the
quarry beside the village
a machine gun. Our 3rd
had taken â the place,
in on the General and the Brigade
Major and then climbed up _â the
steps and went to the machine gun
hit.
their guns cn our hill and
THE ZERO HOUR
, order. IT had hardly uttered
The night was now .well advanc-| words when
ed so it was time to shave and get
top of the bank above the roail
the savage roar burst forth. It was!our advance had
a stupendous attack, Field
heavy guns, and siege
sent forth their fury, and. ma
guns poured millions of rounds i0-)gth,
to the country beyond the Canal
evidently
ÂŁUNS,'checked for a time. While
was a splendid
and landing near us: that we went Jost a brother in the Battalion
back under cover till the first:the early part of the war.
burst of tie storm should subside.}«tow old are you, Cope?â
At that moment | knew our | men
were crossing the huge diteh aid I
prayed that God would give them
victory. When the barrage â had
lifted I started down towards the
He
hind another whereâ a-German
machive gun. must have caught
thein a3 (ney advanced. A young cf-
ficer of the 2nd, Battalion was dy-
ing from wounds. Two or three
decorations on his breast toid his
past record in the war. While i was
had picreed his steed helmet
way to the aid post.
A CRITICAL TIME .
ig station. lic
tne way to the d
aa in his face.
had a frightful we
not know at the time how _ badly
the dressing station was not far
up to me in the military hospital at
St. Anneâs with a new nose growing
comfortably on his face and his
cheek marked wth a scar that was
not unsightly. âThe last time I
met you, Sir,â he said, âwas near
the Canal du Nord when you s'ow-
ed me the way to. the dressing
but made signs that he wanted
Division were on our right
they had been tied up in
Brigade had their right flank
tore his beauty.
ACROSS THE CANAL DU NORD
I climbed down to the bottom
it in which men were walking and
the sappers were at work. Some
crossed the great Canal du Nord
Our battalions were now moving
up and I joined them, avoiding «
part of a field which the men toid
me was under fire of a machine
gun from the mill at Marquion, The
country was open and green. The
day was fine and once more we ex-
perienced the satisfaction of taking
possession of the enemy's _ terri-
tory. Before us the ground rose in
a gradual slope and we did not
know what might meet us when
we arrived at the top, but it was
delightful to go with the men feel-
ing that each step was a gain, When
we got to the top of the rise, we
had a splendid view of the country
beyond. Before us, in the distance
nearing the village I looked over
numbers of little figures
he said he thought they
âwith us. The 5th, Battalion
through Hayncourt and found
âmight be of any value. Their C.
â10th, disappeared going forward
âthe Douai Cambrai road.
noon. The sun was setting, and
on
straight Arras Cambrai road with
stood there was a number of desert-
the M.
an aid post and the chaplain weny
about looking for the wounded. Our
villaga
and got into some forward trencn-
my
left in-a
of âMar-
quion IT saw two Germans manning
Brigade
and some
Highlanders were âwalking on the
edge of the quarry just above the
Huns, of whose. presence they were
unaware. I saw the enemy suddeniy
on firing as âbefore. It was not lony
before the German artillery turned
1 told
some men of the 2nd, Brigade who
were coming forward, to take cov-
er in the trench or go in extended
the
a shell burst, killing
one man and. weunding in the thigy
âyeady for zero hour. A little after;the one to whom I was talking. {
r bobs + *|much longer a special museum and
five we had some breakfast and, went over to him and found that a ai ne ice Beat ene i
about a quarter past I went to the) no artery had been cut, and the London to house his presents, In
if chaplain of the 3rd, Battalion got the
and waited for the barrage, At 5.20; him carried off. Down in the valley!,, 4
been
T was;
batteries! trying to sea what the trouble was
nea young officer, called Cope, of the
Battaion came up to me. He joe h
young. fellow and
So many things were flying about looked so clean and fresh. He had
I said,
re-
plied, âI am twenty.â T said, âWhat
a glorious thing it is to be: out here
at twenty.â âYes,â he said, looking
towards the valley, âit is a glorious
thing to be out here at twenty but
Canal, passing through a field) Âąn/q should like to know. what. js.« 4 â
5 ; § 2 L 5âJumboâ who'got very seasick in
my way where T found lying aboutinoiding them up.â He had â hardly|transit and only vecuyerad after re-
doad and wounded men. Four Orlenokeu when there was a sharp peatod applications of ââHootchâ
five were in astraight line one be-\ orack of a machine gun bullet and
he dropped at my side. The âbullet
and
entered his brain. He never recov-
ered consciousness and died on the
ing sufferers, a ser-
Percaunecubste ghee from the]. The 2nd, Brigade was now mov-
direction of the Canal and asked] ig forward, so T went down the
hill past a dug out which had been
used as a German dressing station.
A bit of shell âhad dug into i SWihe, BRS GHA pate i pee for himself. I think he was asking
Chem Carty ine Of Nis none. 7a wounded waiting to be + carried) {0 carry him, but I saw he
f i aske t he| off. Just before 1 reachedâ the}, i \
ha eial Deed aeraig Minick ty nin Arras-Cambrai road I came to the eee lle to race his ay
but he suid he was all rigtt aa|ttench where the ©.O. of the Sra} oy over the fields „ Pe I Fath
: aan ; Battalion had established himself. °~ > flelds when I met a
ony in:
yh shaplain and I were â talking ; Âą
off. I often wondered what became Gi an iviass ; fins ond Battal: batteries. The men halted for a
of him, and 1 never heard till the ion Re ait with â iad wound |test and sat down by the road and
following year when a man came eh vad aaa an officer came and said to me,
in the throat. He could.not speak,
write a message. We got him some
paper and he wrote, âThe situation
on our right is very bad.â The 4th,
and
Bourlon
Wood. So now our,advancing 2nd
âs ation.â I wae indeed glad co find _ jlike me to spend the'night with
him alive and well and to see what Hi aie wai Wasâ beeen ae them. He said he would, so. I de-
ance he to res-| °° Lai botataheatites hed) a
surgical science had done Gade thas Hebel DUMISIOR SOROS termined not to go. back. Some of
had also been checked in their ad-
vance. I crossed the road into the
field, where I found the 5th and j
I went on to the Canal and found) ot, Battalions resting for a mo-| °° of We started.
that at that point it âwas quite dry.) ment before going on to their, ob-
jective. In front of us looking very
peaceful among its trees, was the
village of Hayncourt which the 5th,
hae riley at se ging toy Battalion had to take, The 10th asain
the other side, an ad the â3°Y) Battalion was to pass it on the! @TpAWA, June 20.âT
of feeling that the Canadians hau) jor and go still further forward. less expensive and expedite aeons
We all started off and as we weru
the fields on the right, and there,
to my dismay I saw in the distance
in gray
which I knew must be Germans. I
pointed them out to a sergeant, but
were
French troops who were in the line
went
the
village absolutely deserted and the
houses stripped of everything that
made his headquarters in a trenca
âto the north of the village and the
It was now quite late in the after
i 1 feared that if I did not go back infor the destructive work of ene-
Its rows of tall trees. Where We time I might fitid myself stuck out miesâand other natural causes,
only to step on the accellerator
when they returned with the strug-
gling woman and the machine
dashed away.
Recovering from
ment, golfers and caddies leaped
into machines parked along the
course, and attempted to give pur-
suit. No sooner, however, had the
alarm been given on the golf links
than the police received a teleprone
message from Earl Lempe, a
plumber, who â said that he was
driving toward Cincinnati he saw
a car, approaching © which he
thought he recognized. In the
back seat, he said, âhe saw 'Mrs.
Marshal held firmly in the grasp
of two men, He made haste to a
telephone and informed Mrs.
up
: their amaze
at
WOMAN GOLFER WAS
KIDNAPPED) DURING MATCH
Ohio June 21.â
Mirs. Clara Marshall, aged 30, was
seized on the golf links of the ex-
Country Club
Was manoeuvred to a point on the
aoe
police, He also mentioned the
name of the man he sayé he recog:
nized, :
yMirs. Marshall filed suit for
divorce from her husband Albert
Marshall, proprietor. of the Grand
Dansant and the Toadstool Inn, on
April 25. Extieme cruelty wag
charged, âThe Marshalls were
married last July, but have been is
separated. several months. Mrs,
(Marshall has been making her
home with her father, William
Schawe, treasurer of the Krippend
dorf Ditman Shoe Company,
As soon as theâ police learned
that Mrs, Marshall had a suit for
divorce pending, they began a
search for her husband to see if he
could throw any light on the kid-
nappers or on the motive back of
the abduction, \Mr, Marshall it is
said, is very fond of his wife and
deeply regrets her attempt to get
a divorce, but so far as is known
he has never given any indication
that he would resort to. kidnapping
to prevent her from having her ?
will.
Mrs. Huck, one of those with
whom Mrs. 'Marshal! was playing
golf at the time of the abduction .
said:
âTt was all over bef. anyone
fully realized what nad Hpoened
I did not get a good 1 at the
men who seized Mrs. Marshall and
put her into the machine, but I am
quite sure I had never seen any of
them before, So far as Iam aware
no one whoâ âwitnessed the affair
recognized any of the men.â
had made their headquarters. {things crawling over my face. It{hide themselves, having noticed} Marshallâs father and then told the
went down the steep steps into alwas too much for me. I got up|the approach of the Highlanders,
long dark passage, lit here andjand said, âI think Jam getting and when the latter had passed the 5
there hy the. light which cam.e,crummy, so I'm going off.â I looked|!wo Boches re-appeared and went
LONDON, June 21.âIf the Prinve
of Wales continued his world tours
good.old pre way days Kaisers
and Kings exchanged diamonds or
âtitles as tokens of official regard
jand respect; But the. âPrince of
+Wales, in his travels of thousanos
âog miles as the special ambassador
King and country to the out
lying parts of-the British Empire
and to friendly countries, has â ac-
cumulated something more substan-
tial than titles and things that ap-
proximate the value of diamonds {f
they were knocked down for sale on
the auction block.
For instance his Indian zoologicai
collection has just reached London,
including an obstreporous young
in
Before âJumboâ would consent âio
being hoisted off the ship in a spec:
ially contrived cradle he had to be
NEED) SPECIAL PLAGE
WY
fed large quantities of sweet. crack-
ers and then it took eleven men to
put him ashore and start him for
his new quarters in the Zoo in Re:
gentâs Park.
(But besides âJumboâ there was a
collection of birds, tigers, leopards,
snakes, a small black bear a black
panther and a rhinoceros, This re:
presented the tvestock handed ta
the Prince in token of regard by
the Kingâs faithful subjects in In-
dia if not from Ghandi and his fol-
lowers.
This is the first consignment of
the Prince's gifts to reach London
since he visited India, It still â re-
mains to be seen what he mas beea
presented with in the land of the
Mikado. In his trip to Canada more
than a year ago he was acclaimed
several kinds of chiefs by the In-
dians and had his baggage greatly
increased by snake skins, charms
and a regalia to which he was en-
titled as. Chief Morning Star, ete,
to wear, and which were placed on
exhibit when he got back.
there for the night «without
food oy cover. 1 thought
wise therefore to go to
any
it was
Deligny's
ine gunners were established. In
the road at the entrance of Hayne-
court, I, found a young
wounded in the foot and very sorry
could walk and so showed him the
company of our light trench mortar
âCome and cheer up the men, Can-
on, they have dragged two guns
eight kilometres in the dust and
heat and they are al fed up.â I
âwent over to them and luckily hay-
ing a tine of fifty cigarettes jin my
tu
Mill.where I understood the mach-| §
German] §.
{CONDENSED SPECIALS
§
RATES,
or over,
count as
one word. 10 per cent. discount for
cash. Address forms part of ad.
and must be paid for. Special Rates
Furnished Room ad., 75c for seven
words for one week. Situation
recat for seven words, 6c per
meek,
âWASHING DONE'AT HOME, AP
ply 15 Bishop St.
WOMAN WANTS WORK BY DAY
Apply 8 Rileyâs Lane.
-
*WOOL WANTEDâHighest cash
price paid for «wool. Apply EB.
B. Love & Son., Charlottetown.
pocket I managed to make them go
in round. I asked the ©.C. if he would
the men asked me if I knew where
they could get water. I told them
they might get some in the village
(To Be Continued)
Fe a ee
DIVORCES TO BE CHEAPER
BY PROPOSED AMENDMENT
proceedings is the object of an am-
endment introduced in the Senate
today by Senator Proudfoot. Chair-
man of the Divorce Committee. If
this. proposal âis accepted the ad-
vertising cost will be considerably
reduced, and divorce bills will be
Placed ona basis similar to that of
other private bills. During the Sen-
ate session the Government Leader
expressed the opinion that proroga-
tion would be possible by the end
of next week.
to
0
i nye
THE PLANT LOUSE.
sf ee
to] The little green plant louse,
progeny in one year that mumbers
T'well into ten sextillion, were it not
known a6 the aphid, would havea]:
*POSITION WANTED BY YOUNG
lady in store, Write âBâ co
Guardian,
âOFFICES TO RENT IN THE
Bayer Building. Great George
Street. All latest conveniences,
Apply atthe Studio.
WANTEDâA MIDDLE AGED LA:
dy with fairly good educationa:
to help in Rural Post Office and
housework, Apply Guardian Of-
fice,
âFOR SALE AT CRAPAUD,
house, lot and out
Conveniently situated,
bought less th
dollars, â
FOX RANCHERSâFEED âPpEER |
Ness Cod Liver Oil Biscuit, be-
cause they contain more fat pro.
tein and Wime than other bis-
cuits, Order today, P. W, 1, Fox
Biscuit Co., 50 Oorchester Bt.
*MEN WANTRD â we WANT
4. few real live représentatives
in every city and town in Cana:
da to sell automobile stop dig. ©
'âpreverits acci-
buildings.
can te
an one thousand