i_- ».-'_.-"~. in ~ ' .r..i’.-1` _» _r,_.1‘ .` _ ,M -~ 1 ' 8§taaJzl¢i&h;FL;z- ' 1 ‘ __ - E' - ‘ * ` ' I ~ .1 ~»~ " ' ’ _ ¢i¢n` News, 1 v _ . _ I V ` x _ _ _ _ 0 , _ --~R=A|:> ALi. oven |=l=l|Nc>z- EDWARB |el.AN=:--- . 1. » . , _ » ' ' ‘ ~ ». r .»».»-".- -_.__ _ _ _- . 1 1. . , .-,..-,\...- __ .,_,- J , ' f 1.1,. 1 . .. ._ . . . _ , " ‘ i 1 ' ",", *f ,. mi . ,_ 7- Se- 1 .nn __, _¢‘~." -~ 2'- _'Y _l__,_,.,_ i-i3.‘~ .111 _ f, ., » . ,. "‘_"‘ 4j~!‘1‘1 ‘ '..`_e.»"_1,.' ,1.. . ,_ ,X i ,-L , if 1; , ' - , r , J , ' " . .W "‘ ° if . _‘ni-;,“ '. 'ft/_$'1‘ ,._- »f,';¢`_,"..‘._.-,_-j-,_ _.1., .h-,;\ ,,_’_*_, ' ' "" ' »"§"` lf" -"3" "W" ' " "="' ’ " U E `~ ~ ~ ' .‘... 'JA"').1‘.»&rI*‘f“‘i»>'-W( . .°~1E',§1-"" I I ‘-1. ‘ E `: ,v_»1,». -_ ~_.»--1»\,-,vi,',e§5..;`w_eJ._\_¥‘_',._g,1. I I ~ ~ _ Ei Ee ' .swarms ei" } ‘I ' ._ . 5 - _ _ _ _ lv V nl M 'PHE LATEST Nnws CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA WEDNESDAY MARCH zz 1911 rms-r or {f§§’§H2 - : ' 1 _ _,- I _ i _ __ v 1 ° ' le q ____ SPLENDID SIIGCESSOF? _,,__.____-»-l- _ The report of the Canadian Artil- lery Association for 1910 has just reached here and contains the stand- ing sn-d prizes won by the Fourth 'Regiment Canadian Artillery in com- petition with the Heavy Batteries ‘ ` ° throughout Canada. 1 The prizes won by the Island Bat- teries are as follows : N0. 8 BATTERY 4TH C. A. Ist Prize General Efficiency of Can- sds, the Governor General’s cup and 50. ‘First Prize for Gun Practice in Canada, the Wilson-Smith Challenge Cup and $120- 1 First Prize Efficiency Personeil and Equipment, tie with No.,7 Battery, P. ld. I., and ~$4,5. I-‘irst Prize for Gun Captains, $20. Total amount won by No. 8 Bat- tery. $235- ' NO. 7 BATTERY 4TH C. A. and $40. ( Second Prize Gun Prize Gun Pra tice at Petawawa, 'Mercier Challeng Trophy and $100. Total amount won by No. 7 Bat- tery, $185. The following specialists won prizes: ouNLaY1NG. N0. 8 BATTERY. end ss, Gr. o.’Bennett_ and $4, Gr. R. Les., and $3.50 Gr. A. Seaman. L and $3 Gr. A. McMillan. d L and $2.50, Gr. F. Kennedy. old L and $2, Gr. C. -Hamm. Pmfywr o0n$~n C cCZ~,°: ’”‘»-1'-',_.»-1 niharh rrp NO. 7 BATTERY. Johnson. Davison. Ritchie. wmFF l, Gold L and $5, Gr. 2, Gold L and $4, Br. L. 3, Gold L and $8.50, Br. 4, Gold L and $3, Br. J. hndrigan. Gold L and $2.50 Gr. F. Large. Gold L and $2, Gr/ J. L. Smith. 5. 6. No. 9 BATTERY. _E cold L and $5 Gr. G. Bennett l, . 2, Gold 1, and $4, Gr. A. Brennan 3 Gold L and $3.50, Gr. J. Pauuct onid L end $3, C01- R. G0f ron sues LONDON March 18-A first edition _ U S of Shakeapearvs poems printed in America, was sold at auction here today for $163. It was printed in 'Ph ladelphia in 1796 by Bioren and M E GHZ' _ WASHINGTON Merch is-The Uni- t d states cavalry will v°~i‘fi°iP°"'° 1** CUHDEHSED ADVERTISEMENTS THE Miiliil THE LEOisL siiuiiiu is _ TAL ciiiiiii; ui _ ._, _ nu Pinus wAsH1NoToN Mn. 21-The seit Pedal was put on the Mexican situa- t" n t d_ _ 1 ip o sy and the war alarms which, had been current during President _The situation on the border, how-' _ (Too late for Classification.) t0n's \ 3-Z1d3i. - in we t me American m Y _ i w,,,.,If,§°§,,,.A“t st ti... shew This is HALIEUT, simon, pieined Trent, Eh first time that the united states Pike, Dore. Ccdiish. at Tan '[\I4` NNAN- Hnnpins 1oe Ib nt 'ren- arfny will have participated in s. for- ton’s. 3-21d3i. oi n horse show OST, a fountain pen. Finder please J return to R R. Fitzgerald 3-224131. o' _ Wisner Hotel, Alberton. Z SpecITE)rI'T'OThe (lIiua‘i‘!chmn 22-Westerly _ _ 3,-2Z'd§L "1 ENERAL girl wanted at once. TO . - ~ -- B winds; mostly fair. SALE, quantity of seed bar- ----”-*' _ _,_- ley. Oliver Younker, Wlnsloe. m . in She leaves for Georgetown todat The coldest temperamm Nwrdofl I 3__22dr1wpd_ last hishf- \nd`P\‘°"i°“° t° *hm °' o LET. Four rooms, No. 167 eioek this morning W" “'°“”"°2‘ qi water st. anpiy te soi Kent degrees above zero, but at that ho r Bt. 3_,,_2zd3.pd_ it had ‘“°d°“‘“"‘ *° "'°“t"'“‘ 6°' ANTsn e iii th morn- The wnmwt “gb \ ings. 'lfiiglsy gt; LI; 'BT-lghton The races on the harbor ice yester 3-2345, day were pulled off most successfully ° ‘WA T avr D ' he lowest temperature recorded . _ ahhh WBIMGBY W" "h“`t7'°"° “KN” “_ E ltague SchooLtSuppleI‘nmE ‘moo The three classes furnished So _ as- Fleet, Harry Dousc...... a _ Il. 3.00 TROT. bove zero and the highest was thirty- J. A. Stewart, Sec y. of_ rns ees. sport mr a 1. is “ima who ATIVE _ K YESTERDAY . - 1 .._l1.l_l. ___- 1 Special to The Guardian. LONDON, March 21-Wm. O'Brien, iender or the Independent National- isits. in a letter to The Times _makes on the msn;-p¢otio,,_ _otertures looking to a reconcilation with Redmond, the chairman of the Irish parliamentary party. hir. O'Brien expresses gratification at the conciliatory speeches which Rhdmond ‘made on St. Patrick’s Day, add suggests that they might re- unite the two Irish Parties. e PIIUH PUSPEIIES EUH SEALEHS Special to The Guardian. ST. JOHN'S, Mar. 21-Wireless de- spatches from the sealing fleet today indicate that the fears of an unfav- orable season because of the unusual quantity of ice, were not groundless. Only' one vessel has met with any success. The other fifteen steamers are operating od the Labrador coast and ten of them are still empty. EAUUBLE IHAGEUY IN ANSUNEA EUNN. _,__- .iNsoNLi, cnnn., Mer. 19`-Themes Fitzgibbons, sr., and his wife, Nora, were found in their home on Division street late today with. their skulls crushed in with an axe and the house on fire. Their son, Thomas, ir., is being held by the police charged with the double murder, though according to the story told by him to the po- anii »I.‘wss. bus-y some- ten days. That _ ‘_ . . ,»ogo,eoe.»-Q. .-.....- , _ is. ther, and W E ""'°`“ he in turn hiilfd his fntdte. wounds which he said he reoelve when.he took the axe awa.v from his father, but according to the medic l examiner, the wounds were probably self-inflicted. The tragedy was discovered by a. neighbor, Edward Fogarty, who, at- tracted by smoke issuing from the windows of the house, entered to find Thomas ir. hacking the head of his father, who was lying on the kitchen floor, with an axe, and the_body of the mother with her skull crushed in lying on the floor in a front room. The house was on fire, set either .-by a lamp which was on the floor or by s stove which was overturned. Be- fore the bodies could be removed that of the elder Fitzgibbons was badly burned. Fogarty secured the son and held him until the arrival of the police. According to the story told to them by the son, who was released from the 'state asylum for the insane a year ago, and since that time had been working in Schenectady (N. Y.), he returned home s. weak ago. His father and mother, he said, frequent- ly quarrelied and today had a. par- ticularly violent flght, which led his father to seize the axe which stood in a corner of the kitchen and strik Mrs. Fltzgibhons on the head. Th The son has two slight scalp d s son said he interfered as soon as he could and took the axe from his fa- ther and struck h-im with it, crush- in his sknii. The ere, he said, was what forced when an awkward :cs- 8 started by the lamp, which his father bons is being held pending the coro- ner’s inquiry. IIIIIEIATOGRAPH PARTIES ~ ____- the screen secretly taking cinemato- graph records of themselves riding and walking or standing about h a thr vm t his .n ther before st- _ tigcking oher Bhith _tha axe. Fitzgi\,.‘ but he eonsois himself with the hope , _ _ Tuesday. Mardi 21. 5'i;ie House opened to the Public at 3. . Various inquiries were made and rethrns asked for by Mr. Doble, lr. McDonald (Cardigan), Mr. Pfowse, .ML Kennedy (Bradalbane). Ur. Mc- Kinnon, and others and returns or answers were given by the Pmmior, _ Hon. Mr. Cummiskey and Hon. Mr. Richards. MR. WYATT presented a resolu- tion for an address to the Governor General asking for the appointment of a Judge to till the vacancy caused. by the resignation of Mr. Justice . Hodgson. All regretted that the va- cancy hsd occurred. Mr. Wyatt Uulo- gized the late Master of the Rolls for his eminence as s, lawyer and s, Jud" in Chancery. He had brought tothe discharge of his duties fine natural abilities. great foaming, a sound judgment and most painstakin ef- fort. He had greatlyimbrovof tha proceedure in Chancery. Thevdgrfey, so long continued, had greatly dis- _turbed the administration of justice, He showed the great importance of the Appellate Court, and the neces- sit for three Judges thereon. With _L_ _H __ (Continued on page 6.) HE EAVlAi_S PEACE Special to The Guardian. LONDON, March 21-Admiral Lord Charles Beresford warmly endorsed the Universal peace movement in the House of Commons last evening. ciii ni uuiui ru iivisius ii iiiimii noi" MONTREAL, Mar. 18-About one cent on the dollar is the latest esti- mate of the dividend of the seekers for wealth who sought quick and easy fortunes through the medium of Charles D. Sheldon’s "blind pool." Accordinlgk to Mr. Burnett of gt firm oi’Wi es & Burnet, who _are curators of’ the whats of the onc- time financial "wizard" of 180 St. James Street, there is at pnesevnt ,but little more than $15,000 in receipts available to divide among the unfor- tunate creditors, whosa losses total up in the neighbourhood of eight hundred thousand dollars. ' Nearly $7,000 must come out of the $15,000 to provide for expenses, legal and otherwise, in connection with the winding up of the "investment brok- er's" business. There was extra work entailed in the preparing of the lists of credit- ors, s herculean undertaking in itself. Hundreds of dollars were expended for postage as well as lawyers and other fees. After all this there will remain about $8.000 against the $800,000, which will enable a dividend of a cent or so on the dollar to be de- clared. Home little ray of hope however, was held out to the creditors by Mr. Burnett who said that if this law suit which the curators had taken against 9, certain party for the reco- very' of $14,000 or $15,000 was success-‘ ful, twenty or more other suits would be instituted to recover amounts which. if not quite ad lnlgc 8 as the first one would swell the total B receipts for distribution considerably. where smart people congregate. The victfm's gayety is often some- :ture or an idiotic grin is all too faithfully reproduced on the israel). that the next film may give him a chance of poking fun at his neighbor. Another development of the idea is to have one's domestic joys, such as marriages and chrfstenings, cinemato- Ilow III 6ER“H"Y'graphed and the dlms presented to lfriends. A wedding that took place last week was cinematographer! from BERLIN, March 20-Cinematograph beginning to end, including the drive parties are the latest amusement in to the church and back to the 1bride‘l Berlin society. Guests are shown on house. Copies of the films warspcnt to relatives for the family in Austra- lia, China and India. ____.____--I laughing and chatting in places Minard's Llnimentforklssvatywllifi de MB &b0V° “"°- *rf N ED 'f ‘,]f,§1"{\,;‘M°n the conditions being generally favor sembled to wi nail the races and od Frenchy, A. S. I-Iewltt...... 1 DN!-4 BDNF wmv-I YESTERDAY’S RACES _ - ` i-i' If-Ti 2.35 'raor _ Grlhlrl Glllil-I WWF* Parklyn, John Doylo...... Joseph Ckabbe Minerva Llniment cures Dmdrul Best time 2 1i\ ,ssh pr c L geriskiwq, . ‘ 2.- s'ft~‘\¢,_.- » _ _ - ' .ff ‘ ‘ ~ ._ 1.1..; -~1 in ,‘_..;-:»_n_».~= ' . 1 fr /§??_~fi~€1;f?>;=i1-,»._;` ' 1 . 11 1.. . _ rf. ng. Patrol Judges-I-I. 'Kelly on