'_ The Guardian is Read Daily by 42,000 People. q _ Sworn Circulation Statement _Furnished Advertisers _ k V _ _ v I Y ' ' ` ` ' V ' J"`_"`A'A1'"'A'"4""""""""""*'~""ff-'-`-`-'-'-'-=‘~1-1*:-=-_-.-.-.-:_-_-.-_-_-_-:_:_-::_-_'_-_-_'-‘-'-'-'-'_'-‘-‘>-‘-‘-‘--‘~'-'-¢--'-‘_=‘--_-_-_-_-_~:.-.-:_~_~_~.~:_~_-_-_~_~_-_-_-;-_-_-_-_-:_~_-_-;.-.-_-_-_-_-:_-;,__-,__-,-_-__,-_-,-,-_-_-,-_-,-_-_-_-_-,-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-,-,-_-_-___-__,-,_____,__1=_ '-'-_-,-_»,-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-.-_-;,-_-_-_-________,_,___,_____ __,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __-__,__-_-,-_-,-_-_-,-,~:_-_-:_-e,-*¢sA*l in ' *V777-_-YYYVYYY'CD77-Y"Y-YE-----Ev*--Y*V 1 _ ._ I __ v,v, _ I1-115 cnnq{;g[oy_oUn1i1i t_ ._ -s Morning Daily leans" 1;" i Weekly (new Evening Daily) ill? } CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1915 Per Vs'ar'(dsIlvered in Uvanl E 82.50 par year by mall i)n advanal ` ITALIANS DRIVING AUSTRIANS BACK W-~ Have Captured important Positions on Frontier Threatening Austrian Communication. (Special te Guardian.) UDINE. Italy, June 11.-Italian forces are to-day advancing through Predil Pass on the junction of Laibach railway at Tarvis, which lies six miles on the Austrian side of the italian border. (Special to Guardian.) MILAN, June 11.-Austrians are rc- ported to have evacuated Pozzacchio after blowing up the fortress. Poz- zacchio is east of Adige River, fifteen miles south of Trent. The Italians already hold Vallama, a mile from Pozzacchio. i (Special to Guardian.) GENEVA. June 11.-A tremendous night and day bombardment of the Austrian forts of Santa. Lucia and Santa Maria, defending Tolein (Toll- mino) is being carried on by Italians with heavy guns. (Special to the Guardian.) INNBRUCK, ,_J;me 11.-(By Cour- cia Swiss frontier)-Italian forces captured Ploeken, Austria, close to the frontier. Possession of this loca- tion ls important and endangers the Austrian communications. Ploeken is 15 miles south of the main highway between Laibach and Innsbruck. EINL IEXI UE AMEHIEAN IIEJIIINIIEII Ill GENMANI WASHINGTON, June 10.-The text of the American rejoinder to the Ger- man Government’s reply to the Note following the sinking of the Lusitania follows:- “ The Secretary of State, ad interim, 31 the American Ambassador at Ber- n: “ Department of State. Washington, June 9. 1915. “American Ambassador, Berlin,- “ You are instructed to deliver textually the following note to the Minister of Foreign Affairsz- “ln compliance with Your Excel- lency's request I did not fall to trans- mit to my Govemment immediately upon receipt your note of May 28, in reply to my _!_1,Qte' of May 15, and your supplementary note of June 1, setting forth the conclusions, so far as reach- ed by the Imperial German Govern- ment, concerning the attacks on the American steamers Cushing and Gul- iiight. I am now instructed by my Govemment to communicate the fol- lowing in reply:-- " The Government of the United States notes with gratification the full recognition by the Imperial German Government, in discussing the cases of the Cushing and Gulfiight, of the principle of the freedom of all parts of the open sea to neutral ships. and the frank willingness of the Imperial German Government to acknowledge and meet its liability where the fact of attack upon neutral ships which have not been guilty of any hostile act by German aircraft or vessels of war is satisfactorily established; and the Govemment of the United States will. in due course. lay before the Imperial German Government, as it requests, full information concerning the attack on the steamer Cushing. "With regard to the sinking of the steamer Falaba, by which an Ameri- can citizen lost his life, the Govern- ment of the United States is surprised to find that an effort on the part of a merchantship to escape capture and secure assistance alters the obligation of the onlcer seeking to make the capture in respect of the safety of the lives of those on board the merchant- man, although the vessel has ceased her attempt to escape when torpedo- ad. These are not new circumstances. They have been in the minds of states- men and ol international jurists throughout the development of naval warfare, and the Government of the United States does not understand that they have ever been held to all-Bi' the principles of humanity upon which it has insisted. " Nothing but actual forcible resist- continued efforts to escape when ordered to stall f0i' me of visit on the part of the has ever been hold to of her passengers or of the United not understand Govern case, to re con 8 was masked cargo of the vessel carry l9l'Vil\§, l‘O UIIHOI1 virtual naval Lusitania was not armed for offensive action; that she was not serving as a. transport, that she did not carry a cargo prohibited by the statutes of the United States, and that, if in fact she was a naval vessel, of Great Britain, she should not receive clear- ance as a. merchantman; and it per- formed that duty and enforced its statutes with scrupulous vigilance, through its regularly constituted officials. “lt is able, therefore, to assure the imperial German Government that it has been misinformed. If the Im- perial German Government should deem itself to be in possession of con- vincing evidence that the officials of the Government of the United States _did not perform these duties w.ltlr” thoroughness, the Government of the United States sincerely hopes that it will submit that evidence for con- slderatlon. " Whatever may be the contentions of the imperial German Government regarding the carriage of contraband of war on board the Lusitania, or regarding the explosion of that material by the torpedo, it need only be said that in the view of this Govern- ment these contentions are irrelevant to the question of the legality of the methods used by the German naval authorities in sinking the vessel. " The sinking of passenger ships involves principles of humanity which throw into the background any special circumstances of detail that may be thought to affect the cases, principles which life lt, as the Imperial German Government will no doubt be quick to recognise and acknowledge, out of the class of ordinary subjects of dip- lomatic discussion or of international controversy. Whatever be the other facts regarding the Lusitania, the principal fact is that a great steamer, primarily and chiefly a conveyance for passengers, and carrying more than a thousand souls who had no part or lot in the conduct of the war. was torpcdoed and sunk, without so much as a challenge or a warning, and that men, women and children were sent to their death in circumstances un- paralleled in modern warfare. "The fact that more than one hun- dred American citizens were among those who perished made it the duty of the Government of tho United States to speak of these things, and once more, with solemn emphasis, to call the attention of the Imperial Ger- man Government to the grave respon- sibility which the Government of the United States conceivos that it has incurred in this tragic occurrence and to the indisputable principle upon which that responsibility rests. "The Government of the United States is contending for something much greater than mere right of pro perty, of privileges of commerce it is contending for nothing less high and sacred than the rights of human ity, which every Government honours itself in respecting, and which no Government is justified in resigning on behalf of those under its care and authority Only her actual or refusal to so for the afforded to cap as to nations, and upon and seamen had a it is upon this prin as well as upon the this principle. that stand of the United observe that Your closes with the in Imperial Germ now as before, of the United war The (Special to Guardian.) LONDON, June 11.--A despatch from Rome says the Serbians have occupied Tirana, a town of Albania, and are now marching on the Alban- ian seaport of Durazzoa. (Special to 'the Guardian.) I’ETROGi'tAD, Juno 11.-Suddenly assuming the offensive. the Russian forces in Galicia, south of Lemberg, defeated the Austro-German forces THE RUSSIAN STEAM ROLLER IS AGAIN MDIIING ON ___-_k_..l.. 6,500 men, 188 officers, 17 cannon and 49 maxim guns. LONDON, June 11.-Russian rein- forcements have arrived in the Baltic provinces and in Galicia, and it has become their turn to attack. Accord- ing to the German official report re- ceived to-night part of the German force on the Dubysa. River in the Bal- tic provinces, threatened by an en- circling movement. were obliged to Rochus._Hov¢__ls_oo1¢.1i.._.tl1¢_ 0if¢osiv¢ Driving... the Morro-Germans Before Them, Gapturlug 6,500 Men, 188 Officers and a Number of Cannon and Machine Guns. Shavli and on the Niemen they claim to be making progress, despite a stubborn Russian resistance. More important, in the belief of military observers here, however, is the apparent change that is taking place in the Galician battle. Here again, according to the German ac- count, lhc Russians are advancing to the south and south-cast of Lemberg and also are attacking General Von Linsingen's force which crossed the upon the Dniester River, capturing withdraw, although in the region of Dneister near Zurawna. ASSNNIIIIIAIIIHI' (Special to Guardian.) BERLIN, June 11.-The American note was printed in Berlin newspapers but not accompanied by editorial com- ment. The headlines varied, but were similar in tone. Among the captions were "America stands firm." “The Solemn Warning," " Grave American Warning to Germany" and “A Grave Appeal.” The note is regarded in dip- lomatic circles as decidedly concilia- tory in tone. LANEASNIIIE SPINNENS INNEAIEN III SIHIKE (Special to Guardian.) MANCHESTER, June 11.--A group of trade union officials returned here to-day from London, where they were in conference with the Government authorities. They made the statement that the Government explained to them plainly there must be no stop- page in the Lancashire cotton indus- try. Lancashire operatives nre to-day demanding ten per cent. increase in wages, Spinners are prepared to issue lockout notices at the end of this week, which would tie up thou- sands of spinners. CONDENSED ADS. TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION ONE CENT per word each inser- tion for advertising in this column. Cash must accompany orders. Mini- mum charges, twenty-live cents. WANTED. A WOMAN TO WORK by the day. Apply at this office. ‘ ' 1376-6-12Mtf. WANTED,-GIRL FOR GENERAL housework. Apply 248 GGraiton St. 1373-6-12Mtf. GOOD JOB COMPOSITOR WANTED -Steady sltuation_~ Apply Guard- ian. ___» __l359-ti-1V2_l!ietf sonliio AND Rooms, cEN'raAL location. modern conveniences. 145 Euston Street. < _1388-6-12m4i 'Fo'£Er_'ir=unriisl-lsinouss r-'on summer months with modern con- veniences. Apply at Guai-dian Ofllca 1375-6;1§M3lpd. c7\TPH'1"'€rTs'wAN'rEoIwAN1"so at once six first-class carpenters. Apply Albert Baker, Summerside. 1378-6-12m3i. TIFUL TO RENT.-THE. BEAU ST. Anthony’s Villa, fronting on Dundas Esplanade. Apply to City Hospital. I ‘ 9709-4-15mt_f WANTED-AT ONCE, GOOD COAT 'msker, also pants maker, good ses- son's work. Apply W. T. WILSON. Trenton, N. S. 1368-12-M4ipd _WANTED-BY THE EBT?-i OF JUNE' a capable woman as cook. Good 'i'°°...Aru '° M'--.ters ars, eo.‘ -m. ns r|M sal.: of James Faranharsan's. residence, on Saturday _the lltil. at13la1l;.*l;1`.’m“ lU rinted wlh name and address, D _ lther on flap or front, $9 per 1,000; 5.50 for 2,000; $12.00 for 5,000; 20 for 10,000. GUARDIAN OF- FlC1il. 8808-11-Blmtf. FOR SALE-We offer for quick sale A Royal Black Female Fox one 'year old. This fox is, equal in sp- mar ce to any fox in Csptivity f wane. Burnside Fur Traders, Bpx L93, Truro. N. S. "' ` ‘- 1367-6-13M8ipd » ..f>~'r.....t':‘t:'... I _ ho are e wuts 'for nm mrsnilstion. c:issAl &a’i;es;‘Agten3ssan29 Bt., James on rs , _ _a.~»_ _, E mu tourism uction f r all av exif, contgintglsting Mstri on ‘ -1'-'-‘J-'-*_*-r---_af-'-'N 1::_-_-_-A---<_~_=--~_--:_-_-_~_~_-_-.-v-.~.-.-_-_-_-_-.-_-_-:.-.-_-_-_-.-_-.~_~.-_~_-_-;.-:_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-,-_-_-_-:_-_ _ GENMANS EIESAIII] SUMMARY GEIIMANS SENDING AMEIIIEAN NIIIE '° Ellllllllll MIIIIE MEN LONDON, June 11--The American note to Germany, which is considered here as firm but pacific, divided the interest of the British public to-day with the successful Russian counter- thrust against the Austro-German lines in Galicia. When the placards of the evening newspapers announced receipt of the note there was a general rush for copies, as the text had been anxiously awaited. it arrived too late, however, for comment in the evening editions. Russian success has naturally caused gratification and relief and now the military experts expect there will be a repetition in Galicia of what occurred before Warsaw last winter, when the Germans suffered enormous losses in their efforts to break the Russian front on Bzura and Rawka Rivers. As on that occasion Russian reinforcements arrived in time to force back a portion of General Von Linsingen's army. which had crossed the Dneister River near Zurawna be- fore lt could be strengthened and en- trenched. German and Austrian offl- cial reports make no mention of fight- ing in this reglon,but from an account issued in Petrograd the Austro-Ger- mans suffered heavy losses, losing 17 guns and nearly 7,000 prisoners. Few who crossed the -river escaped. The Russians also claim further successes up in South Lemberg, where they have pressed their opponents back and taken another 2,000 prisoners, while east of Przemysl they say the Germans suffered severely. In Eastern Galicia the Russians con- tinue to fall back to the Dneister un- der Austrian pressure. Following the example of the Italians who occupied Avalona, an Albanian port on the Straits of Otranto, the Serbians are marching across Northern Albania towards Durazzo while the Montene- grins are making for the Port of Alessce. For some time Albania has been overrun by bands which were organized by the Austrians and Turks to harrass Serbia. The opinion is ex- pressed here that these occupations will spell the end of Albanian inte- grity. Heavy fighting continues along the Italian frontier. particularly on the Isonzo River, where the Austrians are making a determined effort to stem the Italian advance. To-day’s toll ex- ncted by German submarines is five vessels, the British steamer Strath- carron, tho Russian steamer Dania, a Swedish steamer, the Russian bark Thomasina, ami the British trawler Interpid. A British warship was also attacked by a submarine in the Adria- tic but reached port slightly dam- aged. MnHun|si_tulunuu At the ministerial session of the 32nd annual Methodist Conference of _Now Brunswick and P. E. Island _now in session in St. John, the following ministers were recommended for a supernumerary relation: Revs. John L. Allen, Thomas Allen, Thomas Steb- bings, John C. Barrio, Douglas Chap- man, D. D., Henry J. Clark, John T. Coiter, S. T. B., Thomas J. Delnstadt. Jacob Heaney, Alfred LePage, Wm. Penne., Stephen Rice, W. B. Thomas, Wm. A. Thomson and Wm. Was-s. The following is the first draft of the station sheet as it affects P. E. island: v f Charlottetown District. I ‘E 76 Charlottetown (First Church), Robert G. Fulton, 77 Charlottetown, (Grace Church), Francis H. Little- johns. 78 Cornwall, George Ormsn, 79 Little York and Winsloe, Alfred J. ,Gould, John L. Lund. 80 Pownal, Ern- _est S. Weeks, B. A., B. D. 81 Vernon River, Willis B. Leard. 82 Montague, I-l`ug`h Miller. 83 Murray Harbor, Frank E. Boothroyd. 84 Souris, Ern- est E. Styles. 85 Mount Stewart, Fred W. Sawdon. _ ,_ _,U Oummenlda Dletrietf sgiammunius. mes M. nice, s.A. g*{i)“__`, elseiuei Oaprgzfggrs. ‘S8 ('}l`ryon. , e . 6 -_ rgae, eorge Mdé, B.~A§ Granville. Levi J, Lelfii. lilgiihrd. H:'Btlnley Yo\ii1¢. a. A. oz sms. oem-gs F. Dawson, M. A. 98 0ape~_.Woife~aad O'1.esry. Ill WESIEHN ENIINI (Special to Guardian.) LONDON, June 11.-A despatch from Amsterdam states that the Ger- man gencral staff is moving a new army of 500,000 men to the western front. BUIEAHIA PENIIESIS AGAINST IUNNEI (Special to Guardian.) LONDON, June 11.--The Bulgarian government, says a despatch from Iiucharcst, has sent a strongly worded protest to Turkey because of the con- tinued lndifference of the country re- garding traiilc on the Diedeagatch railway and the detention of passen- gers and freight. LIUIII SEIIIINE APPEALS ENN MIIIIE MUNIIIIINS (Special to Guardian.) LONDON, June 11.--in an address nt Cardiff, Llyod George said it was his purpose to organise South Wales to speed up the output of munitions just as Lancashire had been organis- ed. Referring to the dire need of ammunition, he said: "l hardly like to say it, but we are still. short of shells. We must get them. It will not do for some to undertake respon- sibility and some to shlrk. There must be equality of sacrifice and con- tributions.” A SIIIIIAL SUHVEI WNAI II MEANS Briefly it may he said that a Social Survey is an attempt to see and set forth actual conditions in a commun- ity as these conditions affect the life of the people, and to suggest a policy and programme for the future. It is in some respects like stock-taking. The merchant faccs the facts in his own business, sees what lines were profitable, what were not, what new needs have arisen among his cus- tomers, what new methods should be introduced and upon these bases his policy for the next year. He looks at good points and bad points without heat or prejudice. because his whole investigation is for the good of his business. . At first there was, in some places, a little resentment to a survey. but that has long since passed, for a social survey is always `constructive, not destructive. it is an attempt by the citizens to look at conditions for thevgoad of the community. From the nature of the case it can know neither party, creed nor class. it has no 'ulterior ends-"to serve. It does not seek 'anything startling or sensational. its work is educational. The aim is to gather up public sentiment in the support of any needed improvements and to strengthen those who in almost every community are striving, often ,single handed, for such an advance. 1 Surveys may be divided into two types, specific and general. Of the former the following are good exam- ples:-Lloyd George's survey of con- ` ditions in rural England. on the results of which his famous Land Act was built; the investigation into every phase of the Pittsburg steel industry. the report of which was published in _three special numbers of The Survey and led to great reforms in conditions of the employees; the examination by the city government of Toronto (through employed experts) of its own system. to see how it might be made more efficient; the sanitary survey of (Continued on Page Eight.) _ -_-lk->_<---_n _ allnlnrs Lmimone cum uouralgia. George A. Seller. Mlnarde Linlmant euros gaqat in eews Minarfs Llniment Cu Prisoners and (Sp°cIal to The Guardian) PARIS, June 11.-(Official this even- ing)-On Friday we fortified our posi- tions in front of Neuville St. Vaast. Wo continue an inventory of the war material captured by us. We have found thus far in the ruins three 77- milliinetre guns, three bomb throwers, fifteen quick firers, which were buried in the ground or damaged, tlioiisunds oi' grenades, u thousand rifles, cight hundred thousand cartridges, incen- diary implements, 105 iniilimetre shells, a large number of engineers' implements und tools, numerous cases ALLIES SUCCESSFUL , ON WESTERN FRONT _`\ , Captured Several German Trenches, Taking Machine Guns. master' ‘ containing explosives and other arti- cles of equipment. in the region of Toutvent Farm, Southwest of 1-lebuteruewe we have organized the positions captured by us yesterday. This morning we cap- tured a further batch of 150 prisoners among them a major. in addition many German wounded have been ad- mitted to our ambulances. The bodies of iii-nd Germans can be counted by hundreds. We have captured three more quick fircrs_ We have bent the German line more than one and one- third miles and on a depth of two- thirds of ft mile. CAN Wi: RAISE A UNIT The letter of Mr. G. J. Bruce, Hon. Secretary of y the Highland Land League in your issue of May 31st shows us that the Highlanders of to- day are living up to the glorious re- cords of the past. Our hearts thrill as we read of the noble wny the croilers and the fishermen have responded to the Empire's call, how every Highland home has given its best, its fathers and sons to the army and navy, its daughters to the nursing brigades, while the old people knit ns only fligh- land women can knit, comforts for those at the front. and the aged men bend their heads to the work the younger had to leave, and how the Highland districts lead all the dis- tricts of the Empire in recruiting. Prince Edward Island was largely settled from the llighlands. Thou- sands of our men have the same names, and the same blood in their veins as the heroes who fought and fell with Robert Bruce and Prince Charlie, and who have in every war our nation has waged, gained glory _ for their country and honor for their cialis. But has change of climate and a less hardy life than that of our fore- fathers made our blood run thin and our valor evaporate? Whilst our clans in the motherland are giving of their best and bravest-yes their all, are we content to stay at homc to grow grain, and enrich ourselves through the war? Are our fathers sending forth their sons to iight while they cheerfully un- dertake additional toil, or do they say "We need you at home, you must not volunteer!" Are our women ready to do a share of the farm work, like their sisters in Scotland and England and Ireland, while their sons and brothers cross the seas to defend the cause of truth and justice, or do they put every obstacle in the way of recruiting lest their own lives be made more toil- some? Have our kills lengthened into skirts? Have we become like Indini. squaw-men 7 ____ f Doubtless the pcrcentagewof High- land names among our recruits will compare well with that of any other part of the nation, but is that suffi- cient for us? Is that like the record set by those whose names we bear? Shouldwe not lead all others? Think how our forefathers responded when the fiery cross was sent over hill and dale io gather the cialis for the fray; and could any fiery cross make such un appeal to us as that cross on which HIGHLAND IN P. E. ISLAND? a live Canadian soldier was crucified at Langemarck? Where is our old spirit? Can we cling to our comfortable homes and hide our coward heads while such bar- barities are perpetrated, and while hundreds of defenceless women and children are murdered by German sub- marines? O! Highlanders hear the Empires call, let us live up to the glorious her- itage which is ours! Do you remem- bor when our exiled fellow country- men fought with the French against the Germans in the 18th century, and captured that island on the Rhine, over since called the Island of the Scots, how their leader exhorted them. Come brothers let me name a spell Shall rouse your .souls again, And send the warm blood bounding free, Through pulse and heart and vein. (‘ail back the days of by-gone years, llc young and strong once more; Think yonder stream so dark and red is one we’ve crossed before. Rise hill and glen, rise crag and nook, ltisc up on either hand, _ Again upon the Garry's banks, ()n Scottish soil we stand. Again I .see the tartans brave, Again the trumpet's ring, Again I hear our leader call, Upon them for the King. Stayed we behind that glorious day, in roaring flood or lin? ’l‘he soul of Graeme is with us still, Now brothers will ye in! A German heart is stout and true. A German arm is strong, A German foot goes seldom back Where armed foemen throng, But never had they faced in field. So stern a charge before, And never had they felt the wield Of Scotlund‘s broad claymore. Attempts have been made to raise various units from this Province, but so far the attempts have failed. Now two new Highland regiments are to be mobilized in the Maritime Pro- vinces. Could we not in this Island raise one or two or three companies, not of kiited Englishmen, or lrishmen, or Weishmen, but every man with a Highland name, and with Highland courage-the_ courage which made "Scofland's broad claymore" a terror to the Germans centuries ago? Who will follow the skirl oi' the pipes? Send your names in at once to the Recruit- ing Ofllcer. CLANSMAN. -'-`-‘=-'-‘-‘-‘-‘-'-‘-`~'-‘-`-'-'-`-'~'~'-'~'~=’~'=-‘-‘-‘-`-’-T-'~'-'-`-`-'-"'~‘~'~'- EPIDEMIC OF CHOLERA BREAKS OUT IN VIENNA PARIS, June 9, 5.15 p. ni.-The Ha- vas Agency has received a despatch from its agent in Madrid who says it is officially announced there that nn epidemic. of cholera has broken out in Vienna. ’f‘IlE \'i/-EA’l‘llEIt, 'i‘EMPEltA'l‘URE, WIDE, MOON, ETC. (Special to The Guardian) TORONTO, June 12.--Maritl|ne:~ South to Westerly winds; showery. THE WEATHER.-Yesterday was fine and mild. The highest temperature recorded yesterday was 68 deg. above sera and the lowest was 55 above. The lowest of the previous night was 45 above zero. At 9 s.m. yesterday it was 55 above and at 9 p.m. it was 58 above. The tide will be high this morning at 9.90, tomorrow at 19.18 and Monday at 10.56; it will be high tonight at 11.37 and tomorrow at 12. The sun .sets this evening at 7.51, tomorrow at 7.52 and Monday nt 7.52; it rises tomorrow morning, Monday and Tuesday at 4.08. The moon sets tonight at 8.20 and tomorrow at 9.11. The last quarter of the moon was on Friday, June ist at 12.31 p. m. There will be a new moon on Sat- urday, June 12th at 2.57 p. m. The length of today will be iifteen _hours and forty-one minutes and of tomorrow fifteen hours and forty-two COMING EVENTS, ANNOUNCEM1£N'l`S, DIEETINGS, ETC. ONE CENT per word each inser- tion for advertising in this column. Cash must accompany orders. Mini- mum charges, twenty-five cents. "Tea at beautiful Elmira in aid of St. Columbo Church, Tuesday, Aug- ust 17th. 1327-6-10M3i_ "There will be a Mission Band Bazaar and Tea in St. James Hall next Thursday afternoon from 3 to 6. Admission 5 cents, tea 10 cents. 18B9~0~131i. “A meeting' of the shareholders of the Tracadie Cross Silver Blaok,»,1'\lx Ca., Ltd., win be held in the hail at Tracadle on Wednesday. June filth at 1 p. m. 1305-8-12M2lpd "Stop tinkering with that old rath- shsckle typewriter and instal a brand new Remington or Smith Premier, it will save you a great deal in the end. A. Milne Fraser, Halifax. N. 8. ` 1364-6-12M1i will you to get we are can DOI!! minutes. _ ree Rheumatilm linars's ‘_ i- .. it 5-._ .M 1’ If "5 i:-f < _ 11 -i _ :_ 5? ‘E 12,. I' px - \' _ E. -"_ x' . U _ iv' . _"fi ig -Iii-Ei; up 1. ;_. ., -if V at-j..-._ >;-`- ` -_ :Y-l5'“ 51:; i _`. 5.1"' 1:; _S 1 4 ‘_ alll' - _iif-_-.A -:nfl '91, YE Zigi -' » ph __ gg. ,.__.»,. 3.1- ff? 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