*m 1 I, 4. . ‘:.`1°;~ --‘-‘fo-_'.2 ' ‘ :"V_‘¢“. ‘N ._ "»p._.‘%_v,.,¥\ ~-\‘-": '».. - _‘;.~~_-_-,,‘r_' ‘ . ,,;_¢u Inq,” ______. _ _ TTERS '. 2-" --n-u-uuu a-___ _-*_ mv To , r _ -I ` O i 9" . ` /" In I ~Escortlnl theliin "Mauree- _ ‘Appliances ' A :netting of the City Council was h0lf_I_‘llI_'tlle Council Chamber |35; eWh_»i:1lF. Hia Worship Maygr Lyons preii ag. The other members pres- ent-.werez--Messrs. Reilly, McKenna, M<=Nvvi_\=. Mel-een. walker, wright, 'I‘ay‘l0r', with Mr. Martin, S, M_, Di-_ Johnson, Health Ofiicer, and M,-_ Glsrlr. Iieccrdeif; T110 minutes of the previous meet- ing having been read and approved, a r|\\1l1\)B\‘ Of accounts were sanctioned for payment. ' _ -_ j , » THE PREVFJNTION ` '21 OF TUBERCULOSIS A letter was read from Mr. L_ E., Bentley. .Secretary of the Charlotte- town braneh of the"Anti-Tuberculosis Societ'y,.trr'msmitting resolutions re- ferring torthe desirability of estab- lishing ‘a licensed public abattoir, the enforcement ‘ of. the sanitary laws, especially ,respecting expectoration, and _'commending the action of the council in _enforcing _the by-laws re- specting milki ~ , e NEW DEBENTURES It was agreed to issue debentures for $13,000 at 2} per cent. for the purpose of retiring the Public Works short time _debentures of 1906-7 'Fenders were authorized to be ob- tained for coal, sand, lumber, etc. 6 ‘l‘HFl"MARKE'l‘ BUILDING Mr. Taylor, seconded » by Mr. Wright, moved that the Public' Pro- perty Committee be authorized to construct an emergency stairway on_ the south sirfe of the market building according to the plans prepare? by the City Surveyor, at a cost no ex- ceeding $150. Agreed. His Worship said in view of the big fire in the city recently it would be well to ascertain whether there was suiiicieut _.insurance _on the market- 'ihe _s.n\Q1lpt,j__ _at_,_present carried was $25,000.-3-.1.e' ~ ' ~. . Mr.'vrrfg‘bt ehengnc that the night wateh~aow.of1 the adjoining building should,_be employed to visit the mar- ket iit ._ intervals and also proposed that the electric wiring ahouldbe in- spected, as nothing of the sort had been dons since its installation. '. Ou the ,motion of Mr. Reilly, se- com-1e|1'-"igy Mr, -McKenna the matters were referred to the Market Commit- tee for consideration and report to a (Continued on page three) _ _‘ ./ AN AVIATION __ Lf. SCHOOL _ _- _-1. >` I SABKA,’I_‘O0N,~_ Sask., March 7- Saskatopn .is td have the first avia- tion school .in Canada. Local man are putting up $20,000 to back the entel‘D\‘il¢». _Five biplanes of the iiiost‘ili\lll10ved'types will be con- tained-‘ii_i_‘.tl1e hanger which is to be erectedrill the city. i-_1v .Qs-.._,-.- lilhlll BI!-S. __¢'eilEllrs. . 'hearings _E16 . 1 ‘.11 ‘N - L One cent par word each insertion in this eolllmh. -Cash must accom- PHD! di‘(lli'¢-dlflnimnm charge twenty- nve cents. _ ,,__'=`-,_;' ...___ - _\_. '*I.»a¢i$£_' meeting in Opera Houses Seed.~ll_f__ '< __ -~ _ _ _ _ll _-gy _--- _ ~_"°°Bkd.te‘.and let Bummerside ~ skate witbf~'yci__ii‘ ht the Arena tonight. . _ 1 ‘\-'~~fE','»,--`~.\-- .lu "’-4" -' ’ “"lfhi;'IiIolithly ‘meeting oI"the lia- aiee' -A g,1;_,ef cn P. F.. 1. Hospital will sllétz' alternoon at -8 ofclock. Crapaud, have new -series*--lt9°¥~ customers for their .___- to- orches- iull nt- to- (Canadian Press) The writer says that the Servian Y ed the Moslem Albanian tribe of Lyuma. already has involled the _ester cxtnre of $1,000,000. ding of Miss Ethel Roosevelt, daugh- ter of Colonel and Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, to Dr. C-lichard Derby, oi this clty,~has been fixed for Friday, April 6. Thewedding will be in the Episcopal church here, and a recep- tion will follow at the Roosevelt re- sidence on Sagamore Hill. The bridal pair will sail the next day for a honeymoon trip to Europe. _ MARCH GAVE ' _ TORONTO, March 7-It is very un- done it this year in Toronto at least. degrees below zero which is about a degree lower than any previous day this winter. Only twice before has this occurred according to the til 1863. ‘ LADY TYPISI _ N-EW YORK, March fl-Mrs. Ida Terr, of Jersey City, whose daugh- ter Salomatook dowh the notes of the speech which Governor Woodrow Wilson made when he accepted the democratic presidental nomination, has sued the 'Drake~"Business College for $26,000- _because that concern was so pleased over the work of its papers, magazines and- circulars in advertising its system of instruction. x ' PROCESS FOR BRITISH SHIPS Lennon, Mai-on `1.-l-what promises tq_be .fan important development in the. process. -of making .armor-plate, duoe as-mor~pl'ate that effects a net weightsav-ing.of 1li.per cent. One succesful- test has already~been car- ried put,--and if his expectations ,are Alumnae, and me swam scarred. it will mean that the battleship so a'rm~ ed would be capable offmateriallv ill' ‘creased speedvwith tlle.same engine that the is greatly a rmor- front Further, he of the 5 GOTO core of layers of steel as - This. he con-' ldistributes the made a 14~ ,.__._.._...._..,,..- NE BOSTON, March 7-A strike of the alteration hands’ union, designed to tie up the cloak and suit departments of all the departmental stores of the city for the big Easter trade, is to be called within a day or two, accor- ding to Vice-president Abraham Mit- chell, oi New York. All the 1,000 members of the union will go out to- gether, Mr. Mitchell said, and no set- tlements will be made with the em- ployers until after the strike has g°rII~?DiI1/Ioiiglilifls, I <1., M nys- n arc The lronworkers' convention here passed a resolution to raise $50,000 with which to care for the families of usual for March to afford the lowest the men convicted of cons irac in - . D v temperature of the winter, but it has UH di’ HHN* Uiali. find B180 ‘10i»¢\i to raise whatever amounry ` of money -is needed to defend the con- TI" “‘°““"'m°*“°” “t "1 D°“““‘°“_ 90'- miss meg in case fi new mal ‘ is l°rvat°r1"tbiS mornin fell to (two granted t em. 'rue families 01 au the men will be cared for untlllafter the cases have been decided finally. The next annual meeting will be held in Peoria, Ills., in September, 1914, it was decided before the convention cords of-the observatory, in 1890 and was adjom-m,d_ Binghamton, N. Y., March_ 7--Last night the employes of the Bingham- ton Rallway Company, who formed a _ local branch of the Amalgamated As- w.- soclation of Street _Railway employes ' _ ` ,_ _ and failed to secure recognition of the new union from the company, went on strike. - 1-it-_-___ TWO RATS CAUSE PANIC IN CHURCH CHOIR. HARRISTON, March 5-A panic in graduate- that without her permis- a chumh °h°il` “|1890 by an animal sion-it-displayed her photograph on “°t “B I’°°' “B “ “°h“’°h m°“°°" but billboard.. and in street. ca“_ news_ a well-nourished specimen of the‘real thing, made its appearance in the choir gallery during the morning ser- vice in one of the Presbyterian Churches, here, and was responsible for considerable nervous excitement amongst the members of the choir, HAS A NEW _ARMOR-PLATE ‘much to ,the wonderment of those in the pews, who were unaware of the cause of the commotion. During the interval between morn- ing and evening seiwiees two traps were' set baited with a large piece is:-a discovery made-by William Hen- of the celebrated product of the Har- ley Worrell, of Bhsmeld, an engineer, riston cheese factory. Although there gg¢¢1,.25__ Hs. ‘gays he is, able to pro-. was every evidence that Mr. Rat had visited the feast prepared for him he 8. evening service com- the precaution was taken to the .traps lest he might his mind and any undue noise -The choir members vitro in usual places, their fa-:es cxprces- solemnity and meditation _be- _the sermon being delivered. of the lady members c\‘en look- as if spur-ning the idea ould be afraid of a rat. the ' discourseflnished changed, in ` the his aPD_¢a!$n°¢ over the in a W COB of | |‘d°d gentle# and feast the ai-_ and officers at the post of Durazzo boast- the Greak government vom” cm' ed to mm that the had exterminab that the main*.»::n.ice lf the prisoners 1 _ _ __ _ _ _ (Canadian Press) “““ii‘§%°i§‘ifI§I.SnlI““I3 IW" n ...E on 3...... ..... ’ SEHIUUSSIHIKI ~ 1 cube simon ROME, Mar. 10-The Popes con- dition continues to improve. LOUIBBURG, March 7-Two sail- ing schooners, the Hazel B. Mosher, Captain Dover, a‘nd the Iona,Captain Goddart, arrived in port from Hall- fax today, bound for Fortune Bay and Burin respectively. This is ear- ly in the season for sailing vessels. During the voyage from Halifax both encountered considerable ice and rough weather. Both loaded coal here. The steamer Knutsiord sauna this evening for se. Jenn with a full cargo of coal The steamer Morwenna is due here from Halifax tsl load coal. The steimer Seal sailed yesterday for Newfrulndland prior to starting out on the anal fishery, -.-Q-__a__Q_.__. CIIIIHIL SEIU IAIH The Central Seed Fair opens in Charlottetown to-day and it is anti- cipated that the attendance will be large and the interest as keen as movements, notably, the recent Short Course. The importance ol the pure seed campaign, inaugurated some years ago and fostered by year- ly seedfairs, is now admitted. Prince Edward Island has won the distinc- tion of being the "seed bed of the dominion," a distinction which is year by year extending and which is turning the eyes not of Canada alone but oi other agricultural countries to this province. It is sincerely hop- ed that the attendance will be pro- portionate to the importance of the matter in hand and that the third Central Seed Fair of 1913 will be the greatest yet, The Guardian heartily welcomes the visitors to Charlotte- town. _*___--__ STEAMER ' 'FOUNDERS ...___ CONSTANTINOPLE, March 7-Two hundred passengers and the members of the crew of the small British steamer Calvados were drowned on March 1, when the steamer founder- ed- in the sea of Marmora, during a bllsard. ~ .The Calvados, which was of 865 tons, plied between Constantinople and Pender-ma; some sixty mil" Southwest of Constantinople in Asia Minor. The Calvados was built at Greenock, Scotland in 1876. The ves- sel was owned- by the Patriotic Steamship Company, of London. LOBES FORTUNE T0 SAVE GIRL. Or , February 21--Pat who died at the real nephew, Chief of Police ili this city, on Tiles- wreck when lil that shown in former agricultural' he can cure consumption, $1,000,000 will be Paid to Dr. Friedrich Fried- mann, by the State of Connecticut, according to an extraordinary offer made tonight by State Tuberculosis Commissioner John Gunshanan, oi Hartford. in his address ou public health before the Rockville Business Men's Association meeting, presided over by Lleut_.-Gov. Lyman T. Tm- gier. of Vernon. The State of Connecticut will give -f_-,-,-_-,-_-_-,-_-,-_-;, _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-,-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-;,.~_ noci`nny's eer- r00m 8110 'WCM *-0 bl!!-` HI hid Iwi wry' ' ner. Finder please return to this of- nee.. _ _ egiusipe. were heard. ‘ ‘ "' *“' * ' 1-.. M.. bm. __ F... .. . -H- we .;=.‘¥"r.*:.¢.‘; _ 85 Edward, before Commence 0 1 Brick given The LennoX. Mlnsrd s Vaughan and Grace Stuart. ‘ WINS LICENSE `