Ji# .t .t ‘.1 -l a I 5 \ 1 t l a sr r \ lr. il l it t _ ,_ l i t l E Ii il if i Q. iz c I. KZ, Ll' ,_....C... ___ 'l if .- i. t iz t; If ll 5' rl "4 if is ri ii .san >- li .t '. I. li it 6, . .;~V. - »:~. is 9* 1 .- , , ..,~ i .,5 ’-Z' is G' 'iv DIARY Q _Cb lla¢iatirste'| _Court D a. at ,Prince Edward Theatre 8.15. 7 and "~4§,D- li- _ ‘ lb9plo’a Theatre 8.15. ‘I and 9.45 p, li. I » DIED l£*_=-.. IIOIIRIION.-` At Ksnogami, Que- bec, sept sth. Hsaal Ardis. infant audits ot'll‘r. and Mrs. G.L. Bourbon (nee Florence Saunders.) l¢sd13inontha)3da1l. ,'~ fix ._ . ,=¢ »-_-arg. -' -._ 1 ‘_ Mail Contract _ .~ll11.»\l.lZll TENDERS, addressed to thg l'o¢-: Phorie 553 1322-yn-iomwfiiiioecspu. PURE liliiill SHEEP The Depat' tmcizt of Aifricul- ture in co~operation with the Live Stock Branch, Ottawa, wishes tn announce that -'special effort is being given to the distribution of pure bred sheep for the benefit ui all provincial breeders. Any- one having animals ofeither sex to offer for sale, or de- siring to pruchasc, should communicate with W. J Reid, Secretary Sheep Breeders' Association, Charlottetown, at 0i’lC¢. . 1 R64-9~12Ml’!l. ll"'.",'_ Sale of Trotting Horses by Tender -1-1 No. 1 Unton Prince bv Todd Mack, dam by Anon. This is thc strain of breeding that prod_uced Etawah 2. 3_lh champion three year old. Prince being) by a son_a Todd out of a dang ter of.Ar|on is very closely related to the champion. He is perfecgg sound and has such tags a feet as y_ou seldom see ina trotting,stall_ion.- The few cnlts sired y him are a fine size and well shaped for speed. . . resceus ri .ill.'.l"°°°““c....'Z“é'°°'“°‘li°3 dam Epaulet 3rd dam by Alcaiitrara 4th dam ‘by Happy Medium. Tkliliaéolt wgis 2nd aiwo o asa yearo at Hag. I-Ie also won a three .rar old race. These two are entered in the minute and 2.35 classes and sold with their ‘No r nce been when from UIIIH' ' ¢ `..» St' r ‘°§.‘.,."?.! everywhere. i“_..1tche_rs. 'uruggistl and Bonsbaw-Charlottetown TIME T A BLE From Bonshaw From Ch'Town Tues. 3, 8.30 a. in Tues. 3, 6 p. ni. Fri. 6, 10.00 a. m. Fri, 6, 6.30 'p. m. Tue. 10, 500 p. m. Tue. 10, 1.00 p. rn. Fri 13, 6.00 a. m. - Fri 13, 3.00 p. m. Tue. 17, 8.30 a. m. Tue. 17, 5.00 p. ln. Fri. 20. 9.30 a. in. Fri. 20, 6200 p, in. Tue. 24, 10.30 a. m. 'Tue. 24, 6.30 p.m Wed. 25, 10.30 a. in. Wed. 25, 8.00 p.m Fri. 27, 6.00 a. in. Fri. 27, 2.00 p. m Freight inust be de'lvered one hour before saillllil. ' ;,.»\i.,l_;.-,_-.'-.1§~ar`f-u . et-~=:-;.=: -> ~ .,/ 44 _ |,gi~;vu`|_?`~ ` .-.,;,'..;il.,_q; I I SEALED TENDERS addressed to the undersigned. and endorserl "Ten- der for Plumbing, Heating 'and Lighting, Nurses' Home, Charlotte- town, P. E. I.", will be received until 12 o’clock noon, Friday, September 20, 1918, for the Plumbing Heating and Lighting Systems, Nurses’ Home, Military Hospital, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Plans and specifications can be seen and forms of tender obtained at the offices ofthe Chief Architect, Depart- ment of Public Works, Ottawa, Sup erintcndent of Dominion Buildings, Charlottetown, P. E. I., and of the Superintendent of Military Hospital Charlottetown, P. E. I. Tenders will not be considered un less made on the forms supplied by the Department and in accordance with the conditions set forth therein. Each tender must be accompanied by an accepted chcque on a chartered bank payable to the ordelr of the Minister of Public Works, equal to 10 p. c. of the amount of the tender. War Loan Bonds of the Dominion will also be accepted as security or war bonds and cheques if required to make up an odd amount. By order, R. C. DESROCHERS, Secretary Department of Public Works, Ottawa, September 10, 1918. 1370-9-13M2i. yr.. ,».'.\;'1r:»s. . sifrfiggin /l§`¢ni»’;»i?-if, :rr ifii Mail Contract SEALED TIENDERS, addressed to the Postmaster General will be receiv- ed at Ottawa until noon, on Friday, the 11t.h October. 1918 for the convey- ance of His Majesty's Mails, on u proposed Contract for tour years, over Rural Mail route No. 3 from Wood Islands North, P. E. Island from the Postmaster General‘s pleasure. Printed notices further information information as to condition of propos- ed Contract may be seen and blanll forms of Tender may be obtained at the Pogt Offices of Wood Island's North, Iris, Hopeiieid', and at the of- flceof the Post Ofllce Inspector. JOHN F. WHEAR, Post Odllce Inspector Post Ofllce Inspector’s Ofllce Charlottetown, 20th Ausust, 1918 1153-8-31831. ' 3-.\‘1_. _.'..;'1e ' ryf"f.'..':`; -Q ~ ’ /-s.;i‘.-.‘¢'.:i.‘».?ff._. \$ynepris of Canadian Northwest lanilllegnlatisns ._-_ fl R004 Illlld sion side i0ne. ` LETTERS 0|' OONDOLENCE ._-_ _ Tignlih, Sept. 5, 1918 To Mrs. Joe Bernard and Mrs. Olive Berimrdt- “Therese it 1188 pleased God in His infinite wisdom to remove from our midst Mr. Joseph Chaisson, father of our esteemed sisters Mrs. :loo Bernard and Mrs. Olive Bemard. therefore we your sis- ters of Div. No. 3 L. A. 0. H. do with one vodce 'offer you our sincere sym- pathy ln this sad bereavevene. i L. A. 0. H. ‘ Tlgnlsh Sept. 5, 1918 To Sister Marie Phee :-Since tho, Lord Jesus does all things well has seen tit to take to His Heavenly home James Phce, father of our dear sis- ter Marie Phe`e. Therefore we your sisters of L. A..'0. H. do with. one, voice offer your our most heartfelt! sympathy in this sad bercavoment,' and assure you that our prayers havol been offered for the respose of his! soul. l _ L. A. o. H. I 7.--.__..... . ..._-_...,, . suiitniurwuiuns w|ii_g|_il|_=iis A Child Could Not Sleep Till Cuticura Healed. 1 "My little brother suffered forabout two sara from tiny red pimplce. 1 They appeared constantly i _ 1 on his body but he ima me greatest trouble under his , ears. The skin was red , and very sore and at the . / lust touch he would give } ` - ahowlofpain. Alter A ' few seconds he would have to scratch, and he was not able to sleep. "A friend advised ms to send fo; Cutlcura Soap and Ointment. I no- ticedqphangsnmd I used threecalresof | Cutlcura Soap and four boxes oi’ Oint- » . ment when he was healed." (Signed) Louis Frank, 746 City Hall Ave., Montreal, Que., February 2, 1918. K your skin clear by using Cutl- curaegoap and Ointment for every- day toilet purposes. 0 For Free Sample Each by Mall ad- dress post-card: “Cutlcura, Dept. A, Boston, U. S. A." Sold everywhere; ORANGE SERMON Derry L. O. L. No. 1169 Long Creek will hold their annual church parade on Sunday Sept. 15th at 3 o’clock p. m. Brethren are requested to mee at McEwen's wharf‘at 2.30 p. m. to form up for parade to New Dominion Presby\tei1an church where Rev. Mr. Calder will preach the sermon for the occasion. ' _ The motor boat Moorena will leave Pownal wharf at 1.15 o’clock on ab- ove date to convey the brethren from the city to attend the service. The Fourth Regiment Band will bc In attendance. A collection will be taken in aid of P. E. Island Hospital. All members sister lodges cordially invited to attend. 1321-9-10tuefri2i. Valuable Property for Sale - For sale that valuable property on Dundas Esplanade, Charlottetown, the Y property of LieutenantColonel Inga, consisting of a dwelling house of thii-i teen rooms, kitchen, pantries and two `i bathrooms with garden on water front opposite dwelling/house. 1, ` Also lot of land on Haviland Street with stable, coach house and garden thereon. For particulars apply to C. R. Smallwood, Solicitor, Cameron Block. Charlottetown. Dated this 23rd day of August, A. D. 1918. 1032-8-24Mstf. \ cinucisgr sits Pursuant to an order of the Court of Chancery Iwill set ui and sell by Public Auction`on Thursday the 19th day of Sep- tember instant at the hour of 1] o’clock fornoon on the premises 'he lands and tenements former- ly the property of the late Peter Gregor situated on the _east side of Upper_Prince Street in Char- lottetown. I ,U “ ~___, The land is fdivided into two plots each havinira '.fro_ntage oi about 65 feet and _running back 150 ieet. _ There is a commodious and well finished dwelling house on each_ plot, _thation the southern ,oortion being adouble tenement The premises willbe sold in bloc or separately as may be brances. The sale to the approved and confirmed by the court which if marie will be free from expense _rc_mises may be inspected at any time on application to W. E Bentley K. C. rom whom all fur- ther particulars can be obtained tflonditions of sale announced s sale. . llllllS Gllllll IIESPERITE Campaign of Terrorism ls Tak- ~ ing New,-Forms. Berlin Refuses to Gparantee Safety 0! Ships 00n¢AIl\l'ng Rnpltrlltod Prisoners-Gsrlunns Are Also Bystematlcally Destroying French Districts From Which They Ars Being Driven. LONDON. Sellt. 9. - The British Foreign Oillce announces that the Austn>Hungarlan Government has promised that the vessel used for the repatriation of British prisoners of war under the Berne agreement should not be attacked by their naval forces, but that the German Govern- ment refused to be governed by the same promise, despite repeated re- presentations in Berlin and Constan- tinople. There appears to be no doubt that the Turkish (bvernment was willing to execute an agreement as speedily as possible, but the lndu- ence of Germany ls being used to ob- struct it. This is partly owing to the desire to perpetuate all causes of ill- feeling between Turkey and Great Britain and partly owing to the ap- prehension of the effect upon the Turkish public opinion of reports which would be brought by repatri- ated Turkish prisoners. A semi-olllcial despatch states that the enemy is destroying everywhere in the most vandal-like manner. When he has not time to burn down houses, he removes the furniture and makes a. great bonfire of it. He blows up the most important buildings and pillages everything, removing agri- cultural machinery and destroying everything else which he has not time to remove. Nevertheless, our ad- vance into ,the forest of Coucy was so rapid that the enemy had to aban- don very large quantities of war ma- terial and important ammunition depots. The sight of such devastation or- dered by the leaders of the German army klndles in our soldiers a de- termination to punish such crimes. They know no fatigue in pursuing. The destruction of towns and vil- lages within the zone of the recent operations has been so complete as to offer little basis for comparisons. South of the Somme, and between the Aisne and the Oise the work of de- molition has' been uniformly thor- ough. Settlements, blg and small, have been reduced to ghostly ruins, the fragments of walls assuming most fantastic shapes; the roofs of many houses, bereft of tiles and slates, look like skeletons of huge beasts whose backs have been broken. Noyon offers the only contrast to the devastation that is characteristic of other towns. Montdidler was razed to the ground. Noyon was al- most as completely ruined, but is still erect. The walls of most of its houses still support: only partially collapsed roofs. From a distance they appear to req_` ire only.repalr. but close lnspectio shows that the Germans made go their boast that they would destroy] the town in its entirety. IIERTLING IN TROUBLE. Speech Pleased Neither Monarchists or Reformers. COPENHAGEN. Sept. 9.-The at- tenp of the Imperial German Chan- csl or, Count von Hertling, to ride two horses simultaneously in his House of Lords speech recently ap- pears, judging by press comments, to have resulted in his falling hard between them. That portion of the press favoring real Prussian fran- chise reform is disappointed and dis- gruntled by the Chancellor’s ambig- uous waming that the Lords could avoid too far-reaching concessions by accepting reform measures'now, and the Conservative press is up in arms uver his appeal forlacceptance. The agrarian Deutsche Tageslel- tung calls Bertllng "the Prussian monarch's grave digger." _ The Kraus Zeltung attacks 'von Hertling for minimizing the crown's deserts and exaggerating the Social- ists' services, and darkly warns him that monarchies do not crumble ,be- cause they resist /t/lie unjustified de- mands of the masses, but because they "let themselves be forced down to the dangerous level of compro- mises." - The pan-German Deutsche Zeltung declares that equal suffrage would be an undtsgulsed surrender to the anti-monarchists’ will, which would endanger the dynasty of the crown. So far aslias been noted only Ger- mania, vcn'Hertling's organ, is satis- fied with his speech. ` Japs Take Town. SHANGHAI, Sept. 9. - Japanese forces have occupied the _town of Khabarovsk, Siberia, according to ad- vices received here from Vladlvostok. Khsbarovsk is the seat of the gen- eral Government of Amur and capital of the Littoral or Maritime Province. It is situated at the junction of the Amur and Ussuri-rivers, and is on the Ussuri branch of the Trans- Siberlan Railway.. Germans Lose Warship. AMSTERDAM, Sept. 9.--One of a squadron of German wsrshipl cruis- ing olf the coast of the island of Ameland Friday evening, ran on a mine or was torpedoed. The ship was seen suddenly to heel over and dll- appear. Secretary Baker In France. WASHINGTON, Sept. _s.--’l.'lie War tm t anno nod the arrival of 11'., desired free from all eiicum- Q’,.f,',,,§¥‘B¢,,,,,. "15,-,,,,,,_ w,,,,,,_\ pant ' by an oillcisilllrlf. including John lynn, assistant aeerstary, in charge of aircraft. I-IAVANA, Sept. D. --The Afschli vals, sugar Refinery at Csrdenaa was destroyed by are saturday. The tom h Itimatecl to sasssd 08,000,000. _ ' M' to lpurchasei. 5”!" “°““°'7. B“""°" H. J. PALMER. Chancery I 3 - _ ' nnunnn stnvluis I - A METHoo_i;-cnuncln _ /. ' A. '._, ir' . J. 11 a. m. Sermon, subject The Ex- _X ' travagauce of Jesus 230,p m Sun . F I ¢` I "5" '3°l1°°l-~'l Dim.. sermon; siiblect. / _ " "Ullileasant Methods but Good Re- or-‘ "' suits. Preacher Kev. R. G. Fulton. 1' BAPTIST CHURCH - 10_a. m. Sunday School. 11 a. m'. sermon. 7 p. in. sermon. Preacher Rev. Charles R. Freeman. - CENTRAL CHRISTIAN . 11 a. ni. Sermon._2.30 p. in. Suliday School and Bible classes. 7 p m. ser- mon. Preacher. Rev. Mr. Emery. H1011. subject, An Empire Builder- Your cup of Ten means much to you. It is ni th 1 the daily fare. It is the one thing that "rounds o.I\"".__:; eqloysblo repast. 'foals fortunately so cheap in this coun on ' ,` ~ A ' I cannot afford Choice Tea. The cost per uiindis m¥°m.3 , _ than ordinary Tea, while the increased prhaurs you st lem dm I ri.AvoR-runi. 'ru ine Kino cons omg. rem will l cup you make is worth many times the difference. It is true aloe actual! nd further-that la make mo uf, _ KlNGyCDP£E Orangs Pckoe la'prepared p:‘tiI:`\‘x‘l’:rl;°for gl A# Choice Tea. uiiusuii. ouiurr sxdtusivsiruvon Ask your grocer for it by the lull nuns' ~ / sono in sultan Paciutoiss onur _ _ _ 8*- ~'*"‘°' ,i`;<”t*iirc°f`¢';6tr;“’*”"'”"", 11 a. in. -sermon, subject, "A'Pat~ ` “,,' . F riot’s Concern.” 2.30 p. m. Sunday \' V ‘ ._ School and Bible Classes. 7 p. m. ser- l Y i V _ . ~ David Livingstone. Preacher, Rev. Dr '|-'H5 5x'|~RA in ¢“o|G5 TEA Fullerton. Visitors welcome, All seats fl‘€B. 1** if _ p Y' -B I' _ ZION CHURCH 11 a. m. sermon. 2.30 p. m. Sunday School and Bible Classes. 7 p m. ser- mon. Preacher Rev. Dr, McKenzie. PEOPLE’8 CHURCH . Services at 7 p. m. Ilcv. D. Mc- Lean. All seats treo and everybody welcome. I sr. PAuL's 11 a. m. Morning Prayer. 2.30 p. m. Sunday School and -Bible Classes. 7 ,.p. m. Evening Prayer and Holy Com- munion, Rev. A. L. Flemming, of Toronto will `oti'lciate. ST. PETER'S CATHEDRAL _ ' i 16th Sunday after Trinity. 8 a.m. Holy Communion. 11 a.ni.matins and Litany. 2.30 p.m.Sunday School and Bible Class. 'l\ p. m. Evens`ong_ Rev. Dr. Hunt will cfllciate. I SALVATION ARMY Ensign and Mrs. P. Forbes, cfllccrs in charge. 11 a. m. Holliness Meeting 3 p. in. Sunday School, all children invited. Bible class for adults. 2.30 p. m. service in Victoria Park, wea- ther permitting. 7 p. rn. Salvation Meeting. Song books provided. Ev- erybody welcome. V sflnard’s Linimeat Co.. Limited Gents.-I cured a valuable hunting dog of mango with MlNA“lf§ii§i=CiiE..S§i§‘LSl11.l‘rfif. ‘i=.‘i‘ii`l'i.‘£§ UPON SUMMARY CONVICTION 00 a l3“3i.‘£’l’l?§ E’.§?Ji3ED»l§°ill¥§1§”§’”§§¥ i , O M for any term not. exceeding si%months, and morccvorlic slrall incur A P NALTY OF $10.00 FOR EACH DAY after the. time when or within which he should have registered detirigg which he' shall continue to be‘ unregis- 0 . - 4. EVERY UNITED STATES CITIZEN WHO HAS DIPLOMATIC EXEM-PTION, although not otherwise subiect, to thsss regulations _SHALL WITHIN TEN DAYS after the grantin of the same truly REPORT T0 Tl-IF. REGISTRAR, in like manner and with the same particulars as 'ulred by the last precedin section; and in ardditlon_l'Isshall embody in his report s true and oem lets statement. gf the particulars of his csrldliete of diplomatic exemption. NEGLECT --OB FAIL RE without ` bleexcuas toscmgx with the rwuiremsnts this section. SHA coNs'ri'r _'rn AN o cm _rim -- ABLE IN 'Tan Msgs AND ity. a :>eI;:ti;r°/tilarins prpvia nite las _ I _-