is " ‘ _ “fo offset this constant -wear and tear on your lflhil fort From seven to six it's usually work, then a hurried jmeal, off to- a dance, a seat at the "movies" or _ other amusement, to bed at eleven V or laterind the same thing all overligsin 'tomorrow-.1 wx 0 E _ A F t Mr. ous McLeod, Uigg, was a visi- __° _ tor to the city yesterday. ' WI/ ?_ §ure_t0fplea§e the Bride lf.’$’°§“;i’$;. lik. ‘t‘;l’.§’.‘$ .‘Zll}...’i‘i.'2‘i‘l‘.§k '13 dainty _ resume his studies at Bedford, N. S. agggftmgnt of H_a1_'|d_ Department, left yesterday morning en Palnteg- china In e_Xqu1.s' his brother Edward has been in the 1*” deem My P"==° °f i',‘;;,°.::.“.‘ .fs:.f:;1‘f. wrt; :rss ' ' U H fl. U be adehght robbers. It is pleasing to know that t0 theféclplent, |l:c in recovering and will he able to w Patterson MoNTnEAi_c_|_<;;\é_=;-_§§Nr:.z.is|.ANo “Have you tried our ramous "Irish ,13.A., late of Princetown, P.E. Island, Twist?" You’ll like it. Just try it 'rho castor of the church was the Rev. __ once--\l’s s sure boi 1'0"" “H0 11° 'i‘. F. Kirmear, who resigned 'a few ‘ other afterwards The Two Macs. 149 _“mths ago ffniiii tggt will' enrich the blood, restore your exhaust- ed vitality, afreal tissue and strength- builder. VINOL is the best thing we can re- commend to do this and it willdo it quickly- ends ” Life today is constant ef es d body you need a ' $1.00 Bottle Central Drugstore - _\\\_\\@_&IlUIllI @\\\ - _ _ _ Mr. and Mrs. T. C. James and Mrs. James left yesterday to spend the winter in Alberton. _ Dainty China A Gift that is always We have an extensive Oc B IDBYB never _ Dill? an editori- _______iihl:-_ based od 01' Y newspaper out thBt`.l\l6 diilarg from offer to lnasmuclé al, contingent upon the tina the Triple Entente, bu effect as soon as Greece her part in the suggested _ motives _ are not Balkan politics of the‘Daiiy Tele- cession of Cyprus to which most of its in- are related by race and clearly involves no departure from the principles upon whlch we have taken our stand from the begin- Ilills. and lt comes with especially happy effect from the power to which Greece_ owes her possession of the Ionian Islands." PERSONALS Mr. Anson Jones, of Bunbury, has taken up his esidenco in Hazelbrook near the station. mi. l The Rev. J. Abbott Winfield, who has about recovered from his recent illness.. crossed over by the Northum- berland on Wednesday evening and is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Mr. John Grlfllth ofthe Post Office route to Yankton, North Dakots.,where accompany his brother home. » L.....=-..=.-_-._--_-._-_-__-_-__ Jeweller ‘ MONTREAI., Oct. 20.-The congre- r~~tlon of St Mark’s Presbyterian Church to-night unanimously decided io semi ii call to the Rev. E. J. Rattee, we all recognise that » . ., _ _ .lm 'r .‘:3”~'\il°ili\li\f1- sry g _ _fwlth the theft so of Percy T. Smith, of Am- hu-st._ohsrged with receiving stolen goods belonging to the Militia. Do- Bartment. will likely conclude _to-ds.!‘.' etectlve Kennedy investigated this case for the militia, eomlngto -Am- herst armed with search warrants. Many places were searched. and as s. result _more than $1,000 worth of military stores, alleged to _have been stolen, have been recovered. `.4ll"ilie evidence ‘for the crown is ln. Detec- tiv'e‘Kenne`dy is the principle witnéss ind' his' testimony disclosed' some startling facts. it was brought out that nearly $2,000 worth of military storedwas stolen. The accused has twdlavryers, -and evidence for the defence will be put in this afternoon. =_~e-1*-ad; NFLD. WILL 8P¢ND1_.A8‘l" MANAND LAST DOLLAR, _ PREMIER MORRIS SAYS. _._ _ ST. JO!-1N'_S, Nild.. Oct. 19.- Speak- ing st a meeting of the Patriotic As- soclaglon last night, the Governor presl ing. _Premier Morris declared that the country would spend the last lllsn and last dollar to support the Empire. The opposition leader Kent endorsed this and the meeting de- cided, enthusiastically to continue en- listment, for both the naval and mill. gafy forces so long as the need ex-' s s. - -_Q _ _HOTEL RRRWILS ` . _ _ \ VICTORIA. Jas. J. Macdonald, Toronto; J. G. Fraser, Montreal;_J. H. Echado, To- ronto; J. F. Fraser, M. Wood, Hali- fax; E. C. Colliers, Montreal; J. Geo. McDonald, J. J. Powers, Cambridge; E. C. Scott, New York; J. W. Daw- son, Toronto; E. J. Ewey, Montreal; E. Ward, Halifax;.F. M. LeBlanc, Memramcook;'~ A. .B. Fisher, Mont- real; E. A. Hoyt, St..John;-J. T. Mc- Donald, Montreal; _W. _ F. Robinson, London; E. W. Cong, St. John; N; R. Noonan, Halifax; C. E. Newsom, Boston. "` " QuEEN.' L. G. Prowse, Murray Harbor; W. H. Courtney. St. John; C. Delaney, Magdalen Islands; A. Martin, Valley- neld; Jas.` Arth_urs,_ Ottawa, A A Ravens. _ A. W. Covey, St. John; P. Sulli- van, St. Peter-’s; 'E. A-. Potter, Mrs. Ar. M. Potter, ANM. Potter, Spring- hill, N. S.; John N. McDonald, Mont- ague; J. G. Campbell, Cape Tra- verse; G. H. Myers, Lake Verde; J. C.‘ Palmer, Conway; W‘. RHBBBU French, Jas. French., Westmoreland; Wm. McKenzie, D. McKenzie, Mrs. Wim. McKenzie, French River; C. R. Mitchell, Boston; J. W. Allen. Sum- merslde; J. A.» McKenzie, Scotchfort; Miss Ella McAda.m. St. Peter’s; Wm. Kennedy, O'Leary; M. Kennedy. Brad' albnne. - ’ _M lx' LONDON. Oct. 20.-Ashmesd Burt- lett, in a despatch dated Dardanelles. Sept; 16,' published ln the Daily Chron- _icl_e. describes the nsvrmonitors ein- ployed by the British. He ys: T" Ooehfternoon there appeared at the entranoefof Kephalos har or an amus- ing looking object. She could hardly be said to steam up but rather wob- _hled into port like a huge goose prim- od fo Mlchaelmas. It is impossible _tp tell at a distance whether she- was jbroudside on or showing her bows or hel'_ stern, for she seemed 'to be quite round. Her high sides held aloft an absolutely 'flat deck on which nothing showed except an enormous .turret fninrwhich projected two guns of .enormous girth and length, whilst ris- 'ing' from her center like a giant of sbllio Californian forest was s. huge striped tripod bearing aloft a kind of oblong jewel box, an exact replica on is huge scale of that in which the Dalai Lsmabears about with' him the ashes 'of his ilrst embodiment. _ With great difllculty steering, she made her way through the crowded harbor and droppedanchor with the eyesof thousands riveted on her. No one had ever seen the like of her be- fore. Sensation in fact followed sen- sation. Her crew began to bathe ap-Q parently. All possessed the super- natural "power of walking on the wa- ter,' for on descending the ladder in- stead of plunging into the waves they \val`ki';i_a.ldug them by the side of her, and, aving thus distributed them- selves proceeded to dive in, only to climb' out again a few minutes later at' their will. ` ‘ V We set of! in heats to investigate .this strange phenomenon and found that ‘just below the surface her sides bulged out some ten feet and then curved under, forming s. platform just washed by the waves. This ls the secret mystery of these craft. In that bulge a man has concentrated his in- genuity to defeat the submarine. lf -a torpedo strikes her side it will ex- plode amidst a variety of substances which I must not mention, and the hull'of the vessel will escape injury. These- huge monitors carry naught but two 14-inch guns and some anti- nir craft armament. The first time one of these monitors went to the mouth of-the Dsrdanelles to celebrate, she gave the poor old Turk a horrid shock of surprise. Her guns go off with a terrible roar and carry over three- quarters of a ton of metal fifteen miles. Later on three more of these monsters arrived, giving us eight 14- inch guns with which to bombard the enemy’s position, in addition to large numbers of smaller monitors of all shapes and sizes, some with names and some without, but each armed with the very latest weapons of pre- cision. _ [IMI A WOMAN'8 WAY “Your wife seems busy these days." "Yes: she is to address a woman's ciub." ` ` “Ah working on her address." “No; on her dress.” "till Pilllll LONDON. Oct. 20,-Cabinet Minis- ters again were bombarded with war questions in the House of Commons today, but for the most part they managed to _escape an intendedfront- sl attack.” In the course of the replies it developed that the oiilcer who com- manded the landing of British troops ali Sulvs. Bay, on the Gallipoli penin- sula, had been shelved. and that he holds no command in the army at pre- sent, but Harold J. Tennant, parlia- mentary under-sscretary for war. de- clined to give further information on the ground that- it would be against public interest. The suggestion made by William Joynson-Hicks, Unionist member for the Brentford division of Middlesex, of a, policy of reprisals as a deterent to Zeppelin raids, was frowned upon by the War Office, Mr. Tennant re- marking that such a policy always had been_the subject of considerable con- troversy. “The Royal Flying Corps," he said, "is a military organization in England for military operations. The dastardly raids by the enemy on un- defended towns and defeuceless peo- ple should not be allowed to divert the energies of this fighting force from its primary military purpose." ' Speaking for the Government in the House of Lords this evening the Duke of Devonshire, civil lord of the ad- mlralty, said the admlralty, which was responsible for the air defence of Lon- don, was doing all possible adequately to meet the Zeppelin menace, and al- though the problem was not an easy one, it hoped to be able to make the defences of Loudon satisfactory in the future. The Duke said there was no evi- dence that any Zeppelin dirigible bal- loon had been brought down by gun fire, either on the latest or the previ- ous raid. _ The Earl of Portsmouth suggested the people of London should be advis- ed of the approach of Zeppelins, but the Duke of Devonshire thought that such a notice would cause greater panic. Session oi Parliament In January OTTAWA, Ont., Oct. 20.-lt seems certain that there will be no general election in Canada for some time to come, and probably none until after the war is over. It is stated authori- tatively in political circles that Sir Wilfrid Laurier has expressed himself to the Prime Minister as agreeable to an extension of the term of the pre- sent parliament. ' There will be no session of parlia- ment until January, but the House wlll, in all likelihood, meet directly after the new year. It was thought for some time that there would be a fall sitting but there is no necessity for this as the Minister of Finance has enough money to meet domestic needs and war necessities. of Herzog, was the and far, have to improve P0015 the lf number of leaders in all the par- ties, apparently have suffered revers- es. This ls especially true of the standard bearers of the labor party, which has been rent; ln twain by the factions for and against ' General Botha. Frederick l~I._ Creswell, labor leader, who has supported General Botha, was defeated in two constituencies in which he was a candidate. In South Africa there are only' 130 members to be elected. The number to be returned by each province is: The Cape, 51; Natal, '7; Orange Free State, 17; Transvaal, 45. Each con- stituency returns one member. Eleveu Thousand ‘ Canadian Casualties OTTAWA, Ont., Oct. 20.-Upwards of four hundred casualties among the Canadian troops at the front, have been reported to Ottawa since the big offensive movement was initiated. The lists are steadily growing but there is no indication of the Canadians hav- ing been in any serious engagements. The casualties instead have been-.sus tained not in terrlile hand~to»hand light- ing, like that of St. Julien, last sping, but as it were, in the ordinary routine of daily warfare, the bursting of e_ne- my shells and continuous snlpping ln addition a dozen lives have been lost bv the Zeppelin night raids over the sleeping Canadian camp at Otterpool. One more name was added to the list by the overnight report. The second division looms large in the latter cas- ualties and it is apparent that practi- cally all of its battalions are getting their baptism of ilre while the ilrst division battalions are renewing their previous experiences. The total casualties among the Can- adians since the war began, is in round numbers, eleven thousand. com- prising 3,500 killed, 6,500 wounded and a thousand missing or prisoners. ..¢.,. -i _...an-ir --more oulrsesin" rlxssnoult `GA"lV» UPGIT .UWAGBU ff' IN ,FlV~E~|MN U. ~ _ lf wat will _ltakll lo;irllll on yours mac or so Qs iam, fanning to si¢m___or you sex gas and eruc . undilxlstod food, or have s feeling pf di heartburn, fullness, nausea, had in moutl1 and stemsclfliesdache. you can sure y get- rggef in flllve niinutoo Ask four plis sclst w shew you the formula. plainly printed on tht nfty-cent cases of Pspe’s Dispepl than you-;wlll underlfnld why dys- peptlo troubles of all nd.s must go, and why it relieves sour. out-of-order stomachs or ludlgestiou in ive min- utes. “Pape's 'Dlapepsin" I hurli- less; tutes like candy, 'though each dose~ will dlgdt and prepare for ss- slmilatian into the blood all the food you eat-; besides, lt makes you go to the table with a he-arty appetite; but what will please you most. is that you will _feel that your stomach and intestines are clean and fresh, and you will not need to resort: to laxa- tives or liver pills for bllliousness or constipation. This city will have many “Pape's Dlapepsin" cranks, as some people will call them, but you will be enthu- diastlc about this splendid stomach preparation. too, if you ever take it for indlgeetion, gases, heartburn, sourness, dyspepsla, or any stomach misery. Get some now, this minute, and rid yourself of stomach misery and indi- gestlon in dve minues. CANADIAN CHALLENGE CUP " CANNOT BE FOUND NEW YORK. Oct. 19.-ln a cable message to the National Horse Show associates. Lord Decies announced that he has failed in all efforts to i'lnd the Canadian challenge cup, an inter- national trophy for army oillcers,whlcl1 was won at the last national horse show by Lieutenant Baron de Mes- low, of the French army. Captain Merwin Crawshay, of the British army. won the cup in 1912. and took it home with him. to be turned overfo the next winner. Crawshay has been killed ln action, and nothing can be learned of Baron de Meslow, ex- cept that he went to the'front with his regiment, the First Cuirasslers, at the outbreak of the war. _ SEAT N0 'CHANGE V SELLS FOR $72,000. NEW YORK, Oct. 19. - The sale of a seat on the New York Stock E!- change for $72,000 was announced to- day. The price ls $2,000 higher than the lust sale, a few days ago. and is several thousand dollars higher than a number of sales between four and six months ago. ' GFBBK GBOFEO S|.l:B8f. . MU. I ' ' ` 1 ni ssl I m -1 I sus g " nun . 2-' l I - » W " l all l' W | _ » n dnesdily, October 27th. if ' I _ october, 27:11, 1915 A ’ A ___ 1 _ _ i I _ i » _ Dollar Da J 1 [1 ,zi- 'i‘ _ . , » Q . N Fares and Train Arrangements of 1 A A Special Trains Muray Harbor Murray River Hopefleld ' Wood Islands Belle River Melville Fodhla Grandview Ulsx ‘ Vernon River Vernon Lake Verde Village Green Mount Albion Hazelbrook Mount Herbert Bunbury Charlottetown. Arr. _ Summerside New-Annan Kensington Freetown Emerald Jet., Bradalbane Elliot.t’s Fredericton Hunter Riveh ,North Wiltshire Milton Royalty J unct., _ Charlottetown, Arr. . _ _ Returning special will leave for Murray Timo 7.30 7.43 7.54 “ 8.05 “ 8.12 " 8.18 “ 1 8.35 " 8.45 “ ` 8.53 " 9.05 " 8.50 “ 9.16 " 9.22 “ 9.28 " 9.32 " 9.40 “ 9.45 " 10.00 9.00 “ 9.11 " 9.25 “ 9.40 “ 9.50 " . ` 9.56 " 10.00 “ 10.07 “ 10.18 “ ' 10.80 " 10.46 " 11.00 " 11.15 “ A. M. .» P. M., and for Summerslde at 4.45 RM. Tickets at single cflrst class far,e_v/ill be issued from Elmira. Souris. Georgetown andstations inclusive to Charlottetown by regular morning -trains. Eastern train w_lll be held at Ch’town lmtll 4.00 P. M. on return. Special fares will also be in effect from qapo Traverse Branch. Harbor via Vernon. at 4.45 Return Fares $1.00 .90 .80 ' .80 .75 .70 .60 .50 .50 .45 .45 .45 .35 .30 .25 .15 .15 $1.00 .90 .90 .75 .70 .65 .60 .55 .45 .45 .30 .20 ____ H 3'” | _ 0ct. 27th. i _, + _ _ Da _ . 1,' ‘ ----_~ fn-nu '_ ‘ _ _ _ 2 _ Practically every merchant in Charlottetown- 1 f e of this leading M0 Charlottetown, _ Eveiéy woman andman onthe Island-should A e _it a_point_to visit .the ‘Capital and take advantag _ _`- A _ ' ' _ ., .,' _- - A 1 ’ . \ 1 ' ‘- l ` :/' H '. < ‘ .` .__ ' ' ‘ _ _ __ . _ __» _ ._ _.. N l A ` ' ` _ '_ .i- ' ‘ A 'i-if-’.. ~ .w _ /_ \ -. .» ~' ~ ii ri , ’ 1 I \` I it' V-£'= will offer Speciiiliéggains to the people oi Charlottetown and Prince Edward Island. Excursion rates from all stations on P. E. l. Railway I Brings charlouemwneveiv dollar v°`_\1_“‘9 °f ` ` _ _ _ _ne Dollar Da "“ fist-iis1sor¢siooo'i="iti5;siarDay. ” 0 _ it 4_1 ..- ,.. v C *hef°`¥.1{0°_`k _ _ _ 0 _ Mm’ "°‘°°"° '°““° th' Charlottetown october 27th _ :mag in the whole family t., . . `,ill"f'.~_ `i ` :*,__\<":-_ '-~.'i3i""~i1`~~'i='¢".-ll-‘?. ,= " ‘ . " r gg =_-.1 nil lu& hui i r 1 -1 . _ _ _ , n ,. 1 i ‘ _ ' ‘ ‘ ` ._ ’x 1 »"B»`lr| 3-gg; 'v"<§si " -» ~-‘,"|t It-.. ,J . "X H( ,r ~~' .U _ ' f ' - _'l‘_ “r » \ _ _ _ _ ' ' ` "»-‘ -;s__ . . ,__ - ' ~. as-:v i_~ -.-~ »~ " " ` l " 1' ' _ _ __ " ,, -_:.._, _ » _ _ _,,__, _.,__._,.. .__ . __ ...i- ».._-_:.4 -,.-"vs = _ -. i. .' __l\"` ‘.1 11- -_1.‘~ _ _ " 'X " ' - ."i.a.~fll; diiz'-'N =l¢~.’=“=_=i '-‘~‘ '_~> lff"\H’l‘ f\"f"“' -"‘ ' , _ " r"` V 4 ._ ` » _ - ~' ‘.- --VJ M5818 iw '\ LUV - ' .llilqi f l ' ‘ ’ 4 ` -' - ¢.5l‘.ill-".` '- ‘ '-lui# ll'-'VHA “ 'Vi ‘l"*"‘f" ' ` _ "" "" ' ~¢. ,». »' .u._ .¢.f‘1_.fl |10 .IT -i-i_h!`l 'ml iil< \ _ _._.|,L, if-1 M ~ _ -fn 'JU 'dj , . .rt __ . ,» s ‘ ' . . qw., _. , . r » / i 1 ./ » ‘.\i:\i'|n'i'fl ._ ____.