,. 'AUGUST 12» 1915 'rim cnsnnorrarown compras pace seven " "‘ " .1 "' ‘\'~¢‘;f.»"" l' P " "'7""'w"m?'. ‘ ` ` I - . i. .~. _ » nf.. 0'. _ _ I __ _ , » .i , __._M,,_.,-_`.__V_‘, _ » _ _ _ _, _&- . i" ' f , _ t f 1.' . » . f i _.sa _ 1' ~ »;._»_\;i§ Sensational Women’s Pumps “ l Men’s"Oxfords “ I Misses’ Sandals “ Children’s Sandals “ Infant’s Sandals “ T 1 'Children’s White Pumps Women’s White Pumps “ 2,50 “' Low Shoe Sale W°m°“’S Oxfords worth to $4.50 for. ....._..sz.ss Women’s Oxfords “ 6( “ 3.00 at .........l1.98 2.29 295 .95 . .85 ._ .75 .25 ll C( ll 5 00 1.25 1.10 .95 90 U ll 4( U u U u (K You may have any pair of men’s, Women’s or Children’s Shoes 20 p. c. off. ALLEY & CO. 135 Queen Street :VW ig 1 1 1 LET us develop your films and make your prints. We have a complete and very modern department for handling this work. Send us your exposures we will get the best there is in them, The G. H. Cook Studio Send One Home Next to an actual visit, a portrait send to the folks at home or those re- latives who care most about you, will _be most welcomed-will give you the greatest pleasure. -- Modern photography hin't a. trial to undergo, its an experience to en- joy. Make tho appointments today. The Bayer Studio A. E.. Lyon _ Photo Studio I s 'sit X G , c ii ,I pecSoci};tynand°11"gsmiiyo ege Work unexcelled. Moderate Prices. Amateur’s work given personal attention 107 Queen St. Ch'Town Phone 68] F ; .PLANT ENE Ci-IARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON. Commencing FRIDAY at noon AUG. UST 6th. the S. S. HALIFAX will leave CHARLOTTETOWN for BOS- 'l‘0N via Hawkesbury and Halifax, and every Friday at noon thereafter. FROM BOBTON EVERY TUESDAY AT NOON. For further infomation apply to JA8. CARRAGHER. Agent. Charlottetown. m ' ) Time Table, Rocky Point Ferry. 8. 8. Hillsboro. ` Leave Ch'town Leave Rocky Point 7.00 a.m. 7.30 a.m. 8.00 a.m. 8.30 a.m. 9.30 s.m. 10.00 s.m. 11.00 a.m. 11-30 l-l1\- 1.ll0 p.m. 2.00 p.m. 2.80 p.m. 8.00 p.m. 3.80 p,m. 4.00 p.m. 4.80 p.m. 5.00 p.m. 6.80 p.m. 7.00 p.m. 9.80 a.m. OUNDAY 10.00 a.m. 12.45 p.m. 1.00 p.m. 3.00 p.m. 2.80 p.m. 8.00 p.m. 3.30 p.m. 4.00 p.m. 5.00 p.m. M. MURPHY. Manager. -Hard _ Coal To Arrive We have the following scliooners. now ou way and due from New York and Philadelphia with car- lbos of Best American Antlirscile coal in Egg stove and Chestnut alles. lllmeiy “IOAIAH K. STETSON. with 500tens '°I. POWER!" with 07° *UM "E A. ALLAN” ....with .JDO ion! This Coal is jail .ot best quality. and will be sold st very |0W°l¢ ll\‘|°° while discharging. Parties requiring Anthracite Coal cannot do better than by booking their orders at once, and delivery will be made from vessels while discharging. Buntain Bell & Co Sailings From LONDON From HALIFAX STEAMEII ulv 21st Aiwenins August iith August lllih Caterine August Jlst From LIVERPOOL From HALIFAX STEAMEIL Durango Auiiusi izth August 17th Tabasco September ter Fumess,Wiihy & Co, Ltd. ' Halifax, N. S. l__,___ _l Our charges are moderate Our work is the yery best. """'g'°"-I C. W. Patterso Cor. Great George and Eastern S . S . Lines International Line Btesmshlps Calvin Austin, Oov. Ding- COAST\VlSE' - Leave St John. Mon . Wed i’°l.'°i‘~' ".'°“".“i°‘l.‘;.““ .i tit? i..." "‘ . . u _ an _ o _ ml5lillwc AND “UNK” HM YoRK Po1NT norEL $f,,‘Q",°¢f,§`,','|';,' 'fue New Y°'k 't 8° m` same fer' Now open for the season. Visitors can MAINE STEAMSHIP LINE go by road or ferry. Telephone con- BTEAMBHIPS NORTHLAND AND nectlon. ~°'"H me ii. W. wiiiris, and Sat at 6.30 p.m . also Mon.. at I0.30 a. m. for XROPRIETOR. CA“_"2f°‘é°f,,9,.|§,°'Ag°n'}f`g{f ,|°|m, N_ 5, l A._E .Flemln|. T.F.lP.A. Bt John, _ ‘PACI AUGUST AUGUST ion. n En 'JE " lo 1- Z Missaussis - - METAGAMA, -_ - W.B. Howard. D. P. A..O. P. "ANADlAN Farm Laborers EXC URSION S St. John to Winnipeg Going $12.00 Returning 18.00 Note--llcyond Winnipeg half cent per mil t points East oi’ McLeod. l 'alizary and Edmeintf ._ ` YUNSITLHNWC lllVl¢l_ From Montreal-Quebec Geo, Waller. Dominion Express Building , ' Ciiariottetown FIC 1 7th 24th SEP. 4 SEP. 11 R.,St.]ohn.N.B W -_-,-_-_-_-,-_-_-_-_-_-.f_~:::.'.-.~_-.-_~:.-_=--_-_-,-_-1-_-_-_-,-_-,-_-,-_-;wg ..*ONE CENT per word each in- sertion fer advertising in this column. Cash must accompany order. ..*8EFlViCES. -Souris and Bridge- town: Services next Sunday will be: Souris at 11 (Sacrament of the Lord's Supper at close) Bridgetown 7.15. Preacher Rev. Ernest E. Styles. Save your strength in hot weather by buying cooked meats. A nice fresh stock just received at Holmans. 2427mtf IDEAL CROP CONDITIONS IN CANADIAN WEST. OTTAWA. Aug. 9.-The following optimistic telegram regarding western crop conditions was received to-day by Hon. Martin Burrell, Minister ot Agriculture, from the Winnipeg im- migration ofllce: “The whole west is rejoicing in an abundance of heat and sunshine, and conditions are everywhere perfectly ideal. Temperature throughout the prairie provinces .for the last six days averaged eighty to ninety in the shade. No front is reported at nights anywhere in the west. Wheat, which 'ls a most abundant crop, is ripening quickly. Oats and other later~grown grains are also maturing satisfactor- ily. Harvest will bo general in the west from the 20th to the 25th of this month. A great feeling of optimism and confidence pervades all parts, par- ticularly in the drought-stricken dis- tricts of last year.” GERMANY Fiiiilili FHUM |]llMINli|iiN LONDON, August 51.- Despite Ger- many‘s thirty years of preparation for this terrific struggle and ber utter dis- regard for the laws of God and man, her violations of the neutrality of Bel- gluiii and Luxemburg in her invas- ion of Franco; her murders from the sky; ber bombardmcnts of undefend- cd coast towns. her employment of asphyxiating gases. and her policy of piracy against unarmed enemy and neutral vessels, culminating in the horror of the ages, the sinking without warning of the great Cunard line stcamship Lusitanin and the murder of hundreds of harmless men and helpless women and children who were passengers; despite her i'oul play and flcndish practices. Germany at the end of the tlrst year of the war, wlilch has cost the lives of 4,- 000,000 men and resulted in the maim- ing of double that number, finds her- self further from the Kulser's dream oi’ world-doniinatlons than ever, and the fruits of her ambition have turn- ed to ashes on her lips. Notwithstanding her t€lllD0I`i\\‘y successes-and they are only tempor- ary-in the eastern theatre of' war, millions of homes in Germany are in mourning; other millions will be iid- dcd before the great war, for which the Kaiser above all men is respons- ible, will be ended. Germany's commerce with the oth- er world, owing to the command of the sea by the Allied beets, is nil. and her business men, robbed first to fill the war chest of the War Lord, are facing ruin. The great thrust at Warsaw, de- signed to inspire hope of victory, is really meant to rob them of more money under the guise of subscrip- tions to another war loan, which will leave the Empire facing, if not really in, bankruptcy. COLONIES HAVE BANISHED. Gormany’s colonies are disappear- ing. First it was Kiad-Chau, taken by German from Chia. hy trick and theft, and now in the hands of the subtle Japanese. Then followed Ger- man Southwest Africa, conquered by_ the redoubtablc Boer tnrnefl British- er, Gen. Louis Botha, and added to the possessions oi’ the British Em- pire; and all signs indicate that every vestiage of territory which sho has annexed in lands beyond hcr hor- ders will be lost. ‘ The Gorman flags is no longer seen upon the sen. Her great ileot oi com- mercial vessels have been either cup- turcd. or idle at ho`me or are intorncd in neutral lands. Her great war fleet too, is iockc