*‘»i’) Anllil is Read Sworn by 42 People. Statement Furnished Advertisers . Uiililii L` .I1 noritlli_a'~.D.eliy 'sanded lm J wooklg-_illogglvonlriil-sally) mr. }_ ' r .Q - -=_,:.; . .55 _ _ _I c1iARL6TT1-frown, -fGANAi5A, FRIDAY, locrossn 8,1915 _ ' ' , ; 1 an $8.50 Per Year (deilverdd In e INW-I DED SERBIA 'lhe Long Threatened Balkan Crisis C hastome lo a iiead. Austro-Ger- lil-an Forcesliave Crossed Border. Alliilo-French Forces Being iiur- rled to Assisi Serbia., sail - - (Special to the Guardian.) however, have finally thrown in their LONDON, Oct. 7.-The long threat-I lot with Austria, Germany and Turkey, ened Austro-German offensive in the having, after consultation with the Balkans, with the added menace of Ministers of those countries, rejected Bulgaria, has begun in earnest. Al- the demands of Russia for the dis- in diplomatic relations between Sofia who it is alleged have been engaged most simultaneously with the rupture missal of the Austro-German officers, ` o und the Entente Powers all Austro- t German army, estimated at 400,000 g Y. from the nortlrwest and, according to e Berlin official reports, crossed the h Drina, Danube and _Sav Rivers at B many points and firmly established p sent of-'tho Greek Government, are d being hurried northward to assist D command the Bulgarian army. Bul- aris in fact denied the presence of men, with enormous weight of heavy such officers, and the Russian, British, nrtiller started the attack on Serbia ‘F rench and italian Ministers ilave ither left or are leaving Sofia. italy as taken action also in giving the ulgarian Minister at Rome his pass orts. It is possible that Bulgaria may itself on the Serbia side. o avoid arousing the Greek _people by Anglo-French troops, which were retraining from attacking Serbia and landed at Saloniki with the tacit con- simply keeping her troops on the bor- er. This would have the effect of reventing Serbia from bringing her Serbia and if possiole to keep the Bul- full strength to bear against the garlans from capturing the Salonlkl- Austro-German attack. Roumnnia. the Nish railway, the o ly source by other Balkan state, is still neutral which the Serblaus chili be fed with R munitions of war. li The hoped-for support from Greece ti oumanis. has been heard from, but; ke Greece, it is for the moment con- nuing friendly with all belligerents. hog uct boon fonhcomiu _ Kiu Con. Doubtless to influence her and the 8 E stantine, by dismissing Premier Veni- 0 zelos and having shown that while his il ther»Balkans, Russia is reported to ave commenced an energetic offen- oouutry gyulpumiooo with the ouuuo of sive in Bukowina and to have attack- the Allies, is not prepared to go S d Austrian positions north~east of ogoiugi tho (lout,-ol powers oi- lullll Czernowitz. At the other end of the me opligoiiouo of tho Qi-ooo.go|-plou eastern front the German offensive treaty alliance, which provides, that ll one all must o to the assistance of il gainst Divinsk is at last making some eadway. A German official communi- Y S tile other in case of attack. A new C3li°ll SWB iillit Fieid Mllfsillli V011 greek (gooiuoi oompouod of mon of Hindenburg has penetrated the Rus- Prn-eerm`iillr'Proally sympathies nur S ian lines over a front of about three been appointed. .The expectation now miles- 'i`i1l'°ll8il°llf tile Cell'-W file io iliog uulouo public opinion fo,-ceo Russians are still on the offensive. the hand of the Government and in- 'The Champagne country, over which sluts on action on the side or the the French made bis seine lille in Allies. Greece will remain neutral. it September. is still mainly the strict lu hui-dly conoolvuplo to the Entente contention ill the west. Reports are dipiop-luis mul Greece will go uve, to so contradictory, however, that it is the Central Powers, for they point out li that Bulgaria is known to covet some il ifllcult to ascertain. what is actually appening. Tile Germans admit that of her territory, and the treatment of the French iliwe made Siigili Dl`08l°Sil~ Greek Natiorlalists in Turkey makes il ut on the whole they claim to have il virtually impossible for her to l,e_ repulsed tho Allied gelleral offensive. como on ally of that count,-y_ AB in On the other hand. the French declare Greece, public opillion in Bulgaria is iii” ii W9-3 the Geimaii °iie“5iV9 not entirely unanimous in support of Wiilillil has bee” i`0Diiis@‘i~ King Ferdinand. Reports ind icatc As thc result of molltlis of minor that the Bulgarian mobilisation is not i°ii°"5 iii Giiiiilmii Gene”-i Si’ ia" being carried out without dlmcully Hamilton reports the British gained -l-he _Kms and Premier Radoslavoffv three hundred yards on a front oi' four miles nt Sulvabay. _ OUNDENBBD ans. ' ron me non MISS Hl]I|]SWIIIIIH'$ lilnw 1- 8 in 111 Ill je st a 8. IB 1`Il est future of Eulope than tile events of have had less weight_.in deciding the the past few tluys in the South East- rl ther-in-lnw of the German Emperor, seems to hold the balance of power of hour. In the second crisis, w-here Greece seemed on. the brink of enter- 1 tents Powers, he has virtually dis- premiership, and has asserted per- sonal control of the Government. that she break with the Central Poiv- ers and expel German officers who have taken charge of Bulgaria’s army ing to several correspondents, has sent an ultimatum to Serbia, allowing the cession of Macedonia to Bulgaria. Empires apparently includes the con- solidation of the field operations with their Turkish Allies by sweepng clear Constantinople. For the accomplish- ready secured the oo-operation of Bulgaria. They need the neutrality of p _ firm the statements of the German press that the German Emperor has guaranteed to Bulgaria both Greek and Roumanian neutrality. Thus _the crucial field of warfare has shifted HE BALKAN CRISIS IS NOW _ i._.___.____, rueial Field ol Uperalions has Shifted from French and Russian Fronts and is Centered in the Balkans. _ Popular Sentimenlill Greece is with Entente Allies 'andthe Kingoi Greece May Find it Saiesl to Bow lo- the Will of the People-I London Press is Mysti- iied by Turn oi Events. LONDON, Oct. 7.-Even the great- battles of tile war may prove to i Kingdoms. King Constantine of _Greece, bro- the Near East in his hand for the g the war' by the side of the En- issed the foremost Greek states- an, Eleutheros Venizelos, from the King Ferdinandof Bulgaria has re- cted Russia's ultimatum demanding aff, and, at the same time, accord- time limit of twenty-four hours, for The programme of the Germanic channel from Berlin and Vienna to ent of this programmethey have al- Greece and Roumania, and then ust crush Serbia. To-day's ilevelo ments tend to con Y ci While technically King Constantine King George to grant the reforms it Atlomoy general to the oppllooilop by lieav reinforcements will be needed. threat of armed revolution, forced . _V { O2-Stl per your by lvlill In morning, Judge Stewart guve ills de- I lllsiliiliollililll will FEATURENO RECOUNT I ` IN QUEEN’S lleclslon oi Jud e Stewart shows il that no Sufficient Cause was set fortil by Mr. Cousins to Warrant a I llecount of the Votes in the First District of Queens. In Queens County Court yesterday sion on the objection raised by the accepted the resignation of M. Veni- demanded. zolos_ his action amounted to dismis- ly Chamber of 257, of whom 13 abstain- Coalition Cabinet, without M. Venize- mier Zaimis at the head. o The possibility that Greece may try c to remain neutral, fearing to stake o either party to the great war, is re- o cognized in England, although it is, Entente Powers are that popular sen- T tfment is with them, and that the cession to the Balkan States of an at an election held on the 16th day of enormous amount of terrtory which Seitember 1915 for the Legislative As- the will of the people, as he has done they covet, while a victory for the sembly in the said Electoral District King may find it best to bow before before. T _News from Roumania is scant. Fev- ence of the Balkan countries without day of September last upon adding up Mr. A. B. Warburton, K. C., on behalf -The Daily Graphic, in an editorial PETROGRAD. OCL 5. Vill L0lll10ll_ of Mr. John S. Cousins for a recount sul of the Premier. The Greek Cham- Great surprise was occasioned 'here of lilo votes for couuuiliop in lilo lou-gt ber had approved the Premier’s mere- by the turn of events in Greece. The D formal protest against the Allies Russian Foreign Office learned this uiiouduuoo of iuloreslod Speoiuioid landing on Greek soil, and his decla- afternoon of the resignation of Pre- 'lille Judge hold limp iuoulli(,ioui_ ration is bound by treaty and vital in-_ mer Venizelos after all audience ‘with ground llud poop shown for d recoup; terests to go to Serbia’s uid, without the King, in which the King declared and sustained me opjootlop pulsed by waiting for s. declaration of war by that he could not pursue the policy the Ado,-uoy Gone,-ol dlsolioi-god lug Bulgaria, by a majority of forty in a of the Venizelos Cabinet to an end. pl-oviouo ordol-_ oud ol-do,-od o I-ol-uud No official comment has been forth- of me 5100 lodged by me uppllcdul ed from voting. _ coming on the new attitude which The majority may -have appeared that country now necessarily as- not a large one for committing the sumes, but it is known that the inter- country to war, and thus the King vention of the King was not looked may have felt justified in informing for by Petrograd, in the light of the ln re election of councillor for the .the Premier that he could not pursue strength which the Greek Premier the Cablnet”s policy to the end. A» had shown: M LONDON, Oct. 7.--The London los, will probably be formed, with el- morning newspapers declare frankly in ther ex-Premier Rhallis' or ox-Pre- that they are mystified by the turn _C f events in Greece, but they do not to onceal from themselves the gravity Court under the provisioils of section f the situation for the Entente Pow- 151 of "The Election Act 1913” upon the natlon's fate upon the success of ers involved in the evident triumph the affidavit of John S. Cousins which f German diplomacy. set forth that he and Alexander J. Mc. Nevin were nominated as the can- considcred slnall. The hopes of the pbintin out that the defeat of the didates for election as a councillor for Z eutonic Powers would mean the ac- t eutons "will destroy the independ- t erish military activity on the Bulgar- enlarging their territory," says: t ian boundary is reported, but there lern Prince, will abandon the safe path of neutrality: t “The contrast is so great that the date for councillor for said has been no general mobilization. failure of the Balkan States to ad- district from the statements There is nothing to indicate that the just their common frontiers by a. p Roumanian _King, who is a Hohenzol- friendly agreement and then throw boxes returned by the several deputy their weight upon the side of the En- returning officers found that accord- ente is an astounding tribute to the i ounty of Queens application was made LONDON, Oct. 6,--The dramatic downfall of the Greek Cabinet as- ` CLASSIFICATION . ---7 A - '___- ONE CENT per word each inser- tion for advertising in this column- Casll must accompany 0l'd°l'H- Mi“i` mum charges, twenty-live Cellill- _ wAN1°En~olN1'l.sM/in To sogiao at 240 Queen St. 3257-10-2M0illtL WANTED--A BRIGHT .BOV T0 run errands in Office. Apply Glllll‘~ sion, ' 3263-10-2Mlf. W0 NEWLY `cows. John E. 3365-10-8m3le1i q, small INIIHISIIIIG IXPIHIINEIS IS GEIIMIN PHISUIIIII chair, accompanied by Mrs Tidmarsh. D and the place was in-an uproar. Trains Then' our -train started and we were told we were Boing to be sent across the border. 0! ~ _ " Weliad pr ceded a long distance when the train was halted and were taken out. 1 Ai Gorman officer. orderqdueto get back tothe place we cemefroli!_.~` 's . I ,_ .°‘,"l‘_o ll‘roiher|'!_ 1' won't ‘lg dreadful plboe." |eld‘one.of i. i dies. ‘ ‘ “algo an you told ” ordered tile rooms from the French and Russian fronts founded diplomatic circles here._What to the Balkan Peninsula, where Ger-_ the outcome will be no one appears b man success would mean the realiza-| to be able to predict, but the enlpha- t is is placed on the fact that the Ve- impression that the Quadruple Alli- for expansion toward India. and As‘ia.vI nizelos party has a considerable ma- mice had no chance for victory." suid Jolln S. Cousins was personally The-people of the Entente Nations jority in the country. LONDON, Oct. 7.--Alexander Zai- tion of Emperor Williani's ambitions s frilly appreciate the momentousness| ofthe crisis. The British newspapcrsf impress upon thc public tllat if the o. Greece, enormous military efforts will d be needed to check the combined a Buigars. c may have completed the landing at G _Saloniki, but if Greek support against t . ______ ________________ I shock to the optimists, but opinion arry the country with him' against will combine the duties of foreign the gold Joliu 5_ Cousins had reason The French and British expedition the retiring Premier. The Pall Mall minister with those of Premier ami to believe und did believe that the azette suggests that the King's ac- it is expected his associates will in- sold Deputy Rolo,-ning Omcer and success of German diplomacy. That ander J. McNevin had a majority of success is doubtless partly due to votes una was thereupon det-lured bribery, but German gold would have elected as a councillor for the said District, tllat he verily bclicved that he German arms had not created an | een spent in vain if the progress oi' The list of new ministers probably llivcr I’oll in suitl District whore the present whcll the Deputy llctul-ning mls URS &CCel>i9li King Constantine`S officer for said Poll declared the num- Tliat the attitude of Greece should invitation to form it new cabinet, ac- hor of bniioio oust for oooh oululllluio gain have become doubtful, just at cording to it Reuter’s despatch from drier tho some had boon oouuiod by German Emperor has securedftheithe time when the Entente Powers Athens. He has assured leaders of l friendly neutrality of the Kiilg oflhad satisfied themselveslthat sho was the Opposition that they will be ai- t efinltely ranged on their side, proved lowed representation. t lim matic on incorrect stntcinunt oi' I Alexander J. McNevin at said poll in German and Austrian advance tow- is divided as to whether Kin Con- will be resented for the King’s ap- t 8 D ards a. junction with the Turks and stantine will prove strong enough to proval within a. few hours. M. Zsimls closed iu tho ballot pox and that he istrict of Queens. There was u. large r. Cousins. The full judgment was as follows: October 7th, 1015 First Electoral District of Queens Cousins vs. McNevin. On the 2nd day of October instant the City of Charlottetown in the me as Judge of Queens County he First Electoral District of Queens hat the returning officer upon the 29th he number of votes for each candi- ontained in the several ballot ng to said statements the said Alex- he Deputy Returning Oiilccr at Long he nu_mlier ot' ballot papers cast for he san] reponent aild for the said he returns to the returning officer en- ion may precipitate a crisis similar clude former Premiers Gounaris, Rhai- Bulgaria cannot be counted upon, to that of 1909, when the army, by a lis, Dragoumis and Theolokis. -,.--. :__.__V_._-.-_,__._.____...______.,___ ‘_ TEMPERATURE, were rushing by filled with troops. _ _, JIIDB. E'1'0_ Dow 6.’--Maritime: Eastvrird ‘ ' fair ra n Yesterday ‘was recorded were _allot get very Oil close ne es lt oi' everyone doing hi luty, 'i Them W” a g°°d attendance' Mi" The recruiting meeting ut North uufl lfrgiud u ou ull oup m,;i(Wl|o “Y f0l° COME. I made on tile same i*i0ili9W°l`iii W" held a i"Is°“er in Wiltshire last evening was one of the ld d ip li ¢_ y g _ I ST. JOHN, Oct. 6.--The Maritime G for ten weeks, and subjected °°“ 0 8° U 0" B l P b t l S l in ooo. i °l`lTll"lY Y i lu treatment at me largest and most enthusiastic yet held Captain 'lr E lvlolquit woo the non Prov nces res y er an ynoi i0 ll i°l 0 “W "3 in connection with the resellt cam- ' ' .sion here to-day decided to hold their hands of her Teuton captors. She was Imam The ha" was. wg" mled’ the Sélsrlzgllfgibillg (igsglfihzfgrgglglynafnlgs "ext meeting m_Trum, Nova Scam' 0ll9 °f il P“i'iY °f “Ve C“““di“" mdies audience sympathetic and the speak- of miiiiui-y nge, Upon them ho uuid date t0 be left 0116"- SeV0l`lli 9"`°“g who were travelling in Germany a year are earnest and convincing. depended me nm, of the British Emf resolutions condemning graft and cor. ago last July and had spent Bvllie time Malo, Leigh p,~,,,,ld,,d ,md lu l, few mm Every mm, physically nt to ben. ruptlon in political life and upholding in l-leidelburg. While there they were we" chosen remarks mated the object arms should at this crisis in the tho ideas of uopni-occ gchb0is_ were i°i“°ii by "V9 Americans and the 0! tl0 Il160tillB» 9Xl>iBllllllB fllily ’l\llli country’s history lay aside every other i’"'°”e'i~ in the '°p°" °" home mis' whole party took train for Frelbcrs. clearly uw unanclal advantage, Quo,-. ld ti d f h _ sions it was stated that tlin-ty men jo n t e colours it the l t ti n of visiting the fam- cons em on an -f tl e h m mission supply corps W hm k‘;‘,°“ lt’ No Omer maths ed by the Dominion Government tv Lieutenant Dawson in u forceful "°m ‘ ° e t ous ac ores . a _ Y lu lio volu tool- d l mel mm_ ' have sons to the front and an ex ra got off the train at Freiberg than the trgae s:Nlc9_ n e n < r C - :;:h;oa‘.i.dc1:;]I;a£§?‘al3g..tl1¢;hSley‘;1“e’;g appeal was necessary to fill the va. guide ordered them to get right on the Rem Canon simpson followed, In of the Empire in its time of need_ cancles. _ "alll Blliiiid hails gain” Aiaieficnn a particularly impressive and forceful Evo,-y ll °l9°°W° 9 l'P°“°~ addr li ict ri tial tl di- " Oh," said he, _"B0i1i8tilill¢ ¢°i'l'ii’i° astrosl: coeisgqugriges Iiliat Wvoullii cfoli- ‘ 2:: lllaplagqpd. Russia will G°"1l°l1Y low it cernuin triumph-. such it tri- ‘. , - H th id: ~. --f.?;‘t‘fl‘il2f'..‘l’t°5...‘f2.§“1?.§. 23... "1" W*°*l‘“*“‘» hand being $29,000." .-,_.-______----_--.___,-._,_,_,--._.___._..__..........-.--_--~---~ ------------~-ff I 1' l umph was not an impossibility. it Ml H ld _ depended upon the manhood of the c -Yfistelflfey a:‘Ir‘i{:l?t,?1'Illiilg sléittle otalii ' liritisli Empire whether the Empire “Or 1 8 l f tl is cit in St Petel's should stand or fall, whether Germany _ i° iii” 'ad es ° tile nmizmce of Canon should triumph or should meet the him the Said -i°i"l 3- i~0llSillS» Our I II IIIIIIIII WIIISHIIII 1 » it MIIIIIIMI PIIIIVIIIIIIS M- In the Embi" is needed coiidugisdoihhigléniogyox1E;I'?sO‘;lIldvI;8 'mm wh°’mvii;2g°rg The augmentation fund for weak “°W ""=l“¢ ‘€i‘}“‘ii."'§i`I.°<§.‘§f.`.‘I.~.""i'ii'iiiiite1'iiIih»a‘ilo§‘i.Ii '"3 ‘°°°'°°-'t appeal was made to individual church- “ii Wii° os to contribute to this fund. as it “nd the was only receiving 65 per cent. of the "ai: amount asked for. I The lVlsoLeod bequest was report- ed to be in good shape, the principal The Synod receives the ovegture _of tbelPresbytery of Piotou' an trans- mits it to the general ‘assembly with the following finding: lily amended an to accepted was etioptldi |u,,,,§,_,o,,g sion oi nie els¢toiii.i'aiririot.~'1"'fn°%;l.iI __v` __. l I l _ 5*’ ..__., , . t . 1 1." _c.i_i.~ 1 .' A nf l , » '_ i ~ r`r ; _ . , . ' i »~' , ._ . ~-.»- _ _ _ 01' thi! oiflllloil The reso- vtllcvr must appoint one ii _ N. - d cause on be- -half of the said John B. Cousins while also several other Deputy Returning officers for several other Polls or Poli- lig Divisions improperly counted bul- ot papers in favor of the said Alex- ander J. McNevin which should have been rejected and improperly rpjcizt- “li illliilit Dallcrs :it sfild eiccti~-il which sliuilld have be-'vi counted in i'n\-cr 0|' On this affidavit and on the applicant paying to the Clerk of the Court $100 ns secur- day an order appointing Wednesday he 6th day of October instant at the hour of eleven o'clock forenooil at thc office of the Clerk of said Court ill tili- Court I-louse in Charlottetown as the time and place to recount the votes given at the said election or to make the final addition thereof. . On the 6th day or October instant the Attorney Gelleral , counsel for the said Alexander J. McNevin and on his affidavit now on file applied for and obtained an order calling upon the said John S. Cousins his attorney or agent to attend and show cause before me at my chambers oil tllo said sixth day of October at eleven o'clock fore- noon. why the order made by mo on the said 2nd day f October for ri recount of the baiiots cast at said election should not be set aside oil the grounds 1. That the affidavit upon which the laid order was granted did not dis- close any _sufficient ground for thc Srantinz of a recount. 2..Tllst the facts alleged ln the said affidavit were not sufficient to give to the Judse jurisdiction for proceeding in the matter. 3. .That the said affidavit did not iiillllitlllfl ill ally case the state or condition ofthe ballot or hullctg on jected to. On the returnlof this order Mr. Wlrbllfton. K. C., and Mr. Palmer, K. C. appeared and showe the order was supported by the Attor- ney General on behalf of the said Alex. Budbr McNevin. . The election Act of 1918 makes due lull MIIDIG Droviliion for holding the election ofmembers to be elected by _tlllaliiledvotere in every electoral Dis- tric! ‘in tile, Province to serve in tile Lqilietive Aneembiyjlbr the pin-pope of holding an election the returning turiilnl officer {or,eacn pniiili _I cer beiorc entering upon his duties must take the oath oi’ office prescrib- ed by law. Each candidate is entitled [f> have at every poll too agents and the candidate himself is permitted to be present during thc election nt any poll. immediately after 'file close of the poll tile deputy rctrnlling officer in the prcsollcc of illc poll clerk anti the can- iilcluties or their agents or at least three electors shall open the ballot box and proceed to count the number of votes given for each candidate, giving t'ull opportunity for those present to examine each ballot. In counting the votes lie shall reject all ballot papers which have not been supplied by him or by wjiicli votes have been given for more candidates' than are to bo elected or upon which there is any writing or_mark, by which the voter could be identified. other than the numbering by the deputy reurning officer in certain cases provided for |in the Election Act and no ballot _paper shall be rejected by reason of any writing, mark or number placed thereon by any deputy returning ofil- cer. He shall also take a note of every o_bjction made by any candidate or his agent or any elector present to any ballot papers found lu the ballot box and shall decide every question arising out of thc objection. These pro visions afford ample facilities for the candidates or their agents to carefully scrutinize the ballots as they are be- ing counted and to note and object to the counting of any ballot which does not conform to the law’s requirements or to the rejection of any which is in conformity therewith. Section 151 of the Election Act 1913 provides "If within four days after that on which the returning officer has made addition of the votes for the purpose of declaring the candidate or canrliilutcs clectcd it' is made to ap- pear on the affidavit of n credible wif- ncss to the Judge of the County Court ol the (‘.onnty in which the Electoral District is situated that a deputy re- tnrnlili.-; officer at an election in such electoral district in counting the votes has (ii) improperly coulltcd or (b) im- iJl‘0il0rly rejected ally ballot papers at such election or (c)madc an incorrect statement of the number of ballot psp- ens cast for any candidate or fd) improperly added up the votes and if the applicant deposits within the said time with the Clerk of the Court $100, as security for costs the said judge shall appoint a. time’ etc. This section is practically a trans: cript of section 193 of the Dominion Elections Act which last was passed by Parliament in tho session of 1900 to take the place of Section 64 of the Doinilllon Elections Act os contained iii thc 1886 ltcvlsed Statutes of Can- uda plinpter 8. This section 64 reads us follows: "lf it Is made to appear on the affidavit oi’ any credible wit- ness to the Judge of county court: * * * tllat sncll witness be- licvcs than any deputy returning ofilccr at any election in such electoral district ill counting the votes (1) has improporlycollntcd or (2) improperly rejected lilly bullot paper at said elec- tion" cle. The Dolninlon Parliament for rea- sons which it deemed gootl and sufll- Clellt save itself the trouble of amend- ing this section striking out the W0l`tl "lllly"in two places before the words “credible witness” and “ eputy returning officer" and substituting in llot_h places the letter "A” and also by striking out the words "that such wit: ness believes." is il 8 wrong inference to draw from this change made in the statute that Parliament intended that from thenceforth facts should be plac- cd hcl`o_re the_Jugelrld not the mere (Continued on page tifree.) comme EVENTS, ANNoUNoEMEN'rs, MEETINGS ETO. nip 1 ` _ l _ ONE GEN1' per word each inser- tion for advertising in this column. Cash must accompany orders. lini- mum charges, twentymve cents. ,_ "Canvas ntretchere. 75a each Ag ricultural Hall. |8184-271| "A Special Meeting of Count Cro- paud C. 0 .F., will be held Saturday 9th at _8 p.m.,at Hampton.Ail member! are requested to/ attend .al bueinedl of importance are to come up by or- der. - I 8348-10-Sllipil. . .___.._. "Change in signed intends Business in the ittvor. rdlnarh \.,§»;l .mf .‘3.~ _,i ~,.i__ §..‘§:j_ . ,_ V ,_ i i »_-.-.»»-~.»~¢ ..... l 'i 5 a I 'l .i= "` . -i.‘.”~ l . l _iw ;; lt. `= jf; iris -l -.ni _fain §» if Hi .-i‘t Ili? ., I... _ s r. Z`r`l _l iff -t 1 A.Il"» is :- if ,WZ :»-r .;__,. ,¢.~r.-£v,c:2.- 5;., i it , it . -_ -I » i I 1 1.-,l~ ~ j tf-Q .2 . .li ‘I .i 1 .§?r‘ . lf)- .I - .ls .r, it wig: ,_ »".‘ ; .i . _il .1 lg.. I-4'.; fill; i iii: ,r-.\’~._ i ‘lvl-i .:_'fi ’ , .sf i fa ....~. :IIE ‘fa-I ' '-1 ,_. v. ,. :_ .-f i l l =