\ _ _‘_‘4_,_‘_¢ro-ea-Q-Q-0-e "7 1b¢ News. _ /_LL i/ze Time. 0..-e-***“°"° » _ if 1 ` _ ~&_ _ _ l _ _ ___ __ _ _ - _,...-xp.: gg _ _ -, __ i-_ . - _-, -_ _qiis ` "f'~`/“"‘-‘¥’*"'5§.’_‘f» 12§'.'~i-sf" f.“:W wwm1qy -- - ' ~ ' *L-: ` ~;-~f- .»=.,,_ _ F-_-_»‘~,=f,._._._,_.,\j * 4. \ ..__< act- _ >*° *_ s _ 1 Y`**"" -“".'_'Y'1~* g ‘¥ T ’ . _,_ '-e »_ 1 _,~-~ `_ . _ "5 .,,_ ,Q1-_uv » :fee -1 ii-_ lv \ Q e *‘ 1- -, d, ' "' ». .?""[ ei _ ‘S-5'* _=»~_ -ceases-e¢,».... » ,_ D A. _ _ ”' ‘A I r ` »¢ ' _' e' _ _ . -A, -_g ,__ _ Y’ _ _ _, __._ ,, _ . _. _, , _ s _ ,JW €',- ., i " - ~f-_. -, seq; \`\fl5*; 0. ’ ’ ' ~.» - ~ " J1 f iv ‘ . .» ' I = __ /gg IO* _ _ _ __ _ THF GUARDIAN CHART OTPETOWN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND TUESDAY JUNE 19 900 if -f m- l, _ ._._-_,,,__ - - _ gmiusun mi. _ _ _ PORTS UNDER WATER ` U 0 ‘ ieneieennes. l UF' f '01 _ -naowto AWFUL STORY tion iNoii,_ l -. \ 1 I Q l act at a greater distance. Some liirain. are who writes, fmm Anahabad 9” April’ '___ What are called observation mines are draft' f_°’ $150= 1`°_°¢h¢d me by J8~St mail. tion. Controlled electro-contact mines are nd Gillafat- If is Sllid t0 be the worst ` ‘ ` fired when a hostile_ vessel by striking famme Qf the Cellffllry- Alfefidy f/h0l’0 816 -_- the mine. ' relief works, and the 'number israpidly in- to Pray for Qu¢en_ when SU-u¢1;_ war in South Africa it is impossible for her _-_ Seven Years. Less time antennae ef geeeetteefei`a}.~'neon1e suffelring from the maine. it is preying tiietiie wiiieend speedy reiieftef - l ~ . ' l _ - " ' condition that exists. In som All . _ _ _ oi Submarine Mining. Lsub-marine mining-a defensive measure _ _ _ éf _ about which the utmost secrecy is observ- C _ _ 0 _ b ioseveit to in for vice by _ _ V '_I`here are various kinds of submarine mines. Some are caused to explode when in contact with or close to a vessel, oth;-,rg under control, while others, once they are laid down, act automatically. fed by electricity from the observing sta- against them gives notice that it is over Uncontrolled mechanical electro- mechanical, or chemical mines explode Dormant mines are those sunk and at- rise and obstruct the fairway, - " -‘T 'nm OF GEORGE F own: in actual or very close contact. A woooie or Pins Flin this morning of rheuirietism of thai mines buoyant does not, in the larger mines lessen their destructive power In all buo ant mines it is highly ad P Teugr Sgntgnced tached to the bottom,but, ontheapproiigh »_-ITB-l1`Yil___1gt0 our relief. It is impossible at - fl < of a hostile fleet or vessel, can _ _lille D&sent time for us to relieve all the ._ _ mo. ii _ ,_ __., 9 _ jlowing arefthe closingratesrf-___ _ .ff _ ` '_ ' 1" fi. _ . _ possibility of an ~ - _ Wham 782; com_ 39%; » °ats__ 22h ;‘:.‘;.°::.‘1:.‘;‘.E:i;‘;;’.;;;r.“:.‘;‘:S::.‘:..‘f.::“:. l into own cniio l*“~5°' ‘ ' ren. _ _ _ _ ~ _ W@__ Clancy, secretary of the BlSh0l5 Thoburn Special Fund for India. 28, 1900. “Your letter of March 20, containing Ijthink the famine is worst in Rajputana H “ION tha-H 5.300.000 people on Government °reasing_.__ England is doing her best to re- U°V8%§0`.'lb=!!brers, but on accouut of the to do what she would. Other countries are o sufferers. There must be 20 millions of 1' many as 20 dead bodies are found on the roadside daily. Very often these are de- voured by wild beasts. Parénts have been _ known to kill and eat their children. “The _missionaries are doing what they can to organize relief. We are expecting to have a meeting of representatives from our conferences in India in a few days at Allahabad for the purpose of - considering the best means of reaching the famine suf- ferers. All the money you can send to us will go direct to help relieve the fam- line-striken. I wish you to thank those who helped you to send this amount too "In--several places there have been plague riots. Some of our native echoolr were compelled to move to other places. We have considerable plague in A"-this vi- cinity. Our trust-i§infGod', -and we are space will suffice to fatally damage the 8 p aces as _ R, Clgngy double skin of any modern-iron-clai'l‘, if ex- v f 2*' _ ' T\l¢!¢ll\lll1S 11'* bel” 905% WP E than are absolutely necessary the best U D0 _H ___ 9 y _ . _ hut' ° ~ _ ~ _ _ viaablehowever to use no larger charges __ _ * f “ ---- ieieed. _ A eee¢:i_i._:eg_e 0llSC “‘“”“""'“`" “D ""“*"“‘~ Znrlnegnllilieed trifft time is een meet den - A - - ious Caution e - Qi.;-C. Wilson, ex Teller of the Merchants' Bank is sentenced to three years for;-on belllement and four for stealing $18,510 from the Bank. -f‘ _ worm Nor Piuv ron rin: QUEEN. HON'rRsAL_ June 18.-(Special)-Rev. A. Herman, American pastor of Zion Con- °onal church has resigned. ~ _ says he never prayed for the Presi- _ in the States and will not pray for Queen, also that under no circumstance Inlii he pray for the success of arms. “failure to pray for the Queen and “Qccssof British arms caused the 3- . _,_ _.Jie ' " f -'-_ Armavmnrnmnxnr. sa 4- v V. __1_’rnL.i.ui:LrH1a, June 18.-(Speciall- he belief now is that Roosevelt will con- ant to run for Vice President with Mc- Kinley.j _---}-_-- Try one can of Oak Brand Condensed lilk and you will decide that it is better and c caper than a cow. Ask your grocer for it. - Zi) tf. Canadian tweeds, tweed effects, plain cloths, felts, well tailored, lined, separate Blttand skirt. Prioe¢,#&75, $511). $0-50 £50, $8.50, $10.00, $12.50, up to $252.50. _A1 ‘ and any made in fitting room. Just the thing for‘a travelling Colors, browns, drabs, heathers, iliecks, blacks. na greens, gre s,fa.wns, lioinespuns.-Jasilston 8: Co.,'l'lie Ready Hade Dress Makers. 4, tf d6cw 3- -_ _a '+=f__» I I ladies’ Canvas Shoes, ill __A They must be so paced that when one is will not cause adjacent mines _ tovsignal'-as if struck by a vessel, for that i would cause them also to be exploded., and thus the whole of the electl‘o~c0ntact _- mines in one group might be tired all at once, when only one of them ought to ex- plode. e ‘ ~ v Ground mines. with detached circuit closers, are possibly the most formidable of all forms of submarine defence. Their usual form is a cylindrical case, generally charged with some tive hundred poun s of ncotton or dynamite. lghere the water is too deep,la.rge buoy- ant mines are used. They are securely an- chored by dead-weight sinkers, and _so cannot shift their positions. Tlieyrequire to be very caiefully laid down, _ for, as_ an authority puts it, “it is a serious thing _ when mines walk about with their sink- 1 ers and take up new positions which they are not intended to occupy.' of all the problems of harbor defence to ‘ arrange a mine system that will absolute- ly stop an e.uemy's vessel at any time and in all weathers, and yet not interferewvith ~ the passage of friendly vessels. Mhies are ,really at their best in absolutely closing up comparatively narrow water- ways' to all traiiicr _ ' Submarine mines' are usually placed chequer-wise in rows and groups at vary- the mined area is controlled partly from one side and partly from the other. _ The firing room of a mine station is an electrical maze of mystery. Al_l the cables from the mines are brought in, and the ‘end of eachwire islabelled and separately connected with the firing key. The one essential defence is se_crecy,and that is why in this article certain inform- ation must be with-held. It is enough the a roaclies toall our to say that pp _ _ great ports and arsenals are effectively mined. _ Our engineers ostentatiously conduct bogus mining practices for the special benefit ofthe spies who swarm in the I nei hborhood of the ports and dockyards Ig case of war, the real mine§_ would besecretly laid in_very different fields, and so complete is the system,,and so perfectly trained the men, that the bold- est commander afloat would never dare to risk his vessel amid a network of Such terribly destructive__ _entanglements as. a well-laid field of live mines, controll- ' ' rl rotected stations on ed from ,nope y p shore. Happily, most of our great port-s_a_re so plat-_e_ ~ ‘inthe Wheféf, 1 -1 - ` It is, in fact, one of the most diMc`iilt.`» d d he by I I Tennis Racquets, the winter _on active militia service in resgznse riilier .\»ia;es_iy‘s cali, begs tsannounce tin absence his law oline el Sonris viii be kept Open and all legal business will Ye promptly at- . tended to und r t tm.ui‘ qgmgdx. Cor- '*.*P°ndence oii b‘iiTig:s§.may be addressed ce _Nm at Souris as usual. »lll$l°l‘l9~ mii'1'0rs__skili_fli1ly deceived every vi8it_oiri~-auto the fthe `__,_ipartment’s dimensions. A more whimsical buildi has been erected on the Midway of the Paris Exposition, and has been described for the New Orleans ‘Times-Democrat” by a recent visitor. It is_ I veritable topsy-turvy house, and nobody but a Frenchman would ever have thought of such a thing. It is a big, old-fashioned threestory manor house, apparently rest ing on its gables, with the foundation eithty feet in the air. One goes in thwvsh 11 d0rm<=1‘ Wind°Wi11 the mio secret. The iiiusien pi-edueed by means and finds everything upside down. Underfoot are what appears to ;b_e,_t;h__e_` toadstools, and overhead, are chairs an = tables and all the ordinary furniture of a house, miraculously ciingingito t_he"re~1 versed floors. There are even books an carpets, and sticking to themf as it magic, ,and on some of fthe 1 tables lamps 4 ot°f&f°"as»1en.é.,%_. __ ce contributes, ~:l...E".‘.¢U'°.¥»‘*“‘_*` ~ to_one ofthe niost bewildering illusions imaginable, but the rea_l_ly amazingfeat-ure ‘ 7 _§,§[9noNro, June 1_8,-(Special.)-Geo. M. ger of their o ' ‘ e - - ‘ _ _ _ _ . r __ __;< ’ _ _ _ ~ ~ _ _ _ ` "' ' 7 s _ _ ._ ii n ' Ci A M". £1 ‘V ir.: 1 ' i -.' ."" ,. ; ;,_> 1-1;!" v V V ‘ I3; - 'e _ 0 , I A -J ,A of the house is thelyiiivr through the win- i dows. They considerable - ex- _ panse of- the exposition grounds, and, in- credible ,as°"it may seem; everything is up-_ side down. One see all the familiar build- N ings standing on their heads, `-throngs of o reversed people walking to and fro, and the sky yawning where the earth ought to be, The effect is indescribably start- ling. I puzzled over those windows for a long time. but I finally discovered their _of two mirrors, botlrset atenmesl in the about-topsy-turvy and cast back into the roomwith all the realism of an open-air view. Visitors are not allowed to go very close to the windov_vsf_for`fear,‘ as the at- 3U1&11 a1'f=i¢1¢S S‘¥*tt°1`e¢1 5.5¢" 0” .»f» _ -l-tendante say," that they will fall down in- to the sky.” The whole effect is most be- wildering. - ing depths. When a channel isbroad, ,___ _ 1 _+ ~-U _ _ __ _ _ ___ __ _ ___ _' __ PR-0M PARlS_ ' _ EXPOSITION Prof. Robertson Docs _Not Agree _Witli Rfooscvclij When lic Says Exposition is a Fake. - Prof. Bobertson, who hasjust returned l from Paris, does not agree with the Roose- velt characterization of the Exposition as °‘the greatest fake of thecentury." “Of’oourse,” Mr. Robertson says, “inter- national exhibitions have lost much of their novelty, and the Paris Exposition does not differ toany extent from the Chicago Fair. There is no doubt, too, that the educational effect of an inter- national exposition is less than it used to bc, as, owing to the more rapid means of transportation, and the improved cable and telegraph service, the 'merchants of onall the latest com'mercial__ developmeiitsauid ` to intermingle 1 tten.,.ihey’_ fegfmeriyio aid. Nevertheless. the "Parisi Exposition offers splendid opportunities for advertising' fthe re-' sources of a country, and of this _Canada is taking full advantage. Ai great, enquiries are made daily as to Canadian gium and other countries.” son thinks that Mr. Tarte is serving Can- ada well in showing a. courteous regard for thelfrench people and French senti- iiient, ilaiiart. 'altogether -from the mere questionof sentiment. It is a good policy . < for`Cana.da to be on good terms with the french, because they will exert an im- portant influence in determining_ the number of awards to be given. More- over, in endeavoring to soften and dissi-' pate _ the acrimonious feeling which seems to have _existed between France and England for ' some time Ipast, Mr. Tarte is really doing a service to imperial interests. _ _ i It is learned that, while in England - Professor Robertson, who ‘has beenen- trusted with the carrying outof Sir WH. -liam MacDoxia.ld's scheme for establish- v""i9“5 °°‘.mtrie~s`.°r°*°ble mkeebl them' il ing schools' for instruction in manual gtraining in C_.9.nada,_secure_d the services .91 -f1v¢_¢0mpetent, instructors to eeme out ‘tothis `country.- Professor Robertson says -that the developement of mlinual training in Britain is the marvel ofthe century in _educational matters. Overhiur thousand train- ing have been .estalilishz-.ii,_aiid this train- canned goods and other food by, iSgivemn°h___°nl_ _ _“_ we _I ba merchants from Britain, bu”_hr¢a§hgu‘"hem;1r§Es;€ctZ ’ The' Chronice and as a pro- _ ,,,,,,,,,_,,,_,,?,_ me if __ _ e:..=_ Y/ -v -.g-- ”‘“"......ee.""i‘i..}"il£"e‘i' on wine 1 _ l Closing prices Jun ` e . ,_ 114; ~` _ _ 1,( 1 -_ _ 31 . ‘ » i ~ _ i Feoefei steei rria us- 0 _ _, _ _ _ ' 'Tennessee Coalaudiron -_ “_ ' . ' _ fic-" ~ DWZDI *Bti Railway ts ~» 'fl'--; eeiinlgs, sp'eeting~enenoeiiere is¢e‘g;eet__“~dm,%e&hsf.the wts,de_.,,¢e»_n-6..-.is ,uma American Sugar ’ American Steel and Wire _ American Tobacco , ' 39 " !'°0k1y!1 Transit U Burlington continental Tob. Federal Steel sihga Louisville and Nashville _ 74% New York Central " ~ ' 1272" ‘3ii.'Paul ~ .ul Union Pac Pr’fd ---_-im-_-___ _ NEW YoRK-Slots usr.. 5 _ _ _ ~ ”~"*'3"‘\xr` ‘~ 'F' ,- ' .s....- ._ _ _ REINFORCEMENTS §Nl i From India,-Boxer Trouble Spreading - Foreigners May bc' Killed. CHINESE roars carronr-1D. .__ ` Lorman, June 18.-(SpeciaLl¢-Sh;e_nghai the mouth of Peihoitiver -have oc- cupied by the allied troops. ~ _ _ i` _ They fired on the foreign worships who replied, siieeeeing their guns and leaning the Forts Sunday. ~ =~ » i_ ‘ i T rownns ssnmivo namroacimnsrg. \ _ _ ._,, forcements will arrive about » ;f., daye _ :__-=;_ England is sending troop; from_?c ngal* and America from __Philipp_i.nea. THE Boxnn movnmnnr srnnanma§f There is no word from the ~Brlti_Q Min- ister at Pekin since the 12th' and _-__§othin¢ is known of the 'situation/but mevement is believed to be si>1v~§118~°P<1 all the foreigners in Pekin ma? 037° 9”' iStN%§u?srbfqtThSe° occupation of Tak1i_§_.#'!orts ie _ confirmed. _ _ _ me Dainty _f _-_ “..,~.r“....."a?:.#s Yoeweet,-die-_maximum ef your clothes. have kepm ‘fer seie. I0'1é¥vtt _ROBERTS ‘N __o¢il!'redeu-ietemarrleed_by hekiamemelebere et;Qe. .1 ,~».;~ W , e __,_:_._ \ _ -" -‘L »»-._ Y IH. _ 0- 1 - _.___..Q. - f 1 _ 4 _ , i; 1 _ - i C 32 U ` -is _ "» L'.=‘- >' » . _ . - -~' vs.” _ namite contained irra case without any ali- 31111050 imi30SSibl8 to exaggeratothe awful our etriken country - _ f v __ _ - _ ‘ -QF-G. _ -r \ ,. . tingent and were in* - ` no fresh news from Africa Lora nebe‘rte` ie ' Dolagoa Bay Railroad-at point. nULLi:n‘s Ten thousand Infantry of Artillery and a seige Bu.ller’s army will China. *‘-ve- 0 _-s winxinsomc Spencer way helmrbied _md emi nporteof battle. Dourxcax. ciiisiar 'rn The miiiieoei-ni* ei-isle ez .rne iniesien, rrenen emi Bring rein - will enable him toenter Yet Wssnmoron, June 18. Fair, fresh to brisk north e 0 Nerye force is the very ent gets beiievea Zee-be eo weed. that eiemetlle mmsid __ oiioe Town Gw- H8781' Pillie A BUNDLE OF the -human Just as e letterprorideyonlb our “Y i