l tm-1‘..~@ W-453;? fr." as-»~ .~».e.,-5.: .fa 'i interesting _ _px t _,,_,,g_________ _____ i ` - i \ - 4 _ ‘| V ,_ .i i .‘ . .f `=°rnacnAiuioi‘i~s1ows.oUAiiniiii\. I ' ` l _ ' -¥§NPgf§»r1918 1.5,, _-3, ',_,_ __ _i , _ _ ` ' '_ '. __ _-‘:._ _ 4*- _'_""° _ I _ Y ~ ' L' i Y " Y -I ' _ 'Y ' . i statement is made by Bishop Warne of ,the if 5* e *P ii ii 'Nl *il* if *P* e 0 5* t I ' » ' _ n'msri_can Methodist cherch who has iivéd if U' I Q .£7 as 3 G S “N UUA. |11” Dolly ('f::|ndod 1007) |200 (delivered or by ld 'ln Cannell. and $250 f°l’ U-3-N w Qilloo at Charlottetown, Sramah Office at lum- ~ Albprton. Sourla and Montague WEDNESDAY. JUNE Stht 1918 _ ~- - A »\»~)» A: 7:: V ~- *_ 7 'A SUBMARINES THIS SIDE The news yesterday morning that Gel' l’Tl3fl 'S1lb1`I18I'IIl€S Were Operating 0l'l the American coast and had sunk several ves selswassomewhat startling. The fact that the succeeded in getting some unprotec y _ ted vessels only goes to show _that their mission was a failure. _They did not cross the Atlantic for small game; they came for transports and the fact_ that they failed 1_n this is the strongest evidence that their mission was a failure. To demonstrate to their superiors at home that they reached this side they sank what they____co_uld get and, having shown their hand, they will now be obliged to get back home as best they can. The fact that they came over has warned our shipping and especially our transports and they will be fully prepared to meet any menace the submarines may put up. _ No doubt the sinking of a few small vessels will be heralded throughout Germany as a great achievement and the vessels will be magnified into war ships and transports but thesemurders are of no more military value to Germany than the murder of a few women and _children _in Paris or London. Had they any hope of sinking a transport they would not have revealed their presence by sinking small coastwise craft. It is not probable that there shall be any further trouble from this visitation. ~ - --lm_- 'l`R.\I)E \\'ITll (iil‘lR)I.\NY'.’ ' Shall we trade with Germany after the war is over? Today the world is _declaim- ing against Germany, declaring against any such trade. Germany must be boycot- ted ,etc , etc Let us not make any mistake will have been unkown in the markets for _ - ~ ' Hls First and Only Fall several years, and her name as a trader It 15 ab°u@700»0001e5S- ' - will have been forgotten. Nevertheless _ The difference betWeen_ the Present To a Brooklyn Eagle reporter he when her Ware come into the market We size of the army and at the high water mark rented ti... iiicifient it was when its s _ , . _ ' ’ and others will rice her goods and ap- 'lf 191615 1>000'000- Smee August. 1916. ‘"5 °`"’“"‘"e °““` "‘° C“P"‘” “f . . 6 d h . q recruits have been put in at the rate 0f_Ch¢irIesfon S. C., which is crowned pragsf' ear Vabuft; th Weth n fer pmceh 500 000 a year or 900 000 in all This indi 'by " °°'"°er "°"'°` It was “"“i"g 3.11 el' V3. UGS 6 91' all OSS O 0111’ OWU v I ‘ ' when the time arrived' for Gardiner _ manufacturers or those of our allies, we shall buy from her. At feast this was the waiv of human nature before the War and, un ess the war materially changes human nature, it will be the way after the war. There is no sentiment in buying and selling; We buy in the cheapest and sell _, in the dearest market. Possibly, when feelings of enmity are acute as at present, we might hesitate to buy from or sell to one whom we as heartily despise as we do Germany-except in the 'event of securing an exceptionally good bargain-and it is just barely possible that some of us would find it difiicult to turn down an exception- ally good bargain with a German even to- ' day. ‘ _ Trade has' never been appreciably in- fluenced either by sentiment, by patriotism, by friendship or even by religion. True we patriotically,‘amicably and religiously ad- vocate trading with our own country and with our own friends and vehemently de- nounce the acceptance of “blood money” for moral and religious purposes but nei- ther patriotism nor friendship will long continue to pay the highest and accept the lowest price for the sake of either country or friendship if better bargains are to be secured across the way, nor will religion it- self Iong continue to refuse the bona fide gifts of the sinner unless there is a palpable string attached. _ _ ‘ We shall trade with Germany after the War provided she is in business and can of- fer us better inducements than our allies, not because it is right to do so but because it is business and business knows no law except business which in the last analysis means giving the least for the most and aiicelptingathe most for the least. t is s et too soon to figure on our trade with (germany after the war. In ‘the meantime it is little use wasting our ener- gies on threats to botycot Germany and put her out of business, or we shall not do it if she opens shop and offers us bargains. _ 'rim mono Faoin imiinus "1‘he_bombardm_ent of the Cathedral of aims consolidated Mohammedans in In British Indian army had been followed, it would have been ne- 1>latfo‘r`1i`i"W'hich stood' before a celebrated mosque. The city authorities, rather than commit such a sacrilege, were preparing to onstruct a subway under the prayer plat- form. The Viceroy took the position' that he street should be diverted slightly. Thus the expense of a subway was avoided, and the prayer-platform was undisturbed. Since the capture of Jerusalem addi- tional evidence has been offered to the Mo- hammedan world of the contrast between British and German methods. In the days of peace Wilhelm of Germany visited Pa- lestine. A portion of the wall of Jerusalem was pulled down so that he could have the satisfaction of riding into the city.-t In War- time, General Allenby left his horses out- side the walls and entered the city on foot. lf- as Bishop Warne testifies, the reverbe- rations of the guns trained upon Rheims reached the bazaars of Lucknow, how much 'nore, the story of the British advance on _. ~ “_,°,,,,.,..»1mii»ei i....¢v.»»i». ii. _ A _ h d l_ f l_low- gg no _ _ YYYYYYY __ _ I . _I . _ ._ _ _ I ._ _ _ c t Jerusalem? _ -->0<-~ I THE S'l`R]‘]NG'I`II OF TIIE ARMIES Reliable war correspondents and sta- \about this. ‘After the war German trade is lrifstielans estimate the total Stfengifh Ofilthe ginger owns.. wavinga iii.; it ig; not likely to cut much of a figure for seve- Uefmanoefmy at 5i_300>000tYT1eH. 1? Y 01m §;1_en_o;1_§e_id_;a_oe_1;__;i i;i_i_i:_i}ini:'___20___sr<_>_§_»;;/32; Tal y€3!‘S, pl'0b3.bIy f0I‘ 2. g€l`l€l`3.t10l1_ 01' 3’500’00 are on t e` Wes eng 1501; '800n street crossing. Gardiner says that .more. She will have to lay new foundations 1914 the Ggrman aemy ‘fum eret 4’800" he does not tails chances. no took for her industrial undertakings, will have 000 men an 9- Year ate? lt grew 0 i »' just one chance, and pmperiy, its he i to build or bu new shi s for her tradin 700- By August, 1916, the German fight- Considers, got s misty mi the oniy- - y p g" t tn 08000001 A ti tnii-hi will have to find new customers, for she ings Feng Was » = ~ n ugus as I '" S °“'e‘”' Vear the strength was about 6,000,000. Now :ates that the German losses since August, 1916, have been 2,400,000._ The German army’s total war losses have been over 3,- 000,000 men. The German Statistician, Karl Bleibtren in Das Neu Europa places the German killed and prisoners since the beginning of the war at 4,456,961. The German government stopped publishing the casualty lists last June, at which time the dead numbered 1,105,760, the prisoners and missing, 591,966; wounded, 2'825,581; total, 4,423,307. - Andre Tardieu French high commis- sioner to the United States, says that France had an army of 3,000,000 when the German offensive began in March last. The Allies now have about 4,000,000 men in France. I ' Noriis About the most successfulform of re- prisal for the German bombing of British hospitals at the front would be to keep German prisoners in buildings marked with a Red Cross back ogfélge lines. Some of the British divisions near Rheims fought tothe last man. Apparently, there was no voluntary retirement in their case. The Allied troops fought as if they wanted to hold the ground they held. Some idea of the strength of the senti- ment against Hearst in the United States may be gathered from the facLthat John W. Griggs, Attorney-General of the United States in the McKinley Administration, has volunteered to defend the mayorof a New Jersey town who is being prosecuted by Hearst for refusing to allow his papers to be circulated in his bailiwick. ` It is the same everywhere. The New York Times says the great majority of mo- tor car drivers are careful and observant of the rights of others in theuse of the streets. The few reckless ones place an undeserved stigma upon all, and it is quite right that l Cessary to Cut Offaqorn-er ofa lccf from the spectators, except in that this meant that the copper the should pay the, maximum rates `for`,,,,,,,,,,,, hm, ,,m,,,,_ ,,,,m,,, u,.,.,,,,,.. first attack upon the cat e ra was o _ x _,__ mi ‘*;:.f.‘;.i."s';;°“.zf ii‘.li‘;;”.';i§iai?. organization did egverything possible to _y““ “ “"1 °’°== S"f°“°'* ‘° 1"” warn Turkey against Joining Germany “' ‘° "°““°' °°“" ”“"°’ " °““"“°' cllnibed the highest building in Brook When their efforts failed they announced ,yn ,, ,ew dm ,go co,,ec,,,,,_, money that the war w political, not religious, for tits gint ati cms drive no and g»ave.thenvs port t§§recru1t1ng fgr the climbed In New York and ln several °*h_°\' EIQQLILL discourse of the Am- _ an campaign to raise $100,000,000 Bishop Warne mentions the respect that or war rem work and wlemd Mohammedans continually show towards many ,,,,,,mm,B of do,,m from me shrines _einiglplages of worstliillg, 311? E011 tiwugriciten muititmiss who watciiea rl Van 9, lsm 0 El’ him perform his remarkable stunts. high? wish thli? seddlgius efforts of the Bri Giifdlnsi WHS in ”I‘°r0\1w Iwi Septem- fish to avoid hurting the sensibilities of :_”“_ f”";:fd"‘° KI” E:_'_'_‘_‘_‘d 14° Mohammedans. A special and shining in- ,fe wzufdm mu;,f"’fa;‘;e'_fr;fe";,”‘:; stance of the British way was cited by Bi- cnmi, ,he C_ P_ R_ ,,,,,,d,,,g_ and shop Warne in an interview quoted by The sought permission to do so, but was Literary Digest. In Cawnpore one fof the '\‘ef“B°¢' lwveuse his climb W°\1\<1 streets was to be straightened. If the plans "““’ "‘°”"°" “"1 "em" ‘““"° I” ""‘" going forward. Gardiner, of course, climbs for money lie does not col- the case of the climbs for the Red Cross. He is employed to carry the advertisement of souie firm on his back as he mounts aloft, and the publicity thu; invariably attends his penfdrniances given him, as one iniglii, say. a considerable circula- tion. Never Takes a Chance Gardiner does every .lay what ninety-nine people out of one hun- dred' would consider impossible. For instance, who looking at the Flatiron building in New York would adml-t that it was possible for a man to start from the sidewalk and go up-the face of -the building to the roof? Gardiner uses no appliances whatever. He does his climbing with his three fingers of’ each hand, with his knees' and lils elbows. His feet do not figure in the .caste, ex- cept to balance him. He wears no- thing on his hands fo give him a grip. He wears rubber-soleil shoes, 'ind usually' a white flannel suit. He is called the Human Fly. and is popularly considered' a daredevil. This form of flattery he repudiates. lle insists that there is nothing re- markable about himself physically, n.l als believes th t`h is ' le fo g-0 over the op, and he knew would be slippery. Neveitheless. rather. than dls‘appoiht_ a crowd of 601000 he took the chance. He cal- culated tha-t il’ he did fall f;‘rom the dome he would land on a slate roof some 51 feet below. “I knew that in falling 51‘feet I wouldii’t hit hard enough fo be greatly hurt. That is because when I climb I am never aifrald-I do not permit myself to be-and my muscles, therefore, U i l . DAILY SELECTIOHS F08 I ' UUIIRDIIIII READERS I) _ Furnished by W. 8. Loulon . _ SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE By Lilian Levaridge _ Brltber soldier brother. the iSpring has como back again, But her voice from the windy hflltops is calling your- name in vain; For never shall we together 'mld the birds and blossoms roam Ovor the hills of home, brotherfover the hiiis of home. ` Liiddle! Lnddlol Laddle! “Somewhere In France" you sleep, Somewhere ‘negrfh allen flowers and allen winds that weep. Bnivoly you marched to baffle. nobly your life laid down, You unto death were faithful, laddfe; yours is the viotor's crown. Laddle: Laddle! Laddie! I-low dim .is the sunshine grown, - As mother and I tosotber speak sobtly in fender tone And the lips that quiver and falter have ever e single theme, As we llsf for your dear, lost whistle, laddie. over the hills of dream. Laddlc. beloved laddlel .I-low soon \ shoulld censio to weep Could' we glance through the soldcn gateway, whose keys the angels keep! ` Yet love. our love that is doafhlau, can follow you when you roam. 345%# mn\\\ \\wvms§\\“u\\wm1Hlmm\i . _ if lIll'I'@ .\ ft., 7,".“_`\\" ,/ , `~ 1 f ini/ \ \4 --1; __ _. /oélri - ' \ --"M _' *_ »». tl? fu* \‘ .f t' _.1 ,v~'~‘»- _ §‘ . 2 \ . f//i I pl ' li if li l§% \ mE‘q__*`- ‘ UEEIQS- ‘ IEE! , ms. ,_ \ ` \.\ ;.,3`,\ . ,_ .__ sc; /:N-g 5` “ sig A s \\\\l\\ iii Z1/ \""li`ii\/` i ' il l ‘i ' ` i ii ' . 1-"`-___ ,g 4 ru-““°’~ ww _ _ _ - » 1 ; r _ _ -f -- in India asamissionary or many years. e __ _ I .f J- . 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