’ ~ f' I’ fi -?’.i-,s’i;f i; _ ~ ., * ” ".,_ ~_. 1 | .‘” . . I , I ,_ I I - iiiiitias ini The liuariiians Bic i iiuaii ii i e ii E I ' -'-,i<~;’," -- '_' . _<._. -,»i .' PAoEs.1iiL..iieiII ' I _ f e~‘ _ . 70@0.=Q_u¢rant¢ed , oRNiNo Ditilv- I2 lie _ fini ay lining 28iii Will tinseMnniil Ziiili _ DQ}lyfor19O'(. . ' ‘ _ - i Catches AilEarly ilile csmomiiow uiiililil is no NF 5_5 -_ A ES £> lnvroiinnppmi } ' ' - E "' ' '~' ” "-”"" , in-it.i».iti...i... cnAir.LorTEToWN, PRINCE EDWARD IS_LtND, QANADA, SATURDAY, Aucusr 24, 1907. i snr:lii;l'.‘i‘.¥§ii,eN,':,§:;*.l';f;;¢_;g ' - -- -- --1 Bl-In li S P RT iiilifilllllil TROUBLE AHEAD r OF M0 I TRE L Threatened by Serious Fire, Which° ' was liept from ance Companies Refuse to Re- ' I new Heavy Risk. Molvrui-Jai., August 2Il.-(Speelal)- Montreal's congested business district was threatened with fire this iiioi-iiiiig. Flames broke out in Caverhill, Leainont &Co's hsrdwirecstabllshinent not lar from the Ilouril ri! Trade, with plenty oi lnllanituable material at hand and ex~ ploslves within the ni-as scope. Streading-lnsun F:r uriately the brigade was able to keep the flames from spreading and Uaverliili, I/inmout 6: Co., 'csolpad with a loss of $.£5,U0t) or so, covered hy insur- BYIOP. Thtvfirelwnsin a district where the insurance companies hav.: recently been reiuslnir to renew heiivy risks. iiAcpAi.AUiil~:ATE Annnrssisroiusn ay James David iiiiwieii, M A. Princi- pal lligh School, Formerly of Dundas, King’s . Co. ln this Province. “Tile Vision Splendid"--tlirit is the tlieuie of my message for you. if we would be in 'liarmouy with the good old custom of having a scriptural starting-point for our Sabbath meditations, we nluy find one, not inappropriate to our theme, in the Hook of Joel, the 2nd chapter and the 28th chapter and the 18th vcrse,‘ “Where there is no vision, the people perish." Your ‘young men sliall see visions----Where there is no vision, the people perish." ` , The dreamer has often been the advance agent of a diviiier day. The seer has’ ever been humanity's guide up the steeps of progress. The race has broken cauip at its cases of ease, left behind the plains of its lowland life, and climbed, with halting step yet ,surely from ridge to ridge toward righteousness, only at the _ unfolding of vision. The worid's saviors have been first of all the world's seers. Joseph hated for his visions, dreams his` way from n vsrigated frock to a robe Of of royalty, froln the cot of n lierdsmaii to the palace of the 1’ll<1ra01\S- 51“l °f Taisus, not disobedient unto the heavenly vision," rises from a ruthless Pe"5°°“i°" to a prince of preachers. JOIN me “Sed prisoner of Patmos, his eye all HllH\I1¢ with the farther light, catches far-r¢11Ch=d visions of humanity iiuparadised. _ And Jesus, the lowly Gelilean. Wllflf ""="°“5 splendid fill his soul! Coiniiiissioiied with no less stupendous task tliiiii to win me go,-ld-fsf god, at the eiui of three toilful years he finds himself rejected by mg "gg, nbimdoned by his brethren, de- serted by his declplcs; mocked ! iiiobl-will crucltledl Yet. With B" °Y° Um" secs the end from the begiilniilgi 5°” the certain triumph heyond this opp.-ireiit dc- fesi, and witii “nailing °°11fi‘1°§‘°°_"‘ “'~“ vision, lie sereniyalliriiis unto his lintiier. "I have finished the work which Th0\\ =” Condciiscditdvcriiscincnis ---1,-U-1-1*"*_'”'”"'”'_'__$' Tee latin f»i|~g¢‘l»mltloM.io9.) ____ |e~ sits eiioa s_F9;£Lt?.5§.=B' O T-In the oily last evenlnlf U D‘“°'f' L is-i»».».i~ tr-1-..i.'l:~~ . I ` I N’ W* ".2.:f.r°ir.iii1°“'fi'iiii..ii i. i r-.o.@1.n9- ~ ,_],,,,, i r ' %‘§,'f,.”3"¢,‘: §ii“ii»°l'fiirn“ uit ww ut ' ;--Anlilr iii 0""‘“°" °‘"“°'»...... D AT,0Niiit -Several .Nhiiii:.':i'titii.ii-iiisr°°si»'=>f . ` I +.'i,i‘.':i2.=,.~.';;,t::l..-_,i':::'.:.$Lsiii-~i' Pi -UU MICE _.St.. ohn, L LM ,_ ,, s in ii lu “nat nviuyboril l`\“"‘ ’ in sinus- "°"' '|1°"'.il »iiii°-'i h a no . and *dal H, ,f ti.. .vm 1 1- rv °r`ilii"' um ni-timl. wi\"°.‘” " m-*‘~‘-'M E' ,psf M!|E';'?E%%'°;ntleman ' A” D"“ " i iiimdleoiir r NN"~‘?‘°"'*i'§'ili.°.Ii`i’irI.‘"#iir.ii‘¢g'.i*»'ff‘-fi* 8'” ,M gmpiiig iii the nlghtnvileu h`| fingt- grs touched the lelegraph? Think you that Edison went out. I ilvluer without s light on the high seas of liquiddeath, and came crime again with the rich wares of electricity? I rather think these men. like Joseph, john, and Jcbul. were aouls . enfowed with sense for things unseen. Greece had her Eleuala. and there a gsmlpe of mystery, to which only the Plymouth, Mass., gavest me to do." Oh Surpasslug See of all the ages I , These, and others unnttlnbered, were valiant sous of vision, A vision that faded not “into the light of common day," as does that described in the familiar one of Wordsworth; but a vision that shone undininicd for llieni until there was .p “no more night." Of this divine endowment ot' our coin- mon humanity, this celestial flame that shines within the soul, this larger light' beneath whose beams eartli's ciiiefeet heroes wrought, of tliis,-"The make it an hour in which yon, my fellow students, who are so soon to pass one of life‘s por- tals, may have visions high and holy! Let ine, at the very outset, caution you against any nlieconceptions concerning the nature of our theme. Vision, the vision of which we are to think, is not, be assured, some mystic faculty, some occult art of day-dreaniing, dome peculiar possession of select souls. Generously as the flower sends forth its fragrance, or the sun sends out its light, so generously and impartially does vision clant its rays to every scul. It is as natural to the normal soul as seeing to the normal eye. Indeed we might classify it physiologically as one of our senses, thc sense of the un- seen. And its supreme importance will be recognized when we reflect that we have at least five senses for the world of liiiigs sesii, and only this one sense for the world of tliiiigi unseen. ().il_v this one ineaiis by which tiic overarching region of the idetl c.ii\ tniiisiiilt its plziiis, or our workiiig out ill this realiii of tlie gil, DJ you woiiiler, then, that I have called you to the contemplation of this isuniit sense? Without it, worthy acli~ eve ii:'lt ui your part, worthy achieve- ment on the part of the world, would be suipaisiblc. Without "Tile Vision Splendid," tlierc can be positively no progress, whether material, or moral. it is au iiiilispensible prerequisite to all advancement in science, to all enrichment in literature, to ull growth in_rellgion. it is a prerequisite, l have said, to ad- vancement iii science. ’l`ciiuys~»:i testi- fied to iliis, when he snug: "Science reaches forth her ar i; To feel fruiii world. to world, and charms , - ller secret from the latest moon." And science sees, let ul helilvit before she reaches forth "to feel from world to world." The man of pclenco-lr not well likened unto one groping in the dark. Think you that Wattwaa wanderlugin the gleaming. when ha dnlnhled upon a . illeanbenglne? Think ` you that Moral nitlate were ad pitted. The muse of in. N.. Sl. JIIHN ENSES IENNINII ENWYEH S'r. Jonlv. August 23.-(Special)-News I reached this city this moiuing of the sudden death of Lewis J Almoii ol' Rothesay who was formerly one of the the leading lawyers of this city, MrAlmon passed through a sever" illness last. winter and has been In frail health since that time. NNE IIPPNSEIJ lil "lNINlllI MIINEY" Bos'l‘oN, Mass,, Aug :£2 -The “t tinted" money question has been brought to the front. again, through another gift by Mr. Rockefeller fnr foreign mlssions.'i‘Iils time it is a gift often thousand dollars to the mlss'onary society of the Disciples of Christ. It ls stirring up an agltatioii in that denomination, similar to that which engaged the Uongrsgiitlonallsts some time ,ago when a large contribution was made by Mr. Rocke'eller to the American Board of Foreign Missions. The ofllcers of the Disciples’ Missionary Society say thai. as the gift was made without any condit‘ons they had no rlizht to reject lt, they have no means of deciding whether any donoi"s money has been honestly or disbonestly gained. On the other Baud there are many prominent leaders who strenuously oppose the retention of this gift, claiming that if the_moneyls not returned, they will withhold their future support from the society. The Disciples are making very good progress as a denomination in this country, particularly ln the liiidriie and western states. Their percent-sire of growth during recent years has been in advance of most of the other Protestant denominations ln the United States. mystery, to which by vision splepdid slie leads her loyal sons, and there beneath her guidance they fashion that gorgeous fabric which mantles earth witntlle inar- vels of science. I A prerequisite to advancement in s:ience, "The Vision Splendid" is lilre- wise essential to enrichment in literature. "The sign and the credentials of the poet," says Eiiiersoii, "are that he aun- ouuces that which no iiiiu foretold." Yet how shall lie announce the unfore- told, unless lie be a prophet of this larger light? A plaint is all abroad today, that we have no great poets; a plaint voiced, also, by Macaulay when he bewailed the EIINL IIN EIISTEN ToItoN'i'o, August 23-(Special)-It has shall not ba allowed to speak in company tour. Mucll dlssappolntment is cxprissorl ln high Conservative circles at tho announce- ment from Nova Scotia that they will speak together at Mid lletoii. WIIMNN KILIEII I N NEEUNIVIEH Wi.iii'i'o.v, Ont. August 2;!-This town was thisreiia ofa very sad occurrence located ln a suburb known as Voiianvllle, one or Iwo houses of ill fame, tdwliich the resl ‘ents objected most strenuously iin i the places were closed. Last week, Mrs. Thonins. known as “Aggle,` returned and located in u tent. She was accompanied oy a friend. Residents of the section took object hu to that, and on Tuesday P. Gilbert an old and respected clt'zeii, organized boys to make a mill on the out- llt thatnlght. The work was accomplish- ed, tha tent was pulled clown, tlie women rotten rgged, but Mr. Gilbert paid frr his lndiscrctlon with his life. He struck Mrs. 'l‘lloniiis, and while lying on the ground she pulled a revolver and nlaoul three b ullets ln his body, eiiuslnglnstant death. The woman is under arrest, and an ln~ quest. is being held. l- iiiiliiii slnii g iiniii iiis. llliw 1’i'r'r.~iiliiiti;, Aug 22--That erecoucllia~ tion between ‘.\lrs.l1arry K. Thaw and her mother, Mrs. Charles J. Holman of Pittsburg. has been effected, In spite of the denials of the younger woman, was made plain here by those close to the Holmens, and that the lust olive branch was borne by Howard Nesblt, brother of the young wife, is also asserted. That Mrs. Harry K. Thaw has eitlicr left New York with her brother Ilowarrl, or that she is going in n few days to Nova Scotia, is asserted here. in Nova Scotia she will beiolned by oth'-rs aside from her brother, when the coiu’iig trial of Thaw may be dl-cnssed. L HICAGO MARliE`I S. Cniosoo, August 23.-(Sp ciall- JulyCorn . . . . . . . . .. ' -'itil “ Wheat..... 805; “ }.’ork..... .. ....... .. $l.’i.ll5 Deo Corn. . 50? Sipt Wheat..... . . . ii-l_.i Pork ...... .. been dec'ded that Ilua. George E. Foster with Leader H. L. Boi-den in his Onlarlol liistniglit. All summer there has been" QUE-IIEC, August 2:-Deputy Aitorne 1 (ienersl Lanctot, who returned from England liy the Empress of Biltain and who jointly with Ilaoiar Greenwood, M. P., for New York and formerly ol Toronto, watched the proceedings in the British parliament relative to the att for the nrovlnco of Quebec, points out that the lilll ln question has a retroactive efl`:ci. lo July l of the present yeitr. This will ensure thc payment uf the Increased subsidies from that il-ite up to whatever du‘e may be llxeil for tli coming into force of the nel. by the klnu'.~\ sanction and slpiiature. In the ineari- time interest due the province is aci:uiii~ ulatlng. BIB UNINNENN Elllilll IN IIHINII I .._._. Bi-:nl.ii\', Aug. 22-A special ilcspatt-H froip Shanghai published yesterday says that the situation in China, especially in the Yantze Valley, continues unsatis- factory. It ls impossible, the message adds, tn say whether a general outbreak is lmpendlnmbut the re\'olutlon.ary move- ment, gains strength daily, and the secret organisations are growing visibly. The Chinese officials say that thnwiands of revolutlonlsts are concealed iii the foreign quarters of the cities, thus plac~ lug themselves outside the jurisdiction of the Chinese Courts. Murdt rous plots against the Manchoos continue to be discovered in Pekin. BYE EIEIIIIIINS , IN SEPTEMBER Oi-rA\v.\, Augu~t 23-lt is proliiilile that the bye-elebllons to till v icuii ol.s in the Home of Commons, vill be held about the middle of Sept-nv ber, probably on the eiizhtcinth ir the nineteenth. Nominations will be ii week earlier. There are are four vac uncles. They are St John City uiiri Ciiun- ty uh re the vacancy was caused li the neitth of Dr A A Sioektnn, Ncrthii ni bei-l\n.‘l,o»iused|iy the death of Edwin (lnchrnne,\\'i=ll'nglnn, ciurvtl liy th' death of Thomas Marlin, and Lon lon. va.. cated by the resignation of lion Chitrlesi Si-iiNi<:\', New South Wales, August 2Ii.~ ISpaj'ial)- The Au.sti'»i|laii Fciicratloii i-i Llirruiciierl wltli secession iiy ii i|uai'i'.-l between tlie li`e|lei‘al (lo\'ei'iiiiic-nt and New South Wales. New South \\'»ilc.~i is importing larg,, qiianlltles ofwire for distiiliuteing iiiiioniz settlers. _ The l"edt-ral Government held thc .\tiili` penililig piiy_nlciit of 25 pcrcentilnty which was refused on thc crnunil that stat' rropci»ty_lvxfiiipi from rliity. FOR A STRALI °F d l d S th Wi G t suisiiiis niii 3.§ii.i‘ii...‘L`i_.. ‘Iiii...°i»‘il'I.".‘Z$“ of New South Wales Who Will ___ » Resist. l"I\l'\l1.Y New South \Viilcs s. iit il stron!! bully of police iinii forcibly salzeii the wire. The l’iiiuc Minister ol Ausiralln threat- ens to arrest the Preinier of New South \V»\li‘s, who di irlilrcs he will resist, and as lic l.~i in riiiiiuil of the police force, while the Fi il -ral tiwcrnlncnt has no police he is iii ii |io»ition to dt-fy tlic federal author- I y. l'ul» ic feeling on opposite sides is inf (SUSE. STARS OF lli»:Anvii.i.i:, l\l.is.»., Aug, 22__l1ig|iii.ill with the master reliisuiaii lil. (Feels l the sulky, eve ned the scores with Folio- iiia (iirlyestcrdiiy at the Grand Cin-ii l. meeting hy liiliiiig the Iioii.ii's iiuiti- hilililill' ill the classic l\lltv4~4»icllu.~* fill DID |. "pg-¢. n my", II llll"Y "'"‘p° féiutivu. lanes Bu m$l=liid°_§{3,f"b°“,f, i '°l\\°¥~f"""9‘°i " ‘ - ii-ziiiii. erition hu her Blsusinlau temple of ,\` , i \ ” * a . _ , - / _ \ ‘ ` I L ef” 9' . “`°°“‘ ' ' »,\ - , _ 5 f, ~ sim. 51 'I 'I _ *`~s_ E ,v "_" / _ .1 . \\ _ t ajft /- .. ____ _ i ~’ u Af? ‘ f 4° ,.3 " .. __ -. . J, , I I {`,~,,4_ /fr; I I \ In Lv on N ' -' ,I desire il tunnel to coiiiicct wlili the iiiiiin I /' __ liiuil, niiil with this end in view each Q ' I ‘fun-9,4 pirson ls requested to cut out the below \`__`//\`___»,§/_/_,_ ( Curia < voupon altar wrlliiiiz in their name and , /1 """"`Tt_"__/° i ` 'f' iidi’rrs:i, and encliso to "The Guardian, ’ ‘ ' 'I _ < ` ' , I " Ch:\i~lottr-iowa", marking "Tunnel" on i \i "A/Q ' I I, /,.// .' ‘, corner of envelope. Everybody should I /I / / \ ~i end at ones. I ` J / ' / _ . _ . . . . . . . . . . . . .... _ ` / ` . . , . . , . . . . . . . . . . . - . . . . . , 4 i/ / < i _I \ K <=-_ eg.-~ T is or ,.' ,- f‘ ,Z . ff' '. .-f' ` lranxba _ _ his ll Hanan I iN Q i-o\ 9 ,Q 'ffsf / \\§,) A ,, _ - .__ - winsaou- " ‘ ‘ ` _ " ,'f"~ \Vi '\ ' f=ii;i;,?<' ii* " _, .- __ ,.»-~ ' . - /N ' \ ,_, ` , - Nwf- I, I 1 ¢ ' "“~“;¥.‘=~ i. \; /. . xx 0 ir -gf' ` ‘ §\ $¥`Vl:\ _,. `\ .Z _ s i fl ii l ii , rl l t The black line ln the above ihovrsihe route of The Gusidian’s Bicycle Rc ad Rare. Wednesday, ,,f,f,::‘::,., ",,,";.;,,,,'t,'?,,,,,:` :gd Argust 28th. The eotrse starts from The Guardian oillce thence out the _Mvilpeqne Road ‘,,|,e,,,,\|,,, ,U they ,,,e,.,,,,,,,,,._ ,,,.,,,.c ln and return by North River comer, Lower Malfeque Road, etc., in all sixteen miles. il.~in,,,i\._-,, si-r,¢is.,,,.,i, iiwiy, - \ -€`\ / ,-` ‘lt ..¥ L iss ,. ._ ....._,. ___,. ll.i. ToRoN1'o, Aug. 22.-When constal>lesf.f wsntout from Pembroke to arrest. an indian named Seralon, for assaulting a _. "“‘ ‘ "L 5- rquaw they found the wlgwriiii iinrrioadf . noun: 'or rin: ouaitniiiws aiciicii: Roan nice. E§'.i2'}i.‘;i'.`;'2‘..'l;2§"IZTI§.I‘.'“fl.ii.‘i?.'$T 3 s s = i i NPENEN EIIIE , UN EUNSTNBEES .ei -` '/l D'2H\D~ New wk. N J.,.liicK Iieyburn, Mae Heart and the Pilcolat look turns iii looking tilt-1' liim Lut each tliiio he had uiilllcient liiusli at the end to stall them oll`. From 10,000 to li£.00li people wltnesi=cd toda5`.~i races. _.__.___ ,__,_-l-- THE W|:ATHER. ’l‘oii<»N'rii, Aug. 21! (Spcc`iii) l"ic=h iiiutli-riislcrly io southwesterly winds, flnc and warni. Afew local showers on Sunday. Mninrd's Linlment- Take no other THE TUNNEI.. The tiiiiirillan would lille to know If the i'i-siiiciitsi of l’i-iii<~c Eilwaiil lslniiil really Md lrveperlty for Prince Edwiii-d connectingthis Prov ace nu nn at once.) » TUNNEL COUPON. rinel L out and s~rid ri anllwnuldliketoseea u - , .. \As i desire wealth I : 5 4' : L wiLh the main and. Cu ._ I g - 5 ls .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .., " ’* ~ ~. Hr, .. , , .» f. K . 4 , , 1,' ,_ f ./', ' v»r," 1. l I nil. '_.,_' 1 V ,' . ,'; ~ ,. , -2.2".,-_,' f 'i _ .-/. ' »,- . '_ 1 ' _ . . ...j,_-~_'» . .‘,._,.,“~,W,|,p;,, ._-~fdi\,nla.~'.\.~fi=,0 .4 - ` ,,, . V _, » ._ ' f “ ~ ‘~ .» ig.-~~-.,} qt . ,_ f ‘J .1 i ,_i ' - _ -- ' ~‘ " " " ' , f , , _ _ . V H ,V W in »; -f,. ` y V H ' r ,, J W I _ NV . . » . ,- - vi = .;.}_;_-,.._,g,,<é»,,~__-, ,t;_,.'_i<.», » f-.»..)»‘~_ Y? 1 _ i it » .4 » , . ~ i - i . QA ' “ tp: ei l ‘ 3 I , » ‘ ~