,, -"Mol: Two 1 "" 'rr-in oHAnLo'rrsTowN‘eUAanrAN ’ ' <' » SEPTEMBER 21? 1914-' TIREDI This season of the year many are apt to have tllat Ianguid, all gone feel- ing, and they attribute to laziness or the weather what is really due to run down condition, may not be bad now but will be worse unless promptly checked. _Iamiesons Tonic Hypophoschltes is a good remedy as you can get for it. its good for all “half sick” people. Full pints 75 cents. J. G. Jamieson DRUGGIST. < A' 5'-5:69 _‘it-g1<"'?-.:.f\J <__.¢.»_ -& to TIDE TABLE SEPTEMBER. . High Water Date Day Time H't Time l 'ru | 6.59 21.19 lwed. 8.16 22.11 | Th. 9.24 22.51 , F. 10.21 | 23.24 sn. | 11.10 | 23.54 S. 11.54 lvl. 0.21 12.34 1 Tu. 0.46 13.11 lwedl 1.10 13.47 l Th. 1.33 14.24 lr. 1, 1.51 15.04 s m~loam»>c»:N>-‘ mmm 5- p- 4mFPN““9 - ' v-r-»*°}~'ola S§c'\U>"-amos . on-_z ~'~‘-"-°°?’P°-“°l“ ”-°°i’i’~"""""°"'-"""<`»'i'l:`l§z§.';°f‘-i°5='§:T.' l`=l'a¢`¢w,,_,_| o~la~.oo-csv-v-‘wget 9 10 11 12 Sa. 2.24 15.57 13 . 2.55 l 17.10 14 M. 3.39 18.30 15 | Tu. 4.45 ‘ 18.42 16 |Wed. 6.17 20.38 17 | Th. 7.39 21.24 18 F. 8.51 22.03 19 I Sa. 9.51 22.40 20 S. 10.45 23.16 21 I M. 11.37 23.5? 22 l Tu, | 12.28 23 Well. 13-19 24 | Th, 14.11 25 15.07 26 l 16.13 27 - 17.25 23 18.41 29 Tu. 19.49 30 ,Wed.| 20.44 DIIRY 0F EVENTS TooAv City Magistrate’s Court, 9 a. nl. Meeting Of the 01'l§slliZl1ii0ll Oi' iii* for the mastery of tile world. He is Branch of the Canadian Patriotic Fund, the mall who ls responslble for tlrls Board of Trade rooms. 8 p. ill. Prince Edward Theatre, 7.15 9 p. m. People’s Theatre, 7.30 alld m. Zion Church Social, 8 p. m. Baptist Church Youllg Peo meeting, 8 p. m. _&ln¢if',iil-" ' BIRTHS 19th, to Mrs (Dr) S. Ii. Gillis, a s MARRIED He llad the ndvalltagc of being in the ‘best Tlletllogicnl Seminary tile world , __ A, las ever llown. with Jesus Christ us §i;k£_(.m§il*(53£;wnA(En lSV"ed';Il;!:li;l,; tim Head Master._ He was ill constant Semen'lb'er15 by me rtev' ,r,_ F., r,-“ller._ companionship with the Soil of Golf. mn D D_ Joh'n Angus Blue' Orr rr0p€_ lie received lllsfrlendly counsel. Was field, tb éarah McLeod, of Little Sand. lim' a smaii priviiegci -~ lrssrzrlr.. lf.. :rs .l::f,l:lllsl‘zl.:; “ENT is BEING ORGANIIED' for gren./t service. lf hlllilad been true to ills advantages his name would is5((rll~;D(;l;1\;e§:elllltln3s9.~I;l‘;ll12l_-:elélrfgnlllgié wétrhlllotondflllsslilg oil tho lips of the days who long to gel intro tllleAEl1l:;- V ` ,mt pean fight. Hence, tie ng 0- me - I 7 _ can clnntingent that Lord Lyveden is :)np(;0r}i¥:lil)f;°r r_r0HiZ,rgms“tg“;i“Ln&§;;f organ zlng. l . ,, , . It is not the intention of Lord Lyve- Slgfanofoghmu£,‘;lw£)ll§i';far,?,:;l_e Ili: “ig den to interfere with American neu- use to deny mm, He had a great U'siiiY- H91 iiiei'¢i°i°e» seeks oniy heritage left him bv his father alld British subjects in the United States. grandfather ln the' lmlted German 01' Americans Wim ‘"9 resident in Bri' Empire. The German nation is ll great Ulilb °i` have miie" 0"' British cm” nutloii. They are n people of sturdy €l18l1iD Dsllsfs- physique. They are solid in body and Permission to organize such a con- ln mrmr They have ll dogged pep 0118911! iiss 0iliY i`e¢°"iii’ been grant' severance which has brought them lid by U10 Bfiiisil Wal' 0iii°"» Wi- °Vei` to their present efficiency. They can two hundred have already enrolled. plan' plot and put lnto practlctr The P18119 sl'9 10 i'°i'm iisif “ii iiiiamri' German people under the aggressive battalion of 480 men, and one or two volley or thelr Emperor haw, made squadrons of cavalry of 150 men each. great slrlrles lrr the cornmerrl l rl .a an b€Bid0l1 Il11Bii dsissilmsllis Tile" if industrial nlld educational world iii iiis Bsliiisi Ci1ll1`Cl1 H0 spoke on Ui Sii' iMiWBl'll Grey, the justice of at the end of four mouths the ohm- --Made lr, (lt.rmm,y~- ls Been on many the power of education. He said Hi°ii‘1i“"' “W5” was 9° “i’i’“"°“t that l mand passes the inspector,_ the men artlcles used tlrt. world Ove,-_ A good we never tire of the story of the Bar- ii iii” with "iw ”i’i""“'“i 0' th” “limie Will fills ills 51\°i9|iisi’iii¥ Usiii Ui iii' deal of our higher education too un- Ons Wii0 Uilisilied i'0l' Us MBKYHI Cillills- worm' mid helpredicwd victory' For ‘ leglance to the king-_not to Great fortunately ll; made lr, Ge,-many_ The American people like to speak of i"""*‘i‘"“” iiaiii" °““° iffiiuilil Ti‘l°“5:l' Britain-and so to the front- as l 'rlinlinll-nl nflumilon is at the highest 310| gldnrtnwllo lrelslll the slaves ln lho lfvfllfliellli ggofgvgglafrgl me 5": ‘Sw unit. point of emclency. The German Em- 11! » M08- 0 sometimes think ' _._-ll___. peror had a great opportunity in hav- iilsi WM KIVGH liberty. But that lg :|9108 mlliilll ll." tile' prtovincel, rgltlrlllélsg - . lnggurghaflnq counlry and g\|¢hgf1||3 B IIIIHIBIKE. LIIJBNY Illllht he illltlili- n Ernie u terms 0 ne sp en A NOVA M391-|,~_ qm|_ |N WEST- people and such extensive manufac- 94|- Wilsl ills been lllkell by WM' - ERN umvsasrrv. turing plants und exnolloniefluouilonal may be relollen by war- Certain l (_Cont:inued_!rom page 1 )__ 23| front as the first Christian Emperor, and Christianity had become trium- unl bondage. Spiritual freedom, he a place of honour. l-lla defeat was his the t rann of sin ol’ God, and concluuded his address by Our glorv is to slay guve lllm llo peace. His ambition Quick results- if 4i00s 110i mails 5 “One moves in silence by the stream brought its own curse upoli him. iiU1‘l`Y mill ll0is€- This is U10 leflllll-H' With sad, yet watchful, eyes; \ ’llut do you think history will say l»i0l1'll1i1i-iflslls WHS S\1i>.I€0i-li' ' or THE A Fell! /Iiliffllnlcry Season Monday Evening, September 21, from 7.30 to 10 o’cIock - It will be an exhibit of fashion sucli as would be expected of Charlottetown, and S. A. McDonald’s, of this memorable year of 1914. ‘ ' French, American and S. A. McDonaId's model hats. Imported and Canadian Coats. . 'if Silks from the Orient.; _ _ "~ A rare wealth of English and Persian piece goods. - -l’ - _ Everywhere in the store-new goods, and everywhere the evidence of modern ""_` prices. _ L_ 0 I 0 0 l ';= gi/ <1 _ H't . FF9“P mmnox , <1 o¢loo¢!»°°°_"'.*‘F°E".°°.°‘_°°.°°5"”."I"."9° §§2§a§m¢eaamowm~©¢N®~m®° sllii over a man brou ht a calanlit 9 D- We would like to have it distinctly I1is's We have no hate in ollr heart towards peop e. Is the German Emperor ll i GILLIS.-At Cilarlottetowll, oil Sept. EACH HAD A GREAT OPPOR' ,,,,_ rUNl'rv. Mr Taylor’s sermoll was a master- piece and would be reproduced in extenso had space permitted. That it was impressive was beyond doubt IS THE GERMAN EMPEROR A POLITICAL JUDAS ISCARIOT? At the Baptist Church on Sunday morning Rev. Z. L. Fash preached from the text, “ But woe to that man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed: good were it for that man if he had never been born." Mark xiv 21. He said things moved so rapidly ill this war we must be prepared for anything. At first the troops of the German Elli- peror advanced in such overwhelming numbers and with such utter disre- gard of human life that most anything seemed possible for them to attempt. At one time it looked ns if they would invest Paris and enter the city ns they did forty years ago. Never for one moment did the British people believe in the ultimate trlunlpll of Germany. There is a grim determina- tion to see this thing through to a finish, alld that flnisll will not be the end of the British Empire. Tile British honestly tried to prevent this war and they are fighting with a clear conscience. We are not responsible for this war. Who, tlieli, is responsible? We be- lieve that outside Germany and Austria the world says, "tile German Emper- or." lie could have prevented it by curbing Allstrin. I-le refused the offer of Sir Edward Grey to arbitrate. He had been making his preparations on the most extensive scale and he thought his chance had come to strike terrible loss of life and property. Il’ g y upon thc world it is thu German Emperor. understood that we are going to speak carefully about the German Emperor him or his people, but we do hate his act which betrayed the world into gloom and sorrow. We are asking a question wllich may not have formulated itself to everybody just in these words, but it is nevertlleless in the minds of the l Political Judas lscarlot ? What a magnificent opportunity .Indus had. Ho was chosen by the Lord to be all Apostle. No greater honour was ever conferred upon man. Then tlllllk of tllo ability of Judas. Ile was a keen, shrewd man or lla naver would have been appointed “lint shall we say about the (‘ its banners bear the slllgle line- no, he will be called William the VVai: Wiiifiii bl`ii\Ks ills C0111l11\l1liiY Hllldll- Our glory is to save,-., Maniac. lt will be William the de- siil’ 11D sllli U - The Uiiii U80 Uliies spoiler of Belgium and Louvaln. It will be the Violator of Treaties, the Murderer alld the Traritor. Does that soulid harsh? ls it true? It is what we all believe and with very good reason. But why has William II. of Germany so miserably failed? He put his own aggrandlsement first. He d‘d not go into this war for any great moral purpose. It was to make Ger- many still greater and assure her future greatness for all time as the ruler of the world. Witll him it was not "God and I," but “I and God.” I-Ie tried to deceive tha world by his pious platitudes and pretensions for peace. Like Judas lie was all adept nt the a_rt of deception, pretending to be il friend when he was an cllelny. What has it all resulted in? 'I`lle most cruel war the world has evoll known. l‘he crluie ls greater than that of Paul Kruger. lt ls greater than tim; of Napoleon. More will be killed alld more sorrow will be in the world from this war than from any other war in history. And this was brought on by tile selfishness oi' one nlan. How great the responsibility for this crime. The German Enlperor has made a miser. able failure of a great opportullity. It llatioll. Tile German Elllperor is a grl-at failure because lie has kept his people }iii‘isi` 11 “'I'UllS’ system ot' goverlllllent. File nation is a machine worked by the lulllperor. individuality is killed Out. and lllanllood is brutalised. Tile more I tlllllk about it the lnore clearly I see it. Pills war is going to break n bad system of goverlinicnt in which the llldlvidual is crushed. ’l‘o look at the perfection of the lllachille you would naturally thillk it would succeed, Bug Iolle tiling is lacking in the German system which makes it a rope of sand in the final tug-of-war. l-I ` -.- world. Democracy is bound lo w1n_ Because the German Emperor has been a traitor to llunlalllty he will be smitten by tile Almighty and broke a magnificent palace to be built. Stone by stone the structure grew and the One morning the strllcture was found ill ruins, hardly one stone standing upon another. "What rea; Cried. 21nd 11 price was set on the head of the one who had destroyed the abode of his majesty. Illlt a wise mail of the court said, “ Great master there is no treason here. Tile house which was great and llligllty has fallen dowll because the builders used nlortar without sand, and so tho work winch tlley did has come to nought." Tllnt is just lilo way the German Emperor has boell bilildillg the Gerlllall Empire. lt lacks the sand of Christian humility and self-sacrifice for the good of others. Ile has built up tl. system of philosophy wllicll says the com- mandment of Jesus to love your ileigll- hour as yourself does not apply to nations. The humble, tender, Jesus was weak. It is only might that lg - over again betraying ills Lord. It is the selfishness of the German system that la the mortar witllout the sand of the gospel. Such selfishness did not stop at the shedding of the blood of hun. dreds of thousands of innocent people Let us not betray our Lord by our selfishness. Dil. MEYERS AT TIIE BAPTIST CHURCH 9Ul1iil1Y evening Dr. Meyers, Tor- onto, preached ll most helpful sermon . _.___ fnollltlos. He him an abundance of things have been attained lhloush the LONDON. Ont.. Sept. 19.-Miss Hil- good material. This gave him li 5|-oat centuries. l. We have achieved free- Ydsriasfy Surg” a (him and Fraucewt The German was da Boyne; of the staff of the Univer- opportunity to do good in the world. d0l11 ill 9-'i\ICHti0ll- ally ol calgary, and formerly ol the .lust think for a moment what on Education is freelns us from many llglthg Ladies' College, was today en- initial advantage the Emperor had in l1l1D91'liiii0l1l1- ` W0 DU! H0 fliill ill “god -as assistant modern language this war. Everything had been worked lilo lllD91'Biiii0l1 lilo! the Bllillills of lecturer oil the mir ol the western out systematically for years ba lt ill U|g|»¢"“¢y_ Qu guy, to how everypart of his would proceed. That is able to hurl 2,000,000 ` Da. 1'. s.'cltolmN cl; an sa w bring bad luck. We are no nervous because we see a flock -of birds, because table with these sit at the is sur moves us to comlmggloll and lmllg_ British Navy, “towards the support of wllicll, to ollr discredit, we had con- Germall lnacllino and bl-lug ln 8 better. fred closed with a strong appeal for _ linlanity 1., _ , , forgotten. I-Iunlallily will heat the Europe with fire alld sword. Sir Wil- day for the German people and for tlre the support of the Arnl_v Field Ser- v . 3 - I have heard of a king who cuuséll The Prellllcr, lloll. J. A. Matilleson, w m E treason has been committed here?" the king w heart of the king swelled wlth r,rl,le_ different steps taken by tile Govern- t a right This lg _judas lscarlot trlbutlons would meet the requirements D a hundred years to grow. Tile ville which clusters around it grows in a year. But the tree lives oil alld it is a llew vine each year. 'l’lle old one dies. 'I‘lle sermon was very sugges- tive. .___._______ SPIEIIIIIIJ MIIIINE 2 ll ISIIIHIIIIIIWN One of the largest meetings yet held incolillgctioll with the Arllly Field Service l~‘ulld was that held at Georgetown Staurday evcuiilg. The Cllilirlllull, Mayor G. A. Aillcell, ably presided. Tile nleetlllg opelloll with all excellently rendered progralllme of patriotic songs by till- school cliilil- ren. The first speaker was lilll Lordsllip the 1.‘.lllef`Justlce, Sir Wlll'i'cll Sullivan, who gave ll very illteri-slillg review of the illlult-dlate causes which lcd to the war. Tile reason, Ile said, that we are able to enjoy the advan- tages of peace wlille the nation is :it war is because of the strength of the tributed ilothillg.” Iteferrilig to lilo call for volunteers it was the dllty ot' every able-bodied lllzlll to go to the front, except where tllv strong- est reasons existed to witllllold illelll, alld it was not a sufficient reason if their wives objected. Some years ago he had visited Belgllllll wllell llc llad the pleasure of seeing the lllilg- llificellt buildings. the great lilll'al'_v, the precloils works of nrt at Lollvuili which had been ruthlessly destroyed ily the (lerlllllli hosts, all act of bur- bflrlty worse lllilll that perpelltraloil by Atlla, the Hull, when he ravaged ice l~‘unil and the itrll Cross, at the same tlllle colllnlelldillg the splell- did work already being dolle by the ladies ol’ Geor etowll as the next spoukcr. Ile began his remarks with nil explnllatioll of the ent, the manner lil which subscrip- lolls are to be tilllcll, null the grain collected and trallsporteli. He also explained the different purposes for lllcll funds are required: First the Army Ficlil Service l"‘ulld, to lvlllcll the present gift is being applied; lllis was for the army :it the frollt. Sec- ond tllo liospitlil Ship and till- llinl Cross Pulld, for the aid of file sick iid wounded; illld, third, the Patriotic Flllld, for the support of ille wives, widows and cllildrell of tilosc wllo had gone to tile front. Tile first two fllllds wi-re already well in llalld. The Patriotic I~‘llllli hall not yet bl-ell dealt with, bllt would be lmllledintoly lie takell up. wllell, he collfldelltly expect- ed, those wllo had been especially lllesscd with large fortunes would coll- trlbllte ill proportion to their lllenlls. He gave the asallrallce that. as to the '1~v~\-nip i~‘\ll\'i whether private voll- oi- not the Government would stand its duty ily this province. lf any mia- tnke would he nlnde it wollld be rutil- er oil the side of generous action. Ile tlleli referred to the advantages arising froln the war. Already the little doni- estic grievances and difficulties that had vexed the natioli had been remov ed; already the effect oi’ fllc war had been to consolidate the nntloil. lie spoke eloquently of the justice of iJrltaln's cause in the war; a cause on which there was ilot u cloud. Some- times the causes of war were obscure bilt, tllanlls to the splendid diplomacy iii _ A Cordial Invitation is Now Extended to all lm & Hmmwlfmwywwfw Jabot, a pronlineilt Bel- i ll i`onl Coillpzllly, Stellar- l l wll to collect and i‘orwul‘d t lug i'or the benefit of this d devastation oi’ tlleir,ll 35,000 lil-lgizllls had in ask il. 24-llolll' I llllcll zlitaclted by surprisv. Such valor si Wlnlt will bccolllc of us? I dare not i ll You callnot llllagille tile fcarl`ul 1 ll is therefore illdispcilsnllle that lnlll and lr ,mfg |ll(,.r,.,l,.,. :ldinll personalities and some ililluen- D ppopln Ol- llr.0rl-tr,tl,wr, wlll tial lil-wspnpcrs ill the ullllappy lol of ll ly ll, the calf llml ll, ,ww ollr brave poplllntioll? (‘llllada is ricll S l 1 raised ill order to-charter a vessel M' H ' sistullce. A public subscription might be II EIISIIN FAMILIES A NEEII IMMIIJIIII ASSISTANCE, Isialldels 0rQ`3IlIZC C0mmIII0€”°GI'aphiC lionl- riililc-ll fnrnlers fronl dying of r Tells of Terrible Conditions In Unhappy try-Nlany Dying of Exposure and Starvation. nl»nnnll»\ll.v is-11100-1011-»»1nlllllle, ing ill. Lil-gi- 120,000 Gerlllaiis against that Nlllllllr was lilkoll. lt la tllrou h d was as follows:-- \vo