qlk .l . gi _-A -.... - ann.-ff. -- ...- f_ . . . _,, . ,, _ ,. .. ¢ J ~ ` _ ' . 1 I | 1 - - f 1 J 'rl-In CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN PAGF svvaw GUST 10, 1915 ” ` ` s l r i l i ._ . , a. -. ‘A __ 1 4 Children’s Shoes _ _, Low Shoe' Sale _ Women’s Oxfords _worth to $4.50 for. ........$2 95 _ Women’s Oxfords; A "‘ l , Women’s Pumps “ Women’s White Pumps . Men’s Oxfords “ Misses’ Sandals “ I Children’s Sandals “ Infant’s Sandals “ Children’s White Pumps “ You may have any pair “ it 3.00 3.50 2.50 1,99 2.29 500 “ ._ 2.95 “ 1,25 “ .95 “ 1.10 . .85 .95 .75 .90 .25 of men'S, Women’s or “ u “ u at u U u U 20 p. c. off. ALLEY & CO. -U- A .rn Q ni I _-I ..*Mlss Lena M. Felt, atenographoi' li LET us develop your films and make your prints. We have a complete and very modern department for handling this work. Send us your exposures we will get the best there is in them, The G. H. Cook Studio Send One Home Next to an actual visit, a portrait send to the folks at home or those re- latives who care most about you, will be most welcomed--will give you the greatest. pleasu`ro. Modern photography isn't a. trial to undergo, its an experience to en- joy. Make the appointments today. The Bayer Studio A A. E. Lyon Photo Studio S'°°°s:‘.§i'..;"..?.§°.‘sf....$°"e“» Work unexcelled. ` Moderate Prices. Amateur’s work given personal attention 107_Queen St. Ch’Town Phone 68] Eastern S . S . Lines International Line Btsamshlpa Galvin Austin, Gov. Ding- loy and Governor Cobb. SOA STW1SE:- Leave St. .lohnk MDD-. Wvd-. an Fridag at9a.m. for Lubec. lblS¢DUl'l P011- land and oston. Return leave Central Wharf- Fioston. Mon.. Wed.. and ifri.. at 0 a m. for Port. land Ea st nrt. Lubec. and St. lohn. _ DlRlilC'lP:-Leave St. John. Tues. Fri. and Sat, at 7 p. m. Return. leave (‘entral Wharf, Boston, Mn .. Thurs. and Sun. at I000a.m. M\'i'noPoL|1'AN Lms BTEAMSHIPS MASSACHUSETTS ` AND' BUNKER HILL Leav e North side ef india Whari.Boston. every d_ay at s'ip.n‘1., due New York at 8a m. Same ser- vice re urn n . ‘ MA|N§ s1'sAMsHlP Line BTEAMBHIPS NORTHLAND AND NORTH STAR Leave Franklin Wharf,Portlsnd.'I`\ies .Thurs.. and Sat at 6.30 p.m . also Mon., at 10.30 a. m. for New York. Same service retuminu. Olty icket Olilce. 47 King Street. A. C. Currie. Agent. 8t. John. N- 5- 'A. E .Flemlng, T.F.&P.A. Bt John. New Brunlwlok. ` Hard Coal” ‘- To Arrive »' ».". It. _ - 'We have the following schoonerli. new on way, and dire from NGW 'York and Philadelphia with oar- goes ni ‘Best American Anthrsclw oosl in Egg stove and Chestnut elses. homely ` ' °isAiAH K.sre'rsoN. with wotm “n. Powells" with 01° 1°" 'fin A. ALLAN" ....wm. ..oso ion: This Coal is all of best qusiiti. ana win be wid nt very lowest i>fl°° while discharging. Parties rel1l1|l'i“S Aatiirscite Coal cannot do hotter than by booking their orders st once, and delivery will be mld° “'01” Vessels while discharging. .s-aninusc. Esau ‘tJ'e7n'l»Eion 'dost Co-. LN- ll.l9I!! M uv \l‘*“"‘ PLANT has Commencing FRIDAY at noon AUG. UST 6th, the S. S. HALIFAX will leave CHARLOT'i‘El`0WN for BOS- ‘l`0N via Hawkesbury and Halifax, AT NOON. For further information apply 1,0 JAS. CARRAGHER. Agent. Charlottetown. I J Furness Sailings From LONDON From HALIFAX S'l`l'lAl\lEll ]uly iltli Messina July Jlst July Zlst Appenlne August 10th From LIVERPOOL From HALIFAX STEAMER July zz Durango August 7th August 3rd Tabasco August zoth Furness,Wiihy & Co,Ltd. l Halifax, N. S. °1 "ANADIAN PAcl|=|c Farm Laborers EXCURSIONS AUGUST 17th AUGUST 24th St. John to Winnipeg Going $ 12.00 Returning 18.00 Note--Beyond Winnipeg half cent per mile to points East of McLeod. Calgary and Edmon- ton. fl gn EZ "` 13 Eff \ ==...,- sin. , _ np.; avtaurlc ssawal, From Montreal-'Quebec MissANAnii~: - - SEP. 4 METAGAMA, - - SEP- 11 w.n. Hows.-d, D. i-_ A.,0. P. R..s¢..l0hn.N.B Geo. Waller, Dominion Express Building and every Fnday at noon th ‘ ft _ ` ARD'S LINIMENT in a severe attack Fnoivl Bosron Evsnv Tiiréésoiiv °' L“G""”°' “nd I h"° "°°“°”"’ Charlottetown ,____;.-Z-_-_M Coal We °asr:.sm@l:is Sf..::.“:.‘ Run of lt/hue, Inverness Round and Peanut, Albion Round, Run of Mine and Nut Customers who want the best should order now so as to take delivery from the Vessels. Use our Coal and save money. all HY - ' rompt and careful, _ s-sris.s-.sauna-|l,l~i» ;‘EEEe'i?iti%lii'(EoIaill orders large and \ Genolaeauahu Siam" . We have vessels now en route i. . ¢9¢ ' h HARD COAL-E g Stove i Niit, Old S_dl`l€V R01-mg' S dney Time Table, Rocky Point Ferry. should witness u api-oily turning of the .. CARL McDONALD is Guardian Representative for Souris. ..'LADV INJURED BY FALL. - Mrs.Johii Marin,7’Bangor,had the mis- fortune to fall r. few days ago causing a. fracture of her leg. ..° Liberal-Conservative meeting will be held at Cardigan on Tuesday evening next when addresses, will be delivered by the Hon. Premier Math» ios0n;,Hon. John McLean, Hon. J. A. McDonald and Mr. J. A. Dewar, M.L. A. 2414-8-9ME2l. ..*8'i'. PETERS.- The people of St. Peters are fortunate in having a long felt want supplied in the posi- tion of a barber. Will Swallow has opened a shop and it is to be hoped ,ho will receive sufficient patronage to BHCOUYHEG his remaining here.- The new tailor Mr.Jas.Brehaut is building UD is good trade here. -The Presby- terian congregation of St. Peters have Purchased the beautiful residence of the late Mr. L. P. Doyle and are litt- ,ing it up for a Manse.-- Miss lliittie and Florence McSwain are engaged as teachers in the South and North sclioois respectively. They are sis. _WTB Mid b0i-ll lst class teachers which speaks well for members of the family. ,EASTERN PERSONALS ..° Miss Poole, of Montague, P, E, I., and Miss McDonald, of Summer- sido, P. E. I., arc visiting Sackvillc, guests of Mrs Edward Hazen. ill M- C- IL R-. Olllce Ruinfni-rl, Maine, who has been visiting friends at St. l:eicr's the past nmnth, started for St. 5101100118. N. B. 'l`hui‘sday where she will spend a few days before return. ing to work. M|nard's Llnlment Go.. Limited. Gentlemen.-Last Winter I received great benefit from the use of MIN- proved it to be very effective in cases of inflammation. Yours, W. A. iiU'rcHiNson. SIH Hi. HUHIJEH ii Ellllli IILUH LUNEIHEUN MONTREAL STAR Ol<`l<`ICE, 17 Cnckspur Street. London, August 6.- Sir lt, L.. Borden made the fall of Warsaw the theme of an inspiring message from Canada to the British people at the Canada Club luncheon today. He saidi- The fall of Warsaw has been fore- shadowed for some time, but it i:i useless to deny the significance of the evcnt. Tho Germans have achieved the success which they vainly at- tempted months ago. It will not in the least dauiit our courage, but only spur to greater efforts and increased determination the peoples ot these is- lands and the Overseas Doniinions. SOM E MISCONCEPTIONS “Many previous German misconcep- tions have counted strongly in our favor, and if we have had disappoliit- ments, they have had iiifliiitcly more. There certainly have been misconcep- tions among tlie Allies regarding the overwhelming importance of machine guns and ammunition. "We in Canada had no difficulty in providing men, but such a war of science ami chemistry found us also unprepared. "lt is my profound convlctioii, af- ter seclng the Ilritlsh and French for- ces iii field and camp, that, regiment for regiment, and iiiiui for man, our forces would more than hold their own when faced by the Germans, but the whole power of the nation iuiist be brought to the task. (Loud cheers.) we are uiiltcdly detorininod. Not one necessary steps to ensure an honor- able und successful issue, upon which we arc unltellly dcteeniiiiorl. Not one niomout must bo lost in that great purpose. If we really grasp the seri- ouinicss of the situation, there should be no reasonable doubt of our ability to accomplish this end in thc early future." (Renewed cheers.) Make the Livelf _ Do its Duty ..ff..:-.i-..f-.;:.-:.:.'-as-~f-~ ahnrladag. 8. 8. Hillsboro. Leave Ch'town Leave Rocky Point 7.00 a.m. 7.80 a.m. 0.00 s.m. 8.80 a.m. 9.80 a.m. 10.00 s.m. 11.00 a.m. 11.80 a.m. 1.80 p.m. I-00 D-DL 8.80 p.m. 8.00 p.m. 8.80 p.m. 4.00 D-III. 4.80 p.m. 6.00 p.m. Phime 111 ifili Hlliii. suNoAv 101680 siiiilf F01 Il*-IN lllllllilllilrill- -vv-----T-'YT-YY'YY-YTD'---vvvr-----T-vw'ivY v----Y--D77:Y-vi'---Yi--v*--D-vi---Y'---Lv’ The Teutoilic HHH03. iiowever, "lay Sa . .°|'r PAYs to buy in tins Province. _ ..*0NE CENT pcr word each in- sertion for advertising in this column. Cash must accompany order. ..°T GORDON IVES Is Guardian Representative for Souris. ..*N0 TEA-PARTY.- There will be no tea party at Elmira on August 17th. 2435-8-7M3i. ..*8T. ALBAN'S CHURCH.-- Ser- ,vlces will be held at St. Albaifs Church, Souris, next Sunday at 11 a.. m. Rev. Dr. Jones will oliiciato. WHAT WiHSiW MEANS lil THE ENGLISH PEUPEE ( New York Evening Post) In Begiuni and Northern France the Allies are undoubtedly bracing them- selves for the new German offensive. That such a blow will come is recog- nized on all sides. The question is how severe will be the German onset. The most pessimistic view on the Al- lied side would be that taken by the London Daily Mall, which spoke the other day of "What Warsaw Means to You,” you being the /English people. “lf Russia were forced far back, months would pass before she could resume her offensive. All through these nionths thc West- ern Alllies would have to face the full violence of the German blows. They have so far been lighting only two-thirds of the German army. ll' at this junc- ture the entire Gorninn army is flung upon thcin, thc strain will be terrific." ’i`wo assertions need here to be ex- amined: Whethcr it is true that the western Allies luwo been lighting two- thirds of the German army, and wlic- ther it is’ likely that the remaining tlilrd of the German army can bc hurl- ed against the Anglo~Frcnch line. ln attempting an estimate of the total numbqi' of Gorman troops now in the field we have fortunately some fairly authoritative data. to build on. 'i‘liis inorning`s dis- patches from London quote the figures cited by it member of the morniiig's dispatches froui London the figures cited by a member of the British General Staff in the course of certain prize court proceedings. Ac- cording to these ligurcs. Germany now has 4,000,000 on her two fronts and iii garrison in Belgium. out of it total of ten million men engaged in serving the Kaiser. lncluiiing the men in the coal _fields, in thc inunition factories, und on the railways, as well as troops in training. Now, tho cciirt proceed- ing rcferred to is one in which it would be the purpose of the British Government to show as large a pro- portion of the Gt-rnian population as possible working for the Kaiser elsewhere tlioii.in the ii'oi\clies, so that our staff ofiicer's estimate of the nicn actually on the fighting line niay be an underestimate, and we may place the German active army nearer to five millions than to four. Estimates by correspondents recently from the front run somewhat higher, but as they probably take in the troops in garrison in Germany ami on the lilies of coniniunlcation, the rliffereiice is not very great. Those results are ‘confirmed by general coiisiileratioiis. The maximum effort of ii nation at wiii' has been placed at ten pei- cent. of its population. ln tho case oi' Germany that would mean a. little less than seven million men. German casualties by this tinio must be well over two and a hall’ millions. which would leave about four millions and a half. Adil the return of the slightly wounded, und we get once more our live millions, roughly. llow are these men distributed? We may say at once that the numbers cn- gaged on tho eastern front have been exaggerated. Reports which speak of six million Austro-Teutons pressing on against Russia are absurd. Only the other' day Petrograd spoke of seventy German divisions acting iii conjunc- iioii with the Austrians. Seventy div- isions would ineaii about 1,400,000 mon. Tliorcforc, the German strength in tho cast- may be reckoned as be- tween a inininiilnl of a million and a half. If we take the latter figure. it leaves three niillioii Germans for Bel- gium and Nortliern l<‘rancc facing a. Frencli army of perhaps two anil n hull millions and an English nrmy of unknown size, but surely nm more than tlirvc qiinrtors of a iriillioii. it is trite that llcrlili has boon speaking of the vory .sinnll niiinbors willi which the Allies are being held in cliock in the west. but Nucli stuteiiioiits inust be taken with cxlrviiio caution. lf, then, we assunio three million Gerninns in the west and ii million and it half in Russia, the first assertion by the Daily Mall is justified. The Allies in the West are facing only two-thirds of the German army. It is quite a riiffereiit matter to speak of the eventual transfer of all of Germnny's troops from the east. to the western front, Such a develop- ment could follow only one contingen- cy; iiot merely the capture of War- saw, iiot even the destruction oi' the present itussian army, but the com- plete subjection ni Russia to the point where sho would be forced to make peace. That is an impossibility of the near future, We know what the spirit of iho Russian people is today. The war will go on; and not only thai. but .thc destruction of the ltusslan ar- my is as yet a remote possibility. Whether on the offensive or in retreat. Russia will keep engaged, not only tho Austrian armies. but a large propor- tion of the German forces. One thing that is certain is that. without the steadying influence of the German troops, the Austrians cannot be de- pended upon. It was Mackeniien who broke the Russian line in Galicia in May. Again it was Mackensen who came to the rescue, when the Rus- sians, after ten weeks of steady de- feat, turned upon the Austrians near ‘Krasnik and inflicted a defeat which German aid averted from turning into a possible disaster. It is plain even to- day that if the Russians were left to CASTOR IA l8.45 p.m. 1.00 p.m. 8.00 1.10 li. Lyons 8. lin is ._ ne. . __ .- . . , \ .*.- .` 1 ~ . ,. '~_'_-=»:-,.‘,, ig.; ii ‘I»,_|"< ‘;~./.` » » . 1-I ‘.-»\_ , <. =;--'ii =-,-, -‘ _, , * . ~ ` ‘ ‘ , ` 1. . 'xv \. _ _ . 1 . ~ t ’ _ .._»,~_»»r.-ge~.i:_rf-rw-a.~i~'f..~= t rf~"..<,=.§’-»i»-W.:at-:;i~.".!s » . i-.,,¢ ¢.:,-.i,. -i-,;»~-r!.~..-’ .-1;; W. l ..f» . » . ‘ i* . \ ‘ _ - * ~ \ » . . . . \ \~ - - - ilu Kind tn Bouril light it out with tht- Au-itrins alone we fall of Warsaw. Onc. the Polish cap- ital is occupied, Germany may decide to intrench and stand on thc defen- western campaign. But the mere hold- ing of the present German line calls tic, through Poland, to where it links up with the Austrians, the German army stretches on a front of between Bi Y D cent., as the Mail pessiinisticaily for- scos, but by less than 20 per cent. Un- qucstlonnbly, liali' n.~million men in thc able hands of the Gernuin General Staff will give a good account ul' tliciiisnlvus. Hut it is a qliestloii now of the totul additional pressure which the Allied line in the west must ex- pect to face. POWNAL RED CROSS SOCIETY. Previously acknowledged l~‘urther Uontributions: A l<‘rlend, Ul\"1’own ~ ~ Mrs. Earl Acorn. Mrs. Gilmore Jnrilinc, Mrs. llenry Sealey Mrs. John Sealey 50 Mrs. Samuel Sculcy 25 $315.93 ' ' 2.00 1.00 50 25 Total to date Further donation of snr-its &i‘:- Mrs. W. J. (_'ni'vei', 1 pnir socks; lliiss llcssin Jenkins, 1 pair socks; l\l|'s. (‘ousins, Zi’/2 lbs. wool; Mrs. li. Mc- l{i||iion, Ll'/Q lbs. wool. Tulnl nuinbel' of sin-its sent in from this Sucicty to dntc. Aug, /ith -104 pairs. $:l2u.4:i S L JENKINS. Scrsrotory. “lt takes przictically "no timo" to make it delightful, thirst quenching glass or jug of lemonade when you uso Speeza Lemon Powder. Try Spoeza, the lemon:-ide tl|at’s quickly made. Powder 15c a tin. The Two Macs, 149 Great George Street. Mtf. THE NHHKEES E ClI"1‘0\VN MARliE'l‘S Print butter (per lb) Fowl (per lb) Chickens, Wheat. (Der bushel) Buckwheat Barley Oats (white) Oats (black) l-lay, pressed per ton Eggs (per doz) Tub biittor (per lb) Potatoes (per bushel) Turnips, (per bushel) Hides Beef (per lb.) retail Pork (per lb) carcass Oats (Black) bu.s. S’SIDE MARKETS Straw (per ton) 58.00 Turnips, bus. .15 Wheat, bus. 1.1! 1.60 Wool. lb. .80 Eggs, dozen .15 Hay, loose ton 810.00 11.00 Hay, pressed 10.00 12.00 I-lides, lb. .10 Lamb pelts .B0 .50 Oatmeal, per 100 8.75 Oats, (white) bus. 65 Barley bus. 65 I0 90°- Buckwheat .60 .90 Butter, lb. (dairy) .20 Butter, lb. (cresmery) .22 Calfakins lb. .10 Oats (black) bus (llil(`?A(l(), Aiigust 8.- Wheat No. 2 rcil $1.10 to $1.171/_»; No. 2 bard $1--ill (Torn No. 2 yellow Xl'/Q0 10 33'/\<'¢ others noiuinnl; Outs No. 3 white, old 59c to iilc; New bbc; Standard tilici Ryo No. 2 new 951:; Barley 7211 to Rllc; Tlinnlliy $5.50 to $7.00; Clover $8.35 to $13.25; i’ol'k $111.65; l.ni'1l $8.07; Ribs $8.62! to $9.12. Laril $11.30. 20 to 25 10 to 11 14 to 16 $1.25 $1.00 $1.00 .60 .62 514.00 20 21 35 .25 .12 10-12 .11 68 i . 24 . 23 .10 70 REMEMBHU The ointment you put on your child's skin gets 1 into the system just as surely as E food the child eats. Don’t let T" impure fats and mineral coloring matter (such as many of the , cheap ointmcnrs contain) get into your child's bloodi Zam- V Buk is purely herbal. V No pois- onous coloring. Use it always. 50:. Box al All Dvuggisls end Slam. ' USE.