P ° _ 1 ‘ . P Acne THE ORNING (IUARDI AGES . I to 8 » 5_1 _ : l ` p I W l>,'f‘ill‘.'§"B'.»i'.‘i-‘I>’ii»‘i>".’i.i"’l '-MONDAY MORNING- oi-IARL.O1'rsrOwN,P. E. I., FEBRUARY as 1904. -MONDAY MORNING- { m';‘}.’;‘,’,';.‘§¢°,:.";',,,,,“';',,°,.‘§,"';“,;‘:,,,., , _ ___,___ ___, ,_____________ _ ’ ‘ - n_ JAPAN’S PLAN OF CAMPAIGN Aiillillll [lil I IS NOW FULLY DEVELOPED CANADA Plillllil ' ° lo be his dutyto write to the state de- ' - Willl Prevent Invasion oi Korea by Russians- .Iap Navy Doing Wonders-l‘Iow Russians are Deceived--Russian Torpedo Boat Sunk-Official ` no JapS Killed. JArAN's CAMPAIGN. ' TOKIO, Feb. 27--(Special,)- The preliminaries of ]apan’s cam- paign on land are developed suiii- ciently to render it practically im. possible for any formidable inva- sion of' Korea by Russia. RUSSIANS MUCH DECEIVED. ST. PETERSBURG, Feb. 27 - (Special)-Russians think Japan will not undertake to land troops just now. JAP NAVY DOING WELL. LONDON.Feb. 27-(Special)- All advices show the Japanese navy is fulfilling its mission of keeping the Russian fleet inactive while the Japanese army move- ments are being prepared and pro- bably carried out in the successful landing of troops. THE OFFICIAL REPORT. The Japanese official report of the sinking of ships at the en- trance to,Port Arthur shows the Work accomplished without loss of life but did not effectively block the channel. ` TORPEDO BOAT SUNK. One Russian torpedo boat was J \ ._ - Xi sites-tam Wholesale Trade-Rubber Boots and Rubbers. Big stock of Granby make of iron wear fame at BIIIF BRIIS. Agents. Prompt attention given to mail orders. Phone 266. Report Shows cut OE from the iieet and sunk at Pigeon Bay.I 'I0 WIN uA'rri.irs. _MoIcew, Fao. 25.-The most sacred image in Russia has been sent to St. Petersburg, and it will be taken later to the Far East with the army. This image is a representation of the Virgin appear- ing to St. Ssrgius, and is always kept at the Troitzko monastery. It is about Due foot square and is covered with preclousl stones. The image has a remarkable history. It accompanied Alexis, Peter the Great and Alexander I. on all their campaigns. A silver tablet attached to it enumer- ates the battles at which the ikon was present. _ iam'ra'rIoN AoAINs1‘ rss U. s. Sr. Pmsnsnuso, I3’eb.25.-The irrita- tion against the United States On account of the supposed unfriendly at-titude cf that country toward Russia, which was slightly noticeable through-out the nego- tiations, seems to have become daily more pronounced, and since the Vicksburg in- cident at Chemuipo (whanlhe commander of the American gunbcat is said to have refused tc unite with the commanders of other foreign warships at Chemulpo to protest against the Japanese firing on the Russian worships Varlag and Korietz, and the fact that the Vicks- burgdid not take on board survivors of the Russian ships). American busi- ness men here are really alarmed concern- ing the possible effect upon American trade. \Vithln the last few days orders for American goods have been counter- manded, the only explanation given being that the prospective purchasers did not desire to buy American goods under th e present circumstances. U. S.Consul Gen- eral Watts has been appealed to in the case ofan American firm which had a large contract having been psreniptorlly cancelled. Ordersforthe lulportaf/IDD Of a big consignment of wood pulp have also been countermanded. the intending pur- chaser saying in his letter that he could not be expected to do business with America after the Vicksburg incident, Mr Watts hes felt it i wtliltn . A smart boy to engage in the Bookbinding de- partmeut. Apply at once to Haszard & Moore. l1i>o`l cltliliiffh cliff _ s s aio caown BRIGHT Music partment, pointing out the state of public feeling here and the great pi-espegghe damage to American trade unless mea- sures were taken to allay the irritation. Americana here believe that an official explanation of the Vicksburg incident would he opportune sad have an excellent effect. Few as are the people who can imagine a battlefield ca shore, they are vastly few- er who can picture with any certainty the scene of a naval ccniilct. And this, of course, more so now than Britain became the sci areign Power at sea, and her wooden walls were handled and fought through whole days in closest proximity with their enemies, lt often befell that ships hulled through and through with shot drifted for many daya,while the handful of unwounded survivors accom- plished tasks auch as make the mind reel to think of. THE DAYS 0F ROMANCE. They fought for life as fiercely as they had faced their human enemies; hacked and bowed at the wreckage around them so that the sea. might take it away with its deadly dangerto them; doggedly stuck to the pumps, cleansed the shambles cf their ship for the avoidance of pestilence and held at bay that sense of utter weari- ness and hopelessness which was the deadliest foe of ali. And the wide, clean aes around them waited impatiently for whatever end was decreed them, ready tc cover up all traces of them if they failed to live, or bare them bravely on its bosom into pert and safety. ' In the days of sail and wood there was something romantic, in spits of its horror, in the manoeuvrlng of those winged fleets upon the open sea. Something solemn lu the sight of two hostile iieels eager lo destroy one another, held in the bonds of unwilling peace by the falling of the wind. The vast shining surface of the sea lying in placid beauty beneath the bright, blue sky, and the two motion- less groups of vessels, with idle sails doivnhanging, just gently moving to thc tender heaving of the swell. Peace, as at the beginning, over nature above; but in the recesse of the ship, what seething WARAND THI ELEMENTS. In contrast most striking, think of two hostile fleets endeavoring to get at each other ln ri gals. The awe-inspiring war of the elements seeming to brook no lu- terference with their high controversy, and man, actuated by the most desperate and primitive of all instincts, daring to disregard the cosmic quarrel of wind and WBVE. But rnpdcrn sea warfare has changed nearly all that. Far more terrible, but mercifully for more swift will be the con- flict betvl c an hostile fleets in the future. There will be scarcely any euch thing as the lingering agony, long drawn out oi' the old days cf sea fighting. For one thing, modern lronclads and cruisers go- ing into action will choose the lesser of two evils confronting them. Because of the deadly peril of splinters and of fire, everything of wood in their fittings, even to the boats, will be cast away at the be- ginning ofthe fight. Then, when the battle is joined, the aeaiuan must needs have a heart of brass encased in triple steel. a mind that re- fuses to meditate upon the immediate possibility of one of those terrible twelve- inch projeciiles plunging down upon his vessel's deck, and cnt, amid the dis- integration of all her ganglions of energy, through the bottcm,renderlng her an easy target to an uninjurcd foe, and her sink- ing a matler of minutes. THE SWIFTNESS Oi" DEATH. And when she sinks, stnne-ilke-pump- ing being, if possible to a yet undamaged engine, a manifest absurdity in that rent fabric of steel-with her must go all of her crew. It may sound cruel and hard- hearted to speak of their and being merci- fuliy swift, hui, In view of the horrors of the old wooden ships floating on,veritahle l ever it has been before. In the days when I passions, ambitions, fears i " ’ "" ""’ ' ~ Car Derailed Causes injuries to Passengers They are Cured for in Tarte’s Palace Car-Large Orders for Locomotives for I. C. ll. at Kingston. AGCIDENT ON C. P. R. Mos-rnsaz., Feb. 27.-(Special)--The Toronto C. P. R. express met with an aonidcnt near Smith’s Falls. The forward truck of the second-class uarieft the rails shortly after leaving Smith's Fail's and the car turned over. 'ran Iruunnn earusn row.. _ Five passengers were injured, but none seriously injured. They were lm- mediately transferred to the private car of Hon. Mr. Tarte and the train backed into Smltb`s Falls. onnsris Fon Locoiiorivms. KiNusroN, 0N1‘.Feb. 27.-(Special)-The Kingston Locomotive Works have receiv- ed orders for twenty-five locomotives for the Intsrcolonial Railway and ten for the Canadian Pacldc. The orders ahead will keep them busy until May, 1905. _(iam A GREAT LITTLE WORKER. During a-long life time the heart will propel half a million tons of blood through the body, and*so long as the blond is in a healthy condition it will repair itself as fast as it wastes, patiently keeping up the play of its valves and the rhythm of its throb. If the action of thc heart pots weak, irregular and fluttering, the b ood ie lacking in nourishing qualities and re- buircs just such assistance as is best sup- plied by Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, the great lood builder and nerve restorative. charnel-houses, when the battle was over, there was hardly anypther term appllca- niez” ` The iiioiern man-of-war will not, at any rate, prolong the agonies of her crew when she is scuttlcd. Silo will gc down quick into the pit in a halo of steam, a whirling voitex cf waves, and in Hve minutes from the commencement of her downward plunge there will be no sign that there has ever been, and only if other vessels be very near will there be any possible chance of saving the hund- ful of stalwart swimmers whcsi super-human struggles have wrenched them clear of the devouring, down-dragging eddics. More than a mere handful therc could not be in any case, since another tre~ mondous difference between past and present sea fighting is that the steel-clad monster goes into the battle with hardly a man visible, almost all of them hidden behind massive walls, shut in from the devastating impact of large projrctilcs, ns as well as the horrible hall of Hotchkiss and Maxim bullets. And to ndd to all these terrible condi- tions of modern sca warfare we have now the submarine. Nil. content with the mighty arena of conflict aflbrded by the open surface of thc sea, in gale, or fog, or calm, the sea fighter must now descend into darkness and silence, the realm of the utterly unknown, in order that hp may hapiy hiirl.at one fell blow as from a bursting volcano, into blazing, boiling ruin and death, eight hundred lives, and the revenue cf a prlncipality. For man has even cxiended the battle-ground of the sea. FRANK T. lil,'I.Ll'lN. CORNS, WARTS, BUNIONS, CALLICES Removed for all time by applying I’\ii- nam`s Painless Corn and Wert Extractor. It contains no acids. Inevar burns l._nfi cures permanently. Use only “Putnam s. WITHOUT DDUBT WE ISSUE THE mrrviv we ~ BEST ACCIDENT PIILICY LADIES ruivs: Your. _'ruins _ 0,, THE MARKET ' rua Last LEAP Year. snare IN Pays the largest indemnity, and policy unconditional. ROMENADE 10° Claims settled rom tl P P Y- Policies issued and notice of accident accepted at Char- ; Liability Assurance Corporation, , Ltd.,'of London, Eng. P . ' HYNDMAN a co.. SIAII CAPITAL - Ll I - WELL OBSERVED PAARDEBERG DAY nrlllsculsll Destroyed by Fire, Raises Serious Questions British Parliamonlio be Dissolved at Easier-Balfour Government Forced to Change its Plans. s1‘a'rl caPI'rAL BURNID. lA1>Is0N, Feb. 27. -(Speclai)- The Wisconsin State capital was destroyed by fire today with a loss estimated at $800,000. wnar ir Invorvlss. The fire involves the building of a new Capitahaspecial session of the Legis- lature and the probable renewal of the agitation ,ln favor oi removnlof the Capital from Madison to Milwaukee. i>aaLIAIlIIsi~11‘ 'ro iii; nissotvirn. LONDON, Feb. 27,-(Special)-it is generally admitted that Parliament will be dissolved on Easter Tuesday and an appeal taken to the electors. A NEVV DK. IS ION. The Government did not intend to ap- peal ic the country at such an early date but recent divisions have driven it to a new decision. The impossibility of holding thc party together is rc Jognize 1. THE PENALTY OF A FAST LIFE. Is paid for by an irritable condition of body and mlnd,by exhausted energy, poor digestion, unstrung nerves and broken sleep. Ifyou must and will live the kill- ing pace, batter keep in mind the sustain- ing powers of Ferroznne, n wonderful Lon- ic and recoastructcr. Ferrozoric is s blood maker, a nerve strangthener. a heart and brain lnvigorntar. It creates np- petlte, insures perfect digestion and ilu- disturbed sleep, restores the vitality and strength lost by excessive living very quickly. Farrozonc will do you iiicsliiu- able good, lrv ir. Price a'»(lc. pei' box or six boxes for $2 50, n.t. I)ruggist~, or Poison Co., Kingston, Ont. DR. l{AMIm'oN`a PIi.I.s Cnnz IIs:AnAr'uB:. CHICAGO MARKETS. Chicano, Feb. 27. - (Special) - May Wheat 1045 July Wheat - “ Corn 57A “ Corn - Pork $16.32) Pork - MARRIED. At the parannnge. Illdcford, Feb 2-i, i004 by A. E. Chapman, Ernest Newcoinbe and Elhcl Gardiner, both of Northam. By the Gallant Boys of the Old Brigade An Enjoyable Time Spent in Feast- ing and Song at the Orderly Rooms on Saturday Night. The "Boys of the Old Brigade" fittlngly celebra'cd Paardehog Day and the fall of Cronje, the Lion of Africa, bya grand banquet in the Orderly Rooms of the Drill Shed on Saturday night. The dining hall was beautifully decor- ated with flags and hunting and when the Khaki boys with many of the City olllcers and militia men and other guest; me down at half-past eight, there was scarcely a vacant chair at the festive board. The chair was happily occupied by liador Weeks; on his right were Col. Moore, D.O.C., Dr. J. T. Jenkins, J. T. Mellish, Conn. Paton, while on his left were seated Bev. T. F. Fullerton and other prominent men. There was also present among others, George E. Hughes, M.L.A., Thomas l\Iay, A. J. Biilin, Arbemils Lord, Prof. Watts, Fred Chandler, Daniel A. lnKinnon, W. N. Duchemin, Wm. Batt, S. Mcliearney, P. P. Gillis. The caterer of the evening was I".B_ Armour and the menu was fully up tothe high reputation that this gentleman ha already won in the city. The following were served as RATIONS Midnight Soup Bully Beef Boer llam Commandeercd Goose Ikona Salad Spud 551mm; Pom Pom Pickles Soft Tuck Hard Tack Plum Duff Nightmare Pie Forbidden Fruit Plc Canadian Cake I. ll. I.. Cmfectionery Adnm's Alc Chinese Tea Vl~lritCciYee Modfior River \\'nLer. Aftci' all had well partaken of the feast and dons aiiiplc _ilisticc lo thc lnncr man the toast list was disposed of The spccchcs of the cvcning were impromptu and in culogism of the gallant deeds of our boys onthe veiriis of South Africa, in rcniinisccnce ci’ the times of hardship and prlvntion undergone, and in aiillcipatlon of the glorious position that liritain will slill maintain ns leadcr of Llic worl/1; the eloquence was nbundrint and passed all too quickly n uiucli en- _ioycd evening. ____f____--l A VERY GOOD RULE It is well known iii ‘L the majority of human ills arise im ll lomtipatlon of thcllowcla nnri rn lu ~ account mnny people make it a r\x_\- I is ».- Lmitthc bowelg uiovc once every fi-iv. lf yeii are subject to constipnt-oii you can li~ rured by the iisc of llr. Clia.~\c`.~i Kidney-Liver Pills. Thlse pills nel. only make thc bowels nctivc but ily their nctloii on thc llvcr unsure ii regular llow of Iiiio, ii1iture`.~i own cath-utic and so remove thc cause of scri- ,ous disease. l /-°-_A '55-_ ~. ¢~\ 7. \ "~ R.. ’ _ .y 1 ,, .. ff; » . f LL” so \ ./2 -dl-, P PER REVINANT SALE l . I - , _ I ich-. ’ -; ... . ' i; .-*.’i_-.‘_'- v . lit, _ F! ' All Here are genuine snaps for Early ¥. Est' if GENERAL AGENTS ng ,ow We have just gone through our Wall Paper Department and made a Clean Sweep of all odd lines and small lots; have done them up in lots to suit any size room; gre lots have borders. some have t. -All Pretty Patterns for Parity Dining Room. Bed Rocui, Hall e d Kitchen; just enough lots fora few days Fast Selling; every lot re- gardless of Cost or Pattern at ex- ml-iAi_i= PRICE Buyers. You save mrmy Ly li'y~ 4 ' ‘ Accident, Health and Employers Liability Assurance. ` Imponefs of Ar ,. _ . _ ami: Manassas., . _ CARTER & Co., Ltd., I-flcw-iw-»~£ '..;”»..$. t . ‘ll r. , ' ' ' ."\ i 1 I \ i Cock's Farm Fruit Apples, Oranges, etc.