,l 1 i __ .o=§: o.-:__ ' 'fir ‘ _ ~'kf7i_-f'_ '~*» “fi if i _»*1<_fil s-til~_efc~Pi°i7».u \ i n¢vsnsssseo1l»n»cnn»c= invssnnssf coal. rs' inc _ _ ___ "_'.»_ , _ 1 X _ xi' --_-. ..r`<,_ _. M_|q'§,_»¢} .» gf _-3 .- , . lsr ei€.i5;¢ noeiilth bélliriresuiia. _ _ cleanest of fuels---Free fitilil 2 étsdrsor ciimitasc 1 - -_ . ' 11wa'i§h‘1iiss'_co4i, ignllo quickly. anno. unnono. nor- f __ _ _ _ __ on; fir n few minutes an nlgliiualid requires but little 'v_:m___ H __ ___ _ __`r,_. gg, _ \_.. .- ._ .. _ ~- ..____f. _,r_ _». _K _ _ sins 'Iii even fire. It lusts all rgienzlbu lo the morning. .-.. ,. » Bening todaret xo cents per ..._ ._ ,._.,,_._ .._.f_,._ quart. Extra quality “for cat- iifgtir cooking. Try some _ton_ig_ht._ _ _ _ LA. HASZARDS ‘ _ 5-- 1-V; _ __ ____ __Gro_ce_r7Gr_sftou St. _ __ _ or K Excursions four days each week " . .Every Tuesday at 3 p. m. to Orw _ _ l ell, return fare 25 cenli. ~ Every Thursday at 3 p. m. to Vicn-rin. return f' re no cents. Every Friday at 3 p. m. to East River, retul-n_‘i'ai'é zo cents. Every Suiurduy nr 3, p. m. to Wen River, return are io cents. ' All of iiliovh am -d :i mist delightful afiernoonh outing at 'very small cost = :~ iIil’l'owil Steam Navy. Co. Wlluri Pnone IN. 235. _ . _ __ ; _ ___ Masonic 'Temple Upera House The Mu sidal event of ille - First and only appearance LESLI E GROSSMI TH year. of the International Artisi lhe famous English Society linlertlllner In the most original entertainment seen for years. __ Refined Humor GROSSMI FH \ GROSS Artistic Music MITH | GROSSMLTH The fun maker \ The talented musician | A genuine Artis, Prices 5oc reserved-35c and 2 5c unreserviéd. ' ' 'l_ Seats may be booked at Drug Stores. ’ 9-28MEzi i G amieson’s and Ranlrin’s I _ ~ I » I l < - r - ,_ l - ` ` ' oun Posslnrnrrlns. (From Yesterdays Evening Guardian.) "What shall we do in order to main’-ain our old standard popula- tion?" is a question that is discussed by our ablest economists of today. In the last ten years nearly ten thou- sand of our population, apart from our natural increase have alreadvleft us. and now it seems that the exodus is greater than svsr. Ws fear that in the next enumera- tion our decrease will be greater than heretofore. What shall we do that our people may be induced to stay with us? Will intensive farming on small holdings meet the emergency, as already advocated by some of our dblast journalists? We do not think that our local markets and environ- inonts are such that we can carry this on successfully at present. In- tensive farming must bs made inter- esting and ‘attr_actlve. Small holdings are adversive to keeping the pcoplo _on the land. The Lrend of the pres- ent day and generation is to concen- trate, and to do things on a larger scale. W0 see this exemplified in sivsry phase of_ averydnv life. The i'nanu‘fscturors are enlarging their lac- tbries in order' that they may pro- duce more' cheaply and adopt thc most modern _ machinery _and meth- dds. ' _` Hence the small men are forced to s wall. The departmental stores his grdduully driving the weaker `crchants out of business, ns a se- `_sl to the silprt ol concentrated nitsl. Even labor has its choice in ing in gangs, (_eolonles_ if von llke,) " here thc, atmosphere is more con- `riial, where the methods of produc- _5 on are the most modern. and where s work is the lightest. To say that __'._‘s _boys will stay on the land and Q primitive farm tools and the one rsd mnshllw which must naturallv ilow n 'gmail h ldin s, while his 3 _i¢l_;i_»oii"‘ira'slu'.l5lle gasoline enrlnc, the an`nre-spreader; the gang-plough and if her modern methods along the _ me line in trying to put 9 square ug in a round_l_i'olc. Hooper or later __ must _adopt doing things on a rarer plane. We must then try and iid 'up homo markets by increasing rpopulstion. l‘5rof. J_-. W. Robert- in on eddrcco glvcn in cnnrlom- ,Vn u le' Years ago said: "Therein ,- reason that P. E. Island should be the home og splendid indus- lu another nc lem. z»l'o-cmrai"oi Youth should find omplovment in l ind\\éi‘-riot' instead oflsaviug "_ 1-1-_-wr ~ » ."‘ ‘. - 'iw ' har _.manufactur- .~. _ , ,_ - - . _; r __ _ nd Oddly* uni -».;5'f.'.' ii-Nz .ce » .. .A » . . ,_ .r<_ i ~ ‘li 'J ’"m‘- are .-l‘.»,;~;\l-_- 1,.. |i\i'»l|"|‘l'|d|'. host equipped machinery, that is pro- -curabls. Mr. Gol‘l's plant. in Char- 'lottetown has turned out some splen- did work equal to the best made in Canada and clearly demonstrates what can be done in that line. Asa people we consume every year nearly halt a million dollars for this one item alone and it is something we must blly, wear out, and buy again. We could supply the other provinces just as cheaply and with as good an article, as they are no doubt buying elsewhere. It is conceded that forty to iifty thousand raw hides and pclts are shipped from this province annu- ally to the large tanneries of the _neighboring provinces. This should ibe manufactured at home if we were ,iklsking the best of our possibilities. |whu¢ could be soho in uno lndustry -is an incentive of what could be done 'in the woolen industry. It is said 'that P. E. Island wool classes among |the best in Canada. We can hardly -conceive or estimate _correctly tho iamount of Woolen fabrics imported every year. We sell sixteen ounces of ,wool for irom twenty to twenty-five _ccnts. The manufacturer makes that one pound into cloth and what do wg have to pay for it then? It is easily seen how every other province is increasing in population from the fa~ci. that the manufactorics Day high wages to their help. 'They in turn have lots of money to spend among the farmers for eggs, butter, and fruit-the products of the farm. While the manufacturers are gettin: _rich from our raw products, the far- mers around them arc getting a_good living share of the prosperity slid are induced to stay on the land, knowing by experience that they can sell at good prices all they can produce. We could elisily support and main- tain a population of 250,000. For instance. if it cost ten centsadozen to produce eggs et the present ratio, to produce twice the quantity, would Iwi £0811 any more-all things being equal. The some reasoning nppliss to butter. bacon, beef, etc. Then the land would become more productive through the application of more com- inercial fertilizer, which has _been proved to be profitable when jiidici- ously used. By those methods farm- ing would be more profitable and conducive to independence. Now, as to thcfmeans by which we can -induce our money men in start- ing msnufactorles. Let us have the farmers interested in this through discussions at our Institutes, so as to become shareholders (with a feel- ing oi patriotism) to realise that manufsctories are conducive to home markers. vhl#.lH_°_ A .emi -Inter. ln. huflding up thmpoirulation and inde- pendence of ths__proyince, Brit- i_s_i.sn‘I&i__¢_i. which l` bdi vs of ‘ ,lg _ dl onstrstos inl»~ac¢.\~.__' _ ~ 1 » ”‘ Nvv. suppose this matter were talked up before our farmers snd~ M ~f -a"_'..._1 My .ws -i' » _ , . '4 C_._ __ "»";i'.:;f I' _'f=fi°=‘-Lt* li3"’;°°'°‘fi»’i‘li `*“»’.§“"i fi:'."7‘-*..°ii ».1i - » .- ,3 ‘° ._._’ f" -71 fx-. dill; . -ei- . V . " li V ` ' ‘advocates pnoffv c ': rha'nufset'urfi|§ ` I and I - pmt. with ri c pncftv wrt. _ _vioffeurncdinurro -cumin . vit tile but artisans and iv., _ ;..;~-L in, _“__ susan; li? r ~ey_u_l_d.\»o.`, 1 _ proven i::._::..;‘:.»..;.i_'_,if“i~°` °*,.':::;'?"*1`- i'~”i'?'i.‘f‘f~'5~*°5__l;ls ycaurcny' orclle rdslln . _ ,,,.., ...°Johu Fraseé _ tsdcher of Bouris West, was in llarlottetown attend- "iiig the Tcdclliirs' Convention. `...*l’. G. Seaman, Bouris, ii 'spend- ing s short holiday in Charlotte- town. ` _ _ ...‘W. Amy, Toronto, and`P. S. I-lammoh, Mdrntrsill, were‘in Monts- gue this week and registered at the Mc‘Donald Hotel.-B. ...°'l‘he Government Dredge No. 9, begm work this week in Montsslw- and is dredging between the wharves preparatory to the fall shipping.-B. ..._°'l‘hs schooner Beagice, Capt. 0'!-iara, which arrived in Bonds; Thursday was discharging her cargo- oi coal yesterday. \ ‘ ...answers Focuou. P`rlucll>al. and Miss Mary Whitey teacher _oi Bourls_ High School, _were in Charlotte- town attending the Teachers' Con-` vention. ._.1» ...*Misses Irene Sterns and Patty Currie, who weie in Charlottetown attending the exhibition, are expected home to-night. through the columns oi your esteem- cd DBIYPF- JOHN B. MACFADYEN. Augustine Cove. UNCOVER ANCIENT CEMETERY. ROME, Sept. 27.-An ancient ,Christian cemetery has accidentally been discovered in the neighborhood of the remains oi the Church of the Holy Apostles at Suoleto, in the Province ol Perugia. ' The church, one of the first Christian temples erected in that part of Italy, cou- tained the bones ofmany who slider- ed martyrdom dnder the Fldvian Ern- perors, but had not been used as a place of burial lor more than iifteen ,centuries Since modern times, having been little more than a ruin, it passed as private property into the lamily of the Sinibaldi, oi whom the present head, the Italian Deputy of that name, decided to enlarge the exten- sive basements for use as_a cellar for storing wine, he being a wine grower on a large scale. ' Excava- tions had hardly begun, a few days ago, when one of the workmen struck a solid block of stone about three feet below the surface and this prov- ed to be the cover of an ancient sar- cophagus of unusual size. I Twenty-one sareophagi with mas- sive covers in monolithn were un- earthed, all helonging to the third or fourth century A. D. ` They were *bpened in the presence of a group of public olllcials and archaeologists from diderent parts of Italy and each was found to contain a skeleton in a perfect stats of preservation. LORD MILNER IN HALIFAX. HALIFAX, N. B., Sept. 27.-Lord Milner addressed the Canadian Club last night. No set subject was an- nounced in ady_snce ashis topic, but what Lord ilner really contended for was the absolute divorcement of imperial, from local issues. Any' _contribution Canada might make to the navy should be made, he said, not as a gift to England but to the empire. .Lord Milner pleaded for the considerationoi lm- perisl matters on their merits and altogether apart from local matters. I-Ie hopiid that such a non-partisan sentiment would be brought about in Canada. In England mattars_of lor- elgn policy had been, during the past ten years withdrawn from partisan strife, and hs hoped for the time when throughout the empire the same _thing would happen as to imperial ques ions. SWEARB GIBSON CAPSIZED BOA'l_‘. __ GOSHEN, N. Y., Sept. 26.-More than fifty, witnesses are expected to be called wheri the hearing of Attor- ney Burton W. Gibson, accused of th`é murder of Countess Ross Mcnschik Szabo, begins Monday. Counsel for the accused lawyer are having witnesses for the prosecution summoned in order to get a line on the Stste’s case. Startling evidence, in which an eye witness of the coun- tess’ death swears that Gibson jump- ed from the boat in which they were rowing on Greenwood Lake at the time of the tragedy and rocked lt uri-» til it overturned, Ins been secured hy District Attorney Rogers. _mucus msn rouup Damn. _ ` soc. ze. sou, Organ well-known dead miles east and ‘tho Pralibiyicr' church some to-_ .o ,I »~. . '_ Uo,rnf.ng be ob°t`alnsd at llo\\¢l|'l\s.~» . - ...~'rnd iiorn' 'inrniiily ouar1iur\'l"‘ ' can gc _obtlillqti 'IC HM J. llbolfl DWI wtf, Bourill .- J. - .._-r~- G; skant°__w°i:_i_____ug d to n w v _ ou_i§_3iliil§ll an iaeiiin our vii: nucy. silica phono Nc. to -5. ..,‘5uliicrlberb should rsneyf n wbsk or two before the time they have paid for has expired Sud thus not niliil 'dll issue, as all ullplirb are dis- continued promptly on expiry datu- _..._ ...'T._Gdrdon lies, agent. will M iladto' receive all nhws, driver*-tlsiug and subscriptions in Montague and vicinity. His oflice phone No. is 18, also rcslucncsphono No. zo.~ _ (Frohi Yesterddyl Evening Guardian.) ...*Bc-llooiler Vi$B G. Hartland, ar- rived in Souris-lest eveullis from the fishing grounds.*_ ____ Gllllilihll can J ohnston’s, ...°Mrs. Isaac Ives, Montague. re- turned home yesterday from Cape Trdvlrss.-*B. ' A. Lpdwsll, Souris, _spent s. plltisiut bvevlfrig rtcsntly with his friends-at Cape Runga* ` ...°'!’h'e schooner Sir Wilfrid, Capt. Jamieson, Georgetown, is discharging B cargo of coal in Montague.-B. _’ ...°'rue schooner Amazon, Capt.; Toksr, from Csneo for the Magdalen? Islands was in Souris for shelter you-5 t,srday.° _ - ' ...'The Bchr. HAPPY Go Lucky, Capt. Allen, Montague, is in uort st Montague with a cargo of barrel. shocks.-B. ._.°'rnc sourie ”fioucrme_n‘ rcporc bake and bait very plentiful at pre- sent. The catch yesterday was three_ thousand pounds per boat.° ...‘Schoon'er Typhoon, Capt. 'Fherl-` nulc, coal laucn from Picton to_ House Harbor, M. I., put in Bourls for shelter last evening! ...~"rno S. s. Enterprise nrriveolnsc evening in Montague with a general freight and left this morning for Pic- ton with a cargo of freight and pro-_ duce.-B ’ ...~scirpo'uor Annie M., cape Poole, srrived__lu Souris yesterday. Bhe had on hoai§ six barrels' oi mackerel which were caught oil the South side of East Point.* 5-1, _tama- ...°M T. G. Ives and son Claude, Morlta*, who his bcdn visiting hdr mother, Mrs. I. o. Rhode, sc. John, for the pest three weeks returned lioms yesterday.-B." ...’Miss Mamie Campbell, Souris, leaves this morning for Boston after spending il year with ber parents. She will be ioined at Morell by her friends Miss May McIntyre en route to the Bunny South.-A. ..."l‘hs Guardisn’s representative at Bouris was favored hy a visit irom Allen and Mrs. McDonald, Rock,barra, They renewed their subscription to the Guardian of which they have been subscribers for the past twenty- iivs years. _ ...'Tl_\ere were a largenumber ol passengers on the S. S. Lady Sybil which sailed from Bouris after the arrival of the evening train to the Magdalen Islands. She landed 250 barrslsof ilour and one car of way freight! . DESPERATE ACT OF NEW YORK POLICE OFFICER. (NEW YORK, Sept. 26.-Anthony Dabs, thc policeman who arrested Harry K. Thaw after the latter kill- sd Stanford White on the Madison Square Garden roof, shot and pro- bably _mortally injured his wife late today, sent bullets into the thighs of two small girls and then committed suicide. Tha shooting took place in front qi the Dabs home on the upper west side after a quarrel, the outcome of which was the serving of a subpoena upon Debs summoning him to appear in the domestic relations court. §tanding__gn the lowest step of the stoop, ,Dehi_,_ fired f,our tigres at his wife _sbs stood o;_;___t h_ landing. on_e'._i:\ri_io,f5,vvr-nc wud, anocggr cnccr- ed_l1 _.__wilo_’s and t s others struoli Mary Co lius,§, 18 years old and Kate Hawkeswkzigll oi the same hge, nsi hliof;s' chi _n, who were plsylngiii rug _doorway _ I Hteppiu over his wif_h's body Dabs -entered' _lifs.i:orrlé,` rel adsd his revol- ver1_a’iid,`,;ihnc hirh“¢'sii,in _the temple. Two hours later _ _yrs lcd _in the hos- nicei v_»n¢r,,_rla n e _l eiiiu s cnncoi condlzlan tonight wir t o two chu- dren, less seriously injured in an ad- jalning ward; 'Dabs had two children, who were not at home st the time of the shoot- in . ‘ K Lazy rronsn mixes _oaaoal Bev- minor-r._ GLAOE __-~*..,_ insiance:- _ (C 's ui (C Cl is Ki s. sl fl Black , Butter crocks ra u Tile' Largest Most up to Date .Eirclusive Styles 'f in Charlottetown if Om* showing of woinen’s' coats Yiind wraps for fall and winter is ‘larger and more complete than lever before' and includes hund- lreds of carefully selected foreign domestic garments, includ ing ,- ;_»_ New Double Laced Wooleos- Insliuh Auturn Tweeds. Black or Blue Cheviot Cloth -_-Fancy mix gnu and Iwo ions worsieds _ 'r‘:'f 1 Prices $5.00 io25.il0 Prowse Bros Lid. < We always carry in stock a complete line of Butter Cracks, (burns. Jugs Bean Puls, etc. We are headquarters for--these goods, and our prices right For Churns al 606 ‘il li is fs % 11 2_6 - 1 gi 25;: 1% O( 2 “ 45c (li-bb# `l 3' " 55c “ ' 654: Bean Po ll ll _ .. at I 23 3_uecenorn__f_o_ A_.N Mcifay Suonysld l throng had assembled, lined by hun~f dreds of school children, _iro whose outbursts of cheering, while repeated attempts to make the horse stand were followed by loud and spontan- eous applause until the spectators were worked upto that pitch oi sn- thusiaeru' which a budding political oruror would give years or nl: life to arouse. ' Finally on`adrnin_lst_eri_ng stlrnulnnts, and with the assistance of a number of on-look`ers and sid fire-crackers the equine was placed in motion, and the excitement for the time being subsided. our rms our Ann were rr ur. It is surprising uiclnrgc number of people in, Charlottetown who, when gay _want to inquire about their __ orning Daily Guardian ur subscrip- tion, ink Central for the_I~T`c`w`s phone No. 138, or ior the Advertising phone N_o. 132.3, instead _of 132; or when they want to inquire aboutgadvortls-' ing ask Central for the Subscription -phone No. 132-2, or for the Newfs cphone No. 133, instead of 132-3-; or .when they. want the News or Editor- i_al Department ask Central for the Subscription phone No. 182-2, or the Advertising phone No. 123-8, instead 'ol 183, although' all tholndspart- ments and their respective, _phone nulrlbers are plainly given lii`t\1_a_tole- phono book. Some people, inftshd of looking .attlie hook, eveh .phone one o_f_`tlic above departments todnd out- wllst number to ask for tio jst mi- ochcr dccnrtnicnc. . all this is _s- great waste oi time on tli`s.fphf‘t oi the s_rso_nU__ph_on_inn, t__ _'Vg _tor at _the iyientral, and the _ def norunent' ",f°|_1¢_fy li , _uwsi penn, on an 'un r o .1 t-sive the ~ necessary information about sith- ‘er dv _ _ ‘FI . or 'thiiiadgdtigsrihh l$}P tions gionovii.-'li'ol~'-. ' _ _ l>tl_¢;n, rugs __-sovsrclpg. oqgqsws' _ n_- other woiss the lg” *now and chu no but cli_elr_o,w,i ctw lgxwwnl depsrtmmfn; and it fill Q _ iss they would__ _l»_s_oqnti£_\:slly running irom one department another, uu- c;:“ncrrc-~.rr'°cr.n.e""- on an lr the D99! ls can llli On and ir n_v_nh6ns_|sulnlisr, _¢rcspt1I_8. Poison: who consult tlrgir phono' wil_ il‘ylilsnth`wr.~' notlhiiimqyprii _:asians 'him una A 6 nv _‘Qi ‘their iillfi" of this ki-nd, e curious and gaping MAROONI HAD REBTLESS NIGHT _ tickled throats emanatedliequcnt' 1 l s.ao :lilo mlm us-~ for the iliiriiiillrd they rmliri' "_1'!_°_l-___‘°'.‘l.=lei°f...s..,_,§mf. ll" \ SPEZIA, Italy, Sept. -ze-'\vi1l=nrn 'Marconi .~.passed a restless night ns n result of injuries suffered by him in an automobile accident fy;s=_mdn~,. near Borghetto. I-Ie' complaiunl of Pains from a slight wound in ”hc` head, while injury to his right i-_vc and many other bruises caused con- siderable irritation. Mrs. Marconi, who was not hurt in the collision sat up nursing her hnsbanl through the night. Mr. Marconi 'was driving at the lime. and the automobile with which his car collldcd was practically wreck Gd bv- the force of the impact. It bo- longsd too lawyer named Beltramc, who was scverclv llruiscd about the chest. while his son‘s teeth were all broken. ' Mr. Marconi's secretary was rnghm badly hurt, his nrm being disl0¢~,5i;¢-_d_ A1' ' - - -r._ 1- -~‘ . ~ l 'J' rl~_rll-r-»~‘_l_~;'i:_"~--~r. 7‘J7‘>_ff}3>’»'~"{ .@mOmm Seeing ls Bellcvimi ll ¢ li i 1 ` Y0%wan sons' eirutn U8 ) n 2-" 'n nT$‘»'$.°“R‘.?l°"°'5°° i§.‘ii‘ . ner -cl cnalo"d J w \ou are ité . ~ l* - . i .r£=H°*'li“é2{°_ _ 0"- just whlilruyotrgay _. beersseweanoiyeiilie ~ n id as w ll befou _ _ E single bell v- ya* ‘..'.=::.'I*‘l'.:.i.':a'i"'»f_=~ ._ ° _ ;§i§'$,?;'i“ ~» “M I .es i I ' _ '. 4' i "°_'“‘°' ‘,:.-,~ _ ae on "T’iii'1iT'Z ~»¢&-oA~‘.AAA le _ B_______ _ Clothlu ___c_i-lAt;_L=____ _P o_ _*_*-9" _ ON E WARE _ _ $OQQ\U.,_§°_‘ \l 9 "Wish that abr- hardly dared to own For something better than she had V L _ known. is hs wish of maniac overworked housekeeper who is compelled to cook I meals n ay on an old-iss lonsd poorly equipped stove lf the izrirsarslss Momillcn srsnnonos _ kdeeégsfgg }_f:___l`£l§§1_:i_;_€1_:_i_;1Ly_.__‘;_i_tdr:_l_i_§r_ié'i;_ll_ave been" diff( rent and Whittier could no Th MONARCHI' ht I b , an smgle supply of hlozf. \n"hli;riort-"filli: fissile; ttiisnkesimd mel ls A End 'num' ‘nd ln” Our new catalogue is nut showing the diiiereni. ways tho MONARCB i ;\l)i_=e_t_i_;_3_sk your stove deaier'to_let yvu seo it. and also examine the itanggiloli' THE ENTERPRISE FOUNDRY C0 sACliVILl.l3 N B MA surncruaans _“iii are distinctive No man will want td wqr hi! Old one any longer mhpu l1¢ sccslhese attractive new Stiff lists 3 cwsnfrg *fr* youueé ,__ il IB E P - . Neckwear, ~ M e-3 < il ia. Y-'lu &el.»ri‘if¢‘=i_ _ la-.».~\ \-an r