ff' . <-_ ., ._ ` .;.l. "4 l 1; l . I .1 . 1 1. 1 ,.-ll. l 5 . 1 'l ( .V . 1 ,__ 4:1' 13;- , . .l,, 1.1. ' 1-* -- . gin-_ "`:'&_ 4~ ' I 1' ,-; 1". - 1. 5* ', 'e it ,' -Q if ffl :l I.. l 1 ._ A! _,lvl t~ . - . . -W. ‘;. al “ . ..- .'; $.11 l _ ill ,. = A ‘,; if »1»=-or ~7-~_:.».....5. _-gg ..,»’ it » -1 .i- .`i` _-$- .,. pq 1. I vé- .... . yi, _ ._,;¢ 5.-rt. hum- '-- 1-a.-sew,”--1 r _ . it lp, .-,i Hi N f" F .Li iw 1, I ,i.‘t _-.__ ~,» , . 1 l \ I ~'<-I:?5`-.T-' MA -115" ' `.` ..- lil- I 1?; his title: I pf l. t'l l ii-_ l‘_ \ 1. 1, <, .. 1 .l ll. ig.. _;,., l l»-=. Vt. ig.: Q l v -. ft 'ii rt - A '.- (_ 1 .-\--.- i .\f~` 51 __..f fi' "- : np- 1 -.pt _ 1-3' F I ‘ ji 3,. > I . 7.1." 1 1 '- rf' - ._ -:fr ll » ,J ir. tu Pilo _is an ointment .made expressly for the _treatment of piles -for _which it is' a, very 'effective remedy O Pilo -allays the infiamation reduces the swelling, _relieves the pain and gives relief in a remark- ably short time. _ _Piio represents _ a scientific combination based on a full under-_ standing of the nature 4 of the maiady for which it is offered as a remedy. .l. G. .lamieson DRUGGIST Watermans lileal - Fountain Pens for the New Year. Every pen fully guaran- teed. Prices from $2.50 up. G. H. Taylor Jeweller & Optician _ M “DE TABLE FEBRUARY. High HT 7.3 Water Tinle 23.38 12.45 13.15 13.45 14.16 14.50 15.31 16.21 17.22 18.36 19.51 20.58 21.59 22.56 23.48 = 12.39 0.34 I 13.00 T11. 1.18 1 13.3? 2.01 14.0.1 Sa. f 14.28 .. _ S. 14.54 I M. ` 15.23 `T\1- = 16.04 W. 17.03 Th. 18.21 F. 19.36 Sa. 20.42 ‘ S. 21.42 gggpgquqeqqj a'aU\¢a~ioooo~l`¢='u1§t~2;,.; Time 12.14 Date Day tcdimmbcalep 5 ,gg I* Fw 5°?" 5°!" C .~.:.- erm ' -Q Noe fri T1.`i.".".e’?‘.°°.° T’ 0* cnicocenvtoo A 'Q I".`1.".°.".`J."."."’."'."."’.“"°° *I ewmoeool-treo:-amvioiavo ll W. Th. F. Sa. S. 3'* D-4 O fir' Qi# _ea ci ~l _-I O il . _ 10 7.51 1 1 _ 9.00 9.57 10.46 11.29 M. 12.06 ' 3?? 12 F. Sa. I S. 9°." can lil 14 15 FFFPFF mhwmwn Qwm~w» ?? 9PFF wa ~m¢w _-i_-1 -zu is 11 is ia eo 'fi .,.. rn oo 55 24 .G9 mm 25 26 27 28 5°°.°° §U` moo is 10.23 FEBRUARY.-lst to Iind. threaten- ing. 3rd to 4th, rain. 5th to 7th, low temperature. 8th to 11th, pleasant. 12th to 15th. keen cutting winds. 16tll to 19th, unsettled wave. 20111 to 21st, windy. 22nd to 24th. mild. genial. 25th to 28th, general snows. __ DIIIIY OF EVENTS T0-DAY. Magistrates Court. 9 a.m. People's Theatre. 7.15 and 9 Prince Edward Theatre, 3, 8.45 p.n1. p.in. 7. and Skate at St. Dunstalfs. ` M" " BIRTHS CAIRNS-At Tryon. on Jan. 25. 1915, to Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Cairns, a son. 0 MACLAREN-At Georgetown on Jan. 30th. to Mr. and Mrs. William Mac- laren. a daughter. STUART-BRACE.-in St James Church. on Tuesday, Feb. 2nd. by Rev. T. F. Fullerton. D.D., George B. Brace. Ton ld Albert Mabel H. Stuart ,Great George Street, Charlottetown. , ‘ 8377-1-26tuf-4|. Schooner For Sale W. Parnell O'Hara, 79 tous, Ameri- can build. Vessel and sails In good condition. Has 27 lI.P., Gasoline en- gine installed by skilled Machanics. Will move Schooner six miles an hour and gives perfect satisfaction. Will sell with or without engine. For par- ticulars write E. BOSWELL. Victoria. P. E. Island. 8402-1-2SMi.f. Tenders For (Il1_eese Maker TENDERS will be received by the undersigned up to noon, February 10, for a maker for Hamilton Factory. Tender to state price per 100 lbs. cheese made. for labor only, Company finding all supplies. Output for last year 45 tons. J. I". PROFITT, Secty., Kensington Dairying Assn., S444-1~2ni2i Kensington. Aniiual__lileeting Tile Annual Meeting ot' the share- holdcrlfof Hillsboro Dalrying Coin- pany will be held in Hillsboro Cheese Factory on Wednesday the 3rd of February, at 2 o`clock p. nl. A full attendance is requested as interesting business is to be iliggvussed. _ F. T. MORROW. President. HUGH TRAINOR, Secretary. 8477-2-3m1i Money To Loan Messrs. McKinnon and McNeill, 90 Great George Street. have several thousand dollars to loail on real good security in the city or country in small or large sums. 8105-Imwflin -l I IN THE LONDON PAPERS. War is Reflected Even in the Ads in thc Great Dailies. The advertising columns of the Loll- don daily papers tell their own stories' of the war. Ii' the censor wont so far as to block out every other lille of ln- formntion, so long as he left the ails. intact the reader would still not lack instruction as to what war means to England. He would still find a great deal of pathos and grim humor. The most notable change has been in the character of the advertising. it is distinctly war advertising. Ol that sort it is more extensive than has ever been known ill the history ol' British journalism. The greatest space galil is probably in ille small iid. linc. Two or more pages, usually the first and lust. of the lcafilnl.: lnorn- ing pnpors are as from time ilnnicln- orinl crowded with thc print an- nouncements yfith only ii bold initial letter to relieve the monotony. The conspicuous new feature is the “Killed in Action" or the “ltoll of Honor" section. There is not a column and hardly an advertisement among the hundreds on the page but that directly or in- directly suggests somc phase of the war. Thc "l’erso13£il" columns. as ever, arc cuigmas. xccpt to those wllo have shared the sccret of communi- cation by this menus, but they often flnflvor of patriotism. When one reads “Dearest-Ani praying for you; al- ways loyal; love," he may easily lill- agine it to bo some swcetlicart's pos- sibly valll attempt to get xi word to her soldier lover, she knows not just where. But one needs to cxercisc no ilnag~ inailon to si-c the 1-.fleets of the wilr in othcr iii:-rinllco:-1. Taking n personal column haphazard one finds ncur thc top such an appeal as this: ' “I want to buy ii Gcrniali helmet. What offers?" There are many suggestions of how one may help the troops in training, such as thlsz- "Wlll anyone lend a pack of har- riers or bengles to a regimental mess to be hunted by the oillcers until or- dcrcd abroad?" There arc those wlln want to locatc wounded relatives, such as this: "if anybody has news of Maj. A. I". liurg, thc I{ing's Own Scottish Bor- derors. wounded at I,c Cntcau. Ang. 26. will they please communicate witli"- There is such a one ns this to re- flect the busy days at the War Ofilcez "0llicer nt War Ofllce, long hours, desires to let. or exchange his house, one hour froln London." TWO CANADIAN CONTINGENTS. "'l`lic Second will bc tht,-. last. contin- gent of Canadliin soldiers to go t_o the front," said n Montreal oillcer who re- turned from Ottawa Tuesday. after ii consultation with the Adjulunttiener e . a. to . » - 1 ' Charlottetown, .al's department. Additional troops "We have a full line of all the dif- ferent kinds ot cased and uncased will be sont over but not as a divtsioll, ns was the case with the tlrst contingent, and will be with the sec- D . all shapes. qualities and prices. ond. They will 8° merely as relo- S=|l:'et I. from the ten 25c ec forcementl for the 50000 Canadians alive im - - lull we are , I 'MacKinnon going forward with the ilrst and sec- Drug Co.. mt George and ond contingents, as has already been Kent Btrhets. - ‘ liliiltf. done in the case of the Princess Pat _ .1 .;;_ _ ' 't'f_‘.*.'.°__"2i=":‘22£~._”£1':.:"2:':?i.'¥.£€ “-\ r _ 2§_§':tr~=ct'1sr1';”3! f9__'s’_._2‘_ .ttf ::.‘;':i°‘.'.t:.:'.'_"' :'::.‘i‘.'.‘.:*..".‘.2i_s.°.:’.°.';°;.‘:: -_ [__'§a..'¢..l-."...~ _(L fi _._ - 'l‘~ J..-.1 _ The London Tablet has sent us through the Catholic Record, of Lon- don. Ont.. the text of the famous pas- toral letter of Cardinal Mercier, of Belgium. for the publication of which he was m,ade a practical prisoner by the German possessors of Brussels. The pastoral itself is altogether- too lengthy to be published. but here are 11 few salient extracts from lt, as re- produced from the Catholic Record: It wus ill ltoine itself that I re- ceived ~tho tidings - stroke after stroke-of the partial destruction of the Cathedral church o(Louvaln, next of the burning of the library and of the scientific installations of our great University and of the devastation of the city, mid next of the wholesale shooting of citizens, and tortures n- iiicted upon women and children, and upon unarmed and undefended men. And while I was still under the shock of these calamities the telegraph brought us news of the bombardment of our beautiful metropolitan cllurch, of the church of Notre Dame and la la Dyie, of the eplscopal palace and of a great part of our dear city of Malines. 0 O U \Vhen, immediately oil my return from Rome, I wen; to Havre, to greet our Belgian, French, and English wounded; when, later, nt Malines, at Louvain, at Antwerp, it was given to me to take the hands ot' those brave men who carried a bullet in their flesh, a wound oil their forehead, be- cause they had marched to the attack of the enemy, or borne the shock of his onslaught. it was a word ol' grati- tude to thcnl that rose to my lips. “O valiant friends," I said. “it was for us, it was for each one ol’ us, it was for nic, that you risked your lives and are now in pain. I ain moved to tell you of my respect, of my thankfulness, to assure you that the whole nation knows how much she is in debt to you.' For in truth our soldiers are our saviors. il 0 ll Al first at Liege, they saved France; a second time, in Flanders they arerstcil the advance of the enemy upcn Calais. Fraiico and England know it; and lli_-l'giunl stands before them both, and before the entire world. ns it nation of heroes. Never before in my wholc life did I feel so, proud to bo a Bel- gian as when, on thc platforms of French stations, and halting a while lil Paris. and visiting London, I was witness of thc entliusiastic admira- tion our Allies feel for thc heroism of our Army. Our King is, in the esteem of all, at the very summit of the lnornl scale; hc is doubtless the only mall who docs not. recognize that fact, as, simple as thc siinpclst of his soldiers, he stands in thc trenches and puts new courage, by the serenity ot’ his face. into the hearts of those of whom he requires that they _ shall not doubt of their country Tile foremost duty of every 'Belgian citizen at this hour is gratitude to the Army. ' iii fs Ki e It any inau had rcscucd you from sbipwrekc or from a fire, you would assuredly hohl yourselves bound to hint by a debt of everlasting thank- fulncss. But it is uct onc man. it is two hundred and fifty thousand men \vl1o fought, who suffered, who fell l`or you so that you might be free, so that Belgium might keep her inde- pcndcnce, her dynasty, hor patriotic unity: 'so tlmi. after the viclssitudes of buttlc slic might rise nobli-r, purer, more crcct. and more glorious than before. Pray daily my brethren, for these two hundred and fifty thousand, and for their leaders to victory; pray for our brethren in arms; pruy for the fallen; pray for those who are still engaged; pray for the recruits who are making ready for the fight to ccnie. What Belgium Has Suffered Better than any other mail, perhaps, do I know what our unhappy country luis undergone. Nor will any Belgian, I trust, doubt of what 1 suffer in lily soul, as ii citizen and as il Bishop, in sympathy with all this sorrow. These f`our last months have seclncd to mc ngclong. Uy thousnluls have our brnvc ones been inown down; wives, motil- vrs, arc we-cping for those t.licy shall never acc again; llenrtlis arc deso- liito; dirc poverty sprciitls. anguish increases. At\Malint~.s. at Ant\verp,thc pee-plc of two great cities have been given over. tho one for six hours. the other one for thirty-four hours. of n continuous bombardlnent, to thc throes of death. I have traversed the greater part of the districts most terribly de- vastated in my diocese. and the ruins I bchcld, and the ashes were more tircndiul than I. prcpnrcd by the sud- dcst ol' forcbodillgs_ could have Inl- agincd. Other parts ot' my diocese. which I have not yet had time to visit have ill like lnnnncr bccn laid waste. tlliurcllcs, schools. asylunis. hospitals, conventa in great numbers are in rllins. Entire villages have all but din- appoarctl. At Wereliter-Wnckerzeal,f'or instance, out of 380 homes. 1210 remain; nt Trenieloo, two-thirds of the village are overthrown; at l3ucken.out of 100 Pi -J' I ? Our Repair l Department We could nat possibly give you a better service regardless of cost. than our repair department is offering you right now at our usual low prices. Iiring your cwelry hi-rc to be rc-paired. ci 'illled Ii iited 'tl ih ~ E3nnl1Zl'|lll\whicl\‘lhE wolkvillll beceyecpslt E rticl I li i ted' undv us=; ugetrgo hlrghnirtrfisicdlrd of pert on.be!ore beinl Pl Ord--thats yvh ‘our repair work given per ect satin- ac on houses, 20 are standing; at Scbaifen, acres, for which tenders will be re- _ _ ' fri' leelvea up to iota ifellrusry, 1915. see THE rsxr st-lows THAT rl-is cAno|NAi. oF s£l.c|uM MERELY fp rl.. following letters from natives ticular... My proper desire is to be .5 - .lt and lllvesl- Toto 'rHE.1'RuTi-1 Asour THE GERMAN DEvAs1'ArtoN OF His lliave been published in the Advertis-" under the Union oovernments iiaz- “`-. _ er Port Eli sbeth, South Africa, Grot- nonsiiicic ou.i.ls, ‘ °°U"TRY PMESTS WERE MURDERED BV *HE "UNE esqus. ami even ridiculous. as their Suit Nat. Compu. can advise our <1-'~ _ Care of MacKinnon & McNeill. 90 _ -_--___ wording may appear, they are none Native Chiefs to form our defence the less more remarkable evidence of force which will drive away all these the Io alt and devotion with which, oppressors out of our _Union Govern- Y Y 189 houses out of 200 are destroyed- ,the South Africa native regards Brit- 11 still stand. At Louvain the third 'ish rule. .part of the buildings are down: 1,074 dW9llill5B have disappeared; on the ,A town land and the suburbs, 1 823 for the Pretoria District, and was a_s your obedient servant. o :: - - _ in . houses have been burnt. _f t 0 s A In this dear city of Louvain, per ' Dewally ln my thoughts. the magma- c cent church of St. Peter will nevei U recover its former splendor. The learn that the G. S. W. A. tr00DB are ,the editor of the Advertiser, and both ancient college of St. Ives, the an d schools, the consular and commer irnmeut, in this matter, Sir, I uni out original. cial schools of the University, the ole D markets, our rich library with its D The first letter was sent to Mr. W. 0. Dear Sir, I like in this matter if ments borders. Dear Sir, I am here in Frankfort. I-‘_ S. God Save the King! God Save llows "Frankfort, “O.F.S.," 16-10-10 “Dear Sir-In the connection of this ircunistauce which occurred for the; nion Government I am quite sad to oslrcus to delapidatc our Union Gov- I sense to find that we natives are ut out of our Govemment duty. What lished manuscripts. its archives, its tive defeuceforce be culled 10 i0ll\ collections. its unique and nnpuh ls our duty then? When will the Na- 0 gallery 01' great portraits oi iilustrl- 1 ous rectors, chnncellors, professors, ll r their daily duty?`For these troops ave already invaded our luiperia. dating fronitne time or its rounds Governnient. tlcn, which preserved for masters and ul-lldcllts alike a. noble tradition ani 8 were an incitement in their studies 1 -all this accuinulail 11 of intellectual sir. in this matter I dvn’t actually un - 0 _ of llistorlc, and of artistic riches,thi fruit of the labors of five centuries- i all is in the dust. Many a pastor has lost its pastor There is sounding in my ears the sorrowful voice 'Of an old man o. whom I asked whether he had hai Mass on Sunday in his batteret church. "It is two months." he said, "since we had ii Church." Thi parish priest and the curate had been interned in a. concentration camp ll 1 1' Thousands of Belgian citizens have in like manner been deported to thi prisons of Gerlilany, to hlunstorlagen to Colle, to Magdleburg. At Munster lagcn nuone three thousand one hun tired civil prisoners were numbered. Ilistory will tell of the physcal and moral 'torments of their long marhyi dom. Hundreds of innocent lnen weri shot. l possess no complete necrology; but I know that there were ninety-ont shot at Aerschot, that there, under pa.in of death, their follow citizens were compelled to dig their graves in the Louvain group of commune: 176 persons, men and women, old me' and sucklinks, rich and poor, in health and sickness, were shot or burnt. Priests Were Murdered In my diocese alone I kilow tlial priests or religions were put tl death. Ono of these, the ‘parisi priest ot' Gelrodc, suffered, l believe a veritable lnartyrdonl. I made ii pilgrimage to ills grave, and. amiu the little flock which so lately lic had been feeding with the zeal of all :in s tie, there did 1 pray to him that fron thc height of Heaven llc would guard his priests, his diocese, ills ccuntry. We can neither nulnber our dead nor compute thc incnsure of ou: ruins. And, what would it be if we turned our sud steps towardi Liege,Nainur,Audcnnc, Dinani, Tam- lncs, Charlcrol and elsewhere? England Kept Faith On the 13th of April, 1839, :1 treaty was signed ill Londan, by King Leo pold, in the name of Belgium, on th one part, and by the Emperor of Aus tria. thc King of France, thc Queer of ll D 0 Our distress has inoved the other nnticns. England, Ireland. and Scotland. France. Holland. the United States, Canada, have vlod with ench other in generosity for our relief. It is a spectacle nt once most mourn- ful and inost noble. Here again is ‘ a revelation ofthe Providental Wis- dom which draws good from evil. ln your name. my brethren. and in my own. I oifcr to the (ioveriinleiits and thc nations that have suceorcd us thc assurance of our admiration and our gratitude. ___._______..__-_- f GRANDEST MAN IN WORLD. SHE SAYS. Nurse at Base Hospital Says British Soldier Teaches World s Lesson. MON'l‘ltl