Z . human lives. w‘ c» l ,4 ..,i. n». PAGE so: yiiuiiiniz EDWARD Doyle and Held For Supreme I At the City Police Coiirt yeitsr- day nwrntng- thres criminal-class were disposed of, one dismissed and the defendants in two ‘others w" up to the supreme Court. -’ The Attorney General was pres- ent, as was Mr. J. J. Johnston. watching the cases. The first to be called Wlg the King vs. Ernest Fardy which had ‘been adjourned for Judgment. The prisoner in this case was defend- ed by Mr. Johnston. l-lis Honor with no comment dis- missed the prisoner. _ The next case was called was the King vs. Lincoln Doyle. chars- ed with shooting William Gormley on March 13th. occasioning grov- ious bodily harm. Gormley on being sworn said he lived on Rochford. Street. was a laborer. On that night he left A-ndrew McLeod at the Harris Ab- attoir corner. about 1b o'clock. l-le saw six or seven fellows. Two or three of the west aide of Pat Mac- Kennafs gangway and two or three, more across the street (Sydney) to the east. Passing gangway he heard voices in gsngway. Looked in. There were two men statnding there. Saw a fellow with a gun. There were only two in the gang- way-dne had a gun. Was going to ask thoselacross the street what was going on. Had not time to open mouth until he was hit. Knew both men. They were Pat Mad- Kenna and Lincoln Doyle. Doyle was the person that had the gun. Witness had his back turned to ask what was going on. Two or three mon were on the other side. ‘Wit- ness was shot from Pat McKennsh gangwsy. Saw the ~gun in Doyle's ' hands. After ‘being shot went west on Sydney ‘Street. Did not know what to do. Was getting weak. Wen-t into B. Carraighefs shop for water to wash ihlood oi! hand and bind it up. Have been in the hospi- tal for a month. There are live shots in his body yet. six shots in hand and one linger amputated. The prisoner after hearing the evidence pleaded "not guilty" and would make no statement now. in answer to His Honour. Mr. Johnston said he was watching the case. The prisoner was then commit- ted to the Supreme Court. The next case called was the King vs. Wm. Gormiey. in this icaae the prisoner was charged ‘with assaulting Patrick McKe-nua. ' Mr. W. E. Bentley. K. C., appear- led for the prisoner. l Gormiy appeared quite ‘pale ifom tho eflecua of the shootiflsaml his month in hospital. While he ‘was giving evidence in the previous {case he ‘was allowed to ‘be seated. j The first witness was Patrick MoKenna who on being sworn aald he was a taxi driver; lived at 86 Sydney Street. 0n the night of‘ March 12th three fellows ‘beat him‘ up. (‘iormly the prisoner was one ‘of them. iAt 9 or 10 o'clock. Cannot Today 3.15, 7 & 8.45 Matinee—26c, 16c. 'ight-37ic, 26c, 16c. iwoii bought ‘me- it but l hate you!” B paid $2,500 for one dance with her H gorgeous winner of the grcd I» bggply qmtest 4 find then-what a ‘stir- ' “to l‘ oefhween the dairies wens pisyboyand the 561W "l" found amazing adventure along the path 0f veggie]; and sudden fame! lists “Bel-ach’: best-seller, now l! kenn- . lions] film expose of Soaely‘: sale of (ll-anon Snggrsrvdbyfitlfli” remember just now who was with lthom. They knocked him down. Did not iknow very much alter he was Fox N e\i‘s---For hove 0f a (ink-Prince Edward Trio ovoiiiiiiowsoiooiioii “The Girl who SmileS”By Lambe knocked down. Do not know who struck him first. Knocked 'iiim ______..__.. .. . . . V» T» ~ I ‘ “my klmw Mm SPIHJOlCFIl. Knocked his teeth out ufiood-hyo Astiiiiiii. l‘4‘i'.\‘lIliH >ii.- ?l('i iiiriy will!" f1" ' ‘ and llljlllfflll his hand. Eye" W15 fer-gm; {mm may i-xliw-iiii-lv iiwiiiltiii ..ir\ii:i:li- iiiiiiivltill is vziiii. \Vii.ii marked and race gwonelh when iriiiibiii KNOW]! as llFlillllll l-llilV- iii- i. li_ Kellogg's A-<'hll11li""""‘<|>’i witness “tame to" they were sane. TDEE¥R3D wheel ii is iii imii: \\llll iill ilii-ii-‘iiii liiiiiil, liiii\‘i-i‘r=r. they PHI! "HY Ono of the other fellows was Mc- ywarig m], 9.4mm‘. 354 [Willi :i i_\'i'il|ll_lEWltil-llfi‘ lo their sinnriiy’ illul’ 011111!’ S Q i E S Imulgau- ' ’ ' Never dii ilii-y Jciiiiiv '-\ll"li Jill ii" lii'i- riuziiii. it llfflllfl iii once. (Crom examined-by Mu‘. Bentley) ._._'_._.__.__ F- -. . There was nothing going on ‘be- ' "sides this. ‘Was in town all that day. l-lad not been to ‘the country. There is a stable where residence _ is. Horse ‘was not away that he knew oi’. llnrsl- was about town. Horse with b/‘x si igh was out. Just don't remember what time he came back. Was out in afterlwon. Got home before six o'clock. Was not out of town with horse and box sleigh. Left box sleigh in yard. There was rum in the sleigh. One keg of ruin. no more than one keg. Left in the sleigh. Don't know whether it was covered or not.‘ Might be a rug or ‘buifaio over it. Put the ‘horse Ln himself. Did not afterwards remove ‘the keg oi’ ruin. it did not remain in the sleigh. Could not tell what happened go llti WAR NEWS rushes in cutting down l The war-horse from the hillS _evsrythlnq in his path- i THESE ARE SOME OF THE CASUALTIES 1 PICK THEM UP QUICKLY 60 pairs only man's rubbers. sizes 6 to 8V2. Two good lasts. Cut tc E8c. Also 00 pairs WWHWVB. all" 2V: 1e 4V:- Cut to 70c_ LADHSS‘ ll AT GOFF’S 300 pairs nicr, little patent or box kip strap slip llPrs for children. "uzvs 3 to 7. "OCR b°fl°m Fri" 3M0’ l Mlsioiurxs Mother hiiii I f room-lull oi’ ladies to lea one i day. Marjorie ssl on a their and i folded her hands. and held‘ lm i I l | l‘ _ b“. i h g _ _ _| H] Missed it alter he “came to." Cut to 05c. otmoml Slr5l5|l 88:: ‘ “ ‘ rlénzrlsagytelng.rnssrndrihhe ramamed In sleigh "m" the a“. A l‘ l‘ S other ladies listened, with smiles “lint wok Plum‘ ‘Saw "hm tflglgh v i . ; - d, - _ licfore lads came along. a ou t rec 60 pairs w<~l| made. ti°°d '°°'*i"ii- ‘will W°-‘"""9~ ‘,’,'c',,','f,'f,n:°ffd§_ndmflr h" up quarters of an hour before. Did nott brown booit lor boys. size l to 5. Cut to 52-75- sliBllfl-‘l The singing-lady shut her eyes imeml to leave it were a“ Mgh ' There was no one watching il- Llncoln Doyle is employed by wit- ness. ille was not there when wit- tress arrived with rum. iDo not own a shot gun. Do not keep one about the place. Did not ase Doyle that evening before he was assaulted. Never heard a gun fired that night. Never heard a sound of it. Told about it atiei lie "came to." There was not more than one keg of ruin —not hill ones. There was one empty one and one full one. Went sway with sleigh that afternoon. did not leave city and came back some oi‘ ilic lime. . . . and o ned lit-r iuoiiih wide to let the high words come out. "Win-ii slic was through." Mar- jorie said. "sll the ladies‘ hands "PW up sud cis pt-il and iliiitrrcd like lraveu in Illa iviiiil." to $2.50. AT (i‘i0FF’S 60 pairs boys Good-Year wslted, handsome, well madei brown calf $4.50. Cut t0 $338- AT GOFF’S yoiiuig gplll strong boots, heavy, good wearers. Sizes 11.12, l3 lor 51.50. AT GOFF’S 9o ohm. men's work boots. solid and well made. Goad ::lt Willi iPrevent lllcerated 'l‘hi'olll.-<At the am symptoms of sore throat, which presagee ulcer- iitioii iind inflammation. take a THE ‘ominous-rows o Gormleyéitiibto Ooursefdllere wearing $3.50. Cut to $3.00. Slashed t0 $215- 9 - AT GOFF S 9O pairs our regular army leather No. 1 brown work iioots for men. covered counter. 81¢!" 9'3""! mm‘- 771° best on the market. Cut to $4.25. AT GOFF’S 60 pairs men's military good year welted. brown bootl- Cut to was. AT GOFF’S 30 pairs shoe packs for men. Excellent whole stock. Solid leather from heel to toe $3.75. AT GOFF’S The "Seibournfl shoes tor men $9.00. t one‘ of England's most famous- AT Ggppts STOVE PIPE, ELBOWS, ETC. Our Ladies’ Shoes are incomparable in beauty style made at short n0tice' -- Man. ORDERS PIIOIPTLY Aunsnltn T0. ' i and price. l --.v--i ini, q it would take panes to tell the whole tale. _GOEF Ltd ‘Ail’ iipooiiiiii of or. Thomas‘ Eclectflc Oil. Add a little sugar to it t0 malifi it palatable. It will allay the irrita- iiiiii and iprevent the ulceration and swelling that are aolpainfu-l. Those who were periodically subject to quinsy ‘have thus made themselves with a full keg of runi and an elm!)- ty keg. lSsw the full keg and empty one there three quarters of an hour before he was attacked. The empty keg disappeared. Did no; take the full one. Did not see either disap pear. Would sly they disappeared immune to attadk while he was lylna unconscious. LOBSTER Send us your order require. y BOILERS, TRAYS,‘ PHONE 3984. ed Sheet Metal Equipment you may SANITARY PACKING TABLES, FRED ll. TRAINOR OPP. PRINCI EDWARD T-HIATRI s. PACKERS for any Galvaniz- i CULENDERS, ‘O0 GRAFTON STREET p1‘ ... _ . -IJPV\J,‘ 1~i ;h(‘~,'- .v..,.i 311*," ‘ litmus‘ l?’ ais- 1c tinnitus I Many Obstacles Cup Seekers _-__ .,=,_.__-.. OOLUMBUS. 0.. April 11.-First murniurinll of interest in the Na- tional Open Golf championship, to be held on the lficioto course here July 8. 9 and 10 are begin- ning to "he heard in this golfing town. il-loine folks who have played the Bcioto agree it is a “tough egg". Scioto normally lhias a yardage of about 6.000 yards. not unusually long in these days of super cour- ses. but for the open it will if the committe in charge desires to‘ make it so. stretch close to 7-000 yards. lit virtually is certain the lScioto will be the longest course in the history of the open tourna- ment. ' The new yardage is the result of improvements on the course dur- ing the last two years in anticipa- tion of the open. Every green has ‘been rebuilt and soddod with bent. lMeny traps have been installed and fairways lengthened or rebuilt to give added yardage. This work was finished last fall and the course now gives every appear- ance of being ready to offer visit- ors a real test as to condition and layout. IScltolo is comparatively innoc- ent as one gets a. first view of it. A brook meanders through tthe layout. cutting through seven of‘ the rol-ling fairways. There are also plenty of trees. although the course is anything ‘but a wooded 0H9. A couple of rounds. however, ee- tabiishes the fact that it is a hard nut to crack. —JLm ‘Barnes, George Duncan. Harry Vardon. Ted Ray. Mike Brady. Abe Mitchell, Bobby Jones. Jess iSweetssr, and many other celebrities tried it and a Ylfillliis Dro has yet to break its par of ‘l2 with the exception of John lRogers, of Dayton, 0.. who shot seventy on two occasions. George Sargent. president of the ‘Pi- fesellonal Golfers Association. who is the home pro at the course, holds the record with 68. This mark as well as Roger's score, was made before lScioto was changed for the open. 'l'.he course now is generally considered three or {our strokes harder. Perhaps the guess of Cyril Walk- er. ‘I924 open title ‘holder who has played t-he course many times may be taken as a fair prediction of what it will take to win this year. 7—8-Teachcr's Basketball Bowling 7——Moore & McLeod vs. Putonal Ltd. 8.'30—Stnnley, Show & Peardon vs‘. ‘Prowse Bros. | Learned after a young man was‘ shot. Did riot isee the gun. Mayhayo ‘been up town after doctor fixed him up. Would -ll0t_ swear he was up town after. ‘Do not keep rum stored at iliiferent places. Did not huy empty keg. Will not’ tci ‘lwhcro got the keg of ru-m. Did not know what became of the tui-l keg. Never saw it afterwards. In this case also the prisoner was committed for trial at" the ISuprcino Court. Tells Of Shower Of in P. E. I. Remarkable Incident Related by "Sir Charles Dhlton of Tlgnlsh to Boston Post Readers. The following intcrcstng letter, from Sir Charles Dalton appears in the ‘Boston sllllilfly Post:- ISlr:-—()n reading over with ‘much interest the communication from Charles Ford in the ‘Sunday Post of last week about animal life beyond the clouds. lt reminded rne of an occurrence some years ago which l can vouch for as being correct. iNot far from the town of Tig- nish, lPrlnco Edward ilaland where l reside. the-re came u, squall of rain one nigh; accompanied with what sounded like small haiil In the morning ll happened to be up early. and to my astonishment l found the ground literally covered with small toads-mo; frogs-unli- llions of them, all rigorous and smart. They were all of uniform size- about one inch long in ‘the body. and black- in color. They were not peculiar to our own province nor to any part of Canada that I know of. Every one of them was hopping gently in ‘the same direction to- wards a swamp about 100 yards dis- tant, where ‘by noon they had ai- most all disappeared. _ Now the perplexing quesfon will iiis iiiagiiioiit that 29s wiii! win the championship. Last yearl Jones and McFarlane tied for the lead with 291 at Worcester, ‘Mass. WW l ‘Nlllllllllllllllll Save the “POKER HANDS” that are packed with Master Work Mail oi‘ Canada, Limited, P.O. Box 1380. Montreal, Canada. if you live in Charlottetowrvappiy personally at our office. so QUEEN sci-on. This will have yw Posture- » jmuhiil;-ii...fo;.‘; ~ 1 ,-i- .-.\-.». . 1 ~ APRIL 14, 192E , man Cut Plug — they are VALUABLE in ' ' exchange FOR high-grade PLAYING CARDS l your "Poker Hands" to Imperial Tobacco Company i l ill ill ing ilcatli. to the great. beyond. One oi’ them oii going up threw I I |(l0\Vll his cloiik.. evidently not anti-I , ‘(ilpa y extreme ilegree Olflflwilllg shipments oi‘ ‘millions have, lime new abode. ill [IIOSO liuvii miule from l’, E. lSlilllll by always remain without any degree of satisfaction as to where they, came from snd what became of them. Probably they made food goi- other forms of small reptiles in the swamp. ‘I doubt if there is any locality where this clan of reptiles are so small and so numerous that the wind could sweep up enough to form a cloud for an extended flight.‘ lln this use of scientific discover- ies who can scoff at the idea that inhabitants of some other planets maybe far more advanced than we are, and that in I- an endgvoy go communicate with us in some way they are despatching by "wireless" fir? N" llsnlle in hopes of re- oe v ng a_"wireless" - onse. f like nature!" mp‘ o We am inn authentic reooni in tin-g an tin ills liuils of Oll18l"_fl1\[tl\(3lB'.’ Commercial League Moll? 1 4 i 4 P . iiV-iiiies '\V(}l‘('. successful in the past. iiiil per nioiitli: Who In the low-p rice field where is the car that equals it ? Before buying a car-open or closed-do the low-priced '3»! ask yourself these questions: i. '1 4. Because answer all these questions and because Chevrolet delivers a greateinmeasure of quality and value for your doll ' the car for you. A. Home 8cyCo. ~ . Docs it boast of such advanced features as . Has it an overhead-valve engine? . Has it a genuine Fisher Body? . Can it duplicate Chevrolet's speed, hill- ' As these cars contain oii erugs 750 bushels, the iotul numl cr ‘of ibusheis shipiped so llll‘ liii been 354,760 bushels. I .\lill'l' tliiiii lilJlilli rnmliliiiiiiiiiis iii | POTATiQ SHIPMENTS l l Since this your opened the iol-l “Y” PM **°‘°“““ “°“' “““““°“‘“ s“ lmmc-"v "6 w“. ‘Till! ..Iiiiliiliilii“"IIILQ"‘Ill’.‘iilililfi l0.30—11.'0—Spci:ial boxing Cllltlil‘r3pk]ly_ may it not come to pass iFo-briiary 2i) curs "lmmmm, m '"p,,r,|n""_ 3.I<lO~—5-—Jll"lli0l‘s i‘ln llll‘ future that we sliailihlilllvf Zliiiri-ii . . . . . . . . . . . .. 232 curs "L -ri,'hoi,i_v.sii-hii|..ii llll‘lfilfrlfrllflfllilll] ‘wireless visltat-lonii from n ini- Ailfll (l0 (lfltl!) . . . . .. 1'Ill‘l‘ll‘ll l0,li2ll IillNfll‘ll|.'l'l'N llliil i-iiiii. ' idlfilLvWlrmiwifl IlliillyjlN iii iilii. will: _ L _ _ _ _ _ ‘ _ _ ' ‘ _ _ __ 473 ral-Sdlll fiiliil lli'('ll|l'lllil. 125 cars can “ 'l‘iilii.l (‘/KIARIIP)S DAil/PON. r l ls it as comfortable and smart in appear- ance as the New Chevrolet? dry disc clutch. genuine Duco finish. vacuum gasoline system with tank in rear? climbing ability and all_-round dcpend- ‘ . ability? no other car at or near Chevrolet price caii ars than any other low-priced car--this is i f ' ' ["780 ""4 hlflbrr. .01., . ' ‘ . . ‘ -il it .4“ . l ‘ . natty-I"- " '.'. . Ileana!“ “our: .. 4.: 4. i. l. x »._. us‘ .. ». izyoaalrir AT Low coer ~ a "W." '.. tivh 11'.’- l .'-! 1‘ .. .- . ~ a. t. s3 l.|_i Mills-nut ,_ I‘ _ ,-=.---.;~- -~- w... .-vm.ia+-wis-afl?" i a o! l'__ , bee}