.1 ~ ' r .,lf'l,ll`. ,tn i _ -'~,'.__r= ,"_:.'.-i r l .e._ ,._j5',_' '.1' ., . ._1-.x __,:.f._- will w l -ri _sim \ 1 _ "i»."`-.ni . ll* if 111;" ` -E.*,l;l:*,=,§.i§i:- 1 . 1;_\-_ '_ 5 »<=t rv-. is-5 _ .,,§_,,__,, __ -;‘l-fs? \ =-;*.?¥l’@ _ _¢__f, » . .fi ff V. . ~1»~,l£f”= if - .‘:i,in.~,il'l,~'f~; f `.~`~¥l‘\l'li§‘i`~‘f.’i"'>. ' .. *'.-.‘;'~,`;~“:_. 1lll*»"i‘i': t ...r.'...-' '~ ' ’f¢,,,*J..,. ,. j.-_--.'.;' - -:“~f;`7-gilfiis-` 4;, ~ -"‘-. 3. _ ,._ .1 -,’. ,j. ,=,"»`~i--11.5 . lgiflffl-li 'Z f ,_ "~~‘f». , lf' , - ii _ _.ll fm. .Ll-."'-.l » _ 3, .l ‘ ;:i' V . .~;y.1;-1 E” I -_ _“ . 1 .l. ,si- -.-»-e~ is ». ' v M `_: rl 'L_ , €i."~.'*i-'fi' r .il Fl' l l ._-1:.-~ y .l"- .`1"` . ". r Zi - \ rv t-'7 i _ -5 f1?'f/55,1 -ww-» z ;_-,.,,v -in ;§¢1‘li..~*-e ` =i‘f*,l_i,,l, 2+' ' . y i,§;'»f - j ._.‘..‘fl 2* l '.,,.':,=.'.-=. ,».. - ,ff E’-‘ 2 `.‘l.,,i.' . A 3'. l l E \”"` "AY . I » _ _ . .- _-,.,._,,.,.,»__ ,...._-..» W. ~»,.~, ; ,,, -_ s.,-... V I sarrsmss I '2é`;'ie1si ‘?f"~‘f » ' 1 Y " _ 2 .. _“_ ,_- I 1. _ r- _D - - -_--_a 1’*'**‘U""*'*' CANADIAN GOVERNMENT RAILWAYS P. E. Island Railway Provincial Exhibition Charlottetown September, Zlst, to 24th, inst. 1915 Excursion Return Tickets at one way First Class fare will be issued from all stations to Charlottetown by all reg- ular trains on September 20th, 21st, 22nd and 23rd. good to return up to and on September 25th, 1915. SPECIAL CHEAP FARES. Tickets at Special Reduced Rates will be issued from all stations to Charlottetown on September 21st, 22nd, and 23rd, good to return up to and on September 24th, and on September 24th, good to return up to and on September 25th, 1915, good going and returning by either special or regular trains. Special Train Arrangements and Fares. Station. Leave. Fare. Tignish 5.00 A. M. $ 1.40 O'Leary 6.12 1.25 ` 1.00 .80 Summerside 8.22 Kensington 8.40 Emerald 9.05 Hunter River _ 9.35 Charlottetown Arrive 10.30 .70 .45 @@@N@A $8S$‘&°>&.°‘& 5”? .55 Elmira Souris St. Peters Mt. Stewart Bedford _ Charlottetown Arrive Vernon 9.23 Lake Verde 9.37 Mt. Albion 9.50 Charlottetown Arrive 10.25 Proportionate fares from all other stations. Incoming A. M. and outgoing P. M. trains will stop at Exhibition Grounds to leave off and take on pas- sengers. Returning from _ Charlottetown Trains on 21st, 22nd. and 23rd. will leave as follows: For Murray Harbor at 6.00 P. M. For Souris and Elmira 5.45 P. M. and 6.15 P. M. For Cape Traverse, Summerside and Tignish at 4.00 P. M. and 6.00 P. M., and for Georgetown at 6.25 P. M. See Posters at Stations for full information. C. A. Hayes, H. H. Melanson, General Trailic Manager, General Passenger Agent Moncton. Moncton. W. T. Huggan, District Passenger Agent, Ch'town. F I Autumn Excursion To Montreal _ Going dates Return limits Sept. 16, 17, 18 Oct. 4th., Sept. 30, Oct. 1, 2 Oct. 18th. F are'-Lowest first class one way fare plus $1.00 for the round trip $18.85. Tickets for sale by. - ° 1.00 1.00 .80 .50 .45 .45 .45 .30 nihiin in sri (Continued from Page Eleven.) row space separating the two lines of trenches. But for that German the daily round of duties was done. His work was over. and with a hund- red on so of his fellows he lay stiff and stark in the moonlight before the trenches of Nsuve Chapelle. ' He looked like a waxen image on its back lying out in the grass in his grey green uniform all splashed with mud, his helmet still on his head, his rifle with its rusting bayonet grasped in one hand flung wide. Beside him lay a. fellow, and beyond him another and another after that. The flares which at intervals flooded the ground with their unnatural light showed that the grass was dotted with these sprawling figures, so inert. so lifeless that one would have said it was s scene from a wax~work show rather than an actual picture of war. Watching the Foe at Lunch In another part of the line one day I noticed a tiny wisp of blue smoke rising into the air. Then through a telescope I discerned very clea`rly,for it was a bright summer morning and the light was wonderfully good, a Ger- man soldier leisurely preparing his lunch. He was a sioutly built figure of a man and he wore the little round fatigue cap of the German infantry. I-Ie was busily stirring something in a pot. Presently he dipped down and disappeared. In a minute or two two other figures came bobbing down the trench, passed into view for a couple of seconds. then vanished again. They were quite safe from rifle~fire. for they were well out of range. The men love to get these glimpses of the Germans. Sometimes of course, a German who thus shows himself is in range. T9” »:i the word will be passed to one of i.-ie :narksmen of the battalion and he will lost himself at a coign of vantage. as oiten as not one of his own choosing, and wait for hours, with one linger caressing the trigger of his rifle, for the re-ap- pearance of the gentleman. Maybe lie will get liis chance and put in his shot. if his bullet has done its work well there will as like as not be a quarter of an hour of German "fright- fuiness' in retaliation for the damage done. More than once from points oi’ van- tage I have seen Germans going about their work behind their lines. Only yesterday I was watching a spectacle which was as good as a. chapter `.of Sven Hedin as a picture oi’ the life pi' the German soldier behind the rout. First two German soldiers emerged on to a white ribbon of road, little baskets in their hands. I imagine they were going to pick fruit. When they had passed out of sight two other Germans emerged from the opposite direction strolling along the mad and then were swallowed up by nn ad- joining wood. At another part of the ilcld of vision two farm carts came slowly down ri hill and stopped by a couple of Gorman soldiers who were digging there. Germans out for a Canter Another day from another point I ( i Here's a New The clever “Sleefii” device (palfenled 191-i‘) on Easlem Shirts makes ii easy to .lengthen or shorten sleeves in a moment. Saves cuffs. Cuts down laundry bills. Give: the “Good-bye" to fussy armleis. Easiem Shirts come in real , nobby stuffs, wiili spanking 'smart aiyie, costing no more than mere common makes. asteirn Say “Show Me" to your dealer \ t, Wear This Patriotic Badge and help the Island Pat- riotic und. Price 10c each. Proceeds to be given to The Island Pat- riotic Fund. Charlottetown Guardian 'ii'.‘.i'.'.iil.."ii.. f"*f'i'. 'ii s we p ay i w ou _ ’ _ music BBW their colllrldes ft I. A lit; f Many Scbolnnhi&o_ and Prizes arg offered; tie shadow passed over their eyes, the For information mu of Counel of tvdv. emu. ' fire there, their only emotion. Tillo- _ 5°l‘°l“°l‘l°" gélffb §glR"&lAE'§l8“A'hE"’°“'°" °"°’ ii ` _ n' _ ‘~ ‘ ' - fi _ ' . . ' ~- _.- - - i .' - _ ' ' o o' o I ‘ ' ‘ . ' . _ ' » - " - - 7 3 f - ` . _ _ . _ f 1 1 4 -1' ` _ ` _ it in 'I ' ' - i . I p-annum-|-_--1. In severe eases of Constipation, Ind: A: o fdnic. “Fruit-s-tives" is invo- luable to purify and-enrich the blood d b 'ld t th and vi watched two German officers out rid- ing, the one on a brown, the other on a. white horse. They rode across an open field, now cantering for a stretch now breathing their horses, and as they rode and doubtless enjoyed the beautiful afternoon the ofilcers beside me discussed the point whether it would be worth while sending a shell over at them. It was decided that this was not a case of justified sniping with a ileld gun. and so those two officers finished their ride in peace. Sometimes, however, a round of slirapnel bursts rudely into the peace- ful avocations of the Boche behind the front. One day I saw a German work- ing party busy on a road behind a screen of trees. The Germans-four or more of them-could be seen clear- ly in their white shirt-sleeves digging away. A couple of rapid directions went over the telephone to the battery 'in the rear, and as the telephone or- derly cried out, "First gun just fired, sir!" the report rang out. blended in the whistle of the shell. Then a swell- ing ball of smoke appeared behind the screen of trees, and through the glass I saw a glint of white as the Ger- mans jumped for shelter or were blown up-which, I cannot say. Three other puffs of smoke sun- deiily materialized all round the place where they had been working, and then to make sure another round was sent over. The working party vanish- ed like the smoke of the shells. but it seemed a curious contrast to me to see even then two Germans emerge on a slope at the other corner of my field of vision and plod slowly up the ridge. They' were miles away from the exploding shells, of course, and only that working party and ourselves at our point of vantage were sharing the emotions of that brief moment of war. ALLIES SWAP FOOD Wounded soldiers who have just re- turned from the front are loud in their praise of the great work which the Frenclinien are doing. In particular, they emphasize the brilliant feats of the French artillery. In their hours of case at the rest camp~rather n niisnonier, having regard to the fact that every inch of ground on the Pen- insula - is well within range of the Turkish guns. and the rest camps en- joy no special immunity-the British Tommies and their French comrades freely mix. Said n man of the Sel- kirk Company of the King's Own Scottish Borderers-"We get along fine together. I have seen us go over to their lines at night and make a swop of Jam and rice. The French don’t seein to get jam and we can’t get rice, and the change is welcome to both of us." All the men complain of the plague of flies. However much they may try to drive them off, it is almost im~ possible to separate the ilies from the food they are eating, so persistent- ly do they attack everything eatable, notably the soldier’s jam. A LETTER FROM GALLIPOLI Writing under date July 9th from the Dardanelles to his friends in Edin- burgh, a sergeant in the 4th Royal Scots says:-"Just about got my foot shot last night. Coming back along the shore myself at night l sat down for a rest and a smoke listening to the bullets plopping in the water. I thought I was quite safe under a big cliff but gradually I heard a bullet coming with its high whine~then thudi a few inches off my right foot, it arrived, raining stones and sand. I said. ‘This is no place for you-'get,’ immediately." I did, I would grudge being wounded like that. "We are having a church service to- night before leaving in the dark, at 8.30-the second time since we got here. We have just had some rum. 7.30, so you can imagine the at- mosphere ai church! Fancy a whole churchful of men' breathing rum! There is going to be 'something doing' tomorrow, so God help the Turk. He always gets the worst of it, poor devil of ii catspaw. Where we were yester- day we counted (and smelled) roughly 500 dead Turks in front of our trench- es. and it is more or less the same all along the line. It is getting dark, and I can hardly see to write. It gets dark very quickly here. 1 have not yet told you that we have a bath nearly every day when at the 'Rest' camp, but have to wash our clothes in the sea. “Truly Heliish Spell." (16th July.) "We are hack _ _aglnin at the 'Rest' Camp after a trlilf eilish spell in the trenches, and I igivs never yet got this letter posted. e Turks have had another good dusting, and the trenches we took were in a must frightful state. They got duch I whip- ping from our artillery that they _made no real organized ,counter-atfnbkl. The trench I got into afterwards had the runners on either side almost ru- ed to the ground level, with the result. that we had practically no cover, and might quite as well have been In the open. . . .At me time one desi not feel what is nnpponins round chant one. It is when the exciton`ient` lil over that we feel our nerves a bit:` iirt we are getting quite unlike 'ur old llfves _. ,. _ lclfcity of paper and envelopes cher, the bass viol who had already a e was able to continue, but this second snemy's renchss. "La Charge!" ohou charge in a fanfare of terrible signin g,_,¢,,,,_ 3[,,,¢,,!,5¢,|},r,¢,g¢,¢/|¢_,-_}=t|,,| canoe intoxication for death and I *;‘1“'¢‘:'l§°(fa"°°“l°“"l l'“d‘°’ 9°' In 7§eBatk, lVl'I|1'al;1a, or a General Euslfe' wialch l|_1|€_dU 0l.l\'_ b'l00dt:lJlI Li: ItisfTrliiti;ie_4‘ii1il|ful town. it has specialists _ r n s s m eos , or c en. Run-D010# C`0»Slfl|ll{d1l,"Ftuil2-.l~hveS" w}?|ch gm- g°n”pf91tg§|ke sucksy of _j lt oflern Literary Courses. Music Courses is the only medicine needed to correct bamboo! Almost -immediately a body 80123, (§`§§"('f§hn;l.°lll"i‘iiilg Asrilince iz. ,ugh tmuble, md mmm th, sugars; fell over Tillocher, one of-the three Free Calendar on application to ¢......,.\n.1...in.. g';ggg;°,§;=;,_‘;;g;f;_g__°°*'=P~°e__y"“ iii-:v.. ii. c. soiuisu, o_o., siuncirni. .==.-sAci0Dul_arity is undoubtedz its attend- ance is steadily increasin MOUNT ALLISON ACADEMY M ~“ "P-~'== =°'~ . ..i”“;“.“:.°. “sz ° 1* 500. B 1301, 6 f0I‘H.50 trial Size 256.` Orme' 5 _ en ° 0 ewra ve “T B' Offer; G¢n¢rql,Bp¢¢in_la|-id Mntrlculatlon Courses leadingto the Colleges of Arts, At dealers or sent postlpaid DY F1111# lg” B’ bllulat (hh TB §lghtd°h°ek' Engineering. Medicine, etc. Manual Training a °-“ve Lf~1*°d»°“-“- M-ob-»~ df-==-~ H- -'»° did -°= -f°»~ Mt. Allison Commercial College - °°°f~= '“ Bezisrféintis "°'"“'°°‘“°' STRONG STAFF OF EXPEHIIIINCICD TEACHERS ‘- FIRST TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 6 J. M. PALMER, M.-A., LL. D., PRINCIPAL :: SACKVlLI..E,N.B. CALELDAR SENT ON REQUEST moment of silence we heard the rever- -7 L Give children the benefit of modern ideas in iuiderwear _ Don’t put old-style uncomfort- ' able bothersome underwear on 7 them. Watson’s ChiIdren’s Union l Suits are made expressly for 5 little folks’ comfort and conven- ience. ups esteem so highly. _ Fit the youngsters out with They are snug fitting, neat and comfortable. Made , % according to the Klosed Krotch idea that the grown- .M The fabric? Spring Needle Rib-un.iform,elastic» smoothly finished, 8°°d f°" Weaf' We also make Wslsts, Vests, Drawers, Bloom- ' 1 ers and a full line of, 1 f Infants’ Goods in all -'- fabnics. l "' Ask your dealer. ~ li. THE WATSON MFG. ‘ii Wi /. Brantford - Ontario -.lf ` /V @ ¢ Z ,z it \\\\\\ _;-_seas \ \ \_ \ - -_-_-;.\.,“ . ll /C iyl Eli' CO., LTD. 29 ///’ "///if." f /L . '=',f.:%/.éf,:'f’ '/Eff ' , .-,;,-///.,../ ./, _ ity and caprice had been mastered, and at FRANK R. HEARTZ, President! F We mu Necessity 1 _ patched up with ends of "32" wire and l' ' 4 scraps of rag for the long run home, . ’ » I ` , _ the young oiilcer, dinnerless but still - - » ‘ charming, the two consulting spec- e S ialists, begrimed once more but still unruflled, regarding “her" with a crit~ ~ ' . o o 0 _ . I heard many stories of the trav- ` ' ` elling workshop that night, of brand X I I new lorries cruelly torn from the M. ' vert some of the cars in a few months H R of sudden calls by ni ht. after lo Cliaflvfleiown Seri- 21 1° 24. 1915 _;;.':_‘_.I'_._r‘,..‘.’.r.":.'.“.°.‘:l.i‘.‘;;~....';.r;.:“:;.fs OPEN To ALL CANADA _N _Umm mm Over $8000.00 in- Exhibition Prizes w,‘l‘_§“‘_§§;’Y,h%§"§,2,‘§§e;“;‘_}Yt‘§_‘;°° c§§’,‘_§§_ Live Stock entries except Poultry close 10th September A031'-__ ____ _ Du __ T _ __ All o_}l;1er eiétriesézlose iéth September. 3, ,ee _.- ,, 0, 0 e you ree ays orse cing $2800.00 in purses. ii'lii.i'l'iil.'£ 2l>til.i.l"i}§l§l.il§ni"eii"il