wonvrpooyinvrouunaoimi } W' E' `, E '.B. ~ "_ f ‘ ' ` _sf '-.== == \ T _ _ cHARLoT'rE'rowN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, c/mana, sarcaoav, NOVEMBER 2;, 1907. { ;y;;~_»,r,~f,,gg-,;,,f1;,,;,;»‘,»»;~,;1,,»;r. 313;; waliixx. .1No auaa1.ua11.v,1aar Y ' ' -- 4 _m WI-Nicaroh’ Sfnililit CA ADA ow . » _a _ ._ ,, _rg ,_, a _ _USI 1111-c11t111111111 I U a T . _ _ _ practice of wearing kilts is increasing in t L W L 1 11 also 1 1 - A ‘ ' ~ SAI ‘l` , I V J ri.. p...¢11i=11,_;1~_wear11»g11he 1' ,, , , H i Picturesque Highland ‘ -e---€- _.________ oiielled Yesterday With a Longshore- ‘°°S‘""‘° '"°"“‘"g iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiis By an Army of Unemployed men For Forty Cents _Against AHE HHi|]|Nli iiiii Wh0 Have Been Discharged Y ell S ast ,mter===, he C P. .;1‘.s;::f.:;f...:1....1;:;::;‘.;.;‘;:.:f. , From Railw 3| | A d R, Refuse the Highéf lgié 1 1112:;‘rn:gn.1i::;1;;°:.;.1;.;;f“;; PHl_P_PPPLPH|P: 0 , ays’ ,e.e n . .1 , ther Industries Sarur Jomv, Nov 21 -(Special)-The winter port eeison orened this morning with the arrival ofthe hi; C P R mm. Eiupreui ol Ireland. Har arrival was marked by n 1,-*film of the longahorc men. . Forty cents an hour is the rate ofwagne rlemandc-i by theLor-gshoremenhi Assocla_ tion, hr the work or loading and discharg- ing steamexs this seahon. Th's was definitely r'cl.r1l ai, the mee logo! theAssociitlon this moraine held In their hsllwater Street. m_______&_i_@_ Asa result. the steamer Empress ol t of Ireland will not he worked by union men and will be idle this niternoon, A prominent member of the union said M The C. P. R. oillclalsliavo btcn in corn- C lnunicaticn with the head olllco at g ontreal and say that. their instruoli-:ns n he ships. e men in London. The kilt, liovrever, ,1 isnotlikelyito belsrgr.-ly_adoptod because, of Ffiends May be the __________y_____zT ven if picturesque, it is expensive. A ' _ _ _ ompleie outfit fonevening dress costs no Ultimate desiiiiaiiofi of r\"mA"‘\ FM"“°° NOV- 23"iSD0C|f\ii- easii-ru States has lloodcri tl.1- countiy less than $150, bull the general price ran- C“““d“ ii* 1° be invafiud i1.V"1D llrmy Of ' 1 . .., , _ es from $200 to '$150. Above that one the Wanderers lUJ5U\Dl0yed from lfnlteil Spares “S 15 WH 1 mm at/vkhu for wmk' >» . , '1'| _ , < _ » i11y go to almost any price, because m_m_en Hue by "___ __ond___ion___ ____ this irouizhout the btatis tales ol Cunadas this morning that the Association had arc thit the Com ' ‘ ' ` - A PNY W\ii PHY Umylhe brroclies sporans and so on may be -“_” froniii 1' it the ' » ~ 1 1 ~prercnt°1u1c, Lcca paid forty cents an hour ull summer o and local men have paid lt. NOW the wiht.-r steameri should pay says than the rate ot thirty cents an hour C the same rate. Last yc \1's ratc was made i thirty cents un hour for the winter port. of the L'>ngshor.1mnn'r1 Association do not atc.11ners,arid laborers got ten cents an go to work at last ycar`s rate they can hour lor teaming grain. ,guy gdy¢_ ‘ The rata ot forty cents, decided on 1,0. day wr. uid includc all classes of work on mcvi hare to work thc ships. Capt. \Valsh, Marine Superintendent, 0 ostl,_\', hut even t at is 11 good deal more s all that will be paid and if thc uic ubcrs 9 Tho Company, i1\ that case will bring DRUCE 11ii1111s1i11 CASE IS SENSATIONALISM In Some Respects Resembled The Fa- Th°1°W==\Sa Lively Timfi 011 mous Tichborne Case- Great Estate Involved-The Duke of b1o.~1r1us.\r,, Nov. zo.-There was a T11 ch M W e Virginia this evening. Two hundred and ii ‘ ` ' _*_________________ f eatatee of the iiiih duke of Portland con~ tains many elements of romance and mystery. The iifth Duke of Portland had twe known children and was succeeded by his cousin. The eccentric duke was nflllcted with an incurable skin disease, which made his face repulsive, and he rarely appeared where he could be seen. lie lived underground most of the time, About 1850 Thomas Charles Drucc mys- teriously purchasefl a large bazaar in London on Baker street. Druce was a niau who never showed himself to his customers or employes. He always kept to his private office, lie built under his place of business secret passugeways, and rooms. He had great wealth, Ile mar- ried Annie May, a woman who had been the misiresg ofthe Duke of Portland for years. lt was a dispute over Annie ltny una ren the bhiteinui die turing of his broiher,~ Drlrde (vas not alwaysnt his place of business, He would disap{car for wfeks, ’l'l1e Duke of Portland was not always at the abby. He, also, wou'd disappear for weeks. By Annie Mny,Druceliad a son named Walter, who married the Anna Maria Druce who claimed the estates for their non. In 1864 Tlionms Charles Druce‘= death was announced and his liorlv wi Condciisciacivcrtlsimcnis Tm law fir i7Im-lilnl\'1|f\Y\- ` ’ _ ,___--_ Q-5.a;=r P503 A FOR RAFHS-édi ANTID A ll f ~ o-.eral hvun Wwrirl apply tg rMr:\ TE B. l_’iil_a_r. Yit- Bldney Bt. l\~2~U-i v<\- m |‘|\'|, Aaipiill; i;lrr.l\[:._t|. Wxwmx , , . .J c1..r1°t1¢’ii»'¢in°° 'M 11-211111--d ' $“‘l‘BoEIo\mrft1:|vl_|:`_ a:u§;Jn;|_:_:;'; W B. 1 1- A ii iii"32ii»'~'»\'-'ww »ff~»~-11-2241* Ugrngg , |;___,\\» M; eu A. `ita\tinfi1l. 1-iv iii-Piiilc »\:‘° "'\' on Wcdnll a Nov. il' 1. »\%¢"‘\> °‘l °k~ hilt ,lm m ,ho\|so‘\old_iuru|1.uru ' ` d . H u£iili?t§..d§iat.aa. °11.1-3.....‘i.‘2 tt 5 ' adv 1| i ke vt" tm'i°e ¢ . aafrirfilisa anus mii- mind is nt _rtghrsnd ao1.1\1» _ i gyqglia. will, loononnsa and :Bar (lifts FULL OF cemetery, Mrs Drnse claimed that lead I was placed in the coilin, and that Thomas e Druce came to life again as the Duke of Portland. luvestlgation showed that the death certiiicnte for Druce was never 3 signed by any English physician, and there was no record that any Thomas Charles Druce was ever horn in England, or Liverpool, swarmcd on board the steamer and took possession of the steer- LONDON, Nov. 21 - The fight for il 1 ph ced in the Drucc toinhat Kensal Green age. The company intended sending the K ° were made to dislodge them, but without to take off 250 other steeragc passengers, n . a " ' PUSSESSIUN UE S. S. Vllilllillii lgi_ ratc of thirty cents an hour. n iountcd with ve costly jewels. The T he invasion is in full progress now. l' td r "ll. ld ` la* ., , ‘ ~. . nmmy on 0° 'i”Vm( 'ess 15 LS’ \V1_N!~liEG. N0\. 2I-l’l1iia1lclpl1iaap- the discharge from employincnt ol xpensive than th morning or frock snip pears to be the destination of the fanati- thousands of men by the railways and 1 cal Doukhoubors, who are now marchiiig 55"] “Wi i|`°H W01”kil\R CUHUCPKIS Of thc' Wi eastward. Since they commenced their A - Pl”0Sp1~i'ity and the building of the Nazioriai 'l‘1-;1u=c;»r.i.lnental Railway and and other gi-:at works ol development are current. and the men out of work flock ntross the border. tramp some three uiontlis ago they have / S S given various reasons for their strange _ pilgriuiages, looking for the l\Iessial1 'ind T _ n waririer climate being aninng the num- _ ‘ P ber. New it is believed from remarks r ‘ I' li ~ iii P. E~ |SiiNll ‘_i_ made to interpreters lthat they are all them iinaiicially in the past. Both men, wo111eii and cliilclren, cloth- ed in loose liaiiging garments of blue bouniifor Pliiluilelpliin to seek aid of cer- 5 tain pliilanthropists there who have aided Rev.J, U. (lnuor-111, S_S_ Finn] Sg¢|e|;_\ry lionicspun, have attracted considerable A omg; to this Pmvmc, fm.,\¢,,,,.D “Mk-B attention in the cities and villages they _.___ :visit tn-day and the places he will visit hwe Passed ll;1'°“i4i‘» ‘md *heir 5973005 _ EQ( so 0. the Wharf at Montreal “ -~~- v arni time on the Allan Line steamer fty Italians who had purchased tickets C lalians on the Sicilian, sailing tomorrow veniug, but the ifalians came to the con- lusion that they would sail on'the Vir- a nian and took possession. Attempts veil, and finally the company was obliged . areas fcllowsz- here were much after the order of a vauder I " . I gundn ‘ Nm-_ 24 1030,, ml C11f;0;;_ A1, ville performance, for the) chanted weird n 1 y , . 30 p 11-, Kerisinzton. ' Monday, Nov 25, 215 p m and T 30 p m istrito L-onventl&fln Malpeque. prayers, alternately clapping hands of stamping their feet. Tuesday, Nov 26. Eiuisdale 230 and 7 30 _ , ` ` n. ‘ M nards L1nlmentCu~es Distemper ~' Werlntsrlay, Nov 27, O'Loary. Thursday, Nov 25, Tyni Vail ey. l\ion1i.\y Deg 2nd, Ex-xutlve meeting in harlottetownl 1 Tuesday, lice 3rd. S E Prince district ouventim In the Presbyterian Church 11 po,-k______ _ _ , __,_ CHICAGO MARKETS Fr day, Nov 20, Sciiumcrlsillc. ___ Omoaoo, November 22-(Speaiait- Nov.03l'n......v................_ 575 " Wbeals..... .. . .. . 90-i PIE Tryon. _ Jan Corn...... . _ Will all pastors and District Stcrctavio id lo m iking these mroiiings a sucee~st " Wheat ..... .... .... .... . . “ Pork-.. out E. J ltattee, Presidt nt. Buv the riveted heel' Berlin iost ly Poles, Russians and Swedes, ` Rubber. ud transfer them tothe biciliau. i Mrnartis Llitiment Cures C0 ids- dte- Piiiili THE PIPES iNll ii WiS 23 .EUH THE WULVES Scotch Hunter Returned tc Peterboro With Hair-Rais- ing Tale of Escape Parimnono, Nov, zo.-Among the stories that hunters have brought down from the north of this county is one of thi surrounding of a liiglilaud Scotch pipe iv a pack of wolves ni the head of Stony ',ake, l)ouald McLean, who resides al Warsaw, went back north with a hnntinr mrly last week, and took the bagpipc with him. At dusk one night while r - turning to camp he heard the approach of a pack of w'oles- The darkness prevented him from using a ritie, and he became badly scared. His only defence was the bagpipes, ani the piper, who had heard of the sound of ri the forest. At fist McLean could hear __ the howling of the wolves above the? music of the bsgpipes, but gradually the sound died away and the piper escaped. _ aback where he related this hair-raising tory. < _ , McLean isa hunter trade, who has recently arrived from Scotland. im mm gf, qnteniy roll\~*'\i by Onaolam |‘;,T,¢,,g¢|¢m\»r~arbox. Ail'1."=1llt|\\\ H m“HiC f°P°mUl§ Wild °“i\'““i~‘» *imc* “Pa bury an accident which result d lo A sad lively tune and walked around a tree in my nf hM"_u"_ '1 late tilts Daltlah railroads have been the scenes of many accidents. For a long 1" ` Any Guardhm reader \:_.ap_r;éoTi1|:la a nov; feature, and hcunrl P . wh° receive' “dimly Prim' 0Mr- Sci-vii-fi a‘i1oii’r`h:erd for the nm 1t.nn ed, badly printed, badly at Fnlryland Thursday nicht and was f0ldCd| btldly Cut, badly applauded for his grareini and V 'bl' ¢ addressed, badly wrapped, M,._ ",,_,,mM,"," M. man .d ,_ torn, soiled or incomplete msiiinnmic paper of whatever issue MATINEE ._ ,S __ Wm kindly notify 'he Sub_ Amatlnea will be hflfl tl~l| ah.q_-noon _ __ _ __ E 'mt `""h°d’m,d, A In ' ft ,cd lon D t t '_ from 4-6 “henlhea me rirwram will N3 _, _ a 3-¢,_s_.~, & | f aatno miwsh then __._...___.------ , _ -___ _ ___ . Pt 2?” mm U pre-cami. Arimisalonfvie titoallprrts 1 2,' , out that at ‘och K ' _rf ‘ . nnce of the hall (L, --1, . , 'I . , 1 , \ 1 J . i l I H 1 n 1 _ 1 ‘ Next morninifhe made his way back to ,P““° 1° "” 'M 9"°“l h°"° °' 'hd ‘British railway peools that that not a slrgie life had been lost la _a period amending coonldorabl over a year. » » ~ . _-_ ,___ 1'- .~_ ,_ _Y____..__ _ _.__` _ _.__ _,. _ _ ___ _imeral .1u'1_v of the city of .S'hr_ew.rlzury, zvlirrv 1n'nc‘feen perrofis were Ieflldc' and rh11‘l_\1-11z11c`°1u/urea' in a from .rmas/:-up . *_ _ , 1 _A `: 'g1?1'i'\n1<1.1 4" ~‘>"""°"" The shave doglrts ac nts In the icoohl. i lsastrcus railway accilsnb at Summ- Iti a rather remarkable thing that of ’ . 1 ' |nard’s Lmlment Cures Gsrgst n Cova- i eff" af' is <'-‘.', .` x \7{? tion S ’ t ~ ./ f__ l_. .|_ i bury iran Toloalm (Nev. 22-(Special)-Modwate it J westerly winds lair sazimlidcr Tortoxo, Nov. 21-It was 11 miserable story of bribery and corruption, of the opening of ballot boxes, and mysterious payments to men who had taken part in the by-election of june, 1905, that was un- foltledat the trial of Loudon case before judge Wincliestcr today, but it cannot be said the crown counsel came any nearer to connecting directly any of the four de- fendants wiih the conspiracy in which it is charged they were iinpliczitcti. Evid- ence ofa startling nature was given by \Villiai;n Spence, who at the 1icck-Ruui- ball election acted es deputy returning officer at Division 5, \Vard 2. He told how after the ballots had been counted and the box sealed he was persuaded by IC. I. Silton to return to the polling booth, where the seal was broken and the box opened. JAPANESE” EUNSUE HEiUllNS EHEUUE Plllll IN Says that He Cannot Accept Payment for Protectig the Japanese . Vancorvitk, November zo.-Hon. K Morikswa, Japanese consul, yesterday forwarded a letter (6 the Coniruissioner Mackenzie King, enclosing the cheqne for $1_6oo which was the cou1n1issioner’s n- ward for the money expanded by the japanese Government. in his letter Mr. Morikawa states it was impossible for his government to accept a reward for the protection of the interests and property of the subjects of japan. "This, and this only,” whites the consul, "is my reason for returning the cheque for $1.600 to, you." .m_.....__._l_ ._+ "1 Sit`ton‘s reason for this proceeding wal that he wanted to find out thc names of the voters whom he thought had failed to keep their promise to vote for Rumbail. Siiton also gave witness $10 on that occasion, and figured in a story told by George Artly, division chairman, who swore he was instriicted by Sifion to 5nd out the electors who needed the money. ____-_-i- illlliiillill Splendid Pictures To-night" Matinee This Afternoon- The beautiful Biblical riaralile ci the "I’1~n1ligul son", is to be piccuted by mn tion photopzrapliy at "Falrylanri", tonluhh and i~1 bound to make a profound iinpressioii. The various phasi-to of ti.e paralilu will le most realistically nortriyed the divislqn ol! the pa1.r|niony‘, th: riotous living ofthe wayward son, the days of wnntanrl wo°, his work as swiin » herd, his biokenhesrtcd return home' thc greetings, tic lntted call, cle. 'Pap picture,-1 ure tnkm (ronin play that had beci enacted by n lnrize comtuny ol actors and actresses with true Et-“ern detail and scenic 1il'ect~. Tue meat.-,~t artistic ncciiracy has been olisnrveil tlirouuhr-ut. _ “l`l1cl~I11cl1nniefl Egg-", is one of rho-o wonderful transfnrrnation 1 rtrick|~i tures in nnny con rf. lt- is fascinating, ben l il- erlnrg and bi-aurliul. , No xircgrirn la cainplere withrut comedy and \.oni|zhl: tl'cre will be a due supply of this element. " “Fun In A Ilaker°1~Shop"-Tnlssugacsla the old saying "A stale loaf ol bread get tno froah and punctured a hols in a dough- nut." It is trlmlul of humor from stare to finish. The way oi the apprentice la certainly hard. “A T1-rrlblo Infant," shows how preco- cious a child can he. Thoinuslcal specialties will he rxrept- lonnlly attractive. Tonight Parker llool - er will ning a newlllusirntrd song “\\’ov1‘t You VVal1z Home Swan. Home With N- ' There will le another pfcasing ape:-1l~y Ilurlmr the intermission step dancing will he gh-1-n ln ecaiuuin by J. M. Mr- Mirard'S Llnimcnt Cures Uiphthgria, 1 A ws . Z* 1' a ,sy ii `i ‘1 ll ir Ii -1 ,. _.._.-v-.-,, i i -,-~_.._...,,..,,,, ._ i t 2 > s 1 '\ / .,,,,» .<- ii . . - 1 »..&',§°f, i. ,E 1 if-'-. .1 1:, ,;», /<., ,, ~+_ r li., mi-s...,s-. 1', il; 1,11 `iii, .f we. i-,“»s .».»1. '11 .Ji ,111 iii .1 -1 ii ,i il , .< .1 §:`=i 11:, 41.1 iid ;i`1 Mil 1.1, 'iii ,,,,. ,_. l 'iii tilt - *"1 1,1 sip P ii “iii ,H f-iii' ` 1,' ,., _ ;.c~, ;-11 1 .__1»rE\ l _f .», ....- ..»._-...a~.. -<-Q.-5 ,.11 z,'1,1 _,,.::;`.~;; 115 lil _ A :§` 1 '~ 'f.i~ , 1.,1_ ,. __ ,_ V 1 4 1 1 1 1 ily; _i 5, t ~ we -\ 122: Ut r- ,rf f .t 7l` ‘ii '_ ii , ‘.`1 ‘.'.f. ,'.'i'3,_,,i 5 fi;-‘TJ ‘l '. ,iii _ ~.»_-_-1.-.~¢f¢_, init it |,». wif i1}51~. _, : fjiii' mi .EF ~ as . .1 .4 1. .vi , ( _,i 1, 1 it _ ' -at 1 ~ ._,.¢¢K. av' 'fe _»<-‘r ~ sf' < . , ' o . . ». `