»Sworn Circulation Statement Furnished Advertisers. XUIOXQMO The io, Road Dolly by 42,000 People.- --- - - ~----v~-»1»--{~-'-----~--~---~v--~~--.f_v,~a-f~-ve*-__-_*_*-~------------~-~~~----`-‘I-`~‘¢v1lV THE QEEEEUEE GUARDIA $‘12"_s'_i'}f.',{’»»2ii’_' iiiiiifi’ Billy, no - --'.:: -_- }__, ` , _ CHARLOTTETOWNE CANADA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1915 E `- is--» {08.60 Per Veer (delivered) le ldvlld P.E.lSliii|] , Wllililiii ll WINTER Eilii Island Swine. Sheep und Cattle ildde Splendid Showing Record Attendance at Fair ,, --»-w»- Eduoutionol Lectures by Experts (Special to The Guardian) AMHERST, N. S., Dec. 7.-Special prizes were awarded to-day at the Maritime Winter Fair which exceeded - ON Along all Fronts lsarlrcf ln Elnnrsr important Battles Begun or impending. Turks Begin Attacks in Mesopotamia. Fight on in Serbia and Gallipoli. in llllelldmlce nu mi" held i“ prev” (Special to the Guardian.) Tile situation for the Allies. compli- o\lB Y€l\l'5»“b°“t 21000 paid admissions cated by the attitude of thc Greek helllB f9C0\'d9d'“t the ticket °m°e“~ LONDON- D0°~ 7--lml3'°‘°t““t bam” government, negotiations at Athens The JlldBll1E Of ¢9»lll9. BUEGD 0-llil have begun or are impending in Mcso having not yet I.eM,hed 1, Sutisfacton. swine was completed- tlllB I1f¢€\'1\00n-tpotlimle, where German Field Marsllai Settlement, ammngh the (week King J. W. Calbeck. of Summerside, P- 'Baron Von Dr Gollz has taken com- has ,.eum,.med his ,,mm.amy and re. E. i.. Oil-l'l'l€¢\ 0” the P- 5- 1‘=‘/“"9 mand of the Turkish forces and is vested hp, umm,-nnceg that (lr-liek Cup for the best Den Ol' BWl'1_9- lit* abollt in attack the British at Kui cl ,room Wm ,lever nmwk ,hp _.\|U,?_.,_ also secured £118 Allili! Sl0¢‘-li U9- f-UD Amar; in so\ltll~eastcl‘ll Serbia, wlieru ,mn cm,g,,_., g,-pm ,mx19|,y`_ f0l' the best swine °f 'my “ge “E the UW Blligariuns hav" ‘llreudy “tl“(’l“"li Tho Austrians continue the offen- ml’i‘lie W. W. Black Sliver Cup for lilo host grade beef animal was cap- tured by Forrest Bros., of Amherst, while the Massey-iiarris special for llle best herd of the grade class was ,the Anglo-French positions and have been repulsed; on Gallipoli, whore, according to Tllrklsli accoullts, the Allies have taken the oi`i`ellsivc, and ill Belgium and Franco, where, reports from I-iollalld state the Gcrlnans have also taken by F0l`l'€S¢ Bl`0lll9l`3~ concentrated strong reinforcements in the international Harvester Co. special, the grand championship for t.be best beef animal was taken by Edward Anderson, of Sackville. In Leicester sheep A. Boswell won ten prizes; in Lincolns Albert Boswell, lfrench Fort, won -ten Ill'l%€Hi J. Twee- dle, Earnscliffe, in Cotswolds won -oight prizes; in poultry Albert Bos- well won twenty prizes, -A. H. Bos- well, Marshfield, twelve, and J. W. Tweedy, fourteen prizes. J. M. Laird & Son took the Snow- ball Cup for best herd Shorthorns. 4 females. This cup was won in 1914 by liarold Etter and in 1915 by J. M. Laird & Son. In Polled Angus, J. M. Laird & Son get 0 flrsts, 5 seconds and 2 thirds. ln Shorthorns, J. M. Laird & Son won 3 firsts, 2 seconds and 3 thirds. Four lectures were given in the evening, all of educational advantage to the attending agriculturlsts. Messrs. Hubbard and A. Trltes were the Chairmen in -the separate lecture rooms. The speakes were as follows: Address. J. I-l. Grisdale, Director of Experimental Farms. Ottawa; crop production in the Maritime Provinces from live stock standpoint, W. W. Baird, Superintendent of Experimental Farm, Nappan, subject, OpD0l‘lUnili9S of Beef Production; address, W. F. Stephen, Secretary of the Canadian Ayrshire Breeders’ Association, Hunt- 'and an inlmense amount of artillery with thc object of striking a blow at the Allied lille; also in Flanders and Artols. , Except in Serbia, the battles have not developed beyond the preliminary stages, as far as is known artillery alone of the different arms being active. Along the Vurdar, Cerna and Karasu front in Serhia. the llulgarians have already commenced tlleir attack against the Anglo-French and it is re- ported that the German army of Gon- eral Von‘ Gallwitz has been reorganised and reinforced and is marching south fo take nart ill the operations. i It is the llltention of the Germans to strike hard before the Allies, who continue to land troops at Saloniki. have completed their preparations. lt is reported the Germans have 40,000 available. There is no indication of Bulgarian or Anglo-i<‘rencll strength, but one report says -that five Allied divisions of nearly 100.000 men have been landed thus far. The battle. therefore, will be one of the greatest importance. According to the French all Bulgarian attacks have been re- pulsed, but the Germans claim that 'the French were compelled to give up positions at the junction of Vardar ami (lcrna livers to avoid being enveloped. sive against the Montenegrins and lierbiulls and are following the Serbs into Albania, whore l‘et.rcul. is render- iml cxilclllely difficult owing to cold weather and had roads. Tilere is said to be 100,000 Serbian troops ulld 20,000 refugees in Albania alld it is reported that the Scrhians are taking with tllcln 40.000 Austrian prisoners capture-J dllring the prerlollu campaigns. The position of lllc S-orbians is l'elldercd more serious by the sllcccl'-s of :hc Austrian cruiser Nova and destroyers ill sinking steamers which arrival at San Giovanni di Molina with supplies _and war material for them. | ln view of the probability of Ger- many asking Great Britain l'or safe conduct for her attaches, whose recall from the United States has been asked, considerable interest is taken ill the action of a German submarine remov- ing from a Grcck steamer, tho British attaclle, (lol. Napier, on his \vay to London from Sofia. LONDON, Dec. 7.-Part of the Serb forces that retreated from Monnstir across the Greek border have joined the Anglo-French expeditionary forces according to news agency despatclles from Salopiki., ROME, Dec. 7.-it is learned that Emperdr Franz Josef has refused to send Austrian troops to aid the Ger- mans and Turks ill the proposed ex- pedition against Egypt. The Emperor contends that all avail- able Austrian forcos are needed to de- fend Austrla’s Western frontier against italy. ,Y.__c-____ .__Y_______v__.V___ ,,,_._.______V__,,vn_,_,,__., .___-....,. _ ___ ====“s»-°s=--we ‘° lx-Pnwlll vlllzllus lsls- ms rlnlwlls nl in vlll ll nl tunnis- . TEMPER . TIDE. MooN.eE'ro. TORONTO. D80- 3--Maritime: PARIS. D60- 7--l‘3liDl\ll\¢‘-N05 V0l1l~,collccssiolls were illsllfllricllt, to iurn Fair to-day, followed by strong winds zelos, ex-Promivr 01' Greece, has is-,the government fronl its direction toi lllld 80165 fl`0Ul 935'- and 3°“th» Wm' Silotl il lll9-l1lf0Sl0 l1llill'9BS0il ill U10 dissolve the chamber and to proceed, sllow and rain. Inamc of thc Liberal party to thc iwitli the elections while all the men; THE WEATHER.--Yesterday WHH,peoplo of his country advising nbsten- ill the kingdom ,who could bo mnbi-l mild and 0l0\ltly» lille in U10 *1f¢9",tlon from voting in the forthcoming liy_e,1w¢-.re under arms. noon. The highest temperature recorded yesterday was 36 degrees above zero. At nine o‘clock yesterday morning it registered 33 degrees above Zero; at nine last night 32 degrees above. Tile coldest the previous night was 33 deg. above zero. ' The tide will be high this afternoon at 12.12 and tomorrow at 1.03; it will be high tonight at 11.17 and tomor- row at 12. The sun sets this afternoonand to- morrow at 4.15; it rises tomorrow morning at 7.80 and Friday at 7.31. The moon sets tonisht at 6.19. There was a new moon on Monday Dec. 5th at 2.04 p. m. The first quarter of the moon will be on Monday. Dec. 13th at 7.38 n. m. The length ot t0,¢lllY Will be “ESM hours and forty~slx minutes. CONDENSED ADS. T00 LATE FOR ‘ CLASSIFICATION 'ONE CENT per word `each inser- tion for advertising in this column. Cash must accompany orders. Mini- mum cbarles, twentyive ceuts.__ Tt)"LE1’_HOUBE. APPLY 232 Great George Bu 5539°12-3m§f- Plums sAueAoie.(‘nAL:NtA\;B ON lf | ' r o e own. “nd “t H°.m°“ " ° sm-11-smu FOR SALE--No. 11 8iLVlR MOON ,Base lBurner nearly new. Afiillll sos Hillsboro st. sssz-12-s-using; FOR BALB.-Vi5LlN IN CASE- Used but five months. ADDIY It this office. sg?-10-Zdmtf Fon'esnVii'.'s-FUn|s`-enso Yonk- ehire Boer. John A. MacPherson. ro Ltr.--A Leriik ealawr eso- 'i&i“ °“ "°""‘ l“°3i£‘1‘ii“i?'° iii' e - _ A s orc . M mm D" toss-11-zsmzr 'general elections. The manifesto was lssllcd on November 21st, but its trails- "Tho ancient regime that was thought to have been abolished by tho. mission by telegraph was prevented ily il-evolution of 1900 came again to life the G!‘€Bk HOVSFl\llll‘-Ill. and it rcachetl with the ministry of the month of Paris to-day by mail. |Fehruary. Beaton ill thc elections, brought about solely by the wresting deviation from our policies amounting The manifesto calls attention I0 the Ithis regime concentrates all its forces fact that the internal crisis was ,many in a supreme effort to suppress 1 HAVE BEEN i Exoeeded OTTAWA, Dec. 7.-- When Hon. W. 'l`. White presents his budget at the next parliament the success of his war revenue measures, the complete fulfillment of his forecasts ns to revenue and trade will place his critics of last session in a position where silence will be their only logic- al argument. ln parliament and in thc Liberal press for a few months fol- lowing the war budget, the moat gloomy and dismal forecasts of ,fall- uro and incompetoncy were made. f'l`hrough :ill these blue rllill propheci- es ill the party press was tl note oi' glee 'in that the supposed failure of the revenue measures would injure the 'government and none expressed a feeling of regret that our participation in the conflict might be retarded or lnodified by lack of funds. There has been no failure; the precautions take en have proven ample and the critics wllo gleefully prophesied failure must find a newline of attack. ANTICIPATIONS EXCEEDED. Last session Mr. White estimated that under the existing revenue measures the govcrnment's income would be for the following fiscal year $120,000,000. He proposed by special taxes and a. horizontal rise in the tariff to increase the revenue by $30,000,000, of which $10,000,000 would come from special war taxes and $20,000,000 from increased customs revenue. it is now evident that instead of falling to pro- duce the $150,000,000 revenue there will be over $160,00,000 and 'that a comfortable surplus instead of a de out of the current revenue will be in , forest on our war debt and our pension list. At the same time there has been a big increase in current expenditure. Sllilllilii SPUUTEH T (Special tothe Guardian.) ST lOiiN Doc 7-That it is dan derogatory opinions of His Majesty secure men for the Empire armies, was evidenced to-night by the arrest hy Detectives Briggs and Barrett of Wilfrid Cribbie, a Socialist orator, who for some months has held forth to the long haired brethren in Socialist ilail. Cribbie lielll a meeting last Sunday night, in the collrso of which he referred to at recruiting placard freely displayed about the St John streets reading " Your King and (Special to The Guardian) ATHENS, Dec. 7.-An agreement for a conference of the Greek military authorities and military representa- tives of the Erltente Powers to ex- amine and report upon the necessities ol' the situation respecting allied de- mands upon Greece, has been reached and a preliminary step toward the lloldlng of the conference has been taken, Premier Skouloudis announced to-day; Tile Government of Greece has only two aims, to safeguard tho sovereignty oi' Greece and not aban- don neutrality llo matter what induce- ments or pressure are brought to bear on her. The situation is clearing. The Entente Powers are beginning to understand that while we are im- movable on -the two heads just stated, we are disposed in every other ro- spect to give material expression to. the feeling every Greek has towards Great Britaln,,France and Russia, dat- ing from Navarino. Tile points which caused the recent friction are now clearing. As far back as November 10th, I suggested the inappropriate- ness of non-military diplomatlsts seek- ing to arrange details of a situation that was essentially military and ol’ which the understood little. Th re the military authorities on either side, authorized to study the necessities of the situation and report on them, thus glvlllg tho Greek Government and the _Entente diplomatists the benefit of FiGi'iTiNG is NUW THE wi" Ms GREEK AND ENTENTE il., wh...-. ,»...,,..,..,. Greek Premier Explains Govern- __' menl’s View on Situation and Con- » we our nurse ference Muiually Agreed Upon. ,,,,,,,, s,,,;.,,,,,,,,,,,,_ Satisfactory Solution Now Assured. tlement could be reached. Respecting railroads the Greek Government has never been unaware that the person- nel was inadequate to handling the immense increase ill traffic due to the military uses to which the railivoys are now put, but M. Bollralli was un- willing to surrender control of his own property. As General Sarrall offers to assist ill the operation of thc railways, leaving the Greek control unquestioned, the Government is only too glad to accept. The question of hunting dowll Austro-German submar- ines ill Grcek territorial waters touches our sovereignty. We protest to the nentrals that we cannot salic- tlon a. violation of ollr territory. But what can we do? We have only a small navy and a vast coastline. We can only protest. What we wallt to avoid is associating Greece with an uncertain outcome of the 'war. Had we joined the Allies lust spring when we were urged to do so, to~day we would have to bear the bulk of the cost of the failure ol' the Gallipoli vell- ture. llall we joined them at the in- ception of the recent Austro-German Bulgarian attack on Serbia we would now he bearing a large part of the price in blood and devastation follow~ Y e - fore I proposed a conference between ing the crushing of the Serbians. By following the two prlllciples we stand by as governing Greece's foreign pol- icy, we have been saved these two dis- asters. We should continue to follow them, for in_,,them is our only salva- thelr conclusions from which a set- tion . ~- .-_-_#_A-_-_-_-_-_ -,-,-,-_-_-_-f -_-_-_-_ -_-_-_ ,=».,,. . . ._-,-,-_-,- - _ _-,-_-_-.-_-_-_-_-,-_-_-_-_-f -_-,-f - -, ,_____,,-_-,M _-,-_-, A __~_. BRITISH LONDON, Dec. 7.-The Turkish tor- pedo boat destroyer Yer Hissar has been sunk in the Sea of Marmora by a British submarine, it was announced officially this evening. A supply steamer and four sailing vessels also, were destroyed by the submarine on December 3 and 4 The official state-' the liberties of the peoplo because it\C0““U'-V Need Y°“-H "My "eww" °f ment is as follows' all mobilized mop which it can count I | 1 ,. igorator of the Cribbie i.ype to illveigll :,‘;g?,;glifeBsi0n or the wnsmm mm] Hai; tv(;],|\;?,t?,||f?|l;,,g,?,¥,f,:;‘,::;,?|);;, :,151 lmeiagainat recruiting at a time When all .-.-.-.-.-_-_-,-_-._-.-_-_-_-_-_-f_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-:_-_-_-_-_-,-_._-_-_-.-_-_-. - Ex-Premier Vcnizclos points ,out governnlcni. are being refllscd leavesl'fff°l`l** 11"" iTei“gK9,X9,:`:-°‘%ht‘; ‘aww me what ho calls the cnliro absence of of absence y"“"5 "W" “ln “E 5 8 wr e the peoillle for the second tirlillzl ill a says thc ci:-i~‘rclllilctl]‘: "iEl‘iii A . v ‘I if] t H I. . ll fi ' ll |18 it WBS il ~ ifviriifilif`inii"cf.i2‘ii"f.§`iElfel E3? i-EE 2f"`{i,-- '.`-'..l°l‘2ll'fl'i°`i§l'il ffiitinig Eivfi §ii=s°i'\°r illuvllfollflate that 1" the city _ " S the mere Pl'-*l1Slll'¢i Of! @X0l‘0iBllli1¢ ltH appearance which would be false tlla.ti°f me lnyansts any ma" ‘mum refer ' ” ‘ w if n ___ 0iJl10Sll-l0ll. and tilat it would have the |~lo1:fions were an approval by thc|E° Kim; (*°‘"'5° “S “ puppet “nd Mcflltied metnfs cab,i",9tt":'_"h age $3115 €’°°l;]‘”‘ if "°’:;’l;‘§,‘£“Ei°;‘ °vE,,]§2,:`lf;g|:,:vagf ii;,b|i,o'%I:gg;i,onS;p;§: WASHINGTON, Dec. 7.-Germany facts nor will hc give the sources of exc us on o e m n s e w rea y o a ance. s o ‘ ,, notified the United States to-day that information concerning thc activities lllslllted the °h“mbe"- and says: I" Greece has exfended her f"°“ti°r5 as mixggegsistetghaaggribrgs 83321225 she desired to know upon what of' the attaches in connection with ,spite °E the “m`°“E i"t°"U°“a"y 1"' E" as N°°E°°~ ,agreed to To_,,|ght' C,-lbble held grounds the State Department esksnaval and military matters. to which lllifwd “P0” me nafmnal "°l“`°”°“E”" The Liber”-I Party has "0 i“E9“ti°“ another mgetlng when his subject the withdrawal of Captain Boy-ed, the the State Department objected. With- tlvei b€'hlll§iDl_l‘0ll;0fl0l:i 0l;f|l'_E;1teT|£’;’E.9,' 5; labixllgigkgl€o5:;°\l:x€€§3}£_':ls_P?‘n!°l:l2i‘,|en|t with the horrors of the cotton naval attache of the German embassy out references to the reasons which l0l‘ 0 0 E 95 SW 9 ’ ‘ ' I the, 95131,. here. and of Captain Von Papen, thelprompted the State Department to ask court, and in spite of his maintenance cislon. says M. Venizelos. who adds f°°E°"i°“' cannenes “"‘ ° , » military attache. S cretar of State‘th ithdrawal of the attaches, it is in the reconstructed ministry. the op- that the portage oblect new is to pre- “"§§‘;'“§'p'f,‘,‘;=;' Lansing received tnoerequolii from iwoistfteii. lm-. United states will stand D.0Blll0l1 00l1f9\1le‘l U95" with decinf' Vent intern” "9 “mf” and E0 19"” for half an hom. and when( accom, sources-from Count Bernstorff. theiupon the established understanding H18 Illini it Wflllld llbsffiin from me ;l:§9g§’;:,;_t ci:,";‘;§’ lggsbaaggéiliedlgfttafg pamed by his wm,_ he Mft the han he ambassador, and from the Berlin iamong nations that an intimatlon that segsptpnesl chamber had in view only disasters now being prlzapared by the ;“"t°h-i ff'-if* ;. wif-i ,-;i.¢£ _ 1.