The Guardian ls Read Dadyby " _ s » r People »|d$i(0I(4 l Statement Furnished Advertise! ' l"ll5l0 DA-lla-Y_ _Mornlng Dolly founded 181 " Weekly (nay Evening Daily) 1387 l-_i i i p l y el1ARl.o'r'rsTowN,_cANAoA,,SA'rURoAY. MARCH 25. 1916 f i _ j{,°;§g gggvigg-;f(;g;';,';p;,ff;f,_> pggggggg;-c___d!i_”!_w_wyuA llul. all lllllll sllltts nllalno liillllliiiiiii Pllocelsolrlos ln me iiilliiisuwtiil lliillllllilll Eiilllll ” f INVERDUN BATTlE _ ` - WAS TUHPEDUED lie Participated _ln the Serbian ' ' _ V , 0 ‘com on A “W t d oth Rmnut fm" D“"°"° ‘md ' ` N nbeelmlzltell allldlLogszs’0ute;$l ing. Particulars Ileagre. Sup lilitnessed Many of the liorrors ||| p,-090|-li0n.¢0 gums, 0|] Estimates of De.. posed Iiumtler of lnlerloans Incident to That. Disastrous ilarch. ST. JOHN, N. Ii., l\iarch_ 2~i.--Lieut- onant itoy Leitch, ol Cllurlottetowll, and u staff olllcer lll tllo Serblnll Army urrlved ill the city yesterduy by the steamer Col-illtlliall. Lieutenant Leltcll visited his home lust summer having been luvallded after ten months witl the ill() lieglnlolll, Second Infantry, Serbian Army. After ll few luontlllr ' he rest llc returned to Serllln whore participated ill tllo Serbian retl-cn , ' u- \ - Ii"0iii` `Du`r.s'lZo. Asked as to the trutl Northwest oi by Germans. Big Galils. 1 l (Special to the Guardiaw) LONDON. March 24.-It is still ill tllat the heaviest battles are in pro- gress. but fighting is also continuing ill the Austro-Italian zone, in Serbia near the Greek frontier and in Asiatic Turkey. The French are keeping up -their-vigorous bombardment of the woods ol Malancourt and Avocourt nor`th-west ol Verdun, which are held by the Germans and also are hammer- ing away witll their guns the German lines of communication ill the eastern nllttellt bombardment by the Germans some thirty men taken prisoners. fringes of Argonne forest. ` el-Amare, where a British force To north-east ot Verdun an inter- under Siege- l on the French second line positions is (Special to the Guardian.) still golllg on, with the French reply- LONDON. March 24.-The Britl ing 9nerge¢iqa11y_ oflicial statement on the campaign The only infantry encounters along the WOSt0i‘li !I'0iit Bays! the western front took place ln Ar- "Tile enemy exploded mines las gonne forest, where the Germans ‘night and to-day near Gulnehy, ju gained a portion ol' the French first north of La Bassee Canal. They d lille trench, but were expelled from it no damage. We bombarded llosti by a counter-attack with a loss ol' trenches south ofCo1nines Canal." All along the Russian front, from the PARIS. March 24.- Bombsrdme region of Friedrlcllstadt tothe district by the French of the German po around Vllna the Russians and Ger- tioilsin tho Woods of Mnlnncourt xl mans are at hard gl-ips. Petrograd Avocourt and by lJ0lli G0i'l1l8ii 8 says that near Whlsy. between Dvinsk French suns iii opposips positions and Vilna the Russians forced all the all sides continue, according to German 'lines and barrlcades and re- French official communication pulsed a vigorous German counter- night.. No infantry action has tak . l attack. Berlin, however, says the Rus- place except in Argonne forest who of the reports regarding the Allsfflllll l it av losses' the Germans entered the French flr ol Ileaviest Fighting. French Keep- ing Up' llolllharlllllenl ol Point Deoimoted German Companies S Filled with Young Recruits From Class of l9l6 in the verqun uccupyed Proportion of Two to Three. Russians Malung. _- Italians attacked und~occupiod Au the French and Russian war theatres tl-lan positions in Cordevole Valley. Berlin reports that in the region which attacked the Turkish positi (Special to the Guardian.) han °f it has “W0” Yet f°“"d its Way Bad weather prevails ill the Austro- expolld with losses. illto prlllt, and nlutll of it will lleve ly the 64th sustained such losses by til Germans Attacked in Compact Masses had Suffered Losses Incident to the lissailant. Italian illoutre. Despite a blizzard tht; ____ (From our own Correspondent) I (Special to the Guardian-) °[ attack on the Kingston penltentiary Glfivlgen °" ,me scrb°`Gr?ek frontier PARIS. Mlifcll 24--‘ T110 GC‘l`111i\llS adlninistrzltioll by Dr J. E. Ewards of ar ‘my du” 5 has been “ progress' Would llfl-V0 ll- bCli@V0i1 lllill Ui0ll‘ Froutelloc. coupled with the allegation The “““‘””°“° "ms “°* 5'” "ie losses at Vcrdup were not creator that thc Mlnlstcl-‘cl lnsllcr had np- natlonalltles ol' thc contending but- man muse 0'(mc1.~,.,.,,ch arlnyf- says Dummy' ben guilty dl. ‘rmélous dm °"leS~ The defeat Of it Bfmsll f°|'g:i -p irlemf-olhcial ncite tllllls iiftcrilooll. Tilt; crinlilllltion in the treatment of polli- 0 OW llg 8Xf\Il1I> GW S l0W 10W EYES telltlnry ollieials, featured the discus- on the aight blank of the Tigris River the German sacrifices were: On the' sion ol’ the Justice Department esti- “\e‘“` Fe “,I§\°' E °hf`t""l”|9d in 9°'"““"' lorenoon oi' March 9. the ilrst blil- -mates in the House to-day. Most of i`“°l’ e' ‘ie "L§‘l’°‘ 35;; “YS T“"kl5\‘ tation ol the nineteenth regiment the cm-lim- part of the ,ply Wag spell; armen "ga “ wppe ombs 0" K“t` reserve Of the flftll GCl'iiiilll COYDS on these topics. but the pellitelltiary is llttiwkeii the VWBSG Of Vllllli ill csinlates were llllally passed and the colunlus oi' fours. The French allowed the first company to penetrate the l w ere it was sur rised b a ,vllage, ll p y Sh ,violent machine gun llre and then 0” ,charged with bayonets. The surviv- ors. those able to do so, took refuge in L houses where they fell. This com~ Bt ,pany, the 13th, was allnillllated. The id _second and third battalions of the le same regiment passed east of the village at the same time going for- ,ward in squads to the llrst lirencll m trenches on the llortllel' slope ol' a sl' _summit domlllatlllg Fort Vaux. The “d ussnllallts were out do\\'ll -ft short “(1 distance from tile trenches by the °" French and fell ‘ back ill disorder. “ Next day. March 10, the sixty»l`ourtl m' regiment of"*”iuianti'y of the BIXL en division ot the third German corps ‘gi replaced to the north ol' ’Vaux th decimated nineteenth regiment, but 1. tire of ollr artillery that thc attae which was begun was eollllterlmtllded. Q _ be known The torture hl-ought dowll ,-_-_-_-,-,-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-.-J.-.-.-:.-,-.-.-_-.-_-.-.-_-.-.-_-.~.-.-_-_-ss..s-_-:_-.-_-.1.-.-_.-_-=.-_-_--_-__ ---- ------~----»-- upon the heads ot' the innocent Sol blalu-l wus lnucll the same as tllo moth ods used by the North Anlerlcall _ T00 LATE FOR , dlaus. Al one pluoe one llulldrcd me _ , ‘ sian attacks fa led w ll Ile y iltl'0Cl¢l0B. Lieut. Leitch said, The before ,1 Gnrman entanglement. line of trenches but were immediate _ ‘ . tl - \ONDENSED A DS. women und elllldren were thrown in l (_‘.[,_\SSI1¢`1OA'1‘1()N u n huge bonfire and hurnc`:i up. Again large number ol elllldrcll were lillod u| in front of the Austrians, who cllarg ) cd them with llxod hayeuets and cut ONE CENT pm. word Cach mBc,._ them to pieces. tloll for advertising in this column. _ "We finally arrived :lt Corfu, wllorc Cash must accompany m.d0,.B_ Mini, our horrors wore ln lt measure at an mum charges twe,my_m,° cenm e d. 'ill Peter wus with us ill the "IDE-KD,-SAUSAGES ALWAYS ON n lx g retreat alld ho trudgcd along like all common soldier. Tile Serbian Arm is now ill first-class shape." Tile retreat from Durazzo he sal or bo adequately told" hc sllld "lt wa too horrible. For one lllllulrerl mile lo ou wus strewn 'wltll bodies o gi V hand at Holman's. Charlottetown. OYSTERS AT BENO|T'B 08 Wé\‘T§iR d i . was full of horrors. "The story will llev- ' st 'lsslal lvl w/mrso-A cl-l/mean Malo A1' 5 King Edward llotel. H ' fzaoz-zs-za-_lvljl._'_ f Wl~l‘r`€i>"`a`\7 Apnll. 1sr., Malo English Woman was made in the Conllllolls that th daughter of an English squlro ha been put in jail summarily some tim found ill her posession literature n vocating revolution and murder. ‘Trouble Between Arrested _as Spy LONDON. Milrtfll 24--A ifflllllllfiiill the rellr to bo rceollstrllctod. 'l`h ago and still was kept there. The mem- bers were impressed with the appur- nfllm in oacll company. Even thc when she was arrested there wa ' ~ Tile battle oi Vordull. which 'lla occupied ll. molltll, was made up o ll ucccssvs ill the iirst few days U third corps had to have two-thirds 0 il its olllcers replaced and thc gap ON -ALL FRONTS _._ . HOUSE OF CDMMONS \ Justice and a lrom Minister. . institution. The Frollennc lnclnber OTTAWA. March 24. - Another ations taken up. Good progress had been made wltll thc latter by the tilne| the House adjourned. l Dr Edwards took occasion to reply to the last report of ponltentiary in- spection, lll which Inspectors Douglas Stewart and W. S. lluglles had paid their respects to the mclnbol' for Frolltelluc. lie also criticized Iioll. C. J. Doherty because at guard at Stoney Mountain penltentinry, who had oar- riod-letters to convicts, had been dis- missed, while a Itolllnn Catholic chap- Iuin who had delle the uallle thing hurl been retnlllcd. 'l‘lle sallllc thing had happened in Kingston pellitelltiary llllulld ltevcllue Ilepnrtlllvnt appropri- l pariment Brought Forth an Allegation ol Religious Discrimi- nation on Part ol Minister ol with regard to the conveying of money I ' . . h from friends outside to convicts in thei pellltentlarlcs. ‘ » Crushing Reply also protested against the granting ot superanuntion allowance to Dr Phelan. surgeon ol the penltentiory, alleging he had never done his duty in a man- ner to deserve such connlderatlon. The reply of the Minister of Justice as regards thc religious discrimination alleged was that the Roman Catholic chaplain nt Stoney Mountain had sent a letter away for a convict while still a new appointee. Ho had done lt ill ignorance ol' the rules. Father Mc- Dellllel ol’ Kingston pcllltelltlary had llot trnl1sl‘errcl ln compact the lH\illCl‘i‘d \i0i‘l‘llil¥ TWU 5C0i»ilH{\ birth- dim’ “ml 10”* wr w°"‘l”'f“l_ most delicate as a result of what is ,lnassoselnl wlnnu- cllll-l's on-_not dis- , y, . _ . lll.irso`5 were rklllod wlloll they fc '- " -. preclplre. All our lines of coln \ “°"°*"7°|’° of y°‘"° °"u"‘ nf” Pr" happening ill Belgium between the mnyed hy lin llouliwll .ullhtes lessor Itapllucl 499 Loxingtoll Avo aunmrluca and (gardilml Mm., . ______ J p _ g ____ ‘ ' ‘ < _ ' ‘ Gorman _ . lllullletttloll were ent and for days and N}_i1V___Y_2l'>lf-_ >”_'ZZ_0Q;J'25M_lL_'_ cle,-_ [L pays that mn Vatican muy bn , days we existed upon almost llotll- \_9g1'...A w|q|3TL_£1- wa1'¢l-| BE. “laced |u A idlmpuu- p05m0n_ Cardinal A on ills. cycperiollees lll thc Serbia ing." Lieut. Leltcll has written u book tween }\gl'lcultllral Ilnll and St. Mercier, .lt is fcnrod, will ho illtcrnod ' li I)unstan's Cutlledrul. idindor please in Germany. Army. Ile louvos shortly for Now \ York to arrallgo for iurther ,fund und will later rctllrll to Sorbln. Knows Nothing 0l Severe Note' 'lo Germany LONDON March 22-The Nether Ilulds Forol ll Office declares tha uotliitlg savers wlth.the Ttlbantla. a newspaper Nieuws V a Rott rs desliatc 8 li wh there concerning the no from Holland to Germany n lenvc nl. Agricultural Hall. s ' 7960-3-Z5-M21. Apply Guardian Ollleo. t a h li. 3 party APPW Saved Steamer STEAMER SUNK r~.“r”'.-. Tr :°.:rf~"'T= P , ,-- , r l room. con a _ ' lagged). gAIlHmol.lgrn collvenieueegl 4 land, Maine, to England. Pr sclal to the Guardian-) ( P --- LONDON, March 24.--According to WH! Dll Lloyd's the steamer Englishman of NEW ` YORK. March 22.-Foul' the Dominion Line has been sunk. guns made of spurs and Thus far 68 survivors have been ac- on the after and quarter counted lor. The last, record ol the Harrison lille steamslllp 'Englishman shows she salted from saved that vessel from be- Portland, Maine, February 1;, for St a submarine victim, according Nszalre and Avoumouplal. ho wus Rivers, of Santa Fe., N. M.,~a 5,257 tons and was wned by the who arrived here yyester- Mississippi and Dominion S.S. Co. steamehip Csmeronla, from ' c I The British steamer Englislnnun, a vessel of 5.257 tons. which plies bo- ~mouth,'has been sunlnbut whether by e mine or torpedo has»aot`beon stated. ~$lxty-eight persons on board were rescued. Wlhather this *number con- stituted the entire ship's company ls not known. ~ . _ gn Acrlvs on otrrtirl srtoltlrlen 9 ol' 1916. who were ln proportion two- absolute contraband, but lt is possible “ that the will soon bo placed on the -_-~»---- 0lll» illluililw lm it Wu” Uxplilmed that these reillforcelnellts sent l'rolll the Hom,-a1,u};i,| .list Meauwlme un. ,,0§,_l Bll0 W9-3 ill C1099 100011 Wml 8 GUTUWII interior were lnsulliciellt. to bring tllo ` ‘ ' tll 'ounll spy wllo had to flee the country and s|_,-ength of me co,-ps to what p_ Wu B 'helors March 2. During their las ures will bo continued on e gl' ° ‘ ii that ulldor the orders in council tiles:-` t securities establish credit for hostile! d' "`il i~ » l -f-.- ' rt ,T _,cs _ _;.~.-'z' asp.”- *.~_‘~§~ ,gs . -1;. ' ""-"` -‘--'T.".-`l-:iff -~3--“~ igili;-' 0 4 ii tg' V' il _ ‘-4 ‘al E 1. '- st , nl.. l:.v,,¥,,, lor ‘. i. ' 221| *s . fl 'i ;' tif' =; li p;,_5.,f . ,_. znf~ 47% , -i`.-1( _‘ l~‘ it " - s‘ . _gf W ' lil-1 if-fl, vllsf.; { ,' 'i :li -. Q -I .i .=.. X2, fl r. ff ,\ may tgi- il il ‘$53 pi 121-7::» -1 _ P, _ 1-Roueiaé ;.»- iii .- , ¢.. ,"12- ,~2%=`1 £--~.,`. - lt 0 _ £9. 'ff' ‘-2 fl .g - .,' , ti- .ét- < ->‘ Q It 1 ,l_ y _.. fp .' :~ fa _'tl .» , _fp xi "`§ "> .` . ,E .<'.~ f; if’ .-_.- » I" l , t. '_»' 4. i.- ii if . 6 ;»- ._, .