T’ l_"¥?‘.’H __ ;_ _ . _ _ -1 . _, . ‘ i it .- . _ _,. .rt , . » - '_ , _ ~ ~ 1 L in ,_ - , _ ,_ ' 1.. - 1 ,,.,. ..» ._ ~. , s»,»».-- '»."- *r 1' Ll ..';--» _ _ ` 'I. -,_ _-_ -.J_..-.',» #tt- » - - , ' f‘:f,<.-..- _ . . ., Q '1-1" , . ,_, i - ~ -;. _ _ _ 'I fn ` I I ` ~ Ki :JI Law* V' 1( __ 7 .. _ THE GUARDIAN COVERS PRINCE EDWXRD ISLAND LIKE THE DEW ' 2 - 0 -II . H THE NEwsWoR'.ri-iReAn1Nc ' - ALL THE ADVTS WORTH (H ,.¢v¢"'* "' ' 'Y "' " Y - ~ .:.._-___ - -_-_-v____________,_ ____ nn fl... »-0°----I-H-E 0...., RD.....-. is =;.;.......;;s. ow lvonlng Daily il? I»'.‘3-'I‘l'¢‘»-or 'ww iw’ cHARi.oT'ri-frown, CANADA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER so, 1918 ws P-» v-» is-me 1. sm...-1. em.. as ms 1.- ua - - $8.50 For Year (Do1lvorel.) ‘ ' DURING THE WEEK IS RIIPIDLY NEI-IRIN COMPLETION On Every Front the Crushin Bl I th All' I' ° ’ ' ul aria s 8 OWS 0 Q ms are Falmg Upon the B°w'|d"gd Armm of Germans’ Ausmans’ and 4000 Prisoners Already Taken. .Whole I_ill’I\$. B' S 'ii . Prisoners are B' S t B kt '» " ' 1 ‘ B505 C°Ptured Than the Germ¢ziln`qaniInAusti;I:an I=atelI0r§;ig'GarIn BIi[i‘I(;)lusa'§diIet?;/gilt*/ze MI)II§t§r?eesmya£un0eiai:; SIX 53fi|¢S Still Continuing Unehecked. a U , BUI a|`ia|`\§ a|'¢ to Quit, Tufks a|'2 _(Special to The Guardian) ‘strong counter attacks and captured 1 - - - . . _ P S . Y _ _ PFBCYICBIIY Annihilated, Austria is Sick ol the War and German is bein Ho" Iessi Whipped. ..‘lA.f§.‘s;.ffI’.§'§.‘f`i..§"IYf.§i."§§.fli.”.f§ “ Thee”-.t»ta~=» new-Nts I (Special to The Guardian) LONDON. Sept. 29.-Like a group of -Smiths surrounding a great anvil Foch's Generals ewinx the sledge hammers in turn crushing the enemy masses beneath their mighty strokes and shaping a new world in which mii- itarism shall not bear rule. ‘ Petain strikes in the Champagne, Pershing along the Mouse, Haig in front of Cambrai, w’hile ilifangin con- tinues his strokes along -the Ailette. Allenby's smashing 'blow in Palestine re-echoes among the mountains of Galilee and Despery has so shrowdly aimed his strokes in the Balkans that Bulgaria sue; for an armistlce as a preliminary to peace negotiations. PRl8ONERB BY THOUSANDS COM- ING IN Prisoners by the thousand and guns in hundreds are taken daily. Not all the armies of workmen in Kruppe or the Verda factories of Austria 'can replace the guns of the foe as quickly as they are being taken from him. ' Thofvictories -won by the organi- sing genius of Foch. _the velour oi his generals and "the daring and herdi- hood of Allied soldiers are bringing the end of the war much nearer than even the most sanguine could have hoped two months ago. .Since Thurs- day the French have captured over 10,000 men in the Champagne, the Americans over 8,000 prisoners and one hundred guns between the Meuee and the Argonne, and the British 6,000 in the _operations of Camibrai. where Bourlon Wood, the chief out- threat against both Cambraialld D0ua'- work of the cities' defences has been taken by the Canadiens, leaving the way into the city open. THE GANADIANS ARE IN IT The centre of interest for Canadian readers this morning‘ls the region between the Senseo River and Cam- brsi where a 'British army, of which the Canadian Corps formed the lefi Hills. iwon another notable victory Yesterday. The chief difficulty in the way of farther progress on this part of the front 'was an unfinished section of the Canal Du Nord the steep 'banks of 'which the enemy believed would Prevent the use of tanks in an assault upon Cambrai. -The canal proved a bog. ’ i 'Pressing -forward along a fourteen mile front ‘between the -Bensee and Fles Quois, the man of the first and third and British armies pushed ac- ross the iflanal and in an amasilmly short time the Canadian and British troops on the crucial part of the frvlli were driving through the German de- fences north and south of iliourloni Hill and Wood. -&_iir .Douglas Haig referring to the work of the Canadians. sw! 0" th* left Canadian Corps under General Currie attacking with the lst, 3rd and 4th divisions, forced A Passage 0! UN Canal Du Nord and captured the vil- lasss or eainsiemaquion and Bourlon with -the wooded height; ,_ of Buuitioil ani. Between the use _tho Af' rss Road they also 151509 `l_l_DI°°dm advance for the flew ."-Eilftlsb _front Ypres today und thc advance at some close to llailencourt, a hamlet on the A-rras Cambrai Road slightly over two miles from Cambrai. HARD FIGHTING AT BOURLON WOOD BUT THE ENEMY WAS BEATEN There was hard fighting south of Bourlon Wiood and for a time the British troops taking part in the ad- vance were held up -by strong defenc- es of Graincourt. These were turned from 'tho north while to the south Flea Quieres and the spur of Beau- camp were carried. Several thousand prisoners were captured. Sir Douglas says the figures in unofficial des- patches are 6,000. South of the active front around Cambrai American troops near Le Catelet captured the outer positions of the Hindenburg line. North of the Arras Camhrai road English troops carried Sauchy Cauchy and Sluchy Lestre, thus protecting the left flank of the troops which we must assume to have ibeen Canadians operating on the Arras Road sector. in the region north of the Scarpe the occupation of Arlenx En Gohelle was completed. Altogetherithe result of the day’s op- erations was to increase greatly the AMERICANS MADE SPLENDiD_ HAUL OF PRIBONERS AND ` GUNS _ PARFS, Sept. 28.-The American ad- vance ‘between the Mouse and the Argonng Forest forced the enemy to throw in his reserves east of the Meuse -where the French put on ii div- ersion. Austrian troops were brought into action and Vienna speaks of them as taking a glorious part in the USM' ing. There could not have 'been much glory in repelling a make belief attack but the incident is important as show- ing Gormany's increasing dependence on the Austrians for the replenish- ment of her waning reserves and man power. Wlcst of the Mouse the Americans in addition to the bl! batch of over 5000 prisoners already reported succeeded in the first da1"S advance in SGNIHZ ¢hl'0\1Eh i0 the German big gun positions. A' SWB! haul was made near Dannevoux; on the River Bank. Four 8 inch and el8llI fl inch guns were captured together with ten acid suns and 34 11\“°`hi“° guns. A -bit to the WB! Of U10 Vmage two other batteries of field SMB Were taken together with is lot_of munitions and me American gunners turned the whole twolve on the Germans. The chief centre of resistance at the CIOBG oi the nm days flshtins was 0" i‘“° high ground of Mount FBUCOU- D“I'_I“5 the night the enemy brought \\l> Slime of the best t-roops in the German urmy, When the American advance was resumed yellefiifly m0l'“I“3 I°“" divisions were thrown into 01111096 the assaults of three American div- isi ns. ln the face of this BYGHIIY Ill' crgased resistance the Amerioalw continued to 'make satisfactory pro- posing the any they captured mvoillages of Charpendry, El>il\0l1' eesae¢.¢.g.¢qo»eaeeoe ‘fovir._1t_iislts" AN Look on-this picture and on that. Over' there in France the sel- s ~ oins to battle. The thoulhi-I0!! D CCOUl1UOC.l_Olf.fO‘O$l%5 g_, at Canadian is sisdlu no Nl I nsdian at home is eranklnl “ll U10 battle-lines Ita ht doathlflpl our iivca -time dan on seams MW? ills! it W6 must w "7 !'!?‘!.-9??" .$°°“T°.°”” " 5'" A sat it in naman nr 0 o o e e e aeloée-e»» Q-one \'." ‘< .-., ‘ - _ f - ._ . ,. _ ._._. _,,__,_,._ _ Motoring -for pllnenro 'ia s luxury. It laufiseemly for us to be iilouure-ssoklils and 'luxury-lining ~‘l'lila_.-1| non r_ for eatfsvogssoe. We must- waste no sll°l|l\°- " ' if _ as _ . ,» _ ~ ti sm esuiliu- lm nm!- 'ihl _ _ I; - ' ~ »..i'r -_ . seuroiseaeeag so _ _ _ _ .- _. ___,,_,_‘.».' n :_‘._, -._.'_.___-__,,»-__-,__ __ 1 ~'f,._ i. ,pt _. _ _ _ _ . .__,_i___l____ Y . .___ ._.___~___.______._____...N ____ ,_ ._ »_ _\..~ _ _ » r , . _ aeeoateavalllieeeaw D “OVER TliERl'.” eeaeeaooeaoaeeseaaaa his oar for s "joy f|¢°-" when our own desh and blood _lil with the foe. We seed to shape ntl simple lines. te no money on gwoiisr. our of it we can save. `!°i9°.eses»~~f~*‘: i; _ vllel, Vory and ivory. Following up.) on the infantry advance the Artillery was dragged up over roads heavy with mud ns a result of 'i`hui'sday"s night ruin and hy night fall the Am- erican gunners were again doing' their part toward the destruction of the enemy’s defensive positions. The German engineers some time ago laid up a. strong line of defence about three miles north of the American out- posts, as they were when the ‘battle was resumed yestordaih which the enemy troops hope to hold. Toward evening the Germans launched sev- eral strong counter attacks against the American centre near Montlaucon and Aviator scouts reported heavy concentrations in the wood of Cler- ges, northwest of Montfaucon there today very heavy fighting will follow the continuance of the American nd- vance. - I l FRENCH BROKE THROUGH ON TWENTY ONE MILES _ The French official report of the first day of the battle oi' the Cham- pagne showg that the assaulting troops broke through the German battle line] on a front of over twenty one miles, took over 700 prisoners of whom 20| were officers and captured a number of villages well behind the onemy’s battle line despite the stuhborn de- fence of .the Germans. The village of Cornay En Dorprerd one of the places ruptured is the principal road centre on the western side oi' -the Argonne forest. With it and Servon in their possession the French will be a'ble to make the evacuation of the Forest by] the German troops still remaining in| it an extremely hazardous operation. The French prisoners on Thursday and Friday totaiover 10,000. BULGARIANS REDUCED T0 CHA- OTIC CONDITION ,ln Macedonia the diplomatic sit- notion is of even greater interest than the military. The Allied troops in -their combined advance along a front of almost a hundred miles np- pear to have reduced the Bulgarian defensive system to a condition of chaos with all their principal lines of fretreat severed. Many thousand of Bulgaria may be able to negotiate una -Mountains :by the French and Serbs while, to tho east of the Car- iiap, British troops have invaded Bulgaria and captured Strumitza thc forward enemy base, taken thirty guns and much ammunition. THE Gnssxs Movino on aut.- cAn|A The Greeks also are advancing into Bulgaria after storming the enemy positions on -the Mountain crests north of Lake Doiran. At Kochana to -which the south pushed after their oc- cupation oflshtib they have covered more than hall, the distance ,ifrom THE WEATHER . TEMPERATURE, FIDE, MOON, ETC. TORONTO, \Sept. 29.--Some scat- tered showers but mostly fair and warm. . The tide will be high this morning at 7.16 and ‘tomorrow at 8.30, it will he high tonight at 9.01 and tomorrow nt 9.49. The sun sets this evening nt 7.02 and tomorrow at 7.01; it rises to- morrow morning at 7.16 and Wednes- day at 1.11. The moon' rises tomorrow mirning at 8.61. \ _ ` The last quarter of the moon was an 'rhnr|day, Sept. 27th at 12.39.-a. -m. »rhm~wii_i_-he a new own on Erl- day 0c_t._ 4th gl D-'mg ‘rnan troops with the tnrdy response ‘gar morale and the Allicd powers ‘Bulgarian Army as at fighting forcc. rss ithsiii or tm, win hs sims Saloniki to Sofia. The invasion of Bulgarian territory, the refusal of a request ffor relnforcemdnts cf Ger- is virtually surrounded in the regions east of the Jordan and faces annihila- tion -by General Allenby’s forces. 'l`o~ day's advices show the total prison- of Austria to a similar' request have UTS l>\lI‘0i1l1y lake" WHS Ill0I`95S€fl 10- ymd the effect of destroying the gui. duy by 4,500. 'l‘lie annihilation of thc fourth army now hoped for would complete the rounding up of the ’i`ur_klsh forces in Palestine account- ing for about 80,000 men. -it-4 BULGARIA INVADED have been approached in the hope that Bulgaria may eb able to negotiate with them a separate peace. Mean- while General Desperey continues his operations for the destruction of the LONDON, Sept. 28.-The war of-- lice today mndc the foli-wing statement on operations in Macedonia: Yester- dfiy the British troops' entered Bul- garia opposite Kosturlno. Kosturlno is in the main Stroiimitz Doirnn high- A revolution with the dcthornemenl of Czar Ferdinand are probable. . AERIAL BARRAGE ZONE PARIS. Sept. 28.- The military commandant at Mannheim ha sissued a proclamation warning that nn aer- ial barragazone exists around Man- nehelm and Ludwigshafen. Wire fences charged with electricity also surround the zone, he warned. rltory and four miles directly south of the important Bulgarian centre of Stroumitz. WHIII SIIX IIIWIRIII Ai.i.iEo AovANcE or Firv iviii.i;s iN nuggia __ , ARCHANGEL, Sept. 29,-American _-_ troops who are now taking part in sI|tIll’dU¥S RUGR8 lttCIli|¢(I. operations in virtually all sectors of Ffgg 0|' [II Pqgg Bgst Rqgg the northern Russian front have cap- of the “cet iurcd several villages in recent fight- ____ ing. The uct result of the fighting _He n 'I 1 __ __ U k in which the Americans co-operated I "3 ‘MB races 0 ‘B wee wit hthe *British and Russians, in the ::;;_ Iiggjtd f;?orE':1t;l"i?r;:“I;f;f;:2;: t ki f ~ I i th t t ' a ng 0 many paces n 8 ms en Th tr k nd ather were all to da i thsi,i san ““°“W° 0fy:10?_em§_anenf_;';:leBs_ an va ce be desired and there was a good at- . icniliince. BOLSHEVIKI 'N #LIGHT The free for all pace was the best race of the meet and every heat of it lh ik n 1 K _ made a thrill on account of the fast The Bog ev 1 are ee ng to ct pacers and the time made. In the first l d th Alii ti l th pai1srs;IiIIt Kgtlas iisozriliiolisgrngvini and Second heats' the pager' white a distance ot’ 325 miles inland from Sox' from Sussex' N' B" lowered the track record by one half second Archangel in a southeasterly direct- ion and the general opinion was that ' .-had she been pushed in the last quar- JAPANESE WAKE PROGRESS IN ter of the third mile. she could have » SIBERIA cnsily lowered it another two sec- onds. In performing this heat, the _ _ .hit LONDON, sept. 29.-in eastern ;l’°“';‘Ol "3_°e°?_eI§§:§ ‘° W 9 Siberia Japanese mounted troops' 0The ‘starter Mgr. Power deserves the marching eastward from Chita and ’ . t B h kv thanks of all present for the promp - have effected a junction at Rufulow were handled. No less than nineteen 306 miles northwest of Blagiovestsch- heats were mn' seven heats from the '_' ' soven were in the Free-For-All and TURK COMMANDER ON WAY T0 BERUN stake rncc. GENEVA, Sept. 28.-*Field Marshall Liman Von Sanders, Commanding the , E FOR ALL PACE Turkish forces who fled from Nazar- FR E c sh l ofr the 'Atnckin th ony b 0 G ‘ L 8 Prince Rupert, 2.041/¢ D. W. British troops appeared, has roach- Wlilbiir. Moncton, N. li. od Constantinople. Advicos from the Leela Burns. 2.16% iz. m. Turkish capital say that Von Sand- , Manson Drug (,0.. Sydney, ers will return at nn early date to_ C B B°'"“' _ 'Iwhite -sox, 2.03% h. in. o.. B. Fenwick, iSussex, N. B. snrrisi-i AinPLAEs some FRANK- B __ Mac 213 h_ g_ _simpson 01 i FORT ' Bros., Stewlake, N. S. Frank Patch, 2.061/4 b.s. Frank I LONDON, sept. 2s. British dir- Manm Hamax' N_ s_ planes yesterday dropped bombs on Peter Farm", 2.14% b_ s_ R SUMMARY ing to an odlcial statement issued 2 2 this evening by_the iwar office. Five Time 212%' M' %’ '13' enemy machines were shot down, P E STAKE ,four British airplanes are missing, L19 TRQT’ 222 Ac another communication says: “On Colorado L 210% Him brought down. In 24 hours we dropped B Nm H_ 219 H_ C_ Hoop Turkish army on the Palestine front Tm” 2-17%nr"A2"1%;:RACm I I f .. ..- --~ ,f .- hours silt forts alll* ll1NW_- - nesday, October ith. , 1677-9-80M1l.J "org _ __ way two miles within Bulgarian ter-1 tack northwest of SL Quentin today 443 dis 1 1 1 2 Z 2 5 dr. the Gorman any or Fmflkron' accord' Kcofe & Son, St. John, N. B. 3 3,4 Jennie Penn, Coggci' A2 Carwell, St.` BOY WANT! I J ' ' i" -"F ' _ _-'__ _ - _ . __ UERNIII-INISNIII II” "E 'FIVE BIG VIi§TOR|E$ _ Q i|o,ooo Prisoners captured in Battles. Another Battle Launched in Belgium points has been more than two and British airmen accounted for 42 one half miles. The attack is being liostlle planes and eight ’bal0ons yester- made -hy the Belgian army and in on day. Nineteen British planes are miss- thc larger part of their front south ing. Near Cambrai the British captur- from the North Sea. One thousand ed (iouzeaucourt with many prisoners. prisoners :ilrciiily have been countcil. lleavy lighting is taking place be- AMERICANBI -BREAK THROUGH tween Dlxiuudc and Ynres and the HINDENBURQ DEFENGEI ~ battle is severe in the southwest for- _-- cst north of Ypres_ The second British LONDON, -Sept. 29.-_The Americans army commenced operations in Fland- have broken through the subsidiary ers this morning in conjunction with defence behind the Hindenburg -line the Belgian army Field Marshal on ii ten mile front between Denne- Haig‘5 statement said today. voux and Ecliz Fontaine, northwest of Verdun_ According to battlefront BRITISH AND AMERICAN TROOPS despatchos received here today. Tha LAUNCH STRONG ATTACK NORTH Americans are within a mile of the OF ST. QUENTIN. heads of the enemy's three standard gauge railways and they have cap- LONDON Sept. 29-British and tured scores of miles of light rail- American troops launched a big at- Ways. German and Austrian troops are ‘being BATTLE BEFORE CAMBRAI RE- rushed to strengthen the Bulgarian BUMED front. . -i' American on Champagne front cap- PARIS, Sept. 20.-‘British (OTCBB P0- tured Br|eulie‘5 Sur Mens and Rom- sumed the battle before Cambral at ugne. The attack is progressing favor- day’-brellk 101151' &°°0l'di_11g 7-0 IWW! T9' Wceived here Today they are reported ..__rbl.i'-_ _ . - ‘ ~ . ` .Fort Maimaison_wi1ieii is one or the to have captured the villsses of Fon- strongliolds of Laon, has been captured talne, Notre Dame. Cai1to.in8» N°1lII9l hy the French while they have reach- and SHIIIY- ;-d the Ailette River at two points, _ takingthe heights of Bellevu. The Bul- FRENCH CAVTUDE M93! VIL' garlans advanced four miles between I '-5955 Ypres and Dixinude, taking 4,000 pris- PARflS Sept. 29.-Todsy's war of- oners_ . Sinha Friday the British have when lice statement reads: At 5.30 o'clock more than 16.000 Huns and General lI1iB 11107111118 FTBDGU l-T009! ¢°m»I““°'| llaig reports that Canadian troops have the 3112101! 011 U19 Chl!-l1'1DlKU° I-'f°nt mpyufed me system known as the and tool: possession of the; village of Marconi Mansiercs Line. north west of s0“l9Dl'@- B11 ImP°fI-‘M nnway gum _ point. They also captured the heights y Canadians were offered some strong Solllh °f ‘F°m'°I“° En 'D°rm°’°' WE itio al rlsoners and captur- resistance north of the Bapaume-‘Ci1m- l°°k add 1* P bmi mad but they rushed north of me ed several guns. The 'battle continues. Arras-'Camlbrai road defenses against ' IIANNIII 'SUSPINII V.Ii.I]. Iillll-'I I NIIIIIIIRY IIPERIIIIINS lRRIVI§__lI_I llmlill Mrs. (Col.) I8. R. Jenkins, Lady I5 British Reply w Bldgurlnn Superintendent of the V. A. D. Request for Armlsucm Class in Charlottetown 'was olllcialli' ' '”"` housed saturday hy nr. charles A- nortlrwest from lagiovestsc ens _ I “e” I” “’h‘°h “‘° ‘"“°"’“ "f Samday LONDON. sept. 29.-or-est Britain Corp. Superintendent of 0'¢"°°° has replied to the Bulgarian request SSTVICI’ that the YUIIUB' l°"“°'_°f th° Ch rlottetcwn for an arinlstlce The reply it is stat- V- A- D- draft (mm ° ensk, according to a Jananese state- _ _ previous days racing' “ve heats n d is full covered by the answer glv had Hl‘l'IV0d BHIGIY In mllllllid "M ment received here. _ f c . Y ' - _ the matched race, and thelialance of on the _Bulgarian representatives by were quartered at me Demmhh-6 tho commander on the .Macedonian HOW". L°“d°“- Thi' “"5 '"1 b° ‘ 'front of the Allied armies. By this Fellof '-0 I-he mani' \'9I°“'°' ‘nd reply it is perfectly' well defined that friends of the young ladies. no military operations can be sus- "°““““~ _ No Parliament Finish of Fridays races 222 'mor 2.25 P/ics srnkis ---~ (Purse $400) OTTAWA, Sept. 28.-From all prel- Kiltie, »McPhee, North ltiver 15dis ent appearances Parliament will not Jas. K Noonan, Bolleveau Moncton. bf! B\1mU\0Y\d b9f°l'° IWW" 15 'Wil' 3153 2' ?;,__._--_-an-in-deli* Loretta Dircctom, F.R. Lewis 'Syd- OOOOOOOOOOOOQOOIOUO 0 hey. A 22 22.ro ' " r i -‘_ Crown Jay. DJMcPherson, New Glas~_ * 4 3 " gow, N.S_ _ _ . Robert L., J.W. Fraser, New Water- Q.¢§§§QQQQQ§.§QlQ..O0.0 iordcis r.iis4rh-- ' 1‘ D. APPLY GUARDIAN John, $4111 oirice. _ ., ,.,.__ __-th Maricobell, Keefe & son 'St. John. fl 8 _ _ -_,T . - _ seymuur niiien, cr Thorns. st ~'ro oainviiitn-QANITARY luv John, . ` 1 s'14i-en ter paper. printed. ' "Pil§]i_lf..DiIi"! vpnsxux-if nun' h-..`1_;“ Jem, .1 Mccregor, sais sums-use our me. .Par mst--svn Wednesday len °“°“‘>' "’“°‘““‘” We". Kelly, Charlottetown ' 3 4 3 4 'rims 2.20 2.2154 2.16% 2.10% 2.25% enai-diss elm. _ 235 CLASS TROT STAKE ' n ‘ - 35 tons of bombs on airdromes and re 4 2 4 8 (Purse “om ,WAN-I-an “Mg kin” “nt '°, , , er. Charlottetown "“"‘""°' Dunham, 2.16% is lst. money Napoleon c. H.v. oaiss; Middleton, win Altlrom 2411 l;f_::;“. oayaanhing.cntewh. 212zN_s. 131221 __, _.M so,ooo 'runxe sunnouivoso _ _ ___ _ ____ Devlish Dorothy, 2.17% Dr. J. Joilicoe, H. Kelly 3253ro ,....i. ~r%'P _ ,num 'r Jenkins. chfrown 1 :i 1 1 sol-der Prince wr si-iciriey. st °WAN‘\’il° *Mi* P0* *NUM* LONDON S I.. 28. Th ‘ ' ' ' ' ' . .- °° ° . mv.. .1 h ~ stare hwlowork 0 li. honest bah. Fairweather. si. John. 181 .Wow Brio*-~ » - l - . ' ' "' -M iii A K i. c tain Arsehauit. NB- ' ai ... _ ANNOUNCEMENTS" Ms;oaIeh~isi:it1s up 22111 uscin. nr. christopher. 'rI¢hish, °W*""'" '.Y;'-._.»=;.';'~,. ' ° ..f P -COMING EVENTS’ Coquette. George Farren, Magdalen p_p_1_ 41|4m_ I`°°m‘ M' ` " “ ` I MEE'.1`ING3» ETCI asians.. \ 112.22. me Duncan. els. oiseir _aihnmc f°°__ °' I*“°“'@°‘!2§_‘~. ,_ -» `-- ‘rims 2.2914 most 2 mt asm 234%” N.s ‘ can K *I* "““"" 2 .~_"P0¢li1°\\°lB°\\¢ °“ l°°°““*»°f Im". 'ilrhovabovel race was (or a wasell The Acadian. W.'i`. Bemple. Kensilll' e' 'A ` " I l - _ _' 7 hih- issue swam. is 252112 '°" _ - 6.-.._~.i~.t;!~-..»._ » i favorable waathe'r‘.__ The Sonrls Ex _ mm, 5, un "0 mth” g “_ .llion lin 'buh l>°ltl>°i\°4 will WM- and it added sreatiy to the menioon'sI'rime 2.1914 2.22 2.2755 2.2054 2.2: ii it 2.21%. _ ipnatlilillb- , N 1 i _ ‘ _ ‘ ¥ _ _ _ ._ .:»,1__x,a_.f_, ,Hr s l "