. Penalar Drugstore' S Shaving Comforts I that are now available- Shaving _Cre_ams,fn|irant Toilet Waters, Baty _ um, everytiiing to make your; shave easy- and pleasant. If itjs the smartmglygu dislike, try. an arp _ a ,tion of _Penslar Shaving Lotion, it will relieve the - burning sensation at once _ _ _25c_.a bottle E. A. Foster 'the 1915 ll are out otherland and I can your home out here. boys of the may we soon bring victorious and suc- CG D1 YOU from the lads of Corps, No. 2 Lab- remain Yours faithfully, ROBERT MAY.-‘ 0l'\. (The above letter indicates, of er which left here with ha and LONDON, Sept. 30.-An Athens despatch to the Exchange Telegraph Company filed yesterday says:- ‘_'Bills proclaiming a state of siege in Macedonia, providing help for the families of men called to the colors and providing a. credlu for $150,000,000 Drachmas ($30,000,000) to meet the expenses of mobilization. were en- thusiastically applauded and voted at a sitting of the chamber today. Prem- ier Venizelos, who was given an ovation, stated the reasons why Greecp P_ S_ _Hoping to haw, a une from was obliged to mobilize and emphasis- was you mom _ ed the gravity of the situation. For- 'amy-B ` e mer Premier Gounarls expressed his course, the safe arrival of the steam- “W"°‘""1 °f M* ve“i”~’l°3' d°°I'"`““°”'" Ifilining finds! to the sum-sian) < 9|-W1 Wil very _ an enem line of with y, and Som and suf- ou the broke’ ‘ N0: I-91' exposed to'-the~fen- _was lost. On the were duels and of varying inten- y sity. ' oats.) J - D Eastern theatre of war: South of _ i | Dvlnsk we forced the enemy back into the marshes and lakes to the east of '. ,_\_\\\\\\\mv/11u1ullA\\\\ , , , ~ W°”“‘°W°- °“"“"Y °"¢“¥°me“‘” PIIIII J I IIIIIMIISIIII i EERMW [mga] ,_...... 8 __ _ _ ‘ _ _ of Postawy were successful for us. l- East 0! Sllwrzell we broke thrvush _ the enemy’s positions by storm. One thousand prisoners, including seven MUST GO ,._ ,,» V Even if you do not want one now it will pay you - to take this chance of a _'_ bargain. _ _ A nice trunk would < make a fine Hors ciissr _ We have them in all kinds and sizes and are prepar- ed to sell at a sacrifice. All our SUIT CASES and CLUB BAGS lat -less than cost. " COME IQUICKLY Morris & Smith PRESIDENT SIIII IIIE I ` "IIIS PISSIII IWII Tuesday the following telegram was received by Mr. T. Edgar McNutt, manager of the Sun Life of Canada for, this lslandz- _ "Montreal, 27th September,- Our _President di_ed‘_at 12.45 today funeral "Ifhursd'5|y;,,`-'-Suu Life-of;Canada.f’_ _ _` 'Maiiy"i|r' this Province will learn with regret of the death of Robert- ~eon Maizaulayi President of the 'Sun _'Lite' Assurance Company of CBl'llld9-- ’-!'- ‘M.r. Macaulay was well known on iiliis Island, as for a great' number =0f years he spent his summer vaca- fglon at the North Shoreof this Prov- nce. - The liste Mr. Macaulay was born in January 1833, and has had over -sixty _one years connection .with Canadian Life Assurance wfork, which _has made him the dean of the life assurance profession inthe Dominion. [Ot this long period more. than forty- -one years has been devoted, with T1-are slngloness of aim, to the service .and upbuilding- of the Sun Life of Canada. _ The late Mr. Macaulay has aeen 'the Sun Life of Cauadafattsln world- power under his guidance; he has 'seen its assets grow from $130,000 _to $70,000,000 he has seen I.he assur- -ance on its books increase item41.- 500.000 to_.ov_er- $250 000 000, _ ,‘ _ may *me comsuiiv `oi»ex-ma'3-a'é»- tively under twenty two flags ln. forty six $°ug¢;|eg,_g|yl_ upon four contin- ents. . f ' The Bun Life Canada is life-work its for. the 81110118 in duo to U19 indomitable ,courage energy of Mr '§4wl»°r__¢so\ _\_§._*_ :TOBIIYY PRESS OF THAT CITY. MISS HAZEL BREMNER OF CHARLOT- 'TETOWN TOOK PART IN PRO- GRAMME. __.4__. Professor J. T. Thompson, who has been spending a holiday in some of the Eastern American cities, returned Tuesday night. During his stay at Fitchburg, Mass., he gave an organ re- cital after the Sunday evening service in the Rollstone Congregational Church. The Fitchburg Daily Senti- nel reports tlxe recital as follows: The auditorium of the Rollstone Church contained a very large audi- ence Thursday evening at the organ recital by Prof. J. T. Thompson, of Charlottetown, P. E. I., in which he was assisted by Miss Hazel_Bremner, soprano, and director of the Rollstone church choir. Prof. Thompson is in Fitchburg visiting friends and gen- erously consented to give this recital, even though it was a laborious inter- ruption- of the time which he had taken for an entire relaxation from his duties. Through this recital, it was _made known to appreciative lis- teners, that Charlottetown can be ac- counted as exceedingly fortunate in having as a resident musician so ar- dent a lover of his art as Prof. Thomp- son, who made evident during the performance of the programme Thurs- day evening. that he is an instrument- alist of an uncommon order. and that he is one to whom the soul of music has been revealed through the diilicult paths of assiduous and sympathetic study. ' _ _ The programme played by Prof. Thompson was of a varied character and very interesting, several of the numbers consisting of arrangements of well known works, by the perform- er, and those of his own composition. Without detailed specification, men- tion may be made of the skillful and happy- arrangement of selections from Wagner, Tannhauser and Lohengrin, which were woven into a piece which carried with it the impression of logi- cal connection, and sequence of mood and~ sentiment. The arrangement opened with the Pilgrim's chorus, _af- ter which the, modulation brougirtfin the beautiful song, "0 Star of Eve," then sweeping into the pomp and splendor of the grand overture, grad- ually subsidiug into the prelude and bridal music of Lohengrin, and end- ing with the stirring music of the grand march. The selection was one of the very, few arrangements from other works which in its orderly. de- velopment and frame of beauty fur- nished its own reason for being. Prof. Thompson also played a descriptive titled "A ni ht at sea," which gave in which the imagery presented to the mind pictures that were well defined o of con Il never only Dl'0§l‘lm me to the and _l\lII[ her voice _ ling- ‘tlfnpt to STOCKHOLM, Sept. 30.-The paper Dagens Nyheter, on the authority of August 23,. Two hundred and forty- JOFFRE AND FRENCH MAKE REAL ‘ TEST OF GERMAN RESIST- _ ANCE. » » LONDON, Sept. 29.-The British commander in his message to the ‘Lord Mayor added that his message encouraged his troops to push the -immediate success to a really decisive issue." This leads the public to be- lieve there is to be no statement such as followed the battle of Neuve Cha.- pelle, but that. with new British for- ces in the field and ample supplies of ammunition, General Joffre and Field Marshal French plan a real test whe- _doing so well in the last day or so. The Austrians have stemmed the Russian advance in Southern Poland and retaken Lutzk. The Germans are Irenewlng the great movement against Dviiisk. ,“RANJI" VICTIM OF A _ l - HUNTING ACCIDENT NEW YORK, Sept. 28.- That "Irony of Fate" we heariabout looms ,up singularly in the case of Prince .Ranjitsinhjh otherwise the Jam Sah- -ib of Nawanagar, ' an East Indian jPrince. who made Quite a name for _himself as a cricketer, tennfsand po- ‘io player while a student at Cam- bridge University in~ England. Ranjitsinhji' offered his service as -a volunteer with the allied troops op- erating in‘ Northern France and was appointed as aide-de-camp on .the stat! of General Sir John French and has been actively operating in that capacity for some months. Late in August he secured- a* leave~of abs- 1ence' for a visit to England and ' the first week in Se temberf was ,s ent in ‘ D D fshootlng in the Yorkshire moors -While after grouse one,of theshoot- ing party of which he was' a member ,mistook the prime for a bit of game and the Jam Sahib received part of a -' charge of shot in the right cheek, `some of the pellets injuring the right side said that _ when he sailed the ,prince, who had escaped injury from ,the bullets and shrapnei of the Ger- .mans, only 'to fall a victim of the rin the hospital at Leeds, where the' I physicians were trying to save the »ho buys a play from a poor author. Bingle fancies he is a"star hires his -own company. The author begs him ,to withdraw and the audience forces _him to, by the aid of an assortment of tegetsbles, etc. The balance ,made up storiesu modern an Duxllid the ` officers were taken. six cannon and I" ‘;rg;1'1BIg';§;l§:la;grishxagugtgfggfnjg four machine _guns were captured ' ` ` ' I `plosion occurred in an ammunition mum of sm°rgen‘ The hams mn' ` -'-' 'factory at Wittenberg, Prussia on mums' Army group oi’ Prince Leopold, Bav- HIGHLY COMPLIMENTED BV two workmen were killed and many arm: Enemy attacks “g“I“5t` `m““y sections of our front were repulsed with sanguinary losses. Army group of Field Marshal Von Niickenzens: The situationls unchang- e . Army group of General Von Linsi- gen: On the upper Kormin the Rus- sians were driven back in an easterly direction. About 800 prisoners were taken and two ` 'Russian aeroplanes shot down. ‘ ` Huminziii visns _ 'ther the German resistance in France and Belgium can be broken. Russia _ _ .though encourageddiy the progress of her allies in the west, has not been --._ NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 30.-(via wireless to Mobile.)-_Ten persons are _known to be killed, 150 injured, and property loss exceedlnga million dol- lars. caused by the destructive West Indian hurriacne which struck this city at-6 o’clock la`st,night. At inter- vals a terrific gale swept through the city st a velocity of 120 to 130 miles an hour. 1,800,000 HUN8 ON _ WESTERN FRONT LONDON, Sept. 28-.-The Times military correspondent says:-"The ,last semi-official notice which the press received of the strength of the Germans in the west placed' their numbers at 1,800,000 men or there- abouts. There is no serious reason to dispute this figure, although some nine German divisions have been drafted to the east during the last _few months. The places of most of these units ha`ve ‘b`6éh`taken by new formations from the interior, while ,considerable numbers of men' have been added to others whose strength early in the year had not been main- man divisions in' the"wes'tem' theatre. Most of the German 'cavalry are in tho east, but there is aninordlnately large proportion or _heavy _and ma. chlfie guns in tile west. ' ` feye s`o` that at lastaccounts he was' . "W9 must “'@mIt"% ll'°95I\li|ifY Of 8 'in danger of losing his eyesight. Mesh transfer drgdrmafl trovllb from _ A recent arrival from the other IIW “Bt i0 'U19 WB", but With 700 miles for the Austro-Germans to hold in the east. and _winij me aussie. sr- miersiiii in position to fight wen, the chances that ‘the Germans will be ,birdshot of a careless gunner, was" ‘ble f° \l\ld°l`il1k° 'Ill Offensive in the Wilt with successes are' not rosy. _i if not more than 11 divisions of fantasy of his own composition en. I'fS.11¢ 0! an inlured eye- $9 "dw "“",'"y m,é“'-I°l‘°d ~ bl’ L0l'd , _ itchener are now in France, than I ' 'We must hope that our power of re- opportunity To show his command of , _ . < the resources of his instrument, audi _ ~ . - _ -",‘f°"§mg dur 521195 With new divi- B vhs- as apart om me question of maintaining them for. long in the y recognized An interesting Bingle’s Mglodrama" a three part; “ma” was the example of old Eng farce comedy wis the headliner of nog? égvthe Emma “me an music by Dr. Armes com- an interesting and varied program ,thmewe hs; psgsegiittb tfhgmak’ '}°W an andante for the slow move- Presented Bl Ulf! Dopular Theatre The mu d - f t“ ° en” W' minuet and gavotte. The last night. Produced by the Vitagraph g - n m r°n~p!'»“°--is h°“°y` 'struction as compared Company with their star cast of mmhed with "en-chu' The G°""“"“ was as marked as Imerry makers this farce is a pleasing “F” an the be" °t' I'h`° "°““d' The ooidsmltirs relief from 'nie slap-stick variet ¢’”°“°“ °' G"”‘““ ‘“?°"“' “"“°I‘ »°“‘“° and the fiction .The story briefly ' is as foilowszp- ‘mm 'tI?1'|"nfden;_h|n me “tum” °f A1914 or of Arnold Ben- ,Bingle wishes to ` become an actor,` 3-:ng We tgaveensrgater part on our eu" ,, _ i 1'- field; 'ls ’gl`°eater` Z t`11u_u."_¢l|g_ Q rg _ ` ` I I I _ 1; osges-no natural line Hof, defence. n short _to lighten our rank. The Scheldt and Mouse in our 'front are all fortified by the ene- my ' in iluliia I I ll EPIIII EVEIIIS . i'i Sept. ' we are _. iff’ I r` .1 v . `f0'1r-I“‘ tained. There are still some 94 Ger-‘ __ ovement CC Nam? of A Duel at Dawn” , , ff ° 9 The King ‘ ‘ NJ%kli§ lglogeilgyn PARTS - I Tuna _ A Name to Coniure wli:l\I"Ia"" _Big StoryI"Big-in Human* In _ that will _Appeal to the Heart of every Mother _' ADVENTURE _ Children Of Cham I “Un,¢1'er Crgsgnt” With Ben Wilson and _ Dorothy 'Phillips Two Reel Gold Seal Gorgeous -.- Oriental Setrinss. Thrilling Fonaas LAW nuctnn Realistic . ' Canada’s Foremost Baritone I l Gill. Mr. and Mrs. Whitehead, Boston, are visiting at York, the guests of ,‘Mr. and Mrs. Sellar. Mrs. Wm. J. Paquet returned to Rustico_ yesterday after visiting friends in the city for the past week. Mrs. H. M. Mitton, left yesterday morning for Bathurst, N. B., after spending e vacation with her friend Mrs. Ed. Nicholson, city. Mrs. Edmond Harvey, of Monpton, N. B., is visiting in Charlottetown, the guest cf Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McEach- ern, Morell Hotel. Rev. Dr. Malcolm J. McLeod,‘ of New York, is spending a few days in the city, the guest of his sister, Mrs. Dr. Harry Johnson. Mrs. Ruth Roberts left yesterday for her home in Sydney, N. S., lifter a brief visit to relatives and friends in New Glasgow, N. S. Previous to visiting New Glasgow Mrs. Roberts had spent a week in Chaflottetown, P. E. I., visiting relatives and friends. Mr. Harold McCallum, formerly of the staff of the Royal Bank of Can- ada, in Charlottetown; and for the las two or three years accountant in the Summerside branch of the same bank, has been appointed manager of the branch at Nsbon, C. B., and leaves this morning for his new sphere of action. Mr. McCallum's many friends in Charlottetown and Summerside will be glad to hear of his promotion, and their best wishes for success will follow him in his new home. Prin. Moran of the Union Commer- cial College informs us that the term of 1915-1916 will in all probability be the most successful in the history of the U. C. C. This speaks well for the good work done in this institution. EIIIMIIIS EIPTIIIIIII III BIIIIISII IIIHGIS _.__.L__. NEW YORK, Sept. 28.-The Lon- don correspondent of the New York Herald this morning says:- ,"Desplte the efforts of the Germans to minimize the great Franco-Brio ish victory on the western front, I am in a position to say though both the London and Paris press deprecate- premature rejoicing-that the results achieved are far mor`e potential even than. the victory on the Marne. The latest figures report the capture of more than 23,000 men and all the spec- ial despatches from the battle front agree that the German losses were terrific. "No doubt, as the German com- munique reports, there have been very heavy losses in allied arm- ies, but the result tablishment of the of the Franco-British capture of nearly all worth the a week iery action front was m the es- superiority and the points, was More than `the artil- o'f the to a great has be- contlnue, ac- of the" mil- the Germans and Belgium and RTB till advancing in of Loos the forward. All and they character- comments of of his the tion `lLl`;",:.’1_‘l_' ' W1 r»>~---1-fr -;-*'~_ , __ __ ` ' _.\f"1'._-,,» -.1 - PARIS, Sept. 24.- Mary Davis a young English woman. who has been working in the patheloglal laborator- ies of the American ambulance here, since Januaryhas just performed an act of heroism as big as any perform- ed on the battlefield, an act for which no precedent exists. Her work has_ been the examination of batceria from the wounded arriving at the ambul- ance and assisting with the experi- mentss with animals to determine their virulence, work for which her studies in~ the Pasteur Institute in Paris had qualified her. - Her duties in, the last few months were chiefly directed towards the study of gaseous gangrene. She had seen many examples of the horrible results of this infection. and had ob- served the invariably fatal course of the disease in 'animals inoculated with the bacilli. She watched and as- Isisted in the experiments in which guinea pigs were inoculated with gan- grene bacilli. ' Convinced of Success She had become convinced of the eflicacy of injections with quinina hy- drochloride and had concluded that the experiments on small animals had given all the results of which they were capable and that the time had come for an exprelment on a normal human body, but not one from the battlefield fatigued and wounded and possibly infected by other bactllll. Well aware that her plan would be prevented ii’ it became known, she de- termined without o. word to anyone to risk her life in an attempt to de- monstrate the efficacy of the treat- ment which she was convinced would cure the victims of this dread dis- ease. Used Five Times Regular Amount Her preparations deliberately and completely made, she waited until she was about to leave for a holiday, so that her absence would not disturb the work in the laboratory. She chose the deadliest strain of bacilli in the laboratory, obtained from the latest case, of which two drops of culture I _ug i>|-:iisormisi isocui-|.iirEs iiEiisEu= wnii ‘ IEDEADLY BRCILLE T0 MD .. ss ° COURSE 0F SCIENCE '_ . suffices to kill s guinea pig. Then she inoculated herself in a manner _most certain to produce the disease. injec- ting iive times the amount uused to kill a guinea pig, making one injec- tion deep into the muscles of her thigh, the other jjust beneath the skin. Amazon Medical Staff Two hours later she quietly came to the laboratory and asked to be treated in the same manner as sni- mals under experiment. The consternation caused by her an- nouncement among the medical stat! may be easily realized. Gangreno is so rare in civil life that it is practic- ally negligible, but since the war the dramatic rapidity and the horrible- ness of its effect make it more dread ed than any other form of disease, even tetanus, which the war has pro- duced. Injections with quinine solution were made at once at the points where she had inoculated the deadly bacilli. She was sent'to the nearest hospital for observation and further treatment. Qulnine injections were given a second time. Symptoms of a slight degree of infection developed within 24 hours, but they subsided without an operation ~ becoming ne- cessary. She is now completely re- covered. Too Many Unknown Factors Dr. Kenneth Taylor of the Univer- sity of Minnesota, pathological at the American ambulance who has been directing the researches with the quirina treatment of gaseous gen- grene, says that while no one can feel higher admiration for the young woman's readiness to risk her life for the cause of science, than himself, the scientific value of the experiment ruust not be overestimated. ' “There are too many unknown fsc- tors contained in any injejction to warrant the conclusion that recovery in this case was the direct result of the treatment” he explained. "How- ever it forms important addition to the results already obtained by the experiments with kulnea pigs." EMPEROR MAY' SELL HAPSBUBG8' HOODOO. PARIS, Sept. 29.-A story that the -Emperor of Austria is seeking to ban- ish Hapsburg hoodoo by selling the famous opal-the earlles stone in his collection-is being circulated in the American colony here. The prospective purchaser of the opal-the value of which is estimated at a quarter of a, million dollars and which weTghs seventeen ounces- is supposed to be one of the biggest jew- _slry firms in Holland. The head of the firm went to Vienna a few days ago ostensibly to complete negotiations for thepurchase. ,TWO BULGARIAN MINISTERS FIE- _ 4 SIGN. PARIS, Sept. 29.-A Havas despatch 'from' Athens says: - "The Bulgarian ministers of finance _and commerce have resigned, accord- ling to a report received from a reliable soiuce in Sofia. ’ “The reason given officially is ll -divergence of views on internal ques- tlo_ns, but the real cause is the com- plete disagreement of the cabinet members with Premier Radoslavoff on the policy to be followed in view of the determined attitude of Greece. "King Ferdinand granted an audi- ence to former Premier Matinoff, leader of the ‘arty favorable to Rus- sia, and asked im, it is understood to form a new cabinet. ' SIX KILLED BY 1RAlLWAY TRAIN PHILADELPHIA, sept. 29.-A Phn- ‘adelphig and-' Reading passenger train rin nt two gangs of _workmen in a tunnel near Phoenixville, Pa., yestdr- day with the result that six wore, kill- ed outright. and eight others were so seriously lnllured- that threedied in a hospital. A GREAT STORM., _ RAGING IN ITALY. - ..__..... great Italy, Trees .... ...I aisi_aiii _ sAssaAi.|. nssutre. "° Aivissicau At Detroit, Detroit 3, St. Louis, 2. 6 At Cleveland-Chicago 13,VCleveIand _ At Washington-Washington 10, Philadelphia 2. » Washington 20, Philadelphia 5. 1 NATIONAL ‘~ r w At Boston-Philadelphia 3, Boston 0. At New York-Brooklyn 2, New York 1. 4 At Chicago-Chicago 5, Cinclnnattl __`. FEDERAL At Brooklyn-Biiffalo 7, Brooklyn 3 At Pittsburg-Chicago 6, Pittsburg 'At St. Louis-Kansas City 1, St.. Louis 0. AMERICAN Washington 3, Detroit 0. NATIONAL I Ats Brooklyn-Philadelphia 8. Brook- yn . _ 3 At Chicago-Chicago 7, Cincinsatti FEDERAL _ I Pittsburg 7, Newark 0. Kansas City il, Baltimore 8. \ No other games in biplealuol. _ __.__.____...,_.._ oisson, N. oils ot' in- la--__-,,i|¢\_'_~ ‘