‘ e ‘ 4 .¢.‘ - -,.,-_*_ ,_. .I,~'l`.h vo-hiltons-siltoalioales _ nos _-__--r-_-‘-‘-‘-‘-'-‘-`-' »`~‘-'-`-“Y”-`:~`-‘J-‘-`~‘-“fr-2-'::::::_-_-_-_~:,-,-,-,-_-L__-_~_-;_-_-_-7-_-_-__::___._____________ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ e is Read Daily- by 42,000; People. ~ ls I ' ” B Sworn Circulation Statement Furnished Advertisers. . ' ' ' ' ` ' ‘ ' ' ' ' ‘ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ‘ ' ' ' - ' ' ‘ ' - - - - ~ - r Y ~`~ ~ r Y ~ Y Y - » ' - r ~ - ' ~ ' ' ' " ' ‘ - ' - ' ' "‘ - ' ‘ ' * ‘ " ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ‘ ' ' ' ' r ‘ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' - ' - ' ~ ' ' """' "1`-`~`-`-"`-`-‘-`-`~`-`~`~`f-‘-`~‘5-`~`-‘-`-‘-‘~'~`~‘-‘-`-‘-`~`-`-'v‘-‘~‘-'-’-'-‘-‘-`-“~'~‘-`~‘-‘-`-“-‘-‘ff-'~‘~'-'-‘-'-'-2*-‘J-'-*Sr-‘--‘-::_-_-L-:_-fr.-:.z‘:-':-::::_-:.-.1~_-::_-,-.~:V-:_-_-_-_-_-_-,;~_-_-:if I 3 ~ ~ 1 THE COTTETOW I GU ARDI \ ~ » ' ‘ ' Md‘R`N|"Nb \:A"||..v ' L ___ _ \ t _ _ _ t,":2'l.".}'.2t'.'.’é'&2'.ii‘.?,§‘ Bill.. no I ' _CHARLo'r'rE1‘owN, CANADA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1915 -+ $8.50 Per Yell’ (dlllvlhll) Ill IGVQOO __ A ' _ { $2.50, per yur by mail In sdvagssb :_ "' - . Y' - 7 . A - _ f CANADA HAS l'l5;000 MEN NOW UNDER ARMS Militia Autllorities will Keep on Steadiiy Recruiting and it is Expected lllal by Spring Canada will have an Army of 250,000 Men. OTTAWA, Oct. 31.-There will be no difficulty in raising the hundred thousand additional men for which the Csbinet`ha€ now given authorisa- tion. The call has been answered already by fresh offers of new county battalions, which General Sir Sam Hughes received today. , While the previous authorisation was 150.000 men, yet there was no intention of stopping at that mark, and the Militia Department have been steadily recruiting and authorising regiments, so that to-day 173,000 men are under arms. ln addition under General Hughes’ winter billeted plan, some twenty- live new county regiments have re- ‘cently been offeredt These regiments are being authorised and recruiting will start immediately. These will bring the total up to 200,000. This leaves but fifty thousand more men, and General Hughes and his staff, as well as Sir Robert Borden. have not the slightest doubt that there would be a ready response to the call, so that in a few months' time Canada will have under arms an army of no less than 250,000 men. The extra forces will be nearly en- .tirely infantry, although some artillery Iunits will be recruited to serve as re- inforcements for those at the front, |while engineering and other corps as ,required will re raised. ‘ \ _ _ _ __ _ __- -,-_-,-_-_ ,_ _-,-_ ,-_-_-_-_-_ _-,-_-,-,. ,. -_-_-_-_-,-_-,-_-_-:f-_-,-_-_~,,-e_ ,-_-_-,-_-_-_-_-; L-_-_-,~,-_-_-.-_» . _ __~.~_ _ ».-Y-_-Y-.~; ._ . . - HIIUMNNIN NNI] HUSSIII H NIIE GUINE I0 NGHEEMENI Q-_--_-,.._....-| . NEW YORK, Oct. 30.-The London correspondent of the New York Her- “General Joffre came, saw and con qnered England yesterday, for after a long war council in Downing Street, in which Mr. Asquith, Lord Kitchener, Mr. Lloyd George, Mr. Balfour and several distinguished English and French Generals took part, I am in- formed. a complete understanding was arrived at. ' "l am.in a position to state Serbia will not"be’abanrloned. Though she may suffer temporsrillh as the result of the treachery of Bulgaria and the inactive policy of the King of the Hel- lenes, in the end the Allies will res- cue her. “ln,this connection, I am told there has been an effectilve rapproaohment between Russia and Roumania; that the Tsar, 'having agreed to consent to a realization of Roumania’s national aspirations, including the cession of aid cables under date of Saturday; l certain portions of Bessarabfa, Rus- sian troops will march through Rou- manian territory to succor Serbia, and that within a short time King Ferdi- nand’s fine army will support the 'Quadruple Entente. I “Athens despatch indicates that ‘King Constantine realizes the, tide is 'turning toward the Allies, and again it would be no surprise if, despite the threats of the Kaiser, when Roumania marches, Greece will also be found fighting on the side of the Allies." NEW YORK. N. Y., Oct. 30.-A news agency despatch ‘from London, published here to-day, saysr Despatches from Rome say that de- finite arrangements have been made ,for the passage of Russian troops , through Roumania to aid Serbia, and that the concessions of the Entente |have been accepted by the Roumanian ~Government, foreshadowing actilve participation by the Roumanians. ;~:::::.~::.2‘.'_‘-‘-'-'- - - - _ ~ ~ - - - - ~ - - - - ~ ~ Y ~ - f - - - ~ Y ~ GEHMNNS WENIII ' IIE HENHING IIE _ IIIGI "VIGIlIHIES" ..Nnw rock. oct. 30.-#A sneclal cable to The World from Lond0l1 says: "A neutral just retumed from resi- dence in Germany to-day declares that internal conditions there are much more serious than imagined outside- "The food prices are causing really serious trouble. The recent food riots in Berlin were ugly manifestations of the spirit among the people. 68119013113' the dependents of soldiers. Women attacked the police; many were in- jured as well as many arrested before the riot was queiled. "Soldier's dependents have only fourteen marks a week allowance. while butter is four marks a pound, meat three, with other provisions pro~ portionstely dear. A State food mono- poly, this obser/ver ‘ said. is surely coming, -but the authorities are delay- ing it owinglo the alarm it would cause. ' ‘ "The reports contain nothing but reports of great victories, but the lleople are suspicious about the official new. asking now. if all these sreat victories in achieved the war are be g . shows no signs of- ending and the, Gllellly will ,have nothing to db with peace proposals. , " In Saxony and Bavaria the depres- sion is partl iilarly severe and the discontent » ` open.. 'l‘he~Bsllran campaign b_ no, relief: gn the contrary, gpg” "mush appre ension about sending the German armies “WHY into. the unknown, when the pressure 'on the French and Russian trontsl mn," hs -renewed any day- "ostlmlsmils sllu the order of the 'lay ln om lslmolrsles. mn noone ex st. to Lsit9r|'t,' 9\_|ts`lde." oolltf_hrE'I§.*§§.1l:1tl'1's, ' . sngktgqcsmsrs. ' ‘ y » llmnos. mo. ON! o'l,rl‘1,-A " vom _nos mm lion for ` in this column. Cult ' Q orders unu- mumsg _1 vscsnu. an , ; ,- , , 'i°‘iY.“’ A 7 ""“" "‘s‘.'..”'":;..!..‘” 'FIN $2.60. otel. UI am-iozsn (Special to The Guardian) , LONDON, Nov. 1.-The Germans have occupied Kraguyevatz, an arsen- lal town in Serbia, while their Bulgar- ian Alli§a_s_ are pushing their way ‘through the mo_untains to Nish, Ser- bia’s war capital. From all sides Ger- mans, Austrians and Bulgars are slow- ly closing on the Serbian armies’ posi- tion which grows graver daily. They are fighting fiercely, however, to save the country and have inflicted such losses on Field Marshal Von Macken- zen’s force that he has been compel- led to send for reinforcements and leave the more serious work of invad- ing the Eastern and Southern part of the country to the Bulgarians who have more experience in mountain warfare such as the Serbians are wag- ing. . From ~the junction of the Danube and Tllmok rivers in the Northeast to Uskup in the South the Bulgarians are moving Westward driving the Serbians out of the towns into the mountains but from Uskup Southward they have been checkell as the Ser- bians in that territory ave been _re- inforced by French and British mod- ern guns with gunners who gained valuable experience in France and Gallipoli. Beyond the forces landed ,at Salonlki which German estimates place at 70,000 men there is no news of further assistance being sent by the Allies to the Serbians. Russian transports have been re- ported off Varna but the report lacks confirmatilon. There is, however, evi- dence in despatches from Bucharest that the people of_ Roumania desire intervention and that pressure is be-. ing brought on the King and Cabinet] ,_._-_-_~_~_-,-_-_-_-J,-.-.-.- ,:_-_-f_-_-_-_-_-.~.~.~.-_-.-.-.-.~.~.-.-_-_-_-;, Strength Acco IGERMANS AND 'BULGARIANS ‘ I CLOSING IN ON SERBIA - I .____._.i__. to induce them to join the Allies and permit the Russian forces to pass through Roumaninn territory to at- tack Bulgaria from the East. Greece continues ,a friendly neutrality. The Germans having failed after two months of almost incessant attacks to reach the Riga and Dvinsk by various routes, are now trying along the railway which skirts the shores of' the Gulf of Riga from Tukum and have, according to their reports, reached a point west of Schlok. This is but a slight advance, as the low ground over which it is difficult to move lies between them and their objective. ,In the Dvinsk__,sector both to the west and south-west of that city, the Russians have begun an offensive, ap- parently in anticipation of renewed attacks by the Germans. They are also on the move in the lake district east of the Dvinsk-Vilna railway and in Volhynia. in Galicia. -The result of these various battles has not been dis- closed, in indeed they are concluded. Those at the southern end of the line are doubtless designed to prevent the Germans and Austrians from sending reinforcements to Serbia. In France the battle for Butte do Tahure, which the Germans recaptur- ed from the French. is still progress- ing without any change in the posi- tions of the two armies. There has been some lighting st other points in the west. What the attacks on this front have cost is shown by the report issued by Field Marshal Sir John French to-night. He says that the published lists of German casualties disclose that seven German battalions Serbia’s Position in North Grows Graver Daily. in South Germans are Checked hy French and British Guns. A Severe ,Fighting on Western Front where Seven German Batlalions Lost 80 Percent oi Their rding to German 0iiiciai List. V which took part in thu Loos fighting, presumably a German counter-attack, lost eighty per cent. of their strength. (Special to the Guardian.) PARIS, Nov. 1.-The following oili- cial communication was issued by the War Oflice to-night: In Belgium, in the sector of Lombartsyde a spirited bombardment by the enemy accom- panied by obvious preparations for attacks which the immediate interven- tion of our artillery prevented, is being carried out. In Champagne, likc\vise, tho whole front between Hill 193 and Tailurc, as well as south of the village, tho Germans bombarded our positions. They manned their trenches and set up scaling ladders. The barrier of fire of our batteries and machine guns stopped this attempt, or this sham at attack. _ PARIS, Oct. 31.-Success or failure oi’ Bulgarian operations in southern Serbia. were bclicvcd hero to-day to depend on thc outcome of at battle reported in Athens despatches as im- minent at or near lstib, between Bul- gar forces and the Combined Serbs and French. The French capture of Strumltzn, in south-western Bulgaria, was believed only an incident of the Gallic swfgp northward from Saloniki, with a view to clearing southern Serbia of Bulgars, and proceeding to the Serbs' assist- BHC9 against the Austro~Germans still farther north. f The Bulgars, according to the best obtainable information, are concen- trated along a line extending north- eastward from Veles, which they are said to have recaptured from the Serbs, to resist this northern advance. """"""""""""""""""""-`~‘-‘-`-`-'-‘-‘==-'-off----'-=---<-=- - - » - - _ - - . . . . _ _ _ _ _ , _ _ _ . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-_ __ _._ Klilg Edward Aiifl Killed Regiment ter was recently changed from Danish Furs. R ubuo or uw 22nd F t fl Brothers & C0-. §'E“W.'§‘°iG..W§ §`§`¢'I.§nse. 115 and 117 l i ti of (UN ,;I;h‘;tegirE1;n:{1d°lthan: Mxiaigessnlrlted- 'W The highnggprice paid for individual furs was $2 610, bid by 01° l'°Dl"°!°l1° tati e of ll.bvelll°ll Freres, st`Pnris, foryb set of sliver fox skins, A set °.f ca-~..2.“‘:n.a°s .r c :- Iv‘:gIg0;I grill arse; rEn¢ed from $300 wFi,B,9s°'gf?r;,1:|qgLf 'es set some records for dover-¥_ncnt owned skins, ._ n l unn- ‘I "NHL °§¥sG§Gm°s¥1»°3f.°G°vsm~. ln °‘° 'rsh vm ss savanna or t pl 'fgtnéy seidyestsr-“ El? ‘l'I.'§f§r3s..Wi1'1.lv wh. »»°°l°-, King Ferdinand of Bulgaria states ern extremity of Lake Garda. in the Tyrol, although strong reinforcements IN ITALY. attltude in the Daily Telegraph, says Russia agree that for the moment the military centre of gravity is in the the correct perspective, the attitude of Bulgaria ey gl-_S-s November 2-Maritime: Bouth-Westerly winds, but mostly fait- WIS recorded sero it ms uns e`vonlns` at st ms; it win mornin¢'st 0.84 and . rwo Prizes ol war Klllll Fffillllflllll For P- F. Island , _ L NDON, N V.` 1.-'A dl Gill lfhed A'°""'__” ‘I Hama" $.2:?°tra“s:§ ‘sa“.:§;“3.f§“`I;t'::c ment to raise a new Highland Regi- HALIFAX N. S., Oct. »31.-Prize thatxllng Edward said: "Ferdinondls men, from Pr, ce Edw d I, d crews from ' worships have bwllsht the clsverest man ln Euwne7s11d” 11° fortnwlm, and fonretoin wigtevoi :G1- two groomers into Halifax. They life added, "the most dangerous. diers we have recently enlisted who the American Steamer H°°kil15 gg - are not yet attached to any other th D t h. teamer l-Iamborn, b _ __ "gm 1\N;:W Yi”I‘;‘ hTh?aEgIfr:,%a?§etl;‘; P _ cogmis understood the Siege Artillery ggtlaiilggtgmggxr Tal; Hockmgs _“___ X_lll_el;e;n_l_e_s;_v_lng Charlottetown early to American. I. _ _ 31' 1 I1 |_ S ‘ , _ "-"-_""""-"" N¢XF§,(¥\AWis{rFiEx]x¥ pgiglonirs Egtgte EE; . t o u a n as een ggefgd Eg e‘;l:cuaIEepRiva at the north- MADRID via Paris, NOV 1-Pro. have arrived from lnnisbruck to op- mlm- Dato 'said to-day he had fm om. 0 P059 the "ana" advlillces All this cial information concerning the rc- diBtl’lCt~ port that Prince Von Bueiow, former German Chancellor. would come to ._...._- I WHAT M|GH.T` WORK A CHANGE Madrid to present King Alfonso with an outline of conditions on which Ger- many might bc willing to consldep $2 FOI' Of SIIVBI' FOX NEW YORK, Oct. 30.--A L0nd0l1 peace negotiations. The neutral at- |{- $150 000 Worth gf cable to the Herald this morning :lmao of spain prevents an discus- urS» l _ says:' ' sion of the questibnof peace terms, _ Furs S0|d Durmg Sale, "Dr E. B. Dillon. discussing Ilsly’s som tho Promlor. no added that in his opinion attempts to initiate peace G8I'|B|'aN Adi/HNCO In an he thinks if Great Britain, .France and negotiations at present would not like- ly succeed. _ _ 'RGNZEiI.°’1I§‘§“I?.1n§'.1"s.£.1‘Zi‘§.‘2i.."i§ Steel Helmets » ' 'rn _st_Loun sn s ::,°mf..r.1::.“:.:;f=°;..raz::°:;:a,rd F01' The British recor for_Government furs were o -' 9 . , P5 _ ° 9" _-___- taineg' yesterday at the auction sale sllies in__fig:_§l‘;igr A_\,lBU'° 9°."m““°' LONDON, Nov. 1.-_On some parts of the Flanders battlefront, the Brit- ish army authorities have begun serv Bough second Street- B9¢W°°11 1go“‘-$6 THE WEATHER, - , ing out to the men in the il`re trenches and 6.30 nm. approximately $1 , t _TEMPERATURE, steel helmets, similar to those intro- of iurs w e sold to buyers represen - V TIDE MOON E duged by me French . Tha Brmsh .ing house?-in Ill 95"! Uf 01° W°"ld' ' . 1 9 TC- .helmet is perfectly plain/ and not de- corated, like the French, which has a grenade crest and a rigid' crown. 'Illia British helmet: exactly resem- ples a pudding basin. _lt islined with 'soft leather and while light, it is very lwarm. The men arewsaitl to'be de- ighted with the new- equipment, bg. cause of the added sense of aecurlty against splinters, bullets and t e bomb frlgftients. E A ‘ One report says that: in a' Small sec- tion . trench thirty mon' were- saved from 'serious head woliiids, in me first mst lends a bizarre sirtn thotroops, who wear it over the Bglsklnvs wood helmet, gitvi°n_g them this spps_sf-ance of crussders. ‘ I four days of the experiment. *The fhei-A British Force ‘Fighting in Serbia ~ LONDON, Nov. `1.-The British ex- peditionary force in Serbia. received its baptism of fire on the Gievgeii- Doran front, where, according to a Times despatch from Athens, it took part in the recent fighting. _ Bulgarian lleseriers _ ’ Arrive in ,Russia LONDON, Nov. 1.-“Tho slackcn- fng of the Gorman thrust at Riga is attributed by the Rctcil to an ln- sufflcicncy of shells, on account of the activities of Allied submarines in the Baltic,” a Reuters despatch from Pct- rograd states. " Parties bf Bulgarian descrters wllo have arrived in Petrogrnd asked to bc enlisted in tho Russian army pro- vided they were not rcquircd to fight their compatriots) I Sir Charles Tupper , Will Be Buried in Amherst°N.S. D OTTAWA, Oct. 31.'-The last 0f‘thc fathers of Confederation _wiii‘ bn brought home to the county ho loved so well and to which he gave of all his energy. intellect and intcrprlsc, Sir Charles Tupper will sleep his last sleep in Amherst, his birthplace. the scene of his many ppliticahbstties and victories. To Cumberland county will be brought the war horse of Cumber- land; his battles sro over, his work is dons. Britain will pay a last tribute to its greatest imperialist of the overseas dominions.; That emblem of British imperialism, the mighty navy, will its e the honour of bringing home the man who fought the battles for im- perial upity. A warship will be sent to ‘convey the remains of the great statesman to Halifax. Twenty years ago the battleship Dominion perform- ed a similar duty when the body of Bir ,John Thompson was brought from London to-the same Canada will give the last of the And a no B _"wg LONDON, Nov. 1.-Germany‘s plans in the Riga. district have been com- pletely demorulized by the successful campaign of British submarines in the Baltic Sea, and tho complete clos- ing of the Gulf of Riga, by Russian mine fields, says the Petrograd corres- pondent oi’ the Post. “Tho Germans are now endeavour- ing with thc most feverish energy," the correspondent says, “to hasten thc restoration of the slender ami inade- quate railway services in their rear. This work heretofore has been carried on in leisurely fashion, because of thc bclicf that present needs could be ad- cquutciy served by the sea route. This plan of campaign ha; been made more _ GERMAN PLANS IN RIGA ARE DEMORALIZED 0wing to Successful Campaign of British Submarines in Baltic. German Soldiers Already Suffer- ing from Winter’s Severity. vital by early snowstorms. which the Russilans declared presage a winter bf unusual severity. "Tho holler hero is that when the Germans are compelled to undergo tho rigors of a real Russian winter, constantly annoyed byl. guerilla attack. and with inadequate supply facilities, they will lose more men by sickness and suffer greater demorallzatilon an comes from even the worst defeat in the fields. It is reported that the er- mans already are experiencing terrible ,hardships and severe epidemics of 1 sickness, although the weather still is Iwhat the Russian soldiers call I 'warm.’ " PARIS, Oct. 31.-(4.20 p.m.).-Dr. M. lt. Vcsnitch, Serbian Minister to France, on being informed of various reports concerning developments in thc Balkans, issued a statement, in which hc said: - -~- ,-_-_-_-,-,-,-f,-,-,-_-_~_-,-_-_-_-_-,-_-_-_-_-_-_-,-,-_-,-,-_-_-:_-,-_-_-,-_-_-: SEHEIIII WILL HE SNIIEII EHIIM HEH INVNIIEHS WHEN NLLIES WILL GE' will lungs ll lclluf , “The Serbian army, assured of the cflicacious aid of the Allies, will fight to the last man. Its chiefs are con- fident of the future, despite the efforts of the adversary, attacking on three fronts.” KING GEIIHGE IG MIIIIH IIIIPHIWEI] LONDON, Oct. 31.-King George, who was injured on Thursday by being thrown from his horse while reviewing troops in the field, con- tinues to improve. An official statement issued to-day says: “The King‘s condition shows further improvement. There has been some sleep and the pain is diniinishialg. Temperature and pulse are norm -` ' LIGHTNING STHUGK _ NIIIGIII IILIUSE DIGBY. Oct. 30.-A house owned and occupied by Mr George Havery at Acaciaville was struck by lightning this morning and totally destroyed by fire. The loss is partially covered by insurance. \ The steamer Clare, with old iron, from Port Latour for St John, har- boured hero on account of last night‘s storm, and is still in port; also thc schooner Maple Loaf, Capt. Bnird,_ and the steamer Grucc L., Capt. Welch. The llesperian Wa§__l‘orpedoed WASI-llNG'l'0N, Oct. 30.-Secretary of State Lansing _pnnounced to-day that the navy department has doflnlto- iy established the fact that a. fragment of tho engine of war. which sank tho Allan iincr liosporian, was a part of a torpedo. The German government has persistently denied that the Hes- perlnn was torpcfided. ln the opinion of United States naval exports thc fragment could not hnvc been a part of a marine mine. The Secretary said the result of the navy dcpartment’s investigation will he immediately communicated either to the Germangovernment directly or to the Ambassador Bornstorif. WANTS T0 BE HANGED AT ONCE SYDNEY, N. S., Oct. 20.-"Coulll not the job he dons at once?" asked Felix Karlicliek, an Austrian, on being sentenced to hang January 10 for the murder of his wife. a Gorman woman, at-thc closing session of the Supreme Court hero this morning. Following a -domestic quarrel » the GENSNIIHNNL NHHESI _...___ HALu-‘AX.` mln Wlfl Qfmld risoner picked up a rifle and shot A -_-,-_~.‘LA-.-_-_~,-_-,-,~.~_-_-¢_-v~.-_-,Tnv:_-_-.1-v-.-_-_-_-Y-av. I'Attorney-General’s Department was communicated with and the officers were sent down to investigate the case. It is rumoured that an axe was used on one of the victims. The woman is a sister of Munro. who lost his life in the fire. She is now in jail at Guysboro. The officers will remain at Whitehead for some days to complete the investigation. I ‘._A\¢ CONDENSED ADS. T00 LATE FOR ` CLASSIFICATION ONE CENT per word each inser- tion for advertising in this column. Cash must accompany orders. llinl- mum charges, twenty-five cents. FOR SALE.-VIOLIN IN CASE. Used but five months. Apply at this office. 3637-10-26n_1tf WANTED BOY FOR DELIVERY I Apply Worthy’s Bakery. 3724-11-2Mtf. WANTED TWO BARBER8, STEAUY job. Apply to Neil O'Brien, New- castle, N. B. 3564-10-22M16lpd. TO LET - BRIGHT. PLEASANT rooms without board. centrally located. Apply at Guardian Office. _ » - 3633-10-26Mtf. TO LET TWO LARGE BRlGHT'_8'UN- ny front rooms suitable for dress- maker for further' particulars ap- ply at Guardian. 8621-10-26Mtf. To LET "NlcEl.v Fumllsl-leo front bedroom for gentleman. Best location. Apply hero. 3725-11-2M8i. LOST - GENTLEMAN'S BLACK ribbon watch fob with ownersigame on same, Finder please lea at. Guardian. 3726-ll-2M3i. mod ern rent Roy Cross females. Frederick Ferry Apply to ers Miller Wrap womens ment. Owner can have proving property sud _this nd. Stanley Bros LOST-SATURDAY small money. Gordon receive mill! book M`|nss|‘s »