ran smut wil cv mcg, 'i Sto1iuel1~.Troubi¢ . - -1-Yields' io- vinci. ,VINOL gzeuzthens the nerves of stol_nac_b and .aids in the assimilation of food. - Itcreatesahealthy appet- ite _nchbood tones up thetired overtaxed nerves and muscles of the . ; stoinechf . vmoi. agrees with the ' d l t -stomach and \ igmdeligiiffiseto the taste. We pffer-to retum gear - e n everycase w ere ' llugilgtodogood. 1 $1.00 bottle. _ Control Drugstore - Headquarters for the . - Penelar Remedies ` ls your account past due. See Bee;r& Weeks!- adv. in this issue 8179-11-21ldEtf._ Professional Cards iisuioil it isiiiuiiiii W. E. Bentley, K. C. Barrlstere and After-neya~st-Law Nloney to Loan. Office-Bank of N. 8. Chambers, Charlottetown, P. E. I. .. .. IIOIION A DUFFY lsrrlatars and Attorneys lolleftors for Ben! Bank of Canad- UDNIV T0 LOAN _ Q AA. Holman; _K_G»'.' Donald lseltlnnen Nel.l__AN C MGKINNON -.lorrlateror .. attorneys-at-Law loyal Bank Bldg., Charlottetown . , WARliiI:‘TON I g;AW ' 50% 0lll\!l- il!! Pub eo. Ito.. milton for comes asha- ors Association. Bank of lloriireal. Cuando. Permanent Mortgage Corpor-' ation ` - Oilaoa-Old Guardian Oilloe. Pri wso Block, Csrlotthtown. P. l. l. Dr. .|. E. BLANCHARD _ DENTIST PARLORS-125 Queen Street, ' '_ Charlottetown, P. E. l. Phone 276-J 3031-ll.-13M1lll0. S. S. _ Hessian C LAWYII ' Montague. P. l. L Money to Loan “I4-ldlltf. J. D-.'_Sftewart1 Barrister, Solicitor and Notary Public Omce Nawsonf ahocic Q _ Charlottetown _ Branch Office Georgetown Money" to ‘;L_oan on Ren " Estate '- me-io-iusu. V _ .N l ¢lIili|_._$i,__'_iEill|ill. 1 i_i-_i;_0isliPiiii “California eyrup of Figs" ean’t harin tender Utomach or bowels. _ _ . +1-_-~ _l 'j A iaxatlve today sgyes 11 sick ehlm tomorrow. Children singly will not take the time from p y to empty their bowels, which becomes clogged UD with waste. liver gets sluggish; stomach' sour. - Look at the tongue, mother! If Coated. or your child is listless. doesnt eat heartily. iu_ll of cold or has sore throat or any other children's ailment, give a teaspoonful of ‘fcntl- f°rnia Syrup or Figs." :heh don't _W°l'1'Y. because it is perfectly harm- lless, and in a few hours all this con- -stipation poison. sour bile and fer- menting waste will ghntlg move out of the bowels, and you ave a. well, ,p ayful child again. -A thorough "ln- side cleansing” is oftinies all that is necessary. It should . be the first treatment given. in any _sickness. Beware of counterfeit :fig syrups. Ask your druggist for e 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup"of Figs," which has full directions for babies, child- ren of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the ,bottl_e._ *Look carefully and see that it ismalle by the “California lli‘ig Syrup Com- pany.” » llhen The Boys Come liome "There are many problems which will face us after ithe war. Such as living, immi- gration and others, but all sink into insignificance in comparison with #the soldi- er and 'his job. That comes first. The man who saved the empire, who stood between your home and tthe heartless Hun, who permitted you to carry on your work unmolested and who in many cases gave up 3, comfortable place to a sbirker- he must be cared ~ for. ilt is not charity, but justice. I-Ie does not ask favors. lt is his right- and our duty." Sir,- il with many others was fav- orably impressed with the sibove note, as published in your issue of N v 16th inst. I have not the least .Hshlol lalliurts . sacked mauve- . towns . . 4 1 - But never went to war, _ S. P. ,. 0 ' ° in all sizes of 54 029 gross tons, were He fought his battle with peanut 'shells ‘ ' in ibsrhilfs' 8l’°¢ory store. And now in conclusion shall we *|10 lllvo taken upon ourselves to. see this thllll through shlrk our dui! Never! Though our hearts yearn for our boys -in the Bomme drive and elsewheref .` . "God ri\les_in heaven: all is neil all earth."- ‘Tlllllltillx Y0u for your valuable spece_ V I sm Sir, etc.. ln_ll¢_M'f 0' the falhm with (21 boys st the front.) Two IN THE l_1pL.l. ¢:A|,»,L, STUCK illillli_ili||S (Special te the Guardian) HALIFAX. N. S.. November 26- (Quotations furnished by F. B. Mc- Curdy da Co., stock and bond brokers, members' Montreal Stock Exchange, M°C\\rdy aui.ia111~s. Halifax, N. s.) ci.osi~o Palaces ` Yesterday Today }Atchison .. 104% 104% .Ain 0 and Fy .. 74% 75% »Am Loco .. 91% 92% ;Anaconda »,Am S &_-R ;Can'Pac 2Cen_ Crucible Steel M. 1-7. ct .... .. Me-x Nor Power . P2. Steel Reading .. \ 10114 121% 1101,; 107% seat - 118% 1111/, ssc; 107% 100% 123% 120 126 100 , 110% 1101.4 101% as 117 100% sau. 101% 100% 12414, 126 122% - sAci< To sAii.iNo sums. Studbaker ,. .. U. S. Steel U. Copper . . . . .. (From the New York Post.) Will the war bring about a revival of the good old soiling-Lllip days? Two items inthe Boston newspapers suggest the query. The flrst is that a three-:nested schooner being built for our coastwise trade has been purchased by Norweglans for foreign trading, for which purpose she will be given a square rig. The second is. more interesting.. in that a barge which was originally a well-known Maine ship, has been purchased to be reconverted into her pristine glory as a three-masted clipper. The fact -that her hull was built in 1882 has _lpot deterred the purchasers from go- ‘ing ahead with their plan; any exped- ient, it seems, is worth restoring to. ing by the interest he manifests, he to their country’s call in this trying crisis. your correspondents home twenty one have enlisted and gone overseas. We cannot hope all will return. Some of them have already paid the extreme price. Let me give you a few facts which ents of those .twenty-one young men do not receive one cent of Separa/tion allowance as none of the men are married. And strange as it may seem. not one of their fathers, althoigh some ernment position. Within this four mile radius there are fifteen Govern- held by fathers' who have between _ever 'donned the - Ktng’s uniform. P _ ll _ .and other" ’isms`- 'are put down' ‘them will suii he enough i_air-mihCoast. ~ i. llow- 'I`o Gain Flesh. _ Remarkable Statement of a Woman who was Nothing But Skin and ` ‘ Bones the rotectlve contrlvances of naval factor in Empire-the migbtiest next years the fleet has patrolled these ance and cons n s a n. as been a vigil to test the patience and men But the watch has hitter northern nights, when only sis hours of twenty-four are daylight, the men can do, the Navy has done, and' done greatly. eyes were very /eager. The spectacle was not greatly- impressive at hrst. There is a glory and a tradition to the Navy that creates an expectation that no sight of concrete things can quite realize. And the expanse of the sea dwarfs even the lmmensity of super-Dreadnougbts. Manoauvryea in Progress. ' To our right, as we moved slowly through the water, we could see mau- oeuvres in progress. Jellicoe, on the Iron Duke, with three other super- Dreadnoughts in line of battle, was repelllng the attack of four torpedo boats. It is not for the layman to discuss naval tactics. We were cou- sclous only of a perfection of line, an easy, sure disposition of ships, a rap- id, calculated play of human pieces on a sea chess-board. And even as we watched, our eyes strayed to the left, where the --- and' other great battleships of the Queen Elizabeth type lazed in the sun. Ranges of 25 miles and guns of 15-inch calibre- such, as we know .from Gallipoli, are the features of this class. Of im- provements since the Dardaneiles. l can say nothing. The secrets of the Admiralty are riot for public discus- lslon. It is' sufficient that the expert and the inventor are ncver still. ‘ “The Day." l colld tell We visited the rets and cunning towers, of g;ln'f 5 oi many, many things. But it is um g s cient- men in the Senate, playing for arty defeated' the desire of the Do the hearts of . p . - never relaxed. whether through hui yminion to play its raft in the Emi-Ire ricane weather or in the dark grip or -of the sea. We have no share in the glory of the Fleet. And this battle cruiser which 'we are boarding now. is wggch has newer' gl1l,ckened_ All that _His Majesty’s Australian rluip Mel hour-ne, Australia is here. Canada? --No! So, old men, acting against a eo le's will have humiliated us We onomy ency." Well-they have learned their lesson. lt is for Canada to remember how they betrayed a proud people ana brought about a Dominlon’s humilia- 1210]). Vlelt to the Melbourne. We leave the Melbourne--u splend- id ship, she is, sister to H.M.A.S. Sydney. which rid the Allies' and neu tial commerce of the Emden. Raven- hiil, in Punch, gave us a-memorable cartoon in honor of that signal event. Do you remember it?--the Qld lion greeting her whelp, who carrled'iu'her mouth thie German commerce d‘es~ troyer, and underneath the motto. “GOOD HUNTING "A Chip of the Old Block." The Melbourne might have had the glory. She, too, was near the Erudcu, but_ her supreme obligation was tc the convoy under her charge.. Slr John Jeliicoe. lt is our privilege now to lunch with Sir John .lelli-coe. As wc como abou:-l bare-headed, and shake iiandh with this nillccr of many decorations and such quiet demeanor, we can hardly realize who it is who is our host. lie are not conscious of any striking per- sonal magnetism nor of ally unusual Germany l1as_v1!l_ Dread-ouuglita. The number of such British ships is cara- fully concealed, but it is_sal'e to say that their strength is double that ot the enemyf Some day the Hun may not run as hh ran from the .lutialiii battle and after his raids on tho Iiai' tlepools and Scarborough. Oil that day, we think, Drake-'s drum will beat very loudly, sending its rumble revcr berating through space to call great figures back to England-Nelson and' Drake and other men of might will marshal with Jellcoa and the dead or rls of Hammond, La., tells' of a more ‘lege and bought a hottie, and it soon, _tlnade rare feel better. I _continued its' muse an' such a change! I have-re-I "gained my strength, flesh and healtl1,| _am perfectly well, and the doctor was ' isurprised to see such a change in me lin such a short time." lE.li1iebeth. Mor- - d' La phatea combined in a pure native old will strengthen the living with the iron of tradition. And the living, -so long denied, so hardly trained, so true to the sea story of 'their fatiicrs. 'them twenty- sons, all eligible for f~,‘-enable .meth0d_ she says':__ | will weigh their full strarigth against Q|_|`||gunan[, nqf, qnq 0( whom bag i "I cannot say enoughlin- praise of the V8.\.lllt6d H6812 0fG6l'll1Hlly. GICEIL N 4 ; g ,§v|n0_}_ for it saved my nm I Wu' ships, stricken with agony, will founu- KtlowinE the above fads. I i18Y0'weak nervous, run'-down, could notiei- M0" born 50 f-he B68 Will E0 back ‘been wondering if our boys (if any sleep, was unfit for work and was|:;:;_itlili‘; 53:1 858m- t The W0llll will ,cpxe back) wlll__ be treated as their ,notlung but skin and bones, Three f o e s ory o conflict. And the -ra ers. are, andg_bsv.e some tv this-ydoctcrs had an failed to help mc. one and 0! the Str-ilssla will Bud a broken co ciuslon: "that \r en Kaiserispl-Zdsy I saw Vinol advertised, took cour-| foe and reil waters will w ness thi.- flnai destruction of Prussia hopes. Odds of Six to One. ' But this is the future. For thc pre- sent, we are nearing the -e and steering slowly past the manoeuvrlng l physical features. It is only after lunch in a splendidly appointed cabin, where comfort, not _luxury, is the do- minant nate, that the quiet, resource ful power of the Commander-in-Chief -he who holds an Empire’s trust as no -other living man-begins to assert itself. and we feel the presence ot' a dominant, human force. | “lt has been intimated to me that the Domiiiions and the Colonies would like a message. All I can say is go on as you have- begun.” So the Com inander-in-Chief addressed' us after luncheon. Simple, diirect words, as striking as another remark of' his cryptic. Asked by one of the corre-:- pondelits if the German fleet were likely to come out again, hc replied: “They don't know.” We have only a few minutes to ln- spect the Flagship. A spotless ilecv and' great guns above-below, ii won- der of lower decks, where every iiich of space is utilized, where the thought and study of years has been utilized to secure for seamen every measure of comfort that ship life can provide. Such is my fleeting impression. Passing the Trswler Fleet. .1 Our visit is practically ovcri We, have left the iron Duke and are H9' Hammml- ~' ° ' ` isblps with our torpedo boat si 1. ' V . mv C B , gnu) ,steaming back to port. A sesplaiie !;iwl;I::i‘;rRf'“°;’€:_eg;‘:'\flmlfeaugfl ‘flu ltv‘h_s_ ling, as she has done- for new-.ly gpiraces above us. in the distance we |M°"|B. can was, because of the beef hour, to establish her identity and rc- , 0811 S00 i\0SPllHi Ships. with their -and ood "ver Penton” 'hon and man__ celvs her instructions. We draw upi81'€,Bt red UPOBBGS, and B\l_l>lli.V VSSSGIS _:anew Depwmnm and g‘ycer°phoB_:beside the Warspite. A war-worn vel.-|01 lllillly lYi>0B- OVBI' £0 U12 Filth! i . eran, this, the greatest of her exploits rides the old Cunarder Campania, un- _t 1 -I ‘ hi _ l I t being that of Jutland, where. coi1ling|familiar in her new guise. As we °" 3-whfletw ,ch make” V no B' mm between the Warrior and her foes, she D885 thrvllgh the net boom at dusk , E .A Foser ruggs, ao e 0 _-11. §§.t¥t° .-.-. 1211-.. boys intends to enlist, they crawl he-_ “’°“ °"_ °’; °° D i l ch rl tt _ engaged siui ships of the enemy 111111 trawler after trawler moves slowly fought them until the battle swept by 0" its h0m0W$i'd trip io the Float. past her and left her scarred and torn,| IL is said that no less than a thousand but -nghling siiii. on-many cihimerof them drag the waters for enemy heras a total loss. She might easlly| have been after such a struggle, bui;.| in tr-uth, the splendid ,ship 'steamed mines. Dangerous and daring work, donc in calm_ and storm. by fishermen who often lay down their lives that away for repairs under her own ati.-am ' the seas may be frce for commerce. and going at 25 knots an hour. Think: We can no iongei' sec the Fleet. The of ft' Odds of six to one, and nevol day is done ln the confusion of our by law. l@ ,Isl . vii... ;_____ ivzii-li; sea. guarded i>y.nels ami ai: _ - . I ‘ yOl,lI° aCCO11I‘1t _()V'e1-*,.'°-` - ft' ingenuity, protected as the miglltiest you of flre»control appliances, of fur I- V' to the souls of its people. For two which feed ‘on piojectlles man ` ze. I ` X "“‘°’“' ‘"° ’°‘2.§“.°‘.‘$“."°“°‘“"..“‘.E“’ l".?'“.‘.‘.§"".‘.‘...$.“Z‘.z..‘;‘.’f”?.?§'C`.ZI.‘Z.§.‘§‘i21l1 before November 30th. ' After that date we shall be obliged to hand the list to the lawyers for collection Aa -id mild- ithilr . _ - 115.1 mm °$!h with “lien slip.. member well iw r-val demo ai 0-~ We hope we won’t have to send in a . Crowded on the bridge of a destroyer, “WU Em29\'B°l1 |\llP\ld°llUY Q\I0l- single name_ we ,lea eg under the pmgecgion °‘ ing the Amer an Declaration of lnde- _ . ‘ an Emprsgg gun; md found the bmi pendence in a Canadian House of But We BTC detéfmllled tO C0ll€Clf all ' ‘ warks of Britain beside and beyond C°mU\°HB- 'Laurier JBBFIDS i-hit A0~' aggguntg Whigh are ast due p _ _ ; _ ~ _. ul _ Q - 1-, | it, 5- gg mlralty advice was in reality a ship- ` sughmlegrklg mtgnallllc 0faal`ltlcip:llon?oii; b““d‘|“S Plot' Liberal “H955 Uf "MW _ . we hear from you today‘°' V C 5" ' " and sneers at an "on1erg- ' ' ' I 1 l i I V 'mn ryonrlal SEA. Novemher,1s1s.,.ie tradition h111iia.` Nl? wohiler ir.-1 Of all 'OV€fdUC aCC0l.ll'lts' Oli ~’ Ge h an a rsen asa, warm B iti h ii et ov rn t wor ... _ -' ~- y si:nya:1dv:mooth seater-so wie found I B 6 K e B 9 _ _ ‘ the Battle Fleet-somewhere in the Canada Not Represented - ' "iiEMuiiif.vis|i -_ ., BRITISH FLEET IN NORTH SEA /"1 ° M - N they no 'i lim" is-sir-John-Joiiicm cryptic erpiy--lim _ Is Your Ascountr. fl* ‘ » ii." U _ F _ . _ _ _ “i'iv...i'.'i',f. E172" rlI'.-§¢l.i.f§ Lil'f.Il‘i'."i1'§'i’.`2.' '.'"‘»l‘f.ll“ OVERDUE ? ilommuaity oil Lend 0ni'y liirvsllously Coadlllwi _ - .' ` ' -' I .We are -preparing .a-list .- . ..\ -r . I . .\ C) LQ.. l i tails in the sum of one great impres- sion. The chapel of the Warsplte, for instance, where a great shell penc- tratoii, damaging neither. crucifix nor- altar. Or a turret of the ---. -1 house in iitself, sheltering formidable 15-inch naval guns. Beside us fl com- mander 'urns ai wheel and file greu: cannon responds to the touih 11.1 it trained no`rsf_\ to the knee. W- are invited to do the saii.e The whffel turns weight of tune by the pressure' of a finger. Buttons are pressed. Jtli- er lcvvrs pulled, uutoiuntic lifts, which in turn feed' the gnu uutll,stiil automahcally, the great breecii iz- closed and waiting for the .ouch to fire the charge. One would imag-no the noise inside these- steel-guarded chambers during a battle would bc terrific. instead, there are establish ed lncideilts where gun-crews have hardly realized thelrr guns have fired The turret in action is one of thc quletest parts of the ship..-'Wee recall. -too, ward-rooms 'and' isospital-rooms. and dining-rooms, bathrooms, read- ing-rooms, repair shops, laundries. bakeries. indeed, on these ships is nearly everything that marks 0. small community on land--only it is mar vellously condonsied. 50 wc (Cine haul; zviiilii in tlic su- preme impression-that of calculated, absolute utilization of every inch of space and amazing perfection of mech- anicai dcvi cs which insure the exact performaiicc of iiilrii-,xitc peruiions in precise time, l-‘iil1illy, there is the size- of the vessels. As l have said. seen fiom a distance in their. ocean envlronnleni, the impression of magni- tude ls not pronounced. But once on board' 'the ships, decks seem almost endless. groups- of men are dwarfed by mighty gulls und turrets, steam launches lic in cradles like rowboats on 11 great lake steamer. There haili- ly appears to be a mail on board-.lb ,though each Dreadnought carries a bat- talion and a thousand lives may be lost when a battleship goes down. One climbs cmllcss radders, running aloft to great heights. where lookouts are ever vigilant, or giving access be- low to tier on tier -of decks down to thc very bowels of the v\c`ssel. I 1 Well, oili' ilicmornllle visit is over. We have received the traditional hos~ pitallty of thc Navy. We have met. striking iilcii and been greatly impres- sed. We are grntcful -for cvcu an liour's iilsilght into thc' intiulatc- :if- iaiirs of the iliigliticst fleet in th-\ world, 'We idk 'to' the -futurc. when the ships ol' (‘.aiiuii'a may 'be found with those oi' Britain and Australia and New Zealand, to the- time when crgnlzeil Eilipirc shall make impossi- ble such perils as thc present. And as for the enemy, l recall a remark or a companion correspondent. "What Chance for (ic1'nlail_v'.”'- l answer: “None." The great 'sua lest will surely come and Gcrninii' naval ambi- tiions will cease from troubling thc world. ' SNEEZING SIGNS. . Siiceziiig, from vcry mrnoic iililcn. has been liclii on-illlous. :~- '~ ‘ Our forefathers we'ni?-io- boil again if tbgoy sneezed while putt-ing oil their shoes. A sneeze to the right was deemed lucky: Lo tile--loft of evil por- tent. To sneeze near ii burial place was very uilluvky. Tradition' has it that snooziiig was at first 11 fatal sign-cvci'y hunlaii bc- iiig sileczcd but once. and then died- but Jacob petitioned' the Creator to remove the sneezing ban, and auccceil- ed. Thcucc ul-csc thc- olicc universal custom of snluting il aneezei' with “God bless you," or "May'you_ liive long!" The custom still obtains lil some pai-is oi' the Contiilexil. ln England not only was ii slieezer lllessctl. but friends raised' their hats to him as well. ln 1l_n old book. “The (Bode of (3oud'uc.t," it is directed that "lf ills lordshlp siieczes ye are not to huwl out ‘Gorl bless youl' but bow 'tn him iia.ndsolneiy." All over the world' the sneeze was recognized. Whole na- tions were unilcr orders to make ex- clamations wlicil' ilieiii- king sricezeii. Sncezing was believed to be a sure cure for liicougll, and' was also looked upon ns li sign of sanity. lf niiizicilt and universal hclief goes -for 'anything it is gvmri lo snooze. Thcrci'oi'c, ict 'lin .sneeze thc wily away! / _ Q- F”"' I l _ i _ - War Loan. iAnd~sls.ughtered_tll/em hip and thigh. § °‘r§q:wv:`Q`m,|4(u¥;h§ u thought but to iight! Ofsuch stuff minds we can recall only a few dc- : _ ` ’ _,-1 ".-‘<- A:"1l_._..¥. :J 1,( ` _ v _ - ‘_ _ _nv _ in i i *_ ' r- Domestic War Loans We are pleased to quote most favorable rates either for buy- 'ing or selling the old or new , Particulars on Application 'l oi:oi\"rO ()f~"i‘. ` I 1 1 _ , Y _ -_-.-_-.-_-_-_-,-_-_-_,,.,¢,_-,_-_-_-_-_-:___._»_____- -_-_-_-_-_-_-_~_.,_»_-_- ,_-_-_ .:-.-.-.~_,_~.-_~.-.-.-_-.1-:_-_-_-.-:_-_-_-_-_-_-_ - _ - - - _-_-_-_-_-.-.-_-.-. _-_-.-_---fc-_-.-as. :.1-_-.-:V V, . _-.-.- -.- ». .-.1-. .-.-.~.-.-.-.1::.-.-:_~.-.-.-.-_-.-.-.-.-_-_-_-_-_-:_-.-_-f -.-.-.- -_-_- -___-,-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_,,__.,,:._-_- - -_~ _ -_ ~ ~ ~ -_-,-,-,-,-, _,_ - _ .___.,, ._,_._._.,,. ._._._._.__,Y___ 'BRINGING UP FATHER _Fi-__‘.~__ -also ‘T_\T'i“'iif~=is;\.~/i'~. l ' 3‘逥_“é`3-m -4.15” _S ,-T --_,_ uis. 1 _ ~ -iinuaau 4,, ~- -- .- i 1 I, ,i , li* ri( ~ *'-*_ `; ' fm - » _ , _`, ., V wmv ilgmlgner e ' "wei.i.-Tale ' rsliirl/;°aooT V fézlvigbqgi' _ `,:',.'f|3,-\""`TE""` _,-----_ _ _ auf., . o,_EA,,,,4.f - ~~ .ions-se Faso _siege ° “EP - _ li-E.'.\"n _ oem . _ .THE i=i ._ - PLA1 -} Mona: ""'"‘*<€»' l H ' “°?°N 'ERE' ` 'U'?`i'\l_R$vr??m CARDS ‘ 1 Il .ii-' -_.$33 -~_ £138 __‘||' r _ 1..... .,= ._ ... cw meas- ""=*’~3°"-=~i ‘> mr. - -.. 'f »~ ,if so-1 _. " _si _ , y ¢fq1q|0_ R _ /\.DAr.Y & C02 llhsu or Nom Scori/1 Buihnisu