~.¥w`1"'* »~=¥-16% 4 ,_., » » ‘ . 1 “.,_.,. Fumlabed by BEAR _YE ONE ; -' ANO'i‘HER’_S BURDENB _ _ ...__ "Ky burden is too heavy, Lord," _" _ I f,l'Bll1bIlnv “I can no farther carry itl" ' And tears I shed. Then came a sudden cry for help From one sore pressed. I ran to seek him, gladly gave ' Him of my best. GUARDIAN READERS l.s. Locum. Then thought I of my heavy bur- den- But, lo, 'twas gone! The gloom and doubt had vanished quite And Lovc's light shone. When we another's burden lift Or try to bear; ,Love's gentle hand removeth swift i Our load of care. -Western Christian Union NEWS FORECAST FOR THE COMING WEEK. WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 11- President Wilson and several mem- bers of his cabinet will make a week-end cruise on board the naval yacht Mayflower to the southern drill grounds.ofl the coast of Virgin- ia to witness the target practice and maneuvers of the American fleet. Political interest will centre in the First congressional district of West Virginia, where a special election is to be held Tuesday to chooseasuo- cessor to Representative J .W. Davis, resigned. Democrats, Republicans and Progressives have named candi- dates for the seat. The Tennessee Legislature will be- gin another special session Monday vengeance. | There were several skirmishes and: occasional outbreaks- of revolution- ary fury in 1307, and early in 1808 "General" Emmeline Pankhurst serv-'I ed six weeks in prison for headingal deputatiou of women in a raid on' the l-louse of Commons, but war was not ofticlally declared by the Sullra- gettes until October 13, 1908. General Pankhurst and her aids made no secret of their plans. For weeks before the thirteenth of Octo- ber the hoardings of London were covered with posters reading: "Votes for Women! Men and women, help the sunragettes to rush the House i __ _mlmrssrsnws rms1~os_'_s_x.n _ _ _ __ Y sEL|-:moss i=o'n"__"' GUIFIWBII It Pays to buy in this Province. CARD OF THANKS.-Hr. Francis McKay wishes. to thank hll many friends who h¢IPOd» him during 'the recent pony contest to accumulate such a large number of votes. 2062. MRS. WHITE, HAIR DRESSER, is at the Lennox for short time only and will be pleased to meet all her patrons. All styles made up from: your own combings. Also shampoo- ing and massage. _ 1919. WEDDING ANNIVERSARY - Mr. and Mrs. John MacEachern, 127 Wat- er Street, will on Wednesday the 15th of October, 1912, celebrate the 50th anniversary of their marriage and will be at home to their friends on the afternoon of that date. 1068. ' ___ u--_-n LARGE oi§\eoe-The senaonerl Dwinapf-of R lbifdto, Capt. Fraser, arrived here from Newcastle, N. B., yesterday morning with what is cre- dltably stated to be the largest car- go of lumber that has been carried by a vessel of her size. The Dwina is of only sixty tons burthen, and the cargo she brought to Charlotte- town consisted of, 84,000 feet of spruce boards. STILL BUSY.-Messrs. Bruce Stewart it Co., Ltd., Charlottetown, of Commons on Tuesday, Oct. 13th, at 7.30." _ -I On the day before that set for the: "rush,” General Pankhurst, and her to consider the prohibition law en- forcement bills. The Western Fuel cases in_ which ‘are involved __ numerous officers and employes of the Western Fuel Com- pany, charged with conspiracy to de- fraud the Government through mani- pulating weights, will come up for trial Monday in the United States District Court at San Francisco. ' .Mrs. Jennie May Eaton is to be placed on trial at Plymouth, Mass., Monday, on an indictment charging_ her with the murder of her husband, Rear Admiral Joseph G. Eaton, U. S. N., retired. I The appeal in the case of Charles Becker and the four gunmen convict- ed of the murder of Herman Rosen-| thul, the gambler, in New York, is' to be argued Monday before the_ Court of Appeals ut Albany. , Arguments in the Government/s anti-trust suit against the Interna-I tional' Harvester Company are sche-_ duled to begin Mondayr in St. 1’uul.` Lending events of the week abroad will be the celebration nt Leipsic of the 100th anniversary of the “Bat- tle of thc Nations,” und thc wed- ding, on Wednesday, ofthe young Duchess of File and Prince Arthur of Connaught, which is to take place in the Chapel Royal, St. James' Palace. _ I WOMEN SUFFRAGETTES CELEBRATE FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF "THE WAR" It will be very strange indeed if this dny pnsses without the scismo- graphs recording n scrics of concus- sions, convulsions, shocks and dis- turhunccs proceeding from the gen- crul direction of John Bull's tight little islund. Because why? Because today marks the fifth anniversary of the suilragette declaration of war, the beginning of the struggle of the English female of the human species for liberty, fraternity and equality, and if thc suilragettcs run true to form they will celebrate with n lieutcnants, Mrs. Drummond and |Sylvia Pankhurst, were arrested andf thrown into gaol. Despite the ab-| sence of their leaders, an army of 50,000 suffrage sympathizers, mostly of the "weaker" sex, gathered in the neighborhood of the House of Com- mons. The authorities were frankly frightened, and the legislators were guarded by a small army of “bob- nies," wane troops were held in re-I serve. A number of men and women' who sought to get through the lines; were arrested, but one, Mrs. Travers riiiemen nowadays. On Saturday Symons, succeeded, and forced the, law-makers to listen to an address’ before she was subdued and dragged I out. 'has oflcred to give a silver medal to Mrs. Pankhurst, her daughter, l Cliristabcl, and Mrs. Drummond,I were tried on a charge of “inciting , to riot." After a sensational trial, Mrs. Paukhurst and Mrs. Drummondi were sentenced to six months in_ prison. Mrs. Drummond was relens-I ed within a few days, but Mrs. Pank- \ hurst served all but a few weeks of her sentence. I Masculine England has learned a ' lot about women in the last iivc ,the usual three ranges, 200, 500 |ycs.rs. And he has paid a pretty 'and 600 yards. penny for his education. Still, at the lend of five years of warfare, he is standing put. His head is bloody . but unhowed. And, in 'thc way of 'thl;§§_a;E‘x;nB3r?::;,;;n;?;v,:;'smh::: practical results, the militants have nothing to show for their logg siege. The "thin red line" in the House of Commons shows no sign of yielding. T0 RACE FOR AERONAUTIC HONORS. I Pnnis, oct. 11-Everything is in ,readiness for thc annual internation- ‘al hulloon race that is to start from the Tuileries tomorrow. There are ,twenty entries in thc contest this gycar, distributed as _followsz Germ- any, Austria, Switzerland and France, three each; the United States, Italy, England and Belgium, two each. received by express on Friday night a large pump, which they will in- stall in a dredge for Mr. V.T. Bert- ram, Toronto. This dredge will ar- rive in Charlottetown shortly and after being put in working order will leave for Rustico to dredge the harbor. This work was to have been done by the dredge that recently sank on the North Side during a storm. Messrs. Bruce Stewart & Co. yesterday alsoshipped an Ideal engine to Mr. Thomas Trainor. Windsor. RIFLE SHOOTING. - There is plenty of encouragement for the city next there will be a spoon shoot for the members of the Civilians' Rifle Club, and Capt. J. Webb Stanley anyone who makes 100 points down the range on this occasion. As it is thc last spoon shoot of this club for this year, it is hoped that every member will make an effort to at- tend. Anothcr offer of a silver med- al for the riflernen has been made, Lient. G. E. Ritchie pledging to give such a trophy to any rilleman in the Province who on Thanksgiving Duv makes a hundred points or over nt _lumber murkep i`n this Provincc,'and .the cause can be traced to the fox iindustry. For there has been a. igreat amount of fox-ranch building, 'not only us regards the pens and [houses for the foxes themselves, but in m,any cases of new dwellings for lthe keepers of the ranches; Lumber- men have consequently benefited from these circumstances, and there ,has been a greater importation- of ,lumber into the Island this season ‘than in any other year recently. At |Messrs. L. M. Poole & Co., one of _the leading lumber merchants of the Island, the lumber imported this year was at the average of a vessel- loatl a day. » » /’“ -*-\_. f/'7./ .2 y , \ ~. / I ,_-_J _ _Q/v/J/1 ,_. -A ‘ A ` ' gy. Xi *IQ-'~"`;;j It fi* .f 5% -. lim. ~‘l\\\Y ` ¢'- 3/ V .t \° -/,/ I l Y i “EP os T f Tea and Coffee Don`t Agree iii UM r ` . f' ;' ii' \\ . I), // 'bk' (/I , \@v l `\` is A prominent physician nys: “If, on discontinuing codec, you _ 'our of sor|s,’ the coffee had better be forever discontinued, for _ you are on the verge of lnebricty." feel fired, languld, and codec.) f}@A_._rIch, nourishing food-drink, with a delighlfnksnsppy flavour. Postdm is msddfroin prime whole wheat, and a small percent of New Orleans Molassef. Contains no caffeine or any otherd ug. I I Poitnm value. Thousands of people have taken warning. and proved ' whit was the cause of their headaches, biliiusness and nervousness. (Tea contains caffeine, the same drug found in A great many former tea or codec drinkers, feeling the need of a hot drink with meals, now us comes in two forms. 'requires fifteen to twenty minutes boiling to bring out the rich no boiling, but is made cap of has num' and 'I by sth-ring a 'teaspoon' and _lager to taste. ‘ AT HOHQ.-Url.; Dean. McEwen will be at cms Tuesday and Wed: H0068! Bfivnlplvons. Det. 11 and '15, at East Roya ty. ;, _ 2053, . . _-7 DISC!!-IARGING CARGO.--‘The sch- ooner Dwina is atlpresent discharg- lns a larsé cargo of dries hunter at D. M. Poole dr Co's., Uonlsffs West wharf. _ . ., 2071 'ri-is yosruuusnanssn.-his Picton boat arrived in Charlottetown on Saturday night at 8.05 o'clock, with an average number of passeng- ers and a* good cargo. DREDGING'.vThe work of dredg- ing around the wharves of Uh". lottetown which the Government is now carrying on is making fair pro- gress. The dredge is now at work at Pownal wharf. HERE ON HONEYMOON. - Mr. Russel Forbes, Manager of the Can- adian Consolidated Rubber Com- pany, and bride, are spending their honeymoon in Charlottetown. They arrived Friday night and registered at the Victoria Hotel. PROCLAIMED.-In the Royal Ga- zette issued on Saturday, publication is made of the proclamation by which Monday, the 20th of October, is ap- pointed by the Privy Council to be observed as' Thanksgiving Day throughout Canada. ` EDUCATIONAL BOOKS, received today. Irving's Sleepy Hollow,Le- Syllabaire, Baker & Bourne’s Geom- etry, Chnmber’s Etymologicnl l)ic-, tionary, French & English Readers, Syke's Com-position, Rational Book Keeping Text Books, at CAR'l‘El