. ~.-. ..' ‘ ,_ ¢___._ ._ I I;-`<'fi ~ 5-ln* :_;-cc. - _ . l . '»~:_l 1-! _ . . . ,TA ' .1 =~:u"‘;» '-1.1 ~ ._-‘it _f -' .- "f, -1 \ _l _ ill _ _,_ '.'~~F. ._ f.: /; l _,_ 1'; 5 1-; ny. --at ?i22r~_ s 1 ~=.,_g. I .__;!__ »'..<“ i ‘iii 11'( -.1-:F nga ities M25," ri; f ~ ii iiiiff-E .\=,";1_-_~ Frei '>~.'. ff.. <_;~.51~¢.SI;“'¢f-..<.`- _:_ =-»:» -._ -_ _-iff 3_5' ’1=12i~ _ ._~“1:' li 'l - .2 ; ‘ iii In s. _ .\ ’.._ Z l 1‘, I l 0 » .t l r i "fit si -‘fav ,.. _ ‘fir l e' . 1 j_”__ if an i 77.. ' ‘-_ir _ ..-, f tl, .!.‘ 3 *IL 1.4' . -.lil .‘ Ml -_ iii “ _ti ,_§ ,. vf f ci . lp t-_'__ _1-L _- fi " ~l "l -l if ,__-_ _<-_~»»¢»=--°»-n 5 -rrlbuhq unw- fu u. s.__A._ 4.8. Infant., ' i litter and Publisher. w~%i= ‘ |_] f l ` -» 'o. K. cm-ru. ~ Machu ldltor. . :ram lg-,_ _ll Moriday, Oct. 13th, being Thanksgiving Day and a A tatutory holiiiiy, The Morning Guardian- wi not be / -gssuedoii Tuesday morning. The Evening _Guardian will 'A iiot be issued on Monday, but will be published”-as usual _ 'on Tuesday aftegrloon. Advertisers please take notice. l . -.,;. \ . - _- *_* ' S--~;- .’ '_. __, ~ ' . WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1919. _ .damn-is \ ‘pivdfdniinioooeiifoo Motorist Aflhlli' `l."oi1`\uaH ` ,.l, ~..¢.x-&¥»‘¥v$¥*#Q§¢ ' ~‘. l BROKEN BEARINGS LET WHQEL COME OFF ’ _ _ ' .T? GOOUO Gil *Q *il 3. -' -.c 4 EDU(_‘A-'l‘I0l\'.»\L (‘0.\`l"l~1RE.\'(‘l‘}. _ The educational conference to be held in Winnipeg on the 20th to the 22nd of this month will probably be, and certainly ought to be, the-most important education- al move ever undertaken in Canada. ' _ As previously intimated in the Guardian, Col._R._ H. Campbell, Superintendent of Education for this province, ° t d t re ent the Rotar .Clubs 'o_f ‘ has been appoin e o rep s y Charlottetown and Hailfax, the Rotary Clubsthrough- ° out Canada being behind the dertaken to finance it. movement and having un- The movement was initiated in Winnipeg, "where a b r of entlemen active in the professional, business and educational life of the city came together, discussed num e g would have been subjected to heavy S the educational conditions in Canada and resolved to in- been quite lursiy. Moreover, in the' augurate a 'forward movement in education. ‘Five gen- f tlemen contributed a thousand dollars each to defray :heh fragments unruly wedged. ann initial expenses, the movement was made Canada wide, _ the Rotary Clubs were interested and a fund of $70,000 was subscribed. The leading were enlisted and the conference assured. This, very this’ side." Canadrhsving some- where about 124 blind returned men spread over a district about forty time_s__as large ns that covered-dn england for the hgn_e;lt-_iqthiose up- on 1,400 men. li riresthhated that approximately, 100 blind will, Heed alter ¢in=e=- For thlstnearsun Hun. As it ls purely u wartiine lnstituglon is anticipated that St. Dunstan's will close ‘at the end_of 1920. when the last blind returned” man will have been trained and the permanent M- ter Care Depsrtment..wil'l. thereafter' carryion. ~ In England, the 'National institute for the blind has secured control of most civilian institutions, with a View to some scheme of systematizlng the .work upon similar lines to those which have heenso successful at St. Dun- sten'e. Sir Arthur Pearson, the founder of St. Dunstan's, has recently it sixth game of the _ uma A " YORK flew been ap- pointed Clialrman of"'tlie Governlngmm e,,B¢e,.,, m,m_ |, nw wmmande, 'y dark and beautiful. Board of Worcester College For High- of the Tartan and is .brmgmg |n Otto. This ls the age of youth. Grey- er Education of the Blind; and he lens man 'pm-ks from Bayand vm Mapu iaired, unattractive folks aren’t went- f ` men? further Bchembi' 01’ 05"? “K over the narrow auge railwa -l - ld Hl”0\1nd, s'o.get bus ith W th' J , on the good work for,(_lhe belief" -°,f der to attack Erigan. It appehi-sntliliilt 3880 and Sulphur Collipvdund tdiiaighl O civilian blinded mei‘l._,Ifl°\‘ UW W' nothing but alléed forces can stop 'md y0ll'll be delighted with your ' I' - , turned man has been-suiccessfully sent the on or the city. jmhrlz' and lark. handsome hair and your youth- Our St0Ck. ` on his way. - - nortwegt pe,-an are at on¢e\f. ful appearance within a few days. ` ' - .' -” .- __ _ ` . . R .M A FACES _ Tl0N United States State Department Places_Bolore _Senate _ 'Committee Reports Showing impending Porllirom Turks and 'l`_a_irtars. _intervention Asked for.” f » _ i lWASH,lNG-’l‘ON, Oct. 6.-William Phillips. Assistant Secretary -of State, appeared ityafore aipulicomittee of the Senate Foreign Relations Commit- ~tee lesterday to urge thegrnve situ- ution confronting the Armenian peo- ple, who are suffering from conditlsns “horrible beyond words" and who ure, he insisted, threatened with extermin- ation-union, troops are sent to ward off- impending attacks by combined* forces of Turks and Tartars. The subcommittee was appointed by Henry "Cabot Lodge (RJ, Senator from Massachusetts, majority leader.` to consider the resolution, by John Sharp Williams (D.), Senator from Mississippi, authorizing President Wilson to use the _military forces of the United States to save the remnant of the Armenian people from extinc- tion. Mr. Phillips was questioned byl the committee behind closed doors on`, thc present conditions ns shown by' the files of the State Department. He submitted communications recently received, all bearing out reports that conditions are extremely critical. He was questioned also as to the rca- sons for the withdrawal of British troops from the Caucasus. Urgent Calla for Troops. i christian and lmtl-foreign propaganda will be renewed, 'and the lives of both oriental Christians und of Americans will he in danger at Tabriz. -In the district of Nukhlcbevan_ the life of any Britlshcr is completely tyrannic- ed, and the British consul’residin$ at Tabriz will' not permit any Britlsher to enter that country. Should Ameri- cans, by attempting -to arrange peace without being supported by force, n ii- ger the Turtars, then Americans would be in the some position as the Brit- ish. American forces would receive respect from thc 'l‘uruirs. The Ameri- can commissioner ut Constantinople summarizes Mr. Sn\ith'.s conclusions in the following manner: “l~`lrst, in order to protect southern Caucnsia, and to prevcut the other- wise inevitzible massacre of u0n-com- batant Armenians as Tartars advance, allied troops are urgently`needed in that country. "Second, there is very serious dan- ger for Erlvnn. "Third, Ottoman Turkish troops are constantly arriving to increase the Tartars. ' "Fourth, any Tartar success in south Csucasia will render northwestern Persia unsafe -for westerners. "Filth, during tho months of May, The subcommittee received ii ca-ble’ message from the American Mission' at Paris, dated Sept. 25, urging that ut' least one regiment of American troopsl be dispatched to Armenia. Capo! George Hyde, an American reliefl worked in Armenia, told the commit-f tee of the starvation and persecution he saw in that stricken country. Cap-_ tain Hyde told the committee how he| himself had seen 1000 Armenian girls being kidnapped by Turks in one sec-' tion of the country. l Mr. i“_hil_lip_s gave the committee to understand that only aid from the" allied powers and America can save! the Armenians. Turks and Tartars,‘ he said. ar_e now attacking the coun-I try. Transportation of foodstuffs to_ relieve the s_ta_rving _people is becoming almost impossible. Colonel Haskell, representative of the American Mis- sion _in‘Armenia, described the con-' ditlon In Armenia, described the con- et for his finished products. ,ditlon as “horrlble.beyoi_id description,", in a cable message to the mlsslon_ One inisntry brigade, or possibly one regiment, would s'ave the situation, according 'to Colonel ~Huskell’s reportw The message from the American Mis- sion at Paris to the coniinlttee -follows; “Wirth regard to the nillitnry re- quirements of t'he 'present situation in the`Cn`u`ciisus, the American Mis-' sion in Paris has received the follow- ing telegraphic information from Colonel Haskell, who personally in`- vestignted _conditions in Armenia and stated' he found the situation horrible beyond description. Colonel Haskell states that relief can and will reach there in time to prevent attacking, if he, Colonel Haskell, be provided with troops, and the situation in ltusslan Armenia will be saved by the equiva- lent of an American brigade of rc- enforced infantry. Colonel Haskell states that Tnrtnrs are attacking on the south and cast with the Tartar throughout the interior. In his opin- ion the fate of our Armenian allies might be decided by the arrival of even one regiment. Unless troops. are rushed, the Armenians may ut miy time be extermlnated." Conditions' Described. The following statement from the State Department was presented by Mr. Phillips: " “The American commissioner at Constantinople telegraphs the depart- ment under dnte of Sept. 20, stating that Mr. F. Tredwell Smith, who is. with the American-Persian Relief. Commission, -passed through Constan- tinople on the 19th instant, coming from _Erlvan, Urumiah, Nakhichevan and Tabriz. Toward the end of Au- gust, crossing .for the second time the Tartar lines from Nakhichevan and Tabriz, he found that the atmosphere was altogether changed. He found that a. Britisher‘s life was no longer safe, because there was no British troops. He found that Americans too were in danger. On July 20, the 'I'ar-- tars commenced battle on the Ar- menians nt Nukhlchevan, and st the end of a three-day battle they drove out the British along with the Ameri- can rellef workers and started a mas- sacre of. Armenian women, children, and men at Nakhichevan. The n_umber of victims is estimated between 6000 and 12,000. Americans testified to Mr. Smith that when they crossed into Persia at the Julia Bridge the river was full of headless, mutilated boies. When Mr. Smith returned along this river into Russia, human bodies were still seen along the river hunks. 'l-lnill Bey. who was formerly the commander of the Turkish troops on fected by what happens in the Cau June and July, in other words. l_`ong after the conclusion of the ariuistice, there occiirred outrages affecting citi- zens and allies _of the allied powers., and which required prompt/attcxv t|`on."- ' The statement then quoted thc fol- lowing telegram from James W. Gerard, listed New York, Sept. 19, to Secretary Lansing: “Today received confidential ciiblc- gram from Paris representative of thc Armenian Republic, of which the fol- lowing are parts, and I ask you to telegraph it to the President: ‘Azer- baijan, under the direction of Turkish oillcers, are making preparations for war against Armenia. Georgia ii nd Azerbaijan entered into an alliance avowedly to attack Denikin, but ac- tually to attack Armenia. British have already left Armenia, and Haskell ar- rived without soldiers. There is an absolute lack of ammunition. Geor- gisns forbid the transportation through Georgia of_ all products except flour. Have absolutely no more money, population exhausted, people starv- ing everywhere, from 30 to 50 persons found dead in streets of ‘Erivnn daily. Population naked, no drugs, no more possibility of resistance; will soon be completely nnnihilated. Within ii month absolute extermination is feared, thus solving the Armenian question. Turks consider us responsi- ble for the overthrow of their empire. \Vords lacking to describe the horror of the situation. You may come too late to save us.” "A telegram from the American mission In Paris states that the Ar- menian forces now consist of men poorly equipped and armed, about 10,000 in number. Against them there are about 40,000 Turkish troops ad- _vuncing on Erivun, these Turtnrs be- ing lcd by Turkish oillcers. All .re- pnrts received by the mission ironi Dr. Barton. Mr. Moore. Admral Bristol. and Colonel Haskell, as well ns from Armenians and British, state that the' Armenian forces ure overwhelmingly outnumbered and that it is almost cer- tain that they will be crushed if reen- forcements and -munitions do not :ir- rlve in the near future. Owing to the tact that must o f the .Armenian in- liubitnnts of Turkish Armenia took refuge and are now conceptrated 'in Russian Armenia, the conquest of liussinn Armenia by Tartars und Turks would probably results in the practical annihilation of the Arme- nian Nation." Sage Tea Beautifies and Darkens Hair DON'T STAY GRAY! IT DARKENS S0 -NATURALLY THAT NO. BODY CAN TELL ___ You can turn grey, faded hair beau- tifully dark and lustrous almost over night if you'll get a bottle of "Wy. eth's Sage and Sulphur Compound" at HM' drug store. Millions of bottles _af this old famous Sage Tea Recipe. improved by theudditlon of other ln- gredients, are sold annually, says ii well-known druggist here, Ibecsuse it dsrkens the hair so naturally and ev- enly that no one _can tell lt has been applied. Those whose hair is turning gray or hecomin faded have sur rise v. two applications the gray hair van- shes and your locks become lucurlant- . l -6 ni” H a p n filling them. because lafter one or I l ~ I 1- Cemesle _ _Quo of tho'y___orid'q ° _ .- _ _ men wu thdyson' 1" - Bootoh waiver. learned the mvww ._. economy. At the egefgf ' 2 he uavddn few " _ '_onou£l\'to buy 'n box ' g_{,"' ‘ oranges-whiohheq' ' ` ' ;;_, P°_d4l°‘_ °* .9 W0# *iii- ’°' °°""“ - ...;n,.§‘; 11;. . _ WMI# ygieyoung “Q ,el.:_ 11° www” t1=_r°iiah"thrl1¢V ”‘;_ i ¢°=°°um\11ma6oo.whi°ii ;“ he invea\ed. Hilirht dlvl- - dend inspired the remark- _ able _noliievomexifa o`f'ldt¢;- '- years. ' ' _i i - - » . . f. But the Seed 0f__l_1l3__prog- _ . perity was sown' when he ‘ began his Bret ` _ We invite your as, ing; _ __ account. ; ` iss :-gi _ UNION BANK or chimp/l _ ` RBOURCLS OF $l53.0(D,000 .' CHARLOTTETOWN BRANCH G. C. T_empIe, Manager *`l it iso-_soo snnlns-1919' i The Royal Bank A s oi Canada J 'Vu _,nu ~,_ 3 v ‘ *un* I FARM To THE BANK, SHOULD BE WELL “ woiuv _ Go tothe Manager of, I the nearest ROYAL - !_| BANK_ Branch with your l financial difficulties while lthey are small and. he can usually hglp you. Your affairs will be treated with strict con- fidence. Tlie B a n k 's employees' are pledged to secrecy about tl.e business of every customer. Capital and Reserves $33,000,000 _ Total Resources - $470,870,450 Charlottetown » A. W. HYNDMAN, Manager BRANCHES Aiso AT ‘ _Surnmerside, Hunter River, Tl2l\lSh. 'Hue Valley, Wel- lington. _ cunt Stewart, Murray River, Eldon, Cardi- ' gina, Rustico (Sub-Branch to unter River.) __ _ ' I ° Garage Automobiles, mu-me and sdtuoury _ Ensures repaired = ,F`°fd~l_'B1>&|l’l and ~B9o_e_lllty Gasoline and Cylinder Oil kept in stock - ‘ 15 Years experience ' _l ..__` mimi-. Leslie Campbell _A careful selec _tion_. of Aeveryf line ' A 4’ . "‘ ‘ .` cams Ni¢:.A.meti.cun ‘llltfbee . Your Asthm oo b _ » mn iurenrenes w|1'|-1 r-'iF1‘l-| |,,-U,,,,,,|,,h ,,|,,c,, ,he ,,.,,g,,, of nr. J. ln. Kgllhgsiihslhhlnlciigli 0'-» e *pleas ._ __» ohms or wonhrra seams. which tu_¢k~.h1n¢s ln"-im' una .nun any is nut something gnu is nun-sly Bd tO have ___...._.. _ < ~1 . 2 lust, and the 5000 Assyrian redigees £0 be h0lJed for; it is to be expected - = ' Y -’ ' CHICAGO. Oct. _5»"°-Rlllh Which in Tsbril, who now exist on uid re- It never fails to brin relief d ia li ` ' ' ' - Sufi” at “ine °'°\°°i fb". “‘°"‘|“3' ceived from the American Relief Ooml your own individual cue it ill” hn‘ ‘ ~ ' ‘ 'wllilgl D°BfP°U€m°l1¢ li- 1°-45 °f 'M5 mission,”-lead u mostwpreolrious life. same So universal h ‘eb w do ‘ Q 3"-Q °°“" "°"d “°|.‘i.°l 3°'m°" w°°“"i Blwiuid' Belvdn -be captured by the :ess bf this tar-fumoda:ur§°|‘.l|':i_m mc- ' 9 O ' ar pgmltllns. the sem '"1 be P\“Y°‘* reruns, u, l»~pn»p,u»1e that the snug me umleuni with thi ul "W ‘ ' ln hicagu tomorrow, the teams go-l _ _ - __ to M - B Bello owes ~‘ lng to Clnclnnati_.'l‘¥_¢|duy_for the .ion .v-. .- ‘u m°°"'°° "7 lt- ' -» . ' gg es. i _ __ ' , 'm - -- ---- --___....___-._ __ __ T New _ U/.anvil If»i_-1»,\ .» .- _‘ ' i _ __ _ _ . 11.1;-:.1.ff:';:<~.<. fu.-OF_F Bsos i.iMiri-in 1 t Is the Giveatiliamiiy Shoe Store. Bring -itldbg-the whole lot from’baby`t5 §,f§,,',|f“h-W. _ . . fa... .4 .1 .-. ._ _ - __ _ ._._ _ sivi-:ciAi,.L__Y_ Piucsn ~ _ _ _ .filters aiu!-tlllslitlall-fework-fb°°h__sl;°tn@ht omni shot;-.-nn... `;,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,- -` ,,_,,,,,,¢y _ . _ . ;_ - - _ - _ - ,_ ____________ _ _ _ i i -4 _ '_ _..-"_‘.1";‘__ .2 ,_________.»__;,__;-_ '_ 2 gg; _ _» _ _ _ _ _ __ ____ . _ _._ _. .ri»_,i v 4 l ~ - -» - s < - » - ~. l - :- a A ..'°~...._&ri.iz1l. t..isL-_'.ttii.ii.l un.. ia. an f.-nieces' ‘ ‘ Andrew-a‘~ . 'run norm Fnolvf THE ~