1.. ri *.*.!'. _‘ri l \ if ii 4 i I-‘ouae .- . 5 1--` ,-_ 7.';."F-7'i'.»="'W_ _-W . i wi _ ~ ,. 1, _ - _ _ -_ ..-,~,~~; ,. 5.. 5,.. ' . »-.it-v.t.\-_ rw 'icq ,, ,,,,,._;, , ...,,y.,__,._;. .i»Vt1v_,;»' ~, m»¢v.~.i- THE 1', . 1 » r \ 1_ ” Niiiiyf, t i --_ as JA i i i -~ mai m' i ALIENATED SYMPATHY The inhuman cruelty ol’ the German soldiers has 'alien- -:- TPI E -:- illiarinilelown Guardian ated much of the sympathy they mlsbt IIIVG l'0¢9iV°d fmm neutral nations. A correspondent of the Boston Herald. after citing some of the atrocities perpetrated at different stages of the war, most of’ which have been mentioned in our news columns, concludes thusz- And when such atrocities are calmly defended by German f/*T y \ Advertising Phons.._. ._ ....132-3 Subscription Phone.... . . . .. . . ....132-2 News and Edit, Day Phone.... . .. . . ........133 News and Edit. Night Phonee.... ......132A133_ ._ __ ii ____ Head Office at Charlottetown Branch Offices at Summer- side. Aiberton, Souris and Montague. . .London Office. Marconi House, Stand W- C- President_... A. Bartlett Managing Editor.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..J. R. Burnett scrupulous observance of that military law which permits the bombardment of fortified places] has this country no other concern than passively to scquicsce ?Every instinct of humanity is prompting this nation to cry to Germany. S "lliilillililiilllllll apologists as being merely unfortunate incidents in the G°""\lfl Fliron' Fire on Each Otiier SHIIWS iililillllii _ Filllili illlii ln Converglng 'Attack at Night SPIES AR! EVERYWHERE ignsi From Allies Lines by Means of “Since you have chosen to iight, you must fight fair. Do not try to justify foul play by Professional llllil>blSB- YOU Colored Lights must cease from the indiscriminate slaughter of non-com- longer carry on your campaign of tei-rorizatlon_ You will 1 never win anything by it in this world but the hate of us o lf we as a nation deliver such a message, we may save c human lives. But if we continue to construe neutrality in 8 dropped. on Paris or Antwerp or London, and again women 3 and children are slain or left writliing in agony, why should DUTY , __€l__ Today, as perhaps never before in this generation the word Duty is on cvcry lip-and sincerely. Evcr_vbod_v l'cailSl‘S Ilia! it scrtous duty tonlronts tlw Empire, thc dominion the province. thc comn1tinit_v_ cvcn the individual, anti that the duty must bc pcrfurinvti, but e\'er_vbody does not realize what thc ext-:tit of his own duly is. it is zi comparatively easy nialtcr to specify what soiiicliotly clsc should do or give liut it is anotlicnnisltf-r when it cutiies right ll0\\'l1 IO llvills or giving for ourselves. ln thc prcsciit <':inipni;:n for help in the carrying on of the war there arc inzigiiifircnt examples of genuine pat- riotism, the patriotism that iiivolvcs sztt~rii"it-c. These are thc tow, iiowt-vcr. thc iiiiijority have not reaclicti the stage of siit-riiicc :uid thc-re :irc t-von stiinll souls who, in this as in t-\'<\r,\' other duly, will nicct the tic-tiiaiid with "How little ran l get oil with?" rather than with "flow much vnu l givt>':" \\'c have- not _wt rvuclicii the stage of sacrifice. \Ve arc giving otit of our zilitiiidance. \\'e know nothing of want and i'1»\-: oi' tis will givc to thc point of denying ourselves vt-r_v ninii_\' of tht- iicccssities, cvvn of the luxuries of life. We do not _.top oi`tf_-n t-nough to think what is required of us or \\.'li_\' it is rcfiuirod. \\`e know nothing of war or its liorrors. nothing ot' wiiat our volunteers have undertaken to f-ndurc, nothing of what is cndurctl by a country over wliit-ii wnr hits sw:-pt with ull its unnumcalile horrors of want, flcstitution, rrinic. iiiurdcr and pillage. And wc might iiuvc known; in moments of staggering faith wo t-vcn four tliait we muy yet know. We are as if stanfling outsidc thc operating room whore one ncar and dear to tis is in tht- hands oi' thc surgeons. \\-'c have fnith in tin- siirgf-ons but, while they hold out hope, we know that tho critical opt-rntion is not yet ovcr and wc await thc outcome with niinglr-<1 hops: :ind four. llut it is more than this; it is wc our_=t~l\'cs who arc on the operating litble, it is our own lives that arc hanging in the lialtincc. The war is not far-ol`f llritaiirs; it is ours for we are llritziin und if slit: fails wc fail. If wc could realize this, could rt-nlizo thait noi only our national hut our individual life is :it stake in tho conflict now dcluging Europe with blood. our giving and our helping would come nearer to that iiiviisurc which says “All that ti iunu hath will he give for his life." (‘oiit,riliutions :irc living rcccivcd from till over the prov- incc to :iid in one wily or iiiititlicr in carrying on the war. lilniiy nrt- giving lilicrall_\' :tllhotigli fcw ave making sacri- fices. Soiiir- :irc giving grudgingly its if thc outcome of thu wat' or tho sui`i`ci~iiig of those tvho huvc been niittlc des- titutc li_\' it ncrv no t-ont-orn oi' thi-irs; they ure content to ici ollicrs do tht-ir lighting and their suffering and their sat-rihi-ing. Tho hiiiipirc is going to win in this struggle; its life is going to lic .szi\'cd iiul iii it i'ciirl'ul cost. Wu who have eti- joyctl its prott><'tion, who form part of it and who without it would lic hclplt-ss, should noi. lic content with doing the least possililc, wc should bo rcady to niakc as grctii a. szicriiico tis if thc war llirrftilciictl to swccp over our own proviiicu and 4-nrry its inurdcr and outrage into our own lionit-.-a. And this doing should not bo too long delayed; it should lic tlonv now :uid with grcitilutlc lliait wc have only to givc ol' our incnns and of our nhtinrlztiicc. This is otir duty to tin- liinpiro, to ltuiiiztnity, and to ourselves. THE NAVY’S GREAT SERVICE .\'o1 si litilc iiiipiiticiirc hits liocn cxliiliitcd in rcrtnin riuurir-rs ov'-r what is ilcscrilivfl as ilic inactivity of tho llritisli N:i\'_‘.' in thi- North Siva. .\lr. \Vinston (‘hurrhill found it tif-vc.-tsnry to nllny fvcliiig to n rw-rtziin cxlciit by pron|i:~=ing that in the cvcnt of thi- (icrmaii flocl remaining inuf-li longer within the fortifiod and mint: protcctod Kicl (finial. it would lic dtig otil like rats. Whlln it, is cxiispcr- ating that our iiiiigiiilir-clit navy sliould rcniiiiii so long inac- tlvt-, it must lic liornc in iiiitid that this inactivity does not cfiiiwitc tiscli-'duff-_-'s_ i-`:ir i`roiii it. The _\"1\'_'.' hy bottling up thi- (it-rinzin ilcot is fulfilling ont-_ of thc prime purposes of its existcm-c. it is daily inflicting on our enemies in~ .lurit-:; t'r;inp:irr»zl with which tliosc inflicted hy the hind fort-les :irc nol_hiiig_ Tlif- pr#-ssurc ol' our nrmics is liinltod, to u grcul t>.\t1_-nl, lo thc imniediiite pohit of contact. The prcssurt- iii' tht- I\'iiv_\' is foil in 1-vt-ry liomc in Germany. As a <'orrr-_-apoiivlr-iii ol` ont: oiotir r-onteinporiirics cfTer'tivt‘l_v points out lhcro orc oilicr ways of killing a dog than hanging him. The five million or tlicroiiliouts of cotiiliatant Ger- mans niiglit coiicoivubly lit- willing to fight to thc last man. llui tiicir powt-r io t-oiitiiiiic fighting alt-pctirls on the will lingnvss und nliillty ol' thc sixt_\'~niilliiin non-cotnliatants in support tht-iii. To thu niivy licloiigs it double function. It is its duly lo ki-cp open the trudo routcs, and thereby Plliililv _our own non conilialnnls to indefinitely provide for thc nriiiorl forces on lnntl or sea. it is likewise its duty to t-lost: down the Iiiuritimo trade of the enemy and thereby inipitlr its crfonomic ability to continue the struggle. Botti thrso conditions have been fulfilled in pre-emincnt degree. Not in the days of Nelson, nor after Trafalgar itself, did we give the world sucii an indication of sea power, and all it involves, as in the very first week of the war. On the day that war was declared German maritime commerce ceal-ictl_ The great hulk of exports and imports, aggregat- ing five thousand million dollars was suddenly cut off. This meant that all the German industries dependent upon this oversee trade were suddenly brought to a stand- still. The factories were closed down, the employees dis- charged, and the means of production and livelihood wiped out. Thus the sixty-millions of non-combatants will soon have trouble.enough to feed and supply themselves let alone carry a fighting army on their backs. lt is more than probable should the Allied Armies do no more than not eyes bc tumed to us from over-seas and voices say. h share in the guilt." 5 "l suppose that it is difficult for people 3,000 miles away 0 to believe the atrocities that the German officers and sol- b and the Red Cross nurses who had their hands cut off 5 the rough way they treated wounded prisoners; they are “ right here in the London hospital (Whitechapel). I am believed it possible that the Germans would have proved themselves such barbarians as they have proved themselves h during the last six weeks." C The writer is a Massachusetts man \vho has spent 30 (1 years in London and is a well-kiiown business nian there. o Daily News of Pasadena, California, gives the text of a let- B Leopold Flelschmann upon the outbreak of the war. This Z alleged letter makes an alleged member of The Times' 0 staff say:-“I tlilnk, to use Lord Sallsbury's polite phrase wrong horse' The British Empire has more to fear from L l purpose of misleading fznoricaii public opinion on ire publication, “Tho Pntlierlaiitl" are trying to mislead it on 8 the Atlantic const. The Pasadena ictter is but a single d _ _ d outcropping of the dcvilish machinations carried on by the German Press ilurcau, both nt home and abroad. (Ton- b of diplomatic and political intelligence, which it supplies of ihesc iicwspupcrs and some of these correspondents arc batants and from wanton destruction; you must not any 0 a _ .. ‘ i who were once your friends. ;‘:d M the Franc” arm es e - ' terms of silent acquiescence, when the next bombs are shal Sir John French. This account D “You might have saved them, and you were silent; you front. This has been accompanied by Another correspondent in the same issue says this: 3 diers have committed, but we have here in London the t°"Pid during me Wet days' An advan' _ . tage has been taken of the arrival of wounded soldiers who were maimed after they were shot, emmrcemems, to relieve. by fresh roops, the men who have been on because they remonstrated with the German soldiers over the firing line for some time. Several baptism of fire during the week. quite ready to say that before the war I would not have GERMAN3 |=|RE QN EACH OTHER. eived which' points to the fact that LONDON. October 2. -- The flicial Press Bureau issued at night a descriptive account of the perations in force in France. immediate touch with it. ommunicated by an eye-witness life- nt at the headquarters of Field Mar upplements that issued on September 4 from general headquarters: ".1lspt_ 25, 1914.-For four days there as been a com arative lull along our spell of fine weather. though the ights are now much coldér. One can- ot have everything, however. and ne evil result of the sunshine has een the release of flies which were nits. therefore, have received their “Since the last letter left general eadquarters evidence has been re- uring counter attacks on the night IUIIIIIUQI ml? may not lssve resido be- ._ m_ _ _ _ _ may not quit their m rson may on any pass through? the Brit sh lines autlicrlsstion. countersigned by a l ish officer. ~- -- “Evsnts have moved so quickly dur- ing the last two months that anything connected with the mobilisation of the British expeditionary force is now ll!- cient history. Nevertheless. the foi- iowlng extract of a German order is evidence of the lllystillC8ll0l\ Of U18 enemy and is a tribute to the value of the secrecy. well and loyslly maintain- ed at the time in England:-. "Tenth Reserve Army Headquar- ters, Mont S. Gilbert mil HAPPENINGSE liii WEEK One of the most delightful musical events of the seas an was the Recital in St. James Church on Thursday evening under the direction of Mr. F. T. Watkis assisted by Miss Galle Of New York. Miss Hughes of Charlotte- 'town and Mr.~R. T. Rice of Toronto. O O 0 Mrs. Geoffrey Fitzgerald and Mrs. And added to the cruelty of German soldiers is the more (antry Area into each other as the re' t` Sunday, the 20th, the German in- ~ i th gentle vice of systematic and “cultured” lying. The sun °f an attempt to earn out e ter said to have been written by one Thomas H. Keel, portion of our position a considerable _ . _ . l l foremost literary men in England,’ to ati individual called before dark' and some hours a er angerous expedient of a converging dvance ln the dark. Opposite one “Associate Editor of the London Tinies and one of the “lagging °f mmm” wrces was observed furious fusilade was heard in front f our line, though no bullets came ver our trenches. “This narrative begins with Sept. 1 and covers only two days. Today, in reference to the Crimean war, ‘we have backed the 5 he 21st, there was but little rain, and he weather took a turn for the better, Itussiii than Germany." Of course no such person has \\_'lliCll 11115 been l11HlIll&iH€d~ The 9°' iver been connected with The Times. The Times even "'°tr,'n“'aS practicallyt°°""“e%h§‘E slit? declares that it izcver even heard of him. ;"‘ ery’ our guns H one p The letter and signature are fictitious invented for the w _,_ d Pacitic coast n-L the `Gori'ntin Ambassador and that curious expended B' large ““mb°r of Shells in n trolled by thc Government, this Bureau posses a monopoly and wounded were picked “p` A num' ii tent were also found. There were to newspapers in Germany and to the correspondents of Olllffr Signs Ula! D0!‘ll0llS Of lll0_€l\€i!lY foreign newspapers who send news from Germany. Many had been withdrawn for some mstance' ng and driving sway the enemy, who ere cndeavoring to construct a de- oubt. The Germans, for their part. long range bombardment of n village. "Reconnoitering parties sont out uring the night of 21-22 covered some eserted trenches, and in them, or ear them in the woods, ovcr 100 dead er of rifles, ammuiiltioii ami cqulp- Miss Marjory Gane who has been Esplanade, left for her home in New York on Friday morning. On the DPC- vious afternoon Mrs. Gane entertain- ed at an informal musicale and her guest who is s. gifted violinist played very beautifully, accompanied on the piano by Mr. l-‘_ T. Watkls. Marv Davies and her cousin Miss Tuesday, Sept. 22, was also iliie, subsidized from the secret service funds of the German Government. The information they publish is' carefully watched. anti they are reprimanded and their subsidies Since the war commenced a continued flood of ` false. statements favorable to Gerniany's prospects have been sent all over the world. lf they receive as little credence elsewhere as they do just now in Canada atid the United States, the Berlin Government might better spend its nionoy on Zeppelins or subniarines._ er for thc next era in our civilization, what then? _min Q0 l_ _il _ NOTES accidciit in nine months. The credit is not given to Prohibition, but to the system which sends offciitlim; chauffeurs to work the roads. pcopio are saying about them. vitc the winged Hun to an illuininntcd decoy in suburban fields whore he may drop his concentrates of Wagner music and sandhags of culturc with little damage? It is ii good rulc not to look for gas trouble with a light. Thc licad official of the German-American (lhaniber of (‘oniincrcc,vsays an American Exchange, turns out to lie a he still bears allegiance, while posing as an American citi- zen. This discovery is the grain of suit needed -to flavour thc literary output of the Chamber. If Canada now becomes a refuge for thousands of ex- iled Belgians, they will bring wltli them the profitable lace lndustry. and at the same time they will inaugurate a ncw era in cfiicicnt intensive farming, the general adop- tion of which by Canadian agriculturists would re-create the provinces and the Dominion economically and iii- dustrlnlly. Scotland. cvcr to the front in defence of her hc-arths and homes, leads ln the recruiting. The returns of recruiting more rapidly since the passage of the Home Rule Bill. An antl~wsr poster of Death shovelling the working peo- ple into the mouth of s cannon was posted all over Buda- pest on a recent Sunday. and led to the arrest of numer- ous Soclslist leaders. The Government also forbade the holding of a parade for peace. The first of the nations that took up the sword in the present war seemingly would like to have the excuse to drop it first. Says an exchange.-The opinion, said to have recently been expressed by the Kaiser, that the invasion of France has been a nasco, recalls astory told afew years ago by William Jennings Bryan to the Toronto Press Club. A more than usually indoient negro boy down South, when sent to hold their own in France, the end of the war o I lend a mule to water, tied the halter strap round his waist _ W nl ss- suredly be obtained through financial and economic col- liecause he was too lazy to hold it in his hand. and when he PDM. llid lil I large measure this will result from the came back to consciousness in the hospital bis remark- titivsl pressure. _'rho economic positions msy take timo‘ 1_0 dvveiriii. tvstvirtr-noni-mmrsmsey ii is inevitable. l ,oi ;\..,i t ‘ * \ a’ was: "I knew, the very first jump that mule took, l had made a mistake." - ' ’ ‘ withdrawn if their work does not come up to expectations. Suppose Germany should win and become the pacemak- Portlzind, Muine,_boasts of only having one automobile News of the outside world is about cut off from the Ger- man puiilic, part of which is reported to lie chafing at the situation. Perhaps the peoplc are just as well off in their ignorance as if the customary channels of information were open. Now they cannot hear thc unflnttcring thitigs other It is hard to understand why London throws u search- liglit aloft from its densely populated sections. Why not in- suiijcct of thc Kaiser, a prince and n potcntnte, to whomhare “S fonnwsz” with less wind, and was one of the most uneventful days that has passed since we reached the Aisne-unevenb ful, that is, for the British. ' There was less artillery work on= each side.; the Germans, nevertheless giving another village a taste of the Jack Johnson,’ BODIES OF GERMANS LIE IN HEAPS. “The spot thus honored was not far from the ridge where some of the most severe close fighting in \v‘hich we have taken part has occurretl. All over this No Man’s Land between the lines, the bodies of German infantry are still lying in heaps where they have fallen at different times. “Espionage plays so large a part in the conduct of the war by the Ger- mans that it is difficult to avoid fur- ther reference to the subject. They have evidently never forgotten the saying of Frederick the Great: "When Marshal Soubise goes to war he is fol- owed by a hundred cooks; when I take the field l nm preceded by a hundred spies." "indeed, until iibout twenty years ago, there was s paragraph in their service reguglatlous, directing that the service of ‘protection in the field.' namely, outposts and advanced guards should always he supplemented by u system of espionage, GERMAN SPY METHODS. "Though such instructions arc no longer made public the Germans. as is well known, still carry them into ef- fect. Apart from the most elaborate arrangements which were made in peace time for obtaining information by paid agents, sonic of the mctliods which are being eniployod for the col- lection or conveying of intelligence “Men in plain clothcs signal to the German lines from poitits in the hands of the encmy by means of colored lights at night nnd puffs of smoke from chimneys by day. Pseudo labor- ers working in the ilolds between the armies have been detected conveying information, and persons in plain clothes have nctcd as advnnco scouts to the German cavalry when advanc- ing. CHURCH CLOCK AS SIGNAL TO ENEMY. “German officers and soldiers in plain clothes, or in French or British uniforms, have remained in localities His presence was only discovered through the erratic movements of the hands of the church clock, which- he was using to signal to his friends by means of an improvised semaphore code. Had this man not been seized, it is probable he would have signalled to the Gemian artillery at the time of their arrival the exact location of the staff. A high explosive shell would then have mysteriously dropped on the building. "Women spies have also been caught; secret agents have been found at the railroads observing entrain- from St. Paul"s Church Wednesday Miss Susan Croskill to Mr. Gerald P. Bremner. The young couple who are very popular in the younger soci- al circlcs received many handsome ldi ift d - delightful hour was spent in con- Miss Geraldine Fitzgerald has Mr. Jack Hnszard luis returned to rcsunic his studies at McGill. Miss of Mr. and Mrs. Rogers D. \Vestaway lncr of this city. thc marrlagoto takc place in the First Methodist Church on Wednesday mornitig, Oct. 14th. Holland (lovo'is *now closed for the season, the last summer resort people to leave being Mr., and Mrs J. P. Gor- clty this week. ' O t O Mrs. Richard Johnson of Sackvlllc is cnjoylng a visit with i)r. H. D. and lilrs. Johnson and is receiving a hear-1 ty welcome from many of her old friends. . . . Rev. Mr. Woodroofe acconipaiiled by his son Jack of Dartmouth. N. S., are renewing old acquaintances in _ Charlottetown. » O l 0 _ Miss Malcolm, of Somerville. Mass.. was the guest this week of l\irs. Croskill. _--.- uf si.; Horse? The cold weather will soon be upon us, and you will uziguxist 26. 1914. t need a good warm rug to protect your Horse inthe Winter “ ‘Corp`s order. 21st August: The Season’ _ ' _ A _ K French troops in front of the Tenth when you are buymg 3 Horse Rug y0l,l, 31W3!'§ Want Army Corps have retreated south to bu the -best donit you and get the Bestv [ue or om- scross the Sambre_ Part of the Bel- Y If ou ’are rticdlar in having theiest, anxlllltl gisn army has withdrawn to Antwerp. money. _ Y _ Pad I t Show ou the uluvineime lt is reported that an English army real afu¢|e,¢all in an e US ¥{ ima diseminu-ima at Canis and" Bou- Brandii These are the genump Horse ugs, and we have '°‘“°' °“ '°"t9 f°'~ B'“°°°'°' them in all sizes at the following prices: nucttiure & canvas Rugs. mnsms in i>§§¢§5ffé>m'~ -'-= $1.50 . 8. English Wool Blankets, $4.50 and __ ._......$5.75 Before purchasing your requirements in Horse Rugs, iitirilwurcfoé let us show you our St0C if ir possible for him ‘ me guest of ivn-_ ima Mrs. G. A. cane, The homes and dependents of over 50.000 Policyhold- ers are protected by _The Great-West Life-protected un~ iier Policies containing every privilege of modem Life nsurance. Permit the Company Lo provide personal rates-age nearest birthday. Sir Louis Davi.es,*Lady Davies, Missl ~ Davies of England left Wednesday Oil Head omce ' ' " winnipeg* return to Ottawa--having spent ti dc- Branch omge . . . Charlgtfetoyqll ,__ lighiful summer in Charlottetown. ' ' ' l Mana M . A. A. Barnett and mrs. i:.s. . gersv Blanrcshard are to serve ten at the 5 -- Coe,'Ltde P. E, I, G°" Unk” this ,““§"‘2°“' ` Offices 61 Queen St, Telephone No 67. \Ve¢ldlng bells rang out brightly H'-U--~ ' i \ v .fy i te T1, \, I ‘ ' ` . `\ Rugs e _ f » \ f .\ Mr. Horseman: . 1 _f ,ah- / _/Lv. 1. , 1- -I , -il ~ L -E555? Abel tivelre chaperéikiiesoatltheueiiiilall gil- r___*__-"___-__ . forma ance n e ws a Wednesday evening, given in |l0“0l' -. ` of M1--» M-mlm °f S“'““"="*"°~ i~ HOME DEFENCE 4 . _ Mass.. and Mr. Christie of Sydney, N. : _ S' A prominent Journal says:-“The special situation ' ' ' ' h d d fb dh b Miss Rena Mcnean. daughter of which now confronts un re so rave_sonsat_i us_ ands Hon. John Mcbwl- S°“fl_S- Wh" ll” (proceeding to war anti conscious of insufficient Life In- lefl ff" the ‘W “S “ “ed ("`°“ N““°’ surance) differs in degree rather than in kind from the un- i” 'mowed by the "aye" of a wide t 'ut of life that laces the individual at an time And circle of home friends for her safe re- 31- in H _ _ - tum when-ner noble services have it is to hedge against the financial loss w ich alw s been completed- Her father was ll' thus threatens home and dependents that the thoughtafiil Q“e"“` “ll” Week bld‘““g he' ‘“"““' breadwinner carries the largest amount of life insurance e e s ' 'Xl if ~ nioriilng announcing the marriage of F I _ - 1 -- t wc( ng g s an are at present en - Q joying their wedding trip in Boston. After the wedding, breakfast was 1 " ' served at the bride's home to a tiuni- lier of thc immediate friends and a ` re- ' ‘ sratuiaiions ‘and 'spoil wishes. “MISS M. M¢D0nald, Of the ViCf0\’ia on Saturday em,,_g. nery Parlors, has returned from her buying 3;?/ioulal/Ir. Gedigld Brgtitinel” magg with 3. HUG display Of the lateSt entertained by a number of his gent- 'nary' _ lemen friends to a dinner iii the Blake She W!" b€ p|€3Sed ‘O meet her Old *CIISJ Hotel After ii most delightful rc- ‘ past, 'toaats were drank to the future torners and. solicits the patronage of happiness of the groom and u pleas- gellefal pllbllf. ant social cvei1in_g_sp’ent. 5839_10_2M61 - ,_ i t turned to Oitawg havmg had a piea. sant visit here with her parents Jus- tice and Mrs Fitzgerald. ____ _ | U U O Y ` ' don and family who returned to the ` of Lower Montague to Mr. W. T. Wei- 0 Stove is Here Your new base burning hall stove is here,- and for real heat production from small coal supply it is the best thing that you could put into the house. - ‘vi .i _ Our_ hail stoves last long. give supreme satisfaction every time they are in use. They are the kind that give excellent heat twenty- four hours in every day, and cost very little 'in up-keep. ` Fenneii & chandler victoria no ’ ` , W from August 4 to September 15 show that 64.444 Scots, or evacuated by the Germans ln order . T "79 of thc total male population, enlisted The ercen i0 f\||""l5|\ lllelil Wllh intel" BHC!! Mr Christie' of Sydnoy is the guest _ I I" "‘ ° V ' .. 8 ' ofDr‘. and M s.C n , " ' Y - _ G A tage in England was 2.41, in Wales 1.94. and in ireland 0"e “Dy °' ‘M5 kind W” f°““d by r 0 my F-t 7]? l lilary Haszard accompanied hcr bro- ' - ther cn the return to Montreal. ' i £4 'ti' The engagemfent*is°announccd this week of Miss Belle l.enorc_ daughter , L 1 i 1 ments and detrslnments. it is a sim- ple matter for sries to mix with refu- gees moving about to their homes; dif- ficult for our troops, who speak neither French nor German. to detect them. "The French have found it necessary ant with quality. to gunrd inst spying lotta piiliiloa 1 _ ._ i ’ 1 i 1 _ gn' ' , ' <1 “/--.f-.>,f.-if-_ 2-.~.f'.: '.r I '-- ,i . . uf 1,.; vi ., " . »‘fr.=1_._,<_-,,_-._< j., ~ , _ _, ‘ \ » iff: ' ~ ,.-,._ 1.1!. 3,-=_ -“»,‘» » »~‘ iff' -F . ._ -2- . .t _ i f ' 1 1,* 1.1 “ix- t h lll g sind also casual way-~ . _ _ __ fa:-:rash the :aids for csrrier pigeons. iwl ¢|l|il|i’¢lI!8 HCI! Proof chi|d".r. Amongst the precautions taken by us lg*-.|,(¢g¢| gg yup tion of tmfollowlng notice, printed Uh -MTU- N if ‘ __@_"ggTw_ _ _ -ti _' _ We,ve sturdy, reliable lchildren’s shoes with soft strong uppers and good- soles Plenty of styles to choose from-comfortable, easy fitting shapes ' _ our troops hidden in s church tower. M _93. lrisli recruiting is now going ahead much Childreifs F ootwear , i-fi sims for dress si _ - - ' . reet or play and all priced at tie lowest possible price consist t 1 1