mmoww»mw¢ . - ¢ IIOZA ~ , », new .ggi , ,. 1: C Q ‘ l ` l 1 The Guardian is Read Daily by 42,000 People. Sworn Circulation Statement Furnished Advertisers I v . - I’ 46Ii't`°4‘¥" nw"-'-`-‘~'-""""""""A'_`A:`_'_'_'T'_'A""'_'A'A'A"""”"""""""fr'-`Y'-'~`-`~`~'-`-`-‘-‘ff-1*-¢r_-_~.-_-_»_-_-_-_-:_-_-_______..___________________________,_________________________ _ _ _ _ _________ ________________ __________ _ __ _ _ _ ___________________ __ _ ______ _______ ~ - - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ ___ _ _ _ _ __ _-_ _-_ _-_-_ _-_-_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-_ _-_ _ _-_-_ _-_ _-_ _-_-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-__-_-___-_-_-_-_-:_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-___-_-_________-_________;____________-_-_,_-___-_-_-_N_-___-_-_-_-____-.-_-_ _ _-_ _-_-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ -. THE CHARLOITETOW G ARDIA IVICRINIIYG DAILY C Momma Dill! '°"'\¢°¢ 1391 Q ` ` I sa so P v u uv u I uvsnes ' 4 W Weekly (now Evening DslI¥)_V1887 ' _ { '5g_50e;,°,.°3;a(,Ey ,:,;°|| Il,;;,,a,,¢,_ SIR GEO. E. FOSTER AT CHARLOTTETOWN _--w-|o\,.... so Eloquently Discusses the War Situ- ation and the Loving Citizens Duty ol Liberty- oi the Empire in Time of National I Peril. An unprecedentedly large audience tilted the People's Theatre last even- ing when Sir George E. Foster, Minis- ter of Trade of Commerce, delivered a iiiagnificeut patriotic address, the eloquence and forceful logic of which could not fail to move the most in- different to a sense of duty in the present national crisis. Long before the time appointed for the opening of the meeting the hall was crowded, and when the speaker took the platform there was not a single vacant seat. The members of the P.E. Island Bat- tery were provided with seats on the platform, and the Fourth Regiment Band was in attendance. Lieutenant Governor McDonald presided and Vin- troduced Sir George Foster, and"asso- elated with them on the platform were the Chief Justice, Sir W. W. Sullivan, Messrs Justices Haszard and Fitz- geraid, the Premier Hon. J. A. Mathie- son, Mr A. A. McLean, M.P., Rev. Dr Fullerton, Rev. Canon Simpson, Col. Peake, Lieut. W. B. Prowse, Lieut. Temple McDonald and Lleut. Ritchie. Before Sir George Foster addressed the meeting a splendid musical pro- gramme was contributed to by the Band, Lieuts. Ritchie and Robins and Mr Frank Oliver and Mr Stanley, the new singer of the People's Theatre, who made quite an impression on the audience in a beautiful song "lilt." The platform was tastefully decorated for the occasion with flags and flowers and presented quite an attractive ap- pearance. His Honour the Lieutenant Governor having introduced him in a few remarks, Str George Foster, rising amidst deafening applause, said: This is a patriotic meeting, so ad- vertised ,I believe, and so understood.” That it is a patriotic meeting as ad- vertised snd understood counts two things-first, that we have a country, and secondly. that there is some rea- son of duty or desire why ut this par- ticular time we are principally rc- ininded of it. That is an idea, a twin idea, which underlies all our meetings that are being held in Canada during this important and troublous time. it is a patriotic meeting in which l, for my own part, am not going to dic- tate to any man as to what he should do, or scold any man for not doing as l think he ought to do; and "man" includes <"woman" as well in this category. It is a meeting where we propose to talk some things over and, if, possible, make some things plain which may nqt be overplain to all of us, and, if possible, rein ourselves up square and face to face with our duties in the premises. A common remark which we hear every day is this, that Canada does not yet sense what this war means and that therefore seh is more quiet than she otherwise would he if she did thoroughly sense the importance of the occasion and lay that importance upon her conscience and her mind. Now, I am not one to chide the lack of knowledge and the lack of informa- tion and the consequent lack of inter- est in so far as there is s lack. There is much to be said in Canada/s favour. Over a hundred years and more we have been lapped in the gentle breezes and soft atmosphere of an enduring peace. The menace of war has been far from us. We have been encircled with the -wings of British power typi- fied by the army and navy; we have been brought up in the belief that that army and navy is quite sufficient for our protection against any foe or any combination of foes; and in that century of peace and tluiclnei! Bild security we have thought little of war and we have perhaps sensed little.of the enormous changes that the last fifty years or twenty-five years have brought into this great world of ours. But to-day we are rudely awakened; and on that century of peace bursts almost in sn instant the sounds of the most tremendous war that history has ever been called upon to chronicle. A year ago and a little more it broke out, and there is not a manhere. prob- ably not a man in the wide domain of Canada, that ever expected that the WM. after it had broken. out. would last for more than three or six months. But s yesr liss passed-a tremendous- i4llnsrd's Llnlmsnt euros .Neursigls oomivo EvEN'rs. . ANNOUNCEMENTS. ‘ MEETINGS. sro. ONI C-INT per word each inter- tlon for advertising in this column. culi must accompany ordw- WM' mum ohsrges, -twenty-ave cents- “C as tretcberl. 750 "CI" AVI' culturzllwl-lslT . 2273-7-WMU- "Remembar the Church Picnic at Crspsud on Ssturdsy afternoon. if the day is no) line will be held 01; lolioiilll Mhlldly. 2577-8-1811181 ly eventful year-and after twelve months of that war, so vast, so ter- rible, so all-embracing, we are bound, on this platform to-iilght, to voice the conclusion that instead of seeing the end of it we have not yet reached the zenith of that war. All the months that have preceded have been, on the part of the Allies, months of prepara- tion for the great and final struggle of the war; all those months that have passed have filtered certain facts into our minds, slowly, gradually, which have been filling us with this thought, growing ever larger, that the peril was greater than we had thought, that the menace was more terrible than we had dreamed; and we are fast coming to the conclusion to-day that the Brit- ish Empire, to go no further, is in the first throes of a death struggle which is to end one way or the British Empire shall have passed the zenith of its power, and its radiant sun of centuries begun to go down wastering to clouds and oblivion. De we really feel that in our hearts to-day? Or are we still simply spectators of a iight three thousand miles away and with which he have little interest, and upon which little hangs for our liberties, our weal or our woe? We are coming slowly, but we are never- theless coming there, and if any word of mine and of the other earliest speakers throughout the length and breadth of tlils country can serve to bring that conclusion sooner, they have done a good work and accom- plished the purpose for which they set out. For until that impression fills our hearts and fills our lives the Brit- ish Empire will not be where it ought to be in the effort to maintain its civilisation and its liberty. (Cheers.)' Now, this is true in this war and it is a thing we have to struggleagaiiist. Yousee figures in the newspapers about the cost of this war to Great Britain and the cost of this war to Franco, and the cost of this war to Russia and the cost of this war to the other warring parties. lt is millions first; it is millions of millions after- wards; it is billions after that, and it is coming to be billions of billions. It does not strike us. \Vhy? Because to semi u billion dollar' mark at a man's mind misses its mark entirely; it is so vast that it confuses calculation, and consequently it misses the aim of pro- ducing convictlon, It is much the same with reference to this war. His- tory, as I said, never recorded anything like it. in all great wars of the past, if they were all placed together, and in one area fought out the issues of the centuries that have gone, there would be nothing which would absolutely compare with the contest which is on to~day, and its very vastness over- powers and confuses us and makes it almost impossible to get at its proper significance and its proper importance. There you are with a long front to-day stretching from Holland down to Swit- zerland. six or seven hundred miles in ienglli, and along that, for twelve months, nilllions of men on either side have been swaying to and fro in the death grip of a terrible contest. And after twelve months have passed what happens? I happened to take up the other day the "Times" of October 7, 1914. and on one of those luminous maps published in the Times there was the coiiftguratlon of the two op- posing armies on that front of which I have just spoken. I looked at it, and I took up the map of configuration to-day, and I was struck. as I had never been struck before, with the significance of the fact. patent to my eye. that the difference of configura- tion on October 7. 1914. and in June of this year, the difference between them measured by feet and by inches. That shows you what the struggle has been. Four millions of men, more or less, have been engaged on that front, and yet, after twelve months of stguggle, they stand in trenches and on terri- tory which measures in feet and inches the difference between their positions in October, 19,14, and to-day, Then there is another wide battle front. seven hundred miles in length, stretching from the Baltic down to the Adriatic, and along that line there has been more motion. There has been the surge towards the west. there has been the back surge towards the east, there has been the third surge back again towards the west and the Car pathians. and there is now the drive again to the east which has assumed large proportions and threatens the very existence of the present armies of one of our greatest and most power- ful Allies. The distance in ground gained and lost is measured in this case by hundreds of miles, but the issue. the final issue. is as indefinite as it was one year ago, as between the armies on that eastern portion of the war. Then the Dardanelles has been added to the conflict, and n. struggle there of Herculean proportions is taking place. In a country the original and natural configuration of which would make it most difficult for an opposing army to geln victory over lsinsrrie Llnlment guru Ill‘8°\ I” °°‘“ F* bwsgpplsced defences, but which, when -_ wr York was torpedocd today by ii Ger- man submarine. south of Ireland. The ship was struck without warning uiltl sank in eleven iniiiutes. 'l`l\ur0 were twenty five Americans on board 'and at least sixteen are known to have been saved. Out of the total passengers and crew about 375 wcro saved, so the loss of life is indicated at less than fifty. Many survivors have been landed at Queenstown. (Special to The Guardian) LONDON, Aug. 19.-The White Star Line issued the following state- ment to-nlglit regarding the Arabic: The Arabic left Liverpool yesterday afternoon at 2 o’clock. She was tor- pedoed this morning at 0.15 o‘clock in latitude 5.50 north; longitude 8.32 west. She had aboard 423 passeiigers and crew. As fur as can be ascertain- (Special to The Guardian) LONDON. Aug. 19.-'l‘ho Arabic was sent to tho bottom by a torpedo from o. German submarine. The tor- pedo struck the Arabic at 0.15 this morning. _ (Special to The Guardian) LONDON, Aug. 19.-The Press As- sociatlon states it is feared that a large number of passengers have been lost. The message of the Associated Press says: “Eleven boats got away and it is feared a large number of pus- sengers were lost." (Special to The Guardian) LONDON, Aug. 19.-A telegram to the Central News and Exchange Tele- graph Co. states that the Arab`ic's passengers have been rescued. The White Star Line is still without de- finite information. WHITE STAR LINER ARABIC SUNK BY GERMAN SUBMARINE While en route from Liverpool to New York with 423 Passengers and Crew on Board. Sank in Eleven Minutes. About 375 Supposed to have been Saved. LONDON, Aug. 19. -The White eu there are 375 survivors. it is un- (special to The Guardian)~ \S‘|ar Arabic with 423 passengers derstood only six passengers are un- QUEENSTOWN, Aug. 19-lt is now aboard bound from Liverpool for New accounted for. fearful there has been great IOSS Of life on the Arabic. (Special to The Guardian) WASHINGTON, Aug 19.-(3 p.m.. American time)-A despatch received from Consul Thompson, Queenstown. says: Vice-Consul Thompson, Queens- town, cabled the State Department to-night the names of .sixteen Ameri- can passcngers of the Arabic. Ile said there was no authentic iiiforma- tion as yet whether any or how many were lost. According to the survivors, the Vice~Consul's message said, the ship was Lorpedoed without warning and sank in eleven minutes. Excellent discipline prevailed, tweiity-one boats were lowered and apparently all ex- cept those that were empty, were .picked up by rescue vessels. _-_-_-_-_-_-_- ~\__-_-_-_-_-_-_-_ ___-_-_-_______ _________________________._____ GERMAN LOSSES WERE TERRIBLE - IN RUSSIAN FIGHT PETROGRAD, Aug. 19. -Russian successes on the loft bank of the river Bug, where the Germans have been pushed buck southwest of Voldava and in the region of Wladimlr, W.olliiisk remove fears for Koevel (on the malii railway line between Brestliovsk and Lusk) although the government institutions have already been with- drawn from that city. The Russians thanks to the great victory achieved at Vlodava are able to retreat in good order to the north of that locality. They continue however to inflict heavy losses on the enemy. During this battle the Germans on Aug. 12 lost 12,800 men. On the 13th 4,000. and on the 14th 16,000 not counting 5,000 missing. At Courtland in the fighting between Scliocnborg and Friedriclistadt, the Riissians by their continual attacks rendered the ro- treat of the German army more and more difficult. `0n Memel the German retreat is being carried out in good order. The Russians to the west of Kovno push- ed forward 800 metres at Malyzyne land in all the wooded parts of Nurzec. The Germans lost 6,000 men. added to by ingenious trencliiiig and fortification of this modern army system, makes it proposition than which no soldiers of the world have ever had a more difficult one. and where greater bravery and heroism and pluck and obstinacy and ingenuity was necessary to make even the small advances that are made from day to day. These are the three great con- tending centres, but the war is world- wide. However, confining ourselves to that. we come again to the conclusion that. with a war so vast, hi which so many millions of people have been engaged, with equipments never rivalled or equalled in the world's history-no man can tell when that war will end or what will be the out- come. The pessimist will utter his conviction and the optimist will utter his; but as to certainty, no man knows; and I stand here to-night be- fore this audience to tell them that the Empire to which we belong is in dire peril this very moment. this very month, this very year; and if there is any man that is proud of its history, that treasures what it has wrought out in the thousand years of its history. and is blessed in spirit by its freedom and its liberties. the peril calls to him. He must face it and lie must settle with his own conscience and his God what is going to be~his attitude to- wards that peril and towards the occasion. What I plead for with every man is this: without dictation. without over-persuasion, I ask him to be honest with himself and not to dodge the question, but to weigh the issue and, informed by his conscience and his God, to do that which every liberty- lovlng subject in all the ages of the world has done for the gaining and the maintenance of the freedom of the world. So much on the first idea, the peril of the Empire. Now, I want to bring out another idea and it is this: Outside the British Empire, every warring power in this great contest Absolutely Owns the Manhood of its Government and of its nation and of its empire. I want that idea to sink into our minds. Take the German Empire. for instance. In this matter of war, in the present contest. the German Empire does not have to plead with fathers or mothers or lovers or shirkers or selfi,sh people-Not one instant! Every man is OWNED by the German Government; every man his to march at its bidding and take the place that it signifies. That is a wonderful thing; that is a tremendous power; but it is just the power which Germany has`to-day. And that does not measure it all. Such has been the system of Germany. such is its system to-day, that it not only owns the mau- SUMMARY OF WAR SITUATION ` (Special to the Guardian.) LONDON, Aug. 19.-The sinking of the White Star liner Arabic with the loss, it is feared, of some fifty lives and a valuable cargo completely over- shadowed the news of the war in spite of the fact that the continued German advance on the eastern front seriously .endangering a portion of the Russian army must soon have an effect on the other fronts. Berlin reports to-day claim that the fortress of Koviio has fallen, com- pelling the Russians in Kalwaria and Suwalki districts on the East Prussian Russians appear to be able to hold their own only in the llaltic provinces, where they are preventing the Ger- mans advancing. Besides the capture of Kovito thc Germans have taken additional Novo Georglevsk forts, anti according to their account have pene- trated llie outer positions of Brest- Litovsk, the great fortress which is the mainstay of what was expected to be the Russians’ new line of defence. There is no evidence as yet of the Grand Duke's intentions. Military writers are of the opinion that the swiftness of the German advance rendered it impossible for him to make a stand at the Brest-Litovsk line, which has already virtually been turned by Field Marshall Von Mac- kenzen in the south and by his colleagues in the north. The French scored two scucesses in the west, taking a portion of a Ger- man ti‘ench»as Artois after a heavy all-day bombardment, and making further advance in the Linge summit of the Vosges. in both these sectors there had been heavy continuous fighting, which the French claim great- ly improved positions captured. There have been some long distance artillery engagements between the Serbians and Austrians across the Danube. Thus fur there is no evidence of the commencement of the Austro~Geriiiai\ offensive which was to carry relief to the Turks. The forces of the Ottoman by the Anglo-French Allies on Galli- poli Peninsula, where a new British contingent obtained a firm footing in the vicinity of Suvla Bay. and by the Russians in the Caucasus, are threat- ened by their enemy Italy. The Italian Government, angered at the disregard of the Porte to the protest against the key, it is reported issued an ultimatum demanding that Italians be allowed to leave the country how. when and where they desire, a privilege hereto- fore denied tliem._ Italy, according to reports from Rome, is making slow, steady progress against the Austrians on all fronts. v---.--- _..,..._.- _.»--~...-~.,.,.,.,... hood of Germany. but it is so arranged that that manhood is a drilled and p disciplined manhood, ready for war ‘and inured to war. It owns the man- hood of Germany, and its owns a man- hood which is prepared. more than that of any other country in the world, for the work the exigencles and the frontier to fall back. in fact, the-` Empire, besides being closely pressedl treatment of Italian subjects in Tur-` IIIEMPIIII ISSISSIIIIIIIIII III EHINISI IIIMIIIII (Special to The Guardian) SHANGHAI, Aug. 19.-An unsuc- cessful attempt to assassinate Admir- _al Tsing Ju Chang, Military Governor ;of Shanghai, and director of the Klang Nan arsenal,'by means of a bomb, was made last night. The Admiral was at the China Merchants' Wharf at mid- night, bidding farewell to his wife who was leaving for Tien Tsin when _the bomb was thrown, narrowly miss- ,ing its mark. The bomb exploded ,with ii. deafening report but the Ad- ‘miral wus not injured. A French de- tective afterwards arrested a suspect who statcd that hc was a former sol- ,dier from Tien Tsin. _,__-__ _...il SEUIIISH EIIHEIIIIIG II GIUHEIIIIWN The Scottish gathering at George- town on Wednesday was an unquali- fied success in spite ot’ the disagree- able state of the weather. and large crowds attended. An indispensable feature ot' the day’s entertainment was the excellent music furnished by the Pipers and the Band of the 82nd Regiment. Two members of the Abegweit Association Mr. James Mc- Millan and Major Drake ably assisted the Committee in their ur- duous duties. Au excellent congrat- ulatory address was presented by the members of the Caledonia Club to His Honor Lieutenant Governor Colin McDonald. who made an appropriate reply. The games which were held during the day were exceedingly in- teresting nnd provided considerable entertainment. The address to Lieu- tenant Governor McDonald was as follows. - ADDRESS TO GOV. MCDONALD Honorable Augustine Colin McDonald Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island. Your Honor: The members of the Caledonian Club of Prince Edward Island, in ati- nual gathering assembled, extend, to you, their fellow claiisma_n,__n\0sl (éftlnued on page three) ‘Minsrd's Llnlment Cures Dlphtherln l‘iiE WEATHER, TEMPERATURE, TIDE. MOON» ETC. (Special to The Guadlan) TORONTO, August 20.-Maritime; Moderate to fresh Westerly W0\\lI\‘» fine, stationary or a little higher ¢0m° perature. THE WEATHER.-Yesterday was cold. The highest temperature recorded yesterday was 62 deg. above zero. At 9 o'clock yesterday morning it regis- tered 55 deg. above, at 9 last night 54 perils of war. And so the father may grudge to give his noni the moiher's love may be rent till her heart breaks; -the mother. the sister. the lover may feel the pang of separation and tho natural impulse to hold the loved one ‘back-it makes no difference to the German Government; that is brushed aside. The selfish man may wish to remain, indifferent and selfish in Ger- many; he may wish to take his own pleasures while others are fighting; the coward and shirker may wish not to go to the front, but to shield him- self behind ihe bodies of braver men- it makes no difference with the Ger- man Government, it makes no differ- em:e_ylth_the__Ger_ms_n ari1_1_y.__'i;he com- (Contlnued on page three.) I Minsrd's Llnlment Curse Rhsumstisrq deg. above. The coldest the previous night was 51 deg. above zero. The tide will be high this evening nt 7.04 nnu tomorrow at 8.21: lt win be high tomorrow morning at 5.45 and Sunday at 7.10. » I The .sun sets this evening at 7.02 and tomorrow at 7; it rises tomorrow morning at 5.00 and Sunday at 5.07. The moon sets tonight at 12. The first quarter of the moon was on Tuesday, Aug 17th at 10.17 p. m. There will be a full moon on Tues- day. Aug. 24th at 5.40 p. m. The length of today will be thirteen ,hours and_ fifty-seven minutes. LATER REPORTS FROM TEXAS STORM Terrible Loss oi Life and Properly Damage Estimated at Many Mil- lions. Cities Razed and Sections IIALLAS, Aug. 18.*.-\ sp(-cial to thc Dallas 'fiines-licraltl from llouston says uiglitct-ii lives lizivt- in-on lost ut Te-xas City, including twclvc l'i\ill-tl to 28,21, suiii to ln- not far l`l'uni liio States soldiers, sevoii nt Lu l’ol't0. lmvosl, lriimiiitllt-r reading r-vor kiiown. ’ three at Lynchburg and three at At that tinic ibn wllnl nttuiiioti this ' llouston. vt=looity of niiwly milcs on hour. A rcllt-l' purty just |'t_>turi\t_-tl lit-.ro froni Virginizi Point, l,ii`-.iwcoii hr-re uiitl (lnI\'r~_pors were soo.r<'Iiiiig for knowii on the Texas coast. Not aldead and curing t'or he injured. The single busliiess house, not a singlclstorni still raged this morning. \____._._______._._____._._._____________._________._________._____________._________________________________1_____________.___.____________________________________ _ _ _ _ _ _ CLOSING SESSION MARITIME BOARD (Special to the Guardian.) to rcply explaining why the rniostion SIlMMidiiSlll)i<], August lil.-'l‘l\e\slio\ilti not bc dealt with at this session second day’s session oi' the Maritime of the llonrtl. Board of 'l‘rutle opt-nod :il tl n.m Tho proposeil nnwntiim-nt to llic with a fair iitteiitiiitico of ticlolzaitcs. f‘onstituLIo|i, which wus as followsi- After routine biisliicss tht- resolution ou municipal lnxntion was taken up, Tliorv shall bo clot-.toil nt ascii :intl upon tiiotioii of \V. it`. Titlinursli :innuul iiict-titig i'roiii tht- oillliuietl laid on the table for future considcrn- liotirds tivo int-mixers, in tho |iioplt` tho followiiig W U le in te Slums u,|n,itU|,, gon einl»i1:~ crcy lark, Anilit-rsl.; llnited States vessels 'to eiistoriilii S- I`i\llllJIN‘II. II11IiI`l\K‘ E. 'l‘. ll' Canada ports to sell their fares, buy bait, supplies. etc. Mr Tidniarsh explninotl lim exist- ing conditions with rvspoct to this: mutter. The tiistrllssiriii was voiitiiiilcti ' by Messrs Gould, Sit-wzirt, llc-nil :intl others. The socrctury was iii:-»i'iit-toil . ll-Ti-ZH. (‘liarlottt-town; A. t`. (`I\npmun, Monc- l0l\§ W. ll. Snowball. '.`hutliuln. Captain ileiitl prolioz-:oil :i volt- ot' llinnks to the retiring l'i‘<‘sIdc\it (Mr I5- '|`~ III!-Ziltil for thc nblo und 1-tio|~gt~li<~ niunnor in whit-li ibut pgotllloinnii ron- T "L'>'T(?o`iitiii\ied`oti page two) CONDENSED ADS. 'l‘OO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION _-_~_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-__-_-_-_-_-________-_-__,_ ,,,, __________________V_V_____ BUSINESS ENVELOPES. -No. 3 printed with name ami nddross either on flap or front, $3 por 1,000; $5.00 for 2,000; $12.00 for 5,000; $20 for $10.00. GUARDIAN Ol<‘- l~‘i(`E. 8808-11-21Mtii’. Losr-in soua`|`s Aeour six weeks ago. ii gold chain and cross sol, with Topaz, very vzillliihlo In owner. Finder kindly leave of Mut- lhow Mcl.enn`s Olllcc, Souris. limitl- sonio reward. 2579-8-lSiii4ipil. FARM Fon SALE.-izio of-ron. sn, niilos from l’icton; 50 acres culti- vated, balance pasture and wood- land. $1,000 worth of spruce nml lit-inlo<~k tinihcr, good building. Wrilo for prices ami further infor- tnutlon, Farm, co Guardian. _ 2575-8~l8mfll NOTICE.-Any person trespalsing an tho big pond on the little lllack llank, Lot ll, will bo prosectilotl hy tho owner, hir Justice ldltzgeraltl, as the shooting on it is strictly pro- sorvod. .iainos C. Tuplin. for owncr. Aug. ltith, 1915. 2564-8-l7m1w FOR sALE. ws ARE Now Pne- small family. centrally located. Ap- oarctl to offer our entire 19\5 crop _ ply at this amos. i59o~o-2ii\nr_ of Silver Black, and High onine , patch fox pups, at prices that will ONE CENT per word -each inser- tion for advertising in this column. Cash must accompany orders. Mini- mum charges, twenty-five cents. COMPOSITOR WANTED-JOB AND sd. compositor wanted; steady job and good wages. Apply Guardian Office. 2401-8-4MEtf. ROOMS FOR THE TOURIST. IDEAL location, at 80 Longworth .»\venuo. il~20in6i. M/up WANTEB Fon A sM7\'|_C family. Apply Box 163, Suniniersltlc. _ 2554-8-16M5i. WANTED- ROOM AND BOARD INA Private family for one Indy. Apply Guardian. 2000-il-20M2llpll. LOST.-On August 18, gold fob, ini- tlaled E.M.l). Finder please leave at Guardian. 2504 wsTi'reo"A'r "once-'-"house" Fo/,» To LET A LARGE DOUBLE FRONT appeal to niiyone that wishes to get xg3"3ml‘Q§gE;:;:";,Tg,aT;r':.E£§`;;,'has established in this lucrative Indus- - ply at Guardian' 2553-s-iviulr. gy “It °’,§°fP‘\"°“‘}‘IY f “M” PfI“°=- ` ____.___.__._____..'.___.___________..__ Ill' B 0f‘. s ret rom rolifi WANTEU-TEN PAJR9 |3|;ANg 3|*-' strains and are not inbred, :iso ii V6? BUICK f0X°l'l UJWQWI-I xmas few pair of Ranch Raised Fisher _ FGBIOHIIYIB- ADD Y - Am" “Y e ' Marten and Mink. Interested parti~ * lock, Charlottetown. - 2452-7-9mtf. es Wm be welmme to 'unmet our r-'o`R`°s`A`LE'-"eENsn‘nIL°PunPosE sim-k nt anytime at our nannies at Strathroy and Komoka, address horso. 7 years, cheap. Would ox- change for good mitch cow. »W. F. correspondence to Graham Bros., If ,gmc ..._ Burke, West Royalty, or Box 42, Strathroy, R. R. No. I Ontario, Can- ; City. 8-20-m3i., ada. 2485-7-11M9ipd, ‘_ will ~ \ E 4 !l!eéi`_,, gf ., ‘*>’ v-X .Q »H 3l'?5¢`Y"> J ` -,r-._,5,-1; :».s-_.