I , . » ‘ ‘ s ulllmhnuuulllnlnlunnso nlnnllllllltllillllnllnllnunamauntnlluntlulultlilnlnullunlxooo nlulllullllltllulllnmtlig uatoioitatololololealtlllllottlliltttliiltliltftl llillllll!lldlllllllllllllliylflyy The Charlottetown ‘Covers Edivard “ Island .Like the' so " lsxlnaloloklullotoslgmllou alotololololololololololeamorslololololololollllllllllllloilllelullollltlslolelltllolealolololsllelualmtllltlslltlnlltololullllllltltolnlrnltllltllrlllllllltllilllllllilllalllltlllllllltllellslllallllllllunllulslllillicllullioulsallllluxsnololelull 'i`|il'i|i'l\\»0l|lm|l ltilélt i. ._ 'u *il all -‘U li 1 I * um _.___ ____________,_______,_ ________,__,________,__t___,____...___.._____1_._1..___._._________......_..______._T,_,._._.____._.,_______.,_____._______._._.___._..,,.__,_._._.__.___._. ._._.,_._._._._., ._._._._._..___._.___.,_._;._.___.,_;_.___._._ ._._._,_-_-_._._-_._._._ ._._,-_.____._._.,_._-_._-_-; ' """""""""""""""‘*-~-"“'cf-"--'""-' "'""'"""""'"'"""""""""""` """`"""""”"""’ " ' . ‘ ‘”°"”"""‘ -' mf- I »- ,~.- irq' its it ., _-" 4 1 I THE CHARLQ]_lE_I,0__}l_’_ YGUAR. . f'1 -1- 15. . _,_ ._ :.*.::l.‘.:°.l’.‘.?2.’.".‘:1.0:‘§?ZBt;‘T ..... c11Anw1~mo€vs.i cllssns '10l6sb}1v,t loss 18, 1917 W .i:’3ll::."fl l;.,, ,..,., ,.,. .,_ . The upheaval caused by tht- great war. -which has already detllroned two Monarchs, now seems to lllc-nace the ancient crowll of Spain. The ut- most exertions of thc Spanish cen- sors have failed to completely sup- press the reports of grave happen- ings in the Pellinsulzlr Kiugdolll. From 'what little is known the Spa- nish army is taking the loud ill the revolutionary movement, which is furtller accelerated by tlletood sunr- city and industrial ullrest. ilumors of revolt have beell currcllt for sever- al months, and at the end ut' May it ai guarantees would be suspended. while the goverllnll-nt prohibited nil public llllanifestatlolls ill respest tr,- lnternutional questions. This was followed by all outbreak at Barcelona on June 1, the seriousness of wllicll was indicated by the fact that the soldiers sided with the revolters and imprisoned a number oi their qflicers. The exact part which the issues of thc war plny ill the Spanish crisis is diflicult to determine. The masses ot’ the people have been generally credited with being strongly pro--Ally ill sentiment while the aristocracy was ullllounred that the cone-ltitution~ loluled toward the side of Gernlally. W., ~.,,....-_M.-...-._., ,.--._..,. WINNIPER HAS l|\AAR|NE U|SASlER 0_0t0.000 000 (Canatiian Press Despatch.) WINNIPEG, MAN- The tllreel story brick building adjoining the Wlinnipeg 'Telegram building and owned by the Telegrzlnl Prillting Company, was ibadly gutted by. tire last. night. The total loss' is esti- mated at forty thousand dollars dis-: tributed amollg the sevrrai wholesale establishments loratcll in the build' ing. 5,UUU ERElUHl UARS EUR lHE U.U.R. MONTREAL- lt ls reported tllat the Canadian Car and Folllldry C1;~._ has definitely closed the coutl'u\‘t i'0l‘ five thousand freight cars for the Cu- nadiall Governlment llllilwnys, the price agreed llpoll being understood tofbe.»$lZ,50lL0.0lL_..,._____,___.,_..____ . Y 000000 0000 llllls 000000 0000-000 (Canadian Press Dispatch.) 1lONSTON.- l~`ivo tllousulld lnhlll wo*en alld childrell clncrell, silout~' nd hnd snug farewell and (lt.-.l spcclll to the kitties. battalion at Mecllllnics'| llall last night. The grunt hall wus' filled to the last chair and to tile- lllsl inch of standing room. The speecll- es were glllgery and usually not lllore than five nllnutes ill lcllglll nlld the speakers included Mayor Curley, tie- nerul E. LeRoy Swectser, Major T. ll. llunt oi the ilcgulars, Mrs. i’. l~‘. Godenrath, mother of the battalion, (ic-lwallcr Scott, and Lieut.i‘oi. Percy A. (lutllrie, comlllzlnding the kiltlcs llnown ill scrvicc as the Zlfltltll over- seas regiment. IN SIBERIA 10 YEARS, COMES TO CLAIM GIRL. NEW YORK, N. Y.-M-iss Julia Gallo, lil years old, ii feet, 2 inches tllll. sat wondering in tht- Surroglltl-s’(`ollrl if Nicholas Ciano, nn artist, who sllid he was her tutllcr. was tolling the truth. Mr. Gano said that he hall beell ill Seboria for ten years until lillti, when ile returned to this city alld sought ills Wife and child. He' lournod, llc said. that his wife had died ill l!lli'>, and tilut on Sept. 30 of that _vcor Mrs. Vlllcskzl Gllsily had obtained charge oi' .illlia. When the girl was collfrollied by har father ill court she did lll.~t rel-ogllizo hinl. He produced a photograph show- ing Julia when shc wus Ii .v\‘1\l`-"1 itltl. standing by llilll. Tile girl said she re- nlelnbercd when lilo photo was taken. Mr. Gallo. said that Mrs. Gusky Should be removed ns hcl' gunrdtull. Mrs. Gusky lions not tilillk Gallo is nble to support, the girl. and ellys she has no knowledge which, would lead her to beliove, he is her father. THE WEATHER. TEMPERATURE, TIDE, H005. ETC. TORONTO, June lil- Fino. with little higher temperature, The highest temperature recorded Yesterday was 'Ili degrees above. At 10 ll. m.. It was 65 above: ut 9 p. ln.. it was 59 above. The coldest the pre- vllous night was- 67 degrees. The tide will be high this morning at 9 and tome-rrow at 9.46; lt. will be high tonight. st l0.i'll and tolnor-- POW nt 11.41. The sun sets this evening at 8~07 Bhd tomorrow at 8.08; it rises tomor row morning and Wednesday at 4.30- t'Pgle moon rises tomorrow morning a. , The last quarter of the llloon WIIH 0ll Tuesday, Juno 12th at i.Il9 s. m. The-re will be ll new mooll on Tues- dily. June 19th at 8.02 a. nl. The length of today will be fifteen hours and thlrtyseven minutes. REPURlEU FRUIVI lUKlU (Cana‘ilan Press Despatch.) 1 Nl<`.'\\' Y(lltl{.- A portion of a des- patch |'c-1-oivell from ’l‘0klc- shows that il Illilrlllr-. disaster of some kind has ol'1:lll'<.-ll ill which lllore than 50 per- suns were killed and nlzlny others ill jurcll. The despatch is dated Thurs- dzly ulld possibly has refel'en<‘e to the lllcrcllallt auxiliary steamer Sakaki, a vessel ol` 24,410 tous. The cablegram. the first part of which is missing foi- lows: _ “'i'okio, 'l‘llursday, Julle 14;- (‘oln- lllulldcr Taichl Uyellarll, captain of Sllkuki and Conllllunder Jusllin Take- galli and ellgilloor alld 54 other mem- bers of the crew. were killed and fif- teen officers and men were wounded. lSlANUER UUNIAAANUS UUNARU llNlR Captain William McEwen, son ot Mr. Horace McEwen, ex-Superilltend ent of the Prince Edward Island Rail way. has been appointed Command or of the S. S. "Parvia." of the (iullard Steamship Line, Captain Mc ltlwell luls been going lo selffor some rixtcell yearn and he is exceedingly young to have won thc command oi ll stenmship ill the Cunard service, one ot' the must ptlrticulllll' and fa lllous steam ship lilies iln the world Captain Mcldwen was male on one ot' the Cunard ships, torpedoed las! year. lie has boen Chief Officer fol sonln time past and now has tht highest uilice ` ill the service. Thr "Parvlll" is now sailing out of .Eng lisll ports, HARVESTER BRINGS $30,100 AT SALE NEW YORK-Paul Kuhu, a grain dealer ol' Tcrrc Haute tind.l. pur cllal-led The linl-vester for `$1l0,000 ai 1 the disposal sule of the li. K. G. Billings llgllt harness horse from Curies Neck Fllrnl in Madison Squart Garden last l1‘rlidlly'_ This is the big’ll est price over paild for a trottel' at lluutloll ill this city, and secolul onl_\ io the price paid for Biltgen ill 1904 ill Boston, when sold for $32000. Thi previous recold for the Garden wnf $30,000, pnid by Wil-lillnl Bradley lol the stallion Todd. Mr. Billings lllsposed of his fllnlou' stud ill Virglniu so tlltlt he 1-onli* turn over to the government -for mil itlary purposes ills 5,000 acre farm Every trotting horse owned by Ml Billings, exccptllllg Uhllln and [All |)l||(m “nd n low snlldle horses, wen $80.'100 Tile second big price of the GH? was pu-id for Wllllllm_ the world'= champion live-_vellr-olll lif\C§l°~ Wim” became the property Oi (l:"“Uh 5 Son, of Lafayette (llld.l. tor $300 tt was wlllsllel-ell nl the G“"‘i°" th" tho purer will eventually K0 l"“`l‘ i' A. it). Van Attu. of Ottcrbein find.) who in-on Wllllamulnll solid llinl tl Mr. nllllnss for 516.000- ~ New Engilalld was lll`0ml"9“' among the buy6l‘H.' G00rKe`il0W\'U`;: of Boston, paid $2,500 for the llugl n six-year-old mare lil’ Ami" " sulllto by Steinway. with It '<"‘;;>|" of 2.11%. (T. W. Llx-Boll. Of W\‘ in svllie_ paid $400 each for Bern Cl R_, 2.07%, and (lhma Worthy. A. J. Forbusll, of Bos-ton. picked out Louise Wll90n. a ten~yeal~ol daughter of Prod~ilU\| mr $335' M". J. McMane|nou of Holfitoll. (Mai- brongnt tile two at prices. mhlo: cgnl; sidering the character of t e or 6 wld, lnust be 1lal‘B0ll19~ John ll; ooslleaiwil. or Provi- dence paid $l.000 on Theodosius ,mt 'sooo lor rollisottll wllll 11 lluy Th H rvester. byB|0,,? ttyl; gray stmilion. standing sixteen hands lllKl\ ilnil b"°‘| by prince oenorelnlrf of lulssls, blwshi 450 l was 1111111 um, Mri Indications are that General Haig is Planning Another Gigantic Drive, also That the Germans for it. German Attacks Laci Their Ori inal Punch, Soldiers Being Driven to t e Attack at Revolver’s Point. British troops are strking along ai~ most the entire lille they ilold ill nor- tllern France not with the terrible force which nlllrked the vi<~.tol'i¢-\s of Arras and Messines, but ill a more ol' less tentative nlanne-r giving weight in tht- belief that Field Marshal Haig is preparing to launch ll 'mighty blow on a hitherto ullprl-cedentell scale. Two features ot' the lighting stand out with sharp siglliilcanlfe. The ilrst is the feeble-ness with which the Germans ure reacting alld the secolld is the sllrprisillg prolltptllass with wilicll Berlin adllllta retirelllellts ill various sectors. The wllole situation is entirely sl- lllllur to that existing prior to the great "stragetic retreat" of the Gor- nlllns from the Solnnle. There is considerable evidence _that l<`leld Mur- sllal Voll lllnde-llburg is planning ano- ther grent witlldl'awal, and that I~‘ield Mllrsllul I-lalg is pressing llinl at ull points in the hope of delivering ll slllttterillg blow, if such ll second “re- trcnt to victory" llllltel'|alizcll. - Tile ltallslls. having sllccessiully nlaintairled their advance in the face lf the lnost formidable Austrian -'oulltcr attacks are apparclltly life' pllring for a rcsnluptioll ol' their of- MEN LOS 0 are not Goin to Wait replaced by troops hastened from the Russian front. FRENCH ENTER ENEMY TREN- CHE8. (Canadian Pres: Despatch.) l>Anls.~ 'rho P1-encll repulsell sei vt-ral raids in the direction of Hill 304 on the heights of -the Mouse last night, according to an official state ment from the War ofhce this morn- ing. The artillery fire around Cra- onnc and Mount Carnlllet was lively. The statement follows: We repuls- ed several attacks against our small posts near iiili 304 on the heights of the Mouse and east of Badonvlllers. l~`l~ell1-ll troops pelletrated German trout-iles east li Rheims and took pri- soners. The artillery lighting was lnolierulely llcllvy ill the sector of Crrlonne and west. ot' Mont Carnlllet. amrlsll nspet 'GERMAN AT- 'TACK. (Caua';iian Press Despatch.) LONDON- Tile repulse of 11 Ger- man attack on the positions captured south ol' the Ypres-Comines Canal is announced by the Wal' Office. l'ellsive. Vienna reports that the italian guns* have opened with the greatest vio-l WOLENCE' once in (‘.al‘illthiu, indicating t.llut Ge- uelul Curdollzl has chosen a new sec-A Ecanmla" Pre" D°°PPi°h') tor, in which to deliver his next blow.l The scene of the l1onlbal'llmcllt . is some thirty miles n<;~rtb of tlorl1.i1\,‘ lud ull ot`t'ensive in this region would' -lllpport the reports that the italian 'onllnander has fur nlorr. ambitious' plans than even the f‘0l\l1\\€f4l 01' Trieste. IERMANS DEOMRALIZED AND DECIMATED. (Cana'.llan Press Despatch.) l’Ai{l‘S.- The Matill’s corrospoll- lcllt at tho Flanders front tele- -grllplls as follows: Prince }tuprecht'g troops enterell 'ho iight dejectedly and without ounsh. Secret orders disco-vercd allow that bellilld cncil section lllur- olles all oillcer whose duty it is to shoot laggards. This otflce-l' is sup- ported by two machlne gulls which 'collaborate in the slaugilter of dclllo- ralized shirkers. _ The woullds of Germall dead and statements of pri- sollcrs prove that these gulls are kept busy urging forward waves of Ger- lualll troops in the hell of liritisll fire. i4 enemy divisions particlpatedvill the last live days' lighting between Wllt- lcilaete and Warnetr.-ll. Nine divi- sions were derilllatcd and the Diller 'Ivo hit. hard. l~‘illall_v t`ollr divisions .ITALIAN FIGHTING INCREASED iN ITALIAN TH'EATRE.- The-re is nothing important to report from the lsullso srllly. (ln the (‘arlntbia front cnellly artillery fire has increased in tilt; Ploeckell sector, with the gre-atest violence. One attack upon our po- sition at Mollto Rombcll was repulsed Artillery fighting on Seete Cumuui plateau has increased ill violence. GERMANY OFFERED PEACE TO RUSSIA. (Canadian Prana Despatch.) . S’l‘OCi(ilOLM.- Tile Social Demo- kratl-\n says Germany tlus .made ull of- fer oi' peace to Russia through ll mem- ber of the Swiss Federal Council. POTATOES Ct-IEAPER. FREDERICTON- The expected slunlp in the local potato market us the result of the spring crop of the southern states being placed upon the United States market, has arriv- ed_ Seven dollars lt barrel was the pl-ice paid llerc yesterday by shippers and today the plice is $5. lt ig said there I4 every prespect of the price going 'lower ulld that t`arnlers wilo are holding for increas- ed prices are doomed to disappoint- luellt. lll cert-alll sections ot’ the south frosts se( back the spring crop of potatoes-, but the Carolinas me pouring all immense quantity into the market. ` l .___.._.__é_é_ |lIn|rh.|.|;|g¢N was prgn In oovn ¢' _ .. _ _ . .L its Only Way to Prevent Hun Burburlty. liao Suggested Thot Germans _ be Warned of Economic Re- . prlsuls After the Wur. L()NDON.- The recent German air l-:lid on Londoll, in which sc- many wo- men und children lost their lives, has greatly strengthened the hands of those wilo so long have advocated a reprisal against German towns, and the Government, which heretofore has been opposed thereto, will again be urged in Parlianlent to take this step. The Westrllrinister Gazette, which opposes reprisals, suggests that the best way of stopping raids on open towns is _for the Entente Allies to intinlate' to the enemy that they are dt-eterllllned, after the war, to use their economic power against all who practiced frightfulness ill the air or under the sea, or accumulate instru- llleuts of war and destruction. KENT NURTHERN SlAliUN BURNEU Al RIUHIBUUTU RI(‘.lIlBU("I`0. N. 13.- The Kent Northern Railway station at this place, was totally destroyed by flla Thursday afternoon with all the contents of the building, which in eluded several thousand dollars worth oi! freight. The fire broke out about two o’olock and had gained such a headway when discovered that it could not be controlled. The freight which is stored in one part of the stat/ion building, it is stated, amounted to .several thousand dollars and little or nothing was sav- ed. How the fire originated is not kllown. but lit is supposed to have started from ll cigar or cigarette stub. ' 000000000 0000000000 00 0000000 (Canavilan Prell Despatch.) M(,lN(‘TON.- At the -Methodist i'o|lference Saturday the final draft of the station slleet was read. Rev. l<‘. W. Sawdon goes to Winsloe and Rev. Bruce Cerew -to Mount Stewart. ill the matter ol! social service and evangelism Rev. W. D. Wilson, Chief inspector of New Brunswick, spolfe of the good work being done in New llmlnswick in enforcing the prohibi- tion law which is regarded as one of the best ill the world. llev. Dr. T. A. Moore approved of the enforcement of prohibition by commission provided the work is ab- solutely freed irolm politics. Saturday afternoon there was B mo- morlul service. Saturday evening was set apart for 11 grand patriotic lneetillg when conscriptlr/n will be the inlportallt topic for consideration. ‘ Additional laymen in attendance fronl Prince Edward dsland are Mes- srs. W. l, Brooks ulld Henry Smith. Tryon; Mr. liorigscn, Bedequc, James umlml-t||\::e:‘;lll;;l;l;; tol;0(l)y(.l »\»lElt':;|(;"tltlE' wm.e'sent to thc Pour tnrest and were M|n.,.dl. L|n|m.m au," ¢°°\|||°||._ ialld Mrs. Matthews, Covehead. “DOIN can national necessity and *level Y international justice by anv name us amount realized was apnloxinlutely ___,,,,,_,,_,_,_.. E. c......c ,-.....»...,_-..,-.7 . . _ . _ ..-_-E »_,.~.-._-......_. _...etc-_... cs... _. _, .s_,.. ~,.._,.~_._~~..., .....~._._ W sw... vague as _Nanmml honor: - _ . _ H .. l` | L (Canadian Preu Despatch.) llsvolulloll Now csllulrls Pllrlrllllo "ttf §§§{t,i§tl§,RmNS,GERMAiN.s Now lll>ll\.|l 0 lllllslllalls srllll, Arlolllsllltslllls l __ F .mE l3.llEiilE|l 1 She carried a large parcel of Ameri- LONDON.- The Neuse Nacllricten-can securities. Tile owners of part of Kiel according to the Hague cor-'of these sllares havc applied to the respondent of the Daily Mallet lastlrailways ill question and have asked 1 1 1 1 / ,_ ..~ ..,,r , ,_ . 1 , 1 .,.~.,, ».\-.Mtv _ / » ~ \ t, 1 . ,sl ~ ,- , il ' Y 1 "fl . »-, f -fy. it 7-.-5,11., 1 l ".1 H R4 ,:igl”f ;»._,1' A lj/llll , ~ .y_ . 1-itltlit-‘ Nl ills' tilt.” .t0t» lxl 'fill ,Z3-.:l£v,`»;<¥.i's1a1 ` f I fs ,~ , ‘ »r ' ' ‘fir -E _.1 'ff . ,.- _sfa J ttyney . . .\. ~l:- .-11, '_ f.?ll,fs:. .1 I ..'.,. .e "1 ;.~_,. 1 s l ` 1 adrmits the loss of tile commercial for duplitate shares on the ground submarine Bremen with its valuable that the Bremen has been lost with cargo. The newspaper says: “The her whole cargo. The railway com- commerclal submarine Bremen left panies have lnadc out fresh papers af- Halmburg last August and since thell ter n de-posit by thc shareowners of unfortunately has not been heard of. suitable guarantees. cially announced. The announcement says: ning I~l.s MaJesty’s ships under is a resistance of three hours. “The lort is situated on the eastern shore of the Red Sea in the Kamarau anchorage. 180 miles north oi’ Pe- rim. “Ninety-fr/ur prisoners, -three ma- chine guns and two mountain gulls lURl SAl|lE,UN REU SEA UAPTUREU BY BRiiiSH LONDON- Port Saliff, on the ellst and rlllaterial stores, cnlllcls, and tho shore of -the Red Sea, has been cap- harbor plunl were cnpllll'cll. tured by British' warships, it is oth- “One Britisller was killed." (Fort Salifl' is on Kalnaran Bay, in Ye-nlen' Province, southwestern Ara- “The comlnsnder-in~chlef in the bla. Large rock salt works are loca- East lndies re-ports that Tuesday mor- ted there. The captured fort ‘lies about 175 miles nl:-rth of the Gulf of conlllland' captured Fort Saliff after Aden, A fo,-ce of Tm-ks to me north of Aden ltrls been long ill the way of the Britisil in the attempts they have made to advance from that city. The purpose of the seizure of Fort Saliff may be in facilitation of a movement to work ill behind this force and cap-' ture or disperse it.) UASUAUIES iN A REUEl_iLEXPlUSIUN (Canadian Press Despatch.) LONDON.- The casualties in ex- plosion irl munitions factory at Ashton under Lyne on Wednesday were re ported officially tc-day as 41 killed and 130 injured. The announcement fol- lows: The following casualties are reported in the Ashton-under~Lyn ex- piosion: 41 deaths, including 29 men. 3 women and children.-130 injured, some seriously. .lt appears that the explosion resulted from ll ilre. A majority of the work people escaped, all the- women having left before the explosion. The manager is amongst the dead. - ERENUH lRANSPURl SUNN BY SUB (Canatdlan Presl Despatch.) PAR.lS.- lllit is officially announced tllut the transport Allnam was torpe- doéd in the Ionian Seaoll June 11, while proceeding under escort. Bombs were at once thrown in the track of the submarines which did not reap- pear. The A_nllnm was taken ln tow by one of the convc-ying ships bllt sank in a few hours. There were no casualties. DONT'8 ON THE WAR, GIVEN IN NEW YORK. APPLY 0iN CANADA NEW YORK.-Dr. Preston W. Slos- son of the history department of (‘ol- umbia University has drawn up a series of “don‘ts" on the war. Some of them are: "Don’t say ‘my country right or wrong'. Wo al‘en'l wrong. Doll't say Wall Street, or ‘British gold' or the 'Northcliffe press’ made this war. You don't have to bribe a nutlon to make it resent thc lllurlicr of its citizens. “Don't call every pro-Ally ‘pro-Brit isll.' Great. Britain is only one of a dozen or so of the Allies. “Don't say that both sides think they are fighting a defensive war. A man may hone-stty think that two and six are eleven but it doel-ln'l make them sc-. "Don’t call univeral training ‘Prus- slnn lnlllts.rism." it is no more Prussi- an that It is Swiss, French. British. Argentine. Japanese or Australian. "Don’t say that we owe aid to France on account of Lafayute. We were right not to do so, We only owe aid to any n-wtllon when it is fighting (as at present) in a righteous quar- rel. "Don't say that ‘lt doosl\'t make any difference to the- workingman what country governs him.’ Ou the con- tmry, it makes' more difference to him than to any one else. because the rich man can spend' his time in trove-l or buy his way into the privileged class if he finds political conditions oppres- sive. E llalll gomellllns like $20606 ` ' ` ` ~ “Delft brelil into lyrglcmprtgng of il nga ' Ng|_A~1g` universal armies as a lc o em- ror Blon when no was racing his _ Plas? PHo'rocr-lAPH or-' AMIRICAN soulless IN E . verse” some mm" me ‘W demo_ tr0li8\‘9 A" ““"i°~ th h up f rg tg tg of gt ok- cratlc than others., but all rest upon s mfecmm I" was llold N0 Ysil fir ol T?\(l;nel\2lo2l!;l}plEnlrll;dtaéllgleilntrdillmgllsillgkstalll`;arl:e?¢;l0¢§fatllNg-vlgaltllllllls l(:anl?:3llIre tzovlln. Tlllemllrit Amezic- Mil! 0! 001111111114 llld |miPii¢l\ 000° Shus0°r"l‘h of righwrll Eiiirllavltoilllinl gli trooils No set foot on English soil since entry into the war. urrivvd at BIIGKPOBL Elkhhd. shortly after the dience. The army may-.lovoi the llch “'20 ° D ___..__.._.. al-rival of the torpadobost and destroyer flotilla. over a month ago. The above Photo shows the men st Black- “ld D°°\'- hilt if 0099111 m°l_f\ °‘1\\°l|‘ Mmudl. |_|”|m.”¢ mfg. qlutcmpor. pool, where they are ulldorgoing further trabnlag before the proceed to France. _ yi! \’°iW°°“ °m`°°" Wd “W- didn't hellp France in 1870 and we' v _ _ Y A, , . _ _ , _ _ _ _ _ _-_-_ _ __A_,_,,..T,__»__V__.___.__V.Y.V____._.__ _. iHE UERNIAN SUB. WAS UAUUHT IN llME (Canaliian l=rezs Despatch.) l’ARlS.- Semi-official note says that tile German submarine U-52 _which was towed into Cadiz on June 11 was operating outside that port c~n June 12. A Norwegian steamer was torpedoed off Huelva and ll Russian sailer between llaroche and Cadiz which leads to the belief tllat a group ot' submarines has been sent to blockade the ports of Cadiz and Hue- via. _-M INUREASEU EIUHNNU UN RUSSIAN ERUNT (Canadian Preui Despatch.) VIANNA VIA LONDON- increas- ed llghiillg On the ilussian frollt in east Galicia and Volhynia is reported, and increased Russian lighting and ac- tivities are colltillued at several points. -li UEATH Ui BUMBARUIER lAUUHlAN MUKINNUN 1,* Tlle death occurred at the Militaly Hospital, Cllflrlottctowll. on Sunday afternoon ot' Bombardier Lauchtian McKinnon of the tives' Point Battery. He arrived in Cllllrlottetowll from Halifax on June (ith, suffering from heart trouble. l-ie at once entered the hospital] for treatlllent. but all thas was done provcd ullavalling and death l-luillled him. Deceased was only twenty-one years of age. ana his demise will he n severe blow to his wvidowed mother, who lives st Canoe Cove. llc served eighteen months nt lvos-' Point, part of which time he was orderly roonl clerk, and was quite ll favorite with ills com- rades by wllonl he wiiil be sincerely nlourlled_ Tile funeral takes place from G. D. Wright‘s ulnlerisking rooms to the ferry en route to his fol-nler hollle ill Canoe Cove. inlnllr-d's Lislmcnt cures sudo, nc. DIVIDEND CUT TO 18 PER CENT. LONDON- The report of tile Suez Canal Colllpsny, pubilsllcd in thc Times this morning, says: Traffic ln 1916 had d-ropped. about sevl-ll ulld a llnlf lnillioll tons since 1‘Ji1l. hut "thanks to increases itll rates the receipts have not fallen lu thc same proportion." The council proposes to distribute ll dividend of 90 francs. This means a dividend of 18 per ceni. as shares are 500 fiance The dividend in 1913 was 164, ln 1914 165 francs. General shipping through the canal in 1916 was 3,110 ships of a net tonnage of nearly twelve and a half millions. The proportion ol' this was pu-rely commercial, 2,240 ships with a tonnage of eight and ll half millions, ta decrease of 56 per cent. compared with 1913. The report states: "Slate commerce' taking the place of private trade, tho decrease ill commercial trntlic In 1916 was therefore not lellly so nmrned so the above Marco would lead one to sup- ltms” ol me 40000 Sues sham the British Gowernlnent. in 1875 bought 176.602,. which ln. |1916 Hero valued at thirty nlllloo pounds, or seven and 31 nsll uma tu pluoluu price. _, 1,. ;_ Qs,-. t ¢ _ "\_.., 1, l : 1 .Qi 1 -0.- , _ it .lf ~ ;; "E ,. lg ‘ 5. '-sl' it ' ' .r '(1 ill .ll -. “ . ;. 1, f t£:` it: .}_\ ‘-_ . -_ 1. - .`.i11"" .=, - .. ,X . ` .tl . .er “ , @1351 i .7 - ll ` .1 f . ‘l 0,' 1 . '\.\'r|. , 1.-:ft l t’ . 1,, .`..'0`-1 ‘."l.`l' , --l i' 1"--,'l' »1 .i1'- i A I 1 ll' -tg .. .‘,il_ . i .ifvlil i" V;-5'. l .> nl. .. .:l’~ 1"'-I N. 11-. 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