ve.; "% . -.- 4! ~2 .a ;5‘~= _L . ii’ ! .~ 4 A . » .é .§. *_ sf l .. " sly f; " E- . _ ,L _IAS _.i -1 "io, ;-.:-. . _ 5; ___-§`\s'~5 - ~`~ , » ` ’ - . - . ~_‘-J - - ».-L'-~ -.».:F_.:-t1:..,e..;i'-.45-`f_i'f,;‘I`°.>~-,`. -;.;,=»~;‘.~=:‘--.' ‘ » » '=:f.>‘:;’:--_~;‘-- 1",_'_1,.~;. -i.ff`1~`f~=',»»,‘£~_z~ f.. 1. ».,_-g; ; i »- '.'~ 5;.-i~=;_' __ ‘ - ~- - 11- ‘ -. r . » _ ‘ .=@ _ -.=,`~_' .'-*-_on _ ,f ' . ' _-ef-_: if. - '_»;_~. g ,~: '~`-.-.~""‘-1,-_i-_=_ .A We-_ .-_o_o 'run on N I 5 .Q5 P Zi-iQ €lan1~ _ e Y ,= A . _._.. _ ___} _ . f_ _ __ ._ _T Wurrilbr 1_7 _'rr _ _cu-_ __ . -_,___ . _I __ _-V* ESTABLISHED |89" CHAKLOTTETUWN. PRINCE EDWARD ISLANDQFRTDAY, AUGUST. 25, |901" ` ` , . -iii " P- HF* r 'H -_ ’ 4 -1- Er f _ s-I EASTERN ` TROUBLE .__-_ freiieh Cruiser Sent to Turkish Waters .i irisiei iiiv roiiow But Peaceful Settlement is Expected-Bark Linwood Given Up. .____. 1-HE rm-:sci=i-rcnxisn TROUBLE. PARIS, August 22--<3Peele1)~“'-5 French u-ulser has been despatched to Turkish waters and a Beet is being Dfebefed l'° follow but a peaceable settlement is ex- pected and the French papers are devoting more space to the coming visit of the Czar than to the Turkish question. BARQUE I.INwooD MIssINo. LoNDoN, August 22.- (Special)--The British barque Linwood, Captain Doug- lass, from Manila, Nov. 14, for New York has been posted at Lloyds as missing. The Linwood hailed ”--om Maitland, N. S.. and was owned by I ‘exander Roy St 'C0. xx-DUO? ASSURE AS YOU ARE BORN. Putman's Corn E xtmctorcures all kin is of oorns and warts, in a short time. Cures painlessly as well a s promptl§_. cures radi- cally as well as %ulckly. he greatest corn raiser on the orth American Con- tinent, just ask yo ur driurgist if this isn t so. Dr giste a l sell it. If you are at a distancgirom a drugstore send twenty- five eente to N. C._ Po sou 8: Oo.,Kingiston, and get it post paid. iiliilil ilili* Aiiiiiiiaiii COMPETING Islanders Arrived Ami Are At Work .11 COMPETITION BEGINS Lord lllinto And Gen. 0’Grady Haley Inspect the Camp. ISLANDERS AT ORLEAIB CAMP. QUI:nEc,August 21.-(Special, delayed)- At the Artillery Camp, Isle of Orleans the Islanders arrived last evening, all well. THE ooMI>I<:'rI'rIoI BEGUN. The Montreal and Cobourg men finished their competition and left for home yes- terday. THE ISLAND MEN Ar WORK. The St. St. John and Prince Edward Island teams are competing in the 40 pounder to-day. 'lhe howitzer competition comes off t0- morrow. SOME TEAMS DECLINE T0 SHIFT. The Montreal and Coburg men declined to shift. The St. John and Prince Edward Island teams shift to-morrow. ~ Loren MIN'ro AND GENERAL INsi>Eo'r. General 0’Grady, Haley inspected the Camp today and was veiy much pleased with the same. The Governor General inspects the camp to-morrow. [THE GUARDIAN is unaccountabiy with- out news of yesterdays eompetitions.- EEI'ron.] _#5--° ' il for ' volunteers to and solicit aid of volun teers were "'i:TJn1` iHie iieiiiioiis or iutottrcuiiiiuu _ _|>_» |;_ [_ Premier l.aurler’s Latestiliqiigeveit io ,mi _ ~ Mvvomoits off iipiu. I _ I The Wreck -of the Steamer Islander and the Loss - A ofthe Passengers Including Two Prom ew e , - I A vioeoria doopoeoi. of 'ruoodav man would bo trying to hold op ood I -- the disaster which overtook the ,abd the bed? °f the U13” W0'-‘ld beet steamer Islander, for although thel *PHY With 3- Daft ef the baek and 3 lis_t of dead has been reduced to 42, ll llttge bit if 'Chia glelt Vleilge 3»l`;:QVe _ _ A. . _ ' I 'A the reports which reached Vancou- We ef- el 1 _ F0111 CX 2113 1011: _ ~ ' .- ' ver ieet night infer that :there ere and the sheer rigor of the expe- MISS MCKZY Dl'0WI\Cd'-H2l’l° ])¢a(|‘.m still a. number of names which have rience. This accounts for the fact evening reports that the victorian? eligging tula piecilofiwrlgclgagela argl ` 5"' e _ fe; 't' t' if gh' su eny ewou uc is ea. » “ ~ Ti; dislthxbgepiuhbnltogt l?lIeTrnli0ve§1;; There would be two or three bubbles P A not been received there The day that few of the passengers who llm¢ Baptist PCO- ' I ,ue ~._. has been given to adiscussiou of the Were 111 the "3~tel' even With bfe " ~ ` in oklahoma’ I accident. It is said by some that it belts Were Saved- _ _ ple Elect -0mc¢rS- A _ _---I: -~ ---§-.~.-;- is quite possible that the steamer Additional advices G0f'r0b01'21lleI ' , struck on a rugged reef which runs and exble-in the dleeetef- There -_ _ . out from Tantallon Point, as few were about 130Pe°P1e bn bee-fd, ln' 1 icehergs are found in that part of the Sound. They mostly find their way out by Taku Arm But it must be remembered that for every foot of ice above water there are seven feet under water, and it is imposs- able for a navigator to see one which cluding passengers, crew and stow- ” aways. Asubmerged iceberg tore a great hole along the bottom of the' steamer, ,into which the water rushed with such volume as to show that the vessel could iioat but a short time. She lasted only fif- his steamer is running onto. All ad- _teen minutes- ' mit that by the time Capt. Foote reached the bridge it was too late to beach the vessel, in fact it was impossible, as the propellor was out of the water. The crew according to the evidence of all, acted splend- idly and left the boats to the pass- engers, they themselves being satis- fied with pieces of wreckage to cling to, until picked up by the boats. Capt. Foote did not jump from the raft, but was thrown oif* it when it capsized, and he went down, as he could not swim a. stroke. Some of the passengers acted most inhumanly, cutting the 'ropes as soon as they got into the boat and pushing oif from the steamer. The chief criticism to the operat- ion of the steamer is that she should have been slowed down as soon as it was found that she was running into ice. MUCH-NEEDED ASSISTANCE. On reaching shore Engineer Brownlee and the hrst officer called sup to Juneau E ghe '11 h ming, a distance of . 5m'es,e'tt'tbt . oooh-.1-fo-oomeu of CITY ANI) ...F.i;.;”t..a.aif:..:..z:. ,_ ,_ _ ,_ _ _ . Lucky and the Juneau steamer W lc seeme ° be wrenc e clear I-e ei. Capt. Foote was not on duty when the vessel struck, being in the cabin below, while pilot Lablanc was on the bridge. Capt. Foote walked the bridge till the vessel was about to plunge, when he leaped and made his way to' a life raft. He saw the raft was overcrowded, and like the British sailor he was, he simply remarked, “ I‘here are too many of us here, good bye, boys ” and turning leaped once more into the deep and shortly afterwards sank. THE si=IIP sons Down. - Dr. John Duncan, of Victoria and Mrs. Ross, wife of the Governor of the Yukon, together with Mrs. Ross’ daughter and a. Mr. Bell, were observed standing on the hurricane deck apparently dazed by their danger. They were advised by one of the oihcers to put on life pre- servers, but almost immediately the vessel went down. As to what hap- pened when she went down there is naturally some difference of opinion. Some state that as she ook e water heiiboilers exploded, ylt. One man who the upper works of the vessel h I - Sh -ll ° Flossie promptly responded to their of the bow as she sank Many lives _ _ p rpose_ of_ picking up any _ at 0nC@_ who might be clinging to the spare, of the vessel' You should see them be- fore you buy. Goo- A. Slater, Maker. __ the vessel. They headed for the _ _ , _ 'run moifioiwofmroo Jooio E. dougiioor beach, where the survivors had D1' Phllhpsi °f S°at"1"».'"th hm t e nviotus or Wi arrive - were oooioooeoaiy lose' ov eho ooo- ’ I §§,.pe€g;,ang were Soon on then Wav tion caused by the sudden sinking rigging and the floating parts of some NAB.vEI.I.oiIs EscArEs. of Mr and Mrs. Wm. H.Judsou Alexan- gathered: and arrived at Juneau Wife and Child’ was in hw Sta'te` dria and Mr. James T. Matheson of Sr. 3-ga-in at-*Out H0011: having on board room' Mrs Phillips’ feeling the Ge0,.ge», N B was eelemuized on wed. the bodies of six passengers which Sbbeki ul`8'ed_he1' husband to Het up riesdayevening. The marriage ceremony had been I-llcked up 011 the be3-Chand. ascel-tam what was. wrong* was pcrformed by the Rev. J. C. Spurr and 3- number of Sl11'ViV0fS- feehng Sure that something un- . . usual had happened. He rushed 55; §'i'SS°f}§‘;‘;;‘t'§éS'£§e:;;§;’e;”`;‘§arsgteti Samuel Jameson, one of the pas- out, and hurriedly returning told the prinéi uls and M; Geo W Judson sengers,arriving Tuesday afternoon his wife and daughter to dress, and su Ortedpthi Dom ° b ‘lations graphically described the scene of they ran for the deck. Just then DD e 3’ °“g"”' “ the disaster after he attempted to the ship gave a Iurch and sank, and THERMOMETER RuAD,NGu__The fuuo,,,__ get on board a raft. He said: I the wife and child were caught by ,ug is u comparative suutumeuu slipped down the rope and on to the _the suction of the air-shaft and_car- Tue highest temperature Ou - raft. By this _time the bow of the " ried to the bottom. Dr Phillips August 218, August Qzuu Islander was sinking, and the stern was struck above the eye by the 333* that he wha* "Maritime Baptist Young People to the surface, together' 1901 1930 1899 1898 1897 1896 1895 1894 74.6 56. 71.6 72. 68,6 72.6 63. 62. 763 was up in the air with the propeller _ air shaft, which prevented him go- 74_ out of the water. Then the stern ing into the shaft and saved his life, 72_ began to sink. I was hanging onto and.he;w_as thrown into the water, 7u_ the outer edge of the raft, and coming up under a cabin door, on 72_ : some of the others may have been to which he climbed with Engineer .,2_ struck by the propeller. 1 was Brownie, who came to the surface 635 struck on the head by the I at the same time. The. two men 603 side of the steamer as it afterwards got hold of some wreck- _gianced by, but was not badly age and managed to reach THE Olivette arrived at 6‘o'olook Yestor- hurt The bruise mark is there yet the shore Dr Phillips was I Cameron S E Evarts, Miss W L ali' in the Cablil W&S 3. I' I1 day evening wibhtho following imooen Butlhad agood hold and a deep worked o for four hours sera Mr I Primo. MISS Paine, Jas breath and down I went We were before he was completely resuscit Harley, Mrs Harley. Mrs Clifton. Miss sucked a long way down Tuen the ated W (1 Preston and wife of _ i _ _- _:_ _I ii ii 2 . -_ . ii . 1 ‘ U I . . - - ` - ~ ` ` ' ppa e tly re- Seattle, were on the boat on their ` f I , Alexander, A. A. Cluiflen, Dr. Fuller, A. leased, for I was tossed to the sur-I wedding trip. Mrs Preston showed P. Fuller, Mrs. Fuller, A. A. Murdock, C. face quicker than I went down. The f remarkable bravery. On passing CANADIAN CRIMINAL STATISTICS. f 0'rrAwA, August 22.-(Special)-The I report of criminal statistics for the year ending June 30 shows 249 more indictuble ofences than the previous year,_wlth 55 more convictions. P. E. Island had 429 cases against 452 the previous year the total for the Dom- inion was 8419. 'rnEPnmm=m's xovEm:N'rs. Sir Wilfrid Laurier has gone to Artha- baskaville. He returns on Monday and goes to Toronto toopen the exhibition there. Hon. Mr. Mulock returned to the City to-day. CAPT. FOOTE WAS FROM IRELAND. YAninoUrH, August 22.-(Specia.l.)- Capt. Foote of the wrecked Islander was not Capt. Calvin, Foote of this cityf but Capt. Hamilton, Foote, a native of Ire- land. MISS HCKAY _ DROWNED. _ Bos'roN. August 21.-(Special to Exam- , iner.)-The niece of Mrs. Ross, whg w`cnt ydown in the Islander, was Louise, daughter ot W. D. McKay, formerly of I Charlottetown. _ i_¢Aizrrnm nA1>'i-:sir rouse-Proven. President. Rev. George A. Lawson; Vice ` President for P. E. I., Aubrey Simpson, Cavendish. nov. G. H. Raymond of P. E. Ioiooa io appointed one of the transportation lead 55. I ` _ enough to reach the shore died after- wards from the edects of long ex- posure in the icy waters. One of the crew was in such a state of misery that he begged those who were en- deavoring to save his life to let him die. He subsequently succumbed to the effects of the terrible exposure. Those who' were saved were picked up at Juneau, sixty of them by the Queen, which reached port last night, and the balance too passage on the Faraloon, which is due today having been left by the Queen at Juneau. THE GOVERNOR'S BEREAVEMENT. It is but a few months since Mr Ross was appointed Commissioner of the Yukon, in succession to Mr Ogilvie. Mr Ross isa London man, andhas many friends in that city who will sympathize with him in the terrible bereavement that has fallen upon him. He left London fox the Territories in 1882 to ranch, becom- ing a member of the Northwest Council in 1883, and Speaker of the Territorial Assembly in 1814!. ` In 1896 he became a member of the sole Agents E. Daniels, G. Harden, Mrs. Harden, Jas. only damage I sustained was from a ithrough the smoking roo_m to reach _Exeeullve Ceueeil fel' the Te"1'i_t°1" Wewrrowoosioox. Fimdooreo the rizhl -1 ‘ E _ U wget 011 McGi1livray. J- Marks- Mr- A. A. Butter- mouthful or two of salt water and -the upper deck, they noticed fifteen lee. ?-“ewes 111 1397 allpelbbee CWD' __ _ _ ooi.i,M... Bono.-ooio,u.. J. H. Bm., some oroiooo io ehorioo ooo oiiose. mon in o amd ooodieiou wieiiiifo- E11-S;oo¢f__of 1;}1bl;o Vgofks 1'; -‘ff I Mrs. Burris, Mrs. DeChamp, Herbert As I was going down Lpreservers on, but doing nothing to all tem ° ee me - _e_ We” “O Gray Miss stewart Miss Susie Miiior could see the propofer save themselves Mrs Preston ad- I-be Yeken ee C0m““ee1°“e1` I3-it v ’ ’ ii' _ . Mrs D J MoQueeu,F l(oEivay,Mrs H above me When I came up there ,vised them to get on deck at once SPFIHH He meffled U1 M89 -"I 5 nr M. Hocre, W. Fredd, win. Aidrew,Mi-S. were but two of our partv left, an-léeveral of them followed her and Barbara E MGKH_Y»_ the ledl" _P-1f`='-' | | I Fuller, J. Fuller, T. McMillan, W. Keyes other man and myself: By this li her husband On deck. deC*_53~'5ed'_ C0mmx5S‘§I“erJ 15"? J. W. MoAim.i: Cum, Col., ispooioii.-somooi strong, o mine-owner, was _shoe dead by _ Cfombyfi saloon Proprietor, who smougm iutouuoii soshooghim.-_' nnnrm -ro sm mouas Lirmu. ' ' _0rsrmi. BAI, August 8. dinner be tendered Sir Lroeou ou souueoy, viioiiio win Lipton ion Now Your to-ruyuoe cctcd to attend Saturdail dhtml. _ro HAVE 4 _ T_Y_ Q "gr ;_i FOUNTAI PENS ,Inst received six (Q dozen cl the eeebrated PARKER ‘Lucky Curve” IOIIITESS FOIIIHII FEIS The success of the Pen Age. Leading Features of the PARKRE PEN are- Lucky Curve Feed. Spring Lock ' Ce..n_'t-Breeek-Cap Ce.n’t Leak ‘ Always Ready. When ou bu Fountain Pen Want theybeit. Y T ' ya' a we “..:.'..:"‘..§.°....°'°'..i.'f&.'»'.. Andsgtsat Eat the worrieeof men- The _Speedy Parker Fountain Pen. Prices $1.50 each up to $4.m. ARTER & can g:> ea *T77 ,!,.,-»-» I FalI-- A --Hardware Our traveller will soon call onyonwith afulllineofsam- - ples. We aeklonr friends to see himbsforeplsaingtheiroc- ig _ . tho coiumbio-constitution ming. e _ E f trrn until after the races. t €