i » . li iii.. if ii ;‘ 4' \ i abgarest brood mare. Miss Pratt , , by Helr~at-Law, 2.05%. Mis# ' ..-Lili-S. seesau..$1§..;rash 9r..n.ots.du~. 1 1 A \ 5 - . ~ o o 0 ' .The British Soldier -ffltbs ‘British soldier, 2_1iil,£. is s re , mshlabiy handsome horse, dark chest .'no.whlte except star. A stout ,‘ oompactly built horse, witi. bone; stands square on thi- .of feet and legs. .\.gh;'hss proved himself to be tbl fdltllt trotting horse that ever race». i libs Provinces. He holds the 4-yea. ogl recom mode or Halifax. 1915, also t 0 Charlottetown Track record sincf- i¢it,'md he is th- nl...-~ likely nom , insight to reduce it in 1918. His 'trotting actim 1.- perfection noel' without boo's and has better- tluiri two-minute spwil. ,'l‘he- British Soldier is sired by CoL*l\\to,‘2.1‘1%, at 3 years, winner 0 ii o Futui it 1900. (Todd \ ¢'_-.Harthizd " y. ` » _`-, grit tent speed-siriug sont Todd 2.14? Qihgllred by Blngen, 2.06111, founde’ 0- e .greatest speed producing ian: i}y` lii the world. 'mis dam or the British soldier i.-= ` tt is the dam of nine with stand ii records, including The Leadinl » lildy, 2.07, at 3 years (a world’s re c`l st the time.) The Prattler 2.121/, ill years. The Pi-sttler is a full bro iii s to The British soldier. _' Us Prsttvis also granddam of si: tb ll records from 2.05% to 2.13% ll ` sd 3 and 4 years. No trottini all bn in Canada has more epee' ng-datronger license to produce a fas l ` or, than the British Soldier, ami iibjps the best crop of colts to show gtg shown by a trotting horse oi i _ Island; large, sound and hand slilfle colts that are showing extreme spud. ' ` it' fall at Charlottetown Exhib. tioii iii a large field of foals sired by thu 'leading stallions foals sired by The British Soldier took all the priv vs eligible to blood foals. .~Mr. John B. Andrews. East Raya \-.rho has bred and sold more fast :nits 'nl ;= any P. E. island breeder .-.ara il..-r he has the most promisin. mil..-, r.-..:: The British Soldier he eve. hail, or. 3.5 farm. He has 2 yearlinge atnfi .’ »'<~f.‘- this spring. itiiim.. `:..-.ve taken the place of thi f-nirii..-» nurse, but they will never mire. place of the fast trotter, si mee-1 -.our best mares to The British 5112113.-¢~ .-nd avoid dlsuppointment,foi he will dre speed just as sure as hi. na--n.~....e will beat the Germans. Nov. lst. Usual return fee. W. S. .\1cK1E, - Owner “lion»- 375-L . ~- - 6014-5-22M1iSat5» _ .`, 1 _GAY o£_UlNlS . For plants ordereby mall, postage prepaid read the following: Extr: .nrly cabbage, cauliflower and celery pr-r '100 $1.20. Extra early tomati per doz. 50c; Late Tomato 25c; lat- :-zhhage per 100 30c. Annual beddinf flower plants, Alyssum (carpet 0* .-,nowi per doz. 17c: Aster, Stocks Petunia, Verbena, Phlox. Snapdragon Saipiglossis. Cosmos. 22c per doz Qbdling Pansy, Carnation and Seed ling Dahlias 30c per doz... Salvie. 25~ az., Hardy Perennials, Pansy and isy in bloom, Carnation, Sweet Wil lgm 75c per doz. Wintered over Tees double Hollyhops 10c each. we are not handling Dahlia or ldiolus bulbs. Please take notice t we are paying the pojage. Par sl requiring ordcrs of h avy plants Quantities such as blooming Pansi gsy, I-lollyhooks orcnhhage plants ll ull send for price list and order _ _express nt less r~o.=f. You can "vs money by buyin-z our plants the market at Campbell Bros. Th plants delivered to the market I ly. Address orders to J. J. Gay & oil, Charlottetown. 6-1Sttmtf. ._, _ JNWF -.. having leased the nshlng and shoot- l_ Lprlvileges of the McNeil Pond sit- d on our property to the Cavend- -Bporting Club anyone fishing or ting on this property will be pros- _ ted for trespsssing. , ERNEST WEBB . HAMILTON McNElLL %-5-23U4itt3wks. . * 3, r:-.i~ . ' ' l ‘ . " $'\;} -__ , --4.5 -‘ns Esf -§~ >§?:l§i§§;é!=f`{- ,El .ll f> §%%* -= 5. ortiiwui estoad s uusrfe in Manitoba icant must sp- Luuio Anim . latty by proxy lon Lands condition. Ann” u uid cal dtmomn A gills of his l¢l’¢l,0ll - - condition. boi is .- ,fx llvtptwhororosidosee perfofzeodintrlls wednissuoiessssmqauniegsesnnss- __ may qusmr-nctiossloauldo his riesémvorsen. .. , roddooeoisosehofthrec , esrniaghomsmsdvltentsshosvsem _ gr, so soon smhinomd sggttnéygrtm %%%% mWwmi ' Y any mais over na '. I nes ».. - Lobster Bait ___.l. We -have s. quantity of Msgdaline honing, choice on hand ond will sell right F.0.B. Kenslngttai. N. A A. C. QLEOD. Park Corner. 8081-8-21M3i. V _ Bonshsw-Charlottetown TIME TABLE Launch “ltrsthgurtnoy" ' Juno, 1918 Leave Boushaw , Leave Ch'town Tues.. 4th. 7 s.m.. . . . . . . . . . . .3.30 p.m Fri., 7th.-8 a.m. . . . . . . . . .5.30 p.m. ;_t::_\Ie's.,1g‘1Itli.5lg(-,304 -` Caliguls and Tiberius and other de- 'E ues., 18th, 7 a.m. . . . . . . . . .3.30 p.m. f‘rl. 21st. 8 a.m. . . . . . . . . .5.30 p.m neil.. zstn, io am. .uso p.m "rl.. 28th. 5 a.m. p.m I -|79-3-1-Mt! ....-1_1-_ iii $550.00 in purses for the horse races t the Summerside Driving Park or ominion Day, Monday, _July -1, 1918. The following horse races will be -ld at the Summerside Driving Perl .1 Monday, July lst: ree-for-all Trot and Pace, mile heats, Puma ...$200.00 19 Trot, 2.22 Pace, mile heats. ‘ Purse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$200.01 .35 Trot, half mile heats, Purse $150.... . . . . . . . ..$150.0t COMPANY J. F. ARNFTT, 083-6-l4fstues4i. ciiiiuggi nu Commenclng Monday. June 24th 918 and until further notice the Cai ferry "Prince Edward Island” will b~ withdrawn from Service between Bor en and Tormentlne and the S. S .\'orthumberlsnd" will be placed on .ie Summerside-Pt. du Chene route rains west will therefore be change- :id run daily, Sunday excepted, s: » s:- ' llow Leave Charlottetown 6.25 a.m. ar ve Summerside 8.50 a.m., leavs ummerside 12.20 p.m., arrive Tig nish 6.05 p.m. Leave Charlottetown 4.00 p.m. ar , -ive Summerside 7.20 p.m., leav- lummerside 8.50 p.m. arrive Tignis`~ 11.55 p.m. Leave Tignish 5.30 a.m., arrlvi summerside 8.35 a.m. leave Sun, werside . 9.49. a.m. arrive,Charl9tt‘1 -uvn 11.55 a. m. Leave Tignish 12.05 p.m., arriv- -fummerside 5.35 p.m.. leave Sum ~iersi_de 8.45 p. m. arrive Charlotte 'own 11.10 p.m. Leave Borden 6.20 a.m.. arrive Em raid 7.20 a.m., arrive Charlottetowr 10.15 a.m. 'Leave Charlottetown 12.15 p. m .lrrive Summerside 4.10 p.m., leavf Summerslde.6.10 p. m., arrive Em \rald Jet. 7.40 p.m., leave Emeralf ict. 9.45 p. m. on arrival of nigh' rain from Summorside and arriv' .lorden 10.45 p.m. ` Trains betweep Souris. Georgetown \iurrsy Harbor and Charlottetown will continue to run as at present. DISTRICT PASSENGER AGENTS ' OFFICE. Wiarlntfeiown, P.E.I.. June 19th, 191' *O55-6-20M3i Bonshaw Stores We, the undersigned, be- ginning on the 17th June and continuing till 19th September- will close our stores on MONDAYS, WED- NESDAYS and THURS- DAYS at 7.30 p.m. sharp. A. J. MHCNEVIN, SAMUEL BEATON. Cemetery Lettering Lemetry lettering on granite or marble. Call or write W. G. Tinney Fredericton P. E. l Q o 8025-6-19wed4iEsst4f. -L jvc-` 4,' ’*." -.".f-2, ‘ ‘” 'if 2' , .iv '_',~;3'.--.' -e » Mail Contra Oosiod tomiors,.sddresed to the Postmaster General, will be received at Ottawa until noon, on Friday. the 5th July. 1918. for the conveyance of His Majesty's Mails, on n proposed Contract for four years, six times pe." week over Rural Mail Route No. iii from Prfncetown, P. E. Island. from ' the lst October next. Printed ~ notices containing further information ss to conditions of pro- posed Contract may be seen and blank foims ot Tender may be obtained st the Post Oilioes of Princetown and at the oillce of the Post Oillc Inspector. $01-itiof.. iz!-IEAR. ost so Inspector. PM 01300 lllpootofs Omoo. .. ir wb. t ui is ri D Y _ comparison. You have killed more ~nodei. the "Scourge of God," you are. “is a forest fire fanned by a cyclone Horse :;or match that may be extinguished - Races ' _ Briton, the Gaul. the Latin and the ‘-‘HE SUMMERSIDE DRIVING PARK - Secretary 4 TO WILLIAM OF HOHENZOLL- IIN, MURDERER, RAPIST AN DESTROY!!! OF DEFENSELESS; WOMEN AND CHILDREN From Col. R. P. Dickerson. Com- mander-in-Chief of the National LOYBUY M0806. Springfield, Mo. Neither history nor fable furnishes us with any such character as yours. You are the chief directing cuuso of.. more crime, more murder. rspe.arson.' ll»9~l"l¢|0l1. cruelty. lying. perjury. ds- struction desecration, desolation and despair than all the so-called kings and evniluerors that have gone before or ever will come after you. You. in the estimation of the world outside of Germany. make Timour, Tsmerlsnc, Attila, Alaric. Xerxes. Darius. Cyrus, Alexander. Caesar, Napoleon. Nero,i Stroyers of human life, honor.soul and "\'0DertY. seem small and un bv ;vien_ women and children in one day han the Tartars or Goths killed in .00 years. Compared to Attila. your ompared to the fltful dame of s par- Y a breath. The path of your destruction has ‘ircled the world. The terror of your :word has spread from the most East- ‘rn point in Siberia to the most West-` -rn Point in Alaska; from far Austra- ¢ \ You will, if the world is not in error.| 'ou in commission of crimes calcu-‘ ited to excite human hatred and con~! ‘empt. i How do you go to -sleep at night 1 and then evolve the almost unimag-' viable and almost unevolvable empire ’ crime which you are charged of .aving inflicted upon the world?What was your original idea What did vu think? Had you any remote idea. ‘iat your forcing of war upon the' wrld would result ln"the ruin which. 'iurope faces --today-? Had you any re- iote idea that of the 1.500.000.000- .-iman beings of all sorts upon the` .ce of the earth, 1,420,000,000 would ite your name. hate your race, hate, and would be willing to‘ -00 individual lives rather than that our power should prevail above onel `-.rmenians and Syrians, of probably .fi.000,000 Slavs in war as the direct "ftsult of war, interfere with your lumber? Do the stumped arms of little chil- - ren reach out to you in your dreams? ‘ no the horror-stretched eyes of out- .aged women haunt you in your -leep? Do the sons of Germany whom ou have doomed to death, as surely is you have doomed the agonized .\rmenian or the hell-condemned Bel- _1ian, reproach you in the darkness? .io the souls of unborn children cry 'ii you at midnight as the souls of .lieir mothers cried when the bayo- -.ets of your Prussians pierced them? .Ind do the myriad souls of little chil- ren that might have been born of .he multitudes of young that you have killed crowd about you in the gleaming and cry: "Oh, Kaiser! but for you we might have had fathers and might have had mothers and might have been born of love and lived ln love and seen God. Married Couple require,any time before autumn heated apartments-about three ,rooms-with or without board. ‘ Address P. 0. Box 55 City. 48 1-5-4sl.Ulit. Get- Your Panama Hat 'A Cleaned Here NOW All the newest hat styles are at your command w en you have us clean and re- block your hat. Expert work guaranteed and lowest prices charged. All smokers supplies always in stock. » Lambros Bros 135 Grafton St. ` Phone 906-¢0ut of Town 0rders_CarefullyAttendsdTo A e Bllmus' - Habit 'ez Some people have bi- ious spells, about every so often until they get to be a habit. ` The liver is at fault. Get the liver right by. using Dr. Chase’s Kid- ney-Liver Pills' and the bile will not collect in the blood _until it pois- ons youl _ ' There is no one or- gan in the human body which has so great a. ...control of health as the liver. Hence the far- reachingceffectfof this treatment. ia to farther Kamschatka. Men of - :ll races and of all blood, Germans* N°w’ we “ever °““ have f“¢h9"9 “W1 imong them. hate your very name. f we “ever can have m°"1ef§ and W0 “rom the borders of Prussia to the' "ev" calf lm b°"“ ami We “ever can -nds of the earth men are rushing to- see God' Y°“ h“ve'“p°n y°“|' M005' vestmy you_ The New Zeahmden '_he_ sodden soul not only the curses. of ualay, me ruipino, the Fuinns, me! °°““"°“ ’“""°’"* Y°“ have d@=¢f°>'@d -I-,erm Del Fug kms' the black Aug but the uncountable millions that but rnlian and thg red American, thelfglrd dggrftnigtlglg 221% "ved 3° Praise "atagonian, the Uruguayan, the Man- y ' ~hu_ the Aina, are‘1~ushing to join the ]$;;;?“t0°:);;l;’t‘l':ie%iw:3g‘ an?)§nt};gl"il;Z‘;; uh" A , 1 I th I d I b f' Billion e vce-gerent of God to 'ourededltigtl-c?ldln.n 0:4: billion? of-ot(i)i"ml° the world' Y°“ speak °f G°d as _undred and eighty thousands of per_,if He were an intimate of thine. ons, practically every human beingl thmwe dm" ever asked G°d what He ‘gg °f Geegan \=1°°f{,;=“<_§ many heme” ..§’§"i'P‘y§.f i`l'..."2.°.‘I.°.d"}'.§‘.?3'G?.l‘l'w‘i.1't ngs of erman oo pray every lay that the House of Hohenzollern ggabeen the answer °f ym" G°d to 1 d ll h i ll b ' __v';DeE trgrgtthg 3253 for “ha e lf you sleep through the night. and No creature "vmg o‘r dead has ever ‘how can it bc done what is the nature nspired one one-thousandtli part of M ym" “waking t° the d““'“ Whal “he hatred that you have inspired‘ar° y°“r feelings as y°“ 'ace the }I;3as't and watch ,the sun climb over the _ or zon on anot er day of blood. mur- hoggt ahgxguirplilie tihlanlgstggdgtashgegider, massacre and- misery of which lved to the 18th year of the 20th cen- ‘ y°u are accused of bflng the 5918 and ‘ury A. D. and probably as the most; unlghauenggg ;“3:°{ 'th mea thing that 'ever will uve. it is. ° *'°“ “ “ "9 “U be “Y 'mpossibie to conceive that any cre- end fm you and your Muse but mm" _ted or “enable thing can exceed-der. destruction and utter desolation? ’ You are a pstterer of the Biblical phrase. Repeat, then ponder upon the words, "They that love the sword shall perish thereby.” Repeat, I say and dwell upon these words. Then tell us, oh Kaiser, if they do not ring truer than any words you ever pon- dered lbver? Remember them, “They that love the sword shall perish thereby." Think upon them, dwell up on them, pass upon them and tell the world if they do not ring truer than any words that have ever come to your eyes' or to yourears? Despicable and despised beast,yo\; and your war-gluttons are doomed. The Americans are streaming into France. The tide is turning and il iwiu not be ion; before urs mi ons, _iliohenxo is hoard around the world nerul Bombing hu uid that the American -boys in France would take cars of ybur barbarians in ,Flanders if we crush"your damnsble I Hun propaganda.--in America. 6 ,Th6r0f0rB. the National Loyalty (Lennie of America announces its :declaration of war on the Hun at yhome and from this instant there will gba no place in the United States-for -BUY but true. 100 percent Americans. = (Signed) COL. R. P. DICKERSON Commander-in-Chief df the National . Loyalty League., - ‘THE DELIGATE AND IMPORTANT i WORK OF MAKING ARMY ‘ounage the pqgitiqns of enemy guns. 3 _ M/we “ste each streak or spot and discover less. Often the exposures are made at great ltaisbts, when niachines are, forced' upward by sntiaireraft fire; conditions of light may be poor: the machine not be flying horizontally when the exposure 'is made. cousins distortion in distances. ln fact. scores of variable factors enter into the work, and the interpreter of photo graphs taken in the air must he s man of seasoned judgment. able to evalu- its true meaning. His work is made doubly difllcult b attempts to cam- e photograph reader, therefore, . The process of making maps where- ,by military operations can be carried? .out is not so comparatively simple as it once was. Neither is it so crude' , and restricted. _ | . The topographical division of the .American Expeditionary Forces has been organizing and training for ‘ months now in France, and' maps con- taining the work of American engin- ' eers are already being supplied to the' ‘ American, staff and Tfield officers; Of course, lt has not been like blazingl _ trails in a wilderness. The ground has' i already been very thoroughly coveredi ' and French army maps and civil rec-i ords from local sources,lorm.a.basls.;.nam,,., came hh, They mg But map making has to be kept scrup-5 ulousiy up to date. ‘ i Robert K. Tomlin, jr.. who is act-2 ing as wsr correspondent for "The- Engineering News-Record] has an ar~» ticle inthe May 23 issue of that pub-' ilcation, in which he says: , “The topographical division must .he able 'to furnish at quick notice' ma-ps of enemy ground and also t-hat( occupied by our own troops, the latter' including not only the advance areas' but also the territory in the rear, such! as sites of supply bases, hospitals, av-l -machine gun ranges, storage yards and camp areas. Obviously, it would be diflicult if not impossible, foi' a single detached organization to do the' field 'and air work necessary for the' production of all of these maps. espec-' , ially on an extended front. The plan is, therefore, to have each army map the territory along its own front, while the topographical division of the intelligence section, a headquart- ers unit. acts as the general clearing house for map- information and out- lines the broad questions of policy by which the special map-making forces in each nrmy are guided. Its work in- volves, of course, very close cooperat- Modern battle maps would' probably he impossible without the eagle eyes if the air. Mr. Tomlin thinks that by far the most valuable source of infor- mation for making. maps' of forward irons is the aerial photograph. But of course. this is a subject about which very few details can hc given out. This correspoiident writes: “Tho work divides ltsclf into ihroc phases, the taking of the picture, its nterpretttion after development and reconstruction of the data in map Form. Our topographical division has wieveioped a forcc of specially trained lation training stations, artillery and? Clarence-"Pop, what is a lon with -the air service." t ii Th must be a student of camouflage in all, of its many variations. After a pic- ture is made. no attempt is made to enlarge or reduce it to some uniform scale. it is put under lenses o`f high power, as well os' sterescopes. which bring the details out in reliei',‘and the msn who reads its message' must be able to make the DN-`*iJe¥' 9»“°W°“°¢° hei ht at which the exposure for -tak- for map meters." for the E was made. The usual height ing a picture from an airplane purposes, I was told, is 2,500 Lance-Corporal Horace Hills, Sui folks, says: "Five or six thousand traveli- had had ed _three or four days, and they ar- nothing at all to eat. After rived soup was brought in. and as they were starving they rushed at it. The Germans then dashed forward and stabbed at them with their swords and bayonets, and killed and wounded ii lot. -Seven or eight Italians were dying of starvation every day in camp. They had no parcels. I saw un Englishman give an Italian bread. and the Italian went down on his knees and kissed his hands.' rgillenni- um " Darkie Dad-"1t’s dess a out ds same as centennial, muh son. on'y it.’s got mo’ 1885-" - -Lemon Juice For Freckles Girls! Make beauty _lotion st home forafew cents. Tl'¥|*| Squeeze the juice oi' two lemons ln- to a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white. shake well, and you iisve a quarter pint of the best ireckle i und tan lotion, and complexion beau, tiller. at very, very small cost. .Your grocer has the lemons and :my drug store or toilet counter will supply tlircc ounces of orchard white for it fvw cont:-i. Massage this swt;e_t_- iy fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands cuch day and -see how freckles and blemishes disappear and how clear, soft und white the skin becomes. Yes! lt is harmless. funn for the lust two steps of this 1 __ work. which cells for the highest type .tj ‘ _I -_ ii' tecilmioal skill, long experience _audi _ .- . i .horo gli familiarity with almost ev- ‘ ‘ arything connected with modern war- l# Of fare. To the uninltisted some of these' hMlf_flZ p Wd] by 'pictures would be absolutely meaning-I thg ppf .__a,f$§E5rEN' - '_ t _ _ ,_ vnnlmiarinfng.-mwn ousnn_1ss‘ _ _ __ _ 7, -iU,t,iE;2g,;ts;ls. ,_ ol I h _ IK” \ ‘N .Graham Flour We have made ar- rangements With Mr. John B. Andrew, East Royalty Flour Mills to supply us fresh each wegk Graham Flour made from our own im- poftatign gf Choice Fife and _ Marquis Seed Wheat of the very best quality. This Wheat makes the.best Grahv-m Fl0\\l’ it is possible to get in any country. We _ will sell in any quantity from 5 pounds up. \Vl{1TE FLOUR Also made' by Mr- Andrcw fy-gm Fife and Marquis Wheat Sup- plied by us, makes the sweetest and most wholesome 'bread ever eaten (the old stone process) You will like it You will use it always. You will have better health by using it. We sell in any quantity from 5 lbs. up. We will receive our first sup- ply gf Gmlium and White Flour on Thurs- day 20f|l of this week. Try it an-d be convinc- ed. For sale at our Feed and Grain Ware- house, Queen Street, , . i Carter & Co Ltd W 'TQ l n h -ur soul , lv down every one of their 1,420,000.-_ ill-1 I _ g l\.} #.- .I Q \ ,- battle and probably 4,000,000 other; .ie ar y . I '-00 French in and out of battle of 1.- 900.000 British, of 1,000,000 'I‘urks.| 3|- ¢' » I i i l gggsg.-re.-.~. - . .V ,_-. __ is ‘-.Le éé ,;/»'~’- if them? , i -' \ fs :‘.‘;if*:.‘5 - R 1’ if - ` il. \- . - ’ » \ `-oes e nowe ge yo 1_1- . _ - \ _ ~ A/ I 1 , \ _ ' ,It .used of having already destroyed 5.: , 4 ,` ~\ \\;_ l btw v 4;. 2 _ .00.000 German lives upon the field oi, -,I `\\ 7 /( .-~ /4 " __ _._ _ W ~ ‘ __ \\ .fi ‘ -9” --_-"L_ 'nt ‘ -`-:rman lives as the direct result of- tv 1' '\ _ .1 /'/ ”//,.. ' ‘ ' . 7/_ _ .ff , Q/-L - I' 'I ‘ w destro ed the lives of 3000--‘ __ _f ‘\"|- ‘ /1),' ,' I " /'- I' ' ' \ . - .. /I / ‘ , / \ , We have just received one carload and have another carload on the way. Direct From the Annapolis Valley of the famous “1-:VAN GELINE” APPLE LY DER ;-'7}'_-j- ___.,, I / /ff. il, Q " 8 _ _ / ` . 1 A ‘ ,_,.../ ‘I i li I ` T The most refreshing and healthy non-intoxicating lllilll.-`-\\“ summer beverage. Guaranteed to keep sweet and clear.. Supplied in large or small barrels. “EVANGELlNE” CYDER VI NEGAR ' “F1/ANGnLINE” SPIRIT VINEGAR EVANGELIINE MALT VINEGAR DEBLOIS BROS 55--57 Water Street Charlottetown rliy fn/1,, \-V, . , . is _ f _ ALSO . ` _ _#11/' .lou-H