" o_CToB__1~;R.-27. 19i4_ ' IIlAX\\ U i_ ’ \ i\\\\WIIlIIIIIIf5\\\\\\\\\\WIIlA\ "" .O U* O l ’ANAoiAtN1i‘_- r - r ' "1 " " ,s_.,,' ‘ , .. . . , . f _ i ,__ r- ,,- ,,,.__,., _.,._,..-._ THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ' PAGE THREE T _ _ _ _ .» _ _ _ -.I '_ ..- ». . ., . J'-i i' ._."i~i~ '-.if ._ 1' ~..-1.-i ,,_ -,ur .. _.t ,_.,.- ., , ... - _ . . _ ~ - . . ._ .. . . _ _ . . I .-W. .“ .r:. . -,:,..f t.,i..r ~‘ '-\ 1. .,.._- - ,r< '-_ »1»~- .;, »:.~‘l, -r' ff-~."-iw gp. -_ =' - ~:-_ -, '_ ti war. »» ~'»- »- ~, i-. gut- ~f_.,.- _,~~ _ I ~ v ;,»_. - -»~»=.»-g , ».,,- -<4 . . - _, , ‘y W i . _,,. .~.->~ r, ° ". i 'ii"¢ _ ,ii " * . ,». -"-,,.;‘~f:,-“i“_v'»-1*.=»;",i‘:-‘\::>»‘~ ~_.'~; 1.-fi, *fi ~ ->. ~.;.. -',-. _.,-. J _fl - "» ‘ ._ ~°-\-.._.~ _ ~_ :»»”f~ 1.- '.*.'~"’-ii ..'» » -\», - ’ " .".‘ ' ‘ 1 ' " ` ` ’ » ~ ~_‘~<`,:,fp ‘ ti -. " . ‘;- »1 ‘i wx.) ¢._,..€: .-I '~'” '. »e ", . f--~~g ri _--_,,-i7,.._,1, fl_¢-',‘\,',.`,i£_-'“,:~~l? ‘ ,-"'»_‘-,-'_' _' _ ,. '-'_ _; '-' _ *__ . ."'~~_ ' .f’ .~';l~z ~-' ` _\ fy".-“ - . " i *ii Fl- “ . _ ¢‘f¥'_'*‘ -~'_"‘_*,~' »\e._\'__*.p;i ;{,;S"` ' ‘ if -_ '~ _ ,l - 1f_ '___.< ,.5 - ._ __ _ _ ,. .\...,..__, Y _ 1 . _ \..._, ,,. _ _,. . _ ,_ __ __ __ _ ,..__.,. | _ _ ._ _ . , . _ _ _ _ . _ _ __ K -. _ _ ._,¢_ . , Mig” ,_, ` si”/alllnlaul _“l_)0c. Bird Says” tgbo seen :are the ex- o2i;t§?_:i:_l°fli;_vantages :of trading 4 Q I [_ /_._.,__‘ _ ___ I fd£.'.1'....._ , ' Don’t “lose sight” ur large line of hot wat ottles. You’re 'not blind ualiy and value. These $1.75, 2.00 5.00 bottles are far abo the average in quality- and every one (guaran- teed. Your money back hey’re not as we say. Just look- E. A. Foste Central Drugstore ll&\\\\\\\\’/IIIIIIO \\\\\i §\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ $9. 8 3 Fra. n-1. l-H H Hon. Chas. Dalton and Mrs. Dalton Hon. A. E. Arsenault, Summerside, pleasant week end at Hartsville. Hon. James McNeill, Commissioner of Public Works, was among those arriving in Charlottetown by the ex- press train last night. Mr. Vincent Callaghan, Ottawa, ar- rived in Charlottetown last night on a visit to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Callaghan, Grafton St. Mrs J. R. Darke left yesterday morning for Providence, R.l., where she will pass the winter months with her mother. . Miss Seller, dressmaker, of this city, leaves by this inorning’s train en route to Boston, where she will spend three months visiting friends. Mr. Daniel J. Shaw, who has been spending his holidays at his home in Uigg was in the city yesterday on his Sl.11'1l'lySld€ lway to his school at the Head of lllll VIII/_l\\\\\\\‘ llllll Wall l Hiiisbbro. Messrs Wm. McLeod and Arthur Godin drove to Charlottetown after nigliifall on Tliurstlay night, convoy- ing the lecturers on Powdcry Scab to Charlottetown.-L. Mrs. Andrews, who has been visit- ing her sister, Mrs. J. B. Russ, Char- lottetown, leaves this inorniing on re- turn to her homo in St. Androw's, N. ll. En route slic will visit relatives in ll/laipetiuc and Snnimerslde. Rev. Dr Mcliinnon, Principal of / Pineliill College, N.S., who preaclietl .in eloquent sermon from Matthew xvi 3, in St James’ Church on Sun- £i2\.iI_.Qil£‘.iliilZ..._l§:ft (‘i\arlottetown yes- terday inorning for Halifax. Mr. A. Mc(‘annell. keeper of the Drill Shed, who was rather seriously » N injured some weeks ago as the result It ls ' of an accident-tiie door of the shed T' . having fallen on his back-is so much Q . ::lI$l?.d'Se§i?l Ilzgiidhliellriwhlgt happens U you' better as to be able to be outdoors. F.S. Mitchell 'l`hc l’raciic.'\l Watch aiidfiflork Rcpairer 253 Qu-_-cg sg, :t ‘]|.irl iitciown Mr. lvic(`.anncil‘s fricnds are pleased to sec him around again. Mr. llorace l\’li~l“:. For Eighty-two ' ___ i._;l‘ ‘ I ° 0,, '~ Ms* Ai 5 . ...iii-:'i°“' °..°"°*°°.... ..: e or your , "W4 dgppeql . Our d tegunlro oxoopiloogzdyvell __ todb our|h':_i\x5\\l‘ll|°: t|in¢e1800»». _ _ The Bank,0f_ Nova Scotia §s.',.......-°-1-2-W ' IILAITDBRABCEIS Chriotioiovii -1 : Buminlogliie , » Q o in “Qh|l¢ f I 'Broad Pass with a.view £0 determining eastward in the Yukon. .0 Ibiscuit was. But sometimes even there MOVING TROOPS RAPIDLY. "Transport by Water Twenty Times Faster than Forced Marches. NEW YORK. Oct. 23.-The Times Sea. Power," says editorially:-» The British bombardment of Os- teiid from the sea is but one of the manifestations of sea power that may eventually prove decisive in the great land coiifiict. The part whlich the British fleet has played, not only in landing expeditionary forces from England, India and the colonies, but in the transport of continental troops to strategic points on the coasts of France and Belgium, has not beeni often mentioned in the reports, but it must have been considerable. The experts say that armies can be moved twenty tlnies as fast on ships as on land marches. The German strateg- ists niust think of this in their oper- ations along the western front. But Brita'in's fleet has dealt sever- er blows to Germany. Directly after the declaration of war import anti export trade, amounting to nearly $5,000,000,000 a year, was strangled on the sea by the British and Frcnch warships. »The North Sea has be- come a closed lake, and in it and the Baltic most of the German warships are bottled up. The trade routes through the Mediterranean and Suez and across the Atlantic and l’at-_ilic oceans are open tu the Allied Powers. save for the pretlacioiis activities of a t'c\v German cruisers that must cease when they are captured or de- stroyed or run out of supplies. That. iuust occur soon, as Geruiauy`s naval bases have been taken. Moreover the powerful protection of the British fleet is the guarantee. tiiat binds together the parts of the British Empire around the earth. So long as that protection exists it must be paid for in active loyalty, a loyalty that' will express itself in increasing ‘levies of troops from population numbering over 360,000,000. lloulitlcss the "conversations" hc- twceii thc military and naval experts of France und Great Britain follow- ing the Agailir crisis had their in- fluence iii forniulating ai policy that 'enables Great Britain by her sea pow- er to forge a_ weapon now day by day strengthening the Allied forces on land. RICH STRIKE OF GOLD AND SILVER IN ALASKA. OTTAWA, Oct. 26.-The Mines 'Department reported to-day'thc details of a wonderfully rich strike of gold and silver which has been matic in the Broad l-‘ass district, 250 miles north of Weward, Alaska. (Z. ll. Collins, of Prince Rupert, semis the report. Great ledges, wide and deep, are reported to have been found, bearing ‘exceptionally rich deposits of gold, silver, lead and zinc. There is a stampede of miners and prospectors to the district. ' The Canadian Mines Department will send two"geolog`icul experts to the proliabillty..of an outcrop to the ::`Bu_y Rexall Remedies and help swell thc Patriotic Fund. From now until December 31, we will give 5 per cent of our total sales of RCXUII Remedies to this great cause. Mac- Kinnon Drug; Co., Cor. Great George and Kent Streets. Metf.- WWw~MMMw so as to save the relieving and_ rc- tiring bodies of men from being fired on as they go. < Those who have left the trenches march back to a sheltered position in the rear. where they ure in coiiinurii- tive security from the German shells and can rest in peace till their turns for duty comes round again. Some- times this safe i‘csf.ing-place is _pro- tected by a rlso of ground; soiiivtiiiics it is deep in thc thick woods lhut, stretch in places behind ilic liriiisii freely and almost ns comfortably as reserill? the men have nn ext-elli-nt diet. They get bacon, cheese and jam and ten, and often even fresh moat. After a fortnight without the lon!! marches to which they were accus- tomed iu the"i1_i'st few wccks of thc campaign, many of them are Kettll\8 percsptibly fat. _. Hot Ten in the Trenches. When their turn camo to 50 up again for their spell-generally 24 hours- ln the trenches they take ii. stock oi’ preserved hecf and biscuits with them. That is the main supply for the day, and it is not as 'unpalatable as it sounds, for the blsonlt U of..excellent wlieaten flour and are easily broken- 1 t teeth smashers the old kind of in the trenches they have hot food brought to them from the rear. And the orderlies who come along during a lull in the firing with a big can of hot tea hung between them deserve all the gratitude they get, for.the German guns may open fire again at any moment. and when "Jack John- sons" are fiylngfthe only safe place is underground. And so. there, under the shelter of the earth parapet, outside which the today, under the caption “British . ' Ili SUIMIERSIDE (Continued from Page One.) Mr. Tlolmden said he would as soon use dry lime and sprinkle plenty of it. The reports of former nieetliigs state that the Dakota Red resists the disease? Mr. Holmden: As far as I have gone, I have not found a, Dakota Red or a cross-bred infected. Is the disease really very harmful There is a destructive form but it has not been found in l’. E. Island. lt, however, shuts the potatoes out of the _American market. You say it is not found in any of the states except l\laine? I suppose you are aware that Maine and the Maritime Provinces supply the whole of the seed potatoes for all of the _other states. 'You also say Belgium is free from this disease. Arc you aware that Belgium imports large quantities from Germany and the Brit- ish isles? Does not this embargo _seem rather strange? I ani not prepared to discuss that. The United States have imposed it, anti we are here to give you infornia- tion regarding its nature and the host _way to get clear ot' it. What steps are bcing taken to have the embargo removed? Mr. Gussow went to Washington last July and matic recommendations whicli have been accepted by the Fctlcral lloai-il _of ilorticulture. These in-goiiations must be put through by the lirliisli Ambassador at Washington, and it` the _war had not broken out the likoiihooil is they would have been coinplcteil before this. 1 cannot say tho form they will take but I think I ani safe in saying that they will permit of potatoes being sent from this l’ro- vince into thc United Status under certificate. AN OLD OFFENDER CAUGHT. For years it has caused ciidiess trouble, but. \\'hcn l*iitnain's Corn Ex- tractor was applied, he canio out. roots and all. Any corn or wart curctl in twenty-four hours by “l’utuaui’s Extractor." 25c. at all dealers. CARMAN MURDER CASE. MINEOLA, N.Y., Oct. 26.-The jury in the case uf Mrs Florence Conklin Carman, charged with the murder of Mrs Louise Bailey, failed to reach a verdict after thirteen hours and ten minutes of deliberation. The jury reported its inability to agree at 10.55 a.m. to-day, and was ilii-wb-»~‘i'~~’ Mrs Carman collapsed upon hearing the verdict, and was carried from tue court-room. Her attorney announced that bail would be t'ui-nisheil for her release to-morrow, should the court consent, pending a new trial. DALHOUSIE DEFEATED BY U.N.B. TEAM. l<‘RlNl-ISS. “lt is not i-nsy ti. br gtniil. If il; \vi~ri- i,1r)otliit~ss niiulil bi* \\oi`tli very litili-. lt woiild not. incaii st.i'iig-_li-_ pi\i'.=ii.~.tciicc, ii.~'pirat.i<.|., iievelopineiit., cl\;ti‘:i.cti‘i‘, as it. ilocs now.. Foul gimiiness--rfliciciit, lienoticiciii. goodness-is valniiblc because of what it; costs, diiy by day, and it nevci' comes at a lial`ut\il\~" -i mi |nn1 pl _ _ _ ; _, _ n Q THE JURY DISAGREE ON THE II DE/\TH_0F}'J. H. MCKENZIE. PICTOU, N. S., Oct. 26.-J. Henry McKenzie, gentleman farmer died last night. I-le as estimated to be worth a quarter of a nililion. ills first wife was a daughter ol' thc late lion. D. l-`art|uliurson. of P. E.‘lslaiid. llis se- cond wlfe and fhrec children survive. " `§. We Can Save You `lVIoney_ On A Piano We are wholesale as well as retail Piano dealers-we buy in inimensetiuantities- buy for cash, and we think buy closer than most dealers. As a result our prices, qual- ity considered are as low or lower than the same goods can be purchased in any other part of Canada. Oni' easy payment plan makes it easy for you to pay for the piano. Lct us tell you mort- about our service and prices- ‘ MILLER BROS. 123 Kent St. -.-v--'~------,-------~ _ _ _ i ~. .. rdasher Try The llabe y _ For Comfortable Underwear wi _UNDERWEAR »._'--I I' f \ 'K 620|- I0-2G.\‘Iif _-.,--‘ \.'=\;='_-\:;-_,-;.-__._.;_._¢.,-._»_,- v-_gil-.-s -- ._-“'ii\i'~‘i "5-..1l"»‘-"_ - -1 _ ~..l . ;__,, y;»:_i;-=_,f=___ ii _ -.\.\..»p..._i' _,-_';`,;'.-:5_-.~.§" .2 . ;'-'zi ' tu -1 / I I at 'rii§riE|.ii3 \ / » '=:‘='i‘.f-=i';." 3"-=:=;. _ _ . ' ‘#34-'ii' "'}’!-’:':-it-_‘i ".- "fb-’-".;‘.'i§. . _,,1],=,{!_!.':"-. '/5.-":~l_;.f.," " `,-‘\¢‘;';l.,_i iii.-_.xlib ',:~‘ _ 55151,.-.~_¢ <\‘__`._.5‘._i_’-;Z'~ " .af . - a ___i fc iii’ 1 .':' ° ',,' happy army of well underclothed men who wear ,___ . STANFIEI.D’S UNDERWEAR made for men in perfect fitting sizes. Stanfield’s Combinations won’tsag, bind or creep up on you when washed-ihey’re Unshrinkable. We have chosen our stock so as to offer alarge variety of weights and fabrics which will appeal to every taste. IF you have never known the pleasure and comfort of STANFIELTYS Combina- tions with pcrfect closed crotch start now and join that UNSHRINKABLE '/` ` ' ` ' in Natural Wool, Silk and Wotl Stanlielil s two-piece suits Red and Blue Label. also Penmans, Sl. George and Wol- sey in dlifcrent weights both combination and two piece. It is time to buy now so as to be 'ready when the thermometer drops. HENDERSON & CUDMORE Sunnyside Gates Old Stand command. German shells are bursting. the Eug- lish private ents his ration as coin- fortsbly as li` he were at a picnic and with far more appetite. the Home Entertainer There’s limitless entertainment in the COLU_M- BIA GRAFONOLA-barrels of _fun for the family. You may select records that will keep your family and friends in spasms of laughter. Then if you are an admirer of the higher art of entertainment the world’s best artists are at your Prices range from $32.00 to $650.00. ,,i°“"i A. E. Toombs M #ri 177 Queen St. Note<"' is r 5 "" ' ' "`-5 The Columbia Grafonola 't'~~1.` -203K¢'fitSi1¢_.. . I' -_ I _ . *"'r°“' _ . _. -. _.-._ --. _ , .. -J ~ » I » a :' ',..~.f;.i."..r 1' ,~,,_,, . . '__ ~ .. __ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ ,.. ~» A ~»» V »-*‘-ww-_ __ -~ __ _ fb* -¢f~~._.._,..,_--..~.»f .,,.. ~.. “mv -.. , _ ._ -_ M..-L " ` i ' . -I-..\..-_»-_,-Mr'-r,»~.-'s -i»'>:~“~rm'f=fv<=ea‘rr»-,iii-°af'w.s-vriwei1/rains."-:.i.~f=-.rf-=fw~<»»-one-f1'1@~.>e1'i;»¢f-r;izi~i-are-air_ -s»mfmmwm .._...._' - »--»-----»--*--"'*~