."1" t' - v.-..-_ .. @ ..__-....--_~- 1...- _...W s-Ye; --._ _ ~ ~- J_,,1~ _'\¢ / 1 r t.-hey enter the ~house. They do not flying past The Japanese wear wood _ _ _ on shoes and take them oft before _ F ' n.u . 111.- 1_1ou1cnlum of tho "*“W°'ll?°U'”5 Plllllill "H810"-’ ` ~ 11 l:;..l l~ oul gathering. Those 50191311100. *Give God -tho right of ’ ’.°" " °” “ ° " _.._.._..__v,;»'“"§.f=-1..... 1.1....'....;°...;,.,.;~............§i...., illlll B|[;|(‘ ill Vil ROUND lillllil (Story told to Th Guardl t How Mrl.KellySuffered and ` 6 an “por er _HowSllewssCured. Wil.--“I was pains Com- 1 of these and feel better over. I know . remedies have me worlds of good and I- hope every suffering woman will give them fs trial.”-Mrs. ANNA Kll:l..l..\', 710 Chestnut Street, Burling- ton, Wis. - |- _ '1'he_lnsny convincing testimonials een- stautly published in the newspapers ought lobe proof enough to women who suffer from those distressing ills pecu- liar totheir sex that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is tho medicine they need. .This goodold root and herb remedy has proved unequslled for these dread- ful ills; it contains what is needed to restore woman's health and strength. If there is any peculiarity in your oilae requiring special ld. vico, write the Lydia. E. Pink- ham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass., for free edsioo. - LETTER OF SYMPATHY. . To Mrs. Wm. Scncnhaugll: Dont' Frioud.~~'I`l1o sadness which has come to so nlany homes during the last few years has now cutcrcr` yours and in so doing you have beep called upc-n to part with one whonn was very dellr to you in thc person ofyour sr/n. W. H. Graham, who was killed in action on the battlefield last month. We as members of’ the l.().G.'I’. o' whicll the deceased was a higllly ho nored member wish to express ou; fleilll llylllpathy ill this your dzly of sorrow and trial. Wo all fully understand wllat 11 noble character- liro. Grahalm pos ilesslfdr always willing fo help" in any "UUE P@.l`U1lllllll5 I0 1:0041. a11d whcr the (all came across the waters “lol mon" Bro. Graham was not slow tc heed- that call and wont like u alan to iight the enemy, 'Ho has laid his life suddenly down a. life just budding into a future of promise. 'Phe summt-.is cnule io hilu in splcn did- manhood and ho was ready to answoi tha call. What. greater unswor could hc give _tllan to lay dowll his lii`c' for his coun ry. ' May God in ills goodness and lovc look down on von und holp you lumi- tills sorrow which wo all so keenly foci. We also ozlrllestly pray that lilo "White .Devo of Peace" shall soon ily over* that loncly grave ill Franco which holds tho dearly loved remains of our Bl'o. We shall mect, 'but we will miss him There' will bc one vacant. chair, We shall linger to caress him. When we hrcathc our evening pray- er. Signed on behalf of thc l.0.G.'l`. ` EMMA LANGILL. V.T. Murray llxlrhollr. Nol‘tll, April 111th-., 1917. Cierfilyman lias Recovered ____- WA8 UNABLE TO FILL APPOiNT~ MENTS AND GREATLY DIS- COURAGED BV 'CONTINUED ltl.-HEALTH. Gnnanoquo, Ollt.. April 23.- The many friends of Rev. Gcorgc Alton are pleased to lollrn t.-f ills l'crovcry nflor a long period of ill-hculth frnln hlliousnoss, stomach troubles and aovoro hoadachcs. Mr. Altoll has boroluc vory -ulut-h discouraged over his luzlbility to ob- tain relief, und tllcught. hr would havo to quit lilo lninlslry, wllou for~ tunsteiy ho read about Dr. i'.ruso's lfldlley-i.lvor Pills and begun thoir uso’ l-io tolls tho particlllars of his case in this interesting letter. Rev. Goorgo Aton, Gananoquo, Out Writes: “I had been suffering l'rom ‘hiltons attacks for four years. l was very wcak, had headaches, and my stomach was so had that I could hardly eat anything without bcllu: troubled lby it. l had triotl many cur os. herbs, pills and salts, und was uu- der the doctor’s oaro for some tilno but instead of getting better I seem- ed to get weaker. l was unable to ful~ fill my appointments on Sabbath and had to secure help. 'I used to take dizzy spells and could not walk a- cross the floor straight. I had almost Elven up all hope, and my wife said l-list if l did not get better we would have to quit the work of tho ministry However, in looking over tho 'Brit- ish _Wlllg,' -l sew Dr. Chase‘s adver- tisement ln tt, and road' how Dr. Cbsse’s Kldiley-Liver Pills had help- ed others who were troubled ss I was. I resolved to give thoso Pills 5 Will. ltld I must say that in a short Urge I ohtslnod relief. I cont/lnued le ing them for sometime ami now l lm sbie to resume my work tl Rein. From the benefit. I have obtain ed -from these pills. l would recom mend them to all who suffer as I did' Rev. C. Cunningham. 124 First Avenue, Toronto: "This ls to cm-tlfy tlult 'l sm personally acquainted with Rev. George Alton of Gsnsouue. and bolle`v¢. his 'ststement ' with reference £0 Dr; Chsse’s Klduey»Llver Pills to be true and correct." Dr. Cllase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, one pill s dose, 25c a -box. 5 for $1.00. ll- sll desftilm, or lildnpnuson. ‘Bates B 00- by "mm H- FVHSBF. Of Georgetown.) I left Geor otow , M°“"9H|» 1° igoin the D. Hazen." now called the "Nukuln S°"WlW0V‘|¢-Gil." built by the Canadian Vickers Co.. or Montreal. ship and °"¢° “Ned at $4,000,000. or which she had- over a m'lllion'dollars in cop- per bars' for Russia. I arrived lm Montreal March 19th. 1916. whore I -l°l”°d U19 BND. We lett Montreal on DW' lst- f°l' Quebec. arrived there that lllSlli.- and were to sail Dec. 5th but an accident happened to one oi *ill* lllsll cylinders. and tn.. slup was d°l”y°d “mlm” llllys to repair the dllllwze dono. W” I9" fm' Sydney. Calle Breton. the 21st, arlived there after it rough Passage. on the night nr -the zaril the ship was ~rolLlng torriblv, smash- ed the skylight over ihio mcn's qua,-_ ters., and messroom. and sleeping quarters we-ro flooded same night. Our life boat broke away from its fastelrtngs and John Smlvth, of Geo,-gc. l0Wll. and Jim McDonald. of Toney River, N.S., wcro callcd upon to ge- cure the boat. A sell boarded her, and both men were carried with it. Smith saved himself nv catching the ra.1|. n nd M<2U’0ll8ld caught a stanchlon to which he clung t-ill the ship cleared herself of water, when they went back and secured tho bout. These men were over to flussla lln illc Mllnto with Cap- tain Read. The ship took on her bun- ker coal at Sy1i‘noy. 'l`cu of thc crew left her st that place-they took “cold feel.-'”-saying the ship would novel reach Russia. so they were paid off and nc\v mcn shipped in their places. W# l6ft Sydney on Jan. lst. 1017, for Russia; on Jan. 6th silghtc.-tl the southern shores oi' Grcelllalld' Jall. Zttil passed north lot’ Iceland; Jud. 16th lrrived mt Ucankzl, called fllcrc for orders and* coal. Ucanka is u now Russian port ln the north, at tho cn- tranco of ‘thc Whiio Scar. 'ilhc wal* has creaicll many new towns on the northern shores of Rus- sia, used as rol1t.rcs for rccciving and distributilng munitions of war. and cx- porting products of thc country. it was tllltro I was aboard the “Earl Grey." now an ice-breaker in the Rus- sian service. We loft Ucnnka Jan. l6tl1 for Archangel. We picked up u steamer in the ice in tho W.hi\tc- Sea. sho was' hound for Accomla, which is practically 11 suburb of Arcllaugcl. We towed hor through 150 miles of lco to Aocolnia; she was loaded with cxplo- silvos anti' n1un'itio.ns ol’ war. -- We saw ships at Usa-llka which had boon iorpedoed and run ashore. Wie arrived at Soiombo Jan. 24th. two_nty-foul' days from Sydney. a dis- ta.»nc'c of 4.500 miles from Quebec, via Sydney: Wo were in latitude 73 dc- grecs noi'-th and did' not seo the sun for four days. Tho ship was lin dark- ness all the way across. no lights ho- ing shown. Two days' after wc arriv- ed at Solo-ulbo they were disclralrging the -ship wc tow-cd up to Accomia, il D . and all explosion took place which blew up thc ship and -two other steam- srs, nearly 300 persons being killcd. We were-_ going to stay tllcrc, but there was no room for' the sh-ip; had we ronraincd n-one ol' us would have been loft to tell thc tale. I have i-n my posscssioll a flag from one of this stculners that was blown up. W'-Q left. ship at Solombo l"ob. 3rd for Po-trograd. We had to drive eight miles ill nleiglls to Arcllangoi. tcm- pcratllrt-. 30 cl't.'gl'ces bclow zero. We were supposed to make trip in train lu Ilii houlrs. but it took tllrco days. a distance of 800 urilles; tho locomo- tives burn wood. ' We urrlvcrl ill Petrograd lfcb. 6th, and were put up lu' barracks. where' we were kept for 22 days. We were nearly starved; we had only sour black bread to eat, no blliter; we wort; given tnllow to put on tho bread; had fish stew for dinner and black/ brcad and ‘hot water for tea, no milk. Soup and stcw wore put ill a bowl. enough for follr mon; wo were given wooden spoons. and the four of us ate ollt of the same bowl. it was with the greatost tlflillculty we could got enough food for ourselves, though wo had plenty of money. The revolution. so i`a'r as wo could len-rn, began through 'workllwll of Poirogrnil striking for more pay, more bsod' anll better contlltllons; ihlcso wore, oi' course, rcfused by the aris- tor'n.lcy. with tho 'result that thi' dis- satisfaction crystalized into nation- wklo revolt.. and tho. Czar and his court woro ovort_hr'owll, thousands llo- ing killcd ill lilo uprisllllg. 'l`ll'is hap- pcuod two days after wc lcfi. l't;tro- grad. Wn saw llhousands of wolnf-n sud' children ‘lu tliiforcnt parts of lilo city waiting ln uns for bread. cold and hungry, sometimes they had to walt all day, and long into the nishl b¢'f0"°_ their turn camo. _W0m9fl W0l‘k 0" the streets' as electric car conductors. cab drivcrs. burbols and irucknllen. “von at the gtahlon they hallclcd frclgfht and malls. I nlw Gorman, Austrian and Turk- ish prleonors of wnr. l travcllcd all over Pctrogrsd, visiting all places of interest. Wie left Petrograd Feb. 8th for Vladivostok. a distance of 4.816 miles, by the Trans-Siberian Railway. A' fuw dnys after we left Potrograd on our trilp :across Russia and Slborla M, me plugins, _wo saw all kinds of l llcd u by the millions of alt on chairs. but on the floor; they have no_beds. but place the qwilts on the floor. and use blocks ol’ wood for pillows. Thurs' are many nilco shops with chimaware and other pretty art-` icles for sale. Their gardens' are very curious and beautiful. We left Yokohama March 23rd on the S.S. Empress of Runsia for Vall- couver. B. G.. a distance of 4.283 m-iles. Over 2,000 Chinese came over, going to France to dig trenches' and bury l-he dead. infect-ions diseases. broke out among them and tho_shlp was de- tained for -twenty-four hours at .Wil- lisms' head quarantine station. and the Chinamen were landed ,nnd'_ ship fumigated. We arrived at Vancouver April 4th, left tlhore April 5th for home, and reached Georgetown April 12th,. five days short offlve months 'from -tho date of leaving. Mr. Ed. Flynn. of Charlottetown, was shlp's carpenter; boatswa-in’s mate was John Smith of Georgetown. who was to Russia with Captain Read on thc Mlinto; quartermasters werc: Chas. Fitzgerald, Georgetown, John A. Mc- Donald, Charlottetown, Iierbert Turner Toney River, N.S., John Blue-,_Wbite Sands, P.E.l. Our cooks were a poor lot. Not being stelalmbost cooks they were _scasick in rough weather and could not do thc work they ship- ped for. Out Captain is a gentleman and did everything ill his power for ns. All things considered I would like to make thc trip over again. In 1908 I was shipwrecked on thc brig "Aquila" and was rescued' and take-n to Naples, italy. l visited France and Spain, landed in London, then went by tho Allan Lino to I-Iali-fax. I have travelled quite a. lot -in differellt coun-_ tries, but novel' -saw a. place Iiike better than this dear old Georgetown, the place of my birth. "&" Pllslllllml lu up c_ lu Sergeant Charles llino, of tho ll8ill Siege Battery \vho roccutly was ill- valltled home from England after u period of service on the battlefields of Franco, was flttingly renlcmbcrcd at thc close ot' thc morning servici- ycstcrday by his follow lncmbors of tho choir of’ St.'I’etel"s Cathedral. two wsls, after which ho road tllc following address_: St, l’ciel"t.~, f‘.atllcdral, - Cha`l'lot.toiown, l'. Pi. 1. _ April 22nd, 1017. 'l`o Sergeant, Cllurlcs liine, Dear Sir,~-- Tho choir ol this catllolilull _ _ church wish to mark corporiltcly in cl Wim" 3 Sn" load of cx ‘°5l"""‘ [UH -special msnncr your roturn to your home and your slull in thc rlloir, am lo cxtc-nd to you sincere co1lgrai.lrl1l- ‘ Muuy at lnau, c-.~1pcciall_v' it lllzlrrictl _ mnn wltll zl. family, who had served tions and zt lloariy \vclcolnc. his King and (Tountry in nun war, as _vnu had dono in South Africa, would have considorcrl illai. ho had done his duty and was noi. culled upon lo of- fer l`ol' st‘l‘vi't'e at sccnllli tilllc until all available lncll who had lloi pro- vlously ullswcrcd the call io urlnn had duno fhcir duly by culistiug ill ihclr counir_v‘s scr\'lcc. You, l\o\\'c.\'1\r_ thought othcrwlso, and carly in lilo history of the proscnt glczlt world- struggle for right. ovrr might and l`or thc liberty' oi` all notions volulltccl:-l wll_on. sold hc. al llowsllahcr. that is pzllll to st-lui a rcpol'fr1‘ to take llolc` cd and wont ovol's't\.:ls to “do your bit in support ol' _vollr Sovereign and Nav tion. ' 1;_ may llavc been that thc blood of ll soldier faintly coursing ill your veins ilnpollrd you so to oi`i`c\' your sel‘vll'r‘s null, if uccd ho your l_l|`t-. in this most. moriiollous projcvi, but thc fact lcnlalns that your rocolzlllfloll of your prlvilcgi- und duty' \vzl‘:-1 prompt und horoir. 1 During your ullsollrc you wrlo cvvr in nllr minds with illrorcsi and solici- iudo and- daily l'cnlclnhcl~cd ill thc praycrs of your chult-ll and congru- gutlon. We lcnrucd with llcop rogrrt of your holng woundctl und Wllll lrratcful will-ll' of your rot-ovl-.l'_v. Wo were much gratified by tho cnfhuslas- tic rcccpiion llct'.orlli'1;-‘ai 'tuuitv io win his point. ‘ D D g‘ "_ ` pm - . thc choir -lofi. scraping thc kalsoullno off thc ccllinl; and wiggllng their I " `. liiapilraglns. pendcnco was drawn up in prayer, __ h hi cat thin, um mmm your Uollstltlliloll _was framed in hafpei mg"§mv YM; woumt ho to prayer; your ('om:lm`Tg. "mms m convert half’ thc church Dcoplc. Some Pm-ver' mesmem wlmfnl lSTe?']°l people know old Hoyle better than E30 prmlltd PfT`¥'nlcd°“;; icklili they do Jesus- Christ, Likc a lady at ooseye "'"t.‘“’ A h- D. d pr'ay'ern1ccting. She- was asked to rc- llls. Bible, put lL ulnlcr ls aim un_ peat u verse of Scripture and mBp0nd_ cd with 'll pass! " ____.___--- Slillilf llll[llIiilUNS IIALIFAX. N. S., April 21-(Quo f.atiol1s furnished by F, Il. Mctinrdy dt (‘o., stock and bond brokcls;_1ul'm- bcrs Montreal Stock Excllangc, Mc~ Atchison .. A. I". Anarollrla . . .. Fan Pac . . . . _ . . (‘cn` .\ln Loco Am S & It .. M. F. ct __ Mex Nor Powcr . Reading 102% 64 ‘/it fill'/s 88% 761/, 161 fill'/_g 73% 857% flill/_~ l _'ES girl you f'l>\lrlnrl lilly' >'f"