-_.... -_.. _>._-....... .. leis-ill: E F‘ i‘ PAQGE FOUR THE GHARLOTTETOWH GUARDIAN President-AV. cat-sic: s. Mel-hie, Li. l‘. Vlco-Prlslldeut-J. It. BMW" secretary-lneut-Pol. D. A. aileKiuuou, D. u. 0, Editor and Managing Director—.l. R. Burnett Associate l-Iil-llnrs-l-‘runk Walker and D. K. (‘urrlo flaming usily tfullntivd lstil) 85.00 oer year (in advance) delivered. $4.50 per rear tin advance) mailed in Csuads Ind United States ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES UNITED STATES-Joe Bcckwilh Special Agency inc. Building, New York City General Mirrors Building, Iletro llllcrsllts Bullav lug, ltnnsns Cily_ Wiilnugiiiiy Towel’ Building Vhlrvgo: Syndicate ‘Frost Building. St, Louis; Glenn fllilltlilllLAllllllltli alousduock Bulldlu‘ 51o Flflnttisvu; 1135 No_ tlslh Slrecr Phlllldclpllil, , Morning Maxim In the long run the religious things that unite deep thinkers are greater than those that divide. New York Control TUESDAY, MARCH I4, I933. iJBERAL ynglypgflyf have been accustomed to make bands payable in New York funds. Hon. Fenland Rinfi-et, M. R. Llb- even [hflugh they Mun marketed erai mayor of lvlontrcal docs ixot almost entirely in Canada, agree with Liberal politicians invwhgie no reliable figures can be this Province that the hnpcrial1obtair1pd p; 15 probable ma; a sub. Conference was barren of results, 513111131 majority of all the wfpor. or that a D0150)‘ of cilrrulrcjr ililia- iition sccziritics payable in New tlonwouldbeofnssistancetocaiiads.[york fund; g5 Mguaily field in Speaking recently before ilie Chibkcanpda, Canldien, Mr. Ririfret voiced warm '1')“; maturing pflndpa; mg in. uunrcviulivn of the trade us-‘rcv-glcrcsi of (Janadian bonds payable merits for the extension of inti-a- in New y-m-k funds m 1933, as Empire business reached at Ottawa estimated by A E_ Ame; 5; m” and NOTES BY THE WAY lt 1's not generally known, but nevertheless truv, that. during all of last week one oi the biggest banks in Canada refused to cash any United States cheque drawn upon any United States bank out- side the city of New York- one might possess s. cheque upon any one of hundreds of United States banks~upon banks from great cities like Philadephia, Pittsburgh. BalVmore-but, so far as its cash value was concerned to this lead- ing Canadian bank or to its hold- I PUBLIC FORUM Thll column u open (or tlo draconian s; correspondents ul dilution! of lnterut. Th! Charlottetown Guardian doe: not nooennrlly onrlorls the oplnlono ol correspondents, can: £11112 of $111M ' By lame; . Barton. M.D. CONTROLLING THE DIET WILL REDUCE HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE . - UNEMPLOYMENT RELIEF sin-In answering "Dissatlsfledk" letter I may say that I don't think he knows what he is talking about. If I was a young man o! 30, single, I would not ask for relief. I would g0 and ~work with the farmers for my bed and board. I am a man "Weight control after middle life presents one of the largest Oppqp. tunlties for preventing high blood er, it was temporarily worthless. The bankers of Canada knew, if the public 0t’ Canada dldlft, what: was taking place across the lino.‘ What the immediate or permanent‘ outcome ol‘ the crisis will be, no! one may predct. Toward the end of every buslnvss l depression in history, an exceed- ingly depressed psychology has al- ways developed. The current situa- tion is no exception. Today most of us decline to concede that hope exists anywhere; skepticism rules on business betterment is doubted, in- lust Summer» A! quoted by the Limited, is 26s million dollars. or Mvulreul Gazelle he will that theme 10o million dollars of maturit- Impcrial Economic Cimforence Scl‘\"1ics‘ a galr estimate might, be ma; B51 t0 B {will 8X36"! 5° have. 919125 million dollars is domiciled in way towards the development of Canada, and of the when” pa,“ natural trade. He XIOZPd that “greit- ments it is estimated that about P’ ‘Fade mmuglwu‘ ‘he Empl“ 7s million dollars will eventually has already been fostered ns a result mme w Czmadmng thus reducing of last year's conference.“ He made we mt pawnenm due m the this remark while speaking with United siams duxing 1933 by about ‘Vmwwll “I "m prom“ GOWTmElOO milion dollars and leaving an men“ Rtlmlde “Walls “u” “"151” approximate amount oi 166 million relations with the United States. dollars payable m New York 3° 515° ‘new “Hm m‘: lmmstry The favorable balance of Can- °1 the d" l“ Elam‘? that the add’: payments and drafts for country never can return to ccin- i 1932 is estimated at 70 million omlc stability by artificial means. dam“ and it is no less like“, to A‘ he P“ il- l1“ "1515 L‘ “'°“d' be equally favorable in 193a. Pres- wide and its solution. therefore. is em jndymuons strong“, suggest dependent on oorld-tvide co-opers- that the“, “m be a material tlon. International action is CSSPll- crease m gem production and export tial, and he believes that the during. the current year. that whmon o: m; problem of m“ commodity imports will be reduced debts “mud me an important and that exports to Great Britain bearing, not only on world morale, may show a further increase as a but also on world fiilznccs. Mr. , result of the Ottawa agreements. Rlnfret characterized inflation as d 1 t t I an m The world wheat situation is in- angerous‘ Th! s a emem 5 e creasingly favorable and Canadian more significant, coming as it does wheat shipments for the past two from one who was a member of air. M k I K] I c b} t months have been 50 per cent. no “we “gs a m and ahead of those in the correspond- foi-meriy editor of Lc Canada, which . lng months of 1932. If due consid- is the French-Canadian Liberal oration is given to the factors out- organ in Montreal. lined and to olii- previous record, there should be no occasion to. question our ability to take care of all foreign obligations without any imrticiilar strain. in- CANADi/VS BORROWINGS The present slump in business, due to the world-wide depression, and the substantial premium New Yoi’: funds has called forth in the United States, and even in D11 MIRTII ANDWZSIC - Great Britain, l. good deal of shoc- elation as to the ability of Canada to meet her foreign debts. A study of tho Canadian balance of pay- The annual performance under the auspices of the Benevolent Irish Society ls an event that is always looked forward to with pleasure. This yea-r an excellent comedy merits affords reassurance on this point, says the monthly bulletin of drama "All the Comforts of an dices questioned,‘ the general ten- dency to spread new gloom be. comes more pronounced. There is nothing new Ol' strange in this: the same mental condition obtain- ed toward the end of every dc- pression in a. hundred years of business and stock market history. The darkest hour precedes dawh— th‘s is as true in business as in rc- lation to solar phenomena. A great dual has ‘been said and written about thc fundamental weakness of the banking structure o! the United states; and there can now no longer be room for doubt that such criticism has been thoroughly Justified. It is not too much to say that until every bank in the country is withn the mem- bership o! the Federal Reserve system, and until the nation frank- ly recognizes the necessity of branch banking on a silffictciitly broad scale to assure diversifica- tion of risk and intelligent bank management it must reconcile it- self to the ever-present danger of' such debacle-s as that through which the country is now passing. -—-——— I We made a mistake, says the London Lancet, in entrusting phy- sical culture to people of inferior education. They ought to be peoplc= of high €(1UCi1l'.'0ll——-flS they are in sweden, for example, They ought to know that the human body is not merely a maclime for digest- ing food and circulating blood and developing muscle, but marvellous creative instrument, n thing that hungers for skilful activity in. every nerve and fibre of it, so that cvcn its physical health is not at- tainable until ycu have satisfied its hunger for skill by one means or another. Your drill serflvflllli your muscle trainer, your profess- ional gymnast, your football coach may be good fellows enough for their business; but. as exponents of physical educatcn. may the Lord deliver us from all such. All citizens stand by President Irish Home," by the noted dram- atist William Gillette, will be staged at the Prince Edward Theatre under the direction of Dr. T. E. E. Robins, whose competent direction of the play "The Irish Millionaire" a few years ago will be recalled by the Royal Bank of Canada. On balance over the "put ten years Canada. has not been a borrower but on the contrary has exported eo/pltel to an amount of 110' mil- lions dollars. Even in the year that he! Just passed. the Ml export of local theatre patrons. m. Robins oopitsl is estimated at no less than has Igng been gsswpmd Wm, 70 7111111011 (1011511- T7195}? 1181"“ l" amateur theatrical performances, after payment oi’ all interest due and oh the present occasion he has outside of Canada, and therefore, been gm-gumm; 1n obgaintng a during 1982 the country as s whole brilliant llTBy of local talent. had no less than 7O irlillion dollars gpecgfll m" ha; been taken 1n available to aimly on the principal casting the different characters and 9f fofvliln debts. attention has also been given to Th! view which is generally held the specialties between the ants. Roosevelt as he begins his heavy labours. In spite of the number and complexity of the problems tharconfront him, his administra- tion opens under happy all-spires because of the strength and una- nimity of public support. With the American people behind him. 511D- porting a. united Congress capable of exerting tremendous emergency powers, Pres‘dcnt Roosevelt cannot . all people ovcr 40 years of age and every hand. Any evidence of i ten pounds or more overweight show l with 12 to support, and I don't get us much relief as “Dissatisfied" is getting, and I am not kicking about it. If this man went west of Sum- merslde, he would see hard times. I nlso see where he applied for de- portation, which I trust he will get, for if every young single man of 30 were to ask for relief, where would this country be? I am, Sir, etc. SATISFIED. pressure." "A balanced reducing diet, intel- ligently silpcrvised, is the largest single factor in the control of cer-' taln types of high blood prcssuyc and the syiniltoms that accompany it." 1 am quoting the words of Dr. C. V. Rowland of Cleveland, who has been able to demonstrate in a large number of cases that overweight is veryy closely associated with high blood pressure. v Roughly speaking, 66 per cent; of TAIL LIGHTS Sirz-I read with much amuse- ment a letter in your columns of March 13th, signed by "A Car Driver." He seems to think if wouldn't be much expense or both- high blood pressure. The death rate is increased in proportion to the increase in iveiglit. And when “'0 remember that l9 out of cvcr_v 2U overweight. indivi- uuls are themselves responsible for their overweight you can under- stand the opening sentence above in which Dr. Rowland states that weight control lifter middle life of- fers everybody their largest oppor- tunity to prevent, high blood pres- sure. One hundred private patients per- soilaiiy observed, many for long periods, showed the following lig- urcs. Weight at first examination, aver- cvery horse drawn vehicle he takes on the road-mowing ma- chine, binder, or s. lot of other things he mentions. But the Road Hog will take care he won't. hit any of those things. How many acci- dents occurred in lighted towns and villages where a road hog can see a wagon if he wants to. Docs "Car Driver" think lighted vehicles will keep the drunken speed fiend from running into him? I have driven age 16-; pounds‘ s car and horse and wagon on the Systolic pressure (with inflated mad’ and I wmnd “k8 1° kn°w bu“; around “m, 175 which is the worst to meet, a wag- Diastcllc pressure (without bandiio“ Without “Ems °" “ c“ with 9s, lights dazzling your eyes. If "Car Under observation _. gycfggc 5 Driver" would dim 111$ lights when months. he meets the man with horse and Reduction in weight - average 2o wagon he could see when he was pounds. off the road or on it. I think i1‘ Reduction in systolic pressure 41. the R. C. M. P. would check up on Reduction in diastolic pressure 17. more car brakes and lights, and Y0“ ca“ 111115 59¢ W1." P11111113’ have the road hog speed fiends 110W fllflllvl-‘YHKQ Fetilwf- - 01' 20 brought to justice and punish of- nouuds in weight brought the sys- fenders. that the poor farmer that tolic pressure down by 40 points? can't afford a car could drive safe and the diwwnc by 17 Pmnts- on the road without beinc saddled In addition to reducing the blood with the cwpcnse of pg)“ or n}. pressure, this reduction in weight is k fleck". on his horse drawn Willem offlglzeatillezlt) lll corg-tectlng other all-land I think “cm. Driver». is very m s la so 0 en accompany , overweight such ns the distress that fiftiterlhvthegcrggis ‘:12: arises from gall bladder trouble in-' I ’ ,Emcrald R. R. or any other pincc digestion, und ulcer of the stomach-that h mmmed to "Ems on w‘? of first part of the small lntcs- om‘ I think‘ at ma“ ‘fights, five While it must be admitted that o" "lmllfv mi‘ cent; of the farmers thetcntlchcy to overweight and high m‘ P‘ E I’ have We“? E005 ‘ma? blood pressure is one“ mhcmed mcnt. and i? they think _lt safer nevertheless a “reducing.” diet—-cut~. w an” with 115mm‘! "ehmcs M ting down on starches, fats mid liq- the!" have n- without m” E315" uids--whcn faithfully followed, mm“ 113551“? 11' “m1 “m”? mm“ should give results in every case. P001‘ 0°90“? l?" 113"" it that Team’ can't afford it. I am. Sir, etc. . MARCH 14, 1m ________________\ People are buying insurance now-a-days bec assured family income, the world in 20 years, Under this pleasant conception, er to a farmer to have lights on- A Life or Endowment new Retirement Annuity is proving a most p lan of thousands of Canadian homes. Branch Office. 15% ANOTHER rm] 1.10m March l3. 1933. First Queens Live Lobster Trade In my SNOWFALL Big Proportion Rapid growth of trade in live lobsters. or "lobsters shipped in shell", has been one o! the prom- inent fisherlcs developments 011 Canada's Atlantic coast. in com- parativcly recent seasons, and in the four year period, 1929-1932. the slfpments averaged 128.350 hun- dredweights annually, says tllc current issue of Fisheries News Bulletin. Last year the shipments from the Look-there below the world ls turning white, flushed and unfolded in its cloak or snow, Blurred and mysterious-awaiting Xligllt— The golden street lamps have begun to glow. N9 Plzeons soar-perhaps the bliz- zard lulls Their dreaming to contentment in fall to bring the country safely through its crisis-Washinglfin- The psychiatrist who told his colleagues at their association meeting that "a. certain amount of excessive maternal care docs not harm the normal child, but it is four Atlantic provinces, which bor- der the world's lobster-producing area, totalled 134,810 hundred- thc cote, Sufc from the sharp and stinging fiakes—no gulls , Siomi the wide skies with melan- wglghtg, °h°1Y mle- Most of these live lobsters are Made“ and dun the fiver “cs, and. sold in the United States market, 5m,’ lBllhOligh there is, of coilrsc, an Wlfildc O1 Cflllflda- and l! Dwbflb- which will include the Charlotte- ly ulsu bellvvcd by a creel maturity iowii Male Chorus of over forty within the country. that 0n balance voiccs, singing beautiful Irish Ali's. we have been borrowers abroad tiur- As 1h other years, the proceeds an l"! "991"- yflafi- i5 not difficult» l0 for charitable purposes. The dates understand. Prior tn the wnr we“); the pvrfofmancr: are March 1g were imparting cnnlwl on n hllgcyzfllld 17. and $111 who can do so scale in connection with the dc-‘Shviihl ma)“ l; a mihyog (injuying vclopmcnt of the natural resources/gm; “fiflhwhflc pnflcfflalnmqnt, of the country, the building of rail- ronds and the crcation of a mun- hfacturlng industry. Although rims-t! of the funds for financing the var, Tire Clmnflirtn rloilflr. S-"lyfi EDITOR/A L NOTES the ' were raised within the country, lhelTomnto Glcbc. can afford to be net foreign dcbt of Canada COllllrl-vm82llflllllllf7ll5 if whilc 0n lllc 0'83’ ucd to lmrczlvo. In rcccnt ycarslfilp it mccts the Unltcll States dol- thc reverse has been the case, bllljlkll‘ coming down. ills mncnrwlt ha‘; bcln nbsizllrcrll bcvtiilm- no tirziif if}; is siren t’) ill": 'l'l‘c ‘value 0i‘ the Dnmlnlolfs ex-' rctlcinplinii o.’ rl hi1 lwiiliriiiz in 1 pvrl". torlny am aunts in slightly over} NPW ‘furl; \',1tCi'i .2 ilic l: c", offfffl per p":f~t'lll, while one century the louts 0f provlnzvn, 1min Chllfll-gllifl, when Canada consisted cl a’ ltlrr. and cofpriralifliln puvzlblc in Illlllllfl‘ 0f separate colonies. the New York are u-idcly advertised. export value pt‘)- pcrscn wfls mly‘ Canodw F"Ti'.l.'l"‘§ lielri l'i thcytflfid At Confederation, in 1367, l: United Slates have bCTll rcclccmczlinzncuiiird f0 over $23 perpersonmrd and rwlsurchsssd steadily: durum at. fix» opt-hing cf the fiigggh; L511. tcccnt yours. tdorcovcr, cor;>orstions,lui~y' to slightly over $31, 1’ ,1‘ ‘ downright disastrous for the child who exhibits abnormal tenden- ccs." said in retina-about fashion what. the conductor of a medical column compressed admirably when he advised one of his wr- rcspondents to give her child the "advantages oi neglect." Time ‘who have grown up mldwul‘ 0f l‘ large family probably know from; first-fiend experience what the djcfpf meant by the advantages of neglect. The most obvious and im- mediate advantage is that the child who is lcf. alone for part. of lhc time has the time to develop llll- tiatlvc and to make expermcnts in independence and resourcefulness. Fines totalling 44 pounds, with l0 pounds costs, have laccn imposed zit Eallng, England, on a lfg (tally firin which sold blended lillllPl‘ from Siberia as "choicest cream- cry" and branded with an Emp re- stamp. The magistrate sflld it was one of the worst cISQS W" ilrc- sented at his court. The offender should now realize that willie the sun shines on Siberia, that part of the world is not in the British Empire. He has had a costly les- son in both geography fllld 1207305- .10. ‘sflfflltj -- A lighthouse “Mk. ma,“ “d important measure of domestic rogue eye__ oonsumpt on. In 1930. for example, Far down below my snow piled win- the “I” m u“ United Stat“ do“, 5m I amounted to more than 00,300 The sluggish traffic of the street hundredwdghts “m! m9 "31"" i" goes by_ gum, roundly stated, was $2,280,000 __1,y,,,,D,u-any1n New york sum some of the lobsters are forward- ed fp market. on regular transpor- A Bunch Of tation lines, some on "well smacks." ‘ I , ‘and, from Eastern Nova Sculls, hx-I remlers large quantities arc curried on lob- ster trsnsportalion boats which operate under n plan brought into effect by the Dominion Depart- ment of Fisheries. "Well smacks" are boats in which sea. water is allowed to enter and flow about the lobsters. when other means of transportation are used the lob- sters sre carried infairly large crates and icing is employed to keep the temperature at required level. - Nova Scotio is much the biggest shipper of live lobsters, and in i932 its shipments were somewhat larger in the ‘aggregate than in 193i. or _some-98.240 hundred- wclgiifs as compared with 00,700. New Brunswick also does n large business. although its shipments in i932 were only 32,400 hundred- welghts as slim" slightly more than 39,000 in the preceding year. Quebec and Prince Edward Island (Sydney Post-Record» Among the visitors present st the scssional opening of thc Prince Fxrlward Island Legislature last Wed-itcsday were three ex-Prc- mlcrs, now judges of the Stipreme Court of that province. They were Chief Justice Mathlcson, Mr. Jus- tice Ilaszard, and Mr. Justice Saunders. Judge Haszard was pre- mier from i908 to 1911. Chief Jus- tice Matlilcson from 1911 to 1017, and Judge Saunders from i927 to 1030. The fourth judge of thc sli- prcme Court, Mr. Justice Arsen- sult, is also a former premier, hav- ing 500R leader of the Govern- ment from 1917 to 1010. The Island judiciary should be well trained for servke. What other province can boast 0f a bench of supreme Court judges, every one of‘ whom has filled the office of premier? Hyndman 8400- Provincial Managers a JAMES HUGHES Lower Queen Street C. E. MacKENZIE, A New Conception of Insurance Brought About by World Depression means of purchasing something they want in the They think of it asa contract which enables a or a college education for his children or a home without the threat in its mortgage, ' or years of happiness when he retires. the premium deposited is an instalment purchase price of desired objectives. instalments being cancelled in event: of death. policy is uninsured savings plan. The Great-West Life is the champion of thrift and the guard. Consult your nearest Agent or write Prince Edward Island ROBERT E. HYNDMAN, Special Agents at Charlottetown it is an ideal future. man to buy an 8.1156 0r a. trip around All future The opular contract. limited Charlottetown “August, 1914” (mchange) Careless drivers of automobiles. , Crossing Accidents John Masefeld, poet laureate 05-’ and trucks, it would seem, are still England, has not been a stranger atwmptmg w push locomouva to this continent between his sailor and trams on the “ticks at cum? days 1“ the Nmetles Md l“ pres" lugs, according to figures showing cnt visit. It was upon another mis- , the number or highway cmssmg 51°“ m“ M" Maseneld “gal” Md accidents on the Canadian Nation- agam visited the United states l a1 Railways during 1932. The tats-l during the first years of the wnr-‘number o, highway crash“ mp H's helm’ was s“ "m" b11113“, dents show n decrease of 102 from American public opinion w the» the previous year but some of this, side of the Allies. The story is told t probably, is accounted for by the that, at a public recital before a lesser number or mom, vehicles university audience, after readlngiusmg the highways during 1932' “mo Selectmns mm‘ his poems’ he Until motorists exerdse greater suggested that‘ he would read aloud. can m m?” driving. u; is. apps!“ ‘he "erses “m c“ ‘my °f m” 1mm": entfy, inevitable that. the number crs desired, some one immediately of mes 10st and persons mjmed suggested “August 1914'" ‘will be out of all proportion to Mr. Mass-field turned over the what it should ‘W pages. noticeably laesitaterl to be- During 1932 tmrmhseven maple gm’ hm‘ plunged ‘m0 the 0501mm lost. their llvcsand 1'10 were injur- descriptlon of the simple beauty 0f ed M highway crossing accidents m” mgush wumryslde and the on the Canadian National. over Engushmmls love c’! home’ "the 50 per cent oi’ all automobile soci- heartfeit things past speaking dear to unknown generations" or its people. The contrasting horrors of death in the trenches which followed as the audience sensed the res- trained feeling in his voice. with growing difficulty. Mnsefield read on, slower and slower, deeper and ' deeper. At last his emotion over- came him. No sound came from his moving lips. He stopped, and when the silence in the hall had become almost unbearable he ciosed the book and said simply “I cannot read that poem." ship on a. smaller scale than tlic other two provinces. In 19322 the Quebec total, something more than 2.400 hundrcdweights, exceeded the i031 bushess, but in Prince Ed- ward Island. with about 1.700 him- drcdwcights, there was a decrease. MAGS Special llx. 315 COD LIVER. OIL EXTRACT WITH CRESOTE AND GUIACOL COMPOUND An ideal remedy particular- ly adopted for persistent and irritating Coughs and Bron- chial affections. It quickly relieves the con- gestion and thereby allows its tonic and flesh producing pro- perties to become Immediately effective. lt has the Tonic properties of llyphosphltes and the flesh producing properties contain- fll the Extract of Cod Livers, this combined with creosote which ls n. most el- feetive antiseptic, rnekes It a valuable remedy In Chronic Bronchitis lrl deep seated Coughs. Also gives appetite and improves general condi- on. Got a bottle. today. PRICE $1.00. THE 2 MAGS dents in the province of Quebec last yearhuvc been proveu to be due to careless driving and, as the {number of motor cars increases on the highways, the percentage will seven people were killed and 21f injured and in 1930 nlnetyufcur were killed and 326 injured and the question naturally srisesio what percentage of the decresls can be credited to the lesser num- ber of motor vehicles 9n the high- ways due to depressed CCOXlOmlc conditions? Our “Abused” Convicts (Ottawa. JOIIIHQD ‘. There are some details in thew port of the Superintendent of Pen itentiarles for the fiscal year end ed March 31, 1932, just: made nu‘: lic, which should interest any will may think the residents of our fe- deral prisons are getting rough treatment. In that twelve months, and iii the seven penitenlfaries, iiien was spent (or “pipes, tobacco ant lights" the sum of $17,635.31. Tlii average daily population was 3,931 Thus the expenditure per convict per year on this item was about $425. In addition convicts were giver took on an additional poignancy‘ Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention. [doubtless increase unless motor- ‘ists themselves exercise ordinary sense in driving. In 193i forty- dental service which oost thl- D0 mhlcn $9,848.54. and hospital ser- vices which cost $37,162.95. FOR PERFECT TEA FLAVOR l 41se- ‘ Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea i‘ Sold Only In Red Airtight Packages. ‘lliclt ' The best leaf and the longest cure give you the most lasting and delicious chew who}; you ask for H 8c N Black ‘Twist. You'll have the time of your life trying to chew the flavor out of this tine tobacco. “Black TWIST (H EWING ltlEYt; RFHCIIDLSQN-