Y. f iT"»*T°`f51 I I v . 'rim ciuanomnrowu GUARDIAN I V' 611.' - _ uiisitiiis. sm root. clot litulciinrtttui in Ianni maui tin “""'”» “°“ 'I' ‘3“"‘l “ve Niall' ni iusuu in s. s. tunic , sumti niunis _'rt-tsv vantsi-I cutout. _ viuus is nusssn wlstf-IN.” When the throat tickles. when it hurts to draw a long breath, when you feel; as if a knife were stuck in your side, lt’| time to draw out the conges- tion that will soon become pneumonia. All Ofdlhlrl' mush syrup has no chance at all-you roam,-,,_,_ puweuul penetrating liniment. NOUIIRB is known that possesses more merit in such cases than Ner- viline. - ‘ \.Rub it liberally over the side; and 1.-hest--rub-it in hard. The warm, soothing effect of Nor. “ull” W1" "0 llltllarent in five minutes. . Nothing like it 'for quick relief- takes soreness out of the throat in one Tllllllllls-breaks up the chest cold. draws out the inflammation, stops the cough quickly. Rub lt. on for rheumatisin-it d_e- stroys the pain-drives it right away. TTY it for stiff muscles-it works mir- acles iusuch cases. Give Nerviline a. chance on your. Nlllalxle. prove it out for lumbago, see what it can do for sciatlca, , N0, Dain-relieving remedy compares ill power to cure with Nerviline. Largest sale in Canada for any lint. mem 10|’ lleifly forty years. The rea- son is plain. it satisfies every time. The large 50 cent family size bottle is more economical than the 25 cent trial size. Sold by dealers everywhere or the Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Canada. "‘“`-`~`-""`~`-‘-T-`-'-"`-‘-‘-`-` -‘-'-‘~‘-‘-2'-‘~‘-1*-1'-‘J-'-:_-:.~_-_= -».-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-: _-_-_-_-,_._._.___.___. __._.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ ausuuu rut sumiits tu » Nobody since the war began has made more frequent appeals to “our old God" to bless his arms than luis the' Kaiser. He is as full of pious ex- ressions as was Paul Kruger. Yet, according to Dr. Godfrey Raupert, a Prussian by birth. but a naturalized Tiritish subject for 25 years. and a prominent Roman Catholic and medi- cal practiouer, the chief-reason why Germany must fall in this war is be- cause her people have lost communion with God, and have become pagans. iio writes. “I hold it to be simply in- conceivable and inconsistent with any reasonable belief in God and in a mor- al world-order, that after nineteen cen- turies of Christian thought and teach- iiig a nation exhibiting all the marks of pagaiiism shoiiid triumph and should become dominant in Europe. if God and Christianity bc true. there cannot, and must not, surely he any real doubt as to the ultimate issue of the conflict .” BLAMES DARWIN li Germany were not pagan at hcart Prussian militarism could nev- cr have been developed to its present. state, and lacking Prussian militarism there would have been no war. lt is rather astonishing to find :Dr. Rau- pert blaming Darwin for German paganisin. He says that the religious life of the greater part of the world was not seriously aaffected by Dar- win. but that in Germany his teach- ing fell upon favorable and well' pre- pared soil, and brought forth fruit ii thousand-fold. li' this is true, the reason probably is that Darwin was not understood in Germany, or that some of his translators and Iilsclplcs there were athiests. and found in Darwin’s discoveries isolated texts from which to maintain their impious doctrines. The reason Dar- win's teaching has not adversely af- ‘ fected religion 'in Great Britain is be- cause it was not understood there as being antagonistic religion. lu the broad sense Darwin was himself a religious man. Those who under- stood him to be an antagonistist of Christianity were neither scientists nor Christiaiis. No Belief in the Supernatural ' However, according to Dr. Ilaupert, the German snvants who accepted the theories luiil down hy the author of tho "Origin of Species" tried to prove that is was ii negation of the suepr- natural. They attacked the person and character oi' Christ himself in terms that would not have been toler- ated in any civilized community. The writer continues: - “We are here concerned with great fundamental and root principles which must be recognized ii' we are to regard ourselves as Christians ui any rational and comprehensible sense, and if we are to put our fin50l' upon the ultimate cause which has produced the mortal moral disease from which modern Germany is suf- fering. The best and most logical thinkers of all times and nations have admitted that Christianity is a super- natural and authoritative religion. the cominunictiou to man of truths and laws which his unaided. intelligence could not discover for itself, and that it is by the submission of his intelli- gence to these Divinely ordained laws that his truest progress and his high- est happiness are secured. It is uopn these laws, having Divine sanction, that our modern civilization and the modern Christian State have been liuilt up. Man cannot weigh and measure the infinite by the limitations of his finite mind. He must, there- fore strive to adapt himself'to the supernatural order. he MUS* “WY tm’ laws which Christ himself has laid down, he must train and cultivate and 'attune’ the powers of his soul so that he may understand." Mlnied by Their Leaders Much might be written about those who had prepared the soil of the German mind for this perverted ln- terpretation of Darwin'-s theories, but going no further back we find that the leaders of scientific and. religious thought we iincousciously or design- edly niiselading the people. The idea of a future world having been banish- ed from the minds of the great ma- jority of the German people, they naturally fell back upon the ideal expressed in tho words, “Let as eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die." In recent years this doc- trine _ has become so prominent in German conduct that many publicisis havo protested. They have seen home ties weakened, the beer garden ‘be- come more and more like homes, hus- bands and wives taking their indepen- dent pleusures, and the growing chil- dren displaying a taste for restau- rants aud music halls that llirentcned the very foundations of tho family life upon which are founded tho wcli-be- ing and security of the modern state. Cultivated decadcnccmaterial wealth and power. however were a'com\iina- tion that could not. he broken by ucwspaper warnings. Only such a catastrophe as the present war can challenge it. German People Feared War The writer believes that deep down in the sould of the average Prussian is a hatred ot' the Prussian military and bureaucratic system. From the cradle to the grave he is haunted by t.he spectre of centralized authority. Ile fears and despises the military caste, but politically helpless as he is, he has found no safe way of ridding himself of it. Dr. llaupert assures tis that for years there has been ii haunting fear among the German civil population that the military caste would some day involve it iii some such war as is now being fought. War having come. feelings of patriotism inspire the ordiuaary German citizen to fight for what he detests. After the war, when he realizes that he has been misled, and that the defeat of his military rulers is a blessing, and not it humiliation. he will thank liisyconqueroirs, and will admit that ii. was only by outside means that he could have been rcs- cued froni the yoke that religion and militarism have fastened upon him. TYPHUS FEVER AMONG BRITISH PRISONERS iN GERMANY LONDON. May 13.-Sir Edward Grey. the British Foreign Secretary. has received through Walter Hines Page, the American Ambassador at London, and James W. Gerard, the American Ambassador to Germany, a despatch which says that typhus fever is present in the following German prison camps, where there are British prisoners of war: Zoasen, Altdamm, Schneidermuhl, Gardelcgen. Witten- berg, Sagan. Cassel, Zerbst, Lengel- salza, and Chemnitz. The cases at Zossen are said to be confined to Rue- siaii prisoners and a few of thc indian troops. ONLY A FOOTBALL “All Pools Day was not allowed to pass without a practical joke being played on the enemy." writes t.li0 British eyewitness in his latest de- spatch. “An aviator flying over the Lille aerodrome, dropped a football. it fell slowly through the air, and the Germans could be seen hurrying from all directions to take cover from what they evidently thought was a bomb. That it bounced to an enormous height from the ground without ex- ploding, was probably taken to be due to a delay action fuse, for it was not till the ball finally came to rest that they emerged from their shelter to examine lt. On it was written: ‘ Al>l'll fool-Gott strafe Enslsnd." Doctor 'Said Sciatica--- ` l Rlieumatism---Lumbago .__ . ..., ..-i_, au~r us couto Nor HELP ME. AND EN ooneso me use or on. CHABE'8 KIDNEY-LIVER PILLS. ' M. william Pm-nor. 105 C°Y“8° r ,, ills in the street Brantford, Ont nfarkable “_ following letter of his re I _ porience with Dr. Chases Kidll°l' Liver run: “My d°¢i°\' °f°°*°'lh““f for some time for Sciatics. “R622 maugm, L\\|l1\)n§0, bill. I0 D0 D YD » for 1 aaa to lay 0# "°"l‘~ '1"’° "'°“" gn! omoor or the sick benefit called to soo mo and advised the use <1; tal; Chase's l(Idne¥°UV°l’ Pm°'th“ “me I-that he had been curedlof keel me trouble by their use. r“m_ dmxgm .bout them Nut beln satis- mea edtlietn highly- ° k fo my neo with uii|,i went loom were d t and when he said BY oc or. . .good 1 began their u|e.°';ll‘:iv1ngdr°ll3¢° non with 'hiv 01°! action of the itlkneya and l>oW°l;°;;l‘\_: ~°"“°'.t-.‘ ..°.“2..“..:':..:'.:‘.t..°“° I'¥ImIvas so had that I could only ‘;z,“,:t.'.i?:..°:“.:°.:.:“.:.‘; ::..f:.. .oo 'mono who have had this alimeatwtmt ;9ano1sev¢v.i»s¢°"°» .°\“- - -. ,_ - -k _ \ 1. -_-_"I-35,' _,-"\».. gi _5. A . ',f»f-\»_ ,»t.‘» -,I ‘_.-pt-..t,¢---“_» _twin ,~, ;,'~‘_,<-..>.'t-.,¢t,,....;;i, .-‘- .-»‘.v` -w -'-’ 'i I' ' ` ' ' ~ ing this letter to let people who have my trouble to know of these pills. You are at liberty to uso this letter, and if anyone interested will call or write to me I will give every detail.” Write to Mr. Parker. enclosing stamp for reply, and he will verify this statement. He will do this out of the gratitude he feels for his cure and because he realizes how difficult it is to obtain the cure of these dread- fully painful ailments. There are so many treatments ro- commeaded for rheumatism that you naturally doubt them ali. Here is an opportunity for you tlo verify thi! ¢\ll‘0 and put this great medicine to the test. it will only cost. you a quarter to try Dr. Chas 's Kidney-Liver Pills. They get at tEe very foundation of rheumatfaili and by removing the poin- oas from the eysitemh take away the cause of twins an so es. _ -Dr. Chairs Kidney-Liver Pills, one pm e dose. |5_ wits a box. all dell- on, or iadrpanwif. Dates It Co., Limit- t`ed,"l‘oi°onto. _ _, _ AMSTERDAM, May li.- Tho Col- ogne Veolk_s Zeitung, commenting up- on expressious of American opinion COIICBTDIHS the sinking of the Lusitan- la says “Americans are very prone to criticize without any expectation that such fighting with words will make any~gre-ut imp.'eu:1oli on these whom they denounce. They fc-el re- lieved when they have given frank expression to their irritation. lu Am- erica however, war if; most unpopular because it requires so many sacrifices and destroys business. There is no need therefore to app|°olien=l that Am. erica will join the war against us. But it may be taken for granted that the wave of anti-German liatretl- will continue to mount still higher. We deplore but we cannot prevent; tt. Anti-German feeling is a product of agitation. It slowly mountctl and will also slowly sulisitle.” nttlctlilttinnt PARIS, May 14.-- Official tonight. "To North of Arras the conditions of the ground rendered operations dii'- ficult. Our offensive has however been continued. At Southeast Angres we have af- tacked from both sides the road to Aix Beoulettcs Souchez and taken north of this road a strong German trench extending on the front one Kilometer (about two thirds mile) on the south road which had been or- ganized t'or defence behind this for- est we captured a trench of the sec- ond linc. We have found on the ground in this vicinity 400 Germans who were killed. More south we have continu- ed clearlng the slopes east and south of Notre Dame de Loretto. We have taken additional houses at Neuvillo St. Vaust. According to the testimony of prisoners our artillery inflicted ex- tremely heavy losses ou the enemy. The number oi' ofllccrs wero uiadc prisoners since Sunday, was about one hundred. the number of guns cnp- tured twenty, includlng eight heavy guns. In addition we have taken one hundred machine guns and bomb throwers. The Germans made an at- tack upon us this morning in the wood of Ailly. They obtained a momentary footing on our first line, but were forc- ed back by counter attacks. We cap- tured about one hundred prisoners. Tlie dai has been quiet on other parts of t e fornt." ‘ AMERICANS IN PARIS PROTEST AGAINST THE LUSITANIA OUTRAGE PARIS, May 13.-More than 100 Am- ericans in Paris have signed the foll- owing cablegrum. which was forward- cd to President Wilson. "We, the undersigned, having ob- served strict neutrality although liv- ing amid the horrors of war, now feel that in justice to our conditions, and in order to preserve our .self-respect, we must voice an indignant and en- ergetic protest against the sinking of the Lusitaiiia, an act pre-eminent lu its savagery. and which places the re- sponsible government outside civil- ized liumauity. MOTION PICTURES OF TORPEDO- ING. BREST, France, May 12.-'l‘lie.Cap- tain of the Chateau Brland yesterday reported the circumstances ot' the sinking of his vessel on April 3 in the English Channel during a voyage from Gravesend to New York. llc said the submarine suddenly appeared and gave the crew five minutes to leave the ship. lt then rflred a torpedo and the Chateau Briand sank in four mln- utes. He said there was a photogra- phic or moving picture apparatus in- stalled on the platform of the submar- ine which recorded all the incidents of the torpedoing from the first summons iintiil the disappearance of the ship. ORGANIST WITH WOODEN LEG Geoifry Norris, a well known char- acter in the country parts between Wigan, Southport and Preston, is a man of remarkable versatility. Al- though he has a wooden leg, he has played the pedal organ at Wrighting- ton Parish Church for fi period of nineteen and a half years. Sexton and Parish Clerk for twenty years, he digs all the graves unaided, and has per- sonally directed about 500 interments. lie has held office in connection ‘with every phase of Sunday School work. and has rang Good l-‘riday "passing" bell for twenty years. For tewnty- three years he has missed only one Sunday service and that was when his own banns of marriage were called, as it is customary for those "named" to abstain from' going to church on "banns Sunday.-" SUICIDE OF PRISONER IN . BATHURST JAii_. BATHUIIST, N. B., May 12.-Ed- ward Duuphy. of Cherry Valley, P. E. l., wiiowas serving a year in jail for theft. attempted to take his own life Tuesday by ciittlug his throat with a razor, and succeeded in inflicting a wound from which he died in the J. H. Dunn Hospital on Thursday. Duuphy was convicted last/ summer on a charge of stealing watches from the house of Mr, Azad Landry. and sen- tenced by Judge Mchatchy to serve one year in jail. On the 13th of April Dr. J. N. Michaud, who was called to attend the prisoner for a slight indis- position, noticed that the unfortunate fnan was losing his mind. and Sheriff Doucet, on being informed of this fact immediately wrote to the Department of Justice at Ottawa asking for author- itiy to have him removed to the -Pro- vncial Hospital. The Sheriff had just received his mail on Tudsday morning when word was broullit. to with a razor, and in that mail there was a letter from the Provincial Hos- pital giving him authority to take the man there. Dr. Michaud was called iggiediateiy after the deed was done found that Dunphy's windpipe had been severed. The gaping wound from which the unfortunate man hail lost a large quantity of blood. was levied u , and after considerable dei# ‘title viothli was removed to the J. . Dunn Hospital, where death ensued about tmatyfour hours afterwards. - at NEW YORK, May 14.- Without an American on o-Jani, tae White Star liner Cymrlc sailed for Liverpool to- day under the llritlsh flag. She had aboard 956 persons includ- ing a crew of 400. Her Commander. Capt. Beadnell. Lieut Commander in the Royal Naval Reserve, said that on the way over at Lantic passengers would have daily boat drill and in- struction in the adjustment of life boats. 400 hundred passengers were in the steersge. A large percentage of them were children and nearly all were Canadians. cninlttuis is mtv ut It mu ROME. May l4.- Premier Salaudra has convoked a council of Ministers, who are now meeting to make decis- ion relative to the present crisis. ROME. Moy 14.- News that King Victor Emmanuel will not accept Premier Salandra’s resignation and that Salandra and Baron Sonuino, for- eign Minister. will remain in power, is spreading like wildfire throughout Rome and creating an excellent im- pression. - ONTARIO FARMER SHOT AND KILLED WHILE PLOUGHING SINCOE. Ont.. May 13.-Christopher Schoup, aged 50, a wealthy miller ami farmer of the township of North Wal- singham. was murdered yesterday afternoon by an unknown person while ploughing in his fields. The bcny was found by his wife with a bullet in the head. Robbery' is thought to have been the motive, the man having been in the habit of cs.-ryiog considerable money on his person. CANADA TO HAVE $150,000 UNDER ARMS VERY SOON 0'I"l`AWA. Mlly 1l.~Cauadu had 108,760 men under arms on the first of May. This includes the troops at the i`ront, those drilling at home pre. paratory to going there, and the corps or deiaeliments assigned to guard duty in different parts of the country. The question of raising additional troops is under consideration. but as yet no announcement is made. The expectatiomliowever, is that before long the list will have reached the total of 150,000. The department has promptly filled up the gaps resulting from the losses at the front and further reinforce- ments are being despatched steadily. The plan which has applied hereto- fore, and which still holds. is that ot' keeping fifty thousand men unller arms at all times in Canada, and de- spatching them du large batches as the necessities of the service call for. This has worked most satisfactorily and. at the beginning of the moiitli, the tliffereiit units were fully up to establishment. With additional uiiits in prospect of authorization, the total by the summer will likely reach the 150,000 mark. Two complete divisions will be constantly maintained .in the field and reinforcements at the rate of eight or ten thousand ti month pro- vided for. Since the battle of Ypres. with its heavy loss of men and wounded. np- plications are coming in under the provisions of the Pension Regula- tions. The amount required for this purpose will reach several millions. Two millions have already been pro- vided. . ` Tile scale is graduated according to the rank of’ the men, the nature of the disability. and the number of de- pendents on the dead or incapacitated soldier. A special staff has been as- signed to attend to these cases, to the end that they may bc dealt with promptly. UNUSVAI. LINEN PILLOWS. If you are a lover of the bizarre and unusual' in household furnishings and a. practical economist: as well, you -will relish the suggestion for making use of the soft-colored linen patches that lurk in the dark corners of every patch box. The most novel arts and crafty cushion tops that ev- er graced the wicker chairs of lawn or veranda are being evolved from these linen scraps. They cover all sorts and shapes of pillows, from the ‘ridiculous little sausege~ahaped af- |fair, just the thing to slip under the ineck or the crook of the back, to the ,comfortable oval-shaped cushion. A tsmall, round pillow is covered with a grayish-lavender dress linen. Ai: the centre is a round cluny or torchon lace doily, secured under a flat linen button. This pillow is edged with tor- chon lace, and looks even dantier than it sounds. A dull-blue linen, just the same shade as that faded-looking morning dress you wore last: summer, is oval-shaped. Diagonalkyacross the (top is a band of gray linen, edged on either side vuith bias trips of dull green. On this gray handle poised a new genus of artificial flowers, name- ly the linen rose. These curious roses are cleverly fashioned from folded scraps of various dull shades of rose, ‘lavender and blue linen with fiat, green leaves and stems.. Though this lone pillow combines st least uve au- iferent colors, the entire effect ie for from being gaudy or even gay. This same rose treatment is used on a ,third cushion, with o. banh of wide `c1uny lace in place of the green line diagonal. Your own patches may yield even stranger combinations 'than these described, and the pleas- ure of creating your own models will nun mst Duuphy me out no uImt’l>° in rf°i»°\'¢l°“ 11° *N “dd” °*"°°- tiveneas of your porch for busy morn- ings and drowsy afternoons. A REAL. BALIBMANI (From the Kansas City Journal.) An Abilene piano-dealer struck a . hole in the road and dumped a piano on the roadside. He went to get help, 'found the farm-house had no piano sod the one in the ditch and went ,back to town. He got. full price for it ‘ too, he says. LONDON, May 14.-- For the first time in the past six months authorized German and French official announce- ments of the progress of hostilities find themselves in agreement. The German communication admits thc truth of the more émportsnt clulnis made by General Jo re, French Com- mander Chief, and that successes were met by the French between La- ,basse and Arras. lf this attack can be pushed here the consequences will be still more marked. In the ripiuiou 'ol' British military commentators who are clxluiing today that a limo rur- ther advance by the French will open a conspicuous gap in the German line, a development which will necessitate the falling back of the Germans on a wide front. To North of Labaesc the British arc doing little more than holding their own. but at the saint- time they are keeping a great masses of Germans engaged, troops who otherwise would be available against the French offensive. ILIIIS FIISIIIIIIG _.ia PETROGRAD. May `l4.~- Official this evening in the region of Shavll ilshting is developing under condi- tions favorablo to us. Yestertluy we took more than one tiioiisantl Gcrmiiii prisoners and captured uint: niet-hlne guns. “in Western Galicia inienslly of thc fighting is lessened. .“0ur troops are concentrating gradually on the line of the River San with the object of occupying a shorter front. The Austrian nrmv is evacuating the eleventh strongly i-‘rtilied posi- tion extending from Brietritza Rivet- to Itoumania. about ninety four miles iii length fell hack prccipatlng' the twelfth beyond the liivf-r Piutli. The enemy‘s cavalry which was sacrificed by repeated clizirges to protect the general retreat was disper- sed by our fire.. “Our Cavalry Divisions broke through the enemy's fron: at various points and by successful charges threw the encmy's columns uhich were oil the march into 'lis- IS FIVUUHIBLEI TFIE. STANDARD SOLD REFUSE order. Our vigorous pursuit of the enemy coniiuiics under conditions partir-ulai~ly favorable to us. The great number of prisoners we already have taken is rapidly increasing. § | TJ/nlllM¢w\\a\\\\\\»mma\\\\\wa//////A\\\\\wwAm WIl$l;§§“\ / /I I Q, s I ' lllIIIlIfJ1`“\\\\\\\\lZIIIA“\\\\\\YIIh\§?IIlIllIIlA\\\\\\\\\§Ill 1 hall the MIGHT of the German Millions trample RIGHT underloo 21'; Shall the Hantlful of Prussian Militarisls who have already trampled the people of the German Empire underfoot Dominate he worn at a crisis Lake rio? IFE 1. if the lives of our Empire’s finest manhood are not too precious to be spar- ed in the campaign against Germany,is a Canadian Dollar too precious to be spared ? _ 2. Do you consider that the “Wait and See Policy” is inspired by feelings of patriotism--or by the unqualified SELF- ISHNESS of men who, for their POCK- E'l"S sake or for their APPETITES sake, refuse to contribute one dime from their abundance to the assistance and relief of our boys at the front ? 3. We went to War with Germany be- cause she said MIGHT WAS RIGHT, and trampled Belgium underfoot. DO YOU propose to allow the MIGHT of the German millions to trample Right underfoot? Do you propose to allow a handful of men who have militarism on the brain to dominate at a crisis like this-to jeopordise the destiny of the British}Empire in order that their accum- ulation of gold shall go on undisturbed whilst millions of our best men are throw- ing their all into the balance? 4. Are you banking upon the good in- fluence ofthe King’s magniiicient lead in voluntarily stopping intoxicants during the War to check the serious delay drink is causing in the manufac- ture of war material? Granting that his Majesty’s noble example will be prom- ptly followed by every loyal subject who has command of himself, do you ser- iously suggest that the money thus ,saved will be of any benefit, if you re- fuse to contribute what it represents to keep the boys at the front? 5. If the FULL STRENGTH ot the Empire is imperative to crush German milimrism, why do you hold back your contribution to the comfort and relief of the brave men who are sacrificial; their all for you ? NI PLAIN QUESTIONS to the ople of PRINCE EDWARD ISLAN C 6. Do you seriously believe that yoi. will reap any blessing by witholding that dollar or quarter which your conscience tells you you owe to your Country now? 7. Which would present the greater diiliculty, the rebuilding of the trade after the war, if suspended in the mean- time, or the rebuilding of the British nation and the re-establishment of Brit: ish prestige if our cause should be lost through your lack of promptness and generosity in contributing to the com- fort and relief cf the hungry and wound- ed soldiers in the battle line? 8. lsit possible that interested parties have led you to believe that the Wai' will soon be over, notwithstanding the costly advertising for recruits, the reg- istration of women workers, and the new appeals for every available man to help in the production of war material? 9. Since the best men among us have cheerfully sacrificed the comfort and security of their homes for the wretch- edness and peril of the trenches-since mothers have given up their sons, and wives their husbands, can you seriously doubt for a moment that the country is READY to sacrifice of its means cheer- fully in order that the Britons shrill be free? When a War tax was levied it was paid 'without a murmur. Were we asked to walk barefoot:-:cl in the roadway to help the boys in the trenches we would do it willingly and gladly. At what do you value your patriotism in hes- itating when called upon to sacrifice a dollar for an island Fieltl Kitchen and Ambulance ? 10. Arc you aware that every little counts in carrying on a great War and that the sentiment behind a gift of this kind will be of infinitely' more worth than the intrinsic value of the gift? Every Man and Woman Asked to Send This Coupon to the GUARDIAN D0 I T0 THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN I Show - | Charlottetown - Your . . Your Enclosed Please Find $ ..... .. as my Contribution to the‘ Field Kitchen and Ambulance Fund. _ Patriotism 5"* is Ili' CNP” ADDRESS.-. ..... ........ .... ._ Bi C°“lfll°“li“¢ ' ' I NAME... . . . T0-DAY I L g . New “\\\iIIIK%\\&\\\\“\\\iMW` » U . , - g _ .» _ ,__ I A I , , f ` ,~ , . t ' . f~ ." ‘ me ` _ ,....¢~-,-‘ i //IM.\\\\l I£\\Y§\YIJl\\\\\\\\ I 0III@I'é\\\ a /i\\F.§ I 'i -I ff-i I t o 'as-r. - 5., I I. I I- I fl t,'I_ I I I I I In E t i, i” ..»»_ _i i I .'\I .-_sr-~» .4 I t L; it :I §& we .__.._j. ti If-i I tr i. 1, v l 1 .s=._'<_-;.- -'ff T? TZ’ .‘ ‘~ 'I