—-—-~..-n.-acr 111-11 A tinntorrrrowii auilnniiui Morning Dolly than!!! h lllll hesldmt. Llano-Col. W. Chatu I. Iolnro Vice President. J. l. Burnett, I, J. l,‘ Secretary, Haul. 43o]. l). A. , l). l. 0. Editor and Manning Director J. IL Home". l‘. l- l asmim sum, ma: Walker SUBSCRIPTION KATIE . limperycai-(lnsdunecidallvuechfllh $.00 per year (in ndvaneel mailed to P. l. lllwl p.00 pa!‘ y (in advance) mulled to cmulaenlll-l Mem rs audit Bureau or Circulation: i ' ‘The Strongest Memory is Wflllwr "N!!! the AWealcesLlnk." _ sermon’. Novnnmm 11. 19-19- Remembrance Day Jnce again Remembrance Day comes around. with memories undimmcd ‘of the years“0f tragedy and suffering which preceded the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the elflvflllll month," 1918. We celebrated it first as Affil- istice Day. But as the year} P3524 l" 518mm?‘ ance deepened, and we dedicated its observance entirely to the memory of our heroic dead- This Remembrance Day l5 the most Solemn of all the days that we have so observed. we are again at war, with the same foe and 8K3?!" the same creed of ruthless force and aggression. Only this time thcre can be no Armistice-no “Cease Fire"--until final victory for human freedom and democracy has been won. Had we refused to face such an issue when there was no honourable way of escape. m" dead would indeed have died in van, —— not those only whose memory _wc honour i043)’. be? all who ever paid \vith their blood for the hen.- age we hold. It is part of our pride m our soldier dead that they did nothing new, took no new way, but trod lHSUIICUVClY and worthily in a beaten track; their courage, their faith,_their chivalry, were theirs by inheritance. The ideals that led them were the common ideals that have led the best of our race through the past. One may catch sounds of it in Chaucer and Spenser; a fuller music in Shakespeirfi; 311d thenceforth down through Scott and Burns, Byron and Tennyson, Ne\vbolt and Masefield, to our soldier poets of the last war who gave ringing assurance of their fighting faith. Through them we catch the authentic accents of all who made the great sacrifice. “They cannot die 1194i" f0? “b97337- Be {hey remeluberf-d 0f their land for aye. Grcen be their grave-Y. ""4 9'99" the” memory!" The Christian Ideal "The Nazi doctrine of force." dfillafed Pnlfle Minister Mackenzie King in a recent speech. 15 the very antithesis of what one finds in fl"? christian gospel If it crews"? the? .“”ll “f: as I see it, an end of our Christian_civilization._ What is the Christian ideal, which the Nazi doctrine contravenes and in defense of which we are now at war? 'l‘he following quotation from an authoritative source dealsuvith one essential factor, common to the experience of Christians of all denominations, but‘ frequently forgotten and requiring to be restated from time to time: “The scientific materialism of the Nineteenth Century was responsible for the widespreadbc- lief in an inevitable progress to a millennium by the method of social reform. The huntam- tarian type of religion put forward at that time. was accepted because it so entirely harmonized with this point of vicw. According to it the Christian religion consisted in believing that God is our Iinlhcr, and that all mcn are brothers; that Christ was :1 good Man who taught this, and enforced it by His example. In short. that He crime not to rcclccm society, but to teach men how to reform society. And there are_Still plcuty of people who think that “Christianityfh as they call it, is “useful m society", that it 1S the sort of medicine to be taken in modest doses to kcep the social sickness from becoming too obvious: that it is to do the ambulance work, to encourage men in patching up an old world. If the Gospel is rczilly only a modest program 0i social rcftiim fm- a world which can save itsclf. thcn, indeed. miracles are out of place, and there xvzis no uccd for the Son of God to be- cnntr? lnr.'iri1:ltc. "The Wllnlc structure of Christendom, as it has :tppt-.|i"<-.l in history, must be traced to the Q,\'[|Cfl(‘l1',‘t' of rcdcmption. ‘If (my 1min be lll Chi-fr! hr Ir II uczu rrmiluriv; old things are pars- ml iiriviv, lip/mid all tlifiiqs are become 1mm.’ 'Y¢’ m“ fill our in Chris! Jarvis.’ TThcsc are typical fthrascs of the New" 'l‘cstaiiicut, describing the intense fwrnl which the experience look in the earliest days. liruzn the first it has had three aspccts: (ill lt is cmborlicrl in a redeemed com- munity, whose mcuibcrs arc hound together in a more intimate mzumcr than is to be found in any olhcr form of society (b) kVitliin the com- munity rrdcmpliuii moves primarily along per- sonal lines, rcliulitllng individual character and deepening the natural gifts of personality; yet in such n \v.'t\' its to eliminate selfish individual- ism zuul build bridges of fellowship and mutual (lcpcutloiicc. (c) The redemptive power whirl; is at work is .'|l\V.'l_VS traced to the action of God, and thcrcforc im .. cs n theological explanation of the wlinlc CXPPFlcIICC. It was this third fea- ture which, bv the tiiiivcrsal tcsiiiiloity of the earliest Christians, was rcgarrlcrl as completely determinative for the Christian moral and social order. For the experience of redemption means for the individual a dcfinilc personal rela- tionship of the soul to Christ; and.it belongs to the essence of the experience that this relation- ship is not self-made or capable of lacing affect- ed in any salutary degree by compulsion from without. ' ‘ "It is the repented impact of divine power lupon human weakness that constitutes the deep- est clement in Christian experience. As ideals are pitched highyso the sense of natural insuf- ficiency to attain them is intensified. Yet fail- urc is met again and again by the miracle of divine forgiveness, alisolving the rmst and ‘bring- ing reconciliation with God. _Tl’1_II-5 CllfflflS 0f habit are broken and new beginnings are cori- stantly made. At every moral crisis there des- cends upon the vacillating human “rill in its hour. o6. renounce a power more than humil- . / which recreates energy and renews hope of pos- sibilities beyond natural expectation. “Neither obedienceto a moral code nor imita- tion of the highest ideal of character are in themselves sufficient to break down the barriers of egoimi and weld men together into a living, world-wide, moral fellowship. If virtue were men's true good, then grace would only need to bring them into conformity with an‘ ideal pat- tern of humanity. Such a process would at best only be one of sanctified self-culture. Its end would be nothing but the self-centred perfection which formed the ideal of pagan ethics. But it is the mission of Christianity to destroy such egoism, which is the greatest obstacle to the reign of God over human society." g. EDITORIAL sores = Chloroform first used as an anaesthetic to- morrow’s date, 1847. u u a n Remembrance Day. “The leaves of memory seemed to make a mournful rustling in the dark." e is w a We seem all set for a busy time up till Christ- mas, ready money being fairly plentiful and the immediate prospects even better. U Q , i i The first separation allowance for soldiers’ wives and children was received yesterday-for September and October. Henceforth it will be due‘ and payable tile firsaqffaeh month, Tomorrow in the churches throughout the land will be the real spiritual Remembrance Day, when there will ‘be an opportunity for com- munity communion with “Saints who from their labours rest." s- 1 n- 1- Ifiilimmising changes in the administration of the Quebec Liquor Commission, the new Ffflfllfl‘, Mr. Godboue intimated his intention to see a more bfflidlmlllfiltd, tolerant, if severe, supervision initiated." In other words “a wider open, less prohibitive, if strict, supervision” - whatever such coniradictory‘terms mean. “The best laid schemes of mice and men gang aft agley", especially in newspaper pro- duction and development. A weekly in Paris, M0» decided to outstrip its rival’s popularity by sponsoring a. contest to select “the most beau- tiful woman in the world.” The title was won by the daughter of‘ th: rivalilpapefs publisher. Grain growers in Australia having kicked against price control, Prime lllinister R. G. Menzies has announced that the government was willing to make an unconditional advance of $10,- 000,000 on the new season's wheat to compensate growers for the low overseas price, but refused to commit the government to make an initial payment of 60c a bushel at country sidings in February as requested by a deputation of wheat growers. Mr. Menzies said that while the Com- monwealth had offered $10 ooo,ooo before the war on condition that the States provided $7,- 500,000 he was prepared to make an tint-nudi- tional grant, half of which would be paid in this financial year, half in the next. The government is trying to obtain overseas markets, but is find- ing it difficult, a a v a Notwithstanding Herr Hitlcr’s swashbuckler threats, unless the Germans spring a surprise, the troops on the front line will be practically inactive at least for three months and possibly more. A few army corps, relieving each other periodically, would suffice to hold the front. Nevertheless there could be no thought of even partial demobilization; the armies must rciiiaiil ready for instant action. This situation has bccn brought about by two factors-the Allies’ d.- cision not to engage in “any rash offensive" and what is described as Chancellor Ilitlcfls sub- sequent hesitation or indecision. in the rlcm- ocracies conduct of war is a prerogative 0f tllc government (in the present cause rcprcscntctl by the Allied \\'zir Council) and lilC commziildcr- in-chicf i5 entrusted solely with the conduct of operations. In the Third Rcich it is cvidcut that Her;- Hitler conducts both, tlu-rcforc any hesita- tion or indecision must be his. ‘F! 1! H 1K Ninety-five per ccut of all lypcs of ilrlllrilis can bc treated successfully, in tlic opiuioii of Dr. Douglas Taylor of the Royal Victoria Hospital. In (lcvcloping his theme on “Arthritis,” Dr. Til)’- lor affirmed that at lcnst <)o pcr ccut of all ilc- formitics due to the (il.<(‘.'l\t‘ mriy lic prevented. During the last two or thrcc yvn-irs, he lifts treat- cd and kept accurate nutcs on IHOTC than 20o cases and his findings wcrc that tbcrc is no one disease called arthritis, but iuzuiy typos “So many, in fact, that it is plniu folly for any pcr- son to announce that lll(‘l'(‘ is any onc spccific remedy." Dr. 'l‘.'i_\‘lor claims that various lvpcs of rheumatic diseases affect from two ln tlircc por cont of the entire population of the trorlrl. They affect more pcoplc than tuberculosis, heart disease and cancer combinctl. Tbcy cause more crippling than any ntlicr individual dis- ease and catisc onc-sistli ui the ‘.~,.'..‘ -'".d.. 'r’~‘ invnlidism on the North American continent. More than 97,000,000 days’ work are lost each year in the United States through arthritis. n u- s- n It is now clear, says Auger, that Adolf Hitler, by starting operations in Poland, has missed tbc only chance-if hc cvcr bad it——-'to disturb the Anglo-French marshalliug of forces on thc Rhine. It is equally apparent that if the Ger- man air force had been as powerful as ad- vci-tiscd Hitler would not have hesitated to use it against the British and French. The rcsnlt of those negative factors is a stalemate on the Western Front, bcciiusc the Anglo-French lin- tentc considers that time is on its side and is therefore in no hurry to start major operations. Military experts consider that the destinies of the war will be largely dctcrmincrl by two datcs_ The first will coincide with the establishment of such predominance iii quality and numbers of the Al- lied air force that the Germans will be forced to give up any idea of a large-scale attack by fliied this week, was an ancmay tn iiorrs BY riir WAY rather long ago Bra-allot toldmebowhebroke me new: to the late Elm a unit. o1 the Tank Corgi. He was officially commissioned to 1n. rorm Hts Majesty o! this dieclslipn, and. abtlred 1s lull uniform with decoration , duly presented tumult st the Palace. Them be was ushered into an apartment mg alone, and was promptly greet- ed with a. cherry; "Heller-I sup- pose youwe come to tell me the are making another o! my cruel ill-Val?! Nzl-ments into --busmenl" But the eat-cavalry busmen will war. and even being turned into l. light tank unit cannot kill the old cavalry eplrtt. A trlend. who has been watchlnc some or our tankuiezd oavaliymen tn training with their live-ton mounts, was interested to discover that each mount had s name. ‘These names rather puzzled hm, u he did not recognize them. and could not lo- soclete them with any mlllta-ry deities. But the Major 1n charge enlightened him. "They are." he explained. “all names o! Grand Naclonal winners!" - Ottawa Jour- nnl. I ‘am encloslnt n letter from u. Kenya native which you may consider worth publishing. It 1g |, charming - and not unusual-ex- wllole o! loyalty. The letter, which was addressed to the Dis- trlot. Commissioner, Boutfh nyq-r, was first published 1n the natdvn Planer which we are issuing now 1n order that tihe natives shall know exactly what. 1s going on 1n Eur- BPBI "Dear 8lr—I be: Wu to 1w- cept me tn oller my three pigs to Government, to be used 1n the war I have kept three pigs only and I am 1n wantlnz them to be 1n the work o1’ your Crown second- ing my love and power. like other fellows who have given up their lives 1n order to defend other People's lives I Ielt. heartedly u I have no knowledge, or exper- ience or any work. except these pigs which I decided that I must give them to Government, exactly as I would give up my 111g r0: our Kingdom to remain just, m us as 1t has forever. “In measur- ing my 912s. they are tour feet. 1n length, etc. "Now. su- I would be very much pleased to hear from you what you have decided m; that question o1 these offerings,- Your obedlenl/ly servant, KAN OGA S. O. NJEGA.” How widespread ls the fear that the petrol rationing will cripple road transport la shown by the sudden and unexpected de- mand Ior alternative fuels, espegl- ally gas. Finns making or m5;- keting portable gas-making plants are said to be inundated wltih orders and one o1’ the anthracite concerns for a larger special dried which form the fuel. largest 1s arranging production o! the One hun- wlll drive n 16 h.p. car 150 miles and ls equvtalent. to petrol at 5 1-2d per gallon. In the House o! Lords the Duke o1 Mnntrose said gas vehicles on the roads, France 7,000, Italy 3,000, Auztralla 600 and Great. Britain only 200. He knew or a bus company in the Highlands which had been operating a 22- seater vehicle for over a year, It had run over 50.000 mlles on daily service, and the directors of the company were so pleased that they ha-d ordered a 32-seater bus. He had soon this bu: on test, and lt. had done 42 mph. It was stated on behalf of the Government that they were experimenting on t-he sublcct and hoped soon to make a statement on it. -- Banffshlre Journal. Talbert Hatfield ls dead. That name may not stir any memories tn the newer generation, but. to many whose hair l; graying the mere word Hatfield ls like the dou- ble click of a rifle lock. It goes back to the days when the Hat- fled-McCoy feud in the moun- tnlus of Kentucky and West. Vir- ginln was the most celebrated vendetta in the United States. The disagreement grew up over the ownership of a couple of stray razorback hogs. It carried on for half a century or more and many, both men and women died. "Haw; Floyd" Hatfield, Randi McCoy, “Dcvil Airsc" Hr-tffcld Young Stnyton, Deacon Ellson Hnt1leld~ there were some of the salty names of the participants 1n the feud. There was even n romance between young Joiice Hatfield and Rose Ann McCoy, but it wound up in tragedy, and the killings went on. Tclbert Hatfield, the man who that feuding community-he main- tained neutrality. Part o! the time that. the vendetta war. at its height. he occupied the difficult position o! a Justice 01' the peace. The fact that. he could do so and still survive to the ripe age or 89 years, argues for a magnificent diplo- matic aballty. It's too bad Talbert Hatfield didn't pass on his secret. We can think o1’ several European nations who would like to know how he, 1n the midst. o1 the moun- tain combustion, kept- clear o1’ the tight-Holland, Finland, Belgium and Switzerland among them. - Kunsas City Times. A new decoration {or German submarine officers and crews has been established. Berlin reports. The decoration will be awarded to men "who have sailed on two or more cruiser’ against the enemy and to those wounded on duty aboard a submarine. When a man 1s decorated for sailing only air on Britain and Fraiicc- The second will be the moment when the Anglo-French predomin- ance reaches dintcusinns permitting an ovcr- whelming invasion of Germany from thc air. Before the first stage has bccn reached, and cer- tainly before the second arrives, liitlcr will he obliged to stake his all on a desperate attcntpt twice 1n a submarine, it strongly suggests that the risk o! death on submarine duty 1s now no great. that, those who return to port are honored like survivors 01a forlorn hope. And when men wounded on submarine duty are set. aside as a separate class 1t. ‘M I "m" more: dinner aBrl-tllh Army; V that imotrier lemons cav lry, regiment was to be converted to where King George V. was stand» play u‘ lmp°'l‘°'nl' m” m m”. Take 1m our quarrel wlth the ‘roe! 8.1 3WD alllhmlle PM moved h1m that ln dredwclght 0! this fuel. 1t 1s stated was in progress, he wrote this poem. an dead he may, Germany now had 10.000 produoer- I THE CHARLOTTETOWN ouaitmanf~ ~ -‘ ' In Flanders Fields _ unanimou- .... . l§.thiou¢ht.hecourtewota mlllllmmrmlmyir e M" Ill-In 2080 tower.) , 1. THE CALI. Inflandemtlellh the popplemblw -BOUW!0!1 the crosses, row on row zThzgkmnrk our place; and 1n the Y The lax-ks, still hm alndnf, , ‘Scarce heard Landfills guns selgz, [We are the dead. Slim-t. days ago W6 livvd. felt, dawn, sew unmet i’ W. ' Loved and were loved, and now we Inflnnlenfleldl. In Flaindem fields. -~L1eut.-Ool. John D. McRae. H. THE PLEDGE m Flanders fields the cannon boom And fltful flashes the gtlloom, Wlttfi stains the eairtih whereinszyiydu o ll redder than th popp bloom 1n FMIIIJQT! Hell’; Sig; on ye tit-ave. The dictating The‘ duaklm trench, the mined The rmiy at me battle lieu s“ c“ w or..." "l. eep . or Your in: torch aloft we bur, Wm burnlnc heart an 00m we swan- T loeepthetlaltilnbo htltttir, T: crush the roe or slggp with yolii In m fields. —Chia.s. D. Ga-lbnlhh, State Uni-man, Otilo. I'll. T!!! In brlanden tlelrb the poppies Abav urlowlmheillowodwmb. ‘Ilisfiigirbiuvedeedemniynevu e ‘Ihetomhorrreedomllftedhilfl-i Shallshlmtoreverwhezteymi e. No more 1n Flanders fields will grow The crosses. endles row on row, Fv crushed and conquered lies the we the faith», wdve seen 1t OurImyruud brave lle dead‘ nrlth you In Flanders fields. The mmporumieeboomorgim NOVEMBER '11, 193,, . i _' ' ' L firurlamation ' 0n this day of solemn remembrance I join with the Mayors of Gilles m3 Towns in all parts of Canada to issue this Proclamation: ' It bids us reconsecrate ourselves to the nation's hi h t i whatever field our duty lies. ' g es He" cc’ l“ Shortly before Their Majestles’ visit, the Mayors of Canada passed a reso- lution calling for Moral Rea-Armament. as the need o1‘ the day. The world-wide response showed a world-wide need; and war has inten- sified that need. In time of war our homes require this kind of spirit to enable them to bear its anxieties, as well as to give them a lasting unity and purpose, Such a spirit will make for co-operation in industry and throughout the whole nation. It. will make us eager to put. national interest before pen lonal security and personal profit. With a sense o! Individual responsibility, we shall achieve true enonorny ‘of man-power, money, and national effort. , The morale o! the people and the health of the fighting services will be ‘at. their best. Furthermore we need no longer accept as inevitable thd, moral casualties of war. l , The two minutes’ silence on Remembrance Day forms a link with the dead. It can also link us with the future and with lite. On this day, while remembering our glorious dead, let us use these two minutes to seek God's Plan and to find out how best to serve Him, our King, and our Country. l Recognizing our own faults and our own failures, leti us set ourselves to put. right what 1| wrong 1n our own lives and so help to free our country from greed, fear and hate. Then we shall truly honour those whom we recall to memory today. Then REMEBRANCE DAY recalls the courage and sacrifice of the pagt, _ we can build the sort of world they died to bring about. , - E. A. FOSTER, ' MAYOR 00D 8.478‘ CANADA SAVE THE’ KING And furious cry of savage Hun Are silent now. The vrlctoryk won In Flanders fields. .-—Rev. IA. Williams. leinriox, South Da/kota. "m FLANDEES rmtns" 1. All tfne world knows the story of the physician o! Montreal, 0a.- nndia, who enlisted at the very be- ginning 0t the war and was as- signed to the medical corps. The devastation or Belgium, will: every field a burial ground, so deep April, 1915. while the second ‘battle of Ypres Speaking for the Belg“! calls upon tine outside world to mediate attnetlon and has made ts author's name immortal. He died ln Flanders, January 28, I918. 11. A reply to Col. McRiaeXs poem was written 1n the same year, 1915, by the state librarian of Ohio. It 1s significant that beTore his own na- tion had gotten into the wair or had recognized any moral respon- sibility this writer had the prophet- ic vision to pledge to Belgium that the world would go the utmost 11m- lt. 1n her defense. It. ls a gallant re- sponse m the urgent appeal o! a stricken land. III. In the autumn of’ 1918, with Germany defeated and suppllant, a priest in a small Dakota town penned the tltlrd o1 this serlu, 1n which he commemorates the com- pletion of the great task. It. ap- prcvprlaf/ely rounds out and com- plates the theme-Cal], Pledge, Ful- fillment. This unique trilogy o1’ verse by different writers ls one of the noted library products o1’ the warn-sit, 1n True Voice. The Immorit-zd Heritage (Globe and Mall) The Imperial War Graves Com- mission has completed its work in a fashion that has never been equalled by any people 1n any age on such a scale. Sir Fabian Ware has published a book whose title ls the same as that o1 this article, which will comfort and ennoble thousands oi mourners, He points out. that respect for the dead 1s the oldest. and most universal sign of the spirituality of man. Our British graves in every the- awe or the Great. War carry a oer- tnln mystic atmosphere "which ll forever England." In France, It- aly and Palestine, and on the tip or the lordly Dardnnellea, Just across the strait 1mm ancient Troy. you 11nd the white-walled garden with its Cross o1 Sacrifice like a crusaders sword. Trees and flowers abound, but. not. {or the adornment o1 individual graves. ‘There 1s no competition 1n which the dead would seem to be differ- ent from, and better than, each other. And yet they do not lle in a cormmon grave, tor each was "a. separate personality with a. royal lolalim nor tndlvtdual understand- ntz.’ O O O The pathos and the tras o1 this Remembmnoe Day 1s the?! 1t. was originally a “Cease Fire" and only afterward a. memorial for our deed. But now the guns are boom- ing again and we have to ask our- selves, "Have our brothers died 1n vain?" The festival has ceased to have u. limited significance. It leads us into the wider spheres o1 hu- man eistenoe and the Divine Hand 1n history. The instinct c! memorials ls, as we have said, very old. First, there 1s the determlnat on of man to be as immortal as he can. The inner story at the Pyramids and many a trlumghal arch 1n ancient Rome revels the incurable tin-n of mankind. But thls ls not e human soul at its best. The historical re- good o! being wounded 1n less avenge her wrongs. It attracted 1m- gm I _ Ell lilIh d f 5,315,115; 113;, M energy“; 2.85%.... ?w‘é‘°..°.'ill2€. 12%;‘; 06W Many o: me “us” ‘or whmh men British army will be much greater - alibi dded are not only forgotten. ‘ml “h” w‘ Wm l” l“ “ lwsllm“ l” qqanrufiiu- m°ml>'°h°*"“’"- llédfifmbli” eifiyuiil III-Iv HI.‘ Bu‘ m’ 9°”: M u" mmed‘ m” tort to create a lar reduction o1’ Q lguolnl&bup mortals o1 the would will one dis’ 3° p - be s“ er than m‘ “m,” o! the foodstuffs to assist. the Mother Qpgggqq-Qpfli zivintamii matter! little why men g°% olllgtwéflllmtgelhilgflkgefff; m. nu awn-In mlllhl- b“ l‘ M” mm" m" will make this a prof table lnvest- rm» o» sow hlhv- “m” “h” p" mm m“ beuwed menl: but apart from the monetary m“ “m” mm“ m worm Wm‘ oonslderatlon, we must consider §~» n mains taunts ur hearts m to mug, m ii“.’..'i"ia"$“°‘$°’ o hi“ n" PUBLIC FORUM swiailifla‘ n m‘ M M o e s sorrow, w were m1ud,d_ never intended to sneak to later I. One sungisily $11. namtnr s luau generation. nu column u ups: m a: , hlurcli I heard. the. hymn, M133 gfiuiymtin the‘ dlnnuun by nnuponaun a iqvho” m PeQ-fl e Se,» an , " Deu- amid." h, , so. or: need our prayers at m. l» in m mhoomb; me necessarily undone sh 0|; n ma!“ i gisfMlahail, sndfsbove all, authen- " """""°"" prayer more ottien tnmmir chiuelal. 'I'.he Salvation Anny lmve a mm "munch out into the deep and lat e shore llna so Iisumfli out. munoh out 1n he Ocean o! Love Out when the mu ttdu flow." A boat was 1n more danger the shore. but not so now. 91.11.: deep has become a mdlniz place tor submarine and mines. Our sailors _——..;=; (Continued on i I1, Col l! We are very aandohs to can-y out y. 41.34.17 $7- thls policy 1n the most successful way possible 1n order to assLst 1n “ i the production or food for the s01- dilers at the front as. no doubt, 1n tlc poetry, lru man's beet claim to immortality. needom, apparently. must. be bouoht amw tih the jeweleatsaaritlcelrytihesomnnd grandsons d! those who have ill-id before. There la no wav- Those Mao arr-led the rela baton Wmm.”"“"...u""‘ fir. 91.313211.“ w o - We an touch! chords which transcend natl tv. ‘The cloud witnesses" of the Epistle to the He- ilareiws lmovn D0 I80. lNYClJ-IBQ 0T color. . ‘ . In a certain are: beyond Arms wiuun sight o! the noble Pywon of no three great ceme- es-one French, one Emmi and German-with about. thousand names 1n awh- are others mm which all persona-l hate and ambitlm have 1on8 5111" WAR/TIME ‘FARM PRODUUHON “Bln-Aslwe grieve dlsoovggsdmtihge a surp us young e Province which canno? be taken cane o! by present. owners, our De/ on u. 5§1'.i'.'i1!~-"aui=i'.?'i~ B? ‘W? “d I “W!” h" "m1 W1‘ pertinent, 1n conjunction with the the Livestock Marketing Board, have succeeded 1n placing approxi- matelyflfloyourispss 1n the hands or farmers who need them. During the same length o! time titty bred sows and ten sows or breeding age have been distributed throughout the Province. These sows are all for. These memorials are a mon- ument. 1p man, hull and heroic. but they have the hope o! Chris- tlnnlty 1n their stones. Unless all our mental and spiritual standards are pure llluslmi humanlty believes that the day come when "Na- tion shall not 11ft up sword against nation, neither shall tlhere be war any more." we have a duty to perform. We may have sacrifices to make, but, even 1t such 1s the case, our exertions, inconveniences. and sacrifices will be very little as compared with those 01' the soldiers who are fight- ing our battle at. the front. I am. Sir. et... W. H. DENNIS. ,M1nlst.er o! Agriculture. ___.______. CHURCHES AND THE WAR gryi-Our ttégltlgllfihfi! are dndblv oa n: on bra - mon. with entertalnmlieerili Bfrrir ‘fiche soldiers and rerrwhments served every week bv two o! our churches. Otiher Societies are also helping Edi-g ‘Ifinlar-IIMIWN 15$ $~ibW gonad damages In can a0 eolhhni ,9..- .‘ And, dominate-III eolhdbonalroeorastouninll-F hqspollolkldlnd m. ninth-l your. Norlnllvtlrllrnhnuvi by lbenqenl o! "IINGHQ Conpeny oi Hartford. l‘llll-llili“' hugchuucns." W. K. ROGERS AGENCIES LTD CHARLOTTETOWN THE DEAD Blow out, you bugles, over the rlch There's none o1 these so lonely and But. d made us rarer gins an . These laid ihe world away; poured out the r Sweet wine ‘o1’ youth; gave up the 0t work and 10y, and that unhoped serene, ‘mat men call c; and those who would have , Their some, they gave their tnunor- tallty. Blow, bugles, blow! 11w brought 1B. for our dearth, Holiness, lacked so long, and Ime, Honour 1s come beck, u a king, in And we n. mm. with a royal And Nulgneas walks 1n our ways And we law's some into our heritage, —R “Wllll llllT” ll Wllllllli The Boys of The Old Brigade WERE MARCHING YESTERDAY — 1914. TODAY THE YOUNGSTERS OF THE NEW BRIGADE ARE MARCHING AND AGAINST THE SAME FOE. AS IN 1914 OUR TOBACCO MOVES WITH EVERY ISLAND UNIT OR REGIMENT. HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST Chewing 10c Per F ig Manufactured By IIIBKEY and NICHOLSON TOBACCO CO., LTD., Charlottetown thy. unable h‘: v i also suggests that the chances In to crush the Allied forces. y than two voyages. - Winnipeg flklblme. __ , ,,_ , C __.. .4