115;" lit‘ i‘? l ,1 (Ill! , OIIIIILOTTETOVIII GUARDIAN i Honda: ma; (Founded tn imi Inhale. mun-cu. w. Chum- a. mum vine-harem. .1. a. Illrlllfl. v4.1. - ill-y. Lieu-Col I). A. Wucllnnm. 0.5.0. leer-e . lilflor and Maulzlnq Director. l. ll. Burnett. FJJ. I Drill: Editor. Frank Walker. SUBSUIPPTION BATES 88.00 per year (In ndvnncel ‘ellverf t: (2th MM err your 1 . ndnnnet milled to l’ I Inland U-OO n" venr (h: nfluncrl mulled to Canada and H.8- Members Audll Bureau of Clrculutlon: rte Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest THUESDAY, FEBRUARY, l, 1910- Civic Affairs Notwithstanding controversy occasioned l1y the recent changes in civic auditing and tax- collccting, it \\'\llll(l appear from yesterday's nomination results that the taxpayers are, for the most part, satisfied. 'l‘lierc arc, however, nciv candidates iu tlt: running, to whom a fair field should h1- exfciitleil. ' The ctuulidatcs for the hlayoralty, Mr. Roy llolniuu 411111 Ur. llcath hlclntyre, are both members of the outgoing Council, and well known to all our citizens. To retiring .\l;1_1oi' 1'1. .~\. Foster tribute is due for his zeal and zitu-utitm to duty, and for rc- forins iustitutetl uudzr his regime which. it is hoped. 11iil result iii more efficient civic finan- cing. His \\'0i1~liip has at all times been ap- proachable by the electors, has represented us worthily on official and other occasions, and has proved an zible champion of civic interests in his coutzict with the provincial and federal gov- erusuuuts. K111411115; however, his atliniuistrafion will go down in lll$l1>l'_\' as the one in which long-deferred iitiprovemeiiis in civic auditing wcrcfibrought about. Reading Matter For Our Sailors A new line of work is being organized l1y the Iloy Scouts .\ssoci.'llit1t1 of Prince lidivurd Is- land. The inaiu object iu the training of Scouts. of course. is the ilevclopment of character and physique. Now they tire to have an opportunity to work for the benefit of others and thus sl1o1v the result of their own training. The 5811011 0f the Roval and I\'o_v.'1l Canadian Navy based 0n llalifztx. spend lllttft‘ than three quarters of their time at seal 'l‘l1cii"s is an arduous and dglugcrotls task. Living as they do in cramped quarters, there is no opportunity for amusement or recreation in their watch below. Reading matter couseqi1:-i1il_v is a great boon to them. For this purpose the Island Scouts are under- taking the task of keeping the lads at sea sup- plied with an ziinple supply of illustrated papers, periodicals, niugztziues and fiction of all var- icties. For the present the plan is for the Boy Scouts to mgtkc a lmllSC in liiiiisC COllfiCtiOtl CVCFY 1W0 weeks, thc actual dates to be announced from time to time. .»'\ll collections will be taken to (iroup Headquarters. and then they will be packed iii cartons and forwarded t0 Ilalifax‘. .\rrangeinei1ts are being made with the Cana- dian National Railways to have all cartons car- ried free. This splendid task will surely self to all our people and secure a YCSPOHSC. commend it- generous The Bacon Problem Speaking last week" at the annual meeting of the Sunnnersidc Board of Trade, l\lr. Rand ll. Mathesou, manager of the Transportation Com- mission of the hlaritime Board of 'I‘radc, stress- ed two as yet unsolved problems facing Mari- time farmers iii producing under the Bacon Trade Agreement with the Linitcd Kingdom. One is the question of freight rates on grain and grain products. The precedents established l1y the Board of Transport Commissioners in the matter of grain rates, he stated, were such that representations in ctniiieclion with the present situation lllll not offer much hope of obtaining a motlificrlittu in the present rates. Yet this is an essential fnctoi- in the problem of profitable production. Moreover, if freight rates were reduced, an- other l|llv~ilttll Ilflstfs, \\'hat assurances are there that priczs of fcctl would not continue to rise, thus obviating any alleviation that might be ob- tained from that end? (hi the other hand, if prices on f/ccd-tulfs were “peggcd" as is the bacon price. what assurance was there that the freight ivouli not be further iticrrased uuditr 1 . " roiitliiioits 211111 circumstances? Tilicreforr any representations in connection witli tc-i11pt1r:1r_v zissistzitice t0 the p csent [flight would nppcflt‘ in require a fusion o both prices and rail rates. lt was SiIQQgslLWl that the three hlaritime gowriiiciits should unite in milking representa- tions to flttaiva with the vieiv of obtaining assistance to hlziriiimc farmers in this connec- tion. hlr. hlzttliesttn referred to the Provisional Order, No. H131, passed by the British Gov- ernnicnt on Sept. 3, 111351, fixing the price n11 feed stuffs on jhe basis of the preceding week as an assistance 1o the livestock‘ producers in the United Kiug-ltnn. Similar action might prove beneficial in this coilntr/v, as a temporary 111eas- tire until hlarilimc farmers were in a position to supplement their own livestock feed. Canada's feed-grain production last year was the largest since i930, yet the farmers of the lllarifiuic Provinces have had the experience of pttviug higher prices this year than for several seasons past. The situation is. to say the least, an anomalous out‘, auil may result, if not rem- edied, in driving Maritime farmers out of bacon production altogether at a tinte when there is a practically unlimited demand at fixed prices in the British market. 'l'his would be doubly unfortunate. because Canada is already being flooded with United States pork. Nearly 25,- 000,000 pounds were imported last year, and marketing experts in Central Canada forecast a record movement of hogs from the United States to ('.'1i1.'1d:1 in 1940. lllillfeed price and freight-rate obstacles facing lllarilinie farmers B._ are not known in Mid-Wcstcm United States, or, for that matter, in other parts of Canada. Action must be taken in the very near future if the Maritime bacon industry is to be saved from extinction. ' EDITORIAL NOTES Souris by-election today. n1 a 41 i All is now set for next week's Civic election. at 1r =- w- \Ve are entitled to .10 (lays peace, quietness and contemplation, but whether we'll get it with an election on hand is another matter. i Anthony Hope, novelist, Lorn this date, 1863. "Bourgeois", I observed, “is an epithet which the riff-raft apply to what is respectable, and the aristocracy to what is decent.” at at Licenses will now be necessary for all im- portations into the Colony of Grenada, the Lee- ward Islands, and British Guiana, from all coun- 'tries, instead of being only applicable to Can- ada and Newfoundland as formerly. >1= =1 4t a: The deepening of the St. Lawrence scheme, by which Prime Minister hlaclcenzie King would sell Montreal and the .\l€ll'llllllC ports to Chicago is going to be a vital question at issue in this election. i It will 11c noticed that the llou. Mr. Rulston in issuing from (ltiaiva his boost to Summer- side Board of Trade for pafriofically forgoing their clziiui for wharf itiiproveuient, “patriotical- ii i if offered to provide. i‘ 1k i In an endeavour to improve its judicial sys- tcni, the Ontario (ioveriimcut has introduced a jury system. Second to this is the proposed reduction in the number of jurors in county and (listrict court civil actions to six. The present statute requires l2 jurors. icccniiinentletl in the report of ‘.\lr. Fred Barlow, made a survey of (lntarirfs judicial systcm_ i‘ ¥ ll T The United quested that lfire eiuluavoiir to ensure continu- ous supplies of both live pigs and bacon to that will be freely granted to the end of the year, and probably for the duration of the war. Ilaiu and bztccm are strictly rationed to the British public and every effort is being made to keep fitecrilig both in liire and in the United King- dom. This information was contained it1 a re- port to the Department of 'l'radc and Commerce from James Cormack, Canadian Trade Com- missioner at Dublin. 4* i i! ll NCWSPZIPCFS, if used with the same intensity as radio as an advertising medium, would pro- duce results at lo1ver costs, Mr. George Dibcrt, executive of the j. \\'altcr TllOlllpSOf] Co., New York, maintaiuctl iii an address he delivered be- fore the wcekly luncheon meeting of the Ad- vertising and $alcs Executives Club in the Mount Royal llotel. Atlvertisers should spend their money more effectively iii newspapers, Mr. Dibcrt suggested, urging that they should buy more intensively, make their advertisements ap- pear more often and increase their volume 0f advertising where justified. Stressing the im- portance of reader influence, .\Ir. Dibcrt held that there are too many atlvertising media an the market, sold oii the basis of circulation alone and not oii the basis of their reader interest. The “pay dirt" in atlvertisiiig, the speaker de- clared, is in circulation with reader influence, gauged by the number of people sufficiently in- terested to be regular and voluntary readers. - =1- w Germany is beginning to realize that “bullets instead of butter” is not profitable. The Ruhr- Arbciter, a popular industrial workers’ news- paper of Rheuish Prussia observes that the la- bor shortage on Gcrmau farms was rapidly be- coming acute on account of the augmenting coii- scription, which now embraces men of 56 years of age, has been endorsed by the paper run by Dr. (iuebbcls, hlinister of Propaganda, the An- griff, or Claw. The Ruhr paper had declared that “there is little likelihood that we shall be able to meet this need to any appreciable extent (luring the war." After analyzing the latest unemployment figures, the paper points out that most of the workless are not suited for agricul- furc. 'I'l1ose thrown out of employment by the cutting-doivu of honic-cousutnption industries are chiefly clerks. shop assistants, textile _work- ers and hotel euiployes. The Angriff now :ickuowletlge.s the agriculture labor shortage. It advises farmers who are short of men to aban- don their plans for ploughing up new land. They must concentrate instead oii getting the most out of their existing acreage. ##1## “It 1111s indeed a gracious act on the part of llis Majesty the King (writes _thc Duke of Moutrose in The Tiiincs) to bestow honors oii certain naval officers and seamen ‘in recogni- tion of the recipient's great courage and skill in rendering safe and rcady'for inspection enemy mines at great risk of their lives.’ This was a splendid service, 1111f not the first one of the kind, for I witnessed an exactly similar case in the last war, and it was performed partly in the dark by a single civilian who l do not think re- ceived any recognition at all. lle was a mine expert from (frouibie, and had been sent to strip and take away the first German mine that had been made Captive. As we ivalked down to the beach in the dark 11c fold me he had never seen a German mine before, but of course had stripped huudrctls of British mines and knew exactly what ivould happen if he made anv error in judgment in what he was going to do. In cold blood he scf to work at dawn with screw- driver, spanner and “tire-cutter. and by noon he had the 1vhol1~ thing rendered safe and put i11 a farm-cart to ltegiu its journey to Crombie. I do not know if this civilian expert is alive to- day; but if your report of the bestowal of these honors should come to his notice it would be nice for him to know how much the bravery of his action is appreciated" ginning to break through , _ _ controls which a totalitaqan re- (lown the retail price iii order to prevent pro- grime has placed around the Ger- man price structure. ably control prices, but of Dickens THE ciuuuprrizrown cuknbuin IIOTES OY 'l'llE WAY- -A steady nln tint descend: on New York city early in the utter- noon and continues, increases an: taxicab trade by an Average b1 8.15.000 worth o1 extra business, - uhrtatlm Scleuce . Pinon: In lllkht can be brought. to earth at any point by transmu- sron of radio waves through a new and secret alloy. according to a ‘scientist who has been conducting experiments with homing pgeon: in the Transvaal. -- Montreal Star. To the Nebraska Power Com- pany of Omaha which. after em- ploying fifteen temporary sales- men for ninety days, udverllsed and obtained other Jobs for theiu because of their proven ability. “Public service" o! a type that will pay dividends In public good wfll.—- Chrltstlan Science Monlur. The rumor: from Washington a! distress 1n Moscow, because of the failure of Russian transport. are at. one with the storles from Finland. Russta, indeed. seems to have made little progress tn es:ei1t.af organizational methods since the days of the Czar, when troops went Into battle without guns and without the proper reuitorsements of supply. - Halifax Chronicle. Orders such an these placed with Canadian plants are : UGIIIIII: an- swer to the question: “What ls Canada. doing ln this war?" and will satisfy manufacturers who nave been waiting for~ nearly live months for orders n I _ supplies. ly neglected to mention the 111ml pro qua he had mealately set a new volume o! money in circulation and put a new purchasing power in the hands of for military These orders wlll 1m- me people. From the long-term viewpoint, they will create an in- dustrial set-up which, with care _ _ and supervision. will form the bill to simplify court jirocecdure. Chief change basis; of Canada's industral ex- proposc-d is tllc complete abolition of the grand Z;f;§e§“g‘re§§_“~" me Mu" _ bond“ The Empire alr training program for which preparations is now being w made. will tnclude both changes were ment of.‘ no fewer than 77 bases Ln various parts of Canada, as well . . . as all the facilities for the educa- Mastcr of the .\lllll't'llll‘ Lourt of Ontario, who mm 0r 35,000 pilots, gunners and obzervers. start. of this big undertaking de- the establish- each year The rear nds upon delivery of the neces- .. . . pe luugtloui authorities have rc- gary alygplanes, or 11111111. 4,361 have been ordered. Canada will become the stage for , p _ V the most. amlntious aviation school market during 10.10, for which import licences ever inaugurated ' Empire or anywhere in the world. Wliuu they arrive, in the British -—bydney Post-Record Inflation, ti: other words. ls be- all the It Ls show- ing itself not in runaway prices but 1n acute shortage. The block- ade wlll intensify these shortages, out they would be apparent. 1n any case. They represent the working out of inflationary tendencies un- rler a. regime which can unquestion- cannot thereby halt the operation of ecorn- omlc law. —Wasnmgton Post. Time brings Its varied changes. and with the passing of the years there are shift; 1n standards 1n many fields. The Portland Ex- press raised a ‘point when lt re- marked: “By the way. clo you re- member when not to have read all was a mark of illiter- acv " Reply in bright form came quickly in this observation by The Boston Globe. “We remember when the Harvard English department condemned him sot harshly that. students hld their copies of his tales ln the closet." Examples can be found in other fields than that 01' literature, but even taking into account the limits set tn the re- marks noted. there ts evidence right there of the familiar pendulum movement well illustrated ln his- tory. - Frederlcwn Gleaner. There is ample room too for private beneficeiice. We talk of me evacuation of the Finnish towns. Do we always recall at the same time what it mean; for the cnild- ren and the aged even of such a hardy race as the Finns to be transported from their liomcs in intense cold and packed into ltttie towns and villages of summer non- day cam-ps amid s. wilderness of (‘e and snow? Those same rigors of winter which have afforded their Bid 1n checking the IIIVHQCI‘ mus; have pressed heavily upon the weak. the sick, and the wounded among the invaded. If Finland can be saved. more than Finnish lib- erty wlll be preserved. Her salva- tlcn would be a triumph for llb- erty whlch would rc-echo tlirougn- out the world. — London Tunes. That. man, llvtng rlght ln this part of Ontario, who Insulated his house by fillfflylng lt. with 11 hose so that lee would keep out the wind, had what we should call “moral forti- tude." As well as common sense. Certainly ice keeps out the wind. but. it's the idea of the thing mat, would make the average human be. m8 Prefer the shivers and droughts. It. ls common knowledge that trap- per-s and fishermen. braving me Wlmfy Wfllfli. use woollen mitts whlch, when frozen over, keep out the wind. And many hardly fellows mstst. that snow is magnificent tn- sulatlon-so much so that a good sleep tn ft, with a sleeping bag en- closing you. ls as comfortable as a. good hotel_ Arctic travelers-whom we never quite t-rusL-vauch for the comfort. of the igloo. All these things are, no doubt. splendid if you have the courage to test them and go through with 1t_ But. nom- lng could be colder tn theory, than such attempts at insulation, It's the principle of the thing-Hum- tlton Spectator. W. R. Givens of Kingston. win- terl-ng tn Florida, writes how he "was shocked and 11s a Canadian greatiy disturbed" by the promin- ent publication tn Hordla papers 0f a despatch stating that. the 0n- tarlo Legislature by 44 to 10 had condemned the Canadian Govern- ment's "ullegd inefficiency ln war effort." and that. Premier Hepburn “had threatened to resign lf the resolution failed of passage." Mr, Hepburn "and his spin-else‘ whip-cracked followers" may have scored a temporary vlctory ln Tor- onto, "but." Mr. Givens asks, "do they realize that at the same time they have caused to be lashed throughout the world the vlllaln- ously unfair and cruel charge that Canada. has been recreant to her trust. and has tailed the Empire tn her hour of perll? The tragedy of tt-lhat such a charge should ever have been made! 1111911111. how- The RS4 Hflckle or The Black Watch i (Fred Williams 1n the Globe and kill) l It ts not. generally known that the Black Watch or Royal l-Itzhlmd Regunent 1a mo oldest Highland regunent tn the British army. Its origin must be bought. almost exactly two hundred yearn :30, tn ttie troublesome time: In Scotland which followed me overthrow of the Stuarts and the comm: of flu Hiinovarian succession. The mayor- ity of the Highland clans were lJaoobites and favored the 51mm cause. but some of the chiefs were loyal to the new regime. and mo Government. Ln London devtaed a method of utllmng the loyal clans as soldiers to watch the disaffected. Thus bevween the year; 1725 and 1729, slX independent companies of Highlanders were raised to watch the Htgnlands and keep the peace in dlttemnf. parts of the country. These companies adopted a blue, clack and green tartan, which gave them a dark and sombre appear- ance when compared with the -brlgfit scarlet o! the English regi- ments of the line. Hence the famil- far name of Am Freloeaqoan Dunn -Tne Black Watch. So successful were ‘base compa- nies that a royal warrant. dated 25th October. 1739, was Issued m form a. :eg1ment from the independ- ent. companies of the Black Wapcn. Four new companies were raised, and in May i740, the Whole were mustered and embodted into a regi- ment over 1.100 strong in a field at Aberteldy 1n the County of Perth, under the title of the Highland Regtment. but they stfl retained the name The Black Watch. It was not until 1751, when a royal warrant conferred numerical titles on the regiments of the llric, that The Bfack Wabuh received the number "42nd." which has since been almost as ramcu-s as me more familiar name, Baptlsm of Fire at mntenoy. The Black Watch received their baptism of fire at the fiercely con- tested battle of Fontenoy tn 1745, fought. by the British against the Branch. It ts more than a strange coincidence that when the Great Nar ended on Armistice Day, 191B, patrols of the 42nd Black Watch were crossing the same field of Fonieiioy. After a few years the seven Years‘ War broke out in the North Ameri- oan Continent and the Black Watch were ordered there. Plre regiment made a great. name for Itself at the Battle of Tloonderoga, more than one-half of the men and two-thirds of the officers were either killed or ivounded. Ticonderoga Day is kept in remembrance by SCOI/EIIIGD in the (limited States and Canada to the at’. The regiment afso took part tn the capture of Montreal and the sur- render 0'1‘ Canada by the French. More than 150 years later Scots- men and their descendants from Canada sent. three battalions of Canadi n Black Watch to France in the Great War. The regiment. also took part ln the American Rebellion. and then went to India. t.o quell native rtslngs. About; this ttme, 1787, Arthur Wel- lesley, afterward the great Duke of Wellington, obtained his commis- sion ln the Black Watcl; “WHY THE RED HACKLE?" The next campaign was in Flim- rlers. 1794-5. On Jan. 5. 1795, an 1n- cident happened which gave to the Black Watch their famous red hackle plume WhlCll ls worn in the bean-dress. At the Village of Geld- ennalsan two ftelu guns were sta- tioned oufslcle the village to cover the retirement of the ptquets. ‘Three guns were abandoned by a detach- ment of the British Llght. Dragoons and as the French were hauling them off as a prune. the Black Watch were ordered to retake them. This the regiment dld successfully, and the general officer command- ing the British forces was so 1m- pre=sed with the bravery shown that he took the red vulture plume from the helmet of the officer Cfimmflfldlng the Dru-Boom and put lt tn me feather hat. of the Black Watch commanding officer. saying: “42nd, the lLt-h Light; Dragoons shall never wear the red plume tn their helmet any more and I hope the 42nd will carry it so 1on1 as they B79 the Black Watch." Thlf. was how the Black Watch won the red hackle. and every fifth day of January. all over the world, the various hattultons and regtmental associations meet. ln commemora- tlcn Of tho distinction OOIIIGITBG on the regiment. 1 H]? The r1" ‘nt. took hart. in f e Peninsular War at the retreat from uflfllllllfl when S11‘ John Moore was kllled. ft was the Black Watch men who carried his body to the burial place. In the Napoleonic War the regi- ment. took part tn the Battle of Qnatre Bras and Waterloo. Some years later an incident tiaippened which ts worth recording, A troop ~ hip called the Btrloenheim was 00n- veylng troops to South Allies tor the Kafflr wars, when lt struck a rock and was sfnlrfhg. The women and children were safely taken off and the soldiers stood to atvantidn as the ship went. down. 0f five him- dred troops three hundred and titty- seven 'were drowned and the Black Watch had the largest number of deaths of any regiment aboard. S0 great. was the sensation caused by the discipline displayed 0n this oc- casion that the Efmperor William 1st of Germany ordered an account of the incident to be read to every regiment in liLs army on three parades. The regiment also took part 111mg Crimea War and the Boer War. When the Great War broke out. tn 1914 there were seven battalions and when it ended ln 1918 there were twenty-five battalions. Fifty thousand men passed through the ranks. of whom over elizht thous- and were killed and over twenty thousand wounded. Seventy battle hmwrs were won in the Great War 1o be added to thirty won tn earlier wars_ Three battalions of Canadian Black Watch also took pm tn the Great war and ft L! noteworthy to time that t-he 42nd Cfinndlnn Black Watch captured Mom on Armtgtlce ,mornlnr!. The retzular fat Battalion ‘had retired through Moria In Aug- ust. 1914. ever, the world, knowing 05113413 knowing her people and knowing the Bforloua record of her gallant sons. ta not llkelyeto be long 5e. luded by the rub r-atamp vote of the Ontario Legislature under or- ders from a pocket-size Boss of the Huey Long type," _ Qttaw; Journal Couservatlvo. , A FANCY FROM FONTENELLE _ And she ihughedgid the pride of her youthful bl . A; she thought; of the Gardener a ndlng -- “He ls old.—so' dldl A116 he noon must die!" The fulllbsawaxedluthewarm And ahiénfpretid and spread till her .... .1=.*1t.*-.1.er~= “its t: once more q she curd end- “He la older nowl He wlll soon be dead!" But the breeu of the morning blew. and fo d u That the leaviias o! the blown Rose strewed the ground; And he came at; noon, that Garden- er o . And he raked them gently under the mould. And I wove the thing to u random r yme, 15w the Rose is Beauty. the Garden- er, Time. —Austln Dobson. “Hitler’s” Magic (New York Herald Tribune) Hts shopworn magic must sure- 1y be losing something of its power at home. Abroad, what Hitler says has ceased to count. He may or may not be on the point. of launching war at once upon the West. but. no one wlll take his 1m- nouncement. of its Immlnence as 0f any eque in itself. At. his last public appearance, in Mirn- lch. he breathed virtually the same thzeatF"we wlll now speak to the British ln the language they best understand"—and some were still naive enough to regard it. as a sig- nal of the storm. But that. was nearly three months ago. A Hitler speech ls not. intended for the communication of ideas. It ls a. weapon in the war o! nerves an exercise upon ignorant. emotions. a. calculated play upon whatever passions the great man believes that he can arouse and wlll be of use to hlm. what lt says ls unim- portant. What lt does ts the only thing of interest about lt. And by that test, which ls the only one its author himself applies, the Hitler- ltm oratory has not, since the be- ginning of the war. been notably successful. One can only guess, both from the slfences and strljencles of the Fuehrer, that it. ls tending to lose ltspoteucy with the Germans. 'I‘hat'. guess may be wrong. But. it 1s quite clear that in France and Great Brltutn It has produced the very opposite of the calculated ef- fect. Its comblnatlon of threat bluster and promise failed to drive a wedge between the two countries, and only brought them closer, Rallies And Broadcasts (Halifax Chronicle) A reader. commenting on B. rec- ent, editorial dealing with political broadcasts, asks why such broad- casts are not. more popular. Poll- tlcal meetings tn this province, the reader points out, have always cre- ated interest. It ls a common oc- currence for a political rally to overflow a. rlnk or other large bulldlng. If Nova Scotlans would flock to such olltlcal affairs, why do they aocep cheerfully a lesser porttotzi of polltl". on the radio? The answer ls fairly evident. The political broadcast offers nothing but. the statements of one speaker. A political rally offers much more besides. A broadcast consists simply of the unconcerned remarks of one party spokesman, wlthout. benefit. of bands, cheering, or any of the trimmings that. make for the spectacular. This ls especially true of the coming campaign. No pub 1c meetings may be broadcast. The only political address the radio lls- teners will hear wlll be addresses dellvered tn a studio. relylng solely on the logic and oratory of the speaker to make their effect. ‘This ls a for cry from the attrac- tions of the old-fashloned political rally, The political mas; meet- ings offers an opportunity for every- body ln the district to see and lira:- one of the country's notables, sup- ported by a cast of lesser lights. It. ls 1m occasion for social Intercourse since the gathering brings together old friends from all parts of the district. It ls a spectacle with the vast. crowd. the band playing, and the thunderous applause. The political rally Induces a good deal of excitement. There ls n. thrill in attending, Just to sense the at.- mtxsphere. It ls well nlizh impossible to de- velop comparable excttement over the dellvcry of a. racllo address. PROVIDE airs-Ea" KENTVILLIE, N. 5.. Feb. 5 _ (C?) —'I‘he biggest upset of the year in the Valley Ixeague Wu posted tonight when Port Wlltlams. ctrcult. champions last. year, de- feated the League-leading Wolf- vtlle Cohorts, 10-2, tn a. fast, loose game. ' ‘HICK E Y'S" . i is sold Everywhere ln the Province ‘rho Rose tn the gardeuullpped he: h“ If You Don't Watch Out (Halifax Olumlcle) The ‘flu germ bu been making his mnunl visit. Tue buy little fel- low m: curled out a full program at pared violent effects of fut year's cpl- demzc. They have had enough, lust the same, to convince them beyond goubltah of that the germ once agatn w ul. t That ls n characteristic of Influ- enza. It. does not have to be berlous to voke a good deal of discom- for and annoyance. Scores of vlc- tims can testify to that. The dis- comfort and annoyance occasioned by influenza. 1s manifest 1n many a. the victims nutter Ea usual head. Others f spinal col ed and they were about to break two at. the waist. Other; find their shoulder muscles contracting into firm knot-s. making ordinary stand- gti) 5m alttlxig positions unbear- e. Others spend the day vainly try- lng to keen warm by means of extra blankets and sweaters. And almost all the vlcfl-ms HEW that dreadful feverish headache, coupled with a general soreness and a, sense of ebbing vitality. None of them feel confident of any store of energy. stlll less of any ambition. They are miserable wretches whose one thouzht ls t0 b; left. ln peace until the whole un- ha py state of affairs has passed. me of them unfortunately, will return prematurely to their daily routine without. achlevtn! proper recovery. A3 a result they will come down with a. sécond attack and through the whole unpleasant bus - ness all over again. Living On Rations (Humlltop Spectator) By royal request, Kln George Queen Elizabeth, Queen ary and the Princesses have been placed on rations, “exactly like the rest. of the United Kingdom's population," to use the words of our London corres- ndent, as given in yesterday's bpectator. This ls sufficient proof ot the adequacy of the official al- lowance of sugar, butter, paeon and ham er citizen. The British Food Minis ry has seen to tt that there ls no chalice of imybodys health suf- fering because of the limitations; ln fact, ll: ls still osslble to eat much more than ls a vlsuble. The maximum quantity of sugar per person each week ls set at tweye ounces; butter, four ounces. In nddl- tlon there Li; a wide choice of alter- native foods. It ls said that: the new brand of margarine ls equal to but- ter in nutrttlve value and lndls- tinguishable from lt tn taste. Added vlfamtnes and other qualities have even won 1t. a. preference for some consumers. There are extra allowances for special purposes. For instance, housewives are supplied with addi- tional sugar for cunning their fruit. Canadian Soldiers FRE$H 1111K‘ BATTER We also carry a full Immunity a. 1940 IMO S OOllOlTlOll P O Wll Ell I03 I03!!! AND 051113 Thholgondltlo: Powder wlll our‘ {his urn n11], the 00d and glvo 8 "u. anal’: coat : llno glouy ‘p- Tone: I tho mkm. rom- all all in can» n ciiulendld maintain»: IOIIIII- Ahnolutely tho than Candl- tion Powder mommy an buy, “macaque: of nook would h: Price Per Lb. 50 Cont: l‘! PAYS T0 FEED MAGS HOG-WORM AND TONIC POWDER. Each year hundred: of pig: dlo from worms. Tht: could be remedied l! nwlne breeder: paid food wnnn powder In e. The most dependable and elfectlvo u! these powder: l: Mb“ can: o1 Q Q u Q 0 ‘yuan’ Y yin-Inp- Price Per Lb. S5 Omit. We glvo Mull Order: prompt lttention. Remember we are only u far from you as your Port Office 0|‘ Mull Box. TllE 2 MASS lFor Every‘ twp DOImdA ofm 018.3188! lpurc use or preserv 8. P98 pflundg o] sugar $1 ptermltteddlzee; keeper" are gran en poun o sugar ‘loi- each colony of bees. For ,the convenience o1’ shoppers, n. llihlriiiiie oviier ‘lb tchotaupiiiallfillelrrmiivhlch lsaves the trouble of taking the Iratlon book along on every occasion. Alld are suppllefill qndfir irlllli iystem. u no one 8c w a nec- gsarv for tliewmalntenauce of v19)!‘- pus healthbdlxrtil xiespleictt.‘ of the féiw 00d comm es w c come un er regulation. QUICK WAY TO DRY STOCKINGS If you wish to wear a certain pat! of sllk stockings and they must be washed first, a. quick way o! drying ls to wring them out. as dry as possible and then roll tightly In a Turkish towel for five minutes. ‘Then hang 1n an airy place and they will dry very quickly. Need FLASHLIGHTS Send Flashlights and do not forget Extra Batteries Send the Best EVEREADY! FLASHLIGHTS and IE5 line of EVEREADY Radio B & C Batteries, Aircells, Dry Cells, Auto Lamps and Prestone. TllE, ROGERS HARDWARE COMPANY LIMITED i 0 ' ilit am}; ute BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TE I’LL MOW ’EM DOWN SAYS CHARLIE Mc CAR THY And that's what the bowling fans like to do. Tobacco has lts fans too who remain loyal to one brand and It's easy to be loyal when you have a winner like HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST CHEWING 10¢ P...- n; STRAIGHT MANUFACTURED BY lllOKEY 81 lllOllOLSOll TOBACCO CO. LTD. CHARLOTTETOWN