j sgsgsssssesssrarszesstl. . -_ ._- nrvnlrfrfEl-IAU‘ e111 w-r-“s-yvwmq, , ~ the interest of the country. . ‘ war purposes locum-y. A. ldfhr and lllnlflnflllheidtll- l» BI!!!“- I- l. I A-eelnle lifter, Inn! Weller , \ SUBSCRIPTION I_.A'I'l8 Jet yea: (In Millie!) delivered lo 0N 81M yeuihi advance) IlllIOIMP-I- “The Strongest Memory-Ia Weaker than Ifl¢__WfilkO_8Vt__l!lk-” mummy, novninm n, 1m. Dr. Monica's Charges Dr. Manion's charges .of the continuance of federal patronage and favoritism have aroused Coupled with these complaints is his correction of a more _ or less prevalent impression that the Conservative par- liamentary party is sharing with the Govern- ment the responsibilities and prerogatives con- nected iviih Canada's war plans and policies. It is high time the situation in this. respect was clarified, and since the Government seemed con- tent to remain silent on the question, it be- liooved Dr. Manion to make the Conservative Oppositions attitude clear- Commenting on the issue, the Sydney Post- Record (Independent) says: “Conservative co-operation does not, in Pre- mier King’s estimation, require any conferences between Government and Opposition, nor any aliatirnient of the patronage system, nor any shar- ing of state appointments 0r public contracts with others than the party supporters of the Administration. All that the so-called political truce implies is the elimination 0f contested by- elections and of partisan criticism by the Op- position of the Governments war measures. This is a comfortable and cosy position for Mr. King to take, but unfortunately it is one he cannot continue to have and hold. Manifestly there are only three positions the Prime Min- ister can take while the country is at war. He may either form a Coalition Ministry, or he may carry 0n under a full understanding with the Opposition, coupled with necessary c0iifer- ences, on all matters relating to the war, or he may continue to run the country with a single- pariy organization till such an imbalanced con- traption riins into the ditch. S0 far he has de- termined t0 try out the last of these alterna- tives, and the Conservatives share neither the burdens nor the benefits,——if there be any bene- fits,-—0f directing Canada's war efforts. In other words, Canada's wartime Adminis- tration is a sinion-ptire, patronage-distributing, party-run, liberal Government. To get the re- cord straightened so that all can understand this, may prove of considerable value for future re- fcrciicc." "Garbler At Work"~ Reference was made yesterday to a. letter by Dr. I. F. MacNeill in the Summerside press, advocating Finance Minister Ralston’s nomin- zition by Prince County Liberals as candidate for the late Mr. A. E. MacLeaifs seat in Par- liament. Because we quoted his two essential arguments and not the full text of his letter, our local contemporary accuses us of “garbling." The shoe is on the other foot. It is our con- temporary that has garbled The Guardian's ref- erence to Dr. MacNeilVs statement. We quoted the Doctor as urging his party colleagues “not to demur at this proposal and ask, ‘What did King ever do for us when he represented us at Ottawa?’ " Our contemporary garbles this to make it-read". “Dr. MacNeill urges Prince County lfillCftllS not t0 demur at this proposal aiid nrlcr, ‘What did King ever d0’." etc. The substitution of "asks" for “ask" entirely changes ihc sense of the passage quoted. It misrepresents us as stating that Dr. bIacNeill was asking what Mr. King ever did as absentee represen- tative: whereas our statement quite clearly was that the Doctor was posing this question as one ivliich ‘he anticipated his Liberal readers would be asking, and which he wished to show was irrelevant iii Colonel Ralston's case- _ “'0 would he loath to think that this “garb- ling" was done deliberately by our contempor- ‘arv. but for thc fact that while it gives the rest‘ of Dr. ‘.\l.-ic\'i~ill's letter in full, it suppresses this part entirely. _ I. O. D. E. Appeal AS ziiiiioiiiiccd iii ihc ltical columns, the post- poned ili-livcry of goods through the I. O. D. E. _ _ ‘ _ _ for evacuated children should be scut to the flillly- _TllB1l' rcgulflr pay stops and since i_t_is Press Unllm- I Canadian Legion rooms today (Nov, 10), impossible to support themselves and faiiiilils Everybody pcmembers’ or h“ Specifically, the request made by the Daughters of the liiupirc throughout Canada is for new clothing and lilzuikcts for the children of the Mother Land who have been sent to places of safety for the (luratioii of the war, and for the child refugees now in Great Britain. While the shipments of clothing will not be concluded until the close of navigation in the St. Lawrence, the parcels already forwarded from other provin- ces have bccii conservatively estimated at $25,- 000- ln Zl(l(llll()ll,-EI considerable sum of money has been contributed for this means. Practically no expense has been involved in connection with the tiiiiltirtziking, as all services have been voi- uiitary, aiid ihc (fanadian Railways have made arrangements for free transportation of the parcels oi clothing to Great Britain where they are being distributed by Mrs. Vincent Massey, wife of the Canadian lligh Commissioner. The Order is also now well organized and ready in every Province to supply the demand fpr field comforts which come from the Mil- itary Units iii their different localities, to which the attention 0f their officers is drawn. These patriotic undertakings bring io mind that in the Great War the I. 0- D- E- the sum of $282,853 in the used for the purchase overseas of bulances and hospital auxiliaries, 415,000); hogs, 4,294,000 (3,486,900) ; hens and 476,000 (2,039,600); geese, 795,400 (807,400); raised first year, which was motor am- and that dur- = EDITORIA iuoes i "Edward the Peaienflkey" liorn this date 184l- Aoeording to Goering “being humane is n0 joke." Accordingly Czech-Slovakia and P0- land campaigns WC]: merely piirthful sport. There are plentiful outlets for the contribu- tions of the charitably inclined these days--com- forts for our soldiers at home and evacuated children in the Motherland. When the Prime Minister says he is ignorant of any specific patronage charge, he is following the example of Nelson in placing the telescope to his blind eye. " i: a iii Ralston in search of a seat is rather ominous. At one time we were told he had three con- stituencies falling over one another in an en- deavour to get him as their member. But really is; it reasonable to expect this province to har- bour any more absfntie members? The Mayor and City Council are to be con- gratulated on issuing the Civic accounts for 1938, duly audited and arranged in a manner in which comparison is easily made with those of the pre- ceding year. There should be now no trouble in ' having the 1939 accounts published in ample time for the fillSllltflg ‘Ciyiic Election. The total numbers 0f farm live stock in Can- ada as in Iune last are estimated as follows, with the corresponding numbers for 1938 within brac- kets: horses, 2,824,340 (2,820,700); total cattle, 8.474.600 (8.s1I.'-*<>0): sheep. 3.365.800 (3.- chickens, 58,509,800 ($3,774,600); turkeys, 2,- ducks, 624,000 (615,800); total poultry, 62,- 405200 (smsmowy a e n e The Advance Preliminary Statement, Stocks of Canadian Butter, Cheese and Eggs for No- vember 1, shows a reduction from last year in the nine principal cities of Canada of almost three million pounds creamery butter, five million pounds cheese and four hundred thousand dozen cold storage eggs, but an increase of over seven hundred thousand pounds 0f frozen eggs. On November 1, 1938, the creamery butter stocks in these cities were 69.1 per cent 0f the total hold- ings in Canada, while last month they were 71.4 per cent of the total Canadian stocks. Butter and cheese start their not "out-of-storage" move- ment during October each year. This move- meiit continues until May when the net “into- storagc" movement commences, May 1 being the date on which stocks are shown at their lowest. n: u iv a: The -butter supply situation is quite satisfac- tory. On the basis of the September‘ t0 April factory output in 1938-1939, the visible and pros- pective supply for the suceeding eight months would exceed domestic requirements by ap- IIOTES BY TIIE im AI NIB beginning or in: century a famous German nebula-r was pemiltwl by special ‘ o! the Sultan of Turkey in vlslt; the holy cities of Arabia, Mecca and Medina. When, ami- lm- mense difficulties, be reached Medina be found to his amaze- ment that. the Governor was a Seotsinui, one ‘rhomaa. Keith. ‘Immune had been l, sergeant, m the Black Watch and had left the regiment in Egypt. I am sorry to say lie had been converted to Islam. and tben, by the exercise o! what. 1 have called disciplined audacity, he so rose to fortune due to the Albertan, he dld not send his letter here first he does not explain. It ls his own affair. have done him the same courtesy as our selected predecessors in sending him his letter back. The reason ls in the letter ltsellfl- Calgary Albertan. England and ‘France may be opinion thinks of their ebanoee to wln the war. Mr. Byas reports among politicians, b" hessmen and intellectuals. Of fifty replies half refuse to predict, flve believe 1 preponderance ls impressive even when it ls largely non- rnllltary opinion. Sympathy for the Allies does not enter because the same poll snows no such state of than forty-three anese aloofness from the European war and three want to go ln vrlth body la ln favor of going 1n with the Allies. - New York Times. steady encroachment pal government. In a. short time 1t would seem that the Provincial Government wlll have taken away every right and privilege in attitude of the Government ln this respect ls evidenced in the right to bold elections. years, ll lt. had been thought de- sirable to ext/end the term o! proximately 13 million pounds, even if the de- mand remains the same- Production of butter during the spmmer period recorded a decline of 2.2 per cent as compared with the same period of last year, but the total production of 113,- 000,000 pounds was about three per cent above the five-year average for the June-August period. Exports were unusually large, amounting to al- most 4,000,000 pounds, 0r about two per cent above those for the spring period, and were 500,- 000 pounds lower than the unusually large over- seas movement that took place in the summer of 1936. ##1## In a foreword to its third White Paper the British Government explains. says the New York Times, that the documents therein included were not written for publication and were in fact withheld from publication “so long as there was the slightest prospect 0f reaching any settlement with the German Government." The essential truth of the sickening story told in these docu- ments has long since been established by inde- pendent investigation. It will be recalled that President Roosevelt issued at that time a state-- ment in which he said! “The news of the past few_days_ from Germany has deeply shocked public opinion in the United States. Such news from any part of the world would inevitably produce a similar profound reaction among Ani- erican people in every part of the nation. I myself could scarcely believe that such things COUld occur in a twentieth-century civilization." a =o= * >l< There are no halfway measures in liaiitlliug the man and ivonian power in (icriiiaiiy- In tlic first place, men who are not in the army arc usually doing work of “uatioiial iiiiportziiicc." If not, they are immediately seized and put iiito a factory or officc~it ilocs not matter, for it is all a part of the war machine. lii some cases men’ are taken from their work and put iiito 1hr; auxiliary police at a salary of 5o pfcniiigs on that amount, their wives and children must earn money instead. Women also rcprcsciit vital cogs in the machinery. Those who must stay home because 0f children are drafted {or sev- eral hours a day, mending, WZlSlllllg and cook- ing for soldiers. Others have been put to all kinds of work, cvcn that usually rcscrvctl for men. And children do their share by collecting paper, scraps and garbage to fccd the llllllllClplll pigs. =0: it =ii iv A new photo-clcittric eye which detects the approach of (loath in changing color of the skin has been reported to the American (follcge of Surgeons. The eyc givcs warning in time to atlmiiiister life-saving tixygcn. It ivas designer] at the Ford Hospital, Detroit, for use iii surgical operations, and promises to be uscful wherever anaesthetics or scdalivi-s have to he given. When death approaches in a surgical operation, and fiflCll in other foriiis, the blood grows darker. The change is due to loss of oxygen. The doc- tor giviiig the zinacsiliitic watches the pallor of the unconscious person for the oxygen danger signs. By giving more oxygen he can stave off the final sinking. llut he can see only the sur- face. The new eye looks virtually iiito the lilootl itself. This is done by placing a strong light behind the ear. Some oi"ihe rays pass through ing the four years of that War from coast to coast raised over $5.0°°.°°° 501 -..r.,-. the members munlclpal councils, the procedure would have been to pass legisla- tion whereby mumctpalltles, with due consideration, might adopt two-year temis or terms of long- er duration lf they thought. this wise. - Tlmmlns Advance. The defect. in the whole proposition to abolish elvlc elec- tions during the we: - and lti is bum nor any enactment of the Legislative Assembly can prevent members of munelipal bodies from GUARDIAN.- Government bave called ln road machines and left e roads In apeha deplorable state and laid off e which travellln and ke l th l I iiiymiiiaii-t iii5°'§is§“$ii‘§.““8i.i'¥ bosses who dld the the hundreds of f and unemployed from havln But that Ls not. the reason why we ggrqaodlefl l: synmeuc subs‘ tum’ w dld oleomargarlne ls titles, by th and by pastry and cakes. other cullnary u . it ugéid in COITEOPEDIG homes, interested to know what Japanese table. were permitted for cooking al from. Tokyo a miniature poll con- fiflftl,“,_’,°,§,fi‘em§fiféif'lflsfo, m ducted by Japanese magazlnes and fryln turned down New Zealand merit Germany wlll win and twenty be- 3111c?“ ve ( lleve the Allies wlll wln. A 4-t0- bout 15c w 154; p Q B wii be by the War have ample supplies near at h from Denmark and adjacent sources and are not open to Western Hem- LI%I“ICN§ fleec mind. Out of fifty replies no less (press that owln lnslst on Jap- Bel-tins New Zea an lncreaslnllgr sale of "cold storage lnldad." Cold storage their llvee at the sight of a kllted blllibel‘ GBDIGCIBWS in quality 121091‘; Hlghland regiment with fixed product m, me Creamery Th,‘ Kinzltls, uIldB the Toronto Globe and ls more the case when slaillped to warmer climates. Claims that. sen- For some time past the Advance i3}; ggggaxgylegrethlégyigfnalc for has been calling attention to the chase more than they need 0!! mlmlcl- est grades of fresh butter from Quebec cieamerles Xx: 26 1-20 exposes the stupldlnisof such statements. In real fact it‘ from the municipalities praetlcalw ggursgfigntgaihmgflglse °,§ 6X06!“ limited personal or family supplies, that of tax-collecting. The change from retail cu butter for Germany and lick England. No- ragga“, than flesh from the ml lélg bifiter a. o present case of taking away of the thgewhofiandlsmnce “mm me In Pa“ mile neutral saftey zone, Germany has not ships nor even In- clination to lnterfere with to places where it does them no harm. They W are busy enough trying to lnterctpt war provisions and supplies from -—" retwhlna the war zones and would- n't. Wu terfere with allowing import all the butter they can eat. serious —- is that neither Mr. Hep- farm dealt with by different there ls yet one point I would like T to br out. PUBLIC roiuiu quelleu el OCMMII M, ‘ eernepenlelh. LIBERAL ROAD WORK 8h‘:- Now that the 0am hard-working men and horses s0 far morning and n h the ones wbo an . time-keepers andn surveyors usands poor o o butter their In Eng and and the used bread. Unlted Stated mfii 1r b end D01‘, l Il e I‘ , ba e better-off e ass for for frying nly reserved for the sampls The Government & t arl Food Commission. lngs. he story ls flllged tyihfil unce n o nd butter them is at t0 tourla stores at retail pr . no uncertainty of sett- from New Zealand. mom to Trinidad it can travel There ls harg of powder to ln- a c e Trinidad to 1 am, Sir, etc. ECONOMIST FARM PRICES Sin-Although the quwtlon of prices has been effectively wirltm. Our igliest authorities appre- . what they h“. duty at all so wartlme, but. they ftnd the sugges- oes and notified "05 m“ no gprlce exceeding that 0f W" an 8) approxlma e1 mor. flieGermensli-itbe usedtnoi-y the Boeebe cell knew it was all up with them when the Scots came over “the top." The Kaiser's roudest troops feared the Black Vi!“ other famous Highland regiments, who were rated among the most merely formidable 1n tlbe attire British a. feel that. something or esque wlll 3E1 doff the ktlt and don the one-piece khaki overall with zipper fastener: and snaps at the bottom of the lee keep out the mud. Who has not. been thrilled at the served them a0 falthfull , follow tb t b be tb Go warmdir! on: 01° can“ e 1 Vern“ o! weather and le t wet laceetbe b ‘Moslem the ltéworlgoltsi e ties ln the ‘my mean‘ may? Do ‘gay m“ w“ ~ l‘ w“ l‘ Pretty enough qult or would they rather curious fate even for a Scotsman keep warm “with; the addawmandacxilf‘ the Black Watch.- sbovial worlgr m r ee ulr. . Mn. A reader bu ‘neat u: let A Mt“ T Ann - . '_—__ii ter for publication, explaining BUTTER‘ mm‘! that he had previously sent lt to slr;_ The cit Gav rnment, of two other editors who returned Bydne ,N. 5., it ubllshed are 1n new: be; made nvnllable tn lt. w hlm unpublished. On the "i? mdngiirlanlictuniolteglzig baking u» prewar”??? m H - whole, lt was rather decent, of - m, d tom“ m‘ W" l1 u‘ ° 9P ".2. "he l» cheater-mailer I» °i="‘~¥»“*“=%l-°f»-“=%~“"'”““&ll- p W3??? m’ ma“ lotions em increased during war- hat legislated to prevent “m, and m“ u pmdbly w“, p“, make regard as their public and more so ln been! an prof! geetlble piece out hu- Army Discards The Kilt (Enemies!) war "Kameradl" or flee for bay- "llhe ladies from Hell," the Gordons and etch, any the kllt ls to be bythostreanlllned forms whgél; man the Magtnot 1.1m. Man t and many a. Saasenach pictur- be loot. as the andmem 0 BOYS! 0 BOYS! O Boys’, the times I've seen! he mums I've done and known! If you knew where I have been, Or half the Joys I've had, elzht of kllt and sporran as a. High- reslgnlng whenever they please. ciaw me m“ ma, the mnnet who You never would leave me alone; It they take a notion to quit, there wlll have to be an electiloiti- unless it is to be provided that vacancies may be fllled wholesale by appointment, which ls a nega- tion of our system. Then there ls the matter of pleblscltes and by- laws on which a. pronouncement of the electors or ratepayers ls required. Surely this prerogative Ls not going to be handed over to the Ontario Municipal Board. —Wood- stock Sentinel-Review. A Burmese cuswm wlll be made unlawful lf the House of Representatives passes a blll spon- sored by a private member. He seeks to suppress the pract-lce of throwing stones at any house ln which a. marriage has Just been celebrated. Peaceful people are in favor of the blll, he says, as the practice has led to reslous crimes. There seems to be no doubt that 1t is of a respectable antiquity and that in the villages fees are paid to the stone-throwers to induce tliem to desist. How it all originat- ed is not clear. Experts who have lnvestlgatecl tlie fascinating sub- jeer. of the world's marriage cus- toms trace rnany of them to a de- sire to drive off evil spirits or else to ensure that. the union shall be blessed with children. - Indian heard ol’, the great. Russian rum- or september, 1914. What was s0 curious about this rumor was the piiasloiiate intensity with which it was defended by the faithful. It arose, apparently, from the passage through Great Britain of some Serbian reservists on their way home; In a few hours these Serbian reservists had swollen into a great. Russian army which had landed at Lelth from eight vast llncrs and was rapidly being transported t0 France. There were those who swore that their aunt had actually seen the snow still adhering (although it was a warm September) to these Rus- sian beards. To contradict this rumor was felt to show lack of patriotism and social solidarity. Appalllng quarrels arose: ‘mothers wept, fathers thundered, old friend- ships were severed engagements broken otf. -— Harold Nlcolson ln ' London Spectator. The trouble about. the worst of the war propaganda ls that even ll’ you sometimes catch up with the llar, you hardly ever catch up with the lle. Vancouver Prov- lnce. Leave It to the Scots to make the 3"‘ “bids; w “Pr... wear eep l What . . but I know quite well: solicitors clerk to a great extent takes what he Ls izlven and gives what is asked has sufifered most severely ln late IIIIDHIICGB " ‘ prlees - - '- nmwag tvee A. E. rooms MUSIC STORE 16'! Queen street ‘ W forpnz could be rushed to lng m‘ tBut when lllhotagg desired, or where speelalagiyoinaw: heeded. the parachute is not m. missed as either impractical or im- lfkely. It. was used in the l“; war for diropplng spies m4 m b. lliegwinthlswarforanext/enolm 0 t pugose. Further an this method o1 ,9, Kravatiltll‘ sabotage and. poglb}! facilitating espionage, any pom“ parachute invasion does not, 81y‘ anxiety to the British authorities, I}. has beemriepared for, ln ; my eteransa etheaeofssya"; an: enrolled in "defines compa- nies." and in them is entrusted m. guarding of vulnerable lnts snr. watching over just. sucfioomitiiiv- emles as the dropping o! pgrgghum invaders. No body of men could be better chosen for this duty, just as ex-soldlers are now to take om watch of the vulnerable points in Canada. Parachutl ‘soldiers to attest; enemy coun es remains a pru- tloal piece of daring mthoiiy, m, hope of success, but in that it does carry threat to isolated jung- tlons or utilities, lt. has use; QM the British are not ignoring while not. much fearing them. JOHN BULUS JAMS LONDON —(C7P)—When a short- age of sugar threatened to tie the home preserves of Englsii members of the Natl/anal Wderatloin of Women's Institutes arlblied to the Sugar Commission for pe slon to set; as distributors and with- ln a. week handled 35 tons of sugar. THE LIGHT land regiment swung down the road to the sklrl of the pipes? The kllt may be impractical in modern war- are, when soldiers llveln holes in the ground like moles. It. clogs wltn mud, which rubs the skin off bare legs. And tine tartan serves to Iden- tify Scots regiments. But lt. was pretty effective in the Great War wher the Highlanders went int» action kleklng a football before thorn or were inspired by the, stir- ring music of the bagpipes. ‘bonnie feehtem a . have worn the kllt for 300 years and f ous reel- ments wlll continue to vor lt for ceremonial occasions. Even lf the last glamorous touch has gone from thei battlefields, the gallantry re- IIlB. ns. Parachute Invaders (Winnipeg Free Press) In the Russian manoeuvres three years ago a force of 1,200 men was dropped by parachute from trans- port planee. This compact force was armed with 15o machine-guns and 10 light field-guns, and had assembled itself in eight. milnutes of the release of the rachutes. The feat was studied y general staffs to see how lt. might be ap- plled in wlder warfare. Its first ap- pllcation was by the Germans in Poland, who used parachute tipops to mop up behind the advancing mechanized troops and to cow the non-combatant populace. There has been a suggestion that the Germans mean to apply that experience to Great Britain, but this is thought improbable be- cause useless, except in one respect. years and some pick up on his part would be of general adivan- of tlhe faiirners of now have to buy they eat, burn and clothe them- selves with. But the real point. ls that this Province is almost. totally agri- cultiuul, making it possible under oo-operatlve conditions to almost. of us would rather have our cities and towns yet the fact Ls not alp- preclatea that the financial eon- dltlon of our urban population depends on the selling and buying power of the primary producer and it should be to their interest t0 increase the buslnes power oit the producers, especially the farmer. To put lt simply the general fan-met‘ not. only wants but needs twice as many utilities and - sories as he can now affo ; so that if our economic system 1n- stead of bleeding us steadily would give us s. fair business standard, then by our increased purchasing power would come greatly increas- ed employment and general busl- ness which would be of increas- lng benefit to all. I am. Sir, ehc. FAILMER. NOW TOTES STRETCIIER LONDON —— (GP) ~Volunteerlrg with Canada's Larry lns for we: service, Tommy Marti another col- ored boxer, is now an ARP stre _ - er-bearer. ill wind that doesn't blow a. thrifty Scot some good. - Toronto Globe and Mall. A friend n! our! had hooked Dil- sage on a world-famous transatlan- tic steamship due to will biwk t0 England later this month. Last. week he was informed reslei-llllll’ that. as he was the only prospec- tive passenger now remaining on the llst, it. would be owes-BM’! tn cancel his reservation. — Financ- ial Post. tissues and blood. The clcctric eye picks up ' these rays and detects changes in the blood color too slight for the human eye to see- besii of any situation. Aft/er the rald over the Firth of Forth they gathered an easy catch of fish kllled by bomb explosions. It's an Every Would break out and go mad; And all the d085 would bark! BB9. Lei‘ "5 m‘ “m” i°° that mm There was a oung fellow of old this Pmvlme Who spoke is onderiful tow mo" °1 “m” Bullt on s. lgke o‘; gold, n’ Afloat 1n the And lute; upon the B-ke Ilzépyed by such com-mesons e The reason out of do without a city, although most Brain" and b0 leave him daft Babbling of lutes and. farm. The tale was rt ht enough: Willows and orgies, And ladies skilled in love. But they listened only to smirk, For he spoke to incredulous fools, And. maybe was sorry be spoke; and raft. sun, ht. was enough to fairs ABE YOU TROUBLE!) 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John Gggerty. i i, Any small force landed by para- chute might accomplish some def- lrilt-e act. of destruction, but. could not expect to survive in a country where roads one good and armed Our souuls grow up to the light; we must keep our eyes on the light and look no lowen-G. Meredith. *1 l For a Delicious Cllll 0i Orange Pekoe Tea Mr. Iea Poll Says: The Boys of The I , ~ Old Brigade WERE MARCHING YESTERDAY — 1914. TODAY THE YOUNGSTERS OF THE NEW BRIGADE ARE MARCHING AND AGAINST TI-IE SAME FOE. AS IN 1914 OUR 'I‘OBAC(‘.() MOVES WITH EVERY ISLAND UNIT 0R. REGIMENT. l HICKEY’S t BLACK TWIST Chewing 10¢ Per Fig Manufactured By HIGKEY and NICHOLSON TOBACCO 00., LTD., Charlottetown .~.. ‘