‘time ' 44cm on heelt- - . for 1n a t t e 1' e will ‘ w. 40k for our unmd bonds. w OI! Mil V iin t! mun n“ ms your. of iolind, bo anus DDRESS ' - "than. , 9-, l-failflaxfi‘ s.-...... 1 ‘should “be f dollar gained. vest them in the pledge of a ‘or of a. soundly- lldustry behind ah ,'_,give a generous Qjtpuey luyested. nls. _ raeualalsilloleleaoellll _ ..-...s__~. .r----~--<--a~is'¢-n-u--aa--i Stock Quotations Indhh cannot be fl“ Q tatio ’ LFAX, Ma 10.— uo n8 “flabby Johsnaton and Ward. mm“; of the Montreal Stock change : New Yonk Exchange ‘Tgp, and Santa Fe ilty. l, 182% erlcau Can Co. 49% u Locomotive Co, . . . . . . . . 111% smelt. and Reins. Co. . 1'50 awn,“ Cop. Mill. ‘C0. in M146 f‘ “Jmciiic 0o. 180% Y. Con. and- illud. RIV- M159 m Am. Bus. 0o. Plthyi l?» 142% n, ca. ('0. tray.) xn 1y, 100% udson Motor ICE!‘ 1C0. . -' - , “lb tel-national Paper ‘Oo- 50 ternaticnal Petroleum . .. 29% andsrd Oil of N..J. .. . 36% is. Kan. and Tex. Ry. . .. 251% “ding C0, .. . 116% uthern Pacific 1C0. '113% lion Pacific iRy. . . . . . . . . . . 176 jndustrial Alcohol co. .. '16 73% 169 atinghouse Electric iuited States tS-tssl -- Monircal Mock Exchange mziiiun Traction . . , . . . . .. 13 urentilie Pulp ontreal Power .. tool Co. Can. Ooni- innipeg Electric sbestos Com. New . banish ‘River Pfd Danish River Com. . hawilrigan- . BANKS " iinik Oommerce . . ‘i1 Royal link Nova, iscotia. . . . . . 320 ivheat-May, 143%; July,~'1ii0%'; cot, 133%. ‘Corn-May, 79%; ept., 87%. Oats-May, 48%; ept., 46%,. ‘ Whemt--May,153%, Livestock Report‘- (Canadian Preu) ' MONTREAL. May 10.—'l‘here were 292 cattle, 20 sheep, 698 hogs llid 2,000 calves for sale on the two markets this morning. Com- mon and medium quality cows were strong sellers at, from $5.00 to $8.00 and common bulls $4.75 to $6.00. Calves sold from $5.60 in $7.50 with the bulk of sales In straight car lots st $0.76 and $7.00. Two or three lots fairly good veals were sold for $7.50 and some very Door kinds down to $5.50. A few sheep were picked out at $8.00 but the general price for fairly good ilinds was $7.50. hogs were a shade stronger than yesterday with pric- es at $10.85 and $11.00 on a flat lillls. and on one market where July, n»... July. 49%; uty Iudg ruled that an I for" an account dismissed the act stuns. of the Grand River res- erv ‘ion for $133- auénor soods supplied 1°)‘ "- "w" conducted ‘by the -r'es Sued For Account ' Owed By Him _,__. iOnL. May iL-rmit e ‘Brandon in division court ndian cannot be sued owed by him. c1111 [on of T118 Kl-Tk co. Hamuwn. asainflt W- The amount was defendant on the 6W9. _ The defence entered the P169- l?“ according to the Infill}!!!- 1A°l m9 claim could not succeed and the presiding judge interpreted the w! in the same way. ‘ N ew U. S; Border {Ru-ling Expected T0 Be Settled .____ State and illaibor over the new bor- ne;- 111M118‘ of the U. 8., enter on their‘ third week with every rpros- pect otfehrly settlement. While n0 official announcement had been made by either side it is generally agreed by observers here that the restrictions on Canadian reslilfiillli working In the U. S. will be stood all: until 1.11s whole subject of bord- er crossing privileges of nationals H og_-bqg,ll_oguntriea lmd"been discus- ‘ sad in a conference between repre- sentatives of the Canadian and Unitedstates ilovflfnnients. Perpetual Motion Claim (By British United Press) WVIEIJLIINGTON, New Ymaland. iMa '9. .—-1An Auckland resident, 'R. N icdsseypwhois eighteen years oiid, claims to have solved the sec- ret of perpetual motion. Once start- ed. he says, a contrivance he has made will not stop unless part of the mechanism breaks. ilt require; no fiuel and has no springs. The inventor has been promised assistance to make a working model, aid if this is successful he will take the invention to England and America. I iMl‘. ‘De (lasso! states that he has devoted the past two and a half years to the perfection of his the- ories. and has wt. last discovered the essential point for which he has ibeon searching. Il-Iis principles, he claims, are so original that he is confident of success, and he says that his in- vention could be made only s. few there were less than 50 hogs cigar- 1-‘11 yesterday and less than‘ 300 to- iliiy to $11.50 was paid. / inches square, so as to fit a clock, 0r large‘ enough to drive factory ‘machinery. If Shfefygliosit. Belles A Couldf-{Qhlfyllspeak the lure ofquick T“!!! inverter-other q Uni M, Qty We»?! ~ I l of investment ‘ er etorlee r , a ‘in , indignant in entcounasliols. ‘l "also p . . amsvwrlznmqmwu1f ‘MN "'~“l‘WK=f\*,0:'. arms.- JJWVWVQVMMIV‘. “mmlllil in the Strand m. tion Alliance '2 .lar of the University - baa just been _ more ~ dependable TI-IE "PUBLIC FORUM-- T m‘ “mm” ll Oren for the discussion by oer- '"P°"l1011le of question; 9| Guardian doea "mllloridems. not necessarily arr‘ i ms cnautorrurowu ‘autumn: lnlvrm- ‘rm Charlottetown the opinion of Getting Ahead Of The Joneses Condensed from Harper's Magazin (April, '27) R. Leclem Phillips a “What I like about England." said my dentist, after a vacation WILL rusv MAKE i1- ..DRY,,_ sh-“M Premier ‘Stewart's great eatre, that audi- Prov- Bbn- Dr- Ms. um three-quartersmtii‘ ill: 1.31:? c dateis now in the field in this Ince believed in at 163st one plank llllamzllls (gmservative platform, Y. vernmeut 901mm of Llilllfll‘. Strange as m“, may seem-under present circumstanc. es-—-it is nevertheless a inc; that is well known to scores of our 1190MB. Won't those Liberal cand- idates be fine fellows to -back up The P1111101’! policy or "Liquor for iviuunicliival. pummel-ls ONihy?" Wont they be more likely to 511p- port Mnlzlsaunders‘ "MO-RIE WORK- NBL BOOZE" Prohibi- U°fl PJ°1l'~‘Y'-’ Whit say lhe Proilibi-I I am. Sir, etc, CONSISTENCY THE PATRIOT'S ATTITUDE Sir.—I notice that the Patriot loses no opportunity to divert at. tention from the question at issue between the two parties. Thar, ls between the platform laid down by Premier Stewart and set forth in large type, and Mr. Sailndcr-‘s sthtement that, if the Liberals should be successful in gaining of- fice the Prohibitory Liquor Law will be made more workable cud the price of liquor reduced. But Tbe Patriot dwells on every little mistake, clerical or typographical that may be made. and enlarges upon points that have no bearing whatever upon the heist means of controlling and reducing the liquor evil, which lathe object of pom parties. i urn, Sir, etc, A WATCHER. Charlottetown, May 9th, 1927. ___ ' -—¢o->_i IT WILL HlAVE T0 SOMER- SAULT 4_._.... Sdrr-In his masterly spew-h 11L. the big Conservative liquor had been in operation ‘in firs? 0f the nine Canadian Provinces for‘ a number oi‘ years, (two more of the Provinces have recently adopt- ed it) there was absolutely no de- mand in any of those iProvinces for a return to Prohibition, nor had t-ho parhlgg gpposing the gOVGPIImGIItS in any of those Provinces ever dreamed o! reintroducing Prohibi- tioa as a plank in their respective political platforms. Tillie ls the best evidence of how weii the Con- trol policy is working out in our sister Provinces, and I venture the prediction that when this law Illa/Jed on the Statute Books In this province, tlhe-re will be absol- utely no fear of the Lribersl Opposi- tion even as much as, suslfllllhi; that we go back to the discredited Prohibition larw. And then, won't The Patriot have to eat its own u-ords next election? I am, Sir, etc. PROPHET -—-—<e&———— THEY'LL BE GLAD HE CAME 3li'.~l notice by an advertise- ment iu the newspapers that the Rev. Murdock MacKlnnon, Minister 0f Runnymede United. Church, To- ronto, is coming to t-his Province next week to address a number of meetings ln the Libel-alt interests. The reverend- gentleman will speak in favor of Prohibition. and Wlll- 80 the ad. tells us, bring us “first hand information on the question of Pro- hibition and Government Sale in the Provinces of Canada." It will be remembered that this same Rev. Mr. MacKinnon addressed number- iess meetings in his native city of Toronto and throughout the Prov- ince of Ontario just previous to the elections which were held in that Province in December last. At all those meetings he gave the people his so-colied “first hand informa- iiou on the question of Prohibition and Government sale," with the re- suit that. on election day, all the Prohibition candidates in the city of Toronto lost. their deposits, while i-licies throughout, cause to regret that. he visited us. I uni. Sir, etc., “G:T." Paris Flight Starts Today (Special to the Guardian) NEW YORK, N. Y., Mny 9. —— I‘he Bellanca mnllopiaue, in which Lloyd Bertaud and Clarence Chain- berlin plan to make their Pal-ls flight will leave for Paris tomor- row morning, weailier permitting. G. M. Bellancia, builder of the plane, stated today. A 1,500 Year 01a Bible British United Press) (8% _ LON ON, May a-A modem photographic reproduction of thc Gothic "Silver Bible," which was translated in the fourth century 11.1). by the Gothic bishop 11111185- and now transcribed ill 140111 11"“ silver letters, has row been coll.- pletod by the Swedish Ullll/Ofillt)’ Library pf Upsaln. where this (Illi- qua relic is preserved. The whole work will be presented to the uni- versity is September of this H11“ when the University of 1711111118 W1“ celebrate its 450th annlvwlliil“ The Bible of Ulfilas tyas tram-l- iated in what is now Hungary Tm": Greek into Gothic. H1111 iiillflifl‘ Scandinavian dialect slioken by l_ if originally Swedish Goths duri-ls the centuries of their wandering! from 100 down to 700 A.D.. Whejl they successively held "Way W“ all tbs countries between tiiii Black Sea and Gibraltar. During the Thirty Years’ War the Swcdci; occupied Prague and tlliicovilfe‘ the Silver Bible and brouflhl ll l“ Sweden. Later it disappeared. but was found in Holland. Where It was bought and bought back it: the University Library ill’ Uhlml“ in the seventeenth century. Parts of it have silffered from the ravages of time. For 1.1111 new edition the 1x7 vases 111W“ been subjected to a photographic process in which X-rsyi-i and the H0: called Tiuorescence" method have been employed. Down in the cei- Library ll special laboratory, with nil modern accessories, has been Jnsiailevi. Thcwork has been carried on I01‘ several years under the Bllllfiflll‘ te * of Professor Bwsdbflfll- the well-known Swedish Nobel- priaa winner in Cbemistry- Thflllk" to the modern means of reproduc- tion, the new edition will contain the whole text, and several diffi- cult readings have been made clear through the combined efforts of chemistry and optics. 4L Melflll’! nihscronv or CANADIAN PUBLIOATION3 nadian Publications, issued and this DUI: lioation nodoubt, will be welcome by national advertisers throushoill Oaaada and the United States. It is the» twentieth edition-the first issue having appeared iii 139' and it nu" been the en the publishers at all times to make Olcll» number more complete 1111' thin previous actory. of 0a editiog , , ‘In t, this directory is accent- gg "a"; as ‘a, reliable source A, _. _ _ . I t‘. The 1087. edition of MOKIIIT’! Dir- m deavour of M Auto Stampede (By British United Press) LONDON, May 7.——A one-armed mall was the unwilling “hero" of a thrilling ride in a runaway car! through crowded traffic ill busy Leeds streets (he other day. Ignorant of the use of the con- trols, and in any cnsc unable to use them with only one arm, he tailing to the steering wheel with his one hand, and swerved in and out of the traffic and crowds. He finished his ride ill collision with a lamp-poet, having nu tile way ripped a bit out of a ponyks mouth and injured a man. Tile "driver" was Edward Riley, who as an unofficial attendant cleans cars parked near Dyer- street. , "I was polishing some fittings in- side lbe car when, I think, my el- bow touched thc self-starter," he said. "I was thrown on to the seat, shined. “is that people stay m their own class in that country. The universal American habit of “Film”! l0 ‘Kit ahead 0f the Jon- eses’ entails efforts wibich make 1119 811-1116 h)’ n0 means wort-h the candle. One o: these days people Ill! realize it. and the sooner thc better. Year by year, as we pQp“. iatlon of the country increases, the Blfflllkle to raise oneself sncis-Lly and financially is getting more deadly and more difficult. One of ithese days It will become so ill- “! tensely difficult that men and wo- men wlil choose the alternative to lhh! frightful competition. That l5. they will stay in. the class in Whml- l-he)’ hlllinento be born and cultivate serenity and a compet- ence instead of the competitive spirit and a nervous breakdown." A woman who had just decided to separate from her husband ro- centiy said. to me: ‘ilviy husband has failed in the field in which it is most important that every mall and woman should succeed-abet is, as an ordinary social human be- ing. (He is a. brilliant success as a merchant and a. pitiful failure as a man, il-Ie has been generous to me with his money and incred- ibly stingy with his company I shall refuse any reconciliation, for his companionship is uo longer worth having. He has been ruin- ed -by his ghastly abuse of the modern competitive spirit." IHer husband, she continued, had nothing to say—that is, nothing to say as an ordinary social human male, although he had an immense amount lo say in his capacity of merchant. Furthermore, he had little but contempt for all the per- sonsl graces because they did not "get a. man anywhere.” And then she burst out, “From now on I in- tend to cultivate the society of none but those who are resolutely determined to go now-here, although I suppose that this vvill make my circle dreadfully restricted. But then, I have always preferred qual- ity to quantity. Over and over again ilave I heal-lb ,iu a large majority oi‘ the constitu- complain“ of me obnmenass o; u", bugbear. me Pmvmce highly competitive male wuterning l‘ 019N111: 511 ‘hey were ‘werwhelmlngly “efmwd- the inner needs and longings o: in- '1 the Strand theatre, Premier stew-i“ “lulu” Te-“lll-S are (lbmlled 1mm telligent women as opposed to w ' WASHING/TON. Mo)’ 9-“N°5°' art ‘made a strong point in favor of "l"? Rel/He'll‘ gentleman's meellllliil their needs for raiment, food, shel- tiations. between the CBYWllB-ll Willis Liquor ‘Control policy when hp ;in this Province. and (I believe such my, iration tmdl the henchmen“ °t stated, that, llilltvbtllrlfnlldlng thfilwl“ be thc tense, then the Istewnrt fm- flhgy an; material; 1m; ma, d... fact that Government (‘ontroi of government forces will have little sire for a. community of interests». These last he understands, for inteiilacvuai svomiradesllip. i501- some faint recognition of the fact that‘. a woman has a soul and can- not live ln_ happiness by bread alone 1's, so they say, incomprehen- sible to his busine-ss-rididen mind. "Once when I was young," said one woman to me. "I had enthusi- asms and a score-of interests. But I suppose I was not one of the strong-minder! sort. I had to have someone to share them with li‘ they were to be kept alive. I malried; and when I talked of‘ the things I loved my huz-ybantl just looked at me-und grunitell. It is many years now since we have exchang- ed any conversation other than‘ on formal commonpiaces. But ho is satisfied; he is getting ahead in the world." Now, L-he competitive spirit is particularly strong .ln the United States and the divorce rate is par- ticularly high. ls there any rela- tion between the two? I believe tillers is. Marriage, until recently, meant for a woman protection and econ- omic safety, two conditions of such immense value that wives might well be content -to leave well en- anli the thing moved off at what I thought was a terrific speed. ‘I grabbed the steering-wheel, and managed to swerve in and out of tile traffic in Cross Union-street and liarewood street, street. “Passing a pony and strap, some- thing caught the bridge am] 11p". ell a bit out of the polly's mouth. Then I hit a lamp-post and sonic- how caught a man. I was thrown forward and had, several teeth knocked out." “It was my. first auto ride," he added. PRINCE STREET SCHOOL ‘Honor Roll, April 19271 .._.._. Grade X. Ml‘. Rogers —1. Mabel iMatlleson, 2. ‘Bertha Mutiow, fl- Margaret Waller. Grade IX. Miss Vickerson —- 1. Nancy Weeks, 2. Adele McLt-ninaii. 3. Wayne lMcKie. Grade Villl- Miss Ross- lyMar- galet: McLeod. 2. Alice Bryenton, '3. Jessie Waller. Grade vn, -MI,35 drying -.1. ‘Mar- jorie Fraser, 2. Elna Clark, Si. Mar- jorie Bhaw. Grade VI. Miss Watson-l. Flor- once islillllll0llfl, 2. Jean Williams, ti, Doris Ferguson, Grads v. iMiss Fullerton —- 1- (Edith Shaw, 2. Gladys iLafferty, 3. Doris -Birt. 1 Grade W, Miss Owen --1. Herb- ert Davis, 2. Annie Acorn, 3. Mar- garet iMolnnis. Grade IV. iMiss Agnew -—1. Joan McNeil, 2. Irene MacDonald. 3. (Dena Court. . Grade ITI. (Miss Alnew — 1. MM‘- gorot McQuarrie, 2. Sally Rushes. z. iDonaid Eaton. 3. Helen Roppr. Grade I'll. ‘Miss Jcmieson — 1- Margaret large, 2. Stella Jay. 3- John McLeod- 1 1 ‘ Grade II. Miss Yeo — 1- Ml! iHayter, 2. Patricia. Ritchie, 3. Ada rr. Grade ill. Miss Weeks -— 1. Viv- Ian Abbot, 2. iNora Down. 3- M!" ion Oudmore, (i. Elmer Clark. Grade I. Miss ‘Bourke --1.Aif_reda iRickard. i1- Rnymoiid Helmm- 3- Bertha mini. Grads I. m» Taylor r‘ 1- is" 1 , iOalmen Glover, 8- Glad” JIMM- ‘_ ' 1 W- e Jars".- i‘ h 1H e" l. a VI. - |$Eu all’. a. Ruthie Hood. ii- illnthie Pilll0|l¢tP~ m saws‘ 111i “me-w w iurgswnsraywtsiirvfl- his: ~ fit’. 1 ough alone and not demand much more than these strictly material benefits from their husbands. But ,today women are able to provide for t-hemselves. iPut bluntly, the and then'old inducement of economic safety dered a slxteen-yeur-oid llPl rushed into the crowd in Georgeias one of the most attractive fent- prove that he had the "will power ures 0i‘ marriage for a woman 1s no longer enough. She is able to demand higher inducements to change her status as an economic- ally independent woman. Wilitillout question, the induce- men-t which the average intelligent ‘and well-bred woman would prefer is that 0t’ a high degree of person- ality in an ‘aspiring suitor-a per- sonality ths-t commands first the interest, then the‘ respect. and fin- ally the devotion of women. And thc point id which, I wish toiead is the fact that the competitive spirit, when highly developed, kills the quality which the modern self- supporting woman demands as a compensation for the much dimin- ished prestige of matrimonial econ- omic safety. In other words, the highly competitive male is entirely lacking in personal attractiveness since iibe competitive spirit and personal attractiveness are mutual- iy destructive, In the eyes of wo- men he is, indeed, a horror, and the sooner he knows it the better. I often wonder how our "suc- cess" experts explainihe towerlzui; personalities and marvelous 1W1‘- rormances of men who lived and (lied in, the days on’ inherited social status, when success “authori-ties’ were not, and‘ no one dreamed of spending his life in 8n fl-ttsmiii- l0 best his fellows in a race to a high- er social class than his own. Yet and obscurity for power- speere was the son of a D001‘ H1118"- town tradesmen; cardinal Wolsey was the son of a butcher; Napo- leon wqa the poverty-stricken son oi a petty Corsican lawyer; Rousseau was the son of a poor watohnraker; Voltaire mime-rm - of a notary. And these‘ examples mhhtbs mul- tlipllfid.‘ hundred fold. Yet. such men came to the flout when the compel". lbltit ‘m. 1111mm 111 its probe ‘ sehleialid when social sta/tue was accepted u an inherit- ed condition. ~ ‘gtaittle is needed to p tire , ,0. many 51011118 mall. ltltitalt ita horrible recent ct ,,...,.-t straining to climb the mm . .. tit Md men did rise, did make their mark. ; did exchange poverty for wealth ; Shaks- ~ next moot the wider, its iaot of serenity. its struggle to keep up ap- ibr leer of what the "Jon- lta dismal]: or flasks. If We Want to Get What Are We Going To Do About It? llmprovement We’ve Got to Make a Change in the Law~_- We've Got to Make a Law that Can and Will be Enforced-a Law thatwill have a preponderance of Public Opinion behind it- and a Government administering it whose reputation is staked upon its enforcement-s I . In Regard to Temperance We, Can Only Make Progress By lieing Practical And the. Practical Man QuWoman Asks: Whut1Ar0 We Going to do About It. We ‘have the Prohibition Law—-We have the Bo0t-legzor—We have the Poisonous, Home Brew—We have theiS1n\ligg1ediIlum—We have the Misuse of the Scripts-there is lmlnk- enness on our Streets-And many at‘ our Boys and Girls do Drink liquor nnd do carry Imtt-om; and with their money-sod- iien minds they have rendered themselves an outside the ranks Offihe "gold- diggers." I confess that I look back with regret tit the (lays of inherited sol-- ial status and comparatively limit- ed horizons. Just think of life without the “Joneses‘-'! Fior these detestable "Joneses" arc u modern and more particularly nn American Our ancestors in the old ouutrie-s lived and hull their being ntouclled by, their influence; ftllil c. have only to Study iihe chron- icles and intimate records 01‘ other days. to realize tlla l. they were light- ersheurletl, more joyous men and women than ourselves. But since those (lays the "Jonescs" have spawned and multiplied Incredibly and most of us are under their domination in a greater or lesser degree. And wit-h the Increasing influence of this family has come the liecreat-lfngl agreeabiienesa u; social life. Thine. who made an exhaustive study nf the sntiul life of the Ancien Regime, asks tho reason of its peculiar charm, And he answers his own question Wltll the verdict that "tillers was no laborious, forced work lll [host- liays, n0 furious l-olnpetltion, no uncertain careers, no infinite per- spectives. Ranks were clearly defined, ambitions limited, and there was less envy. Man was not habitually tllS1<l8llS‘i‘lB(],'S01ll‘Gil and preoccupied 11'» he is today," This state of flifltllfS is not pro- gress according to the "go-getters". Bilt wihat is progress‘? ‘Some of us are beginning to be 111a puzzled about its nature as Pontlus Pilate was about the nature of truth. Murler To Show Will Power (By (British United Prue) IMKJSOUW, iMay 9. -— ‘How an undergraduate, aged nineteen, miltr- O of a superman". was related in the Moscow Supreme Appeal Court rec- ently. iA student named Cbolof and i1 group of friends held a discussion on Nietazchehl doctrines, at‘ which Oh-ciof lboasted that he at least had will power endhgb for anything. “Even to commit luurder?" a colu- rsde asked. “Yes, even for that." >Cholot auswered- "And if anybody here hag the nerve to sign a letter for the police declaring that it was not my fault I will murder him on the spot, then drink two bottles of lbeer and go to the pictures." ‘Everybody laughed at him, and a girl student named Zina Yuccoova took up the challenge. "Very well, It'll sign", she exclaimed. Amid great merriment a document word- ed, “Pilease don't blame any one for my death," was drawn up ‘and Zina duly appended her signature "Now watch," said iCholof, pulling cut a Finnish clasp knife. iHe sprang across the table and staibbed the laughing Zina to the heart. lle then quietly folded up and pocketed the girl's letter. said, “ee you tomorrow," to his friends drank twd bottles nf beer, and spent the evening at the picture a ' iLlli, Y1‘ i“ . 1i’. house. as he bud promised. Next morning be took Zinafis let- obnoxious to any wom- {for to the police, and was amazed iwhen they (‘hanged him with murd- 101-. Iyears imprisonment, which senten- 'l-Ie was sentenced lo nine re ives ilplleid ‘the Court 0i’ Appeal here. by River Of Whiskey (By British United Press) LONDON, aMay i), ~ Collision. the other day, ‘bfliwetill u. street car and lorry at the junction of Stock- well-‘Street Illlil Briggate, in Glas- gow, ended (iieastrouely for the lorry. ‘its load consisted of five ibarmis of whiskey, three of which burst and flooded the street with spirit. Briggate is near the river side, a few yards from the fish market, and the spectacle of gal-- lons of good whiskey running to waste proved to great :1 tempta- tion- Quirk as lightning, u. few of the natives made u dash indoors and next minute emerged with cups and iin runs. whit-ll ‘hey sdtyopell up the rapidly disappearing liquor, by then running down the incline along the gutter and into the man- hole. Several wnrkiuen who were ilPllltKl with flasks which hurl prev- iously held ullfill‘ tea, eagerly refil- led the tins and culls with the stronger brew. There were others who hall neither cup or flask,They got down on their hands and knees and (lrullk. When lile stream was running dry they dipped their caps into the fluid and squeezed the con- tents into their mouths. It was a mild ‘Baccaualinn orgy which at- tracted an ever-increasing number of participants. When the police arrived the stream was far spread and rapidly dwindling, ‘and no of- ficer could withhold the crowd as they scurried hither and thither. When the last liregs were flowing away and the more enterprising rushed for clothes which were us- ed for sponges. Beauty Queen in Tears (By British United Press) IHERLIN, May 9. ——— A ‘-‘Queen 0f iBeautl” in tears, stripped oi her precious crown of rose; and royal mantle, was the central fig-lire in an amazing scene which recently ic- curred at tile Berlin Sports "Palace. The helpless heroine was Ise Grahn, a charming blonde, who out of 100 fail" candidates clad in bath- ing costumes, had been bailed by the judges as the girl whose face and figure entitled her tq the cor- cted honor. (The decision was reached by the judges after hours of anxious con- sideration. The queen was accord- ingly crowned and formally con- ducted to her throne- Riotous scenes, marked, however. lhe judge's announcement. ‘No sooner was it made than the hail became a seething mass of struggl- ing humanity the vast-majority of those present being llissatisfled with Fraulein (Hahn's election. iMBILBPg reached a crisis when a young man sprang on to the dais and denounced the judges, de- manding excitedly that there lbe .1 Always the Same Always bakes the some. Tested every day in ourown “home-baking” kitchen. _ Money back gives you trouble. bunker Flour , .81 fresh trial. loud cheers from a large section of the crowd. Then another gallant allftlllg to the aid 10f the weeping queen and pleaded her cause. Shedding copious tears. lhe un- happy beauty stood in the centre of u howling mob. The other girl candidates were obviously nervous- Tile judges, fearing for their per- sonal safety ilell. lly u. large majority a resolution for the deposition of the queen ‘was curried; her crown was taken off, she sisal ller royal mantle and mini-lied the prize 0f 3.375. {m O-O-OO-OO-OQ-O-OOQ-OO-OOO-O-O-OO Ilnily Selections won Guardian Readers May 1'1, 1927 rut/tier. com-slug piutses u} God, sing praises: sins; Praises hill» I’R.A\'ii§It:-—With gladness uni] rejoicing from thc heart we Will sing praises unto This’. 0 n01!- BIRDS “Darlings? God said l0 the birds. “Go now and sing, For men are weary of winter. Go and bring Promise to empty branches" He set them free _ Winged to carry His tpralse Joyousiy. They built in meadow and uce. In barn and croft. They carried the word of love Afar, aloft, They were colored like flowers. Every wing “ins pointed and _ strong, A marvellous thing. balanced and "Darlings." God said to the birth“. "Go now IO another place, Me“ geqgw to wonder at ‘fast At thy grace. ‘ Leave for a while and then Ai-tel- barren days. One robin shall make i Awake to "praise." heir hearts I So all the singing birds Lifted their wings to g0; They iouml a ipath in the blue High way they know. Only the chiokadee stayed To sing in the snow. -Lnuise Driecoli, ill the New York Times. ---—<-o>i——- : :Worins, the irritation that they cause in the stomach and intestines deprive irvfants of the nourishment that they should derive from food. and msl-nwtritiou is the result. liiil- ierfls Worm Powders destroy worms and correct the morbid munitions in the stomach and bowels that are favourable to worms. so that the full nutriment of the child ls as- sured and development in every ‘The ijrflliosal was ‘laiied withway encouraged. i m1 "it (i0. -,_ You cannot be sure of your baking unless you are sure of your flour ,f,lws r .‘ ‘v at: lo 531W‘ , ~ m , ,=i v ‘ ur King. sing praises. Ifsalm 47:6.»