W. C. T. U. Notes AUTUMN SONG fling me a, song of the Autumn clear, with the mellow days ruddy eves: Bing me a. song of the ending year, With the piled up sheaves. Bing me a song pf the apple bowers, of the great grapes the vine-field ids, e ripe peaches bright as ers. ‘ ind the rich hop-fields. sing me a. song of the fallen mast. Oi the sharp odor the pornase sheds, of the purple beets left last in the garden beds. ling me a song of the tolling bees, 0f the long flightand the honey won, 0f the white hives under the apple- trees, in the hazy sun. Bing me a song of the thyme and the sage, 0i sweet marloram in the garden SP6?» Where goes my love Amnitage Pulling the sununer savory. fling me a song of the red deep, The long glow the sun leaves, Di the swallows taking a last sleep in the barn eaves. and the PROHIBDHON AND HEALTH , ect of Alcohol on the Human . P. S. Bourdeau-Slsco, MD.) The more we obey the laws of Personal hygiene, which make for health, the less we shall tend to uave alcohol. If we learn to respect laws an hattifested in the physical body, we shall be more likely to respect all laws, including the Eighteenth Amendment. One of the great benefits of pro- hibition is the better health of our lltion. The following considerations “l1 Imnly nmve this stafoment. Alcohol and Liver Cirrhosis From 101a to ma deaths from livel- cirrhosis in the United, States ‘NW6. nearly one-half. Cirrhosis 0! the liver is considered a good ""86 0i the use o! alcohol. When Plbitibition entered much liver cir- lhmls departed-an indication that inhibition in its early days really Pmhibited. In order to accomplish ° "W "lilit now we do not need in“ prohibition, but more enforce- t. y Alcohol and Tuberculosis ‘Zines the nishtcanth sat-tenement ‘ ‘"19 effective the tuberculosis ‘rt-h rats has fallen faster than in “firth” brevious period in history mo‘, admitted that the prohibition ,m°"}“°“° “"01 directly and indir- bpga‘ ls been an important factor in this for health and longevity “w dread disease. But a Federal 3mm“! 115°"? l0 manufac- ‘m 811d traffic in alcoholic bever- ‘m inevitably carries with 1t s " to sens to lmtimclg mm l W0 llliYS; 0NlY At The Lowest Price Ever Offered! THE llllLMAll ' I“ Electric fHE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Queen” Washer $35 For Your 01d Ice Chest! ;_Yes! We’ll Pay Th is Big Price ON l FillllAYand SATURDAY at our SPECIAL Slightly Used FRIGIDAIRES Only Four Frigidaircs-All in perfect shape-are great bargains-will sell fast_so to get $35.00 for your old Ice Chest, you must come in early. Just Two Examples of These Savings lt’s Easy To Buy-— -You’ll like the satisfactory performance of this sturdily built machine, which compares with other much higher priced washers. See it, and decide NOW. This exceptional offer lasts only from A. M. FRIDAY To 9 P. Al. SATURDAY 910058-1105 0i’ its innocent citizens during a short space of years. When the people know they will act. It is the function of this department to educate the people to these facts, so they may act intelligently. Alcohol and Child Saving Since the prohibition law was $79-$60. partly because of the new. law, thfl ill/Be of some 200.000 child- rcn and youth under twenty-one Yeflrs 0! use have been saved. But some men in high places in some states would bring back the olden 0534-701‘ Whflt purpose? In order to raise taxes. Shall the United States of America, for paltry dollars, lmmolate unfortunate thousands of its children and youth on the altar of alcohoitvzn? The preservation of the present law has a distinct hour. in: on the health. life and welfare cf the people. and For 10 Months $515" 'uo lurznzsr Monthly’ A particular friends of mine was JACK MINER , To get Lifetime Frigidnlrcn-Iiiodern doubly imp llon’t Miss First Ghoice! The Holman Home Plan Makes It Easy To Own YOU PAY ONLY $189.00 $9.00 Down-Balance ‘Monthly. FRIGIDAIRE MODEL MIA; MAJESTIC SOLD AT . . . . .. $282.00 4 Cub’ F t S‘ SOLD ' Reduced $58.00 Reduclecd $16950 Your Old Ice Chest 35.00 Your Old Ice Chest 35.00 Total Allowance 93.00 Total Allowance 79m) HERE'S YOUR OPPORTUNITY ortant. year-old boy of the present day has . keys, (Continued from page 12> and for cruel, blood-thirsty, mur-l dcruus depredations he has got the’ house-cat chased right out; of the; slaughter-house, for he will kiilvand,’ eat a great variety of adult birds‘ and animals. I have neverknowna house-cat to destroy, such as tur-l but wild geese, peacocks, all kinds of hawks and all other owls, and animals such as skunks, muskrats, groundbogs, minks, weas- l- eis and hares. Now, although I have no personal knowledge of this, yet a gentleman farmer who lived near the woods told me (and I beiievei him, or I would not repeat it) that his bunch of house-cats which were inns“ right opwsm’ each other‘ ‘me about hail grown, were in the habit of climbing upon the roof of the “we and 5mm, ma, macho. 1 had watched this shrlke tnlume we eyes to me m, o, the chimney to keep warm during the'°hi° when I was a km" dmsemng a Shrike’ 11115 5hrike igfseen in all his life. Time and time la bird about the size and color of again during my life haw I seen B a blue Jay, known m a great many 4 wounded bird lag behind as the people as the butcher bm-L 1 saidifiock flew to cover; and often have I to those standing by, “He 15 a bad I seen u. hawk dart at them, and one; always shoot him on sight» [he never failed to get the wounded‘ My yrlend stopped yo, a moment I one. And some wounded quail have. and said, “Beg your pardgn, Jack‘ ,bccn stolen from me by hawks be- you are wrong; this is not the fore I got to where they lit, and if mg northern Shrike you have m“ | it were not for the snow I wouldn't creme to; “NO, no. my dear feuowy- ‘have known what had happened as I replied. q mean the very one‘ I did not always see the hawk. 37°“ are skhmlng- and “gum I say’ Once in my life I had ll. flock of 5h°°t mm ‘m 5mm" My -, about. thirty young wild ducks. {Llemilfimued and ‘jpltdlm a kmd l Therm were two little runts that nil- “ c" nlanner» " 5° - “m 5m“ ‘poured to want to die, but I rebel- prised at you." Now, dear readezyfled and kept patching them up here were two natural born natur- yummy one took with a 50,8 eye dlscnsc, and in 1t fciv days the otiic: little scab had it, and both dicd, ibut not until they had introduced advocating the protection, the other the destruction, of the same I had ducks and all my nice, healthy sic-nun and Alcoholic Death Ran, wmw. months; these horned owls often found his nest and knew came and wok away every one of what he fed m‘ ymmg umnj I me m“ However‘ I have no posh thave caught dozens of them, right . t, ' C , ti t m 1920 the records Show ‘the proof of this last statement. l“ the M m Mada and ‘By But this I do know: There is noth- i a“ always searching n” birds" ciucks started drooping. When I cvcntuniiy got this disease checked] I had only seven ducks loft. Now, according to my own experience, if a. hawk had come along he would the death rate from alcoholism per 100.000 of the population was less than one-fourth that of 1917; and that the alcoholic death rate among‘ Policy holders of the Metropolitan Life Insurance COmpany had drop- bed to about one-eighth of that in i017. These figures reflect the ben- eflil of Prohibition as prohibition Wlht to be, No other period of history in the world records such n drop in the death rate, even among selected groups. could we have had a better degree of enforcement dur- ing all these years how enviable 110W would be our health record and our death rate. What the na- tion now needs is not nuli-ftcation, but more prohibition. Alcohol and Alcoholic Insanity A few Years s80 reports showed that nine of the states of the union contained 90 per cent. of all 611505 0f alcoholic insanity in the land. These states were thestates that had j.’ ticaliy nullified prohibition within their borders. whatsoever a man, or a state, or a nation shall sow, that shall it also reap. If it sows the seed of alcoholism it 511511 reap alcoholic insanity. Alcohol and Athletics Is there a relationship between alcohol and athletics? If alcohol is 800d for a nation. it is good for the individual. Why not furnish oil ath- letics with alcoholic beverages? Be- cause lt has been found that al- cohol impairs physical efficiency. Athletics is wiser than certain com. ........i..l interests, and some poli- tlcsl parties-athletics has excom- municated alcohol. Alcohol and Strength of Will There is a certain element in all society which is inadequate and msladiusted to its environment. Blwh persons are unhappy. They find to turn to stimulants and narcotics to induce a state of eu- Dlwris, and these substances in tum further deteriorate the will, and render the individual yet. more [emotionally unstable. Just here al- ing roosts high enough or sleeps low enough to be out of reach of this heartless cannibal. One rc- grcttable fact to mc is that I have never seen where another bird or animal‘ ever killed a great horned owl, although they have lived in the township with me all my life. chiefly the small fly-catchers. Well, we dissected this fellow, and found two little birds‘ legs, and they were not mates. Last fall I saw a shrike follow a snow bird fully five hun- dred feet high, but the snow bird won out. I said to another man, “The crow and bronco gvackle take the robins cuss.“ “Why," he said. "I don't, understand that; there is a robln‘s nest within a rod of my door, and. the woods are full of crows." Why. bless your life, that is, just the reason why the robin ooholism finds many of its ready recruits. Now any complete health program must include preventive mental and emotional hygiene. For those who cannot be salvaged in this manner, the prohibition of al- cohol is legitimate, for they are a menace to yhcir icllowmcn and a tniilsione about the neck of soozety.’ They cannot protect themselves; for protection. Now first of all we must not loscv sight of this fact: That there never‘; they must be protected. They profitfvas but one perfect’ Manager stood: by prob-name“; they perish by n» on this earth, and He put thesc~ may creatures all here. SO let 115 I011 Traces nf Alcohol Found in the back me pages of time and tflke a Body No Excuse for imbibing More 190k m? “awn! below ma“ “Itch 5160M] fared, Likely you have read the A recent. medical journal states history of America; I howl“; but that minute quantifies 0f alcohol I doubt if there is any flcclmm‘ are normally found in the human known of the clouds of birds that body, and some people argue that. once hovered over this coiiiiliflliil~ therefore, it. must be good and The settlings in the bfliiol" 0f i115 ncedcd by the system. But on the little artificial pond neiif my 110059. other hand, so are minute quanti- caused from the wild goose and ties of other poisonous and waste duck droppings, are exactly of the substances found normally in thesame material that we find in uor body, but nature hastens to excretelmayshcs, and which is from three them. Any additional amounts of to ten feet, deep in U10 BVBFPBG alcohol injected are also a poison marsh. I will not attempt to men- and must also be excreted, for they m“ the number of birds I have cannot bc used. The youth of the seen in one day, because the avcr- land especnlly need to think cicar- age boy of the mesa“; would not. ly on thcsc questions. The health believe it; but I will say that I department. is co-operating in scek- firm“; believe I have seen more ing to direct this thinking. birds m on, dgy‘ before I was inn Conclusion 1t t. not difficult to soc that pro- ' iilbition ha; a vcry definite relation to tho hmth of the people. It is the immciltate burden of this de-. partmcnt to broadcast these facts to the public. 1 It is not difficult to sec that the ‘ way to make n law respected is not to rciax it, 0r nullify it 0t‘ repeal 1g; hm to enforce it. The ultimate goal cl‘ the department is better Cleaned. sited. Rwlimh Ammt or Made Over into New» We Pay the Freiflhlv MARITIME RUG WORKS built there, it simply came to himbivds‘ enemies. ihavc picked up the weak oncs and prevented this disease. So after all my life's study I nm fully con- vinced that these cannibal birds were put licre to destroy the weak and sickly and prevent; contagious disease, letting the strong and healthy survive, But man has in- lerfcved, He has paid nil his at- tention to the destruction of the food birds and has almost annihil- ated them and let what we now call their enemies go; or, in other WOYdS, we human beings have com- bined our forces with the food Now Point Pelee marsh is about fifteen miles from where I hm sit- ting. Point Pelee is the most sou- ihcrly part of mainland in Can- ada, and the hawks cross there by the thousands every fall; yet I ncvcr knew of a hunter going pur- posely to shoot thcm. But if tiicvc were twenty-five ducks in a pond down there and twenty-five men knew it tonight, there would likely be fifty guns there tomorrow morn- mg, Yes, I honestly bclicve there are as many hawks and owls in Antcrica today as there were thirty years ago. Last fall, when the hawks wcrc migrating. in October, they started roosting in our woods, and in less than a week there were tilousands upon thousands coming thcrc. So l took a flash-light and the .22 rlfic nnd went down mid I H111 51111? "5 high as twenty-five would fly out of one little trcc every time I shut. It was a bright moonlight, night, and they soon took the hint, and I only kille dfiftccn or twenty. But to hear their wings as tbcY 110"" cred around, over the woods. would cnusc one to wonder where they came from and where they were going. However, once was enough; the rcst took the hint for the next night not one was sccn going tilcru. So don‘t lct us blame the Great Provider; it is nmtvs mistake, that‘ is all; we have gone wrong. “Oh, but say. Jack Miner, do you birds enough in America that the enIorcement-Jfhe Unkm Bilnfll- " . 5IQS 1911b Ha is ' \~ P. Protestant Orphanage Review, The September meeting of the Trustee Board of the Protestant 0t"- phauagc r wcil attended and the time was mainly occupnri with thc cotislderation of the sev-sfi‘. cufilillit- tee reports of their activity over the summer months. Considerable repair had been found necessary to the brickwork and some remodeling done in the interior; four cat's of coal had been‘ purchased and the hauling was 12c- lng ict by tcilcicl‘. ; The report of the Home was very complete and included the activity of the Gywos and L. P. U, in bcllulf of Lllt: children. The Board is cvcr grateful to such organizations for these and past favors. In presenting the finance report, lvlrs. H. S. licn- derson, head of the committee, tab- led a cheque for $200.00 from the City Auxiliary, the result of their floivcr sale during Exhibition week. The members individually expressed their appreciation of tiic outstand- ing ivork of this untirlng band of ladies. Rcsulning, it was shown it while funds were in sight for im- mediate needs, thc cxtrn expense for iviutci" liccds including coal would require special financing till tiic ililllllfil fail drive opening early in November. In the Endowmctit Fund the re- ccipt of $100.00 from the estate of the late William Ross Rigott, Savage Harbor, was announced. During i932 this fund had received several helpful increases but so far in. i033 vcry little had been added. It is hoped e. thoughtful public will not overlook this excellent plan of con- -. tinuing assistance. The children in. our carc I-Iulmalfs Bharlottetown YOU PAY ONLY $ 99.50 $9.50 Down-Balance Monthly. _ _ refrigeration, the saving of food waste, Econ- omy, Convemencc, and right at the end of the ice season when sanitation in family food is IAGE FIVE {a SELLING 0F food and professional supervision all combine to give a happy healthful family. Few homes are open to adopt children these days so it hns become n difficulty to keep a reasonable average; expenses have been cut as for as efficiency will permit and economy is being practised at every corner. The children of course are our study and care; we have proved that a generous public ls behind the In- stitution and so long as the home is wisely conducted and their confid- ence rctnincd the funds to carry on \\'ii1 be provided; information is free and readily supplied. In such o. work there are numer- ous problems and we must remem- bcr that it. is lives we are dealing with; if a ciiild socks to cntcr, on our itcccptalicc or refusal so much depends; it must ever be a turning point in their lives and the more thoughtful we are, the more res- ponsibility we must feel. The com- mittee ivhcse duty it is to consider the pass on such cases should have the sincere sympathy of all, Infants or innocents and children FREAK may become useful citizens and we believe right thinking people will do their part. in aasistins; the road be- hind. has had many pitfalls but faith and courage have brought us through, what may lie ahead we know not but we face the futurl with a courage born of past victor- ics. This work is just in its infancy: many, many children are in need of better training and care if they are to become upright and law- abiding and so to get thinking peo- ple to thinking deeper them few lines sketching our present work and effort are penned. You are invited to get in touch with the active workers so that the innocent and unfortunate children may be given that chance to live useful lives which is being denied them and who can resist the plea of the helpless? Be a. worker and of good courage. SPRING MARYLAND AS TREES BLOSSOMS AGAIN OOCURB IN BEAR CANIBRIDGE, Md}. 20- W.th pear trees in blossom while separation and dcscrtioia arc bcccm- Pill? fruit Bun hand‘ 1mm we ing too common. If the first is not limbs 5nd “m m“ bushes m feasible either of the others may bel blmm f0!‘ the "wild ml"? m“ tried and so the Orphanage is in- lye”? 5 new‘ swing h“ °°m° ‘A scck our shelter for various reasons; our social crdcr is changing; divorce, voivcd in (icciciilig the future of the {hi5 560W)“ 01 E3599?“ Sh“ children. 1t is a problem whether MflYYlfllld- _ The excessive Summer rains n. child ‘u; more orphaned by death _ _ _ or dcscistlott and the only rule we Whifih flwfied 1h? “mo” m All‘ the child itself. unfortunate children so that they have l ITEVCl‘ been in bcitcl" health due lll ' » part to the exceptional number of clear sunny days when they could old and the delicate, maimed slid discnscd would sup- ply all these hawks and owls with 3 l just cxnctiy f “ food?" Yes, that is ‘l lcsolnc crippled. I what I want to say, yet I have no ,1 j proof of it. I only know that the3 hawks ivill take a cripple every time and let thc strong and healthy go. “Weil," you say, “how about a flock of little ducks? He could take any one of them." Not so easily. Wild ducks at six hours oicl wall dive like a lot of frogs, but a dcli- cate one cannot; he will pcssmly‘ just; put his hood tinder, and his body will stick out like a bloated toad. Yes, I bclicve thn‘. loss than one hilncircd years ago there were more of the above class of birds for the hawks, each year. in America. titan there are altogether now. S0,‘ after having a. lifetime of export- encg raising birds, instead of cinc- toring the sickly oncs and petting " the drooples and sore-eyes. I Jils‘. . take the hawks plan and destl'oy' them. While I would not. titcsc cannibal birds like in son become ox- tinct, yet I would be ltlvascd to .~»t-.~ I thcm decreased tho same as our last forty years. pretend to say‘ that thorn were flllcCiOllltl‘ birds have bccomo dilrin: iilfhl Q They are beans just as you You get beans PHONE 211. TEWARTXS BEANS are the only beans ii (except the ones you make yourself) which arc baked for immediate use. vczil don't have to pay for sealing them or handling them ovcr a period of months. of their fine linvour. 20 cents per quart‘ STEWAR T’S Bakery » can follow is to give the most. carc-Iglkit and 93TH’ ,59Pl9mb°1' and m5 ful consideration to the welfare of: balmy days which mlliiwed a" m‘ lsponszble for the We strive to train and care for sDlilill." S4110 hml-lcultumm- years "second Glory-Ag)! hen Linlmgnt mold XXX BEANS BAKED for TODA Y t homc baked beans; would hake them. You which have lost nothing i'i’ilf§i KENT STREET. with“. - “u... .. ._g - .__, _» .-.-I.~...-.i.<...._-_...