..Gmwng Orient. __ , Biendetif _ irld’sgi9"fi.°s-t Qk" "at Packed 1 , o-o- nutty, Selections . '9" ._ . I Guardian Readers “wnqsoooo-oooooooo-Qoov -»-’“ May i1, 1021 ' A m, onnarioui-iciests in m, a eieaii heart. 0 60d: and re- new a right spirlt..1wlttllin,_.u1§)' tPsalm 5,1110. ~~-'- , In" *5‘ ' 11lmYER:—- "Take my heart and let it be_ v Jtiivays OIIIYi m". Q01‘ TIIMY MOTHER OF MINE (MUIIIOFS Day, May 8th, 1927) "Mother of mine. through all the - changing years—.- - _ g , Time's narrow bridge, that serv- os lo span _ ‘The pass 'tw.lxt _two eternities-a ' man ’ ‘Now grown to full estate, with hopes and fears Aiiil joy and trials such as come to . , l < \Vill evér shrine within his heart the Uhough 0|‘ your nobility, true and conalantp iii-alight with helpful deeds and ,m0tlvea pure. l-low small, llow meagre a return can d bestow F41!‘ all your loving thoughts, your tender cal-cl “ lliiiiclflsli ever! All I aiu l owe To you. And so, dear, it is my prayer That peace and joy the yours, sorrows few, With loved ones spared in bless and cherish your." Woman Who Shot Mussolini Freed ian d ROME May ISL-The d-Ionpvlolot i Albino Gibson, who attempted to assassinate rremler Mussolini Ap- ril 7. 1926, was freed today from the jail where she hadbeen held since‘ that, time. The S"? haired ilrlgh woman, in WOUIICIIIIEd-IIB premiers nose with a revolver bul- lei, as he walked toward his auto- mobile on the Capitoline Hill, was PPIOIISQd u-pon decision of the DPOBE- (‘lllOl"'S office. Silo was allowed to return to her home in Ireland on she was "irres- ponsible due to total derangement who Ql-lx. ceede-d the grounds that of mlndk. INIIIGESTION Gas on Stomach -_ » y~~=6ausod Sovoroi-Iialns If . . . iiiiiffii ‘iifiafiifiuhfifigfi’; ii to b I€"_mmv“&aub§:'l0 avail.’ At loot Blilll)t)('i\ I — L() 0 i) w" . he didn't: gab‘ h. P" er only b: The tr. M. Tomato. 0nd. p ' Fan (harden Paps , . ' Onion sets Shallots and ‘MOI! V-ICEITAILI ‘ All!!! in a fow days. i fit- Wo will Volvo's lino stock 3 of PLAMTA both VIC!- TAILI and F-lowor. Wo havq . lomc oilcioo. ‘Q i334‘ ‘ ' kct. gardens ‘in i».- mieatruiue" a in‘ the “' isi §uoa i...» [IO-R ti the .best packet yet iound ior tea-Aluminum. mvf ‘\>1§.¢‘o.- ‘vie-k ,-.. A Tragedy of ti... (Combined from page 4) us.» CG, llfllll and it is increasing rapidly-nearly lo per cent. in the dccate last Past as compared with 5 per cent. in the ten years previous to that. And this increasing disaster to the. province has occurred and is going on in Cflnadals boasted “growing time,"_v when the Dominion as a whole increased its population by over 32 per cent. ten years, and had expended during that time_$7,00_0,000 to biting ini- migrant scttlers to Canada. ', V, ' ‘A ' liiostof those who have gone were young“ men and women infhqiiflplime, _whom it had cost at least $1,000 eachto rear, maintain, and educate, and if they werepworth the actual co'§t-— and who shall doubt it ?-—the_v represents value of $72,000,000, of which fully three-fourths has gone to enriclra foreign nation. It “mm m‘ said ‘hat they have gone of free choice. Of British stock they were, and second to no other like number of people in Canada in their attachment and devotion to British institutions. How they loved their native island home is pathetically illustrated b)’ ‘he "will!" ‘Vho. when they sickened abroad, came home to die. ram cmmrormrowu‘ comma _ hlbltion Act is having ' IQGOIIIDBI purchasers to buy more '» lulilption of liquor as The Public Forum ‘ This column In open for tho discussion by correspondents of quoctlono of interest. Tho Ctiaricttctown- Guardian doc! not noconlrily ondoroo the opinions of oorrcopondcnh. jfriia PROHIBITION FARCE . _.8lr,—'i‘he great mass of the peo- ple are nowfeellug that they are within proximate distance of gett- ing a straight opportunity of deal- ing the death blow to that scream- ing farce and gigantic imposture called Prohibition. Until now this has been a one-sided gamelof hy- pocrlsy very well curried on in the guise of plebiscites, referendums— concocted to promote the political interests of o. few women and an army of office-seekers. At bcs they are only a "political ring, who plot an scheme in the inner Liber a1 clrc e, that passes out the cards from ambush to the operators out- side. lt is well known that they would never vote for the prohibit- ion ticket if it prevented them from procuring all the booze they want- ed themselves. But knowing that the majority 0f the “free and ill- dependent" are handled-plied they push their activities with hollow zeal. They have kept the voters blindfolded, and when they carry a farce they content themselves with shouting at somebody else to "inform" ‘on the men and women who deceive themselves with the idea. that they are "free and inde- pendent" electors, when as a mat ter of fact they are only blinded by the “wet-dry” schemes who play the game. The question might well be ask ed those tricksters why the Prohlb ition law has not been "enforced" in deference to all this boohoolng about lnon-euforcement." Why have they not done the "informing" of railing at those who voted Bkainsf. it’! Simply they acted the hypocrite and helped to avoid an KOYOIIIB the Prohibition Farce. part are those who vote for pro- hibitlon and have since violated it B"! 50mg i0 play in this election? ition and still be sure to violate it every chance they get; or do they intend to throw off the mask and P“ 5°? 9- Mrlllsent temperance aw that will stop their squealing end hypocrisy. ' To hear the Prollibitionlst apol- ogists sighlng since the Act be. came law one would Suppose ma; evidence could not be found to en. 10m it. in the face of the fact ‘ha! 111° f-‘PY of non-enforcement gxrbtsn heard in town and country And it no?“ the Act became lsw. near it n! still be heard fsr and of it e electors do not; get rid There is another outcry all L0,...- zgflbggiéntirv aglainst giving permlgg How man“ ‘t9 “"11"? districts. have h my 0 the Prohibltionists _6 meetings and expoggd 1MB 81 eat evil. Not one has been heard. Home brewing is u“, Worst canker-worm that ever d9. alléfillgd Itillfl homes of any country. D t o very life out of the “m” °l the lend. and it the Pr bibition Act is sustained the evil will. increase in debaucbing the Willem! end strength of the youth of This home brew the Province. evil begins t th °' "Qcletv aha Blledflvizydggrlilgttiiti’: The next greatest evil of the Pro: deviance it than they needed o h d vsvter- - i: pun’. iusiiiiifli $1 dgtkkl; purchases, as well as heavy - "3' A‘ "m"! Wmperance themiuimum unsung; haven“ t” m!" lot ono thundering s" 3° 0D‘ llninllt thiw unworkable fraud d-liston to no buucomb in its vor. r. A. 0. Saunders has at another sham pom”. o; N‘ liquor at less cost. This proof direct and undeniable ma: "'49 mlkei money out of the . illiililof drink that ho and hi. ‘Ill i0!‘ only doflw. wouilalpouuc from tho giant Q IIOOOIIIP] u) Qn. ilie Act. _ k now of Sound. W11 i do Ion cm tion! Iliit not uor Spot: the viiost lcltomc- ever-pm g b0 i .n=1:g.- more “h Mffiovil hllnooit could not dupe I autwrtivtau... ilieeliour Named ' the “spyiug" and all that. instead Might it be asked just now who! Do‘ they intend m “m "m9 Pmmb‘ What, tlicii, are tlic cattses of the incrcasi - of tgn words between Charlottetown and 3M0". and by thefmany "hundreds who have died abroad whose bodies, by their last request, are brought back to the churchyards of the home-land. As a direct consequence of the loss of its people, the Island Pifivimie has. within the past twenty years, lost two of the six re»- presentatives it had in the House of Commons and by the next redistribution of seats must inevitably lose another. With half of the representation already lost. with the unit of representation aver growing larger from census to census, while the Island's people diminish with increasing speed, like snow in the growing warmth of an April sun, the people are left to contemplate, with such composure as they can. command, the possibility of which Sir Wilfrid Laiirier spoke in Parliament not long ago, that Prince Edward Island might yet be represented by a single member. This must happen when Quebec shall havca. population of three millions and the population of this province is depicted to or below 68,000. A Quebec of 2,500,000 would give the Island province but two members to represent the population it has today. But our losses are not limited to those of population and representation. In common with the other Maritime Provinces, we have lost three-fourths of our shipping tonnage. In 1879. Canada, with 1,333,000 tons of shipping, ranked fourth among the maritime nations of tlic world, and the three provinces by ‘the sea owned more than two-thirds of the ivhole. T he three provinces have now less than one-fourth part of the tonnage they then Iiad, and Canada in licr comnicrtizil marine has dropped to eleventh place among the nations. To loss of population, loss of representation in Parliament, and loss of shipping, must bc added the consequent losses to pro- vincial revenue, to trade anti industry, to church and schoolgsup- port, the diminished value 0f real estate and the greater burden of taxation that fails upon the diminished number of taxpayers Taken all together it is a tragedy indeed. Yet the people of Prince Edward Island are not poor. Their soil, have enabled them to live and prosper under certain htird conditions, to be presently adverted to. They have seven Of fright millions of dollars on deposit in the banks, and there is perhaps less actual poverty than in any community of like numbers linfCiuli ada. And the people have not, as in- othcr provinces, c t, the rural districts to congregateiiii the towns. By the census, Cllar - lottetown has lost during the past decade as many people propor- tionately as tiic rural districts. d f . iig exo us, roni this fair province? The causes are various, but may be slimmed up in one-the lack of opportunities available elsewhere in and outside of Canada. To speak more in detail, the followingcauses may be assigned. The lack of paying ivinter employment 0f flnY sort, except the usual attendance upon farm stock. This arts-es from the almost entire absence of manufacturing industries, T1115. in tttrii, arises from the disabilities in regard to transportation, es- pecially in winter. And hcrc successive governments at Ottawa are blamed, and justly blamed, by the people. Caiiadzrlias shimm- lessly broken her pledged faith iii regard to providing. continuous steam communication between the Island and the. mainland, sum- met‘ and iviutcr." In summer the communication IS regular, but burdened with excessive rates. In ivinter it has been» most irregu- lar and more costly. _ ~ , If the Island farmer would send a carioad of oats 0r pota- toes to Sydney, oue of his best markets, say a distance of 30g miles f roni a mid-island lp0lilll, Ilclllllllliil 281516 llzzgtxreiiairio pounds, when a like car oat wou< c a' - Sydney, a distance of 90o miles, for l6 cents per hundred pounds‘- Express rates are loaded u? I" the Same way‘ o,“ companylx given n, monopoly of the service and charges what it pleases. d ciforts for thirl)’ Years by 1h? boards 9f "adei the legliiamrekatf representatives in Parliament have been unequal to: e téislagd getting i. reasonable through rate such as obtains oh t e ma he- The Dominion, which owns the IIKCTCOIOIIIBI Railwayg h Prince Edward Island Railway, aiid the Wlfllfil‘ steamers, it.‘ also stibsidizcs the summer steamers connecting the two rill Wiitllli systems, must; be held accountable for the cxorbitantlfosd i“ which the transportation has been so IOIIE buidemd- f-m m m; manufacturers, and shippers have borne ‘these burdefns o;- a ‘gem gfafion, solely because their appeals for. justice and- air pg the disregarded by those iii authority- “"5 '5 0? a pfcce ‘T,’ time; Dominion government's treatment‘ 0f the province in. elar lg!‘ Dim-s with respect to the telegraph service between the Is an‘: a? flirt‘; o-f 0n the mainland. The government was bound b! t c_ e . anion to maintain a regular telegraph service, but for thirty years after the union left the pwlile 1° Pa)’ fin)’ “m; figwsegcgise mdrside and Point du Chéflfl-"lhat i9 ‘mm 9°"? t° P9“ acrPss. m‘; Straits, And messages could only be sent in the day time 0- twglvg hoprs, night service being denied. Press rates warp prttis portionately high. and a IIIOITIIIIg "liwsim?" °°“Id_ "i" 3f: :1“! ",4... my telegraphic news of later date than eight oc oc _ h puma“, gygning; Night service is now obtainable, along "wit - . ' “ ' ht rate" or “night letter yet reduced rates, but there is no m8 for Prince Edward Island. tie" ‘mess Mine remit‘ t° ti“ people ‘of-tho mainland provinces . It, i; f9;- msqns such as these that so manic-of ‘tiiepeopie. V Pldnce Island regard the union with [Canada a?‘ a m“; ungqwu-¢md_ unfortunate event. and from likecauscs, w en uu lackylof‘ Mmm nities athomexifive them abroad ,_ p a home elsewhere than in the Dfmiitlimh and lion-eased. has grown Hashim ‘ .5 " ' ‘ W!‘ ‘mmmk i i‘ $2 —* ,_ it of successive Canadian governments. It is surely little to the credit of Canada that this province, after liavingbccn taken into the union, trusting and prosperous, has for forty years since bcr-ii lantic coast between Labrador and Panama. Those nearest to us in condition, as in distance, are the other members 0f the mariiiiiie group, New BTllllSWiCk mid Nova Scolia. They lirotigllt with tliem into the union their iiiiiics, their lumber, their shipping, and their fisheries. They gave the Doni- inioii its only winter ports on the Atlantic seaboard. 'l'licy have not prospered as_tlicy hoped to prosper, or as tlicy should have prospered under fair conditions mid equal opportunities with the ti‘: The most. Delicious and Nutritious " I Whole-Wheat Product on the Market. The All-Year-Round Cereal. Accepted by Authorities the World over as the best food for human consumption. Try a Package and be Convinceld. , For Sale by all the Leading Grocery Stores in the Province. DEBLOIS 131205., LTD. Wholesale Distributors for P. E. Island the most stagnant in growth of any province or state on the .t\‘t-, J ilolti To The Good » Amend The Evil Sir Thomas White, iCanadlrs outstanding war-time Minister of Finance and recognized as one-of the souudest and ableat men ill the Dominion today, says-z "'l‘liu. a Prohibition Act is not capable of adequate enforcement. lacking as it does the strong support of public opinion must by this time he clear to all who have given any study to the subject. The time ' has arrived to so amend it us tn prevent and limit, m4 far as possible, the evils of lntemperunce under a system of Government Control, having a firmer support of public opinion, and under regulations which will not lead lo the evils which for the pa-st seven yearn have been insepalulllly’ connected with the administration of Prohibition." industry and thrift,‘ together with the natural fertility of the checked. i. middle mid western provinccsof Canada. section the exodus has been largo and continuous, and is still un- The young manhood and womanhood of eastern Canada has gone, is going, out, not westward alone, but, in large measure, southward not to build up the Dominion but to give strength and . vigor to another and a rival nation. Thus the right arm of Cau- adzl has been bled white till it has become weak, almost paralyzed. _ It is for the statesmen of Canada to. face thc stern facts, asc laillllilcfCflil-W, and devise a remedy. can. 9 may repeat the tragedy of the last, and the dcpopulntioil andidiscontent of Ireland bc repeated in itiaritinie Canada. Front all this eastern Otherwise, the next 5§INt".i _BHlVE (By British United Press) DONIDION, lvial 14. -— What 8D- peared t0 be a mysterious case of grave robbery in t-be lit-tie Austrian town. of Miregoihas turned out to be s most wonderful example of mother-love. iMilltsa Teribovltch, a sewing wo- man out of a job, is the heroine of this strange story, as reported to the Viennese police. According 1o the Mayor of Miro- gol, the guardian of the Central Cemetery of ‘thatt city early one morning came upon a grave that had been- opened during-tile night. The earth had beenibadly replaced and everything pointed to ghouls having been at work. But when the grave diggers opened the little cas- ket at the bottom of the pit, they found the body of a young boy who UPENS HEH F§§‘O'§Q-OOO-O4-PO4-O4§-OO-O-O+¢4 DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon worms OFTEN MISUSED: "Sidewise" is preferred t0 "Bille- ways." OFTEN MLStPRONOUNIOFD: Jo- cose. Pronounce, jo-kos, botih 0's as in "no," s as in “a-io", accent last syllable. ‘OFTEN M-liSPRtONOUNCED: dia- phragm; phragm. _ ISYtNONYMSZ difficult, artiuoue. perplexing, intricate, hard. involv- ed, obscure, laborious, onerous. WQRJD .,STU'DY: "Use a word three times and it is yours." Let us increase our vocabulary by mas- tering one word each day. Today's word: SPONTEANEOUS; proceed- ing from natural disposition or im- pulses. “i admire her spontaneous manner of doing things." ._-_<i-}—~-——- Mauls Brother branches and twigs from this fam- lly tree of the world have given rise to t-he insects, birds and beasts that. exist itotlay! Man is thus a distant relation of the cabbage, ‘bu-t he is (‘fllllllfiefililly nearer iii kinship to the chimpan- zee ‘thun- IQ the IBPIIFISPIg; sprout. Dr l-leaton observes that tile-top- most. branch of the tree of life lic- gun to fork at. a date which. coni- pared with the immense periods o1’ time, occupier! by the earliest dlvi islons, iliust be regarded as coni- parutlvely recent. i "We do not know exactly when it was." he added, “but. it may per- h-nps have been a iiilliiqli years 0r so ago; and developments took place along ‘two (lilfercut direc- tions. in one 0i these t-lie success- ive generations igenlained in tho forest and grailtialiy became iiiinlik-l eys; and in the open country. and were the primitive ancestors of man. “The relationship between man and monkeys is, therefore, a coni- paratively close one; and, indeed. it is amazing that so obvious a re- semblance sihould have so long es- caped observation and should even now be denied,‘ among them being common salt. p-hos-pha-tes, potash and lime. “The reason for this," says Dr. Heston, is that the ancestors (if these animals," including ourselves ‘were iii the remote agefl the name, a-nd lived in the sea; and the com-- position of the salts in the ‘blood of all their descendants)»: still the some as that of ihu water of tliut primeval sou. ‘In this particular rc- speut tiho whole vertebrate king- dom. in spite oi’ all the changes that its various members have sill)‘ seqiiently undergone, has literally retained its blood relationship." <Di-. illcatoii assert“ that In: "dc- preesiiig popular belief" that lihe human race is (leteriorafiing is "ltllsnltliely without foundation. Posts RewardTor Missing Fliers WASHINGTON, May li-tlluy‘ mond Orteig, United States sponsor 0E the $25,000 New York-Paris flight prize, has cabled from Paris an offer of $5.000 reward for any An astonishing fact is that the blood of all animals with backbolr, es, from muu to fishes, includes, "exactly the same" assortment of' inorganic, substances, or salts. 2 Alliance aviator wlm iliscovers either of the missing french ilyers captains Nuii- gesser and Coll, or traces of their seaplane, the commerce depart- mont announced today. Temperance Meetings had been buried there ithree weeks before. Nothing indicated that valuables bad ever been lelit in The Cabbage ByBrItIIh United Press) MRS. GORDON WR-IG-HT OF SOUTH LONDON, ONTARIO, PRESI- DENT OF CANADIAN WOMAN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERANIOE UNION WILL ADDRESS PUBLIC TEMPERANCE MEETINGS UNDER THE ' AUSPICEiS OF THE TEMPERANCE ALLIANCE OF PRINCE EDWARD W» I the simple pine casket. The authorities were unable to solve the mystery. i Now the ‘truth has been revealed. iMilitaa Teiibovltch, for some time employed lathe family of a postal clerk, but at present rwitthout a pos- ition, has 00mg forward with a "confession" that throws a singular light on the primitive mentality of some of the mountain peoples in the south of Austria, and at the same time throws on aureola of ory round the furrowed brow of this martyred mother. This ls the explanation she gave the police. "l am the mother of the iii-tie boy, there in the cemeterY- When his fat-her left me four months, ago il loist my job and did not knew wbatt to do. My husband had tak- en all the savings. and event my good clothes. Then my little Vlado got sick. and‘ there was no medi- cine to cure him. What was] I to do? ‘*1 managed to get a iititie work here and there, but the money was not enough to pay for a doctor. I90 0119 night. my boy died. _ TINY came ‘sad- took his lltitle body away. it broke my heaiit to see him in that cough casket, and 11.0! even a. nice shirt and (lewd 1N"!- ers for ‘bi-m tto wag, "Thea all of a sudden l felt that d had c. duty In perform. I went out and broke rocks on the road with a, contractors gang. It was not a womcno work, but if stuck to ition two weeks, until I had enough monoym so and buy my boy some decent clothes. "lie was my boy. nit. cefaobody oi“ could do iior him what his ’otllor could. Bo l lot l-ilo exact of loch forhlim and a new cult, and o flue dotted shirt ‘m; 1 toot my bundle to the unwary chi-co times, but found diomvc only situ- one of the mop ~ - rosin." ~ . "w- ‘IJONIDON, May i4.——The poplin" delusion that men are descended from monkeys. falsely attributed to Darwin, is gently corrected by Dr. Trevor l-leaton, of Christ Church. Oxford, an authority on anatomy. “The animal descent of man is sometimes taken to lint-ply that our ancestors were monkeys," writes Dr. tl-leaton; "but this is not quite correct. The triltli is that, at dif- fereut stages of their evolution. they have exhibited a succession. of different forms, but all of these have long been extinct, and a few fossilissd traces- are all that can now be found of them. An the branches of a tree spring out at different levels from the par- ent trunk, and l-hen grow away from each other in different direc- Lions, so the innumerable living things have all sprung from the same common stem. The first great division occurred many hun- dreds of millions of years ago, and marked the separation» betlween au- imals and plants; and successive ISLAND, AT THE FOLLOWING Monday, May ldth-Trlnity U Thursday, May Nth-Baptist Kiimulr at B p. m. ray Harbor at 8 p. m- Saturday, May Zist-R. C. Hall Other dates and places will be Mra- Wright is a noted pintfor engagements in Western Canada PLACES ON‘ THE FOLLOWING DATES: nltcdt Church, Charlottetown, at 8 p. m. (This meeting will be broadcast. Tune in.) Tuesday, May Wth-Pownal p. m. Cherry Valley at 8 p. m. Wednesday, May 18th.—Wood Island: at 2:30 p, m. Eldon Hall 8 p.m. Church. Murray River 2.30 p. m. Friday, May mills-Temperance Hall, Georgetown, 2.30 p. m. Mur- at Sturgeon at 8 p. m. Sunday, May finch-Cardigan, Presbyterian Church at 11 a. m. Zion Church, Charlottetown, 8.15 p. m. (Thin meeting will be broadcast). announced later. m speaker and“ has cancelled many in order to speak to the women and men of Prince Edward Island upon the luucs now before the public. All are invited to attend the meetings. 5580-5-16" ti’. came l set ito-work-with s little scoop ‘l had brought, and dug near- ly all night uu-tll l came _to Ithe box that held my ‘boy. It. wag hard to open it with the scoop, but ll suc- ceeded. \ WFor a long while l held my Vlado against rne c! i used to hold him. Then i! dressed him with cu the nice things l hall bought for butterfly knot with his new ol-avat, and than put ‘him-softly back in that cold casket‘. ‘ die will rest bettorlaomlio will be pleased with lilo mother. And now you can art-cot mo, sir, if yo want to.’ ' l, ‘ The offloll feoaim of llliitu wipod a tccr from him, the soft shirt apd blue cotton-P . suit. aadwsvembing. ltiiodp. nice p, i who limo tllg "tuuii- i rather roughly, .~ ~ UNEQUALLED IN QUALITY AND FLAVOR, To have mo roni joy a tobacco mon always llk fc y Hickey 8c “i Lulu. - ALL! Y . BLACK g TWIST " I It to tho loader for cvsg-"iialva, century slid nd planar-o out of chewing r Nicholson's v , ll‘ rowing _ i- '