'lI|llIs'O:lJllr| iet__A|_li_Hf!Ififf!f'I'i‘Willi" . hsve become so absorbed in the Wednesday, 91?. M. T0 1 A. M. i rus HIGHLANDS ,3 OPENING DANCE AL. BLANCHARUS ORCHESTRA June 5th. v TICKETS, 50c. Canadzfs Greatest Need Preaching in St. James Church on Sunday forenocn, Rev. Dr. Keir Fraser, Alberton, delivered an. ex- cellent and timely sermon on "Can- ada's Grciitest -Need - Christian Homes." Taking as his text, Dent. s, verses 8-7, Dr. Fraser spoke as loilows: We hear a great deal today about revivals. The word has become a commonplace. And what I want to do this morning is to emphasize the revival which, in my Judgment, the world needs the most. You may nct perhaps sgr c with me. but I am sum you w give me a respectiul hearing. And first oi all I want to say that the revival society most needs today is not a revival or trade. That, I believe, is coming, and I also believe that when it does conic it will not be an unmixed blessing. Commercial prosperity never has been. and never can be, the great- est good in a nation's liie. Nor is the revival that society most needs a. revival oi good govern- merit. That too is coming. Everywhere, in all countries, there is increasing evidence oi the fact that people are getting tired of being boss-ridden and ring-ruled and monopoly-cursed. But society needs more than civic reform. _ Nor is the revival society most neefi today s. revival oi physical surroundings-oi what we call eug- enim. That too is important. The body is holy. but it still remains s fact that man merely hss s body while he is s. soul. Nor is the revival society most needs the revival oi philanthropy. Philanthropy is certainly in a‘ state of revival. The agents oi multi-miilionsires are searching the earth for, some new scheme oi hu- man betterment into which to put the millions their employers cannot ierry with them across the river Styx. And it is a hopeful sign that people are beginning to realize that the only way in which they can take their money with them into the next world is to use it to help others in this world. And yet it remains that humanity has interests more sacred than those represented by philan- thropy. . Neither is the revival that society most needs today an educational revival. Education, is .a favorite word to- day. it can have almost anything it asks ior. The‘ mammoth sums put into educational enterprises, during the last twenty years break previous records. The state legisla- Lures across the line are almost emptying their tressuries to build up their big universities. And we ought to he glad oi this. Education deserves all it is getting, and yet educatio is not the final word in civilization. Nor is the revival most needed to- day a revival of personal salvation. Certainly there-is desperate need of such a revival, because there can be no hope ci any permanent im- provement i.n iety that does not take into account the ‘tremendous influence which only the church can wield. And yet there is somethiw better than the church. Nor is the revival most need today s revival of personal salvation. Thst Mo is essential because there is no hope, oi s social millcneurn that leaves out oi account the salva- tion of the individual. .But there is something more iundamental than even tho kind o! revival which reaches the unchurched and brings the individual into the kingdom. The revival society most needs to- day is the revival of arr institution which is older than all these, which is more important than .-.rry and all oi them combined, and which if al- lowed to decline, will seal the doom oi human progress. I reier to "The Home." The revival society most needs to- day is s revival oi the Christian home. Some oi you will possibly challenge this tesnent. It sounds extremef It is a strong statement. but r believe it, and I believe r have abundant reasons ior believing it. Int us look at these dific t in- terests I have mentioned, a oi which are important. (l) The interests of the home are more important than the inter- ests of trade. » I tell you men and women you hsve sold out, and have sold to the lowest bidder, when you sacrifice home Joys sud home ssnotltles ior the money god. And this is what many are doing. They are money- msd. There are, men who chase ior dollars that they hsve actually bscoliis strangers to their own horns. Their own children scarcely know them. And when the ehsse is ovcr what hsve they gain- ed? What it profit a man ii he gain the whole world and lose his horrid?‘ Yonder is s msn who has all sympathy. The ideals should be the to the bad. I-Ie is s poor iool ii he would not gladly swap every dollar in have his boy safe and clssn and happy. , (2) Again the government oi the home is more important than the government oi the country simply because the government oi the home is essential to good national govern- merit. You cannot make good citizens out oi people who have never been taught obedience. We are all chock- ed at the conditions oi lawlessness that prevail today.» But there is nothing accidental about it. It is a growth. It had its origin in the home. We have been growing a generation who have never learned to respect authority. And what do laws mean to people who have sl- ways? been used to having their own way (3) Again, and the sanctity of the home is more important than all the questions about eugenics oi which we hear so much today, because i! the homes had been christian the problem oi eugenics would, never have arisen. People are talking to- day about saieguarding the marri- age relations with a physical exam- ination. Why? Because the marri- age relation has been so abused that society is paying the price. We rnust begin further back than r. physical examination ii race purity is to be achieved. We must begin by in- culcatlng into the mind oi’ the child the ideals oi a pure heart and a clean mind. “Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart irom it." It is something to say to a moral leper: "You shall not breed your kind." It is iar saner to prevent the production oi moral lcpers. And this is the lfusiness oi the Christian home. (4) Again. the devotion of the home is a iiner thing than philan- thropy. Now, don't misunderstand me. Our benevolent work is splendid. It hss had an amazing growth. But this. to s, large extent, hss been made necessary by the failure of an cldsr institution to do its work. If there had been better homes there would have been less need oi benevolent institutions. And I don't cm how good an institution is, it: csn never be as good as a home, and can never take the place oi a home. (5) And the interests of the home are-higher than the interests of the school. Oi course in a sense they are iden- tical and should work in perfect same. Thatietoceywhonachild leaves home ior school it should not be T ‘l-d to change moral at- mpheres. The zones, ii I may so speak, shoud be the same. Because if the ideals oi the school are hostile to the ideals of the home, ii the child ~18 untallght at school what it has been taught st home, then the school is a peril. . You have a child growing up whom you purpose sending oii to school one oi’ these days. Whst kind of a school is it that you have in mind? Do you know anything about its moral and religious iniiu- cnce? Do you core anything about this ieature oi it’! Or are you go- ing to be iooled by the so-callcd finishing features it cflers, while it leaves out oi account God and teaches your child snobbery, and what is worse-irrelilion? (c) Again, the revival of tbs home is more important than the rcvivsl of the church. The home is older than the church. Furthermore. it lies at the ioundation oi the church. No re- vival in the church gets iarienough which does not aiioct the home. The church is the most important in- stitution in the world except one. It is more important than the shop or the school or the state, but it is not as important as the home. The character of the church is iixed by the home. And" there is not much iuture. ior any church which does not have behind itssltsr s iireside. (7) Once more, the revival oi the home is of more concern than per- sonal salvation, ior the simple res- son that the cause always precedes the results. It is important to convert people, to get them saved, but ii this change is to come at the best time-and in nine csses out oi ten st the only tlme-and if it is to produce the best res “ Jtwillbebccsuseoftheholy iniluerlces wielded by a godly father and s pious mother in s Christian home. ‘Ihereiore, I repeat that the re- vivsl society most needs today is s revival of the Christian home. is s strong statement, but I believe itisnostrorlgertbsntbcfacts de- mend. That the Christian home is in s state of decline today ls evident to anybody who has opp eyes. I tell you, men and women. the homo as an institution is lighting for its life made millions, but his son hss gone_ she esllscl ° . risllv ha; itlDNlYS ' " 3th?“ sctil s today. The servant question. tbs 9a,, *‘.'..."'-l".".i bit RDII ‘ . . GU i M.D.,C.M. Physician & Surgeon’ Office, Hours: 1 p. im-ii p. Ill. x 7 p. III.—H p. m. < and by appointment 1 Bank of Commerce .‘ ldg, < Telephone 324. i #7 AAAAAQ shanks‘? ° DUMB-Mi high acct oi living, the rush oi mod- ern l e, the numerous iads which claim our time, the speed mania, the dance mania, tbs recreation mania. are sll s terrible menace to the quiet and simplicity without which true horns liie hasn't the ghost oi a chance. 'I‘he unity oi the home is very diiiicult to maintain today. Ire- member that when I wss s boy the table used to be thesocisl centre where all the family met at meal time, but today they straggle in as the demands of social or other en- gagements will permit. Thus what used to be the bond in the common life oi the home is broken. But I am speaking oi the Christ- ian home. and there the situation is worse. in order to make myself clear, I am going to give you three eviden- ccs-st least to me evidences-oi the decline oi the home. (l) 'I‘he iirst is a growing lack oi regard for the sanctity oi the marri- age vow. , Marriage is not s sacrament but it is sacred. And yet it is being rear- fuliy cheapened today. It is not only entered into lightly but it is lightly set aside. Marriage is a moral act. made so by God. and hulnsn law can never make moral what divine law has made immoral. Public sent- iment on this subject here in Can- ada is much higher than in the US. There conditions are such as to shock us. They have reached the dregs. They arc indecent. But even with us the conditions are such u to cause slsrrn. They indicate s de- cline oi the Christian home. Bl- cause ii there is one thing that Christianity has always stood (or it is the sanctity oi marriage. m Then secondly there is s de- cline o! parental authority today. 'I'he first lesson that any oi us needs to learn is that there is such s thing ss authority in the world- and that we must all submit to authority. And i! this is not taught in the home, where csn it be taught? And what is the situation in the average home today? Well, so isr as I can see, parental authority is a Joke. And this is where our law-breakers are znsdc. A few weeks ago some boys were arr-signed beiore one of our police judges on s criminal charge. Listen to the comment oi a secular paper m the circumstance: "Judge beiore whom the boys were arraigned, ai- firmcd that behind and beneath the ugly problems which are constantly beiorcthe Juvenile couri-l. I! W11 as other coirrts, is that o1 pernicious home influence. He charges parents with s. disregard oi parental duty, and sn almost criminal carelessness as to where their children are and what they are doing. And he hinted that it was reslly the fathers and mothers of the boys who were in the dock." This lack oi authority in the home is s bad thing for the parents, but it is worse for the children, because there is trouble ahead ior any boy or girl who hss not learned to res- pect authority. (S) Then the third evidence of the decline of the Christian home thst I have in mind is the decline in re- ligious instruction. The most important element o! the Christian home, in my judg- ment, is the atmosphere of rever- ence. It is to the soul what sun- light is to the flower. No child's soul hss a fair chance who is not taught prayer and the great truths about God and the future life. What is the religious liie oi your_ home? You provide well for the physical wants oi your children. Arc you making any provision ior their spiritual wants? Ii not you are sending them out on s hopeless journey. Is a blessin asked st your table‘! It may take only hsli s. dozen sec- onds, but it is more important than all the conversation thst takes place afterwards. Have you s. family sitar? If you care anything for your children be- ware of a prsyerless home. We wonder st some oi the things which are happen‘ today. We should stop wondering. The things we de- plore hsve their calls in godless homes. Before I close, I want to ssy in a word or two, three things. (l) The first is this‘. The Christ- isn house is needed today ior the ssh of the nation. We Canadians hsve some gust battles to iight during the next isw years. We must have leaders who possess to stsnd up sgsinso Pflvllesc; and citiseas whose ideals nation where the homes where God is honored, and the children Its tllllbt the Rinctp- lcs oi tbs Christian l’ is § é e5, l 2E z B sci sigh irgrttrii ii :5 ‘i its M?‘ l autumn llrqllull Lured by the strsngs tales tbst led with the little Prince ldwsrd Island iishing vill- lge of Fortune s group oi New York soiors arrived there during 1 Provinces beiore they return to - BIOIGIIY. Ever since C. P. Ilockton started an actor's colony there 30 years ago the stage iolk have been com- lng in find health and s summer's happiness at Fortune. ocording to showmenh tradi- tion Iliockton who was David Bei- asco’: character actor. died in Florida, but his body drifted down a river and the ses brought it to rest on the shores of Fortune Bay, near his summer home. Actors may believe the story-internationally famous cartoonists have pictured it es truth and so have radio news en‘ , but iisherfolk of For- tune talke it with their customary grain oi salt. Far out on a fir-iringed point in s. natural cathedral in‘ the woods is the memorial to Iliockton built by David Beiasco. Inside are the ashes oi the ismoussctcr-on top is s. sun disl. ' ' The latest arrivals st the colony are Captain Neville Percy. director, William Galloway, Fairfax Burgh- er. Rlu Davies and Margaret Os- mond. They appeared recently in "Springtime ior Henry" and plan to produce the show sometime during the summer in various Maritime centres. One Killed In 'GyPsy , Camp Brawl (OJ. Dy Guardhsfs Special Wire) RIEIIRIVE. NH 5-. June .'i—More than a score oi witnesses hsve been summoned ior tomorrow's inquest in- to the death oi 22 yesr old Vincent McNeil, shot esrly Sunday morning in s battle between a group oi $11118 miners and s band oi gyp- es. _ progress could be marked by the or o» “we” w»: into your system s iew days after-taking Fallows’ Syrup, which contains the “Vital 8". Fellows’ creates strength by lrslping to stimulate the circulation, by aiding in en- riching tbs blood, and by re- vitalizing the nerves. Tske Fellows’ ior a month or two and sur rise yourself and others (lb your new energy and brightness. zse FELLOWS’ ‘ .§YRUP . . -.~ FRENCH LINER Continued irom page l four (by: ll hours and. 42 minutes. She made 749 miles one day and- iorsnhourmainta ‘aspeed oi 3139 knots. - _ The Normandie carried a large number oi notables on her maiden trip, including Mine. Lebrun, the wile oi the President of France it required so minutes to warp the liner into her new pier, and in the process, as several tugs were nibbling at her huge sides, a long strip oi paint was scraped ofi her side when she bumped against the pier. Until today the swiitest crossing of the Northern Atlantic had been made by the liner Bremen in iour days, l6 hours and 15 seconds. The German ship's average speed ‘was 29.51 knots, - The liner Rex, however, had made the southern Atlantic cross- ing in iour days, l3 hours and 5B minutes, The Italian liner also held the record for daily distance, hav- ing made 736 miles. This -was shaded by the ‘Mil-mile record of the Normandie, Planes Mark Progress Long beiore the ‘limbo-ton ves- sel appeared in the Narrows, her ‘swarm of airplanes roaring over er. Any ship, even a tramp steamer. looms large when it passes into the Narrows, but the Normsndie bulk- ed so impressively that the tops oi her squat i ‘ seemed on a level with the highlands on either side oi the passage. _ About 100 smaller craft scurried, about the Normandle as she lay st quarantine and steamed up the bay. They ranged irom a pictur- Frsnk Demctro, ts year old lead. 9!‘ 0! the 879513. Illefllli to have fired the fstsl bullet, _is still. in hospital suiferlng from cuts and bfulfiee, and most oi his followers are nursing minor injuries. Demp- tm. who told police his people were promtazting their maidens, is under I In the Glace Bay jail are Den Power, Marshall McDonald, Tom Ul-lfbhy and Moses Murphy. iour Reserve youths who were arrested bfilter the fltht and held without The Hilly osmp was wrecked during the brswl and the rovers are now sheltered in s vacant Glare Bay restaurant. Stabilization Co n fe re nce Is Urged‘ (C. ih-Ilavas) (By Guardian's Special Wire) PAR-TB, June 8.--II'renoe's new Fin- ance Minister, Joseph Csillsux, came outstrcsigly todqv in favor oi an ‘ ‘ timsl monetary stabilisation coniercnce ss sn aid to world econ- omic recovery. The new Bouisscn Cabinet will go beiore the Chamber oi Deputies to- morrow for the first time, virtually slured o! sn immediate vote to give to it the sweeping decree-power it deems essential for defence of the franc sndstsbilination oi France's economic and immoral position. Before confronting the deputies the ministers will hold s full cabinet session st which they will plan their canpsim. combined come irom one college.- Dsvidson, North Carolina. And yet it is not strange but it is significant. The explanation is this-Nearly all the young men who go to Davidson College come irom Scotch-Irish homes. where ligious instruc“ the family sltsr, and the Catechism hsve not gone out oi fashion. Bo the Christian home is needed for tbs sske oi the church. (DOnoe more the Christian noms is needed for the lake oi your child- run. You love your children. Oi course you do. You woulduo afiyflllhl 101‘ them. Are you Mini the best? Are you them our. to llie's duties strung with Christian es so ‘that when temptations come they may stand, and hsvins dons all eon- tinuc to stand? You feel perhaps that if you leave your children mon- ey enciwn to be indwcndcnt you willdowcll. ‘Ihatistheicsstthinl you can leave them. How often it bsoomcs s, curse! Have you ever knownreligicsiiobcscurse? Itis money you need to leave your pcwsr, "habits of reverence, oi in- dusky, and devotion to duty. OI Codbslpuswsavsourhomesl I! I but message the chancscosaybutoisewordthmy nation andmysgaiiscme one had toicmstlrismcra thstthlsw mE MSDERN SHOP IUNNIIIDI ' biases Ncstlatm. i m. pnardvtxriellz. , esque, four-masted schooner to a row-boat. Planes, including amphibians ‘Ills column is reserved In cl local ilhrosl but advertising a lows! Iaturs n" be lrrssrtod as s asltl s word strictly slnbls rn advance. IIIEMEN CALLED — Firemen were called out yesterday alter- nooniorssmalliireinaysrdoni the corner oi Queen and Fitzroy Streets. news sl oooo Day's SPORT-Mr. Alex Corbett, head waiter st the Cana- disn National Hotel. and Mr. George D. Scarborough, St. John, N. 3-. were out trout fishing yesterday and report a 800d. catch. WILL APPEAR. IN COURT -i The driver o1 s car which collided} head on with mother car on the Hlllsbolo Bridge Sunday will appear in court today charged with oper- cting a motor vehicle while under the influence oi liquor. Both cars were slightly damaged. POLICE COURT—At the Police Court Saturday an adjourned case oi driving to the common danger was further adjourned. The de-, fondant in a customs case was re-; manded for three days The de- fendant in a breach oi the sanit-l ary by-law case was fined $1.00‘ and costs or three days in jail. Al drunk who failed to appear had] his bail estreaied. SIMS BUILDING COMPLETED —On Saturday workmen completed work on the Sims Building, which has been undergoing extensive in- terior re-modelling recently prior to being taken over by the Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserves to be used as headquarwrs The first two floors will be used by the naval reserves While the third floor has been fitted up to serve as caretakerh quarters. Club rooms have been provided on the first floor for the Army and Navy Club. OPENS OFFICE -.- Dr. Howatt has opened oifices in Bank St., formerly occupied by Sun Laval University and M.D., C.M., from Queens University. He is a licentiaie of the medical council of Canada and holds certliicates Ior post-graduate work at Cook County Post-graduate School irr Chicago. While in the United Clinic in Rochester and. Lahey, Clinic in Boston. Dr. Howatt, who practice. VILLE IYYS IN PORT-The and huge transports, droned over- head. Trailing irom one was a banner bearing the letters: "New York welcomes the Normandie." Roaring Welcome Shortly aiter the Normandie ar- "ived in the Narrows the sym- -hony of the water-trout began. It zontinued until she was warped nto her pier. ships oi-all descrip- tions whistling in greeting. The oncemlghty Leviathan, of course, was silent as the Nor- mandle glided past. The retired flagship oi the American Merchant Marine. once the largest and most palatial of ocean greyhounds, is rusting at her pier. From the sun deck oi the new Normandie she locked small and obsolete. Wall Street's usual manifesta- ion oi enthusiasm-stoma oi ticker tape-could be clearly seen against the backdrop _of the sky- scrapers as the ship passed the battery. It was a hard day on the telephone company's directories Charge Raid- Mo de By Ethiopians (By Andrus Berdlng (Associated Press Foneign Staff) (LP. By Guardian's Special Wire) BONE, June 3—A “nucleus oi armed Ethiopians" attacked and killed 30 native Italian troops and stole several thousand head oi cattle May 3i in the Dsncali re- gion, Italian authorities charged tonight in an official statement. Authorities asserted the Ethiopi- an attack was made against a "small post oi native gendarmes placed by us ior the protection oi the native population along the Eritrean frontrier." on the same day some 30 armed Ethiopians tried to shoot their way into the Italian military zone near Gublci in Italian Somaliland, but were repulsed with undetermined losses. The latter attack, the officials ssid, was replaced by {talisn colon- ial troops known ss "Dubats." Prince Lays Corner Stone IDMDON, June 3-(0. P. Cable) —'I'he Prince oi Wales today laid the foundation-atom oi the new 82,600,000 building of the Royal Inspire Society on Northumberluld Avenue. His Royal Highness read a mes- ssgs 1mm the King expressing the hope the suspicious occasion would msrkflie openingofsncrscsiin- creasing prosperity. and also mes- sages from the hnplre Prune Min- isters, including Prime Minister R. B, Bennett of Csnsds, and Prime lsimster Ramsay Macdonsld. Too Late To Classify evenings lticbmmd Street. Apply 99 Crest Goo. M. Phone 10$. L-WM-d-d-Si mobile bumper. Apply Their statement charged also that D08‘! ._ IITWIEN CITY AND Golf Links, Ssturdsyniront suto- Guardian. rams Hench cruiser Ville D'Ys arrived in Charlottetown Saturday. Oom- msnder Pierre Goybet paid an oili- cial call on His Honour Lt. Gover- nor DeEnis which i-liis Honour later returned. Lieutenant J. Con- nolly and Sub Lieutenant C. Scarth representing hhe Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserves also Saturday. Yesterday in honor oi King George's birthday a 2i -gun sal- uie was fired by the cruiser. The ship which came from Sydney, C. 13., will remain in Charlottetown until the end of the week. A crew o! about one hundred men and ten officers is on board. Mr, and Mrs. Samuel Clow. Charlottetown. left yesterday ior a week's holidays in Nova Scotia. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Cottell, St. Raters/bur". Florida. arrived in Charlottetown yesterday. They are staying at the Canadian National Hotel. Wife Of Former Island” Dr. Dies Marion F. MacKay, wife oi Dr- F. H. McKay, Montreal physician and neurologist, died at Montreal Saturday. Mrs. MacKay was born at Haliiax, daughter oi C. M. Crowell who now lives at Provid- ence, R. I. Agraduate in nursing from the Royal Victoria Hospital in 191i, Miss Crowell married Dr. MacKay in i914. During the Great War she served overseas with the original Queen Alexandra group oi nurses. She has been active in the Hospit- n! Ahuruiae association and the McGill Women's Union. her father, Mrs. MacKay is sur- and Nancy at Montreal, and family at Holland Cove. i l" William Gordon. (Ralph Con- R- D~ Ottawa. oi Commerce Building, Grafton 15h Empire (own). MES M“ E, Liie Insurance Co., next door to Gaudet and Haszard. Dr. Howatt Jllrzllllelgngulliaurghatnl’ attendee Si. Dunstans University be], wmnme . Nf, e“ "1 for six years and holds B50. from clfimh Torghto. 5320mm‘ Mary States he also attended the Mayo} Eckmm cow’ is a son oi’ Mr. John and the later yaude Mrs. Howatt. ‘will continue general 1 éaskflell- 0011.: George Albert Mc- called on Commander Goybet on‘ In addition to Dr. MacKay and vived by two children, Kenneth and a sister, Mrs. Davidson, and a broth- er, Charles Crowell oi Providence. Dr, MacKay is a native of Prince Edward Island and has spent the past few summers with his wiie Popularity s: (suns 1'0 sum. HEINZFST, $5000in PRIZES i See Ilris paper Thursday Contest Continued irom page 1 Clliiord Clark, Ottawa; Cyrilie Fm. 511' Dfllase. Quebec: William stewart Edwards, Ottawa; Rev. Char. nor), Winllllli-IE; Hon. George Her- bm sfldsewick, Ottawa; Harry Stevenson Southam. Ottawa; James Hossack Woods, Calgary; slmpn James McLean, Ottawa. Commander o; the Q-(ler 0g m, British Empire (civil division): Ed- ward Johnson, New York; M“. chant Mulroney, Washington; W11. liam Ezra Matthews, Ottawa; Rob- ert Edward McKechnie, Vancouver; Miss Helen Richmond Young Reid, Montreal; Mrs, Sarah Turnbull WEYYEII. Toronto; Frank Thomas Shutt, Ottawa; William Lash Mil- ler. Toronto: Col. Henry Campbell Osborne, Ottawa. Commander of the Order of the Brill-sh moire (military division): Lt. Col. Henry Willis O'Connor, Ofiicers of the Order of the Brit- len Blrtless, Alexander, Man; M188 Ottawa: cc Camp- All W°°-.°@11M11ier. Ont: 3M3‘; William Davey, Victoria; Dgvid Marritt Duncan, Victoria; A1984 Fitzpatrick, Toronto; chm-ks 5m, “"5011 Fosbery. Montreal; Lusbbe Vletorln Germaine, Quebec; Jghn Kingston; Edwin 51151513 Hlfdy. ‘Poronto; Miss Egg-ah Emily Maxwell. Ottawa: Mrs. Lucy Montgomery MacDonald. ee- Edmonton: Iester Bowles gearson. Ottawa: Miss Mary Pink- SLYI», 98128-13’; Arthur Melville u?» CIIISBTY; John Alexander Stiles. Ottawa; Mrs. Jessie Mabel swwart, Prerth, Ont; M155 m, MANY CANADIANS gm“; meme q; 4' TUESDAY vac-women's Christian. ‘Iie -- - snce Union-Just Parlor. . ISO-Auxiliary of W. M- S,— - ‘Parlor. No rmandié’ 1'1 ‘V ,1 Sets Three’ New Reco r (A. P. By Guardian's Special ‘ NEW YORK, June a-wnen . if Normandie slipped post ----~ Lightship at 11:03 a. m., B. D. today she had three new -~ for passenger liners: ‘ l. 0L1. » The crossing time b based on 3.192 miles from Southampton to Ambrose Lightship. The dethroned queen of the the Italian liner Rrex, based title on a. shorter crossing allies-irom Gibraltar to Light in iour days, 13 h - minutes in Aug., 1933. The Rex averaged 28.92 her record crossing. The N -~ dis averaged 29.64 knots. The best day's run plevi the ‘I49 miles by the -~ -- was 736 by the Rex. (C. P. Cable By Guardian's S Wire ) LONDON, June 8-“Ths poll relations between Great Brit and the Dominions have b" Westley Thorburn, Ottawa. Member of the Order oi the Brit- ish moire relvul: Albert Martin Balding. saint John. N. 3.; Edward Peril)‘ Brown, Wolivilla, N. s; my. Brown, Ottawa: Mrs. Agnes Com-lie. Condu- Basls; William Johnston Cook. Grand Forks, B. 0.; Mrs, M“? Tum“? ChBPmBfl. Vernon, B. 6-: Nirs. Annie Charlotte Dalton, vmwuver? M155 31111118 1a Luella Danton. Nipawin, 535a,; 3mm, FCFZIISOII. Fort San, Sask; Marcel Gibm- Ottawa; Harold Stacey mahlm- Ottawa: George Thomas B51111’. Ottawa; wmjgm 1d,.“ m, tawa. Joseph Adelard Levcie. Mm. "w: George Frederick Lewis, To. 1011110; Mrs. Margaret Alice M“- 8118.11. Edmonton; Mrs. Daisy M". 3111111- Edmonmlll Mrs. Hannah Glen mwmla-ld- SB-ikflwon: Alexemder MQKEY. Truro, N‘. 8.; meme; Henry Manuel], Orttewe; Mmhaei C°11Y1°11y MacCormac. Ottawa; M155 Jean Ethel MacLachlan, Regina; Mrs. Ethel Alberta McKillop, Ce]. 8813'.‘ Clement Peter Moore, Syd- ney. N. 8.; Miss Kathleen O'Brien, pushed forward since the war, . the economic problems ere ' now beginning." declared Wa Elliot, Minister of Agrlculturm. day. , These would occupy British r Dominions‘ statesmen for the rl 1o years, he believed, and he commended some sort of per ent machinery to keep econ: relations under constant review Esqulrnalt. D. 0.: WarranLOH Anthony Augustine Rabnett, O ,- WB; Regimental Sergiz-Maj. Ge , Rollie, Halifax; Regimental BI Mai. John Wyatt, Kingston. BIRTHS rr this City. on ' day, June 2, i935, to Mr. and Arthur J. Guindon, a daughter MORRISON-din this City, ding, i936, to Mr. and Mrs. James Mr f, son. a daughter. f. , . DEATHS Villam Island, Albert Bay, B. 0,; Mrs. Harriet Osborne. Dawson City, Y. T.; Mrs. May Paul, Prince A1. bert. Basic: Mrs. Bessie Walden MacLean Reynolds. Toronto; Mrs. Jane Rose, Vancouver; Miss Etlsie Saunders, Ottawa; George gimp. son, Ottawa; Harry Slater, 1,9,. Chute. Que-i John Stevens, Ottawa; Mrs. Lilian carter Stephens, Port- age La. Prairie, Man; Miss Mona Wilson. Charlottetown; Mrs. Han- nah Zelda Woods, Fredericton. N. B.; George Washington Yates. Ot- tawa; Mrs. Elizabeth Jane Pendle- ton Crombie, Ottawa; Elijah Silver- stone. Montreal. Order oi the British innlpirr (mil- itary): Comifiander Ronald Ian Agnew, Halifax; Squadron Leader George Eric Brookes. Camp Borden. Ont.; Major Edson Innis Millard Burns, Ottawa. Member c1 the Order oi the Erit- ish Empire (military): Master Gun- ner Herbert Collings. Esquimult. B. C.; Commissioned Victuallin-r Oi- iioer John George Buckner Horne, LOVELINESS OF OUR PROVINCE KEEP IH WITH THE and Neckties. Old thin hands" at small cost. and returned. HEW METHOD PHONE 983 HATURE 2 WILL soon RENEW THE SUMMER All parcels called fo-l BOYCE-At Bonshaw, June 8, Mrs. Elizabeth Boyce, aged 82. I eral Wednesday, June 5 at 2 r irom her late residence. NEWSON—-At the P E. Island 1 pital on Sunday, June 2, M! . Inuisa Newson. Funeral irom raidence of her brother, Hr. Newson, Mt. Edward Road 1.. {Puesday afternoon service star F»; at 2 o'clock. funeral leaving at ‘I.’ Interment People's Cemetery. H? N. D. MacLear UNDERTAKEB EMBALMER Charlottetown and North u iitshiro Phone 14D l ». Yr. STEP SEASUH ' i Let us renew your last year’s Suit, Coat, Ha f gs become new in o - cllarllrns uu.