IIAHMS 01a MEREMAN n, perplexing thing about life ls m; niesolute complexity of reality, oi things andrelations alike. guardian. Ioudcd ll."- mwn aim-dim no Cents. {Go On Dumping‘- Press Stall Correspondent) M. her coming wheat crop at not ,1 7,000,100 tons as compared with m. prop of 20,500,000 tons last year. m; yours crop iithin sciiei Russia. amounted to 3300.000 ions, leaving l 51131105 01 ii.000,00i) ions "towards the begin- mg of :1. ncw campaign," says the (gifemtnt submitted by the R0551!" [eleggiifili to the wheat conference. {he quantity" of wheat exported from ma, lzirt crop will probably reach HDQILDOO tons. As regards the new “was: [HP sowing of winter wheat mounts to approximately 12,600,000 leoiares ta hectare is 2.4 acres) and Jhe $001113 of spring wheat will a.- izount to 29.700000 hectares . Trauslai-sd lulu terms of the Can- adian ivheat bushel of 60 pounds, yhe statement. means a wheat crop 2i roughly 1.Z16,545.000 bushels in Soviet Russia in the coming harvest. i. E. Lubimoil, chairman of the so- ziet delegation to the wheat con- gmnce iniri mp conference that Rue ill! was opposed to the United States Jolicy oi inducing acreage to meet he world wheat situation. "I must ieclarc," Mr. Lubimof! said “that so far as our country is concerned this iuggested solution is unacceptable." Will Bdttle For British Amateur Golf Ch’Ship (Canadia Press) ivEsTw-ARD HO, Devcnshlre, May ll-Youili scored a brilliant triumph ln the semi-finals of the blue ribbon of amateur golf in Great Britain to- day. The final ior the British amat- eur title will be contested tomorrow by 25 year old John De Forest, son of a ivealihy baron and 22 year old Eric liinrtinsmith, scion of the head oi an eminent banking house. De Forest eliminated Sydney Roper, in bis quartci- final match and went on l0 eliminate William Tulloch, re- doubiablo Scotsman from Glasgow by one hole. Martinsmlth, progress- "1 lllfflllsh the quarter final at the “Dense oi Peter Miller and in the semi-final accounted ior Dr. John lticCormack of Dubland. ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMING EVENTS. MEETINGS arcs. m"shciv and Dance Forest Hill Hall “Sdfly- 4700-5-22-31. ItW-‘fllflflding car oi cedar shingles P“ Colwells siding now. R. A. Mo. B11. New Haven. 4608-5-21-21 "Spa "A Noble outcast." in Peaks Hall. Monday, May 25th. 9'1"" 4071-5-21-31. “Rummage sale. Market Building, “My morning at 10 o'clock. 4722-5-22-31 "Zion Guild Cako Sale Saturday "i? 23. Bethune Hardware. ' 4720-5-B2-2l LJéPwno recital by pupils of Miss a "1 MOKQHZIO. HD1118 MQIIIOTlEl i" Sltlmlsy afternoon at ‘esii. 1684-5414! n .._.__ ""1709 Cardigan Dramatic Club sublime“ the ‘my mo“ B“? m m 88in Hall. May 25th in aid oi aints Church. eobl-b-fl-fli. n01‘ i, "_' “sinks. Bggangdsfilfiliysildgiglbem “slab-w 1n. ““°“°"n‘i‘a’-'i°-li-§fi CUB I vying ll n my. F"? “w M3. algal-aw: mes- I-Wo l-lasism. Emerald and Aldon m- K n some W- Boa. Everett wsaloeii. . (Ml-IN! nceisogllalnmcfm m “m m“ after ploy, s HIE RUSSIAN ilEsllP-[IINT [IF IHEBUNFERENBE M; Afraid That U. S. Will Blame Them If rthe Wheat Barley iFails, By Asserting [That They Want To m Ggoyge Hambleton, Canadian ypNDON, May LIL-Russia estim- g consumption c Brands Propaganda Here is seen iihe Duchess of York Weslstmie hospital. POPULAR DUCHISS AT HARE-OW HOSPITAL talking in Nurse Ambulance Sister Werhner upon the occasion recently when the Dulce and Duchess of York visited Harrow to open the Stuart Memorial extension of the Harrow and Predicts Which Believes A provincial election late in July, resulting the defeat oi the Lea Gov-I einrnent, is predicted by the Mon- treal Standard in a leading new: ar- ilrle dated Msyizo. The article ful- own. “Canada's smallest province, pro- verbially iickie in its political favors inasmuch ea it rarely grants eitier major political party two successive terms of offlce. is already in the throes of a general election campaign. However, bsliottirig is not expect- ed to take place until some time late in July. Prince Edward Island's Govern- ment, one of the two remalnlnil Lib- eral administrations ln the Domin- ion, is obliged to take the plunge in a year of depression desrrte any inclination government supporters might have to wait for better times. The die is cast in Prince Edward Island in view oi the four sessions of Provincial Legislature already held. This, despite the fact that ‘coders ,0! Governments at this time are not keen to face the electorate. Busin- .ess generally is still depressed. and [the resultant political unrest has created a situation more favorable to the critical "outs" than to the re- sponsible "ins." one feature of the forthcoming campaign, however, will be that unemployment has stalked in Prince Edward Island to s for smaller degree than in any other Canadian province. The Island legislature, st the time oi prorogation recently, comprised 22 Liberal members and 6 Conservative members, ,with two vacancies creat- ed by a resignation on either side to provide candidates ior last July's Federal election. ‘Do win a majority in the forthcoming Provincial sex-mi election the Opposition must make heavy Iliru from the Government. but desplh the lundiolll. politic-l observers expect the Govcrnmflll '0 be overthrown. Rarely llll I- 90'0"!" nionf. in Prince Edward Island been presented viii-h a. second suocosdvb mandate by the elcotcn and observ- m believe the present is a poor time in which m expect any ohm» in precedent. ‘Though the political situation in both Manitoba and Quebec is some- what diflorent from that in this PY0~ vincc the situation in those provinc- es is being watched closely therea- bouts. _:_ I: Honoured (Special to flu Guardian) 'I&GI'ID, Ont" May flL-Dr. l‘. G. Blntlng Ill awarded last night the Fllvelle Medal by the Royal 5o- oiety of Canada. His contribution in the discovery of insulin had done Victoria flies-neon maul ’ v. a Q4 more to benefit mankind than any ¥lfi~flfi In lb nan be was hid- Victory for Conservatives Defeat Of Lea Government Fore- ‘cast By The Montreal Standard, Elections Will Be Held In July. Duchess ‘ In view oi’ Bulgaria's proximity to the Soviet Union, political signifi- rance is read into the coming mar- riage of the Gmnd Duchess Kyra, to Prince Cyril oi, Bulgaria. Kyrn, who ls oly 22, is daughter of the Gand Dultc Cyril Vladimlrovlfich, pretender to the Russian throne. N. B. Premier And Cabinet Are Sworn In FREDERIOIUN. N. 3., May 21- Hon. Charles Dow Richards, Minis- ter of Lands and Mines in the New Brunswick Government, was sworn in tonight as Premier oi his Prov- ince, succeeding the Hon. J. B. M. Bsxtor, who has been elevated to the Appeals Division of the Provin- cial supreme Court. i-lon. w. Richards assumed the portfolio of Attorney General, which Dr. Baxter hold, and his com De- partment of Lands and Mines was lhlmflPllBOdMllDHOD-IAP-D. Tilley, former member without port- folio and President o1 the Ibiecutivs council. The only new member of the government sworn in tonightby His Honor Lieutenant Governor H. l-i. McLean. is Hon. W. H. Harrison, K. 0., who becomes Pncident of the nxecutive Council. without portfolio. The ordor in which the eight main- bars took the oath was: Premier and Attorney General- Hon. c. o. Richards. ' Provincial Secretary-floodlit" and Clerk of the Crown-ln-Chmoery- Hon. A. J. Leger. Minister of Lands and Mines- Hon. L. P. D. ’l‘illey. Minister d Public Wfl-L. n. -//, w‘ Covers Prince Edward Speaking at the Conserv- ative convention in Suin- merside on Wednesday night, Hon. J. D. Stewart, Conservative party leader, referred to Liberal propa- ganda which isbeing spread throughout Prince County to the effect that the Con- servatives, if elected at the coming general elections, would put Government Con- trol into effect by Order-in- Council. This propaganda Mr. Stewart branded as ab» solutely untrue. Such ac- tion, he declared, would be ._ xrw" w" Hon. J. D. Stewart Makes Em- phatic Statement With Regard To His Attitude Towards Gov- ernment By Order-In-Council. “we. Island Like the Dew o A, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1931 a violation of the statutes of the Province. “The members of the Lib- eral Government.” he added- “are judging us by their own standards. Because they have altered the stat- ute law and have taken power to themselves to in-- crease the gasoline tax by Order-in-Councll, they think we may do the same with the Prohibition Act. That is absolutely contrary to Brit- ish constitutional practice and it will not be counten- anced by the Conservative party if returned to power." _ Grants For v Vocational Education (Cauulian Press) OTTAWA. Ont. May flL-Grants for vocational education in Canada are to be renewed. in conformance with the election pledge of Premier R. B. Bennett a resolution-will short- ly be introduced in the House of Commons "to approprlatq the sum of $750,000 per annuin ior fifteen years for such purposes, payments to be made conditional upon agreements with the respective provincial govern- ments." The money is to be made available by the Dominion to assist vocational education along the lines of the act of i910. A51 men‘ on a contributory basis by the provinces are to be signed. A fifty-fifty basis of contribution with the provinces ls likely to be provided. The act oi 1919 provided for a term oi ten years only and expired in i929; and during this period $10,000,000 was psid out by way oi grants. Since the expiration the 1929 act no Dominion grants for vocational education have been made. Makes His Debut MONTREAL, Que, May flL-A till clean cut, handsome young man step- ped on the boards of Moysc i-lsll stage, McG-ill University here lest. evening and took a. distinguished Montreal audience by storm. He was Viscount Duncmnon, son oi the Gov General and Lady Bessborough, who was making his Canadian theatrical debut. The occasion was the final membership meeting oi the repertory theatre inc. when s varied program including a specially i-Iritten |plny was presented. Sir Andrew MlcPhall provided the material for the youth- flul nobleman to speck and it was eloquently spoken. The play “Good Theatre" took to task nearly every- thing and everybody connected with Montreal's latest dramatic venture. Most of Monbnl‘: prominenet industrialists. educaticnslists and other figures in the limelight were written into 8h Andrews play with kindly malice.‘ A. Bwwsrt. Minister of Agriculture-lion. law- is smith. Minister of Health and labor- Hon. H. I. Taylor. M. D. Ministnr Without Iurtfdio-lion. Ii. A. Reilly. 8. C. President of lbucoutivc Council and Minister without Pomolio-llm. W. H. Harrison, K. C. Hon. 1dr. Richards is the first na- tiveofforktosssumetherrsm- iership since the lm A. G. Blair, who resilncd in i606 after thimen years of office, to enter the cabinet of Bir Wilfred Lsurier. The York Regimental Band played tonight as s mcelsion of his friends and sup- porters escorted Premier Richards from the Psrlisnwnt buildings to hi: bona in acorn B- Burned Matress Contained $2,500 In Securities ST. THOMAS, Ont, May 21-—Her desire to observe clean up week cost s local housewife more than she had bargained ior. In overhauling the house. she threw away an old mat- tress. It was burned by garbage col- lectors shortly after. Later it was learned that there had been bonds mod securities to the value of $2.500 sewed up inside the mattrsss. D e n ia ls A n cl Counter Denials In The House f (clllldllh Press) OTTAWA, Ont, May 2i-A storm blew up in the House of Commons today on expenditures of money in‘ New Brunswick under the unemploy- ment relief plan. His remarks brok- en by a stream oi interruptions, Hon. P. J. Veniot, former Liberal Post- msster-General, declared that iive or six supervisors had admitted wrongdoing before the provincial royal commission in New Brunswick examining into the expenditure of money on roads and bridges in that province. These men, he allegedwere in the provincial employ in connec- tion also with monies expended] through the Dominion unemploy.-, merit scheme. Mr. veniot charged that a. defeated Conservative can- didate in the 1080 provincial election had been a bridge superintendent in oounectic with a bridge built by the province near Bathurst. N. B. This man was given credit on the pay shoots for ten hours work per day st the rate of sixty cents an hour. The worlnnen under him. however. only worked eight hours. Mr. Ven- iot wanted the Department of Labor to obtain from the Department of Public Works in New Brunswick certified pay shuts on monies ex- ; ‘ ‘ under the Dominion unem- ployment plan. He wanted an in- vestigation on receipt of these pay sheets. lie would provide the names of those appearing on the requested pay sheets into whose cases he want- ed investigation. A strong retort csm¢ from Prank n. smith. icons. Carleton-Victoria). Mr, Bmith expressed resentment at the imputation by Mr. Veniot. that any-member of the New Brunswick Govemmcnt had been guilty of any wrongdoing. w. Venlot denied that he charged any member oi the Gov- ernment ci New Brunswick, but Mr. Smith declared that such an impres- sion had certainly been felt by the speech of the ex-Poetmaster-Gener ll. This whole question, Mr. Smith Read by Everybody As Misrepresentation u Scholar WINS MODELLING PRIZE Miss Sylvia Hahn. daughicv of Gus lave Hahn and niece of the Canadian sculptor. Emmanuel Hahn, whose winning of the scholarship for first year modelling at. the Ontario College of Art. Toronto. was an- nounced a! the animal comment-e- meiii. liiiss Hahn also ranked for several other prizes. The Canada Shipping Act (Canadian Press) OTTAWA. Ont, May zl-Cansdsls shipping act is so "hopelessly out oi date” that it provides that the form ior discharge papers shall show sail- ors’ wages in pounds. shillings and pence, declared James S. Woods- worth, Labor member ior Winnipeg north centre, in the House oi Com- mons today. With one slight excep- tion, the act had not been amended since drafted originally in 1854. There was no doubt the act needed revising replied Hon. Alfred Duran- leau, Minister of Marine. It was the intention of his Department to study it and‘ to draft a complete reforma~ tion within a very short time. (Canadan Press) TORONTO. May zL-Sc de- pendent are human beings is well as all living things upon sun spots and their cycles of waning rind ininnsiflcail , that even the number of people on the earth is now thought to vary with their strength or weakness. R. Mcldrum Stewart, F. R. S. C. to- day told the joint session oi the Astronomy and Royal Astrono- rrfcsl Society of Canada at the Royal Society o‘ Canadi annual meeting. provincial royal commission had been received. On behalf ci the Min- ister of Public works in New Bruns~ wick, he wished to state he was fully satisfied "that when the report is made to the Provincial Government it. is found that any persons have been guilty of taking funds out of the exchequer of the province or oi receiving monies unfairly or unjust- ly, not only will they be asked to make restitution, but they will be prosmuted according to law." ' A general huh-hub developed when Mr. Smith and Mr. Veniot engaged in cross-chamber verbal dueiling on past political history in New Bruns- wick. When Minister of Public works in New Brunswick, Mr. Veniot refused to pennit judges or lawyers to conduct investigations. Mr. Smith declared. in one investigation it had been found that 8 year old boys were on the government payroll and men had confesed to drawing money all season when they had done no work. Yet Mr. Veniot. it was charged through legislation immunized them from making restitution. This drew further denials from the former postmssterfieneral. who took the floor on a point of order. The facts lncbcycnocuntiltbecepcrtofths stated. should have been better leit as stated were correct. countered Mr. Smith. 12 PAGES i in two stories today which, although], There alter. MAXIMS OIA MEREMAN are no circumstances in the world that determine action cannot ‘BF UNRESTI Change in Spain Make Little Difference l Survey Finds Europ- e a n Disturbances Economic Not Polit- ical. LONDON, May 21. (RPM-The wind irhich sworn Spain from mon- archv in republic ruffled the surface ll! other European countries, .1110 did no n1orc. A [lnitcrl Prc=s survcj; of economic condition“. and otlwr fac-. tors o.’ unrest. but nofliinr: indicat- ing that. Spain's l‘€“-'Dlllfl0ll'i"‘/ r-X-‘ ample will be inllnwcd elsewhere hi! the near future In Spain itself, i‘ was realize] that. a change in zznv-"rnment can bring no millenium Observers and oillixisi: agreed that the implantation ll tn.- republic did not wipe out all polit- ilCfll and social problems. hut l)l"ll.'§l'i[ _inio porter a regime bPllFVCd to htne fgreaier chance of achieving satis- i farciiv. Fvcn in political matters, . larchy-takin): the political form of ‘a. "monarchist rigl-it." seekm: r-prrir. lllllllfi’ to effect restoration of the Bourbons-ivas cnvisagetl. Economic Problems Loom Exportation oi capital was seen in Spain as in several other count- ries, as a major menace of the pres- ent. Evcn before the republic was declared many aristocrats and ucb- ies made heavy withdrawals oi de- Continued on page 6 (British Urited Press) LONDON, May 21—Right Hon. J. H. Thomas, Secretary of state for the Dominions, is the central figure officially described as "pure specul-y ation" are believed to have muchi substance. H. Wilson Harris, the New Chronicles Geneva correspondent, and a well known authority on the Leagvo, asserts that Right Hon. Ar- thur Henderson, Brltish Foreign sec- retary, is unable to sign the conven- tion which will make it possible ior European farmers to obtain credits at a reasonable rate, from the lnier- national Mortgage Credit Company, because of Mr. Thomas‘ opposition. France, Italy, Germany and other European states are going to sign, but Mr. Henderson is limited to mere approval owing to difilculties in London. Thomas declares Harris cori- siclers that any assistance given to European farmers means more com- petition for Canadian and Australian wheat, although this fear was not expressed by any oi the wheat-grow- ing ccuntries at the recent Rome con- ierence- The other story, regarding the much discussed Secretary for the Domlnions, is that he will not. go to Ottawa. ior the Imperial Economic Conference uness h» has a concrete wheat quota proposal to put before the delegates. In this connection. the proposed wheat quota has now pass- ed out of practical politics so far as the present. Parliamentary scssion is concerned. Right Hon. Christopher Addison. the Minister of Agriculture told the. agriculiural group oi the Labor Party last night that the Cab- inet is cqnnliv rlividrd on the ques- tion. but. h:- said that the whole mat- ter would be discussed thoroughly at thc Ottawa conference. 'l'his means that. WHOPVPX‘ goes in ihc Canadian Capital for Britain will not take any British proposal: with him. but will ascertain what Canada and the oth- er Dominions wish the mother count- ry to do. “fhe-ther nr not this is to ihr liking of Mr. Thomas remains to be sac-n, but his enthusiasm ior ‘closer Empire trade relation: is well known, anti h» fails to see why Lib- eral opposition should prevent him from taking propmls to Ottawa. principal capitals disclosi-d stringent . iiactxiry solution than had the moiz-i the i Hflflfifilblllll oi a reaction toward mon- ; Annual Subscriptions Delivered 66.00. Byllnllfilnldluld U-LLIIJO. IEIIRDPE snu ’si|nwss|tiis-_ . _ , Ex-Przsoner = a HEADS SPANISH ARMY Don Francisco Agulleray Agca, a i military prisoner during reign of Al- iionso, who has been appointed cap- itain general of the Spanish republl s l land forces. 1 Plutinum Is i Suggested As A ‘Substitute tOanadian Press) i roaoivro, May ZL-Declaring the ivorlds available gold supply to have been so effectively "cornered" by the United states as ‘to render it un- suitable for monetary purposes, B. K. Sandwell, economist of McGill Un- iversity, in an address before the Royal society today suggested that Canada alone, or in co-operatlon with the rest oi the Empire, might detach her currency from the mid standard and substitute some other basis, pos- sibly platinum. MR . 0 M A sgBreak Threatens P l E x E DIBetween Vatican And New Govt. MADRID. May 21—It was learned authoritatively that negotiation: concerning the papal note to Mad- rid over the recent anti-church vio- lence in Spain have prevented the Spanish ambassador, Louis Zuleta, so far from presenting his credentials to the Holy See. The strictest diplo- matic secrecy still is observed con- cerning the contents of the note. Cardinal Segura, primate of Spain who fled the country, was reported today to have been called to the Vatican as an advisor to the Pop! on Spanish affairs and these reports said he would not return to his post in Spain. .1711;- Weather, Etc, {NE lilo W00 Lilies (UESSINQ (AMEs WILL PROBABLY Chow UP to BE A WEATHER rum l ronoirro, May 23—M0derttd westerly" winds, partly cloudy, witK slightly lower temperature. Temperatures Maximum ... ... ... '71 Minimum . .. 51 High tide this afternoon at i254 and tomorrow morning at 3.10. Sun sets this afternoon at 7.25 and rises tomorrow morning at 4.28. First quarter moon Saturday. Mal 24. 3.39 p. m. Summer-side tide eighteen minutes istcr than Charlottetown.