"III! in “inli L0 Ann-alan- Editor-n- IIII per y-r lll advance) wmesr rvmvos FIRST, _ ‘St. Dunstan’: University yester- passed its 81st milestone, and .7. great interest taken in the con- _ ‘vocation exercises evidenced, more ltrmlgly than words can do. the place which this noble institution holds in public regard. The main . address to tho graduates, delivered ' by the Rev. A.,A. MacAulay. Bt. ‘S Z ‘Eiljfifiififll Tspur, year aiter year, to successive classes of students, who have gone forth ‘into business and professional life, into the Church and into nigh offices of State, a credit to their Alma Mater, to their Province, and ' to themselves. Who can estimate the value of such training, or the 71.5 fnntribution to Canadian cltiuen- ‘If. ihip which st. Dunstans, 1n its 7" more than iourscore years of exist- }. once, has made? i One hears, from time to time. T} criticism of higher education as be- ing unprofitable in a world chief- {T- ly concerned with economic read- fj justmaut and with problems purely scientific, utilitarian and practical. l, Buch criticism is not new. It is one of the oldest of educational heresles; {Q not need it be answered otherwise Q than by an appeal to human experi- F once. can man live by bread alone? E can he make progress, even mat- erially, without vision? Can he _ thrive on scientific formulas, un- leavened by religious and cultural a ideals? Let a once ardent student a of the gospel oi scientific material- “ jam speak on this point. We know not what, ii any, panacea. Mr. H. G. H Wells now has for humanity; certain g n u that in ma, when the follow- j ing passage was written, he had I come to the end oi the trail in his ‘I starch for a scientific utopia: , “The analysis oi matter in the last g Quarter oi a century." (writes Mr. ' Wells), “has reached a point where itllasceascdwbeinl-lll/hllmln u, sense wonderful. It is incompre- p hemsible. Every statement is a par- p, gdox; every formula is an outrage q on clmmon sense. One is left baff- led as by the hieroglyphics oi an in- sane scribbler . . . We have follow- m pd our deductions further and fur- Bither into a stirring crystalline com- m‘ t oi multi-dirnenslonal curvatures md throbbing reactions. Energy is d is not, and then again it is; all l‘ lg flickers in and out‘oi Not- ‘ ‘ there is an irrational bound ‘motion, there is a limit set to d tho range oi temperature. Space is us bent in some inconceivable fashion "4 io out straight lines re-enter into ithemseives, gravitation is a neces- ' quen oi duration, and gum; are tho orbits and harmonies QEJIEEIJLBKKJ 1 “I of infinitesimal electrical changes. m, linsteinb own description for POP- enlightenment of his space- la time system with its bent and pos- a!‘ ‘biy unstable oo-ordinates reads to ', ms like the description of a clear II gbloyi goes wider and further; and vibrating four-dimensional haggis. l9 ilohr has imposed a rlnoll-ns inter- “ mission upon the ‘whole universe- “ In the depths or helshte o! physics- ‘l for one word seems as 800d 9-! 91° other when all direction is lost. I lfllflnd my mind sitting down at last hflhgugfied of effort inlmuch the - inoou oi Albrecht Duerel-‘s ‘Melan- g dholla.’ I have gono far along that fiiway, and I can go no farther into i‘ /vvDh-17y t no that wilderness of vauishin! forms land pufla of energy in a fluid?!‘ ~diluensional field oi force." I What have been the practical re- agulta oi our boasted scientific ad- fiancelnent? They were summed uP . w Mr. Ii. W. Beatty, nesident oi a Canadian Pacific Railway and .. aunoollor of McGill University. in l3. irccent baccalaureate 1544"": "w° Id, ploughed lands to the r1189 the desert and to the‘ line where ' soil ends in the rocky wild"- og the north. We built rall- ' from seatoael. We linked the “m”; ‘m1. ghdpl. we destroyed barrier of we W “m” . h, w; split matter into if-l "f... h-agmentr-evon to the PW‘ "~~ mattoroeasutobomaim Jaematoboforee. Welmflfi mnhouooxlmowladcotvill- brokledownthehfl°1“m' Eli-I. OIQOR I. IILIII, I I. Illtllfiliflbl. .. Lin! ~00. DA. Qnallnnn. .l 1, ~ldlt0oaa¢ | manor-all lo mooning Ill-Ag “anoint ch01! to It III gull [d [0 mailed WEDNESDAY. HAY £9. 198i. ., Pcierfs Bay, eloquently summed up the ideals which have guided the faculty and. which have been the Ilnm. I213. Q .l. Walton III II Funk. our) not. In can: and onus Icahn. gave too little thought to those spir- itual values" by" which all numan progress must be weighed." Words of wisdom; words amply justifying, if justification were need- ed, all that such institutions as 5t. Dunstanb University stands and GAS stood for in the life one. com- munity and m; naticnl. - A POPULAR MEASURE ‘The experience of the Bennett Government in administering the Farmers’ Creditors Arrangement Act, says the Mail and Elnnin, has established clearly three facts rela- tive to tho attitude oi mind of Can- adian people: (a) ‘Ihat in a very real way they are of assisting one nniiiihh the creditor by making concessions. the debtor assuming new obligations based on what he honestly feels is his capacity to pay. (b) 'l'hat the very situation oi be- ing in default has tended to develoP misunderstandings and illwill, which can be readily eliminated when the parties get together under the guid- ance and direction oi a. conclliator. (c) ‘ihat farmers, however debt- ridden they may be, have a natural aversion to bankruptcy and prefer to seek compromises on the part oi their creditors in order to readjust their fins ' i difficulties.- To the end of April statistics from office in the Department oi Finance as to activities in the various provin- ces under the Act show that there were 48,120 interviews, 8,873 propos- als and 3.424 settlements In addi- tion, to thsend oi April, the Boards of Review had formulated 8B1 pro- posals, so that up to that date an aggregate oi 4,065 settlements had been effected by Official Receivers and Boards oi Rev-low. 51111012141. Nora's N. R. A. is having hard sledding in USA. law courts. No sooner does winter go than forest files start. One blessing of being poor is that there is little danger oi’ being kid- DBPPCG. At Ottawa they are inclined to rush business in order to escape Ottawa's torrid weather in July. As there seems no prospect oi Provincial or Federal elections until the Fall we may yet be able to enjoy the summer without undue political heat. The Governor-General has gone to Quebec until the middle of July. Indications are that he will be here until af .1‘ the September elec- tion, and probably leave for Eng- land in October. ' Apropos the NRA. judgment at Washington, a retail advertisement by Gimbelso: New Ylork, said last week: "As merchants we have no right to take sides in matters of this sort. As merchants our "Share the Wealth’ plan consists in buil- ing the largest quantities oi mer- chandise wc can absorb and selling them cheap. This plan has Put thousands oi people to work. This plan has helped tokecp factories running. ‘Pilot's ‘ha-if oi our ‘Share the Wealth’ plan; more work for more people. The other‘ half is to sell you the things you need and must buy at prices you can afford." Government interference with in- dustry to which little objection can be taken, is the oat-opera" ex- tended by the Canadian Customs to ti; Canadian Travel Bureau at Ottawa, whereby some customs routine at the international border, which frequently deterred the for- eign sportsman from visiting 0on- ada, have been relaxed. Mo coming hen with fishing-rods. guns, goif_ clubs, olnlflfll material and such like will notbd required to daclsm than on varied and various governmental forms. An omnibus permit puovidb for tho declaration ofallitemaandneitberbondnor depoafl will b! required, W 70 I period of six urchins. Notes By The Way The Bureau oi Advertising, rur- veying the whole field of publicity media and reporting to the Amer- ican Newspaper Publishers‘ Asso- ‘ “ now meeting in New York, says: "The final conclusion is that the advertiser who uses newspapers alone is getting the best available coverage at the lowest cost." There were plenty oi figures to back up the paragraph above. but one docs not need to consult figures to ap- preciate the soundness of the coil- clusion. Every magazine has some leaders. Every billboard is seen by some persons. Every radio station has‘ some listeners. But everybody reads the n. porn-Border Git- ies Btar. The world’: largest land pllllt. pride of Soviet Russia. has been destroyed, with shocking loss of life, by the fool antics oi a "stunt" performer in a. small machine. It is passing strange that. with the whole upper air in which to do his silly business, this man had to manoeuvre under the wings oi a. mighty passenger-carrying plane. A writer about Stevenson said that at first glance Stevenson was anything but an attractive looking began to talk a. light flashed from his eyes and his whole countenance became beautiful. Daniel Webster had suph a, noble and sculptural face that when ho walked the streets oi London it was remarked that he looked like a god. The face o1 Napoleon probably had more to do with his matchless hold upon his followers than anything elm outside his dominating personality. The story oi our lives is written in- delibly upon our faces, as though bathed with every thought we think. Our faces even betray the honeyed or insincere words that we say. Agoodroadhnoeurcforbad manners or for wild driving, and many a difficult bend is safe en- ough until s difficult character at the wheel o1 a. car comes along to negotiate it. This ancient human fact holds true for the pedestrian as well. A vast amount oi educa- tion remains to be done as the fix- ed crossing places and light con- trols accumulate. walkers will have to learn to conform to the simple rules in use at such points. Penalt- ies. no doubt, will come for the walker as for the driver involved in a glaring default, but it will be time encullh to think of that when street organization has created a more coherent state of affairs. And there is always this footnote. When all as been done to main move- ment definite and predictable, en- lightened self-interest wlll remain the may to safety on any road whatever. Emperor Hallo Selassie, by de- cree, has abolished selfdom throughout Ethiopia and has also ordered a. programme to eqllallm the system of land taxation. cal- culated to "advance the country a thousand years in civilization." If Ethiopia can also placate the 8769/‘ power which is threatening its mace, there should be an era oi contentment ahead for its subjects. William Hazlitt. in one of his sprightly and scintillating essays. speaks of the man of genius as wanting in Judgment. He explains m; by saying that "it is not a want of judgment, but an excess of other things" that creates this im- pression. He speaks oi such as the “willingly blind." The trouble with so many of us is that we look at no many things, and hear so much, that we see nothing and ab- sorb into our minds very little o! that which makes life iull, vital and thrilling. The genius overrides cus- tom and brushes the foolish barri- cades of convention aside. He must stand apart. He must be individual. He must lead. He is seriously a. man of thought and action and must not become mired in a. maze of excuses and apologies. He must be willing- ly blind. Edbon was very deaf most of his life-entirely so during the most man. but just tho moment that h~.-..‘ fluid ter-Beul- dyes/lea ness or sromcn AND m. resume causes man! svmvrous tho condition. colds" that can be caused oy o". as food allergy-being sensltivg reltain foods. "Several persons may pm-tgke o! the same food to which each is lower or very highly sensitive and shortly after eating one may develop hives (urticaria), a second rhinitis-- llllflanlmaliuzl oi lining of nose, a (hleathless- 1lrss) and the fourth allergy oi the stomach and intestine resembling food poisoning. This stomach and intestinal ren- sitiveness to foods may be caused by the same factor as asthma, hay "fev- er and urticaria." I am quoting Dr. Ernest r Risley Eaton in an address to'the New York Academy of Medicine. The onset of the attack may be sudden or gradual and the attack so sharply defined that the food caus- ing the disturbance is at once rec- ognized or determined. irritability particularly while eating, tiredness, overeating. careless cooking may also be ly to blame. Dr. Eaton mentions some of the symptoms or manifestation oi these food allergic attacks aflecting the stomach and intestine. They are: pain over the eyes, pain in back of the head, swelling of the eyelids, llos. tongue and membrnno (lining) of the mouth; canker sores, blurring oi vision, fear of pain, pain, nausea, fullness after eating, disten- sion oi the abdomen. diarrhoea or constipation, vomiting, pale and flabby skin, dizziness, exhaustion, sweating, colic, flatulence (gas), heartburn, lowered blood pressure and collapse." ' I believe most of us know one or moro foods that we may like but which do not like us, as the saving goes. We recognize or know these particular foods but there may be others which we do not suspect. The suggestion is that when we have the above or some of the above symp- tonls we should think of food allergy and try to find the offending food or ggtds and leave them out oi our Mothers-In-Law (London Times) There are strong men in ‘Iexas, with sharpshooters ln their hands and bullets in their bodies, eq ally ready to pepper or be pep red. They are above the common human weakness rejoice in the exhilara- tion of danger, and are braced by Hi6 challenge 0f unmanageable bucking bronchus. To such nlen mothrs-in-law present nn cause for fear. Fifteen thousand people have been lining the streets oi Amarillo on Mother-in-law Day, and they watched without blanch- ing while 3,000 mothers-in-law marched past. ‘File Governor of the State, in a vigorous denunciation of sons-in-law and their perverse ways, which showed h-im to be a worthy successor oi ‘Ma!’ Ferguson of Texas, declared that no beings have suffered more misrepresenta- tion than mothers-in-law. I: so, it is not the misrepresentation of ignorance, due to a failure to know the subject at close quarters. Long before there were music-halls there were mothers-in-law: in fact music-hails, like clubs, developed as places of masculine ease and enter- ‘ainment, ii not because of mothers-in-law, at any rate because oi a. widespread desire for some- where to escape from uneasy homes. 'I‘he joke sticks because mothers- ploductive period of his amazing inventions. He used to say that it was a blessing for it shut out from his mind so much that he didn't want to hear anyway. allowing him to concentrate in a manner as he otherwise would not have been able in do. The willingly blind sq! the big things ahead. Their is a thrown vision, selecting the essen- tial and making it a part of their creed»! creation. " The dominion: am not. o! owl‘!!- bound by the tcrlns of the Iiocarno Treaty, but in a general way they may be regarded as supporting its peace-preserving purpose. If, how- gver, this country were to incur obligations further afield on the Continent, then it would certainly be at the risk of causing a split in Imperial sentiment. The domiuions are lees concerned even than our Qwn popla will}! any elaborate lid;- work of arrangements in Eastern Elnlopc. 111st ll clearly one of the molt important emollient-ions to be taken into account at a moment when the promise of support from Great Britain is being aousht in in-law have stuck. They have all the qualifications for getting them- selves disliked-superior and de- tailed knowledge about how a house should be run, and how a particular wife or husband should be treated. They can hardly be out-argued, for they start with years of practice in the tactics and manoeuvres of do- mastic life, and can produce knock- down arguments from their mean- ories of the early years oi their child. Freud has played most tedi- ously into their large hands. They an equally uncomfortable when they are very wicked and when they are over-righteous. Juvenal had only the wicked sort inmind whenhelothhlseligofll th sixth satire, making lubstan- FOOD ALI-EDDY 0B SENSITIVI- A few years ago the idea that oer- tain foods could cause a “head cold" in some individuals was ridiculed, but to-day it is so well known that when an individual finds his "ayes and nose running water" he i; onnn ublc- to put his finger on the p". tlcular food or foods that caused However it is not only “head min foods but other derangement! of the body processes. This is known to nmuufioffiiul Mini ter From Oppos on Press E I T1118 D pose, for which the Right Hon. R. B. Bennett b respected, those to whom his policies an an- athema. And ffhoso qualities, .in turn, expl ‘ the feelings oi wel- come and felicitatioal-whcther ar- tlculat or silent-with which Gan- udlans of all political suasion greet the return of the Prime Minis- ter from the King's Jubilee cele- braiions. Thlee months of illness and‘ a fortnight overseas apparently have not changed w. Bennett, as wit- ness his words. It's still "the job" first. It was "the job" when he went into office in i930, and, whether or not he has handled tilat job to the satisfaction of n majority of tho Canadian public, there can surely men indifferent to heat and cold, "1 be none who honestly claims that at any time in those five years lt has been R. B. Bennett first and "the job" second. He uses, too, the words "the way I think it should be done." Richard Bcdford Bennett has always known how he thought a. job should be done. It is timt same strong-mind- cdness that has armed his critics with the adjectives "domineering" and "autocratic." And apparently. ii’ MnBennetf/s faith in the ca/pltai- istic system has weakened, his faith in his own. judgment has not. Admittedly, the problems 0i the future course of Mr. Bennett, and the leadership of his party, are not clarified as yet. But it becomes ap- parent that, if the present Prime Minister does not continue that leadership, it will be due to the weakness of the flash, and not to any failure of that dominant spirit which has borne such a large share of Canada's burdens in the last five years. Mr. Roosevelt In Inflation (Ottawa Journal) The case against inflation- ageinst one brand of inflation-has seldom been put more forcefully than President Roosevelt put it in his condemnation before Congress 0i the veterans’ bonus bill. The proposition of this measure. known ofilclally as the Patman Bonus Bill, is that the United States Treasury print 32.200.000.000 of greenbacks, hand them over to the veterans. Mr. Roosevelt, warn- ing against this "deceptively easy method of payment." end holding that resort to such money would lead to other similar demands, add- "The first person injured by sky- rocketing prices is the man on the fixed income. Every disabled veter- an on pension is on fixed income. This bill favors the able-bodied veteran at the expense of the dis- abled . ‘ .. . . . Every country that has attempted the form oi meeting its obligations which is hero provided has suffered disas- trous consequences." Mr. Roosevelt was on the side oi history. The story oi what happen- ed during the French Revolution, the story oi what happened to greenbacks after the American Civil War, the story of what hap- pened in Germany after the Great Wa.":—ali tell the some thing. In- flation or the particular brand of inflation which resorts to printing press money, is a catastro, . If it could happen, or if it could be manag ’, that the supply of money could be made more plenti- ful without a rise in prices, print- ing press money would have no terrors. But it doesn't work that way. As soon as money ls issued without something tangible behind it, without gold or credit, than. in- evitably, men lose faith in its in- tegrlty, there u afconsequent flight from money to things, and prices soar. This, bad enough in itself, would not be so bad ii wages and in- comes soared with prices. But they don't. All economic experience shows that, under inflation. wages and incomes are the last things to rise, with the result, of course, that the great army of workers and mir‘d‘e- class salaried people are worse off than before. The extraordinary thing is that, notwithstanding this well known by all still plead for inflation. Thinking of all economics in terms oi money, and forgetting altogether that tho important ti the some points about mo thine is money value. or. seafhlfl! of trouser mom. to put it another way. m» mimic A ale-v l" "law"! =1- siizlo money that my?“ a "Wlwglg-“Gxn noisy: COOLING PM‘ l RIB '9.“ "um luoolos still naxfnul the difficult more money were printed. or all l" "l" "1"" '°°'l ""9"" iclntionligip u. littielssier’ {henna- tho economic iunialu. it u a» "W" "m" "l"- mothcr- dawisa yo enn- ¥ m‘ P“ 1mm ncufifi; sniffer of disapproval, ‘m "'7 “w” \ Rival Pine imllkini lunar-u Fran the Finest Ontario Buflay - o lru AI rxrnl coon snore. “Peerless I at the Price" llickey & Nicholson, SONNDIPS 0F NIGHTFALL Always Ihshall remember how the n t UOIIIOSbZD a garden, There can never A silence deeper than the day's last light Brings to a closing petal. Sleepiiy A tulip yavms and nods upon the wind, A bluebell tlnklcs faintly; four dclooks ' Pbrget that Time beats on eternally, Eiolded in crimson slumber. Holly- hooks Breathe delicately as music that ls thinned To memory; a bee aways on the stalks Where shadows hide his golden pir- acy. The moon comes slowly and its white hand rocks The gate until the last bright fire- fly goes Into the dark cathedral of a rose. This is the hour for lovers. ‘Close the door And turn the latch, ye old and weary-eyed- Tho white moon climbs the sky for you no more. This is youth's hour. These bright stars, tide on tide, Swirling from purple anvlis of the ht nig , Are but for lovers’ hearts. The dark wind sings Only for lips that meet when moons are white. Only for hearts that know no per- ishings. Let them gather shadows about them and go Light-hearted, where lilacs hang heavy and still With the new-fallen dew; let them whisper low, _ Forgetting that Dawn waits over the hill . I it is the hour for lovers when shadows creep; Ye old and weary, close the door and sleep. Gaelic In the Maritimes (Glace Bay Gazette.) They are, apparently, gobl g in strong for Gaelic in Prince Edward Island. A young clergyman in the island province conducts a service once a month in Gaelic and holds gatherings fortnightly in the village where villagers meet to sing, read and exchange news in Gaelic, ac- cording to the clerical enthusiast, ls n poetical language full of music and is one oi the oldest oi tongues. 'l‘he alphabet has l8 letters but makes up for the shortage oi letters by the numbe of ‘sounds of which there are 108. The English langu- age has only 42 sounds. The Mari- Just Received A largo quantity of FORM- ALIN, one of the but preven- tlvcu known for Smut or hut on Grab. F 45mm Whithead Hicky. ;.; ltwlllrootoroilnyilairio‘ color. tboflginal llllllollnriohllllnbung. autkhwthelbair. no . lllirm Ifllhlhn Betibliilolelmnouuh. ~fi GIIII O. b. ‘file 2 lilacs’ ‘time Provinces, particularly Oape Breton, contain the greatest num- ber of Gaelic speaking ,persons in Canada, according to the Tourist Department of the comedian N, tional Railways. Se Conservative Convention A convention of the Conservative Electors of the cond District of Queens will be held in‘ Ch’Tovvn, Tuesday lune 4, at 8. p. m_ in the Board of Trade Rooms, Market Building, to nominate two candidates for the provincial elec- tion. The polls chairman in each polling division in the said district will ca.H a. meeting of the Conserva- tive electors for the purpose of choosing five dele- gates to attend said convention. Dated this 20th day of May, 1935. SAMUEL KENNEDY, President R. R.» Bell, Secretary. v i_ivvvvvvvvtv vvv v v ‘m Conservative Convention A convention of the Conservative Electors of the Third District of Kings will be held in Cardigan, Saturday, June i. at 8 |l.llI. in the public hall for the purpose of nominating two candidates for the provincial election. chairman in each polling division in the said district will call a meeting of the Conservative electors for the purpose of choosing five delegates to attend The polls said convention. Dated this 27th day of May, 1935. wrslrnll cum rxcunsl A- F- MCQUAID, President. MARTIN MACKINNQN, SGCPOMTY H§Z-Z%3%_R‘===Zi%;R§HiH%Z‘-I Gelhr dates-May 15th to sou. lnglmlvg, p ' Return llmltpto agpminaummm u" |- l‘! Fares-on . _ -' l; =l;E§?E~:’E~£3h"°r...=‘~fi.-‘~EF-.;il'-l= ll ll v1. If. nnerns l “L u Great George gueoo ZK%R%5C%ZER%H%EEE a A‘; ‘xxnnx-na- Solutio l. 2. 8. 4. IP- T9‘! PM lays: Use But Quality 7154i lLRQ1I1fl!LA! ORANGE PEKOE ll IMIIII TIA "all oily in nd airtight pigs. .5; *.;.;;fy.;.». Bontest . Advertisers Name - W. D. GILLIS Ila-Collin & Co. Wadi-Bevan Bros. Ih-Angul Maclaeilun. l Bell-Angelina Blanchard. Done-H. H. liing. Groceries-M. E, Griflin. Light-The Mayfair Tu Boone. g Loaf-Stewart's Bakery. ‘ ‘ Pluza wmlwsas Min Jean Tbomppo 301mg; ~- - Mrs. Ernest Mutebglztilarloitgicwu, RR. 6. i Mr- Henry com. lu nawml ca. , - Mn. John MeDoagali, Fair-view. - ’ camp Plifll wlrmilns will in n.unn.nn-nnn f 1