i l . I H‘ LIGIITLY I y um], i 41,151,512 iffif y.‘ " ' v ADVANCED P R I C E Featured b! o"? I50 Radio Stations u. ::.\ni;n \l'll‘ll (iizxi: AtTREYs nortvrvoou snow ‘Illl-‘Y .\.\'l) .\l.\KI.' WIIOOPEE IX ON Nil-I SCREEN l-Il)\\'.\'itl) o. ROBINSON “THUHDER i" THE til-FY” Q Q Q I O 00—-8,30 -— Come Early snows iii 3.15:7. l‘l.\‘i' Fll-‘TEEN DIFFERENT rxsrucnntxrs GOOD OLD RURAL STYLE O I O I O in Island Motor Transport Ltd. (‘hrirlntlettnvn to Summerside (Daily ex. Sun.) lxavcs White's Restaurant-Silt] a.m.--12.00 noon-—4.00 p.m Fummcii-"itle to Charlottetown (Daily ex. Sun.) Leuvcs (iourlie-‘s Drug Store-ICLOO a.m.—2.00 p.m.-—6.00 p.m. Two round trips on Sunday evening S FOR THIS BIG SHOW Mat. lfic-Zlc-Eve. 27¢—38c—45¢ ~I_r “on: ruriuiiu-wiio- s}; tlGiAGSiand cots" JEFFERSON IHACHANIER brings his inimitable cartoon scenes to rcnl life on the screen “ROUND-UP TIME IN TEXAS" with GENE AUTREY lhe Central Guardian (‘OKFEDERATION LIFE SL'R.~\.\'('E. IN- L-6T98-7-l2-312 COOK'S for perfect pictures. L-5469-24-24-tf SPECIAL RATES AT KENT BEAUTY SHOPPE. L-l0-l3-8J-2i. ADDRESS CORRECTED —- 1n the 1st year P. W. C. list of grad- uates Mi.» Alury l... McDonald, Pool-ids. was given as Souris. PLAN SCHOOL FAIR-The tea- chers of Tignish School District and vicinity held a meeting in the Dalton School on Friday May 28th to discuss plans for a school fair. The following officers were ap- pointed: President. Miss Bertha Duyle, Secy Miss Doris Gavin. As- sisunt Secy, Miss Eulahe Chuisson. ENJOYED HOLIDAY -—- "Miss Gladys C. Birt 0f Pisquicl East. has returned home from a visit of sev- erul weeks with her sister. Mrs. ollYel‘ i\lCKll\l\Ol‘t of Somerville, and regular late Saturday service. (‘hiirloltetnvrn to Souris-Elmira Lcivcs “title's itc-iauront 4.30 p.111. (Daily except Sunday) Elmirii-nliuris to Charlottetown LPJYPS lilmiiu 7.1.3 ;i.ni. _ Express tuirrcis carried-at reasonable rates. hu.~r~ lift‘ suit‘ null comfortable. cheaper by far than driving I..\I.'l'. your Loaves sum-is 8.00 a.m. (Daily ex. Sun.) t l Gill‘. l llufiing rooms flisll ut Bowman's Store. Hunter River and i Diiiistinis Restaurant, Kcnsington Phone ‘llQ Ch‘tnwn I.‘.\l.T. Ltd. Phone so ssitie Big; Stove Show Al‘. ‘The Prince Eilwaril "Poliv Jrnkins 7&1 llcr Plow B055’ on stnge 4k Iltl. (l. Bohlnson on_ SWITCH Shelters. .. hrs hcrel tl her Little = rill ivhich the? pflcmirg m 'l" ‘o p;»,q.-~.-. Fjrl~.t:;ii"rl'.= .'-t'l"“l"l‘. et- Auction Sale of I. Household Furniture“ To ln- wit] hy public nut-lion at it tlraltnn street, (‘har- lom-tovrn, on Thursday the llllh of June. household turni- turt- or tlrc late Mrs. John Richards, ‘including a number of choice pit-cos of old lash- innrtl furuiturc‘. also dining room. il\lll'I room. kitchen. bedroom turnitttre, rugs, eur- tziliis, carpets, pictures. m. etc. Sale to commence at 10.30 A. M. Terms rash TIIE EASTERN TRFST (T). l l l Ian; . f ‘"4 Yzszfr 1*“ Fxecu "Rotate Lute Isabel A. Richards .1. A. MACDONALD, Auctioneer. liiil” Georgetown — Charlottetown Bus Service STARTING MONDAY. MAY Illth Leave Georgetown — - Cardlgan — — - 48 Station - — St. Thercsas — — Peakes — — Pisquid — — — 8.00 A.M. 8.30 Ad“. 8.40 5.31. 8.50 AM. 9.00 Ad“. 9.10 A-M. i of honor of the grittlurites was carried stern taskmaster. much will be 7 out. in a very creditable lthsd. Miss Blrt, who is a keen split‘. fan, had the pleasure of watching the hockey payoffs in the Boszon Gardens and later Wit- ncssnu the Boston Marathon. She ‘also Yblléd many points of interest |in hfassachusetls and New Hamp- Fshire in company with Mr. and Mrs. McKinnon and was Krtatly im- pmued with the beautiful scenery and splendid roads. JPNIOR PROM HIGHLY EN- JOYED-The annual dance held by the Junior Plihosophy‘ students Si. Dunstanls University in way at the I. O. O. F. Hail last evening. The builrlinrq wits carefully dc- coriticd in the emblematic red and llllllt! colors of the college BB1- loon. flag< and such novelties add- ed much to the appearance. Dan- cing was hichly enjoyed to the rhythm of McKeai-ncys Orchestra. The large hall was filled to its ca- pacity 0r perhaps more than it could acccmmoclire to the great- est. advantage. The cliaperones gracing the event were Mrs. M. D. Gillis, Mrs. D. F. McPhee and Mrs. J. J. Morris. The event prov- ed a fitting close for the college year and even more so for the college days of the graduates. SUCCESSFUL IN MUSICAL CONTEsT~Frlends in this city of Brother George. De LaSalle Col- lege. Aurora. Ontario will be pleas- ed to hour ct his success it fl muslcnl concert which took DltlCE Fort Augustus -— 9.30 AM. \l'rh<tt'r's Corner 9.35 AM. Charlottetown — 10.00 A\IM' Leave Charlottetown — 4.00 I‘.. . Pcitkcs - -- — — 5.00 P.M.. (‘nrtligan - - - 5.30 mi. l Arrive (i"III'g'(‘i0Wfl - — 6.00 RM. Passengers are fully protected by Insurance for any accident that may happen while driving ln this Bus. ALLISON HUESTIS Arrive 21:0‘. on is "Thunder in the Gill." snirrzug; lnvnrd G. Robinson, an ndventurr- or}: that is bound to really tutti‘. _\0ll. Sbghtljv advanced prices are in pffyst for this engagement which also includes the latest issue of the Fox Ncws~vrhich remlnd5 U5 to rcmind you not to miss thfi Coronation Pictures Thursday. All Eyes Should Be Examined No authority claims that. an cye service will cause ALL cycs to see normally. But they all recognize that oy no other means can the desired results be secured, IIIII they assert that the ideal plan would he to have every pair of eyeyundergo an ex- amlnutlnn. You would be wise tn agree with them. 6. F. ltutohoson coming on . recently at Aurora. The competi- tors included choral I and vocal numbers, pianoforte, instrumental numbers and elocutlon. Brother George and“). J. Johnston, Wind- sor, ontiirlo. were awarded gold medals for a piano duct “Hunger- AND — GAFITOI. TODAY WED. i Rhythm" - ARGIBB. - Coming THUR... ulumii‘: THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Following is the text of the ad- delivered by Rev. W. V. MacDon- ald, D. 1)., of Hope River. “Gentlemenz-Wlth these exer- cises you conclude o. successful col- lege career that began some years ago when you came to this vener- able Institution seeking the high ideal which the Sage of old prais- ed as alone worthy of the scholar and expressed in this way- To know Wisdom, T0 understand the words of Prudence; To receive the instruction of Doctrine, Justice and Judgment and Eq- ulty. "Now, it seems ‘The root of wisdom and its discipline have been revealed to you’ and under- flstandtrig "The multiplicity of her steps‘ you are going out this af- ternoon bearing the parchment that ls the seal of your ‘Alma Maters‘ approval and her testim- ony to the world of your learning and your wcrtlh-we congratulate you on your success. "To St. Dunstarfs I offer my thanks because it has done me the honor of asking me to speak some words to the graduating class of this year; congratulations and commcndations. since this ls the first occasion ln its many years oi service that at its commencement exercises it confers degrees upon its successful students. For this indicates smother advance in its capacity to further the interests of those entrusted to it; it is another milestone that it has overtaken on the road of learning marking a new stretch along which. we trust. it will pursue its way with un- wearylng pace. "You of the graduating class are going from the seclusion of the College halls. the little world of the campus. the sollcitude of your superiors, lnto the great school o_f life. or should we call it. when we consider the time in which we live. the world's "Broad field of battle‘. Into this clamor and strife you are not being precipitated without careful preparation; your studies, the instructions given you, the discipline to which you have been subjected. all tend to enable you to meet life's inequalities with equanimity. You have acquainted yourselves with and evaluated the lives of individuals, eminent, or notorious. because of their deeds. You have done likewise with ha.- tions and observed how peoples inspired by common ambitions have carried on for the better- ment. of the world, or otherwise. Expect Much of Graduates “You have been fashioned for future responsibilities in a man- ner that ls beyond the reach of the great mass of your fellowmen. Much has been given you and from you. because the world ls a demanded. as privileges impose re- sponslbllltles. The duties you will be called upon to assume should not, we believe, cause you any un- due anxiety as you have made use of the opportunities your college course afforded, and therefore you should go your several ways with a goodly measure of Justlned con- fidence. ~ "What are some of the advant- ages you gained through a liberal education? The treasures of know- ledge that the ages had stored up were placed before you and you were made sharers of that accum- ulated wealth. You were enabled to explore and to appraise the teachings of sage and philosoph- ers. it was mode possible for you to survey the realms 0f poetry and kindred arts that ennoble the minds of those who come under their influence; you have followed science in its advances and noted how man's genius and industry have lmade physical laws subserv- lent t0 his will-An a word you were made posscssors of wealth o! knowledge and agility of mind. flooded with the comprehensive light that exposed the vistas of the ages, and uni-oiled for your contemplation the vast canvas in whose lights and shades you sew lGives Address At St. Dunstan’s 83rd Commencement laws to the eternal law, to bind dress to the graduates. at the things created to their Creator. It ,Commencement exerctres at. 5t. has directed you along the high- lbunstans University yesterday. way of knowledge in accordance with its glorious motto ‘Ex eodem fonte. fides et sclentln’. Prom the same fountain head issues faith and science. "We can in this connection re- call wlth satisfaction the historic ._ triumphs of learning according to the christian tradition, wiEh spe- cial reference to our own uncul- lured forbears. The races from which we are derived were brought under the yoke of the Gospel and the influence of the schools at al- most the some moment. Through the centuries religion and the arts and science made parallel advan- ces—a. forward march of holiness and culture that found its culmin- ating expression in the wonderful cathedrals and the great universi- ties of the middle ages. The or- lgln and development of the great schools, of Oxford. for example. but we might name a. score, took place under the fostering hand of religion. Is it not probable that the great hope of the world is a return to the traditions of that. progressive past, by ze-uniting in all our schools faith and science. “Another result of the christian system in education, one that. we are apt to pass overtoo lightlynsl- though it is of great impogtance in present day reckoning. is that it makes you true Democrats. There is such misuse of this term that we are in danger of losing its sig- nificance. The christian concep- tion of Democracy ls founded in the recognition cl. man's inherent dignity and his high destiny. ‘That destiny demands that there be of- forded to man the fullest freedom to develop his physical, his men- tel and his moral faculties. Hence legislative enactments that oppose man's natural rights and oflend his dignity are contrary to the most elementary notion of Democ- racy. Your education has impress- ed upon you that where man is not recognized as the child of God with an eternal destiny, tyranny Creeps 1n. sometimes exercised by a Dictator, sometimes under the gulse of laws to introduce some panacea. labelled ‘modern progress.’ To these fundamentals I call your attention to show that you are equipped with ideals and princi- ples that can serve the best inter- ests of mankind. ' l What of the World‘! "Now whet of the world lnto which Wu are passing? In gen- eral it presents o. confusion of ideas and of actions that is dis- quieting We note a. startling change when we compare the ideas that characterize our age with those o! the past. During the lat- ter. at least in those centuries we understand the host, iunld the civil disasters. the national and international crises, there was a social fabric that survived and-was the basis of recovery, 1t; was made up of common belief in fun- damental truths, a sense of social solidarity in the minds of mem- bers of society and above g1] 91g; the foundation of political and re- ligious (itemization. the domestic 506160‘. the home. was entrenched tn honor and ln permanency. All these tended after the stress of vfllflmlty to reconstruct that pert of a social heritage that. was worth salvaging. "Now. old beliefs are questioned. what wes hitherto generally u. cepted lS now declared antiquated and denied. often without any bet- ter reason than that former gm- erotlons held them sacred, so that minds are broken clear from any anchorage of truth and are tern. pest-test in a sea of clashing id- Bflls: Butllllfltl’. human and Divine l5 sneerlnizly rejected. there ls an individualism that contemris the necessity of social solidarity; there is an attempt to displace chi-w _Z find defenders. Beyond question. the authentic. authoritative doc- ltrtne of Communism is athelsttc. mtlttantly anti-God. _ “Such clashes between the forces of belief and unbeilef are notnew in history. I am recalling a. fum- iiui- llDfy to you when I speak of the tragedy of Julian the apostate that gifted, infamous Emperor of Home who undertook to destroy the church that his great prede- cessor on the Imperial throne had set up in dignity in the Empire. The unfortunate Julian. while his life ebbed away. acknowledged his failure crying out. in his hate as he hurled a handful of dust to- wards Heaven ‘Thou hast con- quered. Galilean’. Passing over the intervening outbursts against God's established authority upon earth. we note the work of Reusseamthe fruit-s of whose teachings were the excesses of the French Revolut- ion. lnd his followers of almost our own day, who had the declar- ed pollcy of putting out the lights of Heaven. We have confidence that no mutter how bitter or pro- longed the struggle communism will have a common end with those other movements, the Gol- ilean and his faith will prevail. the lights of Heaven will continue to lllumlne the souls of men. “We shall let the master-minds of Communism speak for them- selves ond from |u§ fundamental principles that actu- ate the movement wherever found. First I quote from Stalin's mea- sage to the Red Army lost Novem- ber, 1n which is something of the insistent. menacing beat of the savages’ tom-tom. sending forth its one message, religion must be destroyed. These are the Bolshevlst leader's wordo-‘Wecon- sider all religion as our Worst enemy. The struggle against all religion must be canted on re- lentlessly. There can be no com- promise with religion whose aims are basically opposed to ours. We may change our tactics in the struggle against religion. violence was used during the post. twenty years but now intellectual means must be adopted. The final stage will be reached when religion will only exist. as a thing of past his- tory. This is our goal’. SPIln Sheds Lurld Light “Now I offer something from Sphin which sheds o lurid light. upon the activities of the band who call themselves the Loyalist Government and the defenders of liberty in that nation with such o. glorious history. that Ls now ro- duced to such misery. It is from the communication of the Mints- ter of Education In the w-called Loyalist administration under Csib- allero to the Anti-God Congress JUNE 1. 192.1 at Moscow, held a few was I quote: ‘Your struggle ogaiiisst it llglon ls also our-s. It is our (he. to make Spain a lend of mllitlt. atheists. The struggle W111 be in flcult as there are still 11mm‘! resctlonaries who oppose (5.9 m‘; option of Soviet Culture‘. We ma‘ well ask ourselves whether n. i in our land who are agitating‘)? favor of the extension of 39,0“! Culture’ in Spain are deceived U ore genuine disciples of Stalinlsn: “S0 much for the lllldetlyin principle of Communism; howl: it applied in practice? The slmpi. formula of christiantty "mo, shalt love the Lord thy God Wm thy whole heart. and thy rierghbo, as thyself’ is thrown overboard Man, regarded as a superior brim becomes the slave of the State He possesses no natural rights ma. can be violated. He may no; i. it suits the State, possegg anyfiml party, not even a home of his Own The slaughter of thousands or ere; millions of citizens by the mo", by starvation or by forced labor, i, incidental to the national welfare The confiscation of all prlvaté property and necessary foodstuffs the elimination of the home. tlu wholesale snatching of chug...“ from the family circle to b. brought up like other animals in droves. marriage and divorce put (Continued ori page 9) _____E/fi°<y¢% DID you ever stop to consider the tens of thousands of revolutions that are mode by the fast moving parts of a bicycle every day that it is ridden-and of the millions of revolutions that means in a year? Yer, in spite of these countless turnings of metal against metal, the (LCM. bicycle gives many long years of trouble-free service. This is possible in a (LCM. bicycle because of the extreme accuracy with which it is made and because of the fine steels used in its manufac- turc—thcse steels are beat-treated in C.C.M.'s own furnaces. ‘These qualities are especially important in the three fast-moving parts- the ‘brake, the front hub and the big main sprocket bearing or hanger. F irsc in importance is the C.C.M. Hercules Coaster Brake which is a marvel of mechan- ital ingenuity and uciuacy. The least touch of back-pedalling and on goes the brake, smooth and sure, increasing in its effective- ness as you increase the back pressure. Then a forward turn and the C.C.M. Hercules in- tantly drives you onward. Then comes the (LCM. Triplex Hanger to t which the main sprocket, cranks and pedals ttan charity and religion by a cult of humanltorlarilsm and humanism and these are bullded on the sands of, and are as unstable as. ” EmQl-lohfi: the home. religious ol- leglance 0nd notional stability are being undermined by divorce which ts rampant in all ranks of society. "We need not insist upon the grave economic problems. a fruit- deplctcd the triumphs. also the disasters, in the intellectual march of the human race. inn Dance" while the former re- ccived a bronze medal for a piano scfo "Noeietti" in E malofi by Schuman. Brother George tAustin Connolly» son of Ml‘. and Mrs. J. B. Connolly, 96 Kent street. Charlottetown. entered the Nov- ltlate of De Lasalle College in October. 1935. He received the Holy Habit ln December of tho some yerir and pronounced his first Religious Vows in December i936. routes (‘QUILT-At the police court yesterday morning a party charged with keeping a gamlni house was sentenced to thirty clays in jail. An adjourned case of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of liquor was further adjourned until today and another motorist, arrested about midnight after a collision also appeared on a charge of operat- ing n motor vehicle under the ln- fluence of liquor. and was remand- ed for a week. A drunk hnd ln- oopable was sentenced to four days in jail, while two others on simi- lar charges. who failed to appear hBd their hall bonds cstrested. Personals Rev. T. Owen l-Iiuzhe". and Mr. Norman MacPherson. Montague. leave for Drawn today to attend the General Assembly. Rev. Wm. Reynolds, Ottawa. Pre hvlerv. has arrlvccl to take services in Belfast. Church next two Sundays. ‘I I0! 001th. UII for the “But. I do not wish to leavethe impression with you that this of itself would be an unalloyed priv- ilege. An Institution. though ltbe rated the highest in the lend. lacks the soul of learning. if there be not added another characteris- tic in the scheme of its training. This essential note your Alma. Mater has supplied in your college course. It has educated you ac- cording to the Christian tradition of learning. “This ls a matter of importance; for those schools that cut them- selves off from the christian sys- tem walk tn the shadow without ever emerging lnto the full light of truth. They concern themselves with effects without taking lntp account the first unchongtngcause: they seek for truth while ignor- ing the supreme Being who ls Truth itself; they try to measure vital forces, to understand the world of which we are a. port. to delve lnto the innermost strata of physical phenomena, while reject- ing the author of life, who set. the spheres themseh“ tn motion and holds |.ll things made tn the hol- low of Hts omntpotont hand. 8.0.“. Avoids False System "St. Dunstnns, avoiding such false systems, has taught you to sent-ch for universal truth and not merely skim the surface of the things of nature, to link natural fu.l source of the social unrest that is so evident in the world. We have our own disequilibrium. In this respect the harsh fact that one-tenth of our people were on relief last. winter and s great number more at the borderline of want can not be passed over and that ‘the pageantry of hunger, want and patches’ is with us. A few calculations based on the es- timated per ceplta wealth of our own Province enable us to see how this ls possible and the narrow margin of social security we enjoy. We are not helpless in the face of such conditions, ineffective as chaff blown about by the wind; we must better conditions and not content ourselves with crying ‘Ali's well’ as we are told the ostrich attempts to save itself from dongerby bury- ing its head in the slnd. We must face the possibilities that the bread lines, labor unrest, the relief-rolls hold for our land favored through the bounty of nature above moot other parts of the earth. Communist-n. One More Threat "We single out. one more menace to our culture, vlz., Ccmununtsm. It ls another of the moral. social and political plagues that have st various times afflicted mankind and threatened the existence of entnbllshed institutions-mt clvlllm- tion itself. 1t. is the world's latest challenge to chrtstlonlty. ‘There are some who deny this. but there are attached This Triplex Hanger is virtually the power plant of a CCM. bicycle. All of it; parts (except ball bearings) are made in the C.C.M. factory, and they include hard- ened ball races, stout cranks, an accurate sprocket and other true running parts. Be- cause of the smooth running o _ _ Triplex Hanger all of your pedalling eEort 1| convened into power to roll you along. The other fast-moving pan of a CCM. bicyclc-—tbe front hub-—-is a strong and care- fully built mechanism with o sturdy l-Xlt, ball bearings and hardened steel races. These three accurately made important parts of a C.C.M. Bicycle together with steel rims, rustlcss steel spokes, seamless steel tub- the C.C.M. in combine to make the C.C.M. "The Long- Li c Bicycle". C.C.M. ‘Indies’ " C.C.M. "Boy Scour‘ Tim Boys, buy your C.C.M.‘ Bicycle from Brace, ltloltay & tlompany Ltd. - .. SUMMERSIDE, P. c. I. CCM. "Girl's" or “B0715. C.C.M. "Crescent" Men's. C.C.M. "Standard Roadster‘ C.C.M. “Road Racer" . . . . .. C.C.M. “Ladies Sport‘ C.C.M. "Motorbike" . C.C.M. "Flyte" ...... .. . C.C.M. "Delivery" (lcssBIsket) 51.50 menu rnly be nrmiged for a small cnn rge. Ask your denier Remember, when you go to buy a bicycle, that a C.C.M. has everything that you can find in any bicycle plus many exclusive C.C.M. fea- tures, plus long life. $33.00 57.50 50.50 40.00 40.00 59.50 59.50 44.00 50.00 or a cnuloguc. EASY TERMS at CHARTET - SUMMERSIDE 'C.C.M. BICYCLES SOLD BY w THE BIKE SHOP The onE fully equipped Bicycle Repair Department in P-EJ- PHONE 602. never was a theory advanced. no matter bow absurd, which did not ‘si- F. A. STEWART JONES Special Representative 4r» Buy your C.C. M. Bicycle through Simpson’s Home Lovers Club. Down, 10 Months to Pay. NO INTEREST. uginoso EASTERN LIMITEL .1. J!‘