F MAXIMS , or A -~ HERE MAN -“"‘»|r|il\Kd?* Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew -,~ _ . .....- -na MAXIMS ,_ or A MERE MAN 11.7 Hcwhohwisebefore his time willdiebdoreheisold. M I 'f A 3 0 M . "V -.W . . I U e _+ l I-"..‘..".»-‘i“"<‘l’-f-`-1-5 'iii'-° °-'55 cnAnLo'rrE'rowN GANADA, sA'rURDAY~ MAY zo, 1934 avi - Li- -= I a me--e.. M if ' ’ 3' -- .W __ 1 l Wg gag 14 PAGES '§}‘“i.‘t‘..'é'i’..'2.l?‘l.';.‘I. 3.°"5f"l‘. '.13 Urn I ri n Kin V Emir Feisal p.W.c. C ple-fosnriin or B... . . scuncucrm Successful .Year man engaged pursuits and to the bus as well as to the P!`°f¢5 Mr. H. H. Shaw, Chl ,mtiiunc one noted that it w mpg training. Print-l.pal’s R/ep0rt first for the newly cstablished juni ludshown honesty, abilit into rit pect which the students pay to th i0 a new Prince of Wales College. ANNOUNCEMENTS. COMING EVENTS, this rolumn at I cents por wer lirlrlly payable in ndvrmce. "Tclklos-».\ialpeque Monday. "‘Doii't miss the big show _Victoria Monday night. L v Zion Cubs nt Moore & McLeod. All School, Saturday, 26l.ll, at 6.3 . ' Ai Moore .\~ Mchcods at 2 o‘eloc.‘.:. .. ,H ive the three act play "Marry- climilliv by Mt. Albion Dramatic enlngmxllli- fllblon Hall, Tuesday ev- lsc - il-ly ..0th_ Admission 25:: and ' L-5243. "F“h”\"eW Players will ‘ __ present g‘;5lfnPl3_§' Mrs. 0‘Leary Goes into Ma ess in Afton Hall, Monday, Y 2301- If not fine Tuesdiy, L-5310. Wil. t: __ -ll A A’ '° mn! People disclaim \ '°""’“’“"|"y for smau .sm ‘ 'dim huh no not c, nf ` future no "nh .dnt :al .p_ 35:' unless the order 1| go. °“'“°‘* With payment. ‘ CHAaL0'rrE'rowN l GiiAnm/lu M m t Marks Close Of First Term As Junior Collegé- incniisunr Nm Mcimi Head of Roman Cath- W mt commencement exercises ~ Growth of College Wales College, as a jun were held Yell/014'-llsy Prince of Wales college nine students Brad- from 1860, and in 'I4 years had mad me institution- The ns- a great growth. Its attainment ha of the col1€8° WHS Well been reached by natural growt friends and relatives of Fifty years ago about 100 studen Premier MacMillan had enrolled. From 1879, when wo- Prlnclpal, Dr. B. N- men students had been admitted, t _ he reviewed the l’¢“"° “'°"k body had shown a measurable in- ) Work Of Session Commended gl fc. P. ny Guardian. special wire) tg _'IDR/ONTO, May 25-Most Rev. olic Church In To- ronto Was 82 Years of Age. Neil McNeil, Archbishop of the Toronto Archdiocese of the Roman Catholic Church, died at midnight. Archbishop McNeil, who was 82 this imp°’°““°° °f when the plans for the presen building had been made The ne of Education, outlin or 9, junior college. Pre- Mpcivllllan stressed the import- ofuiaintalning a high academic -for this greet increase. Whether in his report on the year's work, pp Rcperisoii remarked that the ---*___ pgslon, the seventy-fourth in the history of the institution, was the or college. He slated that the work of the year had been done in comfort. 1 Altliough the student body had ai- iooit reached the 600 mark, there had never been a suspicion of con- gestion in the corridors, and the, rork had been done in wonderful runouiizilngs, in an environment A N K G U A R D duct of the students and in the` work accomplished. In their com ,lurtabla surroundings the students Y. E Y and rnanliness. The speaker ex- pressed his admiration for the res- building had been planned with that number and the natural increase in P goverrurlent had been prepared fo ie iicvelopmtnt 01 Prime the large increase of the last thre was the development idea of the real pmposedto raise the standard in the ' use of the institution to the province Wrong profession by the refusal of 9 uwrsgr to individuals under eight- ,gp years of age. and eventually b requiring an additional year of_ acad- Ior whether if. was a reaction to th depression was difficult to say. 01 “Verity and an increasing com- mercial class of 60 or over, which had increased the number. It was (Continued on Page 3) REPUESED BY rlilrh had been reflected in the con Six Bandits Frustrated In Attempt to Rob iiistltutlon and to their teacher; South Holland Sav' With the new building there was al- There might be several explanations it bishop appeared on the road to re- credit on the scout leader; ond y There was now a Fourth Year class RIJBBERS ARE ings Bank. (A. P. By Guardiufs Special Wire) CHICAGO, May 25.-A bank guard “snncnncemrinla are Inserted In “Talklcs-Frencl‘l River Tum- tiv. L~s242. l L-5242. | ci ‘Ss -_rr-» v"Annual recital by pupils of Miss Lillian McKenzie, June 18th. L-5343 "Special Tiilkie at Kensington nltsduyiiiglit. L-5315. antcs, recruited on five minutes` ‘Buy your Cakes today from the L-5324, °°R“mmf\lli- snle. St. James Sun Pm- L-5207 'Src "A Cheerful Liar" by Lome Vellvr Di-nnnic club at orweii Mal’ 2301. and Georgetown, Miw mm- L-:cot "mfr the Cubs happy by buying i'0l1r other ii-om them on Saturday L-5268. M°'Clyds River play at Bonshaw logaduv. Moy zatn. If not fine, fol- ,5‘“K H-rht. Admission 25c and °~ L-5299 |,h°Y‘:_‘ Wm 5° 88 pleased as those m“ms°fI\0W receiving splendid m,,mn°e"""; mfmey invested in ld" lu wtth the Sun Life, Can- Mm I 89-11 Insurance Company. ,|_ A Ml’°’°Y Vldly- Inquire of to ` °°’°~ Mlmser. charlotte- vfho had waited months to avenge his son'5 death today repulsed a band of six aimed bandits kl°" MEETINGS, ETC`one of them outright, i'nortall§ wounding another and disabling a third. Storming the banks in the quiet little suburban town of South Hol- land the six bandits found them- selves trapped. Before they could i s dead, another dying and a third hi and staggering. The others dragged the third man into their car and fled, completely routed and in fright, The guard was Jacob P. De Young, 53 years old. Four months ago his only son was killed in the same bank by, police said, the same hold-up gang. De Young routed the robbers with five shots from a high-powered rifle. Those who could flee ran out into the fire of three or four vigil- notlce to trap the gunmen. Four escaped. leaving one dead and one dying. Three hours later a speeding car slowed before the Jef- ferson Park Hospital on the south _ side of Chicago and dumped out a 0_ wounded inrm who police said was Isadore Pincus, one of the South Holland gang. Hospital attaches said he was near death from loss of blood. The dead man was identified as John Cozzi, 21, of Chicago. The fat- ally wounded man, police said, was Ben Toccio, 19, also of Chicago. He died from loss of blood late today. South Holland was prepared for the robbers. Shortly before op:-ning time for the South Holland 'l‘rust do Savings Bank, Police Chief Leonard H, Lagestce spied a small, fast se- dan cruising past the bank. "1 think it's a stlckup," he told Charles E. Waterman, President or the bank. De Young mounted his post. A steel shield on the balcony of the bank, commanded a clear view of thc floor below. Lugestee hurried across the street of tne quiet little town, s settlement of Dutch truck farmers, and warned Neal Van Ksnegon, garage owned. K in their holsters. The bandits' car stopped. One door. Another waited in the car. Four went in. All were masked. shouted. Then came the time De Young bank last Feb. 10. him from this perch. TEHERAN, May 25-F1006! today destroyed more than 1,- ooo homer in tho city of Kem on the banks of the Kum Riv- er, It was leamed hors tonight. The waters were reported still rising and it was feared the entire city might be flooded. Van Kanegon got out an elephant gun. La estee loosened two pistols mm took up a station at the bank "This is a. stiokup," the leader had been waiting for since they found his son, Pfesr, 31, dead in the He drew a bead on the leader and shot. The bandit buckled and drop- ped. Ds Young swung his gun to- ward the second man, climbing up nn eight-foot partition to get at the money drawers. One shot knocked His Honour Lieuten- crease. Three or four years ago the . DeBlols, who Presen- students had numbered 350. and gxgitg °§§'§1;dh1:mB';:Ng,,°g‘°;Lf diplomas. 8115 With' that was the number at the time man céthouc Church m Toronto in . _ol _ as VE for 22 years. Pneumonia appeared, however, May 16, and Archbishop McNeil became gradually weaker. He had th pe ation. Mother St. Martin, provincial Archbishop McNeil was the eldest of a family of eleven children, rais- studsnt and advanced quickly, his teachers. In 1895 he labored amend the Ro- man Catholics of Newfoundland, spending ll years in that country, journeying along the rugged coast in b t d sailboat to visit Charlottetown, P. E. I. Hon. E. Lapointe Heads League Of Nations Society (C. P. by Guardlan's Special Wire) 0'I'I‘AWA, May 25-1-Ion. Ernest Lapoinie, member of parliament for Quebec East, was re-elected; president of the League of Nat- ions Society of Canada in Canada at its annual meeting here today. Practically all the other officers. honorary and active were re-elect- ed but a few new ones were nam- ‘ed. New members oj the council linclude: Reginald Rogers, Char- lottetown and Dr. W. WNW. M- L. A., Saint John. N. _B. Natives Killed By Wild Beasts (A. P. by Guardlan’| Special Wire) LJSBON, May 25-Snarllni. kin aids on villages and spreading WHO! 1" tho into-lor of portuguese Ml mmm and several natives are The Government has offered 1 iu-go pc-in for ouch lion oioln. and a number of hunting partial hive been orgnniled. ,.______---- MAY ADVERTISE LIQUOR. wnmrpmo, may as-iz. D. Waugh, liquor commissioner. In Til* I"l"l l'F1-gffl 1: =‘r’ =; 11|: l'l'l -lcni resentatlve regarding an article Whi°h appeared in yesterday's Pat- riot, Mnjor F. B. Conrad, M. M., President of the Charlottetown branch of the Canadiian Legion B. E B. L., stated that tile!! row on an ' . - - hms parishioners He became A,.ch_ some tmtiblo in the first days Peter‘s Wolf Uribe. -me were to dem-mme as fm- blshop of Vancouver in 1910, coming Work W Ch was Started at th” l possible the nature and extent of to Toronto in 1924. KEI1Sll'igf0n Rifle Rllllge, OWAIIK t0 SSl0N Mtivitles in this field' as (mn-ie He was auch” of numemus pub_ a. misunderstanding between Mr. SALE OF CANDY BY ZION out in the diffewnt In-o,,mce5_ g PRUVED GREAT Sl|GCESSi Interesting Program Preented By Boys ' Last Evening in P. W. C. Hall. A programme of lkeiches, songs and gymnastics put on by the city 305' S0011! U1'00D5 and Cub Packs under the distinguished patronage of His Honour Lieutenant Governor DeBl/ols at the Prince of Wales College Hall last evening proved a huge success. ’ R8-1181118 from the opening chorus down to the 'Tantalizing Trio” the were C0mDllCB.tl0!15 O! £118 blhddor Bild ad L result, the lender; gf 1,1-Qundg of applause from the large , Feisah to can-y on for h|m_ Enur Trio composed of Bill Trainor, Lorne Callback and Niall Burnett, illlpersoneting a, group of would-be received the last sacraments before ,radio artists provided 5 fitting ou. o o r max to In evenin of d _ 8 mirth an entertainment. Among the out of the help afforded them by Mr. Austin 'I‘n1.in0r in respect to “make- “VVll.at Bodlltini is-WTI!-t B001!!- ability in mathematics receiving Ink , ,_ receiving praise from hig early rviewed by a Guardian rep- ing Is Not -Commissioner Wai-ren. Be Prepared ' S0118! and Yells-Zion Wolf Cubs. Games-St. Panl’s Cubs. nrill-Kirk _Wolf Cubs. Tumbling-.Kirk Boy Beouts. ` 6@".*‘E1$lt\‘l'9' UGPMRODU-Bt. (By Guardian's Special Wire) PARIS, May 25-Aroused by wer talk in the Chamber of Deputies, Foreign Minister 'Louis Barthou to- day vigorously outlined a. policy of seeking peace, which involved re- fusal to disarm France or to agree to any rearmamcnt of Germany. "We don't want war," asserted the veteran minister, who, in the same speech, promised to take a strong stand on the matter of clashes on the German border. "We will do everything to avoid it. Wo will avoid it!" With regard in the border situ- ation, intensified recently by the arrest in Germany of a French ral- road man accused of insulting the Nazi regime, Barthou promised: "The government will a-Ct Wil-11.1111 the energy you wish." Stressing the importance of the safeguarding, of th, independence of Austria, M. Barthou declared that while the government never interfered in the domestic affairs of another nation he had indicated to Chancellor Dollfuss of Austria the ndvlsablilty to ease the TGPTCS* sive measures against the Socialists imprisoned following the bloody Vienna riots. He also discussed his recent visit to Warsaw, saying he was working to bring Poland and Russia togeth- er. R.ussla's proposed entry into the League of Nation; would be an im- portant event towards world peace, he added. The Foreign Minister indicated forthcoming visits to Rumania. and Yugoslavia and referred to meeting Tewflk Ruehdi Bey, Turkish For- eign Minister, tomorrow. Then he reviewed the disarmament question. After restating_ the traditional French policy that disarmament must be based on security and that France never would permit Ger- many to re-ann in violation of ex- isting treaties, the Foreign Minister declared that e. solution of the im- passe wss not impossible at the forthcoming meeting of the dis- armament conference. "At the meeting of the arms con- ference next week I shall do every- thing possible fo stress these prin- cipleg of French policy," he said. "I have promised my support to Ar- thur- Henderson, President of the conference, and the door is not closed. The French Government re- maim faithful to the cause of peace and to the League of Na.- tions " man-eating lions are me E Y * ' gc _ 3 , ; vis-; _ E ` A ` . 4 A r ’ A Afrl it reported to the 80V' .....$:‘.'.. lit. od... 0-- ---1- The most delicious tea ’§.’l°.l'.“.‘°..o..”°'°.;*§f.’l.l‘.’.lf° ".’..h. _.n_,~_,.-“_-;<_.__,<_» - s. . The seed pre-into entered the vcroiur numbo rr in-. an um mn ro s ef ioinr h°Sp“’“1 °n May 1° with 5” inter' Km? 8"” °f BUEHBHB hll lllll' Dfeoislon, exacltlieilrrelxxlll so skill- takin; tinge oust lxiwrrllu hs wa: mind The Princi ai doubted if the 'al “””‘°“° Wm* °m“81°°- Th°'°‘°" '» “°°"°° dlmlvhls parliament. fully rendered that they brought- games, no coin upon his son, amn- is 1' . L, e and kidney trouble. Doctors decided military coup detat are laboring to audiencen just as good as his war-like father. College, and referredto the or four years. At the present time an °P°*"m°n WHS Iiefressnry and it oonstruct a Fascist-inclined gov- The harmonizing in the various the student body numbered WL was performed May »15. The oper- emmcnt. choruses, etc.. gud the can-ying out ation was successful and the Arch- of the special acts reflected much Wvery- Cub__Mistresses. The Tsntslinlng C 0 N F E R C E UN ADULT superior of the Maritime Pi-ovinces| ,town guests at the concert was His a very satisfactory condition to find of Congregation of Notre Dame. ls, ,Worship Mayor Lldstone. -_---3----l a sister of the late Archbishop., The scouts are deeply grateful for ed in Hillsborough, N. B. His father UD" which greetly aided the ap- ””“°_‘ ,was Malcolm McNeil, a. blacksmith -°°*' DERYHHCB 0'! the personages on the and descendant or the Monciu or Returned Men Shown sim- Prof. L. W. Shaw At- `B , lltl l-51 in U18 ll- , _ I :A227 ° me md He Every Consideration "WWW twded. Mietmg For il Arch ish l . \ _ in 1;. .ssrnsl 1- work At Roi. 0...... .......c Organization At To blacksmith shop. i-Ie was a keen Range w‘;1i11°-G°d 31%! U40 PC1100 0! l'0I\t0. ' e ." . _ Professor L. W. Shaw of Prince of Wales College returned last evening from Toronto where he at- tended a conference on adult edu- \cation convened by the Department of Extensions of the University of TOLEDO, 0., May 25. - Khaki- clad national guardsmen whipped out their revolver; late today and fired on a brick-bat hurling crowd of 2,000 yelling strike sympathizers whom tear gas had failed to dis- perse. The troops, whose rifle fire yesterday killed two and wounded several, rushed the rioters' lines in Elm Street in a sudden foray after sporadic clashes throughout the day. The crowd scattered quickly at the first shots. Firing as they ran, the soldiers pursued the strikers and their friends down alleys and be- tween houses. Almost simultaneously two truck- loads of soldiers whizzed to the downtown district to break up a shouting throng of 500 around the ‘police station. “Were going back to get help and we'l.l come back here and strip you,” screamed the rloters as they re- treated. Stephen Kardox, 29, an employee of the Electric Autolite Company, whose plant has been the centre of the strike disorders since Tuesday, was beaten severely by a group of rioters and stripped of his clothing. Almost nude, he ran. from the riot zone into the vicinity of the police station wlth_ howling men in pursuit. Officers rescued Kardox, who had been called a. "soab." At twilight another brick barrage started. There was the crack of a rifle, and spectators said a guards- man had fired at the fringe of the crowd. A 2-year-old boy was hurt in an early afternoon tear gas bombard- ment of riotera. He was struck by a gas projectile. A police ambulance came shrieking to the scene. Guards- Toronto. Purpose; of the gather- men "rested five men, A su bomb 15 which one strike sympathizer picked up and tried to hurl back at the sol- 0 E H Dunnigan, assistant to Char- carrled on in different parts of Canada. The points of most general interest in these reports were thc amazing amount of educational work that is being clone among ceased, and thc widely divergent points of view as to what constit- utes ndiilt education. In the evening in the magnificent dining room of Hart Hull, tho delegates and many others were the guests at dinner of ,President Cody of the University of Toronto, who during the course of the evening delivered a very fine address on the place of adult education in the llfc of the people. The second day was given to a discussion if the reports nf the dele- gates and of the committee which ,had been appointed to consider the formation of a national adult edu- cation association. After consider- able discussion it was decided to appoint a temporary committee representative of the different provinces mid the interests con- cerned, whose duty it would be to survey and iiirtlicr encourage and extend the work now being done, and to formulate plans for a co- Iordinating organization for the iwholo of Cannrlu. The Maritime fmcmbers of this committee are: Professor A. B. MacDonald of St. Francis Xavier, Mr. W. K. Tibert, director of vocational training for New Brunswick, and Prof. L.. W. Shaw of Prince Edward Island, who also represented the group of six Cmadians who studied adult edu- cation in Scandinavia a. year ago. Previous to the conference this group of six had met in Ottawa to discuss the work which they had been doing since returning to Can- ada last Autumn, and to consider the problems likely to arise in the Toronto convention. The group had been asked lo have one of their on Work in the University of Tor- ,those whose formal schooling has iioations on education and while in H‘ R- ’““'g° °f “‘° EmP1°Y“‘°”" s°°m`5 exohon o ideas as to methods and ics p, 'ron in attom tea rode Toronto concentrated his activities °°mmm‘° °f the "‘eg|°“ and tm’ M°1°d1°"`M°"t H°17 R”d°°m°’ materirlls, and to consider the ad- p in this field. 1-le is survived by five fggmeer in charge °f the W°rk' s°,?“"' ,, , vlsabllity of some organization leaving a committee of automotive sisters. They ere: Mrs. Peter smith ‘h °f Wh°'“ “ted in P°"e°“Y A my ln °°”‘“’* "st Pam” which might servo to oo-oroinato strike ieacersz "Tho mediators have and Mrs. Archibald Chisholm. both §§°d faith' Maj" °°““d “°°k “P th _at . the many scattered agencies now a of ,mmnm Mm cathmne Mac_ the matrter in the afternoon, with S :tic g e Gang . Peters worm- ‘Donald of Vancouver, Mrs. Chris- e Pa mage Cfmmmee and the gs T t H Nearly a hundred registered dele- mm Mlcmnmd of Anugomsh' trouble was quickly adjusted to the seo 0 T311 uf mg 73° *dmglir gates and many interested visitor N. B., and Rev. Mother St. Martin. mme sms'a°ti°n °f an °°“°em` be ‘M 9' °r’ “me m O ' were in attendance, representin ed' Both he and Mr' Large feel ck’ every province and almost every that thc Government has shown Indian Club SwixiUll'18-S00Ul5m8B- a ,mc at Work in Canada Th the rctumcd men every °°n51d”°` ter Harold Ameuault' summerside' cgnierlgnce met in Convocation Hall Island Students non in this mutter, as is evidenced Camp Fire Scene- ,,,,de,. the chairmanship 0, M,,_ W tl thi li fire B. shot, one of their number was; gg ml; may vsfovrignsé aggrcéxx. AGm5EMENT g1(;,N|5|) -7- Dunlop- Dh'e°t°1` ‘lf Extensi GraduateFfOfn veterar1is.e(;I'hlsW§;elrcenta\ge (C P by Guudlun sped" win) onto’ and opened with two interesh $13,; ire' now e‘:np1‘;ye5{1 on me JANEIRQ Bram' May 24_ ,ing addresses on adult education, Butts, a much larger number will The agreement settling the Leticia %':’IbYdMr~ F- G't'1Fh°m:§' L°v"‘,d‘;;:i be needed in about a week’s dispute between Colombia and 3 an ' represen ng e ° MONTREAL May 25_mc1uded time Peru Wu signed wmghh Associntiori of Adult Education, the in the pass list issued today by ' Second by D1"tF" F'uB°°kA°t Tew r _ York, represen ng io me can McGill University are the follow 1 Q Association of Adult Education in: ' . . Both these mcn emphasized the ¢_°°v5‘_`°°.tr.‘§r'.;.,,§§§,’,"of§.'lZ...l`f,'f’.,'§, fact that -guiitiduccgoii mntiifg 'w- M- P- E- . :..’::.;i.';i;¥. is I . ' . rather than the large group that French Pol1cY as rf A town’ Margaret J' MuL"eIn’RIj,ew :fills giveli1-t€;nr‘lT;l1r‘l?i~g0rep§.? .i l ss-cs -.~¢s~n-;s< .- mzzzox-:-new-. `/` is \CJ§U.| 'eek Pt an.. "..- ---.- --..- ....- tate Pi roi Sup( »-an E E $P» 4*-ra 7: >--.2-._ S.-3-.-_V