o_o... hir _i T .. -3 i 1 trees-young men, whose minds and ca"'ii'clt`ies are being moulded, and vh%se`young hearts are being influ- sncfeill by the teaching and example of their devoted Professors. I see foo. ina.`rl`y_of your parents here with whom weufshiire the happiness and satisfac- tilil 'of this occasion. I see also the _ _ | gralixilalics Of Other YGHTS here i'°iii*Y bued by a. sense of duty and hy high you will leave ccllege with some idea 1 m‘l§é_lr°n arid in lnlriii i°°iri°8 °“ motives il you practice the virtues .for your own capabilities end of the you,,wlth kindly eyes. end extendlns ri-ie inculcetec. field in which you may be moot thgllé hand fOr I Breen. llrlfl Whisper' The value and the importance of pi-pfiliibly engaged, 1 ir1g,§tq_`you-Courese. led. keep yvill' the knowledge and the discipline uc- wen; le pe e worker in Gods luiadxupl V quired under the opportunities here vineyard-_Get sei; °‘$1n_--__._- PAGE TEN ___ , _ _ 'rm-; criAlu.o'l"i.'s'rowN ouanolnn hom Page 5) 1 and '_ oimded zeal. Na. il-they who so sacrifice i t arent pleasure to Welcome end h°n°r to be distrusiful of science, is to luck i this distinguished son of the Church euihu-e, to doubt the ned ef i- egg - ' 8 P °8r ' who has been so slgnally honoiu-ed by lg ld leek knewledge, ld queegien the the people of his own native province, necessity of i-ellgien is 1,0 went wig and We of Slllllt DUllSt2n'S feel lleell' dom, and who, where the light of the ly grateful to him for being already intellect fails, are dl,-eepeel by the graciously mindful of this institution guldln ll ht of Faith 8 8 - . in the desisnins of the Eplscopil 'rake sf. Dunstens awey from this COM Of Arms- '_ province and what would be the re- Hls Excellency has been much as- will If, may he smell ee colleges go, sociated with University life in the Il does not boast the endowments of City of Toronto. His success of the hi-ge, eoliegee, hill fel- lle eine it past, the important positions he has cause, in ndmii-ellen end ein-price, been ll0n0Ul'°fl With- his iidmihlii' so much so, that we are inclined to trative, executive and scholarly 1 abilities. hir fine °iUllliii@S Of mi’-`iii be greater than its cause.” The result and heart, augur well for the years le greed and the eeiiee of il, in this to be spent with us, during which he Unlversity, te which today many il dren in pleasant ways, md to their thoughts a touch of heaven lends. ,`.,‘ Saint Dunstan's-the home of an- theves, give their all with such_ elenl wiedein md new lee,-nln3_. 1, devo ~ attention, untlrilig patience lpeelilng the heel they le known en. coUi‘es'lns research, stimulating sin, we lest mei here at o similar thought. l'=filli“¥ *film led awaken- func S9-int DUnSN\n’S UlllVel’Si¢Y ing the love of excellence. She is a ln°iir. 1, the src-at loss she has sus- scientific incutuie, e school oi cul- taine_ by the death of our late ture, and n lirnining gi-eunel fer the lame is and beloved Bishop buelneee ef il_¢e_ D'Leliry. who was held in such deep st. Dunstarrs educates minds that regard and kind affection by all our give di,-eellon lo lhe nge_ 1; in 5 nm- Doobie. . sery of ideas and ideals-a centre for But. out of our redness- i°y hee the development olralih and science. come. and it is a cause of pride and 1-1ei»e_ if anywhere, ere lnund leeehei-5 doeb l'¢.10lClllS YO each “nil Sli Of US: whose one passion is the love of 1 that We CHU n0W Wi'-‘iC°ln° i° °U-l' truth-the love of God and man, who midst, His Excellency, Right Rever- deny the principle "that no effect can `. ""f",> ` ‘ ," ` ~`”" ». .`_ ' ‘i f " ‘ " '. " 1 ‘-, 1"* ¢ i' ~""'lv-.. . -uf ‘ l i \ “ r J-& ' 1 - M51! B i , 1 ,.1 look on all things with n serene eye. mmm .rossrn Evans max Guam Ganmvm g md Bishop o_sumvan’ with whose who bring to every question. 8 mm mmmrc Louis cess Gran. Josxrn Maonolunn Annan r. noucsrni .lomv on j presence we are honoured today. It is unbiased mind, who understand that r`. ‘ ° l 'l.T,.DUN57;4N;g ~ Gradniates o£St. D I ' ’ 5 ’ 0 I , lmstan s Umversity P 1 ._ _ -'i -r -1"" A ` In ' 2 '- V ‘ -- , ` V ‘ 1 i ORGE Mcconlluiq . 1 V. > 1 _l will watch ever the interests of our loyal heart renders the grateful ui- ARTHUR ll- I-AWLOB Amman .lossrn lurmasv nsaom :arms onolrniu . einen own St. Dunstan’s, where year by 1 1 . l e Til bute of a loving son to his Alma ` _ . AN A. Macrllll ADRIAN MlOHAEl.'DU1i!AlS PHILIP ERNEST D0 ru yesr under the sunshine of his pres- Mayen perslsceufeffcric, and the he-of bil ""' ' ’ ` ~ 1 - ii ‘ one h f` V _ f ` ' " ' _~~-- - r ~ ence, will continue the great work of ity, it is cop Olin as come mm humble 'ur which h il ' laced ln your hands 1 c. i i " 1 I' ' "-"fl -Y -- V - c g to know inet they , ,mel _ 1, h U, 1 as °°” i’ elite n your bearing through life . f li in i .` "youth in its perfect biossomlns/" LIGHT or r-.lil'm. are not thc highest things in life. and 0 "gs ° S ° ii always ,keep in these hallowed hells. ' ° ° he Fed Stately and sceptral lilies break Full' Ulnlll-'h ii be- i0 Wllich Uh°i°S¢ Leamlng is acquaintance with what should not be made its aim. The nostlllls Hl0rl@S Of 9- P059. others have felt, thought and done. Everybody hasa vocation, every soul Delliih Oil each depth. 5°" i°1d °n Knowledge is the result of what we that comes into this world has a. fold: ourselves have felt, thought and done. vocation-to know, to love and to l Tll0USh fair" iii! ii- i0 ilehilifi Hence, a man knows best what he has . serve God. taught to himself: what, out of per- We are told by Goethe, that the T0 b€l1UiY~ and if° SWSEUWSS Wake? sonal contact with God, with man. world stands before every man as a Yet. fairer Siiil. i10 See and S1118 and with Nature, he has made his marble quarry, from which each one Youth in its perfect blossoming-" own, ‘must choose one block of marble, and The important thing then is not so. work at it faithfully. As we all wish to Gradilelfesi ln HCC€Dlin8 the illviflt- much to know the thoughts and loves be happy in our work. let us lay hold tion £0 l1Cldr0SS YOU. On this ha-PPY of others, as to be able ourselves to of work, which occupies the mind, nay. I can assure you thetit Wes not think truly and to love hobly. The body, been. und soul. li we wich lo Wlillolll nlUCh fear End tl'€llli>iin8. i°l` aim should be to rouse, strengthen, perform. our duties faithfully, we will as you may knew. the profession lo ,ond uluinlne the mind, rather than *naturally have ambitions and ideals, which I belong IS nl0r° °0n¢9fn€ii to store it with learning; and the but let hot our ambitions and ideals with Mflon. tlllln Sloredh- great educational problem has been, ‘lead us to place honors before duty. I lim nni UnllllnllfUi ihllf in iihe and ia. how to give to the soul purity The world will honor you, sooner or previous years. meslerly addressee of intention, to the conscience, stead- ialer,i1 you src worthy or honor. We have been elven by some ol the melt iaslncsc, and to the mind, force. ‘should bc ready to accept the hum- eloflllonii SDe8l<€i'S and brilliant lllindl. piiability and openness to light. or in blest duties; and in this connection that our fair lirovlnlre null/ b0llSl> °i- other words how to bring philosophy Emerson says: And so, to you, who are about fo doff el li an re glon to the aid of the will so “We dream of castles and palaces, the 'toss Praelellta' Of Y0Ui=h- and that the ,better self shall prevail, and and end by putting up a wood-shed.” don the ‘toga vlrills’ of manh00d. 1 each generation introduce its succes- It is better, however, to build one am rather reluctant to speak. Some- 50,- in e higher plane el life_ body has Sllili that llle hi8h¢Si ¢X' To this end, the efforts of your fuels of life dry, than to go on dream- empliflcation of bravery in any mor- le h h that one of the bravest of men, now- that _you have learned lnlidli. and fluence of religion, and have been and error. Every man may win who hav? been given much good advice, no ` to which I am expected to add some mtifefl I “dfefore me in this representative as§§rribiage the youthful students of St.“blinstan's developing in stature and'irfi'6wledge like so many beautiful giaduatesa This occasion is so Your religious education will bring a delightful fulness to your lives such as nothing else carl, because it has instilled a habit of charity of thought, which helps one to make friends all through life; because it has brought the thorough realization that only a few things in life really matter and. because it has acquainted you with God's Providence, it helps you towards an attitude of unworried dependence upon His Goodness, that keeps aww more wrinkles than a hundred beauty shops can You cannot fail to be lm- presentecl, and the use to be made of sohémg. SO l'rliUBl’li Wii-ll lli8nii’i¢lln°¢- this experience, I an-l sure has been Sqlprbdnnnf With Brent Bild iii’\i'°id impressed on you all. It opens the pqsgiluties. that I should prefer to ences to the wider school of the leg,q,you to YOU! OWI1 !°lil°'::so;1;oJr;ovanNoa aauan- Bemmys parish hem Rm, mmm and illusory unless there is added ,D 1 these stately trees, among these .- . o ri R.. Gale, V.D., of Mt on Sundays Ocean Limited on of boys, and these goodly priests- the Saint John Fusiliers, has been t H mon _Moncton and from the vision and the dream. l llPl>0lni5ed an honorary aide-de-campy ms return 0 am ' ` the rhapsody and the retrospect, you i0 His Excellency the Governor- Times' l it the good of the heart, and the good iof the conscience. Whatever may be [said of culture, of its ability to make iits possessor at home among the iworld’s best, it is nevertheless true that if culture be sought apart from religion, its tendency is to produce an artificial and unsympathetlc char- acter. l' Culture of course is necessary. We (need it as a corrective of the tend- ‘ency to seek the good of life in 1 what is merely material, as a means , of helping us to overcome our vulgar i self-complacency, our satisfaction j with low aims and cheap accomplish- ‘ ments. We need it to make our lives less unlovely, less material. We need to take us out of ourselves and to rge us on to labor with God. mat we may leave the world better, because we have lived in it. If culture, there- fore, is to become a mighty trans- forming influence in your lives it must be wedded to religious faith without which, while it widens the in- tellectual view, it fails to develop the will. _ Graduates, as you take leave of world in peace. Be of good courage. Hold fast to that which is Bood. Render no man evil for evil. Strengthen the faint-hearted, sup- port the weak, help the afflicted, love and serve God and in the manner SO well described by Addison-80 i0l'ih5 -..._._,..__.-*-_...__ will draw inspiration to your arms and purpose to your will. FABEWELL, and I THANK YOU. An Appreciation I cannot refrain from adding my sympathetic testimony to the passing of one of the finest grades of young manhood that I ever met in Prince Edward Island, ln the person of Meredith Parkman, who in the very beginning of young manhood was so recently called to higher rewards and higher service. His quiet charming personality won for him an ever increasing circle of friends who join in the loss, in the poverty and yet in the inspira- tion of the sudden tragedy of the death of this young man. The life of Meredith P|.\'lr.man cannot but serve as a lead to the hundreds and thousands of young men in Prince Edward Island, who cannot but feel that life is A richer and deeper thing because Meredith lived and moved and had his being in their midst. I join with a great host of friends in extending to his bereaved father and mother, bl-other and sister, a heartfelt sympathy in this crisis hour and yet in so expressing my deep- est feellngs I feel that a life so Mep- ly worth while as Mei‘edith‘l was is a compensation far beyond the pow-' er of words to express in the midst of the bittemass and pain ,of a nud- den and unexpected passage from this life to the lifter And the better Just beyond. NEIL HIIIIAN, Pastor of the First Baptist Church., Moncton, N. a. .April lv. mi. 1 Rose Valley at 2 p. m. Thor. Pale- ' SPENT WEEK-END WITH A. oeullivan, as Bishop of chu-»5 Father James E. Brown, curate of Si_ General, Lord Bessborough; other Maritime Provinces men so honored are Lieutenant-Colonel S. C. Oland, VD., of the Reserve ofiicers, Halifax, 1 _ and Major F. I. Andrew, MM., of the 30”’ :as bil; tfitixlifiaxzegdoitiinlllhtlncl Pun” Edwud Island Light H°"°' neriv u“p-tonfdate store under his msn- Charlottetown, P. E. I. Announce. agement Mr staplés has beenom ment of these appointments ‘ls made a year here' And has succeeded, get in the Canada Gazette of May 23. my in greatly developing the lie; D . ‘m ‘ ad I ` RETURN To PARLIAME T Drug Store business, but has ln 0 N ARY ` ll rc ret his de- DUTIES-Marltime Parliameritarians, :Qing lfgereifigllglateg him on_ill|1 who hm been spending B few days 1 promotion Mr. Staples is sucoeellliii at their respective homes, passed by Mn G; R_ Gilroy, of me limb through the any during me Weelbend branch in Amherst, where he lill en route to Ottawa to continue their been for about E yeah Mn Gilmore semoml dunes' Amimg the num' is cordially welcomed to Chsl'l°ii¢' ber were Senators John Stanfield of t . i ed tlls ,I ; Fr nk _ _ town, and the hope s eitliren a B Black, of Sackville, ld eenniml J. E. Sinclair, of Emerald, P.E.I., I-lon. he Wm enjoy B long Ns en . us. John A. MacDonald, M.P., of Oardl-, E811. P. E. I., Minister Without Port- m,,,,,1,, L,,,|,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,, ,|i,i, I aoss plwo sroar cllsNors‘- . Mr. c. J. staples, of the pose Driu s1'o|>MC'|'|'|+f+< ossrlzusrlon . £:.:::.’.°:l.';'.i':‘.°..:':';“.'.“.:°..‘l‘.';".'.°."i,.‘:.e - iilii i. ‘nfl 'i`°X---thelunrsneeodmoehliiller No' il” N *il"°b°*\°v¢lilrdeeh'uctlonbyualn¢l'LY ' 0** . mimic-olive wseoeniosed sy iri.v.-rox ln-S:s.~1$\__, . P¢netratin¢mlst.8prqdll°e¢¢|yon¢|¢¢l,ln‘, FLY-TOXII --11 4.. . T. ,. Y i rusi.uph°l¢tery.=ic.rl.Y-roxwluuocmln. More la cmda 1 li?) \ _ F v ' -fe-1 Qi L I _ Spruce Lat/is & _ Cedar Slzingles _ on hand 500.000 Spruce Lathe . Prices $2.50-$8.50 and $4.00 per 1.000 -Also- One Million Cedar Shingles in Air-Dried British Columbia and Campbellton, Nt B. Cedar Shingles In all Grades ` -Prices low- L. M. Poots & co. "“°""‘"""i"