Of His Majesty’s SIL VER JUBILEE We Extend Hearty CONGRATULATIONS f-Zong May He Reign» ' PRDWSE BROS. LTD. 1 For full particulars call E “ “ "Tl BERMUDA and wrsr mmrs New Low Summer Rates effective with April 20o. Sailing. l“ l"! W. ii. ROGERS "i Charlottetown, P. E. I. :-; 94 Great George Street Phone ‘Pi 540 and 541 f i" ‘for loom » Below will be found a brief syn- Epsis of telegraphic records receiv- ld at the Head Office of the Bank B! Montreal from its Branches. The Branch Managers have complete Ind intimate knowledge of each local situation and arc in' close Much with crop conditions in all lictions of the districts mentioned. GENERAL Farming operations have been delayed in many parts of the Dom- inion by unpropitious weather. In British Columbia the season is ful- ly two weeks later than usual, tn the Prairie Provinces it is one to two weeks late, and in Quebec and the Maritime Provinrrs it is some- what backward. In Ontario. on the other hand, the season is about ten clays earlier than usual, and farm- ing operations in that province arc well advanced. Seeding is becom- ing fairly general in the southern and central districts of Manitoba and Saskatchewan. but it has bare- ly been commenced in the nothern areas of these provinces and in A1- berta. While initial moisture con- ditions generally are ample, subsoil moisture reserves arc meagre over large areas. In QJEIJEC spring ploughing is not yet general, due to continuance of frost in the ground. Fall wheat in Ontario h"s come through the winter fairly well. and seeding is general. 'In the Maritime Provinces, owing to adverse weather, leeding will bc delayed by as much as two uvnks in certain sections. Fall wheat ilviutered well in British Columbia, and sowing of spring grains is 50 per cent. completed. ‘Bennination, howcvc“. has been flow and growth is bazkivard. De- Iniis follow: PRAIRIE PROVINCES Alberta-Seeding is not likely to be gr-neral until Mav 10th. The seed bed is in good condition and there is amF-‘B top soil moisture but Iittlc reserve moisture in the sub- soil. The late season is likely to re- sult in a dccrcasc in wheat acreage and a. corresponding increase in the acreage of coarse gzains. Pastures need warmth. Sugar beet seeding is bdckward. Saskatchewan~Se:ding is just commencing in the north. but is reroming general in other dIptricts. Initial mofsturc conditions are fairly good, but there are little reserves over large areas of the pro- vince from Saskatoon south. Dust storms to date have not been ser- i . Most districts report that the Srfiage to be sown to wheat will hp lowered, particularly in the southern areas, where farmers are liindicapped by shortage oi seed, ikd and horse power. MANITOBA JSeedIng has commenced in prac- tbally all districts and will be cen- dal this week. Early moisture con- ditions are favourable but subsoil rdccrve; are meagre in southweatem time. There his been but little soil l“); . CANADIAN SOCIETY OI‘ O08’! ACCOUNTANTS UOIHISGIONIB FOB TAKING AFFIDAVIT-B IN TII BUPIIKI COURT OI P. B. l- l. IL I. IIPBISINTAHVI . TIE CANADIAN OBIDII‘ MEN'S TRUST ABBOOIATION, LmIIED. IANK OI NOVA SOOTIA BUILDING WN, I. I. I. ii. if. S. IIEMMING, B.A..ol>.A..c.o.A CEBTHHED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT MEMBER drifting. Indications point to a re- duced wheat acreage, particularly in the southwest, due to poor con- ditign of horses and shortage of see . PROVINCE OF QUEBEC Pastures and meadows have come through the winter with lit- tle apparent damage, but more rain and warmer weather an: needed to promote growth. Livestock has wintered well and will presently g0 onto pastures in good condition. The maple syrup yield to date is better than average and of good quality; pz-ices obtained by produc- ers, however, have been lower than last year. PROVINCE OF ONTARIO The land is working up info a very friable condition. Old meadows appear to have wintered satisfac- torily, but new craps of clover are spotty. Orchards, while still suffer- ing from the severe winter of 1933- 34, show little apparent damage from frosts, and cherry trees are commencing to bloom. Tobacco plants under glass are showing satisfactory growth. Livestock wint- ered well, but few farmers have turned out their cattle, as insuffi- cient rainfall has retarded growth of pastures. MARITIME PROVINCES are in in the 8 Pastures and meadows good condition. Orchards Annapolis Valley show little sign of whiter kill. Livestock has wintered 0 well. Indications are that the acreage devoted to potatoes will be less than last year. PROVINCE 0F BRITISH COLUMBIA The soil is in good condition with adeouate moisture. The onion crop in the Kamloops district has been planted. the acrzage being estimated at 15 per cent over the average. Early tomato plants were damaged by frost and required" placing. Planting of potatoes is about 50 mr cent completed. Frvlt some orchards suffered by severe “rather. Apricots have been dam- aged by frost and some other fruis. also have been affected. Th~ heavy l. snowfal‘ of this year should pro- vide ample water for irriration and nasturaize. _ ST Evrsiaui I EXAMINATIUN [fitting and ugcplytng Glance. ll. J. IMIBN orroommrsr l i Office Connected With s Drugstore S OF Prilloe of Wales it was written, "H.R.H. livrs 24 hours a day. and more sentimental twaddle has been Mitten about him than‘ about any other person, with the possible-exception of his niece, r ncess Elizabeth." It. is, certainly more true that the ilon, where undergraduates who were . lPrinccs obviou. mental reaction to. destined to be the Qgnsgyygflye m» hi5 august pflsition is that it hislihiberal statesmen of their generat- BIWQYS restricted his DETSOMJ free-don made their first flights of or- dcm, and that he l5 consequently 59' aiory. often compelled to encounter an} artificiaiity and a lack of spontan-Q likely that residence at Oxford in- Eity in the bearing of those of anyl fluenrrd the Prince's character to into contact. cnt Prince of Wales lad t':"c ordi circumstanrcd parents. Almost h = sall School on the Lancashire coat Hansen's lutnlafto went v." ‘l lcey“ ihc realm for he taught th~ Prince what w"s good in “the English public sciro‘. tracIition"-—the tho rough with the sznooth cheer- fully. to worl: and to shun a ccnccit of OllfYg own self. When the Prince went tn the ,A5 A.D.C., naval collcgc at Osborne. I=le of Wight Mr. lianreli went with him. Wit-h this exception the give-ii the Prime at Osboznc and a1- school" the Princcs station pursued him. He could never have thc school-boy luxury, for instance, of telling sm- other fcllow that his face made him until the close of the war. One who tired, or “plugging him one" if he was in close touch with him writes: became too “cocky? FiVB yéafs 0i’ "HRH. was not a privileged spec- this discipline included a period as tator or ornament of the ‘gilded EDWARD, PRINCE OF WALES . ,_.-\ ACTIVITIES OF THE PRINCE OF WALES By THOMAS T. CHAMPION Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, May 5—tC.i>.)-0f_the recently Of the Prince's youthful training, once confessed. 17E‘! husband. the, e - V?" YBHTS of age the pres- ry life of a ch‘1d of comfortcib! "iy glimpses of royal pomp in those days was wh:n he used to Herc again his bchifd from the garfen Marlborough Home the of the 110F055 the Way. It was from this man submarineThe same haunting verwplacc, ivithin a few mouth= obstacle was urged .'.l‘.“n he carne=t- of his seventh bi thdny, tha. ire .iy d-‘JSZTGCI to go n5 an offlln-vry sub. heard the proclamation by the he"— nltern of the 13.11am; to Franc; n; r aids of the ace ' ward VII. In tho ‘was from his fiitiicr and that he rrathered his fir; sions of the qracity of public du‘y. In those years. too, he f"un'l pl urc in the comirny ci hi; g:ai1df.1tln=i'_ front \vh:m he dfilbi- “ss rciclrcd nzaziy a hint towfrds trees have wlntered fairly well, bu. {may Immleis) wall at chiming guru‘: at St. Jamc's Polar.“ sion of K‘ng Ed“ teitder _\".‘a:..- it mother lmorv- ki‘ Next to ltis Ii\'i'|"l' and mother vrendfut "r the formative ih? youn"! Psi". ' ' mniuiy '.>_\' . ,p'cv .;s'_v at tit". famous R0"- s hi’ ns- quests": of ll'l'“.‘~i‘ hoof: icarni" , willingness to trke wcll and H?‘ \"."il, training o later at the naval "finishing at Dartmouth, was the amc as given any other cadet. Nevertheless the restrictions of 1B "snotty" on H-MB. Hindustan. Then the Prince passed to the Uni. ‘varsity of Oxford, occupying a 51m- pie set of rooms in Mazdalen Col- ‘ lege, and still under the guidance of ,Mr- Hansell. At Oxford, too, the j 1y forced upon him. It was impas- ‘ sible for him to participate in the political debates of the Oxford Un- In the academic sense it is un- degree with whom he is broughtiany marked degree; on the 01mg;- ‘hand the comparative freedom of, the life here gave him generous op- ‘ he cannot help but have rucful re- l ncrtunity for expanding his natal-J! membrances. "As a kid it was the tflsfe for sport. Soccer he playc" very devil,” 11,3 ’ However. he was luzky in one thing, daiens second eleven but it wa= ' for from the very first bath his p010 and hunting which really cap father King George, and his grand- father King Edwaid, were‘ at one in varsity days, too, m3 prince Mqu“, | Ye-Wivllls that his uilbrlngm: Should ed his first practical expcrierre o: be very diflnrent from that endur- soldiering. becoming i. °d by Iiilll; Edward. In the iatters member oi‘ the University Officers case social historians have record- ‘Iralning corps, and during the am ed their wonderment that. in view nual training toelng the pole of a of the. fussy devotion of the Queen bell-tent at night with five other Victoria and ‘ PFillCB‘ Consort, to ‘the upbringing, ilflps did little for him in the pro- of their chlldfell- KY1: Edward and l fundities of thought and learning hi; brother; and sisters failed toundoubtndly developed his self-re: turn out anything but prigs of the iiimcc an extened his perspective IlrsLcrdcr! ‘ over more than one srason in Mag- I turcd his imagination. In his uni-i f nil-blown comrades. Oxford, though it, per. Service In war The great war broke out while he was lit the Universit . Illld there was scme talk of his r ’ ining the Navy. position as IIEIF-"p- finrcut obtrudeci itself. As he" -ap. parent cn board a ship o’ war h" would be at the merry of any Ger- am not so mu'h dfstuzbe", at the prospect of your gettinz killed," Lord Kitthmer told hl-‘i. “as I am disturbed at the pr "eel of your ‘rotting taken cries“. Soon after this the Prince ran up flsainst a s-cnhr subnlt.r"'n "‘."\ w“; grooved nt having; boon d; "f-tgue" fcr thrcc (‘ays sutcessi cly. ‘I 1:931 to SiTYld my lif: in sup: vising," the senior subaltern. "mn lucky)’ retcrled h": _; sunrvsrci." Dr-"r-{i per. mission to proceed tn France tin“. Prince for oncc fcrsook lzls ccde of conduct to ask no fav"rs. H2 never rest-ed till h": was allowed t1 be- come a member of G510 staff All the some it was; a bitter" disappoint- ment that he had not gun“ to the! war as n regimental omccr. It would be overpainting the pic- turc to say there was anything phenomenal in h"s service in Franc". however, t; General FTfinPh hi‘ ill!" the ine5tim"“l* ad- vflniflze of seeing very much more of the war than millions of other serving sodiicrs. for he naturally flffi-Omllflnled the commander-in- chief all ovcr the line and beheld every phase of operations. With the eXf-“Diioll of a period on the Italian front, and a short trip of inspection to Egypt and the Sudan, the Prince remained with the British in Fmnce sense oi his position was perpetual- ' k Most Dutifully a 119-121 QUEEN ST. and Good 71.; President, ‘Directors and ‘Staff of MOORE & McLEODS LIMITED on This .Memtorable Occasion of THE SIL VER JUBIL EE nd Loyally ‘Extend Their Congratulations‘ Wish es to THEIR MAJESTIES stat!’ legend, but a hard-working oflicer in intimate touch with all the crude facts of sacrifice and effort, and all the influenc s of comrarleship on a bath-front. If he had spent six months with a pla- toon of the Grenadier-s in the mud of a contested trench, and come home with one arm, he would have been a more obvious example of typical experience and more pleas- cd with himself. But he mght easily have bern .1 1:55 complete participant." Popular Personality The Prince, at the clozc of the war, was in his 25th year. and was little known to the publi at lma: even at home. In the fen ye:rs foi- lowing he became easily the mos‘. popular personage in the Enxlish- speaking world. His debut as An- bassador of Emp .1 was in August ' 1919, when he made his first visit to Canada. The Prince's exteslon of this visl‘. to the Unit:d States was at first regarded with some little apprehension at home. Ac- cording to an English critic at that time the question of who Ilild won the war was estrangling felltiflns. "The strict police supervision maln- tained over the Princes movements and the sececy of his program made it impossible for him to n".- seive any popular welcome at Washington. It was the Prince himself who insisted that at New York all this ‘mystery and pre- caution should be dropped, and his smile, reinforced with his cheery wave of the hand. as he passed through the streets, won a com- plete victory." The following yeur the Prince visited Australia and New Maland. and in the year; immediately after ho visited India, South Africa, South America. with tvio other visits to Canada. and one other sojourn in the States. His fourth visit to Canada was in 1927. The following year he wcnt on a huntng trip t) East Africa, but hurrfed home on news of the King's grave illness. and flushed his East African hunting t.ip two years later. His last big Journey abroad was in mo, when he v.sited the Arzentln: are many of the immense neigh- bcrlng spaies. his princirfn obje:t bring to przrecute trade pfbpigllldi on behalf of the British Empire. Selling ldz-u of Empire Which brings vs to the role the Prlrce has pfayrd Ps Bagman of Empire. "Etzp rrht cvrz" and see Crnadn fri- you! c was his .Yl‘i'.‘i'fiii'i.ll to l3 ‘ busntssmen Vat the lifiarsflni House, fo‘lo in‘. an ' "s01 im- , " .1"? men 12f IJUSIIITZ; i’ were fully ner- madcz‘, that t‘ .1 in; in '.h ds were entirely o-iat". ‘I am sking this qu. ..n taught," -on- iuued the Prince mlvely. “b? arse I am very interested. as I have ncvcr triad to sell anyihliv; in my life rXccpt a few horses." Resumhig his serlcus tonc he alluded to the “somewhat sad state of affairs," he had sometimes encountered in his wide travels. of a British commun- ity, thousands of milts away anx- ious to buy B ltish goods but un able to do so beaaura they were neither suitable nor practicable t1 the locality. ' In regard to the (‘omestic wel- fare of the United Kingdom tn: Prince's kcenest interest of late has been devoted to the housing of the industrial classes. Hts exhorte- tions have not only contained pas- sages of almost burning indignation, but he has also set a considerable example towards u better state of things in the ref-conditioning of his own property on the Duchy of Oomwoil estate. at Kennington, BRINGING UP FATHiifR _KING GEORGE V and QUEEN MARY m“? ‘or CI-IARLO"‘TETOWN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND South Iiondon. Of his desire for the welfare of the youth of the nation striking proof has been afforded within the 1m few midis when the Prince submitted a scheme for celebrating the Jubilee by making substantial provision for the care of adolescents. The Prince's visits to the stricken industrial azeas of limcland and. Wales during the years of deep industrial depression were stimulating in more than one sense. Further evidence of the heir-apparents resolve to study things at close, quarters is evinced almost every week when he is not out of England. It is stating the obvious fact to say that in social wo y, and service he finds his great- est recreatian. It was recently writ- ten of him: “Th"re is less than no‘hin1 of policy‘ in his perrrtual vis'ts to East End clvbs. and in his zeal fcr the British Legion and kirfic-ed insfrutifna. He goes to all such funz-tlcns bccaus: they gen- ‘uinrly int-crest him." “What of his life?" continues the same writer. “Thu: ran be ronc harder to live, n0 future mo e diiii- cult to prepare for, less eisy to contemplate. All too FBIIY of the sweets oi human cxisvnre reach him at last stain and diluied. As the years go on the isolation him; of his position in the civilized w: anr‘ of his personal life is ilk“ to in""ase. It is imnr"ba'"ie th" "y man at heart envies him h‘ ‘ob. But his destiny ls assured of the best possible chance of success in his hands." ACTOR HAD FORESIGIIT LONDON, May 5—(C.P.i-Ed- mund Gwenn. British actor now starring in "Laburnum Grove" in the United States, stored most of more valuable belongings before he crossed the Atlantic. Bunion J who broke into his rooms in John Street, Adelphl, must be disap- pointed men. MIOTIOII SALE OI‘ PREMISES AND FURNITURE OI ESTATE LATE MARY JANE MCMILLAN l um instructed to ncil at Public motion on Tuecdny, the 7th flay ci flay next, A.D., 1835, beginning at i0 o'clock in the forcnoon at 13f ilng Street, GI lotietown, d1 thl IUFJQIIOIO 1 belonging to thu estate of the lab Mary Jl-uc Mc- Illian, consirttn, oi parlor, dluim 00m, bedrooms and kitchen fumi- uu-e. Allo one piano. one largo mir- .or, safe, etc. At 2 o'clock in the mi‘ moon cl '.he same day the dwelling houu and nemilca of the late Mary Juno Mc- illllan at 133 King Btu-let will sin -e offered for ale. This l: a first Jun property with all modern con- venieucel. Term: made known It 11c. Johnston a. Johnston Solicltorl. J. A. MACDONALD, Auctioneer f.-'f072-4-30-'ii A N. D. MacLean 7 moan-rum i sun/tutu C‘ lotuwwu and Phone Ill x North Wlltlhln $83Sé$°1§= I w“; TAN“. m was is m R00 hi’ ‘iii-E'-