Ho histo "ticipi The 1 been byte” l Canada l Manda: 5 confere F the Re‘ i chair. l man o: i’ l Service i l subject , | E. Boo _ Ministe I .. t" ion. i o, c helpful En“ Christi. y ‘m, voking in,” tlon in _Nau er too 1 i term ‘from t Mew idoina noth ways a was" ifmxf; g 5w. i; f, \ i on Tlr , i i Order‘ 15* w-"qnwvsszeivb-q.-. -..- t JHis Worship the Mayor we; that ‘the new mum Commission legis-‘ ~ and acts PAGE roux Ems GIIARLOTTETOWII auntnun filo y»! Wu '_ summit-w. Chaner l. IeLare. ll- Secretary LlenL-Cal. n. a. newsman. D- B- 0- lidltar and Ainnlllll Annelaia Itllforl—l*n|nk Waller llld D. K. Carrie llnrnlng Dally (founded rue-n li-W n-r vur (in luv-I") 115111;"!- 51.50 pee year (ln advance) nnallcd in Canada and United n el- J>»!_¢‘7'P WEDNESDAY, i-MNOTHER MILESTONE A‘ Another milestone in the ill-awry .70; gt, Dunstarfs University was tbagsed ygsterday when the oom- mencernent exercises, marking the {close of the scholastic year, were ‘held. rt is extremely gratifying to note, tron; the Rector‘: address, that despite world wide economic depression the attendance of stud- ents was well maintained and I- satisfarwry year's work was accom- plisltco. It is .n times of stress and strain that zlo great value of our edu- cational and cultural institutions is brought. most forcibly home- ‘Pile graduates of Si. Dunstan! this year, who were so eloquently Bd- dressed by nu Excellency Bishop Osullivan, have good reason to feel that they are equipped 1n a high' degree for the active duties 0f ctizenshlp which now lie before them. More utilitarian Studlee—th= acquiremcnt of the qualifications necessary to make s. livelihood- were never more necessary than they are today: but these subjects have rightly been relegated to second place in our higher educa- tional curriculs. A proper back- ground of philosophy and religion is the only influence that can coun- ‘tcract the crude and revolutionary thinking which is so much in evi- dence m modern civilization. Grounded firmly in the essentials af a religious and classical train- ing, there is little likelihood of the graduates of st. Dunstan! losing that sense of proportion, of spiritual balance and stability, so necessary to them in the achievement of any worthwhile succem in life. CITY COUNCIL Evidently the City Council did not get much "forrader" special meeting on Monday. The much heralded police investigation came to naught, and the otherbusi- ness on the agenda, with the exception of the resolution con- lation for which was passed by the Saunders Government, is inopera- tive because 9W0 of the members of the Commission have contracts Ior the me of their electricity with the Maritime Electric Light Com- pany. ‘This is a. matter that will ham to be settled between the Government and the commission, or between applicants before the Commission and the Commission Itself. It is not customary for a Pflnlbacase toqilcetion the constitution of the court to which It goes of its own free will and accord, but in this particular in- stance His Worship does not seem to be in accord with hie Council independently. Anyway, U19 question now having been rais- ed it is for the Government andthe Commission to adjust matters, or have the city Council in the im- enviable position of not being able to proceed with the airing of its case before the CommLs-sion. LA USANNE The United States is not to be lnveigicd into taking part in the Lausanne Conference slated to take place on the 16th inst. The prlnopai objcct of ths Conference Ls to con- sider the future policy of continent- al countries with regard to German War reparations and war loans. The United States has not been rep- resented at previous conferences, taking the ground that she did‘ not ("Inim reparations from Germ- Noi. luiviitg SllilCfCfl any con» p, Vioe-PnehhlO-J- I. Burnett lllreetor-vl- B. Barnett- JUNB l. I933 should Germany fail to meet her obligations. The whole finflwill fabric of the world dvPflid-s 011 711B outcome of this Lausanne Con- 'ference. Prime liflnister Ramsay Today's economic will: is “worse” than any that have pi ceded it be- cause lts savage blows have fallen upon a more sensitive social organ- ism, upon a public opinio mo" susceptible to shock. A on un- employed today is worse than a million unemployed forty years ago because our social conscience today is more awake to the re- proach of willing workers who can find no work to do. We can no lon- ger think with equanlmity of a "labor reserve," to be mobilized when needed and turned out with- MacDonald, with the concurrence of the other countries, intends widen- ing the object of the Conference on the present occasion to include ferment of the commercial countries] of the world at lari9. and 1101994‘ that in view of this widened soone- consideration of plans for the bet- much the Pflme out provision when production elackens.—New York Times. ln a speech at Newcastle, Eng- of Wales said: “I am full of admiration for those running voluntary organizations, but it struck me that the older the United States would Washington, how- ever, has turned a deaf ear to this appeal, and so far as the States is concerned the conference, will have to reach decisions with- out obtaining any United States official expression of views on the threatening financial crisis upon which we are entering. RUSSIA AND JAPAN The warning note given by the Sov et official organ Izvestia to Japan is not without canoe. According to the Week lihid ‘Review of May 21st, there are still keen observers who believe that a. Russian-Japanese clash is in the highest degree improbable; but opin- ion and fears that it is becoming more likely is growing. Russia it seems pretty clear, does not want s. war and will do her best to keep out of one: she is anxious to complete her present Plan and the next one, and seeks no weakening external dis- fractions. But what Russia wishes and what Japan intends are not necessarily compatible. If Japanese forces in Msnchuria, where the at- mosphere is growing still more in- ritory the Soviet would be forced to more Sun, that there exists some- where in America man capable of snatching a baby from his crib and death has been the occasion nation-wide revulsion and horror. But what shall be said of the fact revealed since the announcements of the baby's death, that ‘more than one hundred demands for ransom were received from persons anxious to capitalize this outrage? tame. we" w “out, 3mm“ tfl._ shall be said of the whole regiment of those who have people were to the fore. It is time the younger generation got down to leadership as well. They are do- ing p lot, but, frankly, I am sug- ‘gesting that they can do a. lot more. It is up to us to see the youth of the country encouraged to exercise their minds and blow off steam, and help them to grow up good sports. It would be a fine lthing if all who are amociated to- gether for games were also asso- ciated in some form of service. I wonder, too, if the staffs of our great business houses, insurance offices and banks might not make themselves corporately responsible for some form of individual ser- ivice that would enlarge the oppor- tunities of boys and girls. We are not here to consider how indus- trial or political action can help us in our present difficulties. We are here to consider how we ourselves can help each other. and I am sure there is a lot that can be done." The knowledge. says the Balti- a man or wo- doing him to for What thrust them- fight. and the world would be in for a first-class war. If Russia won, the prestige, and possibly the area. of l9 n! communism in the world would be enormously increased. If Japan won t would she be content to stop there, or would her next target be America‘! coming lmpruvgmgnigg in eh; desire was to be left in peace, but fish market, might as well ncv- LIBERAL VIEWPOINT ‘dded this sigmncant “mark: m. h“, been them Th. 0M ___i "Jetsbefrltami the ftlangcs of realcvifrar '~ Roviewi the events f the t are gm‘ “g ° “mp m “r important daemon amwd M by n‘ o p“ from our Eastern borders. The session 0f Parliament, the Toronto Globe, leading Liberal newspaper, finds much to commend in the various measures adopted. It notes, first and foremost, that "the public puree was closely guarded, of necessity." It calls attention to the emphasis placed in the Speech from the Throne on the Government's Policy for miemployment and farm relief as the ehief consideration of the session, and adds: "more is reason for satisfaction that the equilibrium of the Budget was well maintained, even M. the expense of drastic economies and extra. rovsk, Siberia, commander of the eastern army of Russia, declared the Soviets only fighters of the Eastern army, mas- tering all the latest machines of war, are ready to rise at. any moment in defence of So- viet territory. We defy foreign foot to trample the collec- tivo fields of the U. S. S. R." Whe- ther this is for Japanese or Chinese consumption or both, it is very much to the point. President Hoover has a ‘ contributed e. new phase in the form of “frozen confidence." He told the States that “frozen confidence" is the thing that holds them back at the moment. In actual fact this is selves in front of cameras, invent- ed stories of "contacts", carried on petty battles for prestige and gen- erally bcmlrcd the trail and made mock of a family's grief and a na- ion's shame and indignation? Speaking on May 1st at Khaba- General Blucher, devices and a single l‘ ‘lily [anm W. Harlan. ALD Q rout: ANNUAL VACATION It is said that it is the mm who needs a vacation least is the one who thinks he needs it most, where- as the one who thinks he needs it least is the one who needs it moot. However there is no question a- bout it anymore; everybody needs a vacation. Not perhaps the vaca- tion you may have in mind, but a vacation nevertheless. In other words a vacation may be easily fli- terpreted as simply vacating, leav- ing vacant you usual plam of work or abode and putting yourself-mind and body-somewhere else. The very fact that you are l- Wl-Y from your usual surroundings with their cares, worries, and ob- ligatlons, and that your mind and body is occupied with other things, is just what 1s needed by that mind and body of yours. . The ideal vacation, as I've men- tioned before, is tryingfb do at vacation time exactly what you've been planning the rest of the yea-r, that you would do at your vacation time. It is this uulfillmcnt of de- sire’ that makes this life of ours seem just that much more worth while. Perhaps you have always wanted to do some certain thing, or go to some certain place, and while the actual realizaton of your desire may not be just up to all that you expected, nevertheless it has releas- ed or let loose something that you felt was binding you before. Until a few years ago, everything for the vacation was considered from the standpoint of Just what it would do to that body of yours; give you some color, enrich your biood,rcst your body, improve your appetite. The vacation did th's all right and still will do it, but think- ing people now recognize that it is the effect upon the mind that is most important from the health standpoint. If the mind gets free from worry, from routine duties, from the same- everything-food, street cars, automobiles, noise,-s.nd the brain through eyes, ears, nose, and tongue bv reason of a. vaca- tion gets an entirely new set of sensations,‘ these sensations react ‘upon every part of the body. They recreate the individual as it were; thus a real vacation is recreation.- Now is the time then for those of us who get our vacaton during July and August to be planning Just what we are go‘ng to do to get the most out of it. It should mean plenty of rest the first two or three days, then some form of activity until the last couple of days, when rest should again be taken. Above all, try to get. a complete change. a C or/ULQowu/t. ness of people of the United taxation. Besida seeing the country through a year of serious depression, however, the session will be of his- forte, and probably national, portance in other nationalization of radio is a lnile- stone. The new insurance legislation and amendments to the Bankruptcy and Winding-Up Ante are import- ant. Adoption of e. treaty with New Zealand is a notable step in prog- Obviously the Globe speaks ‘“e element of the Liberal party. It realizes the exceptional difficulties under which the Bennett Government is work- ing and in the respect sets an ex- ample which other Liberal papers, of less weight and import- ance, would do well t0 f0ll0W. the more EDITORIAL NOTES Good news comes from Fort Erie, effect that six United States jazz bands have been barred from Canada by immigra- Ontario, to the (‘l JblC losses, only ltavlug joincd iiic war in tlic death throes shc dd‘ n;i cousidri" hcrszrlf concerned with what Licrmairv (i005 0i‘ i100! 110i mung (O do with regard to her irr-iiy obligations. 0n the other hand, the European allied countries ficu officers acting under new issued from Ottawa. There is more than a sufficiency of jazz now flooding Canada from American broadcast‘ i; stations, and those who care for that kind of entertainment have every oppor- "9 RIPE! l!!! 1299' the radio ought to be a force for good in order to procure for Canadian peopic a general culture ma“? °1 “Fwy!” m“ "Wm" which at the present time is lack- not at all a. bad phrase. It is gen- erally held that, while the hard times are actual, many of the symptoms are psychological. If that can be brought home to people they may relax some of the need- less precautionary economy that. is holding things back, even more perhaps than the "frozen assets" with which they have recently be- come familiar. A gray-haired Irishwoman of Rochester. N. Y., is looking forward with hope to the Imperial Econo- mic Conferencc at Ottawa. She thinks her son will be coming to the Canadian capital for the meet- ings, and she expects he will slip down to Rochester for a visit be- fore returning to the Emerald Isle. The woman is Mrs. Catherine T. Wheelwright. The son is Eamon de Valera, President of the Irish Free State, and much in the news these days in connection with the discussions between the Free State and Great Britain ovcr the aboli- tion of the Parliamentary oath of allegiance to thc British Crown by the Dali Elrcnnn. Mrs. Wheel- wright's first httsbaitd was n Span- iard by name of dc Valera. He was a sculptor and actor. Her second husband is a. Rochester man. The mother of the Free State President has been in poor health for some time. Whether it is nationalized or not, the ROSE-CHEEKED LAURA Rose-checked Laura, come; sing thou smoothly with beauty! Silent music, either other . Sweetly gracing. thy Lovely forms do flow Front consent divinely ham-ed; Heaven is music, and thy beauty! Birth is heavenly. These dull notes we siliB Discords need for helps to grace them, only beauty purely lovins. Knows no discord.‘ (Thomas Camplon (1567-1820) "Science and lndueify h!" 8011B forward, but our methods in eon- ducting our daily affairs have not." _John Grier Hbben. "The measure of sireiilth 0i 8 country ls not a. few Brest estates. but, c, multitude of prosperous small independent holdinge."—’lheodore ‘Roosevelt. "The foundation of real business is serviceffl-Henry Ford. ing; in order to distraction in the homes, the dc- velopment of good taste and the evolution of a mentality largely Canadian. To this end, there should be intelligent control of broad- casting and enlightened surveil- lance. m this way the almost in- finite extension of radiography will give birth to a new duty that will bc added to those which al- ready are grave and numerous in provide healthy THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN u PUBLIC FORUM This column i: open for the dhonlllon by wneepoudentl of questions of interest. The bhrloltetewn Guard!!! 60H not necessarily endorse the aplnlonl of correspondents. A SUGGESTION 0F HOPE Sin-Many attempts have been made to diagnose our 500181 and economic ills, and amid the con- flicting opinions of so-called spu- ialists-bankers, economists, busin- ess men and parliamentarians - it may be presumptuous for a, mere pat-pop to exprws an opinion, yet he ventures to assert that some- when, somehow the causes for the present depression are mostly moral not material. The earth has not failed us. It mu brings forth bountifulli- ‘film is enough. and to ANN. 0f 0W1’!- thing to satisfy every human bled. The trouble is in mm: in hi! lee of the worlds‘ resources: in his IQ- latlonship with his fellow men, Qnd m his attitude towmia God. fir- gahtuan greeltmeaoiieeseomolflcn individual and national new}. insane westefulnesfl. 5959-" Phil!" seeking, churchlesmeel, godl&m and loose living have each 000% uted its share-come more and lune less-in deranging business, deflati- ing trade, creating uncmploymmt and rendering cleavagel in society. We have been fooling with lie ten commandments, and, It i a pastime that cannot be indulged in without appalling ces consequences which have been ac cumulating and from which p] Ir. now suffering. When men in gabil life of the widest experience. Idol as Sir Willmott Lewis, G0!!!)mid- ent for the London Time h Wish- ington, warned the members of the Canadian Daily Newspaper 5mm- aton in Toronto that “previous civ- ilizations had oollapsed because of their lack of moral principles" and urged them to "remember that there is nothing more certain upon any reading of h‘story, than that with- out moral principles we are losta” when a man of the eminence of Sir Josiah Stamp clearly indicated in a recent address at Ottawa that there was no hope of ultimate re- oovery without a recognition of spin ltual verlties in life, when one of the most outstanding lawyers in New York told a group of his fellow citizens that he could sec no relief untl men got on their knees and confessed their sins unto God; when our own Senator Hughes in a. re- markable address told his fellow Senators that one of the causes of the present depress'on was forget- fulness of God; when the Prime Minister at. a notable gathering last autumn stated that nothing but the grace of God could save the world: a statement which the leader of the opposition did not qualify in a speech in the House of Commons but indirectly approved-then a Preacher need not apologize when he suggests that our people should repent and tum unto God. ‘ To beget a, change of mind which Yepentance means, it is not. enough that the people should flock in in- creasing numbers to their respective churches — commendable as this would be. The vision which the writer has before him is the get- tins tozether of all people of good- will in nubile assembly. either in church, or hall, or in the open a'r: in every hamlet, town and city where by song, by prayer and ex- hortatlon they might receive the quickening, the uplift, tho comfort, the changing mind that comes from the union of hearts in common worship. I One of the most inspiring and Pithetic sights stored away in my memory was a gathering of thou. sands of people-meld weekly-in st. George's Square, Liverpool,-who met, in a. time of depression to sing, not Jinziins doezem, but the great hymns of the church universal. The Wor were there in great numbers ragged, pfnched and wan, but as they sang-and how gloriously they sang-their faces for the while were lit by a celestial fire. Something of this kind is what I crave to see, and without obtruding our creeds and ecclesiastical theories, surely the best minds in all the churches throughout the land-United Church Anglican, Presbyterian, Baptist, and Roman Catholic-can plan a wny whereby this may be accomplished. If not, then the chrlsilanlty repre- sented by the churches is a ghastly caricature of Him who came to shed abroad a spirit of love and mutual helpfulness. I have been told by chaplains in the Great War, that in the most of the mighty holocaust-s of battle The difference in price is $550 Fare is Saloon Class, The $475 Fare is Tourist Class, The $395 Fare is Third For Further Particulars Write or See J. A. 79 Hillsboro Si. EUROPEAN TOURIST ORGANIZER. and CONDUCTOR. How J. A. MdcLAREN cams, Make It Europe This Y ' PAY LESS_AND GET MO FROM YOUR VACATION All Expenses Paid, Tours At Surprisingly" L Low Costs ! LOl/VEST FARES IN YEARS Mr. MacLaren will quote you a price that will make you decide to join his British Isles Trip, sailing first week in July 60 Days-All Expense Included, $395 - $475 - $550. r! }. l. the difference in the class aboard ship. The Class. ALL FIRST CLASS ON LAND. MacLaren (Formerly of Paimu Lid.) Charlottetown days hemmed in by poverty. People who are stricken by shrunken in- comes, businessmen in despair over their losses, governments driven t0 ( distraction by insurmountable prob- lems, with multitudes of all sorts and conditohs of men and women tired, worried and haunted-our churchmen must find some common ground of service, of hope and in- spiration. when hearts are falling and lives are sagging, there can be no room for clesiasticism. such united services as the writer has suggested, if carried out throughout the summer months, would not nec- essarily bring at. once food to the hungry or work to the workless, bill they would beset friendliness, brotherllness, a new mind that will not rest until there is a. more eq-u- able distribution of the necessites and comforts of life for the com- mon peoplc, and until “we have built. Jerusalem" in this great land. I am, Sir, etc, J. W. II. MILNI 1'16 Carrng Avenue, ottawa, “War today no longer has the klamour it once had so far as m- ponsible governments are cottcerm edP-Amoid Zwelg. ___________ "I believe in the old saying; ‘The is” e wunirv’: governed the better B Wiluiryli B0verricd."'-I"rank11n The First Announcement Said OUT THEY GO ! Now Owing to the Wonderful Values TNEY ARE GOING OIIT FAST The quality of the marble and granite, the superior workmanship, and the tremendous dis- count account for-the success of this Remark- able Sale. Chandler & Bell guarantee a saving of from $20 to $50 to anyone purchasing a memorial during this sale. They have the proof-and they can produce it. Don’t delay—See these Beautiful Monuments. 0f Castle Grey Marble, Scotch and Native Gramtes, in latest designs. ONANOLER & BELL \ 160 Kent Street CHARLOTTETOWN D. Roosevelt. EY ES I G N T EXAMINATION Filling natl lapplylng Glui- el. ale, Ii. J. NABON 1 I OPTOHITBIST Office Connected Willa Dragliaro $1.25 Nujol ‘I50 Nniol .~.... $1.25 Llelcrine 25o Llsierine Tooth Pllh Z30 P $1.00 Mineral Oil 69a as.» a. a. s. s c. Tablets 28a . m Fi-itativel m 25c Frnitaiivee .......... 330 when men were moaning, crying and dying, they knew no ecclesi- astical distinctions but "felt the pulse of one fraternity." Today with men homeless, penni- less and friendlese-men who want to live and yet day after day "6 in jeopardy as to their exstencc, fath- ers out of work with uunsrv child- i t i v regard to famiizleducotiga. ~ run. moi-here who have seen MIMI‘. 60a Chane Nerve Food .. 41a SBeOhueaK-Llrilis Ne i THE 2 MAGS DRUGSTOII MO Great George Street All Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. 30o Lister-inc ............ 23c i i 00-00 ‘Amkkkaakk k k ‘a AA - v-.. -\ _-. ‘slaucmsttnrwlsa Trusty as an old friendmit never fails to please with its lasting flavour. l-llClfifYysfvhiltl-IOISON