__ __,-__._,-__.._.. . ,- l B - gust 3 1‘ rm‘! F ‘l? 2’. ....t! TU ESDAY. .0? a ~ - fl-IE CHARLOTIIQTOWN GUARDIAN .4’ was‘ <; hos The season for gay, pretty things. Just look at the Hosiery, the i, Underwear and the Gloves can get for only SLOO! All new- ' all Spring-like-all of tvditionol KAYSER quality. you 119-421 Queen Street ‘liter llllihifle» “a . e- e \5 6G0 $_ _ ($10M §§§i~“.l‘.‘ c3111 “hi9 ° u_ _ ,, c“ 4 w“: $131“ vet“; b“ “a \ so Y~ \\ S" b 5 .1?» l’ so ‘“ Charlottetown King's Kindness Marked Crowning 0f “Peacemaker” Lownoiiv. Arm! _ Strange and even cruel happening-s associatid with post coronations are scattered so frequently in the r011 or migiish hzstory that the‘ in 1902 vcry coronation 0i‘ Edward VII stands out b; reason of a kindly 1:;- dent. .i Archbishop of Canter- ..(li‘rick Temple. father of the present Archbishop of York. knelt to do homage to the Sovereign but was unable to rise again to his feet. Ekiward there- upon ieft. the Chair for amo- ment iind gtinilj,‘ assisted the stricken ‘pTilllfllP to his feet. "God bless you. Sir, God bless you," murmured the Arc-pbishoiw. It tins on account. of Dr. Temples in- firmilics that the Archhlsh/ii) of , flu-n Dr. ltfnelnszztn, crowned F- Queen. Akox- wTZf‘ 'i)'.‘i0\'t"(l. Edward hav- <\"tl =1 worm place, in the I SURE LIKE THE TASTE Yilb MIGHT AS q‘ 5W4"? v -~I of England through his. 13»*"‘CP“"fduties and in his scrupulous WELL ililgcnt services as Prince of Vliziles during the latter years of the reign of Victoria. It was the especial distinction of Edward to hrive been a. substantial support of the throne before he was called upon to occupy it. He was exampl- fll‘_\' in the discharge of his pubiic de- tnchment from party politics. Hs coronation was postponed by the long dravm-out wnr Din South Africa. Fixed first for June 2e, i902. another postponement necessary. the King suffering from perityphlitis. which necessitated an operation. The King's recovery was rapid and the coronation took place Aug. 0. Though shom of much magm. licence which would have been iiddcd to it three monthg before by the presence of foreign royalties, m" Ceremony ivas perfonned in \V(‘Stl'fllf1sfBl' Abbey amid may, rejoieings, m MAY LABEL SUBURBS (By The Canadian Press) T-DNDON-A Dian is undercon- sirlerotion to erect name-plates in- rlimting the boundaries of differ- ent London districts as an inno- vntlon for Coronation year. »/ ND IT'S A mo PLUG FOR A owns! BUY THE BEST, a‘ -- WB-S Harvard Gives Club Eight Oared Shell DARTMOUTH, N.S., April l2- Presentation of an eight-cared shell to the North Star Aquatic Club of this Halifax Harbor town by Harvard University is being hailed by followers of shell racing as a. “sporting gesture unparalleled in Maritime ath etic history." Halifax saw its first eight-cared shell racing in the summer" of 1935 when several races were held as part of the Deep Sea ,Rodeo and Summer Carnival program. Buffalo Wl/estsides, Manhattan University and the Lachine Club of Montreal Salli crews and Halifax also enter- e . The fans liked it. 1r, was, in their opinion, superior to the four-cared races they had seen for years and for which the Halifax and Dart- mouth crews had won B. reputation. They wanted more of it. But the city and tovm aquatic clubs, their reg ttas suffering from attendances dep eted by the depres- sion ancl the automobile which made week-end out-of-iown trips easy. were not immediately able to purchase eight-cared shells and to provide quarters for them. Jubilee CIub was the first to buv one. For a year it lay in the shell house, unused in competition be- iJUSC there was no other club with .1 sitiiilai" shell. The North Stars decided to buy one and opened ne- gotiations for the purchase of a Harvard boat. But when the Harvard athletic head, William J. "Bill" Bingham, learned of the interest aroused in the younger oarsmen, and of the effort being made to sponsor eight- oured shell racing. he presented the Dartmouth club with its first eight- man boat. And now eight-cared shell racing seems assured for Halifax regattas this summer. Sudden Death From Heart Attack SPEAGATHE. Que, April 7- A verdict of death by natural causes was reached tonight by a coroner's jury inquiring into the death of Genevieve Lund, New Brunswick- bom nurse at the Lauientian Sana- torium here. Miss Lund was found dead early today in a hallway of the institu- tion. Medical testimony at the in- quest was that she had died of a heart attack. Dr. J. M. Roussell, Quebec Prov- ince medloo-legal expert from Montreal performed the autopsy. Dr. J. R. Blais of St. Jerome, , coroner. heard from officials of the i‘ institution that Miss Lund‘s body i had been found slumped over s. hot radiator, she was believed to have taken ill and collasped on the way to a washroom. Miss Lund, 28, was a daughter of Rev. John L. Lund. of Pentz, N. S. A graduate of Moncton City Hos- pital. she had been at the senator- ium here for three years. ST. ANDREWB SCHOOL ' Standing for the month 0f March: Grade X-l. Rita Maohityie, 2. Bernadette MacDonald. Grade VII-l. Meriadorn. Mac- Donald; 2. Theresa. Muclntyre; 3. John Thomas. Grade VI-l. Margaret Rose: 2. Hope Rose. 3. Jean NlacKenzie- Grade IV-l. Daisy Smullwood. Grade III-l. Audrey Muclntyre; 2. Theresa MacDonald; 8 Josephine ‘Thomas. Grade III (JrJ-l. Shirley Mac- Kenzle. " Grade I -1. Freda. Macmtyre; 2. Urban MacDonald: 3. John MacDonald. Grade I tJr)-1. Ellwood Mac- Kenzle; 2. Annie Thomas. —John R. man, Teacher lllnnrd’: Llnlnianl cannon lhlno. By WILLIAMS v I 2/ l up“ ' ' f?‘ / t%* 2/ ‘if i“ i Q Z 52-3‘- \— 3a., !§-__.>’/ _\ 1 LOOK! QUICK, MA.’ 1 CAN'T HOLD lT BUT A SECOND~ LOOKIT ‘Tl-l’ COMICAL CAMEL-v- I'LL SHOW VOU A M0065 NEXT "ATLL BE A HAIZD ONE. Byrd Tells What Individual Gan D0 To Check War Can we, 5.5 individuals, do any- thing to avert war? Admiral Richard E. Byrd believes that we can, and in the Rotarian Magazine enmnerates several stcpfi that can be taken by all individuals desiring to maintain peaceful re- lations between nations. "The first step," urges the fum- ous arctic explorer, who on his last trip to the South Pole resolved to devote most of the remainder of his life to efforts for peace, "is to inform ourselves and our children as to what is involved in the choices to be made. "Take Just one of the questions of peace: disarmament. How much does the mun in the street krow about. it The point is that dis- armament is not as simple as it sounds. We need to inform our- selves about it, as we need to in- form ourselves about all the prob- lems of peace. To promote pence, we must know what peiwe means. “A second step. perhaps. is to study war and voilence as institut- ions. and to reach conclusions about them. Is violence effective? Is war an efficient method of settling ‘ Disregardlng ethical flrr‘ 1i OUR BOADING HOUSE r/// ‘at? 7 77> — I’ ‘THERE wAs A-riivie WHEN ’ 1 couunwr MAKE u? MY l MIND WHICH wA-s we considerations. bloodshed, ruined lives. biological consequences. and the like. does war do the immediate job of settling international dis- putes? “We think in sober moments that we must avoid war at all costs; yet when the hour comes. in our ex- citement the greoter imperative seems to be to cave our country against what apparently threatens it. Perhaps. we can fortify our- selves against this by calm logic be- fore the war clouds arise. Perhaps we can convince ourselves, and then others, that. war does not settle problems and difficulties. "A third step, individuals can take, perhaps." continues Admiral Byrd, "is to inform themselves as to i what is really necessary for peace. Can nations live side by side in amity? We know, of course. that they can. The cias-tc instance is Canada and the Unit/ed States, two countries having the longest com- mon frontier of any nations-with- out one mile of that frontier forti- fited-ond not in a century and a. quarter hu there been war, or the serious threat of war. The coun- tries of the Scandinavian peninsula, also, have not known war for more than a. century. "The final thing, of course, after having informed ourselves. is take positive action toward the realization of our beliefs. Of the ‘way’, I am not so sink-nor am I t __ with t 51>u'r-r-"r sPu-r-"ri; A HAWIAER OF ICE, INDEED.’ i=ui=i= -'F --- 1 WILL HAVE You KNOW, sum that, any one way is the only way.... I would not want to close my mind to any proposal honestly and competently made with the purpose of furthering peace. When peace comes, it will no doubt coma through the meeting and agree- ment of many minds which among themselves possess diverse views 0B most subjects-and even on methods of attaining this oblw- tive." 4 QUEEN WILL OFFICIATE (By The Canadian Press) RDUERDAM-Queen Wilhelm.- ina. of the Netherlands will 011lo- late at the launching of the liner. Nieuw Amstqdam, April 10. (ORNS 6 VMRTS Roman dry skin. Dub on Minud‘: 3 time: dull . L“ ii ‘Mia-nu or: whicConu a llft rlgllt off‘ MINARUS lNlMENT Major Hoople ”% MOST userui. AROUND ms House/You on -n-ie cuavioo no ~n-ir.=. cA-ocvi ! Bur, sauce ‘THE CLKKOO wem’ sounfllva ‘DSUDED 1i-iA-r YOUR VOICE J5 sour. vovrruua, AND 1M eioiua "rovur You iuro ‘PPOPUCTION, m1 HAvi-z "to EQUIP You WITH ICE "toms AND MAW; ‘THAT I HAVE PURCHASED A ‘PAYING Business! rrs ‘FAME, UNDER MY GUIDHJG GEHILE, WILL ‘STRETCH ‘FROM _ code-r 1o ¢oAsr-..i-<Ai=- 7 KAF-Fw-Il. AM SUPERSEDINQ I oAvie IN Hi6 cmcus amen , it \\\\\l\ \\\\ l _ . mvtmrof-‘Zp-i!‘ , w ;\\\\\ y\l\\\\\\ 3-1 (“k \\" ‘ E BIGfTRNNED ‘FLEA BARON- l. iii