.r":f¢. ._ . 1.1, . ~ ~21. i ‘ - l ‘ri-Lgijine M I N is Te R Sir Ionics Al. ilARRIl-HS impassioned. ,3)’ . McNAMEE WEEKLY NEWS 3--'I—B.l5 EDWARD TODAY Glasgow Adopts Huge Dock Plan G ASGOW, Scotland, July 22— (C.P.)-A scheme o1 dockland de- velopment; bared on a 50-year plan and. estimated to cost 535000.000. has been approved by the Clyde Navigation Trust in Glasgow. About l 1-2 miles of additional wharfage will be provided, and 1 1-4 miles of river frontage will be used. A modified layout of docks. con- sisting 0f two basins to the west ' of King George V Dock, with grav- fng docks at the south end and a riverside quay running eastwards. from Renfrew and permitting o! a widening cf 200 feet in the river op- posite has now been visualized- The needs of the trust for at least 5o years ahead will be met by grad- ual additions as required on the basis of the scheme. GQVPLAC Eés J '_’YO,U;HAVE NEV Beau serous. ~ CANADIAN umiloucgi. afi-fij; ApIAIIIES ‘I Those place: you have drgnmed - about .'..gou can vinteasilythil car wit Canadian National ow summer fares. Before planning your vacation, inves- xigate rhese travel bargains- LOW WEEK-END FAKE Going Friday Noon to 2-00 . .m.- Sunday; rerurnin icavc ‘ sonlnuion up co Mon I mid- “ ‘nlghc. On aalealiyur. . g0 DAY PARIS c0 “ w; l d other points in Idlnd Saskatchewan. 1 and! 51w aw S; s 4;. my runes co i Sc . so) r0); l (Mflhndnrd 111F321” -" oi TIM?! i ONE ION! GIRI. . ._. ‘waging o gallon! bofllc against o flood of vicious slandcrlj 3 -— ‘I — 8.45 P. M. OSWALD CARTOON SCREEN SNAPSHOTS ronn --knl.r.v' COMEDY CAPITOL ‘I'D-DAY ALSO: “Party WKWC t] t api o Checked and double-checked, “Party Wire," new Columbia. pic- ture, which opened yesterday at the Capitol Theatre, leaves little to be desired in the way of entertain- ' July 21-0. P.) —Genetic8. ment. Story, acting and direction are well done and knit closely into a compact. fletter-than-average who . Jean Arthur and Victor Jory, cc- featured in the film, make their story romance believable and con- vinclng. Taken from the best-selling novel by Bruce Manning, “Party Wire" re- volves around a storm of gossip which sweeps over a typical Mid- western small town when secrets become often facts through the tele- phone party wire. The scathing rumors almost cause the destruction oi Miss Arthur's and Jory's rom- ance, but they fight through to- gether to wln vindication in a nov- el surprise climax. Charley Grapewin, featured as Miss Arthur's lazy, but lovable, old father, turns in some excellent com- - cdy. And, as a pair of very able gos- sipers, Clara Blandick and Maude Eburne are splendid. Credit, too, goesto Helen Lowell, as Jory's in- valid aunt; Geneva Mitchell as Jean's rival for Jcry's affections; ' nnd to the rest of the competent supporting cast, which includes » Robert Allen, Oscar Apfel, Lillian Harmer and Matt McHugh. The direction, by Erie Kenton, is intelligent, and keeps the film mov- ing always at a. fast clip. "Party Wire" is a. full evening's entertainment-dent’ miss it! - Science Spots Family Traits In Transactions COLD SPRING HARBOR, N. Y., the science which set out to discover the laws of heredity, has found the packages, transmlttcd from parents to child, containing the entire as- , sortment of hereditary traits. says Dr. C. B. Davenport of the Carn- egie Institution station for experi- mental evolution here. The ..ame of the oecsges is genes. They are very small bodies in living cells. The genes lie close to the limits of photog-raphnbllity under thc highest microscopic power, and with ultra-violet light. There are thoimnds of them in each cell of thc human body. Each cell's multi- ‘tude of genes is a duplication of those in every other sell-a perfect my of the original sets from father mother. Heredity is too often thought of narrowly as merely the tmnmiis- IIGYOIQNIM from parent to child. But heredity is, in its broader as- pect, tho control of individual dc- velopnscnt. Dr. Davenport says. The development of THE CHARIJOTTETOWN Hepburn In Barrie’s “Little Minister” At Prince Edward Ever since Maude Adams human- to her nnlvc not of lntriguc which ized the lovable character of Babble in Sir James Battle's nevcr-to-bc- forgotten story and play, "Tho Llttic Minister", this quaint document has endeared itself to theatre-goers everywhere. And now Katharine Hepburn has made a splendid interpretation of the story as her new starring chlcic which , r‘ yesterday at the Prince Edward Theatre. Hollywood's lavish resources have been drawn upon to the limit in N- gard to production, cost, detail, in- timate touchs, backgrounds, color, romance and lnicrpretations. There is the appealing romance of the little pastor, ‘Gavin Dishart, for Babble-a. romance that tugs at the heart and engenders a. flne senti- ment enchanting to the beholder. Babble returns this love with all the nature of her sex-and to this love Hepburn is said tc give a depth of tenderness and spirit which oven she has never before revealed. Sir James M. Barrie ls a keen. penetrating. though whimsical, writer. He knows the feminine soul and his Babble is the eternal Eve that he painted her-and Miss Hep- burn is the ideal actress to portray his heroine most vividly. The spectator instantly l-SPOIIGI she weaves around the serious-mind- ed Gavin and lnllchlevously delights in watching him endeavor to break this romantic yoke. ' Everyone’: lymplthy also glows at the attempts of the simple village weavers to break their industrial bondage. And when Babble takes ' Gavin to the hilltop and persuades him tc blow_thc horn, warning the countryside of the approach of the A soldiers, one hnds the incident not only highly dramatic, but aPNaluig. Compact with human uches, this EKG-Radio Picture ls embroidered with countless details of Debbie's charm, and the whole story is play- ed against a background charged with life in the quaint and colorful Scottish town of Thrums. Katharine Hepburn makes Babble a delightful study of plqunnt and persuasi e arts. John with fine authorityand lends the part a quaint pathos. Alan Hale in properly featured as Rcb Dow, the village ruffian. The sensitive hand of direc- tor Richard Wallace was all that was needed tc give the picture the anal touch it needed, and to weld together the performance of the star and the large and splendid ,, t- Halifax Port Arrivals ARRIVALS Dredge from local harbour Scow from local harbour Ile Madame from local harbour Banshee from local harbour Acadia from New York Yarmouth from Boston Ciss from local harbour Acadian from local harbour Pentland from local harbour SAILINGS Ile Madame to MW. Arm Banshee to N.W. Arm Ciss to Saint John Acadlan to local harbour Pentland to local harbour Bulkarler to Dlngwall VESSELS IN BER-TH Dredge, berth Scow. berth Ile Madame. excursion Banshee, excursion Acadia, cruise Yarmcuth, cruise piss, loading Acadlan. discharging Pentland, discharging Bulkarier, discharging Mary Currie, berth Barge No. 2. berth VESSELS DUE T0 ARRIVE July zit-Cornwallis from Montreal Magdalen from Halifax Sonia from Saint John Dominion Shipper from Halifax Zl-Chedabucto from E. C. Ports Zzl-Cavelier from Montreal Rosalind from New York Fort St. George from St. John's Serlnga from Montreal Famorth from Boston City of Johannesburg, Calcutta Zil-Reo from Halifax Magdalen from Halifax ill-Lady Hawkins from Bermuda Marlls from Halifax 25—Clssy from Montreal Lenarflsh from Halifax Fernfleld from Halifax 26-—New0undland from Liverpool Lehigh rom Boston Moyra from Saint John zfl-Lillemor from Jamaica Farnorth from Charlottetown Blue River from Toronto 28-—Portia from Nfld. Ports Chedabucto from E.C. Ports 29—Markland from Liverpool, NB. $0.000 FOB. RADIUM LONDON. July 22-(C.P.)—Klng Edward's Hospital Fund for Inn- don has received from Roger Parr of Warrlngton, a former High Sheriff of Herefordshirc, $50,000 as a Jubilee gift to its Radium Fund. WINDHOEK, South Africa. July 22—(C.P.)-J. H. Hofmeyr. Union minister, opening the Home In- dustries Exhibition and Agricul- tural Show here recently, spoke in English. German and Afrikaans. rather the egg," Dr. Davenport goes on. ' "And the egg has to work with great swiftness. 'I‘o wnstruct from a few cells a. mouse capable at birth of moving about. suckling, react- ing to various stimulus; ofmuscle, ‘ " nthcbeglnrungs of thousands of hairs and numer- ous glands, the circulatory system, a complicated nervous systcm made u_n of many millions of cells, lakes about 260 hours." It is the next lob of genetics to work out, along thcsc hypothetical lines, the method of production by gcnu, cf the various tissues with their reqaectivc qualities at the proper time and place. Still another direction in which the genetics of the filturc will move is toward n betlcr undu- stnnding of tire relations between hereditary changes and evolution. Most of the hereditary changca (mutations) which occur under the But some are; at least some mu- totions omur that fit the orpniln "ironic Quick Eliot iron Maritime Provinces crops, ac- cording to the Bank of Montreal: In Prince Edward Island grain crops continue to make excellent . Hay has benefited by the weather of the past week but the yield will be below Throughout New Brunswick and Nova. Scotla grains show satisfac- tcry growth. Haying has - ced and should be general next week; the crop is expected _to be about average. Potatoes and other roots continue satisfactory prog- ress. Apples are sizing rapidly and small fnilts are promising. British Proud 0f Air Trades LONDON. July nil-No better tribute was ever paid tc the skill of service mechanics responsible for the maintenance of aircmft and to the dependability of British airplanes and engines than in con- nection with the King's recent first Iwlow of the Royal Air Force, ac- cording to observers here. lit was pointed out the reviewin- volving the assembly and parade of 366 airplanes and a -‘ "fly past" of 20 squadrons went through without a hitch. The great event and the whole of the arduous week of preparation were attended byno "incident" more serious than one forced landing during a practice flight. The airplanes were drawn up for the King's inspection on the grassy plain of Mlldenhall airdmrme, fam- ous in flying history as the starting point of the England-Australia. air races last October. In front were ranged the fighting squadrons; be- hind them were the light bombers and the army oo-opemtlon units. In the background were the heavy bombers, their olive-grey bodies and wings contrcstlxig with thesll- very hue of the smaller machines. Al.“ panied by the Prince of Wales and the Duke of York. both of whom are expert airplane pilots and hold high funk in the Royal Air Force, the King drove slowly along the five miles of aircraft, halting here and there to talk with officers and men and to inspect more closely details cf thevequip- ment of the machines. < Irwpection lasted nearly an hour, nutcr- which the King left forDux- ford, 27 miles away, where he watched the fly past. His deport- urc was the signal for tense, or- dolcd activity. Every airplane had in be moved unhurrieib’. vet as rapidly as possible, to a new posi- tion in readiness for the take-oi! of the 20 squadrons w fly tc Dux- ford. Cont/ml officers slgmlled ‘ with red and green flags. . First to ascend were the heavy bombing biplanes, then four squad- rons of light bombers capable of 180 miles on hour but under or- ders to maintain a stcndy 115 mil- cs. They wen followed by a mixed group of squadrons of light bomb- ers. army oo-cprnticn machines and finally 10 single-seam- fighter- squadrons, somc- of whose machin- escanspcedalong M231 rnileran hour. Moving st relatively low speeds the formations remained precise and orderly in somewhat bumpy weather. At Duxicrd the scene was unfor- Bcttnble. a masicrplccc of mechan- ical beauty in movement aauinst s. background of hot bloc sky and light fieecy cloud. Nine miles ln length “ ‘thew-fleet, each squadron kceplng formation like guardsmcn, every machine a mir- acle of polished wing: and body in mite of l. week's pleketing in the open. ~ At. the end came the Glcstcr command. End Kidney nonnal. i GUARDIAN 5i Ice Cream Festival The ice cream festival held at Indian River on Tuesday evening was an enjoyable aflalr in spite of the lnclemency of the weather. The ball game between Kcnsiniftvn and Mar-gate ladies was won by Mar- gaie, the score being 21-6. A short program of sports was carried out with the following results: 16 lb. hammer throw: 1. Bunk Fitzzerrild, Clftown: 2. Don Baker, Margate; 3. James Gal- lagher, Margate. 16 lb. shot put: 1. James Gallagher; 2. Bunk Fitz- gerald; 3. Don Baker. 56 lb. weight (distance): _ 1. Fred Cameron, Margate; 2. Lester Champion, Kensington; 3. Weston Campbell, Clermont. 50 yard dash (open): 1. John McDonald. Indian River; 2. Peter McLellan, Indian River; 3. Aloysius McLcllnn, Indian River. Girls 50 yard dash: 1. Audrey Baker. Margate; 2. Gladys Baker, Margate; 3. Evelyn Johnson, Murgate. 50 yard dash (boys in): 1. Joseph Cameron, Indian River; 2, Earnest Mclnnis, Indian River; 3. Charles German, Sensington. 50 yard dash (boys sh): 1. John E. Noonan, 2. David Gor- man. 3. Roddic Cameron. Girls 50 yard dush in: 1. Kathleen Reid, Hope River; 2. Patricia Penticrgnsi, Kenslngton; 3. Mary Reid, Hope River; 4. Adclade Glover, Spring Valley. Girls 50 yard dosh sr.: 1. Margaret McKinncn. Clermont ll. Rose Mclnnis, Indian River; 3. Mary Pendergast, Kcnsington. The dnncing booth was well pat- ronized. Spccinl demonstrations of 519D dancing fls in “ye olden tyme" were given by the veterans John Murphy and N. J. McNclll. Excel. lent music was provided by several local musiclans.—K. NEW BRUNSWICK monwnys m rmsr cnnss MOTORING CONDITION mrznnmcron. N.l3., July 22- NEW Bruit-Wicks motoring highways are now in excellent mid-season condlton. During the spring con- stant gradlng operations were (m. ried out to bring all road surfaces to the highet pTssibIc standard of smoothness and recent favorable weather has made the matter of maintenance less difficult. Construction projects are under way at various points along the Provincial highway system but in no instance do these in any way interfere with the movement; of tramc. In the majority o! cases work is being carried on in such a way that only one side of the high- way is under construction at any time. Where this method is not feasible good safe dot/curs have been provided. ' Returns covering the period and. ed Juno 30th. complied and dis- tributed by the New Brunswlc‘ Government Bureau a‘ Information and Tourist Travel, indicatc that during the early part or the mm. lng season the volume of United States tourists‘ cars entering the Province has measured well up against that of last year. Yeast From Wood Andriowlndudrlalchcmlstsuc r w Austria, excited over possible rc sicratlon of the Hamburg dynasty. and threatened by mobilization of tie Entente. was faced with another cf Chancellor Kurt von Schuschnigg Linz. Rumors of political sabotage the chancellor's wife and serious in is forecast that Prince Ernst Starh cist, who flew back from Venice. wh duke Otto, claimant to the Austrian or dictator. Figures in the accident (IySchuschnlKB. who has been adv for a while; (2) Mme. Sohuschnigg, accident; (3) Prince Von Starhemb to succeed Schuschnigg; (4) Kurt broken thigh; (5) Another photo- son. i JULY 2s, 193s’ _ . ii Monarchislt Plot Hin ted in Austrian Motor Fatality (5) the troops of her neighbors, the Lit- definitc crises when the automobile crashed into o. tree five miles from and plotting followed the death of Jury t) his son, and the possibility emberg, Austria's most militant fas- ere he was conferring with Arch- throne, may make himself regent to the chancellor are shown here. ised by physicians to give up office who died from a broken neck in the erg, asked by the Austrian cabinet Schuschnigg. Jr., 9. who suffered a graph of the chancellor's injured Connaught Led Knightly Walk LONDON. July 22—(C.P.)—'I‘he ceremony or Installation of Knights of the Most Honorable Order of the Bath at Westminster Abbey- the first for many years-was at- tended by many most famous men in England, including leaders oi the army, navy. air force. leading statesmen, well-known public 591'" vants, all in brilliant medlaeval robes that made recognition of many of them dlmcult. ‘The occasion was also the o'e- opening, after renovation, of the Henry VII Chapel, the chapel of the order, hung with the multi- colored banners of the Knights Grand Cross. The Great Master of the Order o: the Bath ls the Duke of Con- naught, a. former Governor-General of Canada. with him in the slow and stately procession up to the High Altar. to the music of Elgar, and out into the Henry VII Chapel, filed his fellow G.C.B.'s--each in a. flowing gown of crimson. with shining white ribbons at the shoul- ders, orders and medals gleaming; their hats were o! black velvet. each with a fine white ostrich feather. It was pure Plantagenet pageant- ry. in a setting that exactly suited it. Once in the chapel the ccrc- mony of installation began. each knight to be installed drawing his sword, holding it forward by the blade, the hilt towards the altar. The ceremony over, the proces- sion re-formed and passed through the Abbey and out into the cloist- ers, headed by the choir singing "For All the Saints." BABY MacKAY Friends and rehtives sympathirc with the pa/rents of little Ola Mar- ion MacKay, baby daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bcrtmnr MacKay, whose sudden death occurred at Ollnton on July 2nd. The little child had lt lived another month would have been two years old, and was a. gen- eral favorite with everyone. She was left at a neighbor's house while the parents went to Ken- sington, and had wandered out of sight for only a few minutes. Sud- denly she was missed and they searched for the mining child. ony to find it lilelcss in a pool oi wntcr at the gate. The Doctor was hastily summoned but could do nothing for the unfcrtunatc child. It seemed God's calling tilat the little child g0 to Heaven with His angels, because only icn days pre- vious it had fallen into the watcr and its mother had saved it. It was a terrible shock to the almost brokon-hcaricd mother and father. Time are left to mourn two little brothers, Willard and Weirum, and a sister Mary, besides it's grand- parents. The funeral was conduct- "cdonJulyiirdbyRcmMnSom- pail-bums were Messrs. Keith Wlrnn, Chas. Dennis. Jackie O‘- Comm, Ernest Robertson, Ivan Pickering. Hillard Woodslde. It wuicndecisialdtcrcst in New, London cometary when‘ its 3am. mother was buried only two months ago. , (Patriot. pitllc copy) flour/m. mail. my n-tcir.) -'l'wo men were sentenced to doom and two others to asvca WILL MAGNIFY EVIDENCE BOMBAY‘. July 22—(C1'.)—1'lor the first time in the history of the Bombay High Court, a. micro- phone and amplifier has been put in use in one of the chambers. onfiFirifirifvrisf/{iv REMEMBERS 11m s. A. LONDON. July zz-The gratitude of a one-time "homeless and brok- en man" to the Salvation Army for their kindness and hospitality is expressed ln a. practical manner in the will of Henry Greenip, Car-ford street. Poplar, wastepaper canvas- ser. He bequeathed: £200 and money in the Post Of- flce Savings Bank to the Salvation Army, to be expended; £50 for free breakfasts at the Blackfriarl Institution, "as s. token of gro- titudc and thanks for the kindness and hospitality shown ic mo by the officers in charge when I entered there a homeless and broken mu-u one Sunday morning in October, 1912." £50 for general religious purposes in connection with tho social work at the Salvation Army Hostel, Quaker street, Spitalfleldsi £50 for general religious purposes in connection with the Social work at the Spa road Colony S.i!l., the remainder for the furtherance of spiritual work ln the Salvation Army's Institutions for men. The residue of the property to the General of the Salvation Army, for the Darkest England. Social Scheme. Mr. Greenip left £432. The Financial Record to the Liberal candidatcs like nothing in all Liberal history ignoring the added burden time. beginning of the depression concerned. over half a million dollars. ing, plenty. The task facing the Con Province in their three year In doing this, one would the Public Accounts reveal ‘I The Conservatives, with Conservative years of world sion was letting in 1' In 1981 The Conservative aver-age c: Li i ave i _ Inna hi]. following. in an athlliit W "b! not bslcnul in their yam of year, the debt increase was $192,645, $176,540, and in 19,30, $234,584, or a total of $603,766 debt increase in the three Liberal “years of plenty.” record chow for the fourth Liberal ycarlwhcn the depres- The MacMiiian Government's record of achievement is a red rag to a bull. There is to compare with it, and they dare not challenge comparison on this ground. Instead- of responsibility which the Government has been facing-they resort to misstatements regarding the financial record of the two administrations, in an effort to prove “MacMiilan’s extravagance.” Every school child in Prince Edward Island known that no comparison of governmental financing is of any value without taking into account the conditions prevailing at the The first three years of the Saunders-Lea Government, for example, were normal years; their fourth year saw the so far as this Province waa In that year they piled up a debt incricase of But the expenditures every year were steadily mount- In 1928 the Liberal expenditure was $1,267,354. 1929 it was $1,361,503, and in 1930 $1,455,670, or a total of $1,034,540 in their three fuii years. Out of that was paid on I interest and sinking funds $540,193, leaving an expenditure of $3,541,347 which they incurred in their three years of In servative administration was to help the people by giving as much employment and relief as possible, while at the same time keeping down the debt. How did they succeed '! In 1932, the first full Conservative year, they expended $2,014,923; in 1933, $1,686,415, and in 1934 $2,026,359: or a total of $5,727,697, less interest and sinking fund payments of $948,066,,ienvlng an expenditure for the three years mentioned of $4,779,611; In other words, they paid out to the people of this period $1,238,264 more than the Len Government paid in the corresponding time. expect them to incur a very much larger debt than the Liberals incurred. But what do In 1928, the first full Liberal In 1929 it was an increased expenditure of $1,238,264, increased the debt by 8927,2104 dilcrencc oi $324,000 which can easily be accounted for by the interest and sinking fund on the debt increase of $1,177,000 which the Len Government left on going out of office. But this only accounts for the Liberal financial record in their three “years of plenty” as compared with the thrcc depression. What docs the they “mini 01.860000. l"! $220,950 in interest and linking fund, or a total of $1,045,550- pcaditnrc for the. tin-co suc- cogdin years of depression was $1,698,500. - In other words, _ dilute in 1m was ' cnscrvsiln -cxpcndltm ~ for an time run gnaicr by $02,446 than the an aim u iIoHhc whole story. 1...‘... increased u.» a o4- .198,1tr8l48.m last . I ...~...r.............“---"~ The I-iinrll Mlle! now h u» aiarvl twinks-um»- lancc the Bcllcvw , my could e x ted prosperity. .-‘ » l, > ;.;,~,§g,§__i;,' y!