PAGE stxw_ _# THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN APRIL 30. 1937 ‘r. SATURDAY ‘MATINEE AT‘. 2.3" ‘Prince Edward Today All. THE SVJELP AND iPl-ENDC‘! CF EZNEQLAND’! HEROIC PATEL‘ l Alexander I455‘ Kordu _ presents ~\ _ tfi “(in . t z‘ I l x\\ye\n\\\\‘\\\n.... \“‘\\\\“\ - a.’ ~ - J Also Adv: turt- s rt And An - I Eulr-‘iv- \~l i») ‘l. ' t" t irlotm ' "l-ltlf; y, ' “w A f n > w’ I .lll‘.i.H DOUBLE BARRELED ACTION! DAPITD L —- TODAY and SATURDAY ifclsslbvrs PALS TURN AGAINST HlM _0_lhi'li§ M T lHRilliNG ADVENTURE. t.” lug’ rice E. Mulfords /Z-¥ ORDERLAND f, ,._ WILLIAM e0 f‘ 6nd,.- m.“ . JJ-‘ra w...“ Till} ICAMOUS G-RIAN 0F TllE PRINTED PAGE SMASHES ACROSS THE SCREEN IN A NEW BREATH-TAKING HIT ~ “DICK TRA c Y” --—-- With Ralph Byrd—Kay Hughes ‘Iln- titmuus cartoon detective lives on the screen in thrilling real- Um- and the Spider Mob! _______~_.__ SATURDAY MAT. oomtiutl rc- tiers who have laughed and cried with Tracy, 1 . uni, UWPII mi Junior Ln the newspapers will scream with t. rillVlllPlH as the courageous G-Man relentlessly trails the Lame 2.80 fPE-iiibe" Edward Hit ins League 0f Na- W tit-us Gold Medal OVER’ ENGlLAND" (_l4-\lk-'lA4u l-ljST '1 Alli IEAIH l.\ i1.l' llllllllllllllllS IliLk. Jxzllolls. tlu- Prince the slur)‘. ‘III. young ill. anon: V AC- PICTURE OF vote of 52‘ "rlrc Over Eng- . Edward's week- ciltl itnraclion. non the League o. Xildtllln‘ Gold .\l<<l:ll ,' t‘l‘ll't‘ oi the _\. lil' and was award- ttt u lllll‘\'-—lil.\l ll PlLillllWQ at the inlnctl Radio City , ‘ll lat: lls-ll on the fourth of March. ‘ in Robson, u, Queen Erzubeth. and leadim‘. uni by Laurence Oliver Englishman ~ terrors of the Span- en Leigh as as the best llSllCti American . the Spanish gl who pro- » , 11nd Rnylnond Massey .\\'t'lilli_ King Philip of Check Year lleeds List: Touch-up tum. -_ ._ ._ _ 50c! Stop iqlu-zilt (lil — 25c imri dill’, Loosen .\'nt Oil — - -- - lilii-l Slmoniz - - - _ _- tlfn- rnu‘ Car Bulb» _ - __ _ __ im- ll|i Fuses — -— - — ."vl' can-h License Pinto I-mtenl-rs 10c eat-h , License Plnle Emmi-s — 75c srt Patching Kits — — - - - -' Hammers - — — - - - Bumper Jar-ks —- — — — Bumper Jacks -— — -- -— . fl Chamois — — — -— 5th- nml till:- Wonl Ilusfern — -- -- -— — $1.25 Attention Car Owners on the Following (‘lteesct-ltith — — 18c—3 yd. okr- lltlsters — — -- — — 0c lb. Auto flown — — — — - 30c lb. (‘itstrol - -— — — - $1.80 gal. (lun Grease -— —— — — — 30c lb. Windshield Wipers -- —- -- $1.00 Windshield Wiper Blades — — — — — -— -- 20c and 45c Windshield Wiper Arms i 85c Tire Pall-hes — — — — 10c up Autnmnbilc Lamp Kit. — — 10c Fender Guides — — $1.35 each Door Slit-ulcers — -- — 4c each Automobile llorns —- —- — $2.00 Pumps--—-—---—89c up This Store Will be STARTING ‘rile b92533 Company PHONE 10B Open for Business Until 9.30 on Saturday Nights MAY 1st. HARDWARE Limited CHARLUTTETUWN Ailgtusttls Bridle. of the Toronto DaJy Star. sold: "l-‘lre Over Eng- land l5 the finest British film ever shown here, and the greatest. .ilm of England ever made anywhere. Hullyuootl has produced no his- L0l'.t‘;ll picture so fine." "Boys Life." the official Organ of the Boy Scouts of Amerca. says: “If ‘Fire Over Eingland’ is not t0 be the best picture of 1937. it is bound t0 bl- 0 tanding in mo- t'on picture achievement. for Oill“l'5 must g0 fur b0 equal it.’ Reviewers everywhere have prais- ed the picture: The .New York ‘Times -"Has all the solid virtues of the better pictures" —Hern.ld‘ Trzbune- “Resplendent pagcantry ——.\i(liifl.ll acting —direction splen- ditF-American-Thrlller de lllX0-—- filled with fire, smoke and sure strclkc-lylcal love scenes-romanci- as well as adventure." And so it goes. Unless you arc a pnrfcillar follower of lhglish pictures. you may be quite un- ncqtlainted will: the cast. but take our word lhr it. vou'll know. when you've sren the picture. that they (lichft. make any difference. You'd seen a mnrvcllour produc- tion and a Univ great cast. The Prince Edtvardis program also includes an adventure short and an exceptionally clever and entertainiig Mickey Mouse cm"- toon entitled. "The Worm Turns.“ (‘apitoPs New Serial Based yOn Cartoon William Boys in Another "Cassidy” Series -- “IIGrdr-rIand" is New Feature ‘Thrills, breath-taking and spine- tingling action, roaring and smash- ing adventure. dangerous and in- triguing—-all are combined in the action-loaded Capitol Theatre pro- gram for this week-end. . You have delighted in the career of the famous cartoon G-Mnn. Dick ‘Tracy. the most famous detect ve of the printed age. Now, the Capitol l5 presenting a screen attraction based on the famous cartoon strip originated by Chester Gould. Dick Tracy comes to the film as handsome. husky Ralph Byrd ta. re- markable rcsemblnncew; Gwen is lovely Kay Hughes; Mike McGurk is Smiley Burnettc. beucr KIIOWII as "Frog" from his parts in the Gene Autrcy westerns; little Junior is Lee Van Alta; Steve Lockwood ls Fred Hamilton; Brandon is Bruce Mtch- ell. It is of interest to note the pres- ence in the cast of “Dick Tracy" of one of the most famous leading men of the silent picture days, namely. Francis X. Bushman. The Capitols new Week-end fea- ture is thrilling Western of the "J-lopalong Cassidy" series entitled "Borderland" and featuring William Boyd. The program also includes e. very entertaining ltttle cartoon, "Kiko Foils the Fox." C HARACTER The word “character” which comes into our English speech directly and without change of sound from the Greek, signifies, first. the sharp tool with which a. seal or a die is engraved and then the inscription of the object which is cut in the seal or in the die. Our character. then, ls the image and the superscrlptlon which we cut. upon our life; I say we cut, for however much happens to us and bears upon us from outside causes beyond our control. it ls true, tn the last analysis. that we deter- mine our own character. We hold the tools which cut the legends on our life. We grave the die. we lnclse the seal. What are the tools with which we cut character upon ourselves? The fools are thoughts. As a man thinketh in his heart. so is heF-Oharles Cuthberi. Hall. TAKING . THOUGHT llf a man talke no thought albout what is distant. he will find sor- row near at hand-Confucius- Scotlantfs Greatest Athlete A. A. CAMEBDWS OUTSTANDING RECORDS llBy c. n. MCCOMBIE sun-m 1n these days of record break- ing by modern athletes. it mid m" terest some of your readers to heal‘ the story of the career of one W00 set up a good many records lnhls time, and who was. in m‘ 0001100 so far a5 the actual heavy even“ are concerned the Emmi?- fllhlew- and certainly the strongest man who ever made a. name for him- self at the Scottish games. Alexander Anthony Cameron was born on March 20. 1817. Bl Loch Tralz. in Invernessshlm. but at the age of two went with hi5 father to Glengalmadale, King- lalrloch. Arlyll. Where he 5119M most of his boyhood. invariably the case with prominent athletes. his extraordinary. powers side of the family. and of maternal grandfather it is related that on one occasion; when a cart drawn by a garmn got bogged. the driver sent to him for assistance. seizing the cart by the projections at the rear he heaved it on to firm ground. and remarked, "No wonder the beastie couldn't get it out; I was nearly beat myself." First Competed at Fort William At the age of 19 he competed first in the local competitions at Fort William. and in the following season (1897) astounded the natives by doing 45 ft. 4 in. with the light ball. and 105 ft. with the light hammer. In the spring of 1898 his greatest rival as a. ball putter the late Charles Madcan. then of F‘ort Wil- liam. wrote to my father sawing lthat he had seen a youngster who weight competitors then in the fled As these included Donald Ross. Klltarllty: Donald Gillespie. Islay -, and Madenn himself. Cameron had something to do, but Maclean's estimate of Cameron's powers proved correct by the end of the season. when he had beaten lvlaclean by 4 ft. with the heavy atone at Oban. and Gillespieand G l-I Johnsttone with both heavy and light balls at Fort ’Wil1lam. His putt of 3'1 ft. 6 in. with a 22 1-2 lb. stone was probably the best ever done up to that date at Oban. At Inverness in the same season he was beaten by two inches with the light ball by Donald Ross, and failed to get a place with the heavy ‘throw which was winning ball. although he slightly fouled a. by a foot. Ln the season of 1899 he never reached his true form of putting. and had still not begun to be a hammer thrower or caber tosserof note. but in i900, although still only commencing to show lrn- proved form with hammer and cabcr. he was easily the leading putter with heavy ball, and second to Charles Maclean with light ball. "Hwy 590m Records Broken In that season he smashed the Aboyne record with heavy stone with a putt of 38 ft. 9 in., and dld 38 ft. 2 in at Fort William; 38 ft. B 1-2 in. at Inverness. and 39 ft. 1 in at Aberdeen. His best putt with the light ball was 46 ft. 11 in at Dundee. In 1901 he started the season by winning the light ball at Galstone Games with 48 ft., b€£ttlng C. Maclean by a foot. although 190i was one of Maclearfs best seasons. He also beat Maclean with the heavy ball a-t Aberfeldy under Benulne conditions with 3'1 ft. 6- 1-2 ln. At the Glasgow Exhibition, Games held that year he won the iheevv ball with a1 n. 1., in. from iJames iG-lllesple. Morrison Morrison and Donald was in ex- ceptionally good form that season, and was second with a7 n. 1 in, Incidentally he is one of the few athletes who have a, genuine authentic record of over 3a n, with a 22 lb. ball. Up to Cameron's time no athlete coird claim such a record. yet he did more than two feet better than 38 ft. on many occasions. At Fort William he fltlflin beat lvfaclean with both balls. the distances recorded being 40 ft. with the hetwv and so n. 5 ln. with the light ball. The ground used for the butting at IFort William at. that time was by no means level, Wt the 111N008 W85 exceptional. At Pitlochry he won the light ball with 4a ft. s ln.. and ac. compllshed a wonderful perform- 8110c 8-i- Oban. when he putted the 22 1-2 lb. stone 38 ft. 6 in. 0n 080W smund. but did not com- plete either at Aboyne ar the Northern Meeting that year. Still Winning Throughout the season he was easily best with the heavy ball, and still second to Maclean with the l6 1b.. but not of much ac- BRINGING uP. FAIHER l I he“? hwd ‘W- "5 is RIT°SLI were inherited from his mother's icon“ with the hammer, gyhqugh he occasionally 80¢ I fairly 800d COMING z‘ {I A s ACT PLAY Presented by I‘ uorlan Piaf"! lloly Redeemer llall MONDAY. MAY 8rd. TUESDAY. MAY 4th. Curtain a.ao' Admission 25c with Samuel French Co. throw. In the season of 1901 hi! appeared for the first time It our local games alt Kirkmlchael and only did 102 ft. with the 118m hammer. whereas three yen-IE 13061‘ his first throw with the same ham- mer on the same ground measur- ed 128 ft. 6 in. With the caber he was improving, but seldom won from Johnstone, Morrison and Munro. From 1901 to 1904 he improved steadily with hammer and caber, while maintaining his form the ball. and doing great work with the weights tn the. style which then prevailed. until in 1934 he was practically invincible at any heavy event. g Seven Records in One Day In that year he set up seven ‘world's records in one day on dead would probably beat all the heavy wave] ground at, pitlochry. mm a]- ‘though his hammer records have ‘bot-h been since beaten. ;ball record on that ground remains his heavy untouched, as also does his light boll record of $7 ft. a in. made at Lochaber Games under conditions. The change style of weight throwing Cameron's time makes HOTIENTOT new. 0h Sale main’: Dru Slew Produced by Special Arrangement with » A Month-Earl Grocery Sale Stock Up At These Savings-Prices on Sale FRIDAY-SAT"RDAY-IIDIDAY-TIIES. A|ll'il 30. May 1, 3, 4 Eatonia Choice’ TOMATOES, N0. Standard Quality PEAS" No. 2 tin SHORTENING 1lb.pkg.— —- -— — PASTRY FLOUR 2 1-2 tins, 3 for — — 4 for — —_— - — llie 19¢ BANANAS, 3 lbs. Large Crispy Head LUTTUCE 2 for TOMATOES lb. — - — — -— — — RADISH New Bunch — — — NEW CARROTS 2 lbs. — —- — — — ‘ Sunkist - _ Eatonia _ _ RANGES, d _ c ‘BAKING POWDER, 1 lb. tin - - - 190 gamma °" Londgn 4 T0!‘ conn STARCH. l lb. pkz- 2 ‘or - — Local 15c Bulk Seedless CABBAGE, 2 heads RAISINS, 2 lbs. - - - - - - - _ 0 Firm Ripe _ 25o 18o 10o 21c 7|b-ba3_"_"—__-__—__ Choice Granulated or Brown GRAPES. ib- —. — — a SUGAR, 10 lbs. - - - - - - - - - gliIONS y g~ 23c ICING SUGAR g t CUgU-IWEEES“ "‘ ‘"‘ Bulk,2lbs.--———————— 17¢ Each______ 23g Enlons Fresh Ground PINEAPPLES, COFFEE,lb.—-———————— 2h Eac|,__________ 25D chow cw"! COOKED Picnic Style HAMBURG COOKED SLICED HAM PORK STEAK Clgélggl) BACON Sliced AsntgpLsoaas Sr d , O I08 Lb. Li, I vLb. I80 2 lbs. 29c Lb. I50 Eatons Sun-Glo CREAMERY Canadian CHEESE, lb. - — — ‘Frozen certified i in H181 since ; isorn I SALMON, lb. — — - Smoked BUTTER, 2 lbs. -- — 23o 28c FILLETS. 2 lbs. - - . ROLLED OATS Norwegian Val- Yew McLarens Imperial McLaren’s Prepared difficult. and although his modern conditions, I doubt very much if even George Clark could improve on Cameron's using the same style. As a caber ftosser he was supreme when at his best, and although Perhaps Dlnnle may have been his equal. I do not think any athlete during the last 40 years could have held his own Cameron. 1’ have seen Games a stick cut twice a Oban lings. As a wrestler no one can say how good he was since he disliked all forms of wrestlng, and could not fflnlv be induced to compete. but I can give the opinions of two famous athletes in diverse styles_ -Ge0rge Hackenschmidt. the Ei-eal; Polish catch-as-catchcan and Grew-Roman exam. stated-"If Afec takes fa wrestling we can 3,11 retire." “He'll brak‘ g‘ your Bucks" Once ln the midst of a heated "Eument among a number of the leading Cumberland exponents as to the demerits of Scottish athletes in the wrestling ring, the voice of Bill Studholme was heard to de- clare—"Thexe is a. man I met in Scotland called Cameron. and if @0105 00011 here (Grasmexe) he'll brak. all your backs." Cameron beat. all previous pm- fesslonal records with hanuner, ball and weight decisively and easily, and I believe could have done much better work then he did had he been extended ln 1904. In 1905 hq went to New Zealand to mu;- the games meetings there. and never regained his best form after his re. turn. although he was our foremost heavyweight almost up to the out- break of the Great War. After me war he did not turn out again, u- though I am certain he could have given an excellent account of him- sell’ for a few years, I have frequently met him Mung B5 Judge at some of the Western geegilnwgaasallllfge the KM. and he is ge as _ petite“ e was a com mww"! M10 quiet by nettlre, unassuming in disposition, and imlbosmble to quarrel with Sandy w“ “lied by B11 who knew him, 00d Yfiibecled as an athlete and a man. ________ extracts: ma rosruni: 4 limmle exercise and one Which (i085 much to flnprgvg yguf posture is to walk armmd with the palms of the hands tamed outward. Without. shoulder pres- ‘sure Wu feel a straightening of the shoulders. l [In lllnud’: [or Dandruff. dis-i tances have been eclipsed under distances. with , after , Cameron had tossed it before any‘ of the other competitors got it over. ' and these others were no weak- ' Eatons ROSE BUSHES Asst. Varieties eacnv- _ _ _. _ MANY OTHER ITEMS ON SALE NOT LISTED HERE Frontier Glenwood Bulk, 5 lbs.———--—--—————— SARDINES, Brand 2 tins -— :- — — JELLY POWDER, assort. 4 pltgs. — -- MUSTARD, 26 oz. jar — —‘ — — —- TOMATO JUICE‘ 20 oz. tin, 3 for — 25c 19c 15o 17o \ PEACHES, No. 2 quat tin, 3 tins — -— 25o Grain IAIINNIPEG. April 29 — (OP) —- After climbing two cents on what. appeared to be renewed confidence in the market with good QXPOTF buying wheat prices on the Win- nipeg grain exchange eased today- At, theclose values were 1-8 cent higher to 3-8 cent lower with May at $1.29 3-8. July $1.26 5-8 and Oc- tober $1.16 to $1.16 1-4. Minor selling at the openln! produced fractional lossse. Then ‘a rally shot prices up but trading again turned dull with reversal of the past two day's 911F880“! 0P‘ erations and intermittent profit- taking. Although export purchases were estimated as high as 1.000.000 b0- shela observers said only 500.000 bushels were for actual export with the United Kingdom a blg cus- tomer. Cash wheat improved with mod- crate amounts of Nos. 3 and 4 northern wheat traded at frac- tlonally better spreads. Rye futures led the upturn in coarse grain prices but settled to close unchanged to 1-8 cent lower. May barley advanced llwo cents. MINING TORONTO. Arpr. 29—(OP)—Thc Toronto market stood up to selling pressure with more success today than ln Wednesday's session but the forces favoring the decline still dominated the situation. All index groups closed lower with the A ' EYESIGII EXAMIIATIDII Ilttlng and Ssaplyln; Giana I. J. IAADIiI l orrommin non-noun. r. n. r. on. Connected wan n golds, of! about two polntagow- lng the widest decline. A depressing note in the day's proceedings was the heavy selling of the big golds at losses of frac- tions to three points. Dome de- clined 3 points to 38 3-4 on a trade of 6,200 shares while Lake Shore and McIntyre dropped 1 5-8 to l 3-4 each and l-Iolllnger eased 1-4 to 11 1-4. All finished close to the 10w for the day. Buffalo- Ankerite- declined '75 cents and other losses were limited to a few cents. Gains ran through the junior oils. Calgary-Edmonton and 0k- alta. added 20 cents each and smaller gains were boarded for Calmont. Dalhousle, Highwood, Acme and Ajax. The big base metals had periods of strength but. they were heavy at the close. Noranda retained 2 points of a mid-day three-point gain. Coast Copper lost 25 cents. Pend Orellle 10 and Ventures 5. Sherrltt, Alderman and Chromium firmed slightly. ‘ Gold issues closing about l0 ctr. lower included Argosy. Beattle. Cariboo. Conlarum. East Malartlc. Hard Rock, Mucassa, O'Brien, Pickle Crow. Pioneer, Blake Luke, Towagmac and Sylvanlte. Grow a few new flowers this year. Mimulus, also known as monkey flower. is a beautiful porch boxgnn- nual for a shady situation. It n is new to you, grow a few plants 011$ year. but start them early in a sccd box indoors. as the seed is fine and slow to germinate. Lawn seeding and feeding will be one of the earliest spring tasks. m‘! your order 1n for seed and 131""! food and make arrangements w borrow a roller to smooth over the rough spots caused by “m” heaving. MONTREAL. April $9 — (OP)- Prlces closed irregular on Mont- real stock exchange today “Jim gains and losses posted throurll- out the list in the wake of an c1" ratlc session. lire lillnnrtl’: for Cnldu. FU R STORAGE Repairing; Remodeling; Relining; Now is the time to have this work done ‘ Let us protect your furs from Fire: Theft: For only 2 1-27.. of your own fair valuation. We ltore and insure your furs until Fall We call for and deliver PHONE US NOW-1177 Island Furriers, Moths : Heat 165 Kent Street @RNED I QTATE // BEEP AN‘ C THE MENU ‘TODAY AN’ GOT ME LXKEO LIP IN ME_ %OM— . ABBPQE .2" -By George McM-mus