“i t. _ __..._.1._¢.___\_,,___,v _ - I i l i i ._»~<-1..n:...-!\.-s:s us... r zPRlNCE D WA R D NOW PLAYING T-MATINEE 3-15-1150, 26c. NIGHT ‘l Q $15-$60. 31c, 450. msr suowmus TODAY “THE LOVE CONTRACT” ' ‘NEWS WEEKLY arm manna! ouasa COMEDY t PRINCE EDWARD THURSDAY MATINEE 315-160, 26c. NIGHT ‘l As SAS-Zflc, 31c, 45c. THRILLING ROMANTIC DRAMA OF 5 5% t! , GLomo “iii I I I I I lliliiil [ll A MiGHTY‘ j ROMANCE A spectacularstorg ‘ch at will stirthe blood and the IITIGQIFI ation. Heroic Naval menjcheirdarinq deeds and their-sweethearts‘, fjhe/itiqhfi/Aovalfpic .1145 andANNA NEAGLE. US Fire Ml? wrrH i ,- HENRY ' EDWARDS NAVAL EPIC l South Australia‘ '._?(;cfj_ Life Outback Pictures of the conditions under which women in the outback live were drawn by Mr, H, Griffiths, of the Australian Inland Mission, who has ben in Adelaide fiticnrling the Methodist Confemnce. He had lo travel considerably more than one thousand miles to reach here. On some oi’ the lonely outposts in Ccn- tral Australia north of Alice Springs, he Filld, people wont. for months without. sclng anyone but those actually living there. A woman liv- lng one hundred miles oil the main track rode into the Marunboy Mb;- sion once n. iycai‘ to sec other white women, the trip taking several days. Because of the scanty , scattered population, nnd the consequent lael; Df medical services, missioncrs, such is Mr, GflllltllS, have to attend to many things beside the spiritual needs of their people. His tasks in- clude hair-cutting nnd extraction of Ieeth, two matters in which his ex- perience with the ambulance corps during the war served him in good itead. Mr. Griffiths considers great possibilities lie nlieiid of Ccnlral Australia if it can be given the boil- pfits of irrigation. That should be ossible, for he pointed out that in loud seasons the Katherine River, two hundred miles south of Darvxln, J-lses over n. bridge 85 ft. above iii!‘ normal level of the water. A Rare Marsupinl Natural science in Australia has 01o greater enthusiast than Mr. H. H. I-‘inlayson, honorary curator of mammals at the Adelaide Museum. Every year he disappears “into the blué" for months on end, and scl- uom returns without news of inter- esting discoveries of mammals. Last year, near the Queensland border, he found specimens of the Cola- cunta, a rare mxirsupial resembling u kangaroo-rat, which mnny thought; to be extinct. This year's expedi- tion embraced a mammal survey of hundreds of square miles of CcntrB-l Australia, west of Alice Springs. with a companion and a string of camels he set out in December, and returned 1n the beginning of March, having made many valuable “finds.” No ram fell while he was away. Blld he found springs and rock holes dry- mg up g0 rapidly that many groups of nomadic natives were inovifla in closer to settlement. One 511F108. which in 1928 was flowlfl! l?’ "l9 mm of 6000 gallons a day, was fail- (pg-n, serious matter “for the native ma”, for itwas one of the most celebrated con-oboree m0" in cell- trlliflultralia. A l. - 1,! Brondeut unions qqgui Awtrnlfe u koeplnl well l- n J A STORY OF TIIE BRITISH NAVY. ANDY CLYDE COIVEVDY breast of modern developments in education, and in a, few weeks both wireless and the cinema. will be us- ed to impart knowledge to children in schools. Probably the Education Dcpartmentb plan for broadcast les- sons will be inaugurated at the be- ginning of next term. Draft talks have been prepared by authorities on a. number of subjects, and when they have been approved of by the committee in charge of_ the project the scheme will begin. Iron, Gold and Copper At: Iron Knob, on Eyre Peninsula, South Australia has one of the most valuable know-n iron ore deposits, and. it was largely from there that the States production of iron ore, 538,000 tons, valued at £618,000, was derived in 1932. That. quantity was , roe times us much as that mined in 1931. Renewed activity in gold prospecting was reflected in the States production of £21,000 worth of gold. But strange to sny the State which once laud in the famous Burra Burra and Wallaroo copper mines the richest workings of that. character 1n the Commonwealth, produced no copper lust year. How- evcr, there are large quantities of ore at Moonta and Wallaroo await- ing treatment. ' Adelaide Trams A remarkable state of affairs is revealed in the half-yearly report of the Adelaide Municipal Traniways 'l‘rust. Last year 1t inaugurated a system of concession tickets, but for the first six months only 885 were taken out. For the July-January period oi’ 1032-33 the number lupt to 28,000, nnd because of the popu- larity of the concessions, the ’I‘rilst cstimntcrs that. on the half year it lost, £7424 in revenue. 'I‘hus for the six months it showed a debit of £1313, compared with a profit of £10,069 for the corresponding period of the previous your. There was an excess of revenue over working ex- penses of £126,000, but commitments and interest more than nbrorbed that amount. German Cruiser Unprecedented interest has been shown by South Australians in the German cruiser Koln, the first Ger- man war vessel to visit here since the outbreak of hostilities in 1914. During a week-end during which the vessel was open for inspection, more than 16,000 people boarded her, creating grcnt confusion. Officers and ratings have been cordially re- ceived everywhere, and the action of Captain Sehnlewlnd in placing a wreath on the State War Memorial created a distinctly good impression WISDOM Wisdom is oft-times nearer when we st:op. Than when we worth scan-Words- GAPITU BAPITU NIGHT ‘I Q 9F CAPITOL SERIAL MATINEE 8.15 .... NIGHT ‘I & 8.45 ...-...... 26c. 37% MATINEE S. A rldin’, allocfln‘, roerln’ allow packed will: love and thrills! Mickey McGuire Comedy Wm urrv runusunosco All!‘ . . 11c, 260.. “THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME" COMEDY and VAGABOND ADVENTURE THURS 18 11c. 26c- 8-15 .... 26o, 37o. A Hard-Fighting Drama of Love and Guns And Steamin’ Leather! ‘i ‘Illi W951 THE A CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Cheap Fares King’s Birthday (Canadian Presll ‘Ml MONTREAL, Que" May 30-5:- rangement of special ldW (in! 101' the King's Birthday holiday, June 3rd, by the Canadian Railway! was announced by O. P. Ricldell, Chair- man o: the Canadian Passenger Al- sociation. These special fares will offer the option of one, two or three duy trips, and as the holiday falls on Saturday this year, will provide for long week-end holi- days at low rates. For the 0W0 or three day holiday trip, tickets will be good on Canadian railways be- tween any two points 1n Canada at one and a quarter times the regu- lar one-way first class fare. ‘These tickets will be good going from 12 noon on Friday, Juno z, to noon on Sunday, June 4, and good for lng up to midnight Monday, June 5 One day trips on the basis of single fare for the return trip will be sold on Saturday, June 3rd. good going on any train after 1.00 a. m., Bet- urday and returning not later than midnight the same day. There will also be the usual one day returri tickets good between stations ‘in Canada on sale on Sunday, June 4. The times stated are standard time in each instance. Saint John River Has Earliest Run ; - Salmon Yet Known SAINT JCIHN, N. 3., May 30- The Saint John River, 1n New Brunswick, has the earliest run of salmon known, states the Fish and Game Department of the Canad- ian National Railways. Research t0 date can find no sound basis for twp current view: about Atlantic salmom-that their coming in mm the sea is a spawning impulse and that the different runs are racial- ly or genetically distinct. Studies made on Saint John River salmon and its tributaries show that when they are in condition to do so, and quite irrespective of spawning. they come to tho surface of the pea and jump and later move into more and more brackish crater and fin- ally into fresh water. While the spawning condition urges them both up and down stream in search of gravel beds, this “river maturity" makes them move from salt water to trash. Although they become "river mature" in most diverse sea- sons and so have more or less dis tinctlvo runs, they all become sexually mature at the same sea- son (October) and scum wzether. —early run fish and late run fish big salmon, grilse, and sometimes even the parr that have never been to sea. The Saint John River pre- sents exceptionally favorable 00n- ditiona for the salmon’: gradual return to fresh water whenever 1t feels the slightest inclination to do so. There is no need for it to wait until the river becomes favorable or until such time as it feels that it must go, even if conditions are not very favorable. In the rivers at the head of the Bay of Fundy the bulk of the salmon never seem to enter the rivers until July. 1t is now felt that the exception of the early run of Saint John River sal- mon is that they do not. come b0 the surface and move riverwards until they have given up feeding and lost their appetite. The more food there is the fatter they will get and the szorier they wiill stop eating. Pelagic shrimp and small herring are particularly abundant Ln the water from Saint John out to the mouth of the Bay of Fundy, and form the chief food of the salmon there. This seems quite sufficient to explain the early character of the Saint John fish. OYSTER YAWN AUTHORS ‘FAKE TURN AT CLAM: FIND WARM WATER DUNKING DOES TRICK RALEIGH, N. 0., May 30—The oyster is opened by making it yawn and the clam, long known as "tight-upped", can be made to open its shell with comparative ease due to successful experiments made at Beaufort, N. C. The United States Bureau of Fisheries several months ago an- nounced it had perfected m eco- ncmfcal and practical method of making oysters open by inducing yawn! by means of a chemical ap- pilcatlon. To-day Dr. Vera, Koehrlng and Herbert 1". Pytherch revealed that experiments they have made at the fishery at Beaufort have resulted in simplifying materially the open- fng of clams by putting them in a relaxed narootizcd state. Bathe them in warm water. ranging from 100 to 110 degrees Fflmnhelt. they open their shells and are unable t0 clo-e them again. The economic value of the new method the expert; said, in in the fact that there is no shrinkage or apparent 10st of tissue fluid! 8M the meat in in the some condition as if the shellfish were 0901194 Blessing 0n Crops And Farm Animals BARBIE, May ail-At the farms of George Snider and James Rlx, at Cralghurst and Crown Hill, near here, service was held today, when clergymen of the Anglican Deanery of East Sfmcce gathered for the "Blessing of the Crops", reported to be the first ldrvice of the kind in Canada. The service was instituted about A. D. 500. After the (singing of a psalm and the reading of a short passage from scripture, prayer was offered for the success of the farm- er and his work and a blessing ask- ed upon the implements he used and the animals that give their lives for the country. The clergyman taking part were: Rural Dean D, M. Rose, Orillia; Rev. W. Kenny, Wyebridgc; Rev. W. Province, Warmlnster; Rev, T. R. Haughbon, Shanty Bay, and Rev. W. Newman, Craighurst. AMIPLE MOISTURE IN WEST- ERN CANADA WINNIPEG, Man, May 30-—Dur- ing the past week precipitation varying from heavy rains to torren- tial downpoura have fallen over practically the whole of the grain growing territory, with the result that there is amplemolsture for some considerable time. In some low lying districts it is expected that some damage will result from flovillflg. While in newer districts in the park belt area, where Spring was late, seeding is from '7 to l0 days behind a. normal year. With the exception of the northern dis- tricts of Saskatchewan and the central districts of Alberta, wheat seeding is fully completed and a few days or drvlnc Whellthel‘ will see the last. of the wheat reach the seed-bed, according to the weekly crop report of the Agricultural Dc- partment, Canadian National Rail- ways. PONDS RESTOUKET) TYTTII GAHIE FISH BOSTON, Mass, May 30,-—Sal- vaging operations by the crews of the Division of Fisheries and Game have recovered nearly half a mil- lion fish in a single month this spring to add to tho joys of the summer anglers, Director Raymond J. Kenney announced as reports from the crews reached his office Thousands of white and yellow 10 inches, the majority of them heavy with spawn, have been net.- ted and thousands of horned pout and other varieties of fresh water fish have been gathered in and transferred to ponds where they are awaiting the fisher-men's lures. The salvage work, which yearly resolves itself into a race against the climbing thermometer, was be- gun about the middle of last month. Two crews of four men each, under the direction of Supt. W. H. Seaman covering the east- ern part of the state and Supt. Elmer A. Meeker in the western part, started out. as soon u the weather permitted. The crews battled some unusual weather this year at the start of their operations, pulling their nets on ponds during mow, sleet, and rain storms and winds more like m‘ddle of April. But. they kept at the tuk in order to bring in the fish while the "runs" were on. Now the race has developed into an of- fort to seine l0 many ponds n; possible before the mercury climbs warm t0 handle and ship the sal- W‘, - waged flab without 10s., perch, ranging in size from six to. ‘the middlQ 0f February than the , u» the pom: where u becomes too ‘ Bee Watering Trough A special trough, five feet long and one foot wide, is kept full of running water for the bees at the Bee Division Experimental Farm, Ot- tawa. when the weather is fine, the trough ls literally covered with bees all clay long, and even the moist ground surrounding the trough is swarming with the water gather- eis. Bees require water for the reu- lIlQ 0f brood, and at the Central Farm have often been seen gather- ing water from the melting snow in the warm days d! lvmxch. Von Papen Urges Union of Europe BERLIN, May al-Jrho peaceful reorganization of Europe through abolition or national states and subsitutimi thereof of the principle of federation combined with racial autonomy was proposed today by Vice-Chancellor Franz Von Papen in a speech before a. huge gather- ing of “Borderland Germans” on the Iburg in the Teutonburg For- est near Osnabruck. His proposal, he said, was the revolutionary contribution of Ger- many's national revolution to the political development of Europe. Teulcnburg wrest was the scene of the victory bf the Germanic chieftain Arminius over the Roman Legions of Varus which is cele- brated in German history as the liberation of the German race from Roman dominance. The exact nature of the new oir- der as championed by Herr von Pnpen is still somewhat nebulous, but apparently he envisions one or several federations of Europe with- in which the various racial units would lwe under their own self- administratlon in mutual respect to the mrfcctharmony of one an- other—-a mixture apparently of the ideology of the United States of Europe and the Austin-Hungarian monarchy before the war. Racial units and not the state ls to be the primary consideration. “when Wcodrow Wilson pro- claimed the principle of self-deter- mination of fictions," Herr von Pnpcn explained, “he knew nothing of the eastern European belt of mixed race: and of the impossibil- ity of synchroniing states and rac- ial burglaries. The "mechanical majority rule of national democ- racy exposcd its foreign policy to the sin of assimilation and h) the "AM-n. ,, Bu, Muir 5IQYARI5 Jimmie Jingle Says : For sandwiches this loaf’ you'll like To take with you on ride or hike. --Stewart’s Bread. the return journey on trains leav- . l l SAMPLE SuoEs $295 Bell and Murray Grades All in Size 4 went on SALE, This Morning at the CURRIE BAHKRUPT SALE Don’t‘ Pass Up a Chance to Secure a $7.00 or $8.00 Shoe If You Have a Small ,Foot. GURRIFS BANKRUPT STDGK OPPOSITE CUDMORE'S GROCERY‘ MAY 31.71933 danger of ixredenfa. Not the vital interests of the various peoples, but the vital interes‘ of the state dom- inated. Sometimes these. interests demanded protection and some- times-deatruction of racial units depending upon whether they were ones own or foreign. “The peace treaties gave new impetus to the Balkanlzation of Europe, increased the points of friction and promoted further split- ting up of peoples. The Germans of Europe are divided among no less than 20 states and one-third of the German people live outside the bor- ders of the Reich. ' “The minority protection of the League of Nations and The Hague =Court have brought no aid to the permanently outnumbered citizen of lesser rights, while minority rights have become an empty word of idealism. "States arise and disappear. The race is living and the eternal prin- ciple. Our youth sensed that when it. uncovered again the springs of racial consdousness long hidden a- way. That is also the wholesome feature in the properly understood racial idea-thinking in terms of home and soil, of family, of an- cestry, of heredity and clans." Canadians Consume A Larger Amount Than In Years Reminiscent of the brave old days when a barrel of pork con- stituted an ever-ready standby in the pioneers‘ larder, Canadians in 1932, according to the latest sta- tistics, ate more pork and less beef and eggs than in the preceding three years. In 1932 also, more tur- keys; ducks and geese were eaten than in 1931, but less than in 1930 and 1929. Again, in 1932 the con- sumption of chickens was less than in the preceding year. Rveckoned in percentages, every Canadian man, woman, and child in i932 individually consumed r0159 lbs of pork; 56.02 lbs of beed; 6.9‘! lbs of mutton; 7.87 lbs of chicken; 1.75 lbs of turkey; .41 of a, pound of duck: .83 of a. pound of goose; and 28.30 dozens eggs. The estimat- ed total consumption for the year far-pork, 904,305,073 lbs; beef, sea.- 509357 lbs; mutton, 78,182,856; chicken. 82,658,449 lbs: turkey, 1a,- 424310 lbs; duck, 4,286,215 lbs; geese, 8,670,600 lbs; and eggs. 297.- 949.8919 dwelt-nonunion Depart- ment of Agriculture. Pine Needle Scale Spruce and pine inthe Prairie Provinces are severely injured by the pine needle scale, e minute. scale-like insect less than 3 mm. in length which feeds 0n the foliage by sucking the juices through I slender beak, says tho Dominion IDWDOIOQBB. Th! l$lfl‘lfl INN Ill MEMURIAM i RIBS- GBIAEAM Many relatives and friends in Prince County were grieved to learn of the sudden death on Saturday last of Ill/Ira. Kenneth Graham of Bradalbane and a daughter of Mr. Calvin Reeves of Freetown at the early age of 35 years. ' Mrs. Graham, about six weeks ago lied been under a. serious op- eration in the Prince County Hos- pital. Just a ‘weckmgo she return- ed to her home, apparently on the mad to ‘recovery. Although remaining in bed after her arrival at home, she seemed to be improving. but on Saturday morning passed alway shortly after taking her breakfast. Besides her grief stricken hus- band and one adopted son, Donald, four years old, there are left to mourn her father and step mother two brothers, Alfred of lllreewwn, and Harry in the West of Canada; also one sister. Mrs. McKenzie Mathieson of Brada-lbane to ‘whom much sympathy 1c extended in their sad bereavement-a ‘ Prairie Spruce Pest The Entomological Branch o! the Dominion Department of Agrfculg- ure advises that during the past few years the spruce mite has sex- loll-sly iniured many varieties of spruce used on the prairies as shelter-belie and ornamental trees. Infestation is recognized by p, yel- 1°Wl°ll Ol‘ rusty brown uPDearance 0f the foliage and the presence of a fine network of silken threads over the twigs and needles,_awq;n- milled by largo munbers or ex. "finely minute green or brown mites. The trees should be may“; about the middle of June, m- gar]. icr. with lime llllphur u; um m, °1 m“! POunds to 70 gallons o; w“. tar. Although thorough gprgyins 1g “WWW. the trees should not be drenched. The deposit left on m, Ivllm by the mray dlsappegrg within a few weeks. in eolour and cm reldily and“. uished on the dark gnen foliage. When they are abundant. the vit- ality of the tree is reduced and the tree may be killed. miiiry may be prevented by spraying the infested foiiqg dug. ing the first. week in June, at the time the egu are hatching, with lime sulphur at the nto q; m; pound to 1B gallons of water. It fl advisable not to spray when u» "mini-attire is above l0 degrees It, and care should be taken to pig- vent the apray dripping on pgimqq buildings HOWARD JAMES YOUNG Howard Jame: Youngpnnsoduny at his home in Kinsman-o, P. l L May 10th, i988, ngcd Q. Mr. YOIBI\ critical operation eleven month: B-go, and although medical drill wu the bent that cvuld be pucciucd.‘ and all done that could possibly be done to restore health, it was dia- covered that the nature of the trouble was too deeply seated w ei- fect n, cure. v He came homo from the hospital last rlebmuy and was faithfully cared for by his devoted, sister, m1 William Coflln until his exodus. He was a devoted father, am. highly estamcd citizen, and bore hll suffering with great patience and fortitude. He is survived by a son. Foster two daughters, Mrs. Roy Bruce, Red Point, _Mrs. Robert Yates, Kings- bom, and one sister. His wife (nee Laura. MacDonald) predeceased him ten yea-rs ago. The funeral service was held from his late residence on May 11th and was conducted by H. R. Bell in The pail-bearers were William Mc- Donald, _ Robert Bruce, Wilford MacLenn, Oswald Stewart and Les- ter Robertson. Interment was at Kingsboro Cemi etery. ‘ axronr AUTOMOBILES mo.“ CANADA r0 mu mu-risu wast mums MONTREAL, Que" May 30- Theie is renewed activity in thl field of automobile export from Canada to the British Went Indivi- seid Andrew 1H,. Allen, General Manager of the Canadian Nntlolllll Steamship, commenting on an c!‘ ceptlonslly large shipment of such cars that left by the "vlgcboild cruise" freighter "Chomedy" fill the eastern group o; Caribbean islands. These cars ‘are made in Canada and chipped from Canad- ian ports in Canadian ships. Th"! up of the smaller and less eX- penlivo variety, well received ll the Caribbean ‘ ' . The mer- ing wheel in each cue has bwl lot over to the right for the Plll" pone of meeting the hep-to-thc left rulu of the Welt mdieu. ::Per|im Balm the creator Hid pram-var of beautiful comvlfllmll‘ ‘Tonic m mm and wouderfuli)’ Ill mutating. Safeguards and belutlflfl the molt delicately-textured In"! Cools and rollover all skim fiunllvd or irritated by weather condition! mum in results. A mm amt" rubbing and a youthful freahnw and dlintlnell u fnltmtl! wit“ Invaluable for softening the hwill ma making them annual: will"- Truly the perfect toilet liqulaite for m vmnn m emu , 1nd tinder-gone a very serious and. "‘ the presence of a large gathering ,.