dm-mm-2-:-:1: NE WAS CIIPID and suiiniocx HOLMES I —-to this pair in‘ love-and in trouble I: D M u N o o w i: N N MAUREEN 0'8Ul.!.IVAN LUCILE wrraon ALSO JIEWS AND MUSICAL ' IN “MUSIC ALSO . ..&ANDfl“ CAPI'I‘OL—TODAY— 3.I5—7.00—8.45 A Ll C E F A Y E . . Coiusor — sono urr — NOVELTY "IINCONQIJERED ‘I’!-IE CHARLOITETOWN ousiwuuv 4 IS MAGIC" ADDED . . ANDY CLYDE COMEDY — . BUCK JONE SERIAL CHAPTER 13 THURSDAY — FRIDAY — SATURDAY DAILY 3.15 -- 7.00 —- 8.45 P. M. . CAPITOL’- “KALF BAKED RELATIONS” I . . . IIc—26c. . 260-320. MATINEE . . . EVENING SPRING HATS UTTERLY RIDICUOUS TTOIDAY Ea THURS. DAILY ;‘.l.'-1.00»-—-8.45 p. M. p|{|N(jE Mat. 16c, 26c. Eve. 23c. 32c, 37c. To Made-by-Hand. UI'I‘AWA. April l4—(C.P.)—ln; China one can buy 9C0 hand-made Blzitrette; for the equivalent of 30 cents in Canadian mcnvey and growth of the limit!-rolling cigar-. ette industry is .“.?l'lC‘.l;sly menacing , the machine-made cigarette. H. A. ‘Scott. C2!ZlCidI{‘.ll Trade C:mm‘s-‘ Iioner at Shanzihal. writes in the. current issue of the Commercial‘ Intelligence Jcum'l. ‘ “The Internal Rivenue Tax." he‘ writes. “cn hand-r.1cd cigar Ltes.‘ lm0lmting to $1’) S'.’li‘.n3h£“.I cur-; rency per 5000) is ori‘y o:ie-:lgvli'.h ‘ of tl\2 inwcrt into on " . practice it i. cases no tax vs‘. the maker; cf h ettes. who are 711311365 tlI‘u'.l'.o.. the and are difficult to itco c.“ “This cl:vcl:p'.n:nt startzd so‘/:ral 1 Years ago as rt result of high in-} ternal tzixcs. and h‘5 n:-.7 reac‘i- l ‘X1 the D01“? \/. it has I3;":"lliC B. menace to in ' ~r— ettcs. whi"l cigar- ed in‘ couritry . Consump ‘in of tho‘? Il.’l'‘(l-'.l‘'dO : INDIAN OI‘!<‘1’.‘E; :;'r.rI.=!BL‘D : MYSORE . —:c?» —L‘.. Col Gopaln RCO, C '11. ~.ii"aiit of the ‘ . '8 . “as st:i‘o- , '0'.‘ b m"'i Leeizlng l redress from g.i -. He will re- cover. ’ Who I-Ias Perfect Eyes Perfect eye) — where can they be found? scarcely any- where. Most eyes are defect- ive? No question about it. Most. abnormal vision could be made normal? Yes. or at least. greatly improved. Every- one is benefited by the cor- recting of grrafl of v1sion'.’ Yes. the benefits are usually very noticeable and perman- ant. l wi‘ The latest. Paris huts seemingly are designed only for the young girl blessed with small. regular features. So eccentric that they border on the ridiculous, some of the new hats are totally unsuited ‘to the average Lead and face. For example, there torpedo hat in olive green velvet with a crown of crushed rose pet- uls. The hot is trimmed with a tuft. of green and pink ostrich feather; and is wom tilted over the right .;'e. Equally absurcd another trimmed with large loops of black satin ribbon which flop over the left eye In coiitrzist are the small round ha‘: shapzd like torzador head gear with a crown of dull straw and 8. brim of black shiny weave. Others are with crowns of block felt and brims cf white felt piped in black The Mandarin hat with an even wider brim likewise turning up, is equally pcp-;la:~ Various new straw weaves are dirplaycd. Pleated straw is used frequently as wcil as a lacquered leghcrn which is shiny and smooth. A Chincse straw. shiny. looks like long strands of giisterifzg .-p'.\ghet- ti woven together The mxt recent il‘it?l’piCihLlOn of the halo hat is 8. Marie Stuart b9l‘.nEL which ‘comes forward in H. (leak on the for:h:ad just at the hair line. The sidrs of the hat. ,-.:linp:. turn back from the fit: in a modified halo effect. ATLANTIC FLYING SAFE. HE CLAIMS HAMILTON. I-:rin::da. April 14 _<CPr —I‘lL's safer to fly the Atlantic than it is to u'c:-‘s Piz- ca:iilly,' 5 d Ccinma .i-r Sir Walter Wiiruiizim, air mail pioneer cl. cussing tr2:s-Atlantic mull scr- vi:e d'..riiig a re.-cent visit to this p:opcsed trans-o....nic air base "We should l‘iCi\'f.‘ had ' nolhhzg to stop CK‘ pc. . ulio belives tlizt in five years i .11! the world's f'i".R..‘l5 will be carried by air Sir Walter sent the first "air- mni." lett:r acros the English Channel in 1903 and inaugurated rt regular airmail delivery in India in 1911. BROKERS INCREASE COLLATERAL LOANS TORC-NTO. April 14 —(CP) Toronto brokers greatly increased their borrowings in March on stock collateral .t.lv.e tstal of loans at the end of the month standing at $34,452,828 conipared with $26.- I80,8'l1 at the end of February. The gain in bori-owirags occurred against a decline in the quoted maiket valuation of all stocks \vh'i.‘.‘h dropped to 54.895.792.639 from slightly above five billions in Feb- ruary. The to‘.al of collateral bor- rowings do not include loans on G. F. Hutchesoii foreign securities nor the borrow- ings of bond affiliate companiu of Toronto Exchange members. is a. small . is‘ ROYAL CHILD-LOVERS When King Leopold was staying at Buckingham Palace in January he mentioned to the King and Queen Mary the propect E .‘ series of childrei. parks in Belgium l to commemorate the late Queen 3 Astrid (says the Daily Telegraph.) I of New it seems likely that the , memory of the late King George is I to ‘e kept in the same way in this , country. I It 1; typical of the great interest , that is taken in children and their 1 welfare by modern Royal person- ages that two great Royal child- lovcrs. both beloved of their people. I should be remembered in the same way. VOICES OF ROYALTY References made by Mr. Wich- ham Steed to King Edward the Se"€ntl1's wonderful voice prompt- ed numerous discussions after- wards on the subject of Royal vo‘ces iV.'r. Wickham Steed declared that he had heard King Edward's "big voice" carry 300 yards against a wind Guests dis:ussed King George‘: voice the most famous in the world, and regarded as ideal by the broad- cast‘ 1g a:tho:it.' 5. King Edward the Eighth is also gifted with the family voice,'c:ear and carrying (says the Daily Telegrahp ) x ‘ MYSTERY! 'N . Pclico sleuihs Cambridge, Ma-Is.. liave aunt,‘ to contend with here. Tcsli u rgradilates who occupy this lI‘l'lll cry .".ivak- ones] to find the :-.'.I:i'.'c s'.".o\vn car; on the front of their building. ‘way up near the top of the fourth of lem for the police, who 'ai-c shown trying to get the car down again to "form firma".by means of the block and tackle. __._.—_— BERMUDA TO HAVE IioMEs'ric SCIIOOL HAMILTON. Bermuda, April 12. ——iCP) — l3c:~mua'a Dcmestic School Act of 1983. ozitlining wide- it years . it," Other fine royal voices are those of Queen Mary. very deep and (l.gnificd_ the Duche s of York. 1' clear and silvery. and the Duchess | of Kent, deep and of such fine ex- prcs:i:ii that it is a pleasure to listen to it i '-""' ' -"C-'T"A THNA FISHING \ 17:17.‘. {ENG NUMBER. OF ANGL- ERS of in- deep- south .lur'3.i‘.~_ by t‘1e member quiries. Ii large number of ‘sea. anglers will visit the ‘shore in Nova Scotia this season 1 in search of tuna. according to the l Fish a‘.‘.d Game Department of the Caiizidian National Railways. A world record turn was caught off Liverpool, on this shore. by a Chi:ago‘s:)o;tsman with rod and line in 1934. The record fish wcghed 956 pounds. Last summer a c:nsid:rable number of sports- men from the United States visit- ed this shore and many were suc- tcesiful in landing one or more tuna. GROWING USE SHINGLRS IN SOUTH AFRICA There is a growing use of shingles in building construction in South Africa. A large two-storeyed apai-tmtnt house in three sections. rccentlv complcfied in Cape Town, is roofed with shingles. This should have a benefical effect on future sales. 1936. it is anticipated. i will see more building than ever ,before. particularly in the coast .cltles, according to the Industrial Uepnrtrrerit of the Canadian !National Railways. Johannesburg |is experiencing a building boom. spread nc:d for t":iiii'n,r; of Bar- mudizins to fill hotel positions. makes provision for supplying ccntpctrm sc;'\'uii‘.s for residents‘ merit of a (lcnics school and makes provision for aiuiual un- kcsp. It is pro; (1 to engage qtialif cd cioni. . iciiec teachers from E.igi5.i‘d and Czuisifa to give complete courses in all branches of hcuseliold work for men and women (“NADA . PIJES RKLK OF TLOUR IRIFORTED. JAMAICA Canada i'ai:k<. next after Great Britain its :1 :oii:rc of suppy for good; impo;tcd into Jamaica, Brit-- ish West I.‘tEi:s. ncxoiiiiliiig for 16.4 p:r tillt of t:‘.:Il value, according to the cnztzidiaii National Stcanisliip; which company main- tains dir::t stcoinsiiip connection between Caiiada and Jamaica. Great Britain's share. the chief supplying c0ill’ii.i‘_\'. is 40 3 per cent. The United states ranks next to Canride. \'.'L.‘i l”.'t I‘‘‘-‘ wont: other Empire countries 15 per cent, which accounts for 80.9 he: cent of the total. Canada supplied 62 per cent of the flour i ‘ .' cf .1 n buys 56.2 per Canada 28.1 per cent. United States 8 9 per cent. other British Empire countries L3 11:: cent. LLOYD'S INSURE TROUT IoNDoN (GP) ~Cont.riictors en- gaged in work around Sussex trout up to 83500 in Lloyd's on the lives of the trout which might be in- jured by chemicals. } ".'i"§-.'!'"~° f“-'3 a;. .7 .tnt . Kaiser" as Boy Used Teeth on Kilted Uncles . .__._. By THOMAS '1‘. OHAHIION . ‘(hnldlln Frill lhl! Writer IDNDON. April 16—(0.P.)—{'rom the days of his infancy until with- inatew Yearsofthawnr tiieox- Kalser made many visits to Eng- land. If it were not that his ex- travagancos of conduct at home and abroad largely assisted to so monumentally tragic an epuoda in world history an account of his Im- perlal Majesty‘: aojourns in this is- land, and of the trouble he caused his illustrious English kinsfolk, would make oomio reading. Wlllielm's first public appearance here was in 1863. when at the we of four he atbendecktho wedding in st. George’: Chapel, Windsor, of his uncle, the Prince of wales (afterwards King Edward VI!) to Alexandra of Denmark. Bishop Samuel Wilberforce has left the following record of that day's events: "Everyone behaved at their but. The Princess of Wales calm. feel- ing. self-"possessed. The ce with more depth of manner han ever before. The little Prince Wil- hum of Prussia between his two little uncles to keep him quiet, bath or wiiom—the Crown Princess told me—he bit on the bare High-i land legs whenever they touched him to keep his quiet." The “two little uncles" would be the sons of Queen Victoria who tubsequently became the , Duke of Connaught and the Duke of Edin- burgh. ‘ Eighteen years later the Prince of Wales went to Berlin for the wedding of the future Kaiser. "Throughout the bridegi-o:>m’s youth the Prince had shown him all the genlnl tenderness which an uncle could bestcw on a nephew," writes Sir Sidney Lee in his‘Life of King Edward. “As a boy the young Prince seemed to reciprocate his uncle's affectionate interest in his welfare. but the customary military’ educa- tion of the heirs of the l-lohenzol- lerns had'b.n unfavorable influence on his adolescence. H13 social in- smrey. How it got there is :1 'pr0b- i timacies were almost wholly con- fined to Junker officers, and their buster tended to corrupt his filial scntlment, and to render aggressive ,war a supreme object o‘ worship. ‘His mother's English I’.‘a‘ligS and her sway over his father baeame a personal grievance." The future Kaiser's mother. it will be remembered. was the Prince .of Wales‘ sister and became on her "marriage. Crown Princess cf Ger- tmany and subsequently l’:.~_oress Frederick. Became British Admiral Wilhelm II made his firs: visit to England as such in 1889. 3. Yea!‘ after he had‘ assumed the Imperial Crown. He had only recently identi- fied himself with the Pan-German ambltioncf converting Germany into a great naval power. and it that date his flamboyant speeches and attitudes roused no great cen- cem in the English court or among Queen Victoria's ministers. The young Kaiser had just created an independent, Admiralty department for Germany. and he frankly admitted one motive of his visit to Ccwes wa' to improve his know‘edge of England's naval equip- ment. Thc Queen and her govern- ment .declded that her grandson's developing interest in naval matters might. in the cause of general har- mony. be indulged by the bestmval on him of the honorary dignity of British admiral. The news was re- ceived by the Kai:er with an out- burst of boylike ecstasy. “Fancy wearing the same uniform as St. Vincent and Nelson." he wrote ex- ultingly to sir Edward Malet. the British Ambassador at Berlin. “It. is enough to make me quite giddy." Another visit to Ovwes by his Im- perinl Majesty of Germany came in the ensuing summer. Curiously -enough he arrived in the _Solent. on the very day that Queen Victoria extended the Royal Assent to the bill under which I-leligoland was ceded to Gennany. After leaving Oowes the Kal..er went straight, to Heligoland. “Without a battle. without the shedding of a tear," he exclaimed in an exuberant speech, “this beautiful island has passed into my possession. We have acquired it by a treaty freely con- cluded with a country to which we are related by blood. I drink to the illiisti-ious lady to whom we are in- debted for the transfer." At the close of the War, it will be recalled, Heligoiand was dis- mantled of all its military strength. under the Treaty "of Versailles. Each of the five years. i89l to 1895, found the Kaiser by his own wish, revisiting England and his Enzlish relatives. The saw a. progressive decline in the cordiallty of uncle and nephew- tho Prince of Wales and the Kais- ei-—untii they came at the last near open breach. In 1891 Qil<3f‘_n Victoria. and her govemment deemed it politic to invite the Kaiser and Kaiserin to pay her and her country. for the first time since their accession, I stxve visit. The Prince flguIed'prom- inently in the reception of his nephew and the Kaisei-in. He bore the Kaiser company when the via- itor received in the Guildhall the Freedom of London. and no hard the Kaiser on the occasion to [in five visits [ , “DEMANDS _-j “BETTER CITIZENS ‘TO-MORROW T0-DAY.”— , _ . INVEST IN THEIR FUTURE : _ .BY SUPPORTING THE . Y. M. C. A. APRIL 'l5th. 16th.‘ 17th’ _‘THE PRESENT _APPEAL ‘PROVIDES FOR AN EVER INCREASING. ‘SERVICE TO THE COMMUNITY - ON THE .PART, OF THE ASSOCIATION. 4 I i I . i i GUIDING YOUTH Financial Campaign D the well-worn assurances: “As far as it is in my power. I intend. to maintain the historical friendship between these our two nations. My 51111 15. above all, the maintenance of pence.’ A NIALVN IKIVICI 0' VMI CANADIAN NIDICAL IIIOCIATIOII AND LIFI INIUIANCI Efllllamgg 1‘. CANADA GOOD HEARING Loss or hearing usually becomes noticeable during middle life. The most hopeful point of attack in the prevention of deafnes is in cliild- . hood. There is no doubt but that child health is the foundation for adult health. This is as true of the ears as it is of other parts of the body.‘ The outer car may suffer from any of the conditions which afflict the external park of the body. An old and sound maxim is to the ef- fect that nothing” smaller than the elbow should be placed in the ear. Any injury to the canal of the outer ear may result in a boil. which in this situation, is particul- arly painfui and not without dan- ger. It is in the middle ear, located immediately behind the ear-drum, that most of the trouble starts which leads to loss of hearing. The middle ear is connected by a narrow tube to the back of the nose and throat. and because of this close contact. it may be said that the health 02 the middle ear is depend- ent upon the henlth of the nose and throat. The first step towards the pre- servation of hearing is to prevent. in so far as this is possible, recur- rent colds in children, and to treat such colds as do occur -by putting the child to bed and keeping him there. Diseased tonsils and enlarg- ed adenoids should be removed. In- fection in the nose and throat is readily oommunicated. via the Eustachian tube. to the middle ear. The passage of infection is facil- itated in those who close the nost- rils and blow the note hard. for such 'b‘owing pracfically forces mat- erlal from the nose and throat in- to the Eustachian tube. Nasal douches may act in the same way, and because of this danger. they should not be used unless as and when prescribed by. 9. physician. The most gentle pressure must never be exceeded or elc infection may be washed up into the middle ear. Infection of the middle ear—the so-called abscessed eai-——i.s practi- cally always preceded by some in- fection of the nose and throat. The first symptom is pain. Earache calls for prompt and skilled attention. The early opening of the ear- drum, thus providing drainage for the infected middle eir. will usual- ly prevent the infection from spreading backwards to cause an inflammation of the mastoid. Many seem to fear that an incis- ion of the ear-drum will cause deafness; this is not the case. The incision heals and no permanent damage results. If. however. the ear-drum is allowed to rupture from the pressure of the infection in the middle car. then healing of the ear-drum may not take place. Those wxi have infected ears or head sinuses should not go in swim- n‘.ing until the condition is cured and their doctor has told them that it is safe for them to swim. Questions concerning health, ad- dressed to the Canadian Medical Association. 104 College street, Toronto. wi‘l be answered personal- ly by letter. . TO FILL U1‘ HOLES Have some plaster of Paris and mix it with milk instead of water. The milk prevents the plaster from setting too quickly, and it also makes it waterproof when it is set and therefore immune from the effects of damp. This mixture can alto be used for filling up any holes or knocks in the wall before O l.|,\\l ‘VD II i‘ N/\ M i: I -‘ IH '-sll ‘H nun " ’ ‘Opera Star Hono red on YIN Retirement A l . . 0 tion 01 her 25 years with flu Metropolitan, Luci-czla Bari has al nounce_(L her retirement from an active career. and perhaps not in iii a future in an advisory capuiiy only. Edward Johnston. _ manly er of the Metropolitan Opera Associ- ation, ‘and Earl It. Lewis, box office I-rel-Surer, arehere seen presenting Inorezis Bori with gifts in apprecla PLAN YOUR NEW ~ HOME" NOW MortgageAFunds Are Available on . Attractive Terms for New Construc- tion in the City of Charlottetown under the Provisions of the omiiiion Housing Act, 1935 For further information apply to I... M. POOLE & C0. Representing the . SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY ' OF CANADA :: L-3704-4-I5-22-29. SEED OATS" Choice No. 1 Imported ltllplpefod. ~ BANNER VICTORY ABUNDANCE We also have some OATS, No. 1 and 2 Govemmont. inspected. Prices right. See them at our Seed Store. Write for prices. CARTER & co. LID CHARLOTTETOWN . si-:EosMEN