Famous Pianist Turns to Movies In Feature‘ Role T CAPlIUI.—|UDAY—'J, , Clllilll M03315 —MADGE EVANS IN “MOONLIGHT MURDER " ,0 PLUS OAl'I'00N—8l’0ll'l' R.l:‘.VlEW—RU'l'l! E’.l".l‘!NG ‘MUSIC.-ll: -_—- TODAY 3—7—9P.M. NORMA SHEARER in ‘V “SMILlN’ ’ THROU ” PRINCE THE . ._. .4... ‘.';,.3 A Little Bet With’ God (continued from page 2) WITH FEIDQID’ MARCH — LESLIE HOWARD ’ ILU8 . ._. “SILLY .§Y'lIl,|l’|l0NY By llrner W. . Annotated Prue rnrelgn Stan LONDON, July id.-At the 080 0!‘ 70 Ignace Jan Paderewaki is taking his piano into the heat Ind Klara 0! the motion picture studio. liarthoflnttime inhi.Il0ngolr- eer the famous pianist and Polish }):!t..riot has signed to appear in a He has been engaged by Lothar Mendee. American director now heading his own British production company, tor the lead role in .'| film ' t:tmpora.i:, titled "Moonlight Son- 5. “ 'a Workonthepictureetartsthis PETER B.KYNE'5 "VH9 offered the Indies his heart‘ and D. fortune 9 ill pawn—t1ckets' \_|V' I 1 z I month with Mendes himselt in the director's chair. "Paderewski of course will have the role or a. musician," explains the vigorous hard -working Mendes. “But it will be a role as only Pad- ereweki can play it; no velvet-Jack- eted product of the make-up artist. "Nor will the iilm be merely the ' ‘ mu:-:arr;moi l;;ermi‘tting laardeigwski to ' p y p no tom a finish. '. STA Fl R E T T The my new an honest wr- | ‘fly!-1 of the eflect of a great music- !‘ " r ' - 1 ion tlm the lives of several other peop c. “It was the story in fact which had much to do with persuading Paderewski to come to the films. His music will be there but it will at all times be purposeful." Film people here are conlident that Paderewski, with his striking appearance, the amazing head and deepest kindly eyes, will have his per- sonality enhanced by the films. His age is not regarded as a drawback and no iilm test were made. “He is as alive, as vital, as ever," said Mendes after meeting the mu- sician in Paris and signing the con- tracts. “He is accepting a new med- ium of expression with extraordin- ary interest, insisting on being in- formed as to every detail." W11)’ Padefewski. who has made many fortunes -— and given them IIWBY -— should emerge from his Switzerland retreat to enter motion Fcrri (5925-- ACOLUMBU/\ Comedy mo Rex. and Rinty — Cl1AP- 5- THURSDAY — FRIDAY — SATURDAY I ‘ pecison’, , gayest conzé‘dy ' FRANK MORGAN .-and ’ Y COURTNEIDGE . ..,.M 1 UL“. _ Lvs , svurrromr — sonar newsw- musrcar. . . . onaucuso rm: GUARD :———— ' ‘—""‘—"_‘ THURSDAY'- FRIDAY - SATURDAY DAILY 3.00 — 7.00 —- 9.00‘ P. M. SATURDAY MATINEE EARL} 2.30 P. M- nmmz 3.00 -1.00 -9.45 ram. snuansv MATINEE snars nanny aso Evening llc-We P available, the immigration tabies of Chalpicr VI have been placed on I. The Canada Year MATiNEF . . . . . EVFNING calendar year b3«5i5 W 13°u"'“° 1”‘ pictures is something or a mystery. 16C ""6: I - 27c-Bhc-38¢ for temtional comparison. Statistics That he is to receive a, tidy sum "‘ covering the construction industry 18 taken for granted. but there are neither hints nor rumors of any un- in Canada have been made avail- due need or money. able in the Bureau recently, and are published {or the first time in Chapter xv, amplifying the inform- ation on contracts awarded and building permits, statistics of whlch have appeared reg- uiarly in the past. The introduc- tion io the External Trade Chap- ter (XVI) has been revised by the inclusion of an abstract of the value and quantum of world trade abridg- ed (mm the League of Nations’ “Review of world Trade. 1934." Sec- tion 9 of Cimpier XVII dea‘ing with Merchtindising and Service Emb- lislinrenis has been entirely revis- ed and rewritten to cover the esti- m:l‘.~cs of rciail trade made since the 1931 Census; a new series of monthly indexes of retail sales, 19:9-35, is also inciuded as well as princpal sinlisiics of chain stores and the motion picture industry. some revision has been considered necessary in Chapter XXI by the inclusion or new material on the important cubject oi municipal l:ixat.on and the estimate of ne- iional wcakir. 1933, with revised compara.b‘.c Jgures for 1929——the Iaiicr estimate gives a picture at :he peak 01 domestic prosperity while the 1933 figures reflect the T The publication oi the 1936 edi- tion of the Canada Year Book is announced by the General Statis- tics Branch of the Dominion Bur- eau of statistics. The Canada Year Book ivhe oincial statstical an- nual or the country and contains a thoroughly uip—to-date account of the natural resources or the Dominion and their development. the history of the country, its in-i stitutlons. its demography, i.-he dlf-i ferent branches of production, trade,’ trannsortaton, finance, education; e‘.c»—2n brief, a comprehensive; study within the limits of a single; volume of the social and economic‘ condition of the Dominion. This, new edition has been thoroughly: revised throughout and includefl in all its chapters the latest‘, information available up to the date or going to press. The 1936 Canada Year Book ex- tends to over 1,150 pages, dealing with every phase or the national life and more especially with those su:oept;ble of statistical measure-, ment. Attention may be called to’ some of the special features oi the present volume. The statistical sum- mary. included ln the introductory matter, has been extended L“; . Ill COMING . . . GRACE MOORE ~ TH KING STEPS OUT " cooler Weather In Prairie Provinces teiants i'rom all over the world and the United states will be well rep- resented. This natural sporting event was inargurated in 1934 to commemor- ate the part the River St. Maur- ice played in the lives of the e ' missionaries, voyageurs and co ll’ curs de bois as mil as the history of the Province of Quebec. It 3.!- The om)m.Lum to Wimses B‘ ford; opportunities for the re-enact- uruque and thrilling spar-ting event‘ “'‘‘5“‘9 QVEW Y9“ °f 3"’ '-‘~’-3“ °‘ will be ziilordrtl motorists visiting! me“. “33m5t the River and mm the Pmv-mm of Qkcbgc this ye,_u._ for skill, resource and courage. Special arrgngcnienis have been‘ The “C9 ‘3 W be “m August 215"- mude to permit them to iol‘ow ini 22*“ and 23’d~ M “Ch °f the f°““" their own C“.s_ or in rented Cars’ towns along the river where the therlntirc mm, from Tuque to consestantswill stop—La Tuque, the ‘ Tmi:._RM,_,mS‘ ‘starting p::.nt, Grand-Mere, Trols The T2ol.s'-Rivieres-La Tuquci £11239: :35 highway skl..s Io. pract daily the, oelebmtions have been 1 ‘a’ ’ir- lie 5 ... “C13!-'5~ ful hiilldl ll mi 3 1 c ur<e on, planned and 8 varied program 0! the st. Maurice River over which _ r” '- willbe conciuctcd the Annual Cancel “““53m°““'5 ‘"11 1°“d t° "h° 39”‘ eral enjoyment. Race ircm Lit Tuque Lo 'Iro'.s-Riv-‘ _ :1VTOtorists £6 , ~ Follow Quebec. Canoe Race, - Natural Sporting Event Attracts, Visitors From All Over America; WINNIPEG, July 13.-(CP)— Cozler weather for Alberta. and Saskatchewan came today in the wake of prairie rains that gave their greatest blessing to the mid- western province while Manitoba remained in the hot belt. Deaths irom heat prostrations in Manitoba, chiefly in Winnipeg, mounted to 22 for the week-end to- night and eight others drowned in seeking relier from the t:r-rid wea- ther. Twenty-i'our persons were in hospital as a result of sunstrokc; one death in each of askatchewan and Alberta. brought the western prairie total to 32. ‘ Reports of drought damage in wheat, a. late influx of buying and strong outside markets sh:vcd prices higher on the Winnipeg grain exchange after early reces- siom. Temperatures dropped in Alberta ieres. To .ollov.' an event of this year. A special article, "Canada on type will be an unusual experience vimy Ridge," prepared by colom-1 writing down of values resulting with scattered rains in the prov- portescue Duguld, 1),s,o., from the dcpresio-n. several of ince. Manitoba showed rains lnthe A. E.C.A., Director of the Historical section ((}.S.) Department of Na- tional efence, has been included in Chapter II. This h apropos in the light of the pilgrimage to Vlmy and the oflicial unveiling of the Virny Memorial arranged in take place this month. New material on fertility rates and multiple births in Canada has been added to chap- ter V. Insofar as statistics are for many sgeciators and the few points a: which ti-.2 road docs leave river will po slbly add to the il1.'3;".l:L for ill£‘y will provide short intervals during which the race will be out of sight, only to be picked up again :1 few miles fartlier on and affiord new thrills. The race this your takes on an international n;-pest. for whilst in the past 1. has been confined to lines as net-minder with Owen native Can.::ii;r.s or the Province sound Greys, Dominion junior *: is now open to con- champions of 1927. Birthday Greetings (By The Canad'an Press) To Benny Grant, former relief goalkeeper with Toronto Maple Leafs in the National Hockey League, born 28 years ago tomorrow in Owen Sound. Ont. Now playing in the Cansxii:m—American league, Grant burst into the hockey head- south but all precipitation was light and temperatures in the 90's continued. rhnerson, on the inter- national boundary in Southern Manitoba. set a western record Sunday with a maximum tempera- ture cf 112. ' Saskatchewan, as well as getting cooler weather. derived the greatest crop benefit from the week‘-end rains. The best rains occurred 100 miles southeast of R.egin.a and about 100 miles north and east of Regina. Heavy rains in the southeastern section were looked upon by gov- ernment ofllcials as likely to ease the siaustical series in Chapter XXII have become broken by the creation or‘ the Bank of Canada, but since it will be some time be- fore other series can be begun on the new basis, a compromise has been tempararry made. Improve- ment has been affected in. the presentation of the financial statis- tics of the provlnclally-controlled schooLg of Canada by the 001160- tion of data on a more comparable basis from all provinces. These are . presented in Chapter XXV, Tables 8 and 9. chapter XXVI has been Japanese In Canada Have Monoply W ,,,,,, ,,,,,,_,, ,,,,,,, 011 Strange Art Of Chicken-Sexing ion and oi provincial health auf.‘h- ume hope was new We um Occidentals Fail In Tests After Years Of Training orltics and a. brief sketch of the would n 1 0 1“ he exneme origin and growth of the difimnt south .7.’°....°V...§.' M t classes or institutions in Canldi wrnurroo, July rs—'romnuu have been inc1uded~ rains fell over Winnipeg tonight to The death of His Maiestv Kine break the hot spell out reached George V on Jim 30- 193°: "09!" its climax in the week-end when ed with deep sorrow th1'0“8h°“t “I0 so persons died in Manitoba from Empire and with world-wide reg-rot, he“ ma d,°wmnR_ and the auccessio of Kine Ed- Preceded by a dust storm that ward VIII to the Thmne. have 1309“ roiled clouds of dirt over the city appropriately marked by the repr~o- gmm an we,“ um mm W" M. duction, as irontispieoe, of the - ncial Proclamation of the Govern- ment of Canada made on Jan. 71. 1936. accompanied by the latest omcial photogra-phs, obtained through the courtesy of the respec- tive Court photographers. (By Central Press Calnadinn) IUMONTON, July 11—Under con- trfit to northern Alberta poultry farmers, Shogo Uryu, one or only iioizmen in the world working the stflnge profession of chici<e:r-s¢x- .-_“lnI has just completed the examin-' turbances and thunder. Temper- atures in Winnipeg has soared to the 100 mark during the day. The rain lasted nearly an hour and during the heavy downpour the mercury dropped sharply to ‘ill Imn of 200.0(7) day-old chicks. a work that has taken since early larch. 739 34‘t5'°‘“'°1: i-“P °:'1"_"‘° “'°‘“ The Volume is illustrated by degrees. After the rain ceased. g“°k}““ k3hW&‘l'] mg‘ “:23 gm 51‘ many maps and diagrams and the however. the temperature hopped -’w“u‘fmt°h “ nedetirfnine ms: latest available data are everywhon up my degree: or 3 uly 2) _d‘y_a1d8c<;:*‘cks at the H“ of . included. degrees below the high ID!‘ the day. “'1 mu?» P'°bab1V ""5 We Owing to the urgent need for INDIAN nrvna womsrrs INSTITUTE economy in the distribution ol,Gov- emment publications, it has be- come necessary to make a charge to all individuals receiving the Girl- ada Year Book. Person; requiring the Year Book may obtain it man the King's Printer, Ottawa. as low as the supply lash. at the price of $1.50, which covers merely the cost of paper, printing and binding. By a special oonoeuion, minister: 01 religion. bone-tide student. and school teachers may obtain paper. bound copies It the nominal price or we each. ‘ ding feature or this remarkable as practised commercially by Japanese experts in the Do- on. is that they guarantee their is as 91 per cent. perfect. Eight members of the Indian Riv- er Wmnens' Institute and six visit- ors met at the more on July Bob to hold their’ regular monthu meeting. The President called the meeting to order and the Creed was read by This was followed by re. 5 run an __ rapid strides are re- in have been made~througli- -theyorld in the, unusual art ~ was flat discovered by two scientists, Dr. x. lluui uaiverdty. In me. ill to- Ihore are oni A few men who mines 10 in cent. uwle. aoeordlnt E 9. O E 3. ? 1.. rvleor, mu amid, the Institute to the annual can. Ml-P! . Banish Elias ilyglenleally with Aeroxan . FLY CATCHER IOISAOIII ~ J. E. M. GENES!‘ . Ilfillflll. GUI members compu- O with It. Next . cm: which an- were iillied much on- "sternel what does this mean? I've Just remembered papers said you were dead—hurned up in Y0“? . . . Sterne nodded: "That's right." he agreed, gently. “But»—what does it mean. Blame . . .?" By way 0!. answer raised his hand, xoretinger pointing to rnpel attention. And then it was that Dursloy, listening, heard an old familiar sound he had not heard tor many years. The distant, ecstat- ic, yeiping bark 0! hi; old Irish terrier, Tim-Iwho had died five years before, and had never been replaced because no other dog would have been the same . . . And the bark—that unmistakable, uuiorgettable bar-k—-eacpression of joy at the return of his master after an absenoe—was drawing rapidly nearer! He turned to Sterne, his eyes wide: "Sterne! That oar-—-I didn't dodge itaifier all . . .'I" 8teme‘s hand was laid upon his own, warm and comforting. As he companied by severe electrical dis- . lighted barking came nearer—a.nd now Dumley could hear the scrab- ble oi excited paws on the gravel outside . . .i (TI-l:E: END) St. Augustine School The closing exercises of Rustico Convent were held in the parish hall Rev. Mgr. Ohiasson presided. The program was as iollows:— Recitation —.La. Main, Le Marmot . a i ’Eglise. The Daisy A. Mortii’y- ing Mistake. Songs: L'Ange Gardien, La Broderie i.eBon Cote’des Choses. Action Sorvg—Home Sweet Home. History—aPagea.nt. Pe-aoe—Pagcant. Dia.iogues— Mademoiselle Sus- ceptible, Les Defants de la Jenn- esse. God Save the King. Prizes and Oertiflcatet Prizes for highest aggregate donated by Mgr. Chiasson award- ed in Grade IV to Cecile Dulong; Grade III Bernice Doiron. Grade II Georgina Doiron; Grade VII, Alfredo. Doucet. Grade VI Louise Doiron, Gradev Edna Bouin, Grade VIII Evelyn C. Doucet, Grade IX Stella Gallant Grade K prize donated by Mr. Sylvere Des- Roches awarded to Alice Pineau. ’ Prizes for Catechism in primary department to—Rita J. Doucet; in intermediate department prize donated by Mrs Eusebe Doucet awarded to Edna Bouin; prize in senior department to Rita Pineau donated by Miss Freda Peters. Prizes for atis-ndance—Melvin Doiron. Ar-mom Dulon-g, Gerard Pincau, Alphonse Pineau, [Ebert Doiron Eric Dousct Evelyn Doucet, Arthur Douoet, Alyrc Pineau. Prizes for applica.tion—F‘ra.ncis Doucet Anita Blanchard. Yvonne Buote, Gertrude DesRoches. Rita B Doucet. Leona Dsucet Norma Doucet, Cecile Doiron. Edgar Des- Roches. Prizes for elocution— Louise Doucet. Clarence Douzet, Clarence Blanchard. Prize for music donated by Mr. Eusebe Doucet awarded to Corinne Gallant. Prize for Art to -—Justin Gal- la.nt. Prize for Athlei.ic.e—to Urbirl Dorion. Prize for Latin to-Rita Pineau. Prize for Algerbra to—'I'heolinde Bouin. - Price for Georgraphy to—«Mar- guerite Gauthier. Prize for Arithmetic to —Eilem Doucet. Grade VI1—- Certificates awarded to Evelyn Douoet, Rita Doucet. Georgina Mlar-tin; Rou Anna Doiron. Prize for application donated by Mrs. Gomeille Doucet awarded to -—-Aileen Howard. Prize for French Conversation donated the !"renc.h Republic to—R.ose Doiron. Prizes for French Conversation by Mgr. Ohiason to—4]eor-gins Martin and Evelyn Gallant. Prize for French awarded ac- cording to the examinations in the French schools ofP. I: I. Garden 9 and 10 1 st to Antoinette Gallant; Ind prize to Theolindo Bouin; 4th prize to Alice Pineau. Grade VII 4th prize Anna Doiron. Prize for Grades 1x and)! for the Convent only let to Adelina Bouin; 2nd Stella. Blanchard. Price for Grade VII! in con- vent only: lat to Rita Douoet. Prise for Grades V and VI in convent only to Louise Doiron. Prize for Physical Drill in to- epotétonte No I to Rustico Con- ven . toliose ms an-.rn‘ronu. nun _......__ MANOKEIIIR.-(O. P.)-Edward Lawrence, 35-year-old» one-legged shoemaker, said to have collected about 025,000 in live years by ug. in; people to subscribe the cost at a wooden leg, was sentenced to 21 rnonths for attempted houlebrelh :a—eu;irIs -3"”-'==.“"ez~: _, VIII.-nun’: " n IN A R or s 4-i1'3$Zl-v; |.li"c’if-iLi'~i i nodded the sound 01 the dog’: de- . ‘fl-"sr=.;.r.v:i~z. :* E i ! e;itt3.~gIa;;.ry:q,_r;.;.¢5.-.u -.»,...;.- I- Compen 'lIG:lAG with any other brand at any price for . . . MILDNESS QUALITY VALUE ._Y .15. 19 CIGARETTE TOBACCO I81 Queen Street, Your Vacation Have the City Ticket Agency plan your summer vacation. Information in regard to rates, etc. will be given at any time. PHONE 540 W. K. ROGERS Phone 540 1 summer holiday . . 0ES'l‘l.\'.\'I'l0.\'S Ilnioy a Vacation Ill Till: WEST... EW. reduced summer farce enable you to visit the Prairie Provinces. famous Canadian Rockief vacation resorts and Canada‘; Evergreen Playground on the Pacific Coast for your . all outdoor sports. New Low acumen‘:-sass rmuxn 'rnu- rrnon CllARl.0'l"l'E'l'0\VN . . . Conch Tourist Sleep:-rf Standard Sloeperf OnulaaniilSept.30 .3 s. 8i|T_iilfli_ 3 TIMEs$A'L;EEKLY‘ (Mondqyn,1'huruIayn and Saturdays) ACROCC COOL SEAS FOR BOSTON FROM CHAILOTTIIOWN, P.I.l. ‘16... ‘29%. on in IOIIIID um Ausun-etlougyounnyonjoyeho convenience and luxury at this di- rect one service. The Saint John in ea:-Ilse-elrip.nndlurrnany cu-nine -maetionsnroyouneoenioydarlng henenlen-cervl....operatlona.Doek spans. Dancing. Th_olDII‘I|.Iy|nod. cneuIenonu.TI:eelean.eool,;... sllsle w‘I_y to travel. And the loan |'II|- -II-u any I . ‘flu-‘ad .4 :"..:'.‘v..':..'a'..'..';§..“.-...-’.-.'.'-.:..“:.-:l-. town-olldl II . ' ...'.‘'.'.'.*..':'-...,'-°'.:' °'-'° -* C A ....:.:.?* -'...°-.1-.. ':.-~--....-' '.--~'--»-..... um lulu. EASTERN ITIAMIHIP LINII Winnipeg — _ _... ._.. [ciao .g_g5 . Mu llexlnn — — — -- — -iuo aa.oo roo.1o Saskatoon — — _. ._ 7935 573. "53. E"'"°"'°nv—Cv-ltlry 00.55 was 1l0.'il JnIprr~—llnnif — — — 00.10 10!.” 124.00 ' Limit Limit iguon-rn pgcrnc pooch In an onus; oer. 8|. ‘UM — —- ?— — 3114.“ cm! Tourist Rleéparf — -— 126.40 htnnxluril Bleep:-rf — — -113.60 1 Plus .i..pa... at ..a.om.oa.a.'.. ‘.2 NEW REDUCED nu. : Lignil 45 day! but not he-r than Oct. 3i. Pnpnrtlende ndudlovu to uh: polnic—Full in/onnlllen from cw tkkd uni. CANADIAN NATIONAL IIY°'l'HE°SEA You'll Ind no eowerln, IIOCO‘ .. . use a o In cabin on 3° edge ‘J’ .35.... Meaieanhecenml hulri door I ~".'r".’L .sn-717.4-4 law lancer rm! W. I. IMIIII C107 THIN ll?‘ III than IMO‘ mm Phone I00 Use Ccullnn Netlond Tel-0705'