ma cnaaaorrarowu cunnbmis ALISON ADDED . PLUS GRAHAM PRINCE EDWARD “One Doubtinfj Ilromas M.» BILLIE BURKE‘ STERLING HOLLOWAY GAIL PATRICK o FRANCES GRANT . . “MEMORIES AND MELODIES" IN COLOR. DIACNAMEE NEWS TODAY-TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY MAT. 3 P. M. . . . . .. EVE, ‘l d: 8.45 P. M. 26c. 32c, 37c. is... ant; Night” SKIPWORTH m? . 16c, 26c. An Engaging lVlystery-(‘omedy At The Capitol "One New York Night," Metro-| Goldwyn-Mayer's exciting niystery= featuring Franchot Tone and Unal Mcrkel which opens today at the! Capitol Theatre to provide the sud-i ience with many thrills and heai'ty laugh; Concerning a murder committed in a modern, metropolitan hotel. the story presents a unique cross-- section of life seen in the various guests who become involved in the mysterious crime. The plot has to do with the disappearance of the dead man’s body, a stock broker who is very much disliked. A young cowman from Wyoming, a private secretary. a telephone operator, a Russian Countess and many other guests find themselves directly mixed up in the unsavory affair. Franchot Tone, who has attained such widespread popularity as a. romantic actor, portrays the role of the oowman who is visiting the big city in search for a brunette to marry. Una Mierkel is seen as a. blonde telephone operator who joins forces with the cowman to clear certain suspicions directed at the Countess. l-low the crime is ultimately solv- ed and how Franchot Tone wins a blonde instead of a dark-haired wife make an entertaining mystery- comedy that will long be remem- bered. Daughter Camping Benefits Mother Making mother ova: certainly was not the original motive of several- hundred young girls who enrolledi in a girls‘ camp this summer. Yeti according to the directors, in more‘, cases than one, the over-anxious,‘ over-indulgent type of parent has been transformed to a variety more suited for young girls. i "A certain mother telephoned. twice a day the first week her} daughter was here, giving a multi-l iude of disections about her healthl and habits," said a young woman.‘ who is in charge of camps for both older and younger girls. “Then she came to visit on Sun-‘ day and when she saw her timid.. pampered little daughter, who had never dried a dish in her life. doing camp chores as n matter of course, picking up a garter snake without the least fear and romping mer- rily with the other girls, she said it revolutionized her whole attitude toward the child. She hasn't tele- phoned one time since." Best of all. according to the direc- . for guide over the camp, the child.‘ nine and a half. is learning not to. be afraid. She had been trained at- home t0 be brave. but in camp. she says, you get a chance to put all your theories into practice. For in- stance, there is Bill, the garter snake. I-Ie lives in a. jar and the children feed him and even bathe him. They have learned that the; proper way to take him out or his‘ jar is by the back of the neck. “He. isn‘t really siinly and cold at all." the little girl declared gravely. trying to set right some of the fal- lacies that seem to be prevalent about nature. "And of course his bite is not even somuch as a pin- prick." She put the snake carefully back and lot a white rat clnmber from his cage on to her shoulder. "Can you rol‘. a poncho?" she in- quired. Th“ visitor shook her head and the youngster looked a trifle dashed that so vital a part of any- onek-x education should have been neglected. “Well. thats for when you do a walking trip and sleep out." she explained. "You roll your blankets nnd sheets inside, and sleep in the roll; for pillows you ilsc ba'sam twigs, or mnybe your shoes covered with your sweater. ‘Did you ever cook eggs and bacon on a hot rock when youre on a breakfast hike? It saves carrying skillets nnd things. You just heat the rocks and then you fry. first the bacon, so there will be grease, then the eggs. They taste grand. You ult use real rock, though, and not lhale. I used shaleonoe when I was Ieamlng and the eggs flew away in the air! -| .-L Canoeln; Without Paddles "I suppose you don't know what {gimmnuig u. either? That's for when you lose your paddles in a "canoe. Then you stand on the stern wave your arms. flex your knees rhythmically and it makes the IBIIOQ Q0. "Knowing how to make all kinda of fire is very important. too. A cooking fire has to be concentrat- ~ed and small. and on a windy mountain tap. you have to make ‘t in a trench. When it's a camp- -‘"'e to sit around and sing. thin biz and there is a lot of wood architecture, you know . like a house." Among the chores helped with this year was blazing trails and making jelly. They called it a gyp- sy jell and the girls dremed up in bandannas. picked berries and made the jelly out of doors on a pictur- esque hunters’ and trappers‘ fire- “thats where you have two big logs that you can straddle with a keMe or coffee pot.” The girls made 37 glasses of Jelly in an hour-enough to supply every table in the camp. And as an added artistic touch. they imprisoned a. little green leaf in tho paraffin at the top of each jar. All Busy With Nature Everybody in the camp. including tile councillors and even the handy man. is working on some nature project of his or her own. some are studying the different kinds of clouds. There are plenty of star lzazers and a number are interested in geology. Several have taken to classify mosses and fungi. gathered in the woods. The whole camp stops whatever it is doing when a deer appears. or, as happened the other day, the biggest snapping turtle anybody had ever seen was brought in. Ev- cn a board meeting paused to look n: this 60 pound monster. But then n new kind of bird singing outside the window will halt a meal in the open-air dining hall, while every- body listens. TESTS IIYPNOTIBM TO EASE CHILDBIRTH KHARKOV, U. S- B. R... Aug 15 --Pninles.s childbirth by hypnotism a technique adopted by Prof K I. Platonow of the Ukrainian Psychoneurological Academy, was announced to-day. Of 90 experi- ments only five per cent. showed negniivc results, he said. When pain was not eliminated coin- pletely it was diminished con- siderably The technique involves building up a spi\ of confidence and lack oi‘ fear before mildbirth. as well as hypnotism, at time of delivery. DISFIGURES GIRL BIRMINGHAM, England, Aug. il-JCPJ-Sentenco of four years penal servitude was passed here on John Halifax Rabone, a Camp l-iill bus- driver, who was found guilty of throwing corrosive fluid upon Margaret Chilton. POOR IIERRING SEASON NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE, land, Aug, ll-This has been the poorest herring season off the east coast for many years. At a meet- ing of the Northumbcrland Sea. Fisheries Committee it was stated that in one instance a Scottish herring boat with d0 nets arrived with only one herring. ‘Eoazn/LL (‘Imrrh 0f England School far Girlr. WINDSOR NOVA ICOTIA Junior School with lpeclnl nt- tcltlon In younger u. Senior luhocl f0! lllll School grads XI and Itlohl . Ind h [ruin XII examinations, Mule, Art, Household leis lumncr and Wlptn sports-Ill- lll . ‘garden return loplolnhr Ia I'D‘ PROIPICIIYF APPLY 1'0 Till IICIIYAII Id hlll or Iln Rloehlllj Ilollnl Con, P. l. l. --'y._nr_en_ should have convict .A\IL‘LI - Sh-h-h-h.’ IT'S A SECRET‘ Olcourco fbcymcn‘ rily catch the mar» dour — but that’: onlyparloflba gay oxclllnonf 06- 0 . NEW YORK FRINGNDT TONE - IINN NERNEl Conrad Nagol o Harvey Stephan: ALSO . . . "STRANGER THAN FICTION" . . . TODD-KELLY COMEDY ONE HORSE FARMERS TO DAY-TU ES DAY TWO DAYS ONLY SHOWS AT 3 — ‘l - 8.45 RM. . cAplTol-ltint. 11c, 26c. Eve. 26c, 32c. Even Royalty Uses Bicycle In Holland Hoiiiuid is one oi the smallest states in Europe. Its greatest length does not exceed around 150 boilndary with Germany. This area, about 12.650 square miles, a little ovor half the size of the province of Nova Scotzfa (21,068), supports a. population of 8,000,000. The popu- lation of Nova Sootia is 512,846, or just 6,4 per cent of that of Holland. t The country for the most part is at or below sea level which neces- sitates the dykes. synonymous with a Netherlands landscape along with the windmills. frhere is an extens- ive rictwork of navigable canals which carry the greatest portion of the country's heaviest freight traf- fic. according to the Industrial De- partment of the Canadian National Railways. The railways, of whlchl there are 2.110 miles, take carol principally of passenger traffic and i also maintain an express service for package merchandise, Motor trucks have created ~ problem for the railways as regards this express traffic but buses are not allowed to compete where they 7:\‘y deprive the rnrllways of pass gcr trafflc. Holland is the land of bicycles. nearly half of the population own- ing a machine. The bicycle knows no class distinction, being ridden from Royalty down and is a keen competitor of the automobile. Mot- oring in Holland. however. has its difficulties as many of the roads and highways are very old and not suit- ed to modern trnihc. In many cnscs they are nnrrow and the older ones are still paved with brick, The country is. nevertheless, moderniz- ing its, highways nnd already there are approximately l6 000 miles of road silitnblc for ii10t’il'lll‘Z. . Putting It Up To Britain (Toronto Globe) The Sim Canal ha: again enter- ed ominously into the cmsiderat- ions of the Italo-Eihiopian dispute. The reiteration at this time of the previous suggestion that it be closed to Italian shipping indicates the very slim hope that remarns for a settlement by the French, Britsh and Italian conference which opens in Paris this week. That confer- ence, it is nsw clearly understood. will proceed according to the treaty of 1906. which means the only solu- tion will be a proposed (livislon 0i’ Abyssinian territory by the three Powers. Any such solution ignores all question of Ethitpian independ- cnoe. the root of the whole problem. an.l will therefore bc unacceptable to Emperor Haile Selassie. S0 it becomes obvious the Imagine of Nations must cvcntunllv fnoe the issue. If it attempts lo do sa, it must either continue to ignore the Ethiopian appeal or consider thc whole problem. which will be a sig- nal for war in Abyssinza, and con- sequently its problem will be as- grnvntcd nnd cnlnrgcri. It is fol' this reason that British observers fall back upon the threat of the sue-z Canal. T; close the Suex Canal would mean an act of war, which Italy can postpone by appealing to thc Inter- national Court. Thc covenant un- der which the calla] operates states clearly that the watcrwnv Shflil 1'8- main unconditionally opt-n to mer- chant flents and wnrcrnft alike. By the provisions of the Covenant. how- ever, the League reaservcs the right to recmsider and completely abro- gate nil international obligations whose "continuance might cndansfr the peace of the world." Should Britain oflicially carry the suez proposal to the Council session, scheduled for Sept. 4. shc will b0 testing league unity and authority as it has never been tooled befm. It must. be remembered that thn Suez Canal threat followed the Bri- tish delega" to Geneva for the first meeting of the Council on the dispute. The Council chose to load the burden or settlement back upon the shoulders of Franco and Great Britain. Thus it was openly locking to avoid any self-contained Action which might lead up to militant enforcement of the Covenant. I‘. cannot now avoid that action be- yond Sept. 4 and continue to exllt. If subsequent actions demand that the Covenant be enforced. the Sue! Canal will be one of glen?’ w- oda t: be adopted; t 0 6| of the members of the Council be- milcs. north to south, while at itsi widest portion it is about 1Z5 miles . across. from the North sea t0 the , . biological test (P681?) Louise llhcery. daughter of late Albert G. Eatery. formerly of the Post Ofiice Department of this city, to Professor G. Hubm Nich- olson, of Burlington, Vermont. Miss Eatery 1s the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Ibecl of 246 Kent stret, and is a graduate of MoGill University, class of '32. Professor Nicholson is the son of Mr. George L. Nicholson of Crapaud, and the late Mrs. Annie MacCaJlum Nichol- son. I-le is a graduate of Mount Allison University, class of '22. and received his masters degree from Harvard the following year. The wedding will take place quietly this month in Montreal. BRILLIANT STUDENT 00M- PLETES COURSE-Mr. Ernest P. Weeks, B.A.. son of Rev. E. S. Weeks, Millstream, N. 13., has ar- rived from Oxfsrd, England. to " spend a vacation. He has com- pleted the course for a degree from the famousllnlversity of Oxford, specializing in political science and economics, basides taking studicsin philosophy. During the two years of his course he travelled extensive- ly during vacations. I-Ie has been t; Aihem. Austria. Home, Denmark, Norway. F:a.nce. etc. He returns in October to continue his studies.-- Moncton Times. Rev. E. S. Weeks land his son Ernest and daughter Jean are visiting on the Island. , Mk. Harry E. Foster. city. left sat.- rday on a two weeks’ visit to Bos- i ton nnd New York. g N Qual ity in Fish Oils for Feeding (EXDPFllBIiEBI Farms Note) ‘ Since fish oils are fed primarily. not. as sources of fat, but as vita- min containing supplements. the first essential is that they be well suppiicdlwith the fat soluble vita- min-s A and D. At the present time there is but one acceptable and practical way of determining the potency of any oil in this respect, namely, through feeding the oil to small laboratory animals, prefer- ably chicks, on rations devoid of these vitamins and ascertaining the number of units of each vita- min present. This constitutes a and biologically tested oils are available on the market. At the present time by this method of testing only, can the vitamin content of any sub- stance be ascertained. As is often the case, however. - fish oils may be highin vitamin content but- may possess other physical or chemical properties which make them unsuited for consumption. In the past, because oils high in free fatty acids have been deleterious when fed to chicks. a high content of these acids was considered to be an in- dication of an ilnsatisfactory oil. Investigators, however, have been unable to show that free fatty acids in fish oils are harmful. Re- cent research work, at. the Poultry . Division of the Central Experi- mental Farm, has indicated that fish oils of poor quality may con- tain certain poisonous substances which nre detrimental to growth. uniformity and egg production of chickens» It was also found that in most cases oils which are high in frcc fatty acid content are also high in these poisonous products, although this is not. necessarily al- ways the case. These substances arc nitrogenous in nature and or- iginate through decomposition of liver or other body material in the oils. by enzymes and bacteria. They are apt to be present in compar- atively largc amounts when stale livers are used for rendering oil or when oils are not carefully rendered and (rlritain livir ma- terial, The samc ‘conditions usually bring about a high free fatty acid content of the oil. Hence. oil made by the sun-rendering process will usually be high in both toxic nitro- genous products and free fatty acids and nitrogenous products has either been poorly processed, or made from stale fish materials, or both, and should not be purchased. Thc effects of these poisonous products may vary from only a slight one on growth. uniformity and egg production to very serious stunting of growth and high mor- tality. depending upon their con- centration. Oils sold by reliable dealers are usually of a stated free fatty acid content and the pur- chaser should, therefore. buy only olisoi’ low content r2 to 4 per cent or less) since this constitutes the only mcahs of estimating these toxic products, at present available. FLOODLIGIITS NOR BATHERS HASTINCnS. Erlglnnd. Aug. 16- (CPJ-Becausc of the increasing popularity of night bathing, the local corporation has arranged for a wide stretch of the sea and beach near the pier to be illumin- itch at night. nomic blockade. It is hardly to be expected that France will endorse either of these measures. Russia might, P~land is problematical, and the majority of the bthcrs will ask to be excused from ‘ctivanpa-rtici- pation. 0n the grmind that they arc unarmed neutralitios. ‘The answ obviously is. the Council cannot be expect-ed to act in defcnleoftho Covenant or to meet any of it! obligations beyond empowering Great Britain. on its behalf. to act u aha use fit in the ENGAGEMENT-The engagement is announced of Miss Margaret Mr. and lvixs. A.G. Essery and the lowest. 11-5“! standing the many ommter attrac- tions last Wednesday. the annual £53 and picnic at the Belfldt Ohllmh Grove drew m0?!’- DWPIQ "ill! "'1 has done for some years. It was a big success from every atflidwlnt, and the people of the Presbyterian Church deserve to be b18311! 00111" plimentod n» their orzmizlru abil- fly a5 well as upon their ounces. Stowaway She picked the worlds biggest ship to hide away. Joan Bailey. 14. of New York is shown will an om- cer of the French liner, Norn-iarldief first stowaway to be discovered on the world's largest vmacl. family cabled passage money. Joan's Business Brisk In Steel Vests FOXMEhL-Feedlng Bungle Rat- ions exclusively, has given super- ior results wherever fed. The cost is BELFAST PICNK! —_- Nflilwith- I FIE CENTRAL GUARDLAN _ f This oolunl ll rclnrvnd _for new: ELECTRIC BAZGBB. Ohlflltll fi 0 2.121223; .:'":.::'.-::::. .- ~- _ - “use Jungle Travel ‘~==-“'#~‘ " sicwcc"°"..v.zrsiss ..........e am mum a»: by 6mm‘ Motor! for DifliI-Y BEADS SOARS OI‘ JOURNEY Dru! Storms nnd Cactus Ind l bridged Riven been Their Mil’! TORONTO, .Aug. l'I--A $651311 with British maul license plats T0828, hand-lettered on tin. and scratched and sclrred by W’ “a” tus of the tiger country and the landslides of the r-runslavas. W111 be a distinguished stranger among the giitterlnl new cars in W" automotive building at the Canad- ian National Eithlbition this Y9“- It 1s the Chevrolet made fam0ll5 in the i935 travels of Gordon Sin- clair, footloose reporter of th’! ‘Ibronto star. In it he covered 9000 adventurous miles. and bumpfl-i- radiator, and fenders bear interest- ing “souvenir? of the DUTY“??- Believing that thousands would like to see the car.- that carried the famed Canadian newswriter to Kashmir and the Khyber and other glamorous places, General Motors of Canada arranged for the return of this automobile, so that it might be included in the C.N.R.. exhibit. The Chevrolet, no less than its driver, had a. lot of thrills packed into its Indian sojourn. On the way to Kashmir, early last. Spring, it had to have a road cut for it through snow '10 feet deep, a battal- ion of one thousand ooolirs being engaged for the task. Temperature varying by as much as 100 degrees in three days tested the car's con- stitution, but it seemed to thrive equally well on 110 degrees in the shade at Delhi and five degrees of frost in the Vale of Kashmir. Dust storms, unbridgod rivers. and heavy jungle travel were every-day af- fairs, and occasionally there was an unavoidable crash with a watez; buffalo or a stiray camel. Less than 15 per cent of the roads were pav- . ed, and a constant menaco to tires ‘ was encountered in tho razor-edg- ed shoes frequently cut by ‘DUI-i locks. One of the car‘; s- tacular feats‘ was to cover the distance of 1169 miles irom Razmak. capital of Waz- iristan. to Bombay, in five days and three hours. It takes trrains a l-2 days to make the same run. c While Sinclair was able to tak: his car with him on his jaunt, it was a matter of regret that h: could not also take the supply 0! fuel. Gas was u high as 80 cents a gallon in Central‘ India. The explanation of the hand-let- tered marker is that in India the‘ motorist get; a number. and he has to make and letter themarkcns in For Timid Folk ' (Associatod Press) VIENNA, Aux. l8»—War fever in Ethiopia and general unrest in many other parts of the globe mean good business for Eirropc’; manufacturers of _ millet-proof vests. ‘ ' ‘ Thc domand for Venus and Jack": cts WlllCll cannot be limped by bullets is so brisk that factories work overtime. Emperors, dictators, diplom ‘, terrorists and lately also army of- ficcrs on route to the African arena. are good customers for this modern business. In Vienna Bernard Spanner, an American citizen, has established a bullet-proof vest factory. He has invented a new‘ typo q! jacket, which, he claims, resist-s shots from army rifles. "Bilsincss started to boom about eight vcnrs ago," Spoonier said. "Mussolini brought luck to me when he bought his first bullet- proof vest from me," . Spooner then explained how tactful one must be in hb business because "the popularity o! a king or general might suffer, if it be- came known that he has slaut a bullet-proof vest under ‘his unf- fcrrn, although in Mussolinfs case his vest is no secret." It?! useless to ask Spooner the “Whnfs Who" of his order book. Tested Many Timon “The puncture-proof cut has made a remarkable development since the days I had to-taavel from town to town in America to prove my vcsts wcrc bullet-proof." he continued, " ‘Come on. I'll fire nt you" was the first demand wher- ever I went. I have been shot at hundreds of times and haven't been scratched. "Last year Spain nnd the balkans were my best customers. But this year Italy, Ethiopia and America are doing best, as far as my business is concerned. flwomen seem to fear bullets less than men," spooner observed. "Up to a few months ago I had sold only one vest to a woman in my whole career. She was a sheriff in Kentucky But lately bwo wo- men in New York. one in Chicago and one in Hollywood ordered vests to measure. "I have a nice clientele in Texas,” Mr. Bpooner added nmil- ingiy. “But some oi’ them are im- patient. One ordered a Jacket sent by airmail. Four weeks inter the parcel was returned with I. letter from the sheriff of the Texas tcvm, which read: "'Mr. Blank was shot five day: before your vest arrived. ‘therefore it ll returned!" The vest consist: of an!!! dol- cn thin, square ltcol pistol. Itch plate is mm! into a clocrfittiul any way he likes. Defaulting Municipalities (Le Canada, Montreal: The Financial Post of Toronto has just made a survey fmm thcl Atlantic to the Pacific into default- i ing municipalities which nnd thernlclves in this position. wheth- er as regards principal and inter- est. orr intcrut only. But it adds, with reason, that the number of de- faults matters less than the total, with reference to the principle. and’ it prepars the following interest- ing table (in millions of dollars): Drlnultlng Tl rnunl- RC. of . lilil. I 1| i.» - \ ii ii l i i I Uptown Office 153 Great George St. For Delivery nutnma AUGUST and SEPTEMBER Our Cash Prices are as follows: t Cartage extra. Springhill Screened . $ 8.50 Old Sydney Screened . . . . . . . . 9.00 Albion Screened . . . . . . . . . . .. 8-50 Bayview Screened . . . . . . . . . . 7.75 Inverness Screened . . . . . . . . . 9.00 Albion Nut and Stove . . . . . . . . 9.00 Yorkshire Stove 10.00 Standard Slack .. . . . . . . . . . 4.75 Springhill Slack . . . . . . . .-.1.. 6.50 Old Sydney Slack .. . . . . . .~ 6.50 HARD COAL . American Scotch 613-00 Welsh Sold in any quantity- A. PICKARD & CO. PHONE 240i Uptown Office 153 Great George St. "sci .0 on the surfaoe more white than i" Mairltimes . - 64-8 ohllntlonnrlpnldehrdrfnuli- ' ‘ " M d’ ,1 young,“ Pugh, g5 id “m” " ' w l9“ ' arfhiii Lgagililxeiiitgrtég.bxnxdoocife- Efek/dgfihswln. 1t new" "i" °" Mflfliwbfl- “'0 92's 130 bec comes immediately after. its these two Prairie Provinces . . t But’ " " 4'0 ‘M! 8'8 o cic charged at most. with a they have ‘ireldlllltétv-lhfll’ 5° M” 3"“ °°" " l“ ‘m3 8'8 3.3a {ill-rm the Financial Post aay how-the case or the default‘ gfffi ' “'2 33:}; a‘: admits that Alberta. which appears] in! municipalities- e . - - ~ -_____M___M_V AT N0 EXTRA linen bag, which also contain: some secretly-constructed mflllilil to hold the bullet. Thou than Bus: Canal or elsewhere. bill are pieced together and the whole- is covered with thin lock-hm. - It ( yond declaring war on It and llliding lfmdfl roroen to tho ofcnsn . 0! Ethicnintexetinr Within V‘ THE REID STUDIO SPERIOR DEVELOPING 8. PRINTING "rid/Kn. n EXP. FILM rTQEr 1:35;" ENLARGED 5 x 7 - 5 0.. 1E!) MONCTON, N. B. an!’ economy, venient terms, EXTRA ELEGTIIIGITYN Helps pay the low operating Cos? nus range that gives you spud cleanli- and carefree cooking. All: your dealer about. our low price: and con- F or Clean Caretree Cooking N01 r ulliT ELEGTRIB RANGES $2 "(INN 008T No large inveatme t. 0 I 2 d t: a handsome i935 Clhnadisnyf}? E. "Iimprilnt Ilfilil! Ehgtrlc range in your kitchen. Pay the balance in ‘ 4B email monthly payments. It's the fam- “(tonpanii m" Charlottetown. P. E. i.‘