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Provineia Library } 1-82
REDCLIFF REVIEW |
OUR SLOGAN: An Industrial Metropolis of Industrious People Who Pull Together.
Volume 21
Expect Pottery Plant Thanksgiving And To Operate Shortly; Remembrance Day Set
' Machinery Installed and A Kiln, Will Be Observed Separately Now Being Built And Both Holidays. }
—-
During the pant [sy worekg! At ‘the last session of pariia- | great. progress has been made, ment it was decided to
move |
THE REDCLIFF REVIEW
Sane
THURSDAY, OCT 8th, 1931
More Items of Local Interest
As next Monday will be ob-
‘served as Thanksgiving Day in’ tell last Tuesday. | Canada, and a public holiday, all
the stores in town will be closed.
+ . .
Donald McLachlan thinks
| The first snow of the season It was only a flurry and melted as it fell. ° * * Mrs. J..R. MacKenzie is spend- jing his week in Calgary ona
at the new pottery plant which | Thanksgining Day forward to a that the reason there is such’ visit with friends. is being started in Redcliff jdate in October as was the cus- tight ball played in this _world’s| . . The full equipmen of mach-| tom up until a few years ago,|series is because there is a! -@. L. Stone was the speaker
inery has been installed and this and observe Nevember 11th. in| week work is well under way on/each year as “Remembrance the erection of the kiln. Day.” ‘This has been celebrated
Mr. Wyatt, who is at the head | heretofore as Armistice Day in of the company. is an exper-/conjunction with: Thanksgiving, ienced pottery man. He informs|the joint holiday always being the Review that he does not an- observed on the eMonday of the} ticipate any difficulty in turning| Week in which NoVember 11th out a good class of material for fell. Under the new legislation which there isa bigdemand in both days will be observed as the west at_the present time. public holidays. | Thanksgiving
It is the intention to com-|has been proclaimed for Monday, October 12th, and Remembrance Day will fall on Mednesday. Nov. | 11th. Both will be school holi-| days.
mence operations by manufac- turing a line of domestic _semi- porcelain ware, and, as soon as conditions. warrant. branching out into the finer lines of goods.
Mr. Wyatt expects to have exrything ready to commence operations by the end of this month, employing fifteen or twenty men.
The old truck factory in the west end of the town, and recent ly purched by this company, has
a
Dramatic Society For Gordon Memorial
Last Monday Evening Ata meeting held last Monday
‘makes ideal prmises for pottery;}don Memorial Church. purposes. Officers are: |
; : President—Mrs. Hargrave. Explorers Form A,
Vice Pres.—Mrs. Trembath.
Scotchman on each side.
+ All returned soldiers.of Red- cliff and district who are out of employment are asked to ter their names with the secre- tary at the local Legion Club toomst at once.
*
regis-
A Rummage Sale will be held in he ebasement of Pordon Mem- orial church on Tuesday, Oct. 18th from 3 to 8 p.m... Tea will be. served. Fruit, etc, from the Thanksgiving ser- church, will be on
Vegetablts,
vice. in. the
sale. * me *
As a measure of economy the
usual district conventions — of
Was Formed at a Meeting Held} teachers will be discontinued for
his year. School authorities and teachers reading this notice are asked by the Department of
evening a dramatic society WAS! Faucation to give it as wide pub-| been dompletely renovated andj formed in connection with Gor- licity as possible. that no con-
The fusion mau result.
* * &
The postal department has
Everybody welcome. * *|
at the Rotary luncheon in icine Hat last Monday noon. i * * «¢
Mr. J. E. Tarrant celebrated jhis umpty-umth birthday last |Monday. Joe still looks hale and | hearty despite his recent bad | acéident. | Bade ig 3
| Mr. G. L. Collard, of Saska- }toon, motored over to Redcliff last week end and sspent a few days visiting his brother, A. N.
¥ * x
The Medicine Hat Rotary Club
is. making extensive prepara-|
tions for their big annual carni- val next Thursday, Friday and |Saturday. Read their adv.
{ i *
Friday night, given by the social committee of the Damind D foot ball club, was largely attended jand was a great success, .
be * *-.* .
Annual hallowe’en supper will | bee held by St. Ambrose S. W.
| A. in the Parish Hall on October
\26th. Watch for further notice
Sedi- |
*.* The dance at thee air port last |
SCHOOL NEWS
| Quite a unmber turned out to the second meeting of the High School Literary Society last Friday afternoon when a series records were
played. An ex- jceptionaly clever mind reading act was presented bp Phyllis | Sanderson who claimed to be the seventh wife of the magician, |Houdini. She looked like it. The next meeting of the sciety j will be held. in the high. schol jroom on Friday afternoon, Octo- ber 16th, Thee time has been j changed frm 1:30 p. m. to 3 p.m. jin orderto accommodate visitor's jwho find it difficult to attend early in the afternoon. The feature of the program will be la dramatization of Drinkwaer’s |“Abraham Lincoln,” by the ma- [triculation class. Special per- {mission has been obtained from {Mr. Haris.t Hudson theatre,, | New York. to present the act | here,-as it is highty protected by jeopyright. The play is one of he classics of contemporary _lit- eatue.
Thee first fire drill of the year was held last week when the school was abandoned inside of 50 seconds,
Local Church to Hold Harvest Home Service
issued a booklet of postal infor-' as the price for supper will be |In Gordn Memorial on Sunday
; Sec.-Treas.—C. G. Pow g Sane i Rangers’ Group St ; imation which is well worth keep- Trail ee , “e — pager’ — ail 56 ing. It gives practically all the To Meet. : Evening in es Joes Ks air ae important information — relative Sac “¢ mae ae Movember oe.) 0. oht8--senting mail: -matter-of-all
On Wednesday afternoon the
In the world’s baseball series | kinds; rates on letters and par- so far St. Lovis has wot “three | cels. sizes of parcels and limits
acording to the present coniti- i tions, Ve * * . Messrs. D. McLachlan, Gea. | Myers. Jas. Stratton and R. L.
October the 11th Harvest Home. ‘Thanksgiving services will be eheld in Gordon ‘Memorial church on Sunday next
of visitors
of educational |
;
General Election In Great Britain
|The Date is Set For Tuesday. October 27th
|
A general election has . been decided upon in Great Britian | aS a means of sstraightening out | the complex political situation Voting will take place on Octco- jber -7th The new National government led by Premier Mac- Donad, will seek a definite man- date from the electors to guide the nation through what may prove a very difficult period — It is recognized that the lack of ‘mandate is one of the echief weaknesses of the coalition ad- ministration formede a few weeks ago to balance the budget and to. inaugurate imperative jnatinal economies. | As the issue is submitted to | the people. it is evdent that there | will be two main parties seeking amandate. the Nationalist party led-by Mr MacDonald and the Laborites headed by Mr. Hen- derson. The Nationalists in- clude all the Conservatives, ex- cept a few disgrundled ones, the MacDonald Laborites and the Simon Liberals who include 22 members of the present house. The Henderson Laborites em- brace the great bulk of the labor movement, although there are indications that all is not well be tween the right and left wines of the party
CROP REPORT
Issued By The ptment of
Morton were selected from Red-}Dnations of flowers, fruits and
“Caehe—Geo, Ballantyne.
* Rebekah Assembly, will be pre-
Explorers who have had three years’ activity as a group re- solved to start the trail as Rang- ers. They -named their camp “The Pioneers.” The following were chosen as officers:
Chief Ranger—Robert Pow.
Ralph Hargrave. Tally—Jack Learmonth.
seventh game is necessary it will also be played in that city.
4; RTE
Mentor— James Brown
They are to meet now at 7 o’clock Wednesday evenings in- stead of afternoons.
ooo
Decide To Form A Tuxis Square
Boys Meet Last Wednesday And Elect Officers
On Wednesday last a group of teen age boys, 15 years and over, gathered in Gordon. Memrial school room and decided to form a Tuxis Square with the name: “Omega.” They elected the fllowing officers:
Pretor— Jas. Brown.
Deputy—J. Lowens.
Scriptor—Dan Jensen
Comptor—R. Buchholz,
It was decided to ask Mr. C. T. Hall tobe Mentor. Len Larson was chosen pianist.
The Squaree will meet every Wednesday nigt at 8:30.
Se
VEGA LODGE TO HOLD SPECIAL MEETIN®™
Vega Rebekah Lodge, No. 97. will hold a special meeting on Wednesday, October 14th. Mrs.
McGregor, President of the fishing rod is laid
Wit the fall of the leaf and the tang of autumn in the air the aside and the Nimrods look to their rifles and shotguns, as the hunting season is
yours look it overand put it
jaway for reference.
CANADA OFFERS PARADISE TO HUNTERS.
=
tablished points of entry into the
woods and mountains, readily accessible: to those in search of ame. The shores of countless akes, rivers, and creeks, abound
of bear, mountain goat. Bear are also plen- tiful in the Ontario northland and in certain parts of
no jury cases they were Lwiegud the first Cay.
dis-
mountain sheep aad
Quebec. With w to preservation, various
a sent at the meeting. ushered in. True to her reputation | with all varieties of duck and goose | Changes have been made this year —- - ad one ot he vone , tent ple | and are not infrequently the scene ao game lave of ‘all Canuilan ‘ood grounds, Svenads ones 8 of the termination of successful mee, ge CAR FOR SALE—In ¢g r of sport, furi feathered aici f a and ns a broad per : : i ith and horned, to all who care to] ©xPeditions after moose, elk. and | hunting is offered and the invading condition. Lirense will go w netrate its far-flung hinterlands. | deer of all kinds. New Brunswick) army from Canadian centres, a8 it. Cheap for cash. apply at| — m coast to coast, all along the | Tivals Ontario and Quebec as moose | well as from the United States, is it. eap sh. PP vast system of the Canadian Paci-| territory, while further west, the| already starting on its expedi- Review office. fic Railway, there are countless es-| towering Rockies offer their tribute | tions.
4 | BAPTIST CURCH
games and Philadelphia two,/of weights, etc. It isa well | cliff to act as jurors for the fall| vegetables will be gratefully The next game will be played in| bound book which will be distri-| assize in MedicineHat th's week. | received and may be left at‘ the in St. Louis on Friday and if a| bued at once, When you get) 4s here was a li:.) + docket and|church not later than Saturday
early afternoon, On Tuesday, October 18th a
ifrom 8 to8 o'clock at which there will be a rummage sale and | donations will be disposed of.
ae
| se
Churches
oe Se
Soe
|
| ST. MARY'S CHURCH Celebrationof Mass every Sun- iday of each month except the | first Sunday, at 8:30 a. m.
Sunday Services: Sunday | Scheol and Bible Class at 11 a.m. | Evening Service at 7:30. Thos. Mulligan, Minister. ' 7 7 * ST. AMBROSE CHURCH tev. Malcolm Stewart, vicar 8 a. m. Holy Comunion. | 10 a.m. Sunday School, Ist and 8rd Sundays: 11 a, m Choral Eucharist. 2nd, 4th and 5th Sundays: | 11a, m. Mattins and sermon 7:30 p. m. Evensong and sermon
|GORDON MEMORIAL UNITED CHURCH | Pastor Rev. R. Erskine Pow Sunday, October 11th, 1931. Harvest Home Thanksgiving service ; 10a, m, Church School. ; 31:15 a, m. Morning Worship | Subject: “The Joy of the , Harvest Time” i § p m—Bowell 7:30 p.m, Evening Worship, Subject: “The Thankful Spirit ‘We need thelieht of the Gos pel to see Life Steadily and to See jt whole.”
tea will beheld bythe Ladies’ Aid}
Agriculture, Edmonton
CCutting of grain is ninety- five per cent.competed through-— the provinre. The amount of threshing varies sonsiderably. A period of from one to two weeks of dtl rainy weather haus ed threshiv operation to cease over practically the whole pre- vince. Phe past week has been generally dry and bjight and threshing has been resumed. South of Calgary abotit ninety per cent, of threshing is com- pleted and this proportion ‘gra- dally decreases towards the north. Inthe area east and north-east of Edmonton thresh-
|ing is only commenced and _ will
not be general until next week. In the central part of the pro- vince about twenty per cent. of {wheat has been threshed and in lthe Peace River district about | thirty-five per cetn.. Yields are saeisfactory in all j parts of the province: with the hexceeption of the dry area. \Grades' have been adversely | affected by prolonged wet wea | ther. a condition which has been lrapidly improving within the | past few days. With the pre jsent weather conditionsit is |hoped that a very large proporr ition of wheat in the northern districts will receive s traight grades in the course of the next | few days. | Harvesting of sugar beets is ‘in progress in the irrigated dis- ltriets, ‘The yield per acre will ibe at least equal to last year. The sugar content is also report- ved to be high. | A fair crop of ptatoes of good | quality is reported in the south- ern part of the province and a heavy cron in northern districts. Very little fall plowing has been done, :
4
ae
THE REVIEW, R
EDCLIFF, ALBERTA
Evolution Of Peace Nations Of the World Should Place | Armed Forces Under Control | Of League |
A proposal that the nations of the| world place their armed forces ‘under | | the control of the League of Nations | jand a prediction that France would | lead the way at the 1982 disarmament | conference was made by Joseph Paul | Bonoour, foreign affairs chairman of | the Chamber of Deputies, in a state-| |ment to the Associated Press. “I mean that the council of the| | League of Nations when face to face
MACDONALD’S Fine Cut
funest (A Sb
om J, VAT UAAEL
Home Taugit Fears
What has been described by one writer as “far and away the most con- | with @ case of proved war of aggres- | elusive tests of character ever made, since Adam and Eve reared Cain and sion should. be empowered under ar- Abel and made a moral success of one boy and amoral failure of the other,’’) ticle 15 ‘of the League Covenant to | were the elaborate studies recently undertaken by two professors of Columbia | male tbe of them to settle & War and Yale Universities. These scientists tested the character attitudes of oriate. over 10,000 school children’ from eight to sixteen years old, under “normal” | “Ate other nations like us ready? | school and home conditions. The children did not even know they were being Are they willing to. vist their ebins | scientifically studied. The net result of these intricate and reliable tests was | elit als Gavel and ‘so saudi pias to show that among agencies in having the greatest influence in building the Seattel OF aud at ths Qlsnsaleen human character, the “home” outweighed the school, the church, the Sunday of the League of Nations? ‘oo this School, the movies and sports all combined. gesture the problem of parity telat be solved.”
He said that French circles yearn- ed for’ perpetual peace and are grow- ing apprehensive over next year’s dis- armament conference.
The statement said that in his opin-| ion the disarmament conference would
This is faét number-one for parents to consider. The second in import- ance is where and how home influence and training makes or mars the child} life within its walls. _There are three phases of home life out of which are developed the emotional patterns or habits which will make boys and girls) into self-reliant men and women, able to meet an imperfect world with high ideals of their own. These phases are, ‘first, the attitude between husband and wife; second, the attitude of sisters and brothers toward each other; and|
‘Before he Found the Remedy
Many people endure suffering un-
necessarily, This man did.
If he had
known ten years ago what he knows
to-day, he would have been spared great deal of suffering. *T feel I must write a few lines i
appreciation of your: Kruschen Salts,
I have suffered chronic acidity of the stomach, nearly everything, until I was advise by a friend to try Kruschen, which
for 10 years from I tried
d I
have taken for the last ‘two months, and I am pteased to say I have had
no return of the acidity.”--W. B.
Kruschen Salts swiftly neutralises acid, takes all the torment out of it, and gently expels it from the system, And by stimulating your organs of elimination to perfect regular action,
Kruschen will prevent this harmfe
al
acid from ever accumulating again, After that you'll experience no more
misery after meals, Kruschen wi
keep your inside. clean and_ serene. Pure and invigorated blood will be
sent coursing to every body. Youll getic and well. As healthy and heart
as it is humanly possible to feel,
Recipes For This Week
(By Betty Barclay)
art of your feel wonderfully ener-
7
Nations Will Uphold Britain Prestige Must Be Safeguarded Or World Will Suffer
Engrossed as we are in our own troubles in Canada, we may not real- ize how very serious is the situation in the Mother Country. Yet the out- ward signs, visible to the world, are sufficiently alarming. We may be sure, when a Labour Prime Minister must not only interrupt his own holi- |day but feels it necessary to call into council the leaders of the Conserva- tive and Liberal Parties to devise emergency measures to meet an im- minent crisis, that the crisis is grave and, indeed, almost desperate.
British stability is a world asset. If anything serious were to happen to the age-long leader of world finance }and trade, the whole world would suf- |fer. It is inconceivable under such circumstances that the prestige of British institutions will not be safe- guarded by all the power which the leaders of finance in other nations can bring to bear. Some of them may
-|not relish the opportunity to rush to
the rescue of the Colossus of other years—but they will rush. They dare not permit anything really dangerous to occur.-Montreal Star.
Borden's ST.CHARLES MILK
UNSWEETENED | EVAPORATED
115 George St., Toronte
Send me a free copy of your new cook book.
Name. «oa enn e nn me oe ee eee
Publication _ Fees Usually Average Around Seven Thousand Dollars
It costs about 7,000 dollars to launch an. ordinary novel. Some- times it can be done for less, but
third, the attitude of parents toward children. be the gravest event since the signing ORANGE CHEESE SALAD Scientists ample that figure about averages vampire Let us take a look at the way in which these home attitudes foster the | o¢ the war treaties and a decisive step ‘ ( Arctic Sea Bottom) tio™ costs, inclusive of advance pu
one emotional attitude which affects our lives more than any other and ex-| in the evolution of peace, * pases y eariika licity and advertising.
tends as a sort of background through nearly all the others. This is self-) «typon its success or failure de- packages 0 adelphia ‘cream | Interesting Report Received By| Only time book publishers are not
confidence as opposed to fear—not fear of some special thing but a rather pends the future of peace,” he said. generalized fear of life itself. “T mean that-the failure of the dis- |
Vast numbers of people who will face death oh a moment's notice, who| armament conference would be the | go through all sorts of real dangers without a quaver, have yet a sort of| signal for the re-armament of powers | underlying fear of life's possibilities that seldom leaves them. It is easy to| which: uhder the peace ‘treaties are | fall into these generalized fears, and there are thousands of ways in which | subjected to special. limitations.” i parents actually teach this state of mind to their children. One of the Inasmuch as M: Paul-Boncour is! amazing discoveries made by doctors during the examinations in the World |acknowledged as France's greatest au-| War was, that so many perfectly healthy young men had all their lives been | thority on disarmament and is cer-| convinced that they had heart or kidney trouble or some similar malady and| tain to be one of France's chief dele- | had feared to undertake arduous occupation for that reason. In nearly all| gates to the disarmament canference | cases their fears had been started by hearing symptoms discussed at home. }in Geneva next. February, his state-
What is “fear” anyhow? Well, the scientists have done a world of work ment. was considered to be of such in the last thirty. years on fear, and they find there are three distinct kinds. far-reaching importance that it will The first is natural or biological fear—the kind that preserves you. from) give an entirely new angle to the natural perils; the second is intelligent or constructive fear—the kind you get | struggle for the reduction and limita- tion of armaments.
from sound, healthful education; and the third is pathological fear- destruc- |
cheese. 1 cup toasted cocoanut, 1 head lettuce (inside leaves).
Pare oranges and separate sections. Mash cream cheese. Make into balls | On let- tuce covered salad plates, place orange sections with 2 or 3 cheese balls. Top
and roll in teasted cocoanut.
with a spoon oY mayonnaise.
TOMATO-RAISIN CONSERVE 2 quarts fresh, ripe tomatoes.
4 sour apples, peeled, cored and
cubed. 2 lemons, cubed. 2 pounds sugar. 6 sticks cinnamon,
Radiogram From Submarine ’ “Nautilus”
A copyrighted radiograrh from the submarine “Nautilus” to the New | York American tells how scientists aboard the vessel have sampled the oottom of the Arctic Ocean 5,220 feet from the surface.
The result, says the radiogram from Capt. Sir Hubert Wilkins, com- mander of the North Pole submarine expedition, was a column of Arctic mud 17 inches long and one inch thick. It was “brown from the sur- face for 15 inches and then pale blue, representing the deposits ‘in polar waters of hundreds of thousands or
taking really big chances of losing money is on the less spectacular books such as biographies and educa- tional tomes. There's always enough advance sale and orders from librar- ies to cover costs on books of that type.
Always keep Dougtas’ Egyptian Liniment at hand, ready to bring im- mediate relief to burns, sores and felons. Stops bleeding at once. Pre- vents blood poisoning. Splendid for sore throat and quinsy.
Ontario Mines
« Output Shows Decrease In First Six
tive fear that comes from a wrong view of life, from wrong comparisons of | 1 small piece of mace. perhaps hundreds of millions of Months Of Year yourself with other people, from wrong attitudes toward your job, and from) q. 9 * (Tie ‘spices in cheese cloth bag.) years. 3 : wane waltin 62 TCbisak abies Guee telling yourself constantly you are not as important as others, As a rule Air Mail Service os : ‘pu
there are just three people who ever tell you you are no good—your parents, | your brothers or sisters, and yourself. And nine times out of ten you have | begun to tell yourself you are no good because your mother, or father, or) brother, or sister, in some way first destroyed your self-confidence. For example, you hear many people assert they are naturally afraid of lightning, or burglars, or something of the sort.. This is not true, because there are but two things-that people are “naturally afraid of.” ‘The first is be abandoned. It was stated by Mr. a loud noise, and the second is the sense of falling. Dr. John Watson and his Veniot, former — postmaster-general students have tried in hundreds of ways to frightened babies,: but these are that under the old system of deliver- the only two, ways in which they have succeéded. jing mail by dog teams in winter and} Many mothers say, “My child has always been afraid of the dark.” Oh,|PY boat in summer, it took many no, the mother taught it to be afraid. She put the babe to-bed and went out Weeks to reach its destination and and slammed the door, or talked loudly, or scolded, or dropped a basin on ©Ven then the service cost the de- the floor. Or, when it got a little older, the mother talked about being afraid P®ttment $41,000 a year. Contracts of the dark herself, or told the child something dreadful that was likely to fF delivery by airplane called for happen in the dark. | only some $6,000 additional and in- And it is just this way that children are taught to be afraid of life. Stead of giving people of the far Parents need to be taught on the many ways in which they actually teach Dorth mail once or twice a year they
To Aklavik Necessary
Paying Its Way and Must Not Be Abandoned
Whatever happens “to the prairie
mail that to Aklavik simply must not
Boil all ingredients, except sugar, until a thick mass is obtained. Add sugar slowly and boil about 15 min- utes or until jelly stage is reached, which is when the mass sheets from the side of the spoon. One cup of nut meats may be added to this just be- fore removing from the fire. Pour into
glasses and seal.
The Proven Asthma Remedy. Since asthma existed there has been no jlack of much heralded remedies, but |they have proved short lived and The ever-growing reputa- tation of Dr. J. D, Kellogg’s Asthma Remedy has given it a place in the field of medicine which no other can It has never been pushed by sensational methods, but has sim-
worthless.
approach.
Worms in children work havoc. These pests attack the tender lining of the intestines and, if left to pur- sue their ravages undisturbed, will ultimately perforate the. wall, be- cause these worms are of the hook variety that cling to and feed upon the interior surface. Miller's Worm Powders will not only exterminate these worms, of whatever variety, but will serve to repair the injury they have done.
Semnibina To Crow About .
Alberta Producing Half Of Western Wheat Crop This Year Central and northern Alberta today has the best wheat crop prospect in three years.
for the first six months of 1931 shows a 12.04 per cent. decrease over the same period last year, the half-yearly report of the Provincial Department of Mines shows. At the same time, gold production of the province reach- ed the record total of $20,608,196. Production to the end of June this year amounted to $50,997,740, as compared with ~ $58,236,562 for the corresponding period of 1930.
KEEP YOURSELF HEALTHY
The lot of most is much indoor work and little real ex-
ly gone on effecting relief and mak-| ‘For the first time in history, one- pecan! pepe bh seqromerad their children to.be afraid of life by shielding them from responsibility. They | have been receiving several deliver- 4 new converts. |half of the total wheat crop of the a , thorough Y are missing the greatest educational opportunity this world offers when they !¢8 each winter. It was further stat- SS ae West will be produced in Alberta. r. Carter’s Little Liver fail to put as much responsibility on the child as he can reasonably carry just ©4 that the northern air service un- Royal Winter Fair Alberta will have the lowest cost] _ re. le. 60 years as early in life as:is possible, In this way you build up habits of success in- der a two-cent rate today is paying || - of planting and harvesting in 20 = stead of habits of failure, courage habits instead of habits of fearing life and its way and has a surplus. These Small Exhibit Of Saskatchewan Live- | ¥&83: : f 25¢ & 75c red packages dodging its responsibilities. |facts should remove the Aklavik ser- stock Will Go To Toronto The five-cent government bonus on Ask your druggist for
This has nothing contrary to the duty of teaching the children the second Vice from any general plan of cutting :
kind of fear—intelligent fear—which is merely teaching them good judgment Out the air mails.—Edmonton Jour-
A small but select exhibit of Sas-
wheat will mean over $6,000,000 to Alberta farmers this fall.
) a deed TERS IRZEPILLS
in avoiding dangers and destructive habits. This kind of fear is merely the nal. r Sas inal See de ight Dairy live stock and poultry sales -
negative side of character building and should be carried through to the ce eCard lthis fall through the co-operation at add another $1,000,000 each week to
constructive or positive side—that is, to the development of ideals and Saskatoon Fair adecat whi aa oa ck Cinema alte. Alberta's farm income, A T E N T &
ambitions, of goals to be reached and battles to be won. The greatest duty | : TadieiGn to: thle: effact<. wlth: pact? Alberta has every reason to. face A List Of ‘Wanted Inventions’? ana
of parents is to fill their children’s minds with the belief that they can meet Operating Loss This Year Shows wuhie the Devious decision that no|‘e future with unshaken confidence. PHL AREA HES Focer irl a Rin oy any
these duties and battles with satisfaction and success, : ’ Decrease Over That Of 1930 excihits whbiid be Rorwubsaa dn vies ~-Edmonton Journal, The RAMSAY Co. or OTTAWA, Ont. When intelligent fear is carried to the point of exaggeration it becomes. F
Operating loss on the 1931 Saska- toon Exhibition, including all fixed charges against the exhibition board, amounted to $18,848.43, it was an- /nounced at a meeting of the finance ,committee. This shows a substantial ‘decrease over the exhibition loss in 1930.
of economic conditions, was reached following a conference between the executive of the Saskatchewan Live- stock Board and Hon. Robert Weir, Federal, Minister, of Agriculture. * In agreeing to terms by which freight charges could be met, Mr, Weir urged that an exhibit of Total attendance was 66,853, with!“none but the best should go for-
the third fear-—-diseased or pathological fear, The way out is to develop | logical judgment of our own powers and those of our friends. When this is done honestly, when you think “in detail” of your own powers of body and mind and compare them with these same qualities in others, you will be as- tonished to find that you are superior in most respects to the very people you have taught yourself to be afraid of. é
But the great lesson for parents is, that all these attitudes, both destruc- tive and constructive, are chiefly developed in the home. And since Nature, has given us but two inborn fears, and all others are learned, and since the home is the greatest agency in the world for teaching all our emotional atti- 29;786 attending the grandstand. ward,” and offered on behalf of the tudes, the very large question every,family should answer is, “Are we as|_ 1 View of conditions this operating’ Federal Government to pay 75 per parents or brothers and sisters teaching ourselves and one another to meet | loss, was considered very reasonable | cent. of the freight costs provided life with fear, self-depreciation and doubt, or are we trying to be a daily and the exhjbition management has/the Provincial Government contribut- inspitation to one another to meet life with the self-confidence and good operated about $5,000 under thejed the remaining 25 per cent. cheer that calls out each one’s best energies?” amount budgeted in 1930. The assent of the Provincial Goy-
The answer to these questions will have more effect on the happiness and DELS Ei RE: ernment to this scheme was given by success of every member-of the family than anything that.ever has been or Hon. W. C. Buckle, Provincial Minis- ever will be taught in school or cellege. ter of Agriculture., Feed allowances on a reduced scale will be made by the Provincial Government as in the past, and the exhibit will be managed by the provincial livestock branch.
Externally Or ternally, It Is| Good,-When app externally by |brisk rubbing, Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric —- OW opens the. pores and penetrates
‘the tissue, touching the seat of the.
trouble and immediately affording re-| a Case lief. Administered internally, it will) still the irritation in the throat which
A Matter Of Taste < Four To a Man Canadian ice-cream is delicious but} Policeman; “I have found Canadian coffee “almost undrinkable,” | containing whisky.”
in the opinion of a group of British| Prohibition Officer: “Good, I will induces coughing and’ will relieve af-| The Provincial Government will Foods that ordinarily stale quickly cadets who have been attending rifle |send a dozen customs officers to deal protein Sh cataae Ste cok 4 also contribute 50¢per cent. of the will stay fresh and tempting a sur-
‘ e ; ; ; meets in this country. The.cadets said | with it. cevinaglt prize money, but honoraria will not prisingly long time if you cover
and| Policeman: “I think six men will be to| enough there are only two dozen bottles in the case.”
they. liked Canada “immensely” that everyone would endeavour come back,
SLES ES ah be granted, as in former years.
Big Ben is to have a better home,, Recommendations of livestock will |The tower which contains the large | be made by selection committees as in clock at the House of Parliament in| Previous years, but stock not exhibited
Goodwill, like a good name, is got London, England, is being renovated Previously will not receive much at- by many actions, and lost by one. |with new facing stone, cut at the | Fenton. quarry to fit.
them with Para-Sani Heavy Waxed Paper.
Your grocer, druggist or stationer has Para-Sani in the handy, sanitary pieerene Parkas “or those who prefer a lighter paper put up in sheet form ask for Appleford's “Centre Pull’ Packs,
Poison ivy is a native American plant
Could Not Chee
k the Summer Complaint A Few Doses Did It
Mrs, R: Coulter, 918-11th Ave. E., Calgary, Alta, writes:—~‘Last summer my youngest son was bad with summer complaint, and everything he ate he would vomit, and he got so thin I became very much worried, I eould not get the discharges checked, so I went to the druggist and he gave me a bottle of “Dr. Fowler’s Extract, of Wild Strawberry and told me it would stop the trouble if anything would, After I had given the boy the first few doses © I noticed the discharges weré being checked, and was not long before he was well ayain,’’
e ‘
rat SE I Butter Production | ‘The so-called flying squirrels are| Butter production in Western Can-
really gliders, gliding from a higher ada last year increased by 1,161,424 ;to a lower point by aid of a mem- pounds; the total output being 47,- jbrane along the side of the body. | 424,201 pounds.
Customer—"How's sandwich?” Waiter—‘It speaks for itself, sir.”
your tongue! A simple machine which tests thé
tenderness of canned fruits and veg- etables has been devised by govern-
— |ment scientists, The deepest safe diving limit. for '
| any submarine yet constructed is 450° feet. . |
—
The only humming bird found in | the eastern United States is the ruby~ | throat.
Western Representatives: HUNTER-MARTIN & CO., REGINA, SASK.
Ww. N. VU. 1906
The Canada Year Book, 1931
Volume Contains Latest Information Available On Canadian Conditions The publication of the 1931 edition
of the Canadian Year Book is an-
nounced by the General Statistics
Branch of the Dominion Bureau of
Statistics. The Year Book, which is
now ready for distribution, is the of-
ficial statistical annual of. the re- sources, histury, institutions and so- cial and economic conditions of the
Dominion. The present volume has
been thoroughly revised | throughout
and includes in all its chapters the latest information available up to the date of going to press.
This 1931 issue of the Canada Year
Book extends to 1,148 pages and is Soya Bean Could Be Grown Proftably | Twentieth Century
“preceded by an introduction including a statistical summary of the progress of Canada from 1871 to 1930, There
are twenty-nine chapters in the main|farmers may have a long time to}
part of the volume. The first of these deals, with physiography, including
| to-date statistics as regards Agrioul- ture than it has been possible to pub- | lish in other editions; details of the |Census of Manufacturers for 1928 with summary for 1928; statistics of the operation of Old Age Pensions and unemployment relief; a special article on the development of the fine arts in Canada; lists of the more im- | portant Canadian books (English and | French) published in 1930. The ap- | pendix contains preliminary figures on immigration and trade for the fis. cal year ended March 31, 1931.
|tained free of charge from the Do- | minion Statistician, by Government |Departments, public libraries, jour. | nalists and educationists. ‘
| ‘Adapted To Many Uses
j
} On Prairies | Wheat will no doubt “come back” one of these days, but the prairie
and in the meantime they should embark more upon livestock
wait,
The Canada Year Book may be ob-|
MOROCCO'S RULER
‘Fast Railroad Trains
CNR. May Have Fastest Distance Train In World
The Canadian National Railways is destined to have the fastest long-dis- \tance train in the world, if it continues |to reduce the schedule of its Inter- |national Limited, between Montreal | and Chicago. Already this train from | Montreal as far.as Toronto enjoys the | distinction of being the fastest in | North America for the distance, mak- jing the 884 miles in six hours, all average of 55.7 miles an hour.
West of Toronto a slower schedule obtains, but the through time to Chi- cago is only 17 houts 50 minutes from Montreal, an average speed for the | 848-mile run of 47.8 miles an hour. | This. compares with the 48:mile-an-| hour average maintained by the Limited of the |New York Central lines, on which an jextra fare of $9.60 is charged for the 960-mile trip.
A reduction of only 20 minutes more in the schedule of the Canadian |National’s International
Long
Limited |
Was ‘One Shallow River
Expedition
But Glasgow Saw Possibilities In
The shipyards lie along the Clyde, | extending almost the entire length to | the Firth, There's a story in that, too. The Clyde was orice a shallow | river into which no big shipping could | venture past its mouth.
German Scientists Find Evidence To Substantiate Theory Of Shifting Continents The first results of the German ex- pedition to Greenland, originally ied Glasgow, seeing the possibilities of by the late Prof. Alfred Wegener, are ‘shipping importance {f it-cowld really | 20w beginning to drift in and promise
become a port, undertook to maké the | interesting revelations.
stream navigable. It required years| This expedition, which was financed and years of dredging, but the job|by the “Research Association of Ger- was done and now an excellent chan-|™an Science,” started out in April nel is there. But the dredging still | Of last year and ‘spent the entire win- goes on. The river fs given no oppor-| ter in Greenland.
tunity to fill again. Bach day some of} One of the most interesting discov- its deposits are scooped up again and eries which was telegraphed by ex-
Making Clyde Navigable | To Greenland
carried out to sea to be washed back. | Pedition members to Berlin a few
With prominence as a port came | days ago is that the ice in center prominence as a. shipbuilding centre.| Greenland 3,000 meters high has a Many of the finest vessels that have | thickness of 2,700 meters at about 9,-
ever graced the seas have been built | 000 feet.
and launched from these dry docks) As & comparison it might be stated that line the river. Now only a few that the biggest glacier in Switzer- are under construction here and as a|/and is only 300 meters thick, The result there is considerable unemploy- |; figure of 2,700 meters is considered
geography, geology, seismology, the! {
and upon mixed farming than they; would give it the distinction of being’ flora of Canada, the faunas of Can-|
ment. jhere as confirming Professor Wege- have done hitherto, There is another
|faster than the Century — with an|
Arriving at the Gare de’ Lyon,
ada, the natural resources of Canada | and the climate and meteorology. Chapter U. is concerned with history and chronology, and Chapter III. with
constitution and government. includ-"
ing facts relating to the recent ap- pointments of Canadian representa- tives in other countries, and a spe- cial section on the League of Nations. Chapters IV., V., and VI., deal with the composition of the population as shown by the census, with vital sta- tistics and with immigration respec- tively, these three together covering the great Chapter VII. is a general survey of production, bringing together the data from the different fields of Canadian production in such a way as to elim- inate duplication of values as between different industries. Chapters VIII. to XV. inclusive discuss production in the different leading industries of the country, agriculture, forestry, the fur trade, fisheries, mines and minerals, water powers, manufactures and con- struction. External trade is dealt with in Chapter XVI., which includes a study of the tourist trade of Can- ada and the balance of international payments. Chapter XVII. treats of internal trade and has been improv- ed by the inclusion of more compre- hensive statistics on retail distribu- tion. The various facilities for trans-
portation and communication in Can-,
ada are discussed in Chapter XVIII., including steam railways, electric rail- ways, express companies, roads and highways, motor vehicles, air naviga- tion, canals, shipping and navigation, telegraphs, telephones and post office. Chapter XIX. is concerned with la- bour, wages and cost of living, and Chapter XX. with prices, including wholesale and retail prices of com- modities, security prices, prices of ser- vices, interest rates and: import and
export valuations. The public finance of Canada, Dominion, provincial and
municipal, is the subject of Chapter XXI1., which also includes a discus- sion of national wealth and income and a section dealing with sales of
subject of demography. |
branch of husbandry that suggests jItself as a way out of existing daiffi- |culties. That is the growing of soya beans.
The principal source of supply of soya beans at present is Manchuria. The climate of the Canadian prairies is very similar to that of Manchuria. The bean can be cultivated and har- vested by machinery, which should enable the Canadian producers to compete on favourable terms with the hand-cultivated and harvested Man- ;churian product.
The soya bean is adapted to many uses other than to the production of |oil and oil cake. Being a legume, it is relished by cattle whether green or in the form of hay. It is valuable as a silage when used with corn or as a fertilizer. when plowed ‘under in the green condition; the oil cake, too, has desirable fertilizing , qualities. The bean itself will yield oil, flour, casein end other valuable products. The oil \is the most valuable feature of the |bean, ag it has gained an important place in industry, being used in the manufacture of many products, such as margarine, edible oils, shortenings, soaps and paints.
q. Japanese Town Finds That Temperance Pays
People Renew Oath Not To Drink For Five Years
The little town of Kawaidani, Japan, in the silk worm district, has just taken its second oath to observe total abstinence from liquor for five years.
Celebrating the end of its first dry ; period of five years, the community |lars and cents. :
When the movement. started the place was too poor to build a school for its children, It also had an educational debt of $14,000.
Now it has wiped out the debt and | boasts a school buildiag which cost | $22,500, The town authorities re-
found that its effort had paid in dol-|
average speed of better than 48 miles Paris, to attend the International an hour. The speeds of these trains Colonial Exposition, the ‘Sultan of are made possible by the introduction Morocco is pictured above with his of the Hudson-type locomotive, a young son. |powerful and fast passenger engine,/ever made of the monarch and his with six drivers and a “bodster” cap- heir. They were greeted at. the sta- | able of handling up to 18 Pullmans on tion by a distinguished party, includ- fast schedule for sustained runs of ing* President Doumer and Premier |500 miles or more.—Christian Science Laval of France.
Monitor, =
Germany Helps Farmers
A One-Sided Contest
Franklin Gulls Wipe Out Grasshopper Menace In Manitoba
|. Gull and grasshopper met on Mani-|
|toba soil recently in a greatly one-
|sided ‘contest. Armies of Franklin
| gulls swept in over the north-end re-
} cently,
| menced |
Government Announces Scheme For Loaning Money On Stored Grain Government has moved to alleviate
the economic difficulties of the farm-
er by placing into operation a scheme |for lending money on stored gratin, thus slowing down the flow of grain jinto the market and giving the mar-
Swooped to earth and com-| 4 to eradicate the gr. opper | ket. a chance to digest current offer
faster than any scheme yet put for- ward by science.
As residents of the district watch- ed, the gulls went to work, quickly, systematically and fatally. The hop- pers never had a chance with their inveterate enemies of the air. The
Effective at once, farmers holding grain in excess of their needs and | desiring to hang on for better prices, may store it in warehouses or on |their farms under bond, the govern: |ment advancing 50 per cent. of the
terate | . were quickly pulled down into teath- | Syren Rts ied doe oer thee nan
ed j se Chroats ‘that. never seemied tol ost. Provision is made also for- addi-
tire. tional loans on a government receipt Th H-hi ; e gull-hopper battle recalled the for the stored grain. :
famous hopper massacre in Utah, in: \ 1878, Faced with famine as a re-! ee te ee. ee oe sult of the invasion of the jumping idecrwyaplbelig a A see pies radbematihe ed ponte. which threnhened ° to" ‘evodr of his grain without putting any addi- leverything on plant and tree, Utah's |
itional strain on the market. populace was rescued by the gull |
army. Conquest Of the North
In the nick of time the Franklin soviet Union Claiming Huge Slice Of ;gulls came to the rescue, rid the’ ‘Polar. Regton
country of the "hoppers and today, | With every.day the Soviet Union is in Salt Lake City, there stands & becoming more Arctic-conscious, It |monument to the famous bird. lis engaged upan a grandiose “con- | quest of the North,” which has touch- jed the imagination of its people.
; A huge slice of the polar region, Farmers Put Up Hay In north of European and Asiatic Rus- Too Heavy Weight isia, is considered Soviet soil and the | The Seed Branch of the Dominion | government has assumed full re- ;Department of Agriculture have re- sponsibility for exploring and exploit- ‘ceived complaints from hay dealers | ing that region. :
‘that the present practice by Canadian| The Soviets possess the “northern-
| Demand For Lighter Bales
|
| Canadian
‘Canadian bonds, Chapter XXII. deals | port, further that savings banks de-' farmers of putting up hay in bales to| most human colony” on Franz Josef
with currency and banking, loan and | posits increased by $29,000 and postal weights of 150 pounds: or more is) Land. They have established a series
trust companies. Chapter XXIII. with savings by $4,700 since the town went killing the market for Canadian baled of radio and meteorological stations '
insurance and Chapter XXIV. with commercial failures. Chapters XXV.
_“orr the wagon.”
and XXVI. take up the subject of | Egg Market ‘Improving education, and public health. and’ See
benevolence réspectively, while Chap-' Definite Turn For Better Now Appar- ter XVII. is concerned with miscel- | ent In Canada
laneous administration. The sources) The current issue of. the Ege and of official statistical and other in-| poultry Market Review, published formation relative to Canada are giv-/at Ottawa, after calling attention en in Chapter XXVIII, together with to the definite turn for the better
a list of the publications of the Do-| which is now apparent in the egg
eminion and provincial governments. The concluding Chapter XXIX. views Dominion legislation of 1930, principal events of the year, Cana- dian books of the year and official appointments. The volume’ is illus- trated by. many maps and diagrams.
Among the more important fea- tures incorporated in the present edi- tion are the following:—-a section con- sisting of meteorological tables and giving monthly average temperatures and precipitation throughout Canada; sections dealing -with .. diplomatic representation abroad, and Canada and the League of Nations: more up-
4 Ji y i See, PD, “Is Mary il)?”
“Why do you think so?”
“Because I haven't had. any inti- mations of betrothals from her for several months.’ — Kasper, Stock-
i :
W. N. U. 1906
Te@=;
‘market throughout the Dominion, makes the following observation with respect to the present situation: “Since early in spring this publication has consistently pointed out the proba- | bilities of the situation which appear pow to be developing. A reduction in flocks, such as has taken place in many sections, was advised against. During recent weeks there has been an active demand for pullets, indicat-| ing that many producers are renew- ing faith in the egg market and are
anxious to enlarge their flocks over) the proportions planned for earlier in|
the spring.”
Comet Comes and Goes Ryves' comet, a newly-discovered | wanderer of the solar system, flashed over America recently and on into louter space, probably never to return, The Washington Naval Observatory
jhay. Popular demand today is for a’ from Wrangel's Island.to Franz Josef ‘light bale that can be easily handled Land:
|by the buyer, who in most cases is a} Now an announcement has been learter or truckman, who has: to carry made that the “narthernmost electric
‘the bale on his shoulder to his feed station” soon will be built in the Mur-|
\loft. Bales weighing from 110 to 120 mansk region. Experiments are also /pounds will find a much more ready under way for growing vegetables in
market than heavier bales. | the’ Arctic reaches of the country.
DODGING REBEL BULLETS
/
said the comet, a ball of white-hot!| gas, speeding at fully 100 miles per'| second and perhaps even faster, prob- ably was not visible to the naked eye.
Clerk (to the local manager of fire insurance office)--One claim has come in this morning, sir—-from that new- ly married couple we insured last week, She’s burned a whole baking of cakes.
Cactus plants, which have spread to
ally natives of America,
‘The cameraman risked his life to take this photograph of Cuban Fed- eral soldiers about te storm an abandoned furniture factory defended by rebel troops near Havana. The factory had been used hy the insurrection-
—|many parts of the world, were origin- ists to store arms for use in ‘the uprising against President Machado. Shots
were being exchanged even as this picture” was taken.
This is the first picture |
Im the river district hundreds of | Ner’s theory of shifting continents.
j}idle men are to. be seen, lounging Professor Wegener always main- j about hoping against hope that this} tained that the continents of the earth new day will bring new jobs. do not rest on a firm foundation but
“In the old days,” one of them told) swim on a soft mass. Greenland is en- me, “you wouldn‘t have been able to, circled by mountains which form a hear yourself think because of the din) Wreath of rock around the pile of ice of riveting. jin the center,
That this pile should reach down to almost 3,000 meters is regarded as | proot that the ice weighed down the solid rock so that a cross section of Greenland resembles a bow) filled with ice. The rock foundation could | only give way if it rests on a layer having a swampy nature.
The theory is that Greenland was once a solid mass of rock and that the heavy load of ice creeping up on it pressed down the center. ;
The opposite process is noticed in Scandinavia, according to defenders of the Wegener theory. Scandinavia has risen six meters in past centuries and is still rising gradually.
This is attributed to the melting of thick layers. of ice which accumulated there during the ice age, and which weighed Scandinavia down. In Green- land, too, ice ia beginning to melt and thus one will see in future years whether Greenland rises.
Another argument in favour of the Wegener theory is that Greenland, ac- cording to Danish discoveries, moves 36 meters every year toward the west, and that the American and Eu- ropean continents are said to be drift- ing apart.
Much important meteorological re- search work was carried out which may enable long-term weather fore- casts, but the members of the expedi- tion, explain that their, observations must first be compared with those made elsewhere before definite conclu- | sions can be drawn.
Canadian Ports More Popular
Canada Now Routing Overseas Trade | Through Own Ports To Greater Extent
Canada is routing her overseas trade through her own ports to a gréater extent every year, rather than via the United States, according to figures issued by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics.
Canadian ports enjoyed approxi- mately 83 per cent. of Canada's over- seas trade in the last fiscal year, representing 97 per cent, of all over- seas imports and 72.5 per cent of ex- ports.
In 1924 United States ports enjoyed over 26 per cent. of Canada’s over- seas trade and Canadian ports had only 74 per cent. The fact that over 27 per cent. of Canada's overseas ex- ports last year passed through United States ports is due to the large quan- tity of grain, principally wheat, which enters the United States in bond at Buffalo and other lake ports and are Shipped overseas from New York and Portland, particularly in winter months,
Of Canada’s overseas shipments of grain in the past fiscal year amount- ing to 213,510,000 bushels, slightly more than one-third passed through United States ports* :
How To Make Friends
Do Not Wait For Other Fellow To ° Make First Move First Police Fort In Ba::;
“The best way to make a friend -
is to be one.” If every person were Stone Cairn = At Historic Fort
to accept that as a personal sugges- ; .
tion and act on it what a friendly| In the rising mountains of south- old world this would be. There are | ¢#5t British Columbia — almost due few of us who haven’t formed pre-/|80uth of Calgary — a rugged stone judices against certain people —|Cairn marks the site of the first people we have passed on the street | aaa Te —e — phan Rn day after day for years. We have| PF sum oie, Bronze-table formed the opinion without knowing and surrounded by an iron fence, the. them that they are unfriendly and we | cairn was unveiled recently by Lady make no attempt to learn whether , Steele.
our impressions are right or wrong.| Jnscription on the tablet reads: It is not unlikely that those same | “The first North West Mounted Police people have gained the same impres-| Fort in British Columbia was ‘built sion about us—and if we were to get in 1887 by Superintendent Sam Steele acquainted with these people like as (afterwards Major-General Sir Sam- not we'd find them nice, friendly hu- uel Benfield Steele, K.C., M.G.-M.V.O.) man beings. The trouble is we're al- | with Inspectors Z. T. Wood, C. F. A. ways waiting for the other fellow to | Huot, fag good H. aaygee and er make the first friendly move. “The ™en of ‘ vision. e presence 0: best way to make a friend is to be this famous force acting under the one.” Repeat that half a dozen times ble and tactful command of Steele a day. | secured peace and order in:the coun- I try at a critical time.”
| oe eh ead : | Millions For Rellef
Joan, the city girl, went for a brief | holiday in the country. After a while | Montreal proposes to spend. ap- ‘she became aware of a young farmer | Proximately 99,000,000 for unemploy- who was paying her,his attentions. tment this winter. Of this sum, it was
One moonlight evening, as- they | Stated at the city hall, the Dominion were strolling across a meadow, they | 824 Quebec. Governments will be ask- saw a cow and a calf rubbing noses. | °4 to coutyibuse half of the total or
The young man gazetl longingly into | °"® quarter each. the girl's eyes. | :
“Ah,” he exclaimed poetically, ‘that | sight makes me want to do the same!”
The girl smiled.
“All right, go ahead, then,” she re- plied. “It’s your cow, isn’t fern
A famous author says he has never ° hurt a fly in ‘his life. We generally miss, too,
Gain Special Awards
Special awards of the Canadian Percheron Breeders’ Association were | captured at the Central Canada Hxhi- bition Horse Show, in Ottawa, by G. T. Fraser, of Yale, Sask. He took first prize for Canadian bred stal- lions with his animal “Masterpiece 2nd," and ‘then the mare “Spark Plug” won the first honours in her class.
—_—-_--_--— | “It was too bad of you not to come
“So you and your wife share alike to my wedding.”
in the work of getting breakfast?" | “I'm sorry, but you may be sure “Yeah, She burns the toast and that ifever you get divorced, I'll
I scrape it.” come.” Pages Cales, Yverdon,
THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA
For World Pints:
t | Viscount Cecil Believes Disarmament | Would Cure Unemployment Disarmament is the most effective | |means of curing the unemployment | ills of the world, Viscount Cecil of | Chelwood; said in an interview with |
1 | | |
and his Dog SCOTTIE- a
Brown: “Do you know, I'm losing my memory. It’s worrying me to
death.” Jones (sympathetically): “Never mind, old man. Forget all about it.”— The London Opinion.
WORLD HAPPENINGS
Fraulein Marga von Etzdorf, Ger- | man air woman, landed at Haneda! aerodrome, Tokio, to complete a solo flight from Berlin in 12 days.
An order for approximately 750 cars of this year’s British Columbia pilchard oil has been placed with three firms in British Columbia by
Messrs. Proctor and Gamble of Ivory-| |
dale, Ohio.
Since the opening of the Panama Canal in August, 1914, tolls collected have totalled more than $250,000,000, and the cargo passed through the canal aggregated 300,000,000 tons.
the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, Sales ' Sir Hall Caine, noted British novel-' minster Cathedral. The floodlight How To Ord Pattern births registered in July in 54 cities} The ill wind of depression is rolling } ist, died, August 31, at Greba Castle, plays on the clock tower of the Montreal Port with ne sae . of Canada numbered 7,384; deaths, 8,-|up good-sized profits for more than his home in Douglas, Isle of Man, Houses of Parliament, on the County (ROR Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, ;627, and marriages, 2,748, as com-jone American industry. i where he had been seriously ill for yya)), and on Somerset House. British Engineer Speaks Highly Of 175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg pared with 7,748 births, 3,628 deaths,| Cigarette makers and bathing suits, i some time. He was suffering from &| fairylike effects are obtained by Efficiency Of Grain’ Handling and 3,174 marriages in July last year, | fishing tackle and small arms and fe heart ailment. He was 78 years old. means of colours. Particularly strik- Facilities : Pattern No.......... Size.........|/a practically identical figure for}ammunition manufacturers, for in- ; South Arica was Canada’s best cus-, ing, are the lighting effects on the| High praise for Montreal as a grain !
tomer for automobiles during the. month of July, according to. a report | issued by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. South Africa’s purchases | totalled $117,160.
Nancy Lady Astor, first woman to take a seat in the British Parliament, may be threatened with an Indepen- dent Conservative challenge from her constituency at the next general elec-, tion. 5 |
A. E. Milne, the field telegrapher who. in March, 1918, dispatched Mar- shal Haig’s historic message, “Our backs are to the wall,” died while on vacation at Kirkwall, Orkney Islands. | He was 51 years of age and a resi- dent of Manchester.
Total amount invested by Canada in | all canal systems throughout the Do- minion ,is $233,608,586, Hon. R. J.
Manion, Minister of Railways, stated \
in the House of Commons. Annual) revenue from these systems is $536,-| 727.
The title of Celery King of the United States and Canada has been awarded to James Little, St. Cathar- ines, Ontario, district farmer, Accord- | ing to word received from Cincinnati, Ohio, wehere an international fair was held,
Queer Thing To Steal | Because tombstones attracted him, Juan Valadez must spend nine months | in jail. He wag found guilty of steal- | Ing tombstones from the municipal | cemetery in Juarez, opposite El Paso In Mexico. “I don’t know why I took them,” Valadez said. “You can think it months,” said the court.
over nine
Leisure is sweet to those who have!
earned it, but burdensome to those who get it for nothing.
» a —. “You H&ve been robbed! as the robber like?" “Um--a man—a little bigger than | 1 am."--Buen Humor, Madrid.
W. N. U. 1906
the United Press.
armament
develop their present business. “I have not the least doubt that if
Robert Cecil, is a veteran in the cam- | paign for international peace and dis- | He is one of the most ar- | |} dent supporters of the League of Na-|
| | Viscount Cecil, better known as Sir | i
| rupted peace, they would regain their | courage, begin new undertakings, and |
WHAT CAMB REFORE: Captain Jimmy js force down on a deserted istand while fiving G.veral Lu from China to Japan. They find no game, so decide to try their luck at fNShing :
the next morning we kindled a
Early
any ship passed. within
hook, This I ened to the end of a long cord, and cutting off a corner of General Lu's bright colored cloak, we had a home-made, but attractive ' fish- bait. The interpreter begeed for a_chance to
wet grass to!
|
Lighting Up - London
Congress
Brighter London arrived in earnest this month. Famous buildings and would be for the greater benefit of the
we could effect large economy in ar- | maments, huge capital would be re-| leased for other and much more re*} munerative business. Disarmament is} equally desirable from any way it is regarded. Any money spent for ar- | mament is more than thrown away, | economically speaking ?” |
Viscount Cecil admitted the possi- | bility that a sudden decrease in the | =| building of armaments would throw many people out of work, but added | that the best that could be hoped for |
|from building war material to peace- ful pursuit. This change, he said, }
try his luck and 1 let him go first. We selected a little sandy cove, where the tides cut a deep hole between two rocks. At high tide the water formed a clear, round pool, shallow at the edge, but rap- idly sloping down until the bottom dis- appeared among the green shadows,
The interpreter waded out to his waist, then dropped his bait into the pool. Gen- eral Tu and |. sat lazily on the shore and watched him. Suddenly he gave a quick yank—his pole bent almost double. A great silver fish leaped high in the air, and the battle was orf.
General Lu sat still as a mummy, but T fought that fish all over again, Several times it rose to the surface and came down with a grand splash. Then we could see it scooting alone just a- few inches below water,—straight toward it’s captor.
and Chinese submerged out of sight. A
tremendous fuss and splashing. began,
after which the Chinese arose, dripping, with his prize clasped tightly in his arms.
The pair looked too funny for words. o began to laugh, when the General gave a sharp exclamation and pointed to the en- trance of the cove,
For an tmstant | froze with dread. A sinister black fin, clove the emooth sur- face of the water like an arrow, straight. toward the unsuspecting Chin- ese, With a yell I grasped a short sword which General Lu still wore at his side, and plunged into the water between the
rushing
" , “e pe sire to see our signal. | pushing black fin and Hsu Fu. tions as a means for preserving peace All day we gath- The "shark turned and made for me In- | among nations. * | ered wood and piled! stead. The water reached my belt—too “The world is suffering from a'| take i “Die bright ho SOE SOO Lia ph ool
5 . y Ce Pw " c . want of confidence,” he said “Dis. | fre through the|.shark turned on his back and opened his ' . . . hight. The intet-| huge mouth to grab me, while row after .|armament, huge capital would be re- | preter and |. went] row of gleaming teeth, sharp «as razors, down to the shore) glittered menacingly.
|leased. If business men throughout to Aah, ' I dodged to one side, and {unsed at his ‘ > faking a pin) smooth white stomach with my sword. | the world were quite confident they | from my coat. T/ In my excitement | only. scratched him, | might count on 50 years of uninter-| made a rough’ fish) and he turned again, mad as a whole nest
of bumblebees. Murder shone in his little pig eyes as he rushed Into the fight, This time I drove my sword straight down his throat. With a great whirl and a splash he closed his teeth on the blade and darted out of the cove, leaving a thin red line In the water after him. Meanwhile the Chinese rushed for the
‘increase over July last year of 337,-
'| Cost Over Eight Million Dollars and
“i | storage warehouses, fruit ripening)
| Both stores were soon sold out.
monuments, ships on the. river, the | World industrial outlook, flower beds in the parks, and the aero- drome at Croydon are all flooded each | @ttitude that it is not desirable to night with powerful light, after the|8T@nt financial facilities which’ will method employed so strikingly on the | Permit preparations for war is fully Underground Railway Company's |®Ppreciated in Europe,” he said. “At headquarters at St. James's. |any rate, Britain largely sympathizes Nelson in a golden light, stands | with such an attitude.” out at the top of his column, the Tow- | er Bridge is a great expanse of white | that the United States would insist on
‘against the black backgound, the) Srmament reduction if she granted)
‘spires of Wren churches are thrown |further loans, Viscount Cecil replied: .into vivid relief against the sky, and | it mt | so, too, the the lofty tower of West- | Wite sound.
fountains in Trafalgar Square. Gas is used as well in the general scheme, and there is a demonstration of boule-
cently from a noted authority.
Hospital, along the Embankment. port of the world,”
holding for the first time in England | the construction and administration of ports, said following a four-hour in- , Brees. Although Lopdon was the main pepection: of the harbour.
of the International Dlumination Con- During that point of assembly, visits were pail | time he saw grain discharged from to Glasgow, Edinburgh, Sheffield, Bir- | lake steamers, and from railway cars mingham and Cambridge. _ | by the mechanical unloaders and the
|shakers. He followed the grain through the elevators, walking along miles of conveyors, and saw it. load- ed into ocean liners for carriage to some foreign port.
Butter Production Increase
Output In Saskatchewan Shows Re- markable Gains This Year
The output of creamery butter in Why is snow easier to understand the Province of Saskatchewan for the than any other sort of weather? Be- first seven months of 1931 amounted cause it is the only one of which you to 11,437,871 pounds, an increase of can see the drift.
3,048,97: pounds or 36.3 per cent over | eS Sea ee : the production in the province during, The Girl—‘I should think you'd feel the corresponding seven months of|as happy as a king when you're in 1930. In the month of July this year, | the air.”
the output was 2,805,316 pounds, an| Aviator—‘Happier! I'm an ace.”
930 pounds or 13.6 per cent. Thus| Museums in the United States have Saskatchewan has produced so far | doubled in number since 1906,
this year enough creamery butter) =" ——— — alone to provide each man, woman) ; and child in Canada with more than) one pound each. Butter made in Sas- | katchewan is of notably high quality.
Japan Has Largest Market In World,
} Covers Twenty-Nine Acres | Osaka, Japan, is preparing to open) the new Osaka central wholesale mar- | ear which is believed to be the larg-| est in the world. It covers 29 acres! jand cost $8,900,000, The ‘buildings, of |
jreinforced concrete, covers 11 acres | ,and comprise wholesale stalls, cold | | plants, receiving and shipping sheds | and a five storey administration | building. The market will have rail-| |way and water transportation facili-| ties in the grounds. | Competition Was Keen Store Offered Customers Bonus For Taking Goods Away | Two dry goods stores recently went | into active competition, One adver- | tised dollar drenses for 69 cents, The | other put the same quality dress in the window and priced it 39 cents. After several see-saw reductions, | the first store announced? | | “Come in! Dresses free.” } The other store came back with:
“I believe that the United States |
Asked if Britain resented reports Tie-strings that tie in a bow at back
“I think President Hoover's line’ is 0% coin (coin preferred).
handling port was forthcoming re-
“I think Montreal has the most at) Nemes eee e deter eeeereeeeseseeseees vard lighting in front of St. Thomas’ |ficient grain handling facilities of any
= Sir Alexandér The occasion for this display is the | Gibb, British engineer and expert on
Lh 6 See Ace
LADIES’ AND MISSES’ APRON Ladies’ and Misses’ apron, having | panel front and laid in plaits at sides.
‘Vital Statistics.
Reduction Of Deaths and Marriages Shown For Month Of July
According to a bulletin issued by
are joined to extensions on front of apron. Five pieces. Small, medium, large. Price of pattern 25 cents in stamps Wrap coin
carefully.
deaths and reductions of 4% per cent. weeeveeseectercceessccsesesecs [and 13 per cent. in births and mar- riages respectively.
For the seven months January- July, births showed.a decrease of 2 sstereseseecserseoscsssereress ler cent., deaths 4% per cent., and
i é marriages 11 per cent. from the cor- * | responding seven months of 1930.
TOWD sesseeesscereesseeeremaveese
Pension Courts
To Prevent Gas Wastage ‘Tribunals Are Sometimes Unfair It Is Claimed ¢ Pensions tribunals were at’ times unfair in their hearing of pension| F. P.. Fisher, the Ohio oil expert claims of war veterans, it. was charg-| who has been engaged by the Alber- ed at the Ontario Provincial Conyen-|ta Government to enquire into: the ticn of the Canadian Legion held at| conservation problem in the Turner Oshawa. In some cases war veter-| Valley oil and gas fields, is now well ans had been subjected to indignities| advanced in the preliminaries of his by pension advocates, it was declared.| work, making a thorough survey of A special committee was appointed | the situation with a view to working to hear any complaints which dele-|out a definite and adequate plan for gates might wish to make concern-| preventing wastage and for properly ing pension administration. The con- | controlling the flow from present and vention was unanimously of the opin- | prospective wells. ion that existing pension legislation in Canada was the best to be found in Fifteen thousand letters were car- any country, but delegates were con-|ried by the first ‘plane to fly from vinced that some improvements| Central Africa to England in the new might be made in administration. air mail service.
Conservation Problem In Turner Val- _ ley Oil Field Now Well Advanced
‘PIPER WINS DISTINCTION
The distinction of having piped before two reigning Siamese monarchs went to Piper William Campbell, of New Westminster, B.C., after King Prajadhipok, incognito as Prince Sukhodaya, officially opened the Banff High- land Gathering on Thursday, August 27, at Banff Springs Hotel. |father of the present Siamese ruler, visited England, Piper ‘Willie’ Campbell was special piper to Her Majesty|' “Do you know Mrs. Smith's daugh- i ; |Queen Victoria and in that capacity accompanied the two sovereigns wherever they went. In the picture (right) | ters?” ' Come in, take « dress free and We which appeared in the London Graphic of 1894, King Chuldalongkorn is shown with Queen Victoria. Piper
give you a nickel! | Campbell is in the left of the same picture. On the extreme ieft»he is shown j bas attended the annual Highland Gatherings since their inauguration.
In 1894, when King Chuldalongkorn, of Siam,
orden Chocolate Malted Milk
The health-giving, delicious drink for childrea and grown- - Pound and half pound tins at your grocers
beach yelling strange sounding things at the top of his voice, and the beautiful silver fish swam slow- ly out to sen, with a. re- proachful look on fts face, and a contemptuous wiegle of Its tail. ‘Fine lot you know about shing’’ it seem- ed to say. After that General Lu was quite huffy about the loss of his sword, Soon the sun sank into the sea like a great golden ball, and we made a hugh bright fire up on the rock to attract any ships that might
i | went the fish, bowling him over and tang-| pass in the_ night. |Wonderful Display In Honour Of W8S & gradual reduction, which would’ Right between the interpreters legs (To Be Continued.) BRIEFLY TOLD International Tlumination enable armament firms to. change | Ate re, tome tee Ee ae nen, Doty, Hen ——
NOTE:—Anvy of our young readers writ- ing to “Captain Jimmy” 2010 Star Build- ing. Toronto, will receive signed photo of Captain Jimmy, free.
Depression Has Ret Affected Some Lines
Tobacco, Bathing Suit, and Fishing Tackle Industries Report Big
stance, report to the Department of Commerce that sales this year exceed even those of the years when a de- pression was something to read about in the history books.
Wags say cigarette consumption in- creased because the country is trying to be nonchalant. ‘
But a Commerce Department statis- tician suggests that many working men who could not ‘smoke on their jobs have plenty of time for it now. Most opinion however, is that the gain rests on theefact that tobacco for many is the cheapest of pleasures.
_As for bathing suits, families that used to pack off to- Europe, or tour the National Parks, or visit big re- sorts are going to the old swimming holes it is believed.
Certainly steamship bookings have been drastically curtailed and the at- tendance at National Parks has slumped. But at least one bathing suit manufacturer reports larger pro- fits than before.
Larger sales of fishing tackle and arms are not so easily explained. In- \creased leisure may be a factor,. but Officials believe in some places the search for fish and game is inspired by. a real necessity of cutting down food bills and a desire to make a little money from the sale of pelts.
Fertilizers For Prairie Provinces
In the first half of the current year the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company turned out 2,500 tons of fer- tilizers, the bulk of which was shipped
to various points in the Prairie Prov- inces.
Nervous Best Man (proposing the toast of the bridesmaids): “I wish to propose the health of the brides- maids and to express the hope that in the near future they will be tak- ing the place of the bride.”
Playing radios at the tops of their voices, so to sepeak, has been de- clared a “health menace’ by the noise abatement commission in New York.
“Yes—very modern—each is more
photographed at Banff, where he divorced than the other,” -Muskete,
Vienna.
amen
GiLLeTT:s |
cleans walls
the
floors,
... everything in
@ Full strength for Sink Drains
GILLETT’S Lye “Eats
@ Full strength for the toilet BBwl W Insoluticn for all general cleaning
“THE REVIEW, REDCLIFT, ALBERTA
Flake Lye
M Lye should never be dissolved in hot water.
Kia atin of Gillett's Lye handy and you can cut your kitchen cleaning time in two.
Greasy pots, pans and dishes, soiled walls, the kitchen floor, etc. ... all can be more quickly and thoroughly cleaned with a solution of one tablespoonful of Gillett’s Lye dissolved in a gallon of cold* water.
To keep drains free-running, pour a small quantity of full strength Gillett’s Lye down them each week and they'll never clog with dirt and grease accumus lations
°
Gillett’s Lye has many handy house- hold uses. Send for the new FREE Gillett’s Lye booklet explaining how it will make all your cleaning easier,
Dirt”?
UEVARUCDNU SENET ANNE ETAT
| merfield.”
HIGHWAY Halliday’s laugh carried across the ~ 8. a CHRISTINE: WHITING PARMENTER Copyright 1929 Cc LEPECPUEETLEEDTAPETEED SSS TTEREEENTCCETEER ECOL
CHAPTER XXIX.—Continued.
= | garden to where. Nick sat on the ‘| porch worshiping his daughter, while |Gay lay in the hammock beside him: | He was holding the baby with all the nS
TUTITTOVENTTTCUTETEVOATSONLS PSTN
“Young lady, if you don’t grow up the image of your mother, I'll ‘disown you.”
| “For what?” ;ease of a veteran father, and saying |
find it out yourself.”
=e
| you'd forgive me.” | “And you made a fool of yourself, Nick?”
ing person, Gay.”
It was dark now on the little porch, and very peaceful. Dim stars shone faintly- above; and the air from the garden was sweet with the fragrance
] muni ye THE DUSTY | inine scorn for his ignorance. “You | of myself that I was to own up et ow “You are a very understand- | Journal. £ | get ’em at the hairdresser’s in Sum- |
“No; that is, not a noticeable fool; but will you forgive me just the
‘ same?”
the West, stirring the leaves in the
tree-tops; and far in the distance,
heat-lightning brightened the sky. Gay rested her cheek contentedly
“For not seeing through the lady in the first place.”
She smiled.
“What opened your eyes at last?’’.
of summer. A breeze sprang out of |
Canadian Banks Sound
Have Withstood
| Canadian banks are blamed for many things from time to time, and | there are those who would maké ex- tensive. changes in the banking sys- tem if they had the opportunity, but for business people and the general public there must be a great source of satisfaction in the stability they have shown during the stress of re- }eent months,
Hundreds In States Have Failed
Depression While |
} Such lather!
| Such. refreshing fragrance | softening an
sach skin 4 cleansing !-
Baby’s
Soap
Individual Cortons
10
In the same time hundreds of banks | in the United States have failed and
the depositors have lost vast sums | . .
of money. ‘Three large banks in| Little Helps For This Week
Toledo, Ohio, decided to close their
doors, and a fourth asked that its af-| “Every man shall receive his own
fairs be taken over by the State! arg according to his own labour,” Assets worth |
Bank'ng Department. | | more than $100,000,000 are tied up. At) the same time eleven savings associa-
tions under the building and loan |
‘laws of Ohio said they would have to
| cease permitting withdrawals. |
No situation such as this has faced jany Canadian community nor | depositor in a Canadian bank in the |present emergency. Unquestionably | there is much to be said for a system
which puts such rigid safeguards
Convention Cancelled
| Annual Meeting Of Canadian Clubs
| Will Not Be Held This Year | Announcement that the annual)
meeting of the Association of Cana-
‘dian Civbs, scheduled to have been |
| held in Regina, September 11 and 12,
| will not take place, came from Gra-
| |
any | ; y| How shall we enter when for us
1 Corinthians fii. 8.
Our Father Will no gentle deed disdain; Love, on the cold earth beginning, Lives divine in heaven again; While the angel hearts that beat there Still all tender thoughts retain. ~-Adelaide Anne Proctor.
| the golden gates roll back? Shall we {go home as children whose home- coming is not only welcomed and watched for by the heart of Heavenly Fatherhood and the heart of Heav- enly Brotherhood, but by many and many a. one to whom we have given a smile or a word of love for Christ's sake ?—Rose Porter.
_ Drakes Of Modern Times Men Recently Sailed Across Atlantic In Smajl Boats Ten little sailboats set out from
“If we had a Nancy, and—and a} Gay smiled. mother . ei “Better be careful what you threat- She looked up at him with pleading) en, Daddy. She has her father’s eys. Halliday winced, and Uncle Sim straight, aristocratic nose.” said tactfully: “I don’t. doubt, little | “You can't tell about. noses this girl, but what Sonny'd be real proud -soon,” said Nick, grinning. ‘“‘But any- to lend you his mother, and his little | how, I'll forgive her the nose so long Nick grinned. sister, too, most any time. And you as she keeps your eyes. Wonder what's|. ‘Don't get excited, Gay. It was she got a daddy you think a whole heap | happening across the way. I haven't | kissed me; an absolutely surprising of, or my name ain’t Simeon Augustus’ heard Halliday laugh like that in a and unsolicited caress. It—‘flabber-
Nick looked thoughtfully into space. “I think,” he said slowly, as if he , were trying to get at the real truth, “I think that first it was a kiss. Lat- er——" :
“A kiss! Nick, you—you-——"
against Nick's shoulder. He smiled,/ham Spry, the association's national moving his arm to bring her closer,| secretary. _
while through the.evening stillness} while no official reason for the de-
came the echo of Uncle Sim's big} cision was given out, it is understood laugh. | that due to prevailing economic’ con- “It’s a great old world!” said Nick. | ;-
ditions the affillated clubs of the asso- | clation agreed to a recommendation of the national executive that this year's sessions be eliminated.
According to a report made by Mr,
.
THE END
British Capital For Canada
“+this side.
Bartlett.” ‘ dog’s age.” The child looked up at Halliday with He spoke of it again that evening, a smile that was sweet as a caress. | when Uncle Sim was indulging in a “Martha Halliday,” called Julie; pre-bedtime smoke in company with from the window, “you got to come} their neighbor. The night was still right in now and get ready if you're; with the stillness of a summer Sun- goin’ to church with me,” day, and occasionally the rumble of “Seems like Julie Nipps is gettin’|the old man’s chuckle was carried to pretty regular in her devotions,” com-| them on the air. - mented Simeon dryly. “Ain't seen| “#alliday’s got a firm ally in Uncle her miss a Sunday in three weeks.” | gim,” said Nick:-“A year ago who “It's her perm'nent wave,” Martha would have dreamed of such a thing? explained soberly. “She says there's But there's a big change in Halliday. no use haying it if you don’t go some-| fe told me the other day that he was where to show it off. It cost twenty-| heartily ashamed of some of the stor- five dollars ‘sides her carfares to’ ies he’s published, though at thé time Summerfield.” ‘lhe thought -them merely realistic! “Well; well,” chuckled Simeon, “it He’s writing a book now—a child's would be a pity if the Lord was to pook, Just imagine it! It’s something overlook it after Julie's goin’ to all he invented for Martha's benefit, and that expense. I've heard -o’ some she begged him to write it down, That _ strange things bein’ the cause o' sal- little girl has done a lot for him; but vation, Halliday, but I do'no but hav- I’ve. an idea that his reformation’s not in’ yer hair crimped, is the strangest wholly due to her.” yet. You run along, child, and get Gay did not speak. She was vision- ready like Julie says. 'Tain’t everyone ‘ing the night when Halliday had said has the chance to go to church along goodbye to her, before starting out on beside an expensive head like that.” | what had seemed ‘like a hepeless “When I grow up I'm going to quest. He had called her “a light in have one, too,” Martha announced 80-) the dark.” He had kissed her hands, _berly. | gently and reverently, to be sure, but _ “Yo won't need one,” smiled Hal- not as one kisses the hands of a sis- liday, rumpling her curls with a ten- ter or a friend..Gay knew what ‘had der hand. “Your good fairy gave you changed James Halliday; but, since it one when you were born.” | was his secret . . Nick was saying, quietly: “Do you | know what I think has changed him, Gay? I think it's you.” —~ She started, visibly. “Why—why should | that?” “Just a hunch, that's all, He's been
Pau] *
you_ think
Large Sums Sent Over For Invest- ment In Dominion The influx of enormous sums of
, Basted’ me, as Uncle Sim would say.
|I vowed that “night I'd tell you all
about it. Hence this confession.” “And—later ?"
ada over a period of two years has He turned, meeting her eyes square-| heen one of the factors supporting | ly.. the market for high grade Canadian “We won't go into that.” Unknown | securities during the current difficult , to himself Nick's voice had taken on’ period, according to A. W. Blue, fin- ;an unfamiliar harshness, “It Was ancial editor of the Montreal Star,
only a scene—a scene between Mrs. jn an article published in that paper | Halliday, her husband, and myself. It recently.
| showed me just what she was; and I) “Initiated over two years ago, when j tell you Gay, James Halliday needs | the land-tax question was prominent ‘all the sympathy you can give him. jn ngiish politics, the flow has gain- | can't say any more about it. I can’t oq momentum in recent months and ,even think of it, and stay calm. Some runs into many millions of dollars. i aay, perhaps; I'll tell you. Not NOW. ‘The article follows, in part: | All I ask is that you-belleve that I've| Tt ig stated that local investment done nothing to be ashamed of. | banking houses have handled as much “I never believed anything else,’ as $6,000,000 and $7,000,000 for in- Nick; only I wondered——” | dividual British clients, while numer- “Don't wonler.” |ous accounts run ‘to more conserva- He drew her close for.a long mo-. tive denominations, ment, and kissed her gently. After) “So persistent has been the flow of her journey into a land of doubt and funds, and in such proportion that the fear, she seemed something exquisite movement is virtually tantamount to lhy dear and fragile to him, He said, a ‘flight from the pound, not in- quietly: “Gay—you should have told spired by fear that Great Britain will me about the baby. It would have find it impossible to solve her prob- saved——" : ‘ : | lems, but rather by a desire to escape “I know,” she broke in hurriedly, the growing weight of taxation and in “I know; but I couldn’t foresee the all its various forms, now so onerous things that were to happen, could I?/a burden in England, And I was worried about you, Nick.} “From the Canadian viewpoint, this You weren't yourself, Mr. Maxwell movement is both interesting and sig- saw it as well as I, We knew yqu nificant. It reflects a confidence in needed a change—a chance to get | Canada and her future possibilities as away from all perplexities and wor-, an investment centre, which in turn ries, Besides, I wanted you to feel implies’ commercial and industrial | free, dear. I have always wanted you growth and progress.” to feel free. You shared your freedom | with me so generously. I said to my-
|
Cultivating Walnuts In B.C,
British capital for investment in Can-
Spry at a recent. executive meeting, the association is concluding a most successful year. There are now affili- ated with the association 94 of the 105 active Canadian clubs from coast to coast. : : 2
SYMBOLS
Not the cloud, or the wave, or the bough : Is the thing that I love, | Though I linger till dusk turns to dark As the sky's pageants move.
Always comfort and peace, And that deep in the forest’s green : aisles,
Care will grant me release.
Through the glory of cloud-flight 1 look TO the glory beyond, And I seek for the stars in the sky, Not the stars in the pond. Not earth's beauties before me that move, But hid beauties I guess;
But the love they express!
Persian Balm is magical in creat- ing alluring complexions. A little gentle rubbing and your skin is in- vigorated and touched with the true beauty of youth, Charmingly fra- grant. Delightful to use. Cools and
Though I find in the voice of the sea)
And it is not loved hands that I love, |
junhappy, and knowing you~-seeing self the day we went away together, Pocat @ woman can be, dear—well, it when I was tying up that ridiculous would mean a lot to a lonely man like, bandanna, that whatever happened I ;
caresses the skin. Relieves all rough- ness and chafing caused by weather conditions, Tones and stimulates,
WaJnut culture in British Columbia is becoming quite successful and trees
Halliday.”
A fugitive smile hovered on Gay's lips.
“Isn't it possible that you overrate my virtues?,.I wonder” (there was the least bit of a pause), “I wonder when Mrs.. Halliday is coming back.”
It was the first time she: had men- tioned Angela, and Nick himself had
Dice orinne
“gUFFERED EVERY MONTH
"i HEN I was twelve years
old my mother wanted me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound, but 1 wouldn't. If I had I might have been a well girl now, I have suffered terribly every month,
“The girls where I work used the Vegetable Compound and urged me to try it. It helped my nerves. I intend to keep on until Lam well and strong.’ Miss Rose Lama, 6 Brighton Avenue, Toronto, Ontario,
A. E Cellius
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
said: “Not at present. Never to Bakersville, I think. That's what I gathered from something Halliday said.”
“You don't mean they've separat- ed?"
“T believe "they don't call it a sep- aration; but it amounts to the same thing. She's going abroad for the win- ter anyhow, and Halliday’s to stay here with Martha, She-—I--—-” Nick hesitated and flushed a little, “You were right about Mrs. Halliday, Gay. She's not to be trusted.”
Gay's hand slipped into his.
“Is that all you have to tell me, dear old boy?”
He looked at her, laughing in a way that would have reassured even a doubting wife, and Gay was very far from being that,
“Are you, expecting a tale of in- trigue and treachery, my dear? Well,
no desire to speak of her, Now he'
this year are producing a heavy crop. ;must never by word.or look mar the Success has been quite marked in the joy. of your adventure. | Okanagan, the lower mainland and in “And Life’s an adventure to you,’ Vancouver Island where the growers Nick—the whole of it. It's just as| have been experimenting for a few that, somehow, we have to travei. y@ars, and at Essondale where a I've tried, honestly, to help make it’ grove of walnuts was planted nearly the happy highway she wanted you to ten years ago and will now probably know;’ but I've sometimes “thought” yield about 1,600 pounds of nuts, (Gay smiled, a smile that illumined} _ her face softly like candle-light) “I've Offer Corn As Fuel _sometimes feared, Nick, that I’'vebeen| Burn-a-bushel-of-corn-a-day clubs j responsible for a good deal of dust) will be formed in this part of Iowa along the way!” |this fall if present plans materialize. He met her smile with eyes that were wholly serious, ,and is selling for $3 a ton less than “Dust! I'd say you were the brook coal, farmer proponents of the plan
ah
that quenched my burning thirst. You _say. Through the clubs it is proposed time to think in these weeks when cents a bushel. I'd sec you blow away. I’ve threshed |
| with warm water; then rub in “not the shifting of life's responsibill-
| once we know it--once we honestly |
have never failed me, Gay. You nev- to eliminate the surplus with the hope you've seemed so frail that I've been
jout this freedom business from A to) SCIATICA
is not the ability to answer the ll plenty of Minard’s and
‘ties to other shoulders. It's something
‘ believe it--we are free!”
er will; nor shall I fail you, I've had of increasing the price of corn 25 almost afraid to look at you for fear)
|Z. And I know at last that freedom | Wesh the pelnful part. well
,of the road at a moment's notice, It’s
‘within ourselves--this freedom; and
| A Bilence followed before Gay ania
OF PAIN” ow |
| /
| Cora has excellent heating qualities |
ee
_W. M. U, 1906
there was intrigue, perhaps, on her gently: “I've known that for a long part, but no treachery on mine. Do time, Nick. I could have told you, of you remember when Uncle Sim ex- | codrse; but—but I thought you'd be|
MENT
nhances and protects the loveliest complexion. Unrivalled as a perfect) aid to beauty and charm. |
| Newport on July 4 on a race across {the ocean to The Lizard, off Ply- }mouth. The winner, the 63-foot ‘Dor- |ade,” ran into Plymouth Harbour, al- | most exactly seventeen days out from One of the others had to | Signal to a passing liner for supplies jand to have two of her crew taken |off- after a storm that partially dis- masted her, Having got what she needed, she set off again to make up for lost time.
To set sail across the North Atlan- tic.in a fifty-foot yawl calls for a lot of courage to begin with. There are wicked summer storms that shake up even the biggest liners and in which. these cockleshells would seem to have but the. smallest chance of survival. To cross in. seventeen days, some of them of light airs, means not only courage but the willingness to take every chance.
We marvel at the courage of the ;men of old who crossed the Western /Ocean in their tiny ships, but the Brit- lish and American skippers are their worthy successors. The ocean has |/not changed since 1492 and. a 50-foot | yacht in the grip of its wrath would be just as helpless as a “Golden Hind” or a “Santa Maria.” We still have our Drakes, our de Gamas and our_ Magellans, even in what is said to be a softer age. :
Mother Graves’ Worm Extermin- ator will drive worms from the sys- tem without injury to the child, be- cause its action, while fully effective . is mild.
Turkish Women Lose Jébs
| Street Cleaners Talked Too Much and Neglected Work
Turkish women are swallowing their first defeat since the Kemalists opened all doors to them; they have been found wanting at the job of street cleaning.
“No more women street cleaners,” jannounced the Istanbul municipality. “They have been given a four-year trial, and the streets of the city o ‘the Golden Horn are dirtier than ever. Women fell down on the job because
| being in’ the streets gave them’ too
\irrestible an opportunity for leaning
on their brooms and gossiping.”
City Appeals To Women
| U.S. Census Shows More Men Remain On Farm
Girls and women of the United States were more numerous than boys and men in the great trek from the |farm to the cities in the late decade, the Census Bureau reports. Women now outnumber men in the cities in a) ‘ratio of 100 to 98, That the city has| appealed most to women is shown in) the presence of 9,000,000 more women | in the city. now than on the farm. | |The female urban population is 34,-| | 800,063, while 25,837,903 remain in) rural areas. The urban male popula- tion is 34,154,760, while 27,982,320 live | on the farm, |
|
Crosses Channel On Water Sklis
Karl Naumestnik, an Austrian, has walked across the English Channel from Cape Gris Nez, France, on @ pair of water skiis. Convoyed by a) fishing boat, he scudded across one of the nastiest bits of water in the world, coming ashore at Shakespeare Beach, Dover.
Funny, but folks we think , are} charming people are those who tell other people how good we are.
Saskatchewan Industries The gross value of the manufac-
}tured products in the eight cities of
the Province of Saskatchewan . amounted to $71,836,769 in 1929, that of Regina being $34,842,487; Saska-
/ toon, $15,961,102 and Moose Jaw, $14,-
646,351,
CORNS
Lift off - No Pain /
meant
Just a drop or two of Putnam's on any sore corn and out comes all the . The corn shrivels up and drops
off. No scar, no pain, no pinching from tight shoes. You can dance or walk in comfort, Use only Putnam's Corn Extractor. Satisfaction guaran- teed. Sold by druggists evefywhere,
\
_PUTNAN'S
THE REDCLIFF REVIE\, THURSDAY, OCT 8th, 1931
2 AE La TEE , WERE SET: ey, < cone we (PP IPPPLPPPPPPPPPPY | cK | Violin Luewone e DENTIST \\| ; Pyorrhea Treated & Prevénted i\ Pe REDUCED RAI e ores fos ey a 10 Phone 8945 Medicine Hat Examinations | ‘é Opposite Assiniboia Hotel | H to Conse vatory of. 2 Volt Gattegy Sets 1951-52 Motel. fm ia ea ics ve | ; mrprotnenniatccmcegs H pies eee i ‘to PAUL. KNAPPER TLEY JOHNSON ; ‘ $129.50 Complete With Tubes 3 [ a. KBETLE lent, : | i wid JH 151° Aberdeen St Put the savings deposit lj opt ‘ Bren e , 1] Medicine Hat first on the budget instead 8 Tube Super-Heterodyne a pa a Sie | of last and all will be well. ’ Oce: an As Senegr xs ryice boa Gres pre crore Se ese oe ‘ +: M Ne : | mee _ ances ete A savings balance is a reli- Brings a New Thrill in Radio Reception 7th Street, Redclift 1 andy Tunin - | able friend in need. Noone The Pioneer Radio Dealer in Redcliff ate ; : bes | i en r regretted the saving 1 MILL of mone DEFERRED PAYMENTS MAY BE ARRANGED |—— ier aT an a nerien or : hi eats pachats ; LG WM. HENDERSON i] One dollar opens a savings . were i Off account at any branch of SEE US FIRST Issuer of Marriage Licens FI Maisie Ce this bank. ~ FIRE INSURANCE i! , ! Be lik . }j .Rent collections attended t } ie? = AL BANK OF CANADA CECIL T. HALL Dagigiak FB ovieons stiies > | “sum | IMPERL P 1 Ne cath daisiieipliit se gia —_ oo ne ees tm ane nee am HEAP OFrice TORONTO ii “< * PP
from England sudden death brother,
announcing the of a - younger
* * *
“C” Co. First B’N, S.A. R, REDCLIYF, ALBERTA
All ranks will parade at the Armories at 2000 hours sharp, on Wednesday. Oct. 14th. . for the purpose of carrying out the eight day’s balance of the allott- ed local training.
As there are sevefal vacancies in the unit the O. C. will ¢onssid- er the enstment of a limited number of recruits. Applicants must be of the full age of 18 years and physically fit. Appli- cations may be made in person at the armories Wedenesday evening, or any parade night.
A. G. Osgood, Capt. Officer Commanding C Co.
« * of BIRTHS BRITT— In Medicine Hat hospital on Monday. Oct. 5th, 1931, to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Britt, a daughter * * *
MATHONY—In the Medicine Hat hospital on Friday, Oct 2nd, 1931, to Mr-and Mrs J. W Math- ony, a daughter
BARR—In Redcliff, on Thus- day Oct, 8th, 1931, to. Mr. and | Mrs. €1¥de Barr, a daughter. |
FRANK BAIRD BARRISTER; SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLICS pw Office Broadway Phone 78 REDCLIFF, ALBERTA
OBEAR’S
Garage
Redcliff A Bear For Service
Broadway
Full Stock. of ACCZSSARIES AYS ON HAND
21 CLa3S WORK
AND ALi. GUARNTEED {{ ;
vu Your Business
J. Obear, Prop.
SBE ES |S ostoserenceecencmmen amen emma:
|
sR PE
| Capital and ore $15,000,000 | Thee District meeting of the | 1;
A. E. WARD. MD.
PRN ‘ ; ° . TR eRT TE M ater ia | Interesting i} Masonic district No. 2 will be | L. M. C, C. ns ‘k j spared BRANCH held n Mediecine Hat next Wed | PHYSICIAN AND sSuRGEt Aad iid Wai \ } H. C. MacD ALD, Manager Local litems nesday afternoon and evening. Office and Residence in | Vs are Fully Stocked up = eee tee ls |} LOCKWOOD BLOCK 1 for Spring The heavy frost last. Tuesday CARD OF THANKS aca lf tepairs | Seno = See ae night put the efinishing touches | 3 | Doors and Windows |] eeeesceccccevescososecces | on thee flower gardens. Mr. Thos. Jones, of ‘Cagary, LASS] pet spend last week -home visiting Draying niobate | aii ss D3 | SHOES REDCLIFF DRAY Dick Moore says. that if St,| his sick mother, and he wishes | a sie es piers ‘ | : | Louis wins thee world’s series}t© thank the kind friends who| | am prepared to do all kir nd | Leer oH I Have Bargains: in ; i ; os have been s 4 six |Of Draying and Teaming also'del- |! Oy. rs Ieft with H. J. Cox fH : } are ere he will have a suspicion that the} have been so good, with thei: , . ; if NCnwds” were etiehad kind gifts and flowers since’ his |iver earth and manur for gardens | | willbe attended to, | New Shoes F d B : go ei : mother came home. from the | and lawns, i THE GAS CITY 1 f $2 95 ee arn i it PLANIN I : ts : Mr. J. E. Tarrant received sad hopital. } A. R, Goodine. |} PLANING MILL om news last Friday in a cablegram Atel ox | aH a edicine Hat | DRAYING, TEAMING
SAE SAL TALI OT: i
kd . Bil Plumbing Service |} All kinds of work -in this {]} line done on shortest notice No job to Small and none too big. In preparing for }}!)| fall and winter send for us. \} WORK GUARANTEED MARSH & SCOTT 1
Phone 3655 Medicifie Hat
FOUND—A lladies’ black silk | flowered hand bag. -Owner may get same at the Review office by paying for this adv.
* * &* FARM FOR RENT—Also straw chicken feed and cow feed for], sle. Also 100 acres of short wheat for pasture. See Jacob Lands: for particulars
Watch Our Window For Specials
Bring That Pair of Boots You Need Repaired
and CESSPOOL WORK
Prompt Attention and Satisfaction Guaranteed
Light Draying All kinds of. light’ draying , to any. part of town will “be attended to, may be left at the Station, Phone No.3.
ip lpreoncbabhitrmvensinnaat
TPTTTTITITT TTT LIL
Garden Ploughing Make Arrangements Now
W. H. NUSSEY
Phone 36
promptly Orders Winter will soon be here. CPR.
fey N. Pearson
Opposite Gas Office
SOON veeR-s"seereeeeeee8
Service Guaranteed.
'L. CAHOON
Promal
| pee |
Lang Bros. Ltd.
INSURANCE Fire Accident Life Sickness
051 2nd St. = Medicine Hat
Telephone 3554
Seeereeeeqeceeeceoenseeee
KODAC FINISHING
The Secret of Kodac Finishing is PROMPTNESS IN DELIVERY -—- and — PRINT QUALITY
You can get both by send- ing your Films here to have them developed.
J. BERGERON
Redcliff
SHCESOESESEH BEELER ECeKE
Medicine Hat fotasy |
isnemcie
° .
THREE GREAT NIGHTS OF MERRIMENT
OCT. 15-16-17
Presents
Broadway
SHSSSSSSSSSSHSESSTSOSSOSSSSSESESEseoesecoesoosaeg®
Fee OR SE TOSS DS CeOOEEEDOOESSEDESSeeseeEEESeeOSES
Fea ae eS | ma one 8)
Meat Market Bright Lights Gay Costumes Brilliant Settings When in the city to do nye
some shopping, and when it » 1000. 00 Given Away ” free Prevel ior meng ’ Desiead) comes to Meat just. call at on stare and get the Best there is We always have
ehoiee line of
ens nn renee
Boys’ | Work ( vonte
se erm anore ne emer,
one | Girls’ Baking Contest
FRESH AND CURED MEATS vib AND POULTRY
$50.00 Given Away Each of the First Two Nights Prizes on Saturday Night
Grand Drawing For $1000.00 in
With All The Trimmigs Our Prices Are Right.
Give Us a Trial Order ase Meat Market
2. J. HUNT
Medicine Hat i
oS NT A SE See RNERPRARNENANNENET sen ae
GET YOUR TICKETS NOW FOR THE GRAND PRIZE
628 2nd st.