2 PET arse recieRe tha
THE KREVCLAFF REVIEW
; May Your Christmas aS
Evening’s Pogram Interspersed With Lots of Fun
A real night of fun and frolic
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wu. Ms oe!
or) ite
THURSDAY. DEC 24tt. °936
Children Thoroughly Enjoy The
Moming Be Glorious |
and Your Smile of Christmas Cheer Spread on Throughout the Year
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Local Legion Holds.
R==SLIFF REVIEW
@UR SLOGAN: As lnéwtrial Metropolis of industrious People Who Pull Together.
Annual Xmas Tree
Successful Even
10 O F hall was the scene of
vening when the local
| t lively gathering last Friday Legion ‘eld its annual Christmas tree
‘or children of the club mem
ers, A fine lot of useful
presents
vere distributed togather with
arrels of candies, aisins of various kinds,
, A musical program was also
endered by a number of the -oungsters much to the enjoy- iment of the parents.
nuts and
. - . ° Barton Metane, June Trevie 3 sl
SSeeeeeeeeeeeeeereeeeeee
eeeeesese
Edward Fairhurst Passed Away Friday
Funeral Largely Attended Here Last Sunday
Mr Edward Fairhu-st, whe has been a resident of Redclitf for the past seven years, passed
way in the hospital last Friday eceased had undergone & ser- ous cp ration for internal trou- ‘4e and for a time it looked he yas on a fair way for recovery. later however, complications de- veloped and owing to his weak- ned condition he was unable to tand the additional strain.
Deceased who was 46 years if age, was born in Shelmerdale
nent Miss Broadfoot won the NY) “ste a WA There was a large attendance} ingland. During the war he pane for guessing the largest ge he oo yy! ind the children thoroughly | enlisted with the Imperial army umber with your own family circle and . njoyed the evening. it Atherton, Two years after bursting brought A heave passed since chosen friends will be {!lum- NV agave Selthorn Dickens wrote “A Ined by a mere rediont glow if yen ETERS the war he came to Canada an?
; |
| :
af i z
H Z ; 2 : i
Yo Dividents Ceming
when .first paid, , » than the $25).
Qefinitely 1»
|rentioned in “1935 electiun Tompaign § ON
© One reason \.for the delay in
ettled in British Colur..bia, In 1129 he came to Redcliff and
and in mankind renewed, be- . c Late was an easy ~ = re picture of Gaath Of pect thoaghttulnees mire For Christmas | is resided here until hig death test, and Effie Stratton for the te “oy Ae _ may be others too in ne l=\3)\ Besides his widow Sema Ade outlet tn ee want for that which money can I *o Saves 8. © Member] '«aves three sons and one duagh Jalloon bunting well ee & words buy, but whose souls are parched en : ter; Robert who is marreid, and tor lack ef the encouragement you \ For Lethbridge ee etad +,
One of the pupils played var- igement yo 3 no page 8 A822 st tatere the wore could give. The day will come Edward,, Marjorie and Wiifre:
fous tunes on the piano onde te ep when it is too late to wish that the fecial Credit dividends wi* | who are living at home. were to guess the names of the Pieaion teeoen —_ teoeg yo roy" Ba — 4 not be paid in Alberta in tye] ‘The funeral took place from tunes Migs Moore won the sonuty elds, tm the village, to they ‘were longingly hoped for immediate future, in the ovin-/<1, Ambrose Church on Sunday a Pee Ra aie scar de I fae pa codecs oat ion of HB Wight, Socal Credit | atternoon and the remains were The dancing competition tee, sick Jo body, wovtied 'o Remember the story of the first member for Lethbridge - interred in Redcliff cemetery . 5a yeh ae ge ronson apn ro Boa co He-can see two reasons wh) tev, HS Hamnett conducted tented and it took out strain of the battle of te ite nd its glory. Se they will not be paid un-fl| (he services at the chureh an¥
to decide the yy bs yeu have won- shall you f the Daclomes solr spring—lack of produuction iw | 41 the cemetery went to dered how they managed to get marching with you through all the ’ : par slong, from whet seurce draw days of life; so shall you always the province and the ne.essity} The funeral was largely at- ‘Thacker and Mr A G Oagood thelr cogutahtite the irst of inspiring confidence} enred «and members of the During the evening eoming Megara amd co-operation among the||-cal Legion atended in a body euch os these @ kindly people The late Mr, Fairhurst was a Sy inte action, - Te Lethbridge member sai¢) indly home nian and was most. glo ee he yy the dividends vwegild be small
-opular ameng his many friends. The. sympathy’ of the~ com- ‘unity goes out to the bereaved mes for his untimely death
—— 1p . 5
« Mr R Gordon; of Edmonton who is on his way to
stopped off here for a few days ‘this week to visit his nephew, Mr A Collard and Mrs Collard.
jividend- payments, Wizh*t aid, was the crop failurc, par- ieularly in Southern Alber‘a, here - drought played hevor
REASON FOR THANKS —|Control Centres For 1. 0.0. F. Contest] as tne sun of prosperity 0 Radio Corporation
ASSIA SATIRE LF PERL M E T E FARRT
fins to peer through the neavy Was Enjoyed By Al) ciouds of the depression some Taking Part tignificant sign posts have be-
- gun to appear on the economic
cee cen The card playing contest highway. Gathering streneth Establishment of five ragion Sag pian totalled 21,231 on. Mr Wm. McLean, who war! vhich has been conducted by |.s it rises up higher above the al contrcl centres fer Canadian | Looks ‘ike Friction With Other 7 21 The total is divided aa employed with the McLachlan | ‘he local 1 0 O F lodge for the|*orizon. its rays Mumine ind-|}roudcasting scrvices, ‘nit at- Members of Cabinet tnows: British Colpmbia 78 and McLean Contracting Co.|rast few week was brought to] ices on the posts which are Of jon of a three or five-yew engin ; * § 4,145; Sask, 19,184 here and who was one of the}, closse last Thursday evening. |more than passing interest t* |coring program to complete sn¢| Reports from Edmonton dur- Manitoba, 6,487; Quebec 2.852 outstanding football players in|] ‘The $15.00 prize which was|those yho may-bemoan %r n4-| improve coverage, and & ban on] ‘yg the past few days indicate os on 1913, spent # few days in. town| ffered for the contestant mak. tional position. religious “wars” on the air,|:hat there is another upheavel} LOOK AT YOUR LABED this week the guest of Mr and| ‘ng the largest score for the ser-| The “man on the street” is sere some of the policies an-|)- the Social Credit party. Ths eiiieenascasdisieilieeds Mrs Wm Smith. ‘es was won be Mrs W Wheeler. | interested primarily in the wel- jounced by the Canadian Broad|time it is none other than a : eee Mrs T Jones won second prize: fare of his family. A compar- | casting Corp sation Cabinet “Minister, Hon C, C According to reports fror | “nd Mrs Maillard won the $5.00,‘son with the position of his} “Acrimonious debates bet-| oss, Minister of Mines j C h ui rc h (a Ss Edmonton the government has | nsolation prize. | -ounterpart in other countries,| ween spokesmen for different] Although there is no official] | decided to close its Montres)| There was keen competition, where they live under « system | religious oranizations, which] statement made from either the | -=--—--m-= Trade office on Dec Bist. N ¥ hroughout the contest and all|‘ifferent to that in force ! have been recently on the air in| Preirer » Mr Ross, it woul* ST. MARY’S CHURCH -
Canada, proves beyond douht ‘het we are in a much hap»ier
Indices show that employ. ~ent is increasing all over Can- ‘eds ~da with the possible exception ef Alberta; there {is more buy-
Policies Include Ban On-Church War
New
arioug parts of the country. are to cease,” th annourgement continued “The CBC is to use ‘ts authority to.suppresg them Sermons and talks about relie- on will have to be confined in ‘uture to positive pleadings for
vith farmers and ranchers. . ko at eee!
tumors Are Hfon.
C. C. Ross to Resign
eppaay from the Social Cred - “ily paper and fom othe officia. wurees that there is ground for ior the belief that serioue fr.c-
ton has developed
Placement under the Domin- Placement under the Dom‘n- ion-pro incial farm and employ
Mass will be celebrated on ne rd Scnday of each month a 8:80 a.m
SaaS Fe
ine power; the cause being promoted by Hamnett, Vicar ermany Suffering Shortage vhole fe otehten We - the speaker Attacks on other We Wish Our | Rev H. 8 , attained position not faiths or creeds or sects or par- Redcliff Patrons | | }ORDON MEMORIA - the adoption of any radical ex-| sons wil! not be permitted — s } ss yy Anning to rooms oy nerimenta, but by the promot pac aed sree A Merry Christmas ‘ermany is in a way fon of plans which safeguar4 Rev, H. V. Ellison, Paster scessary food supplies to feed). ai i4us) liberty; thought and] Premier Aberhart, who 1° and @ Seiden. Des, tite reported! section ‘The country ts forging ame fee ees) | Gangs ae Year 10 a, m. Chureh Echool stead by its own efforts, an Pe eggpmant ae, aa 1:15 a. m. Morning Worship ~vith an increasing recognition : Also accept our thanks hrtgy ees and ch'ld in Alberta, is now a- Christmas Memege, Music by business that they are part: th - for your patronrge y the Junior Choir Canada. ‘ers with capital and labour. | “#Y o Pacific Coast for & in the past 30 p. m. Evening W: for the Ganada can reach the heigats veek’s feasting on turkey and » orehip fats, eggs, meats of individual and national secur plum pudding leaving el ine Chritmas Cantata by Junior
dairy products in exchange! :., Wnich those in other coun-|/i@ St Calgary and Edmonto| | Now Willard ad Serior Choirs twles will have reason to envy cores of unemployed who have Christmas Day, Friday, Dec of the scheme in- veither food. clothing or shelt- Service Station ‘Sth, service at 1l am Christ be ex —_—o ex for Christmas. vas Carols and Story. Just ana a det-| Christmas season isa govt ie abe N. My. St., Medicine Hat | | \.our’s service. Glaad to have tune to pay your subscription you with us
LOOK AT YOUR LABED
eR Es, MEGS MER
THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA .
t
A BIGGER RICHER THICKER
BIG BEN
The PERFECT Chewing Tobacco
The
A most important contribution to the problem of providing for the care | of the unemployed will have been made if the youth division of the Federal } Unemployment Commission under Alan Chambers is able to make feasible suggestions for the absorption of unemployed young men and women by industry. 4
Absorption by industry is mentioned as a sine qua non to the solution of this problem because it is only in this way that the problem of unem- ployed youth can be solved permanently and in a satisfactory manner. All other plans can be nothing more than temporary palliatives,
This section of the Unemployment Commission has already made an interim report to the Federal government and it is reported that the cabinet at Ottawa, at the time of writing, is busily engaged considering the pro- posals contained in the report, presumably with a view to putting into effect | as speedily as possible those suggestions which may be deemed timely and appropriate.
One of the most interesting and important recommendations in the re- port is a proposal for the establishment. of a system of apprenticeship in co-operation with industrial concerns and, for more reasons than one, this may be regarded as one of the most satisfactory features of the proposals.
In the first place a system of apprenticeship would constitute a step in the direction of a permanent solution of the problem for those young men and women who would participate.
In the second place an apprenticeship system would solve a problem which industry is facing in the near future, namely a shortage of skilled |
Unemployed Youth Problem
|
Light Beam No One Sees Pure African Air Makes Powerful Beacon Light Invisible
Every night a 8,000-foot beam of light is thrown into the sky at the Empire Exhibition at Johannesburg, South Africa, by a 14,000,000-candie- power beacon—yet no one can see it!
The Johannesburg climate is to blame. It has beaten the engineers
| who set out to make the beam visible
for 100 miles. They installed the apparatus in a hollow tower, 150 feet
| high and dominating the entire ex- | hibition.
This they called the Tower of Light.
Their plans have miscarried, All spectators can see on a cloudless night is the glow of the stars, even when the light is fully switched on.
This paradox is caused by the purity of Johannesburg's air. There are no humidity, no dust and no low
A
WAKE UP-YOUR LIVER BILE—
And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rerin’ to Go
liver shou! ds of thawed pile Inte your bowels dally. 1F this bile
LL ei
' Sees Another Depression
Economist Says Future Holds Both ') Threat And Promise Willard L. Thorp, director of
economic research for Dun and Brad-
street, Inc., told the American fin- ance conference that “if depression is
not flowing freely, your food doesn't direst "jowt decays fn ¢ ere. mag Spee pp around the corner behind wus, it is poteon into the body, “ spa teel sour, also arotind the next corner in the sank and the world punk, future.” | movement doesn'talway= ret "
mere | at the canse. You need something thet works
on the liver as well, It takes those , old
| Carter's Little Liver Pills to get t two “next corner” that there “are no | Pounda-of bile how ing freely aud meke you | grounds for assurance that it is not | make the bile Row freely. They do the w: there.
of calomel but have no calomel or mercury in
them. Aek for Carter's Little Liver Pills by
“Already, I find evidence in iso- name! Stubbornly refuse anything else. 25e.
lated spots of the appearance of a ‘boom psychology’,” he said. “With expanding consumer purchasing power, interest rates low and six years of enforced consumer economy | behind us, some are seeing no limit to the current upswing... .
“We seem to be headed for what
a Learning To Walk Again
| Alfred Scadding Suffers Greatly Even Taking Few Steps
Seven months after the Moose
River Mine in Nova Scotia collapsed,
Thorp said in reference to the)
RUN DOWN? take WINCARNIS
If work and worry have got the better of you and
are feeling weak and istless, follow the recom-
of 20,000 medical men. Take Wincarnis three times daily. To men and women every- where who once felt poh t= | feel now, this advice
proved invaluable. Wine carnis pincers allthe “Sm valuable ss Of grapes (2'4 lbs in
each bottle), and the strength building content of beef.and malt extract. It 1s not a drug, but a delicious, blood and tiseve building wine which quickly soothes tired nerves and builds new wells of energy.
From the time you start taking Wincarnis you will sleep better, wake more chaste? and feel more nearly
as you " who are run-down, or who
For those 1 I suffer from fr: nérves, insomnia,
clouds for the light to be reflected) Alfred Seadding, one of the sur-
agged 4 British professor calls ‘a period of llid complexion of debility, Wincarnis
against—and light is invisible unless it is reflected, a scientist has ex- plained to the exhibition authorities.
Thus the most powerful light in South Africa cannot be seen. Dur- ban Bluff lighthouse is only 3,000,- 000 candiepower and the Cape 8t. Francis light is 5,000,000 candle-
could be turned down on to the ex- hibition grounds every one would be temporarily blinded. Similarly if an airplane would fly in the beam’s path, it would be picked out with
daylight clarity up to a height of|
3,000 feet.
New Means Of Livelihood
Poor In Japan Earn Money From Cat Hunting
Japanese poor have turned to cat
catching for a livelihood, They sell
the cats to makers of musical in-
struments for manufacture of cat!
gut strings.
With a fluttering sparrow as bait and a club for a weapon, the. cat catcher starts his work break—-when the toms and their
mates are returning from a tour of |
the night spots. The cat catcher pulls a string at- tached to his sparrow’'s . legs.
bird squeaks and attracts pussy who) attacks. The cat jumps and the|
stalker bangs with a club—thereby ending kitty's nine lives,
One hazard—the cat catcher is liable to prosecution for destruction of private property if caught with an animal belonging to someone else.
vivors, is learning to walk again.
Scadding began creeping around | the room, clinging to tables and the | bed and then tried a little trip to his small daughter's room.
optimistic error’.”
The “problems of prosperity,” Thorp said, “are more difficult tHan those of depression. . . I know no con- dition which is more dangerous for a
at day-
The
| BEven such a jaunt means his | ankles and heels caused him torture. |
high profits.” | Red welts show the efforts of surg-
He asserted there was a need of
| power, but they flash down on to the! ery to save his feet. He hopes they| “economic leadership,” because the sea. If for a second the 14,000,000) succeeded. “future includes both threat and candlepower. Johannesburg light Scadding went out to a couple of| promise.”
football games but each time he paid
in pain for the fun because the cold *
| aggravates the agony. Outstanding Athlete With Dr. D. E. Robertson, of Tor-
onto, Scadding was rescued from the | Awei@ed Metsrtial Price
cave-in last April that brought death; p. ppp Edwards, dusky Montreal
to Herman Magill, of Toronto, from) runner, was awarded the Norton H.
exposure, Crow Memorial prize as Canada’s : " outstanding athlete and sportsman According To Color
of the year. . The great British Guiana middle- Red Houses In Istanbul, Turkey, In-| distance man, a point-winner for | dicate High Social Status Canada at three Olympic games, was There soon won't be any trouble in| ponored with the award at the an- deciding which is “Park Avenue” in| nual meeting of the Amateur Ath- Istanbul, Turkey—all the houses will) ietic Union of Canada at Regina, be painted bright red. And, to pre-| jzig great Olympic record and his vent less fortunate citizeng from for-| years in track work with McGill | getting that they live in slums, their University influenced the committee homes will be dull gray. _ in recommending Edwards for the This branding of the different sec-| award, tions of the ancient city is expected, Robert “Scotty” Rankine, Preston, by the Municipal Council to make it) Ont distance runner, was the. only one-of the most original in the world.| other nominee. The Council decreed that houses in) gince the award was made first in the same section mugt be painted the) 1931 ¢¢ Percy Williams, Vancouver, same color according to “the breadth| i+ pags been won by Alec Wilson, of the streets, the brightness of light yrontreal; Jimmy Ball, Winnipeg; and particularly, on the social classes yraroi4 Webster, Hamilton, Ont., and to which the inhabitants of the dif- ferent quarters belong.”
|
business than a period of sustained)
|
is the tonic to take. Get Wincarnis
from your druggist today —Sales Agents. Harold f itchie & Co, Ltd., Toronto 23
=
A Real Masterpiece California Baker Makes Unique Cake Five Feet High
George Wong, Oakland, California, is a baker by trade, so in his spare time he amuses himself making cakes,
George's off-hour productions, how- ever, are not the size you buy in a
Dr. Phil Edwards Of Montreal) bakery. They tower up and up until
they almost hit the ceiling.
His masterpiece is a sort of com- bination of the Taj Mahal, the Cali- fornia State Capitol, and the 1893 world's fair. It rises more than five feet.and occupies a base four feet by three,
Wong used 1,035 eggs and 400 pounds of powdered sugar in its con- struction, and nothing else. It weighs 450 pounds and is valued by its maker at $5,000,
Among its features—all in minia- ture—are 94 colimns, 168 windows, nine offices equipped with desks, tele- phones, radios and even coat hangers, 42 flower pots and 39 figures of occu- pants,
For his make-believe people he con- structed ten fire-escapes.
Underground Parking For London
‘ the local authorities that they should help. This is # problem which is already looming on the industrial horizon Nineteen Years Of Flying : . *% cup butter ©. give prompt consideration to the and one which is likely to become acute within the next three or four years, eee Chocolate \% cup lard . powers which parliament extended to in the opinion of observers. Unless industry itself takes the initiative, Imperial Airways Commander Has a 1 cup brown sugar them under the Restriction of Rib- without government aid, the country is likely to witness, in the near future, Flown 1,300,000 Miles | New Product ay Mlaaeceeed teat Pe bon Development Act of last year the anomalous spectacle of thousands of young people ready and presum-| Known as the “Captain Kettle of Makes Big Hit dienicireteaen- The ast gave: power, te. Lenten ably educationally equipped for a life vocation on the one hand and, on the | the Air,” because of his pointed — store windows are éntlc- % teaspoon salt vernal local authorities to provide and main- other hand, industry clamoring for technically trained help but unwilling beard, 0, P. Jones, one of the senior ing the Prospective customer's inter 1 cop’ tain both buildings and underground to take those avaflable because they are not experienced, commanders af Imperial Airways, st and pocketbook almost daily by) o's Oats areas for use as parking places. This pending situation leads one to speculate as to the efficiency of the has now spent an aggregate time in CWRMyee the latest in synthetic % cup water Mr, Hore-Belisha has already ex- training conducted in the public technical and vocational training schools | the air of just over a year and a half, ; ; chopped dates (stoned pressed the view that the parking of of the county, Are they fulfiling the purpose for which they were estab-| and has piloted aircraft a distance| | The article that made an immedi- fee ch ny ‘ , vehicles in a public street is a priv- lished and partially endowed with funds from the Federal treasury? equivalent to 52 journeys round the é eons was syuthetic 2 teapaons hyking powder ileged use of the highway not con- Some doubt may be expressed in the answer to this question in the | world. eee core gp ana gs S| 't teamposn vanilla templated by law ard should be light of present day experience, Parents find, after their sons Qave com-| He has completed 19 years of fly- Prod —_ Germany Method: 1. Cream butter and sugar. | Confined within the narrowest limits. pleted @ course in these schools that, even where there are vacancies to be| ing, during which time he has been| ™0st proud. Wrapped up in the ‘Add slightly beaten egg and rolied| The provision of suitable places filled, the industry for which these lads have presumably been trained are|in the air nearly 13,000 hours, has raven paper and i vrod taste | oats; xix well, 8. Add lard melted| Where vehicles may wait off the not willing to take them because they are “ ", carried approximately 90,000 pas- ful,” it ee ms mete in’ boiling water, 4, Add vanilla,| bighway would make for the freer In fllustration one might cite the automobile industry, an industry | sengers without mishap, and has = crea™y | dates, and flour sifted with baking| 8d safer movement of traffic, which has been reasonably busy, at least during the last couple of years, | flown 1,300,000 miles. Mr, Jones is Soatee qemmpwhes Ne Sor ihe ahllt, talk andl shnmeaben. ie despite the depression and is showing increasing signs of virility. Yet, when only 38. only brown touch left to the! Trop. from epoon*on to wall-ofled| > Distributing New Varieties there are vacancies in automobile repair and service shops, foremen look | — aw aad Pee sheet, allowing sufficient — around fdr men who have been previously engaged in this class of work, All Enipire Wood walotne eogttinet, space for cookies to spread. 6. Bake| Grain, Grass, And Alfalfa Supplied and take them on rather than the youthful products of motor engineering | 1p 9 letter to the Times, the Chief Root Bett moderate oven of 350 degrees for In Two-Pound Packets Glasses in the techatoal echepie bppatien the formar are experienced. | Royal Engineer notes that as the Crops to 20 minutes. "| Samples of new variety of grain, These foremen point out, and presumably with justification, that they wovearer goes up the escalator at és ere grass and alfalfa are to be distribut- cannot fill @ vacancy in thelr shops with one of these young men because | sfoorgate Station he goes on a trip| Mureat OF Statistics Issues Report Would Sell Submarine ed by the Saskatchewan Field Hus- they could not charge their customers the time it would take them to do through the Empire's forests. The ‘., On 1986 Crops heniey Anseslatien: 85-chnniens ter @ repair job, even though they were drawing a low wage. Presumably this \ioie of the balustrade is composed | Production of potatoes, turnips, vegeta :
condition will exist until the last available experienced man has been absorbed and the industry is forced to take on youths turned out by the) technical schools with a completed course to their credit.
In the meantime, the vocational schools are turning out young men
‘ apparently equipped to take their place in industrial world only to find | there are-no jobs for them or that they mist take some other work which | could be undertaken by those who have had no yocational: training. All of which leads to thé impression that some effort will have to be | made im the vocational schools to conduct the work on a more practicable | basis than has hitherto been available, so that when youths leave to adyen- | ture into the world of industry they will at least be as well qualified as
second or third year apprentices.
of beautiful panels of wood from every part of the Empire. Canada, Newfoundland, Africa, India, and
| marigolds, etc.,
than in 1935 but production of hay
and fodder corn was lower, the Do-| The lords of the British admiralty Fairway
Britain itself are rich in timber) wealth. But why, he asks, restrict
are prepared to accept any reason-| Thatcher wheat. Prices q
this excellent idea to Moorgate
Station ?—Canada's Weekly, London.
Woodpeckers do not carry grass
and feathers to line their nests, as. do many other birds, but they cannot
be considered lazy. Few birds work
| Increased sowing of fall.wheat but| able offer for submarine X1 which)
1936 field crops. For potato, root| years ego she was described as a) jand fodder crops the figures repre- cruiser" and “dreadnaught of sent the second estimate of the sea-| the underseas,” X1 is just ga
This may mean remodelling the classes in the vocational schools under son. rust im Portsmouth dockyard for, mall, weighing more than 7,500,000 changed conditions or other changes will have to be made in the system | * ‘iligently as woodpeckers in build- Pal want of a buyer. pounds, were franked year, ac- of training through a hook-up with industrial-concerns. jing thelr homes. They are the Taking Full Advantage With accommodation for 110 men) cording to estimate of the Post Office
It might also be said without contradiction that industry itself has been | ™Aster carpenters of the bird world.) |. 1 List sew 9 sign outside @| she Was once the largest submarine | Department. short-sighted in not having provided for future requirements by establish-|~ ee’ | hotel which read, “Free Garage.” He| in the royal navy but smaller craft ee Ean ing a system of apprenticeship on its own account on a general scale. decided to stay the night, and put his @7® "OW preferred for strategical etter solid and s ooo car in the garage | reasons. produce
The Grea ost Laventor Horse Scared To Death
A number of men were engaged Scared to death by an elephant in a discussion as to who was the was the fate of a horse at Panguitch, greatest inventor. Some said Edison, Utah. Nelse Ipson, rancher, came to some said Marconi, some said Morse. town on horseback to see a circus) Finally @ small Jew said: “Well, parade. His horse, catching his first
gentlemen, those were great peoples, sight of an elephant reared and then
JOrientiant
Northern France probably has the best grass lands in Europe.
THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA
Greater Assistance To The Coal Industry Of Western Canada Is Sought
E. 8, Clarry, Alberta trade com-| missioner, suggested that the Do* minion government and the National Railways provide greater assistance | to the coal industry of western Can-| ada that they may be able to com-} pete successfully in the Ontario mar- ket 5 = .
It was unfortunate, Mr. Clarry told the Ontario associated boards of trade, that although Canada was endowed with enormous deposits of) coal, there were situated In the ex- treme western and eastern sections, | while Ontario and Quebec, in which, resided the great bulk of population and which was highly industrialized, | had to import their entire coal re-| quirements. /
Alberta contained the largest coal | reserves, some geologists estimating that the province possessed 14 per, cent. of the coal of the world and 72) per cent of the reserves of the Bri-| tish. Empire. A conservative ésti-| mate, said the speaker, was’ 40,200,- 000,000 tons.
“Notwithstanding these huge coal reserves, Canada is importing each year, chiefly to Ontario and Quebec, upwards of 12,000,000 tons annually.”
While the tonnage produced by Al- berta mines last year was 5,464,973, | with a value of $13,946,000, a great majority of the mines work for part) of the/year only due to lack of mar- kets.
“Alberta has, however, captured) the markets of western Canada and for some years has been making an effort to supply at least a portion of Ontario's requirements,” Mr. Clarry continued.
Assistance by way of subventions to Nova Scotia and Alberta mines was not sufficient to Uislodge any very appreciable quantity of Ameri- can anthracite although the move- ment of Nova Scotia bituminous omti to Ontario and Quebec had been sub-
_ stantial in the past few years. Mr. Clarry believed such assistance should be extended.
“Canada should frame a fuel policy that would make every one of our
ing areas of the United States and shipments of coal stopped to Canada,
ah:
E. its!
:
: : i
ize ue wrt Fz
|
rf
+
| advised.
FASCIST ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATIONS
Ranching For Women
Sheep Raising Is Interesting Oareer Which Pays Profits
Go west, young woman, and run 4
sheep ranch, Mrs. Kathieen Nielsen
“Tt's not a crazy idea...I meant it,” the secretary-treasurer of the Mon- tana Wool Growers’ Association, in- sisted,
“Obviously, I doti't mean all young women. I'm talking about some of those intelligent, well-equipped Eastern college women, who happen to be just plain bored, or who are seeking an interesting career, with profits,
“I think a lot of them could come out here and make a go of sheep ranching. Lots of Montana women are doing it and like it,”
Mrs. Nielsen recently bought some pure bred sheep and a friend is tend- ing them for her on a southwestern Montana ranch.
“Tt's a small start, but some day I hope to have a real herd and a ranch of my own.”
She hopes her eighteen-year-old daughter, Virginia, now in school at Sioux Falls, 8.D., will “get interest- ed in ranching.” “She wants to be a
. Our picture shows Mussolini giving the first blow with a pick to the Manica Langa which is being demolished for a site for new Municipal Offices for Rome,
A Work Of Art Had To Uphold Dignity Hamilton Man Builds Sugar Model Small Thing Cuused Ohio Lawyer Of Russia’s Kremlin To Lose His Case nurse now, but I can't see that.” Hamilton, Ontario, like Moscow Gen. Charlies B. Goddard of Zanes- She knows “one clever Montana) has its Kremlin, The Hamilton one) ville, Ohio, a lawyer of dignity, once woman who has become the best) is neither as big nor as lasting as) lost a case because he would not
wool buyer in the State, and wool the Russian one-—but it is almost as) drink a glass of water in court. men themselves say 80.” | beautiful. The Moscow structure is
—_-- credited with being so beautiful that) Eliminating The Noise Ivan the Terrible, 300 years ago put) allegedly contaminating a well by jietdaicnaicie out the eyes of the architect so that! changing a drain. As exhibit A, English Factory Agrees To Turn Out! he could not devise anything as fine.| Goddard brought forth a glass of Quieter Motorcycles Hamilton's Kremlin is made of) the water, holding it before the jury Motor traffic is noisy enough,| Sugar, glass and wood, but mostly) as he called attention to its clear- goodness knows, but motorcycle) Sugar. It is about six feet long and) ness and purity. traffic is usually even noisier and | ®lmost’as high and takes up the} When it came the opposing at- some of the motorcycles which bark! greater part of a room in the home) torney’s turn, he threw down a dol- of Thomas H, Hammell, 40 Leinster) lar beside the glass and declared, Avenue, who constructed it. Mr.| “Gentlemen of the jury, I'll give Gen. Hammell is a brother of Jack Ham-| Goddard that dollar if he will drink mell, noted mining magnate. that glass of water.” He felt sure “I have been doing this sort of| that Goddard's dignity would not | thing all my life as a hobby,” Mr.| permit him to accept such a chal- “Over 40 ipnge. now given: an undertaking to the years ago, before I left Hamilton for) Goddard refused to drink, and his ministry that no motorcycle “making | Hollywood, I made a sugar replica of opponent won a verdict.-Cleveland a noise that could be described as the City Hall. I have done Cologne Plain Dealer. ‘ offensive” will be hereafter allowed| Cathedral and many others, but none! ; to leave their works. Only racing! to equal this and I don't think there) and speedway cycles are excepted, | is anything to equal it in the world.| This news will probably be hailed I haven't yet decided what to do with ; it, but I think that next spring I'll
his client who had been sued for
should be placed in the pound. Realizing this and acting upon representations made by the British
pret : j
e 5
th
Some people are born tired, and some are born to make others tired.
contracted @ fatal chill at a Cenotaph service, Another newcomer is likely, of many nations looking up
tunate in- having the use of the only
The Official Wash Day
Attorney Goddard was defending|
Drink Plenty Of Water
Benedict, director of the nutrition
Five school teachers have filed a .
srephante have. levy life spane to inj Suit im the New York, Federal Court PATTERN 5736 errer, he saad _—— , comes a they Here's a grand way to mike 48 at prighion up your room—crochet in bed all day. ; anguish” in the ship from New York | Srangements are Vendy Fy Pd yt ge Rg Husband—Well, I'm. ready in case! ¢o piawaii and Alaska. One of them | ePCittors ST86 you Sill ind complete and charts for ‘n one ee me a night Watch-) ieft the vessel at Vancouver, F the square show; an illustration of it and of the stitches used;
gic service belarten Aus- ato obtain this i send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coln preferred) Gossip never is troubled by unem- saat Bingapore hay ached o| $e Houwebold Arta Dept, Wannhpes Newnpaper nen, £79 MeBamet Ave.
months. 2179! *
Increase In Population Of. World May Be Responsible
Healthy Stock Necessary
Only Real Foundation To Pnsure Profitable Poultry Flock |
A rapid and effective means of improving farm poultry flocks is through the application of the Do- | minion hatchery regulations. To lay
| the foundation of, a profitable farm | flock, it is necessary to start with healthy stock. To enable the farmer to obtain this kind of stock, regula- tions for the control of hatcheries were drawn up, with the co-opera- tion of several:of the provinces.
These hatchery regulations provide for the following—1, all commercial) hatcheries of over 1,000 egg capacity to obtain their hatching eggs from) approved flocks and to operate under Dominion supervision as regards hatchery conduct, operation, and ad- vertising; and 2, approval of flocks) as sources of hatchery’ eggs to be under provincial supervision.
The farm flock may be started by:| 1, the purchase of hatching eggs; 2,| of day-old chicks; 3, of pullets ready) to lay; and 4, of adult breeding| stock. A great deal of annoyance; and loss may be obviated by pur-| chasing from R.O.P. (Record of Per- | formance) or approved flocks.
For the individual farmer or for) the professional poultry breeder in| Canada there is no lack of definite! and authentic information on the) rearing of poultry through the free circulation of pamphlets and reports. |
Coronation Will Be Colorful
Even Pavements Are To Be fiay For The Occasion
Pavements and streets in England in addition to houses, shops and) gardens, are to go gay for the Coro- nation. Many permanent improve- ments are being planned to mark the occasion.
A scheme to repave part of sme} promenade at Brighton with me@ern colored paving slabs. is to be dis- cussed. The cost would be £1,400. |
“Demand for Coronation bulbs,) plants and seeds is so great that we! can hardly cope with the orders,” the proprietor of a famous South Coast | nursery said,
“Garden schemes for the spring are all red, white.and blue: Favorite flowers, to bloom in May, are scar- let and white tulips afd blue forget- me-nots. e
Officials at the Earl Marshal's office are wondering whether to break away from precedent when the dress style chosen for the Coronation is exhibited to the peeresses who will wear it on May 12 and use a live
“| model.
When King George was crowned the Coronation style was shown at a special exhibition to peeresses and accredited Couft dressmakers on @ wax model,
May Expect Too Much
Japan Hoping Hen Will Break World
‘ Production Record
In Japan they have a hen which is expected to break the record of 360 eggs in a year. It has been esti- mated that the average hen laying 200 eggs in a year is producing five times her own weight in eggs dur- ing that period and that seems like @ good deal for one average hen to do, and yet there are plenty of hens to-day which have stepped away be- yond the 200-per-year mark. 4
Somehow we are inclined to hope that hen in Japan fools the people who are figuring she is good enough to lay more than 360 eggs in a year. Possibly they have in mind’ one egg per day for the full year and after that is reached the next step will be to get two eggs per day. And that, of course, is just another form of slavery. There would be no time off for attending to clucking in the
ring. ;
It's too much to expect a hen to make a 1,000 per cent. record and it is well to remember that it takes a good baseball player to bat above the 400 mark.—Peterborough Ex- aminer.
Alr Mall Cachets | Special cachets are being provided
|explains the
For Its Economic Troubles
Two research workers have count- ed noses throughout the world, have
figured trends and have come to the conclusion that the peak of world population probably would be reach- ed in 2100 with 2,645,500,000
Present population was placed at 2,073,300,000, and increase of nearly five-fold over the 445,000,000 in the world in 1630, the earliest time of a recorded estimate
The present rate of growth is ap- proximately one per cent, annually, but the research workers do not ex- pect this rate to continue long and believe that in shortly more than &
century and a half the top will be reached.
The scientists who made the count are Dr. Raymond Pearl and Sophia A. Gould of the John Hopkins Uni- versity School of Hygiene and Pub- lic Health. Their study, published in “Human Biology,” cited the tremend- ous population increase of the last 300 years as a possible basis of some of the unsolved complexities and problems of the modern age
Pearl and Gould show the average density of world population now is about 40 persons to the square mile, approximately that of the United States, but that in reality only a little more than five per cent. of the land area of the earth contains 62.5 per cent. of its population. This con- gestion of people in big cities and thickly settled areas suggested to them an aggravation of some of the already present problems of civiliza- tion. *
“Somebody,” they wrote, “must haul to them what they eat, what they wear, what protects them from the rigors of the physical environ- ment. Now, hauling means of sub- sistence id a service activity, for which somebody must be paid in the absence of a system of slavery.
“The aggregate economic burden so added to the business of human living on the earth, however skill- fully and intelligently it may be done, is an extremely large one. It seems bound in principle to become still greater if the tendency to uneven- ness of population distribution over” the earth's land area . . . continues to increase.”
In this connection, the study re- ferred te “a very rough estimate” that two and a half acres are needed
sion of man’s effective universe, result of scientific discoveries and their application,” giving as an ex- ample the steam engine and ita effect
Dr. Percival R. Cole, vice-chancel- lor of the University of Sydney; Aus- tralia, told the Southern Inter- scholastic Press Association that the “preservation, of all thé best ele- ments of civilization” depended upon the power of the democratic press.
“At the present time,” he said, “in @ number of European countries the sword is definitely stronger than the pen. There the press ig not permit- ted to speak for peace nor even to publish facts that are considered to be adverse to militarist policies.”
A Map And His Horse It appears that there is in exist- ence a New York statute which im- poses the capital penalty for horse stealing. If so, it dates from the early times when a man's life might be dependent upon the speed and stamina of his horse. Therefore, to deprive him of his horse might be to deprive him of his life. That also lynching of horse thieves in the West in pioneer days. The papers report the case of an Iilincls woman who has lived five years with only a half a brain. Noth- ing remarkable about that. Some car drivers get by with none at all.
SE ee hee ee
TEE EEDULIV? ESVINW THURSDAY. DEC 24th 1996
7
As a Life Insurance Policyholder
OUR BEST WISHES FOR
Redecliff, Aiberte SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
w casts wnt Gra brnan eee] A Merry Christmas
and~~~-~~.~.~.~
A Happy New Year Your Policy is Larger Also Accept Our Thanks For Your Patronage
Your Premium is Smaller , P. CAMPEAU & SON . ; is eels soe | Because of Interest Earnings
Opening this year with a 15-inch snow fall on December 2, the ski-ing season in Quebec province was off to a flying start with special Canadian trains as well as regulars crowded with enthusiasts on the
Advertizing Rates Furnished on Application
B. L. Stone, Publisher
THURSDAY. DEC 24th 1956
‘OU get more Life Insurance, cance company that you have
first week-end thereafter from To Our Customers of and you pay less for it, because chosen to act for you begins accu- Montreal to the Laurentians. : : x of i lati necessary funds to pay 1 — ; your policy claim promptly and in The Empress of Britain wil start the winter cruise season We Extend our Hearty The hard-earned savings that you full when it falls d
set aside each year for the financial protection of yourself and your These funds are regulated by
+ family are invested for you by your Dominion and Provincial Insurance Compliments OF Life lasaconce company in gover Ace ond ars muthemetially calcw- ment and municipal bonds, first lated. To maintain them, both the mortgages, public utility bonds, in- —_ premiums you pay and the incerest dustrial and other interest-bearing — earned on them are necessary. securities.
nine-day voyage to the West In- dies and Cuba. It will carry ite own night club of Broadway en- tertainers and a smart dance band, The Pmpress of Australia, between January 7 and March 26 will make six cruises of eight, nine, ten, 16 and 18 day duration 4 the West Indies, all from New ork.
the Season
Gift of a visit home for Christ- tual present suggested for the Because of the interest earnings _— therefore, an essential of year end by G. EB. Carter, general ° an past ed ng yy re —the rental value of your savings Life Insurance contract. Your pol- ed the company’s pre-paid ticket Our Thanks for Your Businss in the Past —your money makes more money, icy is larger,
plan for sending transportation to
out-of-town relatives and friends, ¥ and this earning power of your sav- smaller, because of the additional Arrengunaat of Guise of oat BENY & SON LIMITED ings is put to work for you fromthe money that interest earniings add to Carter, said, and tickets cost no Medicine Hat, Alberta moment you pay your first Life your savings, and this is true in the case of emergency an the roar Insurance premium. case of 3,300,000 other Canadian
the right person. This service is not confined to Christmas and New Year but ts particularly po- Pular at this season.
At that moment, the Life Insu- _—_ Life Insurance policyholders.
Canadian and world ski-ing en thusiasts will have an opportu- nity to test the Rocky Mountains’ of having ski facilities
Assiniboia and Corona Hotels Life Insurance
F
ctamplontipe ihe Cansdan MEDICINE HAT are J J . * > z
from rt to 8 on the steep Wish the Citizens of Redcliff Sian’ Pacific Railway’ mation at A Merry Christmas : Banff, Guardian Canadian Homes
nsoting eqnemennent by and f Departmen Christmas and A Happy and able te the pablio thie wear wae ' Prosperous New Year en in Eastern or within Western
We also wish to thank our friends for their patronage in the past
George Cantalini, Owner and Proprietor
with Mra Pogmore, who was charg) The frovincial government! ¢ 1. i sending cricis in Gar ed as being an accomplice with |} 9s she:ved its plan for the cr> any There is widespread
were the hired man, Emmanual Erns!| ation uf a string of credi' fear that an economic collapse ‘A gift to the Province of On- for the murder of Mr Pogmere |, 10, throughout the prov nee may drive Hitler toa new ad- ferte from the Kerry Hill Flock wag found gunilty and sentensed
ewes and ove ram, of the world | Wt) MOPGMMMetgtgvereteemteterreeeetememes |i: be hanged with Brust on! ‘definately ‘
famous Kerry Hill sheep are now March 3rd.
oe pee” Aeeared Cot WE EXTEND TO OUR PATRONS AND FRIENDS
ranged through W, Rupert Davies,
Of Redcliff and District Our Best Wishes for 2S ; : * oF cetcret tae A Happy and Joyous A Merry Xmas — Royal Christmas St cots serene et Christmastide,
noted for their adaptability to any
§ = ;
curjvenment, and for their gen- and
eemmnenmeaties nad ' paren Sesto sontctveen, A Prosperous New Year heve been a feature of railway
a big reaction on Christmas pres- BOYD WHOLELALE
pod in the A} Copeetnens Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Tobaccos, Thes i ng igare tionary and ities qrest onecene “wih the’ tsadinn Cigars, Cigarettes, Confer Mowelile
W. B. DEMPSTER
Men’s & Wear At Adele oF a Thied St., Medicine tiat
who are gives dic nave the op NOS EEG EGG te te ete Meter er ertar ee terete
We Wish Our Friends and Patrons in Redeliff and District
A Merry Christmas
Royal Hotel
Med. Hat J Reid Prop.
| Dry Cleaning :
Done in Town After Many Yeors of Business We Again Extend To
Get Your Old Clothes} Our Friends In Redeliff and District Cleaned Up For Spring And A More - eee Prosperous Season Ahead Che Camp liments —
SUITS, OVERCOATS
sod PLAIN DRERD ee of Che Season ee CECIL HOTEL Ant dite Our Teaite Sie Yous Late tenting MEDICINE HAT | . LEUNG BROS. D. Fraser, Mgr, 4 /f mogE SE GUST STORES
Fourh St Next Town Hall
ddd detent ttt tit tt |
Becomes Important Link! Cansds’s Aic Service
Fiong Kong Is Bastern Headquarters) “TC's! Route Would Be Wel-|
For Imperial Airways Planes
It is curious that the Oriental countries notwithstanding their adop- tion of western ideas have not yet realized the importance of commer- cial aviation. China is even more air-minded than Japan and has a large and efficient air fleet, one that could give at least as good as it gets from the only enemy likely to attack it. But neither China nor Japan will allow foreign commercial planes to land on their soil.
The result is that the British gov- ernment, owning Hong Kong, has de- cided to allow commercial planes to land there, at what will become, if it is mot that already, one of the largest airports in the world. Hong Kong will be ‘the eastern headquart- ers for planes of Imperial Airways connecting with London, all planes carrying passengers and goods between the large Chinese cities, and the planes of the Pan-American lines which cross the Pacific. In short, Hong Kong becomes an important link for all aviation between Europe, the United States, all parts of China, the Straits Settlements, Australia, India, the Philippines, Hawali and
’ other places.
It is odd that the Chinese will not allow harmless commercial planes to land in China, and it is odder still that the more enlightened govern- ment of Japan remains in a state of complete aerial isolation. But the
Japanese are growing more and more! a@ suspicious race. They seem to see |
ghosts by daylight. — St. Thomas Times-Journal.
Hall, has, after six months’ work, been saved from the mistake of its original builders.
The west wall, which for genera-
tances of from fifteen to thirty feet below the ground level.
Middle Temple Hall has always stood on insecure foundations. There has been slight movement going on
the.
| comed By Travelling Pubtic Hon. C. D. Howe, Minister of) Transport, says: “While Canada has! an enviable record for transportation | of mail, passengers and freight by air | | in districts not served by other forms | | of transport, it is behind most coun-| tries in providing air services along the main arteries of travel. Great! Britain has made definite plans for transporting mall and passengers across the North Atlantic, and it is expected that an air route from Png-| land, via Ireland and Newfoundland, | to Montreal will be in operation by 1938. Canada has contracted with! these countries to furnish an air ser- vice from Montreal to the Pacific Ocean as a connecting link in this all-British air route. Aside from this, | there is an insistent demand from) the travelling public for modern air) transportation in Canada... . It is) to be hoped that the proposed air service can be developed through co- operation between the railways and the Government. The Post Office De-| partment estimates that sufficient business is available almost from the | Start to make the route commercially | feasible, The Dominion Government) has already invested six and a half) million dollars in air fields, and with | the expenditure of an additional mil- |
lion and a half would have ¢ 4) leans’ ancient rivals, the Campbells,| Geneva. It will show films relating)
| facilities across Canada the equal of | those of any transcontinental route!
|
| in America.”
To Save The West
Says Wheat Producing Land Slowly Becoming A Desert
Thousands of acres of Canada's former wheat producing land slowly were becoming a desert and nothing was being done to stop the condition, J, T.,Hull of Winnipeg, secretary of the western agricultural conference, stated in Toronto.
“Western Canada normally pro- ‘duces 400,000,000 bushels of wheat, but this year we produced only 216,- 000,000,” said Mr. Hull, a delegate to the first annual meeting of the Cana- dian Chamber of Agriculture. ‘““‘Thou- | sands upon thousands of acres were never harvested——no good, dried out) ~~and this is the fourth year in suc-
“The fact is that a large portion |of this area is ‘slowly but surely be- | coming a desert. Why? Because
they have plowed under the turf that pe this sol] and the moisture and | millions upon millions of tons of first
|class soil are being “earried away
The “Bessemer City” of New York, wrecked on the coast of Cornwall during a fog, broke in half after the)
STEAMER BROKEN COMPLETELY IN TWO
| |
| |
\Feeding Pullets
For Egg Production
Many Use Dry Mash To Simplify The Feeding Methods
Different methods of feeding pul- lets have given satisfactory resuits and each individual must decide for himself just what plan will be fol lowed Most poultrymen prefer to simplify the feeding methods as much as possible and if the neces sary feeds are supplied, there seems to be no necessity of following prax
tices Involving extra labour, such as feeding a moist mash. In fact better results may be obtained by the dry | feed system unless one has had cor
sideratle experience in feeding pul lets
Pullets should be in good condition when they are put fn the laying house and they should be fed so as to slightly increase their body weight
crew had been rescued by the St. Ives Lifeboat. This picture was taken at low tide, showing the vessel very| "ime the first few months after
securely fixed on a reef of rock.
" Baried The Hatchet |
| | | Ancient Feud Between Powerful Visitors May Sco Films Showing Its’ Many Long And Historic Sieges In|
Scottish Clans Is Called Off
Sir Fitzroy Donald Maclean, Scot- land's oldest clan chief who in 1932 buried the ‘hatchet with the Mac-| died recently in historic Duart castle.
Sir Fitzroy was 101 years old. i
The ancient feud between the clan Maclean and the clan Campbell was said to have originated over the love of a woman in 1745 and to have been, carried down the years until both sides called it off in 1932. ,
On Sir Fitzroy’s 100th birthday he received messages from many of the, 30,000 Macleans scattered throughout | the world.
The clan Gillean, or Maclean, was founded in the 13th century by Gil-| leannan Tuaighe or “Gillean of Bat- tle-Axe’’, whose massive strength and) feats of arms made him famous on Isle of Mull and the mainland. 26th hereditary been confined two years. served in Canada with Hussars, a regiment he joined in 1852 at the age of 18 and commanded in 1871.
was present at the cavalry affair at Buljanak, the battle of the Alma and
jthe siege of Sebastopol. He was
wounded severely at Alma and Se-
bastopol. He was born May 18, 1836 and in
for hundreds of years, the principalt*TO™ central Ameri¢a and Canada| 199g succeeded his father to the clan
if :
eventually remedial measures
el ih 7 at
i :
i
1 i "t
lh ¥ F
|
them. The usher was very nice about it; went off into a dark corner and
wrote his name and address on the back of a program, so they could mail the money to him. That wasn't the end of the episode, though. Next intermission he sought them out again. “Here's a quarter,” he whis- pered. “A dollar bill is so much easier to mail than 75 cents.”—The New Yorker.
Antlers are quite different from horns. Horns have a bony core, grown onto the skull; when broken, they bleed freely and never grow
out again. Antlers have no blood) “those are the people who circulation after attaining their| intimately of course.
growth, and each year off
cleanly from the head.
g @
of which was a crack in| ‘Tough erosion.
| “In the United States they are
| They are trying out great reforesta- tion schemes, But in Canada we
Canada’s tourist industry, with an estimated monetary value of $275,- 000,000 for 1936, yealized the most profitable season since 1929, D. Leo Dolan, director of the Canadian
Travel Bureau, said in an address at) interests of Canadian trade with reached
Niagara Falls, Ontario.
This estimate was based on statis- tics recently released py the Domin-| oin immigration department, showing an increase of 25 per cent. in tour- ist traffic, Mr. Dolan said in his presidential address at the seventh annual convention of Canadian Tour-
| ist and Publicity Bureaux. / | Figures for the first nine months| | of 1936 place the total number of tourists from the United States alone) |at 18,262,638. This represented an | increase of 1,415,720 over the same | period in 1935.
Referring to the association's pro- | gram for 1937 Mr. Dolan said he be- lieved the tourist industry. had an
| unprecedented opportunity to expand ‘and develop.
May Have Been Right
A rather deaf woman found herself | sitting beside a well-known surgeon| at a social dinner. He was not a talkative man, and, try as she might, the old lady could not think of any
conversation, At last she had an) idea.
“Bhould I call you Dr. Dobbs or} | Mr. Dobbs?” she asked, with a
charming smile. | “Gall me anything you like,” said the doctor, and added genially, “Some of my friends call me an old fool!” | “Oh!” she rejoined, not hearing | correctly, but anxious to be pleasant, know
leadership and the baronetcy created in 1631.
Hector Fitzroy Maclean, eldest sur-/ viving son of the late Hector F. Mac-| lean.
A Good Visiting Card An aeroplane trailing streamers with the legend, “Canada Calling | Glasgow,” drifted about the:sky over | that city recently like a maple leaf,’ It served as @ sort of visiting card for the Hon. Vincent Massey, the! Dominion High Commissioner, who! spent a busy day in the city in the)
Scotland.
League Has Movie House
Aims And Work } Years Gone By The League of Nations has opened | Besieged Madrid has had many par-} its own movie house in the new $10,-/ allels among historical accounts of! 000,000 building of the secretariat in beleaguered cities. From oldest times, men have de- to the work of the league to the 2,000, fended their towns with an unyield- or over tourists who are shown over | ing ferocity—against fire, famine, the building every day during the | thirst and the scourge of despair. holiday rush. It will also be used for) Even in the Great War, pounded technical demonstrations tothe mem-| by giant guns and aerial bombs, | bers of the secretariat and to the ex-| points of intensive siege refused to pert committees which meet under) submit. Verdun never was taken. the auspices of the league. | Target of the greatest mass storm- The first program comprises a/| ing in all history, little Verdun sur- short, popular, film. explaining the! vived the assault of 66 German divi-| aims of the league, and two travel) sions and incessant shellfire for 195) films taken in Tibet and in Soviet days—the most furious prolonged| Russia by members of the league's) attecion record. health service. ; Other famous sieges developed into The Tibetan film includes “shots” | similarly long-extended struggles. of the religious rites of the Lamas, The Greeks fought nine years be- which have never before been filmed. for they captured Troy, sacked the
city and regained the beautiful Memorials To Queen Victoria
Helen. Alexander the Great took seven Most Imposing One Is In Front Of ™Onths to subdue Tyre in 832 B.C.; Buckingham Palace | and long before, in the sixth century Queen Victoria has 24 outdoor, 8. Tyre withstood a 13-year slege memorials erected to her memory in| ¥Y Nebuchadnezzar. London, more than any other Eng-| 1 ™more modern times, Sebastapo! lish sovereign. The most imposing of | ®"4ured an 11 months siege in the these i the one in front of Bucking-|CTimean War (1854-55) against a! ham Palace, which required 2,300|COmbined assault of British French | tons of Carrara marble. The most|®94 Turkish troops. unusual is that in Kensington High Clive of India’s heroic defence of Street, which is a kind of gigantic! Arcot ts rye to many. With a ranite candle, complete with gilded | 84rrison ly four officers, 120 tian tan, Ona state ta ites, | Baropeans and 200 Sepoys, Clive sington Gardens, is the work of her ‘Wwarted a 50-day siege by 10,000 It shows | "tive troops. The siege of Port Arthur, in the
——& girlish figure seated, crowned and | "V@ months despite the fact Russian holding a sceptre. defences were far from completed
Rha COMES Ne and the Japanese used a powerful Civilization Has Arrived
new ll-inch howitzer in their bom- An Eskimo boy paraded the mile-| brdment. long two-plank sidewalk of Bethel's,; 1” Spain itself, Zaragozaz, the “Main Street”, ringing a cowbell and capital of the old Kingdom of Ara- turning himself proudly so all could | €°", Sustained an eight-months siege read the legend emblazoned on bis, ‘1808-09 against the French. gandwich-boards: Like Madrid, Zaragozaz was an un- Moving Pictures To-day cient Moorish city. It was destroyed Admission: One Fish by Julius Caesar in 45 B.C., captured And Bethel'’s 20 whites and 200
by the Vandals. in 409, by the Visi- Eskimos know “civilization” had| 8°ths in 476, and by the Moors in the Kuskokwim river coun-| 712, The Moors finally were ex- ; pelled after a nine-month siege.
try.
Drunkenness at the throttle of a) On one return voyage across the | rellway engine means permanent} Atlantic to England, the Berengaria | ciunions); “sut at the wheel of a’ carried more than one ton of tea and motor car the penalty is a few days) coffee, two tons of bacon, two tons jin jail and temporary suspension of/ of butter, 20 tons of potatoes, and
Bob—What 4 nuisance that chap is. Jack—Oh, flerce. After you have touched him for money five or ten times he begins asking you to repay
the driving permit.
In the past fifteen years Boston is) the only metropolitan city in the U.S, which hasn't suffered the loss of | at least one daily newspaper by! merger or suspension. |
BADIO IN SASKATCHEWAN
22 tons of meats, it.
The most bulky of carnivores, the Kodiak bear, attains the largest size| during the American Revolutionary of all known bears. Some of the in-| War. It was applied to a band of termediate species weigh as much as! Tories who stole cattle from’ both 1,200 pounds. | sides.
The term “cowboys” was first used
SCHOOLROOMS
programme
based
: Q
schools.
beginning egg production. If body weight decreases, due to presence of colds, faulty feeding or any other cause, & partial moult is likely to occur and production will be affected for a con#iderable time
At the Dominion Experimental Station, Fredericton, NB, a dry mash is fed in hoppers where the hens can have free access to it. It is advisable to put a small amount of fresh mash in the hoppers each day rather than to fill the hoppers suf- ficiently to last several days, as the birds will be more eager for the fresh mash.
A mixture of whole grains, made up of two parts wheat and one part each of cracked corn, barley and oats is fed in the litter night and morning, The birds are fed so that they will be eager for the grain and about one-third of the day's supply is fed in the morning. The grain for the evening feed may be supplied in troughs, oyster shell and grit are available at all times and green feed is supplied daily.
* Distribution Must Be Fair
Director Of Bank Of England Gives His Views On Prosperity
A prediction that the three great democracies—-France, Great Britain and: the United States—are on the verge of great prosperity but a warning that such prosperity must have wide distribution among the lower income brackets was made at a luncheon of the American Club of Paris by Sir Robert M. Kindersley, a director of the Bank of England.
“This prosperity is democracy's great opportunity,” he said, “but it
forenoon or before the end of the workday ?
If so, then munch on sweets or drink a glass of milk, advises Dr. H. W. Haggard, physiologist at Yale University. ’
Eating between meals is beneficial for most people, Dr. Haggard ex- plained, recalling his early experi- ments in reviving exhausted athletes by injecting sugar in their blood. Mow, for ten years, he said) “I have been feeding industrial workers be- tween-meal lunches in which milk was the major item, and I found that those who ate frequently during the workday worked more, with greater enthusiasm and less fatigue.”
The Outstanding Gift
An attractive woman was taking a backward glance at her life. “Do you know,” she said, “of all the gifts I have received from my beau the one I loved best was not an orchid, mot a bouguet of. hothouse roses, a box of candy nor a best-seller book. The gift I loved best was given me when I was 12 by my first sweet- heart. He was a fat little boy and his father had a butcher shop. He gave me 4 ltunk of bologna sausage.”
The last needle of the first ounce of radium produced in Canada was sealed af the Eldorado Gold Mines
extraction plant at Port Hope, Ont.
in the présence of @ gathering of
is broadcast medical, mining and research lead- on each lesson are | ers. uipped with radios,| A. Bruce of Ontario and Sir Freder- This photo|ick Banting, discoyerer .of insulin,
Lieutenant-Gevernor Herbert
were among those present.
if desired. Pure water,
Teor ee ene
pee ge IR eRe a nr reer pe eee a 28
) f Sik ing j
COOL MILD TOBACCO
Buckingham Fine Cut
WORLD HAPPENIN BRIEFLY TOLD
Shipments of lower grade cattle, under the drouth relief plan, total more than 12,000 head, Hon. W. N. Chant, Alberta minister of agricul- ture, said in an interview.
Lord Wigram, who was private secretary to King George V., has been appointed a director of the Lon- don, Midland and Scottish Railway Company.
Sharks brought money to the. pockets. of Halifax fishermen re-| cently when they drove some 40,000 mackerel inshore for an unusually late catch.
Massachusetts beauty parlors re-! ported receipts of $7,405,000 in 1935, | or $1,700,000 more than in 1933, says The Boston Transcript, dilating on! the “permanent wave” as indication of recovery. /
Dr. J, W. Browning, Exeter, Ont.,! the oldest practicing physician in! Canada, celebrated his 93rd birthday recently, Dr. Browning is also the oldest Morse telegrapher in this country.
Strikes and recovery are spreading together throughont the British Isles. Economists refuse to believe either one breeds the other in spite of the oft-expressed belief that “increasing strikes denote a return to prosper- ity.” z . Astride his trusty seven-year-old mare, H. E. Gore, Alberta farmer, is en route to London to see the corona- tion of King Edward next summer. He will sail from Halifax and expects the trip across the Dominion will take six months.
GS
Restoration Fund
Loss Of $758,000 Suffered By Church Of England Is Fully Made Up A loss of $758,000 which the Church of England in Canada suffered four years ago as a result of maladmini- stration of its Rupert's Land work- ing fund has been more than fully recovered, Rev. Canon Sidney Gould, general secretary of missions, told a capacity congregation in All Saints’ church at Windsor, Ont. | " The effort on the part of church’ members and clergy has had the effect of viridicating the honor, not! only of Angjicans but of the whole Christian church, Canon Gould be-| lieved. But greater still, he con- tended, it had maintained the honor of the Master of the church. Contributions ranging from more than $5,000 to a few pennies came im, Canon Gould said, but among the| outstanding examples of spiritual herojsm was the case of an Indian . women in the far north. The squaw came to him at the close of @ sermon and insisted he ’ take from her $2 from her $5-a-year
the only assured income the woman
savings were gathered. So impressed was-she at the loss suffered by the’ church, she gave up the idea of the! trip and turned oyer her entire say-| ings to the fund.
More Spots On Sun j A row of huge sunspots, more than . 1,250,000 miles long and resembling) @ titanic necklace, has appeared on’ the face of the sun. Dr. Dinsmore Alter, director of Griffith Observa-| tory, Los Angeles, described them as the most impressive spot group! ever seen at the observatory. Sun spots are generally associated with | periodic weather changes on earth.
Skilled Labor Scarce : There is now a shortage of skilled, labor in Canada, in the opinion of / Hon. Norman Rogers, federal mini-| ster of labor. En route to Ottawa! at the end of his first official tour of | the west, Mr. Rogers while in Win- nipeg said that the shortage would increase.
Twenty-six years were needed te
build the Great Pyramid at Gizeh,| go, May 11, 1937,
Egypt.
There are 17,464 wires the cables supporting the San Fran-
fashion treaty money. The §5 represented by fa
May Rival The Moon
Astronomer Notes One Star Is In- creasing In Brilliance
Revealing that (Cassiapaiae suddenly has increased in brightness until it is now twice its usual illumination, Perkin'’s Ob- servatory astronomers at Delaware, Ohio, expressed the possibility it may sometime rival the moon.
Gamma Cassiapaiae is located in the “Celestial W” constellation which may be seen now in the zenith after midnight.
Dr. Ernest Cherrington, Perkin’s astronomer, said he first noted the increased brilliance of the star October from which date it has continued to grow in brightness.
“How bright this star will be- come, nobody knows,” said Prof. N. T. Bobrovnikoff, Ohio Wesleyan University astronomy professor.
“Gamma Cassiapaiae belongs to an unusual group of stars . possessing extensive atmospheres which are not stable as the atmosphere of most stars.”
x o,
JUNIOR'S GAY TWO-PIPCER “SETS THE FASHION" IN HER SET
By Anne Adams °
Bure
to wardrobe
:
-conscious set! So easy ave. cut and.stitch all by herself! There's variety in
choice or short sleeves,
it
trasting crepe or cotton blouse. Economical, isn't it? Aren't the Peter Pan collar, contrasting bow and patch pocket smart?
Pattern 4216 is available in sizes
| 8, 10, 12, 14 and 16. Size 14 takes.
2% yards 54 inch fabric. Illustrated pe nd sewing instructions in- c . 2
Send twenty cents (20c) in coin or stamps (coin preferred) for this
Anne Adams pattern. Write plainly
Size, Name, Address and Style Num- ber, and send order to the Anne
Adams Pattern a Winnipeg Mowpeper Union, 175 McDermot Ave. E., Winnipeg.
Covering Everything
the star Gamma!
THE REVIEW,
|
Prize-Winning Apples
| Apple Growing In Canada Dates) Back To Early Pioneer Days
Canadian apples, which are famous) all over the world for their delight- ful flavor and fine quality, made a | good showing at the Imperial Fruit) | Show at Liverpool, England, this) | year when Canadian exhibitors won | | 23 prizes. British Columbia growers) | won six first prizes; five seconds and/ | two thirds, while Nova Scotia apples | took seven firsts and three seconds. | Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick, | the other Canadian provinces produc- |ing apples in commercial quantities, | did not compete.
Apple growing in Canada dates | back to the early pioneer days. His- | tofy records the establishment of apple and pear orchards in the first | settlements in Nova Scotia over three | hundred years ago by French set- | ers, and the Annapolis Valley, made ; famous by Longfellow in his im- | mortal poem, “Evangeline”, has for! | many generations been one of the most widely known apple-producing | | Sections in North America. In the) Province of Quebec there are records! |of apples growing three hundred) | years ago. In Ontario the first apple | trees were planted about 1760, and) in British Columbia about 1850.
The Canadian climate is well suited to the production of high quality apples, and the industry, originally intended to provide apples, apple cider and vinegar for home consump- | tion has developed to such an extent | that Canadian apples now find their | way to practically all parts of the | world, In 1935 the Canadian crop totalled 4,432,700 barrels, and exports to 44 countries included 2,541,217 barrels of fresh apples.
In the early days of apple growing in Canada little attention was paid to varieties; apples were just apples. Improvement in transportation and storage facilities, the development of export and home markets, and more knowledge gained of the market de- mand were accompanied by experi- mental and research k designed
to develop the most sui varieties and the best methods of growing and handling. There are now in Canada good varieites of apples with keeping qualities which enable them to be stored and made available for con- sumption through practically the en- tire year.
Directors Of Jersey Club
Calgary Man Will Represent Western Canada Next Year
The Canadian Jersey Cattle Club announced election of 1937 directors following the taking of a mail ballot.
Directors are: W. 8. Wajnwright, vice-president of the club, represent- ing British Columbia; Dr. A. M. Mc- Kay, Calgary, representing the prairie provinces; Robert G. David- ‘son, M.P., North Hatley, Que. and W. Elmo Ashton, Foster, Que., rep- resenting Quebec province; Earl E. Lister, Harvey Station, N.B., repre- senting the Maritimes.
Election of the Ontario directors will take place at the annual meet- ing.
| |
Vaults
s Refugees Huge medieval vaults, discovered
cite Paeaty two-piscer thek) Water tho palace af thy Conshaston may
vakian Senate during reconstruction work, will be turned into the world’s largest air raid shelter. In case of
|
in,| an enemy air attack, it will give
refuge to ten thousand people. The
eal palace, which is centuries old, form-
erly housed the Diet of the Kingdom
meat-market are also being unet j into anti-aircraft shelters for war- | time.
‘About Great Men > |
Semething Always To Be Gained ak Good Company i
Great men, taken up in any way,' are profitable company. We cannot |look, however imperfectly, upon al | great man, without gaining some- | | thing by him. He is the living light- | fountain which it is good and pleas- lant to be near—the light which en-|
i
A miner in a Western Australian lightened the darkness of the world
| town consulted a doctor and then|-—in whose radiance all souls feel
went to get the prescription filled. “How much?” he asked the chem-
“Well, let me see. There's three’ and sixpence for the medicine and/ sixpence for the bottle. He hesitated |
as if uncertain. “Ob, hurry up,
let me know the worst.”
ee
to determine Mercury bas an atmosphere. On thet day, the tiny
boss,” said the department of architecture head at' “Put a price on the cork and McGill University, told members of |
astronomers will oldest and: simplest of all ball games, | have the best chance in 1,000 years’ will be played long after tennis and| whether the planet rugby. /
will appear; White gold is an alloy couisisting of 2179 one part gold to five parts of silver.
| that it is well with them... No nobler feeling than this of admira-' | tion for one higher than himself.
Games That Will Survive Poker will long survive bridge as a jcard game, Prof. Ramsay Traquair, |
the Electrical Club at Montreal. Pro-|
feasor Traquair also eaid catchball,|
REDCLIFY,
| Pura Rata, the mystic and
ALBIRTA
Weird Tribal Ceremony English Writer Sees Gypsies Married With Blood Bond
A gypsy wedding in Harpenden, Hertfordshire, is graphically de- scribed by Louise Morgan in the Lon- don News-Chronicle: :
I have just seen the life-lines on the palms of a young man and woman spurt blood as they were cut by a man in purple velvet bolero. These hands were tied together with a silk cord—binding them together in marriage until death.
A leaping camp fire shone on this gypsy wedding, performed with the! ancient blood-law of Romany which demands| the mingling of the blood of bride and groom. The tribe sat about the fire holding “fruitful branches of oak with acorns, Into the silent circle
|
| came the slender young couple, Nellie | Astrologers of ancient Babylon s0
Gray, 20, and Johnnie Lee, 22, both of the tribe of Petulengro. They had) travelled eight hours from Cumber- land to be married by the sherengo| or chief of the tribe. Pale but com-) posed and with a strange dignity, | they nerved themselves for the ordeal) by knife.
Chief Petulengro in his scarlet and gold and purple performed the cere-| mony. He challenged any present to! throw a branch on the fire if he know reason why the two should not be married. Then, taking the right hand of the girl and the left of the! man, he cut sharply. The blood flow- ed, but neither flinched,
The bridesmaid tied their hands, wounds together, and the cord was knotted seven times by each of the! seven virgins while the chief recited! an ancient prayer in Romany. Then he cut the cord and the ceremony was over and the feasting, dancing and music began. i
Deficiency Diets
Ti Health Results From Lack Of
When it is well known that ill’ health will result from the lack of, adequate amounts of lime, phosphor- ous, iodine, iron, and other essential mineral salts in the wiet, why not avoid these dangerous diet defici- encies by the simple, pleasant and in- expensive expedient of including in the regular menus plenty of Cana- dian fish and shellfish—fresh, frozen, canned, dried, pickled, smoked? They are nourishing, health-guarding and ready to the housewife's hand in teeming variety. Why starve in the midst of plenty when these fine-' flavoured, easily digested Canadian fish foods—-from sea and freshwater ~high -in protein, rich in vitamins, and veritable storehouses of essen-
not only are its roads comparatively free of automobiles, but also there) are cycle paths everywhere.
As soon as the human body has! its full equipment of muscle fibres,
IL
Friday The Thirteenth Will Not Make Another Appearance Until August 1937
It has never been proven that any- thing unfortunate really happened to anybody simply because Friday was dated up with the i3th but superstition by any other name, be it legend, tradition or usage, needs no factual precedent f° make folks wary.
Friday, the 13th, made his jittery appearance twice this year, with no more significance to the old world’s fortunes than he achieved 1900 years ago when some humorist of the period discovered the Gregorian cal- endar would present this combination 10 times every five years till the end of time—or the calendar.
Origin of the idea 13 as an un- lucky number is variously credited. declared it. Mythologists of Old Scandinavia gave the number tHe curse of sages because Balder, their sun-god, had to die when 13 were found in the circle of Vathalla.
Some who would have it the idea originated with the Christian era point out there were 13 at the Last Supper, including Judas Iscariot, who next day, traditionally a Friday, be- ‘trayed Jesus Christ for crucifixion.
Friday the 13th is taking a long solsticé, He will not appear again till August of 1937 and only the once that year.
In 1938 his only date with the weary world is in May, but in 1939 he resumes twice-yearly appearances, January and October, with return visits in September and December, 1940.
Value Of Boy Scout Training
Survey of juvenile court records!
by a member of the University of Michigan staff leads him to the as- sertion that Boy Scouts are only one- third as likely to become delinquents 4s are non-Scouts. People who know and appreciate the value of Scout
training will readily believe in the.
truth of that statement.—Kingston Whig-Standard.
A series of tests showed that the average mileage of cars equipped with clean spark plugs was 18.68 miles to the gallon, against 16,75 when the plugs were dirty and worn.
Portugal is doing a big business in naval supplies.
This better pattern feature is t
our service to readers, You'll Youll
Over 21 Million Books Loaned For Home Use During The Year
Public libraries in Canada during 1935 cost eighteen cents per capita less than two per cent. of the cost of public schools, and about ten per cént. of the cost of universities and colleges. Public libraries in opera- tion during the year numbered ‘642, and the expenditure on them was about two million dollars. They lent over 21 million volumes for home use and probably between one-third and one-half as many more to reading- room and reference-room borrowers. Canadian public libraries lend two books a year for every man, woman and child of the population. i
In addition to the public libraries, which: are primarily urban institu- tions, travelling libraries circulate in every province of Cahada. The ob- ject of travelling Mbraries is to sup- plement the book stock of small pub- lic school libraries and to provide some public library service in com- munities otherwise without any. Three universities, Acadia, Dalhousie and St. Francis Xavier, conduct. such a service in Noya Scotia, and Mc- Gill University circulates libraries in Quebec and the Maritime Provinces. Each of the five most westerly prov- inces operates a provincial system of travelling libraries with headquarters at the provincial capital.
Short Courses For Farmers
Will Start At Manitoba University After The New Year
Short courses for farmers have been arranged by the University of Manitoba for this winter starting after the New Year. The Dairy School starts Jan. 4 as does also the course in farm equipment repairs and poultry husbandry. On January 18 . there are courses in bee keeping and milk production; fruit growing and nursery practice work starts Feb. 1 and a course in egg grading and marketing on Feb. 15, :
The post office at Appomattox, site of Lee's surrender to Grant, once was called Surrender.
The life of a single hair on a per- son's head is estimated to be six to ten years.
In the glow ‘worm family, only the female of the species is luminous.
Exclusive New -PATTERN
SERVICE
We ture the first
of Anne
et a world of help
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Anne Adams is thoroughly in the Fashion
“Know”.
She studies, analyzes and directs
the latest Fashion Trends. The best of all her
knowledge and e direct—in this brought to you by this paper.
xperience she sends you exclusive Pattern Feature,
THIS NEW FASHION FEATURE
COMMENCES IN THIS ISSUE
it loses the power’ to form more.
COOK
THREE
VEGETABLES IN
THE $A
*
Warchouscs at Calgary, Edmonton, Regina and Winnipeg
ME POT
ON PACKAGE
CORBI
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ag
—
THE REVIEW,
REDCLIFE,
ALBERTA
THE GREAT ENERGY FOOD with the delicious Flavor
CORN SYRUP
The CANADA STARCH COMPANY Limited Montreal
Send in a label for “Canada’s Prize Recipes” a valuable book—FRER er a A ae Re
OOUUOUETEUEDERUU ROUT RORDONNTO PNA ERE ORES ec ooeT
Thou Shalt: Not Love |
— A NOVEL BY — GRORGIA GRAIG
SOCTECUUUUEVERNCENONETETOON NGG CHAPTER X.—-Continued
“I suppose it was inevitable, but—' well, I got jealous. How could I help it? Yes, jealous of every man you smiled at, forgetting that I was the one who told you to smile! I tried to tell myself that I hated you for your tantalizing indifference. I tried, right from the start, to think of you the worst—the very worst. I didn't! realize until I kissed you this after-| noon that I love you; that I have, loved you from the beginning.”
There was a roaring clamor in Starr's head, a strafige throbbing like’ the beat of jungle tom-toms in her Veins, like the sound of those weird @rums of the desert, made of stretch- ed goatskins, that one heard when approaching an oasis, Uncanny, eerie, | but so swooningly, deliriously filled with a strange delight.
Michael loved her! The Hassan of her own Arabian Nights story loved her!
bidden dreams she had never visual-| ized that love would be like this, an) overwhelmingly emotional, throat- | choking storm beside which all other | emotions she had ever known paled, into insignificance. A grand, mad| passion that rocked body and soul. The same sort of passion that Tut- Amen-Ra had known for the lovely priestess, Ama-Sun, so that he meant to be near her in time and eternity. . .
Cursing to the depths of hig own soul any one who should ever dis- turb their side-by-sideness, So much Starr Ellison understood now, ‘in one
brief, flashing moment that she had | °
never understood before. A poignant | pity for the disturbed lovers in their! tomb in far-away Egypt, near the fringe of the Valley of the Queens, swept over her. Now she knew! Michaels warm hands were grip- ping hers, pleading as was his voice: “Starr! Say something!” What could she say? What could) she offer this man whose dearest)
; 80 ready to forgive, to take all blame
to himself! If only that were all that lay between them—if only a) thing like that, with all it implied, | were what was keeping them apart! If only she could have flung herself) into his arms and cried:
“I made a mistake, Michael-Has- san! A térrible mistake. But I'm! ready to make up for it—for any-| thing--by giving you my whole fu-|
{ ture, by devoting it, myself, all the/
i ;
CRAWLED UPSTAIRS — ANotable Compliment |
ON ALL FOURS
Owing to Rheumatism in Her Knees
It was not a very dignified way of | organization
rheu- | Poultry Producers’ Company request-| MANY COLDS ed the services of George Robertson |
going upstairs, but she had matism in her knees, and it was the best shé could do, at the time. Since then, she has been taking Kruschen
‘i Salts, and now feels much better
love of va full heart,-to making) flead her letter: you happy! |. “I had very painful gout in my big How bitter those words “Tf| toe and could only get upstairs on all only | fours owing to rheumatism in my
(knees. It is over three years ago
since I commenced taking Kruschen the darkness. A form was material-| gaits. 1 must say on damp days 1
izing, outlined against the lighted) still have a little gout, but my knees open windows. Lance Marlowe this| @re quite better. I am over 60 years
Another voice suddenly cut through
| fled from him,
ideal was fine sons, and beautiful
time. Seeking a promised dance. Starr bad never been so glad to see Lance since the first time she had met him. She held out her hands to him, laughing.
“It's nice to see I'm not forgotten,
Lance! I'm dying to dance!” Michael said swiftly, under his breath:
“Don't go like this, Starr, without giving me an answer!" She managed a stricken whisper. “I can't tonight, Michael—honestly . . Give me a few hours—say to- morrow night at Lance's party at the Sea Beach Casino.” And then she
As the lights from the ball room struck Starrs face when he led her to the open window, Lance said to her:
“You look as if you'd been seeing ghosts out there, Starr.”
She urmured: “I have.” And for once her painted lips were not smiling.
of age, have a complexion like a girl's
|
= | } / | George Robertson Of Ottawa Select- Show wick i, ed As Judge OF New York
Poultry Show |
A notable compliment has been | paid to Canada by a United States) The North Eastern!
PREVENT
of Ottawa, Assistant Dominion Poul-| try Hushandman, Central Experi-| mental Farm, Dominion Department |
of Agriculture, to act as judge to! select what is known as the hen of the year at their poultry show which| was held in New York City from | November 10 to 14, 1936. This show! is one of the leading. annual exhibi-| tions of poultry in the United States
and feel very. fit. I am fully repaid for taking a half teaspoonful of Salts each morning in a cup of hot water.’ e(Mrs.) A.W.
The pains and stiffness of rheuma- | tism are frequently caused by de- posits of uric acid in the muscles and joints. The numerous salts in| Kruschen assist in stimulating your) liver and kidneys to healthy, regular action, and help them to get rid of the excess acid which is the cause Of | ceasion he had acted as judge. How-
so much suffering. ever, the promoters of the New York
PICTURE WORTH 52 FREE | show wired that the matter was one
of tremendous tmportance to the TMM King Décrood Viltionnitine hse American Poultry Association and to you at yourdruggist’s—apictureevery | the poultry industry as a whole that home will proudly frame. Free with | he should make the award in the the purchase ofa bottle of Kruschen | major competition of the New York Salts. Supply limited—get youranow. | Show. The management of the Ot- | tawa Winter Fair, ‘therefore, con- She must get out, away from the) sidered that, in view of what might Egyptian-looking penthouse before he! pe regarded as a distinct cpmpll- got here. ment to Canaia, he should go to New York; and for the first time in $0 years George Robertson did not judge at Ottawa.
and the request for a ‘Canadian judge |
| was regarded one of the highest pos-| sible compliments in the realm of} poultry judging.
When the invitation came to act as jadge at New York, Mr. Robertson replied that he was booked to act at the same time at the Ottawa Winter Fair, where for thirty years in suc-
{To Be Continued)
Mast Be Taught Courage
LN
@ At That First Sniffle
or sneere — signs that @ cold may be coming on..s
@ lt S-p-r-e-a-d-s Ns scientific medication swiftly spreads through nese and upper throat — where 3 ovt of 4 colds start
Mother relies on Va-tro-nol for help in preventing her own golds, too. She can feel the tingle as this scientific medication spreads through the trou- “"Vo-erosal ts upscaliy Peapancd 0
‘a~ to stimulate Nature's in this
It was only recently that another} area. Used in time, Va-tro-nol helps Aaughters? She would make him a SENS oes id | widower almost before he was a CHAPTER XI Fear Plays Large Part In Life Of — perm tom esti ag yoo throw off osdadkasta toesdbomges “ y hen ve ie e | bridegroom! She would ruin his life. a Some Children Quickly relieves “Stufty Heed”
Suddenly her ears began to Few , adults realize what a large | ©@0 Poultry Judgés’ Association, held
with an ominous jarrifig rhythm. It was all around her in the air.
“Thou Shalt Not—-Thou Shalt Not...” The curse of her life!
Again an imaginary parade passed
She tried to realize it, and realiza-| D¢fore her eyes, bringing the great-
tion brought a gushing wave of feel- her being, like nothing she had ever
_ known before, or dreamed of, The
first real thing in her life, especially in this swift merry-go-round of crazy @ays and nights. Michael loved her!
She did not realize at just what moment he found her hands. She) only knew of a sudden that he was_
holding them, crushing them in al
est heartbreak a woman could know., Sturdy Jittle men with clear gray eyes like Michael's; little girls who looked like Stephanie. They must look like Stephanie; they could never be Starrs. She, with a wild, yearn- ing dream of motherhood; she with her pitiful few months left to live!
‘She strained against his envelop- ing arms.
“Michael, let me go!”
voice was ; : j “Why should I let you go, when “It's not late, ig it, Starr? Say | I've only just found you?” it isn’t! We'll go away from here.| —His lips were on her again—she
TI have enough money. I don't think was afloat on that sea of langorous I ever want to hear of the word delight... Why did she give him A@gain—except for what it will bring back his kisses, allow herself for even to you and me, if you'll say so—just | @ single moment the thrill of the rap-
il cll ita.
$5
-where where no one has ever heard
what I already have. We'll go @me-| j
g E ii 5 $ Hes
vibe fue Ha ails Hee MH
|
ES RETE ate “al HE oieilf EEEFEEES
i
overshadowed everything else, even’
the upheld scythe of the Grim Reaper | which was always menacing her.
ture of love given and returned? And she knew she
Pf
Tae Fpiat = g20y peed nil Firiee
! i a fH
{
AE ;
: i Hii
He 2
i i
ol é : "Es 3 i
She cried .out wildly: “No! I'm a A doomed star!”
that she was trying to tell
that she had been Lance Marlowe's mistress. *
& thousand times let him believe
writes Mrs. P, M. Peterson, | that tortured his mind. When he
R. R. No. 2, Strome, Alberta. spoke again, his voice was strained, “When I was Idyears old I tool | but his words almost made
six bottles of your Veget her breast.
‘
_| Starr's heart felt like a dull leaden
Starr was not certain she had been asleep at all when the small ivory ‘telephone at her bedside whirred her to an awakening. Sleepily she pick- ed it up. The voice calling out of the bright morning made her heart spin to a dizziness, then stop alto- gether. Michael's voice!
If he only knew that it was the remembered tones of that voice which had kept her awake until the sun was high!
It was a cheerful voice, and if he had ever had a rebuff Michael Fair- bourne appeared to have forgotten it. There was an undercurrent of excitement even in his light tone and words,
“Starr?” He heard her sleepy mur- mur answer, “What! Not awake yet? Arise and shine, honey—I'm coming over!” :
Starr was awake on the instant. She shivered in the lulling warmth of the room and the silk and lace of
Lance's party—tonight.” -
|
Tve got to see my desert princess now—do you get that?”
Masterful Michael! Not the hum- ble Michael of the night before, but an exultant Michael with an accept- ed-lover tone... . He was so sure!
weight as she hung up the phone. why should he not feel assured? chad said things to him that her lps had denied.!
struck her suddenly, as she got quickly out of bed. Michael was, He had refused to accept
} ;
Not yet! to tell him? How could she let him! know? Her brain was a dizzying’ maze as she tried to think it out, her, slim white hands, in which each vein) howed in their fragility, pressing|
}
F fi
‘part & played by fear in the life of
a child. Some there are who cari re- call their early days and nights when
fear was a very real and terrible sen-| Since 1873 when the association was
sation and these will look with kindly tolerance upon the child's unreason- ing terrors. Fear of the darkness, fear of punishment, fear of failure in physical and mental contests, all in- fluence the lives of many children,
crippling and handicapping in the)
race of life.
Parents and teachers should above all things seek to avoid awakening this fear in the child. If the baby cries because he is afraid of the dark, by all means let him have a light.
child's life, and only a reasonable
but not made to fear his punish-
The trouble lies farther back in the Atholl Highlanders Given Royal
| chair of the Standards Revision Com-
at Topeka, Kansas, in September, 1936, he was elected president of the association. This is the first time
VicKS Va-TRO-NOL
organized that a Canadian has been
elected president. Mr. Robertson of Vicks Plan—« was further honoured by being elect- panies Some a oo areneee Soeadons
ed to the very responsible position of
| Little Helps For This Week | And that which fell among thorns
are they, which when they have heard go forth and are choked with
17,353 paneer Tien cas Snes from colds
mittee of the American Poultry As- sociation. ‘For several years he has been a judge at the leading ‘poultry shows throughout Canada and the United States.
Cannot Be Abolished
Patent By Queen Victoria
lenience can correct it. If later he|' Law or no law, the Duke of the cares and riches and pleasures of
has done wrong, he must be correct-| Atholl's litle army cannot be abol-
ished.
When Great Britain's public order
i,F f
URE 4 |
:
E F i g i
cruiting. pears only about once a year, in Sep-
The customary khaki, he said at tember, when the duke marches at a recruiting luncheon, was neither! the head of his clansmen in Highland pleasing to the eye nor was it con-| ceremonial,
He said he believed the solution) Balloons Provide Mystery lay in granting men, beth" of ‘tip . —_——- and territorial armiés, a) Found On Ontario Farm smart blue uniform which some have October 1984" now purchased for themselves and) A cluster of 27 large rubber bal-| which they have been allowed to loons, of the type used by mieteor-| wear “walking out.” | ologists to check wind currents in His greatest ambition in connec-| the upper air, have been discovered tion with the recruiting campaign in a farmer's fence near Richmond, Ontario. One was still inflated. There were no identifying marks, but a date, “October, 1934,” stamped on one of the balloons indicated they might have travelled a long distance’ before coming down in this com- munity 20 miles west of Ottawa.
Are Dated,
leaving the army at the end of his period of service with a good character that he would pass straight into a good job.
No Blue Dahlias
Fame and fortune await the pro- ducer of a blue dahlia, George A. Richardson, dahlia grower, told the) Chinese women started the color-| Kiw Club at Cincinnati, Obio.! ing of fingernails and toenails several R said dahlias of every centuries ago and now members of | the fair sex in the Flowery Kingdom a are dropping the custom as a degen-| . erate habit. Unfortunately the an- clent vogue has now splashed over inte Canada and other lands.
Originated In China
| mer,
this life, and bring no fruit to per- fection. Luke 8:14.
Preserve me from my calling’s snare, :
And hide my simple heart above, thorns of
urged to do so, not because of the! private armies in Great Britain will] Above the
choking care, - The gilded baits of worldly love.
out excuse. Adult Education Association Officers Are Elected At Annual Meet- ing In Toronto. Dr. H. F. Munro, ‘of Halifax, super-
intendent of education for Nova Scotia, was elected president of the
.| Canadian Association for Adult Ed-
ucation at the annual meeting in Toronto. He succeeds W. J. Dunlop, of Toronto, whe became chairman of the executive committee.
Vice-presidents included Robert England of Vancouver.
Council groups were elected in three groups which included:
Retiring in 1937—-Robert England, Vancouver; Donald Cameron, Ed- monton,
Retiring in 1988—L. 8. Klinck, Vancouver; J. F. Fitch, Calgary; J. G. Raynor, Saskatoon; John Kyle, Vancouver.
Retiring in 1939—Miss Bertha Ox- Saskatoon
Crude stone implements known as “eoliths’ represent the earliest known handiwork of man. They were chipped out by cave men at the be- ginning of the Stone Age.
Great Britain has 2,000,000 persons living alone, @ survey shows.
Teeth are composed of approx
Fifty-seven persons were burned During the last 10 years, staffs on mately one-fifth water. to death last year in New York tene-| British railways have shrunk 10 per ~~ ment-house fires. cent.
pce katate ATENTS The hardest ups and downs are} A man may possess all five senses, A List Of “Wanted Inventions” and keeping up appearances and keeping! but he is still pathetic if he lacks the Full Information Sent Free Os Request. down expenses. ees 2179! seine of humor. The Co fee SARA Si: