~aneemerenree: i eee if

Sa E ¥ f ht

_ end brick industry,

Volume 26

To Open Big

11 97

REVCLIFF REVIEW

THE REDCLIFF REVIEW THURSDAY, NOV 4th 1937

|Concert in Cliff Hall

The Rolling Hills | Next Sunday Evening Tract District! Is Held To Raise Funds For The

Needy in Town

To Irrigate 25,000 Acres of Land | \Mr. Bert Allison is making

South of Brooks

From 80 to 100 farm families from the drouth of the southern prairies will be placed on irrigated lands in the Rolling Hills area, some 20 miles south of Brooks and 7 miles east of Ceandia during the next few years. Fifty thorisand acres of land in that district can be irrig ated but the present plan, as announced last week by Hon J. G Gardiner, federal yinister of agriculture, provides for settling 25,000 acres. Brooks Bulletin

areas

A Joint: Convention Held at Whitlaw

Liberals. Conservatives and U. F, A Had Joint Meeting

A political yyeeting was held rt Whitlaw last Saurdey for the vovincial constituency of Cyp ress It was a joint conventim of Liberals, Conservatives and U F A who joined togather for the purpose of uniting, and de- cided to all support what ever candidate was selected to oppose

for the purpose of yqsking ac- sangements to call a later con- vention to _ a candidate

joint political parties. —- -o—~ - -— £0 SPEND $100,000 _ ON PLANT AT HAT

Alberta Clay Products Com- peny Lijited, the sewer pipe established tn Medicine Hat in 1910, announ céd immediate construction at cest of $100,000 of a branch for

the manufecture of stoneware, | :

pottery, glazed tile and brick and kindred products, eyypleying fifty persons. .

Qe cus

Mr W King, principal of the School, has been unable to at- tend school for the past few cays as he is undergoing serious treatment with his dentist.

CALGARY

AND RETURN

rr from REOCLIFF $3.40

Correspendingly Lew Fares from Intermediate Stations

Good Going November 5-6-7 Return Until NOVEMBER 5

ELEALS

Mamadian Jaume

arrangements to hold a series of concerts on Sunday evenings after church services, in order to raise funds for the purpose of distributing it between those who ate uneyployed The First ofie will be staged on Sunday evening, Sov. 5th Itis hoped there will be a good attendance t all tre eoncerts. W. Swanson as been chosen as secretary

We are informed that a splen lid program is arranged for Sun- jay evening and that talent from the town and surrounding dis- trict will take part

A series if programs is being «wtanged for the folling Suday evenings and it is hoped that the concerts will be well patronized ag those who are organizing the movement. as well as those who ave taking part, are deserving of support A ~ collection will bs taken up and the funds will be used for distribution among the unemployed and the needy

ts Now Well Under Way For Vegetables and Flowers

ve now in charge and both are siding in town. ,

Under the new management ‘he plant is now well sown with

1 kinds of vegetables and lowers and within two weeks

here will be a fine crop of ripe

omatees for sale, There wil’

('owers for bedding out. Members of the new company

will have a fine crop for all sea- “ons of tee year ied ein

Dr Charles W Gordon, who is ‘nown 8s an author as Ralph Connor, died in the hospital in Vinnipeg last Sunday. ;

* , >

Miss Percilla Tonks whe was 1 former resident of sRedcliff ind who wes a popular softball ‘layer on the Hat girls team, was married last Tuesday to Mr toss Walker of Medicine Hat

BOY'S MITTS AND GLOVES

You'll find a Good Setection at Reasonabld Prices

DEMPSTER’S

Men's and Boys’ Wear

Third St. Medicine Hat

| Redcliff School News [Local Citizens’ | The Literary meeting, Frid*y October 29th took the foryy of a Halloween party. The majority | of the ynembers came in costume | Norma Osgood, drssed ag a baby von the grand prize.

Various games, such as duck- |

ing for apples, biting apples and | |

Just 50. years ago. on October |

Sist an esteemed eouple of Red: | string were played. In the bean cliff citizens were married in

sbooting conest Vivian Marty ;

Renfrew country Ont, Alynost proved to be the straightest | , ste ~ . terete Pushing came to Redcliff and have resid- | tree was then run or rather?! nore ever since. So popular |

haerwe at get Alfred janc revered are they today that 100 , a silly ades W

gy jtheir many friends assembled at , ose, ~ . s ‘Cliff Hall last Saturday evening

ee gee enjoyed |to celebrate the golden wedding . nse yoo the only regret being jof the honored guests: Mr and rat Mr King was unable to at- | Mrs. Patrick Lavelle

tend the Halloween party. They entered the hall to al . } y, Fy School Literary News | the tune of “A Wedding March

and were followed by _ their

dtughter Mrs Nicholson, of Cal- The annual parade of the) pary, their grand son Mr Jas spooks was held at the Redcliff | Moran of Lethbridge and his School, Friday, October 29th | wife, their grand daughter’ Mrs

The following were the prize | Pider, of Calgary, Mrs Brooks of

molasses coated buns fro

Local Rebekah Lodge |Banks And The Golden Wedding | Was Celebrated *™ be

} Mr and Mrs P_ Lavelle Married 50 Years Ago

ja quarter of a century ago they;

winners: Ethel King won the first prize for the comedy dress Vivien Marty and Bssie Gordon were second, Fo the most orig- inal costume Colleen Jacobsen

Blatherskites Are Circulating Reports.

During the past week vegeta- | bles which have been shipped’ vere from farmers no'th of the. }rovince have now been well distributed to famers of this district and townspeople who! have been in need,

Some blatherskites in town

‘save been circulating report® hi, remarks were most feeling that Mayor Sangster and W ana appropriate, and his thanks ) the gahthering were from the

Pickering who have been assist-

« fair share of vegetables. This we are assured, is a downright | lie, as neither of they, has had any of the goods. |

We are informed that about ?0 families in town have receiv- ed some, of the vegetables,

It ‘s exj ected that some fruit from B © wil\ arrive in the nea: i ture

| em a long, healthy and happy

‘Taber and Monsignor McCoy of St Paaric’s Church Medicine Hat.

After all were seated a dain- ty supper was served tog large

evening and spoke feelingly of osteem in which the honored quests of the evenng were held smong citizens of the town and district. Father MeCoy was called upon propose the toast % the bride and groom. Ho congratu- luted them on having reached the 50th enniversary of their marriage and having kept their vows to the church so faithfully through the years. He wished

‘fe end asked God’s blessing on on them. :

In his attempt to reply, Mr Lavelle was deeply affected but

Messrs C Buchholz A J Lear- month and J Stratton who had teen associated with Mr Lavelle in the same company for a num- ber ef years spoke of the kindly feeling which had always exist- ed and expressed the hope that it would continue indefinitely.

Messrs G H Worts and Mayor Sangster referred to the service which Mr Lavelle had rendered

Now is the Time’ We have Just Unloaded A Car of The Best B. C. Apples That Money Can Buy

Differend Brands and Grades. We can sell these much cheaper now before the weather changes.

men, who knows the Apple Game, shall be in our Redcliff

store all day on Saturday to assi

windows at our store are well even if you don't buy.

Highly Colored, North

Prices Ranging fro Satsuma Oranges, similar

EXTRA SPECIAL FO

Phone No, 241

or take orders for future delivery.

Among othere are such well known as

Macintosh Fancy and Household, Gravenstein Orange, Delicious, Winter Banana, Jonethan

and Anjou Pears. Also a nice line of other fresh Fruits & Vegetables

Liquid Veneer, Large Bottle, Reg. f0c, for 39c¢

THE S, E. GUST STORES

| 0 cmeeed aaeeetd aleeelll aiteeat l canes 4 aemeeee | eames | eaten

One of our Medicine Hat

at Mr. Cann, to show, to sell, _ The beautiful display of worth seeing. Don’t miss it

ern Spy, Wagner Cox

m $1.45 to $2.19 to Japs, perdez. - 25c R SATURDAY ONLY

3rd St. Redcliff

OUR SLOGAN: An Industrial Metropolis of industrious People Who Pull Together,

Held Social Evening Newspapers Left

Supreme Court

' oe

Until Judgement In Case is Given

of

Attended And A Pleasant Evening Spent

A pleasant social evening was | Inopetative held in their hall last Friday evening under the auspices the Rebekah Lodge. Afaer serious consideration

During the first part of the| he cabinet of the Federal Gov evening whist and bridge were | ern;yent has decided that Alber, played, after which refresh-|ta bank taxaion, <tedid control ments were served and a_ short end newspaper regulation bills program followed. | will be subject to reference to

In he whist drive prizes were | ibe Supreme Court and probably won by Mrs Phillips and Mr)|t'e Privy Council, to determine Cann and consolation by Mrs | ii they will become law. Pre Schneider and Mr Collard. In| ‘er King had announced last hvidge Mrs R Davies and Mr J) luesday afternoon Yolan were winners and Miss M| The Supreme Court will be

Skidynore and Mr Ambury won| esked to receive such evidence the consolations. land admit such proof as it may svlo and Mrs Cann gave a recita-| consider necessary in order to

tion both of which were greatly | cever;,ine whether the _ bills, if enjoyed. |: Howed to become law, would be The evening was thoroughly | within the coyppetence of the enjoyed by ali present. \iberta Legislature, In the ree | itive the reservation of as to the town while on the School Board and Town Council and es | becoming law. tended sincere wishes for the - continuance of Mr and Mrs Lav | Discussion or united action by elle in our sown . the ppolies opposed to the Al- Mr McCartney an officer of|!vtra Social Credid government Knights of Columbus of Mdeic-|will be continued in Calgary ine Hat, presented Mr Lavelle,| next week. it was stated who ig a memberof the ledge, ee with an illuminated address,| A car load of apples from BC conveying the best wishes of the] arrived here today for distribu: Ledge to himself and his wife j{t.on around the district for far L Stone proposed | the|rers who had no crop as a result toast to the ladies. Mrs Bamfor | of the drouta th replied in a very fitting °

ent will prevent the acb from

‘The ladies Who arranged ‘the evenings program, presented Mrs Lavelle with a fine purse and Mr Lavelle a purse of gold to commemorate their golden

est exhibitions in Canada repres cnts 50.2% of the total awards. No ether province approached the Alberta record.

wedding anniversary. . 7% During the evening Miss Me-| During the past few weeks Wain, Miss Kane and Mr A considerable robberies have been

Shaw renderei very appropriate solos for the occasion, and com munity singing wag led by W Campeau.

Little Shirley Lakey, who was present with her parents, from Medicine Hat, gave a delightful display of acrobatic feats which the crowd thoroughly enjoyed.

Th evening’s program was closed with a dance which lasted “ll midnight All present had a yreat regard for Mr and Mrs Lavelle and were delghted to be « their golden wedding

The hostesses of the evening were Mrs Bastien Mrs Worts Mrs Stone, Mrs Hargrave and Mrs Hall csodanatie

Mr and Mrs Lavelle wish us to extend their sincere thanks and appreciation to those who were instrumentai in arranging the fatrering for their golden wedd irg and all whe contributed to the presents wich were present- ed to them *

the Canadian Northwest which will all

be of an especial interest to Canadians,

Christmas

In the

Old Country

SPECIAL LOW RAIL FARES Nov. 18 to Jan. & Return Limit

_— 5&5 MONTHS PAY DAY From Stations Edmonton Calgary McLeod, and East SPECIALS —| FUR TRIMMED Through Sleeping Cars JUNIOR ‘COATS To the Seaboard Sioes ||| moms: sees or Dec Ladies’ FUR TRIMMED COATS | | | Quches of Riohm'na menee Low Priced for Pay Day || | Quehess of Athall Deo, 16 FULL FASHIONED CHIFFON HOSE at 59c a Pair

Everything Marked Down

At SILVER’S Opp. Assiniboia, Med. Hat re ee eee

r >

THE REVIEW,

REDCLIFF, ALBERTA

sea ee WRIGLEVS

pi 33 ee, FASCINA a tae /

its a ANS | AUITY FRU ) aaa:

Franklin Was Right

Great Protection

Benjamin Franklin's fame seems certain to go on forever. In the

turies ago Franklin lightning rod. Ridicule, thusiastic acceptance, by the unscrupulous—all the lot of that device.

have been And now

Personality In Education

Too much stress cannot be laid upon the importance of the personality of the teacher as the chief integral factor in the educational systems of Western Canada if these systems are successfully to bear the burden which has been imposed upon them to lay the foundation of a virile and basically sound citizenry. :

It is not enough that the teacher be erudite or that he or she be thor- pughly grounded in principles of psychology and methodology. It is not! even sufficient that the pedagogue,.to use an old fashioned term, be an =| pert in the art of imparting knowledge to hig or her changes. The teacher may have all these essential attributes and yet not have the personality | necessary to inspire character, without which education is but a mere shell. |

Personality has been defined as “that which constitutes distinction of | person; distinctive personal character; individuality. Personality implies

. complex being or character having distinctive and persistent traits, among | which reason, self-consciousness and self-activity are usually reckoned as) essential” and Coleridge defined it as “individuality existing in itself but with a nature as a ground.” j

With these definitions as a background in the mind, the importance) of personality in those who are charged, along with the parents, with the development of a future race which is as yet in the melting pot stage, can scarcely be exaggerated.

For it is axidmatic that as the twig is bent so will the tree become, | and the twig will be bent as the teacher wills and directs it, consciously or unconsciously, and the determining factor in thie process is the teacher's) personality rather than his precept.

The success of the public school system of Great Britain is based upon the knowledge of the importance of this influence and the effect that the personality of the teacher will have upon the character of the pupils under his care. It is because of this that personality is regarded as the funda- mental qualification, though not the only one, for headmastership in the great public schools of the old land.

Over there it is well known and recognized that the personality of the teacher will leave an ineradicable impress on the pupil, an imprint which will glow throughout life and will dominate thought, word and action until the closing scene.

And withal that is a natural sequence of submitting young and im- pressionable minds to the guidance of one individual for many hours a day in the formative period of youth, A

Three important elements enter into the scheme of the education of youth. They are matter, method and personality. The first two have a relative importance in the educational structure, but without the last- mentioned, enduring results could only be insignificant, almost to the zero border.

Sometimes in the controversies which arise from time to time over the subjects which should be taught in the primary and secondary schools and the manner in which these subjects should be presehte@to the inquiring) mind, the fact that the personality of the teacher and his influence on char- acter building transcends the mechanics of education, is minimized or overlooked altogether. Of far greater importance to the future of the stud- ent and of the nation in which he will take his place, is what he will be,

than what he will know or how he learned what he will know.

Good progress in this direction has been made in this country to date, despite the fact that the counti'y is so young and has had to build up an educational system at short notice, and it is to be hoped that the distrac- tions of economic and restless conditions will not be permitted to call a) halt in the march towards this important objective and that as the primary objective it will not be forgotten.

In post-war years important strides were made in the educational sys- tems of the country. Academic and professional standards were raised and other restrictions were imposed which, along with improved remuneration for teachers, served to make the teaching profession more attractive than | it had been in the earlier days when it was used, more often than not, as a stepping stone to other spheres of work or to marriage.

In the more recent difficult years of drought and depression, however, the principal objective of custodians of the schoolhouse has necessarily been towards keeping the school open, all the time if possible, and if not, at least part of the school year. Makeshift measures have had to be adopted, but despite the handicaps imposed by strenuous conditions, in the great major- ity of instances, teachers, trustees and ratepayers have strained the ut- most of their meagre resources in a valiant effort to live up to their obli- ‘gations to the future generation.

During this period the teachers have in a substantial measure sacrificed ‘a great deal te remain true to their trust and for their sakes as well as for the sake of the children it is to be hoped that the end of these difficul- ties lies in the immediate future and that ratepayers and parents will again be able to press further without serious encumbrance towards the geal | that it so essential to the progress of the country—a well equipped school- house and means to adequately recompense a teacher with a personality,

; A Comes Failing Vosebeeet Of Sickness

Many People Do Not Get Much Out| Former Health Officer Of England Of Life Praises U.S, System

come the pronouncements of en-

~~ |gineers with all the latest scientific j instruments tp prove | everything

that almost that Franklin believed and said about his lightning rods was right. The chief difference is that importance of the rods has changed ends. Instead of the branch- ed, pointed and gold-tipped upper end on which lightning rod sales- men used to set such store, modern experts are more concerned about the bottom.

At the laboratories of the General Electric Company at Pittsfield, Mass., where artificial lightning has been a plaything for several years. K. B.

the freaks of natural bolts. cent instance is

One re- instructive. This

bunkhouse where a boy was stand- ing at the window. The house was not struck, but the boy was killed. What happened, Mr. McEachron de- cides from: fingerprints of lightning along its path, was that the bolt fol- lowed one root of the tree, got from that into a small stream of rain- water, followed this to the founda-

ward through the unfortunate young- ster. From his chest the bolt jumped to a near-by metal sauce- pan, thenec to a radio antenna, next to electric wires leading to a neigh- borning building and finally to the telephone system, through a wire hanging near an electric lamp. The telephone system, at last, proved

lightning off into the ground.

From the lightning’s viewpoint this freakish path was simple and direct. The bolt was seeking the smoothest way into the ground.

hence the path by root and stream into the bunkhouse. Hence, also, the importance of the lower end of a

v ater, as Franklin long ago realized it should be, Safest of all places in a storm is to be inside a light- ning rod with its lower end thor- oughly grounded.-New York Her- ald Tribune,

The Bluenose Challenged Race May Take Place Off New York In 1989

We have still our old Bluenose, a boat which has stirred the Bluenose pride, whose graceful lines are still a thing of wonder, whose likeness adorns our dimes and whose picture on one of our specia] postage stamps,

has commanded the admiration of) Bend yous philatelists throughout the world, so;

much so, that some of them go the

had with wind and tide and acci- dent, she still carries on and does

her daily dozen. -

And now Ben Pine, skipper of the Thebaud, comes forward to chal- lenge his old antagonist, Angus Wal- ters, to again try conclusions with the Bluenose, suggesting the race ‘take place off New York in 1939 at its’ great World's Fair. This will give adequate time for preparation, provide an ample stage on which to run the race, and will be an attrac- tion to all the lovers of salt water

During the past twe years, writes} Sir Arthur Newsholme, former William Moulton Marston, in the! chief health officer of England and Rotarian Magazine, I 2,997 persons, “What do you live | sickness as practised in the United for?” I discovered that 94 per cent.| States. He spoke at the 66th annual are merely enduring the present for meeting of the American Public some future event or condition. Poor Health Association. souls! They are wasting to-day’s) Sir Arthur said that from Shake-

realities for tomorrow's speculations, spearean days, no impoverished per-|

sitting bored at a great entertain- son in his own country needed to ment, waiting for a better show suffer from lack of food, shelter or which may never open. medical care.

It's @ com- a | mon failing. | . Sir Arthur told of the work of the

| British National Health Insurance The ocean waters of the world| Act of 1907, which, he said, provides contain about 25 trillion dollars’) medical treatment for one-third of worth of gold in suspension, accord-| the total population of England and ing to the estimates of scientists. | Wales,

For Real Economy - Better Flavour

PURITY FLOUR

Best for all your Baking

and those who sail it. It should not be difficult to so arrange and there

~—Halifax Chronicle.

Something To Puzzle Over How long is a piece of string, and why? I ask for information, not | being able myself to supply the an- swer. The question, I am assured, by one who had to cope with it, has just been put in an examination for

candidates for prison warderships. It!

may, of course, have been a species of intelligence test.

life successfully-London Spectator.

Capital Is Right

On being asked to write down a!

definition of “capital punishment,” says the Christian Science Monitor, a Glasgow schoolboy submitted this:

“Being locked in an ice-cream or chocolate factory for a week-end would, in my opinion, be capital punishment.” '

Great Britain reports @ boom in recruiting for the territorial army.

Monkeys are relished by large eagles of the tropics. 2225

tion of the house and then struck up-|

equal to the strain, and led the!

Ground under the tree was too dry, |

lightning rod, where its buried tip) or metal end plate is close to ground

Engineers Prove Lightning Rods Are

whole history of science no other) figure has grown so steadily in| stature after death. Nearly two cen-| morning with a dull headache. invented the! Kruschen transformed his days. Read over-en- | exploitation |

| lasting relief from headaches.

Might Prove Beneficial

McEachron also has inquired into) Freak Will May Result In Modern

bolt struck a tree forty feet from 4) wife the equivalent of seven cents to

|

length of saying it is the most beau-| whenever possible, cook tiful stamp of all the collections.! without Despite the struggles the boat has/| tains

have asked | Wales, praised the free treatnrent of| Will be the widest genegal approval.| machine.

Capacity to deal with such a problem would no doubt | argue ability to face most crises in|

| for the combined English Universi-

USED TO WAKE UP WITH A HEADACHE

Now Fresh and Lively Every Morning

Here is a man who woke up every Then

Gifts For Royalty

Sent From Toronto To Queen Eliza- beth And Her Daughters

The two beautiful embroidered purses for the Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret Rose, and chiffon hankerchief for Queen Blizabeth, which were the work of Mrs. 8. Mal- loy, 131A Booth avenue, Toronto,

“I used to wake up in the morn- a“ presented on her behalf by the ing with a dull headache. A year Canadian National Exhibition, have ago, I started taking Kruschen Salts| been sent to Buckingham Palace. regularly. To-day, I wake up fresh); The fine examples of Canadian aed lively and can do my days work) neediework for the Queen and the without any exertion. J can recom-| ,, “4 r mend Kruschen for anyone suffering | PTincesses were officially taken over from headaches and constipation,| by EB. W. Scott, representative of the and for putting new life into you. I| Canadian National Express, and sent intend to continue with Kruschen for!to Montreal for shipment on the the rest of my life. E.P. Dt a k

Headaches can nearly always be| Duchess of Bedford, e package traced to a disordered stomach, and| was addressed to G. H. Ward, Cana- to the unsuspected retention in the! dian National Exhibition representa- system of stagnating waste material tive in London, who arranged for its which poisons the blood. Remove delivery to the Royal Family.

these poisons—prevent them from) forming again—and you'll neverhave| The handkerchief for Queen Eliza- to worry any more. And that is just) beth is of pale rose, embroidered how Kruschen Salts brings quick and with the King George Carnation, the | Scottish thistle, the Bowes-Liyon crest and the jewelled sceptre and crown. The little moire bags are of the latest design and are embroider- ed with the rose, thistle and sham- Inheritance Bill | rock, acorns, and oak and maple A husband who bequeathed his| eaves. The one for Princess Eliza- beth is more elaborate than that of purchase a noose, and added a hope| Princess Margaret Rose and has a she would make use of it without! Royal Crown done in gold and jewel delay, may ultimately prove to be a|Clors, whereas that of Princess benefactor. 5 Margaret Rose has a coronet.

The strange request at least has) sent a group of parliamentarians in- to action to put an end to wills that disinherit wives and children.

Headed by Miss Eleanor Rathbone, | independent member of Parliament)

| his letter:

Has Taken Many Years

To Shave Six Seconds Off The Mile Run Record

When Stanley Wooderson, a spind- ly English man clerk, smashed the world's record for the one mile run in London a short time ago he start- ed a fiock of armchair runners fig- uring out once more how soon it will be before someone runs the mile in four minutes flat. Wooderson’s mile was made in four minutes, six and six-tenths seconds, which is just one- fifth of a second faster than the old

ties, a delegation will wait upon Prime Minister Chamberlain to urge introduction of a modern inheritance bill.

For years members of Parliament representing all parties have sought to bring Bnglish law into line with legislation prevailing in Scotland and some of the dominions.

Proponents of a new inheritance bill declare incidents of eccentric be- quests are all too frequent. Here are twb cited:

A London man directed that his wife should be given “one pair of my trousers, free of duty and car- riage paid, ag a symbol of what she wanted to wear in my life-time—but did not.”

Another left his widow the sum of one farthing to be sent her by post in an unstamped envelope. As the letter contained coin and was not

registered, the woman had to pay a| How a village committee in India registration fee of eight pence in| hanged a man for marrying a woman addition to two pence for excess caste is reported from the

postage. Sirmoor State. First the members of his

caste tried social ostracism, but the

EVENS’ RECI victim treated the boycott with

ALICE ST PES amused contempt. So the committee

HOUSEHOLD HINTS Ir war peed soaty Seand ot, 0 sists, voll the eces in icing .

This prevents them sticking tog: r. When ripping an old woollen gar- meat, wind tee in skeins and wash to remove curl in the wool. and wind the wool

elbow and up to your

| hand. This makes a convenient sized skein and it is very easy to wind.

ing them. The skin con- ulose which is a valuable

laxative. Save the leaves of celery. Dry these slowly in the oven and save

them for vegetable soup next win- ter. Rayon is made from wood-pulp and softens in water. Great care must be exercised in weshiog

this puts it out of shape. :

Add corn syrup to candy to pre- | vent it going grainy.

Use very few spices and flavorings |im cooking apples. Try to develop | the natural flavor of the apples,

Store your jars of preserves away from the light, so that the fruit does) not lose its color.

Avoid overloading the wash A small quantity |elothes is cleaned more easily and | there is less strain on the machine,

Treat your lmoleum at regular in-| | tervals with wax, varnish or shellac. 'It is mot only easier to keep the ‘floors clean, but the linoleum wears much longer.

Serve a child or invalid two small servings rather than one large serv- | ing. 4 are much more apt to eat |@ large amount,

Readers are invited to write to Alice Stevens’ Home Service for free advice on home cooking and household problems. Address let- ters to Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 175 McDermot Ave. E., Winnipeg, Man.

/ Like Canadian Glue

Liquor dealer M. Robinson at Houston, Texas, wants Canada to change the formula of the glue it puts on liquor stamps. He said mice had licked the mucilage from all Canadian stamps in his store, but had not molested the stamps of other countries. Other stores dis- closed the same thing had happened to their Canadian stamps.

The Duke of Wellington was 46 years old at the battle of Waterloo; | Blucher was 78. :

WATCH OUT FOR YOUR LIVER!

And You'll Always Feel Great

Engine Driver Retires

Engineer Of British Railway Hada Long Record

George Stone, engine-driver to three kings and maker of railway records, has retired after more than 60 years service with the London, Midiand and Scottish Railway.

Although 65 years old, he was known as “Young Stoney,” a nick- name bestowed on him more than 40 years ago to distinguish him from his father, also a long-service en- gineer. One of his chief regrets in leaving the footplate was that his service could not be extended another 13 months. That extra spell would have given him and his father 100 years of service between them.

Here are some of “Young Stoney’s” notable achievements:

Firat man to drive a railway train non-stop from London to Scotland; fireman on the first all-corridor ex- preas to leave Buston Station in 1893; drove three kings—George V,, Edward VII. and George VI.

“In 650 years I've learned to love engines and shall hate to leave thea,” he said. “You can sell an old

Ston@ did not have an accident,

i

ay ibe 4 : aoa

cEbctaics

THE REVIEW, REI

LIFE, ALBERTA

_ British Scientists Point | To The Dangers Arising | From Unnecess

o—__—_—_—

H. V. Thomas, writing in the Sun- | day Pictorial, vehemently decries the waste of efficien¢y, time and happi hess caused by unnecessary noise |

Pointing out that the recent dis-} cussion of noise at the British Asso- ciation is new departure, the writer states that for the last six years half a dozen Boards of more or icss importance and scores of bulging-browed scientists have been investigating the problem.

The Institute for the Deaf say that more than 3,000,000 people in the country suffer from defective hearing, and that, undoubtedly, noise has played a part in bringing this colossal figure up to its present strength. By noise is meant unnec-|

essary or undesirable sound.

The National Physical Labora-| tory, which has been investigating the notse evil for several years, as- serts that noise encourages nervous) complaints and indubitably wastes | energy. }

Lord Horder, spokesman of the medical profession, says that noise wears down the human nervous sys-| tem so that both the natural resist-| ance to. disease and the natural pow- ers of recovery are lowered.

Professor Henry John Spooner puts it even more strongly by saying | that the cost of noise in this coyn- try is probably £50,000,000 a year in| human wastage.

Tests have proved that, in a noisy) room, typists lost three per cent.) speed and expend 13 per cent. extra) energy; also that when noise was eliminated in a telephone exchange the mistakes of the staff were re- duced immediately by 10 per cent.

More tests have shown that the output in the quiet parts of a fac- tory was appreciably more than in the noisier quarters.

One can distrust isolated conclu- sions of this kind, but one is forced to respect evidence when it is re- peated again and again.

Noise is probably the largest sin- gle brake on the wheels of industry to-day. And yet the writer does not think that this is its worst crime. Human efficiency may be important

. but human bappiness is more im-

portant. In industry and business, because money is at stake, something is)

gradually being done to abolish the “noise nuisance, But in private life, because there are no boards to gov- ern it, noise will go on as long as each thinks that it's only the other fellow who is a nuisance,

And with more flats and more small houses, the output of hate will

ary Noise.

Seed Growers’ Assistance

Need Gese ' Porchaatng Organization For This Purpose |

Need for some permanent organ-| ization such as a seed purchasing commission to assist Canadian farm- ers through purchase of seed each year was emphasized before the Tur-| geon Royal Grain Commission at) Winnipeg by F. L. Dickinson, vice- | president of the Canadian Seed Growers’ Association |

Presenting the brief of his asso- ciation, Mr. Dickinson said many seed growers have difficulty, especi- ally in recent. years, in financing their operations, more particularly during the period after threshing and until the seed is sold in the spring. |

He .requested the commission to consider the problem of the ability | of seed growers to hold the high quality seed they have produced on their farms until it is required sev- eral monthg later for spring sowing.

“Each year thousands of bushels of this valuable seed is marketed| through commercial channels and shipped out as grain because the seed growers cannot finance the holding of it until it is required later | on,” he said,

“The seed exchanges operated by some of the provinces have helped greatly but it is still a difficult maf-| ter for the growers with less than a} carload of seed to secure the neces-| sary financial assistance. v

“There is a need for some perma-' Trees In Kew Gardens nent organization such as a seed 9 purchasing commission to take care Many Of Historic Interest Are To of these purchases of seed each year. Be Seen There

If this could be accomplished it; Kew Gardens, in London, have would not only assist the seed grow- | been having a little centenary. It is ers but it would also help the farm-/| just 100 years since the structure ers who need seed to obtain pure' known as King William's Temple stocks of the varieties they require.” was built on the rising ground on the

Pure seed is a necessary provision opposite side of Pagoda Vista from if Canada is to retain her present! the Limas. William IV., like his pre- status in world grain markets, Mr. decessor, George IV., did not take Dickinson said. ;much interest in the gardens and

this “temple” is almost the only Guarded Windsor Castle

‘thing at Kew to mark his reign.

| Close to the “temple’ are the witch-

Chief Of Fire Brigade Retiring After hazels which will soon be displaying 80 Years Service their curious golden-yellow flowers

The man whose job it has been to 4nd here also may be seen two rare protect oné of the most valuable Specimens of the so-called Tree of and historic buildings in the world Heaven. Nearby are the honey- for 30 years’has just retired, reports Suckles and mulberrigs. One of the the Overseas Daily Mail. He is, ™ulberries is directly descended from Chief Officer Chadwick, of the Wind-| the tree that grew in Shakespeare's sor Castle Fire Brigade. garden at Stratford-on-Avon. An- other tree of interest in the gardens ig Queen Elizabeth's elm. Ali that remains of it is to be seen at Brent- ford Ferry Gate: In her girlhood,

juggernaut rolled through a deserted

TANKS INVADE DESERTED VILLAGE

The distant booming of shells and the occasional roar of a bombing plane overhead matched the low rumble of these tanks as the Japanese

North China as Tokio'’s legions pushed a major offensive in the Tientsin| area, near the Tientsin-Pukow Railroad

ae, ot ie

Chemically Treated Seeds

| Originator Claims Method win} Change Agricultural Practices

| A revolutionary change in agricul

tural practices through use of chemically-treated seeds was fore

|cast by Howard D. Salins, Chicago

after harvesting of test fields of fibre flax and corn in Illinois and Wiscon

sin.

Salins inventor of the, process, | Said it is applicable to all forms of | plant life Results of this year’s tests proved to his satisfaction, Salins said. that

| fibre flax of quality equal to that of the best grown in Europe can be pro duced in North America from treat- ed seed and that it afforded a highly profitable return to farmers, Little or no domestic fibre fiax is grown |} now, although there ig considerable seed flax.

Yields of corn from treated seed, he said, were 25 per cent. greater than yields from various kinds of un treated sted planted in adjacent fields thie year. North of Merrill, Wis., where frosts limit the season to less than 90 days and corn is cut green for silage, a number of farmers, Salin said, grew corn to maturity from treated seed

Reaction of the seed germ to the chemical, Salins said, gives the soil opportunity to facilitate fecundity At. the same time the treatment promotes growth of certain bacteria which replenishes the soil with

| those elements used as food by the

peemenags = growing plant, he said. Consequently,

Thought Henry Ford's Tools Might) he added, use of fertilizer is unnec-| Be Burglar’s Kit | essary. i

The following story told by Henry! In addition to soil fertilization and| Ford about himself is recounted by| increased yiclds, treated seed, he said, | the Glasgow Bulletin. It concerns) produces plants resistant to disease, his visit to England when he and his| pests, and variable unseasonable wife were invited as week-end guests| weather and which show marked) in a country house. The butler took! ability to reach maturity in a shorter | possession of Ford's baggage and un-| growing season. | packed it in the room upstairs. When In areas where yields of grain) Ford went to his room, he noticed| could be increased 25 per cent, the butler eyeing him suspiciously.| through treated seed, Salins said

grain acreage could be cut down and)

On the dressing table, neatly ar-| fibre flax substituted as a rotation

village and war-torn countryside in|

Butler Was Suspicious

ranged, lay the set of mechanic's

tools that Henry Ford always. car-| cash crop. ries in one of hs suitcases in crse - ——— a desire to tinker with machinery! For British Zoo

should come over him. The butler, a) very respectable person, knew noth- Shipment Of Wild Animals Sent ing of Mr, Ford and his hobbies From Canada To England

But he had read his Edgar Wallace! From the parks area of Western and thought he knew a first-class’ Canada a shipment of wild animals| burgiar’s kit. when he saw it.| consisting of two female buffaloes, a| Throughout the entire stay at the pair of bears and a pair of beaver is| country house, the butler made it his now en route to England. Donated business to keep a. close watch on to the Dudley Zoological Society, of | Mr, Ford and his kit. | Dudley, Worcestershire, England, by|

| ing,

Airplane Is Now Opening Up A New Mining Frontier In Northwest Territories

Just as the covered wagor aru! pack train of pioneer days carried the tide of ci zation westwar |\the North American continent the airplane of ti lay is opening | & new mining frontier in the Cana lian Northwest rerritories Lot regarded only as a region of ice snow, this vast expanse, which en braces more than one-third of Canada, is now destined to play ar important role in the economic, life of the Dominion due to the introdu tion of aerial transportation. Many areas once almost inaccessible are now within a few hours’ flying time

from large centres of population, and

regiens rich in minerals of economic

importance—radium, copper, nickel

gold, lead, zinc and silver—await the prospector The year 1929 was the turning

point in the affairs of the Northwest Territories, when mineral-exploration companies demonstrated that the air plane could be used to advantage in

these northern latitudes. The range

of the prospector'’s activities had previously been restricted mainly to lands in close proximity to rivers and lakes, and little was known of the

country back from navigable waters

With the advent of acrial trans- portation the movement of the pros- pector became more widespread and the necessity arose for maps far

more detailed than those then avail- able. By resorting to the airplane and the modern science of map-mak- including aerial photography, topographical and geological map- ping were speeded up. In 1930 and 1931, an area of 11,000 square miles to the east of Great Bear Lake was photographed, and, last year, to give the most recent example, an area of 17,500 square miles to the east of Yellowknife River.

Previous to 1929 the principal mineral developments in the North-

| west Territories were the location

and partial development of lead-zinc deposits near Pine Point, Great Slave Lake, and the discovery of oil at a point about fifty miles below Norman on the Mackenzie River,

| where there are now two producing

wells, tions

As a result of aerial explora- carried out in 1929 copper-

| sulphide deposits were discovered in

the area between Great Bear Lake and the Copptrmine River, and this was followed by the notable discov- ery of pitchblende-silver deposits, from which radium is ob ed, at LaBine Point, on the eastern side of Great Bear Lake, in May, 1930. In 1935 gold was discovered near the mouth of Yellowknife River and on

increase, while the output of neigh- borliness diminishes. ;

Unless, that is, the man in .the street—and that means everybody— will co-operate with the scientists by seeking to reduce noise in private life.

One can see to it that one’s radio

| when living at Richmond Palace, Queen Elizabeth used to walk by the river and sit beneath this once stately elm. Then there is a weep- ing willow on the bank of The Pond that was grown from a cutting taken from the tree that overhung Napol- eon's grave at St. Helena.

Toasting A Symbol “The King” And “The President” Command Highest Respect

As to the President's jocular after- dinner remark in Victoria that on

the National Parks Bureau, Lands, Outpost Island, and also in the vic- Parks and Forests Branch, Depayt-|inity of Taltson Riverson the south ment of Mines and Resources, the snore of Great Slave Lake. In the | buffaloes were taken from Elk Island | ¢.) of 1936 a gold strike was re- | National Park and the bears and) ported at Gordon Lake, 50 milés beaver from Jasper National Park. | northeast of Yellowknife Bay, which

After their capture the animals) ..oms likely to rank as one of the

is not loud enough to disturb the next-door's, One can be careful to clowe the car-door at night by the handle, one can avoid carpentry at night, one can talk quietly in res- taurant, one can remember all the time that any kind of interference; with another's pleasure is boorish-| ness and that noise is the most fre- quent interference of all.

Noise, you say, never bothers you? It only worries nervous, over- wrought people? i

‘Well, what makes them nervous) and overwrought?

Noise, as often as not.

It'll get you yet, if you don't help to do something about it.

|

Millions In Paper Money

Summary Shows Large Sum In Hands Of Canadian Public Hidden in teApots or under mat-| tresses, carried ‘about im pockets and purses or deposited in merchants’ tills, more than §$200,000,000 in paper | money is in the hands of the Cana- dian public, aceording to the Septem- ber statist.cal summary of the Bank of Canada. The August average of | note ,circulation, as distinguished | from notes in banks, was $203,000,- | 000, higher than any time since the boom year of 1929, when it aver- aged $205,000,000. In 1935 the total active note issued averaged $169,- 000,000 .

‘_ Phones For Trawilers

The post office has started tele- phone service between British traw!- ers and home ports. Its normal range at sea is about 100 miles, but it may be exceeded under favorable conditions.

A milk bar, opened at an East Wemyss (Scotland) pit-head, is a big guccess.- Miners drink 80 gallons daily.

|at Sandringham, which will include .

| George V. started some years ago. |

One Honest Dollar

The pompous judge glared sternly over hig spectacles at the tattered prisoner, who had been dragged be-) fore the bar of justice on a charge. of vagrancy.

“Have you ever earned a dollar in your life?” he asked in scorn. /

“Yes, Your Honor,” was the re- sponse. “I voted for you at the last election,”

man pettananetpetgegceettngn ce amine a tatiana

alight. If the brigade had not been on the spot with the latest ances within a few minutes, whole of the old cloisters might gone.

Them From Scotland | The sugar maple is one of Am-

Like many landowners in England, erica’s greatest all-purpose trees. the King recruits his gardeners from Scotland, says the Glasgow Bulletin, | which reports that His Majesty has) appointed a Scotsman, Alexander) MacKinnon, as manager of his farms

|

the experimental flax farm King It won't be Mr. MacKinnon s first ex- perience of an English farm. For! the past dozen years he has been manager for the King’s father-in-| law, Lord Strathmore, at St. Paul's, | Waldenbury, the estate on which the! Queen was born and spent so much | of her childhood. |

New Sis Wicanece

Is Transparent To Light But Will Shut Out Heat Production of a glass that shuts out heat is promised in Prague Czechoslovakia, as the result of a) discovery of a Bohemian inventor. | The glass is opaque, or nearly! opaque, to heat. While it is trans-| parent to light it cam be used to ex-| clude heat. Light waves and heat)

\

These kitties will come without /on @ p.cture or pillow. You can see

i i , wavelength, and it is said the inven ally if done in wool.

ter has found out how to prevent |),

the glass ‘color suggestions

i To obtais this pattern send 20 cer When in flight, hawks steer with | to Household Arts Dept.. Winnipeg N

their tails. 2225 | 3

| Ottawa Journal,

These Kittens Are Fun To Stitch

PATTEKN 5719

Color chart and key are | r pattern 5719 you will find a transfer pattern of a kitten 7x9 inches and j}heat waves from passing through | one 8x 9% inches; illustrations of all stitches used; material requirements;

There is no Alice Brooks pattern book published

were subjected to medical tests and all were given a clean bill of health. Special crates weye prepared for the travellers and they were shipped by rail from Elk Island Park, Lamont, Alberta, to Montreal accompanied by| a@ park warden and sufficient food for the train journey. From Montreal) they sailed on the Canadian Pacific ss. Beaverburn, under arrangements

one occasion when toasting “The, King” he did not know whether he) was drinking the health of George VI. or Edward VIII, it is probably true that thousands of people in the) United States who daily toast “The President’ would rather lose a tooth than drink the health of Mr. Roose-| velt. “The King” like “The Presi-| dent” is a symbol, demanding the

highest respect, no matter who is| that they would be fed and tended | -

the occupant of the throne or chair.| by @ member of the ship's crew dur- ing the ocean voyage.

The crates were stored on the deck bamboo tree's stem |°f the steamer and attached to each |was a tag giving full instructions | for the feeding and care of the occu-) |pant. Each of the buffalo requires) |sixteen pounds of hay per day, while | the bears have a’more varied menu |

consisting of two loaves of bread, a | pound of apples, and a pound of car-|

rots daily for each of them. Five)

poplar sticks about two inches in} | diameter by about two feet long and)

a quarter of a cabbage is the daily| | fare of each beaver. Before sailing)

from Montreal a supply of provisions) including faggots of fresh poplar) wood were put on board the vessel. |

, The giant grow’s a foot in a single day.

The conservation and protection of native fauna is one of the primary functions of the National Parks of Canada and under the watchful eye the parks warden service wild in all its forms is being pre-

of life

served for the benefit of this and fulure generations. A Good Salesman

The tailor was selling his best

friend a new suit. |about the garment.

“I'm telling you, Harry,” “that even your best

He was raving

he said,

much coax friend won't

they're waves do not differ in kind but in| single and outline stiteh and you know what little work that is—use them recognize you in that suit. Just take

entirely in

what impressive gifts theyd make a walk outside for a minute and get |

iven in the pattern. the feel of the garment.”

Harry went out and returned a x moment later. The proprietor rush-

i\ts.in stamps or coin (coin preferred) ed up to him. with a happy smile

ewspaper Union, 175 McDermot Ave. “Good morming, stranger,” he

| beamed, “What can I do for you?” |

most important finds in recent years. A nickel and cobalt-bearing mineral deposit has been located a few miles east of the point where the Fran- coils River enters the eastern arm of Great Slave Lake, and a nickel de- posit has also been discovered and staked on the north shore of Rankin Inlet on the west coast of Hudson Bay.

According to recent reports Can- ada’s northern mineral front con- tinues to be the scene of great activity, and aerial transportation companies are busily engaged in carrying freight, supplies, and men to remote areas. In most of the min- ing country of the North there are numerous Jakes which provide suit- able landing for aircraft with floats in summer and with skis in winter

Britons Like Canadian Eggs

Experts Net Large But Sells At A Premium

Canadian eggs abe becoming in- creasingly important in the British breakfast. Agriculture Department officials predicted shipments to Great Britain this fall would be 1,250,000 dozen, a 37 per cent. increase 912,000 dozen last year.

The export season is from wmid- September to the end of November Up to October 2 270,000 dozen had been shipped

Although exports to Great Br.tain are not large, in comparisen with those other countries, Canadian eggs sell at a premium there. Sas- katchewan, Manitoba and Ontario are the chief exporting provinces

Product

from

to

Not Conducive To Sleep

Perhaps the world’s most unique bedroom is that in a tree-top in Kenya. East’ Africa. For a §50

charge, one may lie abed and watch all gorts of wild anmals, including leGpards, elephants, rbinoccroses, and hyenas.

ing

THE REDCLIFF ow

“The Redcliff Review

THURSDAY, NOV 4th 1937

Dennen eee ae TOWN OF REDCLIFF The Local Tax Arrears

Consolidation Act

The Council of the Town of Redcliff has pased a By-law dtclaring that the above Act will be applicable‘to the Town of Redcliff and ssid By-law has been approved by the Ministe: ef Municipal Affairs in writing

All consolidated arrears of taxes shall under this Act be payable by five equal «nnuol installments together the curtrnt taxes on or before the 15th day of December ex- cept as hereinafter mentioned.

The following persons may make application to the Council to come under the provisions ° the above Act.

Any person, firm or corpora- tion who is the owner of any parcel of lend in the Town of Redcliff. against the title og which, there is .ubsiting no.i-

with |

Save yourself hours of hard “scrub board” washing with a modern Westinghouse Cushioned-Action Washer. Designed to wash clothes quicker, better and with less wear. Million-Dollar Mechanism never needs oiling. A real investment. Pull range of models for gasoline or electric power, priced to suit every b

GASOLINE -POWER or ELECTRIC MODELS

See your nearest Westinghouse dealer —or write direct to your nearest Westinghouse branch for prices and information.

y mts meg ® WESTINGHOUSE CO. LIMITED Branch: CALGARY ond EDMONTON

Westinghouse

(ispionid lletion WASHERS

THURSDAY, NOV 4th 1987

Over $40,000,000 worth of Western Farm Products poured into the East last year

In steady work, the industrial -_ poe any a high standard of livi ite for Prairie Province f ffs is insatiable. He and his family are one of the reasons why over $40,000,000.00 worth of Western farm products found a market in the East-last year.

Over $40,000,000.00 is a lot of money: it’s a sum that means much to the West-

127,000 tons of fresh and cured dressed meat, 175,705 head of cattle, 21,144 calves and 41,557 hogs op ge to the East. Nearly 10,000 tons butter brought in 500,000.00 more, = eggs, honey and t commo- ities accounted for an additional aggregate of well over $20,000,000.00.

certo Hl wan: napa beret Pes

fication for arrears under “The ern producer, collectively and indivi-

icultural West: sax Recovery Act 1929, ee ne foc more tusder ‘Bamern workers fin, 4 geben a Mi nein ; i mean a pacts Oe demand on mer ——

na residen own those commissary. 'Y: od mene 4 of Redcliff for 12 in tons | stock, took in over $1s,000,000.00 for —_in-Canada car helps towards this end. n ediately preceeding the date of for’ net Se ek eee Lg Ry ais application jn the case of aha: * ens oes , oo yon hayes iwius Which have been finally brne crom.secdee er tee mein Canad uv auch of the . pusced vy the Town of Redelif For Wigomatlee bi ee inn

. suid, OF = SuCh: = persons persona] representative,

In such cases where ‘the ap- plicant's property is to be expos- ed for sale at the forthcoming Tax Sele on Sept. 15th, 1937, such applicants should make their applications in time for the Council to consider same

AUTOMOT DUSTRIES

Leave Your Order for

Counter Check Books at THE REVIEW OFFICE

plicaio to consolidate is made efter the 5th day of November 1987 the applicant shall alse de- posit with the Secretary Treas urer sufficient to pay the cur-

Get Your Job Printing At The Review Office

ye geting a S. of thousands of Canadian farms and any event . current homes benefit from first mortgage loans year’s taxes shall be paid by the made possible b : he 10th e by the accumulated savings of M aglcant ot of before a No Job Too Big nor None Too Small arte Stach te For every borrower, there are six-4hrifty a for us to handle on the applicant's consolidated people who supply the necessary funds. er it shall be re- This fact affords a striking illustration of

the ‘‘double duty’’ performed by Life Insurance dollars. Not only do they ensure financial security for the men, women and children of

Tn ease the application is not urtanted, provision is meade in saiq Act for an appeal to the

Minister of i mite of Mami Afar. Canada, but they also help to build and finance Leave Your BILLEBADS pp agpcm 8, oat a yg their farms and homes. STATEMENTS mys os any land in respect Life Insurance companies exercise the Orders Here which there is a subsisting greatest care in the selection of properties ‘ax consolidation agreement. : oe ; chi Gites whe iene oome upon which mortgage loans are made. To F or The PRIES Liste Satisfaction under the provisions of the safeguard the savings of policyholders, security TICKETS ebove Act, all procee lings un of princi d interest i 1 cer the Tax Recover; Act 1923 ——— - ts ond must always bo F ollowing pens " yoo ARDS Guaranteed fre suspended in respect to the : . ms popu tedme wide ou. PROGRAMS and Prices

¢.nsolidation agreement is in ree. .

Reasonable

a

The Dominion Government hes planed to .purchase large Guantities of fruit and vegeta- bies for shipping to the drouth seas of Saskatchewan and Al- - berta. The purchase is being meade through the department of agriculture,

AUCTION BILLS

Let the People Know what you have to sell, by ADVERTISING IN THE REVIEW

It Pays to Advertise in The Review

ALL OUR ADVERTISERS SAY 80 .

* A. ted .

Primitive Tribes Of Peru’

Missionary Tells Strange Tales Of)

Life In Jungle

Strange tales of flageliations, | superstitions and exorcising by primi-|

tive full-blooded Indians of the jungles) of Peru were told in Toronto by Mrs. | Ruth Stull, missionary for the Chris- tian and Missionary Alliance, who was attending the annual Bible and) missionary convention. |

Through jungle so savage that) even soldiers dare not venture into} it, Mrs. Stull, with het husband, travels 3,000 miles into the interior) to reach her mission post in the} Amazon valicy. She has been a mis-| sionary there since 1925. |

Their superstitions are strange. | “They believe,” said Mrs. Stull, “that Sickness is only caused by an evil) spirit, but the evil spirit isn’t in the sick person. So they have a prac- tice of healing called ‘Brujo’, to cast the evil spirit out.

“When a tribesman falls sick the | witch doctor takes charge. First of all, perhaps, the evil spirit is sus- | pected to be in some stones. They) are immediately thrown into a fire | to burn. If that doesn’t make the} sick person better, they try some- | thing else. If they suspect a tree, | they'll cut it down. And if that doesn’t work, they resort to some-/| thing very cruecl—the torture of a child,

“They torture the child by giving) it poisoned tea, They don’t want to kill the child—only to cause it ‘most terrible pain. For if the child dies, they have lost the object of their torture. They will have to take an- other child—and they don’t want to kill their children off too fast.

“But finally, if the tea-poisoning makes no difference to the sick per-

son, they shoot the little baby full of arrows, and it dies.”

In this form of torture, she said, the medicine man has absolute con- trol. He may choose any child he likes, and might even choose his own.

Although these strange people are sun-worshippers, she said, they have no happy hunting ground, no heaven. They live in an absolute terror of death.

Death presents a hopelessness to them, for they believe that upon death their spirits will wander around to eternity in the utter dark-

ness of a jungle night.

Jungle messages, she said, are sent very quickly by tom-tom. “Once,” she said, “nine Indians came along to me for work, which my hus- band gaye them to do. Suddenly they came and said they had to go back to their village immediately; they wouldn't say why. But I found out that they had received a relayed tom-tom message from their village,

150 miles away, that their village had been raided and their women stolen.

“There is always continued war- fare over the women,” she said:

“The strongest men kill other men | and take their wives. For their) prestige rises with the number of people they harbor in their home— widows, orphans and friends.

Famous Newgate Bell

Now Warns Of Closing Time In Madame Tussaud’s Galleries

Ye people all who hear me ring

Be faithful to your God and King.

So runs the couplet inscribed on the old toll bell of Newgate Prison, which is to ring once more.

For nearly a century and a half this immense bell was used to notify the good citizens of London when a condemned prisoner had paid the final penalty. From now on its deep

note will reverberate through the) over the sales in the corresponding good train?”

galleries of Madame Tussaud's wax- works at closing time each night, displacing the warning whistles hitherto blown by the attendants, The Newgate bell was bought by| John T. Tussaud in 1903, when vari- | ous relics of the old prison were offered for sale by auction. At the time there was an idea that the) metal had in it a quantity of silver. | The great-grandson of Madame Tus-| saud secured the bell for £100. |

alias kana | Worked Too Fast “Now Madam,” sad the enthusias- | tic salesman, after he had dashed in- to the lady’s house and scattered lint | and sand all over her living room rug, “if you'll be so good as to) attach this plug to a light socket,| I'll show you how quickly this super-| sweeper picks up dirt.” “And if you'd let me say one word! @t the door,” said the lady, handing | @ broom to the salesman, “this| wouldn't have happened. The house! ain't wired for electricity.” Program Was Cancelled Anxious to avoid. exciting school | children over the undeclared Sino- | Japanese war, the British Broadcast-| ing Corporation recently cancelled a Program in which a Chinese and a Japanese were to give their veapec- | tive views of the conflict.

Cae Ove Fed Sepphes

| Ocean Travellers Had To Provision

Themselves 150 Years Ago

In these days when liners become more and more luxurious as well as faster it is interesting to learn from & letter in the London Times what a Quaker missionary woman took with her on a voyage from Liverpool to New York just 150 years ago. At that time the passengers in sailing Ships were not provisioned. They had to carry their own food supplies with them sufficient to last six weeks ot two months, and they were given “light housekeeping privileges” in the cook’s galley. Obviously the difficulties of travel kept the pas- Senger list down to a very few. It was certainly no vacation for a housewife to make an ocean trip in those times because she had to cook for herself and the family if she had one. There were neither berths nor cabins, sleeping accommodation con- sisting of long mattresses filled with straw, with sheets of canvas drawn over the top on posts, men being in one part of the ship and women and children in another.

This good lady, who went over to the United States as an ambassador of goodwill to American members of the Society of Friends, provisioned herself with:

“Thirty fowles, 12 ducks, 4 hams, 2 dozen Maderia wine, 2 bottles Jamaica spirit, keg West India rum, 4 bottles brandy, 2 bottles vinegar, 6 Ibs. rusks, 2 Ibs. maple biscuits, 2 Ibs. gingerbread biscuits, 8 Ibs, rais- ins, % Ib. tea (a great luxury in those days), 2 Ibs. ground coffee, 2 Ibs, chocolate, one loaf sugar, 14 Ibs. Musco sugar, peck cranberries, 2 quarts oatmeal, 6 Ibs, rice, 5 bushels Indian corn and 100 eggs.”

Apparently the Quaker missionary was well fortified with liquors to help her withstand the rigors of sea sick- ness, but it would appear as if that had not been quite enough, for the great-grandson of the lady records | that on the return voyage her Ameri-' can friends supplied her with an even greater quantity. The Society of Friends in days of yore was not, apparently a believer in prohibition. St. Thomas Times-Journal.

In Case Of Emergency

Every Big Liner Is Prepared For Deaths At Sea

I was down at Southampton the! other day to meet several celebrities arriving in this country from Am- erica aboard the Normandie, and one of the most interesting people I met was the ship's carpenter.

While wandering about the luxury liner, I found myself in the carpen-| ter's shop. And there, lying against a bulkhead, lb saw a newly-made coffin. i

The carpenter laughed at my dis- | may. “We're. glad to say that we haven't had cause to use the coffin on this journey,” he said. “But we always have one ready in case of emergency.” '

I learned that, unknown te most ocean travellers, every big liner car- ries a couple of coffins and its ship's doctor is a qualified embalmer, There are not so many burials at sea as be- fore. The relatives of people who die aboard liners prefer, usually, for the body to be landed at the home. port.—Pearson's Weekly.

'

Radio Sales Jump In Saskatchewan |

Production of radio receiving seta in Canada during the second quarter of 1987 numbered 71,237 sets valued at $2,616,742 at factory selling prices. Sales in Saskatchewan dur- ing the quarter under review totalled 5,678, an increase of 876 per cent, |

period of last year. |

Highty-five out of every 100 diners” on @ train ord coffee, while 15 per-| fer tea, according to statistics. |

ngs |

Newsprint used in the United States annually would make a sheet | 450 feet wide reaching to the moon.

2

A POEM IN STONE

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; Final cleaning operations in progress in Henry VIL.'s Chapel of Westminster Abbey before re-opening for pyb- | lie services. The Abbey was closed in January, when preparations were started for the Coronation, and it has| taken nearly four months to bring the ancient edifice back to normal.

Ornamental Vine Useful |

Hardy Kuduz Binds Soil And Re-

In Simple Language

Guide Explained Act Of Union Be-| tween England And Scotland H. B. Ellison, in Christian Science

Literary Edition Of Bible Spelling Modernized And Scriptures builds Impoverished Land | Presented In Clearer Form

An old familiar ornamental vine, The jealously guarded privilege of also in use in the South as a hay and/ the King's Printers and the Univers-

itor, told th ,; Our Seot-! pasture crop since early in the! ity Presses of Oxford and Cambridge | aa ie rg the ~ hank | twentieth cent Jh t’ to! anal / gu waited ancien ury, has been pu’ to print the authorized version of the cesthes tadh wes 0h

work by the Soil Conservation Ser- vice of the Department of Agricul- ture. :

The vine is kuduz, more commonly

Bible has been relaxed for the PTO-| Castle is crowded with memories, duction of a “literary edition.” |

| but th was | The = meee ofition, called. “The! ut there one memory which the |

Bible, Designed to be Read as Lite Sector fees a = Se known throughout the Southeastern) ature,” is aimed at presenting the in 4 without iigbueth . States as “porch vine.” Soil con- | Scriptures is as luminous, compact) jy, a a casdanal hi apenas: : servationists found here ready made! and fitting a form as possible |= ah oe in oon Aegan 4 lush vine that produces a rapid,|. 4 few portions have been omitted, SH sates ae aaa as See arene te anther Gey. 208 including the Book of Chronicles, = Ages both the Scottish and to Southern farm lands. They needed | and parts of the Apochrypha as well the ae Se oie. that would “pay its own as genealogies, Spelling and punctu- one to sit down was an Englishman, | re og ote pia igre Se the | ation have been modernized. then a Scotsman; till they had all and also helping re-| In an introductory 7, Laurence sat down.. And when they rose wu

build solls impoverished by erosion. | Binyon declares that, “though the| ti) 000 «buss, as thoy mee ru |

Kuduz meets these requirements. Bible represents one of the greatest | 4 ; aelt 6 : y In the Southeast it grows under al-| }iteratures of the world it has for! 4 pas wt / most any condition, on rich land or| centuries been studied apart from)” cape Maggs wr gate

: 1 i poor land. Under favorable condi-| its ijterary form and value; the way’ cor cnet sg cde = oo =

i the vine oft se ou =| i : /

ming fac oui bees eal ee it \s printed testified to this | dramatica A murmur ran ‘through| / igerence. | the sight-seeing throng as the Scots-

single season. They take root every |. | do ch /

few feet at the nodes, literally “rop- jan bore down upon the concluding |

| word “togither'r.” i

ing down” the soil. As a legume, An Interesting Fact kuduz restores nitrogen to the soil, ¥¢ |

and for some time has been known | !“t#ers In Names Of Pack Of Cards: as an excellent forage ‘crop. / Total 52 |

| | The following was taken from 4) : | letter to the London Times: Some re-| Doctor Advises Lots Of Candy When _

Formula Is A Secret | markable things have been discover-f They Have Colds

By means of a new solution A. G./ od in connection with & pack of play-| If children have colds give them Hauff, of Fuerbach, Germany, can ing ecards, and the following—new to| Plenty of iollypops, but don’t tell develop and fix photographic film in) meésappears worthy to be added to| them why. or they'll be sick all the) one process. He is keeping the the number: : | time, Dr. H. Harris Periman advised | formula @ secret. The process Write the names of all the cards| doctors attending the State Medical eliminates the necessity of develop- Ace, Two, Three, Four, Five, Six,| Society. convention in Philadelphia.

Good News For Children

ing in one bath, washing in another | Seven, ight, Nine, Ten, Jack,| “The average child is fond of lolly-| and fixing in a third. | Queen, King—add all letters cornet | gether amd you will find they total this form without much persuasion,”

Pussy Passenger: “Is the 4:10 a 52, the numbers of cards in the pack. 3 Still more remarkable-—write the Porter: “Well, people will talk, of names in French: As Un, Duex, Troi,

course, ma'am, but there's nothing Quatre, Cling, Six, Sept, Huit, Neuf,

definitely known ag’in ‘er.” Dix, Valet, Reine, Roi—add all the

= ene letters together, and again you will

sirable.

Britain, flying more airliners than

to-; pops and will partake of candy in| "4Vigation in thipk weather |search into the uses of these rays

he said. “It is useful both as a food, 48 not yet passed much beyond the being high in caloric value, and qn| mportenental wage. tut as umual an encourager of, thirst, which is. de-|

Launches New Era

Lady

Horseshoer Has Started A Portable Blackamith Shop

Mrs. Martha Smith, the lady blackamtih of Greenwich Village, has made an announcement of dous historical import

Mrs. Smith, who weighs 185 and has biceps slightly smaller than a telephone pole, declared sh ha started a portable blacksmith shop She grieved about it a seeming to realize she

tremer

littl not

making

was

history as she gave out the word at her little hotrie-over-a-biacksmith shop at 46 Horatio Street Horses are 80 scarce in New York nov adays,” she said, wistfully that a fellow can't Wait for the horses to come to him; he's got to go to th horses.”

So she's done it, the taffy-haired smithy and her husband, George They've closed the shop downstairs and loaded their tools into an auto Thus they end an epoch, start an era The horses they visit daily to shoe are the first in the world to receive this special service

And Mra. Smith admits that a poem she ran across somewhere in a magazine, called “The Village Black smith,” is old, old stuff

“Out im Michigan,” she said, “my dad has fA blacksmith shop on .a trailer...”

Mrs. Smith is a gentile kindly wo-

}man of 34 who has a chubby face

and wears khaki riding pants and one of her husband's shirts almost

all day long. Horseshoeing is her life, her love. There is a small mule's shoe nailed on the living room wall just below the pictures of two

cows and immediately above a por- trait of Richard Dix, the movie actor Horseshoeing means romance to her, too, for she met her husband in a blacksmith shop and after they were married they set up a little black- smith shop of their own

A horseshoer since she was twelve Mrs. Smith, nee Drew, has developed @ tremendous muscle in her right arm from swinging a two-pound hammer eight to twelve hours a day, She is twenty pounds heavier than her husband and towers above him, She says in the true feminine man- per, however, that he is the superior horseshoer,

They met in Dexter, Mich. when she was shoeing a big Belgian Per- cheron in her dads biackamith shop

Conquering Air Peril Great Progress Being Made In Defence Against Raids

According to a London letter in the Ottawa Journal, not long ago, in the House of Commons, both Mr. Churchill and Sir Thomas. Inskip made mention of the day when the land may once more dominate the air. .Mr. Churchill thought it might be reached within the next decade, and the Defence Minister suggested that even sooner the peril of the air may be removed.

Both remarks were suggestive of some knowledge not shared yet by the public in general, One great ad- vance towards rendering our defence forces able to get the better of air raiders is now known to be provided

| by fog and cloud penetrating ~appar-

atus for the detection of airplanes.

| By the use of a certain series- of

light waves it has now become pos- sible to detect the presence and movement of aircraft obscured from sight by cloud or fog.

In times of peace the new appar- atus will be applied to the service of the airman and sailor as an aid to Re-

with new scientific discoveries, sev- }eral appliances for their practical | application have been invented al-

most s.multaneously.

Developing Selislanes

Green—Now that your son has find they total 52, the number of any European nation except Ger- graduated, has he decided where he cards in the pack. . many, is ninth in the continent's is going to work? | SailSaaanEEE neti commercial fiyng speed list. But)

Brown--Where? He hasnt even. Besides man, only monkeys have) British ‘plans are lower-powered

‘learméd the art of throwing.

Sixty-six men of the “Jose Luis Diez", a Spgniah Government destroyer, at present usder repair in Falmouth Harbor, walked off the vessel follow- ing the appointment of @ new Captain, and were remoyed to Exeter Prison. They entered the patrol wagons without trouble.

Speed Of 87 Miles An Hour Has i Been Attained

The developing of airplanes has been so spectacular that development of sailplanes may be overlooked But these have attaincd an airspeed of | 87 miles per hour a straight line dis- |tance of 313 miles and a height of more than 19,000 feet, records all | beyond these of power planes in | 1911. | A German pilot went into a cloud to gain height and his rate of ascent | imcrenned from four miles a second | to beyond what his variometer wouid

| register. When he was at 16,400 feet j he tried in vain to get out of the

cloud; he was toss«d up and down, thoroughly chilled and bombarded with hail; the climax came when a wing broke off. However, the pilot with difficulty got clear, and de- secended to safety in his parachute From Nature. “Shooting stars” are “meteoroids" before they fall, “meteors” while fall- ing, and “meteorites” after landing en earth, 2220

ee

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PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO

es ice a eed

THE REVIEW, I

Britain Loves Peace

Statesmen Doing Everything They Can To Avert War

It has been impressed upon us several times by authorities that Great Britain today is a morally different empire than the one which entered the World War, Britain, to- day, is determined to keep peace at | practically any cost, even at the cost of losing face among the family of | nations, which she did during the Italian invasion of Ethiopia. The | British hate the very word of “war,” and fhean to use every diplomatic trick to avert a conflict. Britain al- | ways did like peace, but she never |} allowed another power to bluff its

tEDCLIFE, ALBERTA

FROCK WITH GAY COLLAR- VESTER OR SCARF

Ry Anne Adams

| way into a position threatening the supr¢macy of England on the seas. But the Great War changed things. London is now quite sure that the rest of the empire will not follow the home country into any war | Which might come along, and the people have given notice that it | would have to be a pretty serious | affair before they céndescend to fight jon foreign soil. A greater navy is being built, yes, but Britain must re- main supreme on the seas if the em- pire is to be kept intact. The navy is England's life line. The main fact is Britain’s fighting courage and de- termination for peaceful solutions to world problems, rather than turn- ing to war-like measures at any provocation, To-day, Great Britairi is faced with double trouble—in the Mediterranean and in the Far East. In the inland sea, she is making a stolid stand for safe neutral ship- ping, and has succeeded in making} rather. peaceful negotiations with | Italy, the power threatening British supremagy. In the Orient, she has recently been forced to take a verit-| able slap in the ‘face from Japan, whose aviators shot the British at-| bassador. Tokyo merely said, “So, sorry,” and the British Parliament accepted it. Great Brtain has been tried almost to the limit of endur-| ance, but has kept her head well. It! is suid by some that her empire is decaying, and it perhaps is true that the imperial line is not as strong as' once it was. YetNBritish statesmen deserve praise for continually seck-! ing the peaceful path in a forest of | armaments and bayonets. Eternal peace may be an impossible Utopia, | but the efforts of Great Britain, leading with the United States, may yet produce order out of the chaotic

WORLD HAPPENINGS pape hie Soft Coal Smoke In Cities Said To Be Weight Reducer Lieut. William Ronald Harley of| Weight reducer, an ally of pneu- the Royal Air Force was killed when monia and bronchitis and a cause of éuring naval manoeuvres off the| This medical report was published northeastern Scottish coast. in the American Journal of Public annual meeting of the American mente rom eae cing content| Pulle Health Associaton first time, separated the effects of gon Square Garden, New York, the th common fuels, bituminous, Soviet Russia announced its first orl y direct secret election of a national | was found in anthracite and coke. legislative body will be held Dec. 12 The study was made on rats, mice ron of the Allegheny General. Hespital. Commander 8. D, A, Grey, London,| The animals lived in chambers con- Grey,” fell to his death from a ninth| tions breathed by humans, but the floor window when fixing a radio) concentration was higher and more General Erhard Milch, secretary of| mals living in smoke free chambers, state in the German air ministry, de-| the rats in the anthracite air gained ranks among the finest in the world,| coke air the rats gained 14 per cent. after witnessing French aerial units|/In bituminous smoke their weight It is understood one battalion will| control animals. be added to each of the three regi-| This however, did not mean that Northern Ireland the Inniskiling| cause more weight. For rabbits Fusiliers, the Irish Fusiliers and the| slowed their weight increase in all Canada will have a pavilion at the| worst for them was soft coal, which 1938 Scottish Empire Exhibition at|cut them down by 91 per cent.

constant. ‘Compared with other ani-|.

mess in which the world finds itseif to-day.San Francisco Argonaut, A Ten-Minute Warning All Londoners Would Have In Event! Of Air Attack

The civilian population of London, would receive only ten minutes actual warning of an air attack, in. the event of war, before the invad- ing aircraft reached their objective. | Major H. Stuart Blackmore, Chief Medical Officer of the Air Raids Pre-

cautions Department, British Home Office, made this statement at the

A frock you'll really “live in”— this bound-to-be-admired stylester, and it’s from a pattern so easy to

make, that you won't rest until! use “pretending we could seclude our-

| SPICE UP VERSATILE TAILORED |

} junior board of trade. presents “We shall increasingly have what! TOPICS you might call public utilities cor-| ' porations under government control! of and managed executively by private VITA L

| authority and the British Broadcast-|

| public utilities was foreseen on an|

Business And Public Affairs |

Lord Tweedsmuir Foresees Changes For The Future Development of government-con- trolled but privately-managed insti- tutions bordering on the form of|

Wealth

increasing scale by Lord Tweeds-} muir in an address before Montreal)

citizens,” he said. “In England you | have examples of this in the central

electricity board, the Port of London

INTEREST| & | by DR. J. W. S. MECULLOUGH

| ing Corporation. And I feel that that

| expedient is destined to be increas-|

| be if we are to have a really effec-|

|

you've at least two different ver-|

sions in your wardrobe. Business or “home” girl will be delighted with the versatility of Pattern 4524, for whether you wear it with dashing, contrasting colar-vestee ‘'n’ cuffs or tuck in a jaunty scarf at the neck- line, this Anne Adanis model is in perfect taste at all times! Wouldn't you like your version in wool or synthetic?

Pattern 4524 is available in misses’ and women’s sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 takes 2% yards 54 inch fabric and 1 yard 39 inch contrasting fabric. Illustrated ene sewing in- structions included.

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 Dept. Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 175 McDermott

Ave. E., Winnipeg.

Might Be Good Idea

Official Of Syracuse University Thinks Governments Should Advertise More

Governments should advertise more, William E. Mosher, director of the school of citizenship and public affairs, Syracuse University, told the civil service assembly of the United States and Canada in Ottawa.

“There is a dearth of interpreting to the public what the government is

BRIEFLY TOLD The soft coal smoke of cities is a his plane crashed into Moray Firth| “brosis in the lungs. Jerry Ambler, Calgary cowboy, Health in connection with the 66th world championship rodeo at Madi- The medical smoke test, for the anthracite and coke. Little harm when @ new supreme Soviet will be| anq rabbits by Lucy Schnurer, M.D., 48, wartime fiyer called “Daredevil taining smoke in the same propor- serial, clared France's military aviation) five per cent. more in weight. In in action at Rheims. gain was 25 per cent. less than the ments of the territorial army in|coke and anthracite are sure to Ulster Rifles. three kinds of smoky air, Far the Glasgow with a ground floor area of

largest numbers of uncom-

24,000 square feet, Mayor James G.| Plicated pneumonias and of cases of Parmelee, deputy minister of trade| bronchitis appeared in the animals and commerce, said after returning in soft coal smoke.

from Europe.

Ramsay MacDonald, back in Lon-

Gon after a long holiday in Scotland,

Wealthy Man’s Bensfactions

recently observed his Tist birthday,| Lord Nuffield Gives Large Sums To

Physicians have counselled the former prime minister against re-

Worthy Causes In England Lord Nuffield has announced a

suming work too early after his long| second gift of £300,000 ($1,490,000)

period of poor health,

The Greatest Danger

Good Straight Road Seems To Be| ment fund, the income from which is

Temptation To Drivers

When you e 700 highway accidents and find that 255 of them occurred on straight-away stretches and only 125 at admittedly danger- ous curves, you do not have to go far to find the only possible explana- tion, which is excessive speed. Bar- ring a few plain lunatigs, the very great majority of drivers take such hazards as bad curves, hill crests, ete,, with a certain degree of chu- tion. But the wide-open modern road, properly surfaced, marked and banked, is too much of a temptation for a multitude of people who are in teo much of a hurry even to think.

That is why the majority of acci-|

dents happen where there is least excuses for them.—Montreal Star Berries Grown On Desert Tons of raspberries and other fruit have been grown in Kara Kum, the black desert east of the Caspian Sea in Russia. This has been reported te Moscow by Soviet acientists who were in charge of the cultivation of

the products in soil previously be-|

lieved to be barren.

Although coyotes choose special places to met and yelp their weird gongs, they never use the same meet- ing place twice in succession.

There are 6,657 miles of railways within the borders of the state of Oklahoma.

to the Radcliffe infirmary at Oxford.

Lord Nuffield previously had given £150,000 to the hospital. The second donation is in the form of an endow-

designed to raise the standard of the

£50,000 to the rebuilding fund of the! hospital for sick children in London} and £15,000 to the Princess Eliza-) beth orthopaedic hospital, Exeter. The philanthropist’s benefactions| in the last 11 years total some £8,- 000,000, including a gift of £2,000,000 te Oxford University for endownsent of a post-graduate wchool of medical | research and £2,000,000 for relief of | the distressed areas. | Retriever Was Smart ;

“The other day. a true retriever! gave a remarkable display of the) | bloodhound’s special gift. A lady lost) 'a much-valued comb in a hay field A retriever, which she did not know,) was summoned to the search. He) | was made to smell the lady's hand|

Sanitary Inspectors’ Conference at! doing,” Mosher said. “Public author- Brighton. He added that ‘the net-| ities are almost entirely lacking in work of observation posts being con-| appreciation of the necessity ‘of in- structed all over the country would forming the public of plans or ac- enable a preliminary warning of, complishments.”

something like 20 minutes to be! Government authorities should con- given. But the warning would not, sult large advertisers, the Syracuse be specific—it would only be a gen-| professor suggested. They could find eral warning to an area to get “on)\ out how toothpaste and powder were its toes.” The actual warning of | sold and “a lot could be learned the imminence of attack was bound) from those boys.”

to be much shorter than that, and

it was possible that at the outside

it was likely to be ten minutes, St.

Eating To Music John's college students in —_—_— Annapolis, Md, soon may have Mother: “Bob, why: is Johnny cry-| languid waltzes for breakfast, leis-

ing?” urely foxtrots for hunch, and meas- Bob: “Because I'm eating my/ured military marches for dinner. cake.” Miss Georgia Smith, college dietitian, Mother: “Is his own cake fin- decided the boys had been eating too ished 7"

fast. She is arranging to have slow Bob: “Yes, and he cried while I music in the dining hall to slow the was eating that, too!” | pace.

“ON THE PLAYING FLELDS"-—-OF CANADA i —_— 4

| first and then told to seek. After) jhalf an hour's diligent search he! lcame to hand with the missing| article!

Returning To Oxford The Hon. Alastair Buchan, who has been visiting his parents, Their Excellencies the Governor-General land the Lady Tweedsmuir for the }past few months, sailed inthe Duch-

| eas of York from Montreal for Eng-

Oxford University to resume his

This is not a scene from the Oriental war area. These lads are believed | land. Mr. Buchan will return toto be the only Japanese rugby players in Canada. They are Johnnie Nomura

(left) and Cliff Tompuye, both on the line-up of a Regina high school team.

studies. 2225 | Tonouye was borm in Moose Jaw and Nomura in Alberta.

|

|

lhave never tried artificial ice-rink

|

ARTICLE No. 14

ingly followed in the future. It must Treatment Of Cancer No. 2

The wise surgeon does not depend tive administration.” }on his art alone in the treatment of

Speaking to the board of trade) cancer, In appropriate cases he em- members on the relation of business! pjoyy the auxiliary measures of to public affairs, His Excellency said xray and fadium. In an ever-in- the relation was “closer than €Ver| creasing number of cancers the before. Public affairs mean @ great) treatment is a combination of all deal to business men since there is no department of life the govern- ment does not enter.”

Political knowledge in the past was in the hands of a highly ex- Forty-two years ago a German pert but small number of men, he! professor in the University of Wurz- said. The ordinary man know little) burg, Bavaria, discovered a new kind of such things. But to-day “there) of ray of light while engaged in his are s0 many expert departments) exneriments, This ray, known as they cannot be entrusted to small) ep. X, or Roentgen ray, has the numbers. Government must devolve/ power of penetrating most sub- on a large number of experts. Not! stances, of leaving the shadow of a on royal commissions but on men! dense object on a photographic plate, who do actual executive work, be-| of pringing about chemical reactions cause many matters of national con-| ang of producing changes in living cern are business matters.” matter.

Business and public affairs were) The X-rays are generated by ee le

three methods. In all cases early treatment is essential to success. Neglected cancer is invariably and inevitably fatal.

intricately interwoven and it Was no ing a current of high potential ce : tricity) through a vacuum tube selves, as our grandfathers did, by (Coolidge tube), that is a tube of saying ‘we don’t bother about public/ special character from which the

airs’,” air has been removed, These rays

PE TRG. RD ACE TT are used in the taking of photo- A Remarkable Machine graphs of various parts of the body, such as pictures of bones, of foreign Examination Papers Of Georgia) bodies such as bullets or calculi, By University Graded By Robot means of X-rays the functions of Rob the Robot has just completed| such organs as the heart, lungs, flawless grading of 20,000 freshman/ stomach, intestines, etc., may be ex- placement examjnations for Georgia's|amined. They are used in treating University system. conditions such as lupus, eczema, Rob is a mechanical professor per-| cancer and many others. fected by a national machine com-| The X-rays are very powerful. pany and educational foundations.| They will pass through cardboard, During ten days, he took the ex-| cloth and wood with ease, They will amination papers from all the schools) penetrate a thick plank or a book in the state's university system, ab-| of 2,000 pages. But metals such as sorbed them in toto and reassembl-| iron, copper, lead, silver and gold are ed them in piles along with the! less penctrable, the densest of them score. being fairly opaque. White flesh is The robot works by electricity,| very transparent to the rays; bones “reading” pencil marks on standard| are rather opaque, and one may see test forms of the true-false or selec-| the bones of one’s hand if the lat- tive question variety, During the 10 ter is interposed between the source days, said F. 8S. Beers, university| of the rays and a screen. examiner, this monster accomplished| Cancers accessible to the effects work which formerly required the! of X-rays are destroyed by them, the combined two weeks’ efforts of some | effect being similar to that produced 200 persons throughout the state. by the rays of radium. The dose Here is how the cold-hearted grad-| can be accurately measured, In some ing machine works: cases a large dose is used; in others The examination paper, on which) the total dose is divided ‘over a the freshman has penciled his “X" | period of weeks, fractioned, it is mark in either a “yes’ or a “no"/ called. Needless to say, skill and column, is inserted in the machine. experience are quite as necessary in Electrode blades inside Rob descend| the handling of X-rays as in surg- on the paper and record the posi-|ery, The X-rays are dangerous in tion of the mark. The blade then re-| unskilled hands; they are quite safe lays an electric impulse to a record-|when used by the experienced

ing meter which adds up, calculates) radiologist, Next article: Treatment of Cancer

and registers the grade.

Learning Figure Skating

Princess Elizabeth Is Resuming Yer Lessons In London |

Since the Court returned to Lon-| don, Princess Elizabeth has resumed | her skating lessons at a well-known | ice-rink, and is likely to be accom- panied by Princess Margaret. Prin-' cess Elizabeth began her lessons last season and made remarkable pro- gress. So far, she has learnt only the straightforward movements, but If you are 40 years old and Dr. J.

she has been promised attempts at), sestzier, of the sociology depart- figure-skating, and also the waltz on} nent at Nebraska University, is the tes... The King and the Queen | right, you may. have had 18 ances- tors who were grownups during the | Revolutionary War, 512 who flourish- ed when the Mayflower came over, 524.288 who were walknig the Earth |when King John signed the Great | Charter, and more than eight million | (without allowing too much for dup- Valuable Picture | lications) who were contemporaries Believed to be 6500 years old, a'of William the Conqueror. Isn't Flemish triptych is priceless as far! genealogy grand! Detroit Free as its owner, E. E. Callen of Sydney,| Press. New South Wales, is concerned. A eaten similar ne in the Melbourne Na-| Something New In Baseball

(guile

Look Up Your Ancestors

Proéfessor At Nebraska University Has Figured Out Some News

skating, but a few years ago, when the weather provided frozen ponds and lakes in England, their Majes-| ties skated both at Virginia Water and at Buckingham Palace.

tional Gallery may be worth $500,-| Just before the umpire yelled , experts say, but they decline to “play ball” in the play-off between place a value on Callen’s altar pic-) the Christian and Baptist teams of

ture. He says that it has been in the church league in Hutchinson, his family 50 years, and probably; Kansas, the Rev. Claude J. Miller was stolen from @ church 250 years) stepped to home plate and offered a ago. |prayer that there be no bickering apace between players and umpires. The Loses Bark But Keeps Bite | Rev. J. J, Pre Vol, of the Baptist Karisruhe Gretel, Buffalo's bark-| church, added an amen. The game less dog, is in the doghouse again.’ was played amicably and the Chris- This time the 4-year-old Doberman tians won, 5-4. Pinscher is charged with biting and| —_—_-—-——- will ‘be kept under observation to see| A list of awards to movie person- if she has rabies. The dog whose| ages since 1921 shows Walt Disney bark led to snipping her vocal cords,| the most frequently remembered. It has been doing all her talking in a| was Mr. Disney, you recall, who in- tiny squeak since last December. vented a better mouse.

4

| | |

THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA

Be Careful About Children’s Colds TREAT THEM PROVED WAY

More mothers use VapoRub than any other medication of its kind—they have proved it by use in their own homes. It was jfur- ther proved in the world’s largest colds- clinic. No “dosing”— just massage VapoRub on throat, chest, and back at bedtime. Almost at once, fits poultice-and-vapor action starts to loosén phiegm, relieve irrita- tion and coughing, help break local

congestion. - ten, by morning icCKS the worst of the

cold is over. VapoRus

WHAT HO!

By RICHARD CONNELL

By Arrangement With Thomas Allen, Publisher, Toronto.

CHAPTER I.

“Pop. 109,001," remarked the last census, speaking of Bear Falls, which nésties, surrounded by tall corn and plump pigs, in the midriff of Iowa.

Ten thousand of those who lived, moved and had their being there, were the usual More-or-Lessera, They were more or less prosperous, more or less virtuous. They possessed more or less intelligence, beauty and charm and were more or less happy, more or less sad. They had

the standard quota of health and)

hope, the usual stock of assorted dreams and desires. So much for the ten thousand. The odd one was Ernest Bingley.

If, by design or mistake, you chanced to be in Bear Falls, you might not have been able to tell its Main street from the chief thorough- fare of Bellows Falls, Vermont, or Klamath Falls, Oregon. It was lined with the familiar facades, peopled with the familiar faces, One shop alone was unique. It was a small, neat establishment, with a leaded glass bow-window. It was sand- wiched in between the Bijou-Dream Movie Theatre (Bank Nite Thurs- day), and the opulent Elite Bootery conducted by Mr. Caleb Slocum. It flaunted no garish signs, but bore a small brass plate with the legend

IVANHOE PET SHOP AND TAXIDERMY Ernest Bingley, Sole Prop.

On a fair and tingling fall day the

sole prop. was practicing his art in

the room at the rear of his premises what will the customer think?”

which he called his studio. A blue

quarters. The curious mid-west sun,

pering through the wide north-light window beheld a scene which was a

About the place were strewn odd bits and pieces of creatures feathery, furry and piscatorial, the head of a hawk, the skeleton of a sunfish, the skin and fleece of a lamb which would gambol no more in some green Iowa pasture.

With a piece of chamois Ernest Bingley deftly polished a surprising-

ly life-like glass eye and backed off| she threw a fit the first time she

to survey, critically, his masterpiece to date. :

It was a horse, a tall, able-bodied, handsome horse, s0 cunningly mount- ed that he seemed to be charging, full gallop, at some invisible barrier. Ernest gave a little sigh of satisfac- tion. No connoisseur of stuffed herses could, he felt, cavil at his handiwork.

He patted the horse's muscular neck.

“Easy, boy, easy,” he said.

Moved by some sudden fancy, he

began, inexpertiy, to clamber up on) Ernest.

the broad back of the stationary

steed, But just as he settled into! cum. the phantom saddle and gathered up/ haven't you?”

the imaginary reins, @ second notion’

;

IN UP-TO-DATE STABLES

strudk him, and he dismounted. ite | shucked off a stained and rumpled | smock ,and donned, as more appro- | priate, a well-worn henna hued tweed | coat. His eye lighted on a bamboo fish-pole dusty frotm disuse. This he seized and again he mounted the| horse.

|

| Grasping the pole in his right hand

he pointed it straight ahead, like a)

j lance, roweled the flanks of his| | charger with unseens spurs, and) | Cried, in ringing, defiant tones,

“What ho, varlet! Have at you,

Sir Brian duBois Gilbert! You'll rue) the day you dared cross lances with | a Bingley.” :

His. jousting was interrupted by a

} Sound behind him, He whipped his. eyes around and saw, in the door- way, a brief, paunchy man, goggling at him, pop-eyed.

| “Oh, hello, Mr. Slocum,” said) | Ernest, and the pink on his neck did not come from the sunset.

“Snakes alive, Ernie, what's got) into you now?” demanded. Mr. Slo-) cum. | “Well, you see,” explained Ernest, | he looks so life-like, I sort of | thought I'd take a ride

Mr, Slocum wagged a disapprov- | ing toupee. | “Do you want folks to think you! got hoot-owls in your attic?” he in- | quired.

“No,” gaid Ernest. “I don't.” “Well, if anybody saw you fishing | and hollering on a dead horse they might think you didn’t have all your buttons,” stated Mr. Slocum.

“I guess some people think that | already, said Ernest Bingley.

“So they do, Ernie, so they do,” returned Mr. Slocum cheerfully. “Well, I can't stay away from my store very long. Got your camera ready?” .

"Yes. There it is, on the work bench, under that porcupine.”

“How do you want me to take you?” queried Mr. Slocum, as he gingerly untangied the camera from the porcupine.

“Just like this,” said Ernest, from the horse.

“Pole and all?”

“No.” The pole ctattered to the floor, Ernest sat erect, his arms folded across his chest, and a stern, equestrian look in his hazel eyes.

“Shoot,” he said.

“Well,” observed Mr. Slocum, as) he aimed the camera and squinted along its sights, “I'm only doing this to help out a neighbor, but if I was @ young businessman, trying to win trade, I wouldn't go round having my picture taken on stuffed horses. In business you always got to ask:

| | | i

“Mine will think it is a real horse,” said Ernest, and added, “I hope.”

“Click!” went the camera shutter.

“Of course,” went on Ernest, “T'll tell them the truth, When they see what a natural job I made out of Tartar maybe I'll get more orders, I need 'em.”

“I can’t deny,” said Mr, Slocum, “that Tartar looks real enough to eat oats; but I doubt if you'll ever get rich stuffing horses in this part of Iowa, They'll never be a popular number around here, Too unhandy. Just what is Otis Wyncoop going to do with this critter, now that he has him?”

“Mr. Wyncoop plans to keep him in his den, I understand,” said Ern- est “Tartar was his favorite hunter, you know.”

Mr, Slocum emitted a faintly equine snort.

“Hunter!” he exclaimed. “If that don't beat all get-out! Say, when I first knew Ote Wyncoop the only hunting he ever did was for jobs. And that wife of his! Why, say, Ernie, many'’s the time, twenty, twenty-one years ago she served me an order of ham and down at the America House. Armina Dietz she was ‘then and go fresh from the farm

saw a trolley-car. And now you can blister me from top to bottom if she doesn't sail past my store, all mink- ed up and her snoot in the air, to g

to Chicago to buy her shoes. Is that)

civic? I ask you.”

“It must be fun to be rich,” said Ernest.

“Well,” said Mr. Slocum, “if I was a millionaire and had made my money in sausages I'd never have a stuffed horse in my den. ‘It might give folks ideas.”

“If I was rich, I'd travel,” said

“What for?" demanded Mr, Slo- “You've been to Kansas City,

“Once.” “Well, if you've seen one big town,

| you've seem ‘em all,” said Mr. Slo-

cum. “I me to go to England,” said Ernest.

The owner of the Elite Booterie pursed his lips and made a “Teck, tck, tck” sound. :

“Maybe they're right,” he said. “Maybe you are a bit touched up- stairs. How long have you had this nutty idea, Ernie?”

Ernest Bingley colored as @ man does when some secret dream is touched. 2225

OH, I DON'T KNOW AND EI DON'T CARE! MY HEAD ACHES.+» AND SLEEP NIGHTS .--- PLEASE LEAVE ME ALON

1 NEVER

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BOING TO HAVE A TALK —" ViTH THAT GIRL!

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“Just about always,” he replied.

“Don't be a loon, Ernie,” said Mr. Slocum. “It would be throwing money away. Take my advice and save up and get yourself a car, a

‘Something New In Pictures

Double Sound Track Is Film A new talking movie film in which

Used In

bungalow, a radio and a wife, and) the actor's voice moves around the! settle down, You got the makings! screen with his figure was demon. |

of a nice little business here. If you did less mooning around and got out and mixed with folks more you could build it up to something mighty sweet. How moping off to the ends of the earth would help trade I don't

“Oh, it’s just a wish,” said Ernest. “Probably I'll never be able to afford to go abroad, or any place, Thanks for taking my picture, Mr. Slocum.”

“Ernie,” said Mr. Slocum, “I got @ proposition to make to you.”

Ernest slid down from the horse and endeavored to look shrewd and businesslike.

“I shall be glad to entertain it,” he said,

“My boy, Luther,” said Mr, Slo- cum, “has no head for shoes.”

“Beg pardon?”

“My Fred has, my Roy has, my Len has,” said Mr. Slocum, “but not Luther, He just hasn't got the gift.

pairs of six dollar shoes, and some hosiery, That,” said Mr. Slocum,

strated to the Society of Motion Pic-| ture Engineers in New York,

If the screen figure spoke from the left of the picture, his voice came from the left side of the house, The answer of a figure on the op- posite side of the screen came from the right side of the house. If the | actor moved back from the front of

Museum At Louisburg Seaport Town Once Held The Key To North America Events in the 18th century strug- gle between England and France for possessions in America were re- called at Louisburg when Lord Tweedsmulr dedicated the Federal museum at this Nova Scotia seaport town which once held the key to

North America.

His Excellency stood over the ruins of what was once called the “Dunkirk of America,” the strongest French fortification on this side of

the picture his voice receded with his! the Atlantic before it finally fell into

figure.

‘The new film uses a double sound track for the first time, to produce the “stereophonic” sound, and was announced as the first commercial film of its kind. These lifelike sound effects have been produced in laboratories for several years. Ex- pense has kept them from being adopted by movies.

Given Royal Titles Name Of Indian Family Too Difficult

palefaces’ hospital, “The Prince of Wales” was born

English hands in 1758, and formally declared open the museum which houses relics of the famous siege.

Hundreds braved the wind-driven rain to hear the ceremony. It was “vital timt you should ‘use every memorial to make history live for generations,” for “a visual memorial is a tremendous thing, far more illuminating ‘than the most eloquent words,” the Governor-General said, It was a “sure guarantee of stability and success in the future.”

Why, say, only yesterday he let a To Pronounce

customer get out of the store with a| “The Prince of Wales” was con- Traffic Control

pair of three-fifty ties on, when he valescing at Port Townsend, Wash- t tes T should have sold her at least two! ington, after @ week's illness in the| “Vt Supervises =e ‘om vole

The most important traffic control

“convinced me that Luther has rio 76 years ago on the site of what is in gyhetnes ——= yocation in the shoe line. So I want | Port’ Townsend's busiest corner and ple i » a Pas a8 gy ieount Wea to set him up in some business where! is the last of the hereditary chiefs) MO” | Os | ao 5 Plex {t don't count against you if you!of the fast-dwindling tribe of Clal- y , ,

I'll do, Ernie. I'll give you five thou- sand, spot cash, for this shebang, with its stock, fixtures and good will, Is it a deal?” =

“Tt is not,” said Ernest, firmly.

“With five thousand you could go round the world till you were dizzy,” argued Mr. Slocum, “You'd have to stuff half the horses in the state of Iowa to make that much. Is it a deal?”

iNo,” said Ernest. just the same.”

“Thank you

“You need not expect me to tilt:

the ante,” said Mr. Slocum. thousand is my offer, leave it.”

(To Be Continued)

“Five Take it or

THE MIKADO (REVISED VERSION)

dawdle around some. Tell you what lams.

Early settlers gave him his prince- ly title because they found his tribal name, Lahanim, too difficult to pro- nounce. Similarly they christened

‘this father “The Duke of York,” his

mother “Queen Victoria” uncle “King George.”

and his

Will Hold Its Own

A prediction that the trans- oceanic aeroplane would never take the place of the steamer came from Frederick W. Whitehead, British aeroplane motor manufacturer, and designer of the trans-Atlantic flying boats Cambria and Caledonia. White- head said plane travel would always be expensive——“beyond the reach of the ordinary traveller.”

ter-mind” traffic control system, which will regulate the 60,000 vehicles that ebb and flow along its seven main arteries every twelve hours.

The new system enables the density of the traffic on the roads leading into the Qircus to be con- stantly measured and the times of the signals to be regulated accord- ingly by a ,master-timer, Four vehicle activity-controllers will oper- ate in the main Cireus and two

Little Helps For This Week

Wherefore seeing we also are com- passed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight and the sin that doth eo easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us. Hebrews 12:1,

Could we lift the veil between, Could we for a moment witness Those unnumbered hosts that

Calm and bright on either hand; What a joyful hope would cheer, What a faith serene would guide

us,

Great may be the ager near,

Greater are the friends beside us.

We are compassed about with @

cloud of witnesses whose hearts.

throb in sympathy with every effort and struggle, and who thrill with joy at every success. This thought should check every worldly feeling and unworthy purpose and enshrine us in an atmosphere of heavenly peace, They have overcome, have risen, and are glorified, but they re- ‘main our comforters in every hour of darkness. They also grieved, doubted, and struggled, but in their victory we see the certainty of our own,

Reporter Had Difficulty Finding Data On Bomb Explosion

Recently, says Neal O'Hara in the New York Post, a reporter on @ New York morning dally tried to dig up clippings in the paper’s reference library on the Wall Street bomb ex- plosion of some 15 years ago in which 386 persons were killed. But looking through the filing system under “Explosions,” “Disasters,” “Bombings” and “Wall Street,” he couldn't find a thihg. The envelope of clippings finally turned up under

others at the junction of Lower Re-| ‘he beading of “Mishaps.

gent street with Jermyn street and)

Shaftesbury avenue with Windmill street. The master-timer, however,

Zoo Ostrich Was Clever Polly, the Cincinnati Zoo's prize

will act as a robot supervisor over! ostrich, was her own fire department the ‘whole system.—Industrial Bri-| when a visitor carelessly tossed @

tain,

A Real Racket

burning cigarette on her back. She went into an auguished version of the Highland Fling. Before keepers could reach her with a fire ex-

Mahatma Gandhi Has Clever Way|‘suisher, however, Polly, stepping

To Collect Money

the date is announced beforehand, crowds throng the station to receive his blessing. A few minutes before the train is due to leave Gandhi ap- pears at the window of his third class compartment, gives his bless- ing, tells them: all contributions will be gratefully received. Immediately, there is a shower of notes, coins, of every denomination. At every station on the journey, however small, the train stops, the same happens. Cavalcade.

The California palm saves its old leaves from year to year and droops them over its trunk as a protective covering. :

Just ask yourself as you step on the gas whether it is a matter of life and death whether you pass that other car in freet

high in pain, reached around with

When Gandhi is leaving a town, | BAF long neck and plucked out the

urning tail feathers with her bill.

UNBRUATIN

NIGHTS

Se aeey

up You Tok "Ht ~ seg’ hldtaye

mi

GIN PILLS

LADIES’

SMART COATS

CHAMOIS LINED Special $13.95

Lewis’ Bargain Store Medicine Hat

MONARCH

Medicine Hat NOW SHOWING Thurs. Fri., Sat.

Nov. 4, 5, 6 Patsy Kelly, Lyda Roturti, Rbt. Armstrong IN

‘Nobody’s Baby’

of Mirth AND TWO HITS

‘Man of The People’

with Joseph Calleir, Florence Rice Ted Healy

» elie

See eee eee eeeeseeeee

sous WAKES

Made to Measure Suits and Overcoats

Our Prices Range

Mon. Tues. Wed. Nov. 8, 9, 10

Robt. Montgomery, Reslind Russel

IN $17.06, $19.96, $22.96 sate - $24.95, $27.95 Night Must Fall FP The Drama that Stuns and Made-to-Measure

| Prices Range Same as Men's

| BOND’S CLOTHING | AND HAT SHOP

| | 218 Ry, St. Medicine Hat

Shocks Every Audience With

Danie May Whitty and Allan Marshall

Lang Bros., Ltd.

INSURANCE Fire, Accident,” Take Care of Your Work ae Life, Sickness Tin Work and 651 2nd St. Medicine Hat

Telephone 3554

Plumbing MARSH PLUMBING, LTD.

650 Third 8t. Medicine Hat

#e@eeseeeeaeeeannee

A.E WARD M.D.

Get Ready For the Cold Weather

We have'a Fine Line of

Storm Doors and Windows

made to Any Size

Fr x Q a

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fad @e@eeweeeeeeenenae ° AtR able Prices * KEETLEY JOHNSON * * For Accident, Fireand * $ The Gas City . Sicknesg Insurance . . . rus & Fidelity, Bands | Planing Mill 7th Street, Redcliff 812 Fire Si Medicine Hai eee eeeneeeeeeeeaee

+ -.+,+,_+_?¢+,+,*+,_¢,*

Phene 2160 LEVINSON’S Phone 2160

Our New Store is Now Open Next Door to our Fur and Hide Store, 318 S. Rly. ' Opening Special Fur or Cloth Coate Relined for $5.00

Not assciated with any Fur Repair Shops in Medicine Hat

314 South Railway St.

——re

THURSDAY, NOV 4th 1937

SeSseeeeeeeeseeeeerereee

ROXY

Today-.Friday

NORMA

|

.” rans |

| Interesting Local Items

Don’t miss the Sunday night

> concert at Cliff Hall Men’s Leather Coats

Le Page’s Store News

This black Sheepskin Leather Coat in the

e Manted Glider Style, wind proof sleeves, Patton style, Wool Linned, Extra Value $9.50 Miss Fern Rindahl left last HEARER For those who want a heavier coat see those week-end for Minneapolis to S Black 3-4 length coat. Heavy wool lining, $9 50 -isit relatives. tttaliynanen Fur Collor, All Sizes, Extra Value at _ tenant ae . liere's Value in Fine All Wool and © Sik Ov : Mr and Mee R Moore tett test? “PRIVATE Ladies Hose and Silk Over Wool howe in Qe Sunday for B C where they will esason’s new shades, sizes 84, to 104, a Pair eside in future, LIVES” . Sturdy little boots for the emal- Children 5 Boots ler child; made from black calf Mr and Mrs B’ Coverdale, of with leather in a rodmy fitting Inst, sewn leather soles

nd rubber heels

he tt... « Sele

Calgary spent a few days here this week as guests of Mr and

Robt. Montgomery

Apposum Coats this price All «i

About 25 members of the Med icine Hat Ladies Auxiliary paii their annual visit to the local Auxiliary here last Tuesday afternoon. The meeting was teldin LOOF hall where a program was conducted after which refreshments were served

. . .

FOR RENT:— Two roomed suite with bath and toilet. Ap- ply to Redcliff Greenhouse,

* * * WANTED:—Girl for general housework, part time only, leave name at Review Office.

BETTE DAVIS

“THAT CERTAIN WOMAN”

—with—

Henry Fonda

Third St.,

SSOSSSSSSSSSSSHSSSESOSETIOS cee eee SSE SSSCTEO RECESSES ESEe

g POSS STH SSSSESST SESEOSSSTOSTSSOOS SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHSSESEESESECOOEE

IN MEMORIAM

nT |

Lev- Eliza |

In Loving Memory of a =. jing Wife and Mother Annie Jones whe passed away. November 2nd 1931 Six years have passed since that sad day, . ‘The one,we loved was called away, God took her home it was his will | But in our hearts she liveth still | Ever remembered by her hus-| hand and family. Fred Jones

LESK’S Furniture Exchange

Third7St. Medicine Mat

For New Furniture

& Home Furnishings

Also Better Class USED FURNITURE

away |

Se a

$100,000,000

this Loan, to be issued as follows:

Issue price: 99.125% and accrued interest, Yielding approximately 1.59% to maturity

AND

Seven Year 2'2° Bonds, due November 15, 1944 Issue price: 98.50% and accrued interest, _Yielding approximately 2.74% to maturity

AND

Callable on ar. after November 15, 1948 Issue price: 99.00% and accrued interest, Yielding approximately 3.34% to maturity

be paya

we are proud to offer at

One and One-Half Year 1% Bonds, due June 1, 1939

Fourteen Year 3'4% Bonds, due November 15, 1951

106 ©$2.45

Sa ere ee ——- Beautiful’Coats of AT] Wool Suedecord Mrg W Hill ) Ladies Coats Imported Tweeds and Treebark. trim Pe es Sat., Mon., Tues. Fitt with Laixuious Fur Collars of Sable, Wolf and

$25.00

he LePage Store

Medicine Hat

pe ee te er re rn meena

Rotel fmm ftom [Pietenmet Uy ate ay tn ttm nt fintrome Afni: PREPARE FOR

THE COLD WEATHER | - Antifreeze $3.75 Per Gallon

Cousentrate

| Heaters From $13.75 up why be cold

Also Carry Frost Shields and Defrosters

BENY & SON, Medicine Hat | WV nen emt omnen none fynaenfyomaen)

Dominion of Canada 1937 Refunding Loan

The Bank of Canada is authorized by the Minister of Finance to Receive Subscriptions for

The 1% Bonds will be dated December 1, 1937. The 214° Bonds and the 344% Bonds will be dated ovember tf 1937. Principal and interest will be payable in lawful money of Canada. Interest will le without charge, semi-annually, at ahy branch in Canada of any Chartered Bank.

Bed and Bedding Values

Enjoy Perfect Rest—Buy a new Inner Spring Mattress. Hundreds of coils enclosed in soft felt; Special $15.95

Simmons Magic Comfort $19.95 Panel Bedoutfit Walnut Pane! Bed, sagless cable springs all felt mattress, any size, complete, Only . . $22.85

Drop Side Couch and matiress, cretonne cover only $12.95 32 Piece Dinner Sets [6 service} $2.95

Complete Home Furnishings Moderate Prices

J. J. MOORE & SON

Phene 2787 Near Medicine Hat Garage

Renewal of your Subscription Now will be greatly appreciated

Subscriptions ma Sanads of any Ch

1% Bonds.. Denominations: 244% Bonds

$1,000 $1,000

314% Bonds, $100, $500 and $1,000

Proceeds of this loan will be used for refunding, converted Dominion of Canada 514% Victory Loar

cash required for this purpose

in part, the outstanding total of $122,799,800 on 1 Bonds maturing December 1, 1937. The additional ill be provided from the Treasury.

Payment is to be made in full against delivery of interim certificates on-or about Nov ] c icates ut November 15, 1937 in the case of the 244% Bonds and the 344% Bor in th :

ts, and on or about December 1, 1937, in the case

of the 1%% Bonds.

534% Victory Loan Bonps pve Decemaen 1, 1937 (WITH FINAL «

will be accepted at par up to the amount required for payment of allotments of the new bonds. Resultant cash adjustments, where necessary, will be made at the time of delivery.

v>ON DETACHED)

be made to the Head Office

Tospectus containing complete details of the loan may be obtained.

of the Bank of Canada, through any branch in artered Bank or through any recognized dealer, from whom copies of the Official

The Minister of Finance

reserves the right to allot subscriptions in full or in part.

The subscription lists will open November 3, 1937, and will close a3 to en \y or all of the maturities,

with or without notice, at the discretion of the Minister of Finance.

e Orrawa, NovemBer 2, 1937.

i i