Volume 17.
REDCLIFF REVIEW -
OUR SLOGAN: An Industrial Metropolis of industrious People Whe Pull Together,
THE
At Regular Meeting Held Last
Good Program For 7
The Stampede Here
Will Be Held on The Stampede
Grounds, July 2nd
THURSDAY, JUNE 14er, 1928 ; Number “i
REDCLIFF REVIEW,
‘Redcliff Gets Bye
George Grieve Dies Oddfellows Attend“ Redcliff and Callies. In Bennett Shield Suddenly this Morning Service Last Sunday Play Draw Game
Will Play Winners of The First Succumbs to Severe Attack ot Visitors Present From Ivine, Good Work of oth Defences Draw on June 29th Heart Trouble
SNontay. Brane e Medicine Hat and Walsh Makes Scoreless Game + Arrangements are now well After the game here las Fri-;, After a month’s illness suf- Oddfellows from Medicine Hat Redcliff and the Callies play- Very little business of impor-| under way for rthe big stam- day evening representatives. of fering from heart trouble, Mr. [vine and Walsh joined with /@ scoreless. football game here tanee was transacted at ‘the | pede here on Dominion Day, | each of the clubs in the. local, George Grieve, a pioneer farmer the lodge here last Sunday to |last Froday evening in the Me- regular meeting of the _town | which will be celebrated on Mon- football league got together and ©! this disiret, passed away this eommemorrate the 109th anni-| Clilan cup competition. As rr we council laast Monday evening. | day, July 2nd. made the draw for the Bennett Morning at one o'clock. veisary of the founding of the/|score would indicate the teams : Mayor Worts was in the chair} present indications are that Shield games. The first two) About a montr ago deceased . .
and all the councillors were pre- sent.. After the reading and adoption of the minutes, Solici- Baird reported re the Courtnell case in connection with the laat- ter’s application to redeem his property on Broadway: The case waas heard before Judge Walsh on Monday afternoon and the Judge granted Mr. Court- nell’s petition provided back taxes were arrangegd satsfac- toily with the town.
some good horses will be here
| for rthe races and cowboys are
comng from all quarters to take paitinthe bucking and steer riding contests.
A complete stampede pro- gram has been planned and a good day’s entertainmet is now assured
Annual U. F. A. Service |
: : lodge on this continent. matched names drawn were Calliés and Was strickes with heart trouble, Local members and _ visitors |as it is possible for two teams to
jC. P. R. These two teats will For a time he showed encourag- assembled at the lodge room and|be. The feature of the game play the first game on Tuesday ing signs of improvement under marched to Gordon Memorial| was the splendid work done
levening, June 26th. Redcliff tveaatment of Dr. Rogers , but churrch where serrvice was held| the defence of both teams. Nei- | will qlay the winers on Friday his worries about the farm com- | at three o’clock in the aftenoon. | ther forward lines appéared to jevening, ‘June 29th. (pelled him to leave his bed in| At the church the pastor,'be able to break through. The : All the games will be played oder to be out around, Uufor-| Rey. R..N, Matheson welcomed general opinion of the specta- in Medicine Hat. After expen- tunately he took a relapse and the visitors after which he gave | tors waa that both forward lines ises are deducted the gate re-|his already shattered condition 'an appropriate addess, basing |had a tendancy to try to work ‘ceipts will be pooled and divided Could not withstand the extra his remarks on ist Cor, 2 & 2:|too close in to the goal before
famong the three clubs, Strain. He gradually grew /jesus Christ the Crucified.” | shooting or trying to draw the The winners of this Jeague| Wore until the end came. | After the service a I
| were about as evenly
b)
ill th 1 ff with th in-| Deceased was’'69 years of age pleasant | deferice out. ; | will then play off with the’ win ey BUY year ‘social hour was spent in the Although closely contested, The usual tnonthly accounts At Bowell Sunday, ners of other leagues for the|He came to this district from jodge room. Merer inspiring and although both teams >. weeounts were read andordered omens \championphip of the province, [5Cu, Fifeshire, Ssotland, 25 and interesting addresses were | peared to be working hard for a d. Invitation Ertended to Friends \years ago and homesteaded five | > The offer of L. U. Harrris for
two lots near his property was accepted.
Mrs. Mixon wrote offer purchase a small house on Third street south. The matter was referred to the building commit- tee for investigaton.
An account from the Medicine Hat hospital for $415.00 for care of Mrs. Riley for 166 days was
To Attend
The U. F. A. annual Sundey falls on June 17th this yearr and will be celebrated wieh a sepcial service in the Bowell school house at 3 p, m. of that day: An invitation is extended to all to join in this service.
ee oe
COMMONS AGAIN REJECT
| suites went if given by Grand Warden R. B. ‘miles west of town on what he|/ Morden, of Lethbridge; Deputy |afterwards named “Ravelstone|Gyarnd Master M. Schroder, iF axens {Walsh; Sister Muxworthy, D. D. Fourteen years ago deceased P., Sister Cope, P. P., of Medi cine Hat,, and Wm Henderson of jof Box Springs aand _ Redcliff [agnec DR gd —agnitbee of yay Low aomny Mie naa and Mrs.! ‘There was a good turn out of Grieve had no children. Messrs. Yuill and Mahar of| both Oddfellows and Rebekahs
Deceased was of a quiet un- : : ; ithe Monarch theatre, Medicine |assuming di.spositon but was ot ie pers. wae Semiee
gol, the game was not as excit- inb aas some we have had, It would appear that a few goals are necessary to créate the usual excitement and interest. However both teams put up a rood, clean brand of ball, The good ettedance at all the games 10 far shows that the fans ap- yreciate the kind of ball. being played this season, and are giv-
‘Cameo May Open’
In the Near Future
jmarried Florence Smith, sister | sheik tis Bhat'en Oieeer ee Evening |°! Fred and Earnie Smith, of _ of Dominion Day
OS - AUSTRALIAN FLIERS work after the game.
_ REACH HOME SAFELY The Australian fliers in thei
Lawrence route, and they will also
ish Hall Thursday be used for winter cruise purposes.
| ——
-|Has Been Footballers
The W. A. of St: Ambrose
first time the Pagifie has been creased by an ai ship.
: Pi j t ot] ape of interest in town, rest: The fracas will start a As e crowd which came to The 6:30 p. m, Saturday, in the Ath-
: Redcli , marv standing at 101.1, as compared with | Jetlelic , when Mayor Bulli-
NEW ©. P. R. BOAT ST AMBROSE CHURCH was oe ted — ha ane fight was'a atious one 96.4 \u April, 1927, and 64.1 in April, aie wilt kick off the ball, ‘The
MAKES REGORD TRIP it Sunda: June ard. hu eall to replenish their| Duncan McLachlan, a former - —_—_—— anne ae ae os
er * arieney , 2 gg W.c ‘larder. The call was cheerfuly|resdent of Redeliff, and brother] nines —eeretnn® atten Be lave ve n vs ; oe —_—
On her maiden voyage Western “4 D om, + W-\ responded to and the visiters|of eur own Donald, passed} fret mth tne greg oe to wa > s a of caer the Atlantic the new C, P, R.| "Storm. ® © were unstinted in thir prais of {through town last evening on| 1816, as compared with 1,030 tn the | Wh can Show bile young
““Duchhess of Bedford,” | — . , Donald met -hini; frst quarter of 1927, Filings in [how the game should be played.
GORDON MBMORIAL UNITED CHURCH
th good time they enjoyed while |his way east, here, ‘at the station and went as far as , Medicine Hat wth him,
Following is the line up of the old boys. Look them over see if they are capable or not of ibeatng the youngsters by pitt- ine their experience and skill
—_——_9 —-— —
s
— a = eg 9 ——— ae —am
i , rd Sitend't ved ’ against the superior wnd and ne + Laver to ener ve cordially invited to attend the services bye oo _ pm gh ae yy A stamina of the young fellows: Ted aegu Clcrpeok to Calgary rr bd — = the activities of Gor headquarters of the company. show Old Timers—Crowther, Hen.
—_———v-—_———— pet u 944. . rec , ay f ara Canad Sy ae WILDA WOMAN 18 . i Hl Bret A are shown tnsrnasse ‘be |H, Goldie, Maskell, Redeliff, J:
SENT UP FOR TRIAL|!
——
Tuesday of each month at 8 p.m.
$1,802,617.71 as compared with the
Walton, C. Collins, J, Stout, R. Bue period of 1927.
S. Hodge,Redcliff. Reserves.
ed by alla great success. ing the necessary support gnd Baird f Hat, were in town today. ing |looked upon by .all who knew Pid : Sie °F} REVISED PRAYER BOOK arangements for openig tip the him as a real, true friend He | sreveereenepdern yin ye ee ae | The offer from the Pressed rrvrTy |Cumeo re here in in the|was an indefatigual worker, | ~ Under the direction of the na- |, Frida } Brick Co, of $150.00 for the old| nitidh Hones of Commmens apein (Neat future The Review ) was |and was consideréd one of | the |tional Research Council of Can- at dhe oie Gore | Shipley buildng nn Thrd_ street Sh cwaliag slik Galceted tha oe assured that it was the ipten-|best farmers of the district,| ada, a party has started a sur-|-, try out im the'gnme with the wa hen coder, Counll aed peer tok ofthe Crunch ca tay Nam snes ome parks en geer thee ranches Jn HIG inthe ato Paty of | . ors Champ and t - oe ree western provinces, . x i would be a mistake to move|2fver two days’ close debate on | tne. Pulding ean be put in} | In the death of Gordit Grieve study is being made of the nd "n soes desis senel ) buildings off that street us it is|" {the atention of the nar shape n time it is hoped to. put this district loses one of its most | vance made by ranchers in im-| ‘as had such a full list of signed on the main highway thirough Won had bene octned, recorded teagan heron te, ee-|nopulae an uroperous farmers | provin the quabty of their wou payers ax Uis eat. “We. ae town. Trese two majority almost identical with (a, ° ha oq ‘ vatisfied that from this listthe = _ ° moved and seconded that the|f)N0P"a & day, Monday, July 2nd. termed only a small scale he wae est team available has not 5 ecepted prevous rejection!’ If this is accomplished regular |most successful and it was his : ; aa Sa , reg \£-} or Moved by councillor | last ‘ropes when the vote) shows wil be run weekly im phe |proud — ne rae Hevewiisd Thode habentiee tet AR fete a P< ten, _by withe revised prayer book after eee Es ‘The always had acrop of some J| | would suggest thet the full ex- =~ sons, in, a So the ‘sat December was kind. «an rcutive get together as soon as ee ee Sees Kitered hy the bichope and afer St Ambrose Ladies The funeral Will be héld nest] cunt Desens Sf Deters, tees | pani ane ee te ten etlect division; yeas: covclliors Brow- | TP eae submitted to parliament. Entertain Deligates more atic interiea in Red-| tang 'thettst er four tan | he teams for each game. It is ghton and Sssons, nays: coun- Wednesday. H . iff ¢ te tan tiateme being constructed for |.20t fair to leave ths to one or ellors Brydje, Champ, Campeau |’ ot eee ats = ae nS Se the Canadian Pacifie to be added to |twot und then criticize their. and Cox, Serve Refreshments in the Par- the company's service on the St.
here, et ed deleeates to the |“Southern Cross,” have com | farms, there are 6.8 horses to each To PI You ters cenvuntion bald te Moticine Hist pleted their trip across the Paci i nae ond. © tense So ay ngs week, About seventy-five jfic from Oakland, California to! Bach Saskatchewan farm bas 102 |On Medicine Hat Grounds on motored over to Redcliff and| Brisbane, Australia, IAs Satur-| horses and there ts one tractor to Gébenden teu ‘were given refreshments in the|4ay. The last lap from the Figi| every 4.7 farms, in Alberta there urday Evening Parish Hall, after which Even-|Islands, a distance of 1,700) ere 108 yoy to ry farm and — > song was celebrated n the|miles, was the most dangerous ene tractor to every 1.6 tarme, (From Mediedne Hat News) church. While refreshments/and bad weather conditions Ottawa, Ontario. — Employment | Arrangements have been made were being prepared the men o1}Were . In all the “Southern | stood at a higher level in Canada im between Jim Sangster and Sam the party were shown through |Cross” covered 7,300 miles in ory Li pechn Pabey Fed as ah ‘Goldie for a epochal sume ly the glass plant and taken. to|82 1-2 hours, This was the! ¢191 employers of labor with work. | °C" the Old Timers an e
J. Grisdale, H, Hall, Bert Woods and Doc Meore
The English Rugby League Foot- ball team, at the present time tour- ing Australia and New Zealand, is scheduled to arrive at Vancouver on RM. 8. Niagara, September 14, and will play @ game there next day,
Mrs, Paulln Berreth, of Hilda
i lilda,| Women's Missionary Sogiety on the | charged with attempted poison- ppeared
last Thursday of each month at 3 p-m. | Ladies’ Aid, every Thursday, 8 p.m. | Mission Band every second Monday | at 4;15 pm. |
———-———
Mrs. Bruce Brroadfoot, of San Yesdro, California, who is on
| leave he Trans-Canada after- yay Cngland, is stopping ted to stand trial at the Sunday, June 17th. | | wanda for Montreal CP pr Pan Sar eye aap bey pe | to ae May 12th Lee Publle a, | before” sail’ for furland en the {he aunt, Mrs. D. Broadfoot. : 11:15 Publi ip. | Duchess of Atholl next day. a ————— “ ” } a aeaabeeeenel > ; . G, G. DIED ie Equipped Pan TR | Free scholarships te C. P. R. ap- AM" nate oS DOWN . MRS. oe ne LONDON 7 whe nm ves ott ‘eal ponatione or emslapess end 1 a Is T ibba enrg ; minor sons of employes dl SUDDENL 3\p. m, UF. A. service in| | ‘eompany covering five years’ tul- The application of the United
tion tn emical or Civil Bngineer- | ‘ng at the Boole Polytechnique of | the Dniversity of Montreal and four
Bowell school house. \ ee : CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
- years’ tuition : ganizalti in the
Mrs. Emmeline ‘Rev. D. Hollinger, Minister : bbs Bchao! Dither pale _ pasarye os) — rr Can- hhurst, died this morning im #) gual services. TWO GIANTS OF SHIPPING CIRCLES — the aighature of Great Hell senior |2dian. Pacific Railway tarviff, a ge va be —— Th Conadion Pecitic | liner _ ot Aetealia” 2 ome Ay Ld viee-progiden t of the railway. The |effectve June = Tony ne .
t x i atively short fingea er, manraccouncn |) Nave Gavia treet i soubamene Darans, re,o fs | smlarey a Sve, e tombe, |shinned fou western Canate ; pnd) eaasl of its kind In the world Pacific coast poin' Pankhurst was the first milit-| Celebration of Mas, Seetnd ent) Sock heave the repuistion of Yours wud at ihe paint of atrance eing | by Sieteat andlag ta somperiiee {hes been rejected by the Board oe earecngn Se Sees ae Se | Tas tet 08h depth of maser over she Neat inchs io WF fone _ Sauaination of Railway Commissioners. 7 ~ ceywemen, ait
REDROSE
TE “is good ted’
Red Rose Orange Pekoe
is supreme In clean, bright Aluminum,
Empire Builders
Empire Shopping Week, which was observed throughout Canada last} month, appears to have made an especially strong appeal to the people of Western Canada. This nay be surprising to many people in the eS provinces who are still laboring under the delusion that British and Empire | sentiment is not overly strong in the West, and that it has been weakened | by the influx of settlers of other than British origin. But it is not surprising to the average Westerner; on the contrary, to him it is but the natural out- come of the thought and outlook of the West,
It i not in the East, but In the West, that the strongest approval is giv- en to the British Preference feature in the Canadian tariff, and it is in the West, rather than the Bast, that public opinion favors. further, albeit grad- ual, extensions of that Preference with a view to a lowering of duties and still greater encouragement of British trade in this Dominion, In fact, there | is a very strong sentiment in the West which would welcome the develop- | ment of Preference to the point where all customs duties on British-made | and British-preduced goods were wiped out entirely.
Empire Shopping Week had for its object the focussing of people's at- tention upon certain economic factors in the deviopment of Canada as a component part of the British Commonwealth of Nations and of the Empire | as a whole. Undoubtedly, sentiment provides a mighty urge to all Cana-) dians to give a voluntary preference to Empire goods when making pur-| chases, but, as was the case with prohibition of the liquor traffic, sentiment | is not in itself sufficient. It is the economic factor which, in these modern |
er)
| 300 per minute. Portable typewritera
| pale lips and cheeks, dark rims under
THE REVIEW, REDCLIFT, ALBERTA
Uncanny Inventions Exhibited In London
One Machine Types, Adds, and Multi-
plies At Same Time
Uncanny efficient inventions were to be seen ot the Business Efficiency Exhibition at Holland Park Hall, London, Eng. recently. The devices shown included: An electric machine that opens envelopes at the rate of 30,000 an hour. A machine that types, adds, and multiplies at the same time. A machirte that seals, franks, counts, postmarks and prints) a slogan on envelopes at the rate of |
in colirs to match the home or per- sonal color scheme. A lock which records on a tape the time the door is opened, by whom, and whether from the outsidé or inside of the room.
NEGLECTED ANAEMIA
Often Leads To the Most Serious a Consequences | In no disorder is delay or neglect | more dangerous than in anaemia. Usually the first noticeable signs are)
the eyés and a feeling of weariness. Then follow headaches, backaches, palpitation and breathlessness, ‘The only Way that anaemia can be over- come is to enrich the blood, and it is because of their wonderful blood- enriching and blood-making proper- ties that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills have won such great success in the treatment of this often most stub- born disease. . Thousands of — girls who were in an anaemic ition owe their resent good health to Dr, Williams’ ink Pills, One of these, Miss Ketie McEachern, Port Hood, N.S., says:—~ “I praise the day I began the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, I bed not
-|PIRST CONTRACTS AWARDED
Canada’s Air Mail Service Will Eventually Cover Dominion The nucleus of a transcontinental
serial mail sérvice is being estab-
lished by Canada with the awarding of contracts for four important mail services. Eventually ietters will cross the country from Halifax to Vancou-
By in 36 hours by aeroplane, instead
| of in five days by railway as at pres-
| ent.
| ‘The contracts now entered into
— | provide for a service between Father
A Region Of Wondrous Beauty | Point and Montreal and Ottawa, an-
| other service of four trips per week
Plea Is Made For Establishment Of Between Montreal and Toronto, and
Government Park In Bella | all year-round service between Mon- Coola Valley, B.C, | creal and Albany, N.Y¥., to connect
If you like to get out in the Wild | with the United States Transcontin-
country and hunt wild animals, such | etal Air Service. The total cost will
as grizzlies, with the camera, by all | %¢ $201,150.
means go to the Bella Coola Valley,) The Father Point to Montreal ser-
AFTER ALL
Theres Noshing Jo Lou yf
am Bu
B.C. I have spent the last four sum- mers there, and I am advocating the establishment there of a Dominion Park to be known as MacKenzie Park, in honor of the first white man who crossed Canada and who reach-
ed the sea at that point~this to be|
connected up by means of a highway to be known as Mackenzie Highway, paralielling part of Mackenzie's route so that people can go from New York to California and to Bella Coola over the Mackenzie Highway, visiting Mackenzie Park and returning by way of the Rocky Mountains Park, and #0 on. This would bring money into British Columbia and Canada. It the Dominion will not carry ott this pian I hope to get some wealthy men interested, as the region is one of
vice and the Montreal to Ottawa ser- vice will be provided by the Cana- dian Transcontinental Airways, Lim- ited, of Quebec, the Father Point to Montreal section costing $49,500, or $1.25 per flying mile. The Montreal to Ottawa service is to cost $8,250 for thé season. For the Montreal-Tor- onto service the cost will be $40,500, | or $1.25 per flying mile, and the Mon- | treal to Albany service will cost $95,- 900. According to J, A. Wilson, Director of Civil Aviation in Canada, 60 per cent. of the Royal Air Force pilots during the war were Canadians. | Since the war Canada has been de- | voting her activities to such opera- tions as forest protection, surveying, | mapping, and the assisting of engin-
Americans Have Faith — In British Surgeons
wonderful beauty, Within a distance | eering and geological survey work in| Millionaire Found Way To Get
} days, provides the most powerful argument. And Western Canada is pro- been feeli i time. foundly interested in the economic factor. ona wory onl, } wl pp Pecog Sey tory World trade today is, as it has always been and always will be, a sys-! di: spells and occasional fainting tem of barter,—the exchange by one country of those products and articles | spell, eo —_ eed would it 1 i leave me ti brea’ . of which produces a surplus to another country which requires these thin conaitien I talc Dr. things, and to accept payment therefore in other goods of which such coun- Williams’ Pink oa 1 continued try produces a surplus bwt which the first mentioned country requires to) their use until I had taken six boxes, import. Money is merely a convenient means of effecting such exchange. In
of 70 miles, it is easily traversed in| the northern region. It would take one day by motor boat or auto; the| some time to build up a transconti- jean visit both the so-called reiny| nental air mail service, owing to the | Coast and the desert interior. One can | sparse population of the Dominion, |go from sea level to 12,000 feet, can) but eventually the people would de- have boating on both salt, fresh,| mand more‘rapid service than could swift and still waters, paddling, pol-| be given by the present method.
ing, motor boating, salling, etc. There
Famous Doctor's Services Americans have great faith in Bri- tish surgeons. A few months ago an American millionaire wanted one of the most famous surgeons to go to New York to treat his small child, and offered a very large fee.
=
In
|
by which time I was again enjoying ther words, trade between nations operates on exactly the same principles as | 800d health. I hope my experience
tend between tntividests. ill lead other sufferers to give this
. Western Canada, and Conada as a whole, has 4 surplus of products to sell, If those countries which require the things Canada has to sell are to be in a position to buy and pay for them, we must, in turn, buy from those countries the things they have to sell and which we cannot or do not pro- Guce ourselves and must import.
Last year Canada sold to the rest of the British Empire $200,000,000 | more products than we purchased from them. On the other hand, Canada bought over $200,000,000 more from the United States than we sold across the line, Canada was enabled to pay the United States for the excess of goods imported because of its excess of sales to other parts of the Empire. While Canada did not lose by this procedure, the Empire did not gain; In fact, it sostained loss,
Now as our major exports must cross the seas to Great Britain, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa»it will be to Canada's advantage, in a purely business way, to buy as largely as possible in those countries and thus provide return cargoes for the ships which carry Canada's products into the markets of the far-flung British Empire. The larger these return) cargoes, the more profitably can the vessels be operated, the greater the | number of ships that will be put on these ocean lanes of transportation, the keener the competition for the business, and, as an inevitable economic re-| sult, the lower the freight charges levied on both out-going an‘ ‘n-coming | shipments,
The more Canada buys from its sister nations in the British Common- wealth, the more they can buy from us. The one re-acts on the other, and | trade both ways can thus be built up and grow like the proverbial snawhall. It has long been declared that “trade follows the flag,” but it is also true) that the flag has followed trade, and to the traders of the past we largely owe the Empire of today.
It is equally true that the development of inter-Empire trade has a direct and pronounced effect on immigration, and, inasmuch as Canada is particularly anxious to secure 4 larger proportion of British settlers, the) more we trade with Britain, the more widely will Canada and Canadian | products and Canadian resources and possibilities become known aruong the | British people. |
The slogan of Empire Shopping Week is indubitably true.—“Kmpire | Buycrs are Empire Builders.” Let Canada build by buying.
;
a —- ay ne = TTD Radio Phone Service Extended | SWitzerland, including Geneva. Fur- | ther extensions on the Continent of) Beon | 2urope will be made later. It is also pone that after April 11, last, A considerable extension in Canada ony further extensions would wpe of the list of towns and cities from | 98°? cimultancouniy both Canads which wireless telephone in turope | “24 the United States. may be had, has been announced by | The following cities in Canada RATE Alex. Johnston, Deputy Minister of already béen provided with this wire- Marine and Fisheries, following the! leas telephone service across the a receipt of a statement from the ot. | Mntte: Montreal, Toreste, Quebec, * fice of the Secretary of State for the| Onew, Hamilton, St. done, saliten, Dominions in London. Winnipeg, Calgery and Vancouver. Western cities added recently to the |
Up until April 11, the service was) " ; = available to certain towns in Belgium, |service ares Post Wi » Mameontgn
Germany, Holland and Sweden, but | 924 Regina. since that date it bas been extended)
Three Western Cities Have Added To Lit
to Paris and to certain towns in World’s Stock Of Gold ee “| Reserve Board Reports $9,475,000,000 If You Need A Tonic At Bad Of Last Year | Get The Best! The total stock of monetary gold
heid by Governments, central banks | and similar institutions throughout the world, either in their own vaults or under earmark with correspon- | dents, at the end of 1927, the latest | date for which comprehensive Agures | j} are available, appears to have been | not less than $9,475,000,000, and to. have shown an increase for the year of at least $300,000,000, according to
Guelph, Ont.—-“There is nothing bet- ter as a building tonic than Dr, Pierce's Goldeg Medical Dis- covery. Several times when | was rundown, suffered frem weak stomach, thin and impoverished bleod, I took it and always obtained good re- rules. It eariched my blood, relieved me of
he w seaach, the Federal Reserve Board's bulletin t me up in healt’ Mare made : and made me feel like a new person. i for am, pom poate
also found it splendid to take follow
motherhood to give me strength. I al- | Charity covers a multitude of sins aot areal Dr. Pierce's medicines | and a t covers & multitude of to those whom [ find « for I know | sinners a“
them to be just as ad '—~—Mrs. . :
W. H. Skyring, 52 Nottingham St. vesens
Miaard’s Liniment for Toothache.
It isn't always strongest per- son who has the hold on life
Write Dr. Pierce's lo Hotel ia Buflalo, N. Y., for isee
nhs ae the Ww. N. U. 4781 oot
wi medicine a fair trial.”
Wiliams
| the after-help of castor oil
“child
1s soon be well and strong. These pills are sold by all medicine
50
wal he nane Sy ee a cents a box by The Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., | Brockville, Ont.
“Dry Ice” New Idea
Substitute Has Been Used Success- fully In States
By the use of “dry ice,” or solidi- fied carbon dioxide, the price of ice cream will be cut considerably with- in the next few years, says Fred Ras- mussen, of Harrisburg, executive of the International Ice Cream Manu- facturers’ Association, during the an- nual convention of the body.
Only fifty pounds of the “dry ice” will supply the needs of an ice cream delivery truck for nearly a day, he declared, and use of the substitute will spread rapidly when it is made in quantity. It is now being used in transporting ice cream by truck from Philadelphia to Atlantic City.
-
Miller's Worm Powders do not need or any purgative to complete their thorougn- ness, because they are tho
rough ‘. onal .—Revi f Reviews. themselves. One dose of them, ‘and | Many Inquiries Are Being Received ° ae ~~ eae
will be found palatable by all ren, will end the worm trouble by making the stomach and bowels wntenable to the parasites, And not only this, but the powders will be cer- | tain to exert most beneficial influences in the estive organs.
Forest Effect On Temperatures
Forests have an equalizing effect on extremes of temperature. Records for Canada show that in forested districts maximum temperatures are lower and minimum temperatures higher than in adjoining deforested tracts.
The British museum library announced that there are nearly 4,- 000,000 books on shelf. ‘
‘Short of Breath Dizzy, Sinking Spells COULDN'T WALK FAR
Mra. L. A. Oliver, Gianville Ferry N.B., writes:-~‘A few years ago I dizzy, sinking spells so bed I could hardly stand up without i of page 4 to support me, and I could mot walk any distance op secount ef being so short of breath.
‘*I bed taken @ lot of doctor's med- icine, but it did me ne good, only for the time being, so reading in the B.B.B. almunae about
id
4
Fi
500, « box at all
E i
ft < d
The surgeon, however, was not pre-
is excellent trout fishing and good aninval photography, grizzly bears be- ing very numerous. Thousands of water falls, one of them over 800 feet high; 18 glaciers may be seen from
one place, and there are many others. |
It costs only $40.00 for a- round trip from Vancouver by boat through the fjords of the Nomway of Canada. have taken my first moving picture, showing life in this region. Board in the valley can be had at 50 cents a meal, good cream, fresh fruit, kindly,
nice people, largely of Norwegian) ‘ye profound difference between
descent, noted for cleanliness, and good cooking. Please let me know of anybody who will help me get this park and highway established. We should get about 20 miles wide by 70 miles long of country which ts still in the Crown; that is, it is govern- ment land, and it is of practically nb other value except for park purposes. Harland T. Smith, Department of Mines, Ottawa.
* Mothers can easily know when their |
children are troubled with worms, and
time in ying a relia- oe” Reenc mhc AS ves’ * wrerm Ex 5 Settlers From Across the Line
From Prospective Settlers “Not only will a large number of Canadians return from the United States, but many citizens of that
1 ere is nothing equal to it,
An Ol] That Is Prized Everywhere. -—Dr,. Thomas’ Belectric Oil wag put upon the market without any flour- ish over fifty years ago, It was put up to meet the wants of a small sec- tion, but as soon as its merits became known it had a whole continent for a field, and it is now known and
throughout this continent.
pared to make the journey. He was surprised when shortly afterwards an American doctor arrived with a com- plete cinema film of all the child's movements during a period of 24 hours. ’
To exhibit the film it was neces- sary to take the lecal cinema hall at a high fee. The British surgeon care- fully examined the film and drew a report, which the American ‘doctor took back to America.
Later, he arrived again with an- other film showing the result of the treatment in detail, a big cheque, and a letter of thanks from the relieved father.
|
Monarchy Nationalized
People Look On Royal Family As One Of Their Possessions
the relationship of the people to, the during the “Victorian Age” and what it is now is that Queen Victoria held, in principle and jin practice, to the ancient idea that the people were her people, the coun- try her country, that she }them and ruled over them in virtue ‘of a scarcely mitigated conception of Divine Right, whereas now the people
The difference between an alarm clock and a hen ia that when you get a hen she sits there, but when you set am alarm clock it goes off.
Toothache
the Royal Family as their possessions and are fonder of them and prouder. |of them than of any other national ‘institution, The sense of ownership has ceased to be autocratic or semi- autocratic and has become democra- tic. Unlike the railways and the coal | mines, the Monarchy has been na-
IMINARD'S)
A Square Deal Farmer: “What will you give me | for the horse.”
LINIMENT
has|+
its 50 miles of
had |
hold |
country will seek homes in Canada| Scotchman: “A load of hay.” during the coming year,” predicted|’ Farmer; “But what could I do with) A Chicago manufacturer bas in- Hon, Robert’ Forke, Minister of Im-|® load of hay with no horse to eat) vented @ photographic machine that migration. His prediction, he explain- | it?” jean produce 4,000 finished prints in ed, is based on -reports of Canadian| Scotchman: “Well, I'd lend you the ‘an hour.
agents in the United States, who/| horse till'the hay is gone.” state that they are receiving an al-| most unprecedented number of in- quiries for information concerning Canadian settlement.
Has Unusual Occupation
For twenty-three years Lawrence Quinn, chief oysterman at the Hotel | Lincoln, New York, has been open- ing oysters for a living. He opens an average of 3,900 oysters a day, and during his twenty-three years in this work has found dozens of pearls, None of the stones were of fabulous value, but there have been enough smafl ones to make a very fine necklace and some pendants, and | Quinn still has hope that some day he will pick up one that will be of jreal value.
It is estimated that $100,000,000 is When a man weds an heiress her! annually spent in U.S. for retail store face is his fortune. ' | display advertising.
PERMANENT BUILDING PAPER Smooth the Bumps on the Sales Road Regardiess of price, if quality
is in the merchandise, it is half sold.
. Senatin Oe Buildi Paper is tested and proven wind
|
|
Winnipeg Population
The official figure of the population of Winnipeg proper for 1928, as giv- en by the Assessment Department, is 202,377. Not since 1910 has the 200,- 000 mark been reacheé. This year's figure is exceeded only by the popu- lation totals for 1914 and 1915, when the figures were 208,205 and 212,889 respectively.
A manufacturing concern in In- diana has made paper covers to pro- tect automobiles from fine dust when standing in garages.
Minard’s Liniment for falling hair,
proof—absolutely. Hercules not only aids in sélling but brings quality of toughness which, - making it easy to use without, fear of tearing or cracking, @p-
eee
te.
BRIEFLY TOLD
Henry James Cambie, pioneer rail- way builder and explorer, died at his home in Vancouver, at the age of; ninety-one, after a brief iliness with pneumonia.
Coal production if Canada during | March was slightly less than in Feb- ruary. Alberta produced 616,063 tons. British Columbia's output was 251,- 832 tons
Capt. George H. Wilkins, scarcely
landed from his great feat of flying dailies circulates only about 33,000,- |
across the top of the world by aero- plane, already is plamming © new air) venture—this time over the Antarc-| tic at the other end of the world.
The government is of the opinion that women should have the right to sit in the Senate and means will be
devised to amend the British North $10,000 a year in Chicago or New |
America Act to permit appointment of women to the upper chamber.
The resignation of Sir Henry Dray- ton as member for West York was) announced in the House of Commons. | He hag accepted the appointment of | chairman of the Ontario Liquor | Board.
A notice of motion for the tabling | of correspondence between Canada and Great Britain on the subject of} titles for Canadians has been given by C. H. Cahan, Conservative, Bt. | Lawrence-St. George. The motion also calls for a list of foreign honors | and decorations conferred on Cana-)| dians since 1919. |
Dr. Henry M. Tory, president of the University of Alberta since its| organization, 20 years ago, is tender- ing his resignation, to take effect at| the end of the current college year | next month, in order that he may) accept the permanent chairmanship | of the National Council of Scientific | Research, with headquarters probabl at Ottawa. :
To Beautify Ottawa
Proposed Outlay Of Three Million Dollars To Burnish Up Federal
Capital
Plans for the federal district com- mission for the beautification of the city of Ottawa were laid before the House of Commons by Premier Mac- kenzie King.
The bill, a Government measure, proposes:
1—To reduce from $250,000 to $200,000 the annual amount eranted to the Ottawa federal district com- mission.
2—A further expenditure of $3,000,- 000 for expropriations of the Russell House property. °
The plan—sketch maps were dis- tributed among members that they might better follow the scheme—is to create a large park in the centre of Ottawa, opening up the @pproach- es to Parliament Hill.
A feature of the park scheme is a
centre of the space will be the heart | of the capitol. Theré, in all prababil- | ity, the national war memorial will be erected, ,
“A country is known among the citizens of the world by its capital,” said Mr, King. The capital of Can- ada should be second to none in the British Empire. The various pro- vincial capitals were a credit to their. provinces, and it should be remem-_ bered, he added, that Ottawa was the | federal capital for all the provinces.
Genius At Mental Arithmetic
Scientists of Europe are interest- ed in the case of a woman in a Welsh | hospital who can neither read nor write but is a genius at mental arith-| metic, She can solve mathematical problems in 80 seconds, and is said to never give an incorrect answer. She also can recall a large number of historical dates at will.
The more people talk back the bet-| ter the auctioneer likes it.
A girl often distovers the mau af- ter her own heart doesn't want it.
} | ;
|
“I was only punished by my father ence, and that was for telling the | tru Med f j
| age closer to $5,000.
Small Town Papers
FRANK PARKER STOCKBRIDGE
“errinted by #pectal permission from Sat- “day Evening Post. Copr-icht 1928. by h Curtis Publishing Company Phita deipnia
——— —_ a)
(Continued )
“The total circulation of these 11,-|
500 country weeklies is about 9,500,- 000, an average of a little under 1,- 000 copies each. That doesn't sound like much to a New Yorker, acciistom- ed to circulation figures in the hun- dreds of thousands. But there are
| Only about 600 dailies in the United
States which have as matiy as 10,- 000 circulation, and the whole list ot
000
“Tt doesn’t take a wrge circulation to make a country weekly profitable Bert Mills and some of the rést of you chaps here are the magnates of the business. Remember that an in- come, net, Of $3,000 a year in a vil- lage of 500 population is a whole lot of money; it’s the equal of at least
York, in what it will enable a man to do for himself and his family. It's a whole lot more than the average man in the same sized town makes; as much, I should say, as anybody else in town is likely to make, in-
cluding the banker and the general’
merchant. And I don't think I'm far wrong when I put $3,000 a year as
| pretty nearly the minimum net profit
for country weeklies, with hte aver- If I'm wrong somebody correct me.”
Sounds all right to me,” said an fowa editor who had been doing noth-
ing but listen. “I personally know at |
least fifteen country publishers in fowa who make more than $5000 a year from their papers. It's a poor peper—or, rather, a poor editor, who can't earn 20 per cent a year on his
j investment in this business, and 1
guess our average plant investment runs nearer $20,000 than it does $15,-
| 000.
“That will come pretty close to it,” said one of the others, who turned out to be the representative of a con-
cern carrying 4 general line of print-
ing-office machinery. “Take the main items and check me up. First is the typesetti machine, a line caster just like the: big city papers use,
ighty few country papers haven't got one machine, many have two; the
THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA
| WHERE WILD ANIMALS BECOME TAME
|
Jasper National Park, which will; | be visited by the members of the | Canadian Weekly Newspapers Asso-) | ciation at the completion of their an-|
nual convention at Edmonton this) year, is Canada's largest and finest) game sanctuary. Within its 5,300 square miles, guns and hunting dogs are forbidden, and he who would hunt bears, deer, mountain sheep, moun- tain goats or other animals must do) |so with the camera as his weapon
And there is as much thrill in bring- ing home a good snapshot of a bear! or a deer, as there is in bringing home | the skin or head of such a trophy.
| There are 10,000 mountain sheep }and an equal number of deer in Jas- | per National Park, according to an | estimate made by J. B. Harkin, Com- | missioner of National Parks; in his) | annual report. Dealing with wild life jin the park, Mr, Harkin states: | Wild life generally is increasing rapidly and all animals secon were oe good conditfon. From the observations
| of the warden staff, it is estimated)
are spreading their range annually and previously deserted ranges are again being frequented, An estimate places the number of sheep within the park at 10,000. While Rocky Mountain goat generally keep to the higher altitudes, they are constantly spreading out believed to be ‘well over 2,000 gonts in the park and all, including the kids, are in’ good condition
Signe and tracks seen in different areas indicate a considerable increase among the grizzly bear, especially in|
the region of the Snake, Indian, Rocky
and Smoky Rivers and Rock Lak« Black bear are also increasing and it is a common sight for tourists to see | from ten to thirteen of these animals | in the neighborhood of Jasper at one time. A’ very conservative estimate places the total number of bear with-| in the park at 2,000.
Almost every lake and stream in the park contains beaver and they are increasing rapidly. Buffalo Prai-|
| rie, at one time one of the finest graz-;
There are at present|
| : An Interesting Edition London Dally Mall Pictures Pwents In Year 2,000
A newepaper as newspaper men thought it would be on January 1 2000, has been published in London by the Dally Mail
“Air fire squad section 28 files to a fire in Regent street and quickly quenches a blaze with its . “Anti- Fireo” extinguishers,
“The big murder of the day is that of a man killed by mental suggestion
from his enemy
“So greatly, in fact, has the mental power of the race increased that school children play games during the day and through a silent battery
of ‘memory their
impressors’ do
‘Studying in their sleep Television is a routine part of the
day's affairs. A gathers in
Trafalgar Square to watch a cricket
crowd
match between the Pinglish and Aus tralian teams playing ¢ach other at Sydney, on the other side of the world
“Captain Ralph Girdlestone’s 24- hour flight around the world is fea- tured particularly because a noonday sun was shining over him all during the flight. People have to wear ‘crash- | proof lingerie’ because flying is a part | of their ordinary daily life.
“The only thing that seems wn- changed is the civil war in China, | which is still in the news,”
The newspaper-——a full-sized one of 24 pages was published with a Daily . | Mail exhibition of “Homes of the Fu- i leat at the Great Olmpia,
| |
it
‘ A Graceful Afternoon Or Frock
Established a Precedent
Lady Astor Gives Clever Reason Why Women should have Vote Exceedingly: graceful is {he frock! The New York ‘Times points out pictured here. The two-piece pointed | that laughter and cries of “Who?” skirt is gathered to a bodice having greeted Lady Astor's allusion to*the
the lower edge slightly rounded, qaupnters of Zelophehad in the course thereby giving a graceful line. The
Lvening
| that there are between 800 and 1,000! ing areas in the Park, with a little attractive arrangement of the sur- | the debate in the House of Com-
elk in the park. Herds numbering as|runhing stream passing through it,| Plice effect is effectively shown, and ™ons on the “Flapper Vote,”
average is about one and a quarter, many as 70 and 100 have been seen) is now a series of small lakes and
Three thousand dollars is cheap for a typesetting machine; the $4,000 ones are more in demand. So put it at $4,000 per paper as the average of ag Fanny
“Then there's the press, There may be, we ota By A a pees Bare ig @ newspaper juced on a band press, but I don't know where it is, If I did I'd hunt up the editor and sell him @ power press. The old- time country paper could be, and of-
volution is the minimum, and thal up to the flat-bed perfect- from the roll, of presses cost from §2,- ,000; I think a fair aver-
z . :
88
fi s g
33 : Bas E E ¥
:
i ge iH
i
i 7 |
4 Es g Z g
i H 2
"Bertainty
That
:
i Ug tt Es
rT;
26
ge - é gs
counting in those who don't own their own.
“Yes, I with our friend from Iowa that the average investment in count! weeklies runs well above $15,000, and it is increasing all the
tion again,
* me give you some more fig- ures,” he insisted. “You're wondering where the country editors money to invest in their plants, and where their profits come from. are some government statistics: .There are nearly 60,000,000 ple-—more than half the population of the Unit- ed States--who live in these small towns or in the country around them. There are atill 27,000,000 on the
farms, although 500,000 farmer fam- |
ilies have moved to town since June, 1926. But where did they move to?
To the big cities? Don’t think it; they |
moved to the small towns, where they are still readers of the country week- ies,”
“And these 60,000,000 people, in- stead of being the poorest part of our population, are pretty nearly the richest, on the average. There aren't many millionaires among them, but they'll average a higher cash income per family than the big cities ayer- age. Here's a survey of Edgar Coun. ty, Ilineis, which shows an average cash income per family of $2,500 a year, in addition to the rent for most of them and a large part of their food supply for many of them, That's a
| big income when you consider how
small the Mving expenses are in rural
| communities.
“Here's another survey, made by
the General Federation of Women's) Clubs in July, 1927, of towns under
6,000 population—the exact territory we are talking about. It shows that izi these towns there are 127,885 fam- ilies ow; aphs, 104,410
Here |
\in the vicinity of Cabin Creek. | A very gratifying increase is not- ed in Rocky Mountain sheep. They!
United States—those 27,000,000 men, | women and children-—spend $6,000,- | 000,000 every year for manufactured | goods; they earn one-sixth of the na- tional income, own one-fifth of the
and, , nearly all the tractors. A yy the electric-appliance in- a of 750 small towns showed | that 85 per cent. of the homes were | wired for electricity. That's a high- er rtion than in some -sized | | cities. The people who live in these. | towns and in the nearby farm-houses | which also have e ¢ current are | customers for every sort of electric
equipment. “Those are the folk who make the
news, vr ible country paper poss
a 3 “ |
|. A new law passed by the Quebec | Government makes it compulsory for every person to destroy all noxious weeds on his property whether that property is cultivated or not. The | weeds must be destroyed before they
go to seed, and if the owner fails to|nals, The birds cluster on the cliffs| ing her parcels?” ‘| carry out this work the authorities!
| of work possible for the pay you get, |
; ;
i
i
| We are the trustees, mot the owners of our forest heritage; to ‘keep faith with the future we must | use it wisely and guard it from
phonogr, “Yen, ond 3 cuppase that cued you | SEb pianos, and 65,400 with radio weste through preventable forest | 5 |
permanently.”—Vikingen, Oslo.
Seinen
W. N. U. 2732
“Here are some more government figures, from the Department of Agriculture: The farmers of the
| fres.——Rt. Hoa. W, L Mackenzie K ing,
| Prime Minister.
dams which are occupied by hun-) drede of beaver. Especially good fish-! ing is procured in these beaver lakes. |
Financing Is a Specialty When Contemplating Wise People Consult a Banker
News items about agents of phony stock being sent to jail and about others who escape the law, are not infrequent today, and it makes sor-
rowful reading, for the reason that s0 many of their victims are
Investments |
| Many atyles of smart
| thelr creations are
When there are lace shields at the front and she had explained, only an obstinate back. The long pointed sleeves MAY | opponent could have refused to
be omitted for evening wear, if de-) ” . P sired, thereby making this frock suit-|9°knowledge an extremely happy
able for many occasions, An added! reference. Zelophehad, son of Hepher,
| note of contrast is introduced in the of the tribe of Manasseh, died in the
flowers placed at the shoulder and hip |
desing." We. 1501 is for misnes ann = & Gon et a. small women, and is in sizes 16, 18|¢®ving no sons, but five daughters, and 20 years. Size 18 (36 bust) re- and the latter appealed to Moses say- uires 344 yards 39-inch material, or ing, “Give unto us a possession among
MA —, a no %» yard all-|the brethren of our fathers.” And pen the oatteen. shields. Price 25) wien Moses had laid the case before rel may the very highest authority he received | be found in our Fashion k. Our)|the answer, "The daughters of Zelo-
ers originate their patterns in| speak right shalt . | the heart of the style centres, ane — rae
ose of tested | ly give them a possession of an in- popularity, brought within the meang heritance among their father's breth-
who have entrusted their hard-earn-| of the average woman. Price of the | ren.” Today, as The New York Times
ed savings to these agents or pro-| book 10 cents the copy. |
moters. Yet there are many worth-
| while concerns in which one may in- vest with safety. How can the good | .
be distinguished from the bad? Very) often they can’t be. But those who have money to invest can be surer! of their ground if they will consult | their bankers or some other reputa- ble financier.
When you're sick you consult a) doctor;. when you need the law, you see a lawyer, Financing is a specialty about as intricate as medicine or law. | Therefore see your banker before
you loosen your purse strings.
The cries of séa-birds, especially |
says, all over the worid, inheritance means woman's right to vote. It was very clever of Lady Astor to find
™ | such a precedent. Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, | 175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg
How To Order Patterns
Temperature and Health
Constant Change Keeps People Healthy Says Yale Phofessor There will be no winter and sum- mer in our homes of the future, if aci- a. |. ae = : | ence can work out a plan suggested | by Professor Elisworth Huntingdon, fa | of Yale. He demonstrates that it is j neither high nor low temperatures Old Lady: “And what should a that keep us healthy or unhealthy, polite little boy say to the lady who, but 4 constant change in tempera-
Pattern No : . Size
TOWED si vs cess
seagulls, are very valuable as fog sig- bas given him a half-penny for carry-| tures, If the thermometer stayed at
and their cries warn boatmen that
The man who always does as he
he does.
c
: automatic device | ANADIAN FOREST WEEK ups and downs from a selected idea)
get the /
Canada's forests provide employ- ment, stimulate business, and yleld rich dividends in health and pleasure. Fire is their enemy. Carelessness with fire is criminal and offenders are justly subject te the pensities provided by law.- Hea Charles Stewart, Minister of the loterier.
either an ideal winter or summer
Little Boy: “I'm too polite to tell temperature, the death rate would be dou, ma'am.” high. But if ideal temperatures fiuc- *|tuate by even one degree or so from The way to get rich is to lay up | ay to day, the death rate drops to
Don‘t try to do the smallest amount | pleases is often displeased with what| part of your income and as much as | Slmost Zero, A drep from twenty de-
|grees to zero Means as much as a - | drop from 90 to 70, he says. What our homes need, therefore, is an to give us. these
possible of other people's.
| temperature:
/ ——— The Acid Test i “Put up notices that no book ) agents are to be admitted to the | building,” said the publisher “But you have just advertised for | agents to sell our new work,” pro- | tested the secretary | “Of course, I want to try the ap- plicants out. If a man could -be stop- | ped by a little thing like that notice, | what good would he be to us.” | ccna ain 2 Noticed Relationship | A eonceited young clergyman | walking home from church with one | of the ladies of his congregation, re- marked: “I preached this morning to | a congregation of asses,” “ “I thought of that,” observed the lady, “when you called them beloved | brethren.” : Gilbert: “Horace is very religious isn't he?” Morgan: “I should say he is. Why, | be even wears a herringbone suit on | Friday!”
; - . entirely prevent this waste of « her- Fred: Do you think women cap itage of which we are but trustess stand more suffering than men? fer generations of Canadians yet Jack: Well, I can hardly imagine unborn.-—Hen. R. B: Benne, Lead 4 man wearing chiffon stockings ia of the Opposition. winter.
Seliienaitieiiedmaniacaies ccs ek ilioeme armenia
Eliminating Waste!
Valine Of Scientific Effort As)
Related To Production
The Vancouver Province publishes & well-informed and valuable editor- fal article under the heading “Waste.” It deals with wheat, fruit, lumber, | minerals and fish. In each of these classifications of production this country has been wasteful elther by wry of actual waste of good material or of failure to produce the best of which it is capable
The Province refers to the quan- tity of comparatively grade wheat that was grown last season So far as Canada is raising poor
low
wheat when she might raise good wheat,” the Province says, “she is wasting her opportunities and the
tabor of her farmers and is ‘Jeopard- | ising her reputation as the grower of | high-grade grain.” This is quite true) and this is also the primary reason why trained agriculturists in Alberta recently” promoted a province-wide| campaign for pure seed. It can not be said, nor does The Province say, | that it is possibile always to grow grain of high grade. Last year prov- ed this. 1i was an off year. Late rains and early gmow affected the quality. But, year in and year out, the qual- ity will be higher if careful attention is paid to sound seed and to the weed) evil. What greater care would mean) in incrensed revenue for the farming | population they cnn easily estimate) by comparing the prices received for) No. 1 and No. 2 Northern with those | of No. 3 and the lower grades |
We in this province are not 0 | closely concerned with waste in fish | and mining. But we should not neg-| ject the fact that increased values |
wrought from our natural resources | tat 9 woman was a “chattel,” like| anywhere in the Dominion in the end furniture!
affect trading conditions In Calgary and Alberta
Fortunately, there is a national awakening in Canada to the value of scientific effort as related to pro- duction of all sorts. Science has done and is now doing great things in eliminating waste and in adding to the value of man’s efforts. This is as true in the field of agricultural industry as it is in the field of manu- facturing industry, Science is not sel- fish. The fruits of knowledge are open to the use of all who are alert and ambitious. We bear many com- plaints about conditions in this coun- try. Actually we are much better off than most of us realize and better off than those in many other lands. But, as The Vancouver Province rightly says, “there would be no complaints did we use our patrimony to the full) and not waste it.”—-Calgary Herald,
oe
Showed Her Gratitude Mother Rewarded Bronx School) Teacher In Unusual Way
A charming young school teacher who has classes of children of about eight and nine in a school in Bronx tells this story: Recently a mother called to discuss her daughter's work and behavior. These were reported to | be excellent and the parent departed in fine humor; tle girl tripped up to the teacher's) desk and handed her a bundle with the word that it came from her moth- er. The teacher thanked her and be-
gan to unwrap it. Then she put it) away hastily in a desk drawer. It was)
a bottle of Scotch are
Made To Sult A young mother just returned from India bad engaged a new nurse for her baby: “I don't know what's the matter, madam,-but the little one
cries and cries. I can do nothing to)
quiet it." The mother thought a mo- ment. Then, brightening up, she said:
“I remember now. Baby's last nurse was a black one. You will find the stove-polish on the third shelf of the kitchen cupboard.”
Judge: Only married a week and you beat your wife? A month's . im-
| cake?
| the left hand for the ring is an old
| that finger to the heart.
| per was the usual instrument erm- ployed i The wedding-cake is Roman in
| ed. This was almost entirely a Con-
j music engraving ts becoming a Bri-
The next day the lit-|
All Ancient Customs
Used At Most Weddings But Few) People Know Why i
Here are five wedding questions which few could answer, says a wri ter in Answers Why does a bride fear a veil? Why is rice thrown over a bridal couple as they the church? Why is the wedding-ring put on the fourth finger of the left hand? Why ts, an old shoe thrown after a married couple as they drive to the station? Why have a wedding-
leave
The veil is but the continuance of the ancient Eastern rule that no man/ save her husband should see a wo- man's face, and not even he until af- ter the ceremony.
The throwing of rice Eastern custom. Rice is the staple food in the East, and throwing it symbolized a wish for plenty
The choice of the fourth finger of
is another
custom of pagan Rome. It was be- lieved that a nerve went direct from
Shoe-throwing is another Pastern| custom which we have adopted with | a slight variation. Originally the) bride's father gave an old shoe to the bridegroom as a symbol that he sur- | rendered to him-his parental right of beating his daughter. A shoe or slip-|
origin. A cake made of flour, salt,) and water was always eaten by Ro- man couples in the presence of the| priest. It formed part of the marriage rites.
Finally, behind the question: “Who giveth this woman to be married to) this man?” was. the accepted belief)
England the Music Maker Supplies Every Civilized Country)
With Band and Orchestral Instruments
“The English are called an un-| musical nation, but Mngland makes the music of the world.”
This statement was made by Lieu- tenant-Colonel R. H. Tatton, the or-| ganizing director of the Federation of British Musical Industries.
“British band and orchestral in-) struments,” said Colonel Tatton, “go to every civilized country, and there are famous orchestras all over the world in which British-made Instru- ments are used.
“We also excel in the engraving of the plates from which music is print-
tinental trade before the war, but work as good in quality and as inex- pensive as anything of the kind which is made on the Continent is now produced in this country, and
tish industry.
“We export as many gramophones | and gramophone records as all the) rest of the world. Germany is a good customer for English gramophones and records, and Italy buys more gramophones and records from Eng- land than she manufactures herself.” |
The Lure Of the Farm For City Dweller Usually Means Wish For a Rest | The weak side to the city man's | longing to live on a farm is the fact the longing is strongest in the spring, | right when he has the greatest desire | to quit work of all kind and spend | the remainder of his day's in idleness. For this reason it looks as if his longing to own a farm has no connec- |tion whatever with farm work. He simply wishes to get away from town and do nothing. It is a farm residence Lhe wants, and a farm spring, and he/| would like to have a beautiful feld of wheat; but he doesn't wish to work lin the field, That is not his idea of | being a farmer. Possibly there are)
some few men in town who would)
prisonment will cure you Husband: It’s a bit tough spoiling our honeymoon like that
in Canada, the forest is second
only to agriculture in the value of its products
— ~< (ness: “Must I take the don't believe in God.” : Judge: “It doesn't matter so long as you believe in jeil!”--Kasper, @toekhoim
oath’? I
w N. U. 1731
oo a Reise:
———--- | om his route to take things as they
really make good farmers but most of those who long for farm life at this season are thinking of complete rest
Had Passed Printing Age
A catalogue of farming implements | sent out by a manufacturer found its way to a remote rural village, where | it was evidently received with inter- | est, for the firm got back a carefully- written, if somewhat clumsily ex | pressed letter, asking for furthe: | particulars about one of the articles| | advertised. To this, in the usual course of busi- ness, was sent a typewritten anewer By return of post, the manufactur-
| ers received this reply: “You need not | primt your letters to me, I can read!
writing
| } | ; |
are not to be trusted. No, they are) always up to some dodge or other. |
| The letter carrier expects everyone
| cone
| easily digested and very nourishing. |
FEEDING AND
RING YOUNG Pics Road Programme
Carried Out
More Than 7,000 Miles Built witn| Dominion Subsidy Since 19198 | Virtual completion of Canada’s road | building programme, begun in 1919, was accomplished in 1927, according to the recently published. annual re- port of the Commissioner of High- ways. Co-operation between the fed- eral and Provincial governments of Canada, given wnder the Canada Highways Act, made possible the #utceseful carrying out of the road programme Up to the end of March, 1927, 7,45 miles had been completed out of a to- tal of 8,415 provided under the agree- ment. This mileage was constructed under the provisions governing tne federal subsidy whereby the Dominion Government undertook to furnish 40 per cent. of the cost, the provinces taking care of the remaining 60 per cent. The federal appropriation amounted to $20,000,000 and the eati- mated cost of the highways was §48,- 990,792. Of this the federal govern- ment in March, last, had provided $18,775,602 out of an estimated Do-
Profit Depends To a Large Extent On Proper Treatment The profil one makes in the rais-
ing of hogs depends to a larger ex-
tent than many suppose on the treat- ment the litters .recetve while they are quite young. Years of experience and scores of experiments on the Pix- perimental Farms have justified the conclusion that the character of the feeding and management of the suck- ing and weaned pig has as great in- fluence on the economy of production.
Circular No. 61, of the Department
of Agriculture, at Ottawa, recom-
mendes teaching the litter to eat three
weeks before weaning. The use of a
creep which will admit the little pigs
but not the mother, is recommended.
For best results at weaning times,
sweet skim milk is regarded as a
practical necessily, subsequently sour
skim milk or buttermilk may be used’ Middlings mixed with milk are
| | |
It is recommended also to scatter a few handfuls of dry grain from time | to time in the bedding. This ensures
Sheep Club Work
More General Interest Is Created and Better Results Obtained
THE SUGAR JACK SYSTEM OF FEEDING
Does Not Seem To Improve the
Nutritive Value Of Roughage Sheep clubs, wherever established
The “Sugar Jack" process is usually become centres of general method recently put on the market | sheep raising activity. Youthful mem for the utilization of dry, coarse and | bers bring enthusiasm into thelr new unpalatable forage. It is an ensiling | enterprise, and as a result of their process in which a so-called “con-} well directed efforts succeed in their verter,” the Sugar Jack Convérter, is| undertaking. These clubs, organized used to moisten the dry forage before | by government sheep promoters, fed- it is placed in the press or small.silo.| eral and provincial, and assisted ta An experimental investigation of this getting their foundation stock, are process has been made by the Ani- | started off on correct lines. An in mal Husbandry Division at the Cen-/ centive is given the members not only tral Experimental Farm and the re-| to make the most of their sheep but sults published in a new bulletin en-/| to spread the information they re
titled “The Conversion Of Dry) ceive in their experience and other Roughage Into a Succulent Feed. wise, throughout the districts in Analysis of the “Sugar Jack Con-| which they live. In the Oakville
verter” has shown it to consist large- ly of common salt plys, siaked lime and a little vegetable matter. In fact warm water alone, and warm water | with common salt used to replace the | Sugar Jack Converter proved to be! as satisfactory in the processing as| did the solution of the converter. Judging from the results of practical feeding tests and from chemical and
District, in the Province of Manitoba a sheep club has been well establiah- ed. One of its members, Mr. James Bartlett, has undertaken to popular ize sheep raising by making public his views in an essay he has prepared on “Sheep and Their Care In Mani toba.” His experience leads him to believe that to succeed with sheep one must have a natural liking for
| but for all classes of hogs.
the little pigs taking exercise in hunting up the kernels. Over-feeding
is a frequent cause of fil-health and)
stunting. If tevo litters a year are to be raised it may be necessary to wean the pigs at six weeks of age, but if
| the litters are more widely distribut-
ed they should not be taken from thelr mothers until they are two months old. This circular, written by Mr. G. B. Rothwell, the Dominion
| Animal Husbandman, and his assist-
ant, Mr. W. G. Dunsmore, which is available at the Publications Branch of the Department, recommends ideal rations not only for the weanlings Tt also gives very helpful advice on how to avold or overcome ill health
Value Of Shelterbelts
Good Results Have Been Obtained From An Agricultural Standpotnt
The planting of shelterbelis on/|to use the streets. A large body of prairie farms in Western Canada has! trained “policemen will daily invade } an all the principal thoroughfares, detain
given appreciable results from agricultural standpoint. The water- conserving power Of the soil has been
increased; better crops have resulted; | on, cross, overtake and pass each oth- and the protection from extremes of) er on the sidewalks and where and temperature and wind movements! how to cross the streets.
Las enabled the introduction of the hardier fruits in many localities. Of
| particular importance is the addition-
al moisture secured through the formation of snow drifts which, melt- ing gradually in the spring, provide
| water after adjoining trecles® areas
have largely dried up.
Unless a man has scored at least|/of Pennsylvania many children of 13/ until the trail in our minds is tho- one failure he is unable to appreciate | and 14 years of age are full-time wage | roughly blazed. Then it will be easy
success.
INTREPID AIRMEN MAKE AVIATION FEES
MOTE at The aboye is the most recent photograph of the three ficre who are the only ones ever to conguer the North A motorist says that pedestrians | “antic im a westerly non-stop flight and who also upset the old superstition about Friday the 15th being unlucky
by concluding their history-making hop from Baldounel aerodrome in Ireland, to Greenly Island, Quebec, date. The first outside help to redch the trio.was brought by a Fairchild plane which reached Groenly on Sunday afternoon, April 15, at five o'clock and aboard which were Lieut. C. A.
Mechanic Thibault.
j
‘The picture above shows, from left to right: Captain Herman Koebl, co-pilot of the Bremen; Whrenfeld von Huenefeld, financial backer, and Col. James‘ B. Fiteamaurice, commaudant of the lrigh Hree the football and cigarette.” —Dorg- © air force and co-pilot of tue Bremen i
| bacteriological analysis, Sugar Jack processing does not add to or im- prove the nutritive value of the orig- take advantage of the grant and ©0-| i549) roughage. In the feeding trials operated up to the full extent so that the Sugar Jack ration produced con the accuring benefits are spread 8D-| siderably less milk than silage and erally over the Dominion. The total! was much more expensive. The pro- amounts received by the provinces) auction of milk and fat from the con- are: Prince Edward Island, $603,455; | sumption of the unprocessed dry Nova Scotia, $1,468,720; New Bruns- roughage was equal to that from sim- wick, $1,163,845; Quebec, $4,748,420; | tar roughage processed by the Su- Ontario, $5,824,005; Manitoba, £1-| par jack system, and the dry rough- 345,219; Saskatchewan, $1,664.504; age was equally palatable. Besides, Alberta, $685,589, and British Colum-|+44 gugar . Jack System requires bla, $1,251,955. much more labor than is necessary in feeding either corn silage or un- processed roughage. As a matter of fact the Sugar Jack process is sim-
ply a development of an old fashion | ter housing as an important feature
ed method of feed preparation long | , sheep raising. lie recommends giv- since discarded in favor of modern! ing the flock shelter from the wind Vienna do so in an improper man-| methods auch as the silo. The bulletin | and storms but offers a warning ner, the police authorities claimed in! is distributed by the Publications! goaingt close housing which would announcing a “pedestrians week"when| Branch of the Department of Agri-|isaq the stock to perspire and con-
they will try to teach the publi¢ how| culture, Ottawa. tract colds, As a general winter feed,
i oe good hay and straw are recommend-
Blazing the Trail | od, tut tomrent lambing time a small
ome - |ration of oats will be needed, partic-
Brain Is Like Forest and Thoughts ularly for thosé that are at all thin
Are Just Paths in condition. A dry bed, opportunity
The brain is like a dense forest,| for plenty of exercise, and a supply
and our thoughts are backwoodsmen | of clean water and salt always ayail-
blaging a trail, When once a cer-| able, should bring the flock through
tain thought has passed through it,|in fine condition to produce vigorous Traveller (on boat)—‘You were|it is easier for the same kind of)iambs and to nourish them well
sick the first few days of the trip and| thought to come again, That is habit.
the captain gave you leave? Did you! Fold a piece of paper, then spread it
live stock. He recommends creating an intimacy with the members of his flock, which he has learned by exper fence will be found profitable in their well doing.
After describing the several breeds of sheep popular in Canada, Mr Bartlett gives advice on starting the flock. The ewes, he says, can be pur- chased in August and September cheaper than at any other time of the year, and by buying at that time the heavy milking ewes can be picked out. The fleece is also sufficiently de- veloped at that season to help one to judge not only of its character but of the natural conformation of the stock. Mr. Bartlett regards the win-
minion aid of $19,596,388. All provinces moved eagerly to|
Giving Lessons On Walking
Vienna Is Holding a “Pedestrians Week" For This Purpose People who walk on the streets of |
the walking citizens and demon- strate to them how they must follow-
ask for it?” \ out. Tt is caster to fold tt again in the, Am Essential For Good Butter The New Deck Hand--“I didn’t) same crease than in any other way. ‘ peed need to ask. That ie habit. So, to create a habit | “8? Of Cream Is = Most Important
of cheerfulness, we must send cheer-
Without a fine quality of cream it On thengits cleng agnis and again is impossible to make a good class of butter. Not only must It ‘be pro- duced from healthy, properly fed cows, but it must be cared for so as to preserve it im fine condition. The production and care of cream in- volves many considerations that are systematically and clearly presented in Pamphlet No. 37, of the Depart- ment of Agriculture, at Ottawa on “The Care of Cream For Buttermak- ing.” This circular enumerated the various causes of ill-favored cream and tells how this may be avoided. when the delivery of cream by the patrons is done only twice a week, it is recommended that it must be kept down to at least 48 degrees, requir- ing the use of ice. The circular urges upop the creamery owner to see that his equipment is such that the cream is handled in the most efficient way, that the testing is dene accurately, and that the creamery itself is a model of cleanliness and a standing object lesson to the patrons
In the anthracite mining districts
earners, to be cheerful._-R. P. Anderson.
cancels
- ote
Honored By His Majesty
The King has appointed the Earl of Athlone, Governor-General of South Africa and brother of Queen Mary, a Knight of the Garter. The Duke of | Abercorn and Baron Desborough have also been appointed Knights of the Garter, The Knights of the Most Noble Order of the Garter were in- stituted in 1349
The Columbia icefield in the Cana- | dian Rockies covers 150 square miles | and is the source of streams flowing | to three oceans
on the |
\ and
“Head Louis Culsinier and length?”
“The principal things te gel are
shoulders or full
(Duke) Schiller, Iv
vier, Derlia
| 2s
. look -a person square In the eye. YOU! jnew she had no right to question
THE REVIEW, REDCLIFT, ALBERTA
| baby—it would be. . . | tated. | “I can work by the day and leave | the baby with friends,” said Helmi. | She was pale and tired now, and | looked too ill to be an attractive ven- | ture for anyone looking for help
“I am strong,” said WHelmi: “my baby is young, so I am pale yet. Try me—for a day even.”
." she hest-
Annoying Rashes
Bathe the affected parts freely with
Cuticura Soap and hot-water, dry with- out rubbing, and anoint with Cuticura Ointment. This treatment not only soothes and heals rashes and irritations but tends to prevent such conditions.
ae ce ad Szration Devgt:_ spi ‘om would have been Interested in
always consult him of course’ (Mr.
this) “and I will let Miss Ritchie ,| know. That will be the best. I — | couldn't very well let you bring the | baby, and it’s at night I need you
PAINTED FIRES ee turned to Migs Ritchie, “1
| must go now,” she said; “a little girl minds the baby—-home from school, she stayed for me.”
| Miss Ritchie nodded. “Better luck
| next time,” she said; “I shall keep
| you in mind.”
one | In the afternoon Helm! came back. CHAPTER XXIII.-Contnued. Helm! stared at her haughtily. “It! sre— Gorbett was not going out, so
“Well, there's many a good girl has|!8 not your business,” she sald, “1 CAN) 4. Kent the baby .But no one wanted come to me before without references, | have a baby if I want it without ask- | y1.1m1 she was a foreigner, and she Mrs. Angus, I'm no such a hand for| img you.” ad a baby. references as 1 once was,” said Miss Kind-hearted Miss Ritchie was dis- Ritchie. “They are often written te| Well, who else have you, MISS )t ose, and flared up in anger when get rid of a girl, you know.” Ritchie?” one woman said to Helmi; “You
“No, I do not know that,” said Mrs. The fourth woman who spoke to! should have thought of this about Angus; “I prefer references.” Helmi asked her many question®|tiis time Inst year?”
“Well, then, here you are,” said| about her past. “Where is your hus- “Having a baby is not a crime, Miss Ritchie; “here's an old country} band?” she asked. r Mrs. Coateworth; the poor girl is girl with letters from rectors and cu-| Helm! replied that she did Ot) bo nest and willing to work. She'd tates and local bodies and all—-she'll| not know. give service for every dollar, T'll go do fine for you.” “Are you sure you are married?” [445 ghe isn’t asking charity or even
That morning Helmi was inter-| Helmi produced the certificate. sympathy.” viewed by four other women, She was “Do you ever think he may have All afternoon Helmi waited, while viewed with favor by the first one,| deserted you?” the woman asked | well-dressed women came and went. who enumerated her good points | searchingly. The ‘seekers of employment sat to-
without ever thinking it might he, Helmi hesitated, and as the woman | gether, and were easily distinguish- embarrassing. “You look clean and) pjied 4
smart,” she said; “you knaw how 10) think of the brace and bit Jack used bl beseeching. The war put your clothes on straight, and you! was heute end ;
to bore holes in the boards. Melmi) with all its dislocations had thrown
Coticura Shaving Stick 26¢.
BY NELLIE L. McCLUNG
‘COPYRIGHT, CANADA, 1925
“You bet you can, and welcome.
wom t mt, and are a foreigner, I see, From what an oun. 08 eunphegyne
“Well, I must ask my husband—1)
er questions she could only | apie from the others. Their manner |
| Se you buy Red Rese Toate | | the aluminum package and
Centennial Celebration
| you are not thoroughly satis- | Henri Dunant, Founder Of Red Cross, | Ked Winner of Nobel Peace Prire
» we have authorized your | | Grocer to return your money | | On receipt of the container, | no matter how much of the | tea you have used, Order a trial package. av
| NEW GUIDE FOR AVIATORS |
Roof Signs Would Aid Fliers To) | Identify Towns
The patriotic citizen of today is ‘ called upon to give a roof to his) | country. Roofs are to be the aerial
guideposts for flyers, with signs | | identifying each community, pointing | the direction to the nearest airport | and telling the bistance to it.
The family of a generation hence | Which goes out in its aerial fivver| pew a Sunday afternoon ride will be) paris, October 31, 1910. |} able to see beneath it the name Of! pranco-Swiss business man and | each tawn in large letters, and ‘O| philanthropist. Author of several | learn at a glance where to land if the gooks, | carburetor gets to balking or the | gasoline runs out.
The aviation division of the de- partment of commerce has initiated
Born Geneva, May 8, 1828, Died
Casually travelling through North- ern Italy in 1859, Dunant came upon | the ghastly plain of Solferino where,
jon June 24th, 300,000 men had been jthe plan of guiding aviators by roof) engaged in a battle whigh had lasted | signs, and it has been taken up vigor- | fifteen hours.
jously. Particularly are such sign8) shocked into action at the sight of | valuable to airmen, it is pointed out, |
| on roofs of buildings in smaller towns | | and communities which have no land-
|marks which are easily distinguish- service, recruited from the nearby | atile from the air,
{ town of Castilgione, With these work- Ot! companies have been among the | ors, he obtained afficial permission to ree to accede to the suggestion, and tong the wounded and dying on the | many of them are putting town) geld of battle, going out personally names on the tops of their gasoline) yin wine, food, cigarettes, tobacco, }and of] tanks in each community. The | ¢or which he paid out of his’ own |American Legion has announced | nurse, So indefatigably did he work | that 10,000 of its posts will underiake i that, in gratitude, the invalids named the marking of their communities/ him “The Good Samaritan of Castli-
diers, Dunant undertook to establish & volunteer ambulance and nursing
40,000 dead, wounded and dying sol- |
| [ite eer We
“Let us do good unto all men,”
Galatians vi. 10.
The chief use, then in man of that he knows, Is his painstaking for the good of
all; | Not feshly weeping for our own-made
woes, Nor laughing from a melancholy
| Not hating from a soul that overflows With bitterness breathed out from inward thrall; But sweetly, rather, to ease, to loose, or bind, As need requires, this frail, fallen human kind——-Fulke Greville. Power to do good is the true ana lawful end of aspiring. For good thoughts, though God accept them, yet towards men they are little bet- ter than good dreams, except they be put in act, and that cannot be with- out power and place as the vantage
country?”
“Finland,” said Heli.
“Goodnight!” cried the lady, with a harsh laugh; “then it's all off, My husband had one in his bridge gang and, a positive nuisance he was, & ‘socialist and agitator, He would put me out if I brought home a Finn. 1 want. a British subject, Miss Ritchie. We owe it to our own to give them the choise, though, dear me, some of the Pinglish girls have been a trial, too.” ,
Helmi kept a boardinghouse, and fan- cied Helmi on account of her height. “I like a tall girl—she can carry trays better. You've done it?-—that's good. Yes, you are a likely looking girl, I must say—foreign, but still you have good Wnglish. I don’t mind Finns—- they're tempery, but clean and smart.
|
many her, but she answered as bravely 84) on the faces of many, gaunt fear was she could, ull the time praying, “Make | piainly written. This was particular- her take me, God; Make her!" ly true of those who wege the miost “Well, my dear, I wouldn't be too} refined and cultured. sure, Men are fickle, I know. My first} pPragments’ of conversation fell husband left me.” around Helmi as she sat among the “My man is a good one,” said Hel-| seekers, é mi, firmly. Two women in seal coats were dis-
“Any family?” cussing the situation, . “One littele girl, one month old.” (To Be Continued.)
“Well, of course, that would be the re: MfMiculty.”
*T cam leave het with friends,” said C.N. R. Announces Helmi, eagerly. She was going pan- Low Summer Fares icky. Was there no work anywhere shies for her?
“still, I have three sons, young men; it would not be nice to have a| Summer days are bargain days on young girl who has a baby—you the Canadian National Railways. know what boys are lke—inclined to| Commencing May 15, round trip sum- tease.” mer excursion fares goos into effect. “I like boys, good enough,” said These fares feature a reduction of
Sriaite Gaak? ‘on: maat 60.90 hoes] Meied, cigurty, “txy mno-—t am. 0] *remh 90 Co 35 por wont ae compared
at night! Why? A Baby! Nothing do- ing-—-you won't do me at all. No, sir, 1 had a girl with a baby once and it was always getting sick or dying or something just when I needed her worst. Never again! I believe in population all right, but I can’t have a waitress with a baby, even if we never get the country settled. What in the world did you have a baby for, a smart girl like you?” —
Much of the nervousness in older
stimulation during infancy, caused ay sagnetns baby as a sort of ani-
toy for the amusement of par- ents, relatives’ and friends. Baby. may be played with ,but not for more
than a guarter of an hour to an hour ingly. -?
daily. Beyond that, being handled, tickled, eaused to laugh or even scream, will sometimes result in vom- iting, and invariably causes irrite-
plessness. ry . crying and sleepless-' opened and a dainty little lady eater- ¥ Pe ed She came to the desk quickly,
mess from this cause can avoided by treating baby with more consider
can't see what is making baby rest | toy. “Oh, Miss Ritchie, I am in such
OE peso corn rs
!
| i ;
:
loss of and an “upsets” of | took it so seriously. Have you some batho bver 25" million’ botties| ome
smart worker. I have to get work, my | With the regular rates as well as al-
money is pearly gone, and 1 must pay |!0wing the traveller a longer period
for my baby’s care, my friends are | vefore the date of expiration, the low
not rich people.” fares remaining in. effect until Sep- “{ would not suppose they were,” | tember 30.
: ea m The new rates are applicable from
“No, ma'am,” said Helmi, “Tt ts a all points in the cast and also trom Canadian family who have been very good to me.” ;
“Indeed,” said Mrs, Swallwell, “how good of them! I hope you are very grateful.”
“T am,” sald Helmi, “I want to pay. Will you take me?”
“T pill think about it, I do not like | Prince Rupert. . to decide in a hurry. My home is everything to me. I plan everything so carefully. People tell me F am fool- ish, but it's my nature. Give me your phone number, You haven't a phome? Oh, dear, how awkward! Let me see, you could phone me-—-No, 8333--that
say when I will be in, Every day there | cently expressed criticism of the de- is something. Really, I grow busler| partment, the Canadian Legion (Al-
‘| all the time, it seems, and one CAM-|perta command), the Welcome
not refuse invitations when one ac- League and the Salvation Army were cepts them. Friday evening at din-j , given leave to appear.
ner time—we dine at seven—-I think I have no dinner engagement.”
Fond Father: “Come, Tommy, even
away. How could she wait until Fri-| shouldn't ery.” : day—she must have work. It, was! Tommy: “What's crying-for —
would take her? She looked back and searched the faces of the women. Miss Ritchie nodded to her encourag-
— — a
paiA
BABY BOOKS
‘Tl phone about for you when I can,” she said; “there is a rush on this morning.” :
Just at that moment the door
with tiny steps, like a mechanical im
vguenmacts aby use since ths? infant
Miss Ritchie called Helmi over, you, Mrs.
gz E &
for guidance of flyers. gione.”
om / 4 round.Lord Bacon, ce buildings, shops and tank#) ‘The vision of the suffering witnes- .
are suitable for the signs, the avia- seq at Solferino never left him. For
tion division says, but depots and) three years he travelled about Eu- NO MEDICINE LIKE
warehouses near railroads are par- rope, preaching, lecturing, writing, ticularly good because’ railway lines) advocating the need of speedy reor- are frequently folldwed by flyers. ganization of military and medical Simple block letters in chrome yel-| nursing service. Finally, in 1862, his| For Either the Newborn Babe Or low, on a dull black background, are | little book “Un Souvenir de Sol- the Growing Child best, pilots say, and the letters ferino” appeared and startled | ‘There is no other medicine to equal should be at least six feet high. At-| shocked world into’ the immediate| Baby's Own Tablets for little ones— rows should point the direction of the) need for change. j whether it be for the new born babe nearest landing field and the mileage The Committee of Public. Safety or 2 wed poker: Ke to it should be given. consequently, under the presidency free from opiates 4 other pormatul _— ~ and chairmanship of Gustave Moy-| drugs and the mother can always feel An Ol! For All Mon.—The- sdilor,| nier and General Dufour, became so oe se wy SR sits en |the soldier, the fisherman, the lum- interested that R succeeded In calling | Aram, BAL Goeth Danaanen, | berman, the out-door laborer and all together an International Conference To who are exposed to injury pnd tein 1863, As @ result, of these efforts| healthy children, to whom, when a Eclectric Oil a true and faithfu! still another conference was called in ——— yee we ae aM friend, To ease pain, relieve colds, 1864, when 16 nations sent delegates. rove gens _ Palin —. ~ Ay dress wounds, subdue lumbagg 4nd ‘phe meeting ended when 12 out of the! Keep in any home where there are Thevetern n aeedt totes ae | 16 national representatives signed the young children.” all home medicines and be amongst frst Treaty of Geneva, and Red Cross) | Baby's an aang = Bape = _— those taken on a journey. was established for the first time in ee agweien babes onmeas + international law, Today 59 nations) tion and indigestion; break up col osition ersed ‘subscribe to this Treaty, which grew and simple fever and make teething P is Rev : of the ideals of Henrl Dunant, | easy, They are sold by medicine deal-
fer eee ee om
U.S. Will Never Be Able To Pay Debt (53 F.. 8. To Britain P
Nearly as many men of the Bri- tish empire passed over the Menin road to the Ypres salient not only never to return but ever to lie there without a grave, unknelled, uncof- fined and unknown, as the United States lost by death in the world war. And we of all the universe, have reason to stand with gratitude be- fore that gate of honor to those who perished behind it.. But for their en- durance and that of their comrades, living and dead, it would not be a memorial of their sacrifice, but a monument to.their defeat--a gate opening to the sea and our own coasts. And yet we continue to speak of their debt to us—their deht, who have put us and all the world in eter- nal debt to them.-_New York Times.
—
Insist on Minard’s Liniment—accept no other,
When the popularity of the radio when by the benefits began to be manifest, many persons oh et pecans. Expect real relief expressed the opinion that all musi- |and permanent benefits when you buy | og) instruments would in time be- tment, It oaees come obsolete, especially the piano.
anent in many cases where | But the recent statement of a New other eo called remedies have utterly | York piano company that all existing : |yecords in the piano business had
Operate Candiing | been broken by the sale of $108,000 eS Btatl
worth of pianos in one day proves
Seven. candling stations will be op- The same prediction erated in Saskhtchewan this yeat by! a, made when the player-plano and the Saskatchewan Egg and Poultry) 1. phonograph made thelr debut, Pool, which opened its first egg pool of the season recently, The candling stations are at Regina, Moose Jaw, Saskatoon, North Battleford, York-! Gorns cripple the feet and make ton, Melfort and Assiniboia. This pool; walking a torture, yet sure relief in
; . or | the shape of Holloway's Corn Kemov- will probably remain open for six or) epi wn ida ead aa ‘ seven weeks.
the contrary.
‘put this extraordinary one-day sale of pianos indicates otherwise.
=
Oil Refinery For Moose Jaw ‘
With the purchase of the flax mill “Anything suilable for a man situated west of the Government ele- A holy war is reported to be raging | here?” asked the fellow who never vator at Moose Jaw, by the Price Oil|in Arabia and parts adjacent. As we | glanced at store signs. Development and Refining Company, | understand it, @ holy war is about as “Just me,” smiled the cashier of this city will shortly have a plant in| holy as a-civil war is civil, | the children's specialty shop, operation for the purpose of refaing |) : crude oils. According to Mr. Price, the president, it is intended to estab- lish a chain of plants across Canada, jocating one in each province. It is understood that operations will begin about May 15th.
—
Ps. ge
THE REDCLIFF REVIEW, THURSDAY, JUNE 14th, 1928
stno, who is on atour of the | west looking up Queess gradu- | ates, called at Gordon Memorial | manse on Tuesday evening. The | professor was accompanied by a umber of Queens peiple from
FRUIT SALTS & FRUIT SALINE
has We Carry a Full Line of Nyal’s Liver Salts
A Quality Effervescent
Drin k Stearn’s Morning Salts
ture History,’ Tartalac Kruschen Salts Royal college, Calgary, and open
Wedd’s Grage Salts to all departments thhe first prize was awarded to Miss Ina | damilton, of Three Hills. Miss | |Hamilton is a graduate of ourr She s a daughter
is a graduaate of Queens. > > *
To be taken first thing in
ling the morning, before break-
Erasmus Mills Salts fast.. Ye Old English Fruit Salts
‘Professor McClemet, of King. ing-| | Application for Lease
lister of Public Works, [Edmon- Medicine Hat. Mrs. Matheson ton, for a lease of the following road allowances, viz. = “ Bast side of S. B. 24- 14- 6, w 4t At the examiaations in “crip: | East Side of sec. 13-14-6. w 4th held at Mount | North Side of N. W. 7-14-5 w4 | Any protest against the grant-
|must be forwarded to the Min- lister of Public Works. Edmon- ton, within thirty days from the
iv a ata SS) CLS UTS ET UES Rae EN of Road te acl WM. HENDERSON : DR. EB. L. McKEE Issuer of DENTIST NOTICE is hereby given that} iy By Pyorrhea Treated & Prevented O. R. Reeves, of Medicine Hat, : : |}} Phone 8945 Medicine Hat
made applicaton to the Min- Opposite Assiniboia Hotel |
ener ere)
THE RED STORE
W. D. WATSON AUCTIONEER & GENERAL AGENT
Rent Collections Attended to Office Opp. Redeliff Hotel |
of the above mentioned lease
} | “ . . BIG BOTTLE Sodium Phosphate ba aa ee Robt. Hamilton date of this notice. We Sell New and Slightly used Furniture” Effervescent Yo! MT. imsidents of Redcliff. | Dated at Redcliff this 7th day) 822 South Railway St, , 50 cents Citrate Magnesia let ncemataniiata sree ensoeticeiae es Be | of June, 1928. | Medicine Hat, Alberta CARD OF THANKS O, F, Reeves, Applicant. Phone 3859
CECIL T. HALL, Druggist |) 2, sma_ itr, tenjamin
wish to thank all those who | e=-——_—_———————.——--—-—— lassisted at the time of thei fire Ee
last week. We also wish to | thank the fire pew fo or . |prompt action, and especially |, Mr. P. Des Hafes ,of Ciuney; | Trove who stayed up all night
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Phone 3627
BUILD UP YOUR SAVINGS
>
Dr. J. R. PATIERSON
816 Second Street MEDICINE HAT
> | ALBERTA Interesting ae oy etter tron De | wateh the rite, ar INVEST DEMAND Local Items Rogers. ' FOR RENT—A Nice 4 Room — —_—_—- —-—- SAVINGS
! ** * cottagt ; cettrally located and in = Mr. and Mi. H. J. Sissons good | repair, — Apply E. M. West|' After a long and not very'and family leave tonight foi
eventful session, the — Fitchbug, U.S. on a combined -oFOR SALEA Wel aa Rs house cinerea _ Monday. {holiday and business trip, snake modert wor. ao int bs Gen, Rgdiatt . arzived in» Medicie Hat Agricultural So-|4th Ae at eat cash. town on Tuesday on business | ci¢¢y will hold a race meet on Apply Fran 3, Red lift in conectio with the Dominion|July 25th. Their annual corn; a pe Glass plant here. will be held some tine ia Nove] | O—S—SS_—_==_—_ eee |ber next. BE. E. ROGERS, M.D, CM. Redcliff will play the next! fossrs. J. Kitchen, H. Ch L.M.CC. essrs. J. en, H. football game in Medicine Hat|anq 113 Gox left Tuesday to at- Physician and Surgeon on Friday evening of this week ’ : 7 Office & Res. over Drug Store : ; tend the Masonic, Grand Lodge Phone 6 Dey bed Miaht against the C. P. R. meeting in Calgary. Mrs. Cox one No. 2, Day & gh and Mrs. Kitchen accompanied Teachers and pupils are now e638 busy at the school reviewing for, Rathwell and Hart will meet | eeecceccccccccccssecesooes
the midsumme exams. Some of|in a championship boxing bout Ice Cream
the high school pupils are start-|in the Empress theatre, Medi- You Can Now Buy it at
ing in at 8 a.m. cine Hat, on Friday evening of ED COOKES’
de gal St this week. Program starts at OPEN EVENINGS
* * *
Word has been recsived that)g:30. E. Lawson, of Redcliff, has been oa 8 chosen to referee the football] Rev, J. D, McKenzie, of Mon- game in the Hat Frday evenng'treal, is spending afew days between Redclff and the C. P. R. wieh his cousin, Mrs. Matheson.
Jaga! Mr. McKenze was a commiss-
A special musical service is|ioner to the recent Presbyterian being prepared by the junioi| Assembly held fm reat choir of Godon Memorial, for
“" g Sn ee racaaaacascncvibaawonens
Sunday, June 24th aand will. be} Joseph me Seoie Marty, and
rendered at the morning service| Big Sandy, Mont., hotored over WEDNESDAY
on that day. ak et last spent wo eo 4 eee end with their parents, Mrr. a AFTERNOONS :
Ae Sey wage hee am ioe. Robt, Ma rty. They also :
A. e diocese of Qu’Appell ted their brother, John, in For Ice Cream Onl
4 a ae —— the East Springs district. . :
church, ine Ha vera “** Absolutely no Groceries .
women from St. Ambrose here| Mr. and Mrs, Mm. Hendeson pee Time ma :
are in ottendanse, . nee tonight for Calgary were :
rs. Henderso will undergo an _ While trying to assist a truck) operation for her reyer. Their NOT OPEN SUNDAYS : in trouble on Crescent Heights |many friends here sinceely hope |¢ .
hill, Medicine Hat, H. Lehr’s car the operation will be successful LPPTTTTITITITIiiiiTriii iy went over the bank and landed |and that Mrs. Henderson's sight :
omen ere Wie Sess oem Helen be cutee’. VEGETABLE Plants For Sale
A Nice Assortment, incuding COLUMBINE, GEUM, ——|j| STATICE, VIOLA AUBRIETA, AFRICAN DAISY, LARKSPUR, PETUNIAS, ASTERS, STOCKS, CO8MOS,, PANSIES, GODETIA,
** # The lawn social given by the Merrill Woodruff, who has/ Mission Band of Gordon Memor- been giving piano lessons here|ial church on the chueh ground for some time, is putting on a/last Saturday afternoon was pianc recital in Cliff hall next)well attended by mothers and Saturday afternoon commenc-|older people. The girls and ing at 2:30, The program will|hoys and leaders of the band be puto by Mrr. Woodruff's|were delighted with the success pupils. An invitation is extend-|of the event, which netted the ed to the public to attend. band about $15.00,
DREAMLAND THEATRE, Medicine Hat
THURS. FRI. SAT. MON, TUES, WED.
LAURA LA PLANTE in RALPH INCE, im THANKS FOR THE |
BUGGY RIDE NOT FOR MARGUERITE, ETC. CABBAGE, PEPPER, Paassed ‘U’ PUBLICATION Comedy—“Her Only Hus- Comedies CELERY, TOMATOES. band. Mickey's Felix
Western—Law Rider Battle The Cat DOMINION GREENHOUSE
| CAULIFLOWER,
REDCLIFF DRAY
—— AND ——
Feed Barn
Don’t Buy a Car Till you Have Seen
The Whippet
The Best Buy For the Money on the Market
Most Econemical Car on Gas. Coast to Coast run 43.28 Miles to the Gallon.
All Models Available
DRAYING, TEAMING
and CESSPOOL WORK
PROMPT ATTENTION
and "A it pacase Thtahine of Businc ond West 0 Demensisoticn GA TINT ACTION "deem GUARANTEED GEO. MOSES UNEVERSAL GARAGE W. H. NUSSEY REDCLIFF MEDICINE HAT PHONE 26
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR,
Office Broadway.
ith S&
Al! kinds of light draying to any
Orders may be left at the C. P
i
Lang Bros. Ltd. |
651 2nd St.
CERTIFICATES
—_— v
FRANK BAIRD
Purchased and redeemed at par NOTARY PUBLIC, ete Payable on Demand Phone 79 REDCLIFF, ALBERTA
Por Particulars write or apply to: —_ . HON, R. G. REID Provincial Treasurer
W. V. NEWSON Depdty Prov. Treasurer KEETLEY JOHNSON | PARLIAMENT BUILDINGS, EDMONTON, ALBERTA —for— ~ Accident, Fire, Sickness Insurance Ocean Passenger Service REDCLIFF
Light Draying |) EX CURSION
FARES
part of the town ‘will be promptly attended:to.
&. Station. Phone No. 8.
Prompt Service Guaranteed,
———
J. L.WRIGH?1
RESORTS
Canadian Pacific
ROCKIES - LAKE LOUISE
BANFF
AUCTIONEER
APPRAISER AND LAND VALUATOR
COUNTRY SALES A SPECIALTY
PACIFIC COAST
VANCOUVER - VICTORIA
ALASKA |
THE ROMANTIC NORTH
Several Years Experience
A. W. MURPHY
334 First Street
MEDICINE HAT WEST COASTF
Vancouver Island THE DELIGHTFUL WEST COAST CRUISE
woes Full Inforation From 5; INSURANCE wa SNA Fire Accident CNSR :
ALL, RAIL OR LAKE & RAIL
or Write G. D. BROPHY Distrist Passenger Agent hue PACIFIC RAILWAY, CALGARY. ALTA.
. Life Sickness
Medicine Hat Felephone 8554
How can you Know HOW GOOD THEY ARE.--
unless you try these beverage classics?
BEER ---STOUT PALE ALE
At Good Hotels and Clubs order a case from your nearest agent CALGARY BREWING & MALTING CO. LTD.