ior

_ cession of the United States add considerably to the prestige that organ-

“effects. It will give

THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA

ORANGE PEKOE BLEND i

TEA : “Fresh from the Gardens”

Bitead' States ; The ILO.

More than ordinary significance attaches to recent decision of the American Congress to apply for full membership of the International Labor Organization at Geneva, usually referred to as the ILO. Not only will ac-

i

{zation now enjoys, but, bringing as it will the U.S. into direct confrontation with this important branch of League of Nations’ activity, the move will do much to restore prestige lost by the parent body through recent defections, notably that of Japan.

Press despatches have revealed little of the background, few of the nfotives, behind this change of front ‘on the part of the Washington govern- ment. It is true, of course, membership of the International Labor Organ- ization does not involve endorsement of the League covenant, nor does it entail any political commitments to the League as such, In fact, the U.S. desire to provide adequate safeguards against the “foreign entanglements” that country has so rigorously eschewed since the war, is exemplified in the act of Congress which specifically declares that the United States, by mem- bership in the ILO, shall assume “no obligations under the covenant”.

This, of course, is possible. The International Labor Organization, like the World Court upon whose bench the United States long has been repre- sented, is an autonomous section of the League of Nations. Membership in either or both is possible without acceptance of' the covenant. Germany, as @ matter of fact, was an active, full-fledged member of the ILO for six | years before becoming a member of the League of Nations. The connec- tion between the organization and the League is derived not from the covenant but from the charter of the ILO, which is Part XIII. of the Treaty of Versailles.

The International Labor OrPanization is, however, much closer to the League than is the World Court for the reason that it is, essentially, a means of getting international legislation enacted, or treaties negotiated, as is the League itself. The heart of the League system is its permanent

ers aneenaemdaeey

mechanism for continuous international negotiation, and the ILO parallels this machinery throughout, in its limited field of social questions.

The importance of the United States’ decision to join the International Labor Organization, therefore, can best be deduced by considering it in rela- tion to the economic problems created by varying standards of living, hours of labor and rates of wages, in nations now competing for foreign markets, and also by contrasting the present action.with Washington’s past attitude towards the Geneva labor office.

Hitherto, the United States has been far colder to the ILO than to any other branch of League activity. Until one year ago, the United States government would have nothing whatever to do with the labor organiza- tion, but now, without any parade or ballyhoo, Congress has accepted, vir- tually without demur, the proposal to apply for membership. This will in- volve representation on the permanent secretariat at. Geneva and ultimate

appointment of American <Siheaet ocr rms to the personnel of the central office. .

Psychologically, th m of Washington will have. more far-reaching

_ Germany and Italy “furiously to think” for, if President Roosevelt can persuade Congress to make so complete a volte face in so short a time in connection with one great section of League activity, it follows that but little additional pressure would be required to convert his legislators to the idea of accepting the League covenant. Despite present reticences, and the insistence upon non-political safeguards, American opinion relative to the League is undergoing a change—and that change is not so far short of accepting League membership as to make that end remote. If it come to pass that the United States enter the League, that body will immediately assume grander and nobler proportions in the eyes of the world, and the dreams of those who called it into exist- ence will be within sight of fulfillment.

Sportsmen Will Pay Ten Dollars For|Hundred-Mile Wide Shelter Belt “Good Fighter Being Considered By, Roosevelt

A great effort is being made in| President Roosevelt id considering

China to stamp out cricket-fighting.| a proposal to plant a “shelter belt”

It is being made as great a legal) of trees 100 miles wide and stretch- offence as opium smoking, and pun-|ing across the United States from

ishable with equally severe sentences.

Despite the efforts made to stop the “sport,” an enormous amount of it goes on. Chinese wil pay as much as $10 for a good fighting cricket, end many make it a business to breed them and train them for fight- ing, in the same way as cocks used to be trained for the old English sport of cock-fighting. The crickets) face each other in elaborate bamboo “rings,” down the middle of which @ giass slide runs, through which the fighters glare at each other until such time as their ire is sufficiently aroused for the attack. Large stakes change hands during the fights.

H. R. (Russ) Overly, the man wi gave Col, Charles A. Lindbergh his first airplane ride, is dead. In his book “We,” Lindbergh wrote how he was first inspired to fly while watch- ing Overly’s plane soaring over Madison.

Milk has the highest food Value of @li foods and is considered the most mearly perfect food.

Canada to the Texas panhandle.

This gigantic scheme, requiring 10 to 12 years to complete, would aim to minimize drouth and help prevent winds from stripping farm lands of their choice soil, it was announced recently by the American Tree Asso- ciation. Planting in the 100-mile wide area would be in strips, running north and south.

There would be 100 strips of trees, or one to a mile. The shelter belt would stretch 1,800 miles through North Dakota, South Dakota, Ne- braska, Kansas and Oklahoma to the Texas border.

Producing four different letter- heads at one impression, using two

ho} kinds of paper stock and printing

four different colors at the same time, can be done by presses equip- ped with a new device.

Automatic telephones are rapidly being installed in Northern Ireland. Recently the twenty-third rural auto- matic exchange was opened and a number of others are in course of erection.

Change of Climate, Diet, Water

Project May Succeed

‘| New Process Being Tried To Dredge

Gold From Fraser River

The golden wealth in the sands of the Fraser river, which has till now proved largely elusive to the efforts of man, and of which there is said to be enough to pay the national debt of Canada many times over, is to be at- tacked this summer with a new ‘type of dredge, and with what appears to be every prospect of success.

The structure, now nearing com- pletion, is the largest work of its kind ever attempted on the Pacific coast, incorporating for the first time anywhere in the world an entirely new process as applied to gold dredg- ing.

Built under the engineering advice and supervision of Hume Robertson, placer mining engineer, who has had 20 years’ experience in that kind of work with British companies in the Malaya*-Pehinsula, the great hulk may now be seen assuming final shape at the shipyards of B.C. Marine Engineers and Shipbuilders Limited.

Hydraulic pumps, with suction strength of 200 pounds to the square inch, created by two 500-h.p. motors will raise the sands from the bottom of the river and the complete process of, washing and refining will be com- pleted upon the dredge.

Capacity, with the present equip- ment, is placed at 12,500 cubic yards a day, but provision has been made for double the present sluicing area by the addition of an upper deck, on an incline of 13 feet from bow to stern.

The whole operation will be elec- trically driven with individual motors and control switches on the bridge towards the bow of the structure. Present estimates indicate an oper- ating cost of not more than two cents a cubic yard.

Hydro-electric plant is to be con- structed on Jones Creek, near where the dredge will be put into operation, and will generate 2,000 horse-power. It is understood that work upon this phase of the undertaking is to start at once.

If the operation of the first dredge proves successful—and every possible safeguard against failure seems to have been taken—-the company will proceed to the construction of other dredges of similar model.

Smaller units will: be needed in some parts of the river under lease, but all will incorporate the present equipment, with such improvenie#ts as practice may suggest.

Problem In South Africa Many Pupils With Scottish Names Speak No English

As in Quebec so in South Africa there are people with pure Scottish names like Campbell, Fraser and MacDonald, who speak little or no English, Dr. 8S. H. Bloemfontein, Director of Education of the Orange Free State in the Union of South Africa, remarked after an investiga- tion of Quebec school conditions,

Dr. Pellissier went to Quebec to study the question of bilingualism and how it is handled in Quebec. In South Africa they have the same problem, the majority of the pipils speaking Dutch and the minority English. They also are faced with the difficulty of educating children in the outlying sections, as in Quebec.

Dr. Pellissier said the children with the Scottish names are the descend- ants of settlers who married Boer women. They gave their names to their wives but the mothers passed their own language to their off-

spring. SOURED ON THE WORLD?—THAT’S LIVER

Wake up your Liver Bile '- —No Calomel Fira ad gabe lg peed aad onan tee Low: =a

: fs Little Liver Pills will soon 6x e00n ui for oe, Pe

250. at all Year Of Anniversaries At Least Three Will Be Commemor- ated During 1984

That 1934 is a year of annivers- aries was recalled by Victor Morin,

CAN'T SLIP OR SLIDE

FALSE TEETH

Don’t use any old kind of apes n Ba keep false teeth in use a reliable,, recognized one which dentists prescribe such as Dr. Wernet’s Powder—tho largest seller in the world—grips teeth 80 secure yet comfortable they feel natu- ral. Positively no slipping or clicking— blissful comfort assured all day long, Forms a special comfort cushion to pro- tect and ~~ gums. co cores, Dae my paste-keeps mouth sanitary—breat piesa. 1 Inexpensi ve—all druggists.

Seine ‘kong Sleeps

\ Bit Record Of Rip ‘Vah Winkle Still Stands

A Huddersfield man has had no sleep for eight weary years. Not even morphine can give him an hour of real sleep. How he must envy such a man as W. Foxley, pot-maker to the Mint, who fell asleep on April 27th, 1546, and slept serenely for fourteen days and fifteen nights. Fourteen days is only a nap compar- ed with the exploits of some sleepers. A German civil servant named Arn- heim, forty-five years old, slipped one evening as he got out of a tram and knocked his head on the pave- ment. He was taken home and put to bed. The doctors said there was no concussion or serious injury. Next morning he was still asleep, and he slept for two years and four months. He was a wreck when at last he woke, yet in the end he recovered. There was the famous Marguerite Bovenval, “the Sleeping Woman of Thenolles,” who was thrown into a trance-like sleep by a. fright and slept for nineteen years and six months. Then she slowly roused, was able to talk, but she was wasted to a skeleton, and died five months later. The record Rip Van Winkle is an American, a farmer called Harms. He came in one evening, tired after a long day’s work, went to bed and slept for twenty-six years. It was possible to rouse him to take food, but he could not stay awake more than five minutes. Like the French woman sleeper, he wasted away and died.

French Company Will Survey Bear Lake

If Report Is Satisfactory Capital _ Will Be Invested

A vast amount of French capital will be invested in development in the Great Bear Lake mining district, providing that a survey to be made this summer by Dr. Edmund Bruet, who arrived at Edmonton from Paris, proves satisfactory.

Dr. Bruet, answering questions

which were interpreted by Paul]

Jenvrin, former French consul at Edmonton, stated that there was no question of large scale development being undertaken if his report recom- mends such action.

Dr. Bruet is vice-president and director of Omniyum, a large French company which is interested in min- eral resources all over the world. It has organized a Canadian branch which would carry on the work in the north country.

The company is interested ‘e gold, silver, pitchblende, and any of the other mineral discoveries in the far north.

Also representing the department of natural resources at Paris, Dr. Bruet also will study the habits and conditions of the Indian tribes in the north, He also expects to take back to Paris specimens of plant life and also insects found in the north coun- try.

Queen’s Voice Over Radio

For the second time in the history of broadcasting the queen’s voice will probably be heard on the wireless in September, the occasion being the launching of the Cunarder, No, 534, at Clydebank, Her Majesty having been heard on the wireless in the early days of the British Broadcast- ing Corporation.

Find Gold In Meteorite

Science's first recorded discovery of gold that has fallen from the sky to the earth was reported at Berke- ley, Calif., by Dean Gillespie, of Den- ver, before the meeting of the Ameri- can Association for the Advance- ment of Science. Minute amounts of gold were detected in a meteorite found near Melrose, N.M.

Often the Cause of Diarrhoea

are suddenly attacked with Diarrhea, Dysantery, & Colic, Cramps, Pains in the Summer Complaint or any Looseness of the Bowels, do not waste valuable time, but get a bottle of Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry and see how a it will relieve you. bowel complaint remedy has been on the aan for the 88 years. Proof enough that a ages ting with some new and untried

Do not Boal @ substitute, Get Rey Fowler's”

J “ee en ees oe AOS Re on, at eats mp only by Go, tas, Toronto, Ont

chairman of the Montreal committee on the Jacques Cartier observances, to the Quebec Women's Institutes convention.

In 1534 occurred the discovery of Canada by Jacques Cartier; in 1634, the extension of the colony by the founding of Three Rivers; in 1734, the opening of the first road between Quebec and Montreal; and in 1834, the granting of its charter to Tor- onto

May’ Soin Lengue

By Doing So Russia Would Gals Confidence Abroad

Russia, it is said, plans to enter the League of Nations, and is only delaying to decide what manner of entry would leave it the Jeast ex- plaining to do as to why it stayed out so long.

A chivalrous desire to help keep peace in Europe is credited to Mos- cow, no doubt correctly. But there is shrewdness, as well as chivalry in ‘the move. Stalin has troubles enough, without having to keep 4 watchful eye always on the western front.

In particular he has occasion to focus attention on the far end of his dominion, in which quarter Japan is carving out a place for itself in the Oriental sunshine without much re- gard for what Russia may want.

Joining the League would be for Russia the next thing to making a general treaty of inoffensiveness with Europe, and leave the Soviet directorate freer to pay attention to urgent matters in the Far East.

Japan undoubtedly sacrificed a measure of world confidence when it quit the League. Russia would cor- respondingly gain confidence abroad if it joined the League and thus as- sociated itself with the proclaimed purposes of that organization.—Ed- monton Bulletin.

"Indian Rope Trick A Myth

Occult Committee Says No One Has Ever Seen It

As the result of a solemn inquest held by the Occult committee of the Magic Circle—a group of bona fide scientists—the Indian rope trick to- day reposes under a headstone offici- ally chiseled “myth”.

Nobody, evidence before the com- mittee showed, has ever performed the rope trick—wherein an Indian fakir is supposed to toss a limp rope vertically into the air, whereafter a boy nimbly climbs out of view into the heavens. Nobody could be found who had seen the trick done. So, in effect, the occultists found that neither the rope nor the story will “stand up”. The group has offered $2,500 to anyone who will perform the feat,

Lord Ampthill, once viceroy of In- dia, presided over the committee's meeting.

How India was scoured and large rewards were offered futilely for a rope trickster when King George .nd Queen Mary toured India early in their reign was told by Sidney Clarke, chairman of the Magic Circle.

Even the great Nizan of Hydera- bad, with limitless resources, was unable to locate a juggler who could do the rope trick, when asked . to provide one for a giant garden party, related his friend, Sir Michael O'Dwyer. In 25 years in India, Sir Michael never found anyone who had seen the trick.

Harry Price, director of th- “Ja- tional physical laboratory, said he had collected a library of 12,000 books about magic, and not one con- tained any genuine evidence about the trick,

Sir Francis Griffin, formerly an ‘inspector-general of police in India, imputed belief in the rope trick to the power of suggestion, like the im- pressionable American lady of travel who said the most remarkable thing she had seen in all India was the sun setting behind the Aga Khan.

British Aviatrix On Visit -

Amy Mollison Made Short Stay In New York

Feeling “very fit” Amy Mollison, British aviatrix, arrived on the liner Majestic for a short visit in New York.

Since the crash in Connecticut of the plane in which she and her hus- band, James Mollison, made a west- ward crossing of the Atlantic in 1933, she had done little flying, she said; “just a little for my own pleas- ure.”’

She said that she and Mollison were looking forward with enthu- siasm to the England-Australian air races next October in which they will participate.

Turns Page In History

British Girl Retains Nationality Al- though Married To Frenchman

An English girl of 21 has turned a new page in the story of English women’s fight for equal rights with men.

For pretty Ina Ginn, of Stanmore, Middlesex, has become Mme.—or rather Mrs. Lucien Albert of Paris— and retained her British nationality. She is the only Englishwoman to have married a Frenchman—or any foreigner—and remained British.

Shyly she told of how she wrote to the Home Secretary on her engage- ment, explaining her patriotic de- sire; of the long negotiations with French and Bri authorities.

She went to Paris to be married— on Boxing, Day. Since then, pre- sumably, she has had no nationality —until now.

She displayed the new British pass- port, in her married name, which she has just received. Written in by

tionality and Status of Aliens Act, 1933, wife of a French citizen.”

Machine Reads Minds

Graph Paper Takes Record Of Reactions On Brain

The old story about the walls of jerry-built houses being so thin that you could hear your neighbor chang- ing his mind seems likely to come very near the truth. A machine in- vented by Dr. Alexander Cannon records any mental reaction, and con- sists of flexible tubes which are at- tached to a human subject. The reactions of the brain are recorded on graph paper. Simple emotions like surprise, love, hate, are record- ed, and the machine also registers mental fatigue, the capacity of the mind, reaction to tension or concen- tration, suicidal tendencies, and|. whether the subject is telling the truth or lying. Among other things, it shows that waltz music is sooth- ing, and that it relieves asthma by inducing regular breathing. It is also claimed that it proves telepathy to be a physical fact.

Is Crack Shot

Sergeant Forslund Of R.C.M.P.. Ex- cels With Rifle And Revolver

The crack shot of the Royal Cana- dian Mounted Police, according to the anfiual report of that force tabled in the House of Commons, is Acting Sergeant D. E. Forslund, who serves in “K” (Alberta) division.

Not only does Sergeant Forslund excel with the rifle, but he also is @ sure marksman with the revolver, He is the present holder of the Con- naught cup. While attending an in- structional class at Regina, he fired a@ course and secured a possible 240 points.

Just Moving Again

When Mark {Twain was a young and struggling” newspaper writer in San Francisco, a lady of his acquaint- ance saw him one day with a cigar box under his arm looking in a shop window.

“Mr. Clemens,” she said, “I al- ways see you with a cigar box under your arm. I am afraid you are smoking too much,”

“It isn’t that,” said Mark, “I am moving again.”

The importation of tobacco seed into Canada from Australia and the United States is prohibited in order to keep out blue mould disease (un- known to exist in Canada) which has been responsible for seriaus losses to fluecured tobacco in those countries.

Total storage stocks of eggs in Canada at June 1 were 9,949,535 dozen, as compared with 11,507,606 dozen on June 1 last year, and with a five-year average on June 1 of 11,270,061,

|

Pe a

A Great Mystery

‘Out in the land of Arizona, richest archaeclogical storehouse in the two Americas, according to a statement credited tothe Smithsonian Institu- tion, there is one, mystery which these modern readers of the mys- teries of the rocks have not yet de- ciphered. It is the “breathing moun- tain.” :

In that region slashed through by the Grand Canyon, there once was a great plain. There followed a period of terrific volcanic disturbances dur-

ae

i SOUTH AFRICAN BATTLEFIELD PILGRIMS GREETED BY THE KING .

Halifax Judge Scores Unnecessary Delays In Law

After 27 years on the bench County Court Judge George. 8. Pat- terson of New Glasgow , finds fault not with his fellowmen not with Eng- lish law, but’ with the administration of justice.

The veteran jurist told a Halifax service club that liberties of Magna Carta, granted at Runnymede. in 1215 by King John and since maintained as a guarantee of personal liberty to British subjects, were being violated

aceon She What Is Culture? Mountain That Breathes Is Great ustice Too Tardy Purzle To Scientists Something More Than Study Of

Books States College Head “Tf a boy reads in Latin the sec- tion of Virgil's Georgics on ‘Bees,’ he is supposed to be acquiritig culture; but if a boy on thé farm is taking care of bees and studying them at first hand, he is just doing a job. Why is that? asked Dr. H. D, Brunt of Macdonald College, addressing the convention in Montreal of the Que- bec Women's Institutes on the sub-

ject, “What, then, is Culture?” To identify culture with the read-

2 ing which the earth labored and in civilized Nova Scotia every day. ra Bad pyre Ripe the ae

2 brought forth a few hundred rhoun- He scored “unnecessdry and un- P . ac pangpebiade earreaiabehis ter” eghad

+: tain peaks, One of these peaks constitutional” delays in the admin a arsine or gabe My grinas hr)

e: known as Old Bill Williams is the istration of justice in both civil and Se ae gore aia developed,

a “preathing mountain.” criminal courts, recalling the case of :

hy Qualities essential to culture in Old Bill, despite his appellation, is

quite a youngster, as mountains go, and residents of the town of Wil- liams, sleeping peacefully at its base, arent quite sure whether they should sleep peacefully in the lap of a breathing mountain, so recently a spouting volcano.

In addition to the lava and ashes which are the common outpourings ‘of an active volcano, Old Bill Wil- liams once sent forth great quanti- ties of simon pure cinders, Earth- quakes sifted these cinders down in- to the valleys, and so it is that the town of Williams rests above a bed

jury found “no bill” because there

a girl who had remained in the town jail at Guysboro without trial from October until May, when a grand

was no evidence to support the charge.

“Delays in justice are not the fault of British law,” the judge de- clared firmly. “The fault is in the administration of the law.”

The same applied to civil cases, he continued. In his own county of Pic- tou a farmer in the spring, finding that others had cut wood on his land, would be lucky to get a decision within a year if he took civil action.

the speaker's mind were intellectual alertness and curiosity, or “desire to know,” coupled with a spirit of skepticism, or wanting “to be shown.” “Don’t be too ready to be swept off your feet by the brass band,” Dr. Brunt warned his hearers.

Sensitivity to beauty and to ideas, and a sympathy that makes it pos- sible to understand the feelings and aspirations of others were other qualities stressed.

Given these qualities, culture will result, said Dr. Brunt, but the right environment is an important factor in its development. Hence the im-

Our picture was taken in the grounds at the back of Buckingham Palace and the King and Queen can be seen receiving the party of South African pilgrims who have journeyed to Europe to visit the battlefields of France and Flanders. With the King and Queen-are Col. Thackeray, Earl Jellicoe and Mr. J. H. Aldred, who is the leader

of cinders covered over with from forty to a hundred feet of lava, rock and soil. These cinders are the

“During my 27 years on the bench

e of schools, colleges, church I have dealt with all sorts and con- eae cr ae ng

and other associations, which provide

mountain's lungs.

Citizens of Williams have a unique sewer system. They dig holes, some four feet in diameter, down into this bed of cinders, and all that remains is to turn the sewage into these holes and the sewage disposal problem is solved.

But when sinking these holes, it is as though they drilled into the lungs of a monster sleeping giant. When the drill first breaks through, there is usually a gush of air ‘or gases up- ward, to be followed later by an in- take of equal proportions. There- after, the inhalation and the exhala- tion is quite regular, but on a scale which might be expected from a giant a thousand or more times larger than man. The intake may

halation. Whence comes this ‘breath’?

neath the earth.

' Is*a mountain that : taking a catnap, or is he asleep for good?” ‘The people of Williams, Ari- ‘zona, would like to know.

. Has Seven Inhabitants And Covers Only 800 Acres . Eldon, a village in Hampshire, four

miles: from the market. town of ‘King's Somborne, has, neither _ shop,

.publichouse, nor any other normal willage acquisition does it boast. But ‘Eldon is proud of itself. Its assets - include seven inhabitants, one of

church, bereft of a steeple, and look- ing like a small barn, is only 25 feet long, with an old bell operated by a ‘piece of wire, six pews, and a font ‘no bigger than a tea-Cup. A single ‘gravestone adorns its churchyard, ‘where cattle graze at will. Only

three events took place beyond the memory of the present inhabitants,

‘Twin Sisters Ninety-Two

Twin sisters at the remarkable _ pe of 92 is the mark established by Mrs, Jom Dartt and Mrs. Brenton down east in Nova Scotia. These ladies are claiming no record, but they were a bit put out not long ago when a couple of 83-year-old “young- sters"” called themselves the “oldest twins in the Maritimes.” They were born in Brentwood, N.S., and have lived within a few miles of each other in Colchester county all their lives,

Rare Paper Money The world's largest collection of rare paper money, the “Avonmore” collection in London, comprises 40,- 000 bank notes issued by more than 100 countries during several cen- turies. It includes the note with the highest face value—five million tril- Hon marks—-and the oldest note in the world—issued in China about 700 years ago. ——_——_— Filaments of the first electric ‘amps were made of carbon.

“WwW. N. U. 2064

last for hours and likewise the ex-.

“You've asked a poser. Some say ft is the wind playing upon cinder

moun ‘round about. Some say it is a of things unseen be-

breathes just

-wechool, smithy, dance hall, post-office,

of the pilgrims.

al

Unified Empire Air Force

Plan Does Not Meet With Favor Of British Government

The British government turned down a motion for a unified Empire air force. Lord Londonderry, min- ister for air, frankly told the house of lords the government had lost hope in the disarmament conference. The situation unhappily had become all too clear, he said.

“We can no longer hope an inter- national convention will solve the problems which agitate the whole of Europe,” said the minister.

“His Majesty's ‘government there- fore have decided they can no longer delay the steps that are necessary to provide adequately for the air de- fence of these shores.”

He referred to the government’s decision, announced some time ago, to build up the Royal Air Force un- til it is as big as any other air force within ‘striking distance”.

But .the government could not accept the motion submitted by Vis- count Blibank, which urged the crea- tion of an imperial air force and the summoning of a special imperial de- fence conference to consider the question, the minister added,

Lord Londonderry pointed out that the defence resolution adopted at the imperial conference of 1928 recog- nized that it is for the parliaments of the several parts of the Empire, upon the recommendation of their respective governments, to decide the nature and extent of any action which should be taken by them.

Training School For Dogs

Potsdam Has Provided Many Blind Soldiers With Guides

A training school for blind men’s dogs celebrated the tenth annivers- ary of its foundation in Potsdam re- cently. During the past ten years the school has provided hundreds of blind Germans, especially soldiers, with dogs scientifically trained in the offices of bodyguard and guide. At present there are forty dogs in the school preparing for their final ex- amination. The majority dre . pure- blooded sheep-dogs two to three years old, The course lasts three months. The first and hardest les- son the dogs have to ledrn is to lose or at least not to show their interest in their fellow-kind. Lofty disre- gard, they are taught, must be the answer to another dog’s barking, for

the blind man’s dog barks only to}.

signal danger. When the dog has passed all its examinations its mas- ter-desjgnate comes to the school and himself spends three weeks there so that master and dog understand each other before they come to depend entirely upon each other.

Producers’ poultry .pools, where farmers assemble and make ready their own poultry for shipment to market, are growing in popularity and utility in practically every prov- ince of Canada, These pools started in Western Canada and now Eastern Canada is falling into line.

The chief of all bog forming plants is sphagnum, commonly known as peat moss.

Less than 80 years ago, tomatoes were called “love apples” and culti- vated for show, not for food.

ena aaa

Flowers On Ocean Liners Has Numerous Titles All Big Ships Have Expert To Look| Mountie In Yukon Obliged To Per- After Them form Many Duties

About a year ago we ran a little} ‘The “pooh bah” of the Royal Cana- squib about a lady sailing on the) dian Mounted Police is Superintend- Aquitania whose husband sent| ent T. B. Caulkin, stationed at Daw- aboard a collection of corsage bou-| son City, in the Yukon, according to quets one for each day of the trip. jthe annual report of that force tabl- As our story went, the lady was in| ed in the House of Commons, Super- & quandary what to do and consult-|intendent Caulkin, in addition to ing her steward, was assured that|heing officer commanding, performs the flowers would be nicely cared for| aiso a variety of other functions. by “the gardener”. We let it go at) tHe is immigration inspector, in- that not investigating. Now, how-) spector of fisheries, inspector of ever we know a little about the sub- weights and measures, sheriff of thé Ject of seagoing flowers. The Aqui-| yukon territory, registrar of vital tania has a gardener, so titled: all) statistics, justice of the peace, cor- the big Cunarders have. The garden-| oner, commissioner for performing ers don’t actually grow anything on| marriages, clerk of the court and act- board, but the Cunard people think! ing superintendent of Indian affairs, an expert should be on hand to help Superintendent Caulkin, however,

the potted palms and watch over the| has a competitor who runs him al- most neck-and-neck. This is the of-

4 commanding at Aklavik, in the with their bon-voyage flowers, too.! North West Territories. Superintend-

cut flowers taken aboard for the crossing. They help the passengers | qcer

More are sent aboard at this end ent C. B. Rivett-Carnac. than at Southampton, by the way. The Bremen and Europa have actual conservatories on their decks. Noth- ing really grows in them, though but lilies of the valley. The North Ger- ‘man Lloyd flora is in charge of a Near Dead Sea

Herr Otto Rothe, whose brother, we| Copper mines worked by King are told is one of the biggest ilorists| Solomon's slaves have been unearth- on the -continent—used to supply; ed in the region between the Dead flowers to the Kaiser and now is flor-| Sea and-the. Red Sea by an expedi- ist to Hitler.—The New Yorker. tion of: American: scientists, accord-

May Be Solomon’s Mines

Scientists Have Found Old Workings

: reer , ing toa report submitted to the

Sh ld Not Be S prising ‘American School of Oriental Re-

a rea : search at the University of Pennsyl- Heir Of British Peer Works To Make, V°?!#-

A Living Ruins of furnaces and buildings,

heaps of slag and open veins of cop- per mark the site of the ancient mines.

The period was fixed by Professor Nelson Glueck of the Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, Ohio, who heads the &xpedition, through fragments of pottery excavated in the ruins.

Astonishment is expressed that the son and heir of a British peer ‘should be found working for a living, as a laborer in England and for a wage of $11 a week.

Why this should be found surpris- ing we do not see. Lords must eat, and neither Providence nor the State makes any special provision for their support. The qn of a peer May lose his money or job or both, in the way of common people. Then if he is the right sort of chap he looks for eres er a job or another job, which is what| Ivory aluminum alloys have been was done by the lord who figures in| perfected in England for automobile this cabled story.—-Ottawa Journal, | bodies and engines.

Nine thousand lead pencils could |be made from the cerlen in the human body.

OA, YESSIA'! I'M SURE

You'LL GET THE IDEA

OF IT ALL IN 81% LESSONS, SIR.

ditions of men,” said Judge Patter- son. “As a result I have a higher opinion of my fellow-men than be- fore and have found human nature a

higher and brighter thing than I ever}

imagined.

‘I don’t believe the great major- ity of people are out, to gain all the advantage they can by resorting to the law; and I don’t believe that peo- ple who flatly contradict each other in court are perjurers. They are just honest men who make mistakes.

“There is good in. even the worst of us, and crime is caused by bad en- vironment and lack of training and discipline rather than by inherent badness.

“Mercy rather than mere punish- ment should be the watchword.”

What's In A Name

Story About Violins Proved Beauty Of Melody Depends On Player

ed the melody with an ordinary violin or “fiddle” costing about $100, Then he asked the radio listeners to write in and say which was the $30,000 in- strument and which the $100 one.

Eleven per cent. did not notice any difference, 54 per cent. guessed the $100 violin was the $30,000 one, and 85 per cent. gave the right answer.

A few years ago a firm of violin makers in London named Hill invited a@ committee: of experts to judge be- tween a Stradivarius violii and one of their own make from stock. A skilful musician played on the two instruments behind’ a screen. The unanimous decision of the committee was that the Hill violin was the Stradivarius.

All of which goes to show that this old master fetish is largely an affec- tation. The instrument does not mat- ter so much as the “soul” that the player puts into the performance. A soulful musician can make a homely violin or piano sound like a benedic- tion from Heaven, whereas an ordin- ary player on a Stradivarius or a Steinway couldn't stir any emotion in a listener.

The same goes for art. Pictures may hang in a private collection or in a store for years and not attract attention from the connoisseur, then suddenly somebody discovers upon it the name of a famous artist who has been dead a hundred years or more, and immediately it becomes of fabu- lous value. Nothing has been done to it to alter its appearance. It re- mains the same fine picture or the same bad one as before.

Couldn't Fool Him

Rastus was sent to the general store. ‘My boss,” he said to the clerk, “wants @ pane o' glass nine by "leven.” Z

“Haint got none that size, Rastus,” said the joking clerk, “but will a ‘leven by nine pane do?”

“Tl try ‘er,” replied Rastus; “mab- be if we slip ‘er in sideways no- body'll notice it.”

Willing To Equip Army

Japan has offered to re-equip the Roumanian army with war munitions and weapons and to establish muni- tions factories in Roumania, it was learned on reliable authority. The offer, it was said, included price quo- tations 25 per cent. below those of competing nations, Roumanian tim- ber and oil would be accepted in part payment.

Over the radio recently a violinist who owns a $30,000 Guarnerius violin played -@ melody; upon it, then repeat-

the environment in which these qual- ities can be developed.

Old Trade Is Flourishing

Firm In London Is Sti Turning Out Drums

There is one old London trade that flourishes like the green bay tree. Et is the making of drums and all the appurtenances of military pomp that go with them,

It was discovered through hearing @ man say after lunch in a Service club that he was going to look at a new. set of drums before they go out East to his regiment. This of- ficer was glad of company, and pres- ently I was following him into a little shop near Shaftesbury-avenue, the door of which announced our entry by a musical jangle of bells.

The shop was a museum. The walls were lined with old musical in- struments such as the ancient ser- pent, the old-fashioned ophicleide, bugles, trumpets, /drums dating. thing—drums. carried on a man's back while the lordly drummer marched behind to beat it. Then came Mr. Potter and took us up- stairs to rooms where drum shells and hoops and cords of fine Italian hemp were being prepared and as- sembled .until we came upon a her- aldic artist palette in hand putting the finishing. touches to the arms of the King African Rifles upon a new drum shell.

The firm's “scrap-album” is an enormous tome, containing references to the detail of every regiment reg- ular, volunteer, territorial, and scout troop throughout the Empire.—Over- seas Daily Mail.

Predicts Power From Sea Professor Says Harnessing Only Matter Of Finance Harnessing the tide is only a mat- ter of time according to John 8. Gardiner, of Cambridge, secretary of the Sir John Murray expedition, which is now returning from its In- dian Ocean survey and search for traces of the lost continent of Lem- uria. “I suggest that within 100 years we shall be getting power from the sea,” he said, “It depends a good deal on when coal and oil get shorter and more expensive. It is a matter of finance.” Professor Gard- iner added that ‘it had already been drawn to use the tides in the Severn, where there are variations of 40 to 50 feet in the water line.

Tides

Balloons Made In Canada

Two huge rubber balloons which were used for special experiments in connection with the Piccard strato- sphere flight at Chicago on July 1, were manufactured by the Sterling Rubber Company in Guelph, Ontario, The ballons, ordered by the Univers- ity of Chicago, when completely in- flated have a circumference of some- thing over 50 feet, and are the larg- est of their type ever manufactured in Guelph.

If a girl grows up and does not marry the man chosen for her in childhood, she becomes a “man- woman” in Albania; she dresses like \ @ man, bears arms, and can inherit , property.

A railroad train sank in quick- sand near Pueblo, Colo., in 1875, and never was found.

[a a heaton

WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD

Mme. Marie Curie, co-discoverer of radium, died July 4 in @ sanitarium at Valence, France.

A trade accord between the United Kingdom and Esthonia has been Initialed and will be signed in a few days. j

John C. Slater, one of Prince Al- bert's earliest school teachers, died at his farm home six miles east of the city, aged 81. He came from | Galt, Ont.

Winnings from sweepstakes or lot- teries will be forfeited to the crown under the bill’ amending the Criminal code which was given third reading in the House of Commons.

President Roosevelt has signed the legislation granting a partial six- year moratorium on paying off farm mortgages and the bill for a retire- ment pension system for railway em- ployees.

The French destroyer Vacquelin will visit Canada during the summer to participate in the celebrations of the 400th anniversary of the arrival of Jacques Cartier in the St. Law- rence valley, it was announced.

The Pacific seaboard’s first inter- national air line is now in service with the extension of the United Air Lines San Diego-Seattle passenger- express route to Vancouver. Through connections at San Diego, the line links three countries: Mexico, the United States and Canada.

Formal opening at Peoria, Ill., of its $5,000,000 distillery, the largest in the world, was announced by officials of Hiram Walker and Sons Company, Canadian distilling firm. The new plant will turn out 100,000 gallons of whisky a day and its daily grain consumption will be 20,000 bushels.

The U.S.S. Wilmington, warship, steamed into Toronto harbor, under command of Admiral Leahy, carry- ing the mace of Upper Canada par- liament, seized by American forces during the wars of 1812. It was re- turned to the Ontario government as a mark of friendship between the two nations.

Recipes For This Week

(By Betty Barclay)

PICNIC SALAD (Serves Six)

Lettuce 3 cups orange pieces 3 deviled eggs Stuffed olives. * On lettuce covered salad plates arrange mounds of orange pieces. In- to each mound place half of a deviled egg which has been sliced length- wise. Cut side should be up. Garn- ish with slices of stuffed olives. Serve with mayonnaise in lettuce cup at side of plate.

ORANGE CREAM CUSTARD (Serves Six) Mix together thoroughly and cook in double boiler until thickened: 2 egg yolks, beaten % cup sugar - 2 tablespoons flour % teaspoon salt 1 cup orange juice 1 cup cream (or evaporated milk) Add: 1 teaspoon grated orange rind Cool and turn into serv ing dish over: % cup orange slices Chill. ‘Cover with meringue made of: 2 egg whites, stiffly beaten with 4 tablespoons sugar Decorate with additional orange slices.

Brief Career For Society

National Anti-Scandal Idea Did) Not

y Last Long

-A brief obituary notice in the London Times tells of the death of an idea as well as of a man. A few years ago the Rev, Frank Melville, vicar of Exhall, founded the National Anti-Scandal Society, which almost immediately had a countrywide mem- bership. Its members received a badge bearing a likeness of the three wise monkeys and the legend, “Speak no evil, see no evil, and hear no evil,” | At its most vigorous period the | society's membership could be count. | ed only in the hundreds, but it was made up of enthusiasts. Why did it dwindle away and come to nothing in just a few years? is aked by a} writer. The Times observes that Mr, Melville was ‘noted for his outspoken views and his humor.”

The world's largest known copper deposit, in Chile, is estimated to von- 100,000,000 tons of ore.

New Zealand is void of snakes or poison insects.

ae

WELL, HE'S

BEEN GRINNIN

OGDEN'S-

Y Wow BOYS, SIT YE DOWN ONE ON EACH SIDE OF ME AND ILL TELL YE THE SECRET OF MY GREAT CONTENTMENT

FILL THE OLD PIPE with

DEN'S

THE FISHIN’ WILL TAKE CARE OF SELF? ©

Lou Skuce

OPENS OUT FLAT FOR IRONING

You couldn’t ask for anything easier to fashion than to-day's pretty home frock.

Delightfully cool and lovely for such po yr is gerd ‘print with crisp \ite organdie as the original. Have the ruffling finished profes- sionally with picot edge, or you can roll it by hand or stitch it.on the machine.

A gay seersucker in checks or excellent

pes medium, Trim it with white pique.

Cotton. voile prints, crinkled crepe prints, batiste and handkerchief lawn prints are other lovely cool sugges- tions for this youthful model.

Style No. 331 is designed for sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3% yards of 89-inch material with % yard of 39- inch contrasting.

Price of pattern 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully.

How To Order Patterns

Address: Winnipeg Ni rU: 175 McDermot Ave., «avg

Pattern NO. oe ereeees SIZO.. one meee Name

ee es eee

ee ir SS er ee TOWD me ee oo we wre ore ore 9.0 ow ew om se esece

The Nerviest Insect

Thieving Cockroaches Give Trouble In New York Zoo

Dr. Raymond L, Ditmars, the great New York expert on snakes, has made the discovery that the cock- roach is one of the boldest thieves in the animal kingdom. This nervy insect will eat the skin right off the biggest snake in any zoo. When the zoo snakes shed their skins, the keep- ers save them up for the natural his- tory classes in the schools, Natur- ally they like to get these skins whole and in perfect condition. But be- cause of audacious and voracious cockroaches the skins often look like something the moths have been at. But Ditmars has checkmated the thieving cockroaches by posting bull- frogs as sentries around the snake cages during the skin-shedding sea- son, There isn't a cockroach in the world that is active and smart enough to get past a hungry bull- frog.—Toronto Star.

Have High Reputation In Britain And Are Well Known A tribute was paid to Canadian nurses by Miss Edith Rome, inter- viewed at Montreal on her way to attend the Canadian Nursing Asso- ciation convention in Toronto. Miss Rome said that Canadian nurses have a high reputation in Britain, where they have become known through the constantly increasing’ in- terchange of nurses.

The standards of nursing in Can- ada and Britain, Miss Rome remark- ed, are much higher than those of some countries of Europe, where nursing is a very new thing as yet. The proposed founding of a Fior- ence Nightingale scholarship was re- ferred to by Miss Rome, who ex- pressed the hope that some Canadian nurses would compete for and win it.

ry

»

Little Journeys In Science

PYRETHRUM

(By Gordon H. Guest, M.A.¥ The story of how a young German scientist discovered a valuable in- secticide is most interesting. In far away Japan, in the 17th century, a| Above we show a photo of Bill Japanese nobleman’s daughter was| Hay, the famous announcer of Amos being married, and to this celebration |'n Andy radio team, with a couple of was invited a young German scien-| “king fish”, otherwise spring salmon, tist. caught at Victoria, where Mr. and

It was the usual Japanese custom | Mrs. Hay have been spending a most of those days to decorate each room| enjoyable holiday golfing, motoring, entirely with one kind of flower or|and above all, fishing. .

blossom. In one room the young Popa Te TRG ics CL Bureau Of Research Suggested

scientist observed that no_ insects

were flying around, and that the floor

was strewn with dead flies, ants and| Okanagan Member Lays Plan Before

other typical summer pests. This : B.C. Government

room was decorated with a flower,| Creation of a provincial research institute for scientific investigation of modern and by product trendg in

3 Meco

somewhat like our ordinary field this flower was known as thé pyre- thrum and that it grew in abundance on his host's estate.

Permission was obtained to take a few of these flowers to his labora- tory. After many experiments wtih pyrethrum and similar flowers, he discovered that the scent given off by them killed insects and other creep- ing pests, but was harmless to hu- mans. His discovery has been of great value to all nations in the everlasting war against insect pests. To-day this little “field daisy” is widely cultivated in Japan, and its blossoms, compressed and packed in bales, are shipped to all parts of the world to be used in the manufacture of insect powder, which is used chief- ly in the home.

develop outlets for the basic primary products of British Columbia, is being suggested to the provincial government at Victoria, B.C., by Dr. J. Allen Harris, M.L.A., South Okana-

start be made with the plan, to sup- plement what already is being done in the way of scientific research in B.C. industry. In accommodation at the University of British Columbia, without the expense of new building, he proposes that the province launch the nucleus of a provincial research institute, which would be wholly apart from student activities at the university. _ Started in just such a way the scans era Mellon Institute in the United States About the most helpless thing on! was quickly subsidized by private in- earth is an automobile seven miles|qustries, and has since proved of from a filling station with its fase supreme importance to the business line tank run dry. |Mfe of that country.

CHARMING ENGLISH STAR IN HAPPY MOOD

Jane Baxter, English movie star, whose latest production, “Girls Please” has just been released, into the camera with a winsome smile. Of happy disposition, Jane has already won many'movie fans to her banner and she should break into the headlines for @ long time to come.

all industry, and more particularly to

Praise For Canadian Nurses | A. GOOD CATCH

Heat Energy In Straw

Process For Storing Gases Being Studied By Scientists

A hint that we are overlooking the existence of an immense supply of energy in some of the waste pro- ducts from farms, is revived by C. H. Bailey, a scientist of the Uni- versity of Minnesota, who addressed an organization of flour millers and cereal chemists at Toronto recently.

Mr. Bailey made the statement that chaff and straw in Canada and the United States was capable of producing more heat than all the anthracite coal produced in the United States during a year.

There have been numerous experi- ments in Western Canada in efforts to utilize the straw resulting from the annual harvest. Several times it was said that a process for storing gases from burning straw had been perfected, but this proved incorrect} and so far as is generally known the tremendous quantities of wheat straw in Western Canada and the United States are still a total loss and have to be got rid of by a waste- ful process of burning in the fields.

The chemists recognize that heat is a potential source of power. Mil- lions of tons of wheat straw are an- nualy consigned to the flames in the agricultural areas of Western Can- ada and the United States. If the energy thus liberated could be stored in some way the country would be possessed of enormous reserves of power to do essential work. To-day science is very alert in the study of these problems. It may be that one of these days this problem will be solved and a new source of revenue will be provided for the western farmers, who are badly in need’ of such a benefaction.

Animals Have Vocabulary

Phrase “Our Dumb Friends” Was Always A Libel

The average man or woman who likes animals and is convinced that his or her pet understands a half dozen familiar commands may be surprised to learn that several “ani- mal dictionaries” have been written.

Gabriele D’Annunzio, the Italian poet, has announced that he will in- clude a complete glossary of the canine language in his new book, “Lives of Illustrious Dogs.’ The book is to be modeled after Plutarch’s “Lives”.

Other animals whose vocabularies have been recorded, are the monkey, the horse, and the cat. An Ameri- can woman, Miss Blanche W. Learn- ed, was responsible for classifying 32 terms of the chimpanzee, together with the meaning of each. Other scientists have tabulated 12 words of the Marmoset language and 14 of the Gibbon’s.

The horse is said to speak with “six words and three kinds of neigh- ing’. Cats produce 15 sounds, ac- cording to the experts, each with its distinct interpretation. There are 12 “words” in the hen’s vocabulary and five in the rooster’s.

From all this it seems that it is high time that the phrase, “our dumb friends,” went into discard. It was always a libel.

Japan's New Submarine

The Japanese Navy's new sub- marine, the 1-70, has been launched, The new vessel has a displacement of 1,638 tons. Its engines of 6,000 horse- power will propel it at a surface speed of nineteen knots. Before the launching of the 70 Japan's sub- marine tonnage was given as 72,204, well over the 52,700 ton limit im- posed by the London naval treaty,

Small But Effective

The parliament of the Isle of Man has just brought down its budget showing a surplus of $320,000 where only $25,000 had been estimated. The practical result is a reduction of the income tax rate from ten pence on the pound to eight pence.

Courtship consists of a man run- ning after a girl until she catches him.

About 2,000,000 tons of water pass over Niagara Falls every minute,

Agricultural Notes

Many Items Of Interest To The Western Farmer

The Canada thistle is not native to Canada. It was introduced origin- ally from Europe.

All forms of nitrogenous manure increase the growth of grass at the expense of clover.

Nitrogen, while stimulating piunt growth, soon loses its power unless fortified sufficiently with phosphates and potash, particularly the .ormer.

Losses of fertility from farm m:n- ures may be prevented by the use of litter, watertight floors, covered manure pits, and by getting the manure into the land as quickly as possible.

In relation to grassland, ‘ts crea- tion, management, and fertilization, efficient and highly systematize1 re- search has done much during the past few years to add to human knowledge and to the profits oi the pastoralist.

The use of seaweed as a fertilizer dates back to historic times, and its value for the upkeep of soi! fertility has been generally and practically recognized both in the old world ani in the new by farmers residing uot too far distant from the coast line.

One hundred and eleven pounds of brome grass seed and four pounds of rhubarb seed from the British -Isies, and 122 pounds of ‘flax and seven pounds of rhubarb seed from the United States were imported into Canada during the year ended June 1, 1934,

Sheep help to suppress the wild carrot in pasture lands. This weed is best kept in check by the regu'ar rotation of crops with thorough cul- tivation, It is spreading in the clover

seed producing districts of Ontario,

and is a nuisance along roadsides, waste places and old mi

'* Agriciiitural research ‘as demon-

strated that young herbage, besides being a rich storehouse of proteins, sugars, starches, and essential min- als, contains carotene which in the body of an animal produces vitamin A. This vitamin promotes growth in farm stock as well as in human beings, and enables them to resist disease.

“I know precisely that for either

object, whether to bring the weeds

ahd quitch grass to the surface and

to/wither them by scorching heat, or

to expose the earth itself to the sun's baking rays, there can be nothing better than to plough the soil up with a@ pair of oxen during midday in summer.—Xenophon in his book ‘The Economist”, 434-355 B.C.

There is, finally, one form of econ- omy which is essential to the rapid, confident, and accurate extension of scientific research, and coa sequently to industrial prosperity, based upon its practical application, and tit is sympathetic co-operation and loyal team-work between researcn workers themselves, whether they belong to the same or different institutioss or organizations.--Lord Bledisioe.

Britain’s Public Men

Versatility Is Quality That Makes Them Successful

Britain is truly blessed in the char- acter of her public men, in her am- bassadors and representatives abrodd, Sir William Clark was not merely a trained civil servant with a grasp of trade and economics, He was a cul- tured man of the world with a civil- ized mind, one who was as much at home and as happy in discussing the poets as in analyzing the latest stat- istics on the export of lumber, That quality, the quality of many sided- ness, of versatility—it is the English conception of education—appears to be the thing which makes the Eng- lishman so successful,

Sir William Clark goes to South Africa, will occupy there the post that he held here. In that great field of duty and responsibility Canadians will wish for him all the success and prosperity his talents can hardly fail to win.Ottawa Journal.

The new railway depot at Ken- ton, Middlesex, England, is built of brightly-colored enameled metal. Stainless steel figures largely in the fittings and the platform is flood- lighted.

it, te ante HS

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OCCASIONAL WIFE

EDNA ROBB WEBSTER Author of “Joretta”, “Lipstick Girl” Ete.

SYNOPSIS

Camilla, Hoyt and Peter Anson, | ing and in love, marry secretly, | “deciding to live their own lives apart until Peter is able to provide for her. Peter is a young, struggling sculptor trying to win a competition for a scholarship abroad and Camilla is the adopted daughter of a wealthy fam- fly. She is not to inherit money when she comes of age and so is stiidying commercial art in the hope of landing an agency job. Others in the story are Avis Werth, another wealthy girl who is trying to win Peter, Sylvia Todd, Peter’s model, ~ and Gna Matson, his former room- _ rate with whom he has auarrelled. After a party at an exclusive club, when the rest of the members of the party go a a cabaret to continue the ralety, Peter and Camilla slip off to the beach by themselves and fall asleep on the sand. When thev awake ft fs early morning and Avis and another boy are standing near them. This makes it necessary for Camilla to announce before the party that she and Peter are married. Camilla urges Peter to accept some of her earrings to help tim along. but Peter refuses and they cuarrel. After Camilla has gone frem the studio. Avis Werth calls and persuades Pete

“Eage and Avis ‘Inspiration’. Peter adopts the latter title and Camilla, heartsick goes to Peter's studio for quiet and to think, Peter

Now you can color be considered.”

| figures titled ‘Love’, ‘about which

| conception of ‘The Kiss’—but who) listlessly.

“Oh no, there are many points to had recognized her talent from the | | beginning, but to have the world | “Such as—" recognize her so quickly was a reve- “Subject matter, position, execu-| lation and an enigma at the time. tion of material” “Why, precious!” he exclaimed, "Does the thought behind the ob-| holding her off to gaze into her ject—the reason for the creation, its| flushed face, “I shan’t be able, to originality—mean anything?" afford a wife like you any longér.” “Indeed, it means a very great “Peter, don’t say that!" she laugh- deal. Is there a piece here in which | ed happily. “None of it would be any you vision a, purpose, a story?” good at all, without you. And if “Oh, yes, a splendid one, Uncle | you don't want me to do it—I won't.” John, Stand just here and look at “You mean that?” incredulous. that group over there, third from the She met his eyes bravely. ‘T do, end. Doesn't it tell you a dramatic | Peter. story?” He drew her again into his em- “Yes. I remember ft well in tho| brace. “My darling, how could 1T| original selection. There was no deny you the right to take such an question about entering it, I recall.| opportunity when I can’t take care) Undoubtedly, it is one of the best./ of you? Some day—perhaps—” his) But there are so many among the arms relaxed about her and his! beat.” | words became impatient. “Oh, I) “But what other one tells so poign- | don't know. I've always talked about | ant a story of life?’’ she insisted.| what 1 am going to do, while you} “There is the seagull—beautiful, but | have kept quiet—and done it!" —just a seagull; a splendid likeness; That old expression of haunting) of Andrew Havelock—after all, just} doubt and chagrin clouded his face the portrait of a man; those nude; and the monster of jealousy gripped | insidiously at his heart. He tried valiantly to shake it off, but its hold was tenacious. He sank into a chair,

there is nothing individual; the boy on a hill in a storm, the modernistic

would want a kiss like that?” she} ‘Camilla was on her knees beside smiled. him, instantly, as if she had leaped “I suspect,” he looked at her'a widening chasm in desperation. shrewdly, “that you are campaigning | Her arms clung to him. “Peter, dear for a vote for that young man of) Peter, tell me you don't want me to yours.” go on with this! Tell me the truth!” “Only because he deServes it,” Avis; she pleaded. ‘I want to do just what defended. you wish for me, what your love will ‘I don’t doubt that,” he agreed,|let me do. I don’t want to obey readily. “Well, my dear, if it will re-| anyone or have anything except you lieve your anxiety and you will keep | and your love.” the secret to yourself, he already had| He was instantly contrite, tender. my vote from the teginning. I might| “Why, if I could plan your life for say that my opinion could have wav-| you, I couldn’t wish it to be more ered between that and the Havelock) perfect. You don't think I'd be a dog portrait, but since there had to be|in the manger, do you?” he demand- some dividing factor, your interest|ed, with a tremulous attempt at in Peter Anson might as well be it.| mirth. “I guess I’m just so proud I see nothing unethical about that.| of you and glad for you that I don’t It is merely a matter of matching| know how to act—don't know what points, and, as you say, the vision! I’m doing.” . and the story behind that group of| “Are you sure?” anxiously. immigrants should be favored. But| “Why, of course. Tell you what, don’t hope too much. My vote is|every day you broadcast, I'll tune only one of seven, you know.” in and get more inspiration from She hugged his arm affectionately.| hearing your voice while it speaks, “One of seven is better than none.|to the whole nation than I could I am glad to know that Peter will| get a dozen other ways. I'll say to have one vote, anyway. That will| myself, “That's your wife, you un- draw attention to his work, at least.) worthy pup. She did ‘that all by. her- And you might be able to influence.a| self and in no time. Get yourself good sale for him,” she suggested, | to work and deserve her’.” covertly. : With such gay jesting and 'repeat- “Perhaps I can,” he agreed, with an| ed assurances, he convinced her of

MATURITY—MATERNITY MIDDLE AGE

At these three critical periods a woman needs a medicine she can depend on. That's why so many take Lydia BE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- = 98 out of 100 say, “Te

lps mel” Let it help you, too,

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND

The New Diana

Fast Mail "Plane Of Imperial Alfr- ways Well Named

Endurance feats like those of Mrs. | Mollison and Miss Jean Batten will}up a little more than 30 per cent. of

s00n cease to have any good excuse. When Miss Amy Johnson flew to Australia in twenty days the regu- lar air line ended at Karachi, and she was continuing along a route where no woman had flown before. Miss Batten, taking the same trail in the same type of aeroplane, also had some reason for enduring the strain of long days alone in the air. She had not seen her father in New Zealand for a long time and she wanted to get there quickly. She reached Darwin in fifteen days. A few months hence the mails will need only fourteen days for the journey from London to the great cities in the south of Australia. Instead of travelling, as these two women pilots did, at a speed of eighty miles an hour, the mails will be taken in the new Diana air line at a speed of 145 miles an hour.

Four years ago Mrs, Mollison her- self might have been dubbed the new Diana, making her conquests with the aid of horse power in the place of dogs, but leading the chase in other- wise solitary state for the edification of the multitude. Her position as the:maker of the fastest time for women pilots between England and Australia had stood unchallenged for four years. Now Miss Batten has displaced her by ‘the simple expedi- ent of spending less time on the ground, There was no need to prove that engine and aeroplane would stand such treatment. Mr. C. W. A. Scott and others had driven similar aeroplanes much harder along the same route. Nor was it impossible to obtain faster aircraft for such a

‘ized Canadian, may carry the Maple

E YOU ONA Diet? more than Nature

needs the assistance, about twice each week, of a

, Effervescing glass

ANDREWS LIVER SALT

Manchurian Anny

AR

Japanese Officials Find They Have

More Soldiers Than They Need

The problem of what to do about the Manchurian army, now in the uniforms of the state of Manchou- kuo, is disturbing the Japanese ad- visers and administrators of the new government.

In the days of Chinese domination

an army of more than 300,000 was In TINS—35¢ and 60¢

maintained. This huge force used NEW, L

up more than 80 per cent. of the pel Le ree

budget, and in addition unpaid sold- =

jery and regional commanders levied

special taxes, seized food supplies | 2

without paying for them,. and. paid Little Helps For This Week nothing for billets.

To-day the army of Manchoukuo

“If ye fulfill the royal law accord- numbers about 125,000 men, and uses

ing to the scriptures, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself, ye do well.” James 2:8.

the budget.

In additic- there are more than 50,000 Japanese soldiers in Man- churia, paid and maintained by the Japanese empire.

Originally the Japanese high com- mand in Manchuria figured that the Manchoukuo army need not exceed 35,000 to 40,000 men, but the ques- tion now is what to do with the extra 85,000 to 90,000 unwanted Manchou- kuo soldiers. If they are disbanded, as some have been, they return to banditry. Kept in uniforms and in barracks, and subjected to training and discipline, they become restless and a danger. They frequently mut- iny. When sent on anti-bandit cam- paigns they refuse to fight unless in- trespersed, squad for squad, with Japanese soldiers.

Expert With Foils

Hungarian Who Is Naturalized Cana- dian May Fence At Berlin A Hungarian baron, now a natural-

Come children let us go,

We travel hand in hand;

Each in h‘- brother finds his joy

In this wild stranger land.

The strong be quick to raise

The weaker when they fall;

Let love and peace and patience bloom :

In ready help for all.

It is a sad weakness in us after all, that the thought of a man’s death hallows him anew to us, as if life were not sacred too, as if it were a light thing to fail in love and rev- erence to the brother who has to climb the whole toilsome steep with us, and all our tears and tenderness were due to the one who is spared that hard journey.—George Bliot.

Would we codify the laws that should reign in households, and whose daily transgression annoys us and degrades our household life, we must learn every day to adorn it with sacrifices. Good manners are made up of petty ‘sacrifices. Temper- ance, courage, love, are made up of the same jewels. Listen to every prompting of honor.—R. W. Emer- son.

Leaf into the 1936 Olympic games at Berlin, according to experts who have watched him perform as a “fencer”.

Scion of a famous European house, Baron Wolf von Smertzing has never forgotten his old love, the blade, and although the foil principle of fencing was different to his Hungarian sabre method he quickly developed under the guidance of George Braund, out- standing fencer in Western Canada.

Partial deafness marred him from joining the Hungarian army so he

Canada’s Sweet Tooth

Statistics Relating To Candy Show People Eat Plenty

This continent has a sweet tooth, of course, but the modern candy maker both makes attractive sweets —and advertises them well. Candy statistics of the United States show a thirty per cent. rise in consump- tion over last year. Sales for the

journey. The flight clearly was a| turned to Canada seven years ago. test mainly of stamina in the pilot,| He found employment on the Hudson made at the best time of the year for| Bay Railway and soon became adapt- fiyiig’ and along a route which is|¢d to_his _environment. Before nearly ready for the operation of} leaving the north country he spent regular mail seryices. In that sense|#ome time at trapping.

such a. flight will never lack excuse;| Arriving in Winnipeg in 1930

first four months of 1984 have been at the rate of $200,000,000 a year. However, the glamorous year of 1929 showed the United States consum- ing double that quantity so far as value is concerned. Some of the de-

and Avis follow later, and as the amused smile. his approval, with this reservation,

lights are turned on. see the statue ** @ “Of course, if that day ever comes -sccunde Camila of ‘doing De this, and cdtonnstiin neni prone } wally no was bveredires to meet “hurt and horrified by the accuastion, | Wheatheart Cereal sales had doubled

faints. within a fortnight, production was

the terms of our original agreement.” “That day can’t be too soon for

At Camilla’s suggestion, Peter en- ters as his exhibit a statue he had sculptured especially for her as & wedding gift, They named it “Land of Hope”.

(Now Go On With The Story) CHAPTER LI.

_ -Avis managed to visit the exhibit alone with John Danforth on the day before the final vote would be east for the winner of the Paris scholarship. She had made the co- incidence seem casual enough. And her interest in art had elicited her uncle's unqualified approval from the

esthetic appreciation, which was one of the few disappointments of his life. So, when his niece not only patronized the profession but actu- ally won her degree at National, he was immensely proud, and sympa- thetic with her plans and interests.

So generous was his measure of approval that he had purchased one of her best paintings and hung it in his library, though he had to admit to himself that she couldn't have sold it elsewhere for a song. But he ad- vocated that praise stimulates effort and encourages ambition.

He was particularly noted for his philanthropy to talent, and not a small part of the Paris scholarship fund was responsible to his gener- osity; but he never permitted his left hand to suspect what kept his right hand so busy.

“The judges have no easy task, I can tell you that,” he confided to Avis at the exhibit. “It was difficult even to eliminate the entries.”

“Do only beauty and perfection of detail enter into the consideration?” she , seriously.

IN UP-TO-DATE

STABLES —Old Reliable Minard’s

me,” she declared, earnestly. (To Be Continued)

Fight Gas With Gas

France Has Devised Defences Against Enemy Assaults France is prepared to fight gas with gas and has devised defences against enemy assaults on whole cities by disease germs, military

officials revealed.

A newly-developed defensive gas effectively neutralized poison gases which might be dropped on centres of population in air raids, it was said. Another gas, it was explained, would kill microbes released over a city.

Prepared to invoke these new de- fences, military authorities said they were “not alarmed” by disclosures in London that Germany allegedly has studied the feasibility of flooding London and Paris subway systems with gas and germs,

speeded up, the company was one of few in the city calling back its for- mer employees. Negotiations were being made with a national radio network to broadcast a Tiny Tot series for a children’s half-hour pro-

Camilla was the central figure. Her brain whirled with the exhilaration of so much attention and approba- tion, even while it functioned calmly and clearly with the execution of her plans.

Finally, it was decided that she should prepare the stories, being the only person familiar with the char- acteristics and activities of her di- minutive people. Her salary would be doubled and an additional sum paid for each story. These would be comparatively easy for her to pro- duce,, because they would follow the same action as appeared in the ad- vertisements. The work would in- volve only a little more time, which she could now spare from her draw- ing board, and her remuneration would be doubled thereby,

Then, the most astonishing de- velopment of all was presented to her. The radio manager insisted that the obvious person to present the Tiny Tots, by air, to her juvenile audience, .was the author herself, Camilla Anson. .

Camilla protested, overwhelmed by the possibility, “But I can’t do everything,” she objected, bewildered. “How can I do ad copy, write manu- scripts and broadcast two days each week?" ,

“It is a pretty large order, but you can do it,” the advertising manager encouraged, “You will have a secre- tary to attend to everything except your most personal work, and the broadcasting after the first few ex- periences will become very natural to you. ‘We can arrange for the na- tional hook-up from here instead of from the New York studios-—-”

So it was arranged, and Camilla returned to her apartment that eve- ning so thrilled and bewildered and dejected that she couldn't decide whether to laugh or cry. She sum- moned Peter and, secure in his arms, tried each outlet of her emotions.

He held her close, scarcely believ- ed what his ears heard; that his Camilla had become’a national figure in her field, almost over night. He

Marvels Of The Heavens

Gives Some Idea Of Age Of Sky

Sir James Jeans, the astronomer, unfolded some marvels of the heavens in a lecture at the Royal Institution recently. Here are some of them: Altogether there. are 100 million stars. They are scattered round in the shape of a gigantic cartwheel. This wheel of worlds goes round with majestic slowness. Each revolution takes 250,000,000 years. During the whole of the civilized epoch the wheel of. worlds has only moved as much as the hour hand of a clock moves in oné second, Yes—and this will give you some idea of how old the skies are—the wheel of worlds shows evidence of having gone round thousands of times.

Astronomer

On the first of May this year frozen poultry holdings in Canada were some 2% million pounds in ex- cess} of the previous year, but by June export trade is largely respon- sible for reducing the stock.

The approxjmate periods of incuba- tion of several species of domestic fowl are: Hen, 21 days; partridge, 24 days; guinea fowl and pheasant, 26 days; duck, pea fowl, and turkey, 28 days; and ostrich, 42 days.

but. when the new Diana of Imperial Airways has taken up her duties, and is coursing along the route once a week in either direction, solitary flights by accomplished young wo- men will fall into the category of channel swimming and motor car reliability trials. Some time in the future the air cruise to Australia may be undertaken in the spirit of holiday rather than of achievement; and, when the chase has thus be- come a procession even the new Diana herself will have been dis- placed by something still more me- chanically efficient.—London Times.

Cat's Revenge On Motorist

Near Klagenfurt, Austria, Peter Sussbauer blared his horn at a prim black cat mincing across the road in ffont of his car. The cat swelled its tail, arched its back, crouched, hiss- ed, sprang from ground to running board, to door, to steering wheel, to Peter Sussbauer. Badly scratched and bitten around the neck, Motorist Sussbauer was hospitalized.

Canadian wheat in the United States on June 8 amounted to 6,613,- 977 bushels, of which 4,923,888 bushels were in store at Buffalo; 125,984 bushels at New York, and 1,540,000 bushels at Erie.

Baron von Smertzing entered the University of Manitoba where he re- ceived his B.A. degree. He attended lectures in the evenings and worked at odd jobs during the days. While attending university, however, the 82-year-old student found time to practice fencing at the Blades’ Club,

which he organized.

THE RHYMING OPTIMIST By Aline Michaelis THE MARVEL OF MAN

I thought of man, of his strength and pride

cline is due to lower prices now. So far as this Dominion’s sweet tooth is filled, there were nineteen million pounds of chocolate confectionery manufactured in Canada in 19382 along with over 12% million dozen chocolate bars. There were over 44 million pounds of sugar confection- ery with 1% million dozen bars. Be- sides that we imported three million pounds of confectionery, chiefly from the United Kingdom. Exports are comparatively small.—Brandon Sun. ~ .

Robot Ran Away

“Willie,” the world’s fair robot, was a Chicago run-away. Flash- lights are turned on “Willie's” head to start him walking in circles. A youngster trained his “Willies” brain away he rambled, performing his antics until the keep- ers shut off the light and recovered him.

Pp In the wonders he has made; Of his visions, not to be denied, And his wild heart, unafraid.

O, the marvel of man in his upward climb!

Since the mist of earth's dim youth

He has toiled with fervor and faith sublime, ..

And “l he draws nearer to truth!

A labor union had to call off a strike because somebody stole the automobile of the walking delegate.

=— a

?

There are cities climbing to greet the skies, There are conquests of sea and air,

Ant oa in man and his vic-

4 That are fit for a god to share.

He has fashioned his life in lofty mould,

Has dowered it with beauty and firé,

And his toys are fame's trappings and gauds and gold;

But love is his heart's desire,

ETTE HOLDER

DENICOTEA Cigarette Holder Canadian Hardwood

An increase of 100 per cent. in sales of Canadian hardwood to Great Britain for the first three months of this year has been reported. The figures are placed at 1,206,000 cubic feet this year compared with 604,000 cubic feet during the same period in 1938. Canadian hardwood is being used in increasing quantities in Great Britain for flooring, furniture, and the manufacture of automobile bodies.

Complete holder with refills 61.00 postpaid, er from your Druggist or Tobacconist. Dealers wanted everywhere,

Due to curtailment in Canadian oo Stores lumbering operations and in New- Bese Meiklejohn foundiand’s lumbering,’ fishing, and DEALERS WANTED mining, there was a heavy carryover : of molasses in Barbados, British | CHANTLER & CHANTLER, LTD, West Indies from 1982 to 1933, This Canadian Distributors, year the demand from Canada for 49 Wellington St. W, fancy molasses has been brisk, TORONTO, ONT.

hc ct Neamt

Hifi

THE REDCLIFF REVIEW

Grocery Specials for the

Icing Sugar 2 ibs. ........ 19¢ Light Brown Sugar 3 Pounds for 28c

Lump Sugar 2 Ib. pkt 25¢

SOAP SPECIALS

| P-& G Soap 10 Bars... 37 |’Calay Soap 4 Bars for 238c Kirk's. Castile, 4.Bars 24c

JELLIES, 6 Pkts. for VITO CHEESE 1% Ib. 15e VITO CHEESE 1 Ib. 29¢

28c

BLACKBERRIES Fresh Daily, Basket...

10¢

Phone 241 +. . ° KEETLEY JOHNSON Plumbing, Heating For Accident, Fire and and Repairing

Sickness Insurance Ocean Passenegr Service 7th Street, Redeliff .

Roofing a Specialty All Work Guaranteed

Marsh Plumbing Co.

Ra ERE SE TRL TA 18 NEB WE gh ERS 7 ern caer WM. HENDERSON | Issuer of Marriage Licenses

Medicine Hat FIRE INSURANCE ecorrrrr|, Rent collections attended to x mei Office at Residence 2nd St. ec emmes os ee em ee eee ee ee ied

SeereesSSeseeseseseoaeece ee

THE -_NEW CLUB CAFE

2nd St. S. E. Medicine Hat

————aeeern.

DAVES’ Meat Market .

Specials For The Week End

Prime Rib Roast per lb. 15°

eSSSSSSSS~SESSSSOSSHSUSIOSSOSSSOSSSOSOSBSSOSSO®

When in the city for busi- ness or pleasure, make our

Cafe your Headquarters Pot Roast. Beef per lb. 10: MEALS AND LUNCHES Souler of Lamb Ib... 12: ‘AT ALL HOURS

Boiling Beef per Ib........._ 7 and at Reasonable Prices

Take advantage of our Service and Accommodation

We Appreciate Your Patronage

(HE NEW CLUB CAFE

Seceeveceesesoeeseseeeesr

LOOK AT YOUR LABEL

Moore’s August Furniture Sale

Opens Tuesday a.m. at 9 o'clock

J. J. MOORE & SON

Phone 2787 Near Medecine Hat Garage

Dry Cleaning Have Your Scuffed Clothes-Made : Like New Ones Suits, Overcoats and Plain Dresses ‘Dry Cleaned and Pressed $1,25 By Up-to-date Plant in Medicine Hat Orders Left at A. McGIMPSEY’S, Redcliff

ie, Will be Promptly Attended to

Goods Called For Service. and Delivered

THE S. E. GUST STORES

1 game in the Hat

‘| e@eweeecccovoscoesoeeseeeee

Weekend

IODIZED SALT Extra Special artons “or

23¢

—— ee © PARIS GREEN 2 Pound Pkt, ©....0.-.

WATER GLAS® 2-Pound Tin

290. *

19¢

eae = ee ee ne

| norHouss TOMATOES | 5 Pound Basket hy

Free Delivery

|

& Local Items |

The loci: softball gi played last Thurs day evening and lost out by a score of 21 to 19 to Safeways,

. * *

Obear’s ‘garage front has beea ‘greatly imptoved in appearance _ by a fresh coat of red paint with white trimmings.

. * .

Miss Frances Buchholz under- went an operation for appentdi- citis in the Medicine Hat hospi- tel last. Thursday. She is now progressing favorably.

! Miss Smith, of Drumheller who was taken to the hospitel while visiting her sister here,

sufficiently recoverad to

Sangster’s last

is ~ also

was return to Mrs. Sunday. Mrs. Smith visiting Mrs, Sangster. * > =. | Mr. Oakland’s flower garden on Thitd street is being greatly admired by passers by “these days. The lot is very artisti- cally laid out and the profusion of Yloom attracts the attention of everybody. The garden is a treat to look at and shows what can be done with a littl, care and attention.

INSURANCE Fire Accident

| Life Sickness

New Willard

goveigg Station |

BATTERIES & RADIOS REPAIRED Agents For

PHILCO CAR RADIOS oT. ENNO

Pi oro 3057 318 S.Rallway St, MEDICINE HAT

——-

ore Now For

Spring and Summer We can supply you with SCREEN ~ DOORS AND WINDOWS At Reasonable Prices Do Your Repairing Now When Prices Are Low Orders left with H. J, Cex Promptly Attended to THE GAS CITY

‘. PLANING MILL First St. © Medicine Hat

Ree ee

Mrs. Tutt ‘e. Mise Kelly of Lethbridge. were week-end visit

ors

Mrs Phil'ip Baker is at pres

ent

at Banff.

The girl softballers will play a game here tonight (Thursday) with Safeways.

the

ago. “and PLAIN DRESSES A company has recently been Toa! Furniture For $1.25 formed with the object of pro- +d ae Sixth Avenue Goods Called For and Delivered

moting tables

Ab,

v.1€a8e,

d milk factory.

ill

A

vas

Antonia: Rexg of \ number

Troo

the

Krizon will residg in Redcliff.

A held

day Ambrose ladies, in honor of Ms Maisie - Hill, a August. spent at cadds for which Mrs. WV. King won ‘irst prize.

in fitting ‘resh . very pleasant social time en- joyed.

»f a dear husband- and father, Charles E. Oaklanid, who died in Col. Belcher Hospital, Calgary

July

ory dear. From his loving Nba! | and sons, Edward and David.

A Very pretty wddding took lace in the Catholic Church, at 1y last vhen Mr.

m from Redcliff

afternoon, by some of St.-

or det eyeactiaaneits

Say RO eC ea NI TOS le ie tee pte tei ts san § hn tty ah

7

HURSDAY, JULY 26th, 1934

PIPPI ri ceri i rit titi tii *

Dry Cleaning Done in Town

Get Your Old Clothes Cleaned Up For Spring

We are Preparedito Dry Clean and Press

SUITS, OVERCOATS

When in Medicine. Hat Visit The

with Mrs. Wm. Yates,

5 elle LESK’S Furniture Exchange

and see our Many Won- derful Buys in NEW and USED

FURNITURE

LESK’S FURNITURE EXCHANGE

seececceses

holidaying with her sisters

This will be game postponed some time

the, canning of vege Used Furniture and ‘fruit. produeed in 629 Third Street Mabini th sya rta, and also to establish 21] Phone 3664 . Mdicine Hat

LEUNG BROS:

Fourh St Next Town Hall

eeeenseeera*eeeseceseses

and eventually condens The industry be located at Brooks, Alta.

f Coccsreccccoveccoooecegeooeeooeseseoeoseseeee

How is your subscription”

Saturday morning Jos. Krizon of Redcliff united in marriage to Miss that district of friends of the attended and Mrs.

tive bilday, Saturay, Monde

~~ - CORN .FLAKES Kellog’s, 3 pkts. for 25c

SHREDDED WHEAT

Mr, BISCUITS, 2 pkts.

wedding.

RAISiINS—Seeded

RARER RS ASCII, 23¢ _Celophane e bag 2 Ibs, 356

RAISINS—Seedless Celophane bag 2 Tbs. 33c

Salada Tea Per Pound 47c

SALMON—Flat Tins Horseshoe Brand...-

miscelaneous shower was in the patish hall on Tues-

bride elect of A pleasant hour was

SAuLMON—Tall Tins Horseshoe Brand...-

202

‘CORNED BEEF VEAL LOAF

Miss

‘Till was the recipient of many Bovril Biand, 2 tins... 25¢ Clark’s, Tin... 15< ee Poe aa od od SPAGHETTI SPICED HAM ree SEM ee en Sat ome Heinz, TAM isshonpteeodssten 15e Hormel, Tine. 5.5 Be.

terms, Dainty . re ments were served and

-b- IN LOVING MEMORY

be

July ai, 28, 30 38¢

Sitar Raymond, 50 |b. cotton Sack $3.55

SEALER RINGS—Gem GHM MEAL RINGS

Beh 3 Perfect, Pkt. 23. Per Dozen

Fly Spray Liquid 8 oz tin 30c 16 oz tin 45c

32,0 oz. z. Tin, 85c°

Fly Tox Sprayer r Glass Each 25c

HONEY—Lethbridge “5, Pound Tin ...-..-.«..

27th, 1924. Still to mem

HONEY—Reldel=, 24% 1b. Tin for

. 6+ 8

. 85e 62¢

BIRTHS Fairhurst —In Medicine Hat. FAIRY SOAP, New Price | BABY’S OWN SOAP on Monday July 23, 1934, to Mr. 5 Cakes: for’ ...:-........ 25e¢ WAN, oo coro ane 100. and Mrs: "Robt. Fairhurst, a som 1: ‘CROWN OLIVE PALM OLIVE Toilet Soap, 6 for... 25c Toilet Soap, 5 for... 25e

. STRAYED —Onto the farm of the undersignad, a bay mare branded U,F. half diamond and

B.A, hip.

the farm of Mike Brucker.

In future all dogs must 1 BygRush ORS LF RR AIEEE NIAGR kept under contro: at all times, 4llowners of dogs of any age are compelled to secure tags for same ownership. This bylaw wil be trictly enforced in future,

A. E. WARD, M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON

Lockwood Block Phone 29?

Pyorrhea Treated & Preven’« Phone 8945

LEWIS

- Bargain Store WHEN IN MEDICINE HAT

SOMETHING NEW

wrenenr wm

Nabob Beiian Glass ane 45c hal? diamond both on left Owner may get same at

E. T. COOKE

The Family Grocer |

L) Phone 242 DOG NOTICE pme

Third Street

i GROCERY SPECIALS 4

within one month of

Keep Summer Clothes Fresh Dry Cleaning and Repairing MEDICINE HAT STEAM LAUNDRY

Ouality Laundry,

J. Kitchen. Police

LM. C.C,

Phone 2005 873 A, 2nd St. Medicine Hat

TED VAN WERT, Agent

Office an? Residence in

oe

DR. E, L. McKEE DENTIS1

Marketing Conference

and Co-operative Institute WILL BE HELD AT SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE, OLDS

JULY. 24th, 25th and 26th Addresses and discussions repegting new federal market- ing legislation and variows phases of co-operative activity in, Alberta. Eminent authorities on these subjects will

be present, Al! interested invited to attend.

Medicine He Opposite Assiniboia Hite

Visit The

For Information, Reservations Ete., Write

SECRETARY CONFERENCE COMMITTEE Department of Agriculture, Edmonton

ALL THE TIME