ee

with Mys. Hargrave, Miss Sel-

- ly evening at home spoiled for

. the director.

‘beginning of the

50, members 25e children 25c.

Provincia Libre: y

DEATH ON THE DIAMOND

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

f . NE ae

=" RE DCLI FF REVIEW/===|

“The Life of Se Winters

Volume 24 THE REDCLIFF REVIEW

THURSDAY. NOV. 22nd, 1934

Number 4

“Local £ Bible Sociely Legion Nominates

Getting Ready For Little Theatre

Has Successful Canvass Officers For Next Year!

Alberta Farm Strikers Handed Jail Terms

Entertainment! °°" Thanks to Bo ecale lection Takes Place Second | Had Evidenly Forgotten They

And Canvasser'’s Sunday in December

At the regular monthly meet ing of the local Legion held last Sunday the following elective officers were nominated:

Pres,: Messrs. R, Moore, H. Johnson and H. Cox.

Vice Pres.: Messrs. W. Wat-

Will Be Held on Friday, Once again the Officers of December 7th che Kedclitf Branch of the Can-

adian Bible Society, wish to Preparations are now well|.aank all who have again sub- under way for the first enter-| cribed to this fund, and to the tainment to be given in the|.adies who so willingly and uaittle Theatre by the local asso | -aivntully collected same, viz.

CIAMON Ra el re urs. J. Stratton at .. . $6.05 | ters and W. Yates.

The program will be made up|.irs. R. Phillips .........._ 8:60] Ex. Com.: W. Palneau, R. of three one-act plays in which| Irs. C. Newnham ......... 4:55] Phillips and Joe Podesta. sevu.al new members will take} -argaret Pow -.... bdvastases 5:35| It wag decided that the de-

‘eated candidates for the offie- es of President and Vice Pres- ident were eligible as candid- ates for the executive. Election will take place on Sunday Dec, 9th. ——

Demand in States For Low Grade Wheat

part, some for the first time].. Hodges, M. Allenback 2:35 before a Redcliff audience. Two} \. Shaw, G. Wyatt ....... 5:15 of the plays are comedies and | Jullection Oct. 23rd... 1:50 one a drama. “A Wedding” is a most am: using comedy in which the bridegroom and his male chums experience many difficulties in getting ready for the import- ant event and are kept in aj ‘or warded to Rev. A.A. Lytle state of excitement and embar-| Dis. Sec. at the Bible House rasment by the frequent ap-| ‘aleary. pearances of the bride, and re- Respectfully Subscribed latives of the contracting par- Emma W, Cann. Sec. Tres , ties. The cast is made up for Local Bible Society

pleatnaineca snp

New Board Appointed For Tilley East Area

MORAL “scscactadiaresscaesctegs $28 355 Our thanks are also extended » the Editor of the Review for lyertising for us. The above amount has_ been

Feed and Stock

Nearly a millign bushels of Canadian wheat were shipped into Duluth and Superior last week. Most of this was Amber Yurum but large quantities of iow grade wheat are also going’ into the States for feeding pur- poses, in fact quite a premium exists at Fort William for low yrade* compared with Vaneou- ver dee to the demand from the United {ftates. The

thorn, Miss Shaw, B. Thacker, C. G. Pow, 0. Wooding and C. J. Hoogveld, and is under. the directior of Mrs. Oargrave. “Thursday Evening” js an- other comedy, In this a young couple have their regular week-

\ll Powers Set Out in Act Ad- ministered by Board

By an order, in Council passed -ecently the Tilley East Area- em ere. Creek Area has been

a time by the unexpected visit of both mothers-in-law. How-

ever the play works out to a ava |

‘them competitive ‘with Arzgen- tina wheat, but so far little overseas demand has arisen. The lower wheat grades are now at a price which also com- pete as substitute far feeding srains. The United States aas reduced the duty on impor- ts of wheat unfit for human cousumption to a basis of 10% al, valorm or approximately 1+ bushel as compared to the nsual duty of 42c per bushel. No, 6 wheat and feed wheat

Tid’ a boat has been edited Messrs. EK. L. Gray, 0. S. congman and W. Hewett have een chosen for this board with dy. Gray as Chairman. All orders of the Board shall. be igned by any two members heveof and when so _ signed hall be effective. All the yowers set out in the Act are elegated to this Board. _ Regulations governing the oasing of land in these Areas vill in future be administered

amusing incidents oceur, The eas! is: Mr. Roy mn, Miss “,ey. Miss Elsie Frey and Mrs. Simpson. Miss McWaine is

“The Evil Poor” is a dramat- ic episode composed by Mr, King, of Redcliff. It js taken from Victor Hugo’s “Les Mis- erables” and gives ample scope for’a portrayal of conditions which existed in France at the nineteenth

century. The cast is made up| ’¥ the Board. er pact oorsy Big yee into of Mrs, Stone, Miss Viva Cox : U.S. at fe coded hen ov. R. 8 Hamnett and E, L.| durder Film Has ee ee

ne _

New Kind of Detective| 4 smoker is being held in the Armory here on Saturday night

of this week, for returned men.

‘Tickets will be on sale, next week-end. General admission izel Bruce Discusses All Clues

hm Da pa ay rer | ns seed tal cat mow last . Chnday night brought quite a change in the weather, about two inches of snow fell and the ‘hermometer dropped several degrees, |

cect REE vy. F. C. CUTS LOOSE FROM ALL POLITICS| John Vandercook, author, d Seton I. Miller, screen vriter, have joined forces to ive motion’ pictures a new id of detective, In adapting Vandercook’s willing tale of the tropics, Murder in Trinidad,” coming 0 the Monarch Theatre on londay- Miller has sketched he detective-hero as a human umorous chap, who refuses to ake anything seriously and ‘ho discusses all his clues and liscoveries with all thé suspects He refuses to make a mys-

The Saskatchewan section of che United Farmers of Canada aug devided to cut its political bonds and leave members free

» vute as they desire.

But breaking from the act- ive political field , declared Frank Eliason, secretary. will not cheek the work of the or- ganization nor hinder its inter- est jg major problems affecting the farmers in the province.

The U, F. C. becomes an edu- ational and protective organ- a‘ion on lines similar .to the United Farmers of Manitoba today. Masitoba farmers di- voreed politics in 1928, The Uuited Farmers of Alberta still

‘ald sway as the governing pow ex in Alberta,

“Wir and Mrs, Ted Van Wert went a few days this week in “alvary on business, ‘They re- turned Tuesday night,

Elaborate, comfortable chairs have recently been installed in the Monarch Theatre, They are being most favorably qe mented upon by the patrons from here,

* ¢ #

Open verdict was returned by an inquest jury under Cor- oner Dr. 8, F. McEwen in Med- icine Hat Monday night into the death of an infant. whose avy of his goings and coming®|charred remains were removed ind by his complete, unvarnish- | from the furnace at 783 Seven: | od honesty befuddles and dis-/|th Street on November 5th. ums the opposition, | he Mee)

Nigel Bruce, most popular’ Word. has been recieved that ‘omedian of the British screen J. W. Unwin and Mr. and” Mrs, makes his real American film Rogers are going to spend a vtart as the unusual sleuth in week in this district to hold ‘Murder In Trinidad,’ with meetings to discuss the social ‘leather Angel and Victor Jory credit system. They intend haring his adventures in the holding a meeting in Reddliff Fox Film production,

jin police court by Magistrate 8B. Gore-Hickman on. seven

names the culprits had evident- Duty Reduced on Wheat For/ly forgotten that they are liv-

iof the fog and cold. and his

Are Living in Canada Two jail terms, each of two months, and fines. and court costs aggregating $435 were imposed at Vagerville Monday

picketers charged as a_ result of a grain strike fraces at Mun- dare, Alberta, Nov, 7 last.

Pete Kleparchuk and William “aseybida were sentenced to .wo months in jale on charges of intimidation, and along with Pete Bereziuk, Metro Ulan, Sam Ulan, Fred Yaniw and Joe Osinchuk, were fined $20 and costs on charges of obstructing police officers, and $20 and costs each for doing wilful caumage.

Judging from the above

ing in Canada, t

Britain Still Strong For Continuing Peace

Determination that Britain will continue to work earnestly for the furtherance of peace ly international collaboration was expressed in the speech from the throne at the. opening of the new session of British par-

great state procession in open landaus wag called off because

majesty and other members of the royal family with their at- tendants proceeded to West- minister in motorcars.

Robert J. Rice, 73, retired C.P.R, engineer. who came to Medicine Hat in the company’s service in 1883, died Monday afternoon, Deceased wag a: one time proprietor of t'e Royal Hotel.

[Churches

Si. AMBROSE . HURLA

Rev. H. S. Hamnett, Vicar. 8rd Cunday after Trinity. 8 A. M. Holy Communion. Mattins 11 a. m.

1 A. M, Choral Encharist Evensong 7 80

GURDON MEMORLAL UNITE)) CHURCH

Pastor: Rev. Kk Erskine Pow

Sunday Nov. 25th 1934,

10 a. m, Chure! School

11.15 Morning Service.

Subject: “Jesus Walking on the Water.” K

8 p. m, Service at Bowell,

7:30 p m. Evening w rshin,

Subject: “The Parable of the} Talents.”

“The true lover of the” Bible finds in it a vision of God, a hope for man an inspiration to righteousness, ag ;

ST. MARY’S CHURCH

Mass will be celebrated on the 8rd Sunday of each month

some time next week. iat 8:30 a. m.

Alberta Live Stock

Will Consist of 15 Members From over the Province

——

Personnel of Alberta’s first live stock marketing board un- de; the National Production Marketing Act was announced Saturday afternoon by Hon. «. S. Grisdale, Minister of Ag- riculture.

The board, consisting of 15 members, was named by the Minister at the request of rep- resentatives of the live stock induscry in general meeting in Calgary November 8 ,following the endorsing of a live stock warketing plan for the pro- vince,

vhe marketing plan hus been submitted to the Federal Mar- keting Board at Ottawa, and when it is approved by , this body, ratified by the Governor- in-Council and finally endorsed by vote of Alberta live stock prolucers, it will be the respon- sibility of the board now nam- ed to determine, within the pro- visions of the scheme, the pro- cedure to be followed in this province in the marketing of live stock, and to coordinate the marketing machinery.

. The members of the Alberta Live {tock Marketing Board, named by the Minister, are: R. P. Gilchrist, Wild Horse; Geo- rge Ross, €t. Kilda; W. C. Me- Lethbridge; nee

Mirror; C. R. Abbott, Lacombe T. R. Murray, Tofield; George R. Ball, Edmonton; H, R. Bout- illier, Coda Lake; ami Alex Craig, Wembley. ee

W. M. 8. of Gordon Memorial Church will hold its Annual Thank offering Meeting on Friday Nov. 30th at 3 p. m. Rev. Mr. Binning will speek.

ees

Mr, R. J. Fallas, inspector of beer parlors and clubs paid an official visit to Redcliff yester- day and found everything sat- isfactory.

¢ ° s .

Seasonal reduction in gram rates from Georgian Bay to the Atlantic was put into et- iect last Saturday. ‘T!:: rate now is 5c,

eee

annual masquerade and social

Marketing Board Named

The Jr. W. A. will hold their

Letter of Thanks From Local Legion

|Local Legion Appreciate Poppy | Sale Held Here

| Officers and Members of Redcliff Branch No. 6 Canadian Legion o the B.E.S.L, sincerely appreciate the services render- ed, by Miss Cox and Miss Moore of the school staff and the high school girls who conducted the Poppy Day sales campaign in Town recently, the results of same being most gratifying.

The Poppies are all made in the vetcraft shops of Alberta by disabled ex-service men. the majority of whom are depend- ing on this work as their sole means of support.

We also wish to thank the citizens of Redcliff, for their generous response to the sales girls when called upon. and _es- pecially mention Mr. J. Johnson of Tilley, who conducted the sale of poppies. at that point for the Redcliff branch of the Canadian Legion,

Trusting the people of Red- cliff will continue their inter- est in the affairs of ex-service men and their dependents in the future ag they have in the past.

Sincerely Yours A. G. Osgood fee, Canadian Legion Redcliff, Alta., SS

Story of Romance

Romance written in words of fire deep in the hearts of the lovers of the world!

That’s one of the discriptive phrasés used to herald the com- irig of Cecil B. DeMille’s newest Paramount production, ‘“Cleo- patra,” which will open its 4 day engagement -at the Mon- ‘arch Theatre starting Nov. 28.

The film, a modern screen treatment of one of the world’s greatest love stories, has Claud- ette Colbert, Warren Williams

incipal parts. Wilcoxon is the young Englishman DeMille brought to Hollywood for the rle of Mare Antony, the noble Roman who gave up his life for love of the Egyptian queen while Empires tottered about him.

Rome and Egypt live again in all their monumental splen- dor, serving here ag a_ back- ground fol the deathless love story that distroyed mighty empires and wrote the most ex-

That Shook the World

and Henry Wilcoxon in the pr .

citing pages of history.

Bartlett Cormack noted short story writer, did the screen ad- aptation from the story by wal- demar Young and Vincent Lawrence,

on Friday, November 30th in

the parish hall beginning at

7:30. Adults 20c.* * * * 2 &

Mr. A. N. Collard received sad news today announcing the death of his father who died in Bruce county, Ont., at the

—— —f—

Mr. and Mrs. Bolton were surprised by a number of friendss on the occasion of their 4Oth wedding anniversary on

went to Mrs. J. Bolton and Mr.

Geo, Ordway returned » last week from a big game hunt in the northern part of the pro. vince. Both were successful in getting a moose. The head

M. McLeary and Mr. Stan. Britt A dainty lunch was served, after which Mr, Newnham made a presentation to Mr. and Mrs. Bolton on behalf of their

head brought home by Mr.|many friends. Ordway is a buty with an ex- ee ceptionally fine set of antlers. | How is your subseription®

N. Willis; consolation to Mrs. ,

r ee wn n~s

Thrifty Housewives Buy Quality

"“SALADA “Fresh from the Gardens” A Call To Citiscaship eed Humanity

With the approach of winter in this country, located in the northern

latitudes where winter weather is rigorous and prolonged, numerous organ- |

izations supported by thousands of warm-hearted and generous men and women are actively interesting themselves in the welfare of other thousands

of their fellow citizens who are in difficulty and distress, lacking adequate |

shelter, clothing, fuel and food. These various organizations, each in its own field, are making appeal to the whole citizenship of Canada to come to the aid of all those who are in need of assistance. The press, the pulpit, the public platform and the radio are all enlisted in promoting this humanitarian work, and all of these agencies are gladly extending their services.

It is the interest. the s thy, the generosity, the sacrifice of the in- dividual citizens that is Siow requis. Whatever opinions may have been held by many people in years gone by as to whether or not they were their brother's keeper, surely there can now be no two opinions as to the responsi- bility of each citizen fot the welfare of other citizens. Duty to oneself and one’s own family remains, as it always must remain, but the formerly enter- tained conception of that duty has narrowed during recent years, while one’s duty to others has greatly widened. Past selfishness is the cause of much of the suffering and loss of to-day;,; more unselfishness and the larger patriotism is the universal call of duty to-day.

Because of continued unemployment everywhere, and the plight of so |

many people in Western Canada, especially in south-western Saskatchewan and in portions of Manitoba and Alberta because of another extensive crop failure due to drought, the need for extending assistance to thousands of

families is as great as in any preceding year, and in some respects even |

greater.

Governments, acting on behalf of all the people, are shouldering the major problem. They are mortgaging the future in order that people may survive in the present. It is the only thing to do,—-it must be done, and is being done, To Governments must be left the responsibility and duty which is theirs, but, as Premier Bennett stated in a recent address in support of the various charity drives now in progress across Canada, Government relief efforts, no matter how extensive, can never take the place of the human touch provided by private social welfare agencies. As a result, the responsi- bility on those in a position to contribute to the assistance of the needy is greater than ever in these times.

It is gratifying to note that appeals being made are not falling upon deaf ears or stony hearts. At the time of writing this article no less than 227 railway cars of produce, fruit and vegetables, have been voluntarily con- tributed by people in the eight other provinces to the drought stricken areas of Saskatchewan, and additional cars are being provided every day. Churches, service clubs, the Red Cross, Community Chest organizations, and groups of public spirited men and women in cities, towns and villages all over the Dominion are at work, and the rural districts unaffected by drought are nobly responding.

But, as always, there are many who remain wrapped up in their selfish- ness, but who at a minimum of personal sacrifice could and should make | substantial contribution to the needs of others. Too many people who are still in fairly comfortable circumstances consider themselves hard-up, and | say they cannot make contributions which they ought.to make, simply be- | cause their incomes to-day are reduced from what they were a few years) ago. In those better times they were not called upen to give in proportion to what they had because the need on the part of others did not exist. To- day that need does exist, and it is their duty to respond to present appeals in still larger measure than formerly out of the incomes and reserves they still possess.

Our whole citizenship has a duty to perform because of our relationships to our fellow men. If that duty is not fully and even gladly met, then our much vaunted civilization is a sham and should and will crumble in ruins. Therefore, in every community no matter how small where an appeal on be- half of the needy is made, and regardless of the organization that may make the appeal, or the particular need which it is designed to meet, there should be a cordial welcome extended to those who are giving of their time and energy in promoting the success of the appeal, and the most generous re- sponse possible consistent with one’s own actual needs as these may be seen

and understood in the light of the actually desperate needs of others.

~ SOURED ON THE ‘WORLD?—THAT'S LIVER

Praise Coseifiads Actress ;

Norma Shearer Is Complimented For Her English Diction

London drama critics are compli- Wake Up your Liver Bile menting Norma Shearer, Montreal Man: Ne.Calomel necessary screen star, for her English diction. | ‘generally breeched make if oaata of tang

When it became known a United| Sli, ol mineral waier, gg States motion picture company was Geb and ig ep gs * filming “The Barretts of Wimpole| bile. me your liver pouring the daily ‘two Street,” itu wrote the news- Your plomach nnd ineatined working a chap papers suggesting the king’s English > ouee, ore, probably would be mangled by the| yw, rely vewetae de American actress chosen to play the]. &5e. at all ‘an con eee ra difficult role of Elizabeth Barrett.

Then the picture was released in . London, sg sengee en terygaen le 5 An Early Pioneer

portraying Miss Barrett. The critic

, for The Daily Mail suggested in his column that Miss Shearer’s accent should be studied by some of the Bri- tish stars,

Join The Mounted Police In 1873 Third man to join the old Royal

was formed in Ottawa in the early 70's, James McKernan, 83, died at Edmonton recently.

Mr. McKernan came west in 1873 and was stationed first at Fort Mac- leod in the territory now in southern Alberta. On October 13 last while thumbing through his leather-bound

Learning To Fly Again

‘Colonel Bishop Is Making New Acquaintance, With Controls There is a pleasant tinge of sur- prise in the report that Colonel W. A. Bishop, the Canadian airman who |

destroyed a large number of enemy aeroplanes during the war and was awarded the V.C., is now learning to fly at Montreal. Apparently the Colonel was one of those who return-

ed from his victories more or less to) It is said that he! nto the air)

his Sabine farm. has not taken a machine since 1922, and he feels that some- body had better be looking over his shoulder while he comes to terms with the controls again. Well, it is a wise bird that knows when to re- turn to the nest..-Glasgow Herald,

entry written 60 years ago: “Mount- ed guard for the first time at Fort Macleod to-day home, sweet home,”

He settled near old Fort Edmon- ton in 1882 and in 1885 Mrs. McKer- nan and their four-year-old child took refuge behind the pallisades of

the fort then fearing Indian attacks)

in the rebellion, while Mr. McKer- nan rode patrol duty 50 miles south to warn settlers that the Indians might attack.

He was born in Richmond, Ont.

Sor Lh apped Alands

HINDS

‘Flor ey é.

PListtJsrTitdd

CREAM

== system will,

diary the old-timer came across this}

THE REVIEW,

Secret Chemical Makes Air Clear

In Few Seconds

Lightning raids on fog are fore- shadowed by a secret chémical to which a trial was given recently. When a typical pea-soup specimen loomed up, engineers, having mount- ed their “guns”, an array of centri- pipes suspended thirty feet horizontally above the ground fired streams of this liquid into its midst. In a few seconds a clear path was blazed in the gloom, and while the every fog particle, as it came within range of 2,000 feet, was brought to earth in It is anticipated that aerodromes will be. among the first to install this new fog-clearing Already thousands of pounds are expended annually on and guidance

fugal

chemical attack lasted,

the form of water.

equipment.

special fog signals signs,

If you suffer

take advantage of this offer to try

KRUSCHEN at NO EXPENSE

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Ask your druggist today for the Kru- schen Giant Package. This consists of one Regular 75c package and a FREE TRIAL BOTTLE, Use the trial bottle first. Use it as prescribed and Kruschen’s six natural mineral salts will start you out to a new life. With your internal organs functioning as nature intended they should you'll find new health and new energy. Try Kruschen today AT OUR EXPENSE but remember, your

. druggist has only a limited supply.

Motoring On Sunlight

Dutch Inventors Claim Harnessed Rays Supply Sufficient Energy

Motoring on sunlight instead of petrol is the latest scientific dream, based on a discovery by two Dutch inventors. These men claim to have harnessed the sun’s rays and multi- plied their power a thousand times in a photo-electric cell, thereby man- ufacturing sufficient energy to drive a high-powered car ‘or aeroplane en- gine. Already the sun has been made to work for man in Egypt, where by concentrating its rays on solar boilers enough natural steam is generated to drive low-pressure turbines, This new if practicable bring about an industrial revolution.

Seem To Have No Limit

Japs Hold First Place For Inventive , Genius And Imitation

Our good friends the Japanese ap- pear to have no limits so far as in- ventive genius is concerned. ‘They have apparently discovered the secret of applying it to the imitation of any- thing that can possibly ‘be manu-

factured in their own land, They

have given the world bamboo foun-

tain pens for a few cents, they have

produced silk socks for a few cents;

they have exported millions of para- Jas, McKernan Was Third Man To | 98 for @ few cents, Now they are shipping tens of thousands of spare automobile parts for a few cents North West Mounted Police when it | *Plece—Montreal Star.

Have You Pimples or Boils?

Mss. T, A. Berney of 645 Wellington St., W. Toronto, Ont., says:. “L had a bad case of Is due, I believe, to the

condition of my bi I conataly vas in mise as the ils were all

over my face, I took only two bottles of Dr.

REDCLIFF, ALDERTA

HANDWRITING REVEAL ?

By LAWRENCE HIBBERT (Grapho-Analyst)

(All Rights Reserved)

(Editor's Note: Hundreds of read- ers have written in, asking the author for a personal character analysis. Have you? The well-known Grapho- Analyst who is writing this series of fascinating articles will be glad to tell you what your writing reveals. See the special offer at the end of the article.)

This week, there are several let- ters that have a general appeal to a good many of my readers, dealing, as they do, with situations that may well arise for anyone.

Miss C., of Winnipeg, says: I am a stenographer, but simply detest the life. I am unhappy and feel that I am wasting my time. I have dabbled a bit with painting and drawing, and have been able to make a little extra money now and again in this way. What do you advise?

There are very definite indications in your writing that you have a rare talent for artistic work. Some of my correspondents ask should they take up art as a career, and I am forced to advise them against it. But in your ¢ase, I can very earnestly sug- gest that you can take up drawing as a career. This does not mean, of course, that vou are to give up your present occupation at once.

You must take up your art work, seriously, but in your spare time. Work hard at it; take a good course, because it will pay you in the long run, and when you are in a position to make a career of it, then you can give up your stenographic work.

A widow in the North country writes: I am 88 years of age, and have two children. I have been keep- ing company with a gentleman for some time, and he wants me to marry him. He says that he divorced his first wife, as she was unfaithful, and did not look after him, preferring to gad about. I have a bit of money) and am wondering whether I should marry my friend, or whether I should | continue looking after my children. Please tell me what I should do.

I am sorry that 1 cannot recom- mend you to marry your friend. His writing is that of a deceitful and rather dishonest person. My corre- spondent would be far better off to remain as she is. She can, at least, see that her children are properly looked after. If she were to marry her friend, she would be in for some unhappy times.

She is not old yet, and will very

likely have other opportunities of meeting someone who would make her a good husband, and see that the children were adequately looked after. But, in any case, she is better off as she is. now, than married to the man she has in mind. . Miss S., living in a Toronto sub- urb, writes: My boy friend’ has re- turned to Germany, having lost his employment here. He said that he would either come back, or send for me. Will he remain in love with me? Should I wait for him?

This is a case where Grapho- Analysis alone is not sufficient. I have to call in the aid of psychology. Your friend is of a very affectionate and impulsive nature, He is re- liable enough, and undoubtedly meant what he said when he told you he would marry you one day. But he is a long distance from you, and my advice to you is to cultivate other friends, Do not shun the company of other boys.

You will know before very long. whether your boy friend is still faithful to you. But it may be that he will stop writing. He may meet someone over there whom he likes ‘better. And the blow will not be so hard to you if you have other friends.

So I advise you not to do as you ‘say about having nothing to do with other boys.. That is unnatural and will not help you very much. On the other hand, it may embitter your na- ture, more particularly if your old friend forgets you.

Do you. want your character reveal- ed from your handwriting? And to know what your friends are really like? Send specimens of the writing you want analysed, and enclose 10c coin for each’ Send with 3c stamped addressed envelope, to: Lawrence Hibbert, care of Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 175 McDermot Ave., Winni- peg, Man. Letters will be answered as soon as possible but please allow about two weeks for your reply,

Pays Tribute To Explorer

Sweden Opens Museum In Memory Of Professor Andree

Sweden remembered Prof. Salmon August Andree, famed Arctic ex- plorer, again on the 80th annivers- ary of his birth.

A new Andree Museum, containing diaries, photographs and numerous relics of his ill-fated balloon expedi- tion, was opened, as the drama of the finding of his body, 33 years after he and two companions floated

Pierce's Golden Medical

the boils gradually disap-

we had no return of these

upton. Sold by druggists everywhere. jrite Dr. Pierce's Clinic, Buffalo,

Discovery and re IT ha

Criticism Often Unjust The Ottawa Journal says most of ais are quick to criticize the police. And our eriticism is often unjust. For the miracle of police work, as it is organized to-day, is not that so many criminals escape, but that so

many are apprehended, The public takes note of the few failures; it forgets the thousands of cases where the police succeed.

away to the North, was recalled.

Ashes of Andree and the two men who died wtih him, Nils Stromberg and Knut Fraenkel, will be given formal burial sometime this winter in North Cemetery at Stockholm, They were cremated after their dis- covery in 1930,

A noted French perfumer died re- cently, and among his effects was found a document in the form of a will leaving recipes, formulae, ideas and suggestions for perfumes, loca- tions, creams, to keep the laboratory staff busy for years.

Automobile tires nowadays com- monly run from 15,000 to 25,000 miles, compared with 3,000 to 4,000 miles, which was the life of a tire before the war, says a British writer.

Brazil, with an area of 3,176,358 square miles, has a populations of 39,800,000,

Many parts of England are using coal gas as motor fuel with success and economy.

W. N. U 2071

A\ «

BAD HEADACHES, N

Remember Oe pica below when a want fast relief from pain. Jemand and get the method doc- tors prescribe—Aspirin.

Millions have found that Aspirin eases even a bad headache, neuritis or rheumatic pain often in a few minutes!

In the stomach as in the glass here, an Aspirin tablet starts to dis- solve, or disintegrate, almost the instant it touches moisture. It gins “taking hold” of your pain

Even Rheumatic Pains Eased Fast Now!

RELIEVED IN MINUTES THIS WAY

EURITIS PAINS OFTEN

practically as soon as you swallowit.

Equally important, Aspirin is safe. For scientific tests show this: Angora does not harm the heart.

Remember these two points: Aspirin and Aspirin ia om x And, see that you get ASPIRIN, It is made in Canada, and all druggists have it. Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every Aspirin tablet.

ret tin of 12 tablets or economical bottle of 24 or 100 at any druggist’s.

Why Aspirin Works So Fast

Drop an Aspirin

tablet in

a glass of

water. Note that BE-

PORE it

touches the

bottom, it is disinte-

grating.

IN 2 SECONDS BY STOP WATCH

An Aspirin tablet grate and go to wor!

starts to disinte-

What happens in these

in your stomach—ASPIRI tablets start ‘taking hold” of pain a few minutes after taking.

When in Pain Remember These Pictures % ASPIRIN IS THE TRADE MARK OF THE BAYER COMPANY, LIMITED

«

A Disagreeable Forecast

U.S. Expert Not Optimistic About Weather Of Future

If you asked J. B. Kincer, United

States weather bureau official, to

Russia’s Giant Gan

| “Big Lenin” Made By Creators Of

Germany’s “Big Bertha” Batteries of a new gun named Big Lenin, which has a range of twenty-

guess what the weather will be for | three miles, have been mounted by

the next 25 years, he'd say: and wetter.”

“Colder | the Russians at Viadivostock.

It is claimed that this weapon out-

Kincer, chief of the climatology; ranges by seven miles the heaviest division, told the Cosmos Club at! armament in Japan's capital ships.

Washington, there is good reason to suspect the United States (perhaps the world) is on the threshold of a change of climate.

For the past “quarter century, he found, the world has had increasing warmth and decreasing rainfall. Records of periods before that show cycles of rising and falling tempera- ture and rain lasting about the same number of years, he said, He believes another turn of the weather

. .

time may be imminent:

World’s Noisiest Bird Cockatoo Can Drown Out Dozen Motor Car Horns The scream of the peacock can be heard a mile away, but the noisiest bird in the world is the cockatoo, A single bird can make a din which would drown a dozen motor car horns and dim the sound of a steam. whistle. The bell-bird of Brazil is runner-up to the cockatoo. This white bird is about the size of a pigeon. It lifts its head in the air and makes a noise that sounds like the bang of a hammer on an anvil.

The month of October seems the end of harvest in the northern hemis- phere (Northern Canada, Alaska, Northern Russia, Sweden, Finland, and Norway) and the beginning of harvest in the southern hemisphere. November is the harvest month of Peru and South Africa; December that of Burma and Argentina, the harvest of the latter being carried on throughout January, which is also the harvest month of Uruguay, Chile, and Australia.

Cottonwood, Texas, has a well in the middle of its main street.

A. mobile battery mounted on trucks can be moved to different points on the railway.

The gun is forty-two feet long, and has a special cooling apparatus which enables rapid fire without over- heating,

The size of the projectile and the explosives used are carefully guarded secrets.

The gun is. the work of German experts, some of whom were respon- sible for the creation of “Big Bertha”, the weapon used to shell Paris at seventy-six miles’ range.

col

Da WERNETS POWDER Would you like false teeth to fit so

Sees

can ad about.

on Dr. Wernet’s :

world’s foremost dentiste—the one powder that assures 100% secure Sroncties sensitive

Seoat ees oceans Inexpensive—any druggist.

Commercial canning is one of the oldest of the larger organized indus- tries in Canada. Napoleon is credited as the originator of using air-tight containers for army rations, but the development of the industry is inter- national, In 1809, in France, Fran- cois Appert found that food put in air-tight containers required to be sterilized; an Englishman invented the tin can, and North America prac- tically made canning the great indus- try it is to-day.

A Serbian sculptor has perfected a | fire and water-proof brick made ' chiefly from paper,

The Winter Protection of Cod Liver Oit

PLUS

A GREATER

RESERVE oF VITALITY

Winter is a dangerous period for many of us. The cold requirin,

and wet are constant menaces to

energy to combat, Scott’s Emulsion gives

gallour

ter Winter protection because it is an Emulsified Co Liver Oil in a solution of

body

building hypophosphites of lime and soda values you get in. eng ma nd of Cod Liver

SCOT

—PLUS Liver Oil, vo

T

EMULSION

THE COD LIVER OIL WITH THE PLUS VALUE

For Sale by Your Druggist

' blown down.

Greates

t Hunt For Gold In: The

History Of Canada Has Been Carried On Over Wide Area

A season that brought what is be- Neved to have been the greatest hunt for gold in Canada's history is draw- ing to a close. No figures are avail- able to show the exact number of prospectors and assistants who struggled through often inhospitable country, but a careful approximation indicates a total of about 18,000.

Increased prices for the yellow metal spurred prospectors’ activity. An added factor was extensive use of aeroplanes, which provided access to new districts and revealed existence of still more. Aerial photography, it is said, has revolutionized the metal- mining industry.

Pictures taken from speeding aero- planes tell experts much. The topo- graphical survey of the Department of the Interior produced 40,000 aerial photographs during the summer. From these, most of them taken in Northern Manitoba, Athabaska, Great Bear and Great Slave regions and in the Nahanni district near the Yukon boundary, maps are being developed.

Planes of the Royal Canadian Air Force carrying aerial surveyors made flights over the famous Long Lac district in Northwestern On- tario. Some flights were made in other provinces. Much of the aerial photography this year was designed to help gold seekers, .

Luck, prospectors and geologists say, is still the most important fac- tor in the hunt for gold and less valuable metals. Once a tree was Its roots tore up the surrounding soil and bared what de- veloped to be one of the richest veins ever discovered in Canada. Last summer a prospector stopped on the shore of a-lake because a high wind endangered his canoe® While he wait- ed for the storm to abate he dis- covered what is regarded as one of the most important finds of the year. Such incidents are said to make pros- pectors superstitious,

Aerial photography has removed some of the chance from prospecting. It tells the field man what rocks con- tain no gold and the territory where the soil, or what miners call “over- burden,” is too deep for them to find workable veins, even if they did exist. They help him concentrate his efforts where it is most likely to succeed.

Pictures show granite formations in which metals are seldom found, and, on the other hand, indicate geo- logical “faults” and great fractures where profitable mineralization is more probable. me

Stereoscopes placed’ over - the ple-

Dangerous Policy

Restoration Of The Dead Expert- ments Should Not Be Applied On Human Subjects =~

Raising of the dead is no great feat in the opinion of Professor Vel- yien E. Henderson, chief of the de- partment of pharmacology at the University of Toronto, but is a dan- gerous practice when applied to hu- man beings.

Dr. Henderson revealed university research workers frequently had re- stored to life animals apparently dead for as long as eight minutes, not as a trick to raise them from the dead but because success of experi- ments often depends on the subject remaining alive,

Animals such as dogs and cats, he said, had frequently been restored after overdoses of anaesthetics ap- parently killed them, The same method of restoration, he declared, had been applied to human beings killed by carbon monoxide gas pois- oning, but the subjects frequently

ore as - J H

THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA

LAUNCHING OF THE “QUEEN MARY”

Be

=—

oO Ay eK

CS

ne

<P

—- a J

A splendid view of the launching of the Cunard White Star Liner. Her Majesty, Queen Mary, very graciously performed the ceremony of naming the new vessel. Our photograph shows the great size of the ship, which has an overall length of 1,018 feet The height from the keel to the masthead

became idiots.

is 234 feet. “We get these carbon monoxide |

cases,” he said, “but the brain has been impaired and, in this respect, this tendency becomes more and more

~‘Rashily Life In Russia

May Be Wrecked By Duty Of Citizens

r d.” pronounce To State A wholesome family life holds any race together. Nations crumble

when the sanctity of the home is dis- regarded .or social laws are abrogat- ed. It is not unlikely the Soviet union of Russia may smash on that phase alone for the Bolsheviks or new deal- ers there are playing with fire. In discussions in Russian newspapers the young communists are asking if it is possible to continue the family organization and at’ the same time discharge their regimented duties to the state. The burden of the corre- spondence is the complaint that the amount of work required of citizens by the community leaves neither men nor women Aufficient time to develop a wholesome and affectionate family relationship. Some frankly ask why, if it interferes with the discharge of the duties imposed by the state, fam- ily life should not disappear, at any rate for the present. The appalling

how far the process of regimentation has diverted the mind of Soviet youth.--Brandon Sun.

“They're verra thorough in Lon-

the Strand an’ reported it to the

implications of this suggestion show |

Manitoba Penden Plan

No Change In System Contemplated By Government

Changes in the Old Age Pensions Act in Ontario proposed by Hon. David Croll, minister of public wel- fare, appeared to be a move toward the system now in effect in Manitoba, Cc. K. Newcomb, administrator. of Manitoba old age pensions, states.

In Winnipeg applications for old age pensions were made to the social welfare commission. In all other Manitoba towns applications were made to municipa) councils. Those whose applications were rejected may appeal to Mr. Newcomb for a hearing.

Mr. Newcomb said he had no rea- son to believe any changes in the system were contemplated by the provincial government at present.

While Canada is finding new mar- kets for dried milk products, Russia is making a. bid to increase her ex- ports in this line. A large factory with an annual capacity of 5,000 tons of dried milk has been set up at Yalutorovsk on the Trans-Siberian railway in-a district in the Urals | famous before the war for its dairy

don,” said Mac, “TI Jost a shillin’ in| Cows and butter,

tures show the valleys and hills in re- lief. After discovery of a vein a

police. Next mornin’ I; went to Undaunted by the lack of snow in search again and they'd got the road} Australia, youths of Sydney are

ldicn States Pay High Tribute

To Lord Willingdon By Erecting Statue In Fis Honor

B.C. Salt Fish

This Ie Tho Latest Commodity To | Come Under Marketing Act Balt fish from British Columbia) waters is the latest commodity to} come under a marketing scheme, An- | nouncement was made of the ap- proval by the cabinet of a scheme for | the marketing of salt herring and, salt salmon produced !n British Col- | umbia, The Dominion marketing board un- | der the Natural Products Marketing | Act has a number of other schemes) under consideration, including live- | stock and poultry schemes for West-! tern Canada,

British Columbia, however, leads all provinces in taking advantage of, the act, for besides its salt herring and salmon products it now has its red cedar shingles and its tree fruit under regulation of marketing boards.

The scheme was adopted on the application of the meal, ofl and salt | fish section of the Canadian Manu- facturers’ Association in British Co- lumbia, The local marketing board will consist of two members appoint- ed by that organization, two by Canadian Salt Fish Exporters, Limit- ed, and a chairman to be appointed by the deputy minister of fisherics for Canada,

The local board will have power to regulate the time and place of the’ marketing of the regulated products and the quantity and quality to be released for marketing. It may also conduct a pool for the equalization of returns,

The livestock scheme is proposed by the Saskatchewan Co-operative | Livestock Producers, Limited, and ap- plies only to that province, but simi- lar schemes are being prepared for Manitoba and Alberta, and all are! designed to fit into a general plan | to control livestock marketing over | the whole of Canada, Opinions of | the producers are being sounded out | before proceeding further,

The provincial boards would be | linked through a sales agency and ;all products apart from those for} local consumption would be handled by the sales agency. All producers

' \

Tt is an honor almost unique that the princes of the Indian states are paying Lord Willingdon, viceroy of India. They have subscribed funds with which a statue in his honor will be erected in New Delhi—"to ex press,’ in the words of the official announcement, “the high esteem and regard in which the Viceroy is held by the princes generally and to com- memoriate his long and distinguished connection with the country.”

The success of Lord Willingdon’s service as governor-general of Can- ada led his friends to believe he had the qualities demanded by the much more onerous responsibilities of his Indian post, and they have not been disappointed. In this Dominion he displayed democratic dignity, was an upholder of tradition, but not a stick- ler for form. His authority did not rest upon conventionality, nor was his influence bounded by the limits of his high office. He went to the trouble of learning Canada, of un- derstanding the Canadian viewpoint, and in every branch of his public ser- vice he had the extremely competent support of his wife.

In the larger spheres of Indian affairs Lord Willingdon has demon- strated by these same qualities —and by a happy and rare combination of firmness with tact—his right to be ranked with the great pro-consuls of Britain. When he went to India something more than three years ago the country was rent with disorder, the fanatic Gandhi was a power in the land and the centre of disaffec- tion and unrest, and there was seri- ous resistance to the British plan of broadening self-government of the Indian people as they were educated to accept responsibility for their own administration. Since that time the Viceroy has not done anything spectacular, but the picture to-day is @ vastly different one. Gandhi is in eclipse, his following largely gone. The country is peaceful, rarely finds its way into the news columns.

And this has been accomplished, we imagine, largely because Lord Willingdon is tactful and shrewd and kind, because it is known he-will not tolerate injustice, because his policy in India, as in Canada, is founded on

would be registered, all sales pooled and all packers and dealers, whether wholesale and retail, licensed.

Agricultural Economy

To Procure Information Of An Inter- national, Character

The International Institute of Agri-

culture at Rome is planning to ask

|}common sense.—-Ottawa Journal.

Leads In Literary Output

Russia Claims Production Of Greav- est Number Of Books

Soviet Russia, a generation ago

the most illiterate country of Europe,

| has been assessing its literary

study of the pictures helps in de- velopment, as it shows the contour of the country and indicates the best route for a road and most advan- tageous location for a mill.

In the fyles of the topographical survey 600,000 negatives are kept, and a sufficient number of prints are available to prevent any possible shortage, ©

Got What She Wanted

—_

Action Of New York Girl Would Seem Justifiable

Another story of an individual bucking the tides of big business is told us by a young lady who wanted six buttons. Simply six buttons of a certain size. She found the type she wanted at Altman's, but told the girl

up!”

LONG SLENDERIZING LINES, HEAVIER FIGURE AND A MOST") FLATTERING NECKLINE YOU'LL ADORE

eSNAPSHOT CUIL

Your Own “Candid Camera”

skiing on sandhills.

74 governments for data on which to; ®*hievements and to-day boasts that recommendations for world !™ the production of books it has

she needed a size larger than those) ‘The lovely model patterned for to- on display, The girl asked her what) day, even the amateur sewer will find color, and our young lady said the enceedingty Brg to rr Fe " rt cons of four sections, join color dids't, aap bierigpl ahe was centre-front, centre-back and at sides going to cover them with cloth, Alt-| with the fitted hip area with bias man’s covered buttons, the girl said,| seams to meet each join. It creates and would be pleased to do the cover-| @ ee aoe Res hs nmap line ing. The young lady said she'd like| ™UCc 4pprec y er figure. rey her rood ve Mew lease, In The bodice has ragian shoulders. No DORR, sleeves to bother with to set into that case, the girl said, she couldn't | armholes, And note the pretty bodice sell the buttons. Altman's never sold| trim in coterie Johok shock. buttons for covering, Then our young| Black crepe silk, as original lady ‘drew herself together and told model, 1s especially charming with its

hi tal threaded cr trim. a little white lie She would take six| teet's pana Hs al

red buttons, and wouldn't ever dream | rayon novelties, velvet, efc., are other of re-covering them. The girl sold | nice fabrics for this’ easily made

model, them.--The Bow Yorker. Style No, 956 is designed for sizes|

| 86, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust.

More Radio Sets Sold | Size 36 requires 3% yards 39-inch , Not only were the radio sets sold patorial with % yard 85-inch con- in Canada during the first six trasting.

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

months of 1934 more numerous than | Wrap

Wool crepes, novelty crepe silk, | PO8¢S

| * A “candid camera” snapshot, replete with the troublous atmosphere of an unheppy moment. It tells the whole story.

Some magazines and newspapers} of thing you'll never find in an ordin- makes a great to-do about “candid| ary posed photograph. camera” pictures, so called because To get such a picture you have to they portray the great and near-| be ready to take advantage of a great in unguarded moments and fleeting opportunity. Some day, when i you have your camera out for some y “candid camera” shots have | shots around the house, your pipe made at banquets, receptions, | supher is quite likely to come out conferences and other such affaiis.! on the porch to watch you. Maneuver

planning in agricultural economy.

Its move followed unanimous ap- proval of the proposal made by Dr. Henry Charles Taylor, United States permanent delegate to the institute, to change the organization's direction along lines of international planning.

As soon: as possible the institute will begin its new work, rendered possible by the resolution endorsing Taylor’s proposal, It declared the action had been taken “as a means to improve the quality of work and to meet the needs of the time for) agricultural ‘information of interna- | tional character,”

Interested In Kitchens

King George Likes To Cook When He Is Allowed An amusing story of King George

is told by Philip Inman, managing |

governor of Charing Cross Hospital, in his book, “Oil and Wine,” just published.

The King, he writes, was passing along the corridor to one of the wards when he stopped before the door of the ward kitchen.

“May I go inside?” asked.

The door was opened and revealed a nurse bending down before a gas oven. The King took in everything

the King

They show notables being thoroughly | so that he is in fairly good light, | at a glance and then said: “I'm very

human, unaware of the presence of a! focus your camera for the distance camera. between him and your lens, watch

Naturally such pictures have a lot, for the moment he puts match to of appeal. they realy are eating, worrying.

snap him. Chances are he won't realize what you have done, And you

talking,

For they show people as! tobacco and then quietly turn and}

|interested in kitchens.

| |

I sometimes do a little cooking myself—that is, when I'm _ allowed."’—-New York Times,

surpassed not only every other na- tion, but even the United States and Germany combined.

Just recently 500 Soviet authors met in the first All-Union Writers’ congress, and laid down the general lines of Russian literature for the future.

In connection with their meeting, figures have been published that show the vast progress the) Soviet has made in book publishing since the revolution.

Not less than five million books have been issued within the past 15 years.

Within the past five years the cir- culation of the writings of Maxim Gorki, the Soviet laureate, has been 18,965,000 copies.

Sholskov, author of “Still Flows }the Don,” has sold 2,106,000 books,

And even poetry, ranking well be- |} low prose in other countries, has vast ‘popularity in Russia Official figures place the circulation of Demyan | Bednu's verse at 7,400,000.

cme

The yellow meal worm is a pest that is easily dealt with in winter time in Canada, With the meal or flour placed outside in a rat-proof regeptacle, zero temperature will kill all the pests in a night. If the tem- perature does not go below 20 de- grees Fahrenheit, it is better, says the Dominion Entomologist, to leave the food out two days.

|

Popular Anyway Modern science has struck a blow

the sales during the same period of 1933, but they were also more expen- sive. The total value was $2,165,000,

| made with very small cameras,

uipped with exceptionally fast pean and film. Such cameras: do

How To Order Patterns

enjoy. A whole section of your album may be very well devoted to suth pic-

These candid snapshots aré mera, | en have a “candid camera” shot to

Wife: “No, I didn’t sew a button | at apple pie! Dr, Carl R. Fellers of on your trousers; I was too tired. the Massachusetts state college, said Which is more important, anyway— apple pie contains only about one-

compared with $627,000 a year ago, | the average value (factory prices) being $34 and $28 respectively. Over 8,000 of the sets sold were for auto- mobiles.

Address: Winnipeg ewrponer Union 175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg

Pattern No........+5.

Developed in England, a new type of autogyro having neither wings nor rudder can hang motionless in the air and land on a tennis court.

fone eeeeeeeee eee eee eee eres

WwW. N. U 2071

0p ORTOP RES 5

not need brilliant light, and they can be handled so casually that they do not become conspicuous.

But you don't need any such cam- era to make your own “candid cam- era” snapshots. Of course, you will not be able to shoot under ordinary | under some handicaps. Modern oupere room light -—unless your camera) Sensitive film is remarkable : has an f.3.5 lens, or faster—-but you | ag awd we it, aagwen: a will find ample opportunity in places , & clean wor at where the light is better. | ity widest opening, a watchful eye

For example, do you have a picture| and quiet, unobtrusive camera work of Dad, or Uncle, or Brother lighting|~-these are the onl his pipe? Nothing characteristic-—and yet it's the sort

more than likely they'll be amusing, too. !

It is essential that you use the fastest kind of film for these snap-

shots for you usually have to work

tures, Coveney they are inte y

ts. JOHN VAN GUILDER.

your wife or your trousers?” Husband: ‘“Well,.there are places I can go to without a wife.”

The South Atlantic ocean contains islands which sealers have used for years, but have never seen. They jare in a perpetual fog.

Approximately 4,000,000,000 pounds

| annually §

fourth as much vitamin C as the | fresh apples with which the pie was | made Vitamin C is a mysterious quality in a food which prevents

scurvy.

| Great Britain and Ireland produce | only enough meat to supply London's | population with 3.2 ounces of beef, 2.9 ounces of mutton and lamb, and

could be more! many “candid” ena _santnttals for | of tobacco are produced im the world 2.6 ounces of pork per head each

week.

at

THE REDCLIFF REVIEW ¢erunspay. Nov, 22nd, 1994

The Redcliff Review

uohshed Every Thursday At the Review office, Seeond Street

Redcliff, Alberta

SUBSCRIPTION RATES.

in Canada and Great Britain ....$2.00 $2.50

-nited States

Advertising Rates furnished o. Application B. L. Stone, Publisher

THURSDAY. NOV. 22nd, 1934

EDITOR MORALIZES

A Minnesota editor moralizes thusly: “If’we could all switch businesses all the way around tor just one week. we’ lot more sympathetic of the other fellow’s problem and know a lot more than we do at present about the gause of his shortcomings and of his appegent failures. Let the banker sell prunes, the grocer pull teeth, the dentist run a garage, the garage man edit a paper, the editor jrun the bank, for just six little work days arid we'd all have our eyes 80 wide open to what the others are up against that we would never have the courage to arit- icize, nor would we be sympath- etic again. Then if the whole caboodle of us were to move on various farms and _ operate them for another six days per each, we'd all be so wise and understanding that the peace and harmony prevailing would make this little old community just about the.best place in the world to live in. It can’t he done, of course, but we could take the thought of ourselves that we don’t know anything

te

about the other man’s job and |;

concede that fir all we know he is handling it in good shape.

Redcliff Wenlalscouces

Taken From The Review File Dec. 3rd. 1915

A. B. Clow writes from the Dardanelles and gives a graph- ic account of life in the tren- ches,

The Ratepayers’ passed off very quietly.

Two changes in real. estate| .

_ during the past week. Dr. R. R. Stoner purchased the Sher- win residence on Fifth st. and

breath control Marie Dres- slek,

be jammed.

Meeting:

A. E, WARD, M. D. L, M. C. C, VHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence in

| Lockwood Block Phone 292

ee |

THE NEW CLUB CAFE

2nd St. S. B. Medicine Hat

cubwiy motto The public

Theadore Roosevelt once said the reason fat men are good natured is they can neith- |!

er fight nor run, . ®

Many a wife has found out | that hugging her husband is | the best way to get around him |

———__ || Prepare Now For || The Fall and Winter | |

We can supply you with STORM DOORS AND WINDOWS

At Reasonable Prices

Do Your Repairing Now | ap,

When Prices Are Low

Orders left with H. J, Ccx , Promptly Attended to

THE GAS CITY PLANING MILL First St. Medicine Hat

KEBETLEY JOHNSON for Accident, Fire and Sickness Insurance Ocean Passenegr Service %th Street, Redcliff

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

FRESH OYSTERS Served Any Style

from Broomhall | Liverpool, on Nov. 7th says: The fixing of a minimum rice at Winnipeg lends more idence to importers who are now protected from any severe break or by

A eable and at Reasonable Prices

MEALS AND LUNCHES AT ALL HOURS Take advantage of our Yervice and Accommodation

Dry Cleaning Done in Town

Get Your Old Clothes Cleaned Up For Spring

We are Prepared to Dry’ Clean and Press

SUITS, OVERCOATS

DAVES’ Meat Market

634 3rd St. Medicine Hat

eer

Specials For The Week End

| New Fish |

Opposite Safeways, Medicine Ha

LEUNG BROS.

Fourh St Next Town Hall e

We Appreciate Your

SERVED IN Patronage OLD COUNTRY STYLE

Prices: 10c, 15c and 25c

WTTTITITTT TTL dd

How is your subscription?

Come in and let us

Check up Your Batteries

We carry a Full Stock of G M Batteries on hand

Get Your Car Ready For Winter with G. M. and Prestone

ANTIFREEZE

BENY’S GARAGE, Medicine Ha

LOW

y Seeeseeeeeseeseeeeseeest

OCR TD NTO TE + CD

° Shoulder of Lamb, per fb, - 7c

and PLAIN DRESSES and Chip Shop Stewing Lamb 3 tbs. for - 18c For $1.25 Rolled Roast Beef per tb. - 12c

: Pot Roast Beef, per tb. - - 7c

Goods Called For and Deliverea we pet k Veal Roast per fb, - - 10c he Fish Market Bolling Beef Per Pound - +

GIVE US A TRIAL att Smoked Ham Per Pound + 23c

YOUR PHOTOGRAPH FOR CHRISTMAS

There is nothing your Family or your Friends would Appreciate More than Your Photograph

Arrangements should be made now to assure mail- ing for Overseas in time for Christmas.

A Small Payment Down will Guarantee Early Mailing. Don’t Delay.

Prices Very Reasonable

GAINSBORO STUDIO

Second Street . ' Medicine Hat

——E |

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 Will be Promptly Attended to 24 Hour

Goods Called For Service. and Delivered

When in Need of

Counter Check Books

Leave Your Order At|

The Redcliff Review

THE REDCLIFF REVIEW OFFERS YOU

Of Great dub scription Dorgan thal mean.

MONEY: MAILBOX |

WINTER

excursion FARES

M. Moffatt closed a deal with the Royal Bank for their res- idence on the same street,

The gag company has reduc-

Here is areal offer that will save you money . . . Give yourself and your family lasting enjoyment and entertainment the whole year through . «« This is all you have to do.

ed the rate to lic a thousand cubic feet. : es ee @

Men are now ‘busy at the Glass Plant getting eve ything in rediness to commence oper- ations at the first of the year.

Redcliff’s population ig grow- ing. Four new families came to town this week.

ses 2s fF JUST FOR FUN

From a tomb stone in Wilt- shire, England,

Beneath this stone in hopes

of Zion

Is laid the landlord of the

Lion.

Resigned unto the Heavenly

will,

His son keeps on the busi- ness still.

see

I like a dash of onions in

everything I don’t practice

For your trip to Eastern Canada, Pacific Coast or the Central United States by Canadian Pacific

EASTERN CANADA

Daily December 1 to January 5 THREE MONTHS - RETURN LIMIT

logether with

e PACIFIC COAST VANCOUVER - VICTORIA NEW WESTMINSTER Daily November 15 to February, 28 GOOD TO RETURN UNTIL APRIL 30, 1935

CENTRAL UNITED STATES

Daily December 1 to January 5 THREE MONTHS - RETURN LIMIT

Your Canadian Pacific Agent will gladly quote fares Train Service and make all arrangements.

CANADIAN PACIFIC

combination price.

[] Chatelaine ["] Canadian

[_ Pictorial Review...

and Home Magazine ..

and you will receive the whole 4 publica-

tions for one =o

from the date we receive the coupon. Here is the amazing

Cc) Maclean's (24 issues) 1 yr, [| National Home Monthy

oO Canadian Horticulture Ayr.

low Our Guarantee to Youl

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Canada’s Egg Market |

Grading Regulations Improved Qual- ity And Ensured Good Prices

Canada is the highest priced egg market in the world, and credit, in some measure, for this enviable posi- tion in these days of low prices for agricultural products must be given to the Canadian egg grading regula- tions. The egg regulations were de- signed to improve prices and market- ing conditions and the quality of eggs placed in the market. In the various activities of the egg inspection ser- vice none is regarded as more essen- tial than that of preventing eggs of an inferior grade being sold under @ higher grade. The quality and grading of eggs in wholesale and re- tail stores is subject to continual supervision by officers of the Cana- dian Department of Agriculture egg inspection service.

Supplying Canada’s own demands for eggs is a most important busi- ness. The total production of Cana- dian farm eggs in 1938 was approxi- mately 210,585,000 dozen with an estimated value of $26,345,000. These figures relate only to eggs produced by hens on farms, and do not include the eggs of urban poultry. Canadians are generous egg eaters, and during 1933 each person. in Canada consum- ed, on an average, over 21 dozen eggs. Altogether Canadians consum- ed 229,146,612 dozen eggs, which was close to nineteen million dozen in ex- cess of the eggs produced on farms.

New Toys More Realistic

Streamline Effect Is Being Introduced In Many Ways :

Streamlined skates, with a spare roller and a tail light—that is what Santa Claus is going to bring many good kiddies this Christmas.

Toys, according to a preview at Santa’s workshop at the North Pole, will be more realistic and more dur- able.

Toy automobiles will have stream- Uned effects, “pants” over the wheels and really be a miniature model of the real thing.

Little sister’s dolls will not be so large, but will have real human hair, flirting eyes and smooth, flesh-color- ed bodies. Some will eat and drink. Her stove will be electric and there will be a separate switch for the

_ coils in the oven.

Bicycles, scooters, wagons and velocipedes, too, are following the trend to streamlines. In addition to all those improvements, the new wagons, scooters and other toy ve- hicles will have pneumatic tires,

The toy makers have done big things for the kindergarten young- sters. Toys this year will have more eduactional features than ever. dumbells have just enough weight to give the youngsters good muscle building as he swings them.

Several new adult games are be- ing brought out. One of the most popular is expected to be “monopoly” in which four to 14 may play. “Sorry”, an English game, “Igo”, from Japan and “Harlem” are other adult games on the market. Back- gammon is due for a comeback.

Due to changes in the money ex- change, there will be fewer imported toys. Christmas tree ornaments may cost more because few are made in the United States. The same holds true with miniature glass dolls, ac- cording to workers in the North Pole ‘Toy Shops.

Teachers Learn About Weeds

Every Sort Grown At School Near Belfast, Ireland

Weeds are encouraged to grow in a garden which is beautifully kept at an elementary school near Belfast, Ireland. Under the guidance of the ministry of education 25*teachers are being taught how to teach horticul- ture to the scholars in the rural area. Every sort of weed is grown in orderly fashion. There are neat little rows of regular garden pests which drive the amateur gardener to des- pair. They are fostered and tended as if they were orchids. By careful examination of the specimens the students get to know a lot about weeds and there will be a great slaughter when they return to their own school gardens,

Friends Of Japan Canada is Japan's nearest neigh- bor and the Japanese people remem- ber the sympathetic understanding which the concensus of opinion in Canada has always manifested to- ward the general policy of Japan, Hon, lyemasa. Tokugawa, Japanese ambassador to Canada, told members of the Winnipeg Board of Trade,

Two famous bells, the “Maria Gloriosa” and the “Emperor,” were cast from the metal of 42 French cannon taken by the Germans in the war of 1870. : rn}

W. N. U 2071

Fish Livers Bring Good Price

As A Result Of Research Work Waste Material Now Worth Money

Fish livers were formerly only so much waste, except cod livers, but research is changing that.

Halibut and swordfish livers, for instance, are now worth money to Canadian fishermen because Research found out that they contain an abundance of the same health-build- ing vitamins which give cod liver oil its high medicinal value. The livers, usually shipped in iced cans so that they will retain their freshness, are sold to pharmaceutical companies which extract the oil from them and market it in medivinal preparations.

Sales of halibut livers netted Dom- inion fishermen about $49,000 last year, quite a tidy sum to get for ma- terial that used to be thrown away as useless until a year or two ago, and this year Nova Scotia fishermen are finding a sale for swordfish livers. Swordfish are big fish with big livers so the fishermen are likely to do fair- ly well out of the new business; at all events, they are getting some- thing for what used to be worth nothing, and with little extra effort, for swordfish are always cleaned be- fore being shipped to market.

Swordfish are not taken on the Bri- tish Columbia coast—nor, for that matter, anywhere else in Canadian waters except off Nova Scotia—but it is in Pacific areas that the Do- minion’s largest halibut fishery is carried on and it is there, of course, that most of the business in halibut livers is done. Out of the 250,500 pounds of halibut livers sold by Cana- dian fishermen last year over 229,000 pounds came from British Columbia sources and the remaining quantity from Nova Scotia. The average price, both East and West, was twenty cents a pound and this year’s price is understood to be much the same. Sales of halibut livers “have been in progress for several years but it was only recently that the vita- min content of swordfish livers was determined and a market for them thus created,

Praise For Canadian Rockies

More Magnificent Than Alps States World Traveller

“If the people of Europe and United States only knew of the mag- nificence of the Canadian Rockies and the beauties of the Pacific coast, your tourists would be numbered by millions instead of thousands.”

This was the impression voiced by H. V. Morton, Sunday editor of the New York American, who, with Mrs. ‘Morton, boarded the C.P.R. Seattle boat, terminating their first tour of Canada :

“Yes,” ‘hg said, “while I have travelled extensively over all the world this is. my first visit to Canada, and now I am beginning to realize what pleasure I have denied myself.

“The dry air of the prairies, the brilliant, yet not withering sunshine, and the bracing climate of the moun- tain region would be enough to re- pay me for any distance travelled, but—the Rockies? The Alps cannot even approximate their majestic grandeur and beauty. I am certainly looking forward to seeing them again.”

Hardships Not Known

Suffering Caused By Depression Not Reflected In Relief Lists

The relief lists don’t anywhere near represent the total loss by un- employment and the full burden of hardship now being borne by the gen- eral public. Hardly a man anywhere who is earning a living—a very much depreciated living as a rule—but has felt compelled to assume, from mo- ‘tives of compassion, the burden of some less fortunate ones.

It's easy to be glib and say that the jobless should have saved for a rainy day—a rainy five years for most of them—-and that “it’s always possible to get along somehow.” But how does it work out in actual life?

The half has never been told of the suffering and deprivation in Canada caused by our man-made depression, Certainly the relief lists, appalling as they are, do not reflect it.—Edmon- ton Bulletin,

A Quick Thinker

“Who owns those ferryboats I tripped over coming down the stairs just now?”

The landlady gave a fierce look, “Ferryboats, indeed!" she gasped. “T'll have you understand they are my shoes,”

The boarder gulped uneasily. “Did I say ferryboats?” he hastily asked. “I meant ‘fairy boots’.”

First Gossip: “What does Miss Squills remind you of?”

Second Gossip: “A peninsula, of course...’ ‘First Gossip: “Ob, yes, a narrow

neck stretched out to see.”

One man holds turbulent Cuba in the hollow of his hand, and that man, according to reports; is Colonel Fulgencio Batista. Only thirteen months ago Batista was a sergeant in the rebellious army under former President Machado, and now he commands the army. To be sure, Cuba has a consti- tutional president, Carlos Mendieta, but Colonel Batista is the “court of last resort” in the opinion of political observers. Above are views of the capital of Havana, Colonel Batista, and part of Cuba’s defence equipment.

Ginseng Root Grows Wild

Bottled Canndian Honey

Cultivation Calls For Expensive! Canadian Honey Is In Demand In

Equipment And Special Technique Ginseng root is produced in Can- ada for export to China, where it has

been cultivated for thousands of,

years for its medicinal properties. The word: itself is from the Chinese and means “form of man”. It derives its name from the appearance of the root. When dry, the root is steeped and used much in the same way as other medicinal herbs. Ginseng grows wild over a large part of Can- ada, and was well known to the early French colonists. Its cultivation in- volves special technique and rather expensive equipment, as it must be grown under shade and soil condi- tions must approach those found in the forest. It is not until the fifth or sixth year from the planting of the seed that the root attains sufficient growth for pulling and market. . Its cultivation is highly localized but is reported profitable where suitable conditions are repro- duced.—Toronto Saturday Night.

Big Poultry Plant

American Interests Reported To Be Sponsoring Plan

Chicago and New York’ financial interests are reported sponsoring a scheme to erect a $500,000 poultry farm, at Clinton, Ont., for the pro- duction of eggs. :

The report said the plant would be one of the largest of its kind in the British empire.

The sponsors of the poultry plant were reported also to be considering

employing 400 persons in manufac-| Argentine.

for,

|

British Isles

Canadian honey is enjoying in- creasing popularity in the British Isles, and bottled Canadian honey seems to be the demand of the Bri- tish consumer. In a survey taken re- cently it was found that the glass jar was by far the most popular type of container for extracted honey in the shops of Britain. In London 92 per cent. of the shops stocking honey showed glass jars, while in Glasgow the percentage was 94. The almost universal use of the glass jar con- tainer is attributed to the fact that it shows the clearness and colour of the honey, and presents a clean ap- pearance.

In 1933 Canada produced 19,543,- 500 pounds of honey, which, at an average of 9 cents per pound, was valuea at $1,706,800. While produc- tion was up some 70,000 pounds over the preceding year, on account of the average value being up a cent a pound, the total crop value shows an increase of $336,700. Canada’s ex- ports of honey during 1938 increased 22.1 per cent. over 1932 and the value increased 45.9 per cent. Exports

amounted to 2,806,770 and were}

valued. at $281,657. The United King- dom was Canada’s best customer, purchasing 2,213,899 pounds valued at $254,090.

In the production of wheat in 1933

Canada was in the eighth position with

269,729,000 bushels, being exceeded by Russia, China, the United States, British India, France, Italy and the In the export of wheat

ture of salt, soda ash, acitis and syn-, in 1938, the Dominion led the world.

thetic ammonia.

Money is a bother at any time, If

Twelve per cent. of the motor Iic-| you haven’t any, you won't be happy enses issued in England are held by| until you have; and if you have

women,

Alaska’s flag carries the symbol of the Great Dipper and the Pole Star.

much, you will be worried all the time about losing it.

London's police force now has nearly 20,000 men.

SEE HERE, DARLING! | INSIST THAT You STOP USING MY NEW PLANE FOR A HAIR-DRIER!!

Advising The Farmer

Arm Chair Critics Usually Lots Of Ideas

How easy it is for some persons with imagination and gifted with a flow of words to sit in a comfortable arm chair, feet “cocked on a desk and dictate to a stenographer instruction how a farmer can better his condi- tions. One of these effusions re- cently reached our desk and here it is; “The application of engineering to agriculture has for its purpose the utilization of engneering principles,

methods, and equipment to decrease | the units costs of farm products, to |

reduce the amounts of irksome labor im producing crops and caring for livestock, and to Increase the satis- faction of farm living.”

What a wonderful thing this must |

be for the farmer. The application of engineering to farming is going to show him how he can the more easily, plow, sow and harvest; how best to

ese J | Superstition In China People Seok To Lure Evil Spirits Te Death Before Cars

There is no congestion in motor traffic in Kweiteh, Honan, China, as there are only two automobiles in the city, that belonging to St. Paul's hospital and that of the city magi- strate, but nevertheless a driver must be very alert to avoid accidents, for {n driving through the country groups of women and children run constantly across the road immedi- | ately in front of the car. It is not a game, but a serious business, the hope being that any evil spirit tratl- | ing them will be run down by the car | lf they get over just in time to save |themselves but have the spirit still on the road.

Such is an example of the super- |stition that reigns in the hearts of |the people of the district, the story | of which formed part of the vivid }and memorable address given in

an

unload his grain in the mows; cut| Ontario city by Dr. R. F. Brown, and hoist the corn into the silo; milk graduate of the medical school at the his cows with the minimum of energy University of Toronto, who has been

and in the cheapest manner; weed

) at St. Paul's hospital at Kweiteh for

the turnip patch and get the weeds | the past six years.

out of his corn and potatoes while the |

Other examples of the superstitions

farmer’s wife is to be told how to/| Of the people were also told by the

perform her multiplicity of chores about the house so as to increase the satisfaction of farm living.

speaker--of how during the extreme heat of last year they were surprised at the unusual sight of the gods

If the authors of some of the non-| being placed in the fields, bronze, sensical stuff emanating from city | W0od and paper gods, and were told offices were to write thelr articles, | that the people were giving the gods

leave them on the desk until the fol- lowing morning, and then read them before they began the work of the

a taste of the weather they were giv- ing them in the hope that, experienc- ing the heat themselves, they would

day, we feel sure much of it would|S¢¢ the necessity for sending rain.

find a place in the wastepaper bas- ket.—Perth Expositor.

Something To Remember Nations Could Learn Much From “Slow Poke England”

When ever you hear people talking about “slow poke England” and its tendency to be cautious, here is something to keep in mind.

Since 1929 the world has passing through the worst business depression it has ever known, yet, as Herbert N. Casson, Canadian editor of the London magazine Efficiency points out, in that period only one British department store had closed its doors and not one of the other department stores has had even one year in which it failed to make a pro- fit.

In that period not one railroad sys- tem has suffered a loss, One large hotel. has been torn.down to make way for an office building, but not one large hotel has gone into bank- ruptcy. And not one bank has failed.

Canada can match that record as regards banks, but in other particu- lars it can hardly claim to do so, while some other nations will be hard put to match it at all—Sault Daily Star. ~

Fortune Teller “Was Right me,

been

Foretold Succession Of Sultan Fuad |

To Throne Of Egypt

When a fortune teller in Paris in- formed Prince Fuad he would die a king he laughed.. He was far from the succession. Besides, Egypt had no king. In 1918 it’looked for a moment as if the prophecy might come true. A king was wanted for Albania, Italy was sald to support his candidature. But a German prince was chosen.

Then came the war. His nephew, the Khedive Abbas Hilmi, was de- throned. Prince Fuad’s elder brother, Prince Hussein, became Sultan. Two years later he died. Sultan Hussein's son renounced his rights. Prince Fuad succeeded, When Britain abol- ished the Protectorate in 1922 Sultan Fuad proclaimed himself king. The

Paris fortune teller was right after |

all.—London Daily Telegraph,

Pari-Mutuel Betting

Less Money Wagered On Racing This Year Pari-mutuel betting in Canada this season was $20,976,400, a decrease of $4,161,100 from 1933, it was reported by the department of agriculture. This resulted from 295 days of rac- ing divided between 40 meetings. The smallest amount was.a two-day meeting at Red Deer, Alta., $529. With four tracks and 56 days of racing, Toronto led the wagering with $8,965,500, almost $1,000,000 less than last year. Winnipeg was second with $2,408,000 from three tracks and 35 days of racing; Van- couver, third, $2,252,300, three tracks, 42 days; Montreal, fourth, $1,261,800, three tracks, 42 days, and Calgary, fifth, $580,030, two tracks, 21 days.

The function of the liver is that of saving heat when the body is chilled or at the onset of fever, according to Dr. Henry G. Barbour of Yale.

Dundee has banned Sunday .con- certs for charitv

And once during extreme heat and prolonged drought, the south gate of the walled city was locked for some time, the people believing that the rain spirits come in through the north gate and determining that if they did come in they would not be allowed to get out until they had given rain.

Cause Needless Tragedies

Curious Crowds Hinder Those Wt Could Help In Aocidents

Louis Barthou, the brilliant little foreign minister of France, bled to death, it is now’ known, from a bullet wound in his arm. The deepest shadow of that tragedy lies in the fact that his death from that wound could seemingly have been prevented. Hysteria and morbid curiosity on the part of the crowd delayed his arrival at a hospital; an extraordinary neg- lect of elementary first-aid such as a handkerchief tightly twisted above: the wound, allowed his life to ebb away during the slow passage through tumultuous streets.

France bears the grief and burden caused by the costly stupidity of an excited crowd and the distracted at- tendants on her minister. But every one of us should take to heart again the old and newly demonstrated les- son that in public disaster clearance should be made for the cool-headed and expert. Crowds that gather at scenes of accidents and fires are a serious hindrance to those able to give real help. The gaping spectator of casualties is both nuisance and menace, |

If one cannot aid in time of cat- astrophe, one should at least: keep out of the way of those who can.

Likely To Take Months

Establishment Of Canada’s Central Bank Means Much Work

Establishment of the Bank of Can- ada is still a matter of time, and probabilities are that the organiza- tion will not begin to function unt’! February next year. Subscriptions to the stock of the bank closed some time ago, and this was followed by a process of allocation. The policy of the government is to ensure that shares are held as widely as possible among all classes of the community.

This has increased the difficulty of those handling the situation and has also complicated the difficulty of the shareholders in the matter of elect- ing directors to the bank. However, the shareholders’ list will shortly be published in the official government periodical in order that shareholders may ascertain who among them are eligible to hold directorships. The statute provides for seven.

Wife: “A fine husband you are Why, you can’t even keep me in clothes.”

Husband: “No. And I bought you a home, and I can't keep you in that either.”

Traffic Cop-—“Use your lady! Use your noodle!”

Lady-—"“My goodness! Whrre ‘s it? I've pushed and pulled every- | thing in the car.”

noodle,

Catty: “My dear, I could give you a wrinkle or two!” P

“I'm Bure you could, darling, | never miss them, too.”

ane

er:

Meth BOTs

——

2 RAR ETN, emt

Remarkable New Aid in Avoiding Colds——Samples Fice at Local Druggists

Every Family in This . Locality cality Offered a Free Trial.

Of Vicks Va-tro-nol For Nose and Throat—Also Of Its Ideal Companion, Vicks VapoRub

RESULT OF | RESEARCH

New Aid in Preventing Colds Leads to Plan for Better Control of Colds

PLAN EASY TO FOLLOW

Years ago, Vicks VapoRub intro- duced the modern method of treating colds. Now, Vick Chemists have de- veloped the ideal companion to Vapo- Rub—Vicks Va-tro-nol—the new aid in preventing colds.

These two preparations, together with a few simple rules of health, form the unique Vicks Plan for Bet- ter Control of Colds. The helpfulness of Vicks Plan in reducing the num- ber, duration and dangers of colds has been clinically tested by practis- ing physicians. (The Plan is fully explained in each Vicks package.)

Here, briefly, is how Vicks Plan | 24-hour treatment without the risks; of constant internal dosing, which so | often upsets the digestion—especially |

works; To Help Prevent Colds Watch yourself and children after exposure to any condition apt to be followed by a cold—such as: Contact with others having active colds— cro.yds, public places, stuffy ill-ven- tilated rooms—sudden changes in temperature, wet or cold, or unaccus- tomed exposures—excesses in living which lower resistance, such as over- eating, smoking, or drinking—after a hard day when you are overtired.

Then, if you have that stuffy, sneezy, irritation in the nasal sages where most colds start, use Vicks Va-tro-nol at once---just a few drops up each nostril, Used in time, Va-tro-nol helps to prevent many annoying colds, and to throw off colds in their early stages.

To Help Shorten a Cold

If a cold has developed, or strikes without warning, apply Vicks Vapo- Rub over throat and chest at bedtime. Through the skin, VapoRub acts direct like a poultice. At the same time, its medicated vapors are in- haled with every breath direct to the inflamed air-passages. This combined double action through the night loos- ens phlegm—soothes irritated mem- branes —eases difficult breathing helps break congestion.

During the day—any time, any

place—use Vicks Va-tro-nol every few |

hours as needed. This gives you full

of chiidren,

Trial Packages Free

Your druggist has free combination packages containing trial sizes of Va-tro-nol and VapoRub—also folder telling how these twin aids to fewer and shorter colds are used in Vicks Plan for Better Control of Colds.

pas- |

GLASS (By Gordon H. Guest, M.A.)

Historians tell us that the Egyp- | tiangs discovered how to make glass. The production\of glass on a large scale started in Egypt about 1370 B.C. Alkali (sodium carbonate) was melted with crushéd quartz, lime- stone, and copper compounds in crucibles to give a blue glass. Glass |made in Egypt was shipped to all parts of the Roman Empire.

Science has shown the modern manufacturer how to produce many new and useful kinds of glass. Ordin- ary glass, which is composed of soda, lime end sand cracks readily when suddenly heated or cooled. If com- mon glass is heated strongly it soft- ens, and vessels made from it change their shape The addition of boron compounds and certain metallic oxides to the formula of ordinary glass produces a type of glass known as Jena glass, which can stand high temperatures, Recently scientists have produced pyrex glass by replac- ing some or-all of the lime with aluminum or some other metals. moat a

Pyrex glass is strong and stands changes in temperature so well that cooking dishes can be manufactured from it. Silica, commonly known as sand, can be converted into a trans- parent glass known as silica glass, which can be heated to redness and plunged into cold water without being fractured,

Optical glass for lenses of all

7 Little Journeys In Science |

Dixie Plug gives pipe- smokers a fresh, satis- fying and economical smoke—always! You cut each pipeft® as you need it—that’s freshness, You cut it to suit your taste, coarse or flake—that’s satisfaction. It lasts longer in your pipe— that’s economy.

iliar ; Caen

“Old Matt” Was Carriage Attendant In London Thirty Years “Old Matt”, a familiar character in London, who is estimated to have opened the doors of more than®2,- inde’ ts 7 a by Balt lead 000,000 private cars, taxicabs and) nds is produce y ing lea . oxide to the glass mixture. Optical nanaose Cane py had died in that’ city, | glass must be free from all color- | #8ed 74. His name was Walter Mat- producing materials and must also be free even from very small air bubbles or stringy waves. Cheap imi-

the carriage attendant outside Simp-

Ask for yours today, as your drug- ee supply is limited.

WORLD HAPPENINGS

BRIEFLY TOLD

Four common law criminals, all under 20 years of age, were executed by the axe in the court of the prison at Dessau, Germany.

Hermann Ganswindt, 78, the in- ventor who years ago conceived a project to go to Mars in a dirigible, died recently at Berlin,

Third man to join the old Royal North West Mounted Police when it was formed in Ottawa in the early 70's, James McKernan, 83, is dead at Edmonton.

A direct tax on industrial payrolls which would raise $200,000,000, lies at the heart of the new unemploy- ment insurance plan now being work-

ed out for presentation to the next United States congress,

A new rose, shown for the first time at the National Rose Society show at Horticultural Hall, West- minster, has been named “Princess Marina’. It has velvety salmon petals tinged with orange.

Charged with participation in Com- munistic activities at.the University of California at Los Angeles, John Burnside, president of the Associated students, and four other students

Goriiiaany Needs Wool

May Try To Exchange Goods For South African Product

Following the breakdown of the negotiations between official repre- sentatives, private interests took up investigations into the possibility of a scheme to barter German goods, notably machinery, for South African wool.

Herman Rausch, representing the

German branch of the International Wool Union, is initiating the fresh | attempt at agreement with leaders of | the South African industry. He de- clared on arrival that Germany need- ed all the wool she can get.

Recipes For This Week

(By Betty Barclay)

son’s in the Strand. In his youth he was a noted boxer, and later went to New York as a butler. Since return- | ing to London he declined several offers to return to the United States.

tations of gems are made from glass very rich in lead (paste), and the glass of which cut-glass vessels is) made is of this same kind but it con- tains less lead.

Recently a plate glass has Seen | produced in England which has special strength and toughness. The glass does not splinter when broken, | frenzy as he strolled along the sea- btic forms small compartively harm-| shore. “Roll on; thou deep and dark less fragments: This toughened £1888 | hue ocean, roll,” he recited to his is about five times as strong as| ordinary plate glass, | bride.

“Oh, Gerald,” she exclaimed,

wonderful you are.

The bridegroom was in a_ poetic

“how It's Aris | iti

5 =

Don’t Read This Unless you are interested in a medicine which has helped over 700,000 women and girls. Take it before and after childbirth, at the Change or whenever you are nervous and

rundown. 98 out of 100 say, “It helps me!”

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S

Where Professors Disagree

Have Different Theories About Com- mon Cold Being Catching

Sometimes one wonders whether the published discoveries of scientists are real discoveries or merely at- tempts to start a new theory,. This in the matter of academic debate may often be desirable; particularly when progress stems to be arrested is it profitable to go back and de- liberately question and even deny previously accepted theories, How- ever, when this is done, the public

» RICE AND CHEESE ROLL

2 cups cooked rice

1 cup grated cheese

1 egg

1 teaspoon salt

Dash. of. cayenne

1 tbls. milk, more if. needed

%4 cup nuts, chopped

4% cup bread crumbs

2 cups tomato sauce Mix ingredients in order named,

must not suppose that the new dicta are necessarily true or that the old)

VEGETABLE COMPOUND Bt ARERR Ona BO Gre aS

thews, and for thirty years he was!

Di i a aieteteetmminsenaned guenssiSeasneSiisGiaataalsisAifataEMie tain Side salihaiatinannenenasaeneetanitioinnaete \<usemeut-

o DIXIE

PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO

A Clever Artist English Artist Uses Wood For

Canvas And Picture

At Southampton lives one of the most unusual artists in the world—

|@ carpenter who “paints” pictures

with pieces of wood. He uses three- ply wood for a canvas and in one of his pictures—showing a tree in leaf— nearly 3,000 pieces of wood were used. He obtains light and shade effects by selecting the right grain markings. It is impossible to detect joins when the pictures are finished. They are coated with a clear white polish and framed in ebony. Rare and expensive woods from all over the world go to the making of these unique pictures. Some woods are so brittle that they must be cut with great care before being glued into postiion. When the Queen admired six of the pictures at an exhibition in London she was informed they had taken four years to complete.

Lumbering In B.C,

In the first eight months of this year, the British Columbia log scale was 1,297,000,000 feet, an increase of 5 per cent. over the corresponding period last year. In the month of August, the scale was 206,000,000 feet compared with 169,000,000 feet in August, 1933.

The 1933 score for bank failures was as follows: United States 3,500 —-Canada 0. Who won?

Robot Guides Dirigible Model Of Wireless-Controlled Air-

ship Is Being Tested

Experiments are being made in Tiflis with the model of a wireless- controlled airship. The length of the model is 30 feet, and it carries no passengers but a “mechanical man” in the shape of a complicated wire- less apparatus. It is intended that by means of another wireless on the ground the dirigible shall be made to ascend and then to be steered in any direction. It is hoped, according to Reuter, that it will be possible to make the airship drop propaganda leaflets over any place to which it may be sent.

A traveller back from Borneo says there isn’t a wild man on’ the whole island. It must be nice to live in a country where no one ever misplaces a collar button.

Relieves Congestion Does Not Blister

t f th aot Mecca pi et ld ne ch ae 2

warmth in cramosticn vith Sanmee dies of Mi ceca Ofntment will give quick relief, Full directions in each package. 38

are false. . i <ceaathen ag #75 4

Something of. the “sort has been happening with regard to the inyesti- gation of‘common colds. Two Cali- fornia professors have challenged ex- isting theories. It. is said: ‘They have not been able, they say, to in- fect one person with the cold of an- other. Inoculation will not work; and they doubt very much the theories

LS = CS

adding enough milk to moisten.|held almost as household axioms Shape and roll in the crumbs. Bake! about the disease being highly catch- in moderate oven 20 minutes or until| ing. They think also that germs are

have been suspended for one year. Registration and fingerprinting of

all persons in the United States, as a means of weeding out undesirable aliens, was advocated in a report sub- mitted to the state chamber of com- merce. :

George Walker, K.C., solicitor for the Canadian Pacific Railway Com- pany at Calgary has been appointed assistant general solicitor of the com- pany with offices in Montreal, E. W. Beatty, president of the railway, has announced,

P= en CONG?

“Mrs. Brown,” cried Mr, Smith. to his neighbor, “have you spoken to your boy about mimicking me?”

“Yes, I have,” replied Mrs. Brown. “I've told him not to act like a fool.”

Of the 254 lives lost in Canada’s 46,000 fires last year, 142 were chil- dren, 67 of whom were burned in their homes during the absence of responsible persons.

a golden brown in color. serve with tomato sauce.

FRU CARAMELS

Put through food chopper: 1 cup figs 1 cup seeded raisins 1 cup stoned dates 1 cup walnut meats 1 tablespoon candied orange peel Moisten with: 2 to 4 tablespoons orange juice un- til of right consistency. to make into small balls, Roll in powdered sugar.

A Scenic Highway

The Edmonton Journal says visi- tors to Jasper Park who have motor- ed along the 34 completed miles of the mountain road that will eventu- ally connect Jasper and Lake Louise, are agreed that it will prove to be one of the continent's great scenic highways. It will lie within national parks throughout its entire length and, according to the engineer in charge, will not present any steep grades, while the roadbed is mostly being hewed out of solid rock,

Does it follow that the girl who is out of date is also out of dates?

CORN SYRU

pure. wholesome, and economical table Syrup. Children love its delicious flavor.

Slice and|a result, not the cause, of the dis-

ease.” Some day presumably we _ shall know.

Sheep Clip Shows Increase

B.C, Shipping Half Million Pounds Of Wool To United Kingdom

About 500,000 pounds of wool, rep- resenting the spring clip of the flocks controlled by the B.C, Sheep- Breeders’ Association, have been as-' sembled, graded and packed at the Pacific Coast Terminals, Ltd., ware- house, New Westminster, for export to the United Kingdom.

Its value, at a minimum price of |’ 10 cents a pound, will be approxi- mately $50,000

This shipment is reported to be the largest ever assembled for export from the Fraser river. ‘The volume is nearly double that of last year, which was 300,000 pounds.

Up until last year the B.C, wool clip was assembled at Kamloops and shipped by rail to Toronto, where it was graded for export to Liverpool. B.C. breeders discovered they can save approximately 14,c per pound by shipping their product by water via the Panama Canal,

The wool is received from the Fraser valley, Okanagan, Kootenay and Vancouver Island. Individual shipments range from a few pounds to many thousands.

TO

more

Hungarian soap makers are turn- ing out soap cakes with bake-lite tablets in the middle bearing the fac- tory’s name or trade mark, thus re- minding the user of the brand when the soap is about used up.

Civil Service: A merit system that gives the job to the best man who belongs to the a party.

Canapar saves fuel . eliminates scraping and scouring of pots and pans, , You can use Canapar over and over again. It will not absorb odors. It makes a wonderful dish

cloth, being silky and very tough when wet. Doesn’t shed lint.

TELL YOU HOW

COOK

CAULIFLOWER without the neighbors knowing it

Wrap it in Canapar cookery parchment. Seal : in the aroma, flavor and goodness all at once, Cook your boiled or steamed FISH in Canapar. Line your roasting pan with it. It prevents fats and juices from burning and makes the

tender.

. improves food .

meat

. and

Gpplofout PAPER pRooUcTS " MILTON, ONTARIO

Paper in the Green Box,

LANAVAK

A Pure Genuine Vegetable Parchment Warehouses At Calgary, Edmonton, Regina and Winnipeg

Makers of the famous PARA-SANI Heavy Waxed

esl

# @ x qe .

»

~_ “a

THE REVIEW,

REDCLIFF, ALBERTA

CHAPTER IV.—Continued

WHAT TO DO ABOUT

Dustin swung about to face a gray little figure that stiffened at sight of him. Sim Peters had been cashier of the Seco Bank for more than thirty years. Scotch by descent and cautious by nature, only once had he ventured to extend his activities be- yond Seco. He was like Kipling's muskrat that all his life tried to mus- ter courage to run to the middle of the floor. Peters mustered that cour- age once. . . and Dustin caught him with a loan of five thousand dollars on his house. That loan saved Peters

“Acid Indigestion”

A WAY THAT RELIEVES THE CAUSE IN A FEW MINUTES

bond-slave of Sam Dustin. “Just a moment, Peters. . . .” Dustin drew him aside. “How much money does old man Carr owe the bank? I've got to know.” “The bank?" Peters quavered. don't owe the bank at all, Mr. Dus- tin. He did owe the bank but old man Pegram took it up. It’s a yote and Mr. Pegram’s wonderin’ now what to do with it. lot of money and needs cash “How much is the note fqr?” “Well . . . Old Carr hakn't paid any interest on it for a yeyr. It’s about twelve thousand dollary right now. And I'll tell you more. \. Old man Pegram better let

Many people who think they have ‘weak stomachs” or “indigestion,” doctors say, suffer in reality from nothing more serious than acid stom- ach. And this common ailment can usually be relieved now, in minutes,

All you do is take familiar Philli a” Milk of Magnesia after meals. This acts to almost immediately neutralize the stomach acidity that brings on your trouble. You feel like a new person!

Try this just once. Take either the familiar li uid “PHILLIPS’ ”, or the new Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tablets. But watch out that you get the Genuine PHILLIPS’ Milk of > Magnesia. Made in Canada.

ALSO IN TABLET FORM:

Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tab- {ets are now on sale at all drug stores everywhere. Each tiny

“He

t

cauivalent of holds on it just as soon as he can. a teas) a SOsADING Old Carr’s in a bad way.

Phillips’ Milk

Dustin's heart gave a great jump. This was better than he dared hope. He stared hard at the little figure be- fore him.

‘T've got a five thousand dollar —— : note of yours, Peters,” he said. “It's

secured by this house and lot, eh?”

“Yes, sir. That's so. . . .” Some- thing hard in his throat seemed to

GEORGE B. RODNEY | Author of “The Coronado Trai?, “The

of Magnesia. <a

PHILLIPS” tlh of. Magnesia.

“That note of yours is due next week. I want that note of Carr's that Pegram’s got. See?”

‘IT... sir... I, I swear I don't see how I can fix it. It’s Mr. Pe-

| gram's pares) business. I...” be 4 alf-share tn Preeye eaten weir fo, halt-share | "More than ever did Sim Peters re- Gerald Keene. “The Broken Spur has! gret that accursed flyer in wheat that been systematically looting the ranch, | was to remove him and his old wif Scie ede rye Baga ES sp aaais {8/from any danger of poverty. He But Keene decided to go see what made one final wriggle for escape. was happening for himself—not as, ‘AS matters stand, I don't see how Gerald Keene, half owner of the| it can help you to own a half share Hour-Glass Ranch, but as Duro! of the Hour-glass ranch,” he said. Stone, tenderfoot in a Montgomery) «rraie of it! You're a plain fool, Peters. I'll own the whole. place;

Ward wildwest outfit. Dad Kane, desert rat and luckless prospector til! now, is returning to tell | Soda Spritigs and all,” he added. “Old man Carr owns the Hour-glass, don’t he?”

Dustin and Spike Goddard, owners of “He owns half of it,” said Peters.

choke the little gray cashier. Canyon Trail”, Etc.

SYNOPSIS

the Broken Spur ranch, who had grubstaked him, of his discovery of a rich gold mine, and shows samples

of th: ore. He sees Broken Spur “That's all. When old man Peter 4 he a cattle’ and pre-} vinton died, he left the Hour-glass Spike Goddard and Sam Dustin, half to Joe Carr, his old partner, an’

half to his sister's son, one Gerald Keene, When Carr wanted to borrow on his half of the place, we had to look up the will. That’s how I know.

fearing the old prospector may tell others the things he has seen as to the branding of Carr’s cattle, plot to get him to show them the location of the mine and then to kill him

his bank job but it made him the [

all)

containing eight convenient attractively illustrated envelopes ideal = ee ween tema ge eloed trom aevepepes, Seat t at bag. fd cents, or with the Cook Book for only

re cents, Write for ig Per copies today, to Dept. 620, Western

Canada Flour Mills Co., Limited,

Carr or Keene dies, his half goes to! do?” he asked sharply for Dustin,

the survivor. . .."

“For the love o’ God! . . was breathless again.”

“Say that

let go a smoke-screen of profanity.

Flour Cook Book, sent postpaid UR now offers a new recipe file,

. Toronto, Winnipeg, or Calgary.

with a sharp little oath, was heading .” Dustin | for the bunk-house. Old Dad Kane, stending just inside |

the door, was sudilenly snatched off “Peters said it again and Dustin,| his. feet and

sure that he had not misunderstood, | against the wall.

was sent

good-nature but the vitriolic cverflow | tin’s nose.

of one who fears he has bean hurt and who is not sure of the extent of

whom he did not even know.

He sized old Peters and whirled! the house.

him about. in the moonlight to face

him, There was but one thing to be! thre

done. old Kane knew! That miserable old desert-rat could send him and Spike to jail for a half a lifetime and Joe

‘arr could keep him out of a for- tune. storm of ill-considered impulse.

your old wife's head,”

Hour-glass. Get me?” Peters gaped helplessly at him.

half of the Hour-glass?”

“I don’t know, Mr. Dustin. I swear I don’t. Nobody knows. Even Mr. Carr don’t know. He's been tryin’ to find him through Mr, Burley

he snarled,| much.

“You keep yore hands they're used to bein’. .

“What you want? Hey?” “To shut your fool head

dred men up Red Water? Come into I want to talk to you.’

Wholly angry,

room Dustin turned on him: “Look here, Dad.

to reflect. . . . “It's all my fault.

The solution came in a sudden] jyst couldn't stand secin’ our one

chance of a fortune go glimmerin’ “If you want to keep a roof. over) just because you talk too damned I don’t know just what you “you buy up for me every scrap Of} said but I do know that after a long paper that old Carr has signed. [| time in the hills most men’s jaws re- want to own the half-share of the/lax. You mustn’t give any one even

a hint that you found pay-dirt in th hills.

PUI

spinning He turned like a flash and a rusty old six-gun, a cap} It was not the jovial profanity of| and ball affair, was thrust under Dus-

where | . In other the injury. In one brief kaleidoscopic | men's pockets,” snapped the old pros- | moment the failure of his plans seem-| pector. | ed sure. If Gerald Keene, the nephew of old Peter Vinton, owned half the] Keep you from } all the world Hour-glass then he, Sam Dustin, even | jn : at von resent nabs ceeanial trade in the Old Country and came to if he succeeded in ousting Joe Carr,| olq fool!

was only getting a new. partner! word from Ed. Raynor’ll send a hun- |

and to

Don't you know that one! nected with the Gull Lake Advance

sweating inchoate | Estevan Mercu who A se 40 years of ats at every pore, Kane followed | TY: uM

Too mucli depended on what] pustin into the office. Once in the

.” His very tone was placating for he had time

If you do, we're busted, You

“I mean what I say, you old fool.| knew well enough that one word of Where can I find this man Gerald} gold in Red Water will start a-stam- Keene? The man who owns the other| pede up there.

Here's a tasty table delicacy for the Fall of the year—Apple Roll, made just at the

season when firm, flavorful their finest. It’s better too,

such as bread, rolls, pies

Western Canada hard

Weekly Newspaper Association

Successful Convention Of Saskatche- wan Section Held In Regina

A well attended convention of the, Canadian Weekly Newspaper. Asso- ciation (Saskatchewan section) was held In Regina on October 26. Mr. | | H. Gamble, publisher of the Advance, | | Gull Lake, was elected president for the enguing year.

Mr. Gamble has been a member of | the association for 17 years. Born) in Cumberland, England, he served | his apprenticeship in the printing

; Canada in 1905. He has been con-

| since 1915. Mr. Gamble succeeds Donald C. Dunbar, veteran proprietor of the)

| néwapaper experience has won for him the title of “Dean of western journalism”. Mr. Dunbar was elect- ed honorary president.

8. N. Zingg of the Wapella Post, another veteran of 37 years of Sas- katchewan newspaper work, was elected vice-president, and 38. J. Dornan, Alameda Dispatch, was re- elected secretary-manager of the as- sociation for the twelfth year in suc- cession, Mr. Dornan was given a vote of thanks by association members for his services during his years as secre- tary-manager.

Appointed as this year’s executive were 8. N. Wynn, Yorkton Hnter-

I

e

then?” Where'll we be prise; CC, W. Holmes, Rosetown ; Eagle; O. D. Stitt, Radville Star; H {To Be, Continues) Berryman, Blaine Lake Echo; J. O. Vopni, Davidson Leader. North Pole Controversy

(Now Go On With The Story)

T saw the will.

It says that if either

wrote us that he was handling Mr.

tric set convenience! |

_ ‘AIR-CELL RADIOS

rat RADIO INVENTION

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Are built to operate with the new EVEREADY Air-Cell “A” Battery, an amazing electrical unit that re-energizes itself for at least 1000 hours—which, at 3 hours

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You have no more battery recharging.

Every

program comes through clear as a bell for the entire life of the Air-Cell Battery.

But don’t confuse the new Air-Cell Radios with ordi- nary battery-powered sets. They are as unlike the old sets as anything can possibly be. They are new in perfect reception—new in easy operation—new in

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Air-Cell Radios are now being built by all radio man-:

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Keene's business and that Mr. Keene was travelling somewhere and couldn’t be reached just now.”

Dustin grunted disbelief but he could do nothing at present. He had plenty of money in the bank and Peters knew it. There was no ques- tion of the validity of the check that Dustin wrote at the hotel desk and passed to the gray-faced little cashier who took it shakingly. He pouched it, refused a cigar and headed for the bank feeling like a condemned crimt- nal who has received notice of an un- expected reprieve.

“I'm sorry for old Carr,” he mut- tered; “but I can’t help it. I can't see Mame go to the Poorhouse and that’s what'll happen if Dustin sues out that note. Oh, hell! What's the use kickin’. But I wish I could put a spoke in Dustin's wheel. . . .”

He saw Pegram at the bank who

was only too glad to get rid of Carr’s|

note for Dustin's check and he turned that over to Dustin who promptly headed back for the Broken Spur. He found Spike anxiously awaiting him and he was drawn into the office by a nod from his partner.

“What luck, Sam?”

“The best in the world except for one thing. I found out that old Carr does not own all the Hour-glass. He owns half of it. The other half belongs to one Gerald Keene, nephew of old Peter Vinton. If either Carr or Keene dies, the other gets the whole place... .”

“Well?” said Spike who saw no|

further than the end of his nose, “You call it well, do you? Damned

if I do. I can’t get at this man Keene, No one seems to know his | address. If I could find him, I'd offer’

to buy his share of the Hour-glass.

One thing is sure now, though. We've!

simply got to find out from old Dad Kane the exact place where he locat- ed that ore.”

“I hope you can shut his damned mouth,” said Spike passionately. “Ed. Raynor, the tax collector, was here for grub and old man Kane began shootin’ off his face. He was string- in’ Gay and Corse about what he seen ‘em doing up in the hills. I headed him off in time and I don't think Raynor caught on to what he was sayin’... . What you goin’ to

of the Drovers Bank in Cato but he!

Claim Dr. Cook Came As Close To Pole, As Admiral Peary

The claims of Dr. Frederick A. Cook to discovery of the North Pole were credited by J. Gordon Hayes, Polar historian, with as much accur- acy as those of Admiral Robert E. Peary,

In his book, “The Conquest of the North Pole,” published recently, Hayes said many of Cook's state- ments “may be accepted as genuine and truthful.”

Rear Admiral Richard EB. Byrd and Floyd Bennett were said by Hayes to have been the first persons actually to reach the Pole.

“Admiral Peary,” Hayes said, ‘never was within 50 or more miles of the North Pole. There have been many critics of Peary’s claim on both sides of the Atlantic, and all disinterested inquirers have come to the same conclusion—-that he didn’t reach the Pole; by this it may be understood he never was within 50 or more miles of its position.

Hayes submits Dr, Cook in 1908 “probably reached at least as high a latitude as that attained by Admiral Peary the following year; that Cook’s statements except in relation to his attainment of the North Pole and possibly his. glacial island, may ~ be accepted as’ substantially genuine, truthful and accurate.”

{

When automobiles travel at speeds in excess of 40-miles an hour more | power is require to overcome air re- sistance than road resistance. More power is also required to overcome accident resistance.

| asomaaeti is trying to keep down}

all imports. ,

THE FAMOUS RUBBING LINIMENT Rub on-~pain gone Get the new large econ-

omy size—Also avail- > a in smaller, meen

“MINARD' S

LINIMENT

THE RHYMING - OPTIMIST

By Aline Michaelis

LIFE MOVES IN CYCLES

Life moves in cycles and all seeming change

Is but the glitter of the turning wheel,

For there is no new thing and noth- ing strange

Does the long passage of the years reveal,

There is no change. Helen's look

Was clear as yours when she was glad and young,

Though now, between the pages of a book

The Grecian

Her story dims in a neglected tongue.

Life moves in cycles. Helen once was fair

As you to-day, for Paris’ eyes to see

As you for mine, and on your cheek you wear

No brighter beauty’s banner than did | sh

6.

Though I could doubt your like has) been before, |

Life wheels like stars, what has been |

| comes once more!

| Madeira.

Could Not Be Done Uncle Tom: “So that’s the baby?” Father: “Yes.” Uncle: “I hope you'll bring him up to be a conscientious, upright young man.”

Father: “I'm afraid that'll be difficult.” Uncle: “Pshaw! As the twig is bent

| 80 is the tree inclined.”

Father: “Yes, but this twig is bent on being a girl, and we're inclined. to let it go at that.”

Canadian western sheep ranges ;}produce annually from 150,000. to | 200,000 lambs suitable for fattening | purposes. In addition, there are at least 100,000 to 150,000 unfinished farm lambs that would benefit by being fattened.

An ancient well, 250 feet deep, was discovered in Falamieh several | months ago, relieving drouth in Pales- tine.

Dagenham, England, public lib-

| books.

apples are at when it’s made

with Purity, the high quality all-purpose flour. In- specialties, as in staple baking,

and cakes, you'll

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spring wheat from

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when you use PURITY FLOUR you'll find that one brand, and that PURITY, is all you need for all your baking.

ITY FLOUR

BEST FOR ALL YOUR BAKING

Its

Little Helps For This Week

“He that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen?” 1 John 4:20.

Old friends, old scenes, will love- lier be, As mote of heaven tn each we

see; Some softening gleam of love

and prayer Shall dawn on every cross and care. —J. Keble.

It requires far more of the con- straining love of Christ to love our cousin§ andeighbors of the heaven- ly family, than to feel warm to our suffering brothers in Tuscany or To love the whole Church is one thing, to love, that is to de- light in the graces and veil the de- fects, of the person who misunder- stood us and opposed our plans yes- terday, whose peculiar. infirmities grate on our most sensitive feelings, or whose natural faults are precisely those from which our natural char- acter most revolts, is quite another.

A Temple there has been upon earth, a spiritual Temple made up of living souls, a Temple with God for its, light and Christ for its high priest,” with wings of angels for its arches, with saints and.teachers for its pil- lars, and with worshippers for its pavement, Wherever there is Faith and Love this Temple is.—J. H. New-

_| man,

, AiQueer World

Just after being accosted for a nickle to buy a cup of coffee one reads that the Brazilian coffee crop this year will amount to 29,880,000 bags, of which 11,952,000 bags will be destroyed to keep down the supply. Isn't it a queer world? Or is it the people?

Some men deem the 30-minute ser- mon too long. So they substitute the 1152-column Sunday paper.

And once baking powder had a larger sale than face powder,

WHEN WORK & WORRY PULL YOU DOWN

Take

WIncaents)

THE GREAT TONIC

r)

} rary has abolished fee On OVOVGUC | ae werner

W. N. U 2071

TUXEDO OPTIONAL fk a

Payday Meat Specials

T Bone or Sirloin Steak or Ronst, Per Pound 10-0 15¢ ROUND STEAK— 2 pounds for 25c PRIME RIB ROLL—Per Pound ..00-.c:ccosscvsnensimerneeen 15¢ CHOICE POT ROAST—Per Pound. ...:.cccs. scccossscessnesssse Te BOILING BEEF—Per Pound --10::.c-ccovsinnnnnnunmnnen 6c

Home Made Sausage 2 Ibs. for 25c . Try Our Home Made Potted Meat,PerBowl - 5c : Home Made Beef Dripping, Per Peund . . 15c WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT Before Buying your Winter Meat see us. We can supply you with Hind or Front Quarters at Reasonable Prices

BROADWAY MEAT MARKET G. H. WORTS, Prop.

nema corr te oe

= eS i THE REDGCLIFF REVIEW THURSDAY. NOV. 22nd, 1934 vee ' ‘een eneenaeeniaenenetiaatin Bruce Wontnode: left yester- . Jay for Calgary. Be Sure to Get Your Tickets Early for the sebbbi > \ SS | Local Items Mrs, Crooks and a_ friend e RBs a parts from Brooks were guests of | ittle Theatre Mrs, Fairbairn is visiting |Mrs, Rutherfard over last week .riends in the Hat this week. end, iin Note 7 . . es @«s8 E t t M4 t In a bread price war in Win Miss Edna Carlson of Alder- n er alinmen nipeg week loaves. of bread|son is spending afew days ir were selling at as low as 2 ceu's | tows the guest of Mrs. A. Sand- Manat oe erson, : M4 M4 Delegates to the Athbert. = 8.9 Friday Evening, Dec. 7th Wheat Pool will convene in Cal.-| Miss Jean Herrington R. N. . gary on Tuesday Nov. 27th,| who has been with Mr, and Mrs - ° ‘or their annual meeting. | Hodge for a few days returned as the Seats are Limited io Medicine Hat yesterday. The crop of 1934 is now es aiadiied | timated at 275, 252,000 bus.! Mrs. M. Brucker, returned A Good Program i 18 Assured by the Dominion Bureau of|on Sunday from the hospital in Statistics. Medicine Hat where she Under- Bit ee Jd er { went an operation for inturnal Miss Jean McKinley R. N. of| rouble. She ig now progress- Rm oc een | TOOKs, is the guest of her |ing favorably. | cousin Mrs. K. McKay and Mr. CHINA Monarch Theatre “"cKay, this week. Joe Jacobson returned Tues- 5 SPECIAL | M di Hat day from a hunting trip in the orsested 9 Mrs. Bezler, who underwent north country. He and _ his NOW SHOWING .n operation in Medicine Hat|;artner secured two moose and See Our. Window | The M ic d ‘ospital recently, returned|, deer, They left the follow- o pemeen Comedy “ome on {&nday, where she is ing day for their home in Kan- J.W. FENRICK “Student Tour” onvalescing. er leas City. . WATCHMAKER with Chas. Butterworth, Jimmie Chas. Adams, Manager of} Miss Irene Lyons, who died Durante and Girls Galore e yoney. 235 6th Ave. Medicine Hat he 1932 Drumheller touring |suddenly at the Medicine Hat 5 New Song Hits etball team, is now making |hospital after an operation, oo rrangements to take his team/was._a sister of Mrs. A. Walker Also Sccond Feature over to scotland for a tour of|of this town, to whom the sym- TST ARRIVED JESSIE MATHEWS in hat country. pathy of her friends here goes o.%, "8 out in her bareavement. Shipment of Fri day the 13th Ward Bros. ranch north of eared CHESTERFIELD SUITES Monday Tuesday Wed. ‘own, shipped three car loads| The reading room at the Priced From ........ $69.50 up ‘Murd er in Trinadad’ of cattle from here last Satur-|!ecal Legion club rooms has re- See these lovely new day. Two cars went to Mont-|centlysbeen nicely fitted up for Coverings and Designs. with Nigel Bruce, Heather Angel B| veal and one to Toronto. The | the convenience and _ coinfort and Wictor Jory stock was in splendid condition. | the members, The roova pret Sib cgmmenastaes ‘and a Second Feature Peer lias been renovatted and. some 1 Pa Sa “y cn Tom Walls and Ralph Lyan in BIRTHS nv durmature instei’-1, It at Prices that wi ey ; ti’ 1, Surprise You ‘A Cup of Kindness’ Cainbeass—iv Metiekin. Mat |'* 11% Sule ooey, ma i ital LUrs- We carry a C omplete Line Comedy that you will enjoy An se : an abs 4 si epi Bishop Harding will be in of Parkhill’s and Cimmons y Nov, 22, , to Mr. and Si a Mrs J. W. Campeau a daughter, | ®@dcif! on November 28th as ane eine gad Coming Four Days Bens Renee eee: originally planned to perform Your Used Furniture Nov. 28, 29, 30, Dec. 1 For Rent—A nice three room the confirmation ceremony in Taken in Exchange | CECIL B. DeMILLES cottage just newly renovated, St. Ambrose church, Over 30 ‘6 for $7.50 per month. Apply candidates will be confirmed on LESK’S FURNITURE EXCHANGE |j| Cleopatra” 3. E, Gust Store. that occassion, This is the bi = | ee ee ee largest class here for a number a SS MEL OuE ae CL Oars. , 3 WM. HENDERSON - LEVINSON S$ for f ur mae Issuer of Marriage Licenses a FIRE INSURANCE Lan B Ltd. and Remodelling, etc. - Estimates Free. Rent collections attended to ing r 08. We carry a complete line of Fur Trimmings. Nffee at Residence 2nd St Fur Muffs Made to order. ETS lees INSURANCE All work guaranteed. You don’t have to pay unless you are fully —== Fire Accident satisfied, We will gladly call and give you an estimate DR. E. L. McKEE | Lité Stekhess on your furs. We buy old fur coats. Pyerss blag : orrhea Preven’> In Addition to our Regular Stock we carry a Full Line of Phone 8945 Medicine a 651 2nd St Medicine tai Second Hand Clothes, Tools and Hardware Duntelin Astelhele Sue ey eae Phone 2160 314 South Railway St, a EPO fin Leash , o6CE BARGAINS 3)$ PHILCO. RADIOS f CIL HOTEL, Medicine Hat : | f Ali Depart t A musical instrument o! id 8 epartmens Quality. Sold and prefer- f | : : : red in.66 countries of the —— f ¥ ! Every Saturday Night Low in Price BATTERIES, RADIOS & RADIA S PAIRED $1.50 Per Couple - No Extra Cover Charge ri ge : pate RE } ds 13 Lewis’ Bargain Store T, ENNO

Phone 9957 $18 G.Raliway St

Medicine Hat MEDICINE HAT

Wabasso Cottons at Special Prices

UNBLEACHED }AHEETING—Remnants, 66 to 80 inches wile, per yard 29c 39c and 49c

WHITE FLANNELETTE BLANKETS per pair -...$2.49 {iquare Colored Check Flannelette Blankets Each $1.29 PILLOW CASBS, just in, Special EBach........0.-.0- wa RBG COCOA DOOR MATS, Good Qualitty, 0mm Bc

China and Memiporcelain CUPS and SAUCERS A Real Buy at 10c

NEW GLASSES, Just Unpacked. Tomato Juice 10c Water Glasses 10c TITCHEN CHAIRS 98 . KITCHEN TABLES $5.95 OUR TOY DEPARTMENT OPENS SATURDAY

J.J. MOORE & SON

Phone 2787 Near Medicine Hat Garage

COLD WEATHER

Ani we are prepared to serve you with a Complete Line of Winter Goods at the Very Lowest Prices

PENMAN’S HEAVY FLEECE UNION SUITS

All Sizes up to 44, Selling at .... C'TANFIELD’S in all the different weights and Sizes, White and Natural, Suit. $2.00 and $250 OVERSHOES, Men’s Two. Buckle Overshoes No. 1 Grade, Jersey Cloth, Special per pair OVERSHOEE, Girls’ 2 buckle size, 11 to 2; price... SWEATERS, Boys’ heavy all wol pullover Sweaters with Collar and Zipper; All Colors, Very Warm... $1.95

To make your Xmag shopping easier and more pleas- aut, visit our store and see the display of useful and practical Gifts for The Whole Family,

THE HICKS TRADING CO.

WARM FOOTWEAR

Women’s Overshoes

In the 2-dome fastener Style. Lined with Warm Fleece Lining

in Black, Brown or Tweed Shades; $2 25 e

Low or Cuban Heels, sizes 8 to 9 per pair Children’s Overshoes

Also a Complete Stock of Children’s Overshoes Priced up from, per pair

$1.85

Ladies’ Overshoes

A complete line of Fur-Trim- med Ladies’ Brown, Black or Grey, Pair

$3.35 to $3.85

Men’s 32°) Storm Rubbers

oer at Shee

Sizes 6 to 11, Priced

LePAGE’S, Medicine Hat

Ladies’ Wear, Men’s and Boys’ Wear, Boots and Shoes

Overshoes, in

25% Discount - on Ladies’ Coats

Silk Hose f.%ith, 75¢ Chiffon Hose, per Pair - - 75c

Heavy Service Weight, pr. $1,00 Crepe Hose, per Pair - $1,00

PLLA

BUTLER’S Medicine Hat

COMING TO EMPRESS THEATRE One Day Only, Wed, Nov, 28th DENNIS O'BRIEN

——iIN—-

‘Savages Under the Skin’

Convulged New York, Thrilled Chicago Toronto Raved Oyer it COMPANY OF 18 ARTISTS, Not a Mation Picture but a Stark Thrilling Drama of the Soyth Seas Presented by Living Actors

Seat Sale open 10 a, m, Saturday at Pingle’s Drug Store Prices: Reserved $1,00, 750; Rush Seats 50c Plys Tax

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