\
- “
ee we
7 Military Whist sae
XXII, No.2 ~
So
With Canada once more a nation|ganist, and Richard Dryden, pianist, in arms, with hersons agaih prepared | will dedicate its programme to those to make whatever sacrifice may be|who fell in the Great War, demanded of them, there is special) a
-----so- rrvwmr> poignancy and meaning in the Re-|— . RE ae membrance Day Services that will B AL hy ER be held throughout the Dominion’ on JU ‘ash I
November 11,
Canada’s tribute to the courageous, EDGERTON GIRL dead of 1914.18 ir at the same time al Muy J
'. galute to the courageous living; the
men of Canada’s new army whd with-| 4 shower for Joey | ; | oey Davidson—last out counting risks, are meeting @ week's bride—was held at Mrs. Gold-
fresh challeng* to the hard:won liber- "ing’s home, ‘on’ Monda: P P ’ y_ evening, Oc- ties and free traditions of the British {oper goth, and was another case of
Commonwealth. ; being
As on other occasions of satiooar| 2 ONY Ne BY. spied significance, the Canadian Broadcast-| sixty ladies and gitls attended, ‘bring- ing Corporation will provide, through ‘ing packages of various shapes and the National Network, a medium for | dives and there were also many other uniting homes in every part of the presents which had been sent by those Dominion in common observance of unable to attend: . Remembrance Day. ; dost: ;
The ‘National Remembrance service} Once #gain the affair was really a from Ottawa, 8.45 to 9.80 a.m., M.8,T. , Complete surprise to the guest of hon- will be broadcast from Parliament ;°% mot even a whisper had reach- Hill where His Excellency; Lord ed her ears and to say she was utter- Tweedsmuir, Governor-General of !¥Y dumfounded when she entered the Canada, will speak. An appropriate |Closely packed room is altogether in-
programme of choir and band music | #dequate.
will also be heard, 4 Joey had been a dinner guest at the In the evening, in co-operation say ‘home of her closest friend, Eileen
4
the Canadian Legion of the British|’2W8eY, and about 9 p.m. Eileen in- Empire Service League, the Corpora- veigled the unsuspecting girl into tion will broadcast @ special musical |*iving up to.Mrs. Golding’s,. suppos- programme from Toronto to the Na-| edly to return some books. Seeing tional Network from,5.30 to 6.30 p.m. | the house ableze with lights, Joey at M.S.T. The audience, largely attend. |{TSt refused to enter, saying “it looks ed by Legionnaires, will hear a spe-|** f there ts a bridge session or some- cial ‘message from Lord: Tweedsmuir, | “ing”. Mrs. Golding went out and speaking from Ottawa. The Mendels-|‘Tuthfully explained thaftt'was very sohn Choir, under the direction of Dr, |@efnitely no bMégé*party, and from
H. A. Fricker, with Ivor Baldwin, or-|*4t point on everything went as had been. planned. :
jopentrig parcels.—and making suitable remarks about each-—for almost two
j hours, with at least 116 eyes watch-
gratitude when the last parcel had
e.* e \ing every move, but Joey rose to the Drive Enjoyed oceasion nobly, and her speech of
been attended to, could scarcely have
Another enjoyable evening of Mili- been more graciously expressed had tary Whist was spent on Friday eve- it been carefully rehearsed. ning of last week in the L0.0.F. hall. | After everyone had inspected the The drive was sponsored by Adeline worderful array of both useful and Rebekah Lodge and Mr. L. Mitchell’ ornamental gifts and heartily wished very efficiently took charge. | Joey and her husband-to-be the very There were 12 tables in play and happiest of married lives, a very tasty after the last hand prizes were pre- lunch was served, which brought the bented to Mr. and Mrs. G. Graham, celebration to an end. Mrs. J. Robinson, Mrs. W. Hunting. | The wedding took place on Wednés- ford, Miss Evelyn Ware, Miss Elsie day last in Edmonton, but to date no Wright, Mr. F. Johns and Mr. N. details are available. Branchflower. _ A tasty lunch served by the com: Mr. Sterling Tory is enjoying mittee proved a fitting climax to the a couple of weeks’ vacation from his evening’s entertainment. . duties at the C.N.R.
F irst Division Leaders
EP IT RT
LIEUT.-OOL. C. 8S. L, HERTZBERG Commander of first divisional engi- neers.
MAJOR P. KELLY Senior officer of the pay service at Canadian military headquarters in England. \
BRIGADIER H. G. D. CRERAR Chief of the general staff of the Canadian headquarters,
Commander of the first infantry brigade. ‘
Jd
"FOR THE ADVANCEMENT AND
oo em eer oe pee
the Red Cross Society, few have: been
Jaware of the fact that in wartime the
Society is by law an auxiliary of the Canadian Army Medical Corps. As such it is obliged to meet such, de- mands as the officers of the Army Medical Corps may make. upon it. In the 1914-1918 war these demands were heavy and could not have been met had it not. been for the generous. sup- port. given by Canadian citizens in cash donations to the Society's funds and in work service rendered. It is to meet Army Medical Corps and others demands that will be made on the Society during progress of the present war that the campaign for funds and organization for wartime work effort is now being undertaken. Already demands for wartime sup- plies have been received and the work of preparation is in progress.
Parties Held in Honor Miss Myers
In honor of Miss M. Myers, who has resigned her positian ‘at the hos- pital and is leaving town next week, several social functions were held dur- ing the past week.
On Friday evening, a dinner party was held at the home of Mrs. R. 8S. Rudd, when a pleasant time was spent.
The following evening, Mrs. H. Schlitt entertained at two tables of bridge. Mrs. Cal McKenzie was the high scorer of the play. A dainty {iunch was served by the hostess later in the evening.
It must, be quite an ordeal to sit,
NOTICE
>
*
bd . .
* A curling meeting will be held * in the Council Chambers of the * Town Hall on Friday, Novem- * ber 10th, at 8 p.m. sharp. Ev- * erybody welcome.
.
*. * ’. *. * +s & ©
e*ene# * # # # «@
HIGH SCHOOL PUPILS — HALLOWE'EN PARTY
In celebration of Hallowe’en, a mer- ry time was spent in the Masonic
LL-BEING O}
The latest addition to His Majesty's.’ Royal Canadian Navy, H.M.S. Kem. penfeldt, has been med Assini-
boine and passed. to the control of
the Canadian government.’ The
pp ee
YS oe -
* THE WHOLE COMMUNITY DAY, NOVEMBER 8th, 19399
flotilla leader is 826 feet long with a.displacement of 1,390 tons and a speed of 35% knots. |
HER MAJESTY TO SPEAK
|
OVER THE AIR, NOV. 11th
Elizabeth will broad. cast a message to the “women of the Empire > on Armistice Day, Nov. 11, it is officially an- nounced.’ ; the first broadcast by the Queen since Her “Majesty bade farewell to Canada last summer.
The exact time was not stated, but it is understood it will .be a five-min- ute broadcast starting at 9 p.m. Brit- ish summer time (1 p.m, M.S.T.) The British Broadcasting Corporation’s home and empire services are to-car- ry the speech. ‘
The Queen’s voice has been heard On & 8
7 Her Majesty Queel twelfth broadcast. Her first as Queen
was in September, 1938, when she launched the steamship Queen Eliza- beth at Clydebank.
Because of the war there will be no Armstice Day ceremony this year
This will be at the cénotaph on Whitehall.
CAR BURNED WHILE VISITING THE PARK
i ar
News. oF: Your Visits and Visitors
“fF
vance
re
Memories of the Great War of 1914- \interned in a Norwegian fortress and 18 were brought back to Old Country the vessel turned over to her Ameri- citizens this week in still another can crew, presumably to continue her
manner as the Chancellor of the Ex- interrupted voyage to Glasgow, one
chequer asked the House of Commons of her original ports of call. for extraordinary powers to borrow; On the western front, Swiss observ- large sums of money. The funds are ers report that the heavy artillery of to be used for prosecution of the war French Maginot line is now in action. and also for the retirement of matur- | Allied communiques merely remarked ing loans. At the same time he an. that there is some more activity on nounced the setting up of a commis- the front, with both artillery and in. sion to handle. British financing of the fantry participating. war and also of the country’s civil ex-| Diplomatic attention has been fo- penditures. cussed on The Hague, where King During the question hour in the Leopold, of Belgium, conferred with House, government .membérs were Queen Wilhelmina, of Holland, the given a busy time as questions show- foreign ministers of both countries ered in upon them from all sides, taking part in the discussions. It The Prime Minister, Mr. Chamberlain, WaS rumored that the Belgian king
and the Minister for War, Mr. Leslie Hore-Belisha, took advantage of the opportunity to brand as false two stories which have received consider- able attention in London during the last few days. The first concerned existence of a secret inner war cab- inet within the government. Mr. Chamberlain strongly denounced the ‘ publishing of such untrue statements and said that they provided material for which enemy ‘propagandists are always seeking. The second story which received ministerial attention concerned complaints from soldiers as
fears that Germany’s high command .
may decide to attack France through Belgium or Holland and some con- firmation of this report was seen in the fact’ that, following the confer- ,ence, all Dutch territory on the Ger- |man border was placed under martial jlaw. Later, it was announced that the monarchs of the two countries were renewing their offer, made to the belligerent nations some weeks ago, to attempt to arbitrate the war and explore avenues for peaceful settlement.
; Planes, believed to be German,
While driving through the Buffalo to quality and quantity of food pro- | Were reported over Scotland on Tues- Nationai Park here on Thursday last, vided. Mr. Hore-Belisha, in denying %®Y morning but were driven off by
many times, both before and since she |C@r was destroyed by fire.
came to the throne, this being her
DIET
Forty bundles of poplar wood ar- flames.
rived in Vancouver by Canadian Na- tional Express recently, strictly as an item of diet.
The vehicle was owned by Mr. Ed- gar Caren, of Legal, Alta., and driven by his son, and he. was accompanied by Mr. Jack Caroll and some other es
_. Smelling smoke, _.the
car.. was
? t TRIP cen to a stop, and upon raising
the hood, it immediately burst into The occupants had barely itime to escape before the. fire spread into the upholstery of the car.
The conveyance was declared a to- tal loss, but fortunately was covered
reason to believe that it was origin- ated by enemy propagandists gee ng to influence public opinion. The
ish soldier, he said, was the best treat ed of any in the world.
London this week sees considerable relaxation of war restrictions and many. districts were practigally back on a peace-time basis, with theatres in some cases showing to record houses.
, The American freighter, “City of ‘Flint” once again held the spotlight in naval circles. Seized by the Ger.
v
ight-seeing tour, a 1938 model the truth of the rumor, said he had '@nti-aircraft fire before they could
‘attack.
Mrs. W. T. EBrunker was a visitor ‘fn the city for a day or two at the week end.
‘Canada tw Obséeve
| Remembrance Day
On Saturday rext, November 11th,
They were food for two sleek beav- er from Jasper National Park’ waiting to sail next week for Wellington, N.Z. where they will be added to the muni- cipal zoo. Arriving with the beaver were also three year-old bear, as play- ful a consignement as ever reached the coast. All are the gift of Jasper Park, Canada’s largest out-door game sanctuary. So no one will be fooled by their roly-poly antics the game wardens instructed all concerned in j the export papers: ‘Do not put your;
by insurance.
WEDDING BELLS
ANDERSON—FULLER
At the United church parsonage on Saturday evening, Rev. T. E. Arm- strong, pastor of the church, united in marriage Minnie Edith Fuller, of New
derson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ivor An-
,man raider Deutchland and sent to, Canada, at war again, celebrates the Murmansk, Russia, with a prize crew ending of the Great War of 1914-18. in charge, the ship was released from| Across the Dominion, from ocean to | the Russian port and commenced a ocean, services will be held in, honor | voyage to Hambourg, Germany, still of those who, by land, by sea, and in ;with the German crew in charge. | the air, made the supreme sacrifice. | Travelling in Norwegian territorial The magic of radio will bring the ‘waters in an effort to evade the Brit- national service at Ottawa to the ish blockade, the ship was seized by ‘homes of thousands of listeners as Norwegian authorities, the prize crew |leaders of government pay their .trib- ute to those who fell.
In Wainwright, as usual, Remem- brance Day will be fittingly marked.
Chynoweth
Hall on Tuesday evening last, by the fingers through the wire. A bear is pupils of the Public High School. lraster than a cat.”
The hall was tastefully decorated; ‘The beaver, who dine at night, get ‘for the occasion and entertainment four to six sticks of poplar, a quarter ‘took the form of progressive games. | cabbage and four carrots daily. Tre
Prize winners for the evening includ-' sticks have to be removed when peel- ed Marjorie Cofield, Edgar Callas, oq
Archie Wilson, Annabelle Carsell, Co.! Doing their best for current apple lin Hannah and Edwin Nordstrom. ‘campaigns, the bear consume a pound
A sumptuous lunch was served and of the fruit each day together with i. couple of hours’ dancing enjoyed be- two loaves of bread and.a pound of fore the party broke up. carrots. All food supplies are trav-
Westminster, B.C., and Melvin A. An- . Eva
derson, of Wainwright. Mr. and Mrs. Adolf Anderson were ' the witnesses. The happy couple left for cain On Wednesday last, some forty
where the bridegroom will join his de- guests gathered at the home of Mr. tail in the Canadian Air Force. jand Mrs. J. Chynoweth when they en- itertained in honor of their niece, Miss
Eva Chynoweth, a bride of this week. OVERDONE | The evening was spent in playing games and contests, after which the |guest of honor was presented with a basket laden with groceries, and with
Shower Guest
Violence in propaganda never pays.
The services are again being arrang- ed by the local branch of the Cana- dian Legion and are scheduled to commence at 10.45, when all ex-serv- jice men are asked to parade at the Mown Hall to march to the Memorial ,Clock for the 11 a.m. ceremony. [Iol- jlowing this will be the service in the Elite Theatre, conducted by Comrade Rev. R. S. Stevens, with:Comrade W. J. Bell, of Holden, as guest speaker. As in former years, it is expected
ria aes: | elling with ‘the animals, who are con- jDuring the first Great War the Ger-/.2 04 git’ went the best wishes for a/that there will be a large turnout of
ee * ' signed to E. P. Norman, Town Clerk,
LOCAL NOTES ee ae x
mans flooded Persia with colored pos- ters depicting the British blowing ee-| poys from cannon. “This”, ran the
long and happy married life. The hostess served a delicious lunch ‘before the close of the party.
Chalk up another success for See) geant Collett, local R.C.M.P. officer, , who, we understand, has made a suc- | cessful recovery. of tools recently stol- en in town from Charlie Wear.
t t 7
The local U.F.A. Co-operative Asso- ciation is holding an educational_and entertaining afternoon on November 18th at‘the Masonic Hall. Mr. R. M. McCool, manager of the Northern U.F.A. Co-operative Association, will talk on co-operation and show films of educational value, as well as a comedy. Admission is free and all are invited to be present. G. S. Bak- er, secretary.
t ¢
Mrs. W. Goulet, who has been vis- iting her' father, Mr. W. H. Heffer- nan, and other relatives, for the past few weeks, left for her home in Van- couver last week.
t t ft
Rev. Father Ehmann, who spent several years among the Eskimo in the Arctic Circle, has been appointed Parish Priest at Wainwright to suc- ceed Rev. Father Malone, who en- listed in the Edmonton Medical Unit. Father Ehmann .arrived in town last week and took immediate charge.
¢.. &F
Mrs. H. E. MacDonald and Mrs. W, Bibby. spent a few days in Edmonton last week. ,
+ t f Myr. Roy Fraser is leaving this week
months.
|superscription, “is how the English When he was thrown from a horse treat Moslems.”
last week, Mr. Tom Goddard, of Gilt | “My eyes!” said the Persians. “If ' Edge, was brought to hospital suffer- that is what is going to happen to us,
residents of town and district for this annual tribute to those who have | passed on.
| _—— _
}
‘ing from a broken bone in his foot.
The Careful Driver
“I Drive Safely” is the slogan of careful drivers of commercial ve- hicles who may well be proud of the safety records they are establishing day after day. In proportion to the number of miles driven, fewer acci- dents are chalked up against the men who operate the trucks and buses em- played in the daily transport of mil- lions of tons of freight and millions of passengers than are charged to the general run of motor vehicle operat- ors. :
The professional truck and bus driver, as a rule, knows his mount and its mechanical limitations better than does the average passenger car own- er. Experience has been his teacher. He covers more miles and acquires more driving experience in’@ year or two than the average passenger car operator gains in a lifetime.
CARD OF THANKS
The Child Welfare Branch of the
Women's Institute wish to thank all|cases of chicken-pox have broken out those who sent or brought clothing |in town, and it seems high time the or in any other way donated to their |/quarantine cards were posted to give to reside in Edmonton for the winter}tea and home cooking sale, also to|proper notification of this endemic
Mr. Brunker for the advertising.
annoy the English.” —-Harold Nicolson in The Spectator, London.
§ LOCAL NOTES §
Ka & *
Hallowe’en passed off very quietly in tqwn Tuesday night. Most of fhe householders entertained a large num- ber of queer-looking visitors and handed out the usual treats. Vandal- ism seems to be passing out in re- spect to Hallowe’en, or was it the good work of the local police and their assistants?
+ t t
The elk kill has already started at the Buffalo Park and the Bibby Cart- age is hauling and shipping the meat to Saskatoon. The mildness of the weather has made the care of the meat rather difficult.
tt ft
Mr. Phil May has been busy mov. ing his family into the house recently vacated by Mr. and Mrs. J. McWilliam on Sixth avenue west.
-¢. £.. 1 We learn that quite a number of
| i we must be very careful indeed not |
Major-General A. G. L, McNaugh- ton, general officer commanding the ist Canadian Division C.A.8.F., is
disease. shown here taking the salute as the
Ist Division Commander in Toronto
during his visit to Toronto, where he inspected various units of the 1st division.
=) 1CHAP IO -——~*
CHRISTIAN:
CREED
’
administering relief.
a schoolmaster —- went quietly into ‘en people. concern for the oppressed Jews and Christians of that hate-sick land. They help. were backed by no political or mili- |
small religious sect.
Nazi persecution.
Friends Service Committee were not the first Quaker mediators Germany had seen. Three centuries dgo, Eng- lish Quakers iaterceded there for har- ried Mennonit4s and ‘after the World War, when Germans were starving, the Quakers stood by for two and one- half years, feeding a million people a day at that hungry time.
In war-shattered Spain both the Loyalists and the Insurgents have al- lowed Quakers to cross battle lines in
mais - ° = ©;
Bet
THOSE LITTLE COYS
Last week an anxious father brou ht his little lad of seyen to
my office with a really well-fitt ns. snrgica!-ioc king bandage abut his head, only one eye peeking throush. There had been a fight ot the country school-house and it scems tuis seven-year-old gota sue she worst of it. The teacher, good soul, had applied mercuroch ::e from her kit, put on the dressing and hurr edly took the boy hoine io her car. ,
Removing the dressing, | found an abraded wound not s!in- deep, extending from the inner margin of the leit orbit, almost to ° ¢ point of the nose; it had oozed blood rather freely, and blood ai + even a school-teacher. The slight wound had been treated thorougliuy with mercurochrome.
You know what I did? Well, I removed the handavte wh4
was so snug and efficient as to be almost disabling in itse'! [ prescribed an ounce of the teacher's antiseptic. 1 told the father to leave off all dressings and paint lightly with mercurochrome about four times a day. Within three days the wound had healed.
Now for the conclusions: All small, minor wounds, involv‘: ¢ no important structures, heal better and faster IF LEFT IN TII: OPEN AIR. Had I continued to keep over-heating dressines on that boy’s face, he would have been coming back today for attentio». xXeep your small wound clean with any positive antiseptic, ard use as few dressings as possible. They shut out air.
Meet CALGARY | ' ean Piee Shag Ta AVE ALO OPERATING
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WITHOUT
They. called themselves the Society of
conducting hospitals and canteens and In Soviet. Rus- (in Magazine Digest, February, 1939) |sia in 1920 it was Quakers who per- Three Pennsylvania Quakers —4 suaded the jealous Bolsheviks to ad- college professor, a business man and jmit outsiders to save a famine-strick- Wherever violence leaves
Germany the other day, moved by heartbreak in its path, the Quakers FR almost sure to be at hand with
no ceremonial of worship, no baptism,
Violence itself respects them, and tary force; they sopke merely for a tyranny trusts them, as English gaol- Yet they won lers in the seventeenth century trust. the official permission of Nazidom ta |ed George Fox, the first Quaker, when undertake to relieve and rescue hun-|they transferred him and. parties of dreds of thousands of the victims of jhis followers from one loathsome pri- son to another without a guard on Those envoys of the American;the way. Even im days when Quak- ers weré flogged and dragged and. hanged, a Quaker’s word was known to be better than a prince’s bond, and Quakers were) going out of their way to befriend other victims of wrong.
In England in 1647, in a time when ecclesiastical murder was an argu- ment of bishops and of dissenters in turn, there appeared a band of non- conformists who wished to murder nobody. They “kept their hearts from hardness” ‘and said, “Out of violence
Murat,
voman wns a
ng the
~OCw
: year,
only violence comes”. “ns Friends. In their moments of fervor they trembled, and so the world called them Quakers. . They were an odd people: a fellow- : ship of Christians with no set creed, otal. no outer sacraments, no priests. For- malism, they said, carried the danger that.the symbol might come to mean} more than the thing it represented. The thing to them was the “inner light”, the spirit of God dwelling in the human heart and speaking as the voice of conscience. God had not ceased at some bygone time to reveal His will to men, they said; He still spoke to guide the seeking soul. Meeting without sanction of the State Church, refusing tithes to that
law-suits.
Conference
an crosses. These were found no to sma
“border of Chita, They trace back to
two attempts. to Christianize China is early as 635 A. D.
The ont ‘the compilation of a new Franco- American review, Madame Maurice
sountry. Mediterranean,” is her subject.
Miss Anna E ia E. i it” Halters =" Schneider
he Klondike with her brother dur-
A woman is eminently fitted to lecide questions that arise in the -ourt of Domestic Relations, hinks Mayor Fiorello H, La Guar- lia of New York because he has ecently appointed Mrs. Rosalie
‘ourt for a ten year term at $17,500
_he City of New York as Deputy _ommissioner of Licenses, and the ‘ste of New York as Industrial
“ren
" -adling-all assignments in cases: ng the identity of guns for!
‘-« Chicago State attorney’s staff is: ‘ unique job of Vovick Perron, graduate of the Uni- ‘ersity of Chicago Law School. She | 3 an expert on ballistics for scienti- ic crime detection. !
———>——_ KK_E_E_—_—EE_EEEeep put service before profit and avoid
care of his needy—there has been, it is said, no Quaker’s name on the WPA rolls.
two-thirds of all Quakers live, (it moves him to support the Ameri. can Friends’ Service Committee which governs the social and. welfare work ) of his order, if
Characteristically, the Friend today ‘is industrious, efficient, temperate, |thrifty, forebearing and hospitable. He speaks with care for accuracy and utters no evil. He celebrates no war : jwistanies but expresses his patriotism
jin working for race “understanding ‘and world good-will,
Since he has little time for trivial. ities, the world supposes his life to be ;dull and dreary. apologists say that by avoiding vanities he has time for cultivating worthzwhile satisfac. tions. : i
Persecutions in the beginning, mar- le outside the sect and the at- jtractiveness of the world for the young have kept the Society of Friends $mall—there are fewer than 160,000 of them in the world. But still more it has been the rigor of the Quaker self-discipline. To be a Quak- er requires grit today, just as it did in George Fox’s time.
udbel Brown of the Foreign of Nortk a, has a:collection of 56
area on the Mongolian | |
+ * woman represented in
is now lecturing in this “Naval Problems in the
; is the only miller in the country, Sh whole-wheat mill. She has
customers hout this country, Now, as then, the Friends must ap- n England and in South America. | proach their great tasks without the
Mrs. George Blg¢k is the second | Strength of numbers, the bluster of voman eleeted to/ sit in the Cana- {the sword-rattler, the flattery of the ene © oye I tie Coca — the courtier. Yet they go where hu- gst of Com ns at Ottawa. She |™mane government may not; they cross vas ‘born in
they stand before Caesar and. speak their minds, and get from him what they want!
ago and’ went to Roe ate that armies cannot breach;
gold rush in 1898. *'* ©
So THE MISUSE OF GASOLINE
Fires from gasoline and other pet- roleum products in Canada numbered 1,052 in 1938 and caused property damage of over $600,000 and resulted in the loss of 36 lives. Hundreds of millions of gallons of gasoline are consumed annually in this country but
‘lit is the misuse of a few gallons which has been responsible for the mounting toll of dead and injured and heavy property damage.
If people could only realize that a gallon of gasoline properly vaporized has the explosive force of 82 pounds of dynamite, théy would exercise more care in its use. Gasoline should never be used in the house for dry cleaning purposes. . Wouldn’t it be cheaper to send clothes out to be cleaned than to risk being burned to death in an explosion of the fumes should they come in contact with a flame? Even the very act of clean- ing clothes in gasoline develops static
hitney as justice of this
Mrs, Whitney has served
sioner. * s s ‘ tst_woman president of the Prison Association: is the elected Mrs. Blanch La Du Minnesota State Board of
'
* * * !
Mrs. Fannie,
v
. It prompts him to take
In the United States,
church and denying the usurpations of government in things spiritual, they were beaten, stripped of their possessions, cast into prison to die, or sold into slavery to: the Mohammed- ans of Africa, who, be it said, let them worship as they pleased. Meekly they endured their punishments, never re- turning a.blow, yet persistently put- ting themselves in the way of more punishment. Carlyle thought that such examples. as they gave of man’s free will to light the night of oppres- sion were “properly the only gran- ;deur there is in history”.
| Friends were among the first to ‘work for freedom of speech, assembly , and worship, for separation of church 'and State, for women’s equality with {men, and for prison reforms, such as Elizabeth Fry brought about in New- ;gate and the prison ships. They led |in demanding popular education, abol- ition of slavery and the end of war. From the dissensions of anes
they came by hundreds to America, seeking here an cpportunity to estab- Nish, free from molestation, a humane, democratic social order, tased on {their ways of life. Quaker commun- ‘ities flourished in Rhode Island, Long | Island, New Jersey, North Carolina, ‘and, after 1682, in Pennsylvania, ‘where William Penn led their most ;notable colonial experiment. _
Early in their history these object-
ors to formaligm adopted formal cus- tom by which the world long knew them as a people apart. Fox, the | preached, trudging the English coun- | tryside, or riding long journeys in America, wore’a wide hat to shelter him, and it became the model for all Quakers. As a sign of their belief in ‘the spiritual equality of all persons, they publicly uncovered their heads only in Church, to the great wrath of |, magistrates and other worldly digni- taries. | Shunning ostentation, they affected drab dress, without ornament. Be- reaved, they wore no mourning. Their gardens might not be too elaborate: their houses harbored no .“Babylonish adornments”. . They disowned mem- bers for “playing at gowff’. Even music was taboo to them and is sel- dom heard today in their meeting- houses. When “you” was for super- iors and smacked of servility, they addressed every person as “thou”, be- ing particularly pointed about it when the person was a hanging judge or an archbishop. Thus it comes that to- day’s Quakeress says to her Quaker, “Alden, does thee remember’ where thee left the car keys?”
To swear to tell the truth, they held, was equivalent to saying that one one was normally a liar. Given to truth-telling at all times, they refused {to take oath. The law accepted their ; point at least, and Quaker witnesses | “affirm” theii testimony. The law lhas learned to respect all their | scruples, including their objections to bearing arms.
The Quaker is seldom a part-time Quaker, but practises his religion the whole week through. It leads him to perform his .romises, pay his debts,
AU NITY OF
“NATIONAL UNITY is vital to success of Canada’s War Effort
This series of advertisements was initiated many months prior to the outbreak of war. Its theme “Unity of Canada” was prophetic; a message that today is more vital than ever to all Canadians.
For in Unity lies the strength of the Dominion, and we, of the Automotive Industries, accept our full responsibility in working as well as writing towards this end.
Now, more than ever before, our plants and highly specialized equipment are Dominion assets; our skilled workmen, vital cogs in the wartime indus- trial set-up in which the production of. units of transport looms more important than ever.
So remember, when you buy a Canadian-Built car, ou are helping support an industry that distributes more than $22,000,000.00 in wages and salaries to many thousand families dependent on the in- dustry itself. Add to these the familtes that are supported by industries supplying raw and finished materials to the Auto- mobile manufacturers, and you et an idea of what this activ- ity means to the Canadian ome Market.
A busy Automotive Industry in wartime is a live asset indeed— a truly national war enterprise.
Hoa, A. A, DYSART Premier of New Brunswick
*1006 LUMSDEN BUILDING This advertisement is owe of a serits dealing with the Provinces of Canada, and will appear in many daily and weekly newspapers in the Dominion,
NOVEMBER 8th, 1
rr setecragieesn wn.coneweemaaneret w eo rane meneame wee eee, ss : . PAE CAMRY Gaaee
ty which is Mable to set oft] IRR often happened tod when ‘ors re] cleaned with gasoline, .,- | It may not be generally known but it is nevertheless a fact that in most
provinces in Canada a fire insurance | 7s me policy may be rendered null and void | gra. if more than one quart of gasoline is CL kept in a building without special per-’ “mit: . And even that limit must be kept in a tightly closed metal can-— never in a glass bottle.
The handling of gasoline in the presence of naked Nights is also a very ‘dangerous practice, Attempts to trans fer this volatile liquid from one ves.
Where necessary to ,keep small ‘quantities of gasoline,it should be kept only in approved safety cans and all /Such containers should be prominent- ly Iabelled with the word GASOLINE.
Smoking in the presence of gasoline fumes is a hazardous pastime, and strange as it may seem in this en- lightened age some people still try to see how much gasoline there is in a tank by the use of matches or lighted lanterns.
With the widespread use of gasoline there should be little excuse regard-| jing the lack of knowledge of its ex- !plosive properties and it should com- ‘mand greater respect than has hith- jerto been shown.
How’s Your Subscription Label Read
S QTRAVELLERS %
a ‘xthe Popular
*~ a x GRAND FOOD IN'” EQMONTONS SMARTEST
NEW BRUNSWICK OFFERS EVERY AID IN EMPIRE’S STRUGGLE
“In the gigantic wragele y which Canada has embarked by the. side of the Mother Country, New Brunswick offers every assistance in the hope that her contribution will so help to strengthen the hand of the British Fropire that she and her allies will emerge victorious over the forces of lawlessness and aggtession. Worthy sons of courageous fathers who served King and Country in the Great War are already offering themselves in their thousands. The great natural resources of New Brunswick, her farm products, the rich harvest of her forests, ber fish, her minerals, are at the disposal of His Majesty. Her all-year ocean port of Saint John stands ready to handle the pry stream of goods which will pour through from all over Canada to elp the Motherland in her hour of great necessity. New Brunswick in the past has faken second place to oone in her loyalty to the British flag and the British tradition—she is prepared to demonstrate this once more to the
world,’’, A. A. DYSART, Premier,
ONTARIO.
TORONTO,
939
DRAINS:
(fm Carionton always } enjoy a pleasant visit
CAFE
ED
oN Tene rn
Sel to another in the presence of lan- ECAUSE it cuts right through
|ternis has resulted in numerous deaths clogging dirt, Gillett’s Lye
and injuries. Where found necessary is i
a boon to the housewife! Keep
to,do this, it should be done in day- for cl
light, or by electric light. it handy always—for clearing out
, Many. garage operators still insist} drains... for scouring pots and 4 ‘on using gasoline for cleaning and pans... for many other every- Wy ,washing engine parts in spite of the i
jfact that there are just as efficient day household tasks
and safer solvents on the market. “Numerous instances are on record Metres pat yor thoy tye teoetf | where this practice has resulted in Soworen ene indanaaal
fire and personal injuries. a
—~
we]
a ae
SERVICES sueeny
9 a.m., first and third Sunday: Holy | service | Communion. 8 pan. 9.45 a.m., Sunday Scheol.
; 11 am., second and fourth Sunday: Holy Communicn and Morning Pray- a ;
7.30 p.m., Evensong, every Sunday.
all ages.
service.
ee Sunday Baptisms, weddings and funerals by service.
| arrangements.
United Church of Canada
Rev. 'T. Hagar Armstrong, B.A., B.D. Minister
ee —————————————Oorrererrreorr
10.80 a.m.—Sunday Scnool. 11.30 a.m.—Public Worship. 7.80 pa.—Public worship. ,
Firet and Third Sunday.
8.00 p.m.—Grangedale. visiting
Second and Fourth Sundaysa— 10.00 a.m.~-Fabyan. , 8.00 p.m.—Greenshields.
Rev. R. 8.Stevens, D.D., Minister WAINWRIGHT - - ALBERTA
Regular Lord’s Day service every
Adeling Rebekah Lodge
Third Avenue.
A cordial weIcome is extended to, All. Members of the Degree when '
Miss E. Hart, N.G. Mrs. M. Carsell, R.S. Miss V. Vail, F.S.
RESOURCES OF REICH
od
.'man ‘raw materials) by Anton Lueb-jdisposal. In, the course of long 10.00—Sunday School. Classes, far ke. It is a remarkably intimate and/of research the one thing of which) we Turn, knit 10 stitches; knit 2 to-| ALTERNATE TOE—Decrease for |uxhaustive study of German domestic | are thoroughly assured is how to. in-
Gilt Edge Orange Hall at 2.30 p.m. resources in mine, forest and field. In/crease the growth of plants with lthe purl 2 together, purl 1. i Sunday School followed by a church view of the fateful decrees of Septem-|aid of the food they need. = = 5 ‘ber, the book assumes an added sig- Sydenham School at 2.30 p.m. nificance and many of its statements! with mud from the Nile, the Chinese
e \
School followed by a church a greater significance.
SEER
No. 54
L O. O. F.
in Town. |
Psalm 122:1 ‘“T was glad when they said unto me, ‘Let us go into the house of the Lord’.” We extend that privilege to you and invite you to come.
Blessed Sacrament Church
=
Meets EIGHT Avenue,
Rev. Father Malone, P.P. P. EB. Wiley, N.G. L. Mitchell, R.S.
11 a.m.—Wainwright. : , A
WHEN YOU VISIT WAIN WRIGHT, IT WILL PAY YOU TO CALL
AT OUR PUMPS AND FILL
GASOLINE
J. W. Fraser Refining Ce.
| Phone R105—19
3
X \ Bs)
TaN Be
Whetier you live in town or
realiy huge savings. Make
.
{ ] Western Producer, 1 yr.
.{] Maclean’s Magazine, 1 yr.
| | Family Herald & Weekly Star, 1 yr,
{] True Story, 1 yr.
{ ] Chatelaine Magazine, 1 yr.
{ ] Country Guide & Nor’West Farmer, 2 yrs.
WAINWRIGHT LODGE | \
“BIG THREE”
THIS NEWSPAPER, 1 yr., and your choice any % in Group. Mark an “X” before
° Herr Luebke to the practice and sci- ed by the aid of manures, especially ence of agriculture, and the present chemical fertilizers. Today every far- writer recalls a recent article in a mer knows that half his crop depends German journal of research, which re- on the application of certain manures ferred to a large body of agricultural or fertilizers and the other half on scientists in training for service in the cultivation of the soil, the breeding, colonies, all set to go when these have selection and care of the plants. Giving Herr Luebke his. due, one to the end of 3 needles. must admit-he knows a thing or two. rows plain. gether, repeat to end of 3. needles. Then 3 plain rows.
Zss =
"No, 45 . . ‘been returned! alternate Monday Nights at} P.M., in 1.0.0.F. Hall, Third Wainwright
|
Visiting Brethren Always Welcome ditions for the plants, and continues: It is known that plants live on in- annually at war against weeds with- rows. gredients derived from the air and the out ever making headway against gether and repeat to end of 3 needles. | With the aid of the carbon di- them. Fallows end gardens may be Then 1 plain row. Then 1 row decreas- loxide of the air the plants build’ up Kept reasonably clean until autumn, ing, if necessary, so as to leave 10| cellulose, sugar, starch, fat and lignin. but then enough annuals seed and per- Stitches‘on front needle and 5 on each | From experimental tests one has ob- ennials are allowed to take the air to Of the back needles.
tained a well-defined proof of these lose the ground gained, compelling the Stitches on to 1 needle. s But of the profounder war to be renewed the next year.
' goil. . Sawers, FS
processes. UP WITH—
solved yet.
Wainwright
—— Le a
in the country ... here’s a combination offer
to please your reading tastes ... our paper and your favorite magazines at
your selection and send us the coupon now!
OFFER °
the 2 you desire.
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ste , < d by _ B. Leslie Emslie,
oC.D.A. (Glas) FCS.”
When visiting Berlin in August, morning at elevem o'clock | 1938, the writer, B. Leslie EXmslie, se-| plant hormones, growth su . }@iso in the evening at 7.80. Prayer Cured a copy of the then newly-pub-|ferments, anxins, etc., we know little |purl-2 together, purl 1. every Thursday evenig at lished book entitled “Das deutache of how the plant succeeds in crea
va. |Rohstoffwunder” (the marvel of Ger-|new life from the raw materials a
The war (1914), says the author, crashed into the peaceful, prosperous ing, the Indians wood ashes and the industrial life of the nation, and Ger- | Incas guano. | many entered the bloodiest of all earlier times, woud ashes were applied wars with enormous reserves of raw to pastures. All these manurial prac- materials and finished products at her, tices were based on experience and on disposal. None thought then that be- had no scientific foundation. fore the war’s end there would be a| scarcity. The restriction.of imports’ When, in 1840, Liebig demonstrated by the blockade would have forced the use of-artificial fertilizers and, in ide Germany into submission in the first 1886, Hellriegel recognized the influ-
Meets First and Third Thuradaye year of the war had it not been for,ence of bacteria which serve to ‘dis- of Hach Month in 1.0.0.F. Halt on her research werkers and scientists, integrate and enrich the soil, distinct. iwho succeeded in placing the proces- ly new knowledge of plant growth ‘sing of raw materials on an entirely was acquired. In their scientific lab- new basis and made it possible dur- oratories and" through thousands of ‘ing four long years of conflict to keep experiménts, these investigators were jthe enemy from German soil. Had enabled to discover the interaction of jnot Germany, he asks, an army of in- plant food substances. ventors, engineers and chemists who succeeded in lifting the veil, of crea- represented her greatest asset? Quite tion in relation to the rapid growth inaturally, special attention is paid by and increased yields of crops, obtairf- the measures 9 inches.
KITCHENER TOE — Decrease for toe- gether, knit 6 stitches, knit 2 togeth- er. Repeat this to end of the 3 needles. Then knit 5 rows plain. stitches, knit 2 together, and repeat
Plant Growth Essentials
The primary essential for a high-, — ‘yielding crop, remarks Herr Luebke, HUNDRED PER CENT IS is the provision of proper living oe STANDARD IN WEED CONTROL Stitches, knit 2 together, repeat to The vast majority of farmers are end of 3 needles.
causes which enable a plant to build | the complex molecules of starch, su- escaped the cultivator blades may be ‘gar and cellulose we are ignorant, for peppering the soil beneath them with ‘it is one of the greatest mysteries of green-podded seeds that will germin- ' creation, which no investigator has ate at irregular intervals during the Truc, we know that the next and subsequent years. i ‘growth and development of plants proceeds frvm the activity of the leaf tion, Beaverlodge, Alta., says Super- chlorophyll and the influence of the intendent W. D. Albright, shepherd's ultra-violet rays of the sun, that the purse gives more trouble === other weeds put together, being pecu-
'S a
—— ; purli, warmth, radiation, exchange reagents,| Turn, knit 4 stitches, knit 2 togeth-
j with human and animal excrement;
‘
Science in Agriculture
On the Dominion Experimental Sta- than all
North and very troublesome around
'paths, garden areas and new meadow seedings. It had for years been re- cognized that picking the plants and j toting them around in bunches broad- | ‘cast millions of seeds from the papery ; white pods shelling at the base of the ; plants, whose tips might be still green <= or in blossom. Carrying off such’ weeds in pails or sacks has been the, practice but it was considered safe to | ‘hoe out and leave a plant that had no! white or yellowish pods. Last aut- umn, however, a member of the staff | cured plants having none but green | {pods and sowed the resultant shrivel. | led seed in the greenhouse, obtaining | a germination roughly estimated at ten per cent.
While it may be impracticable even on an experimental station to han¢- , ; pull and destroy every little runt of a plant propegating future trouble, it! is possible by alertness, diligence and timely cultivaticn, supplemented by | handweeding here and there, to fore-| stall most of the trouble and really | gain’ ground at times against the | weeds. In weed control timeliness , thoroughness count for much.
Since the work of Prairie Farm Re- habilitation began in 1935 in so
[Nort precocious and prolific in the’
Canada, a total of 41 community pas- tures has been established with an ag- gregate acreage of 820,000. These pastures now have adequate water supplies and all the equipment neces- sary for the convenient and proper handling of livestock. Each pasture! is a game sanctuary. | KNITTING INSTRUCTIONS FOR WAR work | To assist any of our readers who may be desirous of lending their aid in the efforts necessary, the following ‘Linstructions as issued by the Canadian Red Cross Society should prove help- ful:
Men’s Day Socks
Please make a wearable sock; wash, . and press, or wash and stretch. |
Directions for hand-knitted regula- ! tion socks:
Length of foot when finished—11 inches.
Material required — Approximately 5-6 ounces of 4-ply fingering yarn.
For average knitting — No. 11 needles by Bell gauge.
For tight knitting——No. 10 needles by Bell gauge. |
For loose knitting—No. 12 needles by Bell gauge. |
Cast on 60 stitches, rib 4 inches, | plain, 2 purl. inches in all).
Knit plain 7 inches Ja AHEEL—Knit plain 3.
wool, leaving about 10 inches. Thread | Stray plants of lambsquarter which this into a darning needle, put through
Turn, knit 12 stitches, knit 2 to- The ancient Egyptians manured |gether, knit 1, turn, purl 13 stitches, purl 2 together, purl 1. Turn, knit 14 stitches, knit 2 to-' the Romans preferred green manur. gether, knit 1. Pick up and knit the 12 stitches Also in Germany, in down the side of the heel piece and knit 2 stitches off the front needle. Knit 28 stitches of the front needles
to one needle; the last 2 stitches
knit om to the 3rd needle, on which pick up and knit the 12 stitches at the other side of the heel piece. Div- _the heel stitches on to the 2 side needles and knit right. round again to the centre heel. within 3 stitches of the front end of side needle, knit 2 together, knit 1.
Front needle plain. knit 1, knit 2 together, knit plain to end of needle. :
This reducing to be done every! Thus they other row until there are 56 stitches on the needles (front needle 28, side needles 14 each).
First needle, knit to
Third needle,
Knit plain until foot from the back of the heel!
—knit 6 stitches, then knit 2 to-
Then knit 5;
Then knit 4 Then knit 4, knit 2 to-
Then knit 3
Then knit 2 plain Then knit 2 stitches, knit 2 to. |
|
1
Knit the back Break off the |
-Wite Preservers
—— 026 ER : After you have browned your chicken’ \ tn fat on top of stove, oven fry it until | tender Arrange in heavy dripping pan ' and use moderate temperature. 325 to \850 degrees allowing chicken to remain |
in oven from 40 minutes to an h Baste ‘with butter eae
Dale Cerneg
5-Minute Biographies
Author of “How to Win Friends and Influence People.” JOHN GOTTLIEB WENDEL
lump.
meres nay A ee oe
stitches on to one needle, turn, purl the ist stitch on front needle as if for from end of needle, knit 2 stitches to- back these 26 - stitches, turn, knit purling, but do not take the stitch off. gether, knit 2. On first side knit 2, plain, . Repeat these two rows (al- Then put the darning needle through knit 2 together,knit to end of needle. _| Ways slipping the first stitch) 11 times the 1st stitch on back needle as if for Knit to within 4 stitches from end of (12 in all), or 24 rows. With the inside of the heel toward next stitch on back neédle, as if for knit 2. Knit 3 rounds plain. Then 1 you, purl 15 stitches, purl 2 together,
purling, and take off. *Then through second side needle, knit 2 together,
knitting and do not take off. Then round decreasing, then ? rounds plain. through the 1st stitch on front needle *Then 1 round decreasing. Then 2 again knitting and slip off. Through round plain. Repeat from * until
EKED OUT BY SOIENCE ‘catalysts and the elements distributed jer, knit'1, turn, purl 7 stitches, purl 2 the 2nd stitch on front needle purling there are 10 stitches on front needle . in the plant all co-operate. But, de-|2 together, purl 1. spite our extensive knowledge of| Turn, knit 8 stitches, knit 2 to. stitch on back needle purling and stitches from one side needle to the , |sether, knit 1, turn, purl 9 stitches,
and do not take off. Through the Ist and 5 on each side needle. Now slip
take off. Repeat from * until all the other, malting 10 stitches on 2 needles. stitches are worked off, In finishing Break wool, and finish as for Kitchen-
Turn, knit 6 stitches, knit 2 togeth.'off end of yarn, run yarn once down er toe. t its jer, knit 1, turn, purl? stitches, purl 2: the toe so as not to make a ridge or together, purl 1. :
N.B.: To join wool, SPLICE, do not KNOT. (Next week The Star will publish
gether, knit 1, turn, purl 11 stitches, toe. On front needle knit 2, knit 2 full instructions for making a sleeve.
together! Knit to within 4 stitches less sweater-—Ed.)
Medical Editor, Division of Health Education, New York State Department of Health BONE EATERS ‘
Offhand you might think a person ratner queer for eating boner Really it is we who are queer, we North Americans and our dainte European ancestors; for most peoples of the world are bone eaters. They eat the soft ends and the porous insides of the lon bones, they crunch and munch the small bones of birds and little ‘animals entire and the Chinese have even discovered how to extract the important boné mineral by the use of “vinegar. The well known Chinese dish “sweet-sour spare-ribs” is made by breaking the ribs into small pieces and cooking them, with any meat that happens to be attached, in sweetened vinegar, The resulting dish is so rich in available calcium, the essential bone mineral, that it will easily supply the body’s calcium neéd for a day.
How do these peoples know that their bodies must have calcium, » discovery which Science has made only in recent years? How do tha Chinese know that nursing and pregnant mothers must have an extre supply of calcium? Yet they have a tradition by which these mothere
~ must be provided with a special dish made from the bones of pigs’ fees cooked in vinegar. Who told the American Indian to prepare his tortillas with lime water? You may answer these questions. I will simply add that racial wisdom is such that we should offer lessons ip diet to other races with a good deal of- humility.
Our own experts seem to have decided that we should get our calcium from milk. We need, says Professor Sherman, one half to two
thirds of a gramme of calcium daily. Children and mothers need a gramme. To supply this we must give them at least a quart of milk every day. But if milk does not agree, or if you cannot get pasteurized milk
ond prefer not to take the risk of drinking raw milk, then you may take :r calcium in the form of dicalcium phosphate. Or you may eat bones.
co — > if aa a JOHN JOSEPH GAINES, M:D-3, é° cnn inet i TN SUMMER FIRST AID
The day’s outing for Mamma and the kiddies ~ Over on the -reek four miles west. Shade and grass; trees and flowers; and emergencies, for Mamma. She should be prepared, wiscly.
For there’s Bob; he will drive and he's on the sunny side of the Ford; gets sunburn on the-left ear, till it looks ike a wheat cake righ off the griddle. .
Then Junior, always an explorer, picks up a locust. thorn in hi most prominent musele—it penetrates half an inch.
And Clarice, fond of butterflies, gets stung en the voper lip by: a new species that she finds buzzing over the horsemint bloom.
Little Mary insists on carrying the lunch basket many tives tor heavy for her—trips over a bump—takes CY a section of epi icrans fro one fat knee. ; ;
Tom, the profound, none too energetic and peppy--picks up, at leas a pint of chiggers—and they ALL depcrd on Mamma’ for first ad. NI run to Mamma when in distress.
On that day’s outing take along a kit couteining (1) cols ors; (2 a roll of clean adhesive plaster; (3) a bottle of vodine: (4) clean anu H or gauze for bandages; (5) a splinter forcep: (5) a jar of carbo lite vaseline: (7) a can of antiseptic dusting powder. Don't rely on tae vegetable antiseptics—most of them are powerless for Iaiing per. If a cut finger, let it bleed awhile; then pour iodine into the ent o> around it. Dry quickly and apply adhesive plaster to close wourd. ‘| “skinned” abrasions much the same, except use © rolated vaseline gau7e next the wound.
Pere the thorn in Junior’s flesh—pu'l + : '
sock the puncture with iodine; cover wa + « NM
g
1 children, the estate would be Drokem™ lup. So he warned them that all nics, ‘were after their money, and whcte, suitors came to call on them, he frankly told them not to call i Only one of the sisters, Mi Rebecca, married; and she did. \w marry until she was ‘sixty years ol The others faded into a desolate ol¢. age and died without compamons, The story of their wasted lives is a pitiful illustration of how little money, in itself, can mean. Georgianna, the most spirited of” the sisters, fought agaist her far} restrictions until she developed «® persecution mania and had to be pen away. For twenty years, she! }was confined to an institution foe the mentally ill, and, when she dicd in 1930, most of her friends thouvne
a
New York’s Queerest Rich Family
The most talked-of house in New York used to stand at the corner of Fifth Avenue and _ Thirty-ninth Street. For twenty years it was salled “The House of Mystery.” etective stories, newspaper arti- sles, plays, and even motion pic- tures were woven around its grim, trick walls. Fifty thousand people passed its nailed-up front door every slay for years: yet rarely did anyone ever see a sign of life behind its shuttered windows.
If you rode up Fifth Avenue on > sight-seeing bus, possibly the ‘Nendel House was pointed out to you as the only home in the world where a yard worth a million dol- {ars was maintained so that the , oodle dog would have a place to \lay in.
The Wendels were one of New
York’s richest families. Their real rstate holdings were once valued 3t a hundred million dollars. Yet they loved to cling to the past. A tachelor brother and his spinster sisters lived in a house that had been built when Abraham Lincoln as still an unknown prairie lawyer 1ut in Illinois. I walked past that \ouse when it was being razed, and saw workmen carrying out zinc bathtubs and marble wash-stands that had been in use ever since the days of slavery. ' The Wendels used gas for light- ‘ng because they believed it was yasier on the eyes than electricity. ‘hey had no use for radios, for ‘‘umb waiters, for elevators, or auto- a:obiles. The only modern improve- vent in the house was a telephone; wad that was installed only two wiys before the death of the last of the Wendels, so that the hurse sould call a doctor.
The Wendel House was assessed at only six thousand dollars; yet the jlawyer often pointed out to the family that it was costing them a thousand dollars a day to live in a vix-thousand-dollar house. That was true because the land on which lt stood was worth almost, four mil- lien dallars. and the interest on that
amount plus the assessments anc taxes amounted to about a thousand dollars a day.
But in spite of all this wealth, the Wendel family lived in the past.
John Gottlieb Wendel died in 1914, up to the time of his death, he had all his suits of clothes copied exactly from a suit he had_ pur- chased at the end of the Civil War The suit was kept in the same bo» in which it had been delivered forty years earlier, and he had eighteen copies of it made,at one time. He wouldn’t wear any fabric that had been dyed; so when he wanted <a black suit, he got the wool from a firm in Scotland which supplied him with wool shorn especially from black sheep.
He carried an umbrella, rain o1 shine, winter and summer.
He had one straw hat which he wore year after year until it liter- ally fell apart, but at the beginning of each season, he had it varnished a bright, new, shiny black.
He believed that all manner of mysterious diseases were contracted through; the feet so he had the soles of his shoes made of gutta percha an inch thick to insulate him against the germs in the ground.
In his day, John Gottlieb Wendel was New York's biggest one-man landlord. He grew rich simply by sitting tight and letting the city grow up around him.
The Wendel sisters were violent-
she had been dead for years “he was worth five million dollars, bus t didn’t bring her five cents’ wort of happiness. :
Another sister, Josephine, !ived ilone in one of the Wendel counuy nouses surrounded by no one bit servants. The pitiful part of it i ‘hat she dreamed that the house was filled with noisy, happy cll lren, and used to talk and play wth hem. She imagined that people ‘ame to see her, and she used to iave her servants set six places a§ the dinner table. As each course was~ served, she would change places, pretending that she was ait of the guests in turn.
One by one, as the sisters died, the rooms they had occupied were locked and the shutters closed; until finally Miss Ella left open only her bedroom, her dining-room dow*.- stairs, and the large bare room tu,» stairs where she and her sisters h:a passed their lonely school days. |-us vears, she lived alone in that spoukr, forty-room house with a few fai.i- ful old servants and her French poodle dog, Tobey.
Tobey slept in Ella’s room in % little four-poster bed exactly ‘ike his mistress’. And Tobey ate his ‘dog biscuits and pork chops in the
dining-room at a special brass tab‘e,
spread with a velvet cloth.
When Ella Wendel died. she. left millions of dollars to the. Method‘se Church for missionary work: y-« she herself had seldom gone it
ly opposed to drink; they once re- | church.
fused to sign a million-dollar lease
until they. were, promised that the | living it
first-aid and the medicine cabi-
net to be used in the building|three hundred
wouldn’t contain more than a pint of alcohol. their death, ten thousand dollars’ worth of rare wines, whiskies, and ee were found in their cel- lar, It had lain untouched so long that hundreds of bottles had turned to vinegar. .
She: died believing she hadn’t ¢ relative in the world; bus within a year, presto, two thousand alleged relatives sprang up like mushrooms all ovce
In spite of that, after | the earth,
John Gottlieb Wendel never made a will. He said he “didn’t want any lawyer making money out of his
roperty.” Well, the joke was oo
im, for before the estate was sce tled, not only ome lawyer, but twe
John Gottlieb Wendel had seven | hundred and fifty lawyers, had cot sisters, and he did all in his power | lected fees out of the gold-rush foe
to keep them from marrying. He feared that if they marricd and had
Woe
the Wendel millions. ee i VRRP L
Ds
PPT
‘ three “insertions for $1.00;
| nner tn Wey pr At Prt
ssthees Wik? beta sea ‘PUBLISHED EVERY AY MORIENG
phere Math Street, Wainwright, Alberta, oe ‘aha Municipal ~ Advertising} =. To subscribers rai ‘ihe for first insertion and 10¢ ; $2.00 per year; prs nt ha per line for each mubsequet “aapaagry points, Cansda $2.50 per’ year; United ; - States, England and Coun. |»
_ Foreign tries $3.00 per year. Aa aeetiy 8], vant dive Airis with
tion. will be inserted tili forbid and charged Classified, shbieed: etc., not exceeds Scoordingly.
ing 26 words, 50c for first insertion; | ' strictly
| or sate — gas 5 eBay rendered monthly.
aeore
The officers responsible for the work to. be accomplished by the newly. formed Wainwright and District Branch of the Canadian Red Cross Society are certainly letting no grass grow under their feet in their endéavors for this effort. As will be noted from our advertising columns, a big rally, en- tertainment and dance is being staged on Monday, November 20th, and on that occasion Captain K. C. McLeod will be the guest speaker.
It might be well to point out that to fully cover this district complete- ly.and satisfactorily, it will be advisable that (possibly) each centre or each school district form among themselves a small committee which can better cover the matter pertaining to the effort as such matters affect their own | locality or centre.
The executive who have made a start so far as ‘Wainwright town is concerned will, without doubt, welcome all offers of assistance along the varied lines of the Red Cross work and all interested in the matter should : : get in touch with Dr. H. V. Springbett, the general secretary for this district,/ A new tri-city morning flight. be- who will gladly supply all information possible, both with regard to the aims | tween Toronto, Ottawa and Mont- of the Society generally, and also the big assistance which it is hoped this} real has been inaugurated by Trans- district will be willing to provide. Canada Air Lines to carry passen-
Anyway, make a date right now tq attend the big rally on November! gers, express and mail. Upon reach- 20th for a good time and the splendid address which will then be presented. | ing Montreal, the T.C.A. plane will {| continue on to Moncton on a survey flight from Montreal to Moncton
upon once again to fight in the de- fence of Democracy. ——_ ———— —_——
Young Canadians are once again be- | - The liberties which we enjoy today ing: trained in order that they may go ‘can he preserved in.only one way. to Europe and fight for the. freedom That is by defending the right of any which we all hold sacred. It is fitting man to express his opinion freely even
Parell
PRACT
=
prior to opening regular service to the Maritimes. On these survey flights no passengers will be carried but express and certain mail, pick- ed at random and sent at regular rates, will be carried. Later a regu- lar air mail service will be put into operation. Express parcels are
a trifle worried abcut this new asso- ciate. He- seemed such a sinister,
quiet, daring fellow that he might be’
shown being loaded into the plane
| (top) prior to thé take-off from To- ronto, while passengers, making the first morning trip hetween the three cities, are shown (bottom). Cap- tain Walter Fowler, First Officer Eric Bendcli and Stewardess Ann- ette Brunclle were in charge
like to join that select. group men. ! tioned, here is a summary of the pro- grams rcferred to in the letter:
words,
The Editor, Wainwright Star.
Dear Sir,—Just twenty-one years ago this month the world emerged from the frightful holocaust of a great war which was fought in de- fence of the democratic principles of freedom and equality. We congrat- ulated ourselves that democracy had triumphed and that in the future rea- son and not force would be used in solving international problems. For a few brief, years it seemed that we were right but today we are called
PROFESSIONAL
MEDICAL Dr. R. A. PROCTOR |
SURGEON
Office adjoining the Standard Pharmacy
MAIN STREET LEGAL. J. A. MACKENZIE
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR & NOTARY PUBLIC
Main Street — —
~M.G.CARDELL ~
BARRISTER — SOLICITOR Notary Public, Commissioner
WAINWRIGHT
- Wainwright
Gas Co. Bldg: — | Main Street
MUSICAL
J
Piano Tuner
be well for us.to remember that it is ;may be diametrically opposed to our quite possible for freedom to be de- own ‘most cherished beliefs. Freedom stroyed in our own country while we | cannot be bound by exceptions and
are defending it abroad. \limitations, it must be complete if it
just a trifle too fast for my brood. | , One Man's Family, the story of the! But after hearing him the first time'Barbour family is heard from CICA I’ve definitely put the O.K. on him: each Thursday, 6.00 to 6.30 p.m. Writ- He's always welcome among our se- ten by ex-newspaperman Carlton lect group, because I’ve discovered Morse, it gives perhaps one of the that he has most all the qualities I’d truest available pictures of American
To speak of the loss of liberty in any of the world’s. great democracies may seem madness and yet in 1937 Harold J. Laski, Professor of Political
Economy, University of London, said | that in all probability in the next war |
“the very idea of freedom will per- ish”. while to examine the course of events since the beginning of the present
that they should do so but it would| though the things which he has to say
danger of Professor Laski’s gloomy prophesy being fulfilled.
There have been many instances of either actual or attempted attacks upon personal liberty but it seems to me we need consider only two _ in- stances at the present time.
In France the Communist Party has
=e to determine whether there is any
been declared illegal and its leaders,
outlawed. Not, as we might suppose, because they advocate the destruction of the present economic system, . but because they issued a statement ask- ing the French government to refuse no reasonable peace offer.
In Ontario, a group of United
Church ministers issued a statement’
in which they declared that war is in-
compatible with the spirit of Christ-' ianity and that they were unable to'
approve of the present conflict. These men have been subjected to an invest- igation by the provincial government on the grounds that they were unpat- riotic.
No matter what we may think of the opinions expressed by the Com- munist Party in France or by the ministers in Canada we must all agree upon one thing. The right to express freely one’s considered opin- ion upon matters of national policy is | one of the fundamental principles of
pfiving itself of the benefits of honest \eriticism.-. Once a government com- mences to suppress hostile comment
Perhaps it would be worth |
is to exist at all. Let us then carry this thought with '
us on Armistice.Day. If we truly
over twenty years ago we must firmly \fight for Democracy, not just in Eu-
‘rope alone but in Canada as well. GEO. CHESTERMAN.
9k Dia REVIEW
by Wa tte & Dales
The jnailman ‘brought something to; this office the other day, and I want! to pass it along. I think it solves the | problems of a good many mothers. “Dear Radio Friend:
When I was a young lady, I used to have great ambitions. I was going to marry a millionaire, and my chil- dren were to associate with only the | BEST people.
“Actually, I married an accountant —and we are far from being million- ‘aires. As a matter of fact, our home \though comfortable enough, is located on the wrong side of the tracks. We have four children, and up until re- cently—when we bought a radio— they associated with a good many youngsters hardly to be classed among the BEST people!
“But now, with radio, they are right \in the swim—and so am I.
“You see, tney spend half an hour each Thursday with the Barbour Fam- ily, for one thing. Father Barbour has become as much a part of this family as our bills and monthly pay- ments. My ycunger son is a real buddy of Clifford’s—and our daughter
I never worry ahout these friendships because [ consider the Barbour fam- ily the type my youngsters do well to associate with. I’m usually at the
For Edmonton School Bd. and The jt has entered upon a course which, if/set myself when ‘One Man’s Family’
Lodge Piano House, Edmonton
9747-98rd Avenue, Edmonton Phone 33303
Leave orders for tuning at The Star .Office ;
DENTAL Dr. E. V. Springbett
Dentist.
TELFORD BLOCK Phone $ Res. 36
Hughenden Biery Thursday
Irma Every Tuesday |
GEORGE REYNOLDS AUCTIONEER License 112-39-40
20 Years’ Experience Will buy outright or sell on commis- sion.
Livestock Dealer, and Supervisor of the Wainwright, Edgerton and Chau- vin Feeders’ Association.
“74. Phone 68, Wainwright
followed to its logical conclusion, in. |
Robert T, Bowman, lett, in charge of’ CBC’s Special Events Depart- ment, and his agsistant, T. O. Wik- lund, aresseen with portable trans- mitter at Rice Lake, Ontario, for a
visits with us.
. |evitably leads to ll those horrors! “Lately the family hero has’ been which we today call fascism.
The Lone Ranger. At first I was just
recent Duck Hunting broadcast. On Friday, November 10, at 9.00 p.m., E.8.T., listeners will hear a similar broadcast from a Deer Camp at Metagama in Northern Ontario.
resolve to consecrate ourselves to the!
‘is keeping company with Paul. And}
———————OOOOOOO oe mocracy.’ Any government which | BERN ARD ‘ YOUN denies this right to its citizens is de-
| like the youngsters to have. He's brave, but not a bully. little wildness in him, he makes. up
revere the memory of those who died for it with carloads of dignity and |
| good deeds: // “My biggat surprise came when Harry—he’s ‘My only musically in-
clined¢hild—announced’ that Tosca- | nini was'to play for him on Saturday
night. And gure enough, at 8 p.m., we. were all together—my little fam-! ily and the Symphony group. It was splendid!
“We've been able to. ‘get the boys
skates this year, but they haven't any |
hockey equipment. That’s not worry-
jing them as much as I thought it
| would, though, because they intend to j take in the big National League game every Saturday night, at Toronto.' Thay’ve had a mark on November 4 for a long time, and our set will stay right on CJCA through the hockey and the Symphony. : | “And mind you these are just a few of our new friends. There’s Baby Snooks, Tommy Riggs and Betty Lou, Howie Wing—oh, scores of them. But I think I have given, you some idea of what radio has done for us, and of aie thankful I am to CJCA for their splendid schedule. Yours sincerely, Mrs. G. N. M.
Mrs. G.N.M. can be sure that CJCA appreciates that letter! It shows that they have gotten a little way along the road they hope to travel.
And just in case your family would
If he has a |
| \ family life. |
The Lone Ranger, a drama of tho! west, is heard from CJCA each Mon. | day, Wednesday and Friday at 6.30 p.m.. The Lone Ranger, famed fer | his cry of “Hi yo, Silver!” is a ee ern Robin Hood, helping the down- | trodden and bringing outlaws to Junt:|
e. | The Symphony, now to be heard at
{8.30 p.m., Saturdays, under direction of Arturo Toscanini.
N.H.L. Hockey Broadcasts, start at 7.00 p.m., Saturdays, and run through | ‘until the conclusion of the game. |
Baby Snooks is the loveable (7?) j child character on the Good News of 11940 broadcast, Thursdays, 7.00 p.m., \from CJCA. | Tommy Riggs and Betty Lou is a modern comedy act heard from CJCA | Mondays at 6.00 p.m., on the Quaker Party. ,
Howie Wing’ is the young pilot who handles the leading role in the saga of aviation heard from CJCA Mondays! to Fridays‘at 5.45 p.m.
***There is an old proverbial saying that ‘‘The sole is half the soul!’’ This is implicitly true, for who does not feel his natural self when wearing well-shod shoes—shoes which are re- paired by skilled craftsmen with fine grade leather, essential for long serv- ice and comfort? For that added es- sentiality take your shoes to the O.K. Shoe Repair; the price, above all else, is pleasing. Harness repaired
RED CROSS
RALLY
ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCE
SPECIAL
WATCH FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS
Mon., Nov. 20
Capt. K. C. -C.McLeod|| Cream Separator
SPEAKER:
<A pin he si ie. tins 1i¢
“RAISINS, Au, s’lees, eas ane PINEAPPLE CURES, 16 on, 110 "RAISINS, Cal, salen, 2 ib, Sle - TOMATORS...No. 2/ tins 11¢ miserin ts ia jee: PONIES us 10-Ib. box. 79¢ RATSINA, «paited: ...:. tds 100 MACARONI ........ 5-Ib. box-800 DATES, Sairs .......... Siiise 0 APPLES, Coe Grade; box 61-05 ALMONDS ........... BA) ea SMR atta k i ciel aa eat WALNUTS, pleces....... Lb. 26¢ IODIZED BLOOK SALT .....89¢ ICING SUGAR ....... 9 the. 190.) DAIRY SALT, 60 Ib, sack...95¢ YELLOW SUGAR ... 4.Ibs. 29¢ ROLLED OATS, 20-lb sack 79¢ COCOANUT 0.0... Lb: ete. SONNY BOY .... 6-Ib, sack 85c GLAcb cMeNaR Vn Noe ONTONS 1..0)...-ceccccseen 10 Ibs, 29¢ Sone TAPIOCA. |... 2 Ibs. 28¢ CUT. FESED FREE... i. Pe SAGO oie 2 Ibs. 17%¢ _ GROUND ALMONDS, 4 ox. 25 LIMA BEANS ............ Lb. 12c GLACE PINEAPPLE RINGS Se praRL BARLEY .... 2 Ibs. 15¢ BAKING CHOCOLATE Ylb. 17 BROWN RICE .......... 2 Ibs. 170 VANILLA «........ 8-02. bottle 17%c SALT ooo. 2-Ib. cartons 9c LARD ........,...- 1-Ib. cartons, Lic NABOB TEA ................ Lb. 55¢ ALMOND PASTE .... / Ib. 24c CHIPSO oo... ccc. Pkge. 22c¢ 7 MOLASSES ‘ .......... anid, tin 14c FLOUR, Kitchen Craft SUGAR ......... 20-Ib. sack $1.49 98 Ibs. $2.89 POTATOES, 90- Ib. BACKS ech ccc ' 1.59
PAY CASH AND SAVE
SAFEWAY STORES LTD. WAINWRIGHT
435 MILES or sent a depth of 435 miles, accending DIAMOND DRILLING to the Natural Resoruces Dept. of the If all the footage drilled in Canada , Canadian National Railways. Canada by diamond drill;operators on mineral | is rich in mineral resources and the | deposits during 19388 ‘under contract ;railways play an important part in . - were joined together, it would repre- |their development. achat
oe ed a re
WINTER DRIVING COMF ORT
PREPARE NOW FOR YOUR WINTER DRIVING. DON'T DELAY! ‘DROP IN NOW AND GET YOUR NEEDS IN ANTI-FREEZE . DEFROSTERS
HOOD COVERS - AND; HEATERS
LET-US CHANGE YOUR
OIL FOR THE WINTER
DANGER! DON’T FORGET THE
TRANSMISSION AND REAR END
They must be re-greased to assure you of driving comfort during the long, cold winter.
-Brunker Service Station
For Better Satisfaction
MAIN STREET ; WAINWRIGHT
PLYMOUTH
TAKES THE LEAD FOR 1940 WITH RIDE, PERFORMANCE AND STYLING
OUR SECOND CARLOAD OF CUSTOM AND ROADKING PLY- MOUTHS WILL ARRIVE SHORTLY
GOOD:.USED CARS AVAILABLE NOW
Tory Super Service -Garage
PHONE 5 WAINWRIGHT
NOW THAT THE PRICE OF BUTTERFAT IS MUCH HIGHER,
YOU WILL NEED AN EFFICIENT
Buy a McOormick-Deering with stainless steel discs.
FOR SALE
J: Robinson
Internationél ‘Trucks,”” ‘White Rosé Gasoline and En-Ar-Co Motor Oil.
_Phone. 65
ef hh
Ca
BARGAIN FARES
To Edmonton and Calgary
From all stations in Alberta and
in Saskatchewan (Regina, Sas-
katoon, Prince Albert and west)
To Regina «|
Saskatoon, Moose Jaw, Prince Albert
“S —rem ‘stations in’ ‘Albérta (Ed- monton, Calgary and east), and_ all stations _ in - Saskatchewan and Manitoba (Winnipeg and _ west). Good. Going: Nov. 9-10-11-12 . Returning: Leave destination up to and in- cluding WEDNESDAY, NOV. 15 Good in coaches only. No bag- gage checked. Children five years and under twelve, half fare Full particulars from any local agent —
‘W39-676
CANADIAN NATIONAL
Le
C Mo.
. | Mr,
Following _ several week’ fitness, |
re, aod Leroy, Greenway passed away at the ea hae at the age . jot 39 yen
A good crowd “toned out last wreak to witness the play, “A Real Honey- | moon,” presented by tite Vermilion
Players.
Mr. Jack Reid “ay a patient at the - hospital suffering trom blood poison-! * ing in his: hand,’
The local Odd Fellows opened their new lodge homie this week, it being’ dedicated by high officers of this. The -celebration | jwil Itake the form of. three-day cere- On Wednesday. several new candidates will be initiated; Thursday the dedication sérvices will be held, and on Friday a big dance will biacat
world-wide order.
mony.
up the occasion.
‘ed away the same day.
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO
Mrs. C. Swick and baby are leaving | _ on Friday to join her husband, who is|~
employed in Peru.
Mr. J. Sutherland is in charge of|where Paul has obtained work. the section at Fabyan during the
continued illness of Mr. Latch, who is suffering from the effects of the re- joent fire there.
nevpale nour buy it than
any cther Drumheller brand.
‘| Service Meat Market
If You Want To Become Acquainted With
Real Food Delights
there is a very simple way of becoming introduced. Order
your meats here. This is the shop where there’s no such thing as a piece of meat that isn’t of the highest quality or a customer who isn’t thoroughly satisfied.
WE CAN SUPPLY YOU WITH
Ready Cooked Meats
THAT y ONLY LOOK ATTRACTIVE ON YOUR TABLE, BUT ARE APPETIZING AND TASTY.
E. Schumacker
Service Meat Market
PHONE 63
MAIN and FOURTH
BARGAINS IN NEW AND USED
_ Farm Machinery
SEE US FOR ALL’ YOUR NEEDS IN FARM IMPLEMENTS. | BESIDES HAVING A OOMPLETE LINE OF| NEW. ‘MACHINES, WE CAN OFFER MANY SNAPS IN TRADE-INS, AT PRICES
WHICH REPRESENT REAL SAVINGS
SEE
GUY TORY-
_ ALLIS CHALMERS RUMLEY Co. HART PARR AND MINNEAPOLJIS-MOLINE TRACTORS PHONE 8 ;
COCKSHUTT PLOW co.
WAINWRIGHT
\
ALBERTA
THE NEW FLEURY
Grindmor Grinder
Farmers! Do you realize the value offered by the New Grindmor— its strength of construction—its enclosed ball. bearings—its large hopper close to the ground, with facilities to be run by an endless belt. Built to real engineering standards that keep the Fleury name still at the head of the procession. Compact in Size—Low in Price—High im Value. Oome in for full details.
L. ¢.
TORY
John Deere Farm Implements -
QUEEN STREET
eda geen
_ PHONE 15
WAINWRIGHT !
RE A NO RE oe
Mrs. Alec Adams left for Edmon- lton on Saturday last to be present | with her father, Mr. Currie, who pass-
On Saturday, November 11, Cana- dian dignitaries, members of the Diplomatic Corps and citizens will gather before the Peace Tower of the Parliament Buildings at Ottawa
Mr. and Mrs, Paul Molineaux left | this week for Vancouver Island,
Mr. Ed Ganderton is suffering from an attack of. pneumonia.
Mrs. G. C. Tory recéived the sad.
news of the death of her father at the
Scotia.
‘Mr. Eric Walberg, of Terrace, B.C.,
reside.
Having attended the funeral of his mother in Peace River, Mr. W. Loud- foot has now returned to his work at | the C.N. depot.
Mr. F. Watts had to have one of his fingers amputated during the past | week, the member having been badly | crushed.
* —_——_——____—-* | EDGERTON § * —_—————_*
A very happy. crowd gathered for the highly enjoyable dance in aid of the Red Cross, and sponsored by the Edgerton Masonic Lodge on Hallow- e’en.
| It was held in the local theatre and the floor was well filled from the start
age of 81 years at Guysboro, Nova!
has moved to town with his mother to,
to honor Remembrance Day, . From Parliament Hill, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation will bring to listeners of the National Net- work, a forty-five minute broadcast
The regular monthly meeting of the Ww. A. (Anglican) was held at Mrs. R. Kington’s homé on Thursday after-
noon and final arrangements were |made for the -annual bazaar, which ‘will be held in the church basement on Saturday, Nov. 18th.
|
Several loaded cars went to Mc- |\Caiferty Hall to take in the concert
land dance there on Friday night. Mrs.
took pert in the program and all those
well worth the trip. \
Mr. Wm. Kelly was rushed to the Wainwright Hospital in a very criti- cal condition on Saturday peipekuaas
Dud Sawyer and Mrs. F. W. Davis *
who went agreed that the affair was |*
of the ceremonies, beginning at 10.45 a.m. E.S.T. The above photo- graph was taken during last year’s ceremony.
district during the week.
Owing to the low crop yield in a large part of the district, residents of
the ia ieee of the threshing.
§ Sheepskin Flats § *
Mr. D. Edwards, of Rosetown, Sask. was here last week renewing old ac- quaintances.
Mr. Louis
He had been in town during, the morn- |ing and was apparently in good health
|but shortly after returning home he
collapsed. Dr. Aylesworth was sum-
|moned, and advised that the patient
be immediately removed to hospital. Reports from authentic sources on Monday: indicate that Mr. Kelly is suf- fering from pneumonia and is as well as can be expected at this stage of the disease.
ee, Ld § GREENSHIELDS 8
— *
until around 4 a.m., when “Home Sweet Home” reminded folks that a spot of “shut-eye” might be a good thing. Even the customary pause for refreshments at midnight was aban- doned owing to the fact that free “hot dogs” and coffee were dispensed throughout the entire evening. It is understood that after all expenses are settled there will be a_ satisfactory sum to,turn over to the Red Cross So- ciety. Hearty thanks are due .those who worked so hard to make it a suc- ‘cess, also to the many who patronized so worthy a cause.
Wednesday morning’s sunshine re- vealed the fact that Hallowe'en prank- sters had certainly not been idle, in fact sevaral irate citizens were heard voicing protests because the ‘‘spooks’ had gone beyond the joking point in some cases. We understand that
Principal C. G. Welch read the “riot act” to the Intermediate and High School rooms, and insisted that those who. had taken part in the disturbance the night before should immediately go and restore order,—they did.
TWE MOTEL OF THE FRIENDLY HEARTH
HOTEL GROSVENOR
E.G BAYNES Owner Operator
As we go into the winter months we ‘invite you to stay at the Grosvenor where its broad fireplace spreads a homey, cheery atmosphere throughout the great lounge. Rooms and room and dining service all maintained at a very high level. With rates from $1.50 up—their lowest in years—you'll like this hotel better than ever.
GROSVENOR|
“lfamily have moved into the
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Kett and kiddies | returned Tuesday from Carvel, Alta.,
where they have been visiting Mrs.
Kett’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. MacDon-
ald.
Mrs. Pfluger accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Alex Murray and Ed to the city on Tuesday last, when they combined business and pleasure.
The annual beef ring meeting was held in the hall on Wednesday No- vember ist, with quite’a number of shareholders present. Plans were made for the 1940 ring.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Denson enter- tained a crowd. of friends in the hall on Saturday evening at their wedding dance. Music by Mrs. Glass and
,| Messrs. H. Murrey and E. Gano made
dancing easy until the early hours of the morning.
Visitors to the city at the week end included Paul and Fernande Leduc, Mrs. E. Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Daniels and Billy.
We are glad to see Mrs. McIntee returned from Edmonton on Monday, where she had heen a hospital patient several days.
“Mrs. M. McDougall, with Mr. and Mrs. Bruce McDougall and children, .of Lougheed, were visitors at the Morrison home ‘Sunday.
Mrs. Andy Adams has been a pa-
cook and bottle washer at the teach- erage, Miss Lorraine Lafrance having ‘returned home.
Mr. Tom Goddard, of Gilt Edge, while looking for horses in the flats, had the misfortune to have his horse fall on him, giving him a_ badly sprained ankle
Mr. Cam Lfempleton returned home on Friday after spending a pleasant week in Saskatchewan.
We are sorry that Mrs. E. Mills met with quite a serious accident to
her hip, last week and was taken to
Edmonton :for treatment.
The World of Wheat
H. G. L. Strange, Director, Research Department, Sear Grain Company, Ltd.
“The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be—” —Ecclesiastes 1:9
One of the most remarkable feat- ures of this last crop in Western Can. ada has been the—to some—amazing recovery of the semi-arid or so-called desert area of Southern Saskatche- wan.
It will be remembered that many thought that normal rainfall there would never occur again, and others said that even if good rains did come, that normal yields could not be pro- duced because soil blowing and ‘soil mining’’, they believed, had perman- ently destroyed fertility.
Yet this last year normal rains did occur, and the normal rains brought
jwith them once again normal yields.
Students. of agricultural history are not surprised, for they sve faith in the wise observation of Ecclesias- tes, having noted that natural condi- tions occur over and oyer again in this world, and so they ‘believe that any piece of land which once produc. ed a good crop oan certainly do so
tient in the local hospital for a few |°"Ce again.
days and we hope will be home soon.
§ HEATH
*
Mrs. L’Heureux has returned home from the hospital.
Harry Wootan, who has been em- ployed at the store, has returned to his home at Fort Saskatchewan and Maurice Yates, of Edmonton, is now clerking there.
Dorothy Spornitz spent the week end at her home at Heath.
Mr. and Mrs. John Smith spent a few days last week visiting Mr. and Mrs. Messier at Vermilion.
Leo Messier is completing the ad- dition to his garage at Heath and has also ‘completed’ the demolishing of the old livery barn.
Parents of the junior pupils at Heath were entertained by the pupils on Tuesday afternoon with an inter.
,jesting program and display of enter- prise work, followed by games for all.
>’ Mr. and Mrs. Morton Herbert and Cum. Jmings house, ae
History and Ecclesiastes suggest too, however, that some day drought and so poor yields, will come again; isco’ these there is but one real
| \safeguard, which is to prepare for the '
—_———_— —=|the U.S. southwest are the worst ever Colin Dixon spent a few days in the}experienced at seeding time—Large
township 44-5 are petitioning the gov-|lower price: Estimated Lithuania will] ernment for a re-survey of the crops, |have 120,000 tons of bread grain for as the inspection was made prior to|export—Northwest Grain Dealers es-
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little liking for, although Jim was re-|said, ‘‘that is your business—not mine. In the meantime, I’m not going to live
“Ail Graves wants is to-be left in a hole in the wall so you can keep alone. He says women get to know ja half dozen horses for amusement.” -
Cary did not answer. She was dress- ing to go shopping and. she didn’t want to quarrel with Lucretia. Quar- rels with Lucretia always. left her
assuring about him.
too much and can’t hold théir tongues.” ix
“I shall be happy enough to leave Graves alone,” Cary said coolly.
“A gensitive little puss, aren’t you?” Jim laughed. f 5
When she pointedly ignored this mark, he went on, “We're mighty lucky to get him right now in the middle of the meet. "Most everyone, who is anyone is already under con- tract.” ee
But Cary had more important
empty, with a feeling of wrong doing and wrong thinking.
“Darling,” Lucretia said, suddenly changing the subject, “you are look- ing almost disgracefully fit these days. If I didn’t know better I would say you were in love.”
“It’s my enormous appetite,” Cary
said, as she set a large white cart-!
things on her mind than Graves and his sullen, silent ways. One thing was
wheel hat on her sléek brown head and tipped it alluringly over one eye.
“You have let Paul know where we are, haven’t you?” Lucretia asked, as she lighted a cigarette.
“Of course,” Cary answered care- lessly.
“Then I wonder ,why hé. doesn’t look yow up? San Diego isn’t on the other side of the world by any means.”
“Don’t worry. He'll pop in one of thesé-days,” Cary said slipping on her gloves and stooping to kiss Lucretia’s “ fragrant, cool cheek. ‘I won't be
shopping long. If anyone should call T’li be back in a couple of' hours.” Going down the corridor toward the elevator Cary hummed softly. The hidden ecstasy of approaching dadven- ture surged through her blood. The iday before she had learned that An- thony Garth was in town. He had brought Chief Cal and Black Lad south and stabled them at _ Holly- |wood’s new Englewood Park. From there he would van them across to |Santa Anita. | She rang for the elevator and when NEWLY APPOINTED eee the sixteen-year-old operator, |opened the door, she gave him more , than her usual morning greeting. She | saw in his. freckled face and blue eyes that she was beautiful today and when she stepped out at the: lower floor she, was still. smiling happily.
——————e
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man standing so near her that she brushed against him as she walked rapidly toward the door. A familiar, low laugh caught her and _ stopped j her. :
“Paul!”
“T’d say you were in something of a hurry but that it is causing you no uneasiness.”
Sam Solliman
101st St.
Edmonton, Alta.
Manager.
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‘She was not instantly aware of the|
him, She felt nothing in that kiss: not content with Paul's kisses. But she told herself that was because she had never been madly in
Cary found
complete satisfaction in Paul when|- they did outdoor things together. His|
home was in San Diego; hers on the east coast, so they met once or twice a year for a few days—never long enough to consider anything as ser- ious or complicated as marriage. _ “Whatever you were going to do, could we do it together?” he asked. “I was. going shopping—that was all. It really wasn’t at all important. | I can do it some other time. Shall! we lunch somewhere ?”
“I was about to suggest that,” he #8 if he always had his way about
said. “I know where we can have a
lot of privacy and plenty of excellent | She suspected that was true, for he
food.”
“That sounds right to me,” she said, ‘mother and a self-made father.
“for I have something to tell you.” She was highly amused at the stricken look on his face.
: - | “If it’s a man,” he almost gulped, /2°¢ twins and Anthony — Anthony “break it to me gently—a bit at a 'Garth—says that twin foals occur
time.” She laughed gaily:
- jand a mare and two'colts. The colts! THE CANADIAN MEDICAL
“Like cutting Their mother used to race under the |
adi € } es.” , oe ifs “I intend to run them. They're’ training now at Santa Anita. I wrote you that my step-father died but I guess I failed to mention that he left me half a racing stable. So I decided.
got it?” Ay
“His adopted son, Anthony Garth.” “Are you keeping! the stable to- gether, or racing them separately?” thé asked. fy
“Separately.”
The waiter brought the minted lamb and disappeared again. Paul frowned down at his plate. Cary couldn’t help but think what a really good-looking young man he was-—finely built, with an almost perfectly modelled head, but it was strange that never before jhad she noticed the set of his mouth,
things. . nnerer
was the only son of a doting, rich
“The stable is small,’”’ she continued, “only three horses ready for racing |
A HEALTH SERVICE OF
ASSOCIATION AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES 'N CANADA
jonly once in ten thousand times. | ‘@
ACUTE INDIGESTION
off a puppy’s tail an inch at a whack high-sounding name of Princess May, ,
so it won’t hurt?”
“Yeah, so it won’t hurt.”
“But, darling, it’s no man at all.” Strange in that moment that Anthony Garth should trickle through her thoughts.
“Good!” Paul said, almost boyishly happy again. ‘But I don’t mind tell- ing you that you had me.scared for a moment.”
CHAPTER VIII
The place where Paul took Cary to lunch was far out Wiltshire Boule- vard. It was a small, quiet place, a short distance back from the street, in what once might have been a pri- vate residence.
lingered over coffee and cigarettes. Cary liked dining with Paul.
eould talk or not as she chose.
ever she felt, Paul always seemed to
understand. He was patient almost |wouldn’t by any chance be just a little Cary |in love with him?”
to the degree ef monotony. sometimes wondered what he would be like if riled into action.
He always ordered for her and to-|knew she was blushing.
but Anthony says they call her Mable around .the stables. Then ,there are two three-year-olds and Anthony says one of them—” :
Acute indigestion is a much-abused term. Very fow die of it One reads | in the newspapers that an important
» f She st d short, f he-kn inz| man of business has suddenly died o es acute indigestion. It is a doubtful
tinctively by the look on Paul’s f \ . nee Seen sti diagnosis. One thinks that he died
that she had made the mistake of heat atectl ted | mentioning Anthony Garth once too o steed ay eon’ OR BrO ere | often. possibly by too heavy meals, too much |
“This Anthony you speak of—is he | tobacco or alcohol. The newspapers |
the kid you used to play around with at the ranch?”
“Yes—but he’s grown now.”
“T assumed he must be. I suppose he’s handsome and tall and quite a
itable. Perhaps it is as well.
The heart and stomach are close neighbors. They obtdin their nourish- ment from the same. source, the blood Thay get-their “pep” from a common
When they got there it was past |. one o’clock and only a few couples| said guardedly.
She|saw hjm in tails at the Biltmore I How-|could answer your question better.”
lady killer. That kind usually turn out that way.” :
“T’ve' seen him only twice,” Cary “Each time on busi- |
origin, the nerves; if one organ is healthy, the other shares in this, health as well as in the ill-health of one or the other.
are, on occasion, inclined to be char- | signs, paralysis and constipation with- |
, ordinary food poisoning is. but 2 per)
ness about the horses. Perhaps if I!
Both acute and chronic indigestion are abdominabie, making the victim uncomfortable and morbid. He is | apt to think of heart disease, cancer or other serious ailment. ; | Acute indigestion is invariably due | to the ingestion of too much food, im-|
Paul watched her intently. “You
“Are you being absurd, or trying to be funny?” she said icily, though she
{ly cut off. This blood supply is car-!
A mdn (or woman) eats a hearty dinner at his favorite restaurant or club. Six or seven hours.later, he is fearfully ill, He has fever, pains in the- stomach, nausea, vomiting and perhaps diarrhoea. He has a feeling of impending death. Occasional cases of this food poisoning are fatal in 24 hours. Usually the attack is over in a day or two. The food poi- soning is commonly derived from the use of foods such as milk, meat in the form of hamburgers, sausage and salads or other foods subject to much handling. Other acute stomach at- tacks are due to food toxemia. Bot- ulism belongs to this class. Botulism has usually a’short period of incuba- tion. Vomiting is the earliest symp- tom and this is succeeded by nervous out fever. While the fatality rate of, cent, that of botulism runs to 50 and! 100 per cent. : {
The heart affection most liable to’be; confused with acute indigestion is the one where the blood supply to the heart has been more or less complete- |
ried by the coronary arteries. If one of these vessels is plugged up the per- | son has coronary thrombosis. There!
proper food or food that is “spoiled”. a year or two until the heart’s blood
is ghastly pain; he has nausea, vomit- | ing and gas. The victim is prostrat-| ed. He may die in a few minutes, in an hour or two, or he may survive for
iS DAY NeLY co
supply becomes completely shut off.
The so-called acute indigestion is often a serious matter. It calls for. careful medical examination and at- tention. The symptoms may be due to a heart condition’ for which ‘abso- lute rest is the best remedy. ~
After a huge ‘meal, the immortal Shakespeare said: ‘My grief lies on- ward and my joy behind.” Perhaps
‘the poet meant that it is not safe to
overlook one’s stomach—especially if one has heart disease. .
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“Suppose we
day he ordered minted lamb shoulder talk about something else for a °
and jellied ravigote salad, to be fol-|change.”
lowed by blueberry cake, lemon ice and black coffee. When the waiter ciatively and said, ‘You're particularly lovely today.
gleam in their’ eyes. And now my masculine curiosity wants to know what it is you have to tell me.”
Cary laughed. ‘It will keep until coffee and cigarettes, I want to know about you. What’s this big business you wrote me about?”
He was definitely pleased at her in- terest. “Dad has made me junior member of Norris and White bond house. I have a big, fine suite of of-
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fices, a beautiful smooth-topped desk
with three telephones and enough |first, but she’s gradually getting used buttons to keep me busy guessing|to the idea.’
which one to push. I have a private
secretary — red-headed and pretty,|idea either,” he said suddenly.
too. *“Not a bit.”
Aren’t you jealous?”
“A fat pay check waits for me each | mixed up in such’ business.”
month, whether I work or not, and
there’s only one thing wrong with the | she crushed her half-smoked cigarette
picture. Know what it is?”
Cary shook her head slowly but felt |ed up her gloves and purse.
little red flags at work in her cheeks, waving a warring. “Then I'll tell you.” hand over hers. spend that fat check.” The waiter
drew her hand, fumbling awkwardly | (The characters in this serial are fic-
with her napkin. When he went away
went away he censidered Cary appre- | Dana. looking |came west with us. I thought] firm sent him to the Orient for six ‘only women in love had that certain | months.
‘out to her.
“You haven’t asked me a _ thing about Lucretia and — oh, yes — Ivy. You remember her? She ‘Her husband’s
YA, 1 JUST SENT THE
That was a break for Lou and me. Ivy is in San Francisco with friends and we're lost without her.”
The waiter removed their plates and brought the coffee. Paul took out his cigarette case, opened it and held it She took a cigarette and he lighted it and his own before he spoke.
“I guess I’ve been rather absurd about this whole business.”
“Let’s forget it,” Cary suggested.
He put one/|I’d be home in a couple of hours. “It’s you to help me}She’ll be wild.”
“Lou wasn’t any too happy either, at
“My mother isn’t going to like the “She may not be able to adjust herself to the thought of my future wife being
ALWAYS INCLUDED WI§ WIFE IN Cary stared wide-eyed at him. Then viciously in the ash-tray and gather- ‘Heavens, why didn’t somebody tell me what time it is? I promised Lou
(To Be Continued)
titious)
OS Lo0nT —
\
KNOW You HAD A Ke NEw RADIO - WHAT KIND IS IT ??
~ Wyss \
came at that moment and Cary with-
"HOT WATER KANT] YF — WANT ‘TO . SEE IT ?
I BELIEVE IM GETTING
SCIATICA!
OH Boy - | HOPE
MRS AND THE YOUNGSTER TO A SHOW- CMON IN.
MY INVITATIONS £
House of Hazards - -
SCIATICA ?/—
WE'LL BE ABLE To
UNDERSTAND WHAT
‘THEY SAY /
‘STUPE DOWN" THINKS
WHEW- | HATED TO LIE TO HER BUT, ! JUST COULDN'T TELL HER WHAT JOE AND | HAVE
PLANNED AT HIS HOUSE.
HAW- HAW- N
POMEGRANATES COME
FROM PETRIFIED
AH-*. THE LIME - LIGHT!
WKKINSEURG, Pa./
fi
Von es
4.A. GCALOWIA, BELLE