PRS emer

ists will be held in the Church

| E 30d There

| Provincial

92 SNE NEE SS TE TEN I

REDCLIFF REVIEW

THE REDCLIFF REVIEW

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

LHURSDAY, OCT 8th, 1936

Bo adhulders’ Com. Says|Good Suggestions For Alberta is Solvent) Town Diamond Jubiles

wan Pay its Interest Obligations And Expect Surovlvs

5

Alberta is economicaliy svi- vent and able to meet interest vbli,ations in full, a committee o bondholde:s headed by J M MacDonnell of Toronto advised Premier William Aberua.'t.

It was rpresented the ‘ull in terest charge could have been prid this year and the rovine- rord a budget deficit of only $192,216.

Sice coming into o*¢i-e slight |; over a year ago the Aterhart government passed |+gislation ervbittraily cutting ‘aterest rates by an aggregate of $3,600, wv. The interest rate on some bunds was cut from six te thrie jer cent which represent. abou. the average for the full debt.

The province af Alberta is ¢ onomically and fiscally solvent rid can pay all its interest’ olig viions in full and reasonably ex pect surpl the near fut;e

ee ee

Mr W Hern is at present in

cst report is that he is improv- img gradually, - * # A grand enteitainment wil. ve presented by Gordon Meraor sai Juveniles, with assisting art-

Friday Oct. 9th

mission, Adults 25c; Children 15e. The program is under the cunpiony of the Laiiigy Aid.

Admiral W 0 Sims, war time commander of the United States ‘leet in European waters, and a native of Port Hope, Ont, died

Famous officers of the Cana- Biaa Pacific Raiwcy and Sir John A. Macdonsld, Prime Minister of Canads, arrived at Revelstoke re-

wore Don.:d A. Smith, Goorge - ca, James J. Hill, Van Hor-

depicting the

i i

a i Ht

il f -.

|

The Editor Redcliff Review :—

Dear Cir:

A telegram received this week

‘om the department of Munic- ‘nal Affairs, Edmonton, verifies the fact that Redcliff was ‘co torated as a town on the fifth

y of August 1912.

1937, therefore, will be Red- cliffs silver jubilee year and ‘eps should be taken imm »}iate ly to fittingly celebrate the oc- ‘asion. If thig opportunity is yassed up, not until 1962 can ‘he town expect to celebrate an mer jubilee occasion anl oy ‘at time a great many of the resent inhabitants may be a reat deal too tired.

It hag been further brought v light that Redeliff’s fires own council met in ~eular ession on the thirdday of Oct- ber, 1912,

To put the affair over in p big ray a representative commit!ee ‘lould be called togather as

“om as possible perhaps at the tigation of the mayor of tie

‘uvwn. This committee should xclude representatives from the vuncil, school board, teaching ~ aff, ministereal association. ‘d timers association, retu‘) erchants a’soriation, in¢us'r. or~anizations, charitable or anizations, lodges and the |.cal ress, ;

A proper ‘time for the cele>ra on of the jubilee should to de- sided upon a time which

vould be a publicity campaiicr ‘a which Redeliff town, Rede!iff wroducts and Redcliff. potential- ‘Mes would be given a grew

“elude among other things a eneral holiday on the open!ag ‘ay, a huge street parade pub- ce exhibitions of Redelif pro-

natronize sal stores and in-

‘ustries” campaign, a edi ion of the Review, and the ~nnuaj July ist stampede is dis-

ontinued next year, it mighr be vell to add a sports day as one ** the afternoon attractions «id g with a Medicine Hat to ite:- liff bieyele race open to all ain- stures in Alberta, ~

Several hundreds of do'iars vill be needed to finance a prop- rv celebration, which amount an be raised prtly by public sub *ctiption and partly by entertain vents put on throughout the winter months,

Ir is imperative, therefo f the big vent is toee on (hat ciganization’ work shov!! be started immediately,

We have the town. Only ire

‘rom knowing all about it,

Thanksgiving Supper in (‘14

ir Kingsley Wood, British Minister of Tealth, t hearty old lady in the hop-picking district of Worcestershire.

HEALTH MINISTER VISITS HOP FIELDS

shown conversing wit! whither

‘ye went to atudy conditions and make personal contact with these con- erned with the welfare of the mothers.

¢

ascists Make Trouble At Labor Convention °

tenis Sir Oswald Mostley Fo Cau.'ng I.sorder

|

Condemnation of poi! ‘monstrations in London Eng: yost, inst Wednesday was swor

‘nd was voted in. a resolution

.arochin Council-of St Am-

rose Church will hold a Fish and Chip supper in the Parish Hall on Friday evening Oct ai from 5:30 sed 7 *

>

CH Primrose, former police

magisvrate and pioneer of the

‘a as new heutenant-governor of

‘y the 6th annual Labor party! aiborta Oaths of office were

conference.

The conference demanded th government launch “an imn.ed jate inquiry into activities o th “asecist organization” of Sir

“swald Mosley. Herbert Morrison, Labor «:a.l v, charged «nat Fascists p! nu- 1a parade “for the deliberate ‘urpose of stimulating ej ii dis- rder and racial. strife in the ast end of London.”

Mrs Jessie Bishop, widow \e e late Je’s Bishop, former'y » Box Springs district,

. Queenstown, Alberta,*on Bet: rday, Oct. 8rd The remais ere brourht to Medicine Hat r interment,

Ni

Keep in ee the wmual

‘all under the auspices of £1. ‘ary’s Altar Society. * ile ill be served from 5:30 to 7:30 ‘“ekets are now on sale. Pe vre to get one.

= ee Se Mini-terial

The Association

f Medi-ine Hat is holding its!

snnual Tha iksgiving Servie~ in

*t. Johns Presbyterian” C wureh | t 11 am Thanksgiving Monday

(ct 12 Rev HV Ellison. of hedcliff is to be the speaker. * . > RevH V #ilison is driving round the Medicine Hat Presby- tery Rev Ur Brace of West

“hina, who is giving his splen gyxiyyy yo diysaoa wt ¥ C1: 1.

aid missionary talks at differ- ‘nt points up to Friday The!

congregation of Gordon Memor- HOUNHO GALINA

ial were delighted with his lifting and iuteresting talk on | Sunday morning.

156 3rd Street

|

i

| ;

|

veople in it can preyent Canada} ————_——__________¢_—________________ te | FASHION FUR SHOP

Opposite Safeway Store

scministered by Hon Horace Harvey, chief justice of the su: Yeme court we Alberta

Unemployment in Alberta is vunting, Last week a nev tyrh of 10,892 men and women ‘ere revistered as jobless, a - cording to official firur s, ar ‘n *rease of 691 as compar 4 wth ‘se previous week. Cale ry awed the largest increase of a:y city in the provin T's tmber of idle men there exceed ed 4,000,

4>

ee ee ee ee

‘Churches|

ST. MARY’S CHURCH. Mass will be celebrated on he 8rd Senday ef each mont! it 8:30 a, ah

ST. AMBROSE CHURCH

18th Sunday after Ith October 1936 Rev H. S Hamnett, Vicar 8 am Holy Communion | 10:00 a m Sunday School

. SuLAlssyury ~

Trinit;

JO @2JAreg [wasn @ Ajysop

diysioyy Suyueaq ‘wi -d og: *"Pemog 3 edlAtog ui d ¢g "POOuPS YounyH "wi “w OL Bula

Avpung Surs13syuey,, q078ud “MOST “A 'H '4°u

TVIMOWAWN NOCHO! OJ @> FUeApIPYO “Wi "vw LI] 7:30 p m Evenseng”

Medicine Hat

ace, Ranoden - Repair - Reline ; lean and Glaze Ret New Fur Coats Made to Order ad oo | All Work Guaranteed LOOK AT YOUR LABED tg the

sich

_

j : ae _trigation Commission

Meeting at Vauxhaii

istrict Could Additional Irrigable Ac

Suppl 2,090

A meetin t Thursday

held et Vaxh'l x members of the vincial commission inaviri Alberta’s it learned from W Hays, general mavazcer of e Canada Land and Irripa‘iy mnany, that the company’s ibility to shereholders is today proximately

tg conditions in 1

i uted project

ividend has ever been paid ana 6 CO npany has never showr |

profit. About $20,000 wan! ! required to put the presen “| orks into good condition and),

“be sum of about $250,000 ould supply new works for}

‘out twenty thousand addition | irPigable acres,

eS |

Mr and Mrs Coverdale, ot

algary are at present guests of |

tr and Mrs w Hill.

Next Monday, Oct, 12th, will

e observed throughout Canada| It will) the |+

‘e Thanksgiving Day. e a generel holiday in ‘ominion,

“ees

This week has been appointed

~ the Domi inion government as | The |

Fire Prevention Week” ‘ea is to warn the public to) tke all possible precautions to revent fires . . . The seventh general”. co unch f the United church of Co. adi -ralized oreanization of w cman » the ministry. The counci pproved a recommendatio: of s sessional committee on law ‘d legislation that the ministry « open to persons of either sex. . 2.2 ' Inthe centre of A’berta's ool industry, a garment factory

vith a capitalization of $25,000 |

/ill be established in Lethbridge he factory will be ‘perated by the Loran Germent ‘ompany of Logan, Utah Con ruction of the plant w:l start omediately Wool knitted-wear will be, anufactured, :

According to reports from igary benkers,. between five n. six million dollars in - easn nd negotid!t le securities have een transterred from local anks and crust companies to}

ranch off'ces outside the pro- |

ree, at the request of deposit- rs and security holders The eason goven for this is that ‘ke owners are fearihg the gov- , ‘nment is contemplating atta- leivg bank accounts and negot- vile certiticates

$15,839.000. , No!

pailt ana |

Number 48

—— el

Aaother Mag s‘rate Loses Hs Comarssion

ve te is Not Supporter

of Social Credit

It is now begining to look as ough all government employ- } not 100 per cent be- ers in and supporters ‘of the inl Credit Government and polic'es ave to be fired with t any other reason and with jut notice The government is \yoarently no respector of per- ns ving the past week another Police Magistrate has received tice to forfit his commission In this case it was Mr EG mner, of Brooks who Has been | 4 Police Fagistrate at that piont » the last three and a_hali ; car Asin the case at Hanna |t. e request of Mr Turner for a iLublic inquiry inte the charges |.oainst him was summarily dis- nisged by the Attorney Gener- el'e department Neither offic ils was piven an opportunity to |refend himsesif but simply or- fered to get out In the dismissal of Police Maj ‘trate W P Roberts, of Hanna he xeuse given by the attorney General's department for his dis icissal was: “it ig felt that you

upporters ef the government i'who might come before you in |. ‘our capacity as Police Magis- ltrate’ If that is the honest cpinion of the attorney-general's cepartment how bout it if a ator Credit supporter is ap- o’nted ta take Mr Roberts’ ; foe? Again if that is the nonest opiniva of the attorney ‘ceneral’s department, of the eal iber of the wren of this provinee al! we have to:say is: God help the man or woman opposed to |.oclal Cree’. principlag who comes before a Social Credit Mavistrate :

The reason we say God help the man or woman, is because during the half century we have ; been interested in politics and end political parties in this our ative land, we have never i known, heard of or read of any rlitieal party which has been ore prejudiced, biased and in- ioerant against those’ who do 1 at see eye to eye with S C lead- «rs and the rank and file, than the S C political party of this lL ovince

;

a,

«. W A Scott and Giles. Gut via wen the air race from Ports- mouth, England .to Johaunes- burg S. Africa The dis.ance was 6,500 miles and they di it in 52 hours, 56 minutes 48.2 feconds. The average speed

's,a8 123 miles an hour

"AEP H RR SY REP ENE PMNS MLM

Cliff Hall under auspices

ye ercrsca Supper

of St.Mary's Altar Society

‘Menday Evening, Oct 12

Supper Seived from 5:30 to 7;30 Tickets fur Supper Now on Sale

Adults . 40c

Whist, Bridge, and Dance After The Supper. Cards ee, a 8 sharp Lunch Served at Midnight

All Invited to Attend Come and help the Society 3 RIV GSSSORe:

would be prejudiced against any

YOU can cut Dixie coarse or flakey just as you like jt. It's economical, too, for you cut it only as you use it—there’s no waste.

|

PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO

Requisites For Safe Driving

The summer just passed has produced the usual crop of automobile accidents to drivers higd passengers in the three prairie provinces. The) daily newspapers have duly recorded numerous accidents together with the names of killed and injured and, when the information was available, the causes of these frequent disasters.

It is yet too early to record figures detailing the number of accidents | and the toll of dead and injured. These will be available later, but indica- | tions are that there will be little, if any, reduction below the 1935 record, despite the safety first campaigns which have been waged by governmental | authorities, automobile clubs and commercial organizations interested in the subject, through the public prees, over the air and through motion picture, presentation: 4

“It does not necessarily follow that such campaigns are a failure, but) it seems to indicate that public wemery is short lived or that the capacity) of automobile drivers to avoid accident, no matter how well-intentioned or how careful they may be, is below par. The latter is probably a close ap- proach to correct diagnoBis of the ailment. : |

Statisticians and experts working on ‘figures and available data on the causes of automobile accidents in the Ujpited States last year came to the conclusion that the number of accidents arising from defective equipment or faulty mechanism is comparatively ipsignificant, from which it follows that the human element, the capacity an(i capability of the driver, is in the majority of cases, the factor mainly responsible for disasters on the high-| ways. |

In other words, a large percentage |of automobile accidents, can be! reasonably attributed to lack of training: \jpr lack of experience on the part of the driver and perhaps in many cases,|a combination of the two. This statement does not take into account ac¢idents which can be charged up against recklessness, alcoholism or criminal negligence. |

Undoubtedly lack of training and lack of experience are the causes of a number of crashes and the opinion is ghining ground that a substantial percentage of accidents is caused by drivers who are ordinarily careful but who have not had sufficient re pense danger in time to avoid it or who, sensing a pending risk, are noY skilful enough to resort to the proper course to follow in time to prevent disaster.

In view of thése conclusions there is much to be said for the adoption of courses of training for those who intemd to operate powerful and speedy motive vehicles over the highways. This might be followed by examination of applicants for operators’ licenses for the first time, though it would not be feasible to insist on making such tests’ the sine qua non for the right to drive for those who have previously been granted licenses. Courses of such a nature, if properly carried oyt by competent persons would at least partially, if not completely, take care of lack of training

As for accidents caused by lack of experience, these can only be over-| come by experience, supplemented by iastruction. That drivers can and do| develop a form of road sense which warns them of impending danger is the | testimony of Oliver Stewart, writing in a recent issue of The Observer of London, England, where the mounting accident toll is causing grave concern. |

The writer explains that in course of time a driver learns to interpret | small signs which to a novice would pars unheeded. “A driver on a majn road about to pass the entrance to a side road, suddenly slows down. No other vehicle is visible; yet as he reaches the side turning, a motor bicycle |

es out of it and turns into the main road. If the driver is questioned as tod the |reason he slowed down before any other vehicle was visible, he will probably say: ‘It’s intuition’.”

To Mr. Stewart that is pot altogether a satisfactory explanation He| pointed out that in all probability the driver unconsciously registered some | small sign that something was coming down the side road, a pedestrian| turning his head in that direction or a flock of sparrows taking to flight from the ground or some other indicator |

“The swift interpretation of such things,” says Mr. Stewart, “is road | sense and it is acquired with practice; but it is much too rarely taught. At! first the signs will be seen, but not interpreted; and, in the absence of specific instruction, it is only with long practice that the interpretation can | be expected to come without delay.”

May Increase Duty

'

Producing New Paper

| Russian Scientists Claim It Will Last 1,000 Years

A new brand of paper—so strong that it will “last 1,000 years”—-has been invented by scientists at the Leningrad laboratory of preservation and restoration of documents, it is claimed.

The formula for the paper was dis-

Britain Likely To Get Revenue From Foreign-Made Flags Foreign-made flags, pictures of the| King and other articles suitable for the coronation may be subjected to higher import duties Increases are being considered on articles for use in or commemorating

the aS 6SOUVERIS,/ covered ag a result of studying

which have a representation of the Egyptian and other ancient kinds of | King or any member of the royal |

paper. | family, any royal emblem, or bear

According to the director of the! @ flag of any country in the British laboratory, Professor Tikhonov, pro- Empire, or are in any way suitable .

duction of the new paper will cost for the coronation. no more than the manufacture of|

ordinary paper.

1

coronation or

Papa (to Johriny, four yearsagid): eee SSE “Won't you have another piece of} An improvement in the gear) duck, Johnny?” wheels of dial telephones now per-| «d@obnny: “Yes, please, father, I will,| mits them to live through 5,000,000 @ck's my favorite chicken ‘cept/ operations imstead of 100,000 as turkey” formerly. 2169

at

| lection | personally conducted

| visitor just inside the door. | from Cape Horn and the card around

| oyster weighing eight and one-half

|}one from me father?”

THE REV HEM

Houses Strange Collection

Many Interesting Curios To Be Seen In Private Museum

Charies Q. Eldredge traveller, who har

veteran world celebrated his

| 91st hirthday, is the sole owner dnd | curator of the Eldredge free museum lat Old | boasts of more than 7,000 items col-

Mystic, Connecticut, which

| lected in the last 81 years

Barly in life Eldredge developed a mania for collecting things, and in 1917 he erected a separate building for his trophies and opened his free Since that time

museum mhore than

| 60,000 persons have viewed the col

while Eldredge himself has 25,612 persons through the building

The collector is as fond of enter- taining as he is of collecting curios He displayed his love of entertaining friends in 1891 when he returned to Old Mystic after engaging in the building business for 20 years, and built a large recreational centre which he called Riverview. Hundreds of guests from Connecticut and neighboring states have used his bowling alleys, shooting © galleries and other amusements

The museum houses as strange a

| collection as has ever been assembleiti

In front of it rests the bleached skeleton of a whale, 90 feet long, the gift of Capt. John C. Spicer of Gro- ton, Conn., who caught it in Hudson Bay in’ 1879.

An enormous penguin greets the It came

its neck is typical of the labels Mr. Eldredge has placed on the exhibits. The card reads: “I am sure that you folks, like me, are close readers of| the Bible, so you will remember that somewhere it tells about those who! have ears and hear not and eyes and)

| see not, Well, here is a bird which|

has wings and flies not.”

Eldredge takes more pride in his souvenirs than in his natural history | collection. He has what he believes| is the first cannon ball fired against Fort Sumter, and he says that Hd-

|

that shot, also fired the last shot of) the civil war. When he heard that| Lee had surrendered he shot himself) through the head.

Some of his other prize items are a petrified cocoanut, which, he saya, dates from 437 A.D. and was found, during the digging of the Panama)

mund Ruffin, the fellow who ‘fired

canal; a ship niodel built in a bottle| =

and which won the world prize for that sort of thing In 1934;a petrified

pounds which was found in South Africa in 1865; a plece of wood from the Confederate gunboat Merrimac; some wooden hinges used on a barn) door for more than 200 years; an al- most complete set of al] commemora- tive coins issued by states or the fed- eral government, and several thou- sand rare postage stamps,

For Brighter Silver

Potato Water Is Said To Give It Extra Sparkle

Few people know that if silver ts) polished while ¢% is hot the work is| halved and the resulting brightness) doubled! It is worth while to plan your washing up with this end in view. Leave the silver forks, spoons, teapot and cream jug to the last, pour a little fresh hot water into the basin and wash up the silver, drying

it before it has a chance to cool)

down. Another queer and little known tip for silver is this: To give ai. extra sparkle for a special dinner party, soak it for a moment in the water that the potatoes were boiled in. Dry it while still hot and the) result will be amazing.

SELECTED RECIPES

DATE MUFFINS 4 cup shortenjng 1 egg 2 cups flour 8 teaspoons Magic Baking Powder) 4% teaspoon salt % cup milk 1 cup dates, pitted and chopped. Cream shortening, add beaten egg,| flour in which baking powder and) salt hawe been sifted, and milk. Add) dates. Bake about 25 minutes in| greased gem pans in moderate oven at 400 degrees F | For sweet muffins sift \ sugar with dry ingredients

Teacher—‘“Johnnie, you must bring a written excuse for being absent) yesterday, from the head of your family.”

Johnnie—‘She's away on a fort- night's holiday, ma’am; shall I bring|

Pupils im Scotiand have to get through about three times as many books, in the school year, as do Lon- don ‘school children.

Great Britain is standardizing el brass foundry products. >

Secretary Of

REDCLIFF, ALBERTA

Women In Banking

Eo / Few, tf Any, Hold Positions Of)

Responsibility In Canada Very few, if any, Canadian women, hold positions of responsibility with the banks. Tt is a field in which

thus far the mere male has been able to stave off the feminine on- slaught into the business world

But in the United States, the num ber of lady great to warrant their own—-the Association Women This group will about the middle of October, just be fore the convention of the Bankers’ Association

Offices held by members of the fair sex included in the association’s roster run the entire gamut of the banking profession from president down. Included are presidents, vice- prestients, cashiers, trust officers, statisticians, directors, branch man- agers, and managers of departments such as exchange, collection, ptib- licity, savings.

Sees Better Times

bankers is an association of of. Bank

convene

American

league Of Nations Paints Optimistic Picture

The turning-point in a world indus- trial depression has been passed, an official League of Nation's report de- clared.

The report, prepared by the secre- tary, Joseph A. C. Avenol, presents an optimistic picture and says despite political clouds the task of solving outstanding international ‘economic problems has become easier, and the solution would help to dissipate poll- tical apprehension.

Avenol in the report attributed the failure of agriculture to share fully

in the general improvement, to the |

protection of agriculture in the in- dustrial countries. | Officials said the league's economic

| committee favors discussions among’ | the powers as soon as political condi-

tions permit.

Taking More Medicine The growing consumption of medi- cine in England is worrying Sir

sufficiently”

|

Kingsley Wood, minster of health, |

“We are rapidly becoming 4 nation of medicine (irinkers,” he said in.a speech to t House of Commons. The cost of medicine per head in England, hg said, is double that in Scotland.

| ham.

8

AFTER EVERY

|

Market For Feeder Cattle

Seen In Old Country By

Agricultural Minister

A good brisk market for Canadian feeder cattle was unearthed by Hon Duncan Marshall during his recent stay in EXngiand and Scotland

The Ontario Agricultural Minister predicted that this demand will con tinue this fall. William Henderson, one of the “Old Country” cattle feed- ers, held the same opinion, the Min- ister said. The British Government bonus on beef is one of the props of this “feeder” market cattle can qualify for the bonus after a three-month stay on British pas- turage.

Mr. Marshall said Canadian horses were also selling at good prices and very quickly in the Old Country.

“There is a market right now for more,” he said. “Scotland has not got enough horses to do its work.”

Ontario

One Of Royal Pets Favorite Pony Of Late King George Returns To Sandringham

“Jock”, the favorite pony of King George, has returned to Sandring- He has become a_ personal charge in the Royal list of pets main- tained out of the King’s Privy Purse. With the closing of the Castle mews at Windsor, Jock’s return to his old home is thought the most convenient way of keeping him in comfort. Mr. French, the groom .who has looked after the pony for nearly 20 years, is also to return to Sandringham. King Edward has placed a pretty cottage

at his disposal, and he will enjoy the!

life of a Royal pensioner with noth- ing to do but to look after the pony and ruminate on his 30 years’ Royal

| service,

Canadian |

Campaign Urgently Needed | To Show Europe Necessity. Of Im porting Hard Canadian Wheat

A campaign to fully convince Con-

tinenfal countries of the necessity of

importing hard Canadian wheat te blend with their own was urgently needed today, Lieut.-Col. H. Barre,

Canadian ‘Prade Commissioner te

France, stated at Winnipeg.

It was unlikely, he said, the | French market would be lost to Can- ada, because French wheat must be blended with hard Canadian wheat to make good bread.

“Canadian wheat has achieved an enviable reputation with French mfl- lers during the past year, and they would not now abandon Canada ta favor of Russia,” the commissioner believed. “Much of the market Can- ada has lost in Burope might be re covered through an educational cam- paign.” | Most of the best Canadian wheat | originated in Russia, A, Espinov, | chief Of the State Plant Breeding | Fund of the Soviet Commissariat of

Agriculture, declare. He is touring | Canada to discover whether descend- ant hybrids arb suitable for Russia. | Chief objective of the Soviet for the present, he said, was to supply her huge domestic market.

Although French is spoken by only 45,000,000 French men and women, it is understood and spoken by at least 75,000,000 other persons who are not French.

The groundhog and the woodchuck }are the same animal, the former | name being given to the animal in | the eastern states,

Last year more people visited Can- ada than lived here.

us

and listen #0 -**

Alix Goll adic Sets A tea

NAL CARBON CO-

TORONTO Winnlpes

os the new 1936 dealex' 4.

re git yr

sneer 0

Aree

“Til-designed” was Sir Daniel Hall's blunt description of British subsidies to producers of wheat and sugar beets. Sir Dantel, former chief scientific adviser to the ministry of agriculture, addressed the agricul- tural section of the British Associa- tion for the Advancement of Science.

Since Great Britain produced only two-fifths of her total food con- sumption, the choice should be exer- cised between commodities imported) and those of which home production was encouraged, he argued

Wheat and sugar were cheap in the world’s markets and easiest to) import in time of war. Land was) being diverted to them which was better adapted to the production of livestock and vegetables

Production of milk, Sir Daniel pro- ceeded, already was 30 per cent. in excess of its consumption as milk, but a high price to the puijic was being maintained to cover the loss on con- version of the surplus into cheese and other things. It was no use ad- vertising milk if the price continually increased. The supply of vegetables) and fruit could be extended by divert- ing to them some of the assistance accorded less desirable commodities.

Sir John Orr, famous dietician, said the diet of nearly one-half of the population of Britain was below | the best standard reported by the) international committee of physiolog- | ists. This consisted of a daily supply of one and three-fifths of a pint of

or poultry, one egg, cheese, half a pound of potatoes, a quarter pound of vegetables and legumes. He said health requirements de- manded nearly double the present milk consumption of half a pint per head. Average consumption of eggs should be raised from four to seven weekly. The greatest

and

shillings per weekly (about $2.25 to $2.50)

he said, led

had the shore risen sharply from the water's edge.

near Dorchester.

The Royal Air Force expansion scheme has so accelerated output of planes in England that fact aerodromes are being constructed all over the country to meet the demand for machines. Here is a typical)

ATRORAFT FACTORIES SPRING UP LIKE MUSHROOMS IN ENGLAND

re

. aes. OC

cilisasina snails

ories and

“Wasy” day in an aircraft factory in the Mother Country, with employees working night and ‘day to make sero-

planes.

Plants That Taint Milk

Are Sofmetimes Eaten By Cow In Pasture Or Hay Much has been done to eliminate

barn flavors in milk, but #o far little) problems will be found through the|

ly not every highly flavored or per-| sald Mr. Sarnoff.

Selving Keononic Probleme :

Depends To Great Extent On Pro-

gress Of Science mic

Solution of the world's

“Untapped re-

fumed plant eaten will taint the sources of science may soon bring milk, The hoxious product must be the other half into this sphere, may digested by the cow if it is to go into) create immense new producing and

the milk.

ing wild leeks or onions, Butter- cups will cause bitterness if eaten in quantity when green, though in the

and yarrow all produce bitter milk. Spurges cause milk to become frothy,

Beet tops are said

H. B. Petter, Vancouver aircraft designer, and co-owner with Sir Ernest Willoughby Petter of a Bri- tish aeroplane manufacturing firm, said the English government had ordered the firm to “build all we can.”

In Nova Scotia after a trip te Eng- land, Mr. Petter said a new bombing plane turned out by the firm and having new secret equipment had been taken over by the British gov- ernment.

“Britain dolsn’t want war she is protecting herself against its ad- vent,” Mr. Petter said.

.

with the fire chief?"

“Sure.” replied the police chief. “Just wait while I change hats.”

ia TS Tete RE ae ES

“What's the name of that song dedicated to the early morning milk- man?”

“Oh, you mean ‘Wagon Squeals’.”

No wonder the smooth-coated Champion

200 entries.

CHAMPION OOW WINS HIG

The commonest taint is consuming areas and provide greater which comes from the cow eat-| scope for growth and general world-

wide enrichment than we now dare imagine.

“Until our own generation, the wealth of the world came from be- low the surface of our globe—from mines and waters and fertile

It is only in the last 30-odd

upward for new wealth—up- air, into the strato-

“It is only a small beginning but one could speculate at length on the potential resources that still lie un- touched in ultra-short waves, in sun energy and in the stratospheric lanes. Americans once faced the frontiers of geography. To-day, we face new frontiers of scienge.”

The Lesser Evil A burglar's wife was being cross- examined. “Madam, you are the wife of the prisoner?" “Yes.”

“You knéw he was a burglar when

you married him?”

“Yes.”

“May I ask how you came to marry Such an individual?”

“You may,” snapped the witness. “I was getting old, and had to choose between a burglar and a lawyer.”

An automatic signal to long-dis-

tance telephone callers, warning them when their time is nearly up, is being introduced by the British post- office.

Canton and Swatow, China, 300 miles apart, are to be connected by @ new railway.

Gave Him Satisfaction Famous Post Once Received Heart- fett Compliment From Work- ing Man

When Henry Wadsworth Long- fellow was departing from an audi- | ence with Queen Victoria, he was ac- | costed at the palace gate by a work- ing man who, hat in hand, advanced and said, “Please, sir, your honor, and are you Mr. Longfellow?”

“I am,” replied the poet.

“And did you write the ‘Psalm of Life’T” the man asked.

“I did,” answered Mr. Longfellow.

“Then, your honor, would you be willing to take a working man by the hand?”

Instantly the poet extended his hand and gave his unknown admirer '@ warm handclasp.

Telling of the incident later, Long- fellow said very earnestly, “I never in my life received a compliment that gave me greater satisfaction/—

humanity has begun to) Christian Science Monitor.

Problem Of Over Production

Realm Of Boonomists

| Solution of the problem of .over- production in agriculture lives tn the realm of economists and not agri- | culturists, Prof. J. Hendrick, presi- }dent of the agriculture section, told the British Association for the Ad- vancement of Science.

“It is our social organization, our statesmanship, our economic system, which are at fault when the abund- ance which is produced cannot be | brought to the many who are in need of it,” he said.

“How's collections at your church, Brudder Jackson?"

“Well, we ain’t nebber had to stop in de middle of a collection to go an’ empty de box.”

' Christopher Columbus would have had to sail more than 5,000 miles off his course to miss discovering the New. World. i

| LAfe's span in Great Britain has in- ) creased 17 years since 1876.

a

Value Cannot Be Estimated Regalia For King Féward’s Corona- tion Worth Many Millions Twenty-five million dollars wouldn't buy the regalia which will be tsed when King Edward ts crowned in| Westminster Abbey, May 12, 1937. |

It is impossibe to estimate its) actual value, but the age and hie: | toric value of the different jewels, crowns and articles make them al-| most priceless

Among those parts of the regalia! which will be used at the coronation | there is the Ampulla. This is a medieval term for the vessel of gold,

in the form of an eagle, which | stores the oil for the andinting. It weighs about ten ounces, and is

about nine inches in height | of it is older than 1660 j

Then there is the spoon into which! the oil is poured. It is of silver gilt, | the handle set with four pearis. It is believed to date from the 13th) century

The orb is a ball of gold, about) six inches in diameter, with a gold | band set with a number of various jewels. The crosq on its top is net | ;on a large jewel. |

The ring, sually called “The Wedding Ring of England,” t of) pure gold, with a jewel having « flat | surface upon which is engraved a cross. “A new ring is made for each sovereign. An old tradition is that the closer the ring fits, the longer will the reign last. That happened to come true in the case of Queen) Victoria, for it was squeezed on #0 tight that it could only be removed by putting the finger into iced water, and she reigned longer than any other European sovereign, 62 years.

There are two scepters. The Royal Scepter is about three feet In length, and divided into three parts, of plain gold, studded with jewels, notably part of the Cullinan diamond in the top part, surmounted with a cross set on a large jewel.

The Scepter with the Dove is rather longer than the Royal Scepter. Tt is studded with jewels, the dove being moulded in white enamel, and set on an orb of gold.

The so-called Staff] of St. Edward is not really a scepter, but a long rod, with an orb and cross on the top, without any jewels. It is mere- ly carried in procession.

Two crowns are used. The one called St. Edward's is that with which the sovereigns are crowned. It is of gold and set with countiess jewels. On its top is an orb sur- mounted by a cross, and inside is a cap of velvet. The Imperial State Crown is the crown also used on state occasions. 4

Exhibit Was Different

Entire Orchestra Made Of Paper Shown At Teronte Exhibition An entire orchestra from drummer to leader, fashioned of tiny paper figures, was shown in the Women's building at the Canadian National

Exhibition, Toronto. The orchestra included more, than

Part

‘| 80 players, and was an entry in the

paperwork section. A pianist is shown thumping a grand piano, the maestro stands with baton in the air, the pretty girl harpist fingers the strings of her golden instrument, and the drummer stands poised with drumatick aloft.

Instruments, players, everything is made of paper, and so lifelike are the attitudes of the players and their ex- pressions that women arranging ex- hibits in all parts of the building gathered around the little orchestra to admire it.

Some notable exhibits were seen in entries by women 75 years and older. A square of lace made on a pillow by pins, rare nowadays in| arry exhibits, was sent in by a woman | more than 90 years old. In this sec-| tion, top, were several quilts also made by women more than 00.

Among who personally de- livered her parcel was 02-year-old Mrs. M. A. Thomas of Oriole park- way, Toronto, who has been exhibit- ing regularly for many years and who has had at least nine first prizes in afghans in the last 10 years.

Quilts were among the most num-

For War And Peace

No Moral Obligation Is Recognised Ry Sctance

Science, lending ald to man both in war and peace, “recognized no moral obligations,” the British sociation for the Advancement of Science was told

Judging of the uses to which science may be put, Prof. William Cramp, president of the engineering division of the association, asserted is up to man—and the engineer is

no better and no worse than his brethren. Surveying, the engineer's relation

to the nation, Dr. Cramp asserted “The engineer is called upon

answer certain charges laid against,

him by the preacher and the press

to

| The first is that he is equally willing

to lend himself to works of utility and to works of death and. destruc- tion.

“Remember, however, his dual role. Pure science has nothing to do with ethics; she recognizes no moral obligations whatso®ver. ,

“The same explosive that releases coal underground can also kill men in battle. The telephone is useful alike in the home and in the front line trenches. The same bacteria may be beneficial in one case, harm- ful in another. The same principles that bring the stars within our ken also control the range-finder.

“There i# no scientific apparatus that cannot be misapplied; and to every advantage there is a corre- sponding drawback . .

“To the extent that the engineer is a scientist, the use to which his discoveries shall be put does not con-

cern him. But, it will be the engineer on the h and com- mercial and makes

Convicts at the Southern Michigan prison at Jackson read more books dealing with law and crime detection than any other. .

y, history and travel books lead next in popularity among the prison inmates.

Among the magazines, detective and western stories are the most popular.

Stilison estimates that twice as many fiction books are read as non- fiction. Among the latter the lead- ers in interest seem to be religion, philosophy, sociology, language, nat- ural science, useful arts and litera- ture, ,

One of the most popular sets of books in the library, which contains 16,890 volumes, is a complete set on business practice, issued in connec-

rates tops in many ways. Said Mrs. Bazley as she sailed for England with her husband and two children after a fishing expedition on the

“Canada is the

erous exhibits fer competition Many| Getineau River,- are very beautiful, and they pce cleanest place I have ever seen. Your from coast to coast. The obvious in-| streets and shops and especially your terest in quilts will be supported by | railway stations are the cleanest in

one of the building's main features this yeas, @ quilting bee, which, in en, old- setting, will be “put on” during the Exhibition by a Tor- onte quilting circle

4 swarm of stingless bees have arrived here from Central Africa for experimental purposes and will be released to see if they are

China's steady shift to foreign style clothes is booming the woollen industry.

“Yady” im the picture looks go self-satisfied. She captured the Senior and Grand) Buyera of new cars in Germany title for Holstein Cows at the Canadian National Exhibition, the highest award possible among ever now deduct the cost from income tax|Zambesi one thousand six hundred Her name is “Wonderland Toitille Lady”, and is owned by C. C. Haviland, Wilsonville, Ontario, :

' returns.

the world, I think.” Easily Supplied Two colored troopers were lining up for chow outside the mess hall. “Bay,” declared one, “ef you don't get someplace behind me, I'm going te kneck you out of house 'n’ home!” “Bez you! How yl figure te do that, when I ain't got no home?” “Brother, I'll dig you one!”

The Nile is the longest river in the world—four thousand three hundred miles long. The Niger is two thou- sand five hundred miles long, and the

2168 miles.

»

THE REVIEW,

REDCLIFF,

ALBERTA

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Operated By Remote Control Driveriess Car Observed All Rules Of The Road

Blase New Yorkers gasped at a vacant automobile which observed all the rules of the road as it wove through traffic on a busy Manhattan street.

Patrolmen watchful for traffic violations investigated to find that the automobile was being operated by remote control by the driver of another car which preceded it.

They thumbed their traffic law book in vain to find an ordinance barring driverless cars and finally took the automobile and Harold Jonas to the police station.

Jonas explained that Charies A Harnett, motor vehicles commis sioner, had said he knew of no law barring control operation and had given permission for the experi- ment.

The police sergeant made an entry to this effect on the biotter and the driverless car moved down the street.

Regular brewing establishments Qrst were erected in 1700.

There are 6,430,800 cattle onal

eaives on the farms of Canada.

WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD

Maine elected a Republican gov- ernor and three Republican congress- men in the recent state election.

The Dominion government will pay 100 per cent. of the cost of direct relief in drouth-stricken southwestern Manitoba Premier Bracken an- nounced.

C. W. Goyder, 28, who invented a radio transmitter and held the first two-way conversation between Eng land and, New Zealayd, has been ap- pointed enginete tn thaige of All India radio \ peal board dealing with ‘cases under to the of navigation: of the river, will be suspended from Oct. 1 to May 31, except for the post ofites of Cardross and White Horse The service will be suspended to Champagne from Dec. 1 to March 31.

Grain experts in Ottawa agree with a forecast from Chicago that Canada’s wheat surplus will be dis-

close

crop year, July 31, 1937.

last year to accomplish, this.

Arthur BE. Cavanagh, general man- ager of the Temiskaming and North- ern Ontario Railway, said that amalgamation of shop, car and yard facilities of the T. and N.O. and the Canadian National Railways at Cochrane is under consideration.

Calgary's application to the bond- holders for reduction of interest rates to possibly three per cent. in order save that city $400,000 a year is to be taken up with the In- vestment Dealers’ Association Of Canada,

The League of Nations Society in Canada, announced appointment of Miss Elizabeth P. MacCallum, New York,-as officer in charge of the newly-established international affairs information service to serve its members and the general public throughout Canada.

Former president of the Alberta Municipal Districts’ Association, Frank H. Holmes, of Beaver Mines, Alta., has been appointed to the ap-

Parcel post to the Yukon, owing the federal creditors -arrangement act in the province, it was an- nounced,

A Famous Fisherman

Zane Grey, Noted Novelist, Has Broken Another Record

Zane Grey, novelist and big-game fisherman, has broken another record by landing with rod and line a giant devil ray, off the Queensland coast, which weighed more than 1,200 pounds.

It measured 12 feet across the back and was 10 feet six inches long, he reported. It is one of the few giant rays ever caught with rod and line, and was landed only after @ terrific struggle of nearly four hours.

The devil ray is a giant species of the stingray or “stingaree”, and has been known to exceed 20 feet in width and half a ton in weight.

Grey recently broke the world's record by landing an enormous shark with rod and line off the New South Wales foast.

First Invitation Issued

King Of Greece Receives One Te|

Attend Coronation

King George Il. of Greece received what was believed to be the first in- vitation to King Edward VIII.'s coronation in London next May,

The invitation was extended by Sydney P. Waterlow, the British minister at Athens. It was framed to include also the members of the Greek cabinet.

Persons close to King George said he would either attend in person or, if circumstances prevented, would send Prince Paul, his brother.

The Greek ruler has long been on the friendliest terms with the Britigh royal family, whose guest he was at the time he was recalled from exile to return to the throne.

An Underground Home English Millionaire Is Bullding A Bomb-Proof Wender House The first bomb-proof underground home in Britain is to be built-—for a

millionaire—beneath a lonely of beautiful meadow!land in the hegrt of Hertfordshire.

This new wonder house will be specially air-conditioned and flooded with artificial sunlight, and accord- | ing to experts, it will make a heal- thier home than the ordinary above- the-ground house because it will not j be s ct to air-carried infections. The Atacama desert, in Chile, is | the driest spot on earth.

Every 100 seconds a road crash i ocears in Great Britain 2169

posed of by the end of the present) It would) not be necessary to sell as much as|

BLINDING HEADACHES MADE HER HELPLESS |

siden: ¥ | Forced To Lie Down For Hours At a Time

Other sufferers from headaches will be interested to read this letter:- ; “Until last summer I was subject to very bad headaches. While they) jasted I seemed to lose my sight and) all power in my hands, and was) forced to lie down for hours: at a) time. My aunt (who has taken Rrus- chen Salts for 12 years with bene-| ficial reeults) suggested my trying them. I did so, and I've not had any) return of those headaches for months, in fact I feel quite better. I shall al- ways take Kruschen regularly in future.”"—(Mrs.) M.W. |

Headaches can frequently be traced | to a disordered stomach, and to the unsuspected retention fn the system of stagnating waste material which | poisons the blood. The numerous salts in Kruschen assist in the complete elimination of waste matter, result- ing in a purer blood-stream, and thus helping to bring relief from headaches. |

| Plan Largest Liner

Sister Ship Of Queen Mary To Be Fastest In World

The sister ship of the Queen Mary, the keel of which will probably be| laid in November or December, is to | have a peak speed of 36 knota, ac- | cording to the London News-Chron- icle. Leading draughtsmen of John Brown and Company are now plot- ting out the final theoretical designs | for “552”.

As soon as they are finished models, built to the paper measure- ments, will be tried out in the com- pany’s experimental tank.

The liner will be about 90,000 tons| and at least 12 feet longer than the Queen Mary.

These stipulations will make her without doubt the largest and fastest liner in the world.

The best features of both the Queen Mary and the Normandie will be embodied tn the new ship. For economic running the Queen Mary beats the Normandie. But the French liner is said to be better streamlined.

The geared turbine system of the Queen Mary has satisfied the experts that it is superior to others, and the same type of engine will he adopted in the sister ship.

Ceaseless tests by John Brown and Company since the Queen Mary left the Clyde have demonstrated that the turbine system can be perfected to save about 15. per cent, more in running costs.

Arrangements have been made to take’ on the extra men required for building the ship.

As soon as the decision to lay the keel is made, 2,000 men will be em- ployed and by the end of next year, when she is expected to be launched, about 4,000 will be engaged on her construction.

From then until the ship leaves the Clyde in 1940 the number of men employed will steadily increase until at the peak of the fitting out in her

n at least 12,000 will be working

| distant,

on the ship,

Man In London Ip Greatest Living Expert On Noise

There is a man in London who lives on noise, Noise has become one | of the great problems of our age, and this scientist and engineer was quick tp see the possibilities. He be- came the greatest living expert on noise. In fact he has built up out of noise what might be regarded as one of the oddest professions in exist- ence—that of “Noise Consultant.” | This man with the unique job is | Professor: A. M. Low, well known as |a pioneer of wireless and ‘an expert on popular science, whose articles) |have frequently appeared in print. |He has devoted 25 years to the| | study of noise, ever since he lis- ltened' to the noise qmade by a) motor-cycle engine. |

Today you voyage in a modern |ecean-going liner .and note the: jabsence of the multitudious noises common to many ships. Nine times | Out of ten it is Professor Low's | knowledge which has eliminated them. You buy @ new car and com- | ment on its silence, its freedom from | | body rattles and squeaks. Again it: may be Professor Low who has) | solved the manufacturer's difficulties. |

| He is a modern’ Sherlock Holmes)

tracking noise to its lair.

Britain's Colonial Empire Speaking im Vancouver, Lord 'Tweedsmuir made a noteworthy ob- | servation in reference to the view expressed in some quarters that Bri- | tain should share her colonies among |eountries that lack colonies. “I | would protest most strongly,” he | said, “against the notion that we , Won our colonies by # lucky gamble. | We have been making our colonial

empire for 800 years."s

'

A Corefel Brosdeater

King Paward Very Particular About His Radio Speeches

A London dispatch describes King Edward VIII. as emulating his father in the care with which he prepares radio utterances. As an example, the dispatch tells of last minute changes which King Bdward made in his address dedicating the Canadian| war memorial at Vimy Ridge i

In his original advance text, the| king mentioned Rupert Brooke, the poet, by name and added “whose) ashes lie in an Tonian isle." When) he spoke he referred to Brooke as/ “one of our English poets,” without | naming him, and omitted the clatise | about his ashes. The dispatch does) not m ing out\Brooke’s name; but the king, an experienced broadcaster, recog. | nized the tongue-twisting possibili-| ties of “whose ashes lie in an Ionian isle.”

|

At th

at very first

WARNING SNIFFLE

.. Use this tinique aid for preventing colds, especially designed for nose and throat where most colds start. Used in time, Va-tro-nol helps to avoid many colds.

VICKS VA-TRO-NOL

New Lie Detector

Tests With New Device Prove Very Satisfactory A new ile detector much more ac-

crime detection was described before the American Psychological Associa- tion.

Dr. W. G. Summers, head of the Fordham University department of

| Paying Off Saddest Debts

British Pensions’ Ministry Expects To Finish Work In 1955

The British ministry of pens ons

© clear the reason for leav-| curate than previous devices used in hopes to finish paying for its share

of the cost of the Great War by 1955 ‘a 41 years after its outbreak

| Last year’ the gross expenditure of the ministry of pensions was £43,- 296,874-for war pensions and com-

Elsewhere in the speech, the king , Psychology, told nn tection with the pensatich allowances to 1,006,000 had written “today, 3,000 miles from) psychogalvanometer,” on 50 groups heople. the shores of Canada.” He changed|f college students had detected the; since 1918 the ministry has spent

patch, that “Canadians living on the Pacific Coast, more than 6,000 miles)

might feel aggrieved by negiect.” And that was careful edit- ing indeed.

Supplanted By Wireless

School Bells In Czechoslovakia Will) Not Be Used '

School bells are about to be “sup- planted. Children at elementary and some secondary schools in Czecho- slovakia will be summoned by a wire- less signal followed by a marching! tune, There will then be a topical) radio talk of suitable interest for five minutes, a short piece of claasi-| cal music to train the children's taste, and finally a few bars of jazz to stimulate the spirit of gaiety and liveliness before actual lessons be- gin.

New Surgical Operation

The possibility of a new surgical operation involving the repair of the heart is discussed in the annual re- port of the Royal College of Sur- geons. The operation is designed to remedy certain conditions in which the heart muscles are atrophied. It involves a delicate “grafting” tech- nique, the aim of which is to provide

an alternative path of circulation | ridor til you see the sign ‘Silence,’ |

through the heart. ‘|

ae

PATTERN 5693 ©

| Simple Crochet Makes Swagger Coat

| thie to “thousands of miles,” because | Suilty with only two per cent. of | he realized, according to the dis-

error.

Older iie detecting machines known as “polygraphs” record on paper the blood pressure and heart beat of the person eximined. Dr. Summers’ instrument instead meas- ures extremely small electrical cur- rent changes in the body. *

. Missing Landlord Found Did Not Know Building Was His

Until Tenants Fought

George Ortseifen, a real estate dealer, was surprised to learn a six- flat building on Howe street, Chi- cago, was included in a parcel of real estate which came into his possession through a mortgage transaction,

He might never have found it out, he mused, if two of the tenants had not quarrelied and gone to court, where incidental questioning revealed nobody in the building had paid rent

for ten years because nobody knew!

who owned it. An investigation dis- closed Ortaegifen's unsuspected status of landlord. :

His attorney said rent would be collected hereafter.

“Where is the manager's office?” “Follow the passage until you come to the sign reading ‘No admit- tance. Go upstairs till you come to the sign ‘Keep out.’ Follow the cor-

then yell for him.”

Household Arts

by Alice Brooks

This waffie-weave in a mixed yarn with plain collar, cuffs and pocket trim in a stitch that looks like Persian lamb, is Fashion's newest note in crochet, The swagger coat—three-quarter length—is just the thing for Fall.

It will be appropriate for many occasiogs—it's even owagaes enough to. If you prefer, you can use a plain yarn.

wear over a suit. you will find directions for mak!

trations of it and of all stitches needed; material requirements.

To obtain this to Household Arts pt., E., Winnipeg.

There is no Alice Brooks pattern

tern send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 175 McDermot Ave. |

book published

Just bang @ package io with its convenience -

te bold the “left-over”

=| pianist and statesman

n pattern 5693 ing this coat in size 16-18 and 38-40; illus-

ORE CONVENIENT TO US

| £1,135,000,000, and more than £130,- | 000,000 of that sum has been used | for food, clothing, and education for , War orphans. In 1921, the peak year, , the ministry paid out £60,000,000 in | pensions. At the end of the war there were | 67 ministry-controlled hospitals for disabled soldiers. Now there are 10 | See a few clinics for out-patients. “In a few years’ time,” an official at the ministry said, “only £1,000,000 ,@ year should be needed for pensions. And it is estimated@hat the ministry may finish its work by 1955.” | One of the saddest facts in the | figures is that over 6,000 officers and men are certified insane. More than 10,000 fighting men are undergoing | treatment in hospitals and are not | able to leave although there are still hopes that they will be cured. In | 1921, 17,380 hospial beds were used. Today only 3,200 ‘beds are needed in | hospitals controlled by the ministry. Once there were 260,000 war wid- , ows receiving . pensions. Today the figure is reduced to 134,415, 120,000 j of them having remarried.

Paderewski In Movies | Beauty Of His Music To Be Heard In New Motion Picture Ignace Jan Padereswki is having | the time of his life as a movie star , at 75 years of age. Hundreds of movie extras are | thrilled daily, by the aged master , recording with enthusiastic delight the beauty of his music in the motipn picture ‘“Moon- light Sonata.” :

Playing with Charles Farrel, Pad- erewski works daily from 3 p.m. to to 6 p.m,, playing again and again the numbers he contributes to the picture. ,

His contributions to the movie, in- cludes the title number, Beethoven's “Moonlight Sonata” abcording to tradition inspired by the sight ofa blind girl playing the piano as a full nee cast its beams across the in-

rument, and works of Schubert and Grieg.

Informality Of The West

Governor-General Is Addressed By

Mayor As Mr. Tweedsmuir

Informality of the west greeted Baron Tweedsmuir, governor-general of Canada, when he visited a south- ern Alberta town, it was related at Medicine Hat.

“It's not often we meet such not- able people as Mister Tweedsmuir here,” said the mayor, dressed in his everyday clothes and a sweater.

It was the first time the governor- general had been addressed as “Mis- ter” since his arrival in Canada.

“J found the salutation distinctly ~

refreshing,” said Baron Tweedsmuir.

For dining table use, aluminum | tongs have been invented with which | juice can be squeezed from pieces of lemon without spraying a table or | Staining “8 user's fingers.

your kitchen. You'll be delighted . for, with one hand, you can easily

extract « single shect at time leaving the other hand free

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>

THE

REVIEW,

REDCLIFY, ALBERTA

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testeo FLOUR Due To Physical Changes

Reason For Increase In Blood

Pressure Is Explained “The rise in one's blood pressure is not due to the exercise itself but to physical changes, Prof. R. J. 8. Mc- Dowall, president of the physiology section, said in a paper read at Blackpool, England, before the Bri- tish Association’ for the advance- ment of science.

If exercise could be taken without psychical zest being involved—with- out the brain knowing the exercise was being taken—the blood pressure probably would fall, he said. This had been found to occur in horses.

Explaining that when a person exercises the blood pressure rises but falls even below normal when the exercise stops, Prof. McDowall said this had been explained as due to the accumulation of blood in the dilated muscles.

His observations led him to believe this theory wag not wholly correct. He found the fall was due at least in to a lessening in the resist- ance of muscles hardened during the exercise.

PLE TESTED

Clean Your Chimney

The cost of cleaning or repairing a chimney is trifling when compared with the cost of rebuilding a home. Yet more homes are damaged or de- stroyed every yéar by fires originat- ing im defective chimneys and flues, than by any other single cause of fire. With the approach of winter rural and town residents should have all chimneys and furnaces cleaned and ali defects repaired.

man Hot Plate Cooles with Air!

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eR pre: beating

@Econe heal, es poraies aed _

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Thou: Shalt

Not Love

A NOVEL BY GEORGIA GRAIG

COUUTEOUOEEOUESUCUNOONECHANUCHOOOOSNEOORISORSEG INR CHAPTER VI1.—Continued

"I know a few desert songs, too, Hassan,” Starr told him. “The PEng- lish words.”

Michael grinned as he had time she had called him first time. That

every since the fitted in, too “What could be sweeter?” he ask- “Practice up on ‘em, Starr. I suppose your name really should be Suleika, or something of the sort, but we'll skip that since you insist on your own . Maybe there ought to be an Arabian serving woman, with a lot of jingling anklets and a purple handkerchief over her head—"’ “They're dirty,” Starr said. “Any-

ed

| Way, I can wash my own back.”

There were some interesting times during the next few days while they found and fitted up the apartment which should be the home from which “Play-Girl” would burst upon New York cataclysmically. Every moment was full. Starr had never imagined there could be such joy in marching into the smartest dress

shops and merely making known her}

desires, when some sinuous manikin paraded before her, to become the possersor of the loveliest clothes that ever warmed any girl's heart.

There were a few other interesting moments, not quite such happy ones, when she went back to Mrs. Ma- loney’s for her possessions. She was going to have aii new clothes, of course, and such clothes! but there were a few cherished treasures at the Maloney place with which she did not want to part, even if she could hold onto them for only six months.

The landlady was all smiles and expansive when Starr paid her bill in full. ;

“No hard feeings, I'm hopin’, Miss Ellison,” she purred, “and I sure hated to lock up your clothes Iike that, but it’s like I whs tellin’ you, you can't"

“It's of no consequence, Mrs, Ma- loney,” Starr assured wearily, as she moved by her to climb the steps to her hall room.

Mrs. Maloney, folding the bills to tuck inside her ample bosom, beamed.

“Well; you'll find everything okay, Miss Ellison,” she insisted. “You got clean curtains, an’—",

“Oh, did I forget to mention that I would no longer be needing the room?" Starr drawled over her shoulder, but did not pause.

“You ain't? Where you think you're goin’, Miss—the Waldorf?"

Starr smiled down on her from the head of the stairs.

“No.” She shook her head. VYI've taken-a suite at Essex House while I'm furnishing my new apartment. It's quite comfortable.”

Mrs. Maloney’s eyes bulged. -~you ain't kiddin’?"

Starr smiled wanly and her slight shoulders shrugged.

“Far from it. I--I'm taking 4 penthouse.”

Her former landlady glared, and her lips shut tight. She opened them to snap:

“So it's like that, is it? It just goes to show y’ never can tell An’ there I was thinkin’ you was a nice girl. .. .”

Starr let her go; did not make any attempt at explanation. But she was smiling oddly as she went on to do ber packing. Let the woman think what she chose. It was of no con- sequence—any more than was any- thing else. Besides, this was good practice in the new role she was to assume. : :

Just an episode. Starr forgot it immediately in the excitement of having lunch with Michael Fair- bourne and then going on to an art gallery that specialized in paintings of ancient Egypt. There were in- creasingly many of those luncheons and consultations, of necessity. At each one Starr was beginning to wonder if, in seeking a panacea for

“You

one hurt, she might not be rushing

headlong into another. Michael was utterly imper@®hal in all his dealings with her, but that had nothing to do with the quickening of Starr Bili- son's own heart.

If only he weren't so virilely good looking, her role would be so much edsier. For, try to put it from her all she could, knowing that never must her heart give 4 thrill of love

“Hassan” |

| the carelessness of being assured of | himself. It was going to be hard,! | harder than she had thought. Bad | @nough ot pretend to be such a she- devil as ‘Play-Girl,” but with | Michael-Hassan to complicate it— “It's going to be some debut,) | Starr,” Michael told her on the day! | the last of the fyrnishings came for| | her roof-top apartment and ever¥- | thing wis set in place. He stood | staring about him with happy eyes, | | glowing with that enthusiasm which} was So much a part of him. “Some place, hey? It oughtn't to be hard | to fit right into being a lady from

Cairo with all this scenery, yes? Wait till some of the writing mob get | an eyeful.”” He laughed “They're } already all hot and bothered about) | meeting Play-Girl’ and these rumors}

about her being part Egyptian are| the finishing touch The office has done itself proud for your debut, and now it's up to you. j; have Pierre's ball room for the big event——no less—and all the moderns)

lin the smartest of the smart set will

| be there. It's as I told you, Starr, j all you've*got to do is play up | Play!”

There’ was that far-away look in Starr's eyes as she smiled.

“You're going to be surprised, Michael-Hassan, how I will play!”

It was a small penthouse they had selected, overlooking the East River, but its long, low rooms were ex- quisite and ideal for their purpose. From the moment one stepped into the tiny hallway it was like stepping out of New York and precipitately j into the East. Strange, tall perfor- ated silver lamps stood all about, but ft was the perfume that was the master touch—-merely a suggestively

to one intimately, an aroma that caught one by the throat, made him instinctively remember the perfume of a loved woman's hair when the face is buried in it.

_ “Pretty swell, eh?” Michael asked, his eyes searching about. “But if you ask me, I'd say those windows are the chef d’ouvre. Glad you re- membered the name of that stuff, Starr.”

Starr smiled. The windows were screened with mushrablyeh work How could she -ever forget that? Though it seemed an eternity si.ce

she had wandered through those) -

streets in far-off Egypt and seen win- dow after window of that sort. She said:

“I'm glad you don’t want me to wear a veil when I look out of them.”

Starr's bedroom struck a more modern note. There were touches of) Egypt there, too, notably in the pile of exquisite enamel antique neck- laces and bracelets which were heap- ed in an open jewel box of her dress- ing table, but on the whole the apart-| ment was equipped as the boudoir of | any New York debuntante, with its great bed of rose silk and silver lace, the tall mirrors, the pillow-piled chaise longue and all the ‘accoutre- ments necessary for ald in making a lovely woman all the more lovely. Through the open bathroom door there was a glimpse of a sunken rose- tiled bath. On the wall above it was painted a representation of ancient Egyptian bathing beauties, disport- ing themselves in a lotus-decorated pool. A far cry from Mrs. Ma- loney’s hall bedroom.

Odd that the first thing that Starr Ellison should do when Michael Fair- bourne left her alone in her new home was to run to that great bed, sink her black head into its silk and lace pillows and ery, and cry, and ery.

Michael had done his preliminary work thoroughly. The Tarrance Pub- lishing Company, too, had spread) themselves, sparing no expense for their de luxe press stunt.

(To Be Continued)

Find Odd Fish

Has Head Like A Wildeat And Huge Curved Teeth

A deep sea fish with illuminated “port holes” was found recently at Capetown, South Africa, Known as “Astronesthes Boulengeri,” it is only) the fourth of its kind known to science.

Tiny holes, brightly illuminated, are strung along the lower side of the body. The head of the fish is strikingly like a wildcat's. Huge teeth, like curved needles, protrude from the gaping mouth. In addition, there are two sets of external teeth ranging backward from the jaw.

~

While drilling on a prospective oil | site near Kerguez, Russia, exgerts| were surprised when «4 natural | gusher started spouting to a great height, and now .is ‘producing 8,000 tons of oil a day.” ©

A breakfast of 6,000 flapjacks is the usual menu for the personnel of Ringling Brothers and Barnum and) Bailey circus—take the word of Jerry, the chef. He has to feed 1,600 of them daily. 2169!

. They;

lingering hint of perfume that spoke):

Mr. CAFFEINE- NERVES .. .

WILL YOU PLEASE * STOP BANGING OF THAT [ HAVE HEADACHES. DOES PIANO T THIS HOUSE IS SMe REALIZE THAT? ABOUT AS RESTFUL AS A BOILER PACTORY

CAPFEINE-WERVES MAKES PEOPLE IRRITABLE... 1 WONDER, BOB DRINKS LOTS OF TEA AND COFFEE. + AND DOESWT SLEEP WELL

SO QUIET, NLL BET L SHE'S COOKING UP SOME

WO MORE HEADACHES Itt- MSESTION OF BAD Times POR THIG FAMILY. THE BO Days ARt UP BUT ITS POSTUM OWLY FORUS FROM HOw OW

a cup ~and it's thet may be «

loses his grip!

You WEVE® usen TO WELA, | DON'T LIK® IT, ALITTLE OF THAT RACKET GOES A LONG WANG AFTER A HARD DAYS WORK

teal

Sue KNOWS You COULDN'T GET TO SLERP AGAIN LAST NIGHT, Does SHE

HILE many people can safely drink tea

and coffee—there are a great many

others who cannot. Maybe without realizing it—you are one of these.

The caffeine found in both tea and

be working day and night to rob you of sleep .

oe may

to make. It’s @ delicious drink help.

FREE —Let us send you your first week's supply f POSTUM free. Write for it to Consumer - tee Department 101, General Feode, Limited,

Cobourg, Ontario.

New Kind Of Phone Trade Revival-In Britain Can Change Tone Of Human Voloe| ae And Performs Other Stunts OCs tee

A new kind of telephone whit) Great Britain now has a record in- mimics the human voice was demon~! austria} army. Exclusive of agricul- strated to the Harvard tercentenary) tural workers the number of persons at Cambridge, Mass.

employed totals 10,961,000, the high- It does more than a human being | est known. . : can do, It can change a woman's During the four weeks ended Aug.

voice into aman's or bass into! 94 the total number of une loyed

soprano, It can convert @ single) roi py 38,132 to 1,613,940 or 334,024

voice into a duet, either speech OF) rower than a year ago, It also was _ | the lowest figure in-six years.

A bass singer could sound alike to} Trade revival is reflected from persons simultaneously, one bass, the many angles, The biggest theatre other soprano, tenor or any desired geason for seven years has begun in tone. __| Lond

These stunts of the new electrical | A

jon. boom in apartment building has mimic were demonstrated by Dr.)

In all the great centres of

Frank Jewett, head of the Bell Tele-) popuiation huge blocks are rising, see on

Little Helps For This Week

And every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself, even as He is pure, 1 John 3:3,

Only Thine own.to be,

Only to live to Thee,

Thine, with each day begun,

Thine, ‘with each set of sun,

Thine, till my work la done,

Seal me Thine own,

God hides some ideal in every sou). At some time in our life we feel a trembling longing to do some good thing. Life finds its noblest spring of excellence in this hidden impulse to do our best. There is a time when we are not content to be such merchants or doctors or lawyers as the dead level below it.

phone, jaboratories, The phone 18 4 with accommodation ranging from | Here is God, standing silently at the new instrument, never shown before,’ ¢ne modest small flat to the luxurious | 400r all day long, God whispering to and Dr. Jewett said it was Invented | apartment. The small flat is popu- | the soul that to be pure and true is not for telephoning but to study the) 1a particularly with Mrs. Newlywed | succeed in life, and whatever we

voice,

Dr. Friedrich Bergius, German Nobel prize winner in chemistry, told | how trees ,can be converted into sugar, fat and protein, the three main food requirements of human beings. An army might live on trees. under the processes described by Dr. Bergius. ;

The mimic telephone adds one new! Plant flowered for the first time with part to an ordinary phone. This part | a total of 399 flowers on four spikes,

Rare Orchid Biooms

An orchid plant believed to be one of the rarest in the world is bloom-

is big enough to cover one side of a| ach about three feet long. Two) orchid experts inspected the plant; and gaid that it was the only one of |

room, It takes the electrical im-) pulses that flow from an ordinary phone. It does not transmit them, | it# type they had seen. Instead it analyzes them and then builds up a new voice in electricity.

This new mimicking electrical voice is then transmitted to a loud

The orchid

| Molocea Islands and Malaya.

speaker or a receiv@r and heard. in| 782 pounds recently was found only | | six feet underground through pros-|

the ordinary manner.

Should Raise More Geese

The poultry experts of the Do- minion experimental farm at Ottawa are of the opinion that farmers are not sufficiently into the business of raising geese. They point out that annually at Christmas there is a market shortage of geese, which as- sures @ profitable price for that class of poultry. The advantageous cir- cumstance about raising geese is that the farm offers the ideal con- ditions, freedom of range and plenti- ful supply of green food.

| pecting work in the field of the West | Siberian Gold Mining Trust.

Tags Come Back

Jack Miner, in a recent mail, heard from 76 of his missionary geese, which had been killed by Eskimos and Indians in the Arctic Circle. The tags, during the summer months, had been collected by Rev. Arnold C. Herbert, Anglican missionary at Port Harrison, Hudson Bay,.which is near the 60th parallel of latitude. The tags were put on between 1925 and 1936.

|is believed to be a native of the)

A lump of native copper weighing! history.

s @ Christie Biscuit

and the retired couple wishing ‘to| ®t short of that will burn up like escape the responsibilities of a house. | Stubble though the whole world try

te save it.

Is Still Growing

ing in the conservatory of Hubert World's Tallest Man Now Over Right Dalton at Rumson, New Jersey. The) The tallest man in the world is be-

Feet In Height

lieved to reside at Alton, Illinois. He is Robert Pershing Wadlow, aged 18. He is 8 feet 5 inches in height—and . is still growing! He weighs over thrée hundred pounds, and when the height figures are officially certified

| they will probably prove ‘him to be | the tallest human being in medical

Hie father, an engineer, weighs a mere 145 pounds. ~

On Geranium Day in England $42,500 was raised for the. blind,

Just try CREAM PIE

made with

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There's a recipe with every box. Try it, and see how the neighbors will envy your pie-baking! Of course, Christie's ® Graham Wafers can be used in a * number of different ways. Eaten any

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e's.

G

every taste”