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=

“Serve the Church that the Church

May Serve You.”

CENTRAL tNITED CHURCB BLAIRMORE

'* ‘Rev. James McKelvey, Minister *

“Services Sunday hext:

11.00 a.m., Senior school.

2.00 p.m., Junior school,

7.80 p.m., ‘Public Worship. “y” iat a

ST. LUKE’S CHURCH, BLAIRMORE

_ Rev. W. Grazier, Rector

>

There will be no service = com="

ing Sunday.

b.

i tid \! ; , Sunday > anil

as Gta ety SALVATION ARMY, COLEMAN

Captain and Mrs. T. ‘Smith, Officers in charge.

+e

11 a.m., Holiness meeting.

2.80 p.m.; Directory class.

$ p.m., Sunday school.

7.30 p.m., Salvation meeting. Tuesday: 7.30 p.m., Red Shield Aux-

iliary and Home League..

Thursday: 8 p.m., Praise meeting. Funerals, dedications. and marriages

‘on application to the local officers.

Fh wy”

HILLCREST UNITED: CHURCH:

Services every Sunday at 3 p.m.

BELLEVUE UNITED CHURCH:

Services at 7.30, p.m..every Sunday.

COWLEY UNITED CHURCH:

Services al rnate Sunday ae ings. at 11 o’clack.

Rev. W. H. IRWIN, Minister.

oe rte isso ove me

" BELLEVUE BAPTIST CHURCH Pastor: Rev. Fred Bennett

¥

Sunday school 10 a.m, Morning worship 11 a.m. Evening’ service T.80"p.m.: ‘Midweek - meeting:, Wednesday 7.30 p.m.

A cordial welcome awaits you.

Weather prophets scored again last

week. They warned to expect. snaw— so we had’ snow over most af Albert last Friday morning, Aug 16, what can be considered a very -early date,

. Columbus Club meet Lethbridg2

Galt Miners in the first two games in * the best 3-in-5 series in the southern Alberta senior baseball . playoffs at

the local stadium on Sunday, games Vat 2 and tes

5:30 p.m.

Last week end Pass. residents wit-

nessed several CPR main line trains make the journey.through the Crow to -and from Vancouver, owing to a mud slide on the main line east ‘of Fld. By Tuesday the slide was cleared-an Year. traffic resumed.

Returning: Up to" Midnight Sept. 3

Low Rail Fares. ' “FOR. | LABOR DAY MONDAY, SEPT. 2 _ Rene all Stations in Canada ONE-WAY FARE. ‘and ONE-QUARTER

“FOR ROUND TRIP. (Minimum Fare ‘25e)

- GOING: ica

AUG: 30 . ' ft SEPT.

g and parlor car Loe ml at usual rates,

Full information from any agent

fj f Py ef. 7 madia Hn Jat Hye

R.. AND MRS. HAROLD -

PINKNEY HONORED

On “Saturday inet.’the staff of-the F. M. Thompson Co., and members of their families held a surprise party at the hore of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Pinkney on the oveassion , of ' their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary.

Mrs. A. Sykes presented Mrs. Pink- ney witha lovely bouquet of gladioli and later in. the evening Mrs. R. Simister presented the honored couple with an engraved silver tray and a silver meat server, for which they graciously thanked ‘the staff. |. Dainty: refreshments . were served and’ games were played during the evening the party breaking up with the singing of “For They Are Jolly

Good Fellows.” | Among those present, on‘this occas- sion from out of town were Mr. and Mrs, Charles Hoefer, of Trail; BC and ard Mrs. Erie Hornqu'st and

Mr. family, of Fernie, BC.

Altogether ther were fonty: or more baking V1

‘diss oh

COUPONS VALID

Meat coupons M40 to M50 and butter coupons R10 to R17, in: con-

_ sumer ration books will become’

invalid for the purchase of; these ‘commodities after August, 81, the ' Ration Administration of the War- /time Prices and Trade Board has announced. ;

“Beaver” and “Buffalo” coupons, issued to’'members of the armed forces and other temporary ration card holders, will not be affected by the change, and all sugar coupons will remain valid until further notice. ; aye

VISITORS TO THE NATIONAL ~ PARKS

“Visitors to Canada’s National Parks: where, aiday. to. day, ord is kept ‘numbered approxima 000 up to the end of July, ae ing to’a statement released by. the _Honarable J.-A. Gien, minister of “mines and, resources. This com; “pages. with an attendance | of ap- proximately 600,000 during the

whole of 1945 and is perhaps in-,,

‘dicative of the increased tourist

travel all over Canada ih this the .

first year of peace.

During the month of July alone

60,873 visitors passed through the

‘eastern gateway into Banff Na- tional .Park, Alberta, an increase of more than 18,000 over ‘the same month last year. The other Nation- al Parks ih Alberta also report similar percentage increases in the number of visitors, Lakes attendance~figures jumped from 19,000 to 45,000; Elk Island, the home of the buffalo, from Jess than..10,000 to nearly 17,000; and° ‘Jasper National Park from 4,000 to 7,500 as compared with July of last. year.

In Saskatchewan, Prince Albert National Park had 11,700 visitors compared with 8,000 in July 1945, and Riding Mountain National Park if Manitoba, had nearly 55,000, an increase of more than 15,500 over the same period last

July Yepoerts from the National Parks in British Columb’ a, On-.

tario, Prince Edward Island and’

_ Nova Scotia all tell a similar story —substantial increases over July ‘of last year. For instance, Koote- nay National Park in British Co-

. lumbia, had an increase in. visitors from'’8,700 to 21,600; Point Pelee in Ontario, from 19,400 to 30,800; _ Prince. Edward Island National _ Park from 17,000 to 21,000; and Cape Breton Highlands National Park in Nova Scotia, from 5,000 to 7,000...

A feature of this year’s attends ance at the Nationa). Parks is the number of visitors bringing their own may automobile trailers, and mak- ing use of the campgrounds which have been cquipped for that. pur- pose .in all the National Parks,’ Superintendents. repoyt that these

greater extent ‘than’ ever before thus relieving, the préssure on * other park accommodation. :

{Yn

y. 450,-:

Waterton. ,

camping equipment, including -

campgrounds have been used to a:

m change of policy ig only’ contines ing if it comes from a change of | heart.

.

Se

MRS. ALEC FIFE

Funeral ‘services were held on Monday, August 19, at 2:30 p.m,

for Mrs. Alec Fife,, who passed Wi dtecs at the local

‘away in ‘the Coleman Miners’ hos- pital on Saturday, August 17, at 5 a.m.

held from the United church, .Cole-

tinder auspices of Central United church Sunday school from July 19 to August 9 on each week day morning from 9-12. excluding Saturday.

children aged 10-12 under the Gitoes tion of Miss Dorothy. Moore 4 2 by: Misses ‘Dorothy ‘Hamilton,

Emmerson and Josephine W-slet.

highly. eneouraging to those arranged names ‘appeared on the -reg’ster. Everyone enjoyed themselves and all voted that. Vacation School should be held ae next year,

man, with Rev. McKelvey of Blair- more officiating.

Mrs. Fife, a well known oldtimer of ‘Coleman for the past 33 years, was born in Arbroath, Angus, Scotland; and came to Canada in © 1913, residing in,Coleman, The de- ceased took no prominent part in community activities.

Left to mourn her passing are’ her husband, Mr.’ Alec Fife, and four daughters, Mrs. Robert and Mrs. Ford, of Coleman, and Mrs. _ Oliver and Mrs. Moreficy, of Blair- more.

Interment took place in ‘the Un- ion cemetery, Coleman, Pallbearers were Dave Robert, Alec Morency, George Ford, Roach Oliver, Ron- ald‘ Fife and’ Norman Ford. Hymns

Soul” and “Rock of Ages.” Mrs. Bennan of Blairmore was at the organ.—Coleman Journal,

yn pate +9: n

sung were “Jesus Lover .of My |

BLAIRMORE Vata SCHOOL

Blairmore Vacation Schoot - held

Schoel consisted: of .3 departments. The Kindergarten group. which in-.

The Primary group, which included

children aged 7-9 under the direction of Mrs. Dayidson and Shirley Montalbetti.

Hobden, assisted by Kay

The Junior group which included

set

- Time was, taken up with stories,

games, songs, religious instruction and handiwork.

On ‘the last Friday night, a short

demonstration was held. \when the children showed | their parents and: friends what they had Tearned and made during the preceeding ten days.

A good crowd turned out and ap-

peared very interested in’ the work done by the kiddies.

The attendance at the school was who it, as over 62 children’s

FON, PRICES" ‘BOARD TELLS REGU- LATIONS REGARDING LICENS- ING OF BUSINESSES

Ths Wartime Prices and Trade Board warns all holders of busi-, - ness licenses’ that they must report _ all changes of address and of name

_ to the licensing © division of the

Board. ~

Regulations of the Prices Board » require all manufacturers, persons buying goods for resale, or operat- ing a services business, to hold’ a

license. Once this has been ob- ebained: any chang in the. business

dining tho Cheap helping to harv. oe cro) nto. pie needed: to

ay t feed the 1 ryeindg Mellons 3 2 En dla countries. petition grain by raking their stubble this fall.

BLAIRMORE, ALBERTA, ribbay, AUGUST 23, 1946.

The funeral services were |’

i ee =

i, SURPRISE PARTY ha

Ay pleasant event this week was a fuyprise. party held inthe men’s

Ni

batracks for Constable W, A Shields. Aver thirty men friends from the ) towns gathered on - Tuesday éverHg -to congratulate Constable Shields on his approaching marriage.

ing the evening a presentation speech was made by Mr. 8S. Bannan

four chrome and red chairs were giyen the guest of honor wit)” the belt wishes of those who were present.

speech for the staff, remarking that

it was a ‘satisfaction to al] to know, She Was accompanied by Miss Stella Nadoba, of Calgary, who yill spend the rest of the vacation here with Mr.

t Const. Shields, will be remaining

ni the Pass for’ the present. and es- sthlishing his home here.

‘Gonstable Shields is to marry Miss Irig Morrison, of Lethbidge and Vul-

Kean, on August thirty-first and they

cluded children aged 38-6, under. the}: direction of Mrs. McKelvey assisted by Jean McKelvey, Audrey Cameron, | Mrs. Upkam and Muriel] ‘Oliver.

Blaine}

For the World’s Hungry

ty kind deeceven now more urgen

will reside in Coleman, ms ———— "yy" ___--— WAR NOT ALL OVER UNTIL

/ END OF YEAR FOR SALVA- - TION ARMY

Toronto.—Not ‘until_the—end of |’ h to a number of friends on Sunday

afternoon in henor .of her thirtventh

this year will the war be’ over for The Salvation Army, according to Goinmissioner Benjamin’ Orames, Territorial Commander for Can- ada. _ While the work far he armes fotcés ended in Canata'in June 30, ‘some Salvation Army supervisors _will remain in the field overseas at east until September 30. Comple- tidn of administrative work in con- nection with the operation of The Salvation Army Red Sh’eld War Sérvices is expected to take until: Décemter 31.

Th Salvation Army “became the only Canadian Auxiliary £\rviice “earrying on field operations on July 31 when the other, esganiza- tied over their activities. Optilities ended, Salvation

hate been rickling Sack to Canada and The Salvation Army has been. steadily jincreasing heme ~ front operations: that were diminished because of loss of personnel to war activities. The Salvation Army ‘volunteered! its services before es war started.

A major outedme of wartime activities has: been that large num- bers of ex-servicemen who en¢oun- tered Salvationists at. training centres here and on active service have turned. to Salvation Army representatives-for help and’ guid- ance, said Comniisioner Orames.

To restore The Army to full- time home front operaticns and carry ‘out long-deferred expansions of facilities and services, the Heme Front App2al for $2,000,000 opens across Canada Mzn¢ay, Sep- tember 16.

address, the busiress name, or any

change or modification of the busi-

nss must’ be reported. within ter days“of that change to the licens- ing division.

4 The director- of licensing may

cancel any person’s license. whc _ fails to comply with, these regula-

tions, ‘or who “fails w:thin sixty days of obtaining a license to com-

ply with’ the- regulations of the

board concerning the fixing of the’ ~prices or who has not. actually

started up in the business in the

manner he specified when obtain- ing the License.

.

uired than art one Pec) world on oder farm front

wasted coarse grains > oats oes le “of Canada and to

any farmers may save

_RC.M.Police |’

—————

MORE. SUGAR NEXT APRIL

Present. indications dre that thers wil) be no further change in the present surgar ration until -

ports from Oitawa. Since acreage sown to the 1947 crop is substat- » tially higher and since European out-turns are steadily improving, a considerable improvement in the

Canadian ration might be possible .

at that time. “YF HILLCREST ‘HAPPENINGS

Miss Valera Martinek, who has been rgeant Mudiman made a short| visiting in Calgary for the past three

weeks, returned home last Wednesday.

and Mrs. J. Martinek.

Mr. Dave Hutchinson, of Calgary,

was in town on a surveying job.

Enrcute to Banff, Jasper and other

Alberta points, Mr. and*Mrs. W. H

Stobbs and family, of Missicn, BC, visited in town for a few days last _| week. They were guests of Mr.

Mrs. W. Hi; Moser.

Miss Lorraine Massine

birthday,

Miss Mac Dudley is spend'ng a few days th’s week in Coleman, guest of

Mre and Mrs. C, Coover,

Mr. and Mrs. Fitt, of Nova Scotia, are guests here of Mr. and Mrs. D. A.

Grant,

The death cf John _Andreaszhuck, 39, occured in the Bellevue hospital on Tuesday morning. He was taken sick while on a fishing trip at North Fork, and was rushed to the hospital where he. died shortly after admit- tance. He is survived by his mother, Mrs. Kunesky,, of Hillcrest, three sis- ters, Dora, ef Blairmore, Kate,’ of

Nelson, 4 and Anne; of. ‘Hillcrest, all ¥E\ married, and three: brothers; Jake, of} Brooks, Dick, of Casttzgar and ‘Danny, of Nelson. His father was killed in the

Hillcrest explosion of 1914.

A vocatioral school-for children from 6 to 14 is being held in the Hillcrest]; United church. Miss Bartling, from

Lothbr’ dge, is supervising.

Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Cruickshank motored. to, Calgary on Tuesday, ac- companied by their.son and daughter- Cruickshank and grancsons Dorald and David, who are refurning to their homé in Olds. of Medicine -Hat, is

in-law, Mr. and Mrs. R.

Mr, Porter, virting at tle heme of Mr. and Mrs. C. Sevill for two weeks.

Mrs. P. Gardiner left on Sunday

morning for Winnipeg to srend a va-

cation with relatives. Mrs.- Jack Norton’ is Winnipeg for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Percy returned cn Monday from a motor trp over the Banff Windermere. - | Douglas” working at Knights mij] near Miche’

Hyslop who has:

had the mislortunne ‘to. have his right jhand. badly cut, necessitating hospi- a week. Fortunately amputation waeno$ neceseary but he will be unable to use his hand for Lseverui weeks. a

Mrs. A Bain jr., was hostess to a numter of youngsters on Saturday, when she entertained at a birthday party for her daughter Rosemary on

talization fo

her third b'rthday.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Martinek and fam- ily motored to Pincher Creek. last

Saturday. Miss Audrey Thomas, of Fishburn

is visiting relatives in Hillerest this

« # week,

Mr.

in Edmonton after a week’s visit w:t!

Mrs. Ohrysler’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.

R. Crichton.

‘Mr. and Mrs. Bob Shaw, of Corbin BC, were gues‘s Mrs. Ken, Thornton .

Mr. and Mrs. Kirkland, of Saska toon, are the guests this week of Mr and Mrs, George Thornton:

next April, The Financial Post re- :

and

was hostess

visiting in R. Letcher, Mr. and

-etcher and Herb Letcher

been’

and Mrs. A. Chrysler and -|daughter have returned to the'r home

last week of Mr, anc

COWLEY HAPPENINGS |

Mra. Summerton and baby, of Leth-

bridge, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. ,

M. A. Percevaylt this week. F. Burwell has .ieturred from

Pincher Creek where he was a patient.

in St. Vineent’s hospital for a few days. He is looking fit as a fiddle.

Mrs. John McQuarrie and her two children, of Coleman, are visiting at the parental home of mr. and Mrs. George Dwyer.

John Percevault has recently re- turnéd from Edmonton where. he .gt-

tended the six weeks term of summer school at the University of Alberta, We understand he will teach near Nobléford for the ensuing term of school.

Mr. and Mrs: H. M Welsh, who have been employed with Wilfred Forffet for the past several months, left on Thursday for Innisfail.

A son was born to Mr, and Mrs. J. E. Clinton on August 12th, this being: their fourth child.

Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Bare celebra-

ted their golden wedding on August 15th, when sixty guests gathered at their home to do them honor.

Wilbert Fortier, of Yakima, Wash-

ington, paid a few days visit this

week to his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and. Mrs. Wilfred Fort‘er.

BiELLI—BERTOIA

Pane }

A. marriage of interest to Pass residents took place at Sacred Heart Cathclic. church, Rossland, BC, Wednesday, August 14, when Msgr. A. K, McIntyre jeard the marriage vows of Lola Mary, caughter of Mrs. Luigi Bertoia and the late Mr. Bettoia, and Joseph Louis, son of Mr. and Mys. R. Billi, all of Rossland. The Bielli fam- ily residid in. Blairmore prior to

Malgng t their home in. the BC c! ty.

~ Attendants © were “Migs Amelia Biel- li, sister of the groom, maid of honor; Miss Patricia’ Bryan, bridesmaid, and Michael “Molina, of Trail, cousin. of the groom, as best man. The. bride was given in marriage by her brother, Lido Bertoia, while Wallace Bertoia acted as usher. j

_ Following the ceremony a reception W3s held at the Allan hotel, operated by the Bellis, when some 125 guests

on

were present. ;

The young couple left on -a honey- moon trip throug, the States and to Calgary and other Alberta po'nts. On the‘r ;2turn they wll make the: r home in Rossland.’

Out of town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Peter’ Sartoris and daugh- ter Mary and Mr.. and Mrs. Joe Rossi and. son Charles, of Blairmore; Mr. and Mrs. A.-Montalbetti and Ernest Mentalbetti, of Coleman.

“oy” ' FORTY CAR DRIVERS’ “LICENSES, SUSPENDED

Forty drivers’ licenses. have be2n ‘suspended ,in Alberta this year for various causes, according to information received from the provincial secretary’s department by the Alberta Motor Association.

During the whole of last year, - the number suspended was 68.

Provincial legislation provides that magistrates shall have power to suspend driver’s licenses when a convict‘on has been made for vio- lation of the law and such a course appears ces'rable in the circum- stances.

In many of the cases, the erivers had been found guilty of” reckless driving “or similar in- fringen-cnts of the statute.

The AMA has emphasized the need cf observing safe driving _[r'nciples and create a greater in- terest in safety educat-on.

YOU GET THE SAME delicious Coffee blend whether | you buy Max- well House in the Super-

Vacuum Tin (Drip or Regular Grind) or the

- Glassine-Lined Bag (All

Purpose Grind). 4 \

$2.00 PER ANNUM

SOB fer TR PPR

Ree ad

= epee y

Lane paeeePObeBOPOODISELLES SELES IGA DEID REG SL.

F § *

Been Upheld

‘Dominion Experimental Farms:

_— Sixty Years Of Progress

THIS YEAR MARKS THE SIXTIETH ANNIVERSARY of the found- ing of the Experimental Farm system in Canada, and in observation of this milestone’ tributes have come from all parts of the country to the work which has been carried on in the interests of agriculture for over half a century. When the system was inaugurated in 1886, the position of Cana- dian agriculture was far from prosperous. The great wheat-growing areas of the West had not yet been developed, sixty thousand ‘acres in the Red River Valley being the only wheat crop sown in the West at that time. In the whole of Canada only 45 million acres’ were then under cultivation, as compared with 174 million acres today. Exports of wheat in 1886 amounted to 3,500,000 bushels, nearly all of that being from Ontario, while we now export nearly 300,000,000 bushels, mostly from the Prairie Provinces,

; . The founding of the faneeraontad Farm sys- Br illiant Work tem in Canada inevitably brings to mind the Of Dr Saunders work of the noted scientist, Dr. William Saun-

e

ders, who was the first superintendent. Dr.

. Baunder’s brilliant work in plant breeding, which led to the discovery of

Marquis and other varieties of wheat suitable for the ¢limate of Western Canada, is well known. As a direct result of his studies the Canadian West became one of the great wheat-producing areas of the world, and Canadian agriculture as a whole advanced rapidly. Dr. Saunder's work was not con- cerned entirely with wheat, but extended to problems connected with the

growing of trees, shrubs, fruits and végetabiés in regions where the climate |:

was not considered favourable for their cultivation. He had much success in introducing varieties of plants which could be successfully grown on the Prairies and in morthern, ec ta

The tradition established by Dr. Saunders has been cafried on, and the Dominion Experimental Farms continue to make a valuable contribution to the progress of agriculture in all parts of the country. The importance of scientific knowledge in dealing with farm problems has been proven many times, and the Experimental farms help to keep before the farmers the most up-to-date knowledge on methods of dealing with plant and animal diseases, new breeds of plants, the latest

T radition Has

‘developments in agricultural engineering, and countless other matters re-

lated to farm work. Plans are now under way to further expand the work of the Experimental Farms throughout the Prairie Provinces; in connection with soil drifting, the use of new varieties of crops and the use of the latest cultural methods. This service, inaugurated sixty years ago, has indeed been of great.value both to agriculture and to the country as a whole for, in’ the words.of; Dr, BH. -8, Archibald; superintendent. of .the “Without a prosperous agriculture there can be no prosperous urban community.”

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* Cross Section . Write for full particulars

Medical Courses

Many Young People In B,C. Would; British Athletes Are Trained By 4

Study Medicine There are at present about 125 young people in British Columbia|topsy-turvey age of atomic energy ready and eager to enter upon medi-|may be the winning of Olympic med- cal courses. If a medical faculty is|als by British athletes trained in not started at Point Grey within a| Berlin by German coaches and physi- reasonable period, most of these,| cal culture experts. young people—many of them return-/ Within the magnificence of Ber- ed servicemen—will, be denied the! lin’s Olympic Stadium, British Occu- privilege of. studying medicine. pation troops are running, jumping They cannot be~ accommodated in/and hurling weights daily in an effort other. colleges. because there igs n0O/to keep fit and to cheat monotony. room for.them there. They have not only the finest track We have depended for too long up-|in the world on which to perform, on the schools on the prairies and in| but Germany’s greatest coaches and the East and in the United States to | doctors of physical culture have been educate our doctors. Now we-are|employed. And whatever your opin- thrown upon our own resources. ion of Germahs it is a fact that no-

where can be found more efficient or Stop Sniffling

German Coaches

more skilful athletic coaches. —Lon- don Express.-

30c,..

Reconstituting its staff for its first

v7

MENTHOLATUM

COMFORT Daily

Mills circus found that many of its clowns and performers were in war factories or driving trucks; its trained horses were driving farm vehicles and—crowning blow—its ele- phants were being used for plowing. The circus was given enough priori- ties for an austerity season.

Grves

\LEARN HAIRDRESSING

Clean, steady, interesting, refined, p08 paying profession. aprierent in of positions now open. any start INVISIBLE IN ACTION

vision of outstanding beauty culiure

Strange outcome of the war in this|.

@ Sniffling, Circus Folk

sneezing...

sore, irritated U Ele . £ : phants Are Used For Plowing

nostrils... get

relief with In Britain

Mentholatum. “LONDON. —The war was no re-|.

Jarsand tubes, specter of persons—even circus folk.

eon tig since 1940, the big Bertram|—

THE ENTERPRISE,

ated that the average |Ccome invalid for the purchase of 10 to 15 gallons bd these

water per day. High producing cat | tle, such as those producing, say, gallons of milk per day, may

day. Where dry feed, such as hay or

jchaff and concentrates, is being fed,'!remain valid until further notice.

the cows would take 10 to 15 gal- lons of water as such. However, where the cows are on pasture and quantities up to 130 pounds are known to be eaten, water would be taken in smaller amounts. One hun- dred and thirty pounds of pasture would probably: contain *about nine or ten gallons of water. If silage were fed, 50 pounds of that material would probably CORA about 3% gallons of water.

HOME FROM GERMANY A “few weeks’ visit” that stretched into seven years is the experience of Mrs. Ernie Juergens of ‘Kitchener, Ont. In 1989 Mrs. Juergens went to Ger- many to attend her daughter's fun- eral. Outbreak of war caught her in Hamburg, and she spent the en- tire war there. Houses around her were bombed out. of existence and her own house hit. Glad to be home again after the privations of war- torn Europe, Mrs.‘ Juengéns says happily: “Canada seems

be true.” ‘She declares tpat Cana-| butchers could’ deal in one type of: dian poictass pave RBihs a the most popular oceup baie under natural light.

More ‘Popula

Is Needed By Canada, fo ‘Develop ‘The Country; _ Increased immigration ‘is necessat'y because it is obvious that 12,000,000 people cannot continue indefinitely to own, develop and defend a ‘gountry as large and as rich as Canada, Increased immigration means: algo that the domestic market is enlarged

and that is important in view of the].

post-war improvements being made industrially ant agriculturally hg other countries.

The 4,000 Polish farm workers noi being admitted will be the first c tingent of a long-term Saavene rt needed to provide the population

Canada must have to derive the full}.

benefits from her size, position and natural wealth.

10) lissued to nfembers of the armed ; @n-|forces and other temporary ration sume up to 30 gallons of water per/card holders, will not be affected by

BLA TRMORE, ALTA,

Q.—What are the numbers of the

}meat and butter coupons in ration) them | book No. 5 to be declared invalid

on August 31st?

A.—Meat coupons M-40 to M-50 and butter coupons R-10 to R-17 be-

commodities after August 31st. “Beaver”. and “Buffalo” coupons,

the change and all sugar coupons will

ona , eng

Q.—I heard the sugar ration was to be-increased for the balance otf this year. By. how much is the sugar ration to be increased?

A.—There will be an increase of three pounds per. person in. the in- dividual: sugar ration for. the re- mainder of this year, The increase to consumers will boost the individual ration to 31 pounds of sugar for the year. The 10 pounds of canning sugar is in addition to this and makes a total allotment. of 41 pounds, per pefson, :

ee, ae

Q.—I am a farmer’s wife and make butter for our own use only. Is it necessary to make a report to the Local Ration Board on the amount of butter used? ;

A.—All dairy butter producers (other than. authorized butter re- porters) must register with their respective Local Ratfon Boards even if the butter they produce is used in their own households and is not sold.

--O— Q.—What coupons will be used for

the purchase of meat when the “M"|’

coupons in ration book No. 5. are all used?

A.—The spare “Q" coilpons in book five will be declared valid for the purchase of’ meat after August 22nd. ‘These “Q” coupons will be used un-. til the coupons in ration book No. 6 become: valid on September 19th.

; oO Please send. your questions or your request for the pamphlet

“Consumers’ News” or the Blue Book in which you keep track of your ceiling prices, mentioning the

name of this paper to.the nearest Wartime Prices and Trade Board office in your province.

Under French law 14th century

meat Only and could sell it only| fishing in Atlantic waters off the Sales by candle | Hast Coast be regulated by an inter-

_ national. body came from Capt. Ben MacKenzie, president of the Cana-|in Cape Town when the helress pre- dian Fishermen’s Union, here.

light or lamp were taboo. ome

REGULAR NATURALLY

will ask Atlantic Fishermen’s Union headquarters in Boston to co-oper- ate in an effort to have an interng tional body appointed to regulate ‘fishing. off the Nova Scotia and New- foundland coasts.

elrc se

sane Pexoe

H. L, MACKINNON Co, LTD. WINNIPEG

*

MORE AND MORE PEOPLE

serve cereals

anytime of day!

Here’s an idea that can help ' you save time and work: Serve Kelloggs ready-to-eat cereals not only for breakfast, but for. mid-morning snacks, children’s lunches or suppers, before-bed. All-Wheat, Pep, Corn. i

Kellogg’s All- Wheat is Canadian whole wheat in its most delicious

form. Flaked, All-Bran, Rice Krispies, Bran toasted, ready-to- Flakes and Krumbles are all eat! Everybody made by Kellogg’s, the waisted jane ft esha name in cereals. -

avour.

SAVE TIME... SAVE FUEL... SAVE FOOB!

—————

~~ Foreign Trawlers Coming Of Age

Are Operating In Fishing Areas Off} Princess Elizabeth _ Will Celebrate The Atlantic Coast 21st Birthday In Cape Town

HALIFAX. The proposal that Buckingham Palace announced that the King has approved plans for

alas birthday. at. Government House

sumptive to the British throne comes of age next April 21. . i

The princess, with ‘her sister Mar- gare; is to accompany the gythoes and Queen to South Africa ©: tour starting February 17:

Capt. MacKenzie said his union

be bete

day celebration "will take place short- ly before the royal capris returns. to Britain.

The union chief commented on a

Princess Elizabeth to celebrate her ©

HORIZONTAL 1 Foremost 6 Made holy - 11 More neat 12 Punctuation mark (pl.) . 14 Within 15 To entreat 17 Withered 18 Things In law 20 Coffin and stand (pl.) 23 Greek letter 24 Anglo-Saxon

‘36 An implement which enlarges

se 3 \

= eee, PhS

ci ina MMPS

» B Birian road wea wees wie 2 we

43 To delay 45 Fencing sword 46 Poisonous

snake 48 A kind of race 50 To bring forth

kX OUR CROSSWORD PUZZLE

re fe FCCC PCE Pe PT

X—X

bol Be a al \\

| SY i ae

Boston ~ dispatch which said the French Government was planning construction of 32 néw trawlers to operate on the Banks. He said this would make “the now-crowded Banks more crowded.”

Capt. Mackenzie said his union was collecting depositions for the Federal Fisheries Department from’ fishing vessel masters and crews on opera- tion of foreign trawlers in fishing areas off Nova Scotia. Some fisher- men recently complained they were being forced to abandon the rich Quero bank because of damage to their gear by foreign vessels.

“There must be some regulations, on a.yational or international: basis,” he said, “to govern the catch if our fish supplies are not to be seriously depleted and our fishing industry | wrecked.”

BUILDING

Let not. him who is houseless pull down the house of another, but let him work diligently and build one for himself.—Abraham. Lincoln:

We build our ideals and they in turn build us.—Le Conte.

affection is founded. upon virtae, walled with riches, glazed with beauty; and roofed with honour.— Francis Quarles.

What we do upon some great occa- sion will probably depend on what we already are; ‘and what we are will be the result of previous years ~|of self-discipline.—H. P. Liddon.

We should strive to reach the Horeb height where, God is revealed;

_ Aviation Advances

: Canada Is Keeping Pace With The | 2nd the corner-stone of all spiritual

Rapid Development building iS purity, Mary Baker

The efficiency with which Canada | 24dy: carried out her wartime production| Let us labor’ “for ;the larger com- ‘job had indicated the developments | prehension of truth, and that more

expected from the new skills learned) shall make the history of mankind a

by her engineers and workmen. a, |series of ascending developments.— The “North Star’, the 40-passenger|Horace Mann,

transport capable of flying 3,500

miles non-stop with a maximum

cruising speed of 325 miles an hour

and an altitude limit of 28,000 feet,

THEAST WAY 1

Happy is he the palace of whose.

in specialized ‘fields which might bel thorough repudiation of error, which

is jwith unerring aim and” whisks the ; cays mop tba bhi tat j bapless insect into the owner’s mouth

own shops. Train under direct super-

| Although eight inches long, the chameleon’s tongue is invisible to the ; naked eye when in action. It strikes

rts. Complete, thorough, superior training. The Nu-Fashion method assures success. Write or Cail—

with lightning-like rapidity.

cemmabaaan’ t

challenges. 2686

3 | 8 To ative na i taken as a sample of things roperty ' 55 petite Ba ; To the accepted abilities of Cana- 56 Fastened dians to operate in the air have been 50 inclines ¥ added the demonstrated capabilities 61 Bright : of the Dominion’s production forces 62 More aged : to make the up-to-date planes in VERTICAL 95 Toward the! which they will fly. It is encourag- Lad ot teh se RE a ing to. see such evidence of this coun- 3 To tear , | 30 To hinder try's determination to keep pace with a Rune on tole 32 Ruseian rs) . |the rapid advances of the air age, 6 Denoting A 34 Itallan city - rE | both in building aircraft and in fly- 7 Behold © MA eee one’ } BE: ing them.—Victoria Times. ° 8 Printer’s 38 To wheel ae rst. ——— ~' measure ore : ; 2 Pinta cueke 40 a team ner * El N GIVEN FINAL READING , 5 ; xe uj 5} B OTTAWA. The commong gave|_ Effectiveness roven b 66 years | "1 Peedh ot fire | 47 ed a - s} p third and final reading to a bill suble’e ibe - 13 rir of \ amending the criminal code to change : ok «iy | be Note in in Guide’s| : a the method of selecting juries in} WHY EX' -—WILSON'S ‘tae lee To. Incline the A Saskatchewan and Alberta. The bill| Will kill more files af less cost than » 19 A Gastropod « head Ri hl will permit Saskatchewan to return] any other fly killer. 21 Rivers (Sp.) +158 Delirium re to the practice of a 12-man jury and Y os orate? |* Geen 1 vert inerta 3 retain agama] WILSON’S FLY etaarabapaa PO: ad juries with an improved system of

ONLY 1Qe AT ANY RETANERI

ph tale eel elt ere

Strike Terror In Polish Villages

“ae Wh te A

>

2

- composed mostly of Ukrainian Na-

. time Nazi S.S.. officers.

stuffs.

.and a Ukrainian who was friendly-to

bands recently killed 100 bandits within a week. re

* diary of the British Columbia. Sugar

outheastern Poland not far from the

Lawless Bands

RZESZOW, Poland.—The' torch of terror burns often among the Polish villages’ along the San river, deep in

Russian frontier, "

. Many homes are burned and Pol- ish settlers strung up on /trees by Jawless bands’ officially described as

tionalists, with a sprinkling of one-

These outlaws long have terrorized this section of Poland, but . their activities. became more pronounced after the government statted’ moving Ukrainians out of Polish territory in- to Soviet Russia under a repatriation agreement. :

Some sources attribute the Ukrain- jan. attacks to resentment. at being forced out of their villages to make way for Polish settlers. Others say the bandit bands operating. in the province of Rzeszow were organized to levy against farmers for food- If the farmers don’t deliver, villages are burned and men and women carried off to forest hideouts.

At Terka, bands sweeping in at night from. hideouts hanged five Poles

Poles. ie

Polish newspapers reported: that bands numbering several hundred at- tacked the village of Wolkowyje July 14 and 15 and terrorized the population, One soldier, 30 civilians and five bandits were killed.

Troops hunting down. outlawed

SUGAR. BEETS

Announce That Factory Will Be Built At Taber LETHBRIDGE.—Philip T. Rogers of Vancouver and T. George Wood of Raymond, Alta., announced that a $2,500,000 sugar beet factory will be built at Taber, Alta., by .Canadian Sugar Factories, Limited, e@ . subsi-

Refining Company, Limited, of Van- couver. ee

- Contracts for factory engineering shave been let to the Stearns Rogers Manufacturing Company of “Denver,

~Colo.,-and for building construction

e

to the Dominion Construction Com- pany, of Vancouver, :

RECRUITS NEEDED. Royal Canadian Mounted Police frorce 7 Is To Be Incréased 4 OTTAWA.—Strength of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, now 2,464, will be increased by. 690 as proper material becomes: available, Justice Minister St. Laurent said in the com- mons, ° Less than 200 of the new men needed had so far been engaged. Replying to questions as to whether the increase in the force was aimed to: meet counter-espionage needs, Lfr.

St. Laurent said the whole*force was |

available for any work required of it.

FOUND OBSOLETE

Planes Of ‘Future Too Speedy For , @ Present Type Bombs ae WASHINGTON. Second Great

Wa® bombs have been found obsolete

for supersonic planes of the future

and missiles of “radically new de-

‘sign’ are being developed, the United

States war department has disclosed. It was said that conventiona] type

bombs are inaccurate at Speeds

. equalling the 764-milé-an-hour veloc-

municipal

ity of sound. FLOATING POLLING BOOTH ST. JOHNS, Nfid.—Arctic ice was

reported to be hampering the polling

for. a Labrador representative on

Newfoundland’s natignal convention. ©

The floating polling booth, the steam- ship Marvita, reported it was unable to move north towards the tip of northern Labrador because of ice to collect the votes of the territory's 2,500 registered electors,

_ HEAVY TRAFFIC

. §SASKATOON.—With an increase » of 14 per cent. in the number of pas- sengers carried by the street rail- way in 1945 over 1940, the Saskatoon railway has shown a ‘greater increase in passengers car- ried than has any other city in Can- ada, G. D. Archibald, street’ railway superintendent reported, /

NORTHWEST AIR COMMAND. . OTTAWA, Air Minister Gibson ‘announced appointment. of Air Com- modore R. C, Gordon, C.B.E., of Ot- tawa and Harris, Sask., as air officer commanding north west air com- mand, succeeding’ Air Vice Marshal T, A. Lawrence, -©.B., of Creemore, Ont., who will*retire from the R.C.-

wAF.

INVESTIGATE BLACK, MARKET LONDON.—Officers from Scotland Yard, Britain’s famed criminal in- vestigation department, will travel to Germany to help in the investi- gation of alleged black market activi- ties involving German and British nationals, it was learned.

\

4 Bs

WANTS VOTES FOR INDIANS— Brig. O. M. Martin, Toronto Indian and York c@unty magistrate,. urged. that ‘his race be given the right. to vote in Dominion and provincial elec- tions without loss of, their’ present privileges when he*appeared before the parliamentary committee for In- dian affairs at Ottawa.

Statistics Show More People Are Working

“OTTAWA.—The Dominioh bureau

ian labor force—persons 14 years or over—at 4,828,000 on’ June 1, an in- crease’ of 290,000 compared with Nov. 17, 1945. ‘s

Corresponding to this increase in potential manpower was an increase of 336,000 in those actually working and a reduction of 46,000 ‘in - the number of- unemployed.

The figures were based on, a sampling survey, the third the bureau has conducted in this fieli at three- month’ intervals. Representatives of 25,000 households in 100 different areas scattered across Canada were interviewed to provide material for the estimates. : , %

The total civilian labor force, at June 1 was estimated to comprise 8,732,000 men and 1,096,000 women, By regions it was divided: Maritimes, 435,000; Quebec, 1,333,000; Ontario, 1,651,000; prairies, 1,022,000 and Bri- tish Columbia, 387,000. ;

against, 4,312,000 at Feb. 23, ‘1946, and 4,366,000 at Now 17, 1945.

- The ‘bureau .estimated there were 1,274,000 workérs in agriculture at June 1, compared with’ '1/083;000' ‘in February and 1,056,000: in November. The June figures included 1,074,000 men and -200,000 women. They were made up of 157,000 paid workers 630,000 working on their own farms without paid employees; 66,000 em- ployers. with their’ own, farm’ and 421,000 unpaid family workers.

In industries other than agricul- ture the June total was put at 3,428,- 000, an increase of 118,000. from November, ? .

The bureau“also enquired into the marital status of women holding jobs. It was found that-of the 1,078,- 000 women working -at’ June 1,.677,- 000 were single, 312,000 were married. and 89,000 were widowed, divorced or. permanently separated. Ss

‘The-bureau also’made an estimate of the distribution of non-workers which were not included in the labor

000 non-workers 283,000 were perma- nently unable to or too old to work; 2,712,000 were keeping house 579,- 000 were attending school and 292,000 had retired or were voluntarily idle,

| BRITAIN BLOCKADES PALESTINE TO STOP ILLEGAL JEWISH IMMIGRANTS—To stop further ~ arrivals of illegal Jewish immigrants in the Holy Land, where some Arabs have declared they will fight if the flow continued, Britain has blockaded the Palestine coastline,

‘Ibe attempted in an effort to make

“|to clear and break 250,000 acres of| Canada's 1946 crop was estimated _ | virgin soil_in the Peace River district | 4t 16,000,000 bushels, equally

pte eee tek preetett

THE ENTERPRISE, BLAIRMORE, AUPA,

TO BREAK LAND

Chicago Engineer wit. At Winter Plowing In Peace iy River District

EDMONTON,Winter plowing will

70,000. acres of Jand ready for spring

by veterans in the Peace

a ae saisthict, .W. H. Rodenbeck, Asriculture department announced, | | Chicago, chief enginéer for the Yu-

An additional 250,000 bushels of

kon tion of Texas, said, Thihhechitad Teme hee contenstemrestion of the. Canédlan Snddatry,

for the re-establistiment of veterans.) between’ eastern and western Can- They have taken oVer the Alberta 44a.. The department expected. the government contract, from Hartman | domestic market would absorb 7,000,- Brothers of Seattle, Wash. - 000 bushels: as fresh fruit and. be-

Mr. Rodénbeck said. that 60 mod-|tween 2,500,000 and 8,000,000 for

ern tractors and land clearing ma-j|Ptocessing with at least 3,000,000 chines may already be on their way/hushels likely to be shipped to the to the Peace River district from United Kingdom, Saas

Chicago and TeXas. Work on the ck 1 i FAMOUS. AUTHOR

land will begin. immediately © the equipment arrives, he said,

8 ad So ER La NT H. G. Wells Died In England After Long Illness . |

ALL SUPPLIES LOST : LONDON.—H, G. Wells, 79, famed

Northern Outpost Of Hudson’s Bay British author of scientific romances Company Destroyed By Fire and political writings, died.

CHURCHILL, Man.—The Hudson's; ‘Mr. Wells’ secretary told a re-

Bay company’s outpost at Lake Har-jporter that the author had . died

| either grade may be shipped at the

SUPPORTS BYRNES’ ATTACK— Strong backing for charges made. by U.S. Secretary of State James F. Byrnes that Russia is attempting to dictate peace terms at the Paris con- ference came from Tom Connally, shown here, chairman of the U.S. Senate foreign. relations committee.

Ottawa Extends

AOR ede NR at a . ware ROTTS SATE SP Cha aR OR NR Rae TR ls aN nei

a P

A) At The Paris ) Peace Parley |

NEW YORK.--Some officials were certain that the

assembly . would delayed again’ be-’ Cause of the, lagging progress of the Paris peace conference.

They were convinced that on Sept. 23—the present starting date forthe assembly meeting at Meadows the foreign secretaries and other top diplomatic personnel of the United Nations still would be occupied with peace conference mat- ters. Res by

There was a slight Possibility that the assembly would open on sched- ule and coast along with minor issues, such as the UN budget and various’ administrative problems, until the major delegates return from Paris. It was doubted, however, that this solution’ would gain much support,

bor, Northwest Territories, has been destroyed by fire, word reaching: here said. Lake Harbor is on the south- ern side of Baffin Land and about

\| midway along Hudson Strait.

All supplies» left there a short time ago by the steamship Nascopie were a total loss,- the: report. said. Additional supplies will be sent from here on the Nascopie’s return trip. RRR. Rites RENIN Naa t TESTING CABLE

peacefully at 4 pm. He had been in | failing health ‘for a “considerable time”.

Mr. Wells’ fame grew with ‘his popularized versior.; of science and history—both: of which’ he boosted into the “best-seller” class, . Along with 90-year-old George Bernard Shaw and the late Rudyard Kipling,

; {he was hailed on both sides of the

Atlafitic as a member of the “Big

. UN Secretary-General Trygve Lie, back from a five-week trip to Europe, was expected to produce some official

Tax Exemption For The Co-Ops

OTTAWA.—Provisions of the co-| _ A member of one of the Big Five operative taxation legislation which bi oe tet to UN believed that.-the make bona fide co-operatives com-|2%8¢mbly meeting might have to be

a news conference. It was pointed

little reliable information about the possible wind-up: date of the Paris parley. ;

of statistics estimated Canada’s civil-.|

The number actually employed at|.- June 1 was estimated at 4,702,000, as |’

force figures: It found that of 3,890,- |—

Trans-Jordan are typical Arab Aghters,

Three” of modern-English- literature.

LONDON.—A. new type of under- PEROT RECS NT a sea telephone cable for use between DATE NOT GIVEN Britain and the ‘continent is being| BARKING, Essex; England.—J. P. tested experimentally between Porte: | Mallalieu, parliamentary private sec- mouth and Ryde in the Isle of Wight. | retary to the food minister, said Bri- The cable is of the “multi-channel” |tain’s bread rationing would end type’ capable of handling several) ‘pretty shortly”, He did not amplify simultaneous conversations. « [his remark, :

poe

a

MOLOTOV GREETS MRS. BYRNES AT RECEPTION—Central figure in peace conference controversies, V, M: Molotov, Soviet foreign minister, relaxes at a U.S. ‘Paris embassy reception. He chats with Mrs, James es, j ,

v4

mencing operations on or after. Jan. |

deferred until as late as November

1, 1947, exempt from. taxation for , Unless the United Nations want to three years, were extended by Acting | begin the meeting without the Big Finance Minister Douglas Abbott in| Hive foreign ministers and their the. house, to include new co-oper- | #dvisers., atives that acquire assets for exist- ing businesses.

When -the legislation was under consideration -earlier this session the

OPIUM DEN

he would. give sympathetic consider- Chinatown ation to the suggestion that the tax y TORONTO.—Like a page out of exemption provision be made to apply|*he Fu Manchu mysteries was the to co-operatives that had acquired;W@y a Toronto police officer de- existing businesses. He announced 8cribed the scene in a building in that the government had decided to| Toronto's Chinatown where a special meet the suggestion. narcotics squad arrested seven Chin-: Rt. Hon, J. L. Usley, minister of ; ese on a charge of illegal possession finance, when he “brought down his | Of opium. budget in June,’ had stated it was’ A few minutes before they burst his‘ intention to restrict the three- into the’ room they termed -an illicit year tax newly formed co-operatives which | their way into a Gerrard street room- had not acquired already existing | ing house and seized opium they said

_{ businesses. That stipulation had been | Was worth $30,000 at black market

prompted by the fear that the pro-) Prices. Authorities said it was the

vision might be utilized to operate | biggest opium. seizure in Canada in

i what was really a private business,;10 years. One man was arrested in under the cloak of a co-operative’ that raid. =.

organization, explained Mr. Abbott. | The late Sax Rohmer, author of

“But after considering the matter the fantastic Fu Manchu stories of

it was felt that provisions could be crime on London's fog-shrouded river

‘/inserted if the law to guard against front, probably would™have. felt at a private business being operated, home amid the exotic surroundings

Flushing *

-

out, howeyer, that Lie himself has .

acting finance minister had indicated, Pollce Raid Building In Toronto's

ie

exemption provision to opium den, they had sledgehammered -

under the guise of a co-operative|had he been with pdlice who hamr- -

organization,” said Mr. Abbott.

T. J. Bentley (C.C.F.,: Swift Cur- rent) said he appreciated the. change made by the acting finance minister. Further he urved that the date liné be changed so that the three-year tax

reinforced ddors to enter the richly- furnished Oriental-style’ bedrooms above a club on Elizabeth street.-

; Chinese reclining on cots or on

mered their way through two Steel- .

The officers said they found seven

exemption would apply not. only to!-prigntly-hued rugs on the floor or’

mpc Nd eae a re seated on wocden chairs. Over the launched in the past to oe throne ee BENE: &: Niue Hae. Of Mn Qe vents 7 Banc ig 8 said . smoking opium. ° wo ‘Seite arcu theron sal they sled an opium pipe and a lamp used to heat opium.

Marketing Association. That plant|7, tne bedrooms, they stated, they

was doing a good job taking surplus d tity of } d opium. horses off the land in Saskatchewan FoUn# AUBREY, scuba the dames

|and saving feed for cattle and sheep.

It was providing food for the Bel- gians and for UNRRA and it was| giving farmers a return for their | surplus horges. first quarter of 1946 with purchases ' The Swift Current plant had been totalling approximately $35,000,000. financed and equipped under difficul-|South Africa which bought British ties. It had provided long-term em-| goods valued at more than $60,000,- ployment for over 100 persons, said | 000 was first and India which bought Mr. Bentley. $50,000,000 worth was second.

BRITAIN’S CUSTOMERS | CANBERRA, Australia was Bri- tain’s third best customer during the

Under the proposal to split Palestine into provinces, the Arabs would have one area, Ruler of the British-protected

These members of the camel corps of |" . : it ts Ne & Arab kingdom is Ibn Al Hus#ien. . , 2686 ve : * : . > » hs . s a se : ¥ oe. y LS X Sota i : * ae ; + } 4 i ¥ Mots yy his ah : f aa Ry oom eo * sth PY W. 5; Ht ¥. \ wt - 2 os reseke ne Bud gd WA, . heart e-veilinrs i Syyeeyes WIA can, " pares Pies Se

aaa BARRE AME Loaner ee Oia } * . Ng Life seaeenapatates, b' « . . rf

er . * m wer

three men were

meet, ing of the Uni - Nations ' general,

information on the assembly. plans-at———————__-

PPR SRP LF FPS

Partner ceninitmunnbennsiniinnainens er 2 _— seen * Y

: ° 1 dee ANNA NREL BSNL EE ERI IEA RON LINE MOIS + Eee aehtet Sota te gest - : 4 a : wo! Anis Ame ARINS TOR ET ER EEE NL ET EE Ty TERT IT NET te ST

a é . ia ®

IC, 2 FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1940,

mite ee

Subseri erry parts of Peer erga ny © ns annum;

your baey bpp sce.

GAME REGULATIONS GUNS,. APPLIANCES’ AND

the other thing is Lving done | Sunset November 21,

“through the chartered banks” | Throught. the rimmnindhe ake the 1 that we pay little or no at: ention | Province of Alberta: From one-half is Cia = teal eo ak : sia eaniccaeranien Cheques, nego- to them any more. hour before sunrise Septemter 14 re ie But we should stop dnd think | to one-half hour after sunset “No- | “House ‘Coffee at ‘Haring Leceers. Credit benkiag 0 service es about it. vember 28. lll mealies. : : ; . = Thete are theze in th’s country, There is close ‘season throughout Maxw House has more

no large number, perhaps, who count that day lost that does not provide them witha chance to criticize “the banks.” To hear that kind of talk, you would “imag ne that “the banks” do as they pleas? with” other\ people’s money and” etheir own—that they carry, ..on without let. or hindrance, making : . (jtheir own laws and regulations, oe vee Sa “and generally amassing - forturys 3 for their executives and directors.

/ ‘The fact is, of courze, that bank-

‘ing in th’s Dominion is hedged

about. by the ‘most ridgid restric-

tions and controls— not in’ these

times of “control” alone, but al-

“ways,in season and ovt of season,

jn peace asin war. The banking

laws of Canada are the most ¢x+

acting of all laws governinz Cana-

dian business activities. All bank-

ing is done uncer the, eye and

supervision of government. And no

banking ‘systém in the» werld is

sounder from*the public viewpoint.

the yeat on Hider ‘Ducks, Wood delicious: flavor fuller, Ducks, - Swans, Ross’s Goose, more satisfying body be- Cranes, all shore birds. except | cause: it contain

Wilson’s Snipe, and all migratory ay Waite agi non-game and ‘insectivorous birds.

THE ROYAL BANK OF: CANADA

BLAIRMORE BRANCH - a M. G. SMITH, Manager y BELLEVUE BRANCH: 77+ B LONG, Manager

. : States and Great ritain, $2.50; For- HUNTING METHODS won ick nsaasadscuvnunnatdrsiih : ; ‘eign, $3.00; payable in advance. t FORBIDDEN—The use of an : ' ; Business locals, 15c per line. The Honorable J. Allison Glen, | automatic (auto-loading) gun, or 2 Makesureyour valuables are safely i / Legal notices, the per line for first minister of mines and resources, | swivel or machine gun, or battery, : pvp hee daha fount Box. : : tmeertion; 12¢ per line for each sub-| Ottawa, has just-issued the regu- | 6, rifte; or shotgun loaded with a t+ Or stow ee pang t. ee sequent insertion. lations regarding Migratory Birds single bullet, or any gun larger beeping. The cost trifling. at Obituary notices. inserted free of| for. the current year. than number 10. gauge, or any 2 ee _ , but lists of floral offerings A summmary of the regulations weapon other than a gun or a bow t wena ntannnsnntanntnmsannenasnsnd ~. Chargtd at-10 cents ‘per tine. as they apply\to Alberta follows: | and arrow; and the use of live = ; 5 Rey Display advt, rates on application. ion Berens bitte as :decova, ior ‘ofan aio: 2: Gianbe your reserve cast tii . «* roargarigy er th: Dates Inclusive lane, power-boat)” ‘sail boa’ 1 ‘Travellers’ Cheques . . - e worry: 1 ROI Me Se sh denen stb 08 vas j -WILSON’S SNIPE night light, and cia" from ' free way to carry travel ot Lgpeesien Wisirmore, Altas FH: Awa, ah 1948 Throughout the Province from | motor or wheeled vehicle, ora. 4 good as money anywhere. Ifyoulose 4 Pek ? iebaes, . one-half hour before sunr'se Sop- | vehicle to which a draught anim ' them, you’re not outa cent. : : "all i oar pe = ed pe hour wl is attached. The hunting of mi nansangnenseneatnncndacanesenntecenaccnnacagenchnentensnrnnncans DO IT “THRCUGH THE » Sunset November. 9. ENG tory game birds by the use or ; : ; : : } CHARTERED BANKS” DUCKS, GEESE (o' her than> of baiting with © grain or ol Lex : he Should you run short of cash during 5. Should *you Aatah td combine H ; Ross's Goore) RAILS, COOTS artificial food is prohibited. _ 7” | {your trip call on the nearest Royal + hesineh sh plogsore yg Will had the ' Announcing in Parliament that In that pait .of Alberta lying The shooting of vitreaesey fie ' Bank branch, The local manager is local Royal Bank Manager in any H the Canad'an copper colored | north of the right bank of the | pirds earlier than one-half hour J * < your direct line of communication i disteict a mine of information on} “nickels” aie : being withdrawn’| Athabaska River going -down before sunrise or later than. or H back to yqur own home brash. . local business conditions, 4 from circulation and expressing | stream to its intersection with the | half hour after sunset is Prohil i : ' pacts the belief that “the movement will | north boundary of Township '72°| toq: bon pneenenunenantrcnentnfecpeceeanennennneanein : be completed within the near fu- | 2nd north of the'north boundary of The penalty for violation of a Arrange to have your salary or | you are travelling abroad, H ture,” the Finance Minister added Township 72 from ‘Athabaska bakin wy laws isa fine at other income credited to your account : fatee ie Royal hari ie outed : that “the withdrawal was being | River to its intersection with the | more than three hundred dollars ¢ in your absence. Clean up unpaid bills ee branches in the Soden oy ro ' carried out nish the chartered | interprovincial boundary between and_not less than ten dollars, or | : te er your smi ' an se a ere lew tks ome j Wanks.” Alberta and Saskatchewan: From imprisonment: for a term not 6X s account OF Royal : “aod ta fe paheerte ser H We see so many statements of [ one-half hour before suhrise Sep- ceeding : six, eee: or ‘both " ' : i ; | that kind—that this and that and tember 7 to one-half hour after Ps. ; ‘f (ae eeansansewesonasan Beets eed n eda sagen nad tana nanan nnn nnnsnnenennat

* The banks of Canada did an im- “ie mense job in wartime and av3 ne ' doing ‘an immense job in this ] ; “transition” period. The fact that gig the public hears little about it is LB an indication of how thorovghly it y / is being done, without grounds for y serious comp!aint. if How much free or near-frez s2rv- ice the chartered banks of Canada give governments and tl:2 public we do not know, but it must te very extensive, indeed. (Look «at the line-ups at the bank wickets ted iy t yy i Wh i S VF DS ia a each week or month of feople : |} ia a : ; W //f = “S . ss ay cashing government cheqves. [it is i f ' aly em just one exampte of the servicé the Government cheques comp fo this street every month. banks are giving the public—with- re cet sagt cual Cosa ee f out much “percentage” in it for ai Prise gn x Behe A a be \ the banks). Pee ak ea earllorme hie one This ig not a “defence”. of the ; Oe ies eet we Soret, . ; banks or an “apolégia” for them: t aiee ga ea ees p > , ee ‘os : it is merely an attempt to give the am 2 : st —— 4 esa eh Aart : ate : ee ge ag ? banks of this country come small E ; : MGs measure of the credit ‘that is dve AN NW exgRa shone every second Tes pet Reif : De TN Heralds You may receive Government cheques. You can cash. them without chabee ieee RD: at any branch of a any chartered bank in Canada. Ia one year some thirty-six : danas menace SAVE |S We ar e€ ‘agents. for Sanade s _ million cheques were issued for Family Allowances, the Armed Services, ; their dependents, Pensioners, employees of Ccown Companies and gs like, pounrerien 5 , More than One for eve second of the da and ht! ees cy eras Leading Manufacturer. oR ks ie ay sad at : through “40 Dkwadn “Oreck HC Bei is Can “you imagine the expense to taxpayers if this money had to be : rt eae ae pte Ua See be de: |: RS ae “distributed in cash through thousands of” Special’ pay Offices. ..and the ; by way of Whitecourt to Grande e us a out your next or ler : inconvenience of having to go to such offices to get your money? psy: } Prairie, a distance of 100. miles Lf Ba Se he TAY cigs onyi zy : Hea would be eut off the present cir: | * ® | Ce Sai "Taken in Stride . cuitous, toute, according to’ Hon. A ACO ve uate it Mats eet ae - Your bank ‘performed many such public services peep oa the war and be RHR, | fabs) Fallow, minister. of public ; : ee ee yea ef fhe ae A he < is continuing | to do so. It is taking ° these additional tasks in stride .<. } i works. © ite PRR: Oia The } Ay. aaY fcogid™ eae Beste eat sh ssieues to Play its part io meetiag Canada’s needs of the future. 4 ; ‘The minister, who was a mem- ree ay Mireles et ai, tee eMeat Tae : £ ~ ber of a delegation that made rep- ge SEG wea ars? BS ARR ee iE tiene, Anedno Bee 42 mh, mice ow conann ves ¢ - Bairmore Graphic | -_ mittee of the Canadian senate as * j to the need pf the paved tourist ada’ 7 peel pi é % highway, expressed the opinion OM 0 a Oe ts i rat $ f ye gets Pe that the committee which would be ae 4 ate fe a ay yee : NC pee tiga Sa Nr) MEE ae te cae odie This Advertisement is Sponsored by your Bank would favor the Whitecourt route. | —e a oe, - & i ! 4 \ er tela ot Sarr Lbs, : 2 } bi : ¢ ' § © ye aeaaeeeeeeneeneteates ena aman aE aia WEEE a be IML eI pe tr eenasiatiat. bas ~*~ .

*

~~

VV

- 4 1 : SABA ee pad were i Wey peste ye oy 7" a hx * “Thoupabide oF Cees lesweel Miva ide alacibedl la tks. Beeuinibaie “ofiea Rit bi industries and businesses, but many more are séeking places where Se Wie. Be ean i their skills may be used to the best advantage. You will find these eS BAY ae veterans of Canada’ armed forces, men of loyalty and unflagging detet- eT _. taination. They had qualities which made Canada’s armed services the 3 bpd ants or Laue ke ooe e e er Staak an ; used to-advaninge'in Canada’s industrial life, ? . e or can make an opening, list your Positions with : 4 ; yment Service. Investigate also the training-on-the- - : 3 job provisions of Canada’s rehabilitation programme under which the a Dominion Government may add tothe income which veterans receive ee y+ while. training. You can secure- complete details through the nearest } : f e: office of the Department of. Nag Affairs, the National Employment id Ce Sah Service or Canadian Vocation Training. 5 3 : eek Men and women. for the services were carefully selected on enlistment. oA) i i : experience, training, discipline, the’lessons of organization add. iF. : é se their value. Whether tradesman’ or not, the veteran makes ed : 3 i i Canada yl none, sill : pete fi 3 d eS a * . : , F ra { N THE OF VETERANS BY ei : f 3 is > > 3

Shuiedetigpeataiga Sneieencganetsit:! ee Roam, ee ee!

SORES Sag

entities a bilgi PS tel aa abcde ote: Seen vnicingss aaa

i aad { 4 ,

risa t é a 3 Letina akcos pi tae - whale

resta with the youths of today, who 3 : |ahould be *given ‘every opportunity % officer.-Cmdr. Henry eee OBE, to develop, their talents and make : , has been “Senetaee a ‘good, @ays: Field Marshal Viscount y ... « # Gem Bisenhower said the outstand- Montgoméry, chief of the Imperial ah \ ing leaders of the Second Great War General Staff. A

* p » a Britain's

ae ordered from North America.

eg William Young, 84-year-old retired st London shipping agent, said after his

Youth Training

Needed

oldest’ serving Naval

were Franklin Delano Roosevelt and . Winston Churchill.

i British museum ‘has offered to lend a thine detector to help in a hunt for): buried church plate at Much Wen- lock Abbey, Shropshire.

Canadian-built. mixed-traffic loco- motives now are operating on the “Belgian national railways, first of 300

This, preoccupation with youth ts reflected in almost every spee:h by the famous’ wartime field comyaander now responsible for directing his country’s military stratep~.’

“When the state has no further use for my, services I shall devote the remaining years of my life to the work of training youth,” he said re- cently, “so that they may become worthy citizens of our great and glorious Empire... . «.

“The goal we should aim at is this:.to train our boys to take their proper places in the community ae- cording ‘to the abilities of each, so that they will be able to take over from us older men and lead the coun- try in: peace. $

‘I mean by this: that each boy must be given a chance to develop his own particulaf talents. He must be taught to be master of himself and captain of his soul. _He. must not be stifled for lack of’ opportun- ity. He must be given a chance to

first flight—a 12,000 mile trip from Sydney: “I enjoyed it very much.”

A chime of bells is to be hung in the regimental chapel at Warley, Essex; as a memorial to officers and men of the Essex regiment killed in the war.

Hitler's personal standard, the silk- en swastika he boasted would fly over Buckingham Palace, was on view at the “Germany Under Con }

trol’ Exhibition-at-Lenden,—-—_—-----——--

The Need For Discipline Is Greatly

The future of the British Empire

a.

- 000 ton class and with speeds of 22

A conveyor belt to unload cargo from airplanes in flight, designed to aid airmen in parachuting supplies to the ground in a few seconds, has been developed for discharging mail and other cargo.

Buyers from all parts of the coun- try paid £48,500 ($218,250) for 1,430 used army motorcycles at a three- day auction in Stafford, Eng. One had a bird’s nest complete with eggs in the gas tank.

That Trip Overseas

Much Reduced Fares Are Expected When Boats Resume Service

By Frank Swanson in Ottawa Citizen

Ocean travel today, which is ‘not different from that experienced by thousands of Canadians during the war, soon will begin to return to pre- war standards. In dry docks and graving basins-at-ports-around Bri-

‘tain’s coastline, miniature armies of

workmen are busily engaged in re- storing _war-battered troopers to their pre-war state of elegance and comfort. By late September or early October, the first is expected to

, ‘Start regular passenger runs in thé

North Atlantic service between New York and .the. battered ports of Europe.

Coincident with. the. reconversion of some of the world’s most famous liners out of their anonymous coats of battleship grey, plans are being drawn up for new and more modern Ocean greyhounds. So far, most of these plans are still in the blueprint stage, but their ultimate development will foreshadow the shape of ocean travel of the future.

* * NE

One company has plans for‘ the

constuction of two liners of the 30,-

knots, which would carry 1,000 tour- ist passengers and 500 cabin pas- Sengers at a one-way fare from New York to Britain of $40 for tourists and $80 for cabin-class passengers

with meals extra, or a choice of add- |

ing $10 to the tourist fare and $20 to the cabin fare for an all-inclusive rate.

One of the features of these two ships, which together would form what would be known as the Atlanti Line, would be cafeteria service for passengers to cut down the overhead cost of the trip. The cafeteria pro- posal gives ‘an indication . of the streamlined. terms along which ship owners are thinking these days in ‘their efforts to.cut down the pré-war trans-Atlantic fare which was “the stumbling-block in bringing ocean travel. down ,to the level of the pocket-book df Mr, and .Mrs, Aver- age Citizen.

Realizing the appeal post-war air travel is bound to have, owing’ to the immense .time saving involved, shipping interests in this - country are examining the feasability of con- struction of new liners of the Queen class. Opinion is that. no further ships of this size will be constructed since the passenger bound for Europe or North America in a hurry is al- most certainly Jost to the air lines. The problem, therefore, is to find another type of passenger to replace him, but at a much reduced fare.

t ‘‘* om * :

» It will be late this year before the North Atlantic passenger services return _to anything like pre-war normality, In the meantime, the per- Bon anxious to cross the Atlantic must travel in troopship accommoda- tion, in an army atmosphere of austerity and of constant streams of orders issued practically. around the clock over loudspeaker systems, but with the knowledge that he is lucky to be there at all because of the huge waiting lists on both sides of #e ocean which have piled up during the war years: . °

When travel does become easier toward the end of ‘the year, and with next summer’s anticipated record tourist rush to Britain, for which bookings are already beginning to pile up from all parts of Canada and the United States,. the world should get some indication of what post- war ocean travel will he like in the

, face of air, competition and an al-

most universal demand for a cheaper fare.

ae

with Sir Alexander Fleming was Sir

Medical Triumphs

Penicillin Was Given Top Priority During The War j

A few years may show that in the balance sheet of a world war,, the cost in human lives has been numerically offset by the saving of life‘as a result of medical triumphs in wartime. Penicillin, which spells life for millions statistically con-

demned to die from specific diseases, |:

is hailed by medicine as the most decisive of those triumphs. Manufac- turing Penicillin is the No. 1 medi- cal undertaking of the day in those countries’ which during - wartime joined in developing this wonder drug —Britain, the United States, Canada and Australia.

A drug, for the first time in the history of war, was given top priority over all other forms of war produc-

tion in Britain and the United States. |.

The help of the industrial resources of the United States was sought and given on a large scale. Australia drew additional enthusiasm from the fact that one of the co-discoverers

Howard (Walter) Florey, Australian- born and a gradyate of Adelaide University (both were knighted for their work on penicillin). _But more especially the project in Australia was spurred by the urgency of the needs of the New Guinea campaign and Australia’s, position as the near- est supply base for the Pacific: war.

Those who are direeting production in Australia’s Commonwealth Serum Laboratories say the reserves now in hand and the plans for expansion are such that it should not be long be- fore there~is sufficient for general issue for all purposes.

Penicillin is made today in a $540,- 000 laboratory completed last year. In terms of penicillin manufacture, it is called mass production, but so great is the production problem of the drug, that a day’s yield from the efforts of several hundred workers, skilled and unskilled, fills a single large bottle before being reduced to powder form. :

That is a problem that is occupy- ing the attention of Australian, as well as overseas researchers—to sim- plify and reduce the effort required for penicillin. new field of therapeutics that has been opened to them,—Ottawa Citi- zen, ,

HEALTH SIGNS Crossnéss and irritability are in- fallible signs that the family. doctor should be consulted about a child’s health, declare health authorities at Ottawa. Department of . National and Welfare officials list these signs of good health: Bright eyes, clear skin, good posture, keen appetite, alertness, vitality and pleasing dis- position. Parents they say, will see in these signs, confirmation of. medi- cal opinion on a child's state of health,

air,

That, and the vast).

Man utilizes only about 25 per cent of the oxygen inhaled in a breath of 2686

CATTLE KILLED BY LIGHTNING—At Acton, Ont., 21 registered Jersey cows were instantly killed by a bolt of lightning as they huddled beneath a trée on the Cloverdale dairy ‘farm of A. J. Murray. The bark of

the tree was: slashed by the bolt. Fourteen cows were killed at Colbeck, Ont. f

British Air Liner

Will Make A Tour Of Canada, U.S. And Latin America. BRISTOL, England. A ‘standard product, model of the Brjstol 170, first post-war. British civil airliner to obtain an unrestricted certificate of airworthiness, soon willjtour Can- ada, the United States and . Latin America on a demonstratifn tours The plane, first flown last \\Decem- ber, now is in quantity A teat at the Bristol Aeroplane Cofipany plant in two models—the passenger Way- farer and cargo-carrying freighter. Its manufacturers have said they believe it will prove suitable for use in. the Canadian Northwest since its twin-engines give it ability to oper- ate from small airfields. =

Vey.

Sy Fa

eS STIR)

= : : AX SOFT BALL IS HARD WHEN | {T's NEW AND A HARD BALL {5° | SOFT WHEN (T'S OLD, '” Says HAROLD STEUERWALD, | AhilwadQKees Wiscons1:

Pe

who used 30-80: rifles.

‘THIS CURIOUS WORLD __®,Witism |

make good. asset. to the nation. we can‘afford no liabilities.”

for discipline.

in one such address last June. youth of today have got to be taught discipline. the iron hand of discipline is no good. If that is done we shall be all right.”

One way in which this spirit could

young men compulsory service in the_ forces.

entering the British Army yearly and “our responsibility is surely to arrange that during that time

also - those. that return to civil life better men in every way. sonmad i “We may teach. them leadership, discipline and the true meaning of morale. : :

A Double Purpose

Applause Does Something More Than ‘Give Singer Confidence

Wild Buffalo

The Last One In Oregon Has Been Shot

Each boy must, be an In these days

To the boys themselves—and he has spoken at many school functions _| singe becoming CIGS—the field mar- shal constantly emphasizes the need

“Our future as a nation may hang on leadership and character,” he said “The

The cause alone without

be inculcated, he said, was while were undergoing their

Some 160,000 18-year-olds will be

teach them not only sdldiering but wnttee which will ensure’

You can help build a healthy Can-: ada by worl with the Health League of Canada, an organization of volunteers devoted to a program of health education, especially in the field of disease prevention, arid to the Support of phe work of official depart- ments. of. Health. : ae:

Proof of the national importance of this great voluntary movement which aims at educating the Cana- dian people in the ways of good* health was revealed during the 1946 League-sponsored “Health © Week” campaign which received official en- dorsement and active support of the federal and provincial departments of health and provincial departments of education.

Magnificent support for the project (including its feature event, ‘Social Hygiene Day”) was forthcoming from press, radio, magazines, journals. and other periodicals and publica- tions, and from numerous. national and local advertisers as well as from many public-spirited organizations and. individuals.

Such support assured the event of success and it is doubtful if many Canadian homes missed‘ hearing or seeing one or more “health” mes- sages during the observance. How- ever, despite this all-out aid, the Health League of Canada requires support from other quarters—par- ticularly from the ranks of the. gen-- eral public.

You can help by joining. the League. Your $1 annual member- ship’ fee will do much to further this great crusade for better health for Canadians, and will help keep you informed on many matters concern-

HEALTH LEAGUE OF CANADA,

t

ing the health of your nation, your _

community and yourself. A dollar membership: entitles you to reéeive the monthly Health News,

an-- informative bulletin... containing... \~ articles and items on health matters ~~

And reporting on League activities.

|

If you live in a community where a Division or Branch of the Health League exists, you can take an ac- tive part in the work of one or more of its various committees. ie Rememter,. an informed public

An: admirer of the late Ernestine , opinion can encourage governments

ASHWOOD, Ore.—The deer sn | cbt atiabier 8 was congratulating to introduce measures designed to

the antelope still play in Oregon, but no longer Will the buffalo roam this great Western state. Wenny The Jast wild buffalo in Central | jover, “that applause is very import- Oregon was killed recently by mem- | ant to a singer. ‘It must help to give bers of the Sisters Rodeo Associa-' per confidence.” fais tion at the request of Roland Gridley, | “Confidence it gives, yes,” replied rancher, who said the old animal had jthe- prima donna in her faltering been damaging the Priday ranch near’ English. And then with a broad

here., smile she added: “It gives, too,

a certain operatic role.

» The’ buffalo was brought into Ore- | something even more impértant, It} by your own person

gon 15 years ago” after original | gives a chance for a singer to catch species had been exterminated, The , her buffalo was shot from horgeback—by | Monitor.

George Wakefield and Vernon Peck! .

i

IS. WELL NAMED

|

| stone

feet at each eruption.

WN PITCH DARKNESS f

~ “It’s such a nice day I'm

ELLERS— Anything

.

|

the great singer upon Her success in make for healthier living. And, such

opinion is being created by the

“T guppose,” ventured the, music Health League of Canada, Join the

Health’ League and keep informed.

»

Don’t blame your government for ~

inaction—blame yourself.

~

If you expect governments to pass ~

legislation ‘for medical examination before marriage, or con.pulsory pas- teurization of milk,” you: must help interest.

One hundred thousand members in

breath!” Christian. Science’ constant -receipt of Health News

would represent the powerful public

opinion essential to the building: of

health standards of this country. Much unnecessary illness has been

| Old Faithful, a geyser in Yellow-/ prevented by the Health League of National Park, which ons been Canada which, among other thihgs, . erupting on an average of every; for 26 years has carried on. cam- sixty-five sale Es cote for immunization, pasteuriza- years, shoots, from ; ‘O K | tion; gallons of scalding water about 150 eases, proper nutrition, and good

eradication of. venereal” dis-

health for industrial workers. -

a

gonna

a ay

pee b STOR Dees BL OTR IL Ren eer

Makes Bread that’s

YEAS

CANT BE BEATEN!

rich, delicious,

light-textured, tasty, more digestible!

ALWAYS FULL STRENGTH, ALWAYS DEPENDABLE

‘CAN WE PREVENT FAMINE?

That is the heading of an article}:

by Sir Arthur Salter in an issue of “Picture Post” London, England, just sent to us—dated May 1946. As an authority (Sir Arthur Sal- ter was deputy-director of U.N.R.R.A. 1943-44) he goes on to point out that real famine which may bring starva-

«tion to millions now faces a large

part of Europe, India and the Far Hast. As a unit of measurement: applied to every individual the daily con-

+ sumption of calories is the universal

one. .

A summary of the chart accom- panying the article, gives the food intake of the various peoples at that date. Figures show average daily consumption in calories 1,500 means gevere shortage. 1,000 means slow

starvation. DiBiARiy cis y oe ik 3000- 3400 : South America .... - 3000 j

- Denmark ...... + 2850-2900 Sweden .... +6. 2850-2900 Switzerland ....... 2850-2000 Australia ......... 2900 United Kingdom ... 2850 New Zealand ...... 2800 Turkey ........ «++. 2500 "Norway... 2.0.4.3. 2800-2500 >

Holland ........... 2300-2500 Bega 6 sv isch 2300-2500 WTANCA oc vce be o4 2300-2500 Finland Less than 1900 Hungary ........ Under 1900 * Spain ....... +... Under 1900 Rumania «see» Under 1

. Portugal ........ Under 1900 Italy .......40...%. 1400-1600 Bulgaria’ ..... +.» Under 1500 Czechoslovakia .,, Under 1500 Albania ....... +++» 1200-1700 fla lvdnhe F Ry a JEBOARAO

poet RuS81G 052 6'.. a Not known Germafiy; U.S. zone 1650 ? French zone 1130-1440 ke British zone 1043 As those above figures were quoted ‘(Gn May 1946) there was great hope that crops in the U-:S.A,, Canada, etc., could be supplied to the hungry, but

great difficulties are being experi-|:

enced from many angles, not the

_Jeast of which are upset conditions

Wand paralyzed communications in the tountries which need the most help. Even England is rationing bread and cereal grains now. The monsoon

‘rains failed in the East, arid no mon- g00n means no rice which is the food of millions.

“Can we Feeaee famine” for those poor unfortunates who did not -want war, did not start it, but are to be its victims by the million neverthe- less?

NEW HOCKEY LEAGUE » CALGARY.—The Kootenay Hockey League is no more, but a new circuit called the Western International Hockey League, will be formed with five teams, Trail, Nelson, Kimberley, Bpokarie and Los Angeles. This an- nouncement was made by Fred Hol- ger, manager of the Los Angeles Ramblers, who was in town looking for hockey players, Mr. Holger said

the new league opens Oct. 26,

@, MURSES!/

Fo anager ged obese

Peeuiile

i

MADE BY”

r era

-

ae

——

HAD $2,000 IN. COAT HIS WIFE GAVE AWAY—Trying to trace one

.| of four of his old coats which he told

his wife to give away, is James A, Smith, a U.S. navy veteran, at his telephone in Atlanta, Ga. His wife got rid of the coats, but the ex- Sailor had forgotten his savings of $2,000 left in the pockets of one of them. His attempts to locate the coat and money were futile.

SMILE AWHILE

Grace (displaying a new lamp

shade): ‘Isn't it lovely, Roy?” -

Roy (firmly): “If you wear that

to church on Sunday, you go alone.” =.= * * *

Father was furious; his shav- ing brush was missing.

“Doesn’t anybody know where my Sra ine ree is?” he thun- dered, ;

“N-n-no,” masiwered a -small voice’.from the nursery; “but Willie’s. wooden horse haw stewa a new tail!”

* * * * Dad: “Well, what ‘kind of grades did you make in your finals?” Son: “All ‘right in everything ‘Put one study apd in that I am like Washington, Jefferson, and

Lincoln.” Dad: . “Why-how’'s that?” Son: “I went down in history.”

s ae s .

“I am now engaged,” said Pro- fessor Bland, “in trying to dis- cover. a universal solvent.”

“What is it?” asked Smart.

“A liquid that will dissolve anything.”

“What a great idea,” agreed Smart, “but when you find it what are you going to keep it \ ine”

s** 6 *# .

A young girl talking to her grandfather, asked, ‘Grandfather, how old does a girl have to be to get married?”

_ Grandfather: “She must be old enough yet young enough, big enough yet little enough, ‘wise enough yet dumb enough, weak enough yet strong énough, to chase

a man until he catches her.” ¢ * * 8 &

“What about this_’ere universal disarmyment, Bill?”

“W'y it’s summat like me and

my old woman, When there’s a

bit of a shindy brewin’ the’ one

*- wot proposes peace is the one

wot ain’t got ’old of the poker!”

Junior: “Daddy, what was the date of the Battle of Waterloo?” Daddy: “I don't know.” Junior: “You don’t know! And to think tomorrow I shall be pun- ished for your ignorance. ~ * * *

The attack on a poet in New York when he was robbed of nearly a thousand dollars is de- seribed by the police as a “mys- tery.” The mystery is how @ poet got hold of the dollars,

*_ ¢+ * #@

The cook was having a day off and she came wearing a very styl- ish frock,

“Why Mary,” said her employer, admiringly, “what a nice dress, It would be hard to distinguish the mistress from the cook,” ;

“Don't you worry, mum,” re- plied Mary. “The gooking would tell.” f 2686

THE ENTERPRISE, SATE MORE. ALTA

fog

. Copyright i Wheeler cae Syndicate

UZ

condislaphsnse said wearily,

T” “Look, Steve, we've got to have

action—understand? The crime wave is growing worse by the hour. I know you're busy, but that won’t cut |} icé with the mayor. He's demanded results, Now it’s our move.”

Police Captain Steve Brant toaned back in hig swivel chair. - P;

‘|newspaper tlippings and photos of

wanted men littered, his desk. A de- tailed map of the city was spread out before him.

“These hold-ups are all: the same,” continued the commissioner, “and pulled by the same two thugs, How they have the nerve to stick around here so long, is beyond me.”

“We'll get them.” Steve's’ voice was resolute. ‘These things take time, you know.” Commissioner Drury stiffened. “I agree. But you're taking too long. ‘Far too long.” *.

“It can't be helped. We're not miracle-men.” . .

"I don’t care what you are. You better do something quick or make room for someone who can.”

Steve’s retort diéa_ on his. lips as

GUARDIAN OF |)

2 Rag Re erage asm NN EA TABI AO te ae

4

weapons, monas and all!” > * *

"A apieleus piece of work,’ the ‘commissioner was saying. “Who tipped you off, Stark?” :

The rookie shook his head. “No- body, sir," proudly. “I atrested them under Section five, Sub-section two of the city by-law.”

.“Phunderation!” Section five!”

The commissioner looked puzzled. “What's that cover?”

“Spittin’ on the sidewalk,” the rookie said.

Wheat Is Important ‘But Oats, Barley And Rye Excel It ain ' In Gross Value »/ New rust varieties now being in- troduced are destined to make oat growing in Canada a safer and more profitable occupation and thus place the crop as such on_a still higher level among Canada’s great natural assets, said Dr. L. H. Newman, Do- minion Cerealist, in discussing Cereal Grains, in the Agricultural Institute Review.

While wheat remained the most

Steve. gasped.

the commissioner spun, on his heel|important single grain by reason of and left. Steve made a mental sum-|its almost universal use as human mary of the case as_it stood to date. food, oats and barley, and to a lesser About a month ago, the two men| extent rye held first place as a group believed responsible for most, if.not|from the standpoint of animal nutri- all, of the eurrent hold-ups, had|tion. In gross value they actually pulled their first job. Termed. the/ excelled wheat to a slight degree, Dr. “Black Hoods” by the local préss,| Newman pointed out, but they did because of their disguise, the sinister|not play a very important part in pair had embroiled the entire city, Sojinternational trade as they were].

“We were rushing to the grocer’s before closing time’... Imagine a week-end without delicious Grape-Nuts Flakes!’

far, the police hadn’t a gingle clue. Steve scowled as the phone rang, An irate voice: “This is’ B, J.J}. Turner, over at. the East,End Gro- ceteria. . . Say, that new yor you took on sure is a dilly . “What’s your trouble? 7 “That cop’s nuts. He takes a no- tion to pick on me about every other day ... I’m getting fed up, cap- tain, . . . The awning in front of my store is a half inch lower than the by-law allows . , . He wants to give me a summons. ., .” Steve suppressed a chuckle. “Don’t

‘let him = worry you, ‘Turner, Tl

haye him smarten up.” “You'd better,” abruptly, “or rm seeing the mayor.”

Two minutes later, Dr. Kittering,

the . county. coronet, barged in. His’ $8,743, 738. \ sharp features were flushed. He],

shook a stubby forefinger at Steve. “That rookie you: hited is abso-

lutely stupid!” he thundered, “Can't you do ‘better than that?” the coroner rushed on; “I had to go

through a red light on an emergency call, and the young fool frailed me and gave me a ticket! I explained the situation to him, but it didn’t mean a thing.” »

Steve shook his~head. “I'l look into it,” he promised, ‘We're short- handed these days, and a lot of fel- lows we take-on aren’t grade A by any meags.”

“You can say that again!”

When the rookie patrolman came

in off the beat that afternoon, Steve Re:

ran for him. He came in-hesitantly. Steve said sharply, ‘You'll have to brighten up a bit, Stark... Learn to use your noodle.” He explained about the complaints,

“But they broke the law, sir!” the|

rookie insisted.

“Technically yes,” * Steve told him, “In the light of everyday com- mon* sense—no!”

Steve dismissed the rookie, - shook his head dolefully and called it.a day.

A week later Commissioner Drury strode into Steve's office. “The hold- up last night. The. Black’ Hoods again.”

Steve remained silent.

‘I've just came in from _ the mayor’s office,” Drury went on, ‘He gives you a week to pick them up. He paused a moment. “And that Stark kid. Fire him'now. He's just a nuisance.”

“He’s Dan Stark's boy.” Steve shook his head sadly. Dan Stark had been his best friend. And before he

cashed in, with a gangsters bullet in his chest, Steve had promised to see that his kid ‘got a break.

As the commissioner left, Steve made up his mind.

Yet them do

phate of Bluest

1 ne, consequently ae filable a8 a dust.

*Trademark Reg’

AT YOUR n LOCAL DEALER

.

-—/eattle. They actually constituted the |”

‘Jing and palatable food. Ranking high

largely consumed in Canada by farm goimals,

‘In feeding value for live stock, ‘oats held a very high place. They ranked first in popularity as a horse feed and stood high as a food for

“I can’t imagine it brother ! Step on it and I'll provide a police escort down to the store so you'll be sure of getting your malty-rich, sweet-as-a-nut Post's Grape-Nuts Flakes !”

Grape-Nuts Flakes’ good nourish- ment: carbohydrates for energy, pro- /teins for muscle, phosphorus for teeth

basis of most ofthe grain feeds used in Canada and might be regarded as the most important feed grain.

As human food, oats, chiefly in the form of porridge, have always en-

joyed wide popularity as a nourish- q

| RECIPES |

CREOLE FUDGE LOAF (1 egg)

in, vitamin B, they were in a position to make substantial contribution to the daily intake: of this important.

vitamin. ceording to the latest

milling returns available, oatmeal} 1% Mone sifted Swans Down cake

and rolled’ oats had a valuation of 1% tsps. malimoe Baking Powder ¥% teaspoon salt

pe) Sra

STREET Ewres % cup butter or other shortening 1 cup sugar Daintily Demure cae Wan beater , y 2 squares ,Baker’s unsweetened chogolate, melted % cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla :

Sift flour once, measure, add bak- ing’ powder and salt, and sift to- gether three times. Cream shorten- ing, add sugar. gradually, and cream together until light and fluffy. Add egg and beat well; then add choco- late and blend. Add flour, alternately with milk, a small amount at a time,

beating after each addition. until

pan, 8x8x2 inches, in slow oven (325 deg. F'.) 1 hour, or until done, Spread icing’ on top.

CHEESE WAFERS

¥% cup butter

2 cups grated soft cheese

144 teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce

Paprika

. 3 drops* Tobasco Sauce

3 cups oven-popped ‘rice cereal

% cup sifted flour

Blend butter and cheese _thor- oughly; add Worcestershire and To- basco Sauce. Roll cereal into. fine crumbs, mix with flour’ and add to cheese mixture. . Shape into rolls 1 to 2 inches in diameter; wrap in waxed paper; chill in refrigerator for two hours, or until firm’ Slice. into wafers % inch thick, Bake on un- greased baking sheet.in a moderate over (375 deg. F.) for 12 minutes. Sprinkle with paprika. Yield: 60 wafers (1% inches in diameter).

Real. Old-Timer . :

British Ship Built In 1815 To Be

“2% By ANNE ADAMS

* “Broken. Up “Play. and party frock for your Almost the last of Britain’ littleun! Sew BOTH these adorable|.sumost . tava

“wooden walls’—the old ship Corn- wall—is to be broken up at Graves- end “on the River. Thames and_ its timbers used for furniture. Built in Bombay in 1815, the Cornwall was. launched as a 74-gun ship, In re- cent’ years it has been moored and used as a training ship for boys. The ship last saw action when a bomb fell near it in 1940, ripping a hole in its hull. The German radio

versions—it’s all done with Pattern 4564. Save by using remnants for contrast. Flora} transfer included.

Pattern 4564: 2, 4, 6, 8. . Size 6., flare sleeve frock, 15. yds. 35-in.; with puff, 1% yds. ; 5, yd. contrast.

Send twenty cents (20c) in. coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Write plainly Size, Name, Address and Style Number and send orders to the Anne Adams Pattern

Dept.,. Winnipeg Newspaper Union, te Winnipeg, |#nnounced that raiders had “severely 175 McDermot gis si wsé m’P©B"! damaged a British warship”.—Chris-

tian Science Monitor.

s

New Heating System

English Engineer Devised Method Of Using Water From River

A city electrical engineer in Nor- wich, England, has devised a method of using cold water from the river for heating. He has developed a heat- pump, employing the principle, that compression produces heat, and has): succeeded in maintaining a tempera- ture of nearly 63 deg. F. in a. five- story building. It is reported that this compression-heating costs about one-third as much as orthodox methods. Rise

CGHGAUGS

smooth, Add vanilla. Bake in greased.

Thomas ‘Hardy, : Nov

and bones, iron for the blood, and other food essentials,”

“They're ‘good all right! That’s because they’re made of two grains— wheat and malted barley. And spe- aalaes oe ‘Gell fot ct and golden-brown c' ani pees pk crispness

*T think T’'ll get a ebuble of those giant economy packages.”

_ Not Interested Falconbridge Nickel Mines Not Bothering With Low. Grade

A a , Deposit

TORONTO, Falconbridge Nickel Mines Limited said it has-no inter- est in a low-grade nickel deposit re- ported to have been found near Dar Es-Salaam, Tanganyika, and that it ds not sending a representative to the area to examine the find,

_ The official of Faleonbridge, which operates a mine in the Sudbury dis- trict in northern Ontario, said that

Cc. H. Farnum, mentioned in a Dar

Es-Salaam dispatch as the repre- sentative of the company who would examine the property, is a consultant who ‘has at times acted for Falcon- bridge. However, he is at present in the United States and as far as the company knows is not going to South Africa.

Ea SE fae i

Efi H

rus Hl

F § E ; 4 lf

Welcomed All “Comers

Famous English t, Was Fond ‘ot ‘Cats

glish novelist Thomas ry.fond of cats, Once erica .

The grea Hardy, was- when two fiiends from>

arrived for tea they found th with cats.

ist almost cove or four were on Various parts tm

person, other cats were near at hand and saucers of milk were noticed at different parts of the shrubbery. “Are all these your cats?” Hardy was asked» and he replied genially, “Oh dear no. Some of them are, and some are cats who come regularly to have tea, and some are still other cats not invited by us, but who seemed to find out about this

time of day that tea is being served;~

so we have the pleasure of their company too.”

Sn tree

MACDONALD 4

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TAE BLAIRMORE GRAPHIC, FRIDAY,

bass... from interest” conttol ..,. Pree to you. che about events, Its own world-wide: staff of corre- spondeuss bring —_ news and its meaning to you the sick list.

C. J, Tompkins is in town from Cal- gary on a periodical ‘business visit. ©

Mr. C. Dancoisne has returned from ‘a holiday in the Okanagan, where he visited with a daughter.

George Cleland, of the Cowley, district, was a “business visitor ‘to Biairmore last Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Reg. Tonge are holi- daying at Vancduver, where they are visiting Reg’s motlier.

, Mostyn Hadwell returned to Cal- gary on Sunday after a short visit at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. _|T. Hadwell. ,

apap Pats haat ne oath

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Patterson are leaving on Saturday “for Seattle and Bremerton, Wash., where they will visit friends and relatives.

In the exhib‘tion games last week Jend against Picture. Butte, the local Columbus Club bréke even, with one tie and each club winning one. of the three-game series,

Mrs. Gondard and daughter Mrs. Gales, of “Spokane, Wash., former regi- dents of Blairmore, are visiting at the home of Mrs. Gondard’s sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Silver- horn. : k

I R CARBONAT i Pepsi- Cola" is the registered trade: mark in Canada of Pepsi-Cola Company of ‘Cana da, Limited

|. Miss Catherine Patterson, R.N., ‘| daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Patterson

where she’ will take a post-gradvate course. Her sister Margaret will ac-

company her.

Fit.-Lieut. Victor. W. Duke, recent- ly returned from Overseas, spent ‘Sunday in Hillerest- with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Duke. es Duke left Monday for Edmonton where he will receive permanent’ posting.

OI | ./

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ite Bat a

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Lh 9 J

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are

Mrs. Felix Nickolson and two sons’ Neal_and-Tarry,.of Vancouver, BC, are visiting at the home of:Mrs. Nickol- son’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. F, M. Thompson. .Mr. them later.

us Re wee a

2 Ba Da PL

ae tas

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aie.

Nickolson will _join

in statistics released by the Foot- ‘hills league in Calgary, Joe Kanik, Purity 99 pitcker, rates high among the hurlers. With $ wins and 2 losses he placed third; 90 strike outs and 31 base on balls, third, and an- earned run average of 1,63, fourth. r

Mrs. F. M. Pinkney has arrived home after a visit of several months in Winnipeg With her’ daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mis. E. Harper. Mrs. Pinkney was accompanied from Winnipeg by _ her .. grandchildren, Audrey and Lloyd Pinkney.

(Oe INDIVIDUALISM

The modern tendency 4 reduce everything “to a formula is deplored by healt}, scientists. In the field. of in- fant rearing, while many books have been written on the methods. parents

individuality and ‘essentially personal Aneeds of the child be studied and taken into account. The best way to ‘bring up a child is not by rigid adher- ence to codes and customs, ‘they say, but by such particular attention as the family physician advises for each in- dividual youngster. aye HEALTH AND CLEANLINESS

Why does it pay to use Imperial Oil tractor fuels ? Because Imperial’s large, modern re- fineties and 65 years of experience assure you of

~ highest quality and the right type of fuel for your make and model of tractor. That’s mighty important for economical operation. Yes—it pays to buy Imperial!

} Changes of clothing from grubby work suits to fresh’ things has an im- portant health, as well as an aesthe- tic, value, declare experts in the de- partment of national health and wei- fare, Ottawa. The derartmental offi- cers urge parents to teach children az an early age that soiled clothing 1s not healthy, and it isn’t just. a fad to change after coming in from work or play. And, clean linen makes one

IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED.

Everywhere in Canada

is an important health factor itself.

a

will leave for Montieal on Saturday. *

should follow, doctors urge that the}

feel better. That, gays the department, :

august 23, 1940,

Mr. Walter Fisher is nyported on Mrs. Dewar, of ‘Odlediad, was, &

Blairmore visitor. on Thursday.

* You can only die for your country

once but you can live for it daily.

CARPENTERS wanted Kootenay Power Co., Coleman, Phone 41,

FOR ELECTROLUX CLEANER, sales and service, phone 4481, Leth- bridge; 1264 8rd Ave. South,

NOTICE—Will the party who wrote Electrolux ‘Sales and Service, Leth- bridge, under date of, Aug 18 and using typewriter, please ge! with The Graphic office.

in touch

F, Allen, Pidgeon Lake, Alberta, is

visiting Mr. and Mrs. M. Curcio for

are

a week or two.

Miss E. M. Fulton, of Calgary, has been in Blairmore for a few days, the guést of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Murray.

The man who isn’t much good knows :he isnt good for much. But the man. who is no good thinks he is Pet: fectly all right.

“Three questions and answers” will be the Sermon topic at Central United church Sunday evening. You are Cordially invited to be present. .

Mrs, Millired May and her daugh- ter Jewel, of Cheney, Wash., are visitors in town and are house guests

of Mr. and Mrs. L. Williams. ah

Windsor, Ontario, are on holiday in the Pass, and are’ visiting Rorald’s mother, Mrs. M. Johnson. It is a num- ber of years since Ronald l¢ft here and acquainteénances are happy to ex- tend him ‘and his wife 4 glad hand

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Pinkney returned home after a three” week holiday spent» at. Waterton. Lakes, Kalispell and other Montana’ points. Whilé in Waterton they took part in the Waterton Lakes Lions Club Golf tournament played there three weeks ago.

ae

THERE’S A SURPRISE awaiting you if you hayen’t yet tried delicious Maxwell House Coffee. It’s “‘Radi- ant-Roasted” to gevclop all the extra flavor in the

superb Maxwell House blend,

She'll soon have the world at her finger- tips because

EATON’S 468-page Fall and Winter Catalogue is in the mail for her now.

Tr EATON C'

\

‘at East

Mr. and Mrs, Ronald Johnson, of}.

Wringer Rolls to fit any Washer ~

eagtngs 0)

a a ae

“WASHER REPAIRS.

, ANY MAKE,

Vacuum Cleaners ei Ironers, Bte. 4

Lethbridge Appliances 317 + 8th Stree(‘South |” Phone 4456 / MAYTAG SALES AND SERVICE { - Send your Washer direct to Us’

HARVEST WORKERS -

- NEEDED!

___districts,——-

All available men are needed to assist. with harvesting on Alberta farms. Good wages are being offered, with work available in many

_ FARMERS AND WORKERS

For Harvest help, or harvest work, contact any office of the National Employment Service, your District Agriculturist, or Local Labor

_ Representative today.

~

FARM LABOR SERVICE

DOMINION PROVINCIAL

esis * EDMONTON ALBERTA

You may never sell Gas . to U.S. motorists

‘CANADA'S TOURIST. BUSINESS As s YOUR business

Tourist money spreads around. The garage man, the grocer, the farmer— everybody, benefits directly or indi- rectly, The tourist industry is profitable business—worth protecting. Especially this year when the impression American visitors take back with them will influ- ence Canada’s tourist industry through all the years to come,

CANADIAN TRAVEL BUREAU Department of Trade & Commerce, Ottowa

Double-Edged

Security -

~ SAVINGS © CERTIFICATES Regularly!

Space Donated, By

“THE BREWING INDUSTRY. ‘OF ALBERTA

# 9 1

Cane iad ohh HBR ‘4 ga ea A let Wl 2 AEA LTR? DONS A LR AN NCO 4

eet ee Bet can: defer ee