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Edmonton Bulletin 1929-07-02 - 1929-09-30
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Date
1929-09-13
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EDMONTONS OWN NEWSPAPER Founded to 1880 by Hen Frank Other The Bulletin ts the Only kdmovion Newspaper Quned, Controtted, Operated by Edmontan Men. Published every afterndon, except Sunday the Alberta Press, Limited, vt the Bullet Building, 9841-9845 Jasper Avenue Gast. Sdmont Alberta, Canada. CHARLES E. CAMPBELL Owner and Publisher. Subscription Price By Mail (in advance) or year, in Cansda, 9.00; United States 7.00 By Garren, per, wee or 100 per year Telephon 9924 ADVERTIS REPRESENTATIVES ANADA Toronto, Ont., H. F. Bird, Bullding, 80 King Street West. UNFFED STATES The Beckworth Special Aagene Ine, New York Central Bulldlng, New York City; also Union Trust Bullding. Chicago; Ford Building, Detroit; Syndicate Trust Bidg., St. Loui lnterstate paren . Kansas Oity: Glenn Building. ilania: muss Bullelng, San Franeieo; 1188 No ett Street, Philadelphia. LONDON, ENGLAND The Clougher Carpora- tion, Lamtied, Royal Colonial Chambers. 1 Craven et The Audit Bureau of Circulation audits the etxculation of the Edmonton Bulletin. IF If WILL HELP ALBERTA THE EDMONTON BULLETIN 8 FOR IT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1929 A BANKER, TOO Sir Henry Thornton has been elected a director of the Royal Bank. Congratula- tions to both parties. His election is due to the business ability Sir Henry has shown in the management of the National Railways. Any man who could pull the National out of the hole it was in must be a valuable addition to the directorate of a bark, or almost any other kind of a busi- hess concern. TIME TO INSPECT The Winnipeg jury failed to discover the origin of the apartment house fire there in which nine people perished. Th jury recommends that an inspection be made of all residence buildings in the city which are more than three storeys in height, with a view to seeing that the fire hazard is not increased by faulty con- struction, arrangement or equipment. The: authorities of Edmonton, and of every other western city, should note that recommendation. This is the time for building inspections be made, and they should be made annually in every large Winter is approaching. With the fire risk automatically in- creases. Now is the time to see that buildings and heating apparatus are in shape, or are put in shape, to minimize the danger. AN ALBERTA PRODUCTS FAIR. The Industrial. Committee of the city plans to hold-a produced-in-Alberta exhi- bition early next month. The announce list hearty support for the enterprise. The exhibition will help to bring home to the people of the city the wide variety of Al- berta-made products which are on the market and bidding for their patronage. Those who appreciate the economic ad vantages of buying home products in pre- ference to imported will realize the bene- fits which can be secured through a dem- onstration of the kind. In general terms it is true that-Edmonton people do not know what is made in Edmonton, and Al- bertans do not realize how many of their wants can be supplied from Alberta: fac- tories, mills, farms and gardens. The fair will help to remedy that situation, and in so far as it does this it will promote the general well-being. COAL IN ONTARIO lt;Ontario is in luck. The discovery of a considerable body of coal in the Abitibi district is.an event of first. magnitude to the people of that provirice. Premier Fer- guson states that from 7,000,000 to 10,- 600,000 tons are in sight. Alberta miners dig out:about seven million tons per year. Still, where that much has been found it is reasonable to suppose that more is to be found. If the deposit is large, it will ultimately be worth more to Ontario than the gold mines which have made Porcu- pine famous. Gold does not build -and maintain great industries and industrial centres.. Coal does. Obviously, the uncarthing of this new fuel supply will not better.the prospect of selling Alberta coal in Ontario. That can- not be helped. Nor will Albertans on that account grudge the people of the. older province the good fortune that has come to them. As the prairies fill up with peo- ple, Alberta will not lack markets for its coal.* And no province can prosper with- out the others sharing in the benefit. In- directly Alberta would profit through the development which must follow the open- ing up of a great coal area in Ontario; per- haps profit sufficiently to compensate for the loss of the market now available there o Alberta mines. INVESTIGATION PROPOSED The Calgary Albertan thinks the slump in oil stocks which occurred early this week was caused by the circulation of rumors calculated to: injure companies operating in the Turner valley. Certain interests, it is stated, taking advantage of the psychological effect of a continued decline in prices, attempted to hurry the operation by the circulation of these un- founded reports, which in some cases were tions, is the point where rumors. of that kind could be made most effective, and the point where they might be expected to originate, if anywhere. If there is strgng reason to suspect ment should arouse wide attention and en-4-f0r we do not, companies af fected. Calgary, being the base of opera- Vane MCAT TO that this kind of manipulation has b going on, the Albertan in quite in order in proposing that an investigation be held, and that any offending brokers be weed- ed out of the stock exchanges. That, in the circumstances, would be due to the people who have put millions of dollars in- to the development of the Tur field, to the investing public who are being invited to buy stocks in companies operating there, and of the country. The Turner valley is too important an asset of this province and of the Dominion for the tal eration of any sort of jobbery which would give a set-back to its development. A Contract By EDGAR GUEST Why don t they write it in simple phrases: Why do they tangle me up with clauses? Straight and open and clear our. ause 1s, Why do they fashion such verbal mazes? I have agreed to a certain labor, They have agreed to certain payment. They know what T meant; I knew what they meant. Why can't we deal aa neighbor to neighbor? Why can't they write it the way we said it? Why do the lawyers impose conditions Bofuddling ta clearest af pronositions? Papers like this are yo Xo man s credit. Well, from my desk T have this day banned it, Contract or no. Straight back Til send it, With only this jine to the men who penned it: *T'll sign it the day X ean understand it Change By GLENN FRANK fe of thie facls that schools are ive. institutions, not because re- asta are strangling them: with sub- sidies or seducing them with propaganda, but simply because schools are formal institutions, and formal institulions always .Jng behind the changing needs Those of us-who are chai wth. the responsibility, of ministering the nation s schools will betray our trust if we set out to make the schools either strongholds of reaction or hot- beds of radicalism, But we dare not do other than fight the normal tendency of the school, as an institution, Ks to lag behind the needs of changing civilization. we have aright to ect the school ta do, as follow rst, to picture society as it really fs at the mor mont, hot as it was fifty years ago. Second, to prepare students to play an intellly gent part in the affairs of changing world We have said that our schools exist to prepare our sons and dapghters for adult participation in the affuirs of thelr time. But in the main, I think our schools have failed to do this on two counts, as follows gt; First, they have prepared our sons and daughters for the adult life of ten or twenty-five years ago rather than for the adult life ofthe. present, The social situation has changed materially dur- ing the last twenty-five years, and'the subjee of education has not kept pace with the cha sola picture in the text books is out-of date. Second, they are not preparing -our sons and daughters to wrestle with a future that will probably change more rapidly than the immediate past changed. The social situation. will be changed materially during the ext twenty-five years. Just what these changes will be no one knows. Even our ablest pro- phets are in vivid'disagreement. Therefore, the only education we have any right to give to our sons and daughters is not an cducatjon for a changed world, now the kind of world in which they witl have to live, but an education for a changing world, In the days ahcad. the educated man will be the man who can ang master the swift social change. We must rethink both the subject matter teaching metheds of education in terms of question: How can we prepare our sons and daughters to maintain a clear head and a sense of real valucs in a rapidly changing world? This is more important than learning or not learne ing any particular fact or ficld, and this 40 Years Ago Today From the files of The Edmonton Bulletin The NP. and M. Portage extension was opened on yagust, 28th. f ity council of Madrid, Spain, 1s accused of The robbi the city of 20,000,000. ne ae ee Duluth and: The contract for 50 miles of the Winnipeg road has been let to Foley Bros., of St. inn., to be complcted before the ground and Dennison have the contract. for. grad- miles of the C.P-, Souris branch this fa Montreal Star lt; Out of some eight hundred liquor dealers who are licensed to keep hotels and restau Fants in the elty less thax one hundred are actually complying with the conditions under which their Iicenses are lestied Owing to the non enforcement of the tithing sys- tem in Wales clergymen of the Church of England fete are tesigning their charges and entering secular neults. P The contract for the N.P. and M. general offices, train shed and depot at Winnipeg. and the founda- fion for the hotel has been et to Messrs. Rourke and Gass for 100 000, ypu the sean wheal esope du. ary weather. tl seant wheat crop, due-to ary : The tural society has made a collection of grain and native grasses, which has been shipped to the Toronto exhibition. THIRTY YEARS AGO T, Clatworthy has returned tom the Liard river, Capt, Brown, of one of ihe Yuken-bound partiss of-last year, recured from the north today. Prof. Parker held one of his highly entertainin successful sales of pens with changes for ones, Fives tens and fifty dollar pills as a side ssue on Thursday evening. Mr . Bradley of. Hockley s barber shop was the lucky drawer of the fifty dollar bill. The town authorities Wed any further entertainment by the gifted professor. Indian Commissioner Laird srriv d from the north on Friday. He was accompanied by Messrs. Young, Deschambault, Ht. Mckay, Sgt. Anderson and Constables Burke and Lett. Lucten G. Ransom. L. F. Mann, F. A. Fischer, Chas, 8 Bird, John Hurt and 8. 8. Boggs, of the Great Slave Lake Mining and Prospecting Co, at- rived from the north) Saturda; TWENTY YEARS AGO Sydney. N.S Commander Peary, who is return- ing from tis trip to the pole, will challenge Dr. Cook to an open debate if Dr. Cook does not withdraw his claim to have reached the pole. On his arrival here Com. Peary will also issue a statement ridiculing Dr. Cook's story. This he is now prepsring at Batile Harbor, on the Labradcr coast, where the Roosevelt still Ungers. This was icarned from a telegram from Use explorer today. Cum Peary claims that Dr. Cook knew of his success before making his announcement to the world, Hon. Davi and a former ton on Saturday. TEN YEARS AGO Canada s war expenditure, exchisive of nin roughty 500;000- Mass. The thira day of the police strike opened with the militia forces, 5000. strong, under Laird, first Governor of the Territories, orders to restore lawful conditions, to the point of lusing their rifles f necessary, Toadon A Bolshevist wireless message claims that 12,000 prisoners have been taken from Gen, Kolchak s southern army, and predicts the complete collapse of his campaign. ;ebaths, soaps and ointnients do not finister of the In erior, visited Edmon- Hn a Pn i Ke f fil Ps. 3 AND RU Seu CeuLe see THAT Health and Diet Advice By DR. FRANK McCOY Diet Specialist and Author of The Fast Way to Heslth Questions on Health and Diet Answered hy Dr, MeOoy, when ty eer, when addressed im care of The Edmonton FRIDAY, SEPT i3th McCOY ... +s THE WEEK'S MENU Dr. McCoy's menus suggested for the week beginning Sunday, September 15th: Sunday: Breakfast Poached egg om Melba toast. Stewed fles.: Lunch Head jettuce. 3 chicken, Cooke asparagus, Small green peas. Salad Macaroni or spaghettt, boiled and buttered, of minced avocado on shredded Monday: wheat bread. Stewed prunes. biscuits, String beans. Celery. vegetable soup. Broiled stesk. ed. tomstoes. raisins. Tuesday? with asparagus tips. Baked apple. Wedpesday: Breakfast Coddled eggs, Melba toast. Stewed prunes. or Lunch rounce glass of orange juice, Dinner Baked white fish, cooked squash. Gooked-lettuce. Eliced tomatoes and guotimbers. No dessert, Thursda; Breakfast Baked eggs, small piece toast, Lunch Baked potat beans. Celery, Dinner Spinach an eatery soup. Balispury steak with but oinseit eaves, Apricot whip. nels leaves, Apricot. whip. Friday: Breaktast Whole wheat mutiins, peanut butter. Stewed pears Tunch -Gne or two oranges, glass of Sweet mill Dinner Brotied tet of Sole, baked: eggplant, McCoy salad. No Gensert s Breakfast Cottage cheese, pineapple. (fresh or canned). Cucumber and olive sand- . Dinner Roast Beef or pork, cooked string beans, cooked. oyster plant, Molded vegctable salad (car rots, string beans and celery). Baked ars. Pefucumber and olive sandwiches: thin siiees of genuine whol st bread with peanut butter. Place few crisp spinach or lettuce Jeaves on each slice, then a layer of cucumbers sliced Jengthwise and sprinkle with minced tipe olives. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS jestion J. K. writes: I have had the itch now for six'months. All the cure or help me. and I am most an: feetion can be cured by dieting. The matn change is to regulate your food combinations so as to overcome ex- ceen stomach acidity which ts the CHARACTER tee . CLOSE-UPS HE GIRL WITH THIS GENEROUS BUT THIN NOSE Is SURE TO BE SUPER- SENSITIVE- i an Breakfast French omelet. Genuine whole Salad of quartered cucumbers, Breakfast Re-toasted breakfast with cream (no sume), Pear sauce. - Lunch Combins- tion salad of cookedand'rew vegetables, such as beets, carrots, peas, cyctitibers, eelery,;, Difiner Rosst pork or mutton. Beked squash, Ssied of tomato syffed By Webster Tae a ra a WN a i vy 4 a Nl aly oa ae ae a AN ORNAL B'S OPENING. cy KING OF CAS oe ORK IT) LER Spue. OF Imi THEN DUMMY RUFED: Sir A HIGH SPADES PRE- VENT AM OVER RUPE, 19 200 ANERE EVEN HALE WIT TCO Ha AMON DS On Se Secone Teves. AE Fine SSE WOULP Bet cans, oul? A PERFECT MOONLIGHT NIGHT OM THE LAKE Ce rere - Astrology By PELLE BART Tnfivences on Saturday Avoid risk. Watch for the made today is very likely. ances. The Dinner Reast lettuce: Apple whip. Lunch Bsking powder f Dinner Non-starehy Cooked parsnips. Cook- resourceful Btewed aS : lee trusted. to protect. mate rd your interests. Tt is ne toog Wanble, for you to permit thove self. Your best efforts would be dec Rigrature, banking, ell raliteed cogiueerins, mini draymay yf nature 16, 1867 Excellent ereative work. By ROPERT QUILLEN been exposed to prosperity. old is that 8 giggle doesn't affect as it cf refined enough to despise money-getters. The sdyantage in 2 orphan Is that the sad result of foolish training can be blamed on its Parentage. ected in plans. Reversal of decisions Take no hazard with, fin- usual in connec- tlon with well- laid plans marks sclence invention, Unfavorable for on. jonely allied to you to influence your mover ments in'any way, for you are clover ile enough to judge for youre din any work: Sasting, wil Ki ancl m for attempting anything of an here beneficial re red are the winter 1990, and summer of 1031, the fall of 1982 and the year of 1989. (Charles Dana Gibson, Born September Pispetary Conditions for Sunday, September 15 conditions, prevail for Paragraphs An orator 5 3 man who makes s titude seem important by yelling Now there is a vaccine to prevent aimont everything except degenera- tion of the moral tissue after ong has consolation about getting ees Of money-getters to prodiice a strain vulgar Professor of Poyshology, University. fossor emeritus; lecturer in the th Yoru City bask president of the i Friday the 13th i No matter how big the news, of My ine gare Peay ye fi iyakee tit front pose, S nt iki and the) pepple aay the editors remind them of it. Nor Ihody believes 11 t everybod) 4 eh Buliding Jn the heart of New York the floor above the twelfth ta the fourteenth. Tf you In- vite fourteen to dinner and one fails, more than one person is put out. We do have berth thirteen in Puilman cars; and many people, not in. the Yeast superstitious, think 1 more ap- ropriate that somebody else occ it. Why Am rlonna should be attectr ed that way Js hard to say, since we started with thirteen original States fd ae still going strong. owing how the belief arose doesn t make it any more rational. yaa Hied byte tase Supper y the upper, when thirteen were present, and that's why the superstition particularly to thirteen at table; and iday was the day of the Crucifixion, That's Juss the Christian form of a far older and quite general hellef in lucky and unlucky numbers and days. aise, and. seven, like hitter, anded as icant: they are word Which we use in two nd as sueh imply that even humbers are more than ordinaty. In eharms and incantations things must fe done just three times to make Jthem work. Dream the same dream three times and it wi come true. All food things are tive, says the German prover. But three, though the number of the Trinity, may carry misfortune; and in the smoking-room of the same modern Pullman cas, hard-bolled travellers -wil decline to Ught three cigarettes with the same Montaigne died a5 a loose sully of the mind. Essps hig have heen py ye ture, quick: lof the publi for x un Montaiene, Greek. At five years o fect. As a child he w tatnly an infancy a little out ofthe smenemen: Great Triump determined nature ar ade O - pith Ctueley read trom: a bok in 3 ne discovered that Her ittie son Hore Fie wae leanlig aguinet Jie ieee hhim the words. were upsidg down andthe reversed, but rays, with equal case. And he was rt chilai self. yet i rel a ee le i Ha caly ig ale? tg nate aint gs you an a grea your first with grammar. But it was not his fault as much as that of Lindle: Murrey, author of an English gram- Keeping Mentally Fit By Joseph Jastrow, A.B., A.M., Pb-D., LL.D. Behoal or American Phycbologica) Association 1PY come out: tes and times a1 On This Date SEPTEMBI September 13th, de Montaigne invented that itera tion is, perhaps, beet descriptive of the eupovttions ef say as created by the, great articular vereatiity of ind. fomprehensive he described opinions, with freedom in any other et Genius in that bartoular orm of terse and the imitation Montaigne was born in the f iene ti worgara prance, ihe ne eld raider cootnrle ideas on edeation apd Bis ris the villagers had to fit ip. Sah Sniry 7 See fe could Understood, Wercfore, thet wien, fn his tenth: ear Bordeaux his masters were rather reicent when ae te ieee always-awakened to Qaaays which created a new form of prose. eee BY dg. P. GLASS Horace Greeley at Bix Won Offer of 3 Citizens to Educate Him rer unis B Tie ara ore ie Y What Pa Maher ge amt . ttle, Hi still hear him. Tit-Bits, Wuconstn, 1988 to 1912; bow pro- Boctal Resesrch, New mateh, for fear of Ill luck to one of them Some say that this refers to the Savior erusitied between two thieves. Whether sacred or profenc, the reas som is much the same aiid equally feeble. Por we bolieve these things and let them affect our action not for any reason except that our mi Ayeline to wet that wey. If g th ly considered bed luck, it's ust Well not to take changes And Phirteen Club in London. with thirteen members meeting on the thir teenth of the nionth, for all 1 know, having thisteen courses, 4s, in its why, paying tribute to the super stiton ly defying 1 the gana man st Paya, no hit ntion te it. And tL matter most of us go about oUF these pvivaa fromthe aga whe? survival 8 that king of thinking far os most men had gone 2 yt dig dow perstitions Rave about Of Toots. IVs the idea you do.a thing determines how it will Ws belief in signs omens and ceremonies all gove by some mysterious NoreiDe, A sort of magic in ydaen we the primitive mind's way of leoking ahs mn to be born and when to be married, or start. on m Journey, plant seed, oF go to a hunt or w Way, was determined by a sct of lucky days seasons. We all Tex member: Beware the Ides of Mare boy acquaintance with jullys Ogesar. Go back far enaygh and you would Have believed that the moe important thing, - au were to have an operation, 4s'to have it done fon the right day. Now you want the best surmeon using the best sclenee. And that's the vital difference tween the one kind of thinking a the other. or mast. of qur thinking We use commonsense and. the ystems stle form of st we gall scicnce; ocna, fF ece aigns and ware ye aly Sameer teat ates fea sia ad Tis tastes, rs, le, wer Europe, ci ring the fe the literary world, of Mon- tat appears to tons sees : fer a recepiive infant. der one why a In Consequence young Michel was tant and ai rain was tau : fered to sea onig tn that articular tongue, Even Of secreation he was taught the purest Latin. It is easily came to that particular sub- strains of sof te. Cer , Maintained ina sense, by his hs of Children Leading Wake up. I's your turn mar and reader then in use im the schools, This book tothe instruction ot lit ) hi Moreover, the was to none but those to ask and DEFINITIONS nvwindpes Do east ot veke QUESTIONS (Avoreres by Tomerr-'s Astle delight. ot : make Beethoven orsshe ie, pare At what the pit fee did he begin to study What musics sai before he wan Tisece eet a wn ate ohn tay Sata STOP HIS MISORE The after-dinner droned. and on one mun nodded ie haltman ianed over ana tapped Hibs on the head with his mallet, The delinguent raised bis heed iit me harder. he sai Daunt our hopes. Bee eases: Values par exce store means gr Cash and Carry SILVER BAR 6 PEAOHED, Bin, per uo. SOE 3 25c CORN Chajce 2 25c mam 13 BOGAR CRISP CORN FLAKED coyrrny wilt OR SEAGULL BRANI te per Rees 10- inch another vecorda. saving. EXT VALUE Coats forthe Season- About fifty good Conte that are pri Stylish models, good material, warm Jarge collary of Tbibetine, either crus sold so reasonable. The shades are a . ng navy, Glzes 14 to 44. Salurday's Gest Special Handsome Ki About twentystive very practical sul mands 2.2 use of knitted outfit. 1 styles, pullover or Cardigan atyles, an Teduced to lear to Saturday Cystom Business Women s W Long and short sleeved style, heavy wrap over front, neat collar and lapel hat will stand the strain of frequent Sizes 94 to 44. Woodward value Fancy Pulloy Colors for many admirers and the wear are included in with a lot for. Knlteto-Pit manufactupers send us th Siees 39 to G8. Saturday Bargain + Satin Aftern: In Bie, flarlaus array of styles Jus so nd the, colors too are good. Lovely greens, wines and reds and black pre 42. Without doubt special value at ; Silk and Wool . With just enougb ht Bee ifeaps Bocolal for Saturday only sss ye English All-Woo Pure white fine wool for Bari; i straight opera top or buli-up wigs wt Ro buttons and si only. Be ribbed garmenis, Giees for average fi Ba urday Gpecial, per sult .,.. Girls Vest an Warm garments tor active White Erited gustnents oat brush siceves oF no sleeves. tailored finish. Tit Well, Sinag 6 to 14 yes Gach garment, special . pee . High-Grade Rs Best quality garment, no avon, ratty shades tet all wom fo misses oF Women. On Bole Bat very special price, Per'garment Popular Co In four different, models tor medium Uiting wits dee) inser -Gge8 90 to 40, woodward Votan, Er Fancy Crepe Fe all made to set on. Saturday. sleeveless, tnd int) well made gnd utmost in vat Saturday only, at Woodward hese gowns Bargain Day, 8: Millinery Painted Hats, hand-embroldered ore in combination effect bs All smart, nifty shapes. Zach Wonderful showing of dressy Felts, in oe 2.9 Afferent, .. ; Pattern Hats tre borough, thera uly as teres cand very wearable... tag no two Art Needl Partagas eo All stamped ready to work... Baturdey 15 , 25c, 35c lovely aust boot too a Foner Bogs, stamped Special candy mixture consisting of ahd ehocolates. All fresh and tasty, Salted Peanuts of the small appetizing popular. Saturday Special, Ib, Jelly Beans, a general favorite with 1 Saturday Special, tb, ..,...
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Image 1275 (1929-09-13), from microfilm reel 1275, (CU11117874). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.