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Edmonton Bulletin 1929-07-02 - 1929-09-30
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1929-07-19
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For the Lord sceth not a Today s text is suggested by Mary Walsh, representative, Church of the Nazarene, Wetaskiwin. EDMONLUNS OWN NEWSPAPER Wounded tp 184v by Hon Frank Oliver Tho Bulletin ts the Unly Edmonton Newspaper Qwnea, Controtied, Operated by Edmonton Men. x Published every afternoon, except Sunday, by the Alberta Free Press, Limited, the Bulletin ding 9641-0248 Jasper Avenue East, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. CHARLES E. CAMPBELL Owner and Publisher Subscription Price--By Mali (in advances, per year. in Canada, 5.00; United States 7.00. By Carrier per week. 15 cents, or 7.00 per year. Telephone 9324. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES RN CANADA Toronto, Ont, BF. Bid, Star Bullding, 80 King Street West UNITED STATES Phe Heckworth Special, Agency nc., New York Central Bullding, New York City: also Union Trust Bullding, Chicago: Ford Building, Det indicate Trust Bidg.. St. Lous; Interstate Building, Kansas City: Glenn Butlding, Atlanta; Russ Building, San Francisco; 1135 No. 85th Street, Philadelphia. LONDON, ENGLAND The Clougher Corpora tion, Limited, Royal Colonial Chambers, 20 Craven Street. The Audit Bureau Bf Circulation audits the etreulation of the Edmonton Bulletin. If Iv WILL HELP ALBERTA THE EDMONTON BULLETIN tS FOR IT FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1929 NOT MANY, WANTED Alberta, it is estimated, can get along this year with about two thousand har- -vesters from outside points. Last. year sixteen thousand were required. There will be fewer sheaves to handle this fall, and-there are more idle men in the pro- vince to lend a hand at the job. Condi- tions are pretty similar in the other west- ern provinces. It is rather important that this fact be made widely known. Crops are under standardgn the older provinces and the neighboring states also. The west is some- what liable to an inundation of harvesters from those provinces and states unless the warning signs are hung out in advance. Men in all parts of the continent have got the habit of looking to the western fields for fall work. They should be told that this year is the exception to the rule. PREPARING THE AIR ROUTES The arrival of-the survey party who are looking over western air lines and the arrangements: which er being, made for the inception of the airnail isa hopeful sign that the establishrgent of this service will not be much longer delayed. There was a lively demand -for eir mail. from western centres a year ago. Last Decem- ber trial flights were made by mail planes between Winnipeg and Edmonton, with success. Considering the opportunities for saving time, it cannot be claimed that western people have been unreasonably urgent for the establishment of air mail. It is interesting, and also reassuring, to learn that beacons and emergency land- ing fields are being arranged at thirty- mile intervals along the proposed routes. The public will not grudge any further delay that may be necessary to get these safeguards in order. No one would want the airmen to undertake unnecessary - risks merely that the service should get under way a few days or weeks earlier. With lights and landing places at this comparatively short distance apart, once the service is started it should be possible to operate it regularly and with minimum danger of mishaps... NO LONGER REMOTE Tuesday's afternoon edition of the posed a conference. Moscow replied in effect that there will be no conference, and handed the Chinese representative his 1 can be no question there- fore as to where the responsibility rests for the rupture. The Soviet is the aggres- sor. It was offered peace, and declared for war. Ostensibly, the bone of contention is the Chinese Eastern railway. This is a Russidn-owned railway running through Chinese territory. It is not, and never was, of any particular value to Russia save as a highway-for-Russian influence and Russian troops into the Chinese pro- vince of Manchuria. It was built under the Czarist regime, and as part of the age- long policy of extending the possessions of Russia in-Asia.The-Soviet has shown little enough concern for Russian invest- ments outside Russia in other parts of the world, and no inclination to continue the Czarist policy of expansion in other q ters. The railway through Manchuria is the exception to the rule.. That is to be made the pretext for a war which could have been avoided if Moscow had been willing. The conclusion is obvious. The Soviet is not: going to war to resist China's unwarrantable interference with the man- agement. of the Russian-owned railway. It is making war for the conquest of Man- churia and the.dominance of China. The railway dispute is only the convenient blind for the drive to establish red -author ity in the Orient. The Graduation By EDGAR A, GUEST The college presigent called his name, and when the boy-appeared.- area ee No doubt she- thought it was for him the throng of people cheered. No doubt they thought it was for him they toudly. clapped their hands, But they were paying tribute: to a'mother in. the stands: Well done, my boy, the-president. remarked as he stood there, Tam yery proud this morning. your achleyemente to clare, But that glorious diploma marked a mother's triumph. For that day of graduation saw her fondest dream come true, Oh, the days of tedious stitching Oh, the miles of + hem and. seam ee 5 Bhe had braved with aching fingers to achieve that single dream. And I wonder if he knew it, as -he proudly walked away, How she'd worked-for-that diploma and that gradua- tion day, Fortune-Telling By GLENN FRANK Out present-day civilization may be described:as: race between foresight and fortune-telling. By foresight I mean scientific fore- By fortune-telling I mean unreliable popular pre- diction, Ald Auguste Comte, the French philosopher, expressed. the spirit his fmous phrase Voir; Prevoir; Pourvolr. Freely. transiated this phrase means, See to foresee, foresee in order to provide. Prediction 4s thus one-of the sclence, predietions elther of the popular mind pr of the, professional soothsayer. of.sclence are but one phase of the three-fold business of science. First, sclence must, if st is true to itself, begin by assembling and assaying all the facts about the pro- blem under consideration; clear obesrvation must assemble the facts amd controlled experimentation must test the facts, Second, science must then study the facts it has assembled and tested in the light of cause and effect; it must undertake accurately to forecast the effects that will follow from: the chuses represented by the Third, science must, sf it isto complete its job, help, us to work out.ways and means of controlling the situation its analysis and forecgsts have revealed. There are. thesefore, three p ofthe foresight of the scientist. They/are Bulletin. carried the news that, Judge Positive knowledge. b court at Aklavik, had Erricion: conteol earlier the same a -if-ail-of- us- lt;0r a controtiingmajoritg of us- realiy-4 Eskimc o-were convicted of crimina offences. There are no telegraph wires to Aklavik, None run much nearer that than a thousand miles. The wire- station of the- Dominion Government there flung the message-across-the inter- vening twelve hundred miles to Edmonton. And, if it were necessary or expedient, the judge and lawyers who conducted the trial at Aklavik on Tuesday, along with the mets, could be landed in Edmonton fore the close of the week, by the air- plane service that is operating down the Mackenzie valley. a It is scarcely correct any more to speak of points in the northland as remote. They are still remote in mileage, but in that alone. . In point of time, whether for. mending messages or for urgent traveling, Aklavik is no. more remote than Toronto, from Edmonton. . The wireless station and the airplane have put the trading posts in the north into contact with the older sections of the Dominion to a degree that could not have been done by a half- century of-railway-building. For purposes of administration, exploration and the carrying on of important private business, the hinterland has been opened up and made accessible during the last five years as perhaps only the northerners can fully Tealizes a gt; a) RUSSIA S DRIVE ON CHINA Russia is forcing war upon China. That is the exact meaning of the dismissal of the Chinese ambassador at Moscow. What the dispute is about and which govern- ment was most to blame for the course of events up until that dismissal took place, questions which are aside from the. int. The all-important fact is that the fanking authorities, in replying to. the Russian-ultimatum, stated definitely that a Chinese plenipotentiary was being sent to Moscow to discuss all out-standing questions between the two governments. That declaration passed the initiative to Russia, and along with it the responsi- Professor of fessor exieritus; lecturer York Ott ..By DR. FRANK McCOY Diet Specialist and Author of. The Fast Way to Health Questions on Health und Diet Answered: by Dr. McCoy, when addressed ia care of The Edmonton Bulleain THE WEEK'S MENUS Dr. McCoy's menus suggested for the week beginning Sunday, July 2ist:, Sunday: Breaktast French omelet, toasted Triscula, ripe figs. Lancy Ice cream, Fresh Peaches. Dinn r Broiled chicken, spinach, buttered bepts, salad of cucumbers and celery. Jello. No cream. oe Monday: Breakfast Cottage chese, Melba toast, Apple sauce. Lunch Corn, atring beans, lettuce. Din- ner Reast' mutton, aucchint (Itallan squash), MeCoy tomatoes and cucumbers), Apricot whip. kfast Baked eggs, retoasted shred- Wednesday: Breaktast Retoasted breakfast food. with mili or cream: Stewed figs. Lunch Melon as de- sired. Dinner Rosst pork, cooked spinach, salad of Frank MeCoY tomatoes, cabbage and endive. Baked apple. gt; Thursday: Breakfast Eggs poached in milk, Melba toast. Dish of fresh 4 or canned'berries (no sugar). Lunch Ice cream with one kind of Fresh Frult. Dinner Salisbury steak, baked grated carrots, cucumbers cooked*, salad of certo bacon, Melba toast Stewed Ha ral sins. Lunch Avocado saled, Dinner Baked white fish, cooked egg plant, cooked celery, salad of slleed tomatoes. No dessert. Saturday: Breakfast Orisp waffles, butter, with a small amount. of maple . Stewed apticots, -Lunch with milk or cream (no sugar). Dinner Roast yeal, summer squash, cooked greetis, salad of asparagus tips. have terrible pains all over me:about twenty nitnutes after eating even the thesmallest meal, such as one lice of whole wheat beard, cooked or raw frult, and perhaps one.cup of Postiim of milk... Pains are ftom lower men right -up under-the uri, espe- cially afound left breast, Puts me tr fever. while they last, sometimes for half an hour. Answer The combination . of food of our.time, but unfortunately most.of us are: prac- Htioners of fortune-telling rather than sclentific foresight. If we are conservative, we predict that. innovation will bring doom; if we are radical, wall BUY AT HOME Vancouver Sun: The old-time F iescence, ness as f-nothing had happened and restrict our commeves, Already pa riotic: Canad- jans are insisting on goods of Cariadian origin and this wise discrimination must more generally be sdopted if this country is to. achiove its full measure of :pros- perity and its economie independence. Increased domestic consumption of our own products will stimu- Jate the expansion of Canadian industry, increase the ponsibliity in the developm by patronizing home industry, be elevated to the status of fian people to face the cold facts, adopt such measures as intelligent self-interest may dictate and, while waiting for government action, Individual self-interest may be intelligently and ef- Sesieay semen ta sommmeneey ising home just if not be announ: seas folk may study it in advan nomic conference? Border Cities Star: The Berlin zoological garden. we are told, houses 5,000 animals, comprising 1,500 bility for what might follow. China pro- Gifferent types. Including, of course, a couple of junkers. i i E te Ben iH i i 1 ty i i Hl Fi 2s 5 2 fia 5 aee i ; i; uh ir i i : ig Fi (Sai OSE AND LPs HERE ARE SURE SIGNS THAT THis LITTLE LADY 1s NOT INTERESTED UN - STINGY: LOVER'S Astrology By Planetary Influences on Saturday wl Unfavorable. for. financial affairs. attempting ture where bent red are the summer of 1929 and e winter of 1930. Augustin Daly, Born Jaly 20, 1833 Ad example of a born on guly' 20's Augustin Daly, calebrated Keeping Mentally Tit - Samuel Colt, pistolsend revoivers 1s that they are more essociated with highwaymen, if and the modern criminal, class, than any other weapon. Reg lar Fellers . Who Made Good GRAIN CROPS TO BE LIGHT REPORTS SAY Peyshology, University of Wisconsin, 1888 to 1917: now th the New Schoo for Social Regearch, past president of the American Phychologica) Associa Eee VERSATILITY yt. An all-round athlete may be a record breaker only in a 100-yard S pole vault, but decidedly ae a ea lity implies doing exception- ye, ina Soriehy of, ching: that retreat, Rae, i York, tand thus first and fore most a man of distinction in the edu- hing. , certainly cal for different orders of native endow ment, That is an exceptional exam- Bie, of, Nersstiliy, by. any: standards et he gives the credit to his powers, ofo concentration, to his real love for (hatever be undertakes and to his dy mination to make ind there fe 0 further implledtion thse anybody fatrly well ean do the: same, if only they 63,5 pletely misleadin one: discourage honest effort in. tion; but, holding out false ust as depressing in, the vend, and SUPPOSE (ort for natural gift 4s not Jus. differen. viel a 3 ay of human i tionally versatile mani. you scour New: York nd not find. hun- dred jin his class, A, moderate amount of versatilty, that 1s, men with more than one tal- ent, who could have made good in any one of several callings demanding quite different orders of ability 4s fair- ly common. It 1s 50 because general abllty (andthe qualities supporting i abies poor Jack at any trade will be a master of ut: an expert Jack at one trade JULY 19TH July-19, 1814. The most extraordinary thing about . When Samuel Colt made his fmproyement on the old pistol he probably id jnot realize what boon Itwould be to all and sundry yho desired. to break the law. in some way-or- other. ltraprovertients have, ofcourse, been made in Colt s re- colver that must have added to the Joy of the gunman, ut Colt's weapon was a vast advange in the art of ints particular arm. Colt was not much over fourteen uf HEE gs Ihe whe company had-been dead for five years, extant. But he quickly constructed followed, the revolvers sold rapid around the- ee 248 e528 te H fe Bee iy ut i i By J. P. GLASS: Harm in the Western Provinces een crop ure tniioated in tesued here Bureau of Statistics, with pull il S37 iT su i 2 5; g Official Figures Show New d Production in Canada Under Schedule WATLING Site ot The OTTAWA, duly 19 ey board on tarift- and taxation is cone tinuing the investigation of the ohay mode by 6, G. Goole, MP. that the born on this day are of the four century, who was noted. for precision of 61 Alberto Bentos Dumont, pioneer Prench avise Conditions for Sunday, Planetary Conditions , Avold risk: ont Groom the pony and the dog and Summer doesn't reign it poural Instead of music, cont mporary us, Caligula dined to the of tortured men. But then was belore Jaz bands were in- The Englishman, man, thie Yankee and the Scot entered the bar. The Englishman, stout fellow, stood round of Scotch; the Irishman stood School Bully Blacked Both of Lord Palmerston s Byes umber Oregon Motorist, feeling, characterized by 9 arPATHOS: Quality ot element tn ing that arouses emotion oF pes son, particularly tender emotions (Answered by At what ago did he die? they - Wont wane noted poets The. Day s Motto By JANEY CANUCK Anxious Take, distribu the parent plant in Oanada were ship- Ded out tt a. knock down condition on ele ae , Eleven frotories were denied in Ontario, two Pree Orrawa nly the te of 8 5525 3098 5 per cent reduction in the excise tax. on Gabedianr nde cits hts not Bees the consumer, Drought Has Done Much by the Dominion 50RD. sec Bee i si ea aes rolimated at 328,000 cars and 36,605 trucks, made TULure ekpanslon-of ths business.
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Image 340 (1929-07-19), from microfilm reel 340, (CU11109829). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.