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The Sylvan Lake News 1926-01-08 - 1938-12-29
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Date
1938-11-21
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Transcript
THE NEWS, SYLVAN LAKE ALBERTA WORLD HAPPENING BRIEFLY TOLD subinet, Prime Min- gt; announce ds by Michact 4 gndget for measuring he a lock that cannot be picked or Jimmied were two of the inven tions exhibited at the International Policy Con; at Toronto, The pick-proof lock was invented by a contingent of British troops attached to the port of Cork have eft Irish soil for England, com pleting evacuation unde the term: of the Anglo-Bire accord. vo of the world's most. expensi dolls, attired in the best offer, were ented by the French republi 5 Elizabeth and Marga: : ance can Among other things there will be harvested. The year 1937 saw 500,- m-/ 000 pounds produced and this yea: provision for skating, boxing, sw ming and dancing in a stadium with Tecord-breaker, 2,000,000 Awards For The West fehewan Farmers Make Clean Sweep In Alfalfa Chass The romance in relation of man to farm crops Was exemplified again at the Royal Winter fair in Toronto with announcement four farmers mm White Fox, Susk,, had received first, second, third und fourth pr in alfwlfa, Grimm variety. Six years ago settlers in that nor- thern Sask on relie tchewan district ww he climate was too 7 fund the soil too poor for ordinary to flourish, To-day not one alfalfa grower near White Pox is on lief and many are comparati well off. i It's al due to alfalfa, The Do- ;minion government experimental known as the gr arm found the round in that area, soil district, par- ticularly sulted for growing the crop and introduced the Grimm variet By 1935 sett marketed 40,000 pounds. In 1935, 160,000 pounds were; pounds of accommodation for 15,000 to be built, Grimm alfalfa came off previous un- at Birmingham, Eng:, next year. Three Swiss newspapers panned as mouthpieces of three Fa: cist-inclined political groups whose headquarters previously had been raided, Ths British Columbia gove ment is planning introduction of legislation to establish credit unions in the proy- ince similar to those operating in Nova Scotia and Quebec. A. missing symphony, -known to have been composed by Haydn in 1770, music library of Edinburgh Univer- sity by Dr. Hans Gal, Austrian com- poser. Thatcher Wheat Passes Tests British Cereal Chemists Have Found Tt Satisfactory British cereal chemists have given Thatcher wheat exhaustive tests and found it satisfactory, . M, Hamil- ton, of the Canadian board of grain commissioners and a former cabinet minister in the Saskatchewan goy- ernment, said after his return from trip intended to introduce the rust- resistant wheat to the British mar- ket. It is not a very good looking wheat, because it is dull in color, he said. We have always believed a wheat should not only be good but look good as well. Because of the dull look of the variety a trip to Eng- Jand had been deemed advisable to acquaint chemists, millers and im- porters with its virtues. Turning to a discussion of wheat taint, Mr. Hamilton remarked there had been complaints in Britain about. taint in Canadian wheat. Harbor authorities on the Pacific as well as the Atlantic might well look to see that grain is not stored in the same holds with lumber and apples. That's a matter for the port wardens or whoever watches cargo storage. A Japanese Gateway Bins Bay Was For Many Years A Pirate's Hideout There may be something significant in the fact that it was through Bias Bay that Japan recently moyed 40,- 000 troops toward Canton. There may be something even more sig- nificant in the fact that the bay was for many years a pirate's hideout really much more a stronghold than a hideout, for once they had entered ft the robbers of the sea counted themselves safe among its many islands. Besides a refuge, the bay was a cleanup spot, into which captured steamers were Sailed to be looted In sailing days it was possible for the pirates to handle their victims on the high seas, and for a time steam caused much technological unemploy- ment among residents of Bias Bay. But for a time only, for as usual, the effect on labor was offset by another invention. The pirates learned to board their victims as passengers, overcome the crews at the right moment and take the ships into the bay, after which the men, as often as not, never were heard of again. Secretly married teachers, in Med- ford, Mass., lose: their positions the) raoment their marriage is discovered, and are required to return all salary received since the marriage. - has been discovered in the) productive ground. One million pounds of the 1988 crop is going to s- Germany and a large part of the re- mainder to the United States. The winners at the fair, all from White Fox, were: 1, A. FE. Rusk; 2, H. A, Myers; 3, G. R. McLean and 4, David S. Owen. Dominion government experimental farm Officials, in co-operation with) University of Saskatchewan, develop- ed the Grimm variety, and say the reason for this unprecedented ex- pansion lies in the hardy qualities of the seed crop. Western Canada took the bulk of prize awards in creamery butter, 20 one-pound prints, in dairy products) judging at the fair. Alberta and Manitoba were tied in the first prize section, taking three each, Manitoba led Alberta in the second group, 18-12, and also wits in front in third prize placings, win- ning 20 to Alberta's 13. Burns and Company, Limited, rep-, resenting various Alberta town: were out in front in all three cla: winning one first, six seconds and five thirds, Western competitors fared well in the event of four-horse draught team of geldings or mares. Allen C. Les- lie, of Watrous, Sask., took second prize and L. 0. Crocket, of Mayer- thorpe, Alta., fourth. Old legends tell of men who had the power to look down into the earth and see where gold and silver lay shidden. One of the few western countries where men live longer than women is Sweden. The Bourgault brothers of St. Jean Port Joli, Que., started eight years AN EVER-SO-CHIC BOLERO. FROCK By Anne Adams Here's a campus queen who rates highest honors in her fashion course for this very new bolero-frock she has made is an Anne Adams crea- tion That high neckline and wasp-waist effect are the answer) to What's different in dress styles this Fall. The bolero of Pattern 4952 is equally smart, and may be long sleeved for brisk days, or short sleeyed to show off dimpled elbows. (Matching or contrasting it will com: plement other frocks as well ) Pick a light weight Fall wool in bright plended colors. You'll stitch up your) all-occasion triumph of a frock in no time, and be full of praise for the helpful Sewing Guide sheet of this pattern Pattern 4952 is available in junior and misses sizes 10, 12, 14, 16 and 18. Size 14, entire ensemble, takes 314 yards 54 inch fabri Send twenty cents (20c) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this Anne Adams pattern, Write plainly, Size, Name, Address and Style Num- ber and send order to the Anne Adams Pattern Dept., Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 175 McDermot Ave. E., Winnipeg: Old Salt (to yisitor, who has been out several times with him in his boat): Bit of a swell to-day, sir. Visitor: Nice of you to say so but you ought to see me on Sun- + Pi he would make himself worthy. Hi been through all will agree there iittle figures are now shipped all ov r the continent, The five brothers are ago to carve small wood statuettes depicting phases in the life of the habi- tant. They created such a demand for their clever work that the humorous shown in the top photograph; below is ahown Medard Bourgault with one of his masterpidces, called Le Defricheur (Land Clearer). This piece was carved from a single block of wood. the only tools used being a small pen- knife and a chisel. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON NOVEMB HONESTY IN ALL Thou shalt not Psa Expl The Eighth Law of Honesty, shalt not steal. How Zacchweus Learned Luke 19:1-10. This story of ppened one day when sing through 0; familiar one, gatherer, was eager Being short of stature he limbed a sycomore tree by the side of the road Where Jesus was to-pass. This was not the English sycamore, but a tree that has been described as a fig-mul- berry, having fruit resembling figs and leaves resembling those of the mulberry. It has a short trunk and low, wide-spreading branches. Jesus looked up and w Zaccheus and called him by nam would have offered to stay at a tax- gatherer s house, but Jesus said: Make haste and come down for to- day I must abide at thy house. Jesus compulsion was like that of a shepherd in regard to a lost sheep. The conyersation which took place between Jesus and the publican is not recorded, but the wonderful procedure on the part, of Jesus touched the heart of Zaccheus and changed life. If Jesus thought him worthy the Phou Honesty, what to Jesus, became new man with a new pur pose, He committed himself com- pletely to Jesus and his way of life. Here and now, Master, he said (in Weymouth's translation), I giv half my property to the poor; and if I have unjustly exacted money from: any man, I pledge myself to repay) him four times the amount. Dishonesty in the Temple, Luke 19:45, 46, In the temple precincts animals were sold for sacrifices and money was changed for offerings. This temple market arose for the sake of Jewish pilgrims from afar who ne ded to secure for sacrifices ts and birds duly certified as clean, and to change their foreign money into Jewish coins. But the temple market had become a den of robbers , Jesus declared. It was a monopoly and was owned, or leased, py the sons of the High Priest Annas, as we learn from rabbinic Uterature, and they were noted for) their greed and dishonesty. Jesus entered the temple and be- gan to cast out those who sold, say- ing unto them. It is written, And my house shall be house of prayer: put ye have made it a den of rob- pers. In King Lear, when the Harl of Kent desires to attach himself to the exiled king, he gives as his rea- son, You have that in your face that) I would fain call master authority. This raster-authority was in the face of Jesus and the traffickers fled before him, World Peace Their Aim Boy Scouts Making Preparations For: Two World Gatherings World peace is still the aim of the Boy Scout Movement, and British Scouts are making preparations for two big world peace gatherings one in Australia and one in Scotland. Both are to be attended by boys and young men from all parts of the globe. First of the assemblies will be the Australasian Jamboree near Sydney in December. Some 10,000 boys are expected to participate, and Britain's contingent is sailing on November 2, under the leadership of Rear-Ad- miral R. Collins, CB. Later will come the World Rover Scout Meet in the grounds of Monzie Castle, near Crieff, Perthshire. An attendance of 8,000 is expected and the password will be Friendship. Friendship and peace with all peo- ple 1s, indeed, the ideal of the move- ment, And, after the times we have could be no greater aspiration. Would Not Solve Problem Conscripting The Rich Does Not Put People To Work Conseripting the rich in a cam- paign for increasing the turnover of tax blanks and treasury notes ob- viously cannot possibly solve the problem of putting men to work and of increasing the standard of living among our working classes. The problem of production, distribution and consumption may be gravely con- cerned with the effects of commercial rivalry and unrestricted competition, and control along these lines seems to be indicated, but it is not con- cerned with private fortunes and how they are used. The slogan of 'soak- the-rich is used all too often to) divert attention from the real issues of social and economic reconstruc- tion Halifax Chronicle. Wealth LEAGUE. 0 ; CANADA presents TOPICS by DR. JW. S. MSCULLOUGH TO LIVE LONG, EAT WISELY x old people, hard-boiled eggs are about as digestible as clay pigcons, So says, Dr, C. F. Martin in s article in the last issue of Health on how to attain a normal old. age, Periodic health examinations and prevention of illness are his double recipe and he cites diet as one FE i of the principal factors in living long and comfortably. To live we must eat, he points out to live long we must eat wisel Dr. Martin s old people cannot stand the gastronomic feats of youth, The average man eats twice as much as he necds and, like ex. cess fuel to a boiler wears it out. Eat slowly chew each mouthful eat in moderation. If he avoids the risky gradients ot repletion and the sharp corners of hyper-acidity the octogenarian can gang his ain gait. It is quantity that does most harm. With age, bodily growth has ceased, the furnace needs less fuel so the diet must be reduced. We can easily tell that in various wa: This presenile obesity, which is so common, is merely the result of neg- lect of preventive medicine. We must avoid growing fatter as we get on in y The human stove wears out from the task of cooking food for millions of extra fat cells. But it is all very well to advise on dist, which is only carried out When one can supplement it with character, self-control restraint and moderation. A sorry fare, free from care, is perhaps a dull life, and one is apt to get introspective and hipped on the subject of diet. And so I am not going to tell you in detail what kind of diet you should take. You know already that meats are for the young, and starches for the old; that cereals are good, stewed fruits and salads useful, and bread still remains the staff of life; that any of the dairy products are the fin- est old-age food; that milk, prefer- ably pasteurized, has all the ele- ments needed; that cream cheese is petter than Stilton; and that butter, buttermilk and junket are useful. The art of living, this eminent Montreal doctor says, is not a prep- aration for dying, but a proportion- ing of work and leisure, of labor and reereation such a control of eating, drinking anf making merry that man need not die tomorrow. And so pre- yention is the order of the day. Editorial Note: Headers desiring the complete set of Dr. McCul- lough s cancer articles at once may recure same by writing to The Health League of Canada, 105 Bond St. Toronto, Ont. Not Worth The Effort Fisherman's Catch Brought Than He Paid For Bait Captain Angus Tanner of Lunen- burg sailed his schooner into Halifax, her holds filled with ice fish, the finest cod and haddock the Atlantic produces, 225,000 pounds of it. He re- ceived less per pound for these table fish than he had to pay for the bait he took to sea with him five days hefore. The price of the cod ranged from a cent to a cent and a half a pound; bait, which companies bought at 65 cents a hundred- pounds a month or two ago, cost the schooner- men two cents or more a pound. By. the time Captain Tanner's fish had been sold, through a retailer a few blocks from the waterfront, the cost of the cod had mounted to two pounds for 25-cents, and of the had- dock for which he was paid a cent and three-quarters, to the same fig- ure. Less Etiquette Of Middle Ages According to an etiquette manual of the Middle Ages, you should never lift a piece of meat out of the gravy dish with your whole hand, but should delicately fish it out with three fin- gers, and in so doing, never immerse your fingers in the gravy farther than the last joint. Tt was dusk as she stopped at the roadside garage. I want a quart of red oil, she said. gt; The man gasped and hesitated, R-r-red oil, madam? Certainly, she said. My tail light has fone out. 2282
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Image 1467 (1938-11-21), from microfilm reel 1467, (CU11123921). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.