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1451
1451
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The Sylvan Lake News 1926-01-08 - 1938-12-29
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Date
1938-11-10
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Transcript
hi in m v t ti BEE HIVE Syrup Is my morning t cereal . fous sweetener.) ' WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD F, W. Nicolls, director of the Fed- eral Housing Act, reported 21,000 home improvement loans have been a repaid by Canadian borrowers. Canadian mines produced 1,112 828 tons of coal in September, com- 4937, the Dominion bureau of statis-) tics reported. An urn containing the he late Dowager Queen Marie of Rou mania was enshrined in a simple ceremony in the chapel of mon- astery overlooking the Black sea. ers haye signed contracts for huge according to information at Saint John. Authorities of Nazi-controlled Dan- zig have notified all Jewish doctors f in the Free City they will have to cease practicing by the end of this year. Among the sport events listed for New York during the world s fair is a 72-hole medal play tournament for professionals, It will be played in) June, 1939. General Joseph Degoutte, former a commander of the Allied armies in the Rhineland, died at the age of 72. Death came at his home in the little village of Charnay, near Lyon, France. 1 Soviet Russia's plan to throw up a protective wall of colonists along the far eastern frontiers facing Japan) was reflected in statistics showing Viadivostok s population has increas- ed 150 per cent. since 1926. Demand for tickets for the Olym- pie games to be held at Helsingfors, Finland in 1940 has been so great a sellout is anticipated by J. W. Ran- gall, president of the Olympic or- ; - ganizing committee. The Japanese finance ministry call- ed in one-sen copper coins and put aluminum coins in circulation in their stead. This will permit an an- nual saving of 900 tons of copper, which the army needs. Troops Leave Spain Reported Franco Admits That Cana- dians Are The Best Fighters Mrs. Becky Ewen, national organ- izer of the friends of the Mackenzie Papineau Battalion, said that about 800 Canadians are being demobilized forces and will be in their Canadian homes by Christmas. Mrs. Ewen said the committee was making plans to rehabilitate the men, and the committee is cam- paigning for 50,000. She said Gen- eral Franco, leader of the insurgent forces, had declared unwillingly that Canadians had proven the most stub- porn fighters in the entire war in Spain. Record numbers of oranges and bananas are being eaten by people in Great Britain, but the consumption of apples is the lowest in years, - Ghurch pews first came into use time, worshippers sat on the bare Haye Discovered Son them were described the American Collegs of Surgeons in a report on occupa ses by Louls Schwartz, of the) Red corpus 3 hey curry the ox known said, ous that tt had bee: oleomargarine wrist watch straps were causing skin troub There was new feature about of Quee these straps, They were jet black and sweat-proof. The health dete tives sent them to both a leather r search institute and to skin mpectal- ist to see whether they contained a) State skin frritant. Dominion faced i The war scare over, German buy- there was no more strap trouble, and orders of New Brunswick pulpwood. a warning in prosperous to make it attractive to from ranks of the Spanish Loyalist tearned to speak French, German, in the 15th century. Prior to that For all their investments in THE NEWS, Detectives In Medical Work Dyes Will Cause Skin Diseases Skin diseases that no re breaking Why they apps that catches eard 0 ndustry nedical detective wor ew York to nal skin diss ited States Publle Health Seryice. ey do not always remain confined vorkers, Take the story ot. but- y yellow, a d siir tant, Dr. Schultz tn fact, it was thought so tnnocu 1 to colo he said, rvice skin disease de- ectives discov d its new roic when were called in by amanufacture of wrist watches. Complaints, and) Q aw suits, were charging that his Both reported back there was no)? irritant. Next, the medical detectives went to the makers of the leather and P the dyes, They injected samples of the leather both dyed and undyed. Only the dyed leather show- ed bad effects. There were several dyes. Skin pared with 1421389 in September. Jc ce ivece ahowed that bulter yellow was irritating when it got on the skin, The yellow had been used t of the aiong with a black dye to produce the jet black shade. The black dye) alone gave only blue black. When butter yellow was eliminated in favor of a different yellow dye, one more chemical was tagged with medical-industrial archives. Often the trail is more difficult be- cause all the chemicals used are harmless to the skin. East And West Facing Of Realities All Round Seems Necessary Most business men in the East wish to see a resumption of immi- gration. They wish to see our farm lands all taken up and cultivated. Logically, then, they should wish to see Western agriculture sufficiently new settlers. The way not to do that is to make Western producers packhorses for other interests of one kind or another, Even more import- ant than bringing in new settlers is the need for preventing too many of the farmers sons from leaving the Jand, by giving them something to live for and showing them that they haye some prospect. If the Western people are to be told that they must fend for them- selves, it is quite clear that some of our Eastern friends will haye to change their ways and stop trying to impose tribute which makes condi- tions in these provinges harder and more discouraging. It is said that we should face realities. That is sound advice. There should be a fac- ing of realtities all around. Winni- peg Free Press. Blind Explorer Mrs. Johnson, Widely Travelled, Had. Many Accomplishments Although blind from her 15th year, Mrs. Alice Adkins Johnson, who died in New York recently, was a well- known explorer and during her life Italian and Spanish through con- versation. Mrs, Johnson accompanied her hus- band in hazardous scientific expedi- tions in Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia. Despite her blindness she gathered vivid impressions of her travels and in 1985 published a book of verse en- titled Fog Phantoms and Other Poems, The average temperature of burn- ing buildings is 1,700 degrees Fahren- heit, because brass melts at this heat, and it is generally found not melted or just on the verge. streamlining, the railroads are get- TAKE THE LEAD OUT se OF YOUR LEGS Get Oxygen in Your Blood and You'll Get the Exodus ering If your blo ets pale, fiabby, often lm: may become jittery e. It had never el feel, deprenncid, Back your that of the President accepting an honorary degree from the university gt; and assuring Canada the United es would not stand idly by if the mandment, Matthew wrists with sand Islands Bridge at Ivy Lea, Ont.,) 7 other jumper in a cosy wool flannel SYLVAN LAK, 1 Bounding Up the nother to complet i corpuse nd. bowels-alow down. Your skin 3. Your nerves ou tire uuickly What you ne + of your Dood, in today at your vy Mow quickly thin V F will helt give you ucen s UT Presid President elt's voice has The vote ation. Four records record the entire con- j ocation ceremony at the university, ae, law given by Christ forbids the breaking of the law in thought; it rior to inauguration of the Thou-) b August. i ha NEW JUMPER-FROCK WITH BOLERO By Anne Adams 1 The perfect wardrobe standby for every young girl is Anne Adams three-piece Pattern 4939. You've many color and fabric choices this Fall, so why not pick a teal blue synthetic crepe for bolero and jumper, with the blouse cotton ed by contrasting braid. And so that cold days won't catch your daughter unprepared, stitch up an- You'll find that the ensemble will practically make itself, for the direc tions of the Sewing Instructor are so clear, and the design has a minimum of seams. Winsome, isn't it, with that action skirt a-swing, and but- tons sparkling as trimming Pattern 4930 is available in girls and junior sizes 6, 8, 10, 12, 14 and 16. Size 10, entire ensemble, takes 2 yards 54 inch fabric; blouse 1 yard 86 inch fabric; jumper alone, 1 yards 54 inch fabric. 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., Winnipe; Will Learn To Curtsy In preparation for the visit of the majesties. THE SACKEDN ae of Life, Exodus Pratwottanots ils hap wake mors Hoe KUL. Fhe Hebr d'thun increase: lated Kill 44 not thi that verb, and the include eyery Idind of killing but only, A that kind which we call murder Voice Is Recorded who kills a man in order to save h own life or the 1 Has Record Of) who kills anott: welt's Speech charged with manslaughter, not with. murder. One who commits murder is actuated by personal motive oy : een added historic treasures y eis E been added to the Historie treasures) passion, The soldier in battle is not oe the principal factors in living long University, Kingston, Ont. actuated by personal feeling against set of records, is, the one whom he kills: he is fighting for his country, for the live: must not kill; he took that law for must not strike the murderous blow said Moses. upon the possibility of striking the blow is equally guilty king and queen to Callander, the by certain colors, a Pennsylvanian Dionne quintuplets will learn some- has invented aticky fly paper made thing about court etiquette. Dr, in red and blue blocks instead of the Dafoe said at New York that they customary yellow. will have to curtsy before thelr ALBERTA SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON NOVEMBER 13 OF HUMAN Golde ot Kill is 4 reading; Isalah 11:6-9. Explanations And Coum Tho Sixth mandment: the Lav 20:1 jou shalt W word trans usual word for glish Revised jon (not the American) trans- er x lates the sentence, Thou shalt do no. Grrutesceta murd The prohibition does not ves of others, oF acciden: is ny, of oth- rs, and does not violate this com- pandment. Christ s Enlargement of the Com- 21-26, Christ hat they must not desire to kill. The) races the sin back to its source and forbids the angry thought that leads the angry word and sometimes to he angryrdeed of murder. The hand he thought that dwell said Christ. New Magic Spray Spectacular Results Are Claimed In Growing Plants A magic new spray which grows larger flowers was announced to the United States. Academy of Sciences. The bigger flowers are only one of the spectacular results of spraying this mixture on plants. It also makes possible new hybrids that is, crosses in breeding plants--realizing a long- sought goal of agricultural scientists. The spray is an emulsion of oil, mixed with colchicine, which has been a standard medical remedy for) gout for nearly 2,000 years. Col- chicine is extracted from meadow saffron. A year ago Dr. Albert F. Blakes- lee, of the Carnegie Institution of evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York, announced to the acad- emy discovery that colchicine would) cause strange changes in plants. It doubled their chromosomes, and the substances that govern heredity. Since then the oil spray has been developed as a means of applying the colehicine and Dr. Blakeslee, with BE, W. Sinnott and H. EB. Warmke, reported the first practical results, obtained on more than 40 species of plants. The oil holds the colchicine on the plant tissues until it can penetrate. Buds or young stems are sprayed. On the sprayed parts the leaves be- come a deeper green. Fruits become shorter and stouter. The flowers grow larger. In some species this bigness of blossom is so great sometimes 25 per cent that the, spraying has immediate com- mercial value for floriculturists. The seeds from these larger flowers are Jarger and fewer. The big flowers and stoutened parts grow on the same plant along- side normally small flowers and slen- der parts. The seeds from the col- ent from its parent. Making His Mari leaves record of his travels. Spen- cer, who is an inventor, put tires on the car that printed as he drove across country: George Spencer, Springdale, Va, coast to coast. Wells under the fenders of the rear wheels drip ink on the tires. Believing that files are attracted floors of churches. ting nowhere fast 2280 ward until the mouth is opened, a take. You know already that mea Wherever George Spencer, Spring- dale, Virginia, drives his car he Milton, who dived with the cat and Botanists cannot explain why the branches of poplars grow upwards, Fangs of the rattlesnake le back- while those of willows grow down- Wealth E : L AgOe a5 CANADA presents TOPICS of VITAL INTEREST by DR. J. W. S . M CULLOUGH 70 LIVE LONG, EAT WISELY For old people, hard-bolled eges about us digestible as clay pigeons, So says, Dr, C. F. Martin in his article in the last lasue of Health on how to attain a normal old age. Periodic health examina ions and prey ntion of illness are his jouble recipe and he cites diet as one and comfortably, To live we must eat, he points out to live long we must eat wisel, Dr. Martin says old people cannot stund the gastronomic feats of youth. The average man eats twice as much as he needs and, like : t cess fuel to a boiler wears it out. asion by a foreign did not tell his disciples that they 1. siowly Fletcherize eat in mod- ; : eration. If he avoids the risky granted and went farther, saying adients of repletion and the sharp corners of hyper-acidity the octog- enarian 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 ways. This js Presenile obesity, which is so com- jmon, is merely the result of neglect of preventive medicine. We must avoid growing fatter as we get on in yee from the task of cooking food for s, The human stoye wears out millions of extra fat cells. But it is all yery well to advise on diet, 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 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 finest old-age food; that milk, pre- ferably pasteurized, has all the ele- ments needed; that cream cheese is better than Stilton; and that butter, buttermilk and junket are useful. The art of living, this eminent Montreal doctor says, is not a prep- Washington's station for experimental aration for dying, but a proportion ing of work and leisure, of labor and recreation such a control of eating, drinking and making merry that man need not die tomorrow. And so prevention is the order of the day. Editorial Note: Readers 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 Tragedy Of The Sea Ship's Cat Is Rescued When Vessel Founders After Storm The story of a ship's cat saved by the captain, who popped it into laundry bag and dived into the sca from a blazing schooner, was dis- closed in New York when the res- cued crew of the Pioneer arrived on the liner American Banker. The Pioneer, a Gloucester schooner owned by Captain Hans Milton rocked helplessly for three days 400 miles off Halifax after a hurricane, and finally foundered. With the ship taking water, the chicine-sprayed part of the plant) crew soaked blankets in gasoline, grow permanently larger flowers, and ignited them and ran them to the top a plant that is permanently differ-)of the mast. The schooner caught fire, and was burning brightly when the American Banker hove to on Oct. 2 and rescued the crew of five. The last man off was Captain the ship's sextant. The cat was an unnamed mascot which Seaman Carl Calson of the crew bought in Norfolk, Va. for a nickel from a stranded sailor. Captain Milton said an unidentified vessel had passed and ignored them 24 hours before they were rescued. acca sae School Teacher: Johnny, can you tell me the difference between per- serverance and obstinacy? Johnny: One is a strong wil and the other isa strong won't. a Bills or notes dated Oct. 12, Colum- bus Day, are legalonly in Arkansas wards, and Kansas. fF
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Image 1451 (1938-11-10), from microfilm reel 1451, (CU11124086). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.