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Red Deer Advocate 1916-01-07 - 1917-12-28
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Date
1917-09-28
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W. H. PLAXTON, D.D.S., L.D.S. Burgeon Toronto. and Northwester: University, Chicago. attention given to all the Branches of Modern Dentistry. Office Smith Gactz Blk, Phone 112 canes OR. J. BR, MacCROSTIE , DR, A. T. oe jurg ons Graduates Chicago College of Dental Surgery Office hours, 9 to 12, 1 to 5.30. s-Morthera Crowe Beak Due Deer No. 529, from filerrobert, INo. 613, Mondays, Wednesdays and Mrs S. Fawcett, Hamilton St.. Collingwood, writes, Mi s Liniment surely is aa 1 always the have reonmmended C. P. R. TIME TABLE NORTHBOUND Arrive Leave No. 521, (daily) cos. 3.20 3.30 No. 523 (daily except Sunday) wu... eee 10.50 10.55 No. 525 (daily) 16.40 16.45 SOUTHBOUND No. 522 (daily) . 3.50 3.55 No. 524 (daily) . ff 11.45 11.50 No. 526 (daily except Sunday) cc se-- . 18.25 18.30 No. 530, Kecrpbert (daily 10.10 except Sunday) ... ..- (daily except Sunday 18.K ALBERTA CENTRAL Fridays, depart, 13.30 No. 614, Tuesdays, Thursdays apd Saturdays, arrives 10.15. ae ee We have LatKes, Cutters. Shaper, Drill for both old and new work. J. W. BROUGHTON H.G STONE The annual Sunday School Rally; Day has been agreed upon by the) boards of several leading denomina- tlons in Canada for next Sunday, September 30th. The Methodist Sunday School of the city is planning to take it up with more than usual interest. A program of special cxer- cises has been prepared, and special efforts are being made to establish a new record for nitendance, Particular attention ha: also been paid to the: Fu'low-up' plans for clinching the interest aroused by the Rally and holding a large number not mew attached 1) the school Plain have been made for aseries of euppers te be beld 1. the church during he week following for the purpos) of organizing clubs or classes that wall fi. a long felt wait tu the fife the Church. On Monday st 6.3) pm a numoer of young women of the Carcb hae been Invited to consider the organiza- tion of a Businiss Oirl's class: on Tuesday, some of the business men associated with the Chirea are being invited for similar purpose On Thursday, boys and girls of the toen years will meet, on Friday thy stot of the school will assemble for the concluding supper of the series to consult over future plans. o- RED GROSS REPORT Shipment of Red Cross Supplies to Calgary for fortnight ended Septem ber 18: 640 T bandages, 12 many-tailed bandages. 144 triangular bandages. 12 surgeon's caps. 12 pair surgeon's sleeves. , b2 pillow-slips. 36 bed-pan covers. 12 hot water bottle coyers, 12 bedside bugs. 2 pair slippers. 4 bed socks. 1 pair sheets. . 8 nurses aprons. z 1 wash cloth. 6, comfort bags. 132 khaki handkerchiefs. 16 khaki shirts. hold-alls. 34 suits pyjamas. wo SUNDAY SCHOOL RALLY GREAT WAR VETERANS j/ held unter DANCE What was indeed successful dances ever held tn Rod Deer in every respect, was the dance one of the most the auspices of the Red Deer branch of the Great War Veter ans' Association in the Armories, on Friday evening last, September 21st The committee of the Association spared no pains to make it a success. The Veterans orchestra, undey the sadership of Pte, Nicholls, late of the 10th O.Bn., was engaged from Cal- mary at ao large expense, to enaure good music, and the soldiers wives club was responsible for the refresh- ments, The li also had been jut in good shape, having been draped with flags and banners, prepare by the courtesy of H. G. Stone, A large attendance. was present, many , coin: ing iny from outside points such as Lacombe and Innisfatl The music was certainly the best dance muaic ever heard in Red Deer for many a long day, and the vocal selections by Pte, Nicholls were specially pleas ing The soldiers wives cluu had the art of catering down to a fine point, inasmuch as they were able, to fully satisfy all who purtook of up- per, which is indeed worthy of note. President f C. P. Gee was an efficient floor manager, while secre tary W. Paterson was in charge of the door, The last named was not not- feed in the firing line during the evening, but it was rumored that most of his time was spent in t canteen There were quite a few veterans frou outside points in for the danco, amoay them being Lieut. Scott, late of. the 89th, Sergt. Holmes, P.P.C.L.., and Pte. Tooley, of the 12th C.M.R., and Pte. Copeland. Among the local peo- ple present were noted Dr. and Mrs Collison, Dr. and Mrs. Georgo and Miss George, Dr. and Mra. DeLong, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Welliver, Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Lindsay, and Mr. Cunning ham, of Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Whiteh l e AILWDDAY, Ai a meetng of the Ropresontatives of the various Sunday Schoolr of the City of Red Deer held in the Method it Was de ist Church on Mon cided-to hold a Bold day on Saturday afternoon next, Septe amc h ont the Schoo Grounds, for Y of the various Sahday Scho ay las scholars n held in A nection with Rally Day to be most of the Churches next Sands good program of sports is belag pre paret, and it is hoped that as many children as possible will be on hand tu. luke part in them, as well as their parents. The following is tas pro gram: ; From 2.00 to 400 p.m. races and jumps, tncluding the standard eftie) ney tests for tie high ju:np broad jump, and hop, step and jump, and it In hoped that 4 representative frown the .P.A. from Calgary will be on hand to referee these. There will aho be several nevelty rdces, inelud ing cbstacle race, egg and spoon race, retato race, boot race, sack race, thread needle race, etc. During this period races and games will be held for the younger scholurs tween two teams from the Ariglican and Presbyterian versus Methodist and Baptist Schools, girla and boyy. At 4.15 there will be a basket ball game between two picked teins of girls. At 5.00 p.m. the baseball game will start between a team picked from the .Presbyterian and Anglican Sunday Schools and the Methodists and Bapt- ints. During the afternoon tennis zaines will be played as well. The stewards for the races are J. Malcolm, W: E. Payne, C. D, Locke, and 5..P. Dover, and Miss Grav s. Mr. H. F. Kenny will look efter the baseball game and tug-of-war, while Miss Hill will be in charge of the younger element. The Rey. . E. Brough is secretary, and will be the chief head. Souvenir prizes will be given for the various events. Points will also be.awarded to the various schools on the records of the mei: At 4.00 will be the tug of war be- FFRY S THE BEST FOOD AT THE LOWEST COST The Cleanest Range The Kootenay has a nickeled steely rust-proof oven that is as easy to wash We are receiving a number of enquiries for land in the Red Deer District. If you want to sell bring in your listing. Mellstrom Lindsay Real Estate Red Deer - Alta. 45 pair socks. 6 pillows. Red Deer, Willowdale, Balmoral, Sylvan Lake, Hespero, and Benalto, contributed to this shipment. RED CROSS DONATIONS. Mrs. Laird, Evarts, 6 pair socks. Mrs Huestis oo... eessecsesesseee . LO.D.E., 10.00. This includes 7.00 received from sale of candy by Jean Lindsay; Jean McDonald, Cal- gary; May and Jeam McKechnie, Les- leville, and Madge Nurcombe, Red Deer. Mrs. Ruth Clutterbuck, life mem- bership, 25.00. Mr. William Dixon, Burnt Lake, Mrs. and Miss Gover Messrs. N. White, Sucdie, Humber, and others. for the most excellent evening repeato. . If you will tell re why one photo UNDERTAKER Gaetz Avenue - Red Deer C. T. Eline Builder Contractor .0. BOX 374 PHONE 263 RED DEER Red Deer Granite Marble Works . Marble and granite mon- uments from 16 up, on terms. L. McLEAN Proprietor For Sale D. A. McGILL City Scavenger P.O. Box 576. Kirkpatrick Bros. Shoe Repairing Neatly and Promptly Done Gaetz Avenue South Next North n Crown Bk Coal and Wood 163 3d St. N. E. Phone 227 JAMES .DUNCAN Is prepared to remove ashes, cans, rubbish, plow gardens, supply man- ure for gardens, etc., at reasonable Orders taken at Windsor Livery. Phone Sylvan Lake), bers and a bunner given to the school Carscallen, huving the best record on the bas s of Great credit is due to the committee Ditto grapher can make a better photo- graph than others, I will tell you why Thomas A. Edison can make a better record than others. Come in Store advertising is ee of the classified ad to save all of last Sunday's attendance. The girls of Knox Church will sell fce crerm and candy during the afternoon. W. J. Hanna, food controller, has repealed the order prohibiting the sale of canned vegetables in Manito- - ba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta, LET A CLASSIFIED AD do its part in solving that problem, in do- mg that task eaving time, trouble and expense. For it is the function alfords you IMMEDIATE WITH THE Mt Uhlieh a4, 5.00 mutual ? shi TF eC -Whitenhotseite men per hant finds it profitable only a COMA NICATION I isstiiaesas daene nee 26.00 mere 8 COMMU A..M. SIMPSON, he is able to offer SERVICE, values mAN TO WHOM YOUR MESSAGE up and be over, for one reaso and another. sen that s unique. If somebody wou her mountain, fuli of bushes, against the sky, gazing disconsolatel But t's no go. gophers climb up and run under he cality more in keeping with- fami traditions, and the Commission was going t fence in one of these for its The ledges would give them exerc their backs at the season indicated b: very nose and she's too mournful to 20. caret You see, the Parks Commission, up like trumpet notes, there are mea- which is the Supreme Court and the dows carpetted with wild columbines Privy Council.apd Santa Claus and for looking at and the sweetest of the Board of-Mealth to Maggie, bad sweet grass for eating. decreed that in 1914 the mountainjthore s a real, cool, compact little goats were to be transferred to a lo) mountain fer big horns to show off definite number of unattached moun- eyed spring lamba. tains around Banff, inhabited only by die and go to the butchers heaven, acme of Maggie's uncaught 1 atives, they d bring far more than ordinary the big trees would enable them to rub last year s disrqputable coat off the mountains hereabouts, their primitive fashion magazines, the horses outside the ga and the men Interested tn wool pro- swishing in through the lon Diems would have better looking goat hoping to catch a giimpse of a specimens to judge from when they horn. figured an to whether it was or wasn t trap 1 made a hundred and twenty worth while te try breeding them for Sec.-Treas. C.R.C.8. and ECONOMIES TO YOU. G IE WANTS HER pF rae Inhabitants of the park at Banff. (1) A solitary yak. (2) Mountain goats. ( a For-Cash Pp eats a good many of us;mohalr plush. ish the war would hurry And then came this confounded mi war Camp Hughes, Camp Borden But Maggie has a rea- Valcartier and the rest of the khaki ld pastures ate up a million times over just go and kill the Kaiser, she'd get the cost Of wiring poor Maggie's hilly heaven, which had to be pigeon-holed Maggie's second name ts Mountain, until after the war. too and her last is Goat. She lives at Banff, Alberta, together with two of charge of all the wild wards of the her friends, ina big raggedy paddock park at Banff will tell you apologetl with a stene-bullt call house Ip the centre. You can gener- like ladies in evening dress ally see her up on top of it, silhouetted they can succeed in rubbing the light That's how t comes the oMictal fn ts look because that the reason the y wool off their necks, but the heavy away off to where she can see that matted body-growth won't come away mountain of hers, fur-trimmed and jagainat the awitchy little bushes of full of gloriously tmpossible ledges. the paddock. So some day he'll have She tries to pretend the ridge pole of to catch Maggie and her two friends her present home s one of them. and pluck them like chickens. Which The wretched little proceeding Maggie will resent most r bitterly. The rocky mountain sheep have the ideal ge. They are trees that soar Above all ylon, There are twenty-three sheep in There s large and in- the pasture, five of whom are scary If they were to o tame Mary-sorta lambs. At least they ought to, for they taste so much better There are plenty of wild ones on our friend as we left nd came y in the Government told ie Last year I caught three fn a by elgpacaen s Seep ie ea ee 3 ; with a Is IMPORTANT. MOUNTAIN +. arate i af SOP ee 3) Buffalo. Igate, you know, Scares em a bit, but doesn t burt em. They're in the There was.a scatter of little hoof beats and the whole flock came round jfrom behind the big barn and stood, posed for the lovellest photo with the brown tree trunks for a background. The big horn is a wonderfully picture esque beastie with a touch of the dra- matic in his make up, or he could never have arranged his harem with s.ich an oh-you-kodak effect. But the jast film had been used up trying to get Maggie properly aky-ltned and wo could only sigh regretfully. There's a herd of buffalo at Banff too, but they re not of a hand shaking disposition. Nobody Is allowed to go to call on the monarch of all the plains the C. P, R. has left, unless he goes on horseback or ina motor, Old Dad, the boss of Buffaleville, has even been known to charge an auto, when his dinner hadn't agreed with ihim. And when he charges, you won- der f the Imperilal Limited hasn't got off into the meadow by mistake. But the firnniest animal in the park and doub ss the most sniffed at by the native Canadians ts the yak, who s a born Tibetan, with a face that looks halfway between an Arab steed and a moo-cow, a frandly sweeping tall, and a wonderful lossy black coat which a of normal length on his shoulders and flanks, but goes into the widest and flopplest of fringes on his legs and under body. To becin with, the sixteen Tibetans were dom - ciled in Brandon, But however ex- cellent the climate of Manitoba may be, an a substitute for the Himalayns it leaves a few things to be desired. So the yaka were box-carred up after and keep cleatras-any-coo: The ash-chute directs all the ashes into the pan, which is roomy and large enough to hold a two days accumula- Write for booklet. M Clarys KOOTENAY RANGE WINNIPEG CALGAR' EDMONTON tion. TORONT LONDON ST. JOH MONTREAL N,.N.B. HAMILTON ASKATOON VANCOUVER Y TY Keeping Work At Home as DISTANT pastures always look the greenest, and many buyers of printing are often fooled just as much when they buy product from a distance, as when the land prospector forms a resolution to buy from a glance at distant fields. Why do merchants and manufacturers go from home with their printing orders? Why should they aid in the building up of other communities when their own section is in need of stYpport and encouragement? These are problems that will, not admit of a simple answer. The distant printers salesman visits a town and finds that many merchants, bankers, lawyers and manu- facturers there are buying their stationery in small quantities at reasonable---not to say low---prices. He at once talks price and quantity---that is, price on yer has been-order ing a single thousand copies of a job at, say 4 00, the salesman from the distant city quotes for 5,000 or 10,000 at about half this price, and the chances are that his samples are of a quality and finish superior to that which would be used in the execution of an order. Should the local business man consult the home printer -and talk the matter over with him freely, in- stead of rushing to the conclusion that the local printer had been robbing me right along, he would generally find that in quantities he could buy just as well and often to better advantage, by turning his work over to the home industry. be doing something towards circulating money among his fellow townsmen and enabling them the better to support him in return. Besides he would We believe there are very few buyers of printing now- a-days who are utterly indifferent to the success of their fellows, especially: those who have a eal habitation and a name among them; As a rule * they concede the printer's right to a fair profit, pro- vided always, they can be assured of a square deal. aed Red Deer Advocate while and taken to Renff where they re doing splendidly Academic Public High School Grades Departmental and Matriculation Examinations OYAL Commercial Book-keeping Stenography Typewriting Household Science OLLEGE Expression Dramatic Art and Physical Culture Music Piano, Vocal Fine Art China, s Painting Metal Work, etc. High Class Residential and Day College for Boys and Girls, Young Men ALB CALGARY and Young Women ERTA FALL TERM commences MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 1917. Writ for Calendar and College Literature. Phone eee i wae ta
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Image 720 (1917-09-28), from microfilm reel 720, (CU11258682). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.