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Northern Tribune 1938-01-05 - 1939-08-10
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Date
1939-04-27
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L ESE OAST yuntry, n the gt; cold, tasty utter- ith it e and Now r, this g dig, day. THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1939 THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE Annual School Meet At Grande Prairie Saturday, May 27 (Continued from Page One) A Boys 10Q-yard dash, 10.4 1937, Tom Meen, Sexsmith, ; 220-yard dash, 22 seconds, 1987, Tom Meen, Sexsmith. unning high jump, ft. 1 in, 1935, Dick Roberts, Wembley. Running broad jump, 17 ft. 9 ins., 1ag6, Jack Caldwell, Grande Prairie. lop, step, jump, 39 ft. 6 1938, Bill Russ, Grande Praitie, Pole vault, 8 ft. 8 ins, 1985, Dick Roberts, Wembley. put (12-pound), 5 feet, 193: Stanley Dobbin, Wembiey. * 195 Half mile, 2 min. 40 sec., George Griffiths, Sexsmith. A Girls 7S-yard dash, 98 seconds, Viva Warden, Sexsmith; 1938, Jeanne Turner, Grande Prairie. 150-yard dash, 18.8 seconds, 1936, Gwen Johnstone, Sexsmith, unning high jump, 4 ft. 2 ins, 1987, Jeanne Turner, Grande Prairie, Running broad jump, 13 ft. 7 ins, 1935, Lois Cooke, Grande Prairie. Basketball throw, 9/15, 1938, Nell Beatty, Wembley. Softball throw, 134 ft. 8 ins., 1986, Myrtle Down, Hythe. B Boys 100-yard dash, 10.6 seconds, 1936, Tom Meen, Sexsmith. 220-yard. dash, 23 seconds, 1936, Suurming high Tur juni jump, 4 ft. 9 ins, 1936; Bilk Russ, Grande Prairie. 1956. Sack Spicer St Tose tne , Jacl cer, jose Grande Prairi ae Hop, step, jump, 8 ft. 1 in., 1987, Bill Russ, Grande Prairie. Pole vault, 7 ft. 9 ins, 1936, Bill Lowe, Saskatoon Lake. Shot put (12-pound), 32 ft. 4 ins., 1938, Dan Spicer, St. Joseph's, Grande Praitie, 1937, B Girls 75-yard dash, 9.4 seconds, 1937, Marjorie Sebastian, Saskatoon Lake; Dousha Mihailoff, Running high jump, 4 feet, 1938, Louise Gouchey, Sexsmith. Running broad jump, 13 ft. 8 ins., 1935, Viva Warden, Sexsmith. Basketball throw, 9/15, 1938, Evan- geline Cavett, Percy. Softball throw, 157 feet, 1938, Evangeline Cavett, Percy. Boys 75-yard dash, 96 seconds, 1938, Eldon Erno, Teepee Creek. 150-yard dash, 18.4 seconds, 1938, Jack Gorrey, Clairmont. Running high jump, 4 ft. 4 ins., 1938, Frank Stojan, Grande Prairie. Running broad jump, 13 ft. 11 ins., 1936, Eldon Erno, Teepee Creek. Baseball throw, 192 ft. 7 ins., 1935, Allan Lossing. Pole vault, 7 feet, 1938, Jack Gor- rey, Clairmont. Girls 50-yard dash, 7.4 seconds, 1936, Rose Durda, MacHenry. Running high jump, 4 ft. 1 in, 1938, Violet Johnson, Rycroft. Running broad jump, 12 ft. 11 ins, 1938, Penelope Lowe, Saskatoon ie. Softball throw, 147 feet, 1937, Evangeline Cavett, Clairmont. D Boys 50-yard dash, 7 seconds, 1938, Fred McNaughton, Sexsmith. 75-yard dash, 10.4 seconds, 1938, Fred McNaughton, Sexsmith. Running high jump, 3 ft. 7 ins., 1985, Bob Whenham, Wembley. Standing broad jump, 6 feet, 1938, Irvin Braun, Grande Prairie. Baseball throw, 129 ft. 4 ins., 1938, Don Mitchell, Bezanson. D Girls 50-yard dash, 7 seconds, 1936, Jean Erno, Teepee Creek. Running high jump, 3 ft 6 inc., 1935, Jean Beatty, Wembley. Standing broad jump, 6 ft. 2 ins., 1935, Alice Zahara, Rycroft. Softball throw, 83 ft. 8 ins. 1935, Alice Zahara, Rycroft. COCOS ISLAND SETTLED BY SCOT ONE CENTURY AGO Head of a newcommittee just es- tablished in London to publicize Em- pire wool is young, tall, good looking Dr. I. Clunies Ross. He represents Australia on this committee, which also has members from South Africa and New Zealand. His family, how- ever, is linked not so much with Australia, as with Cocos Island, where a Scottish ancestor settled more than a century ago. This isl- and has been owned by the Ross family ever since, says the London Daily Sketch. Cocos Island is the most important of a small group of tiny coral islets in the Indian Ocean. As the name suggests, it is noted for cocoanuts, not sheep. In fact, pigs Europeans. cidentally, this is not the same Cocos Island, where all the treasure-hunt- ing took place a few years ago. When a large area of Essex, Eng- years 260, fe'cilied oft ff che cartne ago, it off all the earth- worms and they did not reappear until two years later. BARLEY - fs, From their up position the wings are MANSION FOR SALE CHEAP BUT INJTIAL COST OF 5.00 18 JUST THE BEGINNING Would you like to buy a London mansion right in the West End near to Hyde Park, with ten bedrooms, three bathrooms, and five reception rooms, in one of London s fashion- able squares, for 17 You would? Well, the agents for No. 29, Hyde Park square will be pleased if you will call and sign the contract. And then well, you don't wake up, but you find there is a snag about it several snags in fact. The ground rent works out at about 280 a year, the rates (at present) at 154, and the lease is a full-repair- ing one, which means that it will cost about 100 to paint the front of the house alone So if you are not prepared to spend some 700 or 800 a year on your prospective home, you'll have to look elsewhere. Perhaps, after all, you'll take that thirty bob a week flat constant hot water, and if the plast r off the ceil- ing hits you when it falls, you're un- lucky. Still a notice outside No. 29, which is empty at present, says that 36 years unrequired lease is for sale at the cost of 1. Until Christmas No. 29 was the town house of Frederick R. H. Miller, assistant private secre- tary to the Foreign Secretary, Lord Halifax, and now first Secretary at the British Embassy in Washington. Overseas Daily Mail. AERONAUTICAL TIT-BITS By J. W. Nel BIRD FLIGHT When a bird glides with out- stretched wings, the motion is the same as that of a glider or sailplane or of an aeroplane with the engine shut off. A section through a bird s wing from back to front shows that it is similar to that of an aeroplane wing. The air flowing over the wing gives a big suction on the top surface and a pressure underneath. The two combined give a lift which maintains the bird in the air. The gliding can- not continue on a still day unless the bird drops steadily nearer to the ground; but when there is an up- current of air, as there always is when a wind blows against a cliff or a ship, the bird can maintain or even increase its height. This can be seen by anyone who watches gulls in flight on the windward side of a pier. As long as the gull keeps near the same position it has no difficulty in maintaining height; but once it moves away, then it must either flap its wings or circle to get back to the same spot. While gliding, the bird guides itself by movements of the tail, head and neck, and by tilting the outstretched wings. The first and last named help the bird to roll like an aeroplane. The tail is used for an up and down movenient in the same way as an elevator on the aeroplane. The move- ment of the neck and head, on the other hand, alters the bird s centre of gravity. This has not been copied by man, except in a few instances. In one of the Westland Hill Ptero- dactyls, for example, the pilot could move the wings relative to the rest of the aeroplane. Birds can soar in certain winds and in certain localities. After they have reached a certain height, chiels and vultures in India continue to fly in circles without a single flap of the wings and ascend steadily to great heights. Their ascent is largely helped by steady upward currents of hot air. Pilots of gliders gain height in the same way on what they call thermals, even in a temperate country such as England. Birds can soar even when the wind is unsteady. Kites and scavenger vultures will remain in their trees on days when the sky is overcast. A sudden change in the weather will sometimes cause them to start to glide in all directions, apparently aimlessly, although perhaps for pleasure. The unsteadiness or, as it is called, turbulence of the air en- ables them to glide, and it can easily be proved that a bird can keep its height in a wind of varying strength even without the. aid of up e The speeds of many birds Have been accurately measured in t years, and a British autKor, R. Meinertzhagen, was one of the first to publish accurate figures. Small song birds reach an average speed of twenty to thirty miles an hour; blackbirds, twenty-two; swallows, thirty-five; pheasants, thirty-eight; starlings, forty; ducks, forty-five to sixty; plovers, forty to fifty-one; carrier pigeons, fifty-five to sixty; canvas-back ducks, seventy miles an hour; and swifts, even greater speeds. When feeding, swifts may reach 100 miles an hour or more. - In*flapping flight, a bird raises its wings above its back and sometimes even, as with a pigeon, until they clap together with a sharp sound. pulled forwards and downwards and then backwards by the contraction of the largest pectoral muscle; they are raised again by another pectoral muscle whose tendon works through a pulley at the shoulder joint. The wing tip describes a figure of eight and the whole wing appears to have an elliptical rotation. The down- ward: stroke raises the bird and the backward motion gives it a forward speed. During the upward stroke, Alberta and LABOR with the wing partly folded and the feathers opened, the bird loses some height, but its body continues to travel forward by its own momentum. The time for a down beat is half as long again as the time for an up beat. The log primary feathers attached to the band are of great value for lateral steering, and are prominent in insect- catching birds, such as swallows and swifts. The inner secondary feathers, attached to the ulva (the longer bone of the forearm) are of great import- ance for the down stroke, as they trap the air and greatly increase the lift of the wing. The number of the secondaries is greater in soaring birds and reaches a maximum in the alba- t The steering of a bird is ac- complished mainly by a differential action of the wings and differs widely from anything yet known to be pos- sible in aircraft. Birds vary greatly in the rate of beat of their wings, and for that rea- son photographs of birds in flight are generally of those which make only a few beats a second. In recent years, however, a special technique has made possible the photography of humming-birds in flight, with a rate of beat of 200 a second. By comparison, a sparrow makes thir teen strokes a second, a swift ten, a wild duck nine, a pigeon eight, a carrion crow three or four, a heron and a stork two, and a pelican just more than one. When a bird-is about to alight at a chosen spot, it sets its wings at their largest incidence to get the maximum lift, opens the wingtip slots to keep control, and at the last moment re- duces speed by turning its body at a large angle to the wind, by spreading its. tail vertically downwards and by putting its feet forwards. In this way it is able to make a perfect spot landing. Gannets are among the best ex- ponents of such a landing. Other birds with less control may go on flapping until the last minute. What they do exactly is difficult to see unless the bird be a slow flier. Old rooks have often been seen to side- slip to lose height just before landing on the ground, and then with one big flap to put themselves on an even keel to land perfectly with no for- ward speed. Birds such as the sparrow when landing on a bird table seem almost to hover just before they land. The humming-bird does hover before the flower or feeding tube while it sips the nectar or sugared water. Each bird seems to have its own flying trick, the commonest being the pull-up of the ganet and the in- creased wing-beat speed of the spar- row. A bird s take-off is easier. Some birds run and leap, others take a single jump, and those that are help- less on the ground or are accom- plished fliers just drop into the air and let gravity give them the neces- sary speed to start normal flight. Birds powers of endurance are im- mense. The golden plover flies across the Pacific, between lands 2,500 miles apart. Birds have been watched flying at great heights the Lammergeier near Mount Everest at 24,000 feet, and the condor over the Andes at 19,800 feet. R.AF. pilots have met rooks at 11,000 feet; ducks at 7,500 feet, and even lapwings at Wonders of World Avia- AIR BORNE TRAFFIC IS ON THE INCREASE IN CANADA In spite of the cycle of recession, statistics show a remarkable in crease in air line passenger traffic and mail revenue in the past few years, George'G. Wakeman, general traffic manager of the Trans-Canada Airlines, said in an address to the Westmount Rotary Club. Last year, he pointed out, 1,500,000 passengers were carried in the United States, an increase of 200 per cent in five years. World figures for 1938 were not available but the total he said, was in excess of 1937, when there were 5,078,199 air travellers. A study of traffic figures for air line operations in Canada showed that air mail poundage increased from 625,040 pounds in 1934 to 1,857,221 in 1938, about 75 per cent in four years. Air mail postage re- venue Jast year was estimated at 505,592.96. In the same period air freight and express in Canada in- creased from 14,441,179 pounds to 26,387,719, nearly 50 per cent. 517 CANDIDATES FROM OVER- , SEAS JOIN R. A. F. SERVICE Air Secretary Sir Kingsley Wood told the House of Commons the number of candidates from overseas Dominions and colonies who were accepted for appointment as com- missioned pilots in the Royal Air Force in the past year is 517, which, I am sure, the House will agree is a very helpful contribution. WORRIES OF A PLASTIC SURGEON; THIS IS A GOOD STORY; BELIEVE IT OR NOT Plastic surgery has advanced with leaps and bounds in recent years, but plastic surgeons are still having their troubles. One. doctor, according to The Commentator, had a man's inner throat to patch and the only skin he found suitable was on the man's neck. The surgeon opera grafted the skin of the neck to that of the throat quite successfully. But, according to the medical report, the strip from the neck grew a beard and prevented the luckless patient from swallowing his food. To read the best, read The Tribune. INDUSTRY Produces the Empire s Finest BEERS ING ST on Beers Manufactured in the Province . . BEERS THAT ARE BEST THE WORLD By H. G. L. Strange Director The crop Testing Plan. Scientific experiments made at the Dominion Experimental farm at Saskatchewan, and at other institu- tions, indicate beyond question that posited in the soil, and so made avail- able for plant growth. effort made by the farmer to keep down weeds will repay him hand- somely for his toil. time being abound in the world, and the price per bushel in consequence is low. This, therefore, is a good year for farmers to refrain seeding fields this spring that are very weedy, and instead of seeding to fallow. This practice will kill vast quanti- ties of weeds, and so because of less a good crop next year would be en- sured. Following factors have tended to raise price: Argentine corn yields disappointing U.S. Pacific and Aus- tralian mills work at capacity to supply domestic and Chinese demand Further sealing of corn cribs on U.S. farms Inclement weather de- lays some European spring seedings Hungary to denature wheat Argen- tine government corn estimate only 213 million. Following factors have tended to lower price: Threat of large Argen- tine wheat arrivals in Europe U.S. farm stocks of wheat much larger than a year ago Possibility of record wheat crop in Roumania Estimates suggest large corn surplus in South Africa Satisfactory reports on gin- ger crop in Sierra Leone THE A. L. SEARLE 1,000 FARMERS ESSAY CONTEST The Searle Grain Company, Ltd. announces that the chairman of theii board of directors, A. L. Searle, has contributed 1,000 for a prairie farm- ers essay competition. The first prize is 250; the second, 150; and the third, 100, with the balance of 500 to be divided between the re- maining essays that are considered worthy of a prize. Any farmer over 21 years of age, farming in any part of Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Al- berta, is eligible. The prizes will be awarded for the best essays describ- ing methods or practices concerning jthe production or management of crops or land or farm machinery, and which methods the contestanis are actually using, and which they have found to be useful and profitable. (The competition does not refer to live stock production or manage- ment.) Preference will be given to practices and methods that are not at present in general use, but which could be used by a large number of farmers. Essays should be forwarded to the Searle Grain Company, Ltd., not later than June 15, The judging will be done by the Universities of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Mani- toba, for their respective provinces, and the Dominion Experimental Farms, at Ottawa, will be the final judges for placing the higher prizes. Arrangements will be made to publish those essays containing in- formation that may be of value to all farmers. EDMONTON, April 24. D Royal visit of Their Majesties Kin George and Queen Elizobeth assumes greater significance in the Capitol City, and with the advent of spring weather, definite action in the line of preparations has taken the place of mere planning. cee Erection of stands along the Portaye Avenue Section of the Royal Route is commencing imorediately, and under the impetus of the Junlor Board of Trade, a city wide clean-up and puint- up campaign has begun. Owing to the earliness of the visit from the horticultural point of view gardeners are said to be pondering deeply thelr difficulties. As is to be expected, they want to make a red, white find blue showing of blooms wherever possible, and in the Logisla- tive greenhouses it Is sald that the problem Is one of major Importance. Among other craftsmen, however, the seasonable element does not enter with the result that In the Legisla- tive Building painters and decorators have already begun the job of putting things right for the first citizens of the British Commonwealth of Nations, Ovtstandinz contribution in Legislative Chamber is, of course pair of off portraita which hav done by Turner Taylor, the aritint. Matching in size presentations of the late George V Queen Mary which already grace the chamber, the new canvases will endorsation of all eltiz: week the artist was at work putting the finishing touches to hiq creations prior ta-formal delivery. to the Governme the ner, too, Will be brightened by the layine of a new carpet. which has been ordered by the Government For many seaxiona now newamen and galleryitex have watched the traffic lanes on the old carpet grow trom a deep red to a pale pink to a dirty and mottled rey. With the changing of governments, and consequent changing of desk formations. there evolved other traffic lanes, and the floor was rapidly assuming a most distracting and in- trleate pattern In the eyes of the godx above, The Cho Now it will be changed. The old carpet will be cult up and used for re- pairing and replacement in ofher parts Of the legis suites. For it must be borne in mind that the lobbies, too. were the xcene of tr lanes, Whe- ther beaten in by legislators or Jo Inte in 4 matter for conjecture. Di ries In the chamber, which have and hung again, while paint and var. nish will add their virtues to the cause of good cltizensh: . Northern Tribune are reminded that the deadline for purchase of 1939 car Heenses was passed Friday, April 21, and that the Heenae year proper explted March 31 Readers of Indications in the political arena are This Advertivement Is Not Inserted by the Aberta Liquor Contro Board or by the Government of the Provines of Alberts that a Unity candidate will contest the OF WHEAT - Great surpluses of wheat for the modate twelve head of hor: summerfallow them, or even to give Melvin them, if necessary, a double summer- are employed at the Dolphin and Highlights In Edmonton News HUALLEN NEWS SEEDING GENERAL HUALL Apr. 25. Seeding is general in this district and with a continuance of fine weather most of the wheat will be sown by the end Swift Current, at the University of of this week GIRLS MAKE SPORTS PLANS the loss of crop, and so of grain, by At u meeting held the other 1 weeds is enormous. Tt is generally 1icujien wirle made. plans for thelr considered, I believe, that weeds ports activities this coming summer, alone steal approximately 25 per cent The basketball team has been te- of the moisture that finally is de- organiced and a softball team it also being formed. The girls will hold a fance in the Community Hall, Friday, This all means that, on the average, yisht, May 12, to raise funds for sport the farmer loses 25 per cent of his rqiipmient-ote. The Bluebirds Ore yield per acre, he of his income, hestra will play for the dance, so a because of the growth of weeds. It i8 zood turn-out ix hoped for quite obvious, therefore, that any baa Jim Smith has just completed the construction of a barn on his farm on the Ridge. Constructed to accom- ses, it is a well-built structur A number of local men have gone from o work on farms in the neighborhood for the summer, Geo. Clayton is working at the Stegmaier farm, while Willsey and Len Kaufman Walton farms, respectively. Dorothy Grubb and The Misses weed plants, and because of the extra Marjorie Willsey were visitors last moisture saved by the summerfallow, wee end at the Barney Bernard farm at Lower Beaver Lodge. Miss Ev F. G Trail Clayton is a: Fawkes home a isting at the SEEN 'N HEARD Through the Knothol They're away All you hear these days is talk of seeding, and it's some rush, But when it comes to getting the job done quickly we've got to hand the fur-plated ear-muffs to August Zeling, who completed the seeding of 100 acres of wheat before others had barely started. One sees many types of drills being used, but Albert Deering is using something different this year spring-tooth drill which he con gt; structed out of his old drill they say it works dandy. Well, that Ten Cent raise in the peg has been the means of cheer up the wheat farmers, but Coarse Grain Producers are wondering where they get off. The Rev. Sandercocks of Wembley were visitors at the Dal last week to take their children home, who were visiting at the R. 8. Young's. We noticed Miss Lechelt and a lady friend in town Saturday night, and, to use her own words, she was just gallivantin around. The Huallen Basketball Girls busy practising. They'll have to be good they have that Frank Donald Cup to defend you know. We saw Tom Knutson on the re- ceiving end the other evening. Tom was in good spirits and stressed the fact that he was a Swede from Nor- way that lives on lutefisk and sil if you know what that means. Well, guess that s all for this week, so Cheerio and don't forget the Monkman Pass slides and dance April 28. USEFUL INFORMATION When having the misfortune to break a (umbler or other plece of glass Ware, use absorbent cotten to pick up the fine particles, di ning the cot- ton before using. This method is much more effective than a brush especially on hard surfaces, for it byen the smallest pleces and does away TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED ADS. t BRING RESULTS a8 Stony Plain se death of Wm, E tal the rumor that the enter the cont any offical in tion will he held In the near futu ment of William Mead, prac- and graduote in agricul tural se as district axriculturist the Peace River area has been an unced by Hon. D, B. Mullen, Mi vad was an Instructor at the Verml- lion school of axriculture and the Olds school of animal husbandry. He will re-open the Berwyn office, closed since last aber, when the former official was transferred to Grande Prairie Smoke rinks used to be popular par lor tricks, but whe Hing meaning an combine -appenrs on. the carpet, its apt to drag out for lon time. That Is the ease in Ed ton now, where the sixth we Hers of one Tuendity. Ph fast another he case fo : awards there maT Weeks of hearing, ensery sof addresx ta he peneticed by ay t required to speak hive recently There Ik no formula for formal pre- xentations. Phelr Mijestles should he ted in exietly the same wity Their Excellencies t) Hv.-Generil tid hic consort, Phe King should be addvesned aa Sire but it is wnat to xity Your Majesty ones The ould he addressed as Ma'am (net madam), Tt I lt; usunl for gentlemen to, bow by the Inelination of the head when they meet Thelr Majestien and for ladies to curtsey just ax they do when they meet the Governor-General, Tt'hs preferrable to alld lr Maser tlex to open the conversation. FLORIDA RESIDENTS SEE FIRST SIGHT OF SNOW That white fluff, parents told wide eyed youngsters staring in a down- town store window in St. Petersburg, Florida, was snow the stuff you see pictured on Christmas cards. And that's about the only place many na- tives of this sunshine resort had seen jore an air express shipment arrived from Cannon Mountain, New Hampshire, and was placed on public display. The snow, packed in car- tons protected by dry ice, was brought by the New Hampshire Tourist Society for use at a party. Three thousand disabled soldiers of the Great War are still being treated in British hospitals. Great Britain supplies about 4,000 artificial limbs to war pensioners in a single year, t Mountain s And Royal ? ELMWORTH NEWS ELMWORTH, Apr, 20. Spring is here for sure this time. Everywhere you see the farmers on the land and Some have started sowing wheat. For read The Tribune LADIES AID BUSY ON JUMBLE good news, SALE WORK The Ladies Aid of Elmworth held the April meeting at the home of Mrs. R. Frame. nice attendance reported and discussions under way about 4 wool quilt to be made and by the hostess, after which the meet- ing adjourned The next meeting is to be held at the home of Mrs. W, Miller, on May 19. NICE CROWD AT U.F.A. MEETING Mrs. E. Miller entertained the members of the Elmworth U.F.A. at her home Wednesday eveniny. A nice crowd was present and an in- teresting talk was given by one of the members on the Creamery Problem. A dainty lunch was en joyed by all to have to report on the serious condition of Tony Snyder of Elmworth, who is still in the hospital suffering from broker ribs and other injuries when he was thrown from. his horse tast week, soon gets better. Mr. Snyder came here from Wisconsin to live with his ster, Mrs, C. Mehren Slim Bousfield lost a valuable mare last week, also twin colts. Mr. F. Brewer had the misfortune to lose one of his best milk cows. Mrs. R. Frame held an Easter tea at her home and a nice crowd at- tended, The next meeting is to be held at the home of Mrs. L. Williams in May, MUCH SICKNESS So much sickness is reported lately. That of George Donison, who is still in the hospital. Little Alice Elaine Moyer, who was quite Il with a cold. She is much better, F. Smith of Hinton Trail is re- ported on the mend after an attack of flu. Little Clark with pneumonia ter soon. Little Noel Russell, who was sick, is much better now. Smith is quite sick We hope he is bet- A SIGN OF SPRING Dick is on the road drag again: another sign of spring. Rev. Geo. A. Shields holds service at Elmworth every two weeks. He will be here Sunday, April 30. Everyone welcome. * ' BEAVERLODGE ---------------------- BENTUM UNITED CHURCH Beaver Lodge REV. GEO. A. SHIELDS, B.A. Minister Sunday, April 30 11:00 a.m. Beaver Lodge S. S. 11:00 a.m. Elmworth, 300 pm Two Rivers School. 7:30 p.m. Benver Lodge. ot Inserted by vernment of YUKON SOUTHER up-to-date Airline Company to the tea any wh See your ld GRANDE PRAIRIE .,.....5 PEACE RIVER a DAWSON CRE FORT ST, JOHN, also some aprons and dresses for the Jumble sale that is to be held later, A dainty lunch was. served We hope he t FLYING SHOT ITEMS Succes aes FLYING SHOT, Apr. 25. The Ladies Missionary Society met. at Mrs. Bob Cameron's last Thursday, eight ladies being present. The next meeting will be held at Mrs, Wes. Stephen's, on May 18 The ladies of Flying Shot are put- ting on a concert and two of the plays to be preesnted along successfully, are coming Mos of the farmers are on the land in this district. Seeding commenced April 19, Ball games have started in distrle this The Ladies Social Club will meet in the school-house, Wednesday, May 3. There was a fairly good turn-out to church last Sunday. Next service will be held May 7. THIS WEEK Thurs., Fri, Sat. Apr. 27, 28, 29 IN'OLD CHICAGO, co-starring Tyrone Power, Alice Faye and Don Ameche. NEXT WEEK Mon., Tues., Wed., May 1, 2, 3 SPAWN OF THE NORTH, George Raft, Henry Dorothy Lamour. Thurs., Fri, Sat. Mi GIRL OF THE GOLDEN W. tarring Jeanette MacDonald and ison Eddy FILM COST IS ONE-SEVENTH THAT OF ALASKA'S TO U. S. Times have chap ve State: Willian wrath of a inves buble opinion. with hu pur ISO7 of Alaska from Rasshi for seven million dolla The coat of producing wramount x new epic story of the ritery, Spawn of the North, was over one-seventh the total pur price at merle , treasure Spawn of the North. which shows pitol May 1, 2 and 3 with G ney Mondit and Dorothy) Lam ding i cast of hundreds, i the Ktory oof the War henween Ushermen und raiders for contral of the xen HERE'S SONG THAT'S HALF A MILE LONG Nebion Kady's mest dangerous sani almoxt came toa hid ending during a cone far The Girl at thy Golden West at the Capitol May 4,3 and 6, Written for Eady by Shanund Rom bone saul Gus: abn, thes Soliie ot Bortune ie anusual iy thay it ig hait a mile Tong for Eddy and. his bund of forty punted bandits sine it ax they ride cipitous mountain days of rehearsals, bedered the round, for half a mile ower pre- trathe. After tive Hirector yard ity turn, Eddy eut-throat chorus boulder eighty feet level, His mount Wide on the steep frant the ty Imost nse aur Tut La eri, un and riding alonwside, setz the bridle asd steadied (he horse antl I reaiuined its footing. But Raddy trouper. samt the wus sung to lis completion Wine Wisdom BRIGHT Good wine isn't always expensive. Bright's wines are of vintage quality because they are thoroughly aged in wood, before bottling. You will enjoy their rich favour. the control: Board or by TRAVEL By AIR SPEED COMFORT and SECURITY AIR TRANSPORT. ow offers the lowest fares In the history elling public of the ce River country to Bd thene now greatly redi AGENT LIMITED with thety uow the Peace River conntry, from cod fuxBe ANDY CHALMERS POWELL
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Image 550 (1939-04-27), from microfilm reel 550, (CU1727119). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.