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Northern Tribune 1938-01-05 - 1939-08-10
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Date
1939-05-04
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CTURES THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1939 THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE PAGE SEVEN This Week's Radio Broadcast By I. V. Macklin Good evening, ladies and gentle- men. Remember, live stock shipping next Friday and Saturday. Note also that a C.C.F. meeting will be held in the dining-room of the Grande Prairie Hotel on May 12, at 8 p.m., to make arrangements for re-organization meeting later on and a tour for a speaker from out- side. Those who are interested in C.CF. organization are requested to be present from as many points as possible on Friday night, May 12, at 8 p.m. Thank, Elmworth U.F.A. secretary, for your letter of April 20 and your kind invitation. Yes, I will be there after spring's work. We will make it May 15, weather permitting. It would help a lot if you would suggest beforehand some questions which you would like to have discussed, A long and welcome letter came last mail from a resident of the Sex- smith district. I have already an- swered it shortly by mail but am taking the unrequested liberty of dealing with it further over the air. 18 THE C.C.F. 100 PER CENT SOCIALISTIC? The letter brings up some vi fundamental questions about the C.CF. One fs: Is the CCF. 100 per cent socialistic? The letter says You cannot mix capitalism and socialism any more than oil and water. The statement may be true theo- retically, but practically this capi- talistic world is half socialist right now. I noticed one time where the city of Edmonton netted 700,000 from her. socially-owned telephone, street cars, etc, in one year. In Montreal, on one side of a certain street electricity is supplied by a publicly-owned utility and on the + other side by the Herbert Holt in- terests charging just twice as much. The Canadian side of the inter- national bridge over the Niagara River was lighted by the publicly- owned Ontario Hydro-Electric. The Hydro-Electric is a socialistic enter- prise bringing electric service to thousands of homes in Ontario. Sir Adam Beck was the head of that development. To. the, capitalistically- minded people who say that you must have the profit motive for suc- cessful action, we would point to the Ontario Hydro-Electric. The cost to the taxpayers for lighting the United States end of the Niagara bridge by capitalistic enterprise was just four times the cost of lighting the Cana- dian end by.a socialistic method. The memory of the promoter of the socialistic electrification scheme will no doubt live in the homes of Oa- tario users till the Niagara Falls wears itself back to Lake Erie. The name of Samuel Insull of United States, who built up a private elec- trical empire valued at one time at hundreds of millions of dollars, will be laid away with other dusty records of United States criminal courts. Samuel Insull of electrical fame spent many of his last years and his last millions in flight from one foreign country to another, to avoid extradition back to the United States. It is true theoretically that capi- talism and socialism do not mix, but there: they are on the Niagara bridge side by side. Of all the travellers who cross that bridge at night there will probably be few who will know or care that this is a socialistic and that a capitalistic light. The service given is similar but at the time of the investigation by a committee of U.F.A. directors some ten years ago the cost of the capitalistic system was four times as great. If you ask me if the C.CF. favors socialistic or public ownership, the , answer is yes, and first in big monopolies. But we must have patience. The poet says: Let us then be up and doing, With a heart for any fate; Still achieving, still pursuing, Learn to labor and to walt. Under the most reactionary govern- ments the principles of socialism push their way forward. Leaders of governments in Canada, almost with- out exception, have had to be pushed along. The so-called leaders have been in the front of the movement, all right, but instead of leading they have been leaning back with their feet braced. They have only moved their feet forward when they didn't have the power to hold back any longer. The C.C.F. is the only political party in Canada organized for the express purpose of solving economic problems of Canada by peaceable application of socialistic principles. The word, peaceable, involves the fact that no matter how anxious the leaders may be for reform, they must await the enlightened 'good- will of the majority. C.C.F. leaders will depend on the majority just as Present leaders do. The difference will be that the C.CF. lead horses will be lead horses pulling on the bit with eyes and ears forward, They will not always have one ear turned back and one eye on the driver, re- fusing to tighten a tug unless through fear. C.C.F. FAVORS RULE BY THE MANY NOT BY THE FEW The C.C-F. is in favor of democracy or rule by a majority of the people. Past rulers of Canada have weakly consented to the rule of what Lord Bryce used to call the Money Power. Government should be as Abraham Lincoln said, by the peo- ple, for the benefit of the people. Canadian governments have governed the people for the benefit of big business and the money kings. Just now Graham Towers, head of Mackenzie King s Bank of Canada, refuses 500,000 loan for seed grain in Saskatchewan. He says Saskatche- wan- must grow what the world wants. I say the world still wants high-grade western wheat at a low price, and will trade us an abun- dance of oranges, grapefruit, coffee, tea, rubber, tin and all the manu- factured goods we need in western Canada at prices even lower than our wheat. But the Money Power won't let us. They want us to sell for cash and give the cash to the Canadian branch of the Money Power. If we can t sell wheat for cash, we are to be forced to grow be done direct without the use of something that will sell for cash to mioney. And Graham Towers could pay interest with. Imagine the hun- stick his Bank of Canada money up dreds of miles of western Canadian his sleeve. plains trying to go into live stock, Yes, but someone will say that a without a stick of wood to be seen government running an Import and in miles to build a barn for winter Export Board and doing the business protection; without water and with of the nation is socialistic. That is frequent years when the summer just the point. So it is. The C.CF. grass is burnt bare with the drought is prepared to go ahead wi pro- and heat, and when all the crop of gram that will cure the ecdMdmic ills The King s phone bearing the Royal Crown which will be used to broadcast on arrival at Quebec and on Celebrations from Winnipeg. one year would hardly feed a family of the people of Canada. cow and team of horses for the win- One very intelligent citizen said a ter Imagine prairie farmers im- few weeks ago that he was afraid poverished by the. Canadian wheat the C.C.F. would go too fast. He policy of recent years borrowing would likely vote C.C.F. but was money from. Graham Towers, head of giad that the Senate at Ottawa was the Bank of Canada, to buy lumber there as a brake. Yes, no matter and drill wells to keep live stock, how good a platform is, any peace- when he won't authorize a loan for able introduction of it into. the seed grain to grow feed for the stock national life will be slow. The How will 900,000 drought-stricken Senate and the few at the top are people get into live stock when they not the ogly brakes on the wheels of are given barely enough money to progress. The chief delay is due to keep themselves alive? the indifference of the very people A PROCRUSTEAN POLICY who even now so needlessly suffer. FOR THE PRAIRIES WILL NOT INSTITUTE SOCIALISM Talk about some other kind of AT POINT OF A GUN farming for the western prairies, and would say in answer to the r forcing an area fitted for wheat tolcent writer from the Sexsmith dis- fit something else. Graham. Towers trict that the C.C.F. does not seek to is like Procrustes, the fabled robber institute socialism at the point of a of Attica, who had a bed which every gin. If instituted that way, it would captured victim had to fit. If they have to be retained that way. On were too- short, he had screws to the other hand, any national change stretch them out to fit, and if they along the socialistic line that has were too long he sawed them off to sufficient voluntary support to intro- fit the bed. aacoay duce it will have the same support Canada has had such a national to maintain it and a growing sup- policy for years. It was introduced port when it is found to be beneficial. fant industries. All subsequent gov- WILL C.C.F. KEEP ITS ELECTION ernments, including the present, PROMISES? agree that the people of western The letter asks what assurance Canada must be sawed off to fit the the C.C.F. can give the people that national bed. they will be any different from the C.C.F. POLICY ONE TO FIT THE old-line parties? He says, The PEOPLE election promises, of the political The C.C.F. says the national bed Teligious leader of Alberta are still must be altered to fit the people. re Cor cues . The C.CF. policy is for a Canadian C.F. could hardly claim to Import and Export Board that will gt; any holier than the present pro- trade our surplus high-class western Vincial premier, so what can they say wheat for the surplus products of bout any assurance that they will other nations that need our wheat, 0t go back on their promises after Most of the national trading could lection? GRASSHOPPERS Farmers in municipalities within the grass- hopper infested areas are required to comply with the Provincial Agricultural Pests Aet in control of grass- boppers. Communities or municipelities wishing to hold public meetings, or wishing information, eommunicate with the Field Crops Branch of the Provincial Department of Agriculture. Department of Agriculture BON. D. B. MULLEX, Minister, One difference is that the prom- ising governments that failed in the past were organized from the top down. The C.CF. is organized trom the bottom up. The C.C.F. had its rise in groups of organized farmers and laborers, and groups of pro- fessional and business men in the cities organized to seek a solution for the economic ills of Canada. What- ever distance the C.C.F, ever goes it will be by the efforts of the common people organized for political action. What money they get for their elec- tion campaign will have to come trom the poor. There will certainly none come from the rich, The people have never to date been in control of a government of Canada, to govern our nation like good parents would govern their family for the benefit of all. There has always been in Canada the favored children finance and industry. The C.C.F. could have the recall if the + supporters couldn't find representa tives in whom they had sufficient faith. C.C.F. leaders would not re- 3. 8. SWEENEY, Deputy Minister. peal the law the minute it was to be TORONTO OTTAWA MONTREAL QUEBEC .. ANOTHER RAIL TRAVEL Bargain EASTERN CANADA TICKETS ON SALE DAILY May 16 to May 27 RETURN LIMIT 45 Days In addition to date of sale Return Fares from Grande Prairie Coach 87.10 sags: 76.00 a si it of regular berth rate. Good in Standard Sleepers on payment of regular berth rate, swer, we will go Into. personalities Children, 5 years and under 12, half fare. What has eviden' the dom- RRESPONDINGLY LOW FARES TO OTHER POINTS IN EASTERN CAN. Stopovers allowed WINNIPEG and east. Full particulars from any Agent, Peoples Northern Alberta Railways Co. * used against them. The idea that the C.C.F., if elected, would fail-the peopl just as others have done is caused by the mistaken idea that past governments of Canada were responsible to the majority. They have been responsible to th few who financed thelr election cam- Paign. Tt is said that the Beauharnois water-power promoters to a great extent financed the Liberal campaign in 1930, and that R. B. Bennett financed the Conservative campaign to the tune of 750,000. R. B. Ben- nett would think he was justified in being boss of Canada if he financed the campaign chiefly himself. When finance and industry finance the campaign, they are boss; and only when the common people of Canada put up the money for election cam- paigns and win will be boss of the destiny of the land In which we standard: live. And only by united action of 02.35. he common man will the C.CF. ever : be elected to power. ass, C.C.F. WILL NOT FAIL THE 83.50 VOTERS 28.85 To the question will the C.C.F. fail 108.25 the voters as others have done? It the fo1 is not a sufficient an- 87.10 87.90 61.56 inating feature of the life of J. 8, Woodsworth? Did he hope to become ADA. a millionaire in the jous West when as a young man he put his heart and soul into the work of All sin Winnipeg He save a cruel, grants in Winnipeg? He saw a cruel platting compethive economs syst tem, destroying the work that he HROUGHOUT the Empire the voice of His Majesty during the Royal Visit to Canada will be heard through these microphones, They have been produced by the Northern Electric Company, to the specifications of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. The micro- across Canada during the tour of Their Majesties designed for reduction of wind noise for ui oval shape microphones are gold plated and Microphones is one of many produced for use nd is specially out-of-doors. The two the new Cardlold type His Majesty's message of greeting the occasion of the Empire Day trying to do. His book on the Cana- dian immigrants, entitled Strangers Within Our Gates, was widely read in church circles thirty years ago. Is it any wonder that he turned from doctoring the effects to curing the cause of human ills, namely, an un- just economic system? Having spent his life in the cause of human betterment till his head is grey, is he likely to change now? Till say not. Does he advocate any policy, now that the C.C.F. is be- coming popular, that he didn't ad- vocate when it brought only scorn and abuse. Nota thing. Is he fight- ing for political power, for the sake of the glory and the big salary, or is he fighting for a cause? T'll say he is fighting for a cause. the cause of the common people first, and for power to carry it into effect. If other parties steal some of the most popular planks of his platform and put them into theirs, he will tell them they are just patching up capi- talism they need a new system. It is true in our economic as in our religious life, By faith are ye saved. A people having lost its faith in leaders who have continually betrayed them will turn to force and bloodshed for revenge. The C.C.F. appeal is for one fair trial of equal rights for all and special privilege to none in Canada; instead of the competitive slogan, everybody for himself and the devil take the hindmost. The C.C.F. says try for once the co operative plan of each for all and all for each. The farmers of western Canada are swine in the eyes of the money kings. They are treated worse. If they would give us the jungle freedom of root hog or die, we would soon rid ourselves of our restrictions. But they pyt on a tariff yoke so that we an't get anywhere, and monopoly rings in our noses so we can't root. ALL REACH THE TOP OR ALL FALL INTO ABYSS The C.C.F. pictures humanity as mountain climbers, climbing up the steep face of a cliff to higher levels of living. Someone near the top is indifferent to another lower down and kicks him in the face and off his precarious foot hold. But the higher- up is surprised to find that he him- self is roped to the lower climber that has fallen and now dangles over the abyss. He reaches for his knife to cut the rope, only to find that it is a little steel cable that cannot be cut. We must all, ultimately, reach the tableland on top or fall into the abyss together. The poet pictures the man who thinks not of self onty but also of his duty to his fellow-man as one who climbs a steep cliff to the tableland above. He says of duty: He that ever following her com- mands On with toil of heart and knees and hands Through the dark night to the far light hath won His path upward and prevailed, Shall find the toppling crags of duty scaled Are close upon the shining table- lands To which our God Himself is moon and sun. - - -- TWILIGHT, May 2. Correction: Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Swanson, Jr. (not A E. Swanson) have moved to Grande Prairie. ks Everybody enjoyed the ball tice on Sunday, so we have c another for May 6. All are busy practising for the track meet, in hopes that we may hold our two cups. Miss Mayer spent the week-end at Carveth s. Mr. Raison and Mr. Swanson drinking tea. News Wanted For Cecil. . rson and family were Sunday visitors at Maile s. The mule works. oe The veterinary from Grande Prairie spent Sunday in the district vaccinating horses for sleeping sick- fone see Lydia Maile is away working. CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our thanks and appreciation to all our friends for their kindness and sympathy to us in our recent bereavement, and also for the beautiful floral tributes received. under the guidance of the church was Mr, H. R. Mortwedt and Family. At the Churches CHRIST CHURCH (ANGLICAN) Grande Prairle REV, T. DALE JONES, R.D., Rector Easter 4 Sunday, May 7 9:00 a.m. Holy Communion. 11-00 a.m. Confirmation Service, Rt Rev. A. H. Sovereign, D.D., Bishop of Atha bas 12:30 p.m. Sunday School. 7:30 p.m. Evensong, ST. JOSEPH'S CHURCH Grande Prairie Sunday, May 7 Father McGuire Masses 9:00 and 11:00 a.m, Perpetual Help Devotions 7:30 p.m. May Devotions, Wednes- day and Friday Father Naphin Buffalo Lakes 11:00 a.m, Father Redmond Rio Grande 7:30 p.m, 11:00 a.m. ST. PAUL'S UNITED CHURCH Grande Prairie Minister: REV. A. WILLIS CANN HL. Vaughan, A.B-T.C.M., Organist Sunday, May 7 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. 12:15 p.m. Sunday School. 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship. CLAIRMONT UNITED CHURCH Sunday, May 7 2:00 p.m. Sunday School. 3:00 p.m. Communion Service. APOSTOLIC CHURCH Grande Prairie Pastor: REV. A. D. SCOTT Sunday Services: Morning, at 11 a.m. Evening, at 7:30 p.m. Everybody welcome. FORBES PRESBYTERIAN QOHURCH REV. C. E. FISHER Phone 174 Sunday, May 7 11:00 a.m. Sabbath School. 7:30 p.m. Evening Service. 3:00 p.m. Flying Shot. McLAURIN BAPTIST CHURCH Grande Prairie REV. J. M. BAXTER Pastor Sunday, May 7 11:00 a.m. Sunday School. 7:30 p.m. Evening Service. Bezanson Hall, 2:30 pim. Services at Bezanson Hall will be again held at the usual time. 222 -2 gt; lt; t BEAVERLODGE ------- --- ---- -+ BENTUM UNITED CHURCH Beaver Lodge REV. GEO, A. SHIELDS, B.A. Minister Sunday, May 7 11:00 a.m. Beaver Lodge S. S. 11:00 a.m. Hinton Trail. 3:00 p.m Haleourt, 7:30 p.m. Beaver Lodge. SPIRIT RIVER NEWS ----- -------- --- ST. ANDREWS CHURCH (Anglican) REV. J. W. DONALDSON, B.A. Rector Sunday, May 7 11:00 a.m. St. Andrew's Sunday School. Belloy. 2:45 pa St. Andrew's, Spirit River. 7:30 pa SPIRIT RIVER UNITED CHURCH Minister: REV. H. B. RICKER, B.A., B.D. Sunday, May 7 Broncho Creek . Spirit Valley Spirit River WEMBLEY NEWS oe. o WEMBLEY UNITED CHURCH Minister: - REV. NEWMAN J. TRUAX, B.A. Sunday, May 7 11:00 a.m. Wembley Sunday School. 11:00 a.m. Spring Creek Church Service. 11:45 am. Spring Creek Sunday School, 3:00 p.m. Lower Beaver Lodge Church Service. 8:00 p.m. Wembley Church Service. This service will be in charge of the C.G.LT. groups. Special speaker. At Spring Creek and Lower Beaver Lodge Mother's Day services this Sanday. You are invited to attend ANGLICAN CHURCH Parish of Wembley REV. K. L, SANDERCOCK Rector: Sunday, May 7 St. Matthew's, Wembley, Sunday School, 10 a.m. St. Andrew's Lake Saskatoon, Morning Prayer and Sunday School, 11 a.m. Aspen Dale School, Bible Class and Service, 3 p.m. The Right Rev. A. H. Sovereign, D.D., will preach. St. Matthew s, Wembley, 7:30 p.m. The Right Rev. A. H. Sovereign, D.D., will preach. Everyone is specially invited to these services to meet the Bishop. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Adam and Fallen Man is the subject of the Lesson-Sermon at all Christian Science churches on Sun- a The Golden Text is I Corin- thians 15:22. One of the Scriptural citations is: For yet a little while, and the wicked shall not be: yea. thou shalt diligently consider .his place, and it shall not be. But the meek shall inherit the earth; and shall delight themselves in the abun- dance of peace (Psalms 37:10, 11). One of the correlative passages from Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, by Mary Baker Eddy, is: The real man being linked by Science to his Maker, mortals need only turn from sin and lose sight of mortal selfhood to find Christ, the real man and his relation to God, and to recognize the divine sonship . .-. Christ presents the indestructible man, whom Spirit creates, constitutes and governs (p. 316). The oldest sextant Sanskrit play, The Toy Cart, dates from the end of the second century. woe 2g 1 - ; GARDENING wesesecusesesscses NO HURRY Phe averages amateu tank dave a aumnett south and atupe Lota With th an th retin danger ran nf See thinks In while there in mUill a fC axcrloun frost, Ome set-back old day ur two completely off rly start and nting the Ww fof courme do hardiext vegetables or ei Theme nhieu work. * apply 1 be A SHORT CUT For a short cut the gardener in ad vided fo purchage a certain quantity Of started planta of both flowers and vexetables Th usually chased from. the house, forint seed house. TC be impartant to sget Ul Varietter wan tony thie your local xardener MOST FOR YOUR MONEY Those with only: fittie land te spay xhould concentrate on those vesetithle whieh give the biggest returns fo) amalleat xpace oceupied Amany Kinds are beans, eatrrots hard, xpinach, cucumbers Th the lesner-knowt ves leeks, esc ind pepper phan and brand beans. hes: enn all be xrown in the Pence River country GRASSHOPPER SITUATION IN ALBERTA FOR 1939 opper forecast for Al- year is for an outbreak covering a larger area than in 1938. with an extension of the infested area westward and northward, and a light and patchy area recorded for the first time in the Peace River District. The range of severity of infestation over the province is termed light to very severe, depending to a great extent upon the growth and climatic conditions last fall and this spring and early summer. Where the forecast is termed severe there is a threat of widespread damage of great intensity. which necessitates control measures on the part of farm- ers in those areas, Even in the light infested zones grasshoppers may be expected to be present numbers to cause definite losses in individual fields. Therefore, the hopper condition for 1939 continues to be extremely serious, and will re- quire that the province continue its widespread and. well-organized con- trol campaign to avoid tremendou losses of crops in many large dis- triets The provincial government is plac- ing supplies and supervisors at the disposal of municipalities and im- provement districts in order to com- bat the expected outbreak. Farmers within the grasshopper-infested areas are required to comply with the provisions of the Provincial Pests Act in control of grasshoppers. Communities and municipalities wishing to hold public meetin; requiring information, should municate with the Field Branch of the Provincial Department of Agriculture, Edmonton. CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank all those d friends who were so kind to me dur- ing my recent bereavement and for the lovely tokens of remembrance of my late husband. Again please ac- cept my sincere and heartfelt thanks. JEAN HARPER. (Mrs. Harry Harper.) thing dent sprin of destiny Families would be on relie families cam face the fucure arantee financial security fies; (2) provide funds for children; (3) protect the ers and their beneficiaries in Ie ean exceltent dew to eanmult ie ens Canadian xed houxe, preferably sour local nurseries, befure placing vauy order Among the flowers ovhich ei be purchased at started: phtnic ive co Thos, ainniios, petuniad. mmaekeehte anit whoxt of others, Cabbages, celery tomatoes, head lettice. ee and pepper plants in the vegetable line aye all sole ne xtarted plants, and din he had tram sufficient IF there were no life insurance, millions of Canadian citizens would dread the future. Many men would be rerless to protect theit loved ones Thousands more Fortunately there IS life insurance and Canadian ings in life insurance, men and women (1) Each and every working ay. peleyhae: more than Five Hundred Thousand Dollars from their life insurance savings. Life Insurance GUARDIAN OF CANADIAN MP.H.A. Broadcast Hy ART SMITH Monkman Pase. Good evening, Highway friends. he Monkman Pass Highway grain plan is receiving considerable publi- city in newspapers throughout Canada, Last week one of Van- couver s dailies carried an editorial as follows, in part: Numerous farmers living in Peace River have agreed to don- ate an acre of grain each to the Monkman Pass Highway, so ger are they for a road to the Coast. Peac River district is where rown that takes highest awards at the great s, o the wheat should be good; and as the Peace is almost immune from such things as drought and fungi, the crop will likely be good too. The value of the donation will therefore de- pend on the price The promoters of the high- way have given evidence of so much industry and ingenuity and perseverance, and have received xo little encouragement from the governments that should have been their chief backers, that they deserve to succeed. Among those who have signed up for the acre of grain this week we notice Homer Jaque, Huallen, who is xoing to be the first to put up a sign or booster in his field, This Acre of Grain Is for the Monkman Pass Highway. We also have Gordon Fawkes on the list with three a hes in acre for himself and two from his sons, and Gordon Cameron, all of Huallen. A letter was received from Mr. Swen Bloom-of Enilda advising us he has planted an acre for the highway. Please let us hear trom you. The first meeting of the newly- elected executive will, be held at Beaver Lodge tonight. General po for the 1939 activities will be dis- cussed at this meeting, The 1939 trek over the trail has already begun. Ross Millsap of Enilda, one of the 1938 crew, passed through here Sunday with his family in a covered wagon, en route to the mountains. Ross was one of the last to leave the pathfinder road gang last fall and again the mountains and streams along the Monkman Pass Highway route are calling. He hopes to drive the first wagon over the whole route from Rio Grande to lansard. 31, is being named Highway Day, so Further details keep the date open. will be announced next week. There has been a number of re- quests for the song by Clarence arters of Charlottetown, P.E.I. We I haev it played for you again. It is entitled The Song of the Monk- mi OBITUARY CHRISTOPHER N. LINDQUIST The funeral of Christopher Nelson Lindquist, who farmed south of Grande Prairie and who passed away on Monday, May 1, at the age of 64, will be held this (Thursday) after- noun, at 2:30. Services will be held in MeLaurin Baptist Church, Rev. J. M. Baxter officiating. Interment in KNIGHTS OF THE GRIP The following Knights of the Grip are covering this end of their itory: Dick Shore, representing Bauer Black; Phil Pepper, General Foods; Bud McLear, Carnation Milk; al Jacques, Rowntrees; Doug Mars- den, pipes. The boys, w ohtake it as it comes, all report fair business in the Peace River country and excellent roads. First aseent of the Matterhorn, mus Alpine peak. cost the lives of bers of pedition, besin with f . unafraid. Through their sav- for their fami- educating their own old age. receive HOMES Last
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Image 560 (1939-05-04), from microfilm reel 560, (CU1723826). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.