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The Calgary Herald 1919-03-01 - 1919-04-29
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1919-03-21
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BROKEN-OUT SKIN pean Reset, Beate be Rance mete ne te Surface. inorder, and the” burde aie we he a ne it For free sample aboratories, 243 SOLDIER LISTED AS. DEAD: 1S NOW HOME Cornwall Man Walks in on Old Folks and Gives Them Surprise CORNWALL, Ont.. March 19—o. have ono of their svidier sons report ed missing on May 28, 1917, and of- Tictally reported killed in uction on. June 28 of the same year, have him walk {non them a day or two ago to pay them « visit, is the qpleasant experience of Mr. ohn Lalonde, who reside on “Marl~ srough street here. Pte. Wim, La- inde, once a prominent Junior and Gntermediate lacrosse player in his home town, who was locally knowns Shamrock” Lajond: the young man in question. edowith the 23rd battals aon De- cember 4, 14 ¥ went to Francs with the grd battailon (Queen's Own, of Toronto). At Fes- tubert on May 24, 1916, he was wound- ed with shrapnel in the head. After in France for a wei he was sent to Stanley ho: pool, Eng. and remained six weeks. He was then sent Folkstone, where ned for five months, and to France for the time, in December, $15; Ife was transferred to the 18th London. Ont, battalion. After a year and five months on active servi he was taken prisoner in May. 191 on the right of Vimy Town. and was then reported asm sing, and a month Inter was reported killed in action. Lalor ne of wh Kano, af K laced in prison ¢ a 1, . after ich Iatlonde was’ 5 Altdamm, Germany. his id tion. ea: ing the number 1. Fro damm. he was sent to work farm in the town of Gobren Isla’ of RuKer, where: h ploved a farmer named A. M z Pte, Lilonde was paid 4 day and-says.the farm- mm well, only he was hous- brick barn, with horses on ‘of bis “room cows nd this was the most ¢ his experience at a ‘on the ue nine sted pe five months of his. fm- Donal respond their to, weak the ¢: ast. effort wy were knocke mut with the butt end of a ri After eighteen months in rps, ne. kk to Altdan ettin, He le latter December: 11, 1918, on the VHT for Copenhagen. Jin Hull, England, on De- and reaehed Ripon camp rrived In Canada ling holt- thers. to place’ on Basillea ett, Om the rains Jorman: shell at holes in ee hot pre= hoys had a hut con- Cornwall is souvenirs hunting of the Has the portion viously naarrnw -escaiy tinued their. se man was stripped wrecked. - The ‘om de i of. in the who Lalonde building; Regu and Mra.) ° y By AN ALBERTA FARMER'S WIFE THE “URGE” OF MARCH MONG the things having psycho- logical effects on those who are within their sphere of influence, 1am inclined. to give the different | months credit for a psychological ef- fect all their own. ‘At any rate, for my part, each month a# it comes bas « different feeling to me-than its predecessor. ‘The name of each . somehow: Vis- ualizes for me the daily round p cular to the month, and so while }no month can truly be called a “dolce far mente,” one on the farm, or, in- deed, in any hive of yet there “are. months when rhythm of the loom of work @ swifter turn, as t industry, the ¢ takes more awittly onwards; forthe work-| {tis one do the ‘The for would’ seem should and find they une uisitors' and Henry were same mould ali right, but she was sure Henry could show o new tricks, from aren't this mes ut if the fellow eye headache. | Speakin alw dri nig in thy te has felt a mysterious call In the iy. venem air, and he knows without even con- ig calling its. first spring will soon jand the | warning, urge that the call sounds curiously like | crack of the ringmaster’s whip ing his troupe of performing anjmals to attentive. readiness, ‘Therefore, precating look on the spring, there is tp tho | tim S2Ouhs calendar that tt ia Mare, | but my be | Oniy warning ain, and, to me, at least, |showing me that |Mbroad that the season 14 on the eve! spr, and,we must tion. of spring-like activities be getting Kirded up { The Vogue of the Alarm Clock By nentioned | hear triliing untimeously. ‘ah alarm clock Doubtless, how appeal that April me Is largely a question of for Is not this the month popularly. given. over by poets and others of th and mating ina glints upon the: changing in the spring « young man Ughtiy turns to thoughts: of love. ut not in this west, if he has re- mombered to wind his alarm clock the night before. Along sbout July again, when he has got-a fine stretch of summ credit then he may besin to sing to the maid of hischoice: “There's roon in my heart for you, You're the only girl that | adore.” or some such court- fail, but the shrill sound of “the larm, like an accusing conscience, CHeeks off any. tender spring. r of sentiment with, its work atiend And though it is to be feared TW-meaning alarm ats of be of the Hoot by indignant Sleepers, than even a tax collector knows, yet night finds it occupying its usual niche nearby the sium} tnd mornins finds it In’ the spring « livelier dove. fancy more thr the Urder with, aud hired well-rounded wits y who lik Needlessly Alarming devotees, first on the iy with the he early bir the worm), sets his call him to action ¥ hight—or just time'to & the, bunch known “as fellows, Put that js notcall—beine harr i haunting horror of noth If some. morning—he sets i much battered tray. which Ir on a chair Whose legs ure He then lays him down to siey, of being plac post if’ the ase, are vs’ being it when they're tryin Hut it is at the mornin fell ingenuity of the With the first decrepit from one eral Of the porer of a minute be. awit back Tatant to hop un le nother,: and pande= going in new gown! her cous intereurition by > industrious one In te back. with a “Henry rm, why don’ ch comes the ere in. the 5 Yourself. if you can, ve ring again ins quarter of an’ h 40. there's no hurry—at Jeast T-exys Tut: he adds. So while he rests th reat of who has a quarter hé Df race Kiveu, she just-cant hell fearing that so hateful alarm, in tmasination, » dozen times before tt expected recurrence and, naturally, her early-morning face is that of one who has been “jarred” Ig wakeful= fest or she'd be sleeping And fe erieves her husbind, who, = good man. never was inside a RC. chapel ‘a his tifh,..20 his thonghtless telling a nelehbor that email of the same token, when April ts] tiik, to thoughts of love | Neigh th ready 1 know of one alarm doing busi- ss at the old stand, or on it, rather, fections, somehow thought Be th tll they've sir ing | will wak our and the thing {s perish beni my chimney, these mornings! y stiould be smoking ahead of axnt"n0 | despite the sottly falling snow outside, the une ind, give. ‘an exhibition when th =fallow and breaking to his |on. the th world- for | sings most lark, wel lark that get up ull ten sh a And Forward. Tho! We Ww shold. for my about change the voklike “sough™ of the ‘about to must alarm drives," for spring is | Also, {t's a strange the fellow who ‘once instance, giving ‘a he, heared, “alarming” abe. that those ‘wall: neaning people who #0 assiduous: do" rood 'accotding to thelr lights” | YsE now, out of therr deed sympathy ina. ‘ot tights other | the nger Snap’s Soliloquies there. tale “it's Nice to Get Up in the Morning” own feelings, us to Ket roused tout cela. more, ot snied vehemently at we should rise with T belleve that when the] should. rise wi, doesn't fe the one Who “usu: cea his glaria sons "to, make earliest lark: 100k e Guess and Fear the ‘of enoukh good seed to herta is cod wh generally hve focussed: on heir asticma even h st put who Eo ne side facts are Ss going well p that night—| ya think it must only be dy hard school of nes he can answer its inaistency of| he shuttle flies | morning without “red” in one's eye. of the times when Iam doub- asserting Hritons never, never should be slaves, slaration makes no on the ttle tyrant, which 8 steadily on by way of monly wasting protesting time's summons. One call: | of the privileges of winter (unless one has chosen dairying ag the medium through which one means: to get on spite of the lingering snow, and de-| to easy street some time in the sweet face of the] )y and by) is to be able to ignore Htccmometer, when anyone mentions | rio pleading of the alarm key to be already a feeling | wound tl) such time as approaching requires | Seturning over a new leaf, sugKestive) ehough to get up in timo, to crowd ‘day and a half's work into one day. ore who come along to spend ning generally don't go home nt a bit of ext morn- mpelling alarm them from ind ® dark morn! sity chat] that im- your | t tke spfingtime e everybody the problem of getting assidudusly farmer that he new suit, * long enough, tow 1 ES Canna See, sign! plies ber! hu 1 knits, hiels th r seeds ng tow tb owhi- at- | clerk’ for th has * farm r ho has . to take would seem so! remark ft of the farmers -had got t know oF pe n Which they'd have immer’s session! pO: potat a licks of his attached, ne, seed a lot tha and wise THE CALGARY DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1919 the alr over the ingratitude of farm- ers who object to paying the No. 1 price to him for a hetergeneous mix~ ture-chat-would be classed as “aweep- ings-up” any ordinary year However, Leagues being the order of the day, probably the elevator man thinks he'll be the chap to start a Jeague of wheat out on our farms. If the Idea doesn't “take” with the buy- ers he can always blame the bad mixup we've made as an excuse for laying the heavy hand of dockage on our wistful expectations, Come, Let Us Reason Together I know that there are many woul be Solomons budding forth into print with the ‘consumer—their artful little ‘game being to get the consumer to look on the farmer as ‘one who has leverything he wants—has profited, Instead of lost by the war—dut who Uke the bear and lion in the nursery bymn, just growls and fights, for ‘ts his nature tot Such writers elte the caso of odd farmers here and there in the prov- ince who, in spite of last year’s draw- Backs, te-foeling fine, and. “flush,” both as regards thelr pockets and their future prospects, But if these would-be Solomons were really acting up tg their great prototype they'd add | that, of course, “just as one swallow ean’ never make summer," no does one Noble in the province pro- claim us all to be wheat barons! Of course, we are sorry for the consumer, and we are bound to admit that the ‘name consumer is a mere mockery at times, considering the high cost of-consuming, but the fel~ low who finds himself held flatly be- tween the milistenes of high tariff, weather conditions, and no-siy when he sells, cin only’ have, a modicum of sympathy for the other follow who is only gripped at the walstcoat but~ tons. For when we go to the city we find the consumer (by which I meanthe average man with a wage or salary, whose educational ad- vantages and status of birth are on a par with the average farmer on these prairies), to all outward ap- pearances possessed of the ordinary comforts of life, well dressed, able to dine out when he feels like {t, able |to give bis children all the educa~ tional chances the city ‘provides, and with always enowgh left over to let him he a “movie fan” if he so desires. | While on the average farm, in dis- tricts settled, some ten or twelve years, what do we find the man who ip really his social equal doing? Get~ I Most of them have homesteaded in those parts through rumors of # fu~ ture railway coming to help them out, OF they’d never have taken a wife and family so far into the wilds. But though rumors of railway com- ing makes easy sales for the agents, yet all such rumors should be treated With @ pinch of salt by any man who doesn't enjoy spending half his life on the trail, away from his family. But if there is any need for us to be thinking up schemes to help the un- amployed, why not help these out~ lying districts to that “railway, that Will make life so much easier and homelike for them, besides brighten- ng up their farming prospecta? It would be a shock to them, no doubt, to have such a belated fruition of thelr hopes after all hope seemed but Joy doesn't kill: anyone. They'd live to” pay it all back in in~ creased productiveness, and happy ‘hien"-looking homes, two items which beat the best board of trade ads, bollow in the boosting of a district, or province! ‘One Of the most pathetic sights in our farming west,is this type of farmer, who to the daily work of farming combines the hamper of a long trail to town, He doesn’t know he looks pathetic; be hasn't any time to study himself before the mirror to fee Af he looks interesting or ill-used. In fact some of them, in view of what wind and weather have done to thelr faces, are rather shy of looking glasses, but if you have seen the typé once, you always recognize ft again. ‘The contour of the face may vary, Dut the look in the eyes is ver the same. "Tis the look of the man who haa “béen up ayainst it scores of times, but who still keeps hoping for the best, but is ready to meet the worst; who makes’ no bid for sympathy, but says, “Oh, there a good time coming," 0 cheerfully, that you really have not the cruelty to remind him that it may. have gone by, when he wasn't looking. ‘These men, and the spirit that animates them, have been the salt of the west {nthe ploneer days. and they are stil one of her healthiest elements. ‘The pity of it is that they and their needs should'so often be lightly re= garded; that they should so often be assessed so far below their real Value, that the demands of the idle rich, or the rafter, figure ahead of their modest claims. ‘The need ot a good Motoring road from coast to coast may seem very pressing to some, but the . government - who Welgha this claim against many of should, when making its decision, re- member the old story of the king whose little daughter displeased him dy. nly loving him more than salt. but who, when dephived of salt, woke up to the fact that It was the finest thing in his roval-palace. Which is Promise has proved a Never-Never- Land to him, and he'll go somewhere else, where dreams sometimes come true! GINGER SNAP. AN EIGHT-HOUR DAY FREDERICTON, N.B., March 20,— The New Brunswick Federation of Labor this morning adopted con- struction programme which Includes @ provision that the should be limited” to eight hour that there ahould be overtime work only when it was urgently required, find that the working week consist of five and « half day: BAN ON DANCING (Special to The Calgary H’ MEDICINE HAT. March “flu” situation shows great provement today—two cases ‘reported fn twenty-four hours and twenty- three released. ‘The ban has been placed only on_dancing. - BACK ACHE (Limber Up With Penetrating Hamlin’s Wizard Oll ‘A harmless and tffective prepara- tion to relieve the pains of Rheuma- tism, Sciatica, Lame Back and Lum- bago is Hamlin’s Wizard Oil It pen- etrates quickly, drives out. sorene: and limbers up stiff aching joints | muscles. [You have .no idea how useful. it will be found in cases of every day ailment or mishap, when there is need of an immediate healing, anti- Septic application, as in cases, of sprains, bruises, cuts, burns, bites and stings. Get it from druggists for 30 cents. If not satisfied return the bottle and get your money back. Ever constipated or have sick headache? Just try Wizard. Liver these, long-standing western claims ting up before daybreak, and work- ing til sunset, dressed in the most unbecoming “rig” ever invented: (in my opinion), but the. only one that answers the Job. Feeding pigs. mill ing cows, not becatise he enjoys doing it, but évery asset on a farm must be fused to get a minimum of profit. As @ stead the srorching heat, ani he | the di adds years to his looks, (trough the weary wear of its, persistency. All through the season he keeps: on the treadmill round, and.ts.as pleased 4s Punch If his crop comes through. I don't have to remind you that it auite often doesn’ However, he doesn't ‘ket. smiling long enouh to ‘edd up” the wrinkles, for it is now fall, and those machinery. notes are once more due, Not that the poor ¢hap had not ‘really: paid all they were Worth, when he made his first payment, but then, as we ail should know by this time, the way of the Implement firm with “the farmer is that he who asks for. time pays double, You see, having to employ a sole purpose of sending ‘out these duns, they'ye Teally got to raise Uieir prices! It reminds me of ry of the wag who asked the PA paper boy what he would charge him for The Daily Herald, cop= of which the boy was selling. said the youth. “What said the wag, cents down ‘who evidently knew his f by he the game: . The Merry Manipulator However, ‘eight, times out of ten the farmer has chosen this sort life, for some reason or othe willing to bide by It, ship coming in to Harbor some day fore he's too dim of eye with p seo it, but when th s family you cin this system of then having-your from you by markets, or a hundred others “bears” that mil against our agricultural you can pict ans to that aus been 3 her city sisters, is is rfect: kernels. that getle lif ge: germini et lots of rain- ‘o-remind mipaiies ship in grain from points is] ints of t had had ersonal thing we don't] Then the best ith th pre tooking the other o1 of the crtier or twa Who'd variety 8 having too much’ chat ‘year doc ofS Made from whole wheat & - malted barley this delicious food pro- vides the :necess elements for sturdy muscle and brain | “Theres aKeason” Canada food Board License No.2-026 i t of elevator wheat onomical— 210 Sugar. out Is Hmit a bi Ping Ina little board shack. often eh- conditiins and put up with hard- and cold of a pature which may ell known t such as are desig: nated slum dwellers, but are cer- tainly never rienced 4 nd or whos asked. to, consider w ‘over lavishly hi ir breaks she, slic wn bacon, or two extra into the supper-time ete! But it those people who are so anxious to fet consumer and producer in battle array against each other, would just remember the manipulations of the merry middlemen, they'd he showing some right to be calling themselves, aecond Solomons, or L Play, ete, For over and © farmer fou in it's not what you've earned, what the other fellow will pay, you, that ts the rule when he goes a-mar- keting, and naturally, one-sided rules of this sort pute the bulge in the (for him) wrong pocketbook. A Little Fuller. Understanding Needed While ft may be argued that this To farmers cnough to make ie ‘the Taldable minority, and even those, of Gs who nave Rot a littie ahead of It) Rave done #0 by such hand sleddins thac Uc has taken. the gest Of lite from our even, and bronght prematuce nil- ver to our Mair, and even then wo| have not yet the full measure of home | Comforts looked upon. as every day | fiahts ‘by ‘the consumer, Not that were asking for sympathy! Not at | all! We wouldn't change places with | Anyone, because we're made that way hot because we think the consamer would enjoy being In-our shoes at all | Teall: ‘theyre by.-no menas fashions | abte enough for him, even if he aid | get a "ol p thing’ by wearing |ftamt Huesto would like to enbhes | Neevthe fae that the ECs Nas 10 | Feleilont to: thie price we getter pro-| duce. r The Men of the Long, Long Trail | _.Sometimes’ when I read, of some-| Jone or other having that “partic | species of pipe dream in which he| gees a Yast army of our unemployed being soothed Into sweet temper b: heing set to build a-motoring road from coast to coast, there comes be- fore my mind's eye the picture -of those farmerwho have homesteaded way ont.” {rekking patiently, year after year, their scoré and two score miles fo the nearest town, over trails at are a menace, in one way or! other, no matter whether the time ‘simmer or winter, on which, in t. there have been fatalities more than ones, Most of thelr trekking has.to be done by wagon, too, bamp= ity-bump over the hard trail, all! those endless miles, in summer heat And winter chili, because Time being money they lose such a lot of the | Girst-on the long trail that they nat- | urelly can't make much of: the’ ond, Of course, a superfic nerver wail those are who ought to h for lost time. but the car agent is deaf to a that do not smell of “the pi becguse of lost tim@ how can have thas? they | picture of farm life is not applicable | | rute, yor ft ts still true of a very for- | Job he plows-all summer {n| gen-| rt, und was, up to the | ‘Whips, passant little pink pills, 30 cents, ‘ Guaranteed. = to say that this desirable type may | some day decide that the Land of| POSEN, March 20.—The German delegation lett Posen for Berlin working day|day. The Allied mission has returned to Warsaw. | Tn a Po: Havas Agency that the Germans, sign the terms virtually agreed upon, / are quitting Posen. immediately. GERMANY. REFUSES 10 SIGN TERMS AS AGREED Negotiations Regarding Po- Dr. J.D. KeELLooa’s AstHmMaREMEDYy ‘THE CHOKING, BUFFOCATING EFFECTS OF ASTHMA ARE GREATLY MITIGATED: BY THIS EFFECTIVE AGENT. A TRIAL 18 SUFFICIENT TO CONVINCE YOU OF land Considered as Broken Off to- if = n date of March 19 the| the negotiations have Deen considered correspondent says| by the Allies as broken off. The cor= having refused to [respondent adds that the Germans CALGARY TO THE SEA And. Intermediate Points AND OVERSEAS : TRAINS For the East , . 2 7.50 p.m, Daily For the North and West, 7.15 a.m. Daily (ex. Sunday) We Specialize on Close Personal Attention to your Comfort. For Information, Travel and Passport Help, ask “ TOURIST AND TRAVEL BUREAU, 218 Eighth Avenue West, Calgary. Telephone M3626. 250 buys a Thrift Stamp 36 Thritt. Stamps buy éne War Savings Stamp. Value $5.00, January 1st, Yo24, "Start toda Stamps — at Railway, Picket Office Temple-Duff Drug Co.,Ltd. “THE DRUG STORE THAT'S ALWAYS BUSY" OUR STORE IS CENTRALLY. LOCATED, Practicall; c street car in the ome in; use the telephone; get weighed; meet your friends or wait for your car. y stops in front of our dodr, or within a few yards fro mit. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS— YOU ARE WELCOME TO OUR SERVICE. Specials for the week in the Chocolate & Candy Dept. NEILSON’S Solid Chocolate 60c: 75c» GOLDEN 70c «. Rosebuds BEICH’S Fruit Flavor Jelly Pastilles BEICH’S GENUINE Crumbles free. folders. NEILSON’S Bul Chocolates Per Ib., G5¢ to $1.00 Ik making sixteen in all: Thi We lates. are ‘sole agents here for these -delicious Bon Bons and—Chpco- Neilson’s and Patterson’s PACKAGE CHOCOLATES Fresh shipment of eac received this week. h T cafe. Shera FREE Cut out this Coupon, bring it to our store to- morrow, Saturday, March 22nd, make a pur- chase of sixty cents or over -of any Soap, tionery or Candy in the store and. you will be given a.25¢ Thrift Stamp in a folder absolutely Should you already have a foller please bring it with you and we will affix the stamp to it. Stamps will not be handed out unattached to This coupon must be presented. During the last six weeks opportunity to start more than seven hundred of our patrons saving by this campaign and prac- tically al] have continued to avail themselves of our- Thrift Stamps offer each Satur As_stated before we will endeav: age continuous saving by making some offer each weck for ten more consecutive week: offer is undertaken by Temple-Duff Drug Co., Ltd., to assist the War-Saving Stamp cam- paign, the company believing no better method of saving could be offered. FREE Thrift Stamps COUPON SEE US FOR Blackles Vaccine In Pill, Powder or Liquid: Form. We are wholesale agents for Alberta for the Cutter Biological Laboratories and carry complete stock of their Veterinary Vaccines and Serums. Soap, Stationery an Chocolate Week AT TEMPLE-DUFF’S for Saturday Castile Soap Reg, 25c bar, 2 for 35¢ Reg. 35c bar, 2 for 65¢ Reg. 10c cake, 2 for 15¢ Tooth Paste Colgate’s, reg. 35¢, 25¢ Rosebud, reg. 35¢, 25¢ Kellogg's, regular 35¢, for .-.:.s00-- 25¢ Forhan’ Sta- Hair Tonics Danderine— Regular 35c.:.. 25¢ Regular 60c ., 50¢ Regular $1.00... 90€¢ Dandrucide— Regular $1.00, ,.85¢ we have had the y since. r to encour- milar ENO’S FRUIT SALT $1.00 cach Wincarnis Ideal tonic and builder. Large .....-. $1.80 ----+ $1.05 Small Shaving Cream Mennen’s, special 35¢ Polson’s; special. .25¢ Nyal's, special... .25¢ One Special Hot Water Bottle 2 years absolute guaran- tee; reg. $2.50. see. $1.75 avery Temple-Duff Drug Co.,Ltd. “THE DRUG STORE THAT'S ALWAYS BUSY.” FRED J. TEMPLE, Manager, 801-803 FIRST STREET WEST ROBT. M. DUFF, Sec.-Troas. s,
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Image 379 (1919-03-21), from microfilm reel 379, (CU1787253). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.