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Drumheller Review 1931-01-02 - 1934-06-28
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Date
[1934-01-04]
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969
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Quality Has No Substitute ‘SALADA TEA — “Fresh from the Gardens” gga. Another year in this old world’s history has been ushered in, bringing with it the usual longings and hopes that it will prove a better, happler year than its predecessor, but also falling heir to the problems remaining unsolved ag the old year closed. The new year opencd with conditions prevailing which give rise to mixed feelings of hope and despair, of confidence and a lack of it, of en- couragement and discouragement, but a study’and weighing of these condi- tions reveal that the more hopeful aspect of things over-shadows and out- weighs the less encouraging. Despite all the rumors and threats of war, coupled with the failure — temporary let us ‘hope,—of the disarmament conference, peace among the great nations of the world was maintained throughout the past year. This in itself is~encouraging and much to be thankful for when we recall the coming in of a new year less than two decades ago with millions of men engaged in conflict. Equally encouraging Is the fact that the foremost statesmen of the world are striving as never before to maintain peace among the nations, and t6 create and develop relationships which will operate to make such peace a , rather than very precarious and liable to destruction upon the slightest provocation. : The new year fell heir to the depression which began to sweep the world in the late months of 1929 and continued for four years with steadily increasing sevérity. Notwithstanding the fact that the depression continues, signs were not lacking as the old year closed that definite improvements were taking place, and that many factors were coming into play which would have a decided effect in promoting and greatly extending such im- provements, Business in many countries, Great Britain, United States and Canada included, is better and on the upgrade, more pzople are at work, a feeling of greater confidence is evident. The improvement may be small and slow in developing, but it has started, and there are grounds for believing that it will continue and achieve greater momentum during this new year. One of the strongest reasons for such faith and confidence is that men and women of good will everywhere are devoting their talents and bending their energies to the task of finding solutions for the problems which dis- tress the world. Many weaknesses and evils in our economic and social struc- ture have. been exposed of which most people had no knowledge, but, now they are known, men and women of all classes and conditions are determin- ed to remove them. People have been brought closer to one another in this time of adversity than could have been possible in the heyday of general) prosperity. The further development of this greater unselfishness is one of the opportunities which this new year presents to all. The real promise of this new year rests with each of us as ind:viduals. Intact Record Of History REVIEW. DRUMHELLER. ALBERTA Research Has Mado Possible | plete Story of Sontrea |WITH EXCESS FAT Montreal is probably the only city on the North American continent Ao which possesses a complete and in-} Hy tact record of its history as far back | Both Banished by Kruschen as the carly part of the 17th cen-| When one realizes that the cause tury. of overweight 1s closely associated with the cause of rheumatism, It is This was made possible by the re-| easy to understand how it is that the cent work of E. Z. Massicotte, en-/two troubles can so easily be over- titled “Moments Historique de Mon-| come by the same remedy. treal,” which has just been published | bea currence folds she chow: by the Royal Society of Canada. Mr.| ny other suiferera:—-"T first start- Massicotte has been archivist of this!ed taking Kruschen Salts for rheu- city for almost a quarter of a cen-|matism in my ankle| joints. Being tury, during which time he has con- | rather stout, I thought perhaps they tributed many valuable and intereat- Would remedy both troubles, and you Ing artcios about the carly history CAnROE Tease Bow wurpratd 1 ag of Canada. lof my ankles now. And not only that The treatise contains a complete —my weight has reduced 19 Ibs. in and accurate record of the military, just three weeks. I am still reducing, civil and religious authorities who 47d yet I eat what I like, and I fee governed the small island in the “,{lerent woman in every way."— great River St, Lawrence during the! “ Gently, but surely, Kruschen ids period between 1636 and 1760, and the system of all fat-forming food is the result of ten years of difficult refuse, of all poisons and harmful research among the many scattered %¢ids, which give rise to rheumatism, records dating back to that period. Although this historical mono- graph will be of great value to the historian and librarian, it wll also, prove to be a very interesting piece | of literature, Discover New Ray New Device May Be Used For Neu- tralizing Plague | A new ray, said to be capable of projecting bacteria emanations which | will destroy humans, animals ard crops, was described in a special ar- ticle in the London Sunday Dispaten. The article said the new scientific de- vice could be used as well for neutra- lizing ‘plague conditions and fostering | healthier animal and plant life. ' Professor O. A. Newell, head of | the research department of the Na- | tional Health League, the newspaper | said, has revealed some of the char-! acteristics of the ray. It was describ- | ed as “a wireless device made to imi- | tate deadly rays which have been found in‘ nature. “Emulsions of abnormal bacteria are taken from patients suffer'ng from various diseases, These bacteria sent out rays so strong that in some cases they swing the necdle of a gal- vonometre at ranges up to 48 feet.” Tae wave lengths of these emana-| Notwithstanding what is said to the contrary, it is still as true as it ever was that man is largely the master of his own destiny It is still within our) power to make or mar our own lives, although it is also true that we in-| fluence and affect for good or ill the lives of others about us, and that they, | in turn, affect us, Granted that this is so, man can nevertheless countérhct | these influences and order‘his own way of life to a very large extent. ‘There was a time when.people looked upon the Great War as a war to, end war, but taey now realize that fighting is not the way to end fighting: rather that the way to end fighting is to stop fighting; that the way to} world betterment is not through some universal upheaval and general over-| throw of the existing order of things, but tat the way is along paths of peace, of removal of evils, of progressive reforms, of strengthening and adding to the structure which has been erected and improved through all the experiences of the past. And so the realization is growing taat it must be through the unselfishness and individual merit and effort of the people them- | selves that each new year can and will be made better and happier than the! one that went before. z | The year 1934 has been given to us. What are we as individuals going’| to make of it? It is within our power, regardless of what world condition1 may be, to make this new year a better, happier one so far as we as individ uals are‘concerned than last year proved to be. Equally, we can, if we so choose and act, make it a far less happy and a decidedly worse year for ourselves. It is, therefore, up to us as individuals to make our own wishes for happiness in this new year come true, because happiness is a thing of the spirit and not merely of worldly possessions. “Need Some Protection Has! Manufacturers In Europe Present Automatic Apparatus For Work me PEaay Goer near A novel shower bath for locomo- (¢ 2 man in a nice-looking outfit and tives installed by the Canadian Na-| vores that he was fonvehey thon tonal Railways washes them clea? | Blue Melton overcoat, ten shillings; Sea ero ve = % suit twelve shillings; shirt, one shil- Uke “complexion.” The secret in 2/157 ‘ana “three sence: ‘socks two huge washing, frome boasting -36) once: tie, two pence. Total; one sprayers through which water passes| ong, three shillings and seven at a pressure of 140 pounds to the Fence, or, in Canadian money, less square inch. The whole “treatment” | Fone! OM ¢ is automatic. As the engine approach- | Sas ‘ | The overcoat and suit came from es the frame, the front wheels close! poiand the hirt from Belgium, and a low voltage electrical circuit and! i. cocks and tle from Japan. the water, containing a cleaning com=| "Sot now English Sane pound, is turned on. As the back’ coud sell retail an overcoat for less wheels pass, the circuit breaks and | than $2.50, a suit for less than $3, a the shower stops. All grease and dirt! ‘n't tor 30 cents, and socks and ties have been dissolved and washed away | at Hui cantd lark problema” theyreart and a light film of wax is left on’ not answer. These facts demonstrate the locomotive, leaving It spick andi the ‘necessity of tariffs to protect ‘Span-and‘emooth and brights British workers.-St. Thomas Times- Sa | Journal. Tonnage of idle ships throughout | the world decreased 19 per cent. in| " Locomotives’ Beauty Bath | Canadian National Railway Commodity prices in J mounting. ‘pan are tions are then said to have been re- | produced and sent out by wireless. Start Mystery Excursions” Swedish State-Owned Railroads To Try Out Idea Sunday excursions by train. “into e blue,” that is with unknown des- tinations, will be tried in Sweden next summer, the management of the state-owned rallroads has announced. Last summer low rate excursions to definite places attracted many extra travellers, cach train being sold out in advance, and the new system is ex- pected to attract even more. The ad- vantage over the excursion trains with known objectives is that no one can take advantage of the low rate to avoid paying for a regular ticket ‘to a definite locality. Felt Better Anyway The slightly deaf old sportsman, feeling @ little. run down, consulted his doctor who, after examination, prescribed carrot and plenty of it— “How shall I take it?"—“Any way you like and as much ag you like.” A month later the patient returned in bursting health, “Capital,” said the —‘Carrot? Good Lord, I thought you sald claret. I've been drinking three bottles a day for the last four weeks.” In Terms Of Moncy It is estimated by one source in Montreal, that the economic Icss to Canada due to the depression totals $11,000,000 in terms of money, or about $9,000,000 in terms of pur- chasing power after allowance has | digestive disorders and many other ills, : New] Highway Lights Will Broadcast Music And Perfume Air Is Prediction Highway ligats made of aluminum, modeled after a morning glory and reaching a height of 30 fect, were en- visaged by Maj.-Gen. George 0. Squier, U.S.A., retired, in a paper read before the seml-annitl session of the National Academy of Sciences at Cambridge, Mass., recently. The lights, which General Squier calls “Radiolites,” not only will serve to illuminate highways, but will be constructed for the edification and amusement of passing motorists inas- much ‘as they will be equipped with radio receiving sets and will havo large amplifiers to-disseminate pro- grams picked up from the ether waves, Indirect lighting will illumizate the radiolite in fluorescent splendor after nightfall, while an entirely sep- arat: function is found in facilities for diffusing perfumes through jets in the structure, or, if the occasion and need arises, insecticides. General Squier, the army's chief signal officer during the war. inven- tor and shining light of Washing- ton’s staid and solemn Metropolitan club, made another prediction in his paper, saying that skyscrapers are a thing of the past and that “the max- imum height (of buildings) likely Wil turn out to be less than a dozen stdr- jes” in the future. Prohibition Statistics More Revenue From Fines And Con- fiscation Than Cost Of Enforce- ment In US. Prohibition statistics made public by the United States Department of Justice indicate that the government spent less on enforcement than it levied against dry law violators. During the dry era from Jan. 16, 1920, until Oct. 31, 1983, the depart- ment said, prohibition enforcement cost $128,810,291. Fines collected from convicted violators were placed at $80,337,012. The value of proper- ty confiscated was estimated at $219,- 302,464. In combats between officers and racketeers the department said 92 investigators were killed, while the number of persons slain by agents aggregated 178. Should Bo Popular Commenting on a new novel, the New York Sun's book reviewer says: “I cannot think of a single thing to recommend it and I can think of a dozen’ reasons to repudiate it, It. {s dull. It is poorly written It is with- out any sort of realism, literacy or intelligence.” In which case it is- cer- tain to be read by a great many per- sons says the Border Cities Star. Austrian Village Menaced One of the biggest landslides in been made for changes in the cost of history was reported from Graz, living. The estimate is made on the) Austria, The despatch said that an {assumption that the country might | entire mountainside, covering an jhave continued the progress after | area of nine square miles, had begun 1928 at a rate equal to the natural |to slip towards the.village of Wienen, increase in population, about 11% perjon Lake Grundi. Authorities feared cent. annually under ordinary condi-| the village was doomed as soon as the tions. the year ending July 1. Weary Days—Sleepless Nights _ Wrack the Nervous System Men and women toss night after night on sleepless beds. Their eyes do not close in the refreshing repose that comes to those whose nerves are right. They are irritable and nervous, weak and worn out, and everything looks dark and gloomy. Milburn’s H. & N. Pills is the remedy that i required to restore them the blessing of good health. They bring back the sound refreshing sleep, tone up the nerves, and impart that sense of buoyancy to the spirits that is the result of renewed mental and physical vigor. thaw or rain began, Holds Many Awards FE. H. C. Arthur, of Chester, Eng- | land, has effected his 30th rescue | {from drowning. A seven-year-old George Leathwaite, overbal- | janced and fell into: the river, and) | Arthur, 62 years of age, jumped in and brought him to the bank. After | | first-aid the boy was taken home. | |Mr. Arthur is the holder of several | life-saving awards. | Bankruptcies in Egypt are the fewest in czveral years, efit. | It will give you just the extra QUIVERING NERVES Yield to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound When you are Just on edge... when you can’t stand the chil- dren’s noise... when everything isn burden . . . when you are irri- table and blue... try this medi- cine. 98 out of 100 women report en you need. Life will seem gain. e w living ay Where Law Is Elastic Plenty Of Sense In Duke Of Atholl’s Argument About Lotteries The Duke of Atholl, in the mag- nificent disregard of British courts for fame or place, fined £25 recently for conducting a sweepstake, told the House of Lords that the “hypocrisy” of anti-lottery laws was making Bri- tain “the laughing stock of the civil- Ized world.” ‘The Duke of Atholl used arguments familiar to Canadians who have con- sidered the subject. A man with a bank account, he sald, could back a horse and settle with the bookmaker in due course, but if his servant hand- ed in a shilling to back. his favourite he was breaking the law. The Duke of Montrose contributed the thought that if the law were enforced strictly “more than half the vicars in the country” would go to jail for con- ducting raffles. If Britain for these reasons is the laughing stock of the world—a state- ment which indicates that exaggera- tion is a weapon not disregarded even in the august precincts of the House of Lords—what shall we say of Can- ada? We permit raffles in church charities, gambling games in the fall fairs, but hold up our hands in hor- ror at the thought of lotteries for hospitals or government funds. We say through the statute that if an in- dividual having secured a ticket In a sweepstake, should win a prize through this unlawful enterprise, the first individual who takes act’on against him in the courts may re- cover the prize money. If this per- son happens to be his wife or a close friend we close our eyes to the ob- vious conclusion and say the intent of the law has been met. It is not a subject to get excited about. There is a degree of hypocrisy in all humans, therefore in all gov- ernments, and we all do our bit of head-burying on occasions. It is too much to expect logic in our com- mon approach to problems which have, or. seem to present, an issue in morals. We fine a little shopkeep- er for selling a candy bar on Sun- day while the gasoline station next’ door fills a succession of cars for their Sunday trips, and if we want to look for hypocrisy we do.not need to go abroad.—Ottawa Journal. Will Benefit Cattle Trade New Yards Opened At Tilbury Docks, London .. Of. dect?-4 advantage to the re- vived cattle trade between Canada and Great Britain, extensive new cat- tle docks and yards for the handling of live cattle shipments were opened at Tilbury Docks, London, by Lord Ritchie, chairman of the Port of Lon- don Authority. W. A. Wilson, of Canada House, representing the Canadian Minister of Trade and Commerce, speaking at the luncheon which followed, declar- eda steamer was then en route with between 550 and 600 head of catt'e. The new facilities would benefit. t-e Canadian cattle industry, the \ship- ping industry.and the Port Authority, he added, and he hoped the Canadian shipments would continue to be such ag would prove of benefit to the meat trade. Lord Ritchie declared the Port of London had been without a live cattle market for 20 years, all the more sur- prising as 70 per cent. of the chilled and refrigerated meat annually im- ported had been handled by the Port of London. He declared the new fa- cilities would encourage handling of Canadian and Irish cattle. J. W., Dulanty, Commissioner for the Free State, which ships a consid- erable quantity of cattle, said the Free-State-could-offer-cattle that was probably more free of discase than any other cattle in the world. Extensiv> ll Shows Its Magnificence There are occasions when London shows the magnificence that one as- sociates with those spacious days when Queen Victoria and Edward VII. reigned. And one of these occa- sions is the reception which takes place ‘at Londonderry House on the}. eve of @ new session of Parliament, says the Overseas Mail. These are oc- casions, too, when all the precious gems of Arabian Nights splendor seem to appear, as if by magic. Ruling On Debts Acceptance by a creditor of cheques signed by the debtor consti- tute settlement of a debt, although they are returned by the bank be- cause of insufficient funds. Magis- trate F. X. Lacoursiere of Three Riv- ers, Que, made this ruling in dls- missing a charge against Raoul Loranger. The man was charged with failing to settle a debt. me Rvery-ton of Coal produced in Eng- land now costs, on an average, $2,37 for labor and $1.26 for royalties, Get Rid of That Cough or Cold iy For Only a Few Cents In these days when even pennies count, it's great to have a remedy like BUCKLEY'S MIXTURE, that banishes and colds so Busy. Northern Post Aklavik Described’ As “Charing Cross Of The Atlantic” Aklavik is just a dot on the map to most Canadians, but to Rt. Rev. A. L. Fleming, consecrated bishop of the new Anglican missionary dloces: of the Arctic, it is the “Charing Cross of the Atlantic.” The tiny settlement near the mouth of the Mackenzie -River, whose resi- dent population numbers scarcely 50 souls, is alréady “the trading centre of the western Arctic,” said the form- occasion of his -elevation to. the episcopate. a Waves of the Arctic Occan lap ale most to its door. To it come Eskimo and Indian to trade their furs and their fish for other goods. Aeroplanes - soar across 1,000 miles of wilderness to link it with civilization. even through the long winter months. Bishop Fleming believes Aklavike |has a significant future. Already it has been used as a jumping off point for flights to remote points in the ‘Yukon and Alaska, he said. The Lindberghs, he recalled. halted there en route from the United States to Japan by aeroplane in 1932, ‘The new bishop, who became known as "the flying archdeacon” for his aerial journeys across the northland to visit outposts of the church, out- lined with ‘enthusiasm the boundar'es of his’ vast diocese, Took Secret With Him Inventor Of Compass Adjustment ° Dies Suddenly In Vancouver Andrew Fotheringham, 58, master mariner, died recently, possibly car- rying to the grave secrets which might have revolutionized compass adjustment on board ships. i Nine years ago fearing the results of his studies were becoming too well known in London, England, -he cam2 to Vancouver to conclude his work. He signed on as a deckhand on the Union Steamship Company's steamer “Venture,” so that he might ‘purse ws investigations, and collapsed and died while washing paint on deck just as he was believed to have reached success. Friends say his invention had be:n tried out with success on several ves- sels on the Pacific Coast. He is. said to have been able to adjust a com- pass so that it was true magnetically without further adjustment In any part of the world. y Britain Grows More Wheat Increase In Acreage And Production “In England And’Wales A big increase in“wheat acreage and production in England and Wales during 1933 is. shown in the prelim- inary statement of agricultural,.re- turns: just issued. Wheat acreage is shown at -1,660,- 000, an increase of 29 per cent. com- pared with 1932, Wheat - production was.estimated at $1,476,000 hurdred- weight, an increase of 9,385;000 hun- dredweight or 42 per cent. On the other hand, barley acreage decreased by 209,000 acres-and the estimated production of 12,624,000 is 2,718,000 hundredweights below 1932. An MP. says he likes London fogs. I would like to know what he can sce in them? How are Your Nerves? Mr. K. iron Bt S No, Feri ‘Hamilton, * “Tam glad. tc a word in praise of Dr. Plerce's Fi scription, When 1 casion to use it, it helped me. wonderfully. Tae, anally, nervous and and had headaches, but the ‘Fa Pree scription’ 500 me feeling all right Again, ‘This tonic. strengthened’ me greatly.” Write to Dr. Pleree’s Clinle, Buffalo, Ne Xp flor free medical advice, Improves finvour of meats, fish and vegetables. Pays for Itself many times over. All dealers, or write— : Qpploford. parra pagouct ‘MILTON, ONTARIO er archdeacon in an interview on the -
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Image 969 ([1934-01-04]), from microfilm reel 969, (CU11517671). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.