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1119
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Drumheller Review 1931-01-02 - 1934-06-28
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Date
1934-06-28
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RNS = Finest Quality: Reasonably Priced SALADA TEA. “Fresh from the Gardens” De-Bunking Mysteries { One of the traits which keeps humanity young and adds a zest to the'|made with the x-ray camera showed | mere act of living, is man's capacity for wonder, his somewhat naive eyri- the growth in the interior of a rose. laws York osity:in freaks, and his enthusiasm for the unusual or phenomenal in nature. It can scarcely be called a characteristic distinguishing homo sapiens from the beasts of the field or fireside, for the domestic cat or dog (to mention species coming within the range of everyman’s ‘expérience) shows a strangely similar capacity when confronted with something strange in its immediate environment. By test of paw or teeth; it ascertains whether the new experience is good or bad; just as man will, by more complicated ex- periments it is true, attempt to rob the mysterious of its mystery. There is a reason, of course, for this outburst. Strange, cery aquatic monsters have been sighted in diverse corners of the globe. Reports concerning them have been considered of sufficient interest to warrant publication all over the world. A British Columbia lake provided the first thrill of the present scries—a thrill which became familiar in everyone's mouth under the euphonious title “Ogopogo”. The ocean, not to be outdone by a mere: inland: lake; immediately produced another of these strange denizens of remote waters, which, christened “Cadobrosaurus” to fix the credit of its habitat to Vancouver Island, quickly acquired a popular name. As “Cady” it attracted as much attention from reporters and the general public, during its brief occupancy of the spotlight, as have the Quebec quintuplets of more recent and certain origin. France next came to bat with a claim on behalf of its particular pet, seen as through a glass darkly, but acclaimed a ‘monster, a. freak, a lusus naturae, or a throwback. The world was agog with speculation as to what manner of things these visioned creatures wero. The sea serpent of myth and anecdote never attained such repute as the new genera. The sea serpent was too easily explained. It was either a snake which had strayed. from its forest lair to essay adventure on the briny deep, or it was the gnarled’and twisted trunk of a fair sized sapling which ocean currents indued with similitude of life. ‘This was less easily explained. Its discoverers, whether in British "Col- umbia, France, Scotland, Brazil or ¢elsewhere—all stressed the fact “Ogo- pogo”, “Cady” or what-have-you, was different! Scientists were interview- ed by representatives of the popular press and, in unguarded moments suggested it was a relic of pre-historic times hurtled across the ages, in some inexplicable way, into A.D. 1933 or 34. It isto be regretted that Scotland should have been visited by one of these unknowns, The hard-headed Scot, on occasions such as the annivers- ‘ary of Burns, may indeed be .prone to vain imaginings and uncanny ~. Visions, but in his normal state, he is, essentially, ‘from Missouri”. Loch Lomond, which has induced’ many poems, caught the fashion. It pro- duced a freak seen from its “bonny banks”. But when Loch Ness sought to uphold the dignity.of salt-water—that was too much for the practical race north of the Tweed. “Et(the Loch’ Ness monster) was. photographed— and strange, indeed, it looked, A scientist subjected. the picture to pierc- ing-scrutiny—and the mystery was gone. It was, in his opinion, the photo- graph of the fluke of a killer-whale, too modern an aninial, foresooth, to be acclaimed in competition with the million’ year throwbacks ‘which imagina- tion had created. ‘Until another wave of freak discoveries hit the pages.of our newspapers, then, we must content ourselves with, Alley Oop's disnosaur.as a constant reminder of things that were before man was endowed with his amazing | capacity to wonder. "REVIEW. DRUMHELLER. ALBERTA » X-Ray Motion Pictures Dr. ‘Wernet’ 's Powder For FALSE TEETH A Joy To All Users Can't Slip of Slide Sprinkle on Dr. Wernet’s Powder and Nowly Perfected Camera Shows Bones In Process Of Knitting Broken bones are now shown in the process of knitting by x-ray motion | pictures which are made by a new camera perfected by Doctor Arthur | |C. Pillsbury, naturalist and photo- | Ares a ahora nein aoe Brapher of the University of Call-| fortis yourt Eat anything you want fornia. Doctor Pillsbury's camera | olds plates firmly in place—they works on the same principle as the! Posi tively cant allp or aide. “Earns rotective cushion for sensitive gums. one used to photor’aph the unfold-| Praveano colored, gummy ibrtance ing of flowers, tak.ng a series of | keeps mouth sanitary, breath pleasant: Prescribed by world’s most noted den- tists. The cost is small—the comfort eae Any druggist. single pictures at intervals, of a) movement imperceptible to the hu-| man cye, and then running them off ‘as motion pictures to show move- ments which may have taken several days, all encompassed in’ a few moments. The first motion picture Means True Progress Streamline Train Promises Railroads New Lease Of Life M. E. Tracy in an article in the World-Telegram, says carrying eighty-five passengers to- getl It took seventy-two hours to film, as only one picture at a time could be! Sade in antormilttent” exnéauveatnno | Recon Witt Dageage ANS exprcad 1000 miles in thirteen hours and on avoid damaging the rose during the | s17 worth of fuel is something new. filming Doctor William D. Coolidge, . inventor of the Coolidge tube, de- signed a special x-ray tube. for its money. LETTER FROM A Te uave tended sometntng of he |sort for five years. With all the ex- MAN OF QQ) | rorimenting little. has occurred to thrill people. By and large they have been forced to fall back on the About His Rheumatism hope that the best which could be He asks us to excuse his writing. | done was to rearrange what they had We do more that—we congratu-|on hand. late him. on being able to write at, Progress, which should be con- all Gt his age, cepecially ene pas sidered as synonymous, with pros- This 2 stwhat he see carat |perity, is not made of that kind of © years ag) I was in bed for stuff. six syeaies ‘with {nflammatory rheuma-| We are not going to find better tism. Since that time I have been living conditions, much less happi- See ere ate ae a eage | ess by doing what we have always are still somewhat stiff. I take, done in a different way. That ts Kruschen every morning before | where political remedies fall. breakfast, and shall continue to do} Progress is a matter of invention so, because I am sure it has kept me | and achievement. in good shape for three years. inecy | Take this streamline train, for In- years old, and use both hands to | stance, and what does it imply? write."—J. R. G. |. It implies the scrapping of bil- dissolves: away those lions in rolling stock, the substitution needle-pointed crystals of uric acid] o¢ crude, oil for coal, the abandon- Haan ee ne eee Mah thee ais, | ment of steam locomotives for Diesel | solved crystals clean. out of the sys-,engines, a great tem. Then if you keep up “the little aluminum and a reduced consump- daily dose”, excess uric, acid will! tion of steel, different operating .and never form again. | mechanical methods, the mobilization and training of new crews and a Postal. Rocket. Tested | multitude of other drastic readjust- | ments. WIN Speed Delivery Between Britain | — Erance And. Dreland Cenotaph De Dedicated ‘The world’s first postal rocket has been tried out near London by the Canadian Legion Holds Impressive postal authorities and judged suc-| service At Portland, Oregon cessful. Flags representative of the United Deep secrecy veiled the experiment | states, Great Britain and Canada, with the rocket which, invented by| uttering from a single flagpole, It promises the railroads a new lease of. life, capital new enterprise and |labor new work. Best of all, it mises the traveling public more consumption of | Seeking Formula To Control Wheat Exports Young Alberta Man‘ Playing Alchem- ist For Wheat Growers Like an alchemist of old séeking a formula for transforming base metals into gold, a young red-head- ed Canadian, in a modern setting, is searching for a formula which will effectively control wheat exports and establish a minimum world wheat price system. 2 Andrew Cairns, product of an Al- oun when tect co berta farm, University of Alberta ‘Rorotutely #ef6 gat graduate and wheat pool statistician in turn, has won distinction unique as chairman of .an international wheat commission created to better the lot of farmers of five nations. ‘Through his interpretation of com- plex wheat production problems,| Scientists At Chicago Seek Reasom “Andy” has won appreciation and Why Midgets Do Not Grow praise from United States and Euro-| Why is a midget a midget? pean co-workers. Quiet-spoken, deli-| Scientists and medical men who berate in his thinking, this 35-year-| have puzzled over this baffling ques- old student from the Canadian|tion for years will have an oppor- prairies understands. the language of| tunity to pursue their investigation the wheat rancher and has found his|to a fuller extent at the Chicago niche in directing the distribution of} World's Fair this summer: * a world wheat supply under the Lon-| Nate T. Eagle, managing director don wheat agreement: of the new midget city at the fair, His genius for organization has|has extended an invitation to s~ten- brought him a personal power where: tists to use the colony of little. peo- world wheat pacts are discussed. At|ple as a “clinic” to study the per- Rome and at London he has matched | Plexing problem of why the midget wits with the shrewdest wheat trad-| never grew up. ers of four continents. Through his} The midget city will occupy the devotion to an. ideal, a world-wide | Same location as it did last year but upheaval is being moulded into an| Will be four times as large. It will economic entity. be populated by the largest ‘gather- He'is the possessor of a doctor’s| ing of midgets of both sexes and all degree from the University of Min-| ages ever congregated in one place. nesota but it was under the watch-} Although a midget's size is be- ful eye of Dr. F. J. Birchard, in the] leved to be due chiefly to glandular research laboratory of the board of| disorders, no one has ever answered grain commissioners, that he capi-|the question logically and scientific- talized on his start with the Alberta ally. wheat pool. aT Eua PSE To-Explore Ellesmere Island Oxford University Expedition “Is Leaving England In July Edward Shackleton, son of the late Sir Ernest Shackleton, famous Ant- poet of Australin, who has been hon-| rete explorer, is organizing what ored by his bust being placed in the| Will be known as the Oxford Uni- Poet's Corner of Westminster Abbey, | Versity Ellesmere Island expedition, is the first British Dominions poct to| Which is to leave England in July be so commemorated, and the first | aboard a chartered Norwegian sealer. poet so honored since Tennyson, be- | The expedition is receiving the prac- S eiwnaa Eis Cast Stasda! tical support of the Canadian gov- ‘A. memorial volume by Mayor|€fmment and the Royal Geographical Douglas Sladden, on whose petition | Society. the monument has been erected, has| Exploration and geographical sur- been published, giving the story of| Vey of some of the hitherto com- Trying To Solve Puzzle Australian Poet Honored’ Bust Placed In Poet's Corner’ Of Westminster Abbey Adam Lindsay Gordon, national Gerhard Zucker, German expert, wa3| symbolized peace mong English safd to be the forerunner of a ser-| speaking nations at.a memorial ser- | vice calculated to give Great Britain! yice of the British Columbia’ com- ite postal contact with mand of the Canadian Legign. This Air Base For Bermuda Record Rayon Output Regular Servico Planned Between| United States Led Last Year With) bearing special stamps, it was learn-| Quarantined Islands And Japan Second ‘| with Ireland. France and three-minute ' contact | service was the high point of the day's Rose festival program at Port- ‘The rocket will carry 1,200 ietters,| land,“Oregon. To those of both Canada and the ed. It will be trained on Calais from | united States who died in the World Mainland The world's production of rayon|Dover, or else across the Irish Sea, | war was dedicated the permanent Bermuda is going right ahead with yarns aggregated 659,500,000 pounds | and the letters will be posted at the cenotaph, from which the flagpole its provisions to establish an air)!n 1933, the largest output on|nearest postal point to where the | spired. pase. Legislation has been prepared | Tecord, according to figures released’ rocket falls. to assist Imperial Airways to oper-| by the Textile Organon, official pub- ate a regular service between these|lication of the ‘Tubize Chatillon islands and the mainland. The two islands, Darrel's and Burt's, part, of Warwick Parish “vested in her late Majesty Queen Victoria her- heirs and successors forever . for . quarantine purposes,”” have been appropriated: as landing bases. * ‘The government: would” contribute £15,000 for construction’ and equip- ment of ‘the port, according to; the bill before paril A maximum of 520 _would. be. paid to Imperial Airways~edch year for upkeep of the ‘flying service.” The | sum would be paid’ to’ that company} either alone “or in’ conjunction with another company or organization‘ giving service by aircraft between these Islands of the North American continent.” ‘All plant supplies and eauipinent used in construction. would be ad-/ mitted free by the government. The | side down attached by, its legs’ to, provisions would remain in. force un- 1 December, 1940, the bill provides. ——__—_—_ Light rays, X-rays, heat rays-and wireless~rays all travel at the: same, speed but vary In Jength Corporation, ‘Last year’s output com- pares’ with”a previous record of 530, 220/000 ‘pounds produced in 1932. The United States, with a total of 207 680,000 pounds, as against 134,815, ” pone: in -the preceding . year, led* all countries: The modst interesting” de- | velopment was the rise of | Japan, which did, not enter the rayon field on a-large «scale until 1927, to sec~ ond place, with a total’ of $99,500,- "with 84,000,000. pounds and, Italy was ‘fourth with 81,800,000 pounds. -. + -Althe_ most -injurious grasshops | [pers in Canada shed theirskins on ran average of -Sve.times during the} ‘eourse of their devétopment. The’ | grasshopper's skin does ~fot._keep | pace with the. growth of the in: js this pest goes through the several procéSaes of moulting by hanging’ up- some support and slowly. wriggling gut of its old coat. ‘There have, been fo major ‘changes in outlines, of: the, oceans and cont | British Columbia. This is another of 000 potnds, Great Britain followéd | [as anothér, section just a few hun- “This is a gesture of snr The speed of the rocket is esti-j friendship”, said Brig.-Gen. mated at 20 miles a minute. Ross, president of the legion. ne i 1 Thing About Prices first time o nation has erected Queer Thing a Erie memorial to both the dead of a ©. People Pay As Much For| neighboring nation and its own Apples As Londoners lead.” aeGcoaka june na tena tony aa on troop of Royal Canadian Mount- apple in London. or.-in the Soudan |¢a: Police drew great applatise when desert st! aoes!lin somecnaste76e | mer manrones on foot in the Cana- dian legion parade. Kilted bagpipe : bands, drum corps and legionnaires those “Believe It or Not” statements d put it may be believed. because it 1s| Paraded with uniforms and colors of absolutely true and the: mischief of | t¥° nations. the situation is that there is no im- eS mediate method of remedying it. 1t|' THe Brat pune plestwere made oss vgeetatabeurd that Cwhlle. apples|PeAcheene ie nore. ene Pura er soe See Goi tien mallliohel Antone heres et eet ona aprons met: ter, stuffing the cavity with apples, section of this province, still so far| or SS and milk, and then baking the whole. aR “{ don't know what to make of the lettuces in my garden,” says a correspondent. He had better con- eult a salad recipe book. dred miles? distant, is concerned, these apples’might as well be grown en. the canal riven face of- Mars.— Count?y “Lite in B.C Experimented Two Years — ot “| United States, Brazil and Mexico _ Drilled Hole Through’ are three most populous nations in ‘rom End ‘T9.Ead_ | the ~western. hemisphere. ~ Henry’ Huss; watchmaker for the ~ | mente since earlfest times. Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic Cramps and Stomach Pains. 2%. an the pote mace with a.fine Prompt treatment with Dr. Fowler's Extract of | Wild Strawberry in such cases: relieves the pains, checks the looseness of the bowels, and thus does away with the kin irritating stools, the treatment and old., when you suffering, the weakness, and often- times the collapse associated with attacks of this' interest. It is believed this Is only d. Tt does this by checking the too frequent and settling the stomach, and bracing up the weakened system, thus making it a remedy for of bowel complaints -of both young On the market for 88 years — you do not experi- | to equal the demand. ment use i + Put up only by The T, Milburn Go, Ltd., Toronto, Ont. o ‘pst 25 years “in Meaford, Ontario,| Heat of stara is measured by a (has “ sueceedéd “in. drilling @ hole| device weighing “onlfone one-thous- | through a common pin from end to|andth as much As a drop of water. lend without breaking it. Huss has) ——————————_—_____— ‘Leen experimenting for the past two Fe ‘MATURITY—MATERNITY MIDDLE AGE At these three critical periods a woman ls a medicine she can depend oD. That’s why so many take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- und. 98 out of 100 say, “Je Beips me!” Let it help you, too. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND | drill ts just large enough to thread’ a jhair out of a man’s head through it. The pin*was put on display in his | | window and caused’ a great deal of] the second time this has been accoins| plished in Canada, a watchmaker in| Toronto having saccection 18 in doing it. | | | | The supply of gossip seems never | | WwW. N. U. 2052 | perhaps unique because this is the| 8 Englishman Has Wonderful Collec- | Gordon's eventful life, his one love | Pletely) unknown interior of Elles- Gordon sailed to Australia “in the | Canada'a.Arctic coast, is the object _ wild old days” and “became succes-|°f the expedition, which will be led backer and trainer, a member of par- liament, and the most famous steeple- OFF COLOUR? | known.” 2 | He died by his own hand in 187 HOW IS YOUR LIVER . by the news that he had lost the —Without Calomel case for the recovery of his ancestral ‘our liver'a a very small organ, tut St oer np out of liter, by refusing to, pour out it ia Hallhead in Aberdeenshire) he went pounds of liquid bile into your | out into the scrub and shot himself— | py takingsalt P ast book of poems, “Bush Ballads| need aliver stimulant. and Galloping Rhymes.” affair, and his tragic death. mere ‘island, about 600 miles off sively a mounted policeman, a horse- | PY Dr. Noel Humphrey chase rider Australia has ever | Burdened with debts, and depressed Wake up your Liver Bile lands (as head of the Gordons of ale ca gah your dlectve tenia lthe day after he had published his} of coamce.s \ An Unusual Hobby table. Safe. Bure. Stbstitutes, 250 at all drugsiata, British Museum Buys Records tony Of; Match Box Ore | Bible Contains Births Of First Chil- A nephew of Lord Kitchener of) dren At Tristan da Cunha Khartoum, Major Pat A'Beckett, of! piple .records of the births of the Ye Old Ploughe Inn, Speen, a Buck-) frst children at Tristan da Cunha, inghamshire village, owns the largest the lonely little British island of vol- collection of match-box tops in the! canic origin in the south Atlantic, world. He has 22,000 different tops, | 2.900 miles west of the Cape of Good and they cover every available inch | Hope, have just been purchased by of space on all the walls in three| the trustees of the British museum. rooms at his home. He has been|” nis Bible; which is.an American collecting them. for many years, and} one, ‘dated 1831, was in the family has travelled almost the world over |o¢ William Glass, the English found- in search of new designs. He has or of the Tristan settlement. In now some of the first match-boxes which faded ink it records Glass’ marriage came Into use, and a history of world and the birth of 16 children, from progress can be traced in the color- whom many-of the 700 islanders to- ful designs on the match-box covers day are descended. The latest owner which form a unique wallpaper at was Mrs. Annie. Glass, a grand- his country inn. A few years ago, daughter of William Glass. ex-King Alphonso; who is also an en- | thuslastie match-box top collector,| A gust of wind at 81 miles an paid a visit to Major A’Beckett and hour, registered. at Croydon in 1929, spent several hours inspecting his’ was the highest wind velocity ever display. But ex-King Alphonso's noted in or near,London. collection was limited .to a mere | = three’ thousand! ‘The average ‘cost of producing hay on the, Dominion Experimental | Parms in the Prairie’ Provinces has | | been $8.99 per acre, or 6.23 per ton \ror a yield’ of 144 tons per acre., Considerable variation in cost has occurred on different experimental | § | farms, the cost per acre having rang- ed from $5.93 at Swift Current to $11.19 at Morden, while the cost per ton has varied from $4.47 at Bran- don to $8.42 at Indian Head, Hang itin your kit- sens out one sheet of Waxed Paper at atime. At a public dinner in London the chairman hoped that “The visitors will carry away with them ‘home in- teresting souvenirs of their presence this evening.” | Epploford. PAPER eRqoucTs HAMILTON, ONTARIO.
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Image 1119 (1934-06-28), from microfilm reel 1119, (CU11517779). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.