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The Olds Gazette 1926-01-01 - 1927-12-30
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Date
1927-09-02
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aa ——$uffered-So- She Could Not TUE GAZETTE OLDS. oe Betty Buzz stars in screen “Et sptay clears your home of flies and mos- quitoes.. It also kills bed bugs, roaches, ants, and their eggs. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Will not stain. Get Flit today. Distributed in Canada by Fred J. Whitlow & Co,, Limited, Toronto DESTROYS Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches Further attendance at the pictures brought home another fundamental truth—the lovely lady ts always for- given—indeod, she can do no wrong. She may appear do wrong, but someone else is really to blame. She found this to be true with the Doctor and -his wife. The Doctor toved her even when she scolded him, pleaded with her when she pouted; laughed at her: extravagance though pretending to be horrified, bore wiih all her meoods.and rages. Helmi knew it was because she was so beautiful, Every one said the Doctor's wife was such ‘ya lovely lady. No wender Helmi. now . decidea against stenography. She would be a lovely ‘lady! And the words and sen- tences which appeared on the wall | were tinctured with this resolve. Helini was struggting with the les- son on the beaver, in the Third Read- er, “He is an amphibious animal,” she read, “living bgvh on thé land and in the water.” She looked inquiringly at her teacher, whom she knew, with- out looking up, was regarding her in- to aE ay lew & a tently. ee ne “Pshaw. Helmi,..a girl with eyes like yours doesn’t need to know about amphibious animals. Clese the book—that will do for toda$. I want PAINTED FIRES | BY NELLIE L. McCLUNG 'to talk with you. Life is a dull place I get a thrill out .of you you are so young and pro we can. |some way, | mising. Now, | Party. The Doctor is going Fast in COPYRIGHT, CANADA, 1925 | weelk. T’have my parties when he a jis gone, because my parties. and my CHAPTER V.—Costinued Helml sang as she cid everything else, without the slightest trate of sel{-conscidusness. ‘She stood in: the doorway with her’hands_ behind her, and to the gray-haired ladies who lis~ tened she seemed like the embodi- ment of hope and youth and. aspira- tions as she sang in her deep voice,— “Keep on sowing when missed your crops, you've Keep. on dancing when’ the fiddle | stops, Keep on faithful when the curtain drops, And you'll get there in the morn- ing! “Keep on trusting in the cause of right, ; Keep. on looking to the dawn oi light, : Keep on fighting till you've won the. fight. And you'll get there in ths morn- ing.” C ae CHAPTER VI. 6 Helmi’s lessons went on. She could ‘answer the ‘telephone an ‘explain in concise English that “Miss Moore ts oweit,” ar “Would,.you’ please wait one yointua,” followed by “Tank you very much.” “A civil tongue, Moore had to'd-her, “may. not take you as far as a pretty e, but it will take you along a. safer road.” Helmi lived for the days she had her Tesson..-In- the: atmosphere of elegance and beauty she felt iding like Japanese flower. Even the house was luxurious. house smelled of -soap. Helmi,” | Miss a water s. Miss clean Moore's clothes, moth balls; and soup with onions 1n it, pleasant: enough. too, in. its com- “mon, coarse way, but the Doctor's house smelledHelmi could not find one word-to dsceribe it. She had no- ticed the same delicious odor in shop in. Helsingfors. before. she sailed. It. was of flowers in winter time, a CARRIED WIFE TO BED. Walk. Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Minesing, Ontario. — io.— “I ama rac- tical nurse and I recommend Lycia E. Pinkham’sVegetable Compound to suffering women. For three months I was almost: helpless and could not sit at the table long enough to drink acup of tea, Many a time my kus- band carried me to bed, I would be so weak, ‘Then he read inthe paper of a woman safering as I did who got better after takingthe Veneishle Compound, so he wentand got it for me. When] had taken three bottles I was just like a new woman and have had eplendid health ever since. When I feel any bearing-down s 1 always take it; sometimes a bottle or whatever I necd. 1t only medicine and J have told r one about it. . Any one wantin know more about Ly dia BE. Pinkhany’s Vegetable. Compound, iil sla adly write to her. Ico all I-can to rec- ommend it for I feel Lowe my life and strength to it.’”’ — Mrs. NEAL Bowser, R.R. 1, Minesing, Ontario. Do you fecl broken- down, nervous, and weak sometimes? Do you have this horrid feeling of fear which some- times comes to women when they are not well? Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound is excellent to take at such a time.’ It always helps, and if taken regularly and pereerendy will relieve this condition. W. N. U. 1693 y my herself | rel or her frfnd’s | =, old man’s business from ruin by lis: | friends bore him to tears..So.we set rich smeH, with that impalpable hint | thle dates to su. And besides his of luxury which was so dear to Hel- | mother is coming to visit us soon, and | mi’s heart. Some days she’ rode in} '] want something new. You're the the car with her new friend, revelling | | newest thing 1 know, and so T want is the- soft gray plush cushions and you at my party.” é the sparkling glass vase at the side, |~ “| Lave no clothes.” began Tlelmi, which the Doctor kept filled with | «ro. ctyte party.” fresh carnations. Even the floor of | «:isten, Helmi, 1 have the ‘lathes, so don’t worry: over | You'll be a young Finnish lady visit- lng Canada, the Prime Minister's niece. and my friends in asked me to lock after” you. father is a shipping broker, are on, your. write a letter home. telling. about, it, but in the hard‘ working world at home,: with its meagre vocabulary, there were no words to tetl of such magnificesce. There was. only one word to cover it all, and itewas Eng- lish, and if she had written home the: hin: Finnish equivalent of that word, it) ..4 an raving about you, and wanting would have misled people to think lie dance’ with you, in your delightful the car had sustained a bruise. or had broken English .you will beg them to contracted mumps. | excuse you—you are so. tired. You . Helmi had to learn new words, for | will slip -upstafrs, change back into she was experiencing new _ thrills | your maid’s dress, and come down ach day. Mrs. St. John took her! and help. Manda to scrve. Now, come osce a week to the Moving Pictures | and let me try on your clothes. You Theatre, where ITedmi sat spell-bound | yye going to be a symphony in green, | and dazzled. From the time she en- | fjelmi—there’s color so’ dazzling | tered, the enchanted -place until: she | gs green, Mauve dreams, red raves, cameé out again into the sunshine she ; {but green sings. You're te bea sing: knéw-nothting .of_the-real world. | ying goddess Watching the pictures. she came up | Helmi’s eyes were danciag at ‘the the: aisle seeing no one, conscious of | thought of such a thrilliig alventure, no out knowing there was a step, or that | ment upstairs in| Mrs. St. John’s she had - stumbled, following her } room, the walls of Which were of pale friend vaguely to a scat, and sittinS preen brocaded ‘satin, the hangings | } perched) on the edge until some in-, i dignpant person behind her told her to | ‘sit down and let somebody else see, with an impatient “What is the mat- | of the some, and the rugs so plushy | green that they reminded her of the | loyeliest moss she had ever: seen, she found herself looking into the glass anyway?” at a beautiful giv] in a Sissy green The world. Helmi entered’ through | clinging “dress, silver slippers, . jade the green’ plush doors, laid hold on | eatrings and necklace, a marvellous lier impressiorable young-heart. She | cloak .a shade deeper than the dress, saw lovely ladies.in trailing beaded | and. lined ‘with_ flame-colored satin and shining jewels, leaving |.that glimmered and, shone elegant homes to go with their} just tike a fairy story. and. smart.:young stenograpa- (To Be Cont tring seal ut3 and ‘hats they beepal sha steed cewld clap on their heads and: always | fook just grand, and who married the World Reading Shakespeare olé man’s wayward son and saved the -Library tn England Hes 20,000 Books | In Different Languages 5 ‘Then gud there Helmi| The Shakespeare Memorial Library would “be a_ steno: | #t Lirmingham, Englend, has nearly | twenty thousand -Shakespeare books; est | the largest collection-in ‘the world, | ‘ter with you, i ‘ their love: ers W SCS ued), at the door when the bad men Were’ plotting. determined. she grapher. Sometimes when riding on a str cat. Hemi would picky, | weather beaten a eae with; © | tening } | { re. is. being read anyway—we have to take what thrills |. I.am_ going to have a} the car had a velvet carpet, and a. closets full, and. I know just how to” lHght came on in the roof by merciy dress you. You won't need to. talk, pushing a button! Helmi_ tried to your English Montreal: Your! and. you | way to Vancouver to join | We'll fool them, and when they? | would be killed. y wou nothing, stumbling on the. steps with-/anq when in the region..of enchant: Tt was ath some | and the library is a kindof index of , JUICY FRUIT has the flavor of fresh, ripe fruits. It is beneficial too, cleansing mouth and teeth, soothing the throat and helping Aviator Had Narrow Escape Frenchman ‘Fell. Headiong Nearly” Four Miles. Before Parachute Openéd -After a headlong fal of nearly four miles through space; a French avia- jtor, Jean van Laere, suffered merely from a rush of blood to his head caused by. the dizzy drop. Van Laere’s parachute failed to ;open when he leaped from his plane jat an- altitude of. 7,000 metres and jremained shut until by some miracu- ‘lous atmosphere shock. it’ suddenly opened. when he was 100 metres | (about 330 feet) from the earth. The | Aviator’ s fall halted abruptly.and he | dropped gently down into a tree, iu i the forest of Carnelle, .near Beau- mont-Sur-Oise, over which ‘he had been flying. ‘ Stunned by his long fall the air- /man hung only half conscious in the | branches ‘of the tree for some time until lle wag discovered by members \of. the Forestry Service, who lowered |him to.the ground and carried him to | their hut, where, after a | couple “oft | hours’ rest, he regained lucidity and was able to give an aceount of his aerial adventure. Van Laere was making a test flight from Villacoubly Flying Field. Flying over the field, he climbed -to a height of 7,000 metres when his respirator /for some reason stopped functioning. | While choking in his efforts to ad- just the’ respirator, .Van -Laere said, he lost control of the plane and de- | cided he would have to jump to save | hithself: He’ succeeded in Icaping lelear with Ahe parachute, but when it nailed to open. he believed that he “tT am astonished to find myself live.” said the aviator. | . The plane. was found totaliy de- molished: and) almost wholly buried under the ground a few ° hundred yards from the spot where the a landed. Minard’s Liniment for scaly scalp. Airplanes Outdo the Birds: . | } Able To Make Much Lénger Non-Stop r Flights : Factory-mad*..wings have eclipsed ) the feathered “species. Lindbergh’s \Won-stop flight was $.610 miles, The {distance flagyu by .Chamberlin. and | Levine is estimated from 3,900 to 4,- 400. miiles. The longest non-stop fights of* birds have been tliose of Alaskan plovers from the Aleutian islands. to Hawaii, a distance cf. 2,- Hee miles, and the annual migrations of golden plovers :from Newfound- | land andi;Nova Scotia to the Leewara Islands nnd the northeastern. coast of wiry beard whom she beliéved might The demand tor translations comes | be her future employer. It became her delight. to. give up her seat ‘to | {om all quarters of the globe and such, rather to their discomfiture.|/even in China. they are — reading Shakespeare increasingly. Every new edition and every new translation is represented in the Bir- She felt. it only right that she sbould pay them. thi little attention. She wondered. greatly obout.the sons of | these men—so mich would 1 depend on |Mingham L' ibrary, and in the last the son. twelve months ‘three hundred and After ‘that. her teacher could not } twenty-two new _Yolumes were addea keep enough words ahead of her. in thirteen languages.- Helmi kept a list of words pinned over the sink while she .washed dish. , and. in between her moments of at | tending to the real buisness of dish- washing she practised her sentences: The tady is beautiful. She has an elegant-coat Will you'go for a drive? Strange House In India ‘he strangest house in the worid is | probably one in Jeypore; India. Be- | sides its peculiar architectural ap- ‘| pearance it boasts of being. a huge | musical instrument. "When the wind \js blowing it produces beautiful notes |The material used in the structure Have w chocolate? f. adore chocolates | was a porus. stone of .very light Miss Moore, who tried to help on |. Weight. ‘The wind playing upon the the good work of Canad{anizing this | various openings acts as if upon young person who had come to our | reeds. shores, wrote on her sheet:— | Se “Honesty is the best policy.” | “Feyther,” sald little Mickey, “Civility costs nothing.” | “waen't it Patrick Henry that said 1" om “Nivver,” said “Nobody by the name of “Evil communications corrupt good ‘let us have peace? nt | old Mickey. manner And..these Helmi faithfully copied, | Patrick iver said anything like that.” but -they left ber old. Indeed, she | cee told herself. in good Canadian that! It takes a very conscientious man Miss Moore's sentences were dum-|to enjoy his work when the pay is . bells! | smaall. Enlightened Red Men Loyal To the Government Western newspapers are liberal in thelr praise of Chief Thunderchild, who died‘on his reserve near Saska- toon a few days ago. He is said to Chiefs, and as such signed one of the half-dozen treaties in the seventies by which the red man surrendered | his prairie domain to the advancing “jtes. /Thunderchild illustrated how for- -dnate Canada has been in its rela- “ions with the aborigines. He was one of the Chiefs who refused to join Riel in the Rebellion of 1885, and remain- ed loyal tg the Government. with which he ‘had made a ‘covenant a few years earlier. The organization of the Northwest Mounted Police in £874 was a wise move by the Canadian Government, and the Indians ,soon learned the value of the force as a protecting agency for them. _ Crowfoot; the wise Chief of the Blackfoot tribe, out near the foot- hills, expressed well the view of the enlightened Indian when -he signea the Biackfoot~freaty-in-1877. “df the police had. not come to the country, where would we all be now?” he-said. “Bad men and whiskey were killing us ‘so fast that very few indeed of us |’ would have been left today. police have feathers of.a bird protect it from the frosts of winter.” is Croéwfoot, too, refused to join in tle rebellion, and he welcomed the rail- way as the natural instrument of the white race which in the Canadian West had befriended the natives who had to give way to new conditions.— Toronto Globe. The Miller's Worm Powders are a prompt relief fromthe . attacks . of worms: in children. - They are power- ful in their action and, while leaving nothing to be desired as a worm ex: pellant, haye an invigorating effect upon the. youthful.system, remedying fever, biliousness, loss of appetite, sleeplessness, and other ailments that follow disorders) caused by worms in the stomach and bowels. Gold Reserve Well Protected Underground Vaults In Bank Of. England Are Burglar Proof Although workmen engaged on the new underground vaults of the Bank of England, where all of Great Bri- tain’s gold ‘reserve will rest, are guarded from prying eyes by armed policemen, some details have leaked out. regarding what is said to be the world’s hardest job of safe cracking. Underneath the present bank are concrete walls fifty.feet deep and; seven féet- cight~-inches thick; If somebody -with felonious © intentions were to tunnel! through these’ he would come into a passage patrolled by guards and protected’ by -every hive been the last of the old-time’ protected us as~ the :Ont., (THESE two pamphlets, from actual Septet Sean ernment experts, contain information of genuine value on any farm. ey vegetables, a jellies, pis les, ete, It discusses the various methods and~ makes many rehontin aplastic help- fal towards better presteses and fewer sae. Cont differ- ent recipes. anne ives ‘the real facts aut Us fable J farm the populat mentioning Chinchilla. ‘Erp the dian money-m: it and det Y care: ally ie ‘best to of housing, eee era Te keting, curing ne "and breeds. Pho 500 cibee pamphlets| on subjects are available. Write fet the 1927 risk. Fal in and mail this sl ip post free to PUBLICATIONS BRANCH Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, Ontario. Please send me free pamphlets on: together with list of all free pamphicts: NGM sssecssareerserssesusesnednecsvvarennreneriecnransessesee ania’ Post OGiCE ssrereseserseerrerrerimnonsnrsssee: 4 RR. Now. Little Helps For This Week Walk worthy of the Lord unto. all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work.—Col. 1. 10. True worth is in being, ‘not seeming, In doing each day tliat goes by Somé little good, not in,,dreaming, Of great things to do by and by... —Alice Cary. Not ‘what we think, but what we do, Makes saints of us. \ NO MEDICINE LIKE BABY'S OWN TABLETS For Either the , Newborn Babe Or the Growing Chitd There is no other medicine to equal Baby's Own Tablets for little ones— whether it. be for the newborn babe or the growing child the Tablets always: do good. They are absolutely free~from opiates or other harmful drugs and the mother can always feel safe in using. them. Concerning the Table{s, Mrs. John Armour, RR, 1, South “Monaghan, have three -fine known alarm system around all four | healthy. ole to whom; when a sides of the treasure. Once in. this passage way the eracksman would have to cut through double grills. of steel. The next step | ‘approacliing the swag of several hut- | dreds of millions of dollars in gold} ¢ | stom ;tion and indigestion; would be to cut through doors. 0 solid steel weighing 24° tons each. This would: take oxy-acetylene drills, in the hands of experts at least three ; days. These doors . can be with light pressure of one hand, i | young children.’ | SWuUng | it they are open. When they are locked it is different. ~ Recognized as-a leading specific for the destruction of worms, Mother Graves’ Worm” Exterminator has preved a boon to suffering children everywhere. It seldom falls, ’ Semething To Be Proud Of Britain Holds. Enviable Place In Long «=~ DistanesaF lying medicine is needed, we have. given only Baby’s Own Tablets. The. Tab- ‘lets are the. best medicine you can keep. in any home where there are Baby’s Qwn. Tablets are a mild put thorough Jaxative which regulate the ach and bowels; banish. constipa- break up colds and simple. fever and make teething ‘easy. They are sold .by medicine dealers. or direct by mail at :25-cents a box from: ‘The Dr. Williams’. Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. Only Woman Tea Taster There is a woman who -tastés. no fewer than 300.samples of tea every day. She is Miss Margaret Irving, and she enjoys the distinction of being the only woman. tea-taster~in Great Britain. Minard’s Linlment’ for cuts and bruises. Husband: Well, thank the Lord the reat’ | South America, a-distance of 1,700 to 2,200: miles. A Modern Scarecrow Radio has been introduced as the newest farm implement by Gustav’ Schmitz, owner of .a large orchard near Hornburg, California. _Despair- ing of saving his valuable harvest ot apples and pears from a cloud of voracious sparrows, unmoved hy or- dinary scarecrows, he installed a loud’ speaker in the orchard,. and, at the announcer’s first words, the wing: ed pests, fled, terrorized, never to re- turn. i There is no objection to people’s thinking what they like — just so their thinking isn’t done out loud. | The British 1 tance flying is something to be,proud Hikers. | Take a bottle of Minard’s in || your kit bag. Relieves sore feet. MINARD’ Fy <> LINIMENT. record fn “long-dis- of. We have to our credit the first conqttest of the Atlantic both by air- ship and aeroplane, the long array of Empire. flights by Sir Allan Cobham, and the magnificent non-stop attempt to India which synchronized with Colonel Lindbergh’s Atlantic cross- ing. Yet to a great extent, because we are without the flair for self- ad- vertisement which is a conspicuous possession of some other nation. Bri- tain’s reputation abroad fs tending to become that of an indifferent per- former in the air, and pessimistic critics at-home are talking and writ- ing as if we had fallen, into a position of hopeless inferiority. A Clerical Error. A clergyman who had given up lis former position as a justice of the peace in order to enter the pul- | pit was conducting his first marriage | service. = “Do you take this man to be thy | wedded husband?” he asked bride. > The. bride answered eagerly: “I do.” i “And you,” he continued, address- | ing the bridegroom, “what to -suy in your defense?” have you | Teron tar is" inany paid- for Wife: Isn’t it splendid! Now. we can turn it in on @ new one. “It takes a good artist or. a. good actor to draw a good house: Diarrhoea Summer Complaint HE ALWAYS USES Mr. T. F. McGregor, McLennan, Alta., writes:—"Over fortys years ago my mother used to give us Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry for diarrhoea andsummer complaint, All through the years since then when troubled with an excessive looseness of the bowels I have | been accustomed to take a few doses of the | the same old, reliable remedy and it always seoms to have the desired effect, mo matter what the cause.’ Don’t Accept a Substi.ute This valuable preparation has beea on the market for the past 80 years pus oor gat ie T. Milburn Co., Limited
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Image 741 (1927-09-02), from microfilm reel 741, (CU12500261). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.