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The Olds Gazette 1918-01-04 - 1921-06-24
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Date
1921-06-17
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874
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Fe — pars) _ Residents of Canada Who Served “HN GAZEYTD,_ OLDS. ALBERTA. ws Stop the Wasted Effort Compared with most countries, Conaita as been free from serious. in- “dustrial disturbances resulting in strikes and lockouts. In this respect, indeed, the Dominion has been most fortunate, and it is not only a matter for national congratulation, but it speaks well for the saneness, common- sense and general goodwill prevailing in this country, and an indication of the fair-mindedness of both employer and employee. Recently, however, the printers of Regina went on strike to enforce compliance with certain demands made by them and which the employing printers felt constrained to refuse to grant in view of present business con- ditions and the steady decrease in living costs now taking place. Among the demands made by. the journeyman printers was that a 44-hour week should be adopted but that the old scale of pay for 48 hours work should be continued. Other demands-were for the adeption of certain restrictive shop rules which would have the effect of deoreasing production. One such rule was a further extension of avery vicious rule already in force—a rule which, while not benefitting the worker, imposes a burden of expense, not on the employers,-but on the general public. It is a rule which makes a demand for the doing of ‘positive and absolutely waste work. To explain: If a merchant inserts an advertisement in 4 paper and at the same time orders, say 500 or 1,000 copies run off.as a poster, the Union rules prohibit the use of the same type for the double purpose. In other words, the identical job has to be set up’in type twice, whereas once would, and should, suffice. This double cest is entailed, and the public have to pay for it. . The. Union is laboring under the crazy delusion that~ they, are thereby creating: work for-printers and providing employment for a larger number’ of men.” . They forget that as the workers constitute the great bulk of the buying public they. themselves are forced to pay for this waste. As a matter-of fact-they are not creating thore work and providing more employment; indeed experience has proven they are restricting both work and employment, because by reason of the increased and ufinecessary cost of work there is léss done. ‘Any process of labor which does not: produce something of value is economic waste, pure and simple. +The production of something for use ds only way to increase wealth,and ‘it is only through the increase of wealth that more employment can be provided. production. “There may be prospective wealth, enormous potential wealth, ‘in the soil, in‘the mines; in the forests, arid in many latent forms, but such wealth is not worth so much as a brass farthing to the people of the world antil labor is: brought to bear and this natural. wealth is converted into ‘the things:men require. And if men’s energies are devoted to work which produces nothing they need, which is work merely to make work and serves mo good purpose, then the sources of wealth are not increased but decreas- ed. Tlie whole world suffers, but most of all the workers themselves. The workers of the world need to learn the lesson that the first re- quisite for the. payment of the good wages they demand, and have a right to receive, is that.the employers make enough money to be able to pay good wages. . Wealth, let it be repeated, cannot be. distributed until it is created, and whatever interferes with the creation of wealth interferes with the dis- tribution of wéalth in wages as. well as in profits. When Union rules. in- terfere with. the creation of wealth they interfere with the welfare of labor as much as they interfere with the welfare of capital. As a matter of fact, they interfere with the welfare of labor a great ‘deal more than they: interfere with the welfare of ‘capital, because about minety per cent. of the wealth createdsis distributed in wages, and capital is ~well content with anything like ten per cent: of the wealth created. It should, therefore, be the intelligent purpose of the labor unions to} meet any depressed situation in business by increasing: productivity and . profits. | Whenever labor, by restrictive rules, or capital by curtailing pro- duction, interferes with the material.creation of wealth, it interferes with the material development of the race and-with the common possession of the advantages of modern productivity as far as each: restrictive act is operative. There are, says an. American writer, two fundamental facts to be recog- nized: First, that productivity is necessary for permanently high wages; and, second, that high wages are essential to general prosperity. The less the produttivity, the less there is to be-distributed in :profits and ° wages. ‘That is reasonably obvious. : And since the vast majority of the people of this or any other country ware wage-carners, and general prosperity depends upon the prosperity .of the mass, it is equally obvious that only liberal wages will create. general |’ Prosperity and the general purchasing power, which, in turn, means the Prosperity of every individual and of every individual: business. é Therefore, let theré be good wages paid for good work, and let good work—really productive work—be given good wages. Ranch Brings Big Rental $1,000 Fer Ten Acres Does Not In- i clude House. What is believed to be the highest rental ever paid for a ranch property in the Creston Valley has been agreed upon. for this year’s hire of the Tor- nico ranch, which has been taken for one year ct a rental of $1,000 for ten acres. ‘ This does not include the use of the house. The place is planted entirely to trees-and small fruits. Nurses May Get Land ‘ _ Overseas Are Eligible. In the amendments to the Soldier Settlement Act adopted by the Cana- dian House of Commons is a clause declaring that nurses who were resi- dent in»Canada before the war and who served overseas shall be eligible to qualify for land settlement. A Substitute. Life in Mexico being rather mono- f@onous since General Villa's -retire- Children suffering from worms soon That is to say, wealth is4 ament, the long extinct volcano at *-Golin has resumed action and is belch- ing smoke and ashes like a-regular Vesuvius;—Vancouver Province. ~ Our slogan for the coming’ year should. be, “Buy at:Home,” Add to your own and your neighbor's. pros- ‘perity by keeping the money circulat- ing in our own district. MONTH OLD BABY HADSKINTROUBLE On Face and Hands. Hands. Itched and and. Burned. Cuticura Heals, — “My baby was only «toons oid her her face and hands started to getred and a. ‘The eczema started In the form of water blistersand nance ) and burned. She was.so cross and fretful she could f nots e : “Phis lasted nine i Ontario, May 7, 1918. : Cuticura P, Ointment and Tal- Ointment, dust with Talcum. Soap 25 and Sold ; without mug, [sire in stock. raising. show the. symptoms, and ‘any: mother. can detect the presence of these para- sites by the writhings and fretting of the child. _-Until expelled and the system cleared of them, the child can- not regain its health. Miller’s Worm Powders are prompt and efficient, not only for the eradication of worms, but ‘also as-a toner up for children that, are run down in consequence, Special Prize Fort Pure Bred Stock Will Be Given at Canadien ‘National Exhibition Next Year, The Ontario Department of Agri- culture is: offering four prizes at the Canadian National Exhibition next year to the value of $600 to demon- strate the superiority of the pure-bred The first of these prizes is in the dairy cattle class where prizes. are offered for the best calf, yearling. and two-ytar-old-sired by a pure-bred bull; the cow may be any grade or scrub. Similar awards are offered in the beef class, poeieiineeniinene When poverty comes in at the door of.an Eskinro house love doesn’t fly out -at. the window. ~An Eskimo house has no windows. The man who doesn’t recognize the world’s greatness or, his own little- ness is likely to be a cynic. Spend your ‘money at home, there- by helping your own town and local merchants, Testing Soil For Acidity Has To Be Done Carefully To Be Reliable. =~ There are several simple tests for soil acidity used, but they are gener- ally not reliable unless done’ very carefully. The. stirest. test of all is a plot teat. Sow a Strip. of alfalfa and wees it into’ three plots: On plot. one, apply ‘no lime. On plot two, apply one ton 6f lime per acre. On plot three, apply two tong, of lime per acre. If alfalfa does well on all three plots, no lime is needed. If it fails or does poorly on one lime plot but does well on the other two,-lime is needed. If it does better on the plot receiving two.tons per acre, a heavy application is need@d... The most common forms of ground limestone, slaked lime, or marl. The plots used may be small if necessary so only a small: amount of lime will be needed. to make: the test. A SMILE IN EVERY DOSE. OF BABY’S OWN TABLETS Baby’s Own’ Tablets “aré-a regular joy given to. the: little . ones—they| never. fail to. make the cross baby happy. When baby is cross.and fret- , ful the mother may be’ sure some- thing is the - matter for it is not baby’s nature to be cross unless he is aiting. Mothers, if your baby is cross; if he cries.a great deal and needs your ‘constant attention a and night, give him a dose.of Baby’s Own Tablets. They. are a mild but thorough laxative which will quickly regulate the bowels and-stomach and thus relieve constipation and indiges- tion, colds and simple fevers and make: baby happy—there surely. is a smile. in. every dose of the Tablets. Baby’s Own Tablets are sold by medi- cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Men Leave for Goldfields San Francisco Company Shipping Machinery From Edmonton. Fifteen men have beén engaged by the Dominion Trading and Transpor- tation Company, and will leave for the company’s gold claims on the Upper Peace River immediately. “All of the machinery. ordered | by the company in San. Francisco has arrived at. Ed- montom and is. being assembled prior to being shipped: north on one of the company’s barges. . The machinery consists of scrapers, hoisting engine, steam engine, centrifugal pump; two power boilers, and three thousand feet of steel cable. Pain In The Loins Driven Out Quickly That dragging, wearying. sort of pain makes life a misery to many peo- ple. This pain is due to a. passive inflammation of the adjacent tissue. Because every drop rubs in, because it penetrates so deeply... Nerviline gives a wonderful result. More pow- erful because: fiye times stronger, more penetrating because “it* strikes through. soft tissue, more healing to pain, Nerviline Liniment should be al- ways on hand. Sold everywhere in large 35 cent bottles. English Spelling Must Be Used. American forms of spelling have been barred from official documents in the High Court. The Federal’ Chief Justice has announced that he will not allow their- introduction and ordered fhe. spelling of the words “program” and “ceriter” changed to “programme” and “centre.” He re- marked that English spelling was good enough for him. Ask for Minard’s and take no other “Shock Me to Sleep.” _ A: French electrician claims to have invented a machine which will pro- duce sleep by means. of an. electric current from tiny batteries fixed on the. wrist and instep. The current re- laxes the nerves and quickly produces a sensation of. physical ease, followed by slumber, even in the case of habit- usal sufferers from insomnia. Asa vermifuge. an .effective prepar- ation is Mother Grayes’’ Worm Exter- minator, and it can be given to the most delicate child without fear wt in- jury: to the constitution. pedicel ena A Large Catch Of Halibut. approximately one million-cight fiun- dred thousand pounds of halibiit were caught on the fishing banks of British Columbia coast. Of-this catch all but two hundred thousand pounds entered Prince Rupert. ~ lime are finely] During the first two wecks of May,| To Use Mac Left Over BY LORETTO C. LYNCH An’ Acknowledged Expert in All Matters. Pertaining to House- » hold. Management. Time was-when the family looked with horror upon the saving. of yes- terday’s roast. Then we began to hear of the art of camouflage. Presto! the housewife learned to camouflage yesterday’s roast so that the family really believed they were getting a brand new dish. Take tare roast beef, If it has been served on Sunday, set the rem- nants aside to serve on Tuesday. Don’t -make ‘the mistake of giving it to the family cold‘on Monday. If you have served it with potatoes on Sunday, re- heat it cautiously in the top of a double boilers or -in’a pan set over hot water. This conserves the flavor] and prevents the meat from becoming hard. Now make up a nicely sea- soned spaghetti and tomato. sauce. _ Left-over, roast beef may be made into a savory stew with onions and potatoes. To camouflage the stew, place it in a baking dish and -cover with a .tender piecrust. Rub the milk. . This will give a beautiful brown, shiny crust when baked. Bake in. individual dishes if you have them. Lamb and veal left from yestgsday’s roast have delightful ~ possibili- ties. Instead of. bringing to the table a semigrisly-looking plateful of cold sliced Jamb, slice the lamb one-fourth-inch in thickness. kle it generously with drops. of Worcestershire sauce. Cover’and let stand a little while. .. Heat a little fat on the fry pan and saute the. lamb until. heated through and a delicate rown. Serve. with most any vege- table or carrots and peas. Left-over veal should be’ sliced and freed from any ‘unedible. portion. The slices should’ be one-fourth’ inch’ or more. Dip each slice. into flour, then into beaten egg and lastly into sifted dry bread ‘crumbs or cracker crumbs. Fry in ‘hot deep. fat until a delicate. brown. Serve with but- tered boiled noodles. A brown gravy or tomato sauce or white sauce may accompany these impromptu veal cut- lets. ‘ : 2 - Similar cutlets may. be made from roast pork. Indeed, so good are these that I once heard a visitor te- mark toa thrifty housewife that “these are quite the best pork tender- loins” “he had eaten’ this year. A suitable accompaniment to these mock pork tenderloins is creamed potatoes generously sprinkled. with finely chopped parsley and accom- green baked apples. The bone from a roast aaeanig has some flavor left. in it. And it should always be put into the soup kettle. A bone from a baked Virginia ham is a decided improvement to pea or bean or lentil soup. é A ‘roast’ smoked ham has always seemed a good investment, even for a small family, because of the possi- bilities of. its teft-overs. "Do you know that any of the restaurants specializing in’ breakfast dishes reheat in-hot fat a slice of roast smoked ham and serve it with eggs? ‘And for the very last of any: roast, there is:always the hash bowl. Allow two parts of chopped | cooked potatoes and a little grated onién to one part of the chopped-meat: ~Moisten with milk or water, and, if needed, add a little melted fat.) Turn the hash into greased baking dish and bake un- til brown. You will like this better than pan hash. Catarrh Catarrh is a local disease greatly influenced by constitutional —_ conditions. ALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE is Blood Purifier. _-By cleansing the blood and es the System, HALL’S CATARRH MEDI Cin E restores normal conditions and allows Nature to do-its work. Al ts. Circulars’ free. FA. Seer & Co., Toledo, Ohio, a Tonic and New Fuel Comocaiion In B.C, The Canadian Western Fuel Com- pany which operate the coal mines at Nanaimo, Vancouver Island, has been re-organized as a $5,000,000 corpora- tion, and will be known as the West- ern Fuel. Corporation of Canada, Limited. Minard’s. Liniment . Lumberman’s Friend, , Egg-Shaped Arctic Ship. D. B. Macmillan, chief lieutenant ‘of the Peary No?th Pole expedition, hopes* to sail round Baffin’s land in a | 115-ton é¢gg-shaped craft just launch-' that, by reason of her-shape, she will be lifted out of the water by ice pressure and carried along with the pack: | She will burn whale oil as | suppementary fuel. top over with yolk of egg diluted with | Sprin-}. panied in the way of dessert. by large . . “Tanlac has relieved me of my ¢uf-| fering and I just can’t praise it enough,” said Mrs. Margaret Bever- age, 305 Hughson St., North, Hamil: ton, Ont. “For two years my édpetite “was very poor afd I suffered a great deal from formation of gas on my stom- ach. I was also troubled with fre- quent attacks of dizziness and was. actually afraid to go out or even get away from something to hold. on to. One of these dizzy spells came on while I was calling on one of my grand children one day and I just fell right down_on the lawn. - Last spring, when I started taking Tanlac, I had Hamilton Woman Was Actually Afraid To-Go Out On Streets Alone been confined to my bed fora ane and was so weak I could not walk. - “Tanlac helped me from the very start, as I have not had_a weak spell since I started taking it and I feel so good I-can hardly réalize that £ am the same woman. The dizzy spells are gone, my appetite is fine and everything I eat agrees with. me perfectly. Ihave recommended Tan- lac to any number of my friends and, = Jam glad to say,. it has benefitted them. all. everybody who suffers as I did what Tanlac did for me.” Tanlac is sold-by Teading druggists everywhere. : -_ Chaiapton Aviatrix Killed Flying at Altitude of 1 of 1,000 Feet When Plane Gives Way. . : Miss Laura Bromwell, holder of the loop-the-loop. record .for women and one. of the best_ known women pilots in the world, was killed at Mitchell Field, Mineola, N.Y, Miss Bromwell was flying at an zl- tittde of about 1,000 feet when the accident. happened. She had - just} completed oné loop and was about to make a second when something went wrong with ‘the plane and it crashed to the ground. Miss Bromwell, whose: home. was in. Cincinnati, was 23 years old. She established: her~loop-the-loop record on May 15 last last when she executed utes. That same afternoon she plot- ed an ‘airplane over a two mile straight-away course at the fate of 135 miles an hour, The machine:in which Miss Brom- well was: flying was equipped with-a Curtis motor and was. manufactured in Canada. It was of the so-called Canadian J.N. 4 type: A colored preacher took some con- verts to a Louisiana river to baptize them. Seeing some alligators, one of them objected. “can’t you trust the Lord? He took care of Jonah, didn’t he?” “Ya-as, but a whale is different, he’s, got memory; but if one of dem *gaters was to swaller me he’d jis’ go-to sleep in the sun there an’ forgit all about me.” Increase i in Immigration Greatest Neabe Entering Canada . Are From British Isles. During the month of March, 1921, Canada; of whom 4,865 were British, 4,292 from the United States, and 1,852 from other countries. The total immigration: for the fiscal year end- ing March 31st is 148,477, 74,265 be- ing from the British Isles, 48,059 from the United’ States aiah, 26,153 from other countries. This is an increase of 27 per cent. over the poereue fis- cal year. “An Oil for All Men.—The sailor, the. fisherman, the. lumberman, ‘the out-door laborer and-all who are ex- posed to injury and the elements will find D1. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil a true and faithful friend. To ease pain, re- 199 loops in an hour and twenty min-|~ “Why, brother,” urged the pastor, | a total of 11,009 immigrants catered : Germany as a s a Peacemaker Obeying Allied Dems Demands Merely For | Self Preservation. ©» Germany is paying her bills, not ‘so much conscience as in obedience’to the ele- mental law of self-preservation. An Allied army has pitched its tents on. the threshold of the Ruhr, the indus- trial heart of Germany—and if the debtor defaults, ‘the Allied armies will lose little time in taking over the in- dustrial resources of the Ruhr, - The Germans know this, and they would _|rather pay the reparations bill than face the alternative. of a Germany without the Ruhr.—Boston. Trans- cript. SNe oe The good we do is an e tidote for the evil we think. % {| Don’t Neglect Your Skin | Eiittan’s Theft GVER HIS ap the skin: tnan all ‘the beauty treat perfect com- plezion ts caused by & » sluggish liver. ~_ ASPIRIN “Bayer” ‘is oy Gentine j Warritg! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tab-, lets you are not geting sentie’ i bag pirin at all, In every Bayer pa are directions for Colds, Elana Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and-for Pain. Handy- in ‘boxes of twelve tablets I just wish L could tell in obedience to the national - ed in New York. “The explorer hopes, lieve colds, dress wounds, subdue lum- bago and overcome rheumatism, it is excellent. Thereforg, it should have’ a place in all. home medicines bres those taken: ona journey: cost few cents. larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark a aed in.Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of \ Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. SUMMER ~— ‘TOURIST. FARES Bey —To— VANCOUVER, VICTORIA - AND PACIFIC COAST POINTS : ROUND TRIP TICKETS FROM POINTS ' (Western) ONTARIO, MANITOBA, sce ay NnaS ao ons ani , CHOICE of ROUTES (inclusive) in. ALBERTA, (Via ON LAND AND SEA OMA, C.N. via TOFIELD, G.T.P.) AND —RE- ! sObnn J NOW ON SALE if Liberal Stopovers Final Return Limit October 31, 1921. THROUGH CANA- DIAN ROCKIES _ | SEE JASPER PARK AND MOUNT ROBSON | ~ » FOR FULL INFORMATION AS TO FARES, SERVICE, Pita ETC., APPLY TO ANY AGENT ee ae ‘also. sell. | CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAYS
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Image 874 (1921-06-17), from microfilm reel 874, (CU12499306). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.