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The Olds Gazette 1932-01-01 - 1933-12-29
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Date
1933-10-20
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Transcript
a : f ; ’ That effort started right after a Cana- | Unjustified Pessimism: Is" Chief Trouble Of Wheat Market, In Opinion Of Western Economist Unjustified pessimism is the chief | immediate trouble of the wheat mar: | ket, according to Dr. ‘W. W. Swanson, | head of the Department of Economics | Demands Same Hight Standard As In in the University of Saskatchewan, | Other Foods | Im the case of a food -product the who was in Montreal. The importing countries of Europe | producer owes to the consumer ex- have not yet reached their. pre-war ‘treme care.in preparation of that acreage in wheat, Dr. Swanson claim-' | product for-the market to see that it ed, and have considerably reduced | |is wholesome, . clean, attractively their growing of rye. The lessening Packed and equal.to the standards ef imports in Europe was due to no ‘under which it is advertised and la- increase in acreage, but to extremely |belled. The honey producer had high yields this year and last year. things very much his own way until This, he suggested, could not be tak- | ® few years ago because demand ex- en as a permanent factor. -ceeded supply and honey sold quite Dr. Swanson drew attention to the readily without too niuch fussing statement of B. W. Snow, American | 8round with it. Today, however, con- wheat statistician, that current Unit- | ' ditions are somewhat different. More ed States government estimates of honey .is being produced, competition wheat stocks in that country. were | has become keener and the consum- about 150,000;000 bushels too high | ing public has become more discrim- Consumer Wants Good Honey “Did I ever tell: you, dear, ‘about when..I : ‘broke my shoulder erent The Humorist, London. and that thete was actually no sur- inating in its choice. The plus wheat there in excess of domes- ‘has been educated to buy goods grad- tic requirements and a small carry- | led to definite and uniform standards over for safety. . - and ig demanding. similar standards As to the “blue eagle” campaign in ' for honey and these demands’ cannot the United. States, Dr. Swanson’ de- be ignored. The consumer. is willing to clined comment other than to say he ‘pay for quality produce and as he has. had never seen any case where the! the final say as to what he shall buy, people. had avoided the . penalty of | his wants must be considered. The past extravagance by refusing to ad- | producer who fails to recognize this mit it existed. | fact might just as well change his He had been a witness before the Profession first as last-—C: B. Good- royal commission on banking and erham, Dominion Apiarist.’ currency at Saskatoon and conse- | quently declined to comment on the! commission beyond an expression of : admiration for the manner in which | Canadian banks had met the world’ economic crisis and his opinion that , the personnel of the royal commission | was a complete guarantee its report, would be constructive. Winnipeg Newspaper Union | Problems Of Dairymen | | Want Eastern Canada To Export Fair | Amount Of Butter | Working through the National: Dairy Council, the three prairie proy-| inces have made united efforts to in- | duce manufacturers in eastern Can- | ada to export a fair quota of butter. \ dian butter surplus of _ 9,000,000 | pounds was announced August 1. To| this date the western provinces have | received no indication that any but- ter would be shipped to the old coun- try from the east, according to P. B. Reed, Saskatchewan Dairy Commis- sioner and Secretary of the Western Dairy Association.. Mr. Reed said Saskatchewan had shipped slightly more than 1,000,000 pounds to the market overseas. That}. business, he declared was done at a net loss, the loss being heavier in the earlier shipments than the later ‘ones, the result of better prices obtaining in England. Model Of Tower Bridge Lendon’s Famous. Structure Repro- duced. By Farmer With: Crude Tools A model of London’s famous Tow- er Bridge, eight feet long, two feet high and 14 ‘inches wide, has- been made from wooden boxes of the pack- ing or cigar variety by B. O. Broom- head, farmer of Lydden, Saskatch- ewan. : It took two winters of steady ap- plication to the job and. three-and- one-half weeks to paint it. Tis tools were a small plane, jack- knife, razor blades, fret saw, scrap glass. and sandpaper. Gopher tails ‘were used for paint brushes. Although he has never seen the, structure he set to work and built it | for his son.” He has not seen the: bridge, as it stands in London, either. BLE THAT FITS THE FIGURE —GIVES SLENDER APPEARANCE Here’s a pattern that includes. pan- ties to. match your slip. Think of ithe time you have so often: wasted ; trying to buy a slip and pantie that match. You can make this darling set in a single morning. It’s simplicity itself. It’s surprising how little it will cost you. The ‘slip, cut on princess lines—a ed—finish Bursts Into Lite After Sleeping For |*™, Seams to be joined—Ans ae Ten -Yaers [ties have a fitted yoke and circular turists 1 legs, not too full, aac at ue ih, aces et trimmed with narrow lace to match puzzled recen' ly er avior of a! the lace on the slip. South. African ‘“‘Cycados” plant, which| It’s very effective in pale pink crepe » suddenly burst into life at the Royal aie with aoe a “ane sugee may di in Lond .|also be finished w! las binds. aa ee oer se doe ae wen ane |_ Style No. #46 is designed in sizes tend, .after: sleeping. for 10 :years. 12, 14,16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 The plant was found in the South | inches bust. Size 16 requires 314 African section of the Wembley ex- yards of 39-inch material with 31% hibition in 1923. It was then a stock! yards of 2-inch lace and 2 yards of {5-inch lace. and was taken to the botanical gar-|" price of pattern 20 cents in stamps dens, where it slept until last March lee coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin when suddenly leaves sprouted from | carefully. the trunk and within a week or two| it was covered with beautiful foliage. | A Strange Plant How To Order Patterns Dogs are the most affectionate | Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, animals—the only animals that new | 175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg fer the company of man ‘o their own kind. Cats can ‘t be trusted a second.! Pattern NO... ceccccens SBCs cvs ccc cx ow 1 Name .occcccorescvessvccs cece soon Caller: “Good morning, Mrs. Smith. I believe you sent for a locksmith?” Mrs. Smith: ‘‘Yes, come in. We've fost the key of the tin of sardines.” ees eeererasesseee reese emene \TOWN .o.ccorccscscevcescrccecesons _| to ice-bound lighthouses near Warne- AN IMPORTANT UNDIE ENSEM-|. The edges are|: Masher Was Disappointed Valuable Toboggan Team Is Lost By | Indian Ruler Solved iffculty Of His Poorer Subjects Rod Garrick, Swampy Cree Indian,} If you wish to ‘present a gift to the of the Hudson Bay Railway country | twenty-one-year-old Maharajah ~ Of up near Setting Lake, is disappointed. |TravVancore, India; he wil supply it for He counted on having a knockout dog: | you. He recently decreed this. Accord-! team this winter, but the animals are | ing: to Hindi traditions, whén’a young | all dead. {man: goes to pay his respects to. his! Indian | when he came across a timber wolf and six pups. The pups were dandies. | must: be according to his station. in, Three were black, and three were al- lifé. “The , bérsonal’ fortunes’ ‘of many: most: white. They were good, hefty | of the - “princes have been built up on! animals, even as pups. Rod got them | this principle. The Maharajah'~-of]| into camp, and penned them, figuring Travancore realized the injustice of | on* training them from puppyhood, | this’ practice, and now, if you go to” and so have a smart dog team. ,8ee’hirh, you will find at ‘the entranée He went away on a trip. The | gate @ man-in attendance who will! wolves did not take to the food sup- | | give you a roll of silk-or a few. gold | plied them. When he returned he sovereigns which you present te the found five dead. He picked up the/ruler. He accepts these, and his sec-| sixth. It passed away in his arms. | retary takes them back to the guar- dian at the gate for the next visitor. | Tenants Had To Use Ladders ‘ %: Unusual Salvage Method Burglars Stole Staircase From Apart- | Russian Steamer Cut In Two And ment House In France Not even staircases are safe from Re-Welded In Harbor | | the twentieth century Parisian burg- Strange is the method of salvage lar. ; used to rescue the Russian steamer; Tenants living on the third floor of | “Kharkov,” which was wrecked on an’ a French apartment house got up to ice shoal in the Black Sea during 8‘ go to work one morning and found fog. A gang. of: electric welders was they couldn’t go.There was no stair- sent to the shoal in the ice--breaker | case. It ‘had been removed ee the “Thoros,”’ night by burglars. “harkov” in two, After. this ‘the i¢e- Telephones and windows had been | breaker took the two parts off. the 1 | | shoutéd across the street to their in-. | the ‘vessel was taken into Sebastopol credulous neighbors others telephoned Harbor and the bows followed. In ‘the’ the sceptical police, who eventually docks the “Kharkov” will be welded called out the fire department. Third together electrically. . 3, floor dwellers had to use ladders. for the next two weeks while new stairs |. were being installed. _ Canada’s Sagar Refineries Sugar refining is a considerable in- dustry in Canada. Hight refineries.op- erate in the Dominion: One at Dart- mouth, Nova. Scotia;. one at Saint John, New Brunswick; two at “Men- ) treal; one at Chatham, and one iat’ ton October 20 and 21, it is an-| Walleceburg, Ontarto; one at Ray- nounced following an executive meet- | mond,.Alberta, and one at Vancouver, ing here. | British Columbia. The value of pro-/| duction from these eight refineries rin 1932 was $41,022,589. Alberta Editors To Meet Alberta division of the Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association will hold its annual convention in Edmon- Se ee Aeroplanes are delivering supplies ‘Motion picture theatres in New Zealand are being refurnished under the government subsidy for building and repairs. munde, Germany. Some strange kinds of caterpillars can live under water. Keeping Standard Measurements \Is One Of The ~ Most Difficult Problems Confronting. Scientists -seut. the hull-.ef-the} left intact, however, and while some ;Shoal one at a time. The stern part of id Preventive Medicine -) Mental Health Is J st As Important | , As Physical, Health Preventive dici n= ed -with mental as. “basiteat health; | Dr, Av Grant platens. \of the: De- partment: of ‘Public ventive ' Medicine, ealth and: Pre- il University; "| told: the annual’ ‘convention of: the ‘Al- | berta ‘Medical: Association at Calgary. ~: “Phere Sré more beds in oubwhentat hospital‘ than in our, general’ ‘hospi* tals," he ‘said: “Ther of ‘peopilé | 7 numpeér who live upheppy lives, pedénsd! they wi are not mentally happy’ is. large! arene _|. Dr. Fleming’ declared progtéss' fh | the P .| awaits the’ development of the science | _|of medicine. “If thé medical profes- field’ -of ~ preyentive.+ metivitie’ sion is to take part it miust-be* pré- pared to act as a group. In Ab oars to. local organization taking’ ith part in public health, the gute must provincially and nationally define thé} field .it: would assume ‘in thé-realm of preventive medicine.” ‘ Dr. (Flemming referred, to ‘improve- ment of health of, infants, to schools and industries - ‘recognizing. the -im=- portance of héalth and establishing their own medical depattments. The) private practitioner: has had little Rod was on the hunt this spring | ruler he. must offer_a gift. of either | part in this development, he said. | intrinsic val j Silkk. or ilver or gold,-.and ‘the gift; Health: supervision should be given by | Worth about , the family. physician who. should. as- sume responsibility for smallpox vac- cination and diphtheria, immusizatton: | “Preventive medicine. enters**inty|” this problém because it-has sufficient’ knowledge to justify a program of Prevention of mental disease and promotion of mental health: The phy- -sician must study the mental field,’ “he declared, Nutritive Value The Same Frozen. Meat As. Gooa As Fresh _ Research Committee Reports * Frozen meat is as good as fresh meat, according to the research com- mittee of the Royal Agricultural So-| ciety of England. The:committee has reported having inquired of the de- , partment of scientific. 2and industrial research regarding the’relative merits of fresh meat as comparéd with tin- ned, chilled or frozen’ meat. SA ply had’ beer received from the ministry, of héalth stating that on the knowledge at present: available there is no- recognizable difference in nutri- ‘tive, value as between frozen or chill- ed and fresh meat of similar quality. Further, there was no evidence that modern méthods of canning affected | the nutritive value to any greater ex- tent: than ordinary codking. Decorated By King “While. the royal tram ‘was speeding from Aberdeen to Ballater, Scotland, pecently,: King George ented the} ‘M.V.O. to William Johnston, traffic | superintendent of the North Scottish district, whoias retiring after 52 years of railway service... See cd nn ee re : Traffic ‘rece'pts of England’s four; railways last year totalled $628,000,- Now we've turned the corner again we haven't found what’s around it. 8 S_DPusiTAnia a forthcoming attempt to reach the wreck of the liner “Lusitania,” in her w. N. U. 20i? ak. Os od mb sa eo neeseees ss dstonen Explorer’s MecHANICAl ARM Using his 22-foot submarine, “Explorer,” Simon Lake, famous inventor of ufderseas craft, hopes to succeed in BABY SUBMARNE TO SEEK LUSETANIA’S TREASURE. ocean graye off the Irish Coast, where she was torpedoed in 1916. The diminutive submarine attained a depth of 300 feet in initial tests in Long Island Sound recently and as the sunken liner lies in only 200 feet of water, it is reasonable to concede the-Lake expedi- tion an excellent chance of succeeding in the venture. The strong room of the liner is said to contain about $4,000,- 600 in gold and silver, as well as a large quantity of precious stones and other jewelry. ie Really acourate measurement is 1 Still one of the most ticklish problems of science, and of all measurements done in England; the most ticklish a:e “of the’ “imperial ‘standard’ yard and pourid and ‘the official copies of them. This is, a job’ that has to be ‘done, ty. statute every ten ears at tie Na- ‘tiondl * Physital- ‘Laberatory vat’ "Féed- cdmgton. The’ scales, for; compuring * Kthe “po as," ‘fidive been specially de-- reigned and: built py. the Laboratéty.” THey* live - ‘a. nice _ggol tysutt* hich | : wine. cellarc of "fhg' "tures iof ‘Which “are: merétf“de- i s#enéa''so ‘to meet, the Jodd, ‘srmkll cas itis; taken ‘up gradually—toHydid - any. risk .of jarring the: beam’ “hese cofitrols gre i worked --by- ve OBE Pro; ; Jjeeting “through: the:. loot” of "the we t, so ithat .there~-shall be" “Tess |) the hear ‘ssenee: of aitmoving’ be ly; air
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Image 768 (1933-10-20), from microfilm reel 768, (CU12501466). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.