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1322
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The Sylvan Lake News 1942-01-07 - 1944-12-20
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Date
1944-10-18
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Transcript
ROIS, 1944 to $375 to $550 to $675 to $250 to $150 to $125 to $395 to $160 to $750 to $325 Other ‘lan. N (terms in sand Trade 948 nber 5100,000 an, any rust vr 1943 | ETT Hn HET i LIFE AND CUSTOM OF BULGARIA Derived Its Name From Which Means “Man With a Plow" wh is just h of 4 # tidy little nation at f Kentucky (at the mom: now the Balkans th a t J x ia It is 1 re Wes by Danube and t Sea and has t all of the dope mountain rang mou tains lend their name to the Rhe five-inch Bulgarian ct rose-tinted filter, which costs aS 1 cigar is ge Hy esteemed, Im mddings, p und jan 1 than not to be but nations! making of attar ‘One of industries is roses, a gr! base of good perfume. At sev periods in history, attar of r s cost more than gold; the cur quotation here he rs just un dollars an ounce. It ros petals, which are picked at di by Bulgarian maidens and loaded to small donkeys, It takes two t dred and fifty pounds to make ounce. Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria the geographical centre of the kans, dates back to the days of Invading Roman emperor Trajan y restaurants there and In o rian cities are called Chuchw which means “The Skylark”, just cause that's a fashionable name a Bulgarian restaurant. The n pea: keep money, clgarettes, and the They all carry broynitza, wor beads which keep the hands ocew and help the wearer cut down cn his juman being who smoking. Next to the mayor, most important man in a villag the undertaker, who 1s as: turning Into vi generally winding up In jail, an her international politics she made a serles of sad grandscale mis- gut py takes. One of the national heroes of | 5, eliow jelly which is a common past 60 years it has been almost stely Europeanized. A ge nts wear sashes, in which they med to have special knowledge of how one’s relatives may be prevented from pires after their funeral, ‘The Internal polities of Bul-! tq wortd’ garla are pretty intense, the losers yey) for the elevation cf the plane) k the eral rent ten awn eel 3elgium-Dutch civilian shows R. | WO, Rex Bolland of RAF. returned Cap, jeman, Calgary, listens Miniature Radio Set CAF. members miniature radio s with Canadians to greet him afte hile WO. C. E. Pimlott, Victoria, B.C, watche t he Catan Army = Why scasiophoto, used to hear BBC reports. His son t. Reg separation of six years from right and iS Power Of Science ne nae For Ou Aim Must Be To Improve Men And Not Machines The power of science !s producing day by day amazingly perfect ma- chines which appear almost able to be- take the place of human intel for pence. Of this the recently completed male | santorhatic sequence-controlled cal- culator” 1s an outstanding example It Is of vital importance to remem- ber that machines lent ere only machines, and that th coples them ci endeavors to imitate them in any © 18 cuise Is preparing fer a* machine made life. a ther liga, like den however excel p the The who Is not a machine will read and reflect. He will reason and ask questions. He will turn to wisdom In order to get id in| Gn which his own life Is to be passed. has If a practical plan can be worked h all training shall rest liberal education even though Bulgaria 1s a London Times corre-|jimited, as a foundation, then we shall spondent, the late James Bourcl who did a lot for Bulgarian |: ence: he’s burled there. One of things that upset Bulgaria in Middle Ages was a sect called Bogomils. They were heretics yelieved In celibacy. They carried matters so far that finally they were |i. po; hier, he opening the door toward progre: end-| in the world such as we have never the yet been able to achieve. We must the hot turn from the education the to the making of machines. who| Agsurance must be given that our educational system will do all that le to make liberal education men massacred by the Bulgarian Ortho-|in some form, however limited in dox Church, “Bulgar” means literally, " with a plow." When a Bulgarian time, the foundation as well as the ‘man ideal of all training of any kind. This boy | will reduce to a minimum the num- wants to get married, he puts on| per of skilled human machines who a pair of high laced boots as a signal.| nave never Convention dictates that he ch a woman older than himself garians rarely get drunk. They devoted to football (Bnglish put can't play very well. Th frugal, patient, industrious, picious of strangers, practical, ate—something like the obsti shire. The women do much of work on the farms and stand when their h Bolo dancing is considered imm: The Bulgarian language is really sormething—tw@mty-four tenses to a verb_New Yorker. Hotel Thefts In The Table T hear on reliable authority ny hotel and restaurant cutlery to the tables, s0 has been the theft of kn and spoons It seems that members of bombed- put families, who have lost their lery and are unable to replace it, have been helping themselves when out to dinner or supper. Even the precaution of chait the things to tables has not prevent- ed thefts, and as a safeguard cater ers have now been authorized to demand a deposit of approximately | £1 for the use of cutlery before a meal is served, After the meal things have to be returned to refunded.—Beifast News Letter. lovable | old natives of Maine and New Hamp- ands enter The room. many Cutlery Is Chained To | lors in Germany have had to fix sen to be really men cose Our constant aim must be men and Bul- not machines.—Address by Dr. But are jer at Columbia Buy War Savings Stamps regularly sus-| > i | GEMS OF THOUGHT CHEERFULNESS Between levity and cheerfulness ther s a wide distinction; the mind that is most open to the former frequently a stranger to the latter, Blalr The highest wisdom !s continual cheerfulness; such a state, like the | above the mcon, !# slways |clear and serene.Montaigne If good people would but make | thelr goodness agreeable, and smile instead of frowning In thelr virtue, how many weuld they win to the good catse.—Usher. regic He who sees most clearly and en- \lightens other minds most readily, ps his own lump trimmed and Mary Baker Eddy. | burning Cheerfutness keeps up a kind of [daylight in the mind, filling it with a steady and perpetual serenity.— Addison. ‘A laugh, te be joyous, mus from a joyous heart, for without) Jcindness there can be no true Joy. ED FOR MEDICINE: Witch hazel was first used for medicinal purpos but is now wide 1 in beauty preparations for the face and hands. It is derived from the bark of a North American | shrub us Water is re readily by linen than b; ibsorhed =m any other fabric More vitamin B to maintain heaith is required by men than by women. |been t Could Do With More But Canada Wil Have Planes For International Aviation Canada’s position In the supply of airplanes for post-war International avin ts consid better than that of most other countries, officials said in commenting on a Vancouver port which sald ted States alune had a suffictent supply of rab) re planes Officials at Ottawa sald while Can- ada “could do with more planes” she would have sufficient to meet her own domestic and tnternattonal route requirements if the war did not end Lnmedlately. aster bombers, now being turned » numbers at V Aircraft, Malton, Ont, are re garded as having some peacetime possibilities and now are in service on a ‘Trans-Canada Airlines trans- Atlai Canada, is however, pinning her major hope on the big Douglas DC-4 planes which are being built at Mont real and are scheduled for delivery ensiderab! late next year VALUE INCREASING One of the United States oldest and most valuable clocks is the Tall Clock which stands in the library at Clare mont, N.H. It is nine feet tall and is a duplicate of one in the Green Vault in the royal palace of the kings of Saxony in Dresden, Germai It cost the owner $1,000 when brought from Europe in 1880 and has since grown more valuable year by year, Ching Noung is reputed to have first to teach Chinese the method of making bread from wheat and wine from rice in 1998, B.C. and the by oral. | that pro-| con- ives, eut- ning | the the Canadian soldiers watching an explosion “eontrol office”, where the money Is| ress was being cleaned up, smile with pleasure German medals, is Pte H. Wright Canadians Happy Over Boulogne Fall ‘at Camp D’Alprech, south of Boulogne, where at having taken the French city. In centre, wearing some the last enemy fort souvenir WARM TRIBUTE TO THE DOMINIONS Lord Of The Admiralt Pralse For Canadian Navy has rendered to tie ¥ the stitut fc F Tribute te the dominicr also from A. V. Alexwnder first ford ¢ tive then Lat party 1ised the Raynl Canadiar cort work in th Atlantic and the activity of Au tralian cruisers in the M It was settled, he sald tall the nents of the Com eulth must he together in the war neninst Inpan In peace and, {f necessary, In war hene the Royal Navies of the various It will be neces for arts of the Empire to stand ready to keep open the sealanes for protection of our merchant flects and consequent communtentions on which the Com- monwealth depends for existence [RECIPES DRUM STICKS MAKE ENTRANCE One of the most delicious ways to ery | stele, veal atic euts is In the role of Mock Drum Sticks covered with a golden crisp AN rount s or pork coating of browned corn flake crumbs. The use of a ertap cereal in virtually all dishes calling for fir ‘erumbs” is & cooking shortcut homemakers endorse. The toast real flakes rofl! quickly and easily to crumbs ef any desired con- sistency, and the cereal is alwa’ available Mock Drum Sticks (your butcher may of meat around the sk e persuaded to wrap the umbs, then milk to heen added are dipped first in in slightly beaten « which seasonings and finally, @ flake crumbs. browned quickly i amount covered tight © oyen (850 degre or until tender Mock Drum Stic {tg tbs. veal beef or pork skewers cul thin cups corn flakes Be tablespoons mills teaspoon salt spoon Pepper jlespoons fat cup water Cut meat inte strips and roil around skewers in the shape of drum sticks Roll corn flakes inte Cover drum sticks with ¢ dip in slight milk and seasonings hay Roll again in crumt aticks quickly in fat cover Ug! and bi oven (350 degrees F.) or until tender, Yield n corn icks are A small they are haked in a mod about one water hour Soest ws toe derate sme hot servings A delicious salad nade by combining cheese 4 tablespocr tablespoons catsup 1; cup chopped cl head lettuce cowp of ¢ ip REAPING NON-EICTION yelume of short stories, the British public is reading from seven to ten non-fiction boc London bookstores repo: eventl that not a single novel is Inchided It some of their weekly be Warbooks. autobiographer art, criticism und poetry © leaders In early Kngland, coins were some times cut in halves or quarters to ake change. 2590
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Attribution
Image 1322 (1944-10-18), from microfilm reel 1322, (CU11125621). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.