- i i bat one '; me eee An Ok aero hy | + AG \\At WY e
ee 7 bee <tr
STONY PLAIN SUN. |
Vensitd Hoventiadl STONY PLAIN, ALBERTA, THURSDAY AUG. 20. 1998
VA it To ee Pesan Sorte
ROYAL CAFE, STONY PLAIN. No Boot in Price of Bred. H AR DV T ; T AX] Anywhere, Any Time. |ris.20°ficd"s sonatas o ICK S
! Competent Drivers. baker dete the ent nin YOUR HOME TOWN STORE.
NEW SEDAN. PHONE 33. baker a Hdmonton aro mi i = +++ $44 444 Pm on hand a = hien Gr eaoe asl a 1es:
L. M. LARSON, P roprietor. distil does bread polen. “| Don’t buy your Fall Hat until you’ve tine ae Pe. Sus idan seen our i . Youcan save. this town is dependent on Edmon-
ALBERTA PACIFIC GRAIN ton bakers for ite entire supply. : or ae Legialajure to Open Aug. 25. Headquarters for Harvest Sup-
New legislation dealing with the — a good a . 1 ° Debt Adjustment Act in this prov. li fo do Business i 4 ince may be considered at the spe- Pp 1€s at Real Prices. \ \ cial seadion of the Legislature, to Fi ‘ open Tuesday August 25. ° So fer, nothing has been revcal- p ed as to the nature of the deht School Opening 7 adjustment. changes which might ° , : . acak Remember we will have some spe-
It is expected that the principal
Cockshutt Implements. legislation of the session would cials to help you save on this import-
deal with social credit measures
a routh relief for outherh ant item f ndi A FULL LINE OF THESE. = fateqs item of expenditure.
: ip Won’ Text Books SEE THE NEW DISPLAY. ged " iy de Grocery Specials—Lots of
scrip) will not be accepted by the
L. Zilliox, Stony Plain\:=-s= "s-":= Them.
books distributed to [the trade or to trustees, Government officials
= TA awrRt mena” Pls sind uk aging Get. At t -HARDW 3 VICE COUNTS. 38: ie 5 or = =< NTSALBERTA DAIRY IK S.
accepted.” SP oe ROR ? ae Cobepany thiange enjoyed seieie Canals One Cheering Aspect. FARMERS a MARKET. arises from the experience of farmers duri en ee H MEATS ‘OF ALL KINDS. seg tea Repel ga ent they Nays: foun sO being Rest This is D - 2 ; POULTRY. =o eir interests well protected and are. satis- ||the number of expressions from : BO fied oaak it pays to¢ oO business with United Somer in this and i nearby dis a) a rod e Grain G ates ou -||tricts who had inspected their 733 :
grain during the growing season and again at cutting time. This last inspection showed that, their earlier estimate of the yield of wheat per acre on their farms was| . J] too low, and that the recent rains 2 ¢%,, | had had a very beneficial effect on the kernel, enlarging it much be- _ot |yond their expectatione. ‘| It does not often occur that this ., |phenhmenon is recorded, for, asa - |rule, grain growers are rather con- .- |eervative in their guesses regard- ‘ling their yields and rarely indulge , lip an overestimate.
uae i ceed
= BLEVATOR aTm@kin®ogn. wnt
eo Be
“tt =
OPERATING TERMINAL ELEVATORS- FORT WILLIAM= PORT ARInUR-VANCOUNER | ag? f Sun Letter Box. 423 COUNTRY ELEVATORS THROUGHOUT TH A... | ; Editor The Sun: Dear Sir—May I Ah SHEDS re. ‘crave a small space’in your valuable if a paper to make a few notes? The first oasis, when the order was issued a short
a = | time ugo that the liquor vendors and -y| beer licensees were not to accept the
[Canadien N= icna, Railarons | Gevernment scrip in payment for
Old Country Bo flags |
| this for th f preventi Seripters from Sauandering their scrip| We Are Agents for: Ail Steamship ‘\} On beer I a good ! Li ae wes enon cn promul- | es! > ie ae gated that She sehwol: books branch of
> ee Dept. is Fpsbestk ie tox | Special — th ares to the Seaboard Pr,
Let Us Make Your Reservations Now. = For Rates, Reservations, ete., Inquire of Your Local Agent< P:
Our Service and facilities Guarante
haseciban Radio Prices Hehe "
American political talks are mounting ‘in, price as the Presidential elections of Novem: ber loom up. The rule is that when Mr,. F.: + Roosevelt speaks in the capacity of Preside the radio facilities are gratis. Should his" turn out to be” political, his: ‘opponénts vould: be granted the same radio opportunity;. stated by the National Broadcasting Co.'>':* ‘ rs
Radio costs are higher this = ‘iin 1932. For a 2oast-to-coast radio rally on - Byres co nined major networks after sunset the aa wy th arr ft ot e335 i 3 aD 2roximately $52, 000 per hour. said to be the Minister of Education,
Yours, I, G. Noramus.
Canadian National Railw wo
.
THE SUN, STONY PLAIN, ALBERTA
rantecleL-
CIGARETTE PAPERS
Ftomalic
BOOKLET
- British Sentiment Still Dominant
If the face of Canada, the outward form of the country as expressed in customs, modes of life and even forms of speech, is becoming more Americanized with the march of time, the heart of the Dominion, as repre- sented in the spirit, the sentiment of her people, remains as truly British as in United Empire Loyalist days.
The foregoing, in brief, is the answer to those timorous souls in this country or in Great Britain, who ever and anon raise the bogey of ultimate American domination of Canada and see in the adoption of every new de- vice from the United States another nail in the coffin which is supposed to be in construction for the interment of the tie which binds this country to the Motherland. ;
Those who raise the issue in fear and trembling, overlook the fact that the invisibility of the tie constitutes its great strength, because it is the spirit within and not the nature of the outward shell which guides the destinies of nations, even as it does of the individual.
Something of this truth must have inspired the remarks of Carl Golden- berg in an article in the June issue of the Fortnightly, published in London, England under the caption “‘Americanization’ of Canada” in which he divests the effects of the American influence in this country of some of the terrors which it inspires in timid or reluctant breasts.
“The alleged ‘Americanization’ of Canada,” says Goldenberg in a very thoughtful and analytical article, “is usually regarded as a regrettabe .and undesirable trend. It is too often forgotten that Canada does not have to be ‘Americanized’, because Canada is a North American nation.
“The 3,000 miles of boundary that separate Canada from the U.S.A. are a purely imaginary line. The people on each side of this line, in the main, speak the same language, have the same habits and ways of thought, and dress in similar fashions. They see the same moving picture films, they listen to the same radio programmes and they read the same period- icals. Every day thousands cross the boundary line each way as though it did not exist. And proximity makes all this inevitable. Great Britain, after all, is separated from Canada by the width of the Atlantic Ocean.”
Mr. Goldenberg might have added that this very proximity, this grow- ing intercommunication which is being accelerated with improved forms of transportation and by increasing trade relations will just as inevitably re- sult in increasing the American impress on Canadian externals with greater celerity as time goes on.
Quoting statistics the writer goes on to point out that the source of Canadian capital has shifted from London to New York since the Great War, but sees nothing terrifying in that, for he adds:
“In answer to the bogey of ‘American economic penetration’ it may be pointed out that, although U.S. investments are very extensive in so far as the ‘key’ industries of Canada are concerned, they are not subject to American economic control, nor do they seek to promote American political influence. In any event, Canada is rapidly ceasing to be dependent on foreign capital and is actually becoming an exporter of capital. Canadian investments abroad now amount to almost $2,000,000,000.”
Despite these geographic and economic American influences on Cana- dian life, “it is important to remember,” says Mr. Goldenberg, “that Can- ada’s political system is British and the majority of her population is of British origin. There exists a strong sentimental attachment to the mother country and the Crown.”
And if that were not sufficient to ensure the preservation of the British influence in the hearts of the people of this country there is the loyalty of the French-Canadian population to be reckoned with as a factor. That is Mr. Goldenberg’s opinion as expressed in the following words:
“They (the French-Canadians) are devoted to the country and particu- larly Quebec and jealously guard their constitutional rights. They are wary:of any change which might affect the relative importance of their status in Canada. Hence they oppose immigration. They also fear the in- fluence of the U8. and oppose ‘American penetration’ . They value the British connection very highly and oppose attempts to transfer the power to amend the British North America Act, which embodies their rights, from the British Parliament to the Canadian Parliament.”
‘More arguments might be advanced in support of the general conten- tion that there.is little need to fear the so-called American penetration but enough has been said ‘to allay serious alarm on that score and especially when it is remembered that destiny is dominated by the spirit rather than the material. EES ____—ts Was Too Efficient A Fine Record A mechanical man, made of iron,| During the last ten years 1,450,- which has been “performing” with a/| 000,000 railway passengers have been revolver at the exhibition at San) carried in New South Wales without Diego, California, was firing at a/| one fatality caused by railway oper- target when it turned round and, ations. This statement is made in shot its creator, Mr. Henry May, in| official statistics just issued, which the head. ‘Mr. May is recovering. state that 145,000,000 passengers are Sibaieicsilidagaliaiimsinenimiinitinaione carried every year on the State rail- Francois Boissier, French inventor,| W@YS. perfected a storage battery in which) fodine is the active material,
SPRAINS
Rub Minard’s in
y- Ie sila in sore, Tlasmone Puts you on your feet!
(MINARD'S <I>
Force Of Wind The force of wind increases with the square of the velocity. A 80- mile wind conipares with a 10-mile wind as 900 compares with 100. For this reason, a small increase in vel- ocity accounts for a great increase
in wind damage.
Manufacture of confections is worth $225,000,000 a year in Eng- land. The trade supplies work for 49,350 women and 24,650 men.
Farmers of England are drying grass artificially to get five crops of hay a year. 2164
_INIMEN
Lives On Vegetables os
Shaw At Eighty Is Physical And Mental Marvel
George Bernard Shaw has reached his 80th year. G. B. S. is a vege- tarian. So whatever Shaw is today, the credit, or the blame, can be given to vegetables and fruit. He is not, as he says of his meat-eating friends, one of the carnivorae. Com- pote of carrots appeals to him more than a burly beefsteak; a baked apple more than a black bass. At 80, Shaw has one of the most active and alert minds in the world; physic- ally, he will walk or swim most men half his age into exhaustion. A great many men believe they would tire easily or be unable for hard physical labors if they did not eat plenty of meat. The meat eater will also probably agree that he should take plenty vegetables, preferably un- cooked, but he would laugh at the idea of doing a day’s work every day on an exclusively vegetarian diet all the year around. Still, the fact remains that George Bernard Shaw
80, and he is never ill.
WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE—
And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go
The liver should ir out two en of fiquid bile into your bowels daily. If this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn’t digest,
It just in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach, Youget constipated. Harmful poisons go into the body, and you feel sour,
sunk and the world looks punk. A mere bowel movement doesn’talways get at the cause. You need something that works on the liver as well, It takes those old
Carter's Little Liver Pills to get these two
nds of bile flowing freely and make you eel “up and up”. Harmless and gentle, they make the bile freely. They do the wo:
of calome}. but have no calomel! or mercury in
them. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills by
mame! 8) refuse anything else. 25c. An Unusual Operation Transfusion Of His Own Blood Saved ; Boy's Life
A transfusion of his own blood re- ceived credit for saving the life of Sam Owen, Jr., 11, of Bassett, Arkansas.
Accidentally shot recently while at play Sam was brought to a hospital in Memphis, Tenn. The bullet fol- lowed a diagonal course through his body, stopping in his right arm,
The wound above the heart bled
little on the outside, but internal! Sether three times.
Plans Have Been Approved Simplicity Is Keynote Of King George Memorial At Windsor Plans for the monument to King | George at Windsor—the town from which he selected the royal family's present surname—have received ap- proval from King Edward and Queen
Mary.
A tender for execution of the work has been accepted, and the memorial should be ready for unveiling next
is a physical and mental marvel at} %Pring, when King Edward is ex-
pected to preside at the ceremony.
Sir Edward Lutyens has designed the memorial so that the central feature is a stone cenotaph of mas- sive dignity, yet simple in orna- ment. On the top is a carved repre- sentation of the royal emblems rest- ing on a cushion.
¢ 4 .
7
“KEEPS TEETH SPARKLING
Search May Be Ended
Tibetans Believe New Dalai Lama Has Been Found
“Ah Ka Ma’’—the mystic three- word clue said to have been revealed to the regent of Tibet while he sat by the Holy Lake of Kali—may quickly end the nation-wide search for the reincarnation of the Dalat Lama,
Tibetans believe that the spirit of the Dalai Lama, supreme ruler of the country and head of the all- powerful priesthood, enters, at the moment of death, the body of a:baby born at precisely the same time.
The Tashi Lama, the second spirit- ual leader of Tibet, who is living in exile in China, has sent a remark- able letter to Lhassa, stating that he | held a ceremony at “the Carnival of
Upon the steps leading up to the purification,” attended by thousands cenotaph will be carved the inscrip-| of Buddhists from China and Tibet.
tion: George V. First Sovereign of the House of Windsor
During the ceremony, he says, & woman, holding in her arms a two- year-old child, approached the Tashi Lama and caught hold of his body.
Below and in front of the monu-| After the ceremony the Tashi Lama
ment will be a rectangular basin of ascertained that water, with two raised fountains, one!
on each side. The site of the mem- orial is directly below the walls of
Windsor Castle and in the centre of; reincarnation of the
.
the town.
SELECTED RECIPES
LADY BALTIMORE CAKE % cup. butter 1 cup fruit sugar
Whites of 4 eggs
the woman is “Kamatso,” wife of a man in the re- gion of Amdo. It is believed in | Lhassa that this child may be the Dalai Lama, who died two years ago.
The regent’s vision revealed the words “Ah Ka Ma.” It is supposed that “Ah” indicates the Amdo re- gion and the “Ka” and the “Ma” in- dicate “Kama”, the name of the child’s mother. This new “revela- tion” is now being considered by the
2 teaspoons Magic Baking Pow-!| Great Lama’s government in Tibet.
der % cup milk Y% teaspoon almond or rose extract 2 cups flour ° Sift flour and baking powder to- Cream butter,
Took Part In Ceremony
Maid Helped Inaugurate Automatic ’Phone. System In Portugal
How she helped inaugurate the
tears caused blood to accumulate on gradually adding sugar. When very automatic telephone system in Lis- the right side. Hospital surgeons,| ight and smooth work in the milk,’ 10, portugal, has just been learned making three incisions there, found| then gradually whip the stiffly beaten 1. the housemaid in the home of the the blood clean and pure, egg whites into the mixture. bikes Prime Minister. A demonstration
They removed the blood from the all these ingredients are well blend- had been arranged at which the side and injected it back into the| 4, add sifted flour and baking pow-
veins by a transfusion in his leg. der; stir just enough to mix well;
Attendants said this saved the lad’s life. :
Would Find Many Changes
Mother Superior Sees Outside World After 47 Years
When Sister Mary Pius, mother superior of a Dominican convent at New Orleans, Louisiana, went to Toronto to see her sick brother, it was the first time in 47 years she had been in the outside world. She
add flavoring. Pour into greased
‘layer tins. Bake in moderate oven. When cool put together and cover top and sides with the following mix- ture: 1% cups sugar
cup water
cup walnuts or pecan nuts
figs
cup stoned raisins
Whites of 2 eggs
% teaspoon vanilla
¥% teaspoon Magic Baking Powder
Cook sugar and water to 242 de-
Ye 1 6 1
had not set foot outside the walls of} grees F. or until syrup threads, re-
the convent in that time. The brother,*John McMullen, and the nun, now 70, had not seen each other since they said goodbye in Ireland when she left to enter the convent.
The careful driver came to the railroad crossing. He stopped, look- ed, and listened. The only sound he heard was the car behind crashing into his gas-tank,,
, move from fire immediately. Pour in narrow stream on stiffly beaten egg whites, beating continually until thick. Add vanilla, baking powder and finely chopped fruits and nuts.
Hubby: “What possessed you to choose lemon color for your new | dress?”
Wife: “Because I had such a job squeezing it out of you.”
President of the Portuguese Republic was to speak to the Prime Minister, ° and the conversation broadcast. The call was put through. Due to a mis- understanding the Prime Minister was out, and the maid answered. “Well, how’s the ceremony getting on?” she asked, “I’m sure I shall never learn to use this new-fangled clocklike thing.” To this the Presi- dent replied: “Oh, the ceremony is going off extremely well. Do not be afraid to use the clocklike thing. I have found it extremely simple to ring up.” And the ceremony was over.
“Why don’t you read this book of world history from 5000 B.C. to 1935 A.D.?”
“Aw, I looked at it, and don’t like the way it ends.”
Two hundred and twenty-seven automobiles ran into the sides of trains in Pennsylvania in 1935. None of the trains was badly injured.
Pane
and flavorful. cutter on the box.
HEAVY WAX
You'll save its modest cost before half the roll is used. That's because this heavy waxed paper keeps left-overs fresh, moist Ask for Appleford’s Para- Sani because of the exclusive knife edge
‘D
SHOPPING
LIST gw PAPER
Warehouses at Calgary, Edmonton, Regina and Winnipeg
«5
Big Annual Savings To Poultrymen As Result Of U. S.1 Experimental Work
Savings of millions of dollars an- nually will acerve te poulfrymen if
Analysis Basis Of Fertilizer Value
experimental work by United States| pammers Should Be On Guard
govermment scientists develops as expected.
The experiments have been con- ducted by H. C. Barott, agriculture department poultry technologist, over a period of 15 years and are said to have resulted in finding the optimum of favorable condition un- der which egga should be hatched.
For years, Barott has worked in his extensive laboratory at the Belts- ville, Md., experimental farm with “ealorimeters’ in which he could measure exact air conditions—the amount of humidity, gaseous air con- tenta and temperatures—so that over a long period he could determine what air conditions were best suited to hatching.
The resulte of hia experiments are to be publiahed in a detailed tech- nical report, acheduled to be off the presses in about two_months.
Roughly, however, his experiments have shown that the ideal hatching conditions are: Temperature, 100 de- grees; humidity, 60 per cent.; and gaseous makeup of the surrounding air, one-half of one per cent. carbon dioxide and 21 per cent. oxygen.
Barott experimented wtih temper- atures ranging all the way from 90 degrees to well above 100 degrees; with humidity ranging from 8 to 87 per cent.; and with gaseous makeups ranging from leas than one-half of ome per cent. carbon dioxide and 15 per cent. oxygen to 10 per cent. earbon dioxide and 50 per cent oxy- gen.
He worked with 100 eggs for each of his experiments. Highest per- eentage of chicks he obtained from a single group was 95, but this was exceptional. He considered 80 chicks éut of 100 eggs good, and thought such a percentage would justify his long years of work.
Normal lengths of time to hatch chicks is 21 days. Barott found
that raising the temperature slightly |
would increase this incubating period by 24 to 36 hours, but that raising the temperature just 1 per cent. ‘would result in reducing the quality
| available
Against Inferior Products
Despite any selling talk to the contrary, the main basia of value of a commercial fertilizer ts its analysis in plant food, that is ita nitrogen, phosphoric acid or potash content. It frequently comes to the notice of the Fertilizere Division, Seed Branch, Deminion Department of Agriculture that salesmen, in those parta of Can- ada where fertilizers are not well un- derstood, try to sel fertilizers that are not eligible for sale under the Fertilizera Act, or offer a low grade at about the same price as a higher grade fertilizer. Farmers and other buyers should be on guard against this. For example, a superphosphate containing 16 per cent. aveilable phosphoric acid is worth proportion- ately less than one containing 20 per cent., and the triple superphosphate containing 43 per cent. available phosphoric acid has more than twice the content of plant food, and, there- fore, in dollara and cents is worth more than twice as much as the 20 per cent. superphosphate per ton. Each of these grades of superphos- phate is being offered for sale in Canada at the present time, and should be bought on the basis of ita phosphoric acid content, and not just as fertilizer.
The same besis of valuation should be employed for all other fertilizers whether they be mixture, or single materials containing one of the three main plant foods, nitrogen, phos- Phoric acid and potash. Whenever doubtful as to the value of a fer- tilizer, buyera should communicate with officers of the Dominion Seed Branch, which enforces the Fer- tilizers Act.
No Set Study Teachers Oppose Dominion-Wide Curriculum For Canadian Schools
Teachers will not endorse the study of a Dominion-wide curriculum
for Canadian schools at the’ present
of the chicks by 20 per cent. There-| time. This decision was reached at
fore, he concluded; it would be far wiser not to attempt to speed up incubation.
The “respiration calorimeters” with which Barott worked are apecially-designed’ incubators
Hons 15th annual
conference of the Canadian Teachers’ Federation held at Saskatoon. There was little dis- cussion of the question.
Another resolution called upon
in| the executive of the federation to
which all conditions can be regulated! seek teacher exchange arrangements
to the nth degree.
Special electric; with school boards in the United
grids allowed him to keep the tem-| States. The suggestion was that perature at exacty the point he wish-| plans similar to present empire ex- ed it, an unusual air intakes permit-| change agreements be worked out.
ted him to make exact measurements; A_ resolution arising out of a
of air conditions and keep them at! recommendation
whatever point he wished.
of the president that an honor roll for teachers who
finemetal director meant giving up
He i iq i
hagen. A provost its stationed at) gangeter tree comes when, of his home, he asid. However, after Godthaab and & vice-provost farther) strangling another tree upon which it reading the covenant of the league north. Seven Danish and @fteen Es-| was a parasite, it then strangies it-| and realizing what such = league kimo pastors are in charge of ten, self would mean to the world, Sir Herbert parishes in the west, two in the east,! Not the least peculiag fact as to, said no other desire was uppermost and one at Cape York. The country the strangling fig tree, states Dr.| in his mind, fe so large that the parishes are Small, is that it can Mve a simple Sir Herbert was given the task from 150 to 200 miles each way.) life anchored im the ground, entirely! of raising money for the league. He determined. to follow the universal ple are thrifty and happy, they are however, change over and become
g
§
i
4
Us
PREF!
i
5
etelhNibec
iterate, and have schools, including; parasite and take ite nourishment The. British government had
normal school and seminary, Sunday from other trees. Its seed can sprout | promised 10,000 pounds sterling, and schools and young people's societies | in the ground or at any point on the | the French government $80,000,
Religion is taught tn the public) trumk of another tree. In the latter “We got the heads of departments
schools besides case. it may send out roots to the! together and made up a budget for
ground or other points on the host} the first. period. It came to about
Means A Whole Lot tree. In some cases these roots reach/ $1,000,000," he said. Dificulties in
(ile out to neighboring trees, and it may/ drafting 9 diplomatic letter and of
Personal Appearance Has Much To} transfer itself from the first host to obtaining money were outlined. Let-
Do With Succesa the second ome. Any tree upon which | ters were sent to 32 states.
women were paid to be beautiful. A} @Ve" & giant live beauty specialist desired to try out| P**Y. When it starte
going from 16 to 24 treatmenta—an| V°OP—New York Herald Tribune. | tm Paris the only thing done was to eany way of making a living. appoint the Saar eommis- But the best part of the story bas Honest Labor Pays ston. In July, & meeting was yet to come. When the girls start- held in San Salvador, Spain.
ed on their bunt again for jobs they/ Search For Easy Way Of Living| Sent to Geneva to find league found their improved looks a big Ends In Failure quarters, Sir Herbert and two others
, obtained @ new job quick-! teas poverty, both mental and ma- Many others had success in get-| terial, are commenly to be. found,| *#4. were the mistrust of league
among those who spend their time Nicely Pus fim moving aimlessly about all sorts of out-of-the-way places, in the hope,
A man and his wife had enjoyed|of some day lighting upon an un-| ¥2e2 &n investigating committee re- their previous holiday on @ farm so! earned fortune. That kind of fortune! ‘ed & commendatory report, The well that they wished to repeat it. does not often turn up; and when it | 008d was mastered when a system
The only thing that made them | does turn up, it is not usually to the; Was instituted whereby nations were doubtful was that they had been best good-of the finder. Half the S™#sed and thelr ability to pay somewhat annoyed by the close | time and care which some people ex- | deed. Financial affairs were based proximity of the pigsty to the house.’ pend in looking out for great good on the pre-war gold franc.
Finally the man wrote to the| fortune which never comes, would be! “72@ problem of the league now farmer and explained the objection-| enough, if directed into a proper! # ‘© work out ® system whereby able feature. channel, to give them a chief share: nationg which, in
He received the following reply: | of the good which now they seek in! ‘Teaties and promises, set a
“We haven't -had any pigs on the| vain. Honest work never fails fo] coment others, might ,be dealt with, place since you were here last sum-/ pay, and is the only kind of work/*~, an mer. Be sure to come.” that does pay. I don’t Sates ia going London claims to have the world's| Uspended animation until the fever
The first difficulty was overcome
Australian aborigines constantly
They explained that few persons/had performed meritorious public| carry the skull of their nearest and} best cinema organ in that installed °f Priceunt nA pepsin erry but had gone into the question seriously| service be instituted, was looked| dearest dead relative, for use as a) in the new television broadcasting |*> *™ Coniden league come
enough to devote years to the prob-| upon with disfavor by most. of the| drinking cup.
lem, and that if Barott’s findings) delegates and was voted down. The
station at a cost of $50,000.
.. ducing a better quality chick as well|
were put to actual use poultrymen un-| question was then ordered struck doubtedly would find they were pro-; from the minutes of the conference. The question of national scholar- as getting a larger percentage of| ships was re-introduced and two
Smart Pull-ons Crocheted Lengthwise: Regent’s Park In London
chicks.
Some new type incubators, they said, in which the eggs are kept in tiers of shelves, probably can be adapted to making use of Barott's findings without much difficulty be- cause air conditions can be controlled within the tiers. But small dealers, who have old-type equipment and) do not operate on an extensive scale, probably will not be able to put the) findings into practice, they pointed out.
Settled For Him
‘A group of men were discussing. evolution and the. origin of man. One| of the party remained silent, when @ companion turned to him and de- manded his opinion.
“I ain't goin’ to say,” he replied, | “I remember as ‘ow Henry Green| and me thrashed that out once be- fore, and it’s settled as far as I'm concerned.”
“But what conclusion did you come to!” ‘
“Well,” he said slowly, “we didn't errive at the same conclusion—no, we didn’t. Henry arrived at the ‘os- pital an’ me at the police station.”
Britain expects to import 25,000,- 000 cigams from Havana this year.
resolutions, one directed to the fed- eral government and one directed to the provincial governments were in- troduced and unanimously approved.
Could Be Used Today
Marble Cocktail Bar Has Been Found In Roman Ruins
Archaeologists have given the tourist agences a real “talking point” in the effort to attract visitors to Ostica Antica, the ancient imperial seaport of Rome.
Years of propaganda had failed to bring’ visitors to see Ostia's inter-
| esting ruins and art treasures, but
now—a bar hag been unearthed! It is of marble, the same height as the usual soda fountain or cocktail bar, and with a little plumbing could be used today.
Besides numerous ghelves and boxes for the amphoras of liquor, the bar has two spacious cavities—one of which is presumed to have been for ice and the other for a boiler.
Near the bar was found a statue of Hygeia, goddess of health — to whom, no doubt, patrons of 2,000 years ago raised many a beaker.
One of the things you can’t buy on credit is experienca, 2164
you—ease gloves are crocheted-—not ‘round and ‘round-—but 1 whipped
3] i E
Ps
and 150 varieties.
The roses are all of British pro-
logue has been prepared listing the
apply for it.
PATTERN 5676 -
im the niaking—pleasure in the w A wise. Two
Here's joy for
4
a
SRT Pega #6
Fe SEA
a ae
_ actresses declared that when they
THE SUN,
STONY PLAIN,
ALBERTA
WORLD HAPPENINGS
BRIEFLY TOLD
Five buffalo for Prince Albert National park arrived by train from Elk Island park, in Alberta. A pad- dock has been prepared for the ani- mals.
Institutions for the mentally de- fective controlled by the London county council will no longer be called “mental hospitals”, but simply “hospitals”’. .
Half the labor of cutting a field of grain will be done away with if the automatic ‘“stooker,” manufactured by Henry Smith, 82-year-old Toronto inventor, comes up to expectations.
Canadian exhibitors at the Poul- try Congress at Leipzig, Germany, have donated to the Leipzig Zoo- logical Gardens a number of excel- lent specimens of Canadian fowl, it was announced.
Fathers spend too much time in bunkers hitting at little white pills | with niblicks and not enough time with their children, says Judge John! F. McKinley, of Ottawa, chairman of the Ontario parole board and author- ity on domestic relations.
Canada may look forward to new trade agreements with New Zealand, W. J. Jordan, high commissioner for New Zealand, said. He was in Tor- onto on his way to London to as- sume his duties. as successor to Sir James Parr, whose term of office ex- pires shortly.
A live anti-aircraft shell about 10 inches long was unearthed in a garden at Norbury, England. It is believed to have been fired when a Zeppelin bombed the district in 1915.
After 35 years in the royal house- hold, H. Barratt, who weighs 240 pounds and is six feet, three inches in height, has retired on pension. He was known as “Jumbo.”
A primitive Indian grave over 100 years old was uncovered -on the east, bank of the Red River by workmen digging an excavation for a house. The skeleton is of a young boy, buried in the conventional position, | on his side with head and knees touching. His knife and an iron for striking flint were beside him.
Were Seeing Things
Actresses Report Strange Happen- ings At Village In India Charges made by two actresses have sent the police of Nowabshah, India, on a “ghost” hunt. The’
returned home after the evening per- formance an old fakir standing at the foot of the stairs beckoned them to follow him upstairs. ‘When they| reached the top he was gone, and in his place were two cats “with sparks shooting out of their eyes.’ The women looked out of the window, and were horrtified to see a young man hanging from a roof and shout- ing that he was being murdered. They dashed down to help him—only to see him jump down, “and disap- pear into thin air.”” This was enough for the two actresses. They called in neighbors as protection, packed their things and left for quieter lodgings.
Recovered Lost Purse
B.C. Woman Was Happy To Find Contents Intact
E. A. Cook, a janitor at the Bri-| tish Columbia museum, picked up a purse and, without opening it, put it to one side until someone claimed it.
An hour later a woman appeared, rushed about frantically, looked be- hind museum cases and eventually approached Cook. _
“Is that what you are looking for,” he asked, producing the purse.
“Yes,” she said, and opening the’ purse, pulled out a roll of money and counted it.
‘That's right, $915," she said, “thank you,” and walked out.
; Empire Skipping Lines
Sir Edward Beatty Is Organizing To Meet Competition In The Pacific Reports that empire shipping lines
in the Pacific are getting together
under the leadership of Sir Edward
Beatty, president of the Canadian
Pacific Railway, and are organizing
to meet foreign competition are dis-
cussed in an editorial in the London
Daily Mail.
“This would indeed be a welcome step,” says the newspaper. “Sir Ed- ward Beatty is known the world over as president of the famous Canadian Pacific Railway and is probably the foremost business chief in the British empire. When he takes an affair in hand he never fails to carry it through. In this case there is a special need of initiative and energy such as he possesses in s0 high a degree.
“Four years have elapsed since the British government promised the British lines support in the face of the competition of American ves- sels,” it continues. “These latter have received large subsidies and also have as an aid the coastal reservation which closes to British liners the trade between such points as the United States and Honolulu.
“The British government ought therefore to grant a very handsome subsidy to the British lines to equal- ize the position. It is now or never if the British lines are to be saved as their reserve funds are exhausted.
“If Beatty can infuse ‘pep’ into the governments concerned: and se- cure an adequate British service in the Pacific he will have made yet another immense contribution to the welfare of the British empire.”
Seaside Resort For Workers
Nazis Planning Colossal Playground
Exclusively For Working Class
A “colossal’ seaside resort ex- clusjvely for the working class is being conjured up by the Nazis from a lonely strip of beach between Binz and Sassnitz, on the island of Rue- gen, in the Baltic Sea. Twenty thousand factory girls, miners, work- men, kitchen maids, farm-hands, painters, cobblers, plumbers, engine drivers, train conductors and post-
| men, with their wives and children,
will live in 3,350 rooms all facing the sea. Each day about 3,000 wofk- ers will arrive and 3,000 depart, each group staying 10 days. Thus in five months 300,000 are to be accommo- dated.
They will eat 80,000 rolls and 25,- 000 pounds of bread a day which will be baked in their own bakery. A private laundry will wash 16,000 pounds of laundry daily. Meals will be served in 10 gigantic “food houses.”
The beach has a length of five miles of which more than three miles will be equipped with promenades, cafes, resting places, etc. A pler 2,250 feet long will be built,
Cosmic Rays
Huge Electrical Machine For Con- trolling Speeders Of The Sky
A huge electric “traffic cop” for those mystery speeders of the uni- verse—cosmic rays—neared comple- tion in the University of Chicago laboratory of Dr. Arthur Holly Compton, noted physicist.
It was designed on the same gen- eral principle as “speed traps’’ for human motorists. The idea was to pull them out of line as raced along, slow them down, and take their finger-prints,”’
Because the rays are believed to travel almost as fast as light— which beats everything else by whizzing along at 186,300 miles a second—powerful electric currents are required to brake them even slightly.
Thus the “traffic cop” is a 12-ton magnet capable of producing an at-
traction in a cubic foot of air 40,000):
times as great as the earth's mag- netic pull. 2164
Has Useful Gift
King Edward Always Able To Make Appropriate Speech
When King Edward (as Prince of Wales) was in Canada and had to make a speech at almost every rail- way division point, people said his speeches were written by a secretary. When, years later, he began appear- ing at important public functions, at home and abroad, with his speeches growing in maturity, it was con- descendingly admitted that perhaps he improved on the manuscript of a “ghost.” To certain people, always wise about what goes on in high places, no statesman or ruler ever has a mind of his own.
No “ghost” could have written the little speech which King Edward made to 8,000 Canadian Vimy pil- grims at Buckingham Palace, Yet, impromptu as it was, made upon im- pulse, it was a model of its kind.
John Morley once said that a good |
speech depended upon where it was
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
AUGUST 23
THE GOSPEL FOR ALL MEN
Golden text: For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begot- ten Son, that whosoever believeth on him should not perish, but have eternal life. John 3:16.
Lesson; Acts 10:1, 11:18; Romans 1:15-17.
Devotional Reading: Isaiah 11:1-5.
Explanations And Comments
Peter Justifies his Action to the Church at Jerusalem, Acts 11:1-18. In chapters 10 and 11 of The Acts we have two accounts of the way in which Cornelius, the Gentile, and his household had the Gospel preached to them and were baptized. In chap- ter ten Luke records the events as they happened, and then in chapter eleven gives Peter’s report of the events to the Church at Jerusalem. The double account shows how sig- nificant Luke regarded this first ad- dition of Gentiles to the ranks.
The apostles and brethren at Jeru- salem were startled at the opening of the door to the Gentiles. On
made, how it was made, and what! peter’s return to Jerusalem they re-
was said, adding the gay cynicism that the least important was the last. It was a poor thing for Morley to have said. A good speech de- pends almost mainly upon one thing: whether it is appropriate. If a speaker can feel and touch the mood of an occasion, if, in other words, he can have @ sense of proportion, then he is speaking well.
What made King Edward’s speech to Vimy pilgrims a ‘model was his ability to be appropriate. He was not speaking as @ Monarch on a great State occasion. He was speaking as @ war comrade to old comrades on a festival occasion. Hence the open- ing touch of reverence regarding Vimy Ridge, the quick passage to the happier circumstances of this day, the touch of humor, followed by a simple welcome to Buckingham Palace, the sincere wish for a happy journey home. In thought and sim- ple diction, in freedom and pom- posity and artificiality, no speech could be happier.
Monarchs are not wont to speak like this. Nor great rulers. Stalin speaks like a page from Marx. Hit- ler is reminiscent. of an illiterate Nietzsche. Mussolini recalls Napol- eon. Yet, worse than these are the ordinary run of speakers who, every
God taught him a great truth. In
buked him. Up to this time Peter's authority had been unquestioned and it must have cut him to the quick to have his actions challenged. He was rebuked, not for preaching to Gen- tiles, but for having gone into the house of Gentiles and actually eaten with then! Peter did not quail, but justified his conduct by explaining to them the occurrences just as they had happened.
It’ was while he was praying in the city of Joppa that he fell into a trance and had a vision by which
his vision he saw a receptacle re- sembling a great sheet held up by the four corners, which was let down from heaven toward him. In it Peter saw all manner of beasts and creep- ing things and birds. Peter was hungry, and it was natural that things suitable for food should pre- sent themselves to his mental eye.
Peter heard a voice bidding him rise, kill and eat. He was still the self-willed, impulsive and vehement Peter, and he cried out, “Not so, Lord: for nothing common or un- clean hath ever entered mouth.” Recall Mt. 16:22 and John 13:8. Levitical law prescribed what animals could be slaughtered for food and also the method of slaugh- ter. While some of the animals mentioned in Peter’s vision were re- garded by the Jews as clean, that is, fit for eating, they had become unclean according to the Jewish be- | lief by contact with other animals held to be unclean.
Then Peter heard a voice speaking
into my
time they get upon their feet, think;a second time and saying, “What
they must imitate Burke.. It is the sort of thing that makes public speaking a plague.—Otawa Journal.
A little girl sitting in church, watching a wedding, suddenly ex- claimed:
“Mummy, has the lady changed her mind?”
“What do you mean?” the mother asked.
“Why,” replied the child, “she went up the aisle with one man and came back with another.”
In Japanese feudal days, the Sa- murai, or. soldiers constituting the lesser nobility, received their yearly salary in rice. A samurai of high rank earned as much as 250 tons of rice annually.
God hath cleansed, make not thou common.” This was done thrice, and all was drawn up again into heaven.
Peter might have taken the vision to mean simply that the Mosaic regulations as to meats were to be abolished in order that Jews and Gentiles might associate and eat to- gether; but he knew that it had a deeper and wider significance—that no human creature was to be regard- ed as common or unclean, for God is no respecter of persons, Acts 10:34.
Peter next told his accusers how just at that juncture three men stood before the house, who had been sent to him from Cesarea, and the Spirit bade him go with them, making no distinction, paying no heed to the fact that they were Gentiles. He | fully grasped all the implications of the vision ,and realized the occa- sion for his summons.
Tractor trains, 75 feet long, are
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To obtain this to Household Arts B., Wunipeg.
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Famous People Superstitions
Even Queen Victoria Had Ideas About Friday And Thirteen
Queen Victoria possibly picked up some of her strong superstitions during her many visits to Scotland, This queen could not be persuaded to begin any journey on Friday, and sit- ting thirteen at a table was some- thing she would not contemplate for an instant.
Nearly all airmen are superstitious and invariably carry a lucky mascot when starting on a dangerous flight. Colonel Lindbergh pinned his faith on an elk’s tooth, and the Mollisons take a rusty and well-worn horseshoe wherever they go.
The French, although possessing many hard-headed traits, are in- tensely superstitious and Napoleon himself was no exception to the rule. It is considered very unlucky in France to whistle indoors, and the great French conqueror once re- duced an aide-de-camp for daring to pipe a melody within the precincts of the Palace of Fontainebleau.
Boxers are superstitious people, Max Baer will not go anywhere with- out a small golliwog which he looks upon as having contributed to all his good luck in the past. Carpentier’s mascot was a small golden wishbone which he carried on his watchchain.
Actors have their own supersti- tions which exist nowhere else but on the stage. One is that no one must mention the title of a play on its first night until the curtain has risen. Martin Harvey became s0. nervous at an infringement of this custom on one occasion that he com- pletely forgot his opening lines, and had to improvise hastily.
Eleanora Duse made a mascot of a mongoose given to her in India, and would not be consoled when it died. She firmly believed that her acting days were over! And it is well known that her great con- temporary, Sarah Bernhardt, slept in her coffin every night for years in the belief that it would postpone her death. Willie Clarkson, perhaps the greatest wig-maker in the world, left a dinner party attended by distin- guished guests because he had spilled the salt. ;
Kemal Pasha, who has done so much to modernize Turkey, is him- self a believer in superstitions. One of these is that it is unlucky to bring flowers into the house, and their absence is one of the first things noticed by his visitors.
P Attracts Few Visitors
Not Many Tourists Make Through Sewers Of Paris
The famous sewers of Paris, which are open to the public—but seldom prove a drawing card — attracted 1,107 visitors in 1935. The under- ground tour from the Place de la Concorde to the Madeleine church is taken in small boats in the under- ground passages, Made famous by Victor Hugo's “Les Miserables”.
The sewers are open to the public only in summer months, one day a week, and the eerie boat trip can be made for 3 francs per person. Last year’s traffic brought about $285 in- to the coffers of the French govern- ment,
Today Parisian sewers extend from 600 to 700 miles in length, but only a quarter of a mile is available to curious tourists.
Trip
At one,of a series of lectures a woman wanted a seat and General Garfield brought one and seated her.
“Oh, you're a jewel!” she said in appreciation.
“Oh, no,” replied Garfield, “I'm a jeweler; I've just set the jewel.”
via
THE SUN, SIONY PLAIN, ALBERTA
STEPS ARE TAKEN TO DEAL WITH UNEMPLOYMENT
Ottawa.—The national employment commission issued a statement say-!| ing its studies of the housing prob- lems in Canada “have shown that re- habilitation and remodelling of exist- ing structures present particularly favorable promise for early action’’| in its drive against unemployment.
At the same time, the statement said, the commission has found it advantageous to divide its work into two main. classifications: ‘“Formula- tion of such emergency meacures as may be helpful in mitigating the severity of the seasonal employment problem which necessarily and norm- ally results from the approach of winter conditions” and “the longer- range plans for stimulating employ- ment in many different fields.”
The statement emphasized such plans “require considerable study and analysis as a preliminary to the adoption.”
It said:
‘Individual commissioners have spent some time in visiting areas, which involve special problems, as, for instance, Windsor, where special| circumstances exist which have led to unusual restrictions on employ- ment opportunities.
“The stage is now being reached where the situation can more speci-; fically be explored with provincial! government administrators. The commission has already been given a great deal of co-operation by the Dominion government departments in Ottawa and the provinces who, on request, have promptly sent their specialists to help in working out specific plans. Steps are now on the way to develop a form of organiza- tion which will assist in enlisting an ever-enlarging co-operative effort on the part of the community as a
whole towards solving many of the existing complex employment prob- lems,”
First Boat At Churchill Wentworth Arrives With Heavy
Cargo For Prairie Centres Churchill, Man.—Activities at this;
far northern port on Hudson Bay got’! into full swing with the arrival of the steamer Wentworth. The Went- worth docked August 10.
The steamer had 3,000 tons of gen- eral cargo to discharge here, includ- ing coal for Churchill and other northern points, large castings and| steél grinding balls for mines in northern Manitoba, glass and other| merchandise for prairie centres.
Captain L. Graves, a veteran of the Churchill route, reported a quiet voyage from England with a delay of one day owing to fog. The Went-| worth began loading about 310,000 bushels of wheat for Europe.
Would Not Return Land
South Africa Cannot Seé_ Britain)
Giving Colonies Back To Germany
Johannesburg, South Africa.—‘In} no circumstances can South Africa or British envisage the return of either Tanganyika or Southwest Africa to Germany,” declared Oswald Pirow, South Africa defence mini- ater, in a speech before the United Party executive here.
“Some diplomacy other than giv- ing back Tanganyika and Southwest Africa must be found to satisfy Ger- manys colonial aspirations,’’ the minister added. “We are working hand-in-hand with the rest of the | empire in a common defence policy, and South Africa will be an older) brother to the rest of British Africa.”
Find Sunken Steamer Moscow.—-A reminder of the Allied | army intervention in Russian affairs in 1918 has been discovered near Archangel. A diver working the
Dvina river found a large English|Hendaye on the
| Spanish situation.
Made Indian Chief |
Lord Tweedsmuir Is Accepted Into Cree Brotherhood
Cariton, Sask.—Accepted into the Cree brotherhood, Lord Tweedsmuir, governor-general of Canada, became Chief Okemow Otataowkew—‘Teller of Tales’—at a brilliant Indian cere- mony here. There were 5,000 spec- tators as Chief Sam Swimmer of the Sweet Grass band, nephew of the great Poundmaker, who led the In- dian uprising on these plains 51 years ago, placed the feather head dress on the head of the governor-general and placed about his shoulders a fine white cariboo skin.
The Indian chiefs also presented Lord Tweedsmuir with a beautifully. beaded robe as a coronation gift for His Majesty the king. In addition, they created Prime Minister W. L. Mackenzie King an honorary chief, naming him Oteenesew Weeusowew —Wise Counsellor.”
The visit of the governor-general, Lady Twedsmuir and their party was a highlight of the two-day celebra- tion to mark the 60th anniversary of Treaty No. 6, signed at Carlton, by which the Indians ceded rights in their lands to Queen Victoria.
Carlton, a fur trading centre of 80
| years ago, was the mecéa of Indians
from distant parts and for several
| thousand white people who joined
with them in marking the annivers- ary of the historic event.
The solemn, dignified ceremonial, by which Lord Tweedsmuir became a Cree chieftain, took place on a pavilion erected with a poplar grove for a background. Following the actual conferring of chieftainship and acceptance into the Cree nation, 50 braves staged a pow-wow dance before the platform.
His Excellency addressed a few words to the assembled chiefs in their Cree tongue, then continued in English. In Cree he said: “Brother chief, I am most happy on this occa- sion. You have done me great honor in taking me into your. brother- hood.”
To Invade China
Japanese Troops Reported To Be Ready To Advance Shanghai. — Reinforced Japanese troops, it was reported here, are poised for a fresh invasion of Suiy-
| uan province in inner Mongolia—add-
ing new tension to strained relations between Japan and China.
Although a Japanese spokesman at Tientsin denied contemplated partici- pation in events in inner Mongolia, vernacular newspapers here asserted two companies from Jehol, in Man- choukuo, had joined the Japanese forces at Dolonor.
Large numbers were concentrating at Shangtu, West Chabor in prepara- tion for a fresh invasion of the East Suiyuan province, it was asserted here.
The Tientsin spokesman for the Japanese attributed the strife in Mongolia to banditry, admitted the
situation was complicated but assert-
|ed he was unaware whether two
Japanese regiments had departed to- ward Changpei. The Japanese-Man-
| choukuo military pact, he asserted,
does not provide for military assist- ance beyond the Manchoukua border.
Foreign observers, watching the clouds of dissension gather, believed serious action might result,
Envoy To Spain
Great Britain Makes Surprise Diplo- matic Move In Spanish Situation London,—-Great Britain made a
surprise diplomatic move in -the
G. A. D, Ogilvie
Forbes, counsellor of the Madrid em-
bassy, at present in England, is leav-
ing for Madrid as the diplomatic rep- resentative of Britain. Worbes will proceed to Marseilles overland, and from there will be taken, probably by destroyer, to Valencia. Mean- while the British. ambassador to Spain, Sir Henry Chilton, remains at Franco-Spanish
steamer overturned and half covered| frontier.
with sand. The Soviets will attempt to raise it.
Date For Special Session
Edmonton,—-Premier Aberhart an- mounced a special session of the Al- berta legislature to deal with meas- ures for inaugurating Social Credit and discuss the drought situation in the southern part of the province would start August 25,
No explanation of the move was given in official circles beyond that communications between Hendaye and Madrid were difficult owing to fighting areas lying between and that it was considered desirable to have a more authoritative representa- tive on hand in Madrid, At present
the Madrid embassy is in charge of| fame was carried by the acting consul with a clerical staff opening ceremony of the
of about 25.
2164/ the games,
| GRECIAN DICTATOR |
Premier
John Metaxas, man of Greece, who became Dictator
when martial law was declared to|°#hing approximately eight pounds.
quell revolutionary disturbances de- scribed by the government: as result- ing from a Communist-promoted strike.
Canada’s New Coins
Latin Phrases May Not Be Included In Design , Ottawa. — Latin inscription may disappear from Canadian coins at the end of the year. New des‘gns, necessitated by the death of King George will be made soon after Finance Minister Dunning returns from Europe, but it will be three or four months before the issue of new coins bearing the head of King Ed- ward. No decision has been made on the dropping of Latin phrases’ which date back through the centuries to
the time it was a live language in' of men, was licking its way through|:
Europe.
Plan United Kingdom Tour
Two Canadian Motorcades May Make Trip Next Year
Ottawa. — Hector K. Carruthers,
secretary of the Ottawa Board of
Trade, disclosed that preparations
strong}
Bear Name Of King Edward § (. F, MEMBERS
Officials Have Renamed Island And Harbor In Yugoslavia
Sibenik, Yugoslavia.—An _ island and harbor in Yugoslavia bore the name of King Edward as His Majesty cruised in vagabond style along the Dalmatian coast.
The King abandoned his nautical | vacation for a time to go ashore at Rab where he purchased dolls in na- tive costume, talked economics with) the shopkeepers and refreshed his | memory of the locality’s history.
Officials renamed Kuki Otok King) Edward Island and gave to Tejar harbor the King’s name.
Early in the day the royal yacht Nahlin steamed away full speed for Starigrad, 25 miles north, where the King was declared to be planning a| deer hunt in the Velebit mountains.
Wherever he appeared—and was | recognized—he regeived cheers from | the populace. At one stop, however, fishermen were not aware of his! identity, believing him a naval officer from a passing ship.
The King fished until midnight and caught two large “dentalfisch’,
Devastated By Fire
Location For “The Great Barrier” Film Swept By Flames
Revelstoke, B.C.—-One of the most! beautiful of all the Rocky Mountain scenic spots, used a short time ago) ; as the background for the Gaumont) British motion picture, “The Great| | Barrier,” was devastated by fire.
Where movie cameras “shot” the) stirring scenes of the west’s railway construction period, fire was laying | waste the heavily timbered slopes of the Columbia canyon at Silver Tip: | Falls, eight miles from here.
The blaze was believed started by a careless cigarette smoker. <A wooden platform used to obtain a | View of the falls was destroyed. Only /a blackened mountainside remained,
; and the fire, fought by a large force
the timber toward the higher reaches of Mount Revelstoke.
Treaty With Uruguay
Agreement Trade With Canada
Ottawa.— Exchange of most favor-| ed nation treatment in tariff matters,
are under way for two Canadian! is provided in a trade agreement be-
motorcades to tour the United King- dom next year, one starting from London at the time of King Edward's coronation.
‘tween Canada and Uruguay signed
Designed To -Develop:
| |
IN B.C. DISAGREE OVER PLATFORM
Vancouver.~—The Co-operative Com- monwealth Federation opposition in the British Columbia legislature was diminished from seven to four with the expulsion from the provincial party of the house leader, Rev. Rob- ert Connell, Victoria; Jack Price, Vancouver East, whip, and R. B. Swailes, Delta.
The three have declared their in- tention of retaining their seats and their adherence to C.C.F. principles as laid down in the Regina mani-
| festo.
The expulsions by the party execu- tive followed public disagreements over the platform adopted by the July provincial convention.
In the meantime the C.C.F., with its new platform,. and a provincial by-election due in about a month, nominated Dr. Lyle Telford, presi- dent of the provincial organization, to contest Vancouver-Burrard. The seat has been vacant since Mayor McGeer, Liberal, resigned to run for the federal house.
Disagreement in the C.C.F, ranks came out in public during the last session of the legislature when Mr. Connell repudiated statements by E. E. Winch and H. E. Winch, father and son members from Burnaby and Vancouver . East respectively, that the objectives of the C.C.F. and Communism were similar.
Accepting the Vancouver-Burrard nomination, Dr. Telford said he had personally almost “gone on _ his knees” in a letter to Mr. Connell ask- ing him to discuss his differences, but Mr. Connell had refused.
Selassie Is Hopeful
Believes -He Can Re-establish His Ethiopian Kingdom
Bath, England. — Emperor Haile Selassie is resting at this seacoast resort, hoping some day to re-estab- lish his Ethiopian kingdom.
The negus apparently is more cheerful than at any time since the League of Nations gave a cold shoulder to his plea for financial assistance. He has taken heart, his spokesman said, by reports that rem- nants of his armies are operating in
in the office of Prime Minister Mac-| western Ethiopia and hope to retake
' kenzie King.
| The agreement designed to extend
Addis Ababa. “We are in a strong position with
Mr. Carruthers said it was planned| and develop trade between Canada| @0 established seat of government to limit each tour to 25 cars. Cana-| and Uruguay, was designed by .the ®t Gore,” the negus’ representative dian motorists will return visits paid, prime. minister on behalf of Canada| asserted. “The chief difficulty is that to Canada this year by three British} and by Senor Don Mateo Marques| We are unable to import munitions.”
motorcades of which one has com- pleted its itinerary.
Castro acting on behalf of the gov-
| ernment of Uruguay.
THE OLYMPIC FLAME
OA a A
picturesque costumes,
runner leaving the Acropolis at Athens, Greece, with the torch whose of runners across ee ee for
: : 2 t
The negus, who sought refuge after the diplomatic defeat at Geneva last month, planned to re- main several weeks more formulat- ing a program of action and await developments in Ethiopia. He is not going to America in search of sym- pathy, his representative said, but there was no definite assertion he had abandoned plans for the trip entirely.
Must Be Quarantined
Manitoba Adopts New Regulations To Fight Infantile Paralysis
Winnipeg.—Quarantine regulations for infantile paralysis were adopted by the Manitoba government, in cabi- net session, on advice of Hon, I. B. Griffiths, minister of health and pub- lic welfare, :
The new regulations include placarding premises when the patient remains there. Food-handlers. are forbidden to engage in their occupa- tions within 14 days of their last ex- posure to infantile paralysis infec- tion.
July Wheat Exports
Ottawa.—Canada’s export of wheat during July was almost three times greater in volume and more three times greater in value than in July, 1935, the Dominion bureau of statistics reported, At the same time a@ substantial increase was shown in volume and value of wheat flour ex-
s Bs ¥
PERE PE Ty EF OSE PEELE TE FE
ERAS
sSTONY PLAIN SUN. | Stony Plain and District.
Published Every Thursday at The Sun Office, Stony Plain, Alberta.
* Thursday, Ang. 20, 1936. bn __________
Advertising Rates, Display, Contract 35, Readers in Locals 120 a line. Legal and Municipal Notices— 120 a line first insertion; 10ca line for subsequent ingertions,
DR. R. A. WALTON, PHYSIVIAN AND 8URGKON,
lst St. W. Phone 1.
Office and Residence, Opp.Town Hall.
G. J. BRYAN, B. A., LL.B., BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC. Successor to the late F.W. Lundy.
STONY PLAIN.
DR. G. H. BROWN, DENTAL SURGEON, Cor. 95 St. & 118 Av., Edmonton. . PHONE 73174. At Stony Plain on Fridays,
LOST—Car Key 8189 G. M. Corp oration Return to Sun Office. FOUN D—Car Key No. 73. At Sun Office. nh TO LET —Lower floor of Bank
of Montreal building. Apply at Royal Cafe. x8 FOR SALE —Threshing Outfit;
10-20 Titan Tractor and J. I. Case 20” Separator; new drive belt; first-class shape ; wiil sell sep- arate Barth & Anderson. Phone 6 CLASSIFIED ADS. in The Sun
bring. results.
The McCulla travel party returned on Saturday from a round of visits to the Coast cities,
Mr. George J, Bryan left on Sunday for Vancouver.
Barber Wm, Kotscherofsky on Saturday openedj his. hair- dressing parlor in the salon on Main St. formerly occupied by Louie Altheim.
The Gannon Brothers had a very enjoyable hitch - hiking trip to Calgary last week.
Mr Chris Hein, of the New Deal Co op, has rented the Clarke house, on 3d ave,
Mr Fred Miller, the new principal at the S P, Hi., will be taking up his residence, with his familv,in Stony Plain, when a suitable place is found.
Mrs Gronbeck will shortly be vacating her house on the Meridian road and moving out to live with her dauyhter, Mrs A Willie, in Comet dis- trict. :
Mrand Mrs W Collins and family have rented the James Christie house.
The Pailer acreage, on the west side of town, is svid to have been sold to Mr Fred Smidike.
The Midland Bus lines, that operate daily thru Stony from Kdmonton to Wildwood, have applied to the Alberta Hiway Traffic Board for a permit to
They Couldn’t Stick Tozether.
Several theories have been advanced in an attempt to explain what happened to the Cliff dwellers of the American Southwest. Jas. H. Collins, editor of Southern California busi- ness, calls attention in a recent issue to the latest explanation which comes directly from the descendants who live in the 800-year-old Hopi village at Oraibi, Arizona.
Chief Tawaqwaptiwa, former tribal head, stated that the downfall of their “ civilization” was due to human quarrels how to run the community. This is thought to be as good a reason as any to explain the disappearance of
the Cliff dwellers.
They went to the happy hunting grounds because they couldn’t stick together on a uni- fied program; and besides being a good theory this is a plain lesson for these times.
THE SUN BOOK SHOP. — School Supplies Our Specialty.
_———
Regulation’ Note Book.|Scribblers (Pencil)
with Rings, Refills for same; and also Gummed Rein- forcements.
Chalk.
boxes of 1-gross, Sanigene, “xcelsio, etc., , low prices,
Reeves’s Paints 5Oc. a box.
every color, Reeves'’s Tempera Poster, Show card Colors.
Exercise Books (Ink) Prices range from 16c. for the best, to 8c,
Prices from 24c up. Waterman’s Ink,
2-0z., pints & quarts.
India Ink
Reeves’s 4-0z, 19c.
Pencils,
@ large variety on hand.
Refills for same. Crayons
From 5c up.
Drawing Pads
No. 1 and No. 2. Waterman’s: Ink
In Quarts, Pints, 2.07, boxes
now 12c.
Alse Peerless Ink, 2-0z, & pints,
extend their operations from Wildwood to Edson.
Attention is called to the changes in the Game Act, printed in another column.
Mr Mawson, night agent at the local statioa, is moving to the Kowensky house, on 3rd avenue.
In Diy, 5,, Inga M.D., Mr Lloyd Searle has been ap- pointed poundkeeper. Pound looated on SE.18,52,2,5.
BUTTER AND E@Gs waNnTeD at The Royal Cate.
Spruce Grove News.
Mrand Mrs Chas Stefiler, who nad been visiting friends in Ontario for the past two months, have returned.
Mr Montgomery, the char- cobl mao, has just finished shipping a large consignment of his product,
Registration is proceeding at Mr Jesperson’s farm, north of the Grove.
Threshers have begun to operate at several pluces local- ly. Henry Kuhl hauled in the first load of wheat to a local elevator on Thursday the 13th, the load going to the Searle Co.
For a big meal or a good
lunch, try Jack Nichols, at the .
Hotel Restaurant.
The Market Report WHEA1
No. 1 Northern .... . 0.84 No. 2 Northern esse U:82 No. 3 Northern ............ 0.80 '|)No. 4 Northern ......005.. 77 Td OG Witsoe cise epeantine ss 37 BQ AN GAs aie'e cee 06:50 <:bibbeps 33 Extra 1 Feed .....--.......- .33 Mo, 1B eels occas cs 08s coca 30 No..2 Fead:..c87 903 be es .29' . BAKLEY Wa; Bo seweae eat “esos 00 wot 45 | No. Os og wipgsnip Orb dwitiers 9 9's siothienct 42 FOR SALE.
The Christie 4 room house, (on lots 1 & 2, block 3, Main St., opp. the Royal Hotel, Stony Plain» For further in formation Apply at The Sun Office.
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On Monday, Aug. 17th, a pretty wedding was solemn- ized at St Teresa’s church, at Carvel, when Alberta, daugh ter of Mr and Mrs Joseph Fortin of Carvel, became the bride of Edward Horton, son of Mr and Mrs Andrew L Horton of Vegreville,
The ceremony was perform ed bn Rev © Keenan, -pastor of the church. During the Nuptial Mass Miss Margaret Perry and Mr Ernest Perry sang appropriate hymns,
The happy young couple left for u trip to Jasper and points west, and on their re- turn will reside at Veyreville, where tne groom is a member of the staff of the Veyreville Observer
New and second hand text bouks fur public and high
‘schools on sale at The Sun
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The Heartless Hummer.
A lone homming bird spent Sunday and Monday in the garden of Geo. Roberison of Grande Prairie, Accorainuy to Mr Robertsov, humming tnirds are rarely seen in the Peace River, It is tnderstood that as soon as the hen bird begins nesting the male leaves ter parts unknown and lets the female shoulder the responsi bility. As the bird was ulone, it can Le presumed that it is of the > male sex.—Northern Tribune.
Opn Seasons for Game.
Deer, moose, Nov. 2 to Dee; 14
Ducks, geese, Sept. 16 to Nov. 1
Hungarian Partridge, Oct. 1— Nov 30, South of N. Saskatchewan River only.
Grouse, Pheasants and Prairie Chicken—No open season.
Mink, martin, otter, Nov, 1— March 31
Muskrat, Mar.1— April 30. South of N. Saskatchewan river, nu open senson,
Sunday Shooting is prohibited,
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Thou Shalt Not Love
— A NOVEL BY — GEORGIA GRAIG AUT CHAPTER III.—Continued
She watched her father fade, day by day. The physician who had known Ellison all his life, who had brought Starr into the world, was plainly baffled. There was nothing organically wrong with Professor Ellison. Weakness, caused by ex- posure in the desert, the doctor call- ed it tentatively.
It was after the funeral that Starr remembered how keenly the doctor had eyed her.
“You don’t look any too well yourself, Starr, my dear,” he had told her, concernedly. “You're like a shadow. Better let me _ prescribe something for you.”
“No! No!”’ Starr wheeled around in @ panic.
What did he mean? Did he think she was ill? Crazy thoughts raced through her mind, .
“Thou, and thy children—”
John Lessing's words—‘“It’s got me, Ellison. It'll get you, too—and Starr.”
She cried defiantly.to herself :,‘‘No, it shall not get me! I won't Tet it! I'll fight!’ ;
But it’s pretty hard to fight when you’re alone in the world, when you've been reared with the idea that you'll always have money, and sud- denly there is none. When you can't get work, and a deadly weariness drags and drags at your limbs. Starr knew. She had tried—so long. She had come away from the New England home town. No one should ever know how badly everything had really gone. Her chance to make her way alone would, she was sure, be better in New. York, where no one knew her, where she could really get out and fight. It hadn’t worked out that.way. There was no work here, either. No hope.
It was a strange whim which fin- ally had sent Starr Ellison that morn- ing to the New York specialist who knew nothing about her, or who she ‘was; nothing of her history. It was
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well, she had argued, to see another! ness was getting to be an obsession doctor. —of a different kind since this after-
And so he had looked at her,| noon's private seance. She was see- pounded her here and there, did all| ing Egypt everywhere. the usual things, said a lot of the “It won't do!” she told herself usual things, some of which she| firmly. “You're getting light-headed, scarcely comprehended. But that one/ that’s what! You, who just a little sentence of his had registered in-| while ago was having mental hys- delibly: terics admiring a steak in a cafe
“You might as well know the! window.” worst., You won't live another six Plainly enough food was indicated, months.” but where should she go? She had
Subconsciously she had been wait-| quite forgotten, in the stress of other ing to hear just that. thoughts, the sight of the man who
The curse of Tut-Amen-Ra had} had driven her to the refuge of the caught up with her, Museum. Just as well. She would never see him again, of course. But there still was the yearning for life by the arm. Startled, she realized| that would not be downed as she that she- was still staring like one swung out of the Park and headed hypnotized at the bas-relief on the| gown the first street she saw. Her vare which was so righteningly| mind was made up. For once she like the mummy face of Ama-Sun.| meant to go some place where there Even before she glanced up to se€| wag music—life!—and for just a who was disturbing her, she realized| few minutes be of that life. in a flash that at least no longer would she be afraid of things Egyp- tian. She had stared them down— | they and their curses. They knew now she was not afraid. She would see it through gallantly.
Her upturned gaze showed a uni- formed man who was smiling down at her.
“Got to close up now, Miss,” he said. “Reckon you'll have to come
out of Egypt.” Starr leaped to her feet.
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she had enough to pay for one peep vision of what was going on in New York this night and every night. The slim collection of folded bills might be missing afterward, but what did it matter? There was not enough to pay Mrs. Maloney, anyway. She had to go somewhere. .. .
Starr never had any slightest idea what led her to the La Luna cafe. She had never heard of it; did not
lahses lowering over her unbelievably long eyes in what might have been $ M4 commtneed as © chesllage Little Helps For This Week “Right!” he said. “Three times and out! What a blessed coincidence} Wherefore putting away lying, that it started to rain when I was speak every man truth with his passing this—ah—er—dump—and mat neighbor, for we are members one a cab in sight. . . . May I sit! of another. Ephesians 4:25. down?”
Starr moved over, saying nothing | ner oe atid
i : : , know it from a hundred or more| Dut feeling the two bright spots at clear;
Oh, I’m = sorry! i. hadn’t real- other such night life spots in the color that must be brightening her Think how All-seeing God thy ized—I didn’t know— city. In fact in all her life all she camelia cheeks. The man said: ways
The attendant laughed indulgently. “Maybe they’re right when they! And all thy secret thoughts sur-
had ever known of any night-life cafes were those she had briefly glimpsed in Egypt. Perhaps what determined her choice was the tall doorman who wore a tarbush. . .
It- was early and there was no sign of that turbulent joy of which she had heard when a waiter led her to a side table where she sat in state on a red-morocco-covered bench. There were a few people at the tables, none of them eating, but all with drinks before them.
A gaily uniformed orchestra was playing sporadically, and couples danced about the small floor. But as Starr sat alone, sipping her cocktail, all her ardor at buying a bit of life for herself for a dollar and a quarter dampened. It began to look drab to her. She didn’t like the people around her either—bored, unpleasant- featured men, and plainly blatant women from whose overheard scraps of conversation she could make out that they held a decided preference for Elizabethan English. It was not working out at all. The dollar and so forth was going—for an indiffer- ent cocktail or so. And she wasn’t getting a thrill at all. 4
She sighed. Well, it was all of
“Oh, that’s all right, Miss. We're used to that. Lota o’ folks come in here and get clean wrapped up in thinking they’re Cleopatra or some- body, and we got to rouse ‘em up. It’s a right interestin’ place, Egypt, ain’t it?”
Starr smiled at him mechanically, but she did not an#wer his question as she moved away, nodding her thinks. If he only knew! If he only knew!
say there's Fate in the lives of men _— and women.” The essence of lying is in decep- Starr nodded. ‘Three Fates. You| tion, not in words. A lie may be can’t pick and choose.” told by silence, by the accent on a The man glanced at her out of the; Syllable, by a glance that attaches a corner of his eye as he held up a| peculiar significance to a sentence, hand for a waiter, gave his order—| and all tiiese kinds of lies are worse and one for a _ replenishment of| and more base by many degrees Starr’s glass. There was quizzical| than a lie plainly worded. No form surprise in his eyes. of blinded conscience is so far sunk “Snappy comeback,” he remarked. | @s that which comforts itself for “You'd hardly expect it—here.” Then| having deceived because the decep- he laughed. “But I'd forgotten you|.tion was a gesture or silence instead got pretty mad today when I made a} of utterance. He that is in the little crack about Egypt. Know) habit of being deceptive in trifles about the gods as well as the Fates?’’| will try in vain to be true in matters “La il aha illa Allah!” said Starr| of importance, for truth is a thing softly. How could she ever once| of habit rather than will. You can- have sworn to forget everything| not in any case by any sudden and Egyptian—the Arabs, their sayings,! single effort, will to be true if the their Allah; all? habit of your life has been insin- The man's eyes widened and he) cerity.
stared at her. (To Be Continued)
Has Had Great Success
CHAPTER IV.
Never again would Starr Ellison be afraid of Egypt or the relictuary things of the ancient Pharaohs. She might resent, might refuse placidly ‘to accept the doom of their curse upon her father’s house and upon herself, but+during that -hour. spent inthe Museum she had flung her de- fiance to their gods and priestesses, and would go out to meet them with head held high. The damage was done now. They could do no more.
Walking through the Park in the dusk of the dying day, the thought of poetic justice was in her mind. For the first time since that terrible
trip to the land of the Pharaohs she| a piece. You coudn't force Fate, ohe garded as an idle fancy of the gloried in the thought of her own| way or another. With less than five masses is found
physical beauty that resembled that| dollars you couldn't even get intoxi- hold deep truths.
of their priestesses. If the time ever} cated enough to forget you had only cow belongs to
came, she meant to turn that to account,
six months to live, and if this sort of thing was life, the best you could
Then she laughed. With no touch! say for it was that it was synthetic. of merriment in the silvery ripple. Desperately she was trying to If the time ever came! And her with} make up her mind that she would six months—! leave this place, hunt up some other
. | lacked the stamina Tired after her day’s exertions and| where racketeers went, if she could contents*on the ground. A few hours} They were deficient the strong emotions she had felt in| nd such a place—they might be| @ter clouds appeared and heavy rain| perties. which milk the Metropolitan, Starr sank down) jiving life in the raw, but at least, fell over a considerable > lar provide. No wonder on a bench sheltered by some cluster-| one was told, they Hved it. Any- inventor refuses to disclose the na-/ hold the cow in ing shrubbery, touched to pinks and| thing, anything! would be better|ture of his mysterious life-giver. By oranges and russet by the oncoming! than this remembering—= ‘When. . , | But he declares he is willing other products finger of winter. She must have slept.).. qe goor opened, bringing “ine peat his experiments at any gumer in a ‘way She did not know, Only when she| pjast of sharpened night alr and the the presence of meteorological stitute can. — came to herself with a start, the wisps of fog that wert beginning ' Colombo.
night had come. Electric lights flickered along the driveways and beyond were the tall buildings with. their tops hidden by night mists and crowned with the city’s jeweled lights. From over the minarets of the tall buildings south of the Park
gather, refuting the promise of beautiful. 8 must be starting to rain, 4
man who came in was
fi z a i. st
Z Fee Ege:
told how his two hung a moon, a moon in an alien! win @ shrug of resignation ; sky above a modern city, but it must spoke of any port in a storm. hile. hi tood b have been just such a moon as had)“, sist saw his face as he| What's the matter with the whole! ways be “dog
given birth to Isis, The limbs of the trees from which the leaves had al- ready fallen stood out against the sky as,if carved of ebony. The Park was a place of murvle shadows.
The muted notes of a low-voiced automobile siren sounded eerily like the plaintive notes of a reed pipe creeping up from an Egyptian river, and the rumble of the El in the dis- tance was the more distinct throb- bing of a darabukkeh. The walls of
: i : ef
started acrors the fidor, toward the bar! He saw her, too, @ moment) later, and the surprised amfle turned into a grin. How was Starr to know the quick thoughts that were behind the grin on Michael Fairbourne’s face? It looked as if he were glad to see her—and alone—in quite such a place as La Luna. Fairbourne had not entered in such blissful ignor- ance of the reputation of the place as had Starr Ellison. In his mind, her being there—alone—~placed her. It was not an unpleasant surprise.
Quickly he crossed the room, stood looking down at her a moment.
“We've met before,” he remarked lazily, as she remembered he spoke. She nodded, and glanced up at him shyly. This time she was determined not to run away.
‘This is the third time,” she said, and smiled, her unbelievably long
“Time waste differs from material! yinds of notes anyone would be waste,” said Henry Ford, “in that] to get out of @ violin, there can be no salvage.’ Then " comes this thoughtful sentence: Editor of the Brandon Sun a “This easiest of all wastes, and the) },4 well he did with his vege
walls, framed in the twinkling lights, were dazzlingly white—white as the walls of houses she remembered sil- houetted against the sands of /the eternal desert. Almost ashe could imagine giant bougainvillea trailing down their immense heights.
Again Starr Ellison laughed and marched herself straight for the Park entrance. This Eevotian busi-
Leprosy, once very prevalent in| _ England, and one of the oldest!” plagues of mankind, numbers about | 6,000,000 cases in the world, about 100 of them in England at the pres- ent time.
One much-relished Chinese dish is} made partly of octopus. 2164) proves
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Saturday Nigh.’s Picture.
The “silent” movie shown IN 0 W A mM E rf here Saturday * Life of Christ,’ W was well patronise’, The scenes shown were the cus tomary Biblical pictures of our Saviour, with texis taken from the four Gospels as sub- heads, The other pictures were not so “silent,” “ Phelbx the Cat” and Phil Cook = Oue of these appeared fa be of an anciert vintage
Feneral of Mrs it Kulak.
The funeral of Mrs Elizabeth Kulak, whose death was noted in
last week’s issue, took place on Sunday, August 16. A. service was held at the family residence, and a
public service followed au the St MORE SOAP AT
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Boys’ Camp at Hubbel Beach m4 === Hubbel Beach, 3 miles west : ‘ . ; a Gf town, is the HOUT ace vit Confirmation and Baptism | German Baptist Tri-Union of present; 40 boys berweew the Service at Graminia. Alberta. ages of 12 -and 18 at stayirg at the Optimist boys’ camp! ,, there, where they will remain | ooyducted at the Graminia 8 hool j until Tuesday, the 25th. house lost Sunday afvernoon undre man 7 es Glory Hilla church, where The boys are under thedir- the auspices of Groce lutheran |" ?eanion was held of the Young ectlon of W T Tait, leader of church, Rev H J Boettcher, pastor, | People’s society, the Sunday school boos’ work in Edmonton. He] The special service brouglit toa is instructing the bovs in wood | close a series of Summer Schools craft, ee botany and |and Bible studies held in Graminia first aid. Lensowe, Sand Hilla, Cly moygt and This vear's camp a: Hnbbel| Woodbend districts during the past ve sah Salat “seh the lake is the first one held there 2 weeks. The Ten Commandinenss 6 ate ” te eee What under the auspices of Optim }| was the subject. of atudy in the! Rey GW Butech of the Binks ist club, the camp haviny been Summer schovls for religion and Hills church, extended a heart held in previous years at the “The Kingdom of God” for the wialoaine to: the:-Visidbia i gated a ° ! 5 . lich Cooking Lake. subject of study 'n the eveunipz Rev P Daum responded. The boys have been there sroup studies for adults, On Friday morning the devo- since Friday fast, aud keem to — Students’ Howard Miller. “and sigiint poriod was ied by BR Ker, af be enjoying themselves im~ Leonard Gabert assisted Pastor | 1 oan. :
Boettcher in the Summer school . - A mensely. wor ees The morning s-ssion came to a
close by aii interegiing talk by Rev rao Friday Evenink’s Meeting. P Daum, on the subject “What do
we want ?”
A large gathering attended the Many members of the German
hn . t in s . . firmation -and bp ism service Baptists. were happily gathered re.
and the choir members of Alberta Baptists of the German language.
The opening sermon was given
St. Andrews-by-the-Sea P mecting of sicial credit! Wey U Ronther of Olde. gave an
advocates was held in Stony inapiring sermon, “A Spirit Filled Plain Friday tne 14th. The} Youthful Life.” ” ecshageaa chair was taken by W E! Atthe Saturday’ morning seas- Hayes, M. L A., who stated|ion Rev A Kraemer gave an add- that the purpose for calling | ress ov “A Spirit Filled Bible study the meeting was to consider] hour,” on Paaim 82.
the appointment of officials fur| Ou Saturday tha 2 speakers for the forthcoming registration | ‘he evening were Rev F Benke, on period, when all bona fide resi | tbe subject “ Riches of God,” and dents of Alberta 21 years and | Bev A Kuyath on “My soul thirat- over are to sign tne “covenant’ | eh for Go ; for the living God.” which will make them eligible] On Sunday Rev F Benka gave for the “ basic dividend” at aja missionary addrens, showing the later date. Despite the poor} great need of mission work and condition of the roads follow | mission support. - His general ing {ne downpour vf rain on|theme and topic was “The Soul that day, there was a. good | Thiret of man abroad. attendance from this district,| Sunday Aft. » large, responsive The call was for those volun |*vdiewce gathered to hear the teers who. would work in the aospel. Rev A Kuyath preached on carentiane vicinity of Stony, a soul thirsteth for Gad” in the as some few weeks ayo regis |VOrmsn languege.
trars were appuinted fur the| The Glory Hille Church and districts west and southwest. | ev G Rutech did everything pus- The reyistrars so tar appoint. sible to make the visitors’ stay a ed are: pleasant one at their homes, as
Biwel r T Rol well as at their church. , Duleld—-Otat Ohlsen, D Taylor, P AUCTION B J Mr Swift WELL GOT UP AND PRINTED case Cunmtae-2.7 Cleaeen AND ADVERTISING i yar iis TOO, AKE ESSENTIAL iF YOo Wises ) oa Srmea |_| puma voon m0 Verh im Goatener,. Senet Shir Geinichnnt The STONY PLAIN SUN Rooeevat a the United ye See Wabemn Mire ae ————_—_—_—_—_—_—_————— interest to his summer home at noden—Clapt, Gossett BRIAR PIPES fom vathewe have bua Wa ke, ican Visltore have beat ot Prosperity Blondes Vet SACRV ED oiteer popular spot nee pase A correspondent says he knows ture shows provide entertainment. @ jane who despite the depression ROYAL
saved over $10) last . She saath tie enn al. Ueda daw Peennar- TO BE SOLD AT
ee = 2S CENTS.