Provincial Library Bdmonton

Dec 50

~ Che Cathon Chronicle.

i Authorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa

Volume 30; Number 4

AT OUR January Staple, Textile and Saving Needs

SALE

Rayon Dress Lengths. yd . 48c Cotton Terry Towels, each 833c Bleached Sheets, 73x90, each .. $3.69 Dish Cloths ..... ...... Spe lic White Flannelette, yd ............. 39c Broadcloth, yd .. RE A sae .32c Flannelette Blankets, 70x90, pair $5.24

SALE CLOSES SATURDAY, JANUARY 27th THE FARMERS’ EXCHANGE

nda ce ca GOVERNMENT OF CANADA \\

3:% FIRST WAR LOAN BONDS

Due February Ist, 1948-52

BEARING CALL LETTER ‘D’ ONLY HAVE BEEN DRAWN FOR PAYMENT February 1, 1951 AT $100.50 FOR EACH $100. Bonds of this issue bearing the call letter shown should be presented for redemption on February 1, 1951 or as soon thereafter as possible with all coupons of loter date attached. These bonds will not eam interest after February 1, 1951.

\

Carbon, Alberta, Thursday, January

OOOO EXTRA SAVINGS

Lions Club Plans New Features at Ice Carnival

The Carbon Lions Club is once again sponsoring the annual Ice Carnival at the local rink and the date for the gala affair has been set at Friday, February 23. The various committees needed have been set up and are going

“backed by

ahead with the many details in- volved.

The Carnival Queen contest is one of the attractions of the car- nival. Three local girls and one entry from Drumheller arevieing for the top honors and are now busy selling queen tickets. The candidates this year are: Evone Foster, sponsored by the Carbon | Legion; Darleen Hecktor spon-

sored by the Carbon Farmers’

‘Union Local; Vivian Sigmund, the Carbon Junior Grain Club; and Arlene Weymark of Drumheller, who is conducting her own campaign.

The program this year will in- clude anumber of new features including chuckwagon races on the ice. DetaiJs.of the new events will be announced later,

Proceeds of the carnival will be used to defray expenses of op-

erating the rink. ———O—_—__—_

The Carbon Peewees hockey team was swamped bythe Three Hills Peewees by an 12-0 score in a game played here Tuesday. Three Hills scored 11 goals in the first period, one in the sece ond and were het scoreless in the third.

CAN YOU ? STOP IN TIME ®

DRIVE SLOW in sleet, snow or rain! Nor- mal speeds are dangerous when highways are slippery. It takes from 3 to i2 times more distance to stop your car on ice or

snow. To drive safely in winter weather ,,,

HERE’S THE LOWDOWN---SLOW DOWN Be Careful - the life you

save may be your own /

Published in

the interests of public safety by...

\ ALBERTA BREWERS’ AGENTS LIMITED

REPRESENTING BIG HORN BREWING CO. LTD. CALGARY BREWING & MALTING CO. LTD. SICKS' EDMONTON BREWERY LTD. SICKS' LETHBRIDGE BREWERY LTD. / NORTH-WEST BREWING CO. LTD.

es

Page 1 26, 1951 Bassoon $2.00 a Yéar; Sc a Copy a = on f ——————————E

) es ,

Westinghouse Food Mixer It Mixes, It Beats, It Blends (

so much better because years of engineering research plus hours of kitchen testing by homemakers combine to make this the portable household mixer that women want.

i)

The compact, precision-built motor is strong and powerful, full one-eighth h.p. load capacity assures full power for any kitchen mixing requirement. All —bear- ings are packed with sealed-in grease for long-life lub- rication. Never requires oiling. Not a chance for oil drip.

HERE NOW AT Builders’ Hardware Stores Lid.

W. F. ROSS, Manager Phone 3, Carbon

Bill Braisher Says .. .

Get Warm, and Keep Warm, in a Cold, Cold World *

Men’s All wool Combinations $5.00 Men’s Fleece Combinations $3.25 Men’s Super Fleece Combinations $3.75

Let’s Make This

Shirt Week

A Full Selection of Men’s and Boys’ Shirts Men’s Everyday Shirts, in plaids, doeskin and flannel.

143 to 17 $2.95 to $3.95 Boys’ Shirts, ideal for school wear, in gaily colored plaids

and checks. Sizes 1lto14 $1.95 to $2.95 Men’s “Summit” Shirts, the sport styled dress shirt, washable

gabardine. Sizes 144to 17 $7.50 Forsyth Dress Shirts, white , pastel or striped patterns.

Sizes 144 to 17

$3.95 to $5.95

CARBON TRADING COMPANY

Morris Switzer, prop. Phone 18, Carbon eS =~

©

Oranges, sweet, thin skin, juicy, medium

size, § doz.

10 doz. Grapefruit, Marsh seedless, 96s Red Salmon (whole fish), 1b. Cooked Rice, good sized tins, each Peas, 20 oz. tins Corn, 15 oz. tins 13c Peaches, 15 oz. tins 18c

CARLOAD OF SUGAR ARRIVING FEB. | Special price on 100 lb. sacks

95c $1.85

4 for 25c 39c

10c

Groceries, Fruit, Vegetables, Meat, Fish 14c

19.

Maple Buds, fresh stock, lb. Christmas Mixture, we have a surplus Special Offer 5 lbs. for $1.39

59c

Cc. H. NASH & SON

Groceries, Vegetables, Fish, Meats, etc.

THE CHRONICLE, CAKBON,

ALTA,

A Long Friendship

DURING THE PAST HUNDRED YEARS there have been many indi- cations of the close friendship between Canada and the United States and the thousands of miles of undefended border has

between the two countries stood as an example to the world of what can be accomplished in the wav of international friendship and co-operation, It is true that we possess language and that many of the people of both countries have racial and Cultural backgrounds. However, it

a common

the same must be remem-

bered that the two countries were not always at peace, and that some of the most bitter conflicts in history have been civil wars, which was the nature of the early struggles between the American people and ourselves,

Se. 6s ©

Keeping the peace and erasing the bitterness which

An Example once existed between the two nations has been a fine example of the genuine desire of two nations to live

Of Tolerance side by side in enduring peace. One of the latest

manifestations of this friendship took place recently in Washington, D.C.,

when a window in honor of Canada was dedicated in St, Alban’s Cathedral in that city. The great window, which is made of multi-colored stained glass, stands between windows dedicated to the United Kingdom and to South America, and it depicts scenes from the history of Canada, the

central figure being St. Lawrence. The window will stand as a reminder to the many people who will visit the cathedral in the years to come, of the long’ friendship between the United States and Canada. . A ° . . In preserving the peace between the two countries and Benefits For cultivating closer ties through the years, the people Both Nations * both sige ted have benefitted in many ways, One, which has been mentioned many times in the past, lies in the fact that Canada, through her close ties with the United King- dom and her firm friendship with the United States has been able, on numerous occasions to act as a liason between those two countries in the settling of important affairs. For many years, there have been groups in both the United States and Canada who have suggested that at some time Canada may be absorbed by her larger and more powerful neighbor but as time goes on there are no indications of any trend of this kind and it is more likely that the two countries will continue for many years to come to live in the same manner as they have for the last century.

About 10 per cent. of all marriages America remain childless.

‘Something New! Whitefish Livers

| North Saskatchewan gourmets |think they have something pretty | tasty, and perhaps the “outside” may think so, too, shortly.. The addition

in

FOR CHILDREN?

|livers fried in butter and served siz- | Zling hot, D. F, Corney, manager of

the Saskatchewan fish marketing & If your child is run down and board, explains that while fish livers vg ~ listless, he may be susceptibleto |aren’t new in themselves, whitefish ry many colds and minor ills. For livers are. They aren't produced on PY such conditions we recommend vo | Scott's Emulsion containing a commercial basis yet, but experi- | Natural Vitdmin Aand D with ments for wholesale extraction are } other necessary elements to im- sa - \ prove energy and resistance. Buy underway, Success might mean ex- Abd» a bottle today! ai LS

{port to the U.S. market, | oa ee Ss SP

The “great African rift’ cuts across Asia and down into Africa for almost one-sixth of the circumfer- ence of the earth,

COTTSEMULSION &

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hen start taking Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to

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NOTE: 0 relieve such symptoms. No other & Lydia E. Pinkhe's TABI ETS medicine of this type for women has with added ee

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THE TILLERS

HA, HA, HA! GOSH, HUNK, THATS ASWELL TRICK! IM GOING TO TRY IT ON MAW?

—By Les Carroll

HEY, MAW, SEE THIS $10 BILL ? WATCH IT CLOSELY! NOW

PRESTO! NOW YOU DON'T! ITS GOING TO THE REPAIR. SHOP

TO FIX MY

VACUUM CLEANER!

THE NEXT TIME I CATCH YOU

PRACTICING YOUR. MAGIC

TRICKS ON MY TIME, YOU'RE FIRED!

|

to the palate ticklers is whitefish |

Sb. Central Press Canadian, FOUND $4,500—When she picked up a package of “butter” at a Tor- onto groceteria, Mrs. M. Lawrie thought it was wrapped more thor- oughly than other packages she had bought. When she unwrapped it at home, out fell $4,500, money taken from the store till and wrapped by a sales clerk, Mrs. Lawrie who would have liked to buy a house but “couldn't get a kick out of keeping money acquired that way,” returned the money, received $200 reward.

Gold Mining Hits New High

EDMONTON, Gold mining in |northwest Canada hit a new produc- tion high during 1950 despite the cur- jrent gold depression, L. E. Drum- ;mond, secretary-general of the Al- |berta and Northwest Chamber of Mines, said,

Forecasting continued development of northern mining, Mr. Drummond stated that production problems have

been partly eased in the north by the Emergency Mining Assistance | Act.

Funny felt Otherwise

¢ ¢ “So you're a young man with both feet on the ground eh?

What do you do for a living?”

“I take orders from a man with both feet on a desk.”

* * *

In a night club, a dizzy blonde snuggled up to her escort.

“How about giving me a diamond bracelet?”’ she murmured, holding out her arm to envisage the effect.

“My dear,” replied her friend, “extenuating circumstances- per- force me to preclude you from

such a bauble of extravagance.

“T don't get it,” said the girl in | bewilderment, | “That's just what I said!” came the grim reply

. * . me

A boy at school, when asked to describe a kitten, said:

A kitten rushes like mad at nothing whatever—and stops be- fore it gets there,

a * . .

A journalist rang up the Central Office of Information to check some facts about the import of salmon, “I’m afraid they’ve given you the wrong extension,” said a young man’s voice, very cultivated but very pleasant, and very sad indeed. “I only deal with white fish.”

+ a2

“My wife says that if I die she

will remain a widow.”

Manitoba Mining Shows Big Gain During Past Year

WINNIPEG. Manitoba mining production jumped 82.1 per cent, in 1950 and grossed an estimated $31,- 500,000, resources minister J. S. Mc- Diarmid said in a year-end report.

At the same time, the search for oil and natural gas in the province was “much more intensive than in any previous period.” (An oil “show” was made several weeks ago near Melita in southwestern Manitoba but its commercial possibilities have yet to be determined.)

The minister also reported that the market value of furs. produced in Manitoba in 1950 rose 24 per cent. to $3,170,970. Hydro-electric power production was up 15 per cent,

Other points in the minister's re- port:

1. Forest-fire damage totalled only $46,920 in 1950 as compared with nearly $250,000 in 1949. 3. The value of forestry products

2, Commercial fishing fell off, with |for the year was $13,500,000, down 29,500,000 pounds of fish valued at | $700,000 from the previous year.

Prairie Woman Printer Enters City Composing Room

VANCOUVER.—One of the last of |the men’s strongholds, a newspaper composing room, has been invaded by women here.

Mrs. Charlotte Maitland, an all- round newspaper woman, is working among fifty men in the composing room of the Vancouver Sun, One of the few female linotypists in Canada, she began her career when she left jhigh school to set type in Hartney, Man.

Three years later she moved to another weekly newspaper at Souris, Man., and eight years later retired |in favor of marriage. Now the short- j age of help finds her back among the machines. She came here after the death of her husband.

$4,800,000 harvested in 1950 as com- pared with 31,500,000 pounds valued lat $5,500,000 in 1949.

—}

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and blue bonnet

“Evidently she thinks there's not another man like you.”

“No, she’s afraid there is.”

* . o *

An epileptic dropped in a fit on the street and was taken to a hos- pital. Upon removing his coat there was found pinned to his waistcoat a slip of paper on which |} was written:

“This is to inform the house- surgeon this is just a case of plain fits; not appendicitis. My appendix has already been removed twice.” | *2e* © @

“So you've broken off your engagement, You once told me that your girl was the apple of your eye.”

“I know I did, But she’s decid- ed to be another fellow’s peach.” *_* * ©

“Whatever's come over your hus- band lately, Mrs, Raggers?” asked Mrs, Raggleson, of her neighbor, “He does nothin’ but sit an’ brood on the doorstep with his chin in his ’ands,.”

“He ain't brooding,” replied Mrs, Raggers. “He's practising for the local chess tournament,”

~ - .

Tramp: “Is your husband at home?”

Housewife (resourcefully): “Well, if he’s finished his revolv- er practice, he'll be in the garden playing with the bulldog. Do you want to see him?” 2915

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THE CHRONICLE, CARBON,

a

Egyptian Ruler To Marry A Commoner

kkk *

—Central Press Canadian,

WATANABE MATSUKO SEN, which reading from right to left, means Miss Matsuko Watanabe, paused briefly to add a Merry Christmas greet- ing to the holiday bulletin board at the Montreal Y.W.C.A. Miss Watan- abe, who is executive secretary of the Tokyo Y,W.C.A., left recently for Toronto, continuing a journey that has brought her from India through several countries of Europe to Canada, Before returning to Japan in April, she will also visit in the United States. During the few days she has spent in Montreal, the visitor from Tokyo has been a frequent guest of the Montreal Association, wearing the traditional kimono, which, she says, has nearly disappeared from the everyday scene of city life in Japan. The flowing sleeves, and close folds of the graceful garment make it a thing of beauty, but a nuisani@e at work, and Japanese girls are more and more interested in jobs and careers. Western dress and western ideas—even western ideas of Christmas—are taking hold more strongly every day, Miss Matsuko said. Much of this influence has come from the occupation troops stationed throughout Japan, who brought with them their own ideas of how to enjoy the festive season.

te

SOLEMN CEREMONY AT VATICAN CITY—Pope Pius XII kneels as he lays the first brick, symbolically closing the Holy Door of St. Peter's Basilica at Vatican City, in a solemn ceremony ending the 1950 Holy Year of the Roman, Catholic Church, The Pontiff was the first to enter St. Peter's through the Holy Door last Christmas.Eve, and the last to leave

through the door in the world’s largest church this Christmas Eve, The ceremony marked the end of the church's 25th Holy Year.

ae

Same

—Central Press Canadian,

POODLE IS PRESENT FOR ROYALTY—Princess Fatima of Iran and

her American husband, John Hillier, are shown at Orly airport just before they left Paris for Tehran to attend the wedding of the princess's brother, Shah Reza Pahlevi, to Narriman Sadek. a wedding present, The aristocratic pooch was selected from 129 dogs,

World News In Pictures

x*x*k*

*%

LIKE ANY OTHER FOUR-YEA

ALTA,

Aviation Cadet Brings 38 Boys Home

x MM

* * ¥

R-OLD YOUNGSTER who's awed by a brightly-trimmed tree at Christmas

time, Sweden’s Crown Prince Carl Gustav admires the Yuletide tree in his nursery at the royal palace in Stock-

holm,

Left, the young prince stares wide-eyed at lighted candles and trimmings, centre, he cups a bright ball

in his hands, and right, he stands off to admire the shining ball.

—Central Press Canadian,

MARRIAGE TO COMMONER IS SLATED FOR FEBRUARY—Pictur- ed in the uniform of Admiral of the Fleet, Egypt’s colorful ruler, King Farouk, said to be contemplating marriage in the near future to 17- year-old commoner, Narriman Sadek, was recently reported to have placed an order in Turin for “the world’s most luxurious train” to be used on a honeymoon trip in February. King Farouk, who ascended the throne at

the age of 16, on the death of his father, King Fouad, in 1936, was married in 1938, but divorced his

queen Farida, in 1948.

They took the black poodle as

| DROWNING BOY SAVED Billy Pearson, seven-year-old Buckhorn, Ont., schoolboy, who fell through a bridge railing into Buckhorn lake and |was rescued by Sam Woods, post- master of the Peterboro county vil-

lage. Billy was hauled out with a rope tossed by Bert Calvert.of Lake- hurst.

of the community, Mr, Woods,

the water.

jot water.—Central Press Canadian.

Hailed as a hero by every member 65, plunged into the icy lake and held Billy until he could be pulled out of | Lad was returning home from school when he fell into 10 feet

; ~ j f : ¢: re | JOE PETROFF, second cook on the coastal freighter Bulkarrier, peek- ed timidly out of the door of his cabin aboard the ship anchored in the ice covered harbor. Snow was falling heavily, covering the freighter’s deck with a two-inch mantle of white. “Looks like a tough winter for us shipkeepers,’ Joe remarked, pulling his head back into the cosy cabin. “Snow on the deck so early is a bad sign.” Joe, a little fellow with lots of shovelling muscles, is one of the many summer seamen who will spend the winter on the lonely, silent ships that came to the port of Montreal some weeks ago for the winter months,

es

Central Press Canadian, DIDN’T SAY HOW MANY Mrs. R. H. Shaddick of Miami, Fla. smiled that loving maternal smile when she received a letter from her son, John, an aviation cadet, telling her that he was coming home and that he was bringing “a few of the fellows’ with him. But when John arrived with a “few of the fellows” she found that they were 38 air cadets from the Netherlands, She is being introduced to them here by her boy.

However, warm-hearted Miamians sprang to the assistance of the badly outnumbered mother and provided rooms in many families for the Dutch Now they have more party invitations than they can handle.

boys.

_ BAOK FOR FACE-LIFTING—Wearing a bow that looks like a fugi- tive from a scow, the U.S8.S. Mansfield heads for the Puget Sound naval shipyard to have her sleek beauty restored. The destroyer lost her nose when she struck a mine off the Korean coast. The temporary bow was installed at a Japanese shipyard to permit her passage across "the Pacific for the restoration operation.—Central Press Canadian. 2015

- The Sports Clinic -

(An official department of Sports College) Conducted by Lloyd “Ace” Percival

THE CHRONICLE, CAKBON, ALIA,

Big Shipment of Horses| For Newfoundland

MIDDLETON, N.S. Three hun-| dred and ninety-six horses, largest | shipment ever supplied by a single

| RITCHEN MEDITATIONS

World Happenings

By JANE DALE

| WHEN IT IS STORMY

Nova Scotia dealer, are en route to 4 kT ne ; You Are What You Eat Corner Brook, Nfid., where they have | Briefly lold mae “ont hha Ce ee Slightly less th , chas , » . onight; sige . ~ “sock an two years ago,|of energy, and a valuable health been purchased by the Bowater Pulp | ER cee A storm is brewing fast. ports College Research Depart-|food for athletes and non-athletes |®"@ Paper Company. __ Informed sources said Britain now | My thoughts go out to those who rire non th pod of experts in| alike, They were sold here by J. H. Parr, |i8 "eady to shoulder a $10,080,000,000 | = roam J physical education and medical re-| y, ; formerly of Castor ‘| three-year rearmament _ progre Or work far. ¢ = ou as a player . yo ‘astor, Alta. * : program r work far from their sheltered search, The object of this study was Player, coach or parent,| “game of the horses are of western | Without American monetary aid. } home;

should make correct eating habits your. ‘ntiiber one objective. Any Canada stock, but 250 of them are Saskatchewan played host this time or effort needed will be repaid from the Annapolis Valley area of | year to nearly 500,000 Canadian ana | I think of days when around the fire, a thousand times, no matter how | N°V@ Scotia. | United States visitors. It was a re-| AS Storms raged flerce outside, saneaiabttnneanten cord total for the province's tourist The children all were safe and warm;

to determine the most important factor in the development of peak physical fitness and mental efficiency.

The answer, and it was almost

| And I think of days long past,

oun, : y . unanimous, was “nutrition”. In other y we or old “dhe may be. industry | Fed and protected, free from harm words; what you eat, , dd i ° list of our bulletins i rn hee | , Gathered closely to my side, Soon afterwards, Sports Coltege | 2°" ng w iet and nutrition, and Arrangéments have ‘been completed | But one by one they y : 7 ; ., ; | ) u y yearned ; began a second survey. This time et pty information on Yami Yo- STANDARD BRIDGE | with Canadian tobacco companies for | To leave this sheltering oon 89} we asked the athletic youth of Can- gurt, which more and more medical | ~~ = the shipment of cigarettes at reduced | 1 saw them off with many a prayer ada how and what it was eating, and and physical education experts are By M. Harrison-Gray prices to members of the Canadian | That God would guide each one out we found that only one athlete in a tS toon” every day as the “won- Dealer: South, armed forces on duty overseas. lana sant i er food’, r nd keep them ever Pook wneud “de leat Agen a of|. regular naa oa tise ainee tee ‘ae tee oe all. The Middlesex Health Council fined | sow hp a pricier r as la own the 2 : « > a Nation a t i A ow when the storms beat aroun experts in this field—a disturbing re-| ‘Toit Red Wings, National Hockey > g $3 5 3 pound (35 Soy fe Herning to treat this house : sult, to say the least. League and Stanley Cup Champions. @ 764 a man with a toothache Becutts "the hae children once securely lay, —e— 5 . e because try to ce Pepe e : Although he depends completely on . + . w o Q5 patient wasn’t wearing a necktie. To stan . vr Wi poh) aces ste . his body to carry out the commands Sports College, Canada’s nation- aAG4E * a 82 | "Go aa Sian akbar Sea he gives it, the average athlete does wide ‘research and instruction ser- O 4 er Evidence that St, Thomas, Ont., is | x0d, cnt them safe tonight,” I not supply it with gufficient high- vice that gives coaching and advice 3 Q10832 @¢K JI still very much of a railroad city is I A u grade fuel to etinire efffitent opera: | in all sports, is free and open to any- 51096 é SAKS7T4 seen in a local jewelry store which} Newiywed ee bons hhaaecd tion. It is as if Harold Wilson tried |0"®:, Why not join by writing a let- 2Q7 regularly checks timepieces. Approxi- | .y,.4 ss Ty weds have less than 168 to race his powerboat, “Miss Canada | *€" to Sports College, Box 99, Tor- +d : Ps 42 mately 800 railroaders turn in their vs eae hes Poca of reaching their IV” on cigarette lighter fluid onto 1, Ontario. You will receive a 32 watches every month for checking. | °° en wedding’ anniversary, The idea that a person “becomes” | free catalogue listing more than 100 North-South have abun- The people who run Britain's edu-| ss TOT what he eats has been proved scien- | instructional books and pamphlets Ganiaeeaes, tue S Geant of cational system are going back £5 | ieee ote eae ss tifically. Therefore, it doesn’t take Nettle J all phases. of sports, health rubber Beldge, seminal school themselves—to learn how to| ¢ Week! Ti much brainpower to figure out that |®%4 Physical fitness. This training cautious opposition, was One write. The aim is to boost the na-| Aa id AML I the smarest play an athlete can make material is recognized as the finest Ht nT Te tional standard of schoolroom hand-| is at the dinner table. He must make | fits kind in the world, and is ob- nae astides to resid: @ writing which calligraphists call | WALLPAPER SPOTS sure he is eating properly. Coaches tainable nowhere else. anes of Three Diamonds “utility scribble.” } Pencil or ink erasers will take and parents should follow the same} A regular Sports College broadcast three ‘email Dismonds ee 8 Norbert Thompson, an ice dealer,|} 08t Spots from wallpaper. rule when planning the development | very Saturday afternoon carries ad- eek and signs off in in Two Rivers, Wis. lost a ruby from | { Press lightly on the i | di i ree Hearts. , ae air > hae | rase isa aAt one in Sager chatge. ae (etee ee en advice from Actaal Fenie bth nT eae his ring while at work. August Nau-| H eraser, how ever, 01 e simple, natural foods provide | athletes. This 15 minute judge whether he held the man, tavern keeper, noticed an extra| | you may rub | the best possible fuel for the machine | Classroom session is carried by the right cards and had to bid sparkle in his highball, It was|$ the pattern i , i sti i e. i : 4 as | that is the athlete’s body. Yet they) Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. B The defence started off Thompson's ruby imbedded in an ice} { off, were found to be present only in| Look up the time and station in your with two Club tricks, and cube, i aren small quantities on the average diet | area. re an nee y 3. South's d rodeo tate te SeERR cat sheet, with prepared, -refined foods on Waist anadie § Wan cetarned. , : vas f predominating. These foods have COAL OUTPUT DOWN Hoping oo “aiscnre Pag 4 X=X OUR CROSSWORD PUZZLE X—X lost much of their original vitamin >) Diamond, South finessed Ree NUAS : & CALGARY. Alberta's coal pro- @ 10 and ended up three 1 Scram! content, and provide a poor quality /duction for 11 months in 1950 was down: East-West, however, erriperrere fuel that leaves an unhealthy residue. |7,216,969 tons, or more than half a ue have made Four 9 To clip In addition, far too many athletes | pad¢s. 12 Game played

million tons lower than a year ago. on horseback

wae

instrument 14 Fruit drink THIS CURIOUS WORLD “nnuet || 3h.

were eating tog much fatty and fried food.

By far the greatest deficiency un- | covered by the Sports College survey was in B Complex vitamins. These are the vitamins which create healthy nerves, sound digestion and high pn i 22 See eerociate

morale. Th nS = 24 Small. | t orale. ey enably a person to get = | KB STAR. nsec

the maximum good’ from the food he Se iste.

does eat. = BETELGEUSE z Gini name The average athletic diet showed HAS A DIAMETER. seonenn

other outstanding deficiencies such 484+ TIMES Gharacser

important minerals as iron, calcium THE DIAMETER OF THE

36 Note of scale 37 To apply

and phosphorous, all of which are SUN. “a poorly vital in building sound, healthy bod- 41 Sun god ies. Because an athlete depends on 42 Noisy

44 Stringed in- strument of percussion

his body more than the average per- son, he must make sure that it has

| A S q Be s 9 SS

a ®

. : ; 45 As it is no weaknesses. Yet if certain dietary written ; " 3 “e (music) rules are ignored, weaknesses are 47 Verisimilitu- sure to develop. dinous

49 Prince of

Members of the Sports College Afohacietan

Sk EERE ERE

ed ie dl i ls mi a

GE. ESHE EE

N ki i i ie

Testing Group, on which the effec- 60 Sert tiveness of various training tech- 62 Hveband ot niques and conditioning methods are 84 French for

tested, have clearly demonstrated the " i ai oaNie 10 Hypothetical 1 58 Jelet 64 Symbol tor i rtance of diet. emarkable in- " antelope orce ° vanish oleum importance of d R : lin | EA SERVICE. INC. 87 One of 11 You and t 61 About

66 Note of ecale

creases in efficiency were made in Wis Columbue'e 17 What? 62 Land measure such sports as middle and long dis- i ehips ARS, 19 Symbol for 2 ae tance running, hockey, football, bas- fit 8 aeiee PONE Tg NOE | Heer : ketbali and middle and long distance A TRAIN implement 23 Liquid Answer To Last Week’s Puzzle ‘4 : pioees IN GOES OVER AN UNDER: 63 Not any globule j swimming, all of which involve hard \ PASS AND UNDER AN OVERPASS,” 65 Image 25 Warning physical activity and endurance, Ex- S ? 67 Small adult 26 Garment i , epee i ays MILDRED WADE, fishes maker | periments on this group indicatec Baktmore M /. a, 68 Cry of sorrow |27 Scanty { that when a change-over is made to WHA EC, NAY/B712L> 69 Man's 28 Lime tree \ an sdequate diet, efficiency will in- { RAR TIAL 33 Money” srease o or ce d crease as much as 40 per cent, ; | IN a * 9 MEST gs nescseed ps Sports College also tested the value Yj 5 2 Covenants 33 Te rotate TIE P ‘i P b of Yami Yogurt, and found that (ELLGW STONE PARE 4 atari 43 Bh eesron there is no other single food which A NEW GEYSER BURST FORTH 7 § Slumber 46 Wrathful : . : P 2's all- ttered low, | 48 | can do so much for the athlete's all RECENTLY IN THE MIDDLE wares 8. Ww, {requolan round developntent. Yami Yogurt 1s OFA > sound - [51 Printer'’s a Bulgarian milk culture, at present PARKING Lon H Biel S measure obtainable only from the Roselle In- Pia eet a ta 9 Food supplied | 56 Character In stitute in La Trappe, Quebec, but } h © PAY. OFF, to the “The Faerle

israetites Q soon to be made available throughout ueene

Canada, It-is ‘a wonderful source of

VIRGIL

those important B Complex vitamins, igo» iF IVE ASKED THAT KID ONCE J7-TeT's ste F HE'S | eo and in addition, supplies tremendous SER T'VE ASKED HIM A COZEN ABLE TO WALK Hl if

+

f

VIRGIL- 1 BOUGHT THOSE

EXTRACARS FOR \% im %, ie i TRAIN: THEY Reo nd i } “Ors \ i THE BASEMENT! i r a

iy

amounts of Calcium, protein and TIMES TO HAUL THOSE

Vitamin D.

As a nerve tonic and body-builder * for athletes, Yami Yogurt is unex- ¥ celled, Sports College also found that athletes troubled by “nervous stomach” and nausea before and dur- ing their event had almogt no trouble after including Yami Yogurt in their diet. In addition, it is a quick source

“Irene” Popular Song For 1950

NEW YORK. The top popular song in the United States last year was “Good Night Irene”.

Billboard magazine says the tune carried off top honors in its fifth annual poll on the basis of phono- graph record sales and commercial record use.

Second on the list was “Mona Lisa”, followed by the “Third Man Theme”, “Harbor Lights”, a couple of Bing Crosby-and-son specialties— “Sam’s Song” and “Simple Melody”

nN NOW I DON'T HAVE OF COURSE NOT, HAZEL! T'S MUCH NICER wow | |(TO_TELL THEM TO LEAVE

THAT WE'RE OFF THE ONIONS/ __ MARRIED/

-—and then “Bewitched”, ‘Music, Music, Music”, and “Chattanooga Shoe Shine Boy”. 2915 |

4 *

&

Coyote Lives Where He Can Enjoy A Fight

From the Stettler (Alberta) Independent

oo have been hunted in this

district ever since the pioneers settled here in 1903 or even earlier. One of the first items in the Inde- pendent was that coyotes were both- ering stock and poultry from Lamer- ton to Leo, and even the women were on the lookout for them, On Christmas morning, 1906, Mrs. O, O.

fast. His speed has been checked

jy an automobile at forty miles per }hour. Scientists describe him as an inferior member of the wolf family,

| but he is not inferior in any respect, | except in his small stature. His wits }are so sharp that he thrives in re- }gions where the big wolves become

extinct. A rancher or farmer walking or | riding about his place without a gun

LB. Death Rate Lowest Ever Recorded

The tuberculosis death rate in Canada for 1949 was 30.4 per 100,000. This is the lowest rate ever recorded in our country.

All provinces had reductions in their T.B. death rates, The provin- cial rates in ascending order were as follows per 100,000;

Porter of the Gough Lake country| may see several coyotes at close Ontario 15.6 shot a coyote from her front door.|range. He takes his gun the next Saskatchewan 215

In fact the coyote has been hunt- | time but does not see a single ani- Prince Edward Island 23.4 ed more than any other American | ™al. Some trappers say that the Alberta 24.2 animal, Every device and_ trick | Coyote’s keen sense of smell detects Nova Scotia 28.5 known to man has been used down | the gun but this seems too fanciful. Manitoba 28.9 the years, to eradicate him, yet this |The coyotes have a sort of telegraph-| highway service by snow drifts. Horses and sleds were put into service British Columbia 36.4 sly little wolf continues to hold his|ic sixth sense. At any rate they | to supply residents with Christmas food and mail.—Central Press Canadian. New Brunswick 37.8 own, There must be around 200,000 | have something that. man does not Quebec 48.8 vight now in Canada alone, and it | Possess.

is said that there are over 2,000,000 in the United States.

The coyote is a free enterpriser. He could quite easily retire to the uninhabited parts of our vast north-| land and live in comparative peace, | but that does not suit him at all, He delights in living among his enemies and matching his wits with theirs, and he enjoys a coyote hunt just as much as the hunting groups in our own district. He decides to live among his enemies because raise the kind of food he prefers,

He is a scavenger in some respects as he picks up food anywhere, but he likes his food freshly killed, just

as human beings do. He is the| world’s top buccaneer and he is al- ways willing to take his chances | against traps, poison, shot guns,

rifles, airplanes or bombs, and he doesn’t care a tinker’s dam whether a coyote hunt is financed by a mu- nicipality, or by the government at Edmonton

.

If the people of Alberta were real sports, they would admire the coyote instead of hating him, Here is a wild animal that has come up the hard way. He has no friends any- where in the whole world, He can go without food or drink for days at a time. He has a body which is like a steel spring. He has a cun- ning meaning “knowingness” that puts the human brain to shame,

He is a first class animal in his own right, he can stand any degrees of low temperatures or of hunger ind thirst, and he is a devoted hus- band and father,

The coyote is a yellowish gray ani- mal, resembling a small German shepherd dog. He seldom weighs more than 30 pounds, but he is very

+

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| pups.

the d |for themselyes.

The coyote lives in a den dug into the hillside or under an overhanging rock, These dens seem to be hard to find as we never hear of our local hunters coming home with coyote | In most cases there are two dens, one for the mother and young, and the other for the father.

Coyotes breed once a year and produce litters of from four to ten pups. These pups are taken care of by their parents until they are a year old, when they are left to shift

* *

The coyote is God's creature and | so he has his good points, The U.S. | Wildlife Service has reported that | the stomachs of 450 coyotes which | were examined, showed that they had

jeaten 177 wild rabbits, and 137 mis- cellaneous rodents. So don’t con- | demn the coyote to the last ditch. | |He keeps down the rodents and| helps to preserve the balance of | | nature, |

What can we as human beings | learn from the unregenerate coyote?

1, The value of physical -fitness, | Man is an animal too, but he does} not understand physical fitness in }terms of the coyote, Perhaps the | Indians had it or the earliest pion- eers but not the men of the present day, The coyote is always fit be- cause he has to be fit to escape an- nihilation. The female coyote does | not need to reduce as she is always! ready to run forty miles per hour or) to fight for her young.

2, The value of a keen intelligence, | In any situation the coyote knows just what to do on the spur of the! moment. A farmer kept a tame | young coyote tied up near his house | and he fed him with scraps scattered |in front of his kennel, The coyote | waited until the chickens came up | for the scraps and then pounced upon | them, so that he had poultry as well as scraps for his meal,

3. The value of alert senses, Not only has the coyote developed his five senses to the highest degree, but he seems to have a sixth sense back in his sub-conscious mind,

|

|

| pS e -. e e |

|Mother Makes Good |

SALT LAKE CITY,—Mrs. Annie Crook of Tooele, Utah, thinks she is the only licensed woman truck driver | in Utah,

She's licensed to handle any truck | on the road.

The mother of three children, Mrs. Crook, is a former navy Wave and she holds truck driving licenses in California and Kentucky as well as | Utah,

| Mrs, Crook assures anyone that “I }ean handle anything on wheels.” | 2, SPE ere rE | ||| GEMS OF THOUGHT |

| BEHAVIOR | |

What a man does, not what he} feels, thinks, or believes, is the uni- versal yardstick of behavior,—Benja- | min C, Leeming, |

To be always thinking about your} manners is not the way to make

{them good; the very perfection of manners is not to think about your- elf,—-Whatley.

Men's be

behaviour should like | their apparel, not too strait, or point) device, but free for exercise or mo-|

tion, Bacon, |

Be civil to all; sociable to many; familiay with few; friend to one; enemy to none.-Benjamin Franklin.

of manner is the attainment, Men are very long afraid of being natural, from the dread of being taken for ordinary, —Jeffrey. Right motives give g@iions to thought, and strength and freedom to speech and action..-Mary Baker Eddy, 2915

Simplicity last

Apple Pie With Cheese Still Favorite

By KAY REX

OTTAWA, Apple pie with cheese has long been a family favorite, and now it's being pushed as the No. 1 Canadian dish,

At the Canadian tourist association convention in Calgary this fall the Canadian cuisine committee suggest- ed that apple pie with Canadian cheese is due for a bit of promotion,

“As mediocre as it may be in some food establishments, it is still Can- ada’s number one favorite,” says the committee report, “Let's resolve to make and serve better apple pie in Canada.”

Suggestions from the year-old com- mittee are directed particularly at the public catering industry. But it behooves the rest of us to take note of such recommendation.

This is particularly so right now with cheese and apples heavy on the market—waiting to be bought by the Canadian consumer,

The apple crop may be a little be- low last year’s huge one of 18,000,-

|000 bushels and cheese production | down

somewhat from there’s still plenty for all,

1949, But

Home economists of the agricul-|

ture department's consumer section remind that each variety of apple has a definite season when flavor and texture are at their best,

December and January are the months to ask for fall varieties such as McIntosh, Baldwin, Northern Spy, Golden Russet and Winesap, In fact the latter is good right through from December until May.

Northern Spy is best for both eat- ing and cooking. Golden Russet is an eating apple, Another variety at its peak right now is the Rome

| Beauty—good for cooking but only SMILE OF THE WEEK

fair eating,

Steamed apple pudding is an ex- cellent way to treat the family to apples.

Ingredients: cup sugar;

six apples: one-third one cup all-purpose flour; two teaspoons baking-powder; one- half teaspoon salt; one-half milk, two tablespoons shortening, Pare, core and slice apple into a buttered double boiler.

in shortening and add the milk. Spread the dough over the apples.

Steam 35 minutes, Turn out to serve. ;

Six servings,

| Helpful Hints

Don't carry so many bundles that you can’t see over them, especially if you're going up or down stairs. Play safe and make two trips.

Liver, kidney, dried beans, cereals, fish and dried fruits are all sources of the iron that you need for good red blood, They shouldbe eaten regularly.

Don't stir paint around and around in the can to mix it properly, Use a flat paddle and start with the end of the paddle at the bottom of the can; then bring it up through the paint with a twisting, turning mo- lion,

To test varnish or shellac to deter- mine whether or not they will darken finish or impart color to clear wood, pour a small quantity over clear glass. If either varnish or shellac shows an amber quality it will dark- en any finish slightly, and will also impart its color to clear wood,

cup |

Add sugar. | Mix and sift the dry ingredients, cut |”

ODDITIES IN THE NEWS

Just about the only things at Ot- tawa that didn’t mind a recent cold spell were the goldfish of Mr, and Mrs, Allan Keefer. As the mercury fell below the freezing point, the goldfish bowl froze into a chunk of ice. The Keefers’ furnace had gone out while they were visiting Mon- treal. Upon their return home, the Keefers thawed the water. The gold- fish shook themselves, and took up life as usual,

¢* + ¢

Apparently even the Eskimos try to keep up with the Jones’, Dr. Axel Laurent-Christensen, Danish Eskimo authority, said at Edmonton that the Eskimo women in Greenland are starting to wear nylon stockings, The doctor, after a long stay in Green- land, is en route to work among the Eskimos at Aklavik, N.W.T,

* ¢ *

Unmarried girls in some German villages have been consulting chick- ens to learn how long they'll have to wait to find a husband. According to custom, the maidens troop out to the henhouse, and knock on the coop. If the rooster responds first, the girl can expect to find a mate right away. If the hen cackles, she will have to | wait another year. | QO The barber at Canterbury, Eng., |was surprised when an’ 11-year-old

| boy sat in the chair and let fall two | pigtails. The boy’s father said: “my first three children were boys. I vow- jed that if the fourth was a boy I | would let his hair grow like a girl’s, | Now I realize it was wrong.” | o* + | Vancouver police held a woman on | charges that she spattered coal oil ;over John Kowalko who took her to a New Year's party, and thei tried to set him afire, Kowalko fled, un- | burned.

| Rude Customer: “Do you sell dog | biscuits in this horrid little shop?”

Shop assistant: “Yes, Will you eat them here or will I send them ’round }to your kennel?”

: Selected

Pineapple Cream Cake One kalf cup butter, 1% cups sugar, 1 tsp. vanilla, 1 cup crushed pineapple, with juice; 2% cups sifted cake flour, 2% tsp. double- acting baking powder, % tsp. salt, % cup water, 3 eggs, separated, Golden Whipped Cream. Cream butter, Add sugar grad- ually while continuing to cream,

Newfoundland is not included the 1949 statistics because it was not a part of the Dominion during the whole of the year,

The above rates are based on @ total of 4,010 deaths of which 1,794 were women and 2,216 men,

Though T.B. kills more men than women in Canada, the ten-year age group with the largest number of deaths is women of 20-29 inclusive, in which there were 415 deaths. This does not mean, however, that the rate was highest in this group be- cause it is a very large one. The highest rate was actually among men 60 to 69 inclusive, where it was

“77 per 100,000, more than twice the

average,

All provinces in Canada have been carrying on mass X-ray surveys in an effort to find as many cases of tuberculosis as early as possible, There can be no doubt that the per- centage of cases found and treated promptly is increasing steadily, and that there is a corresponding in- crease in the percentage of cases which are cured. When a case is discovered before symptoms appear the chances of recovery are more than nine out of ten.

Early discovery of cases pays divi- dends in every direction, The pa- tient’s chances are improved, so it is better for him. The length of treatment need@@ is shortened, which lowers the taxpayer’s bill. The time off the job is shortened so that the earlier a case is found and treated the less financial hardship the fame ily will have to endure, .

The earlier the disease is found and the patient treated, the less_the danger of infection. The disease be- comes more infectious as it advances, and is therefore more dangerous un- less the patient is under treatment where every precaution is taken against his infection being carried to others,

There are about 17,000 patients in Canadian sanatoria,

70-YEAR-OLD CLIMBER BROOKLINE,’ Mass.—To find out for himself whether the weathervane atop the 150-foot church tower need- ed repairs, 70-year-old parishioner Charles A. Newhall of the Second

Church Unitarian climbed up and took a look, “It was a pushover,” said New-

hall, who for 50 years has been a member of the Appalachian Moun- tain Climbing Club.

Recipes :

Add vanilla and pineapple, Mix and, sift flour, baking powder and salt;

add alternately with water. Bea’

egg whites stiff, fold in, Bake in two greased and floured 8-inc

layer cake pans in moderate oven, 850 degrees F., 35 to 40 minutes, Cool. Fill and top with Golder Whipped Cream. Garnish with bits of drained crushed pineapple.

THE CHRONICLE, CARBON, ALTA.

ae a a a a a es

OUR COMPLETE SHORT STORY—

: LOVE IS DIFFERENT :

* ¢ ¢

By Hilda W. Caufield

R°% CAMERON'S eyes followed his

wife’s graceful figure as_ she danced with their friend, Bob Law- son, Bob was a doctor and had known Ann long before Ron had met and married hér, In fact Ann had been Bob's special nurse.

Ron was remembering all this as he watched them, They were the handsomest couple on the floor, Ann tall and fair, her golden hair and delicate coloring taking on an almost

ethereal quality under the glare of |

lights,

j

Ron thought, miserably, should be proud of hfs wife, but he was only unhappy as he sat at their secluded table for four. Opposite him sat Bob's wife, Dot. Unlike Ann, she was little and dark, Suddenly Bob felt he was neglecting her.

“Dance, Dot?” he asked, rising.

“Thanks, Ron,’ she replied quickly. “If you don’t mind I'd rather sit and watch.”

“Oh, dear, that. was the wrong thing to say,” she thought hopelessly as Ron sat down again. ‘Lately I

am always doing wrong things.”

It was true enough. Dot’s little world, made so happy by Bob's de- votion, had gone awry in some man- ner she couldn’t understand. Every- thing seemed as perfect. Bob was just as devoted; Ron and Ann were just as kind to her. Yet, it was Ann, she had to admit, Ann so love- ly and so necessary to Bob's work.

The Camerons were away on holi- day when Bob and Dot were mar- ried. Dot hadn’t known them till their return but she liked them right away. They would cOmplete the per- fect foursome. But that was before she knew about Ann; before she had seen the fair head and the dark one bent over hosptial pl-ns; before she had felt an outsider in the face of their absorption over professional problems, Now she seemed to be al- ways watching Ann and Bob. That was why she had made that stupid remark just new to Ron.

Ron saw the flush on her

JFashions

and saying the

cheeks.

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Jet pilots call the engine throttle

control the “go handle”,

that he}

2915

Dot's Little World Had Gone val! In Some Manner She ouldn’t Understand.

——————— +

For a moment their eyes met and {each knew what the other was think- jing. ~They shifted their attention to the dancers,

Bob had been laughing down into | Ann’s face. “You are a very beauti- | ful woman,” he had said, half lightly, | half seriously. | Going home in the car with her |}head against Ron’s shoulder, Ann ;thought of Bob's compliment, The | disquietude pursued her to sleep, so it was not surprising that she heard | in the middle of the night the first |shrill of the telephone at her bed-

PLANE CRASHED WEATHER—Crash of the Canadian Pacific airliner on the Cascade moun-

IN GOOD

tains in British Columbia occurred in good flying weather, according to airline officials, Pilot Quinton Moore, (above), who. died in the crash wreck, had changed planes when ad- verse flying conditions caused him to returmtwice to his Penticton base. He then waited until weather reports were favorable.

WESTERN BRIEFS

Seek Farm Helpers

PRINCE ALBERT, Sask.—Saskat- chewan will seek 300 single male and 100 single female farm helpers from among displaced persons coming to Canada in 1951, the national employ- ment service here said.

Must Pay Full Rate

WINNIPEG. Winnipeg General hospital notified municipalities it will end its special $3-a-day rate for in- digent patients. It told municipali- ties that after Jan. 1 it will admit indigent patients only if the munici- palities can pay full cost of the care, which is $6 a day.

| side,

Lifting the receiver quickly, she jheard Bob's steady professional voice saying, “An emergency case, bad ac- |cident, I am at the hospital, Can |you come at once?”

“Yes, I'll come,” she replied short- |ly, hoping Ron had not wakened, but jhe had,

#T’ll drive you,” he offered, spring- | ing up.

4

“No, Ron, there’s no need, ‘I don’t | know how long I'll be so you oughtn’t |to wait. I'll drive myself.” | Ron did not argue. He knew Ann }was capable and she was already | checking over in her mind the articles |in her emergency kit, always handy. | Quickly she was into her uniform. | “A different person,” Ron thought bitterly. ‘Now she dogsn’t belong to me, only to Doctor Lawson.”

At the hospital she did indeed be- |long to Doctor Lawson as she word- | lessly obeyed the cool, clipped voice: “Scissors, Gauze, Scissors.”’

Later, tired beyond measure, she left her car at the hospital while Bob drove her home in his. For a} moment sleep slipped over her and {she slumped against Bob’s shoulder. |While she must have dozed only a few minutes, she had a nameless |dream, awakening with a start, Ron’s name on her lips, “You are a good nurse, Ann Cameron,” she, heard Bob {say in the. darkness. Collecting her wits, Ann smiled, “And you are a |very good doctor,” she said. | experts, we should |

Gets Two Years

KAMLOOPS, B.C. Donald Fols- tron, 20, of Lestock, Sask., has been sentenced to two years for “armed” robbery in the toy-gun holdup Dec. 16 of Bailey’s Grocery at Kamloops. The robbery netted less than $100 and part of the money was recovered when he was arrested on a down- town street the next day.

Building Record EDMONTON. Building permits

,

| “Since we’re | know that an ounce of prevention is | |worth a pound af cure,” he replied. | “Sweet dreams, Ann, and give my ; ciperty Me thanks to Ron for sparing you.” totaling a record $46,579,372 had

Stepping on the gas, Bob was | been issued when the books were |thinking of Dot. Opening the door | closed at the city building depart- quietly, he found her curled up like |™ent for 1950. Previous record was a kitten in a big chair. Quickly she | $40,050,063 in 1949.

| jumped up. |Buys Red Deer Site “Coffee is ready, sir,” she called| RED DEER, Alta.—Canadian Safe- |merrily, making him a curtesy. ways Ltd. has agreed to buy from

“Just what I need,” he said, bend-|the city of Red Deer a business site ing to kiss her, jin the heart of the city for $38,000

Ann was thinking only of how/The 2.47-acre site now is occupied weary she was. Ron sat up in bed|by the Red Deer Arena, which will | to greet her, his one-time wife, now |be torn down or moved. Doctor Lawson’s nurse, he jeered to | himself.

“Was warily.

“A very bad case,” she answered | gravely, “but let’s not talk about it. I am so glad to be home. Home to you, Ron.”

Somehow the phrase made her kus- band’s heart sing.

Home to you, Ron.

(Copyright Wheeler Newspaper Syndicate)

Trans-Jordan became an independ- ent country in 1946, when Britain gave up its mandate.

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1950 Flax Crop ‘Woman Mayor Oil Yield High (Quits Northern Town

Md VANCOUVER.—Mrs.. Sadie Young Despite Frost has left Stewart, B.C., where the Sat Es }summer days are 221% hours long WINNIPEG. About 60 per cent.| and the cabbages grow so big that

of the 1950 flax crop is grading tough) a single one fills a wheelbarrow. and damp but quantity and quality| She has spent 40 years in British of oil’in' the dry seed are excellent,| Columbia’s northernmost port and according to a report released by the | for the past year has been mayor of board of grain commissioners’ labora- | Stewart. tory. | The only mementos she brought oil content of 42.8 per|south with her were a beaverskin cent. in this year’s crop is equal to] coat, 20 years old, a silver nugget, a the highest obtained in 16 previous | box of perfumeries presented by the crops. Drying quality of the oil is| Canadian Legion, a silk scarf pres- highest on record. }ented by legionnaires of neighboring Current flax crop of about 4,000,-| Hyder, Alaska, and a rose from her 000 bushels is twice as large as that | garden, of 1949, and shows 85 per cent. of “The rest of the souvenirs are all carlots inspected. entering the top in my mind,” says Mrs. Young. She grade, jis 72 and has come to Vancouver to The laboratory report cautions) retire. farmers against using frozen flax for She went to Stewart in 1910 dur- feeding livestock, Commercial lin-|ing the gold rush, The population seed meal is recommended as safe was 10,000, Today it 300. feed since it has received heat treat-| ‘It's beautiful in the summer,” ment in crushing plants |says. ‘“There’s only about 114

Average

is she hours

Samples from 182. stations in/|of darkness and robins sing at two Manitoba, 69 in Saskatchewan and/|/in the morning.” 22-in Alberta formed the basis of} - the report. | In early Roman times, the color

| yellow was used only for bridal gar- Think Right—Eat Right—Live Right! | ments.

SSO /

qd Hutky

. Gingerbread Cup Cakes Combine 14 cup melted shortening and 114 nd add 1 beaten eg. Stir until well blended. Mix and sif sifted flour, 1 teaspoon Mogi teaspoon Magic Baking Soda, 4

cups molasses togother 214 cups Bakin; Powder, 1 teaspoon cinna- mon, 1 teaspoon ginger, 14 teaspoon cloves, 14 teaspoon salt, and add alternately with hot water. Bake in 24-214” moderate oven (350°) for 30 minutes. Then blend

cup cup cake pans in

one 3-0z. package of cream cheese with enough milk to make of sauce consistency. Top each serving with a spoonful.

Now’s the Time to Take Stock of Your Investments

1950's stock market prices are history. But what may be ahead in 1951 is a matter requiring careful analysis. Prophecy is dan- gerous, That is why the present is the best time to “take stock’”’ of your investments and consider prospects for the year ahead A careful analysis of your holdings made now will place you in a position to estimage with increased confidence what the future holds in store for them

If you will send us confidentially a list of your holdings, our Research deparement will analyse it, forward an up-to-date commen- tary upon each security, and make sugges- tions that seem advisable in the light of 1951 prospects. No obligation is implied or involved by asking for this analysis.

JAMES RICHARDSON & SONS

ESTABLISHED 1957

Western Canadian Offices:

REGINA - EDMONTON SWIFT CURRENT

WINNIPEG CALGARY LETHBRIDGE °

SASKATOON MOOSE JAW PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE 50-19R

HALLO, KIDDIES, WHATS UP? ORUESOME WHEN THE TEAMS] | MY USING THE 4 PLAYING OUT OF TOWN +++ LIMOUSINE THIS

AFTERNOON Z, .-

—By Chuck Thurston

oe NOZ THEN MAYBE YOU'D ADVANCE A 4MALL PORTION OF NEXT MONTHS ALLOW+

AH, WELL, MY PRETTIES, WE STILL HAVE EACH OTHER! WHO NEEDSA CAR OR MONEY Z

I DONT KNOW,

DUKE, THEY JUST UP AND LEFT” ALL OF A

SUDDEN LIKE!

Thursday, January 25, 1951

WE HAVE A COMPLETE STOCK OF

Cough and Cold Remedies

Come in and see us

Shaw’s Drug Store

R. J. Shaw, Phm. C. Phone 24

Delnor Frozen Foods

Orange Juice Sliced Strawberries

Canteloupe 42c Green Peas 29c Mixed Vegetables 3ic

Super Whip, ready-whipped cream

CARBON LOCKER STORAGE

) Phone 27 Phone 27

LITTLE NEWS ITEMS \OF LOCAL INTEREST

Mr. and Mrs. Morris Switzer were weekend visitors with rela- tives in Calgary.

Mr. and Mrs. Ernst Ratzlaff of Acme have taken up residence in the house formerly occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Wilf Skerry. Mr. Ratzlaff recently accepted a posi- tion at Wright Motors. Mr. and Mrs. Skerry are now residing in the Charlie Martin house on the “island.”

Born in Drumheller hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Barber on Monday, January 22, a daughter, Wendy Joy. .

—Alex R. McTavish, R.O., Gradu- jate Optometrist, will visit Shaw’s Drug Store, Carbon, on Monday |; afternoon, January 29. Complete, | dependable eyesight service.

USE THE CLASSIFIED ADS ! |

(\ows- pay Yourself, too,

on pay-day... with

The Carbon Chronicle, Carbon, Alberta

|

Mr. and Mrs. Barl were weekend visitors in heller at the home of Mrs. tha Ohlhauser.

Ohlhauser Drum- Mar-

Pope Lease W.I. held a success- ful whist drive at Beveridge Lake school Friday, “January 19. Mrs. Jim Bacon and Mrs. E. Grenier were in charge of the entertain- ment. Ladies’ first prize was won by Mrs. Earl Fraser, with the consolation going to Mrs. Harry Church. Men’s first prize went to Mr. McKellar and the consolation to Archie McKinnon. Following whist lunch was served by mem- bers of the W.1.

Carbon lost to Newcastle by a 7-6 score in a hockey game played at Carbon Sunday afternoon. Sass bon scorers were Joe Appleyard, Jim Foster, Bill Heath, Marshall Semenchuk, Walter Martin, John Buchner.

Carbon lineup Goal, Dusty Poxon; defense, Lindsay Hay; Roy Kary, Wray Wright, Dale Poxon. forwards, Jim Foster, Bill Heath, Walter Martin, Oscar Gackle, Reg Heath, John Buchner, Marshall Semenchuk, Joe Appleyard, Jack Appleyard, Archie Gouidie.

Gordon Pugh of Drumheller was a weekend guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hay. ipllincethitinn

Coming Events

—The Drumheller Health Unit will hold a Well Baby School clinic in the United Church hall on Monday, February 5th, from 10 a.m. to 12 noon.

A meeting of Carbon F. U. A. Local No. 1005 will be held in the

Number 4; Page 8

The Carbon Chronicle

Published Every Thursday at CARBON, ALBERTA $2.00 a Year in Canada; $2.50 in US. W. SKERRY, Editor and Publisher

CHRIST CHURCH, CARBON

SUNDAY SERVICES Ist Sunday of the Month: Holy Communion, 11:00 a.m. 2nd, 3rd and 4th Sundays: Even. song, 7.30 p.m. 5th Sunday: Evensong, 3:00 p.m.

REV. J. W. WAY, Vicar

For TRAVEL INFORMATION CALL

Carbon Bus Line

DOUG PROWSE

Proprietor

ee

and Pre-|

CARBON THEATRE

Jan. Feb. Feb.

25 Shaggy.

1—Hello, Frisco, Hello.

8—The Count of Monte Cristo.

Feb. 15—Tobacco Road.

Feb. 22—Double Feature; King of Dodge City and Streets of New York.

HARRY HUNT

Draying

Legion hall Monday evening, Soft Water Hauling

February 5, at 8 p.m. | Res. Phone §2 The Gamble Ladies’ Aid will

meet at the home of Mrs. Victor

Luft at 2,30 p.m. on Thursday

Parenter & Andy Bell There will be a Girls’ Club

Most people leave themselves out in the cold on meeting at the home of Mrs. DRAYING

pay-day. They pay the grocer and the baker... the milkman and the landlord. Everybody and his uncle dig into their pay envelopes but themselves.

Jack Barnes on Tuesday, January

30, at 7.30 p.m. All members are General Tracking

$ Result they’re usually in a financial strait-jacket requested to attend. ' ...and they worry. They worry about bills on hand. : They worry about bills to come, They worry about HERE'S WHAT PEOPLE ARE unexpected bills, Money is always on their mind CARD OF THANKS §. F. TORRANCE SAYING ABOUT souring their pleasure in living. And cobwebs gather I wish to extend my sincere on their plans for tomorrow. tat Aa Pasanal Planing “Wit cme Pe ono cake io be Laie Ald of te], ASU RAMEE nite ch, the ALL CLASSES " > Chapter I.0.D.E., and the teach- The B of M featured Personal Planning on a test basis at the the Personal oe ee WHY? ers of the Carbon school for their FARM MORTGAGE Canadian National Exhibition last j pet A z $ - LOANS autumn, In two weeks, 27,000 Christmas gifts and messages of people asked for a copy of the Personal Planning is much more than just drawing goodwill. Also to Mr. Spry, who B of M’s booklet on ~ up a budget. Budgets are often frustrating dog-collars. ; cana j REAL ESTATE AGENT Personal Planning. Here are some They usually tie you down and make life a very so kindly took care of the United ° rotlangl Commer thgee people monotonous affair. Church and visited me every day; Clerk for Auctioneer “A very workable budget, Your : No, Personal Planning shows you how to live with- to the members of the Carbon | - service te appenciaas : in your income and enjoy it. It’s a complete financial Lions Club, who took care of the WHAT IS SACA - PELO? wi q ac ta pi h “4 “4 2 So 7 ° a j Luan program, cut from the pattern of your particular Scout Hall; to the Charlebois) sapa-pelo is the most remarkable la needs and problems. ami i Ip; “Thank you so much for showing Personal Plann t hel k ‘HI family for their kind help; and scientific discovery of the age, us the way to make a budget work, be ung wont help you make millions, , i 3 WwW . ; ; Have tried for a year wih no But given an honest chance it will cure your at our felends who " ought - which will kill the roots of all sues at, but age I thik we can ‘day-after-pay-day blues,’ chickens, home cooking, fruit, superfluous hair. Saca-Pelo con- really live and save w 4 yo » ¢ tsata ie Reneauat io mp a You Il learn how to make your budget work for honey, Sone and juices; and to tains no drug or chemical, and We Geeta t you, instead of you working for it. And you'll also Dr. McFarlane and my wife for can be applied in the privacy e appreciate Fe EEA _ ea Personal Planning helps you realize your their kind attention and care} of your own home or in method of handling money.” pians for tomorrow much s pr th y ave dg i ° 3 | ment wy. ey. ty ok ch sooner than you have dared during my recent illness. | LOR-BEER LABORATORIES CHARLES GRAHAM _ |679GranvilleSt., Vancouver, B.C. ASK FOR YOUR COPY AT YOUR NEAREST B OF M BRANCH TODAY! TWERE'S NO OBLIGATION... EXCEPT TO YOURSELF Bank oF MOnrTREAL Royal Hotel Canadas First Gauk 7 Calgary Alberta Carbon Branch; JACK BARR, Manager Located in the Centre of Eve y hing WORKING WITH CANADIANS IN EVE RY WALK OF LIFE SINCE 4817 LADIES’ LOUNGE ROOM