i Rer cares 3.50) fs: eee 0 ; ' os 3.75 oy Nox k wrapped. Seo ae C, ole ade cont at tect some whaleaer are setting! prices eaiivalect’ to above quotations
| bes. unwrapped. | 9 King No., 1, wra BR Gs sauna a as ~~ © Holland Pippi No., _y wrap] ail ee | Mother No., 1, wrapped. Splendid apple, * Grimes Gilden No rE: wrapped Per a ee
Compare these prices with the City charge. Oning to nay
J
XMAS CHINA AND GLASS
-No more suitable gift could be imagined rely dainty piece of Nippon China. Our CROCKERY 1 ‘is complete. Dinner Sets, Tea Sets, single pieces. |
SALT! sSALT F, armers iad Cattlemen. We have a carload
at your disposal. Selling well because the price’ . Is: right. In barrels, 50 lb. sacks & 50 Ib. blocks.
olay = “Nothing :
b eae:
| ‘SUITS and OVERCOATS Another large shipment. has ‘ just. arrived ps er: a nuatber of large sizes in a a
BROCTON SHOES - as DP eould be better.
Leather goods in ; a lines have increased 30: per cent. The ereatest wk: ance in history, It will pay you to take a day off to inspect our large dis- ~ play of dark. Ox Blood shves. — Latest styles and good fitting. Every pair absolutely guaranteed, ‘These are now in our window for insp a $9, ae eee pale i ee nex? ‘spring $13.00 without a a doubt. !
so» AND SERVICE Soe
TOWN COUNCIH. Gassitio’s fhe Gisste
THE GEM THEATRE The Yast meeting of Council held eeoy i¢p) H A R D W A R E je) . Fri. and Sat.---Elsie Ferguson in “The Lie.” on Monday was one of the most in-| Together with many other towns|s (4 o) et Monday and Tuesday : teresting of the present year and|in Southern Alberta Bassano effect-| Lx) at : Ethel Clayton in “ Maggie Pepper.” though nearing the end of the term |ed a most remarkable eleventh hour od = owe + Wednesday and Thursday : when members might have been rally in the Victory Loan Campaign < - ; %. ee Agi a expected to huve grown weary of|whiclr resulted in the gloriots at- Lr] : o® Dorothy Dalton in.“ Hard. Boiled. well-doing, they were all on their|tainment of a flag and four crests, — : ou try * Friday and Saturday---Next Week ; at toes and full of ginger. Even the most confirmed optimist > Norma Talmadge.in “ The Safety Curtain, The oniy incident which marred|must Dave been astothded ut this |i bead Ee ca the proceedings was when Secretary | result after so long a period of Carnegy woke Coun, Playfair and | pusillanimity and vaci!llation on the © Us tor your winter a ; insisted upon his voling ona matter alee Rewssi ra those ae aac | ih ° ° of red tape, which Billy «very |knew the chairman best preserve “@ , Quality Merchandise properly considered the psaychologi-|a Micawler-like attitude and were SI requirements cal moment for forty winks. not- disappointed, for duriug the ©)
Aimong the many weighty matters | /#8t two days of the campaign sub-
‘ Opposite th discussed were the granting of per-|S¢tiptions -began to roll in with Come up the side street Past Ollie, ) lt Pays! mission to M. J. Hill for the erec- | @Vet-increasing momcntum until by |f F 4 0 © : bint al an Open Ale. tik ow the two went ie earned wae. obit ve ky W armers 3.00, 3.50, . 0 Pe , WOMEN’S APRONS lots east of the Hunter Hotel; the}® % “Me Honor. Flag: with four ’ MEN S UNDERWEAR : : é deci $ re t a + : : A , crests, und thus once agatn has the S Clarks Charcoal Bricks | 25 doz "7 Pare Wool Shirts and Drawers, | In nest. Stripe Print. of good question of rebates on dray license Bp : fo ~ ‘ ie ’ ; ‘ ; ive | toWn Yisen nobly to its obligations. j “ oo 00d quality Per Garment $3.00 |. I ality. A Bargain 50f each which were decided in the negative; : ‘ seu ; ze | 7" | d $0 | H d | 25 good quality c 4 APRONS the instructions to the chief of aga total amount subscribed in gaivanise 0a. O ¢ s - _MEN’S UNDERWEAR. . poli¢e to-rigidly enforce the license | Bassano was $42,600, S " : All Wool Shirts and Drawers, phieterge ie ee ta ait against petiz tindnte pee _ inde 8 sc «ag made it = 20 galvanised Coal Hod 2.50 Z feat value Per Garnient $2.00 ‘ Vale 1 95 travelling merchants; an offer of | nex’ © impossible for” any ‘ ‘ : . i: : bedi : cgi ibaa og . $250.00 for a “meter not in nxe|systematic work in the district to/f wed Fire Shovels #4 fe [5c to 40c {Tv MEN’S CAPS DRESS GOODS (which needless to add was grabbed | be attempted and that undoubtedly H i St 10.00 to = 0.00 — Splendid lot of Winter Caps, with |. 4 very handsome Bedford Cord in iit onceter); the matter of improv-|had a great bearing on the very eating oves ‘ Oo -N. —/ earflaps, warm and‘comfortable all wool material, yery dresey and ing crossings in towh;~a_ recom-| poor returns made, Stove Boards 2.00 2.25 2.50 Price $1,50 to $3 00 | serviceable, Colors, dark olive mendation that the town superin- ae MAD, ? ? green Per yd, $5.00 Bil tendent inspect the fire hydrants : Felt weather-strip 38 ft. for 65c MEN’S TIES GEORGETTE CREPES every two weeks during the winter Carne H nor. d t A nobby bunch of Silk Pies A host of dainty shades. Just and every four weeks during the ; “BY : onore Pump Jacks 14.00 to 25.00 Price 60% to $1.50) arrived Price per yd. $2,506 summer months; the appointment —
of Secretary Carnegy as assessor and also rcturning officer; and per- mission, tothe newly formed Women's Institute to hold meetings
every mouth in the Town Hall. the betterment of municipalities i } Gouneillor eth had furtber ‘ite Alberta,
Fruits and Vegetables ponoxe thrust the! Que of the most lot a ingle
According to Secretary Carnegy the recent ¢onvention of munici> palities held at Edmonton was pregnant with great possibilities for
Plain Building Paper per roll 1.50
} S| Everything In Hardware __ HARNESS
NIVUD
_ Groceries and Provisions
ew LEO Peaches, Pears, Prunes, Dried Appies, Currants, Relate. New Peel, Lemon, peu cens Citron, Sweet Apple iter.
— ——
““@ome localities orders were more @rastic. than during the war, but the} Plenty of W ; } situation . showed little : : “While production in West Virginia ‘ @nd Colorado were reported increas- ‘ _ ed, there was no noticcable change in the ranks of the 425,000 striking miners. Sixty-six trains were annulled by
‘
Berlin, — Work for all the une: ployed in Germany for the next é years will be provided in resto the ruined mines of Northern Pranee,|and urdock reserved says Vorwaerts, This opinion is’ Rican Mur lock *
fs . based upon the report of the German]S. McLean, re ting the . Be Ghcaco ant Neste 2% nin commission sent to Fens] Abates company, a Gem cone. balirdads recently to ascertain the extent of/tion that the packers and not the the damage and which has just, made] farmers fixed the price of livestock, public its findings. This contention Mr. McLean disput- domestic fields. It decreed lightless “The task,” says the newspaper, | ed,
2 oat A @trects, discontinuance of clectric fer pr pn 94 aries Hem00
ae nish wo r ev » % signs, coal gas for heating and other Imperials to Pass
in the metal :
requiré a two-hinda” non wh the} workers on a vote to decree a gen- eral strike, :
Indiana's public service commission took the most drastic action in the
Prof, W. ‘a tition. J Ales et particularly aiitcrent from at for- Conditions at er __| merly produced, he added, ohh
. bat . Sur y 1 ne advisable restrictions of service by Europe and for everyone else ¢
public utilities, with less than a two gaged in superfluous labor. weeks’ supply of coal ‘The reports show the fallacy of
Ealgary~~Describing the ‘car situ-}°
7 A the theory that emigration of ten eee itatne mS “ ” With calls for assistance from com-|"... ptt " Pianni ation in the province as “awful,” Pro- munities suffering fromt a coal short- million td fifteen miltion oe ears ne fessor W. J. Elliott, of the U.G.G,, By age growing’ more . numerous,.. the from Germany is an economic ne- ion for. ihem | dealt strongly with the situation at Vevsdl ‘te dvetay. Dainaged y
ee Winnipeg.—In a day. or two, three ‘ Heavy Storm> cessity. ees 7 : the U.F.A. secretaries convention. thousand British “ soldiers will bel is. siso denounced the conditions at} Sault Ste, Marie, Mich, ~ A stiff
passing through the West on their northeast ‘gale sweeping Lake: Supe- Is for fuel. i .,,| tlre stockyard here, stating that © the ast ga eeping peals made for fucl. — : Amend Temperance Act way home from Siberia. They will yards were entirely too inadeqnate to|tior severely battere the steamer |'
Orders. went to regional directors
railroad administration turned loose every available car to meet the ap-
arrive at the coast on the Monteagle. of the nation’s railroads from Direc- : LA AS this ie the latrest eanre tu i handle the present business, North Stas, which down the tor-General Hines, to eliminate train] Saskatchewan Minister Informs Grain Canad a panty. d Discussion’ of the business and] tiver, covered with snow and ice, The service where absolutely necessary in Growers That Act Will Be aby ees “a cisleate returned) condition of” the U.G.G. also occu- North Star, a Great. Lakes Transit the public interest, but it was offi- Changed rior estan Acree sets 1 Lie pied some time, Further criticism}Company vessel, is the first ship this
: ing to meet them with some cheer ‘ks cially announced that no general} Saskatoon.—Criticism levelled atlag g mark of appreciation of the id ver png f ars ii eho a salt Haccgnchonta nae curtailment of service was contem- ’ vi he F { ; Was HERE, Pe were ee t the
° rvice was contem-|the government with respect to the/ worth of the imperial army to’ the financial eondition of. thé. eoipany]a00ve in‘and she had lost almost her :
plated. alleged laxity in the operation of the i Saskatchewan Temperance Act drew mere was none too good, and that were| entire deckload of shinglts.
: ; he company to close down now it}. No other reports of vessels caught ; forth a pledge from Hon, George p \ t { Russian Government Langley, minister of municipal ar- Fuel Is Held Up would show a loss of a quarter of a|in the storm have been received here. million, Officials’ of the organization
fairs, that the government would in- Must Change troduce legislation to enforce or am-
end the Act at,the coming session of
claimed, however, that this did not|Mil#on Bushels of Potatoes Frozen Coal Shipments From U.S. to Belrepresent the true condition of the} Winnipeg.—According to — official
Allies Will Continue Economic Pres-| the provincial legislature, at the con- real i tps asad expeeviel parbicrinp fet eg peat eh carioaamibe Nose ect at sure Till Democratic Govern- cluding meeting of Districts 6 and] Poronto. — Although coal consign-! compariy should ‘trade on the basis|lion bushels of potatoes have -been ment Is Formed 16 of the Saskatchewan Grain Grow-].4 to Canada has been held up at| of a wholes <iilseda frozen in the ground, meaning a loss London.—The present measures of} ers Association. the border, H. A, Harrington, On-| Jt was stated that the entire wheat/Of about a million dollars, This is ‘economic pressure on Russia will ———— tario fuel administrator, had been ad-| crop of Alberta was about five million| material reduction from the figures
continue until a democratic govern-| Ds Army vised that shipments will be permit-| } i : ; ‘ . ; ushels, and officials said that the|Siven out’a few days ago, but the ment is established in Russia which Riots at Sale of Goods ted to come forward for industries) company could handle every bushel| estimated yield this year was only.
swath Oe eae nt Ten Thodsand People Storm U. 8.(° the Priority list, which are in im-| that did not go back into the ground] five. million busliels, or two million House of Commons by Under Secre- Armory; One Woman Dead mediate need. or was fed to stock. Jess than last year. ‘
2 2 Mr. Harrington has received the tary for Foreign Affairs. Harmsworth,.| Buffalo, N.Y.—One woman is ‘dead, following message from Washington
London, — King
view of the ira Co hoes oh ¢ in the course o
; missionary from, ye sg
vere inj ; Last Dependents to Leave a sare were lelnres ~ apy in this contection: No Coal For: r Foreign Ships. London. -—= Eight ~ ships Engin ) D { z Li others fainted as the result of a rio “The United States Railroad. ad- ie 2 }2 Germans e eated at bau when a crowd of ten thousand storm-|.._. ‘ y will carry 2,000 Canadian
Ul the doers of the Sixth Ress wieela wid e Me se * ented Ones Is Issued By Ue, Rilivoed| Reseen ee oo whieh bey %
“SS Rsops- Were Suppbite wb isu gimvery here. Lhe cr pending distipition pric Conserve Fuel Risst two pastion ta be“ condctal” Heavy Artillery and ‘Armored gathered for the. opening of @ sale} sn caule, Wiréctor oF purchases|, Washington.—I Cana 1 : oe pd Of Wnieed States vitiy wed cone Ay fo eee ashington.—Instituting the. first da will. be domestic servant.emi-| from Kis”
. . : Copenhagen.—German troops, pre-|_ The dead woman is Mrs. Emma}; general curtailment in’ coal transpor-|grants, each numbering about a hun
istration will have charge of the dis-|tation as a conservative measure, the|dred. ‘They. wi j ; . / trauc h y willt leave during the sumably belonging to Col. Avaloff-| Baumeister, 65 years of age, Whol tribution. It is essential that you getl railroad administration: central coal{ month, rege
Bermondt’s forces, supported by| fainted in the rush and died in 28) absolute proof that the preferred in-| committee ordered discontinued the heavy and light artillery and an arm-|ambulance om its way to a hospital.) dustries are in immediate need of bunkering of foreign owned vessels in Crime Conditions in Chicago ored train, attacked Libau, but were] The injured were jammed up against! (4.4 upon receipt of which informa-|Ametican ports Chicago,—In addressing the Chi- driven off by Lettish troops, who] the rough stone surface of the arm-}tion the administration will take up United ‘States owned ships and|cago association of commerce, Edwin were supported by British artillery,] ory and many were badly cut. the advisability of immediate release | vessels flying the American lig will| W. Sims, president of the Chichigo
sapped to a cohen recived by Operations on Const ‘of Albachiael to preferred industries, aceording to continue to receive fuel supplies as| crime commission and former United|troops of Gen. Denikine’s yolunt ‘ : Saag yeres So ge, airpl Madrid. ~~ Operations By: fad Wns priority list. usual for the time being, it was said,| States district attorney, declared that}army in the meantime took. 20,000 n the afternoon a German airplane ? all other vessels would be’compelled| Chicago, with its population of 5,-|more. The communique asserts :
dropped proclamations on the city.|S¢@ on the pater ete of ie sone opis Sentenced to Death to''walt the. end of, the bituminous] 000000 bas‘miune tnurdete-in a; puniianted aivalons Ot Mallee After a prolonged bombardment by/0n the coast o ucemas, Spene Winnipeg.—Fred Strycki, of Stu-| miners’ strike. than England, are being put out of action daily.
the enemy) artillery, a new violent|Morocco, are being planned by the/artburn, charged with the murder of New York.—There are 210 ships in
offensive was launched in the even-|}overnment. ; The captain-general of | his. employer, John Kohut, by pois-) the port of New York affected by| Dublin.—Ernest Blythe, member of} Victory Loan Popular in s. ing. It was repulsed by the Letts. pomgeried pine in Mees to con- oning, last February, was found|the order of the railfoad: adminteira-{the’ Sita Wel perliaiint: Wha wast. Poitaie Lethal States R The enemy suffered heavily. cr with officials over the contem-| guilty by a jury at the assize couft|tion central coal committee regard-|arrested during a raid on Sinn Fein|have a keen appreciation of
plated attack, here and sentenced by Judge Galt to , 4 “ph . \ ing discontinu: f f headquarters September 12, 1 f Vi b «\wroutded British Sailors Ge Gakcid.: bt 'the proeincial: jail on g ance of foreign tonnage q P 12, and later|o ictory Bonds. $
J Bp bunkering. Many of these, however,| Wa@S sentenced to one year in prison,|from the other side of the bo ler x rong igen a pee Bvt Co age ie January 29, 1920, are British vessels, which, it is be-| Was Teleased from pay te “after having|to a few days ago totalled bal sp 5 Saget SRE. HOMSE ope ¥ Peg. A DORSS . OOF ioe i 4 lieved, will be able to proceed to| been for fiye days on a hunger strike. |550, two, millions more than ship Princess Margert have arrived) ing 180 gallons of liquor, valued at| Premier Supports Viscountess Astor| tyatifax for coal Blythe was taken to a hospital lected’ last year in tha at Copenhagen from Riga, the Politi-|$2,800, consigned to Brown Brothers,} Plymouth,—Lady Astor has receiv- : : : : ¥
by wireless, claims that - troops captured~ 35,000 Bols between ms ober 17 and 27,
#
ken reports. They are from the Brit-| Winnipeg, were scized at the Union| ed the personal endorsement of Pre« ¢ ies " ieh Chilian Ty paign. eae ish cruiser Dragon, which was hit by|station, Officials said the seizure|mier Lloyd George in her candidacy Objects to Prohibition white Sasi alk mh and [bene srelagasal seeps: * a German shell, killing nine and| was in line with the campaign launch-| for a seat in the House of Commons CHIN “haee yauihed. the aseicie eva 1 ta etree vf wounding four men. ed a month ago against the “boot-| from the Plymouth district. The Pre-| New Jersey Governor-Elect Declares| treaty, negotiated some months ago,}Austrian Adecivak to the = . |leggers’ trust, mier, it was announced, has sent her That People Voted Against ‘the state department has annotiaced. al Labor conference here h ~ US. Thanksgiving Day — aa ae aa a letter of encouragement and a pro-| | Measure The treaty is to continue in force for|ed to obtain passage to Washington. — President. Wilson Ham Prices Drop ; mise of his hearty support. Jersey City.—Governor-elect Ed-|five years, and automatically extends|supreme council at Pa has set aside ‘Thursday, November Quebec.—A sudden slump of cight - ward © Edwards has sanovncéd that{iGell until a year. after notice of inv|eo se Abavén tg: aeeiae 27, as Thanksgiving Day, in a pro-|cents in the price of cured and un- French Defeat Turks &
he would use all lawful methods to|tended termination by either govern- prevent prohibition in New Jersey.| ment,
For its enforcement by the federal government, I shall not be respon- sible, he said. “I construe my elec-
4 tion as an indication of the feclings G V rnm t Re of the people of this state concerning Oo e en -—™ national prohibition, They are un, Z — qualifiedly opposed to it, Holding ; i their mandate, I shall use all the Offer of
lawful methods to preserve inviolate the sovereignty of the people.”
_ - . “4 Washington, —_ Or, Distress on Lower St. Lawrence Plan Merging Agencies proposal la ending the Quebec.—Reports of distress have. through ‘withdrawal 4 been received here from points in the | Dominion Employment Bureau May} proc. di in: cli lower St. Lawrence, on the north and Supplant All Others United ‘Min went 6 south shores, esp@ially on the Gaspe Vancouver, B.C.—-The World says: was blunt! ted aad coast-and at Esquimault point, Mer-|“A move is on foot to place all gov-| partment ot We chants here have large shipments of|¢rmmental employment agencies P Th hat Lace supplies which they cannot send out,| throughout Canada under the super- contac yrds ‘ advan as there are no vessels available, An|Vision of the department of civil re-| Gon Wye ba Ar lication has been made to the goy-| ¢stablishment, This would mean that Fed ratio ‘ot Tar, wat iy iment to have the steamer Mont-|the Dominion employment — bureaus dae iW, make sevetal trips to the lower| OW operated here would be operat- fe i nce to deliver supplies to|¢4 from the S.C.R. offices under the’ - bia the close of navi- direction of the unit commander in ’ | British Columbia, and to complete’ to the scheme as it has been mooted me sk pote authoritics would
cording to a cablegram
‘clamation, which said the country|cured ham agreeably surprised Que-]| London.—Turkish forces have been the couference
looked forward “with confidence to|bec housewives, This sudden decline} defeated by French troops in_Angora the dawn of an era where the sacri-jis due to the order from the govern-|(in Asiatic Turkey, 200 miles east of fice of the nations will find recom-|ment, Bacon also has suffered a de-| Constantinople), according to a Con- pense in a world at peace.” cline of sbout 6 to 8 cents per pound,|stantinople dispatch. The Turks de- livered a heavy attack, but were re- pulsed, after several hours’ fighting. The French hospital traih also was reported to have been attacked by troops under Mastapha Kemal.
——
Labor Decides on Hours of Work
Washington, — After nearly five i hours of constant fighting, the inter- ‘ational labor conference adopted - the 48-hour week convention of the committee as a “basis for sy a as to exactly what
50 Schooners for Dominion Govt.
Victoria.—It is reported here that the Dominion Government plans to place contracts for fifty wooden schooners with British Columbia shipyards. According to the report, to tropical and other, specified coun- 28 of the ships will be constructed tries, at this port and the other half will
Originally, Mr, Barnes’ motion be turned: out by Wesie-Op:the sata Pn es aie convention on the) land. ; are not r week,” on. asateidioegs 691. vn ee te the motion|Mr, Fontaine, French Governm
with reference to a special committee of matters concerning its application
|firely cured in
wy 1
at
eated
ie blood with Dr. Pills and are often.
this way, afe
proper
by. building. ap
Saal by
‘Complete in itself, Mother Gra Worm jae Pontes bebe tees - the assistance of any other mi
» it effective. It does not fi to do its work. |
The political party worker is the one who is the most successful in working the party.
Mina ard’s Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
A Scottish minister had been away on a vacation, and on his return asked
A Barony of the United Kingdom]
been conferred upon Admiral Sir Rosslyn Wemyss, G.C.B., who has ‘relinquished the post of First Sea Lord to Earl Beatty.
hiepicine co. Like a Tidal Wave
Heart Disease and Nerve Troubles Sweep the Country
Probably at no period in the
MONEY ORDERS
Buy your out of town supplies with Do- press Money Orders. Five
minion lars costs three cents.
A Strike for Freedom
the sexton how all had gone in his|world’s history h ioni i i i y have heart and nerve} Unionism in a slightly different absence. “Very well, ,indeed!” was}troubles been so prevalent as. they h is Bed a’ ‘ 2 # the cheering response. “They do -siy ate today. ; Ke phase is being use y students of that maist meeniaters leave someone eee et ne weetiing age, ang Shanghai, who have in their_ofgani- worse than themselves to fill the pul- ¥. iety j#ition some 20,000 of their siimnes pul-lthe care and worry, the anxiety and one-fourth of whom are girls. These
fb —_ excesses ~ofdoor exercise. take Dr. Williams’ Pink
pit when they go away, but you'never Jactivity of business life, constitute a
H\co
am engineers, of the Hayden Stone ., New York, passed through Win- nipeg recently after visiting Northe:
Pes .
itoba to determine the value of
lhe famous Flin Flon Copper Mine.
Their report is said to be most favor- able, and negotiations. will likely be completed in December, Should they be successful, it is almost certain that
ja railway will be extended into Nor-
thern Manitoba near the Pass. The line will extend from the Pass to the aise Bases ‘of over seventy
'|miles, This mine is worth epproxi-
| The Hayden Stone agents for J, C, Jackson, Utah , |coppér interes ee CURE Soran ¢
‘of Chauvin, Alberta, rain of forty-eight
and sent them tothe!
9 market recently. This is the
See ships ever sent from this |ing Ais and it was handled altogether
J y the farmers themselves. Mixed : ng is being - generally adopted throughout the surrounding territory sand is bringing prosperity to the far-
- mers, They expect to have more than
a hundred cars of cattle for disposal = cu jct is characteristic of Western wd} : r zi : most exclusively in grain growing; r ay * ° ot aga that less grain is being
-— this fall. _ Whe development of the Chauvin y.. First stockraising was car- then the farmers engaged the tendency is more and more ' towards mixed’ farniing. This does “grown, but rather that more livestock
a,
mately two million dollars. .
Rap eo
: Medicine Co.,
Why take nasty cathartics, sicken- ing salts, or stomach-turning oils to drive these rascals out? Let gentle, harmless Cascarets remove the liver and bowel poison which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, your skin , your breath offen- sivé, and rx stomach sour, Get a box of Cascarets at the drug store and rid joe liver, stomach and bow- els of the excess bile, poisons, and waste which are keeping you miser- ya Cascarets never gripe, never sicken, never inconvenience. They cost so little and work while you sleep.
Wortien ought to make satisfactory angels because they are so fond of “harping.” ©
‘eajieisirtesoraes iin Ifa man ever speaks the truth it is when he is angry.
Keeping Fit
REY len
Co. are acting}
B hadsiese
ufferers from
nervous troubles who has found a ure through Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills.
M iss Johnston says:,“For a long time Iwas a severe sufferer from nervous troubles, with the result that I grew very pale and weak. Medical treat- ment did not help me, and various medicines had no beneficial effect, un- til finally a friend advised me to try
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. I began
their use and took the pills regu- larly for several months, with the re- sult that I not only gained weight, but have recovered my full health an strength, I cannot praise Dr. Willi- ams’ Pink Pills too highly for what hey, have done for me.” up the-blood thére ‘is one : iat has been a household ‘a generation, Dr. Williams’ or Pale People. They ; he entire system, make the oe te -and red, strengthen the res, increase the appetite, put col- e cheeks and lips and drive
seta tired feeling.
50, from € Dr. ill Brockville, Ont.
Canada’s Coal Resources | The tabulated statement of coal production shows that no coal is pro- duced in three provinces, namely, Quebee, Ontario and Manitoba. In 1917, the total production in Canada was 14,015,588 tons, having a value of $47,643,646,
Nova Scotia-led in coal production, with 6,324,684 tons, or a little more than three-sevenths of the total out- put. Alberta was second with 4,723,- 189 tons.
Some people save a lot of money by not buying soap.
It Bids Pain Begone.—When neu- ralgia racks the nerves or lumbago cripples the back is the time to test the virtues of Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil. Well rubbed in, it will still the pain and produce a sensation of ease and rest. There is nothing like it as a liniment, for its curative properties are great. A trial of it will establish faith in it. :
Remember girls, that it is easier to elope than it is to get back home again.
Minard’s Liniment Cures Distemper.
The Unkind Printer
Misprints are often a source of joy to all but editors. Few are more pleasing than those enshrined in the ancient yarn—probably ¢oncocted — of the public banquet at which a speaker, in proposing the toast of “The Army” coupled with it the name of the distinguished general, whom he described, according to the print- ed account of the proceedings, as a “bottle-scarred veteran.” In the next issue of.the paper in which the libel had appeared a note was inserted ex- pressing regret for a typographical error, and explaining that the words should have been “battle-scared vet- eran,”
The Bank of England has the right to sell beer without a license, This privilege was granted to the bank in its gharter of incorporation under date of July 27, 1694. And so the bank, if Sikes onnt kes
roun door to door, |
wholesome} 9
My 7] 0
do that, sir!”
LISTEN TO THIS! SAYS CORNS LIFT RIGHT OUT NOW
You reckless men and womén who are pestered with corns and who havé at least once-a week invited an awful death from lockjaw or blood poison are now told by a Cincinnati author- ity. to use a drug called freezone, which the moment a few drops are applied to any corn, the soreness is telieyed and soon the entire corn, root and all, lifts out with the fin- gers,
It is a sticky ether compound which drtes the moment it is applied and simply shrivels the corn without in- aming or even irritating the sur-
serious drain on the nervous system.
The business of this work-a-day world goes with such a rush that the stoutest hearts and strongest nerves break down under the strain.
On the first approach of any break- down of the system, Milburn’s Heart and Nerve Pills should be taken. The reconstructive power of these pills on the heart and nerve system is simply marvellous.
Mr. W. A. Wright, Hopewell Ave., Ottawa, Ont., writes: “After suffer- ing for some time with my heart, I consulted a number of doctors, but
ot no relief. However, I read what
ilburn’s Heart and Nerve Pills had done for others, who had the same symptoms and thought I would give them a trial; Believe me, six boxes cured me completely. I am feeling fine now, and can attend to my work every day. I can recommend your pills to anyone suffering as I did.”
Price 50c a box at all dealers. or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, .To- ronto, Ont, .
Ot)
will r | a the drug oe. but is sufficient to rid one’s feet of every hard or sof! corn or callus,
You aré further warned Ke cut- ting at a corn is a suicidal habit.
Men, like tools, are useless, they lose their temper.
when
Minard’s Liniment Co., Limited.
Gentlemen,—Last winter I receivy- ed great benefit from the use of MINARD’S LINIMENT in a severe attack of La Grippe, and I have fre- quently proved it to be very effective in cases of Inflamation.
ours, W, A. HUTCHINSON,
Britain Exporting Live Stock
August was a record month for British live stock exporting. Over a million dollars poured into the pock- ets of British breeders of pedigree stock. Since New Year’s Day about $400,000 have been paid Britishers for their horses, cattle, sheep and pigs. In August, 518 horses were sent out of the country. Holland was a buy- er of 102 head worth $580 each. Bel- gium took 98 head worth $1,350 each. During the month 916 cattle were sent away, the United States taking 31. Canada bought 41, Uru- guay 30, and the Argentine 99. The total number of sheep exported was 1,819 head, of which the United States took 480.
Don’t think that a girl by any other name would be as sweet. You may find out your mistake after. giving her yours,
A variety stage transforms an ac- tress into an artist,
it liked, could open a bar|_ le street, or could send} deliver beer from] less to say, how-|
pti pti Be apo
How’s This?
We offer $100.00 for any case of catarrh that cannot be _ cure by HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE is tak- en internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surtaces of the System.
Sold by Druggists for over forty years.
Price 75c. Testimonials free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
The mosquito isn’t a prohibitionist, yet he wants the bars removed.
The average milk pail refuses to upset until it gets full.
Awful Asthma Attacks.—Is there a member of your family who is in the power of this distressing trouble? No
service you can render him will equal the bringing to his attention of Dr. J. D. Kellogg’s Asthma Remedy. This remarkable remedy rests its reputa- tion upon what it has done for oth- ers. It has a truly wonderful-record, covering years and years of success in almost every part of this contin- ent, and even beyond the seas.
A long yarn is‘sometimes produced from the threads of conversation.
CORNS ARE LIKE KNOTS
Year by year they grow harder, and incidentally more painful. Why suffer when you can be cured for 25¢ spent on Putnam’s Corn Extractor? Fifty years in use and guaranteed to cure, Use Putnam’s Extractor, 25c at all dealers.
Soft Drinks
Have you any idea what things are in the bottled soft drinks you con- sume? Some contain one thing, some another, but all contain water, flavor, sweetening and carbon dioxide gas. Those four things are the basic es- sentials of a bottled soft drink, There is likely to be some coloring matter and there may be an acid—usually either the citric acid found in lemons or tartaric acid found in grapes, though sometimes mineral acids are used. Frequently there is a condi- ment, such as red pepper, cinnamon, allspice, cloves or nutmeg. There is almost certainly a trace of alcohol. And that just about covers what is likely to be found in these soft drinks,
I “Now remember, I’m sending you out to sell a portable garage.”
“That's what.”
“And in talking this portable gar- — "Yes?"
| “Always pronounce garage the way
unionists desire — not shorter hours, not other teachers, but they have struck for freedom of speech and the preservation of the freeiom of. the press. The movement, it is reported, is spreading to other cities. Thus come the evidences of the great dem=- ocratic movement in China,
An
ship and goodwill there on time ie: vat Our selection of designs in Jewelry, Cut-
Glass and Hand-painted China excels in. beauty and fine workmanship all show- ings since pre-war days.
We would appreciate your inspection.
POWERS’ OPTICAL & JEWELRY CO.
Permanent Address : . BASSANO, ALBERTA,
a <A oh ei EE IO
, | Buy an Irrigated Farm From the Canadian Pacific Railway.
Irrigation makes the farmer BECAUSE-- fndependent of rainfall, and ae insures good crops, not oc- the Canadian Pacific Railway at casionally, but EVERY YEAR, prices up to $50 PER ACRE, with Irrigation makes possible the twenty years to pay and the priv- enccessful culture of a'iaiia, fe
lege uf a jo 2, WO '- the king of alfalta, which in- liege of a_lonn of $2,000 fur im: sures good returns in dairying provements (629 interest); ne
and mixed farming, : principalaiter Geet payment unt
Itrigstion means intensive farm- ing and close settlement, with end of fourth year, reduced all the advantages of » densely interest if settlement conditions populated agricultural community
P 7 . are complied with, and no water Itrigation in the Canadian Pacific Railway Irrigation Block is no rental for first year.
plichdllin ice Saitek
longer an experiment, the years that it has been tried having Contract can be paid off before
absulutely demonstrated its success
wherever iatelligently applica. maturity if desired,
‘Allan Canon General Supt. of Lasdi
Canadian Pacific Railway, Department of Natural Resources
926 First Street East, Calgary, Alberta.
2 WR 3
W ANTED } 20 men willing to asi
in forming a gymnasium.
Particulars from Harry Powers.
Why We Claim to be
Pioneers in the West
As a Western institution our Bank a: ppeals par- ticularly to the agricultural interests of the Prairie Provinces, Our first country branch was “gyros in 1886 and we have consistently followed a po
of extending our rural connections with the jf ar § a of settlements. We claim to have been of material asi assistance to agricultural communities in develop-
: ing their resources, and in carrying them iene 4
poor crop seasons.
ERR Nac inte ena = sé A 7
Teter; eae ENE
tural Society and an expression of| ‘fhe public should be aroused to the give you better service than |
» UNION BANK OF CANADA Jorision taten bythe members for] Mose stevie exiting thvom tel vd RESOURCES, $153,000,000 it is undoubtedly worth while in} ihe automobiles in such fashion Ko hin s i bse Bassano Branch and Safety Deposit Boxes, A. L. Seale, : ices like th 1 tis fs Branches seo st Clony and Stoayecsk etd ck hire teal Maaains| figure on your car overha q , shang ing this
A Very shortly the ratepayers will : 8 winter | ‘we can sa
Rs | be required to elect three new TOWN COUNCIL money,
yo ca
Atlas Lumber Co.
STORM SASH _ GALT COAL - BRIQUETTES
ee PAINT 3
WOOD - BY pees
{of the Public Utilities Gommiasion, |. ora decision eve in far of the] Wess Jeancellation by latter after/a evidente has been submitted by | both sides, before ‘any “sub-division | can revert (y farm lands as a basis for taxation, So far this is eminentiy fair and ‘.quitable to all parties. But that does not suit our lovely lawmakers and. naturally a joker has to be in- arted, which permits the plaintiff to take the case to a Judge in Chambers without notice being given to the town or school district, and may obtain an order for the can- cellation without any evidence be- ing heard from the othor side,
This proceeding makes a joke of the Public Utilities Commission and an absolute mockery of the prin- siples of demvueratic government.
As a matter of fact the Jaw which makes it possible for the eancella- tion of sub-divisions is manifestly aati: (es infair, for in most cases school dis: dart er tricts have built. their schools upon} . . the amount of assessable property, i : Dy ind as the owners of sub-division /#- ALY. rroperties made application of J ACK TO their own free will to be included ad (Sempre ag n the town, they should be requir. A PEA ‘d to bear their proportion of school taxes to the end of the chap ter. -
The speculation was theirs and aot the school districts but the law »srovides a way out for them with out giving the echool districts an} »pportunity even of stating h jae: Hd <==)
incorporate
the sum of $1500.00 aad assures us of the heartiest eo-operation and support in every way.
They offer much practical ad- vice as to methods of incorporation and organisation and suggest as a basis for working that each mem- ber .of the society take shares to the extent of $10.00 for each dairy cow.
By this method every member assumes responsibility and receives profit according to the number ol contributing cattle in his posses- sion.
Thus, if the number of dairy cattle in possession of members was 1000 head the society would be capitalized at $10,000.00 and every member would have shares according to the extent of his herd, which is an ideal arrange- ment,
An estimate received from ore of the largest supply houses for equipment of the necessary machinery to handle the product of 1000 ‘head of dairy cows amounts to $3600.00 approxi- mately.
With the excellent Eprilties bee
pes in nr] our provinces an perhaps is the silver lining to our clone, uf unequal, badly balanced laws.
Why Take’) A Chasas
| Accidents resulting in death througl:
We have calarged onr. staf \ nobi i Wins ave been the enue ofenguiy | thing is Mew, ¢ clean, and &
‘nore coroner juries the past six monthe
chan any other cause. You will ‘enjoy every meal § you |
Almost every one of these accidents
san be traced to either carelessness or our uew restaurant,
rbstraction on the part of the automobile BS Page
junction for three lines there can be little doubt, that if properly managed a creamery would. be highly successful from the very be- ginning.
It would represent development along the right and most profitable lines. for the whole district and would be but the start of a number of projects which would help to
5 2 é Jriver. They do not seem to take into}#-
encourage the intensive farming] [ois sation the apeed of the train i Best of Everything idea, and would also do much to| che fact that it cannot Jeaye the raile to Blank build up the prosperity of the avoid hitting the road vehicle, : ae s
‘Engineers on railway trains have ag- wrted thet their nerves bave been pui mthe ragged edge by automobile-drivers vho will insist on attempting to cross tlie highway ahead of the train
Engineers can see the automobile rp-
vroaching for several miles on the prairie ¥ il | nd they know instinctively that if both * ‘dep on going somebody will be killed,
(he engineer cannot stop and the auto: nobile driver does not seem to sense the i E if | bat}
evs of: tin be wil van af ‘new quarters (opposite our
‘ull speed to a point just as close to the
noving train as possible relying on his garage) where we shall be able to
rakes to hold,
community,
The addition of a small cold storage plant would cost but a very small sum and would prove highly profitable, not only by keep- ing all the profits at home, but also in the encouragement of poultry keeping which so many of ow farmers neglect to-day.
This whole project might very well be taken up by the Agricul-
that the sound of Mike’s name re- minded him of home.
Mike Shelzki offered the sum of $100 for 9 lot now in posseesion of the town (which, in reply to Coun. Playfair’s question whether same was in the industrial section, was found to be in the wheat belt), and his offer was accepted,
A hc from a Calgary firm for
-| councillors, two school trustees and a member of the Hospital Board. Before these can be elected however they must have first re- ceived and accepted nomination. It would, therefore, seem good business for the ratepayers to select the best men for the
The General
hea ‘
property loaned to the Imperi Qo had not been damaged and : nded, that no Faavss avtlee,
be taken. Ph
that they were satiafed the ona a oul
f Sissies: of Cieuell Sediog Kale sk
hae 1826 he Lost bas from? Municipal Office Saturday November sy Seth 11 o'clock a.m, 1919,
race 1 left} Attendance: Reeve ‘Stewart, Depy.-
nese about. 1400 ~ | Reeve Seen, Coens Brandner and
oved by Coun. Gibson thet the
cuene of the iast regular meeting be 5 |atonted Carried unanimously. ‘Coun. Gibson that the
puty ward. Oaivied ‘ananimously. - Moved by Coun. Gibson that we ask
eee WANTED . we
itty cents. per Decltwr sane, in each | also
Gare for overhauling: “and: repairing. Satisfaction
guaranteed. oft eR GENERAL GARAGE.
—__
se Viel Neiiee to- Farmers and
You are requested to care tor any cattle of the following brands and to re- ‘port same at once to the. undersigned
I qhen all: reasonable charges will be
cheerfully paid. yy: on night ribs.
KY on right ‘hip.
: 2u ie lett shoulder. pt on left ribs. wy on either ribs,
: W. D. TREGO, Office-Phone 42, Gleichen.
FOR SALE 1 Majestic Uook Stove, 1 Sewing Machine, 1 Graphonola, about 60 re cords, Cheap. Apply R, WIGHT, Alta. Proy. Police, Bassano
FOR SALE
Tires, Tubes, Oils, Grease and Auto- mubile Accessories, etc. ? THE GENERAL GARAGE.
FOR SALE
Kitchen Cabinet, ‘wo Heaters and -lseveral other articles of furniture,
JACK TORGAN,
‘the Kill Em-Quick Gopher Poison Co. to renew our note for six months. Carried unanimously.
- Moved by the Reeve first reading of By-law No. 34 re change in boundary of Diy. 8, 6and 6, Carried unauimously.
Moved by the Reeve that By-law No. 34 be given second reading. Carried unanimously.
Moved by Coun, Gibson that work sheets No. 25 to 81 inc. be tabled. Carried unanimously,
Moved. by Coun. McOoy, that the Secretary write the Minister of Agricul- ture, requesting him to place no grazing restrictions on land lying to the north and west of now restricted area, as re- sopicting the said area would work a seyere hardship on the sett'ers north ‘oi the river. Carried unanimously.
Moved by the Reeve that the next regular meeting of the Council be hela at the Municipal Office on Saturday December 128th, at 11 o'clock ~a.m. Carried unanimously,
Moved by Coun. Gibson that the meet- ing adjourn, Oarried.
L. EB, HELMER, Secretary.
Canada’s Agricultural Position
The Hon. 8, F, Tolmie, Canada’s new Minister of Agriculture, has summed up
| the outstanding facts of Canada’s agri-
cultura) position in an article appearing in the November number of The Agri- cultural Gazette. He presents statistice showing the growth of Canada’s finan- cial burden during the past five years and pointe out means by which our national debt will be reduced, He says in part ‘I am confident that this Do- minion, through the development of ber
|Notice ‘ Subscribers Lae aha reciale seiale tk
‘all subscriptions ‘in on
fil
are and beg to announce that on and after
January Ist., 1920, we shall be compell-
ed to raise our annval subscription rate to $1.50,
All subseriptions and renewals recefyed between now and January 1st., will be
charged at the old rate.
cosy ath Eat
And what more apprepriate gift could be made at Xmas than that little something. your home lacks for your wife's or children’s comfort. We can supply you with any article of house furniture you need from single pieces to complete suites.
Our prices are away below the larger City stores and our stock is in many cases better.
Drop in and talk it over. Gramaphones, Records, Albums. A beautifui
of pot plants and ferns. M. GRAY BASSANO
-“O-;
exzxaacoeupunm as
=
DUNLOP TIRES ---E. VERY WHERE
q Disko Traction Tread can be bo
any other Same with all the rest of the “ Two Hands" Tire family:
Dunlop Cord—‘ “Traction” and “Ribbed;” Dunlop
Regular — ‘ “Traction”
“Special,” “Ribbed, a ‘Clipper,’ ‘‘ Plain.”
gq Any lace that i is good enough or ma to drop in- to in of a casing, tube or some gasoline, oil of free air, is a good enough
lace for us to sell Dunlop
ires. In these days when tire service is priceless—it is something to know that Dunlop Distribution is of the most far-reaching character—the most suc- cessful ‘‘ Tire-When-It's- Wanted” co-operation
ever achieved. in Canada.
Ag AREER iy PEN i si jhciealtpeid Sot
2 i
! g =H on right rib, Y, Hight shoulder. hyd jababat. D, FERGUSON,
Fa ers gt ht
qtant a,
a
* Dah Flake
iN, eal
_— eo
Controlling the he Liquor Traffic
The most efficient jetent method of con- trolling the liquor traffic with the object of eliminating the abuses and excesses which seem to be insepar- able from it has long been the sub- ject of agitation and Icgislation, Pos- sibly no one question has resulted in the passage of a greater volume of legislative, the enactment of more re- strictive laws, or the taking of more vates;athan that of public control of the traffic in intoxicants, And not- withstanding it all, we are still far from having solved the problem in a satisfactory manner.
The outbreak of the Great War, and the imperative necessity impos- ed upon all nations of conserving their resources in man-power, pro- ductive capacity, and food supplies, led to the enactment as war measures of stronger restrictive measures than had ever before been generally ac- ceptable to the masses of the people. Many ardent temperance reformers ‘believed that these restrictive laws would be continued after the war, and that in a generation or two the blight of the liquor traffic would be an evil of the past.
It is now quite apparent that many of these restrictive laws will cease to function with the declaration of Peate,—which may be proclaimed for
appears in print, and in any» event, ‘cannot now be long‘ delayed.’ One feform brought about by the war will, hhowever, prove lasting; that is, the pen bar with all its evils and open temptations, and its pernicious treat- ting habit, has gone never to return.
Actual experience during the war thas demonstrated that existing pro- thibitory legislation is not as conclu- sively prohibitive as the authors of such laws anticipated they would be. ‘On the contrary, violations of the law are so numerous, and are so little re- garded by the average person, that a condition of things has been brought about in all these Western Provinces which is little short of a scandal, and which is certainly detrimental to a proper respect for law and subversive of good morals.
In the United States, the people hhave declared for nation-wide prchib- ition of the sale, manufacture, impor- tation and exportation of intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes. Tn Canada, on the other hand, we have no Dominion-wide law, nor at pres- ent does there seem much likelihood of such a law being passed. For one thing, the Canadian Senate has shown very clearly that it will not give ap- proval to such legislation, and the House of Commons has ever before it the attitude of Quebec, which is an- tagonistic to an absolutely prohibi- ‘tory law.
Control and restriction of the liquor traffic in Canada continues, therefore, to be a subject for provincial action, supplemented by such Federal action to assist the provinces as the provin- es by vote of their people may de- mand.
i
the prohib‘tions which have f force under orders in council © will cease with the proclamation of
So long as importation into a ince is legal, it is manifestly impos- sible for any provincial legislature or government to enforce prohibition of the liquor traffic, It can prohibit the sale of liquor, but that is alt. And so long as importation is legally per- mitted existing abuses against which a large section of the people are éom- plaining will continue. And at the best it will not be impossible to stop such importation for from six months to a. year.
When. such a plebiscite vote is eventually held in any province, and if the popular verdict should be to permit importation, then the provin- cial authorities will have to seriously consider whether it would not be bet- ter to provide for some form of regu- lated and controlled sale within the province, rather than have the door left wide open to indiscriminate indi- vidual importation of liquor in un- limited quantities. Should the peo- ple of a province declare in favor of permitting importation, most thought- ful temperance advocates believe that some form of government dispensar- Sir Francis Drake’s Sword ies based on the mail order system,} At a sale held in Inverness recently and patterned somewhat after the|the sword of Sir Francis Drake was system which at one timé was in|disposed of. This weapon is consid- vogue in Saskatchewan, should be es-jered to be the one which Queen|’ tablished. Elizabeth presented to Drake on the a
On the other hand, if the people} occasion of his being knighted after Pesan ce et declare against importation, then|his voyagé round the world. Thelon the packa the utmost care must be exercised in] sword realized 240 guineas.
soy
iis
3
in
RAV RAW FUE ae
the drafting of the most drastic kind
of provincial laws to prevent a repe-| Hope for the Chronic Dyspeptic. tition of abuses which are now unfor-|—Through lack of consideration of tunately so general. the body’s needs, many persons allow
disorders of the digestive apparatus Whatever the nature of the lawS}+, endure until they become a show
enacted, they must have back of them | fillin s and nights. with sufferin ce “weourse of - in araee ts prove effective and Beak: Vegeta le Pills is recommended cial. In the last’ analysis it is the a sure and speedy way to regain
health. These pills are specially com- people who make the laws, and un-| pounded to combat dyspepsia and the less a law has the support of the/many ills that follow in its train, and people it will not be observed andjthey are successful always,
cannot be enforced. oo The Canadian Wheat Crop Kill the Germs of Is Estimated by the Government at
Catarrh 193,000,000 Bushels
The Canadian wheat crop for 1919- 20 is estimated by the government at
By Acting To-day You Can 193,000,000 bushels, or about 4,000,000
oP are sure ‘our child is h ina re ep dag armless laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver Children love taste. on each bottle. Mother! You must say
“By the way, George, what shall
give Mabel for a wedding Present? | &,
chair in the attic, you know.” ~
“T don't think we'd better send her anything, dear, why not let bygones cine Co.,, B be bygones.” .
ails: Fait : Corns are aoe aa grees nature is| =f iller’s orm Powders not only small mea x ue ec pee BER pa oirepakte sy i ™ ot
worms, but they are a remedy for many other ailments of children.} Many a Bg ee ‘waits ‘with bate They strengthen the yone stomach breath. —
against biliousness and are tonical in} _/
their effects where the child suffers
; rs more than that of last A - Quickly Avoid Catarrh and spe sustoosities on aeticelsealaa soudisose hey Onl bs Pei oe Avoid Bronchitis, Per- ada requires for home consumption |4"d they will serve to allay pain and haps Consumption approximately 40,000,000 bushels of La al is, ey ee fiom ven wheat, and for seeding aboyt 35,000,- ‘
Most Agreeable and Surest Cure Is/000, maki total . Catarrhozone, Which Cures Every menning. 9, tots) 0f.75, 000. 00F aa
Is, Curable Case “9 Catarrhozone proves especially Canada’s exportable wheat in 19. - epee : good in those chronic cases where|20 will therefore be about 113,000,000) Minard’s Liniment Cures Colds, &c.
mucous drops down the throat, sick-| bushels, as compared with 103,611,000
$0. toe each. hese rolanen te in the last ‘twelve months, or about Telegraph Service Resumed
ed, only a few breaths through the | 19,000,000 bushels. This will allow] The general telegraphic intercourse inhaler are needed to clear the pass-|0f a few million bushels for the carry-| between Germany and France, inclu-
ages, god where go hy is coughing ond over stock on August 1, 1920, sive of Algeria and Tunis, has been sore bronchia ubes, e soothing, i e >) healing properties of Catagibanaws The production of wheat in Hp-jpsopenes. Eryviionely. Sam men
act almost a8 magic, rope, on the other hand, is down, and mercial wires in intelligible German, Once you stop taking medicine in-| Canada’s prospect of a good market] English, French, Italian and Japanese
to. the pomaeh See get yr Healing | is very bright. If credits can be sat-)are passed. oils and pure balsams, of Catarrho- i * i Lond as Som. vont coh kates isfdctorily arranged, there is no rea-| The censorship on telegrams in
quick and lasting cure for nose colds, son why Canada should not practic-}Germany has been raised. Presa tele catarrh, weak lungs, bronchitis, and | lly sell out everything. Great Brit-| grams between Germany and Great speaker’s sore throat, ain and Ireland will require at least| Britain are again allowed, and code ; The complete $1.00 Outfit of Ca-| 180,000,000 bushels, or about 70,000,000] telegrams from Germany to Holland arrhozone is sufficient for tw0l more than Canada ited. if reliabl ti months’ treatment, and is ranteed, ¢ than Canada hae to export, vipa gn pec eelihhs intepeasies Smaller size, 50c, at all MT declare, or the on their contents is given ff desired. Catarrhozone Co, .» Kingston, Ont. Look out for dark days when the wcirennreerliaertaprome i - pe weather man predicts light rains. Minard’s Liniment Cures Garget in It’s surprising how many otherwise Cows. es? sensibly inclined men believe in si germs and omens, a dle Peggy ME peers A-scientist says that cholera cences away by using Holloway’s look like a comma. Possibly, but Corn Cure, which acts thoroughly when they get into a man’s system] and painlessly. they are apt to put the final period
Western Canada’s 1919 Crop an aes
While exact figures are not yet ob-]° A young widow hasn’t much use| tainable, wheat authorities now seem}for a man who attempts to kiss’ no! to be conforming to the general op-|and fails, inion that Canada’s total yicld of ' gi wheat this year will be 248,000,000) Poverty is the mother of Pen i bushels, as compared with 189,000,000] forts. bushels last year. Of this crop, the} share of the Western Provinces is} ~ 166,000,000 bushels, or over two-thirds| ° of the total yield,
In addition, one of the most se f
A man may not be a ‘coward be- cause he is afraid of a woman. —
able sources in Canada has es bushels of oats, 37,000,000 bushels
bn Ahigen wend st recognize neces- . fit. When or is A wr hiomry when you have dull ‘ee feel logy, whenenot “up to snuff,” keep the bowels free with a mild laxative. In the take a tepid bath cold water may be used if it does not chill), follow with a brisk rub ; a sufficient “setting up” exercise in good air until you are in a warm glow. Have you a tried it lately?
, Don’t let the poisons accumulate in the intestines either, but try a dose of castor oil the first thing on arising, or a pleasant laxative “occasionally, such as one made up of May-apple, aloin and jalap, rolled @ tiny sugar-coated pill, and sold in every drug store as Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. Then a cup of hot water before breakfast, and you'll feel better than a king! If you continue in life thus, you can pass a Life Insurance examination at sixty.
If you wish to prevent old age coming on too soon, or if you want to increase your chances for a long life, you should drink plenty of soft (rain) or distilled water daily between meals, Then procure at the drug store Dr. Pierce’s Anuric (anti-uric-acid). This “Anuric” drives the uric acid out and relieves backache and rhenmatism, as well as kidney trouble, Anuric dissolves uric acid as hot tea dissolves sugar.
Z, 7 Pi ad
fs all and of Westminster were). i | laid pit during the present year, it just been disclosed. A number i Of Extremists, most of Whom are still] ; discourages ged in Bolshevik propaganda in deus ioe at os td apa England, and in the United States, which. tell of exhausted nerves, met and discussed the plans for this ; f |pretentious undertaking, which they ; hoped would be executed by a so- ( called ‘sailors’ and. soldicfs’ union. ° | One of the plotters since has been _ [sent to prison; where he is. still sery- , \ingoa sentence for having made reyo- Yutionary speeches. The plot came to naught because of lack of support and ‘the watchfulness of the authori-
written plainly there, and “thet held that exe S Neoehiad
‘to be seen ih ile eset ;
dying man or a “prospective mo-|
-|ther whose hour is upon her, Yet} |]
_ |they were serene, for the old Otto-} |man had been true to his God, his
va Sa country, and himself, and felt that
ee : he maught to fear, : :
k of clumsy curs, shoe the ‘Super Flumina Babylo-
nis,’ my son,” said he. “I recall a
atanen which tas Arequently. been’ **"1 found: most harmonious and ‘sooth-
# 24 ae poetry: ing. Haniid Pasha slepr’ very ‘little,
"On the mountains of memory, by but of recent days he had fallen more . the world’s wellsprin 8, \and ‘more into the habit of long pe-
all m Bods’. “Where the ig brs the life of Spier ods “ of* semi-somnolence;
Sure? ‘High Heels ~ Cause Corns But. ~- Who Cares Now
Because style decrees that women crowd and buckle up their tender toes in high heel-footwear they suffer from corns, then they cut and trim at these painful pests, which merely makes the
ed & Jove of poetry during his’ con-)- valescence, and. gave to his diction a lilting quality which his kindly host
TheSyruptfor ~ Pancakes
A golden stream of Crown Brand Corn
during which: hig*body ‘became numb while
; / is on all past things, . corn grow hard. This suicidal habit Syrup is most - “creature mak Pee only Lape ‘his mentality “was” Clear arid-tranqnil. may obit lockjaw, and womien are delhi P eae
oe: cious
. It was* the approaching dissolution | warned to stop it. is Pohcekaet b ical and the-spiritaal A ev canes vie drug called freez- can give
f 5 one applied directly upon a sore corn a ae: it: anid bee gives qiick religt, and soon the entice In the Kitchen, allo is a constant call
eR ‘Toot and all, lifts. out» without eit ead on,. ‘ke old Ask the drug store man for a Quarter of an ounce of freezone,
rk looked out across the tote of the dee flowing Bos- ee oes little, “pga auticient
many thin Vo. do} his mind dwelt most ‘upon | ‘This religion, which was of the ortlio- '!dox faith of Islam, but not bigoted, or, when all is said, particularly de-
Crewn for making res Prag Ss, & ?
@ is an ibae com common ¥ lariestiramoment and simply shrivels up the corn without inflaming or cven irritating the surrounding tissue or skin.. Clip this out and pin on your
Rhodes. A. crutch lay at his side, Crown Fane
and one foot was still enveloped in| yout in outward demonstration, Hej Wife’s dresser. Reni _ Sevatehe was never tolprayed when it pleased him, and ‘Rsié Could that day ever come? mount his wheel again, fora Bulgar-| where, and the call of a-_muezzin from ‘ a Gra: ian bullet had so shattered his ankle! a minaret did not always bring him yi. woprthis ter for a dong, } table day with a pos il that only the skilfof Lord Pembroke|to his knees, for which he had been|,../ heard that you gave a note ~ jug of ie Hy Brand Corn had prevented amputation, and the/at times severely censtired. Hamid|** eRasren.. Erenscnet. p, ready for the dozen young man was destined to limp for i — > . RE aORA PORE FCOEUDERERS SOR, SIAR Lové’s young dream is all right un- desserts an dishes
the rest of-his life.” This wound, with three others, le had received in his desperate defense of Colonel. Hamid
of the world, He found all religions
it will truly “crown”. good, and “the lack of amy more be- 2
til the matrimonial alarm clock gocs
Pasha. Ruggles found the desired. poem and read it slowly *in-his clear, pleas- Jant voice, It. is a rather curious fact that the yocal tones of the Turks are more similar to those of English- speaking people that those of any ether nationality. . Hamid. Pashia, to whom the English and French lan- guages were as familiar as his mother tongue, listened to the reading with quict pleasure. Ruggles had a nat- ural lingual facility, and read — with smoothness and expression, These exercises had been for several weeks la pleasant feature of their convales- -|eence. Hamid Pasha’s wound was in the liver and still open. Ruggles had all healed, but Pembroke limited his physical activity. Ruggles read on,
‘ONLY TABLETS MARKED. a ARE. ASPIRIN
He had develop-
| gucsts he had sometimes brought
off and causes a rude awakening. One ‘Great Essential To a Woman's Health
stial and stupid than fraught with any especial danger of hell fire. For him God was God; and while Mohammed was his prophet, it was quite possible that he might through the ages have found need of other prophets, such as
Is Her Nerves
Nature ‘intended women to be this fact had been the sorrow of his ee gs SE wr Patt <i gaa * ; . . is long, 1n n
declining years. Earlier in life he had | wretched. But how: can any. womart taken wives in accordance’ with: the’ hc healthy and happy. whe the whole laws of the Koran and Ottoman so-!nervous system is unstrung. The cial custom, but these marriages pro-|trouble is “yp ey, mete ren to
their social an ouseho. uties than ving unfruitful, he had divorced his they do to their health. Is it any womenkind, amply providing for! wonder, then, that they become irrit- them, He was enormously. rich, hav-
oe eH eH OMOemOnOnOnee able and neryous, have hot flushes,
ing inherited estates in Egypt and|faint and dizzy spells, smothering
stock in the Suez Canal. The Egyp-
and sinking spells, become weak and FOGGY ? tian property he had converted into
nervous, and everything in life be- e . comes.dark and gloomy.
cash, which he had invested, with pro-| Milburn’s Heart and. Nerve Pills
digious subsequent profit, in the oil|are the very remedy that nervous, fields of Batoum, at that time unde- HryG-oiy bay ae women need to re- veloped. Still later, he had disposed Phas hem to the blessings of good of these holdi and reinvested] Mrs. P. H. Ryan, Sand Point, N.S., through his London bankers in Brit-| writes: “I have been a great sufferer ish, African, American and other se-|from nerve troubles, I was so weak curities. Oddly enough, he was the
holder of; large blocks of American
industrial stocks,
and nervous I could not sleep at night and my appetite was very poor.
Hamid Pasha had never been a sensual man, but he was sensuous to
1 could not walk across. the floor without trembling. I had hot flushes the point of aestheticism. His plea- sure lay in such things as the sight
and fainting spells..-When I was on my second box of Milburn’s Heart of his almond trees in full blossom, or the odor of the jasmine which
and Nerve Pills I began to feel bet- ter and kept on until I had used six boxes when I felt like a different per- son, I am never without them in the house and recommend them to all : ; whe suffer with their neryes.” clothed the columns surrounding his} Price 50¢ a box at all dealers or Persian fountain, whereof the basin was composed of ancient tiles, each of which would have been found worthy of a glass case in the Musce Guimet, Their traceries were partly, hidden by delicate moss of a vivid
mailed direct on receipt of price by The T, Milburn Co,, Limited, To- green, which the gardener was per- mitted to es a poly in certain
ronto,, Ont, spots. & Re o3
Hamid Pasha ‘lone also myuste, po- etry, and the dance. “To entertain
A Precarious Playground Mrs. X. (returning home).—Mercy!
Howevef did the child get that awful bump?
Grahma and Confuscius and Zoroas- ter and Jesus Christ.
Hamid Pasta was childless, and
him play on the piano and he fell off.
If Bilious, Constipated or Headachy take “‘Cascarets,”’
sece-<onbetr
Tomorrow the sun will shine for you, Everything will_seem clear, rosy and bright. Your sytem is fill- red with liver and bowel poison, which keeps your skin sallow, your stomach upset, your head foggy and aching. Your meals are turning into poison, gases and acids. You can not feel right. Don’t stay bilious or consti- pated, Feel splendid always by tak- ing Cascarets occasionally, They act without griping or inconvenience. They never sicken you like Calomel, Salts, Oil or nasty, harsh pills, They cost so little too—Cascarets work while you sleep.
Calgary Winter Liyestock Show The Calgary winter livestock show, held last week, was very successful. A great number of fine cattle, sheep amd swine. were on show, and after- wards sold at ‘satisfactory prices. The re 1 proceeds of the sale amounted 000, The cattle, which includ-
mal a number of Holstein — grades, brought an average price of $146 a head, The sheep were’ sold at an average price of $18 a head.’ The
Last year the Indians had under crop 82,421 acres of land, an increase of 11,733 acres over the area cropped in 1917, Last year the value of the Indians’ farm products, incliding hay, acu to soit
gypsy,,troupes from their allah |. in Stainbant He loved wa ie maui
pavilion, which was erceted this sum, its kind iy the country,
Green Girl.—You told me to let!
d.jsalc was held in the new: livestock }. ‘mer, and which is one of the finest]
SMITH GOT WISE
A sore corn, he said was bad en- ough, but to have it stepped on was the limit. He invested in a bottle of Putnam’s Painless Corn Extractor, and now wears a happy smile. Corn is gone—enough said. Try Putnam’s Extractor, 25c at all dealers.
Utilizing Garbage
On behalf of the Saskatchewan Oakole Company, an_ offer has been submitted to the city council of Re- gina, the capital of the province, for the manufacture of garbage into fuek briquettes. The company wants the city to deliver garbage for a period of five years, and asks for the use. of the city transfer station at an annual rental and electrical power free, They propose to begin the erection of a building valued at $35,000 or- $40,000, and will give the city an option to purchase the plant on a basis of an earning capacity of eight per cent.
Over a thousand years ago the fa- mous mosqueof St. Sophia, in Con- tantinople, was built with mortar mixed with musk, and the odor of the latter still exists,
————————
fh pia . s ,
=.7
“Winchester “Riles ae 25.35, 30-30, 32-40, 3 and 38-55, ¢ L644? Series Game traps from musk- | tat to wolf size.
‘PAINTS - OILS.
20 mn oa) WANTED! ; : nc iling wo eal
Particulars from Harry Powers.
tobacco and candy store in Muir's ; ‘ihiskaoons and -D. Gibson ad store. They deserve, and will hoy visitors to Calgary for the}no doubt receive, the hearty sup- /} week end. port of the townspeople in their There will be nobody home a new yenture. ‘Wednesday night. Everybody will} We need some good men “to All beat the big dance the vacancies on Council and School “Dad. Comer Se to-day for a Board and ratepayers will, only 1. visit to Denver, Colo.’ Needless to} have themselves to blame if passen: ‘Bj say a pleasant time will.be had for} Gers are elected in place of workers, Dad’s built that a way. for we have the right men for each lisa, HA: Goopes eid Dna ks ee
F. MacCallum were visitors to. Cal- pers noma on- :
gary on dv and Wednesday Don’t forget the Big Dance on
‘this week. Wednesday night under the auspices of the Auglican Church.
It will not be long before Bassano Tie promises to be one of the most
has a skating rink, and perhaps next year or the year after we may joyable of the whole season.
boast of a curling rink, ‘Mr. and Mrs, B. G. Holley left
‘on Wednesday for a trip to their Taptheall interes at the Angli< bhome in England, and intend to be on Sundey next at 7 80 away four or five months. Their
p.m. when the Ven. Archdeacon abse nce will be felt in many ways, Hayes will induet the Rev. Greene but particularly at the Avgiican
to the invumbeney of the parish, »” Church where both have accom- |: » Don?t forget the big .farmere{ plished much good work in a quiet
4
BEAVER BOARD
FOR BETTER ‘WALLS & rg ang
'
‘uid More Comfort into the Farm Home: Your farming success entitles you & more ‘home comforts and conveniences, what a man works for, after all, so why not have Shios
YOU egn't ex good ae now? aver the home get run down just atthe —
Bat vol oe eae enjoy it moa Fit
Call or write for a copy of that Helpful B The eseités “Light service will be cui
the worst possible kind of weather
~ HEATERS
tke be highest grade and best quality. A size
‘for every room at pri- .
ces from 23. to $37.
The purchase price of this famous
1881 Rogers Al Plate
E give coupons with every 25¢. pur- chas¢ of all the high grade guaran- ii} teed products ma de by the’ United i ty
2»
‘ Ince > lose
Drug’ Company. © are g mopey on thes silverware to get. } quainted With these ‘gods “which ave stén- ete dard= in their. line fy
“Rexall. Reineilies’
Liggeit’s Candies, Perfum Brushes, Stationery, Ru hundreds of other i! le tions, etc, You co : cure this popular silverw: te get it on our half bought pian. « é ample, this teaspoon that sells for soe. you : {| } | | |
can get for toc, with Coupons
ofthe board | EW cracked, sneeting ‘on Tuesday Novewher 25.|W4¥- Their many friends wish el gi cae
galingn by oa them allwith i Soo By Three excellent speskers are to ad-| them @ pleasant voyoge and a safe J. H. Stiles, « Bassano, Arita.
tt rooms of the old ones, dress the meeting on most impor- return, NE I a ad .s .. This ang oul feel like tackling other tant subjects, : ——- ‘ Saree rt
2. things because ew rooms with thess i Fs oui RN (ORES large, boasd like panels is 20 easy. You can de Work is proceeding rapidly on} NOTICE ‘
whole thing yourself, the hospital extemasion and unless}: ; or ae pe You CAN Reduce the H.C.L.
off on Sunday next, November 23rd at 8 a.m., to enable the company to make necessary repaire and adjustments with- out interfering with service to the
jooklet— "Building More Comfort into the Farm Home'*
strikes us, we may expect to have it ready for occupation shortly.
\ Crown Lumber Co. Ltd. Everybody He ppy is the motto| majority of our consumers, & of the committee; that has the ar-| service ‘will ‘De continued as usual | JOS, WRIGHT, Jf rengerments in Hand for the ve eo hore ~ Box 26 Ten years local Manager. — Phone at -egvade tae alr dias id Marat site
The Clany. Gren Club hdd) —————S “abanie doable the Cluny traps - Sail Want ‘Ade pay. » one |
By dealing at the
Home Dressed Meat Market
As we are now. operating on a 4 Cash basis, you'can always de- pend on our high-class home-
dressed meats, poultry, and fish
te"
being wold at vi mea peas gene