wR BE I Ed ii=.L., & _ going to lose it. However, 5 cs - "Was Known as Lady . Bountiful of Edson . ---- i! Princess Leo (Iallizie, the first wo- man to fly the Gr:at Bear Lake area, who died a week. or so ago, in Port Bald, Bgypt, was well known in. the Edson district and in society .ircles in Edmonton, The Princess left Ed- monton in the spring with firs, J. Ar- thur Emery for a tour, abroad, the in- tention being to revisit a number of places known to the Princess in her early life. . : Princess Leo Galitzine was born in Malta and lived as a child in Egypt. As Miss Raynaud-Jarcas she 'qravelled extensively in England and on the continent before her marriage, and it was while on a visit to Paris that she met Prince Galitzine, a mem- ber of the Russian nobility. They were married in 1928. On arrival in Edmonton, Prince and Princess Galitzine bought a ranch in the Edscn district and were well-known for their lavish hospitality there and for their generosily to their poorer neighbors, Prinzess Galitzine being the "Lady Bountiful" of the district and endearing hergelt to old gettlers and new Canadians alike by her interest in their welfare and her general kindness and assistance, It was while at Edson that Prince Galitzine became Interested' in the district. Princess Galitzine accompéiu: fed the men intp the north and was the first white woman to v/sit the new Great Bear Lake area and purchased radium discovery. ~Boy's Eyeball Is " Pierced by Fledgling .CHATHAM--A young bittern, long legged and long beaked march bird, which 15-year-old Lloyd McLean found on his father's farm on How- ard-Harwich town line and was carry- ing home to show his friends suddenly reached up .and jabbed the lad in the eye with its:beak; Lloyd, son of Mr, and Mrs. Leo McLean, may lose his eye, The lad, a keen nature student and: head of his vocational class at Ridge. town High School, was. attracted by the bright plumage of the fledgling as he walked home after dark beside the creek. He gathered it carefully up .in his arms. The: creature coiled: {ts long neck and suddenly taking the: boy unaware gave him a vicious poke in the eye with its beak. "The beak went right through the eye ball," Dr. Bryce Kendrick who is in 'attendance said. "His eye became badly infected and I thought.he 'was I think now that he has a fair chance of re- taining his vision," . _ Higher Education German pupils preparing for their matriculation exam. have been in- formed that extra marks will be given for activities-in one of the country's patriotic bodies. I am not exactly talented at spell- ing, My acquaintance with is slight, : My arithmetic is less like: a science geography % than a guess, And it's seldom that I get an answer right; My history is nebulous and sketchy, At geometry I've never been re- nowned, -'And at botany I can't tell a green- fly from a plant, . : But my politics are absolutely sound. g I have never been a paragon of neatness, My appearance I have alwys left to chance, - (7\And-my. negligent arr4y on examin- ation .day Would have formerly been looked upon askance, But today no lack of beauty in my toilet : Will ever be allowed to do me hurt; : The examiners will see nothing; :lse but good. in me When they look upon the color of my shirt. : : Though I cannot answer any of the questions From the ordeal I am not inclined to shrink, 5 ar For it isn't what he knows that a candidate now shows, But rather what it is his wont to think, 'And the way in which I boo the opposition bya d dries To a person of discernment plainly. tells I am bound to pass, for now they would never dare to piough One whose polities are sound (and little else). THEAT. Harmony Rev. Dr. Ribourg, formerly of To- ronto, now in New York, in a recent sermon, said: . "In the home where authority is Jacking, where no will governs, where destroyed or is in a state of dissolu: tion. If authority rules so that fear destroye or isd in a state ow dissolu- tion. £ authority rules so. that fear yesults, the family ideal crumbles. But when authority rules in haw}: in- SARE WAY. 10 REL 39 lbs. Off --and She Feels Better A woman who has found a sure, safe way to lose fat--without freak dieting or dangerous drugs--wiites: "A year ago I was eaten up with rheumatism, and was far too fat. 1 weighed 164 lbs. and, as my height is only 5 feet 2 inches, you can judge my appearance. I have taken Krusch- en regularly, and not dieted, and now 1 weigh 115 1bs,. which is just nice, and, further, I feel better in health and my rheumatism has vanished." -- (Mrs.) D. N. Unlike . certain drastic drugs, Kruschen does not aim to reduce tu rushing food through the body; its action is not confined to a single part of the system, It has a tonic in- luence upon every organ of elimina- tion, every gland, every nerve, every vein, Gently but surely, it rids the system of a [ fat-forming food re- fuse, of all poisons and harmful acids which give rise to rheumatism, digest- ive disorders, and many other ills, A Million-Dollar Industry Apenn-- Each returning spring Canada gathers a harvest of the maple that runs into millions of dollars, In the calendar year 1933 the Dominion ex- ported 2,370,802 pounds of maple sugar valued at $389,475, and 82,994 gallons of maple syrup valued at $32, 073; the produce of the four provin- ces--Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, This is a strict- ly native industry, having originated nited States being the only countries producing maple syrup and sugar. The red 'man's methods were very crude. He gashed the maple tree with his tomahawk and caught the dripping sap in a birch bark vessel. Moose meat boiled in the maple sap was given ar sweetness much enjoyed by the Indian. Before the advent of metal or even earthen pots the boiling down process was done by dropping heatad 'stones into a hewed out log filled with the sap. According to a legend held by some Indian tribes maple syrup was dis- cevered in the following manner. One day a mighty hunter named Woksis went out in.s2arch of game v hile his squaw, Mogue, busied herself with preparing the meal against his home- cooking. As was customary, she boil- ed some moose meat in the sweet ma- ple water. Forgetting her charge, how ever, the boiling sap thickéned into a syrup. When Woksis returned and tasted the new dish he was so de'ight- ed that he informed: the tribe that a heaven sent instructor had informed his Mogua how to make this wonder- ful new. dish, The size or the yield each spring depends largely upon climatic :ondi- tions. With freezing nights and tha- wing days, clear skies and moderate winds, the yield is good. Ordinarily the run extends three weeks, but sometimes it 'exceeds a month. From 10:to 20 gallons of sap are taken from each. tree, but it requires 50 gallons of sap to make one gailon of syrup or about six pounds of sugar. ° The first run_of the season is rich- est, Gradually as the season advan- ces the sap becomes poorer. The fin- al run is drawn off when the buds are swelling: and 'almost ready to: burst. This poor quality of sap is called bud- dy sap and has a' peculiar flavor that cannot be eliminated. was little improvement in the meth- ods of sugar makers, but since that time the advance has kept pace with that of other branches of agriculture, until it has becorie-a more or less hi- ghly organized commercial industry. --Brockville Recorder-Times. Splinter Causes 'Death of Youngster An inquest disclosed Clementia Domingo de Allende, aged four, of Cape Town, South Africa, died from septicaemia, resulting from a splinter in a big toe, y A brother of the child gaid his sis- ter came to him and. complained of ving a splinter in her right toe. He pulled "ft out with tweezers and found it to be an inch long and fuirly thick. The wound bled # lot and he applied fodine, His mother alsy put boracic powder on the toe. His sister limped a little afterwards and then died suddenly. The district surgeon in a post mortem examination found a small' splinter of wood still embedded in the skin of the toe.. J FO A nd {ing combination bat has im. k SERRE JL rOil ont etvince in. Camada) $1.25 at druggists, \ clreulat sent on © a | . Ai OF RD/ING, © Fifth Avenue, New York City * mony with affection, liberating fluences arg engendered." , bl with the Indians, Canada and the U-|" Until about sixty years ago there . Death of Woman Who . Reveals Savings The locked door of a woman's room in London, Eng., outside which its occupant was found dying some time ago, has only now beer ope.ed to disclose a mystery which is puzzl- ing the neighbourhood. . For although the tenant, Miss C. M, Kelly, aged 62, had for years been in receipt of public and private charities in North London, her room, into which she had allowed no one to enter, contained savings certifi- cates to the value of $2,600, bank notes for $60 and a costly gold watch. The woman had been removed from her home to the Edmonton public in- stitution, where she died. Perhaps the most extraordinary find was a diary in which the dead woman had kept systematic records of persons on whom she had called to ask for money. Hundreds of names are given -- 221 on one day, 173 on another, and 141 on a third. Opposite each name appears the amount received. Large quantities of face-powder, lip-stick, and cosmetics were found in the room. Neighbours state that the woman was always well "made-up" before she went out. One local councillor, it appears, had regularly sent her. about 60 cents each week for many years, and he is astonished at the disclosures which have just been made. A curious fact about the woman is that she has never so far as can be paced, been in receipt of pcor re- ief, Back to the Kitchen CHICAGO--MTrs. Leonora Z. Meder, one of the United States best known club women, who is now président of the Chicago business and professional women's club, believes women belong in kitchens and homes and not in clubs, "Every club woman aud profes- sional woman, young or old," she sald, "would gladly chuck her career to marry a good man, There are two kinds, of women--those that men love and marry, and those who belong to clubs." K MEN Jibing the traditional club woman a little: more, Mrs. Meder added: "] am active in club and profes- sional work myself, but 1 see the error of my ways. It I were as good a cook as I am a lawyer, I'd own Chicago. Well, it's back to the spin- ning whee] for women: now, And back to the kitchen. Thet's wh 'women belong. Getting the vote didn't do women any gouad--they still vote: as their husbands tell them." Captain-Writer A noted exponent of the art of creating marine literature is Cap- tain J. G. Bisset, R.D,, R.N.R, whose "Ship Ahoy" has gone: into several editions. This is a com- pendium of information about the sea for land-lubbers. Captain DBis- - set also writes articles for leading newspapers and magazines the world. He is commander of the Cunard liner Ascania which operates be- tween Canada and Britain. 40 per cent. Apple Crop at Strathroy * STRATHROY--The apple crop in this district will not be more than 40 per cent. of normal, judging from pre- sent. indications, according to a dis. trict spray supervisor, It is also re- ported that the recent frost damaged fruit trees more than was at first thought and peaches, owing to the hard winter, are a total loss except in a few well protected positions, Prospects for cherry, plum and pear crops are more encouraging, Many apple trees have been killed outright, the bark lifted and in some cases the boles are split. OFF COLOUR ? HOW IS YOUR LIVER? Wake up your Liver Bile -- Without Calomel Your llver's a very small organ, but '| it certainly can put.your digestive and eliminative organs out of kilter by re. fusing to pour out its dally two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels, You won't completely correct such a condi. tion by taking salts, oll, mineral water laxative candy or chewing gum or rou- ghage.: When they've moved your bow- els they're. through--and you need a liver: stimulant. Carter's Little Liver Plllg: will. soon brig back the sunshine into your life, They're purely vegetable, Bafe, sure. 43 Adi for them by name, Refuse sub- stitutes. 25c at all drugsists. tnt . - - = EC -------- ing the progwess of : £. PE = have bee 3p 0g ih this paper. fr ol # This photograph shows the h at a point where it is proposed to tourigts, = 7 , ighway through the Ottawa Valley establish a permanent camp site for 2 A Be 33 WEN Here we see the final result Kenora and the Manitoba bounda -- obtained on the section between ry, this section of the road being formally opened to the travelling public on July 1st, 1932. Have You Heard? + Oliver 'was careless abrut hig nor. ona), ects, When mother went ups'airs and saw clothing gcattered about on chalr and floor, she inquired: "Who didn't hang up. his clothes when he went |- to bed?" A muffled voice from under I the blankets murmured, bAdam." "My dear give a man enough rope, and he'll hang himself," "Well, I gave my husband plenty, and he skipped!" : Sambo--So Ruby May give you dat pocketbook fo' yo' birthday. But why such a big one? } Rastus--She says dats to encour- age me, Nobody fs really as respectable as a husband feels when he quits phil- andering and comes back to be for- given, EE He--They tell me tha Colonel is a sexagenarian. She--The old fool! too! . And at his age, Any form _ of government seems dandy, to the man whose bank ac- count is fattening. Superintendent--Lay oft six men. Foreman--We need all we have, sir, Superintendent--I know that, but it you lay oft six it will ecare the rest so that they will work twice as fast, a. The colleges have used up all the material making gaed' men of good timber, so the contractors are com- pelled to resort to concrete, Smith--Is that a good watch: dog? Brown--1I'll gay he is. Ho spent all summer watching the nelghbors' chickens digging up my garden, Some people have happiness thrown in thelr laps and pass it up for a thrill, Youth '(to friend who 18 married) --How much does a marriage license cost? Friend--It will cost you $2 down-- and your salary every weck for the rest of your life. NOTE TO, PARENTS: You were the same kind of idiot at 16 and look |. how wt. you turned out, -- Past Caring. Mrs. Green (at her first football game)--"0Oh, {isn't it awful? Why, they will kill that poor buy under- neath," Daughter--"Don't be silly, mother! Ha doesn't mind' it; he's unconsclous by: this time.,* Tit For Tat Farmer--"If things get too bad we can eat our forest preserves." City' Boy--"You've nothing on us, we.-can eat our trafiic james." Flora--Just think! cheek to kiss me! Dora--You were furions, naturally? Flora--Yes--every time. He bad the The fellow who gets too fat for a canon. _soks funny with a Ukelele, Man--I'd hate to have a bunch of poor relations blow in on me, Neighbor--Yeh! I'd a heap rather have a bunch of rich ones blow in their money on me. Atheletic underwear is almost as close most fellows ever get to a gym- nasium, ' Doctor--Your husband is very {lL You must take every precaution, Wilfe--Yes, doctor, I will cancel the order for my new dress at once, The golden wedding is one happy event that money won't buy. Mother--It that young man asks for. a kiss refuse fit. Daughter--And if he doesn't ask for it? Just a Hint. It was approaching midnight, and the young man still hovered around the door. ? The stillness was suddenly shat. tered by a loud crash upstalrs, "Graclous, dear," sald the timM swain, "what could that be?" "Qh," replied the miss, "that's just papa dropping a hint." a. "Is he trustworthy?" eprustworthy! Why I'd trust him with my lite." 5 "Yes, but how about money 1" English Girl Will Spread Methods of x, "Slimming" in U.S. " London -- Louise Irwin, young English physical culture expert, left to spread methods of "glimming" in the United States. : "Slimming," as reducing is pic turesquely called here, has gained great vogue recently and led 'to a stern campaign by British doctors in an effort to cure its popularity. Miss Irwin told the Evening News she hoped to teach the young Ameri- can girl how to reduce without hav: Ling to resort to either \ physical exercises or a hunger diet, Ye Mix equal parts of Minard's and sweet oil, castor oil, or cream, Spread on brown pply to burn ot paper. scald, Before long the 8 painful smarting stops MINARD'S _ "KING OF PAIN" Issue No. 25-34 fatiguing regard to the hig ECONOMICAL: SATISFYING: The choice tobacco gives DIXIE PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO Dixie Plug lasts far longer in your pipe. a cool, mellow smoke. How to Tie Your Scarf for Smartness Scarf etiquette is something of a science these days when often the effect of an entire costume may de- pend upon this one accessory. Solid colors are always better for the costume which may be figured, strip ed or otherwise designed, and the reverse for ensembles of one color. But color isn't the whole thing. The method of khotting or twittling or drapping ,the*-throat is an all-im- portant factor in searf-manipulation. The simplest method is probably knitting the fabric once around the throat like a handkerchief. Longer ones should be rolled .and twisted -- not folded -- arcund the neck wi fi the ends hanging loose. Still others are knotted Ascot favo wa ion SER inside the jacket. Some silk hand- | kerchiefs are seen in plain patterns, folded three-cornered around the neck and held with a sports pin (one of those huge safety pins or a long golf club, tennis racket, ski-shoe o hockey stick in silver.) Jewelry, generally speaking, is not worn with sport costumes except for pins on caps or at the neck line of the dressier angora sweaters and enamel worn on the lapel or jackets as novelties, Aviation jewelry ac- cessories consist of nuts and bolts, wings, propellors and such fixed 1p as rings, bracelets, necklaces and pins, and particularly the nuts and bolts are used as buttons, snaps, clips and buckles. When is-a Married Woman Not Married ERIE, Pa.--When is a married wo- man not a married womon? That's the thorn piercing the side of Erle's school board, now that it has barred the hiring of married teachers. Mrs, Bertha W. Mahoney started the storm by asking the board if a woman teacher, married and separated from her husband but not dlvorced, was, eligible for a contract. "I know of two or three women," she continued, "who are now living with their husbands and not getting along so well. They would be willing to give up married life if they dould be appointed teachers." Superintendent of schools John C. Diehl thought that womer not living with their husbands are eligible. But this brought a chorus of "No's". from the board. "That might open the way for fraud," one director pointed out. "We might have some married wo- men leaving their husbands to be- come. teachers and then jeturning to thelr husbands again, - Then we couldn't break the contract. Let them get a legal divorce first," Exasperated, John Macdonald, board president sald: "Let's get a legal opinfon." It 18 not 80 much the boing exempt from faults, as the having overcome then, that is an advantage to us, -- Alexander Pope. « First Woman to Win Degree For Estate Management For the first time a woirer has won the London Unlversity degree of B. S.c. (Estate Management) established 12 years ago, The degree Involves the study of sud subjocts as econ: omics, law, accoimtanry, bullaing, surveying and town-planatnyg Tha successful woman candidate is Miss Aurora Lamplough, of Cartwright Gardens, London. Miss Lamplough, wha wae born at Cambridge, Is the daughter of I' I. Lamplough of Northiield, orar Bitm- ingham «a former Fellow oI "rinity College, Cambridge, and lecturer at King's Norton Secondary 8-hool, St George's School, Harpen len, an: the Coiieze of Estate Mantzement, Lon- don. German Author } Says War Certain Paris--Emil Ludwig, exiles Ger- man author, believes war is inevit- able because "dictators are deluding youth, which seeks something more dramatic than democracy." In Les Annales Ludwig writes: . "War is not being encouraged by cannon manufacturers or the chan- cellories, but in universities' and schools, and in mass demonstrations organized by dictators rs a back- ground for their' efforts." A united Europe does not appeal *o youth. because "it possesses neither battle flags----nor anthems nor an avenger's creed." Ludwig said that William II no more desired war than Chancellor Hitler, but that "war was made in- evitable by noisy, nationalistic dis- plays of power.' 'About a million negro children of school age are reported to be not attending any school in the U.S. Classified Advertising RESH EGGS wanted. weekly, W. A. Milton, Is St. Montreal. I"rices sent 43u Bourgeo- FOR QUICK SALE--POWER PUMPS n LEVEN only left at speclal ubllee V] Price. Greatly reduced, Cost far less. Pump water night and day. Ex- ceptional value. Write to-day for prices giving depth of well Mr. A.J. Hol- brook, . Beatty Bros. ILimited, Fergus, Ont. Box 239.W ) iA Ask Mother-- ~~ She Knows Mother took this medicine be= fore and after the babies cames It gave her more strength and energy when she was nerv- ous and rundown . « « kept her | on the job all through the Change. No wonder she recs | ommends it. "LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Seasonal Foodstuffs on Trains AN are features of the table d'hote meal of the Canadian National Railways, vinces, meats, including the famous lincluding Lake Winnipeg goldeyes, and Ontario and the famed Okanagan | featured in these plate service meals The change to table d'hote se dian National diners, arte service on these trains, May 1st, : Ontario spring lamb, freshwatcr fish, | and fruits from the Maritimes, Distinctive Canadian foodstuffs and dainties in their proper scason N fA ) service on the transcontinental trains. commencing with the abolition of a Pi Seafoods from the Maritime P \ uebec | Valley of British Columbia, all are: at appropriate seasons, V rvice is carried out with every service. According to information reaching railway o ficials, the announce» ment of the néw .meal service has been very travelling public. ~ favorably received by the i POULTRY AND EGGS WANTED ein : standard of service which has a prevailed on Cana} There is no let-down in giving the traveller perfect Se 3 rh Sy i OY i ¥ nh Sake Penn ~ nt A " A ee i , - Co 2 HP -- Aes Tr ---- = "2 mT EERE a 1 &