Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Edmonton Journal from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada • 20

Publication:
Edmonton Journali
Location:
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

JOURNAL PHONES 9271 EDMONTON JOURNAL "Iu Every Home'" THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1023 TWENTY English Rail Wreck Kills Four An Old Recipe to Darken Hair By JANICE RAND ALL Prince of Wales Off to Jungles Will Hunt Big Game in Tangani in Northern Rhodesia 'Special Cable to Edmonton Journal By United Press NAROBI. Africa. Nov. 15. Under Almost, knows mat Sane flllllll Iggll RmmiORE liiggggj 7 New Emperor of Japan Host at Strange Dinner Shinto Gods of Heaven and Earth Sat at Meal Served by Ruler (Special to Edmcnton Journal by British United Tress) By Miles Vaughan KYOTO, Japan, Nov.

15. Emperor Hirohioto was host last night at a banquet to an unknown number of invisible guests the strangest of Tea ami Sulphur properly m- Change Constable 1 At Red Deer Today David P. Muir Comes to Edmonton to Join the Ranks of A.P.P. to Edmonton Ju.inidl1 RED DEER. Nov.

15. Leain Red Deer early this morning the night constable. David P. Muir goes to Edmonton to join the A P.P. barracks there in the rank of a constable.

Mr. Muir has served Red Deer In the capacity of a night policeman lor over eight years, fill-: ing the post during that tune with ability and complete satisfaction His resignation was a matter of regret to the councillors, who passed ipouiipi'c. uriugs 'back The nutural color anil lustre 7 ELECT an overcoat bearing this 1 1 1 1 1 If -1 to the hair when 8 the rather hazardous circumstances which face any big game hunting party, the Prince of Wales left today on another stage of his African tour. JwSU registerea iaoei aim assmc yumscu If58 ol a purer wool garment of superior laded. streaked or pray.

Years the only way to eet this mix The royal party, which Includes' six Europeans and seventeen native I guides, bearers and drivers, will go I to the game lands In Tangani, I Northern Rhodesia, where camps will be made in the jungle. The prince was dressed in a pic ST quality. Barrymore PURE WOOL CLOTH FOR OVERCOATS ture was to make it at home, which Is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays we simply ak sny druj store for "Wveth's Sage and Sulplv.r Compound" Vou will get a large bottle of ihi old-time recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients', for only 75 cents. Everybody uses this preparation now, because no one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so nattiraly and evenly.

You dampen a sponge or soft brush with 1. and caw tins through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning that gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, thick and glossy and you look years younger. 11 the unusual rites that have attended his enthronement. Shinto gods of heaven and earth sat at the meal served by the ruler of 75,000,000 subjects as the final act of his enthronement. The Daijo Sai, or Great New Food Festival, was celebrated in the Shinto faith by an emperor clad in simple robes and sitting barefoot on the floor of a bare, wooden hall.

The food was of the simplest tyie, steamed rice and millet, fresh fish, fruits, seaweed broth, the broth of a shell fish called Awabl and thin rice wine called Sake. All except the wine were served in wooden boxes and eaten with chop sticks held only in the riaht hand. a resolution thanking mm ior ins laithlul services to the city and wishing him every success in his new work. While he has not been connected with the movement ol late. Mr.

Muir was a scoutmaster with the local boy scouts durinit the troop's early Under his able leadership the boys made a name for themselves some seven or years aao by having the best scout bugle band in the, province. All these old scouts join with the ciiiens in tending to the constable their be-t wishes lor his' future. turesque hunting outfit. The departure was quiet and informal, in contrast with the barbaric splendor of the celebration of the arrival of the party. Honor Ethel Catherwood WINNIPEG.

Nov. 15. "Catherwood" will be the name of one of the new stations on the recently constructed Rosetown-Perdue branch of the Canadian Pacific railway in Saskatchewan. The station is named after Miss Ethel Catherwood, of Saskatoon, who brought fame to Canada bv her accomplishments at the Olympic games held at Amsterdam this year. We carry a full rane ot Overcoats, made from genuine Barrymore Clotlu in all the popular pattern.

i ACME CLOTHIERS I 10146-50 101st STREET LIMITED His Imperial Majesty, as head of 1 the Shinto religion. had undergone spiritual purification for the meal for nearly a year. He bathed in a sacred tub called the "Onu No Func" New C.N.R. Hotel VANCOUVER, B.C., Nov. 15.

Th civic building committee today gave authority for the issuing of a per- mit for the construction of th 13-storey Canadian National railways hotel to be erected here at a cost approximating $5,000,000. or sacred bath bowl, and was cleansed again with holy water before sitting down to the communion. Millions of persons throughout the country bowed in prayer as he broke bread with the spirits which found the semi-mortal Nipponese dynasty more than 25 centuries ago. Srene of the wreckage near Lockerbie, when 8 London. Midland and Scotland express piled- into a goods train.

Engines and tenders were telescoped by the terrific Impact. Only four persons lost their lives. Ship Limps Into Port Victim of Worst Storm In Forty Years Eaton Toronto Store Will Be Largest of Its Kind In the World FOR. Iv-V Vi. tjSfe! iNEllTISlfef i aye IT yx iil A WINNIPEG, Nov.

15 J. J. Vaughan. Toronto, secretary of the T. Eaton company, Wenesday announced that the Eaton company would shortly commence the construction ronto." Mr.

Vaughan said, "the completed structure would be larger than either Marshal Fields, in Chicago or Macey's, in New York city, as they are at present." It will be several years before the Toronto building is completed. Only the first unit will be erected MONTREAL, Nov. 15. Battling against a terrific northwesterly gale and mountainous seas, her lifeboats swept overboard, wireless gone, coal supply exhausted and cabins and ventilators stoved in the force of the gale the steamer Crelwen, owned by the Derwen Steamship company, has limped into this port, 15 days overdue. "I've been to sea forty years." said the mate Wednesday, "and I have never seen anything like it before." The Crelwen experienced bad weather all the way across from Antwerp, where she had loaded a general cargo for Montreal, but the worst part of the storm was encountered on October 21.

22 and 23, when the ship could make little headway against the winds and high seas. In two days she covered only 99 miles. The seas were so high that at times it was impossible to see the funnel from the bridge. When the coal ran out, the between-deck hatches were broken up and used to fire the boilers, and all available wood on deck was collected and piled on the fires to enable the ship to make Saint John. N.B., where she loaded sufficient coal to take her to her regular coaling station at N.S..

where temporary repairs were also effected. 350a for the present and this will be added to as business warrants. Six Men Killed In Plane Crash Machine Went Into a Tail You Too Can Make This Beautiful GRANDMOTHER'S FLOWER GARDEN QUILT Spin Bodies Badly Mangled SAN ANTONIO, Texxas. Nov. 15.

Six men were killed and another wa; injured when an army transport A Distinctive Early Design in Toronto of the "largest depcrt- mental store in the world." The building, which will be 40 stories high, will cost several million dollars and i will cover two city blocks, the boun- darics of which are Yonge. Bay, Hater and College. Buchanan street, in the centre, will be closed. The building was planned before ttie war by the late Sir John Eaton, but the outbreak of hostilities interrupted the plans for the structure. "According to Mr.

Magre, vice president of the company in To- 22 Bodies Picked Up from Vestris In of One $7,800 Was Still Intact and Safe NEW YORK. 15. Rerlaimfd from the sea, 22 bodies of the Vestris' dead today were being returned to grieving relatives and friends. The first body was brought to this city early yesterday on the rescue ship Berlin, while last night eight bodies were brought by the guard destroyers Tucker and Acush-net. The coastguard destroyer Shaw All sorts of headaches usually yield to an Aspirin tablet.

But don't let the acquaintance end there! Aspirin offers the same welcome relief from neuritis and neuralgia, and even rheumatic pains. To break up a cold, or end a toothache; for children, as well as adults, nothing seems quite so effective and so harmless as Aspirin. But the box must say Bayer; the name must be on every tablet, too, to be genuine Aspirin. Remember that! All druggists, with proven directions. Physicians prescribe Aspirin; it does NOT affect the heart Aiplrta It the trde mirk (rffljtirwl In Csmlil lndictUne BiTer Will It In well known tbtt Aspirin meant Rrr manufacture, to assure the public against lmiU Uuna, tbe Tablet! will be atamped wiui tneir "Barer Cross" trademark.

plane crashed Wednesday afternoon from 3,000 feet in the air to a spot near here, ten miles east of Brooks Field, aviation training school fjr the United States army. The accident occurred when the right wing of the plane broke off from the fuselage and the tail piece broke away, plunging the plane into a tail spin. It crashed nose first into a cotton field. The six passengers killed wen; In the cabin of the plane. They weie piled up forward and their mangled bodies had to be taken to Brook3 Field hospital for identification.

Lt. Harvey F. Dyer. Pilot and Stall Sergeant J. Sicdenhaler, who was in the front seat with him, escaped death when they were thrown out cf the tilting plane and landed with parachutes.

Dyer was unhurt but Siedenhaler had a broken rib that was pronounced not serious. The plane was a Brooks Field ship and was out on maneouvres when the accident occurred. The names of the dead are: Private Arthur W. Hardesty, 24. Lebanon Ky.

Private Niceforo Villereal. 29, Pu-anta Cochabainba, Bolivia. Private Carl W. Harris, 22, Winns-boro. Texas.

Private Harry W. Gauldin, 26, Callander, Va. Private Deaner T. McCluskey, 19, Placid. Texas.

Private Irvin Self, 23, Victor, Tex. ') -mmiitrv-a mi.i.iMiii-ii iiiiArrrinrV i 1 left the scene of the wreck for Ne'v York with 13 bodies. Many of the dead had not been identified today, the clothing of the victims being c-void of identifying marks. Among the bodies aboard the Shaw were those of Major Hashio Incuye, Japanese consulate, Buenos Aires, whose wife was rescued by the battleship Wyoming: Carl representative of a German firm, and his 2-vear-old daughter. Ingeborg.

Of the four bodies brought by the Tucker, only two were identiiird. Brass tags worn about their nedio identified one as that of Jose Gonzales Rua, of New Bedford. Mass, and the other as that of Rayrrond Garcia Pelal. of New York. Rua.

who had sailed with his wife and two-year-old boy. had $7,800 in his pockets when found. His wife was rescued by the Wyoming, but no trace of the son was found. The other two bodies were those of a negro woman and a white man, apparently a member of the crew. Aboard the Acushnet were tne bodies of Ralph P.

Whitehead, of Woodstock. N.Y., end Tom Jones, barman of the Vestris. The identity of the other two was not known. The body brought back by the Berlin was that of a white man who was not identified. The two destroyers landed the bodies at Stapleton.

Staten Island, where they were met by a representative of the Lamport Holt line, the owners of the Vestris, and an Northcott Will Return for Trial Decides Not to Fight Against Extradition Proceedings VANCOUVER, B. C. Nov. 15. Although eight davs remain in which he may appeal, Gordon Stewart Northcott who has been committed for extradition to California on four charges of murder, will not, according to his counsel, Frank Lyons, raise any further obstacle to his enforce.) return for trial at the scene of his Premier Bruce Is alleged crimes.

As the case for the prosecution was ill i Ilia developed by Hon. R. L. Maitland. K.

the accused, it is said, conceded that he would be extradited. He openly expressed a wish to return to California should his mother. Mrs. Louisa Northcott, lose in her extradition fight before the Alberta court. Judge H.

H. Cayley formally committed Northcott for extradition on November 2. The fifteen day period therefore within which an appeal by wav of writ of habeas corpus mav be taken will expire on November 22. I (THE QL'ILT AS EXHIBITED BEFORE THE NANCY PAGE CLfB) FOLLOW THE PATTERNS AS PRESENTED EVERY WEEK at the meetings of the NANCY PAGE QUILT CLUB Closing Campaign Australian General Election Will Be Held on Saturday MELBOURNE, Australia, Nov. 15.

Both Premier Stanley Bruce and James Scullin, labor party leader, are now closing strenuous campaigns in preparation for the Australian general elections to be held on Saturday. Labor has already won a victory in a contest for one of the seats In the event. Three labor candidates and three government candidates were contesting three senate seats at Victoria, and one of the government candidates. Major General J. K.

Forsyth, died. With only two nationalists left in the running there. Labor obtains a senate seat automatically. Twelve ot the 36 senate seats are to be filled on Saturday. In the present senate the government has a majority of 26.

Premlei Bruce Wednesday urged the people to "cleanse the Labor party of disruptive elements by voting for the sane, safe and sound policy of the government." I AlK TOUR DEALER FOR i LAC? MAZDA rnosrlo LAMPS Beautifully Colored Blocks Each block of the Grandmother's Flower Garden Quilt rcprcsent one of the flowers that grew in her garden the heartsease crocus, blue bells and all of the other favorites. Th-: suggested background of the quilt is white with buff flower baskets in each block, containing one of the Bowers. The wholf array of lavenders, blues, pinks, yellows and greens will constitute a veritable flower garden. Below are a few of tht flowers which will be used. Rose Harebell Trillium Crocus Pansy Fuchsia Poppy Morning Glory Tulip Tiger Lily Zinnia Mild at Until stores Mild at Both The Northern Hardware Ltd.

Nancy Page and her fellow club members originated the Idea of the Grandmother's Flower Garden Quilt for their club. They had been studying early home life and the old-fashioned quilting bees suggested the possibility when they saw pictures of intricately pieced patterns and examples of wonderful quilting. So now, every week, they meet to finish one of Uie blocks of this beautiful flower quilt. The pattern for this block is presented weekly In this paper for your guidance In making your own quilt. Tou will also find lt entertaining to read the story of the flower as It Is given by one of the members.

The Nancy Pape Quilt club Is a unique way of presenting a qufli pattern which permits you to check your own problems simultaneously with those which are let form which you may obtain free of charge by writing to th Nancy Fatfe Quilt Club In care of this newspaper. You will be reminded of this offer In connection with each block pattern. If you are a member ot a club that would like to follow the example of the Nancy Page Quilt Club, propose the Grandmother's Flower Garden Quilt at the next meeting. Each member can make one or two of the blocks and the Individual members will also wish to make one for themselves. Just visualize the beautiful quilt with Its white background and buff baskets with flowers In lavenders, blues, pinks, and yellows with greens for stems and leaves Such a white quilt with a drift of pastel colors will be beautiful addition to your guest room or a most welcome gift for one of your friends.

Jusper Ave. Hensnii lilwk Ht 103r1 Strrt IOIt Street Do Your Legs Grow Tired Easily? Do Your Feet and Ankles Swell and Inflame and Get So Sore You Can Hardly Walk? Have You Varicose or Swollen Veins and Bunches Near the Ankle or Knee To atop the misery, puin or soreuesi. help reduce he dangerous swollen veins and strengthen the lefjn. use Mimne's Kuirrul'd ll Thia clean, powerful, penetrating yet safe antiseptic heuhtiB oil i obtainable at-ll nrst-class drug store. In hundred of cases Moone'a Emerald Oil has given binned relief.

Oet bottle today. Use It lor Ulcers. Old SoreH. Broken Veinii and Troublesome Cases of Eczema. Your money buck it does not help.

Can't Mop Kitchen Gas Presses Heart the opportunity to choose from a variety of suggestions as to color schemes and materials. A supplementary list of instructions have been prepared In leaf belair encountered and solved by members of the Quilt Club Equally valuable, will be the discussion of each block by the members of the club, giving you "When I mopped my kitchen I was WATCH FOR A NEW BLOCK PATTERN EACH WEEK Beginning Saturday, November 17 all In, stomach gas pressed so on my heart. Adlerlka ended the gas and I can work fine now." Mrs. C. Thompson.

Adlerlka, a simple glycerin, buckthorn bark, saline compound, acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel and brings out foul matter you would never believe was In your system. This old Fl in the and GAS Is brought out! Dr. H. L. Shoub.

New York, reports: "In addition to Intestinal cleansing, Adlerlka checks the growth oJ Intestinal bacteria." Dr. J. Weaver: "In my 50 years' practice, I have found nothing to excel Adlerlka." J. E. Puckett: "After using Adlerlka I feel better than for 20 years.

Awful Impurities were eliminated." Give your stomach and boweU EEAL cleansing with Adlerlka and fee how good you feeli Just ONE spoonful relieves GAS and chronic constipation. At leaning drucrgists. Sold In Edmonton by Smith's Drug Store. Send for FREE checkerboard. ADI.ERIKA, Dept.

D-188, St. Paul, Minn. matter may have poisoned you lor I months and caused GAS. tour stom-inch. headache or nervousness, Try this simple proof: Take any medicine which acts on lower bowel 'only most laxatives do.

After your I bowels have moved, take Adlerlka rd in short time you will be astonished at how much MOKE sour, old matter Bttwittt0ii JouriM.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Edmonton Journal
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Edmonton Journal Archive

Pages Available:
2,095,023
Years Available:
1903-2024