nvi-wVire-vvleDfse?d*ke-lestenS-lt;y-£5P'asile[isiyceit-ov«»OGrOPOGrO TTJRN^i TJp!siSned to *lasten ^le removal of alt[Japanese from Hastings Park canton-IN ALBERTA RIVER jment and concentrate Japanese fam*#__ j ily groups in a flt;*\v favor *bb’ROCKY MOUNTAIN HOUSE.Alta., July 25 i.CPi—-The ogopcgo is arcund again!Small boys swimming in a pool by the North Sasaktehewan river saw a huge object in the river and began throwing stones, though they really thougnt it was a log.When a stone hit it, the monster made a dive for the bank and the boys fled up the bank. At the tencommunities in the interior of British ^« a . “• *Columbia. Mr. Taylor intimated Uia. ’ before summer ends.about 3.500 Japanese, most of them family units. wi]l be quartered at the newly-acquired (A. B. Tritcs farm, on the Hope-Prince-ton highwav. and at Sloean.Twn-familv houses are now being• ■ 'built at both points, and in some instances will be erected to accommodate the Japanese tenqH)»*nrlly. Mr Taylor said. He said nil married Japanese now working at. lt;*iinstructionof the hill, they looked around and 1 in the more isolated district :| when they found the thing was not; will be reunited with their familiesfollowing them, they stopped to laUe!atld sa*d “the whole situation is now • a good lock. They say the monster ivved in *land-I\i At the II-mile farm, leased from Mr. Trites. the Japanese can produce much of their own garden stuff and .other requirements. Those who work jin the fields will be naid for their labor. The produce will go to the com-Smunity store, where it will be sold back to Japanese in the various concentration points in the province.is huge, an ugly gray, “with eves like car lights and an ugly red mouth filled with teeth that could crunch a small boy in a second.’*They did not venture down the hill again. The monster stayed on the bank, half in and half out of the water, “breathing fire and making sounds” that stood the boys’ hair cnend. Apparently it wasthem to come down the*half an hour, it slid back into the water and disappeared. The boys are positive that what they saw was a living creature, not a log as some are trying to say it must have been.“No logs make sounds like that, or Harvesting in this part of the come plunging to the bank,” they in- j country is expected to start thisfeist. Adults are going down in the ) week. John Rumber, Jr., and Robertevenings to try to see the monster. j Becker are going to start heading--| rye Monday. Most of the rye is ripewaiting for iRnnr, rj ,rvhill. After ! KOSLWheat Burning; Rain is Needed1 —