WE Cutler, Authority on Fossils, 1914

Calgary Herald, 4 April 1914

1865 – Authority on Fossils

Could you give me the name of anyone in Calgary or in Alberta who is an authority on fossils?  I have one that I wish to be identified.  John L West, Hill Spring.

Ans- Write to WE Cutler, Museum of Natural History, Court House, Calgary.  He is an authority on fossils and will be able to give you any information you require.

Scout Jamboree, 1983

Edmonton Journal, 14 Jul 1983

Scout Jamboree ending for 13,564

It’s all over today for the 13,564 scouts at the 15th World Scout Jamboree.

Scouts will leave with new recipes, girlfriends, badges and memories.

One lucky schout will even go home with his own computer.  It will go to the winner of the final computer games playoffs to be held in Kananaskis Country this afternoon.

Hugh Leitch, 14, of Edmonton has a new girlfriend.

“I met her on a ride at the Stampede.”

All the scouts at the jamboree had a chance to attend the Calgary Stampede this week.

American Martin Carter, 14, will return home with a much coveted South African scout hat. 

“I had to trade two BSA (Boy Scots of America) hats to get it.” He said proudly.

Paul Van de Velte, assistant contingent leader of Belgium, says he will come away with a good impression of Canadians.

“The Canadians are very organized. Here, as in Belgium, there are many rules, but here they follow the rules.”

Brent Harris, 16, of South Africa, says he has taken down 20 addresses of friends he made at the jamboree.

He says “learning other people’s way of life – and especially eating habits – was the best part of the Jamboree.”

Marriage Thomas Irvine Cormack and Shirley Mary Pauline, 1954

The Province 17 March 1954

Cormack-Pauline vows repeated at ceremony of wide interest

Victoria – Mr and Mrs Thomas Irvine Cormack, married Saturday in St Mary’s Church, will soon travel to Germany to make their home near Hamburg, where the groom will be stationed with the 2nd Bn PPCLI.  The couple will travel on honeymoon to Calgary, where the groom is now stationed.  He will leave for Germany at the end of March, when Mrs Cormack will return to Victoria, leaving in several months’ time to join him.

Archdeacon AE Del Nunns heard the vows of Shirley Mary, elder daughter of Mr and Mrs Oliver Pauline, and the son of the late Alan Cormack, well-known ship builder, and the late Mrs Cormack.

The bride is granddaughter of the late Hon James A Macdonald, former chief justice of British Columbia, and Mrs Macdonald and of the Hon FA Pauline, former agent-general for BC, and the late Mrs Pauline.

An afternoon length gown of amethyst iridescent taffeta was worn by the attractive bride. The gown was styled with full crinolined skirt, fitted bodice trimmed with matching sequins, and bateau neckline.  She wore a tiny shell hat of iridescent dusky rose straw and carried a cascading bouquet of rosebuds.

 

Times_Colonist_Sat__Mar_20__1954_shirley pauline

Her sister’s only attendant, Miss Carolyn Pauline wore an afternoon-length gown of pale pink corded silk.

Mr Ronald Alexander was best man, Mr Peter Powell and Mr Murray Pauline, Vancouver, ushered guests to pews marked with nosegays of cream daffodils.

WE Cutler declares support for investigations, 1920

Calgary Herald, 10 Jun 1920

Alberta Scored for not having fossil museum

WE Cutler declares support for investigations in local field is not furnished

Does not object to export of specimens

Complains specimen of Duck-billed dinosaur lies unprotected in Calgary

 

Referring to the matter of the raiding of Alberta for prehistoric specimens, WE Cutler, paleontologist, of Steveville, Alberta, scores the provincial government for its alleged apathy with regard to encouraging the unearthing of these fossils and providing a suitable museum in which to keep them.  He further makes several corrections in an article appearing in the Herald, May 1. He cites instances where for less than the mere asking, the government could have come into possession of very valuable and rare specimens. That it did not do so, renders whimsical in his mind, any criticism of those who have removed the natural history museums of the United States.

Alberta, he says, is not the only locality where the prehistoric remains of reptile monsters have been found. But only having been worked since 1880, the fauna was new to paleontologists.  That the American scientists have taken several carloads of specimens and parts of specimens from Alberta, was true, he said: but it was also true that every species save perhaps that of ornithomimus, the bird mimic, is duplicated in the collection of the Victoria Memorial museum at Ottawa.

Specimen in Calgary

Personally, he holds no brief for the American scientists, several of whom he counts among his friendsl but when one considers, he says that the complete skeleton of a duck-billed dinosaur, which he found for the Calgary Natural History Society in 1913, under Dr E Sisley, is lying unprotected in the basement of the Calgary Courthouse, subjected to all sorts of handling by visitors, then, he declares the remarks on the deportation at the end of the Herald’s article of May 1, sounds “somewhat breezy to put the matter gently.” Quoting the sentence in that article which he refers to: “and there is no reason why that same skeleton (Cory Duck) should not be reposing in a provincial museum” he explains that the main reason why such is not possible is that there is no money available for a man to work on in order to go into the field each summer with his party and in order to have a man or two to prepare the material when brought home.

British Fossil Molluscs

During the part of his war service spent in Britain, he made a collection of British fossil molluscs.  This, he says, was intended for Calgary’s museum, when a proper and scientific care and reception were assured. The work which produced them cost him something in the neighbourhood of $1000 and the collection reposes at present in the safekeeping of the British Museum of Natural History, London.  He had always desired, he said, that this province should inaugurate a museum to educate its people regarding the natural wonders which it contains, and which at present, when brought to light, occasion remarks of the greatest ignorance. A classified museum in his mind, would place the whole matter on an accurate scientific basis.

Commenting on the paragraph appearing under the sub-heading “Others Ate Him” which sub-heading referred the Cory Duch, that is supposed by scientists to have formed the piece de resistance of the sea serpents of that period, he declares that the pythonomorph was not only purely marine and therefore had never seen corythosaurus but he was also previous to him in existence.  Bronosaurus and diplodocus both related to each other, and with dentition too weak to eat anything harder than semi-aquatic vegetables, had both died out millions of years prior to the advent of the corythosaurus.  The tyrannosaurus rex, he says, did not live here, but this error was less, owing to the fact that the almost equally as large gorosaurus lived here then.  Pterandodon and pterodactyl would hardly have been able to handle him.

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