Listowel Banner, 22 May 1924, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

-—— Biaghennnetpraneonpeye:!<¢ Bian a Mier eke RS e a flower escaped from a garden js the fish- gf found in inland Canada. - belong the sea-mists of the Atlantic shores and to the ate-cole of the Pacific. What are they ming inland, out of habitat, “fish out of. water,” as it wie But wien you chance cpon the “inland net” of the Indian, ween « round a crude wheel whittled out $4 ring. f> strong the nets! Like Inland . You renigs you pet take it ct hand and run it through finger . Com coarse — pea gt eg Ae e oar. of ese are hr ve © Net! » nd the sweet smell ul lace veil is this Old ne. pared with it, how crude seems e tanned lengths that is the Ase Geta cll — ane gunmwale and heavy tim » the long the fishboats that work.the herri , Jealously hung in an re: 0 of saplings, something inside, om gg ong once ig opr inner gig o ee . out- eaaying: * is is the o _ bi a threads, : , “ the Beauty of F cir are th, rt alg —_ this ese u ., : Sent afhet ptr: Logg ack, ack, back the|is no question of superar’, only an tateresting and » - Garden-of-Eden-time of this continent.” Rea’ Sant discuveries of fossil-skeletons are gacing: het period * back much further than that 20, which|the sea; and we had becume seeasinened even if we reuidn't under- z is upon us, stund or comprehend it. r West. nets of Nipigon need no aid from men in But these order tu write themselves as belonging in that class of simple things which appeal to the heart. When very entertaining are in a mood . the sculpture, for the strength of of difference. Sometimes we nothing can satiate this hunger when but the way of the Maritime . East inland nets that stand for Canadian vers, those wonderful water highways, or we happen on one of them Samer speaks to us with “eS shaw) a vista LS a world of the wild and free, so inanimate written on the page of the Government’ s “Indian allowance” becomes a thing of life, when you _chunged by the handiwork of the Indian into one rd cl by ioe ag of gon dainty lumeot the frailty and mobility o e dain pac the hyper-xensitive fishboat of this it minders up “Twine” these in!nnd nets. cance which is wort! of intund lakes and rives. in some clearing, its gos- nygth thrown about the old wheel's throat it the same human touch as of some their own feminine happen upon it| ed sk po Ba alj ity fe rivers be etl charm of mirror-like sw peace and the sweet amell ra the woo What sort of world's work, someone murmurs, can be accomplished of raperies than tools of an industr The filigree meshes wound eleton of a ree! do not pu of ne immensity and sanee of lakes mere bridle paths, ane Rage gp “of water, have charm . a cf freshwater, the the shane of the deep these toy nets... wie like about this old, asia. rt to be a Blue-Book ne frantiorater fisheries y are im much as . nse... 80 point-finger of the endreds o miles of lakes and up to sportsmen followin ‘the nets of Nipigon.”—Victo: the beckoning Hayward. 4 Canadian Fowls at ~- World’s ——FPICK- OF ~ 5000 MILES TO SPAIN BY C. N. EXPRESS. ‘At the World's Poultry Congress held at Barcelona, Spain, and which closes today, the thirty-five birds =r el selected from all over the Dominion by Elford, Dominion Pi ecagtd Husbandman, by whom they e been accompanied to Europe, jave aroused widespread admiration. The fowls have not been shown in . competition, but were displayed es- sentially to demonstrate what Canada ean do in this branch of husbandry. The representation of the Domin- fon ‘at — important in o the Poultry ‘Pxbibitors of decided among themselve * ‘to be rep- resented at Barcelona in a sufficient- ly impressive manner to arrest atten- ¢fon, All the leading poultry raisers of the country have contributed to the display which may bé said to be courgtrywide in character and to com- > the finest array of. birds which the Dominion has ever exhibited overseas. The following are repre- eented in the exhibit: The mental Farm, Ottawe and B. C. with Barred Rock and White (Leghorn breeds; University of Brit- ish Columbia, Barred Rocks ae - White Leghorns. In the R.O.P are F. G.. Delamere, Stratford, oat * White Leghorns; A. M. Hendrick, over, Ont., White Leghorns; Han ee ea, ont Speciality _ sented by the Hon - Ont., G. H. Pe-Haw Souine ‘of Toro: Their , Barred Rocks; R- J. Pen- hall, est” "Dover, Ont., White Leg- horns. The foregoing are all register- ed birdé. The standard bred class is repre- . J. 8. Martin, Port Dover, Ont., White Wyandottes; " ltural College, Oka, Que., eer; Ferguson & Hunter, . Smith Falls, Poa White Leghorns; The Barred P mouth Rock Club, ‘Toronto, Barred Rocks, contributed by Dr. J. A. = aeee ess Egansville, Trafa ager, and Go- was sup- right through to Spain. ‘ement of the birds was a striking feat in itself. Inasmuch h vn | for their ogg ; s| Brantford, London, ry} He’s managed to get in Hfe. =*! You think of thé friend Ke’s been’ to’ ey men, The good thet he has done; And yo a,| BY the eriénds ‘MASS MEETINGS TO BE HELD IN ¥ e Who are those Sioa Make Prohibition Union were lame MANY PLACES IN TEMPERANCE. AID OF The Ontario Prohibition Union has been conducting a vigorous cam- paign throughout the Province dur-| 3 ing the past two months. Within this | time nearly 160 public meetings have been held, and the work of reorgan- ization in the counties has been pro- ceeding in preparation for the prob- able plebiscite. Arrangements are being made for the holding of mass meetings in such cities and towns as Fort William, North Bay, rrie, Winudsor, Osh- | awa, Peterboro’, Brockville, and oth-| ers east and w Everywhere there ip a real tn-)| thusiasm regarding the effectiveness | of the Ontario Temperance Act, and! an outspoken deman for its con-! tinued and even more thorough en-| forcement, officials of the union re-| a=! o | The Ontarip Prohibition Union is | compiling some important facts re-| garding the operation of Government! control as seen in the Provinces of Quebec and British Columbia—facts! that, the. union feels, are a warning | to this Province against adopting| any such system in the expectation at it will promote the cause of mperance LJ . . oe * . . . . s LJ s * s . WORTH * * . Ld * * * . . * * . e .. Orr DeMass When you think of a man, you sel- dom think Of the knowledge he has of books; You peg think of we clothes he His habits, his faults, or. looks. You —— atx of he he Nor the fonds his gold has bought, begs era he think of a man you most- thi Of some iirnein he has wrought. the car | You sSige him not by his blocks of | ocks, Nor his power or name or pen You anaes a man ‘by the place he's; In the Sbearts of his fellow-men. | You judge him more by the fight he's made, By the way he faced the strife, And not amount of his bank accoun judge the sort of man ono that-he has w They. Were Masons. Two Irishmen watching Shriners’ | Unsightly Pimples _ By Jas. W. Barton, M. D. Perhaps you, or.y wing. boy or girl has veonaitarablo trouble and annoyance from unsightly pimples. It is very embarrassing use they so often appear upon the face. You know that it is from no want of cleanliness, because you have been particularly assiduous in keeping your skin clean. You try various lotions, and get results that may last for a short time. You then try something else without result, you are wise you will consult your physician, and he will likely tell you that it is all the matter of diet. If you are insistent _ — get him to éutline a diet for All the skin lotions in “ee world | will not alter the consistency of your blood. They may be of use in helping the pimples to heal more que: but they will not prevent pim The fact of the matter is “that you are perhaps manufacturing too much oil, so much in fact, that jt gets a bit thickened and does not pour out up- on the skin as readily as it should. You see your skin was meant to be olled to keep it soft and 7 aaaaree and to some extent waterpro The tiny openings ee ‘which the oil is poured may become clogged with dust which may have harmful eubstances In it This causes an ordinary blackhead to become a pimple. Many people can eat anything and everything and have-no trouble what- ever with the 8 I know.a woman. with an unusuaily good complexion who could not eat a plece of butter without having -to pay up for it by a crop of pimples. Anything heating such as porridge, | candies, and too many cakes and pies - will often start the trouble. A big factor in havirig a continual crop of pimples fs constipation. The great majority of sufferers will admit that they are thus troubled. The cure then is first of all watch the diet, and cut down on foods - mentioned above. The next thing is to stimulate the skin to action by exercise and bath- ing. This heats up the skin, keeps the ofl thinner and purifies the bleod by the extra intake of oxygen. The bathing and rubbing likewise cleanses te skin, and stimulates the to the | cirewlatio Don't te satisfied until you have fone after them in the proper way, diet and exercise. Very few people are wholly con- tent with their lot-in life until they get a garage on it t PP trea “may be vain, but the av- ge than thinks himself rather seaaty just after a shay : Home helps: A splendid’ way make a husband ar home nights is to stay there with b You never sealiae how easily things are soiled until you start, to wear white trousers. to} 3h as oe Soars teen a iCbntripurea oy Ontario _ Agriculture, Bai The ay is a destroyer of profits The annoyance that tre various ty per of live stock sutier trom this caus moment of | during the suinqier period ¢an be de verimined with tair atedruey aod «x ofessed a8 lupe tu puauGs of listik wounds Of -pork or Work pol duae Aciunils gel po rest frocy morning “Until oight. The worry is grealus: during the period wl greatest lighi 400 Leoiperature, vJexcription ol tie Fly. ~ The commun stable. fy, aise ie aS Stumoxy citran bi vlie coumn ouse fly in size and shape, The bie Oy biles much Harder, BIVing Quae & BDasp slivg, Li ig a180 A LIOUd Sucker Aud uw Very per- “siBlent tease. ‘bus (bin skin cuverog tbe segs, tanks and avgewesd of Cultic” and borses ig the area they atlack WDeD Oenl On satisfying their thirs. aud Luoger. Al otler limes they diay rest Quielly OD the animal's back OF ub the biavle Wall, Any persou wie ous lo Milk cOWs durihbg the sume period is well acquainted with. the duouyuuce that LOese litue creatures can creaie. And wuen (the stable Oy i ably ugulsted by the “huuse Dy anu the born fy, both the cow and the witker lave anyibing bul @ pieasant lune io their endeavors vw Ue at reas ualf emelent iu miik productiun. ‘ihe stable Oy breeds puincipainy in decay- ingsreluse, betse CBiduure, eeiiebe s.raw—Waleriais thal ore too fre quently found quite close to tue larm vgulidings during the summer perio vhen It Is possinle Lo keep them ut u distance. ithe Treatment Usually Offered. To prevent the stable dy trem an noying animais, providing darkened studles, pens, sheus ur ulber sbeitui~ in which the animals can retreat is « good practice. Spraying or brustin; the animals over with liquid dy ‘re Pellants is also advised. ‘lhere is uu repellaot of very euduring efficiency. but a number of such now ip cummou use are worth while even Lf thelr eliect ls so short as to require dally or twice a day application, nis ma) seem a lot of work, bul a map wilh an auto spray bolding two gallons vo! | liquid cap go over & line of twent) cows In Gve minutes, A ar ere preparation that cun be used spray ls made by mixing the fuliow: ing:— 7 ibs. laundry soap. 14% gta. of] of tar. . 3 gts co 1. oll. 3qts whale oil Dissolve the erage d s0aD in water 4 Gone are the Cau Back under Turkish rule Caakie: tinople is fast losing the dazzle and | frenzy of a new mining camp which it enjeyed under allied occupation. ‘oll men, the Donets basin miners, Anatolian sheep. and cattle kings, Greek war million- o nople to-pop champagne in proof ef thelr success. ; of, a dozen nationalities who threnged the streets and pleasure resorts have sailed away. The jazz bands ang Tsigane singers are silent, the beer. tunnels and dance halls deserted and thelr painted female occupants have vanistred. Constantinople as it wil! be remembered by thousands of Bril- ish, French and other foreigners has ceased to exist. 5 The sun still shines down on a colorful city of varied nationalities, upon red-tiled roofs and white domes and on the minarets’ and marbie palaces skirting the Golden Horn and the Bosphorus, But another trans- formation has taken place over night as it were. From being a wide open town, Constantinople has become a very closed one. the lid on and is clamping-it down tight—not only as regards prohibi- tion but in other directions. Jealous of Constantinople, it is said that the peasant legislators of Angora are de- termined to kill the ancient city as the rt of Turkey. And if there were evé an ilustration of the tall- wagging the dug, it is the fact -of ora, a crude little island town of 25,000 people in the Asiatic desegt, laying dewn the law to Constanti- nosies 1,250,000 inhabitants living where East meets West. Prohibition, they say, was applied in pursuanee of a policy to oust the Greeks who controlled 90 per cent. of the liquor trade. And when the ecree went fo pins Constantinople's 4,000 drinking resorts were ciosed 50,000 Secsin obliged to seek other employment than liquor vend- ing. There are indeed “speak easies" and places where one may still ob- tain alcohoNe refreshments at three r fouf times the former’ price, but the law is being strictly ~ enforced. Moreover, the Oriental likes to drink sociably in the open and is not an ardeut patron of back dvor entrances. The sale of Hquor ts punishable by imprisonment of from three days to three years or a fine ranging from about $45 to Lingiig — 190 strokes of the n the"soles of the and then add the other and more water to, mieke 30 gallons of spray. Additional’ Treatment Suggested. Polsonus and traps are sometimes used and can be made very etficient agents in stable Oy control if us with ordinary inteailgence and tbor- oughness, Formaldehyde is one of the best poisons to use e struction two ounces of [or- maldelyae with 1% quarts of milk. sweeten with brown sugar, and piace lu a window where the dies congre- gate. In stables and pig peus pro- perly darkened, one window may bre left uncovered to provide the neces- sary light to attract the fies to the poiso . If the stable mana wili at the beginning of the season pro- vide shelves on which to place poison dishes high enough up to be out of the way and wirere there is light keep the same replenished from aa) to day with ‘tormaldehyde, misk auc sugar, aud see that all other mols- ture is covered up, millions of dite can be destroyed with littie effort A general clean up daily to preven: Lased pest increasing by breeding i tu Oy contro!; in faci thane is litie use in trying to poison or trap files if we are so shiftiess anu neglectful of sanitary conditions as to Permit them to breed -wholeszle. Ciean up is the trst and last woro in stabie Hy cuntrol.—L. Stevenson Dept. uf Extension, U.A. College wuelph. = f . stack Threshing Hay Advantages. Kecords show that it costs - tac farmer a litite mere to slacu hir grain aud thresh it\ from tie siace snap it aqvues"to thresh directly trow we bed. ‘Lue cos of threshing wiuts io threshing Irom the Slack iB less Wan the cust of threshing in tbe Ged, but When the cost ol stacking Which wust ve taken into conside: aliun, ‘s udded, Lue cout of Slackin, abd Uoresiilag frow the stack isa sat piu Higuer. ‘Lo vliset this, however be susuw aud grain are usually of o Jetler quality. Wousiderubie loss ib imely lu Peouit aro ivaviog graiu su tie UVC 4 wolg Willie WElLUIng lor Oe UWiresuibg luucuine, Kapeciaily tb 8 ifue Af Wet Wealller prevails eurluermore, 41 i ts slackea ay oJ adie ie Ob all vese@wr wel Wealhe: we prow Cab be started, Shucks suiMug AN) iebgla oF (ike On Otlds seeded tO grass kis gut Lhe “grays Uber Qudiiely 20 deigys of this sind -ae grail shuded DG Uireshed or stack: “ ud vafly as possrple, The tomato is closely related to the potato, aud while actual food Vaiue of the lowaw is not so great as that of 0g potuco, it has certain qual ties miake {tone of the ment aieanla of our: aides crops. ee: feet, but on. fe back. To inspire respect for the law, a policy of im- Prisoning those who can afford to Pay big fines, of fining the poor trang ressors and of lashing the penniless is being followed. So says an Ameri- can press correspondent writing from Constantinople. Loud protests from the Constantinople deputies and [rom the vineyard Interests will, however, it is said, result In a anoditication o! the law the Angora Assembly. There js even a story that the prohi- bition policy is only a temporary measure, designed to get the trafic out of the control of the Greeks, and that presently it will be resumed un- der cureful regulation which will Place it in Turkish hands and give the Guvernment a large revenue which it has been losing. But in view of the fact that prohibition is along the ‘line of western improve- ments which Turkey seeks to inau-. gurate, and that strong arink is ex- presaly forbidden to Moslemg by the Kor, Angora may be quite sincere in’ ite. legislatio in. The new Government has focmoen that Constantinople must beco 100 per cent. Turk. And this dempite its population of 200,000 Armenians, 300,000 Greeks, 25,000 Italians, 10,- 000 French and thousands of Alban- lans, Germans, Russians, -Persians, ulgerians and the sprinkling of British and Americans living among the 600,000 Turkish residents. Turk- ish sigus grace all the sHop and hotel fronts to-day, though the authorities do permit beneath these characters their translation in smaller letters Into the language of the national! concerned, But the use of anything| besides Turkish is discouraged by muking the tax five times as sendy for space occupied by the foreign lett -No exceptions are permitted and even the American Y.M.C.A., the Near East Rellef and other educa- tional and philanthropic concerns, Permitted to continue their have becn obliged to comply. largest sign to come down was that an American sewing machine company. “Murked discrimination against Christians Is said to be in evidence. Many of the Greeks and Armenians whose escape from Constantinople the allies assisted in every way. returh to find their former homes comman- deered by the Turkish Government as a penalty for deserting “their country” in time of stress. - One of the newest sights in Constantinople is base street. auctioning of furniture ese “abandcened properties.” Agotber "Gidehos of “he changed order in Constantinople is seen i the new taxi and cab numbers, which are all in Turkish. ‘The result is that only a person with a knowledge of the written, Turkish—which only 50 per’ cent. of the Turks themselves understand—ean take the a of an offending taxi or cab drive Angora, has put,. goubgarpe The’ South Sea ard if does not have Pi eet bread. There | is a tree in th ose islands called the Ras rigger tree, Pthe bread of which, when baked in an oven, looks and tastes v Es Bee. wheat eth. rend. - (Contributed by Ont ano Department oF Augreuture Io No feed is given untir the ehier~ are nearly. three days wd. Walser mia be given to drink If the enill teoroke: off The chicks are givea thé Ter~ ‘upon Cleat boards abour eipull sueke ide, There must be pivuty at Guar that there ip room on the boue ‘for every chick. A board thier fr Aoge and eight Inches wide will giv foom enough for ffty chicks ou ik start. So says Prof. W. i. Grahas The chicks for the frat few week should be fed about siz times cuit at regular intervuis. Give the nr feed in the morning as early as ol chicks cap nee to eal aud (liv lasi ight as late as possible. if grow: chicks in February one feed tas - given at night using artificiai lyn Jon't Uverfeed at the Start. Many chicks are overled on |i: start. We have adopted the pian + the Grst tive or six days iu the brute. er of weighing the feed. An vxpert enced feeder may mot need to weig the feed, but the beginner generai does better by welghing it. We a! low one ounce of the dry mixture ' every Afty chicks at each feed; thu “is, no chicks, for thelr Grst tive, das In the er, get more than * cunces of dry feed to Ofty chicks « one day. The plan follMved is | Moisten the first feed with cann~ tomat\gs, the secund will eges, at the third with minced fiver, aud, th: begin the series over again. above amount will not satsify Ub chicks' appetite. They will create great noise at every feeding time, bu it xiveg a chance for the chick to u sorb completely the yolk In the hod» After the @rst period one shou. feed two or three Tee eacu duy 4 that the chicks will ea e begin giving a drinking vess each a water and sour milk. wii the chicks are" about a week o. Many give.sour milk to drink at tr start, but we have obtalred siigi- better results by~not giving the m: for the first three or four days. Feed Spronted and Cracke:) Cicain When the chicks pass the Keen week, sprouted grains may be I[-: HWitle cracked ¢rains TT! change should be made gratinali from tomatoes, eggs and Neer oF to sprouted grains, tender eres grass, If available, and Ai lithe grat If leg weakness is ‘noted, the toma tors and sprouted gra'ns should 1 increased or the chicks put out « doors on clean tender grass. It is best to rear the chicks on ne fround each year, and mever to brow two lots of chicks on the same greun nN any one year. Many chicas a: sent Inefor examination each rer at have troubles due to land int-. ulo It also will be found advantage ry {f feeding chicks from troveh « broods out of doors to move th boards or troughs a little every fer Likewise it must be remembeie when the chicks are fed indoors, t Keep the feed boards clean. Give Them Plenty of Grit. Grit Is always in easy access of th chicks, It Is advisable and neecrssar to add a little oyster shell dust o ne particles to the ration dally / certain amount of Ime is orersoars Mou'dy feeds, dirty feed beard. ind musty litter are to be avuider Moulds kill large numbers of chick Be sure your house is clean and th) itter not musty Do pot mae cr. aarley or rye straw as litter for bub chicks, because the beards muy -«¢ into the chicks’ eyes, Good clean a ‘alfa makes the best chick Iitter w wave used, When it gets solred jirty remove and replace- it wit siean litter. “eed Less tly Later. As the chicks get older the nuw wer of feeds per day may be. reduc « a0 that at ap age of seven werk chree or four feeds per day are sui sient; in fact, after the second wars aopperaot crushed oats or dry mas: uay be placed in the pen. The fred +f moist mash ard ‘continued at wha: eVer smuunt the chicks whi cleau ui --Dept. of Extension, O. A. Cuileg: Juelph. Millets Sowt at Different Dates, The question is frequently aske- | vemarding the best dates for sowin.' «auiel for lay proauction. For sev oral Be re io prem a0 eapers duced at the vu pv Aerteaiteral | Collexe by sowin, -ulilets on each of six diwerent datee. sarupng op Ma th and fulsbin, ~ August Ist, allowing about tws weeks between each two dutes uf seedings The average resuiis lav. showw the bighest returns fruw suw- sug On June lst. Naturally, Varieiics uke lie Japanese Baruyard auu we sepunese Fanicle require to be sown wacuer than the Huagarmau Uras which requirys a shorter Beasug ici aeVeipiued Keep the brood sow in good thrifts and healthily condition. -Aliow bw wetuiy of exercise, ivod «= the winter, ~ She is very 2) ‘ond o1 alfaifa hay and mange! beels, with ope feed per day of iwidclings and miik, Give ner a dry comforiaus. straw bed, aiso plenty of fi.sb water, aud sue wili winote: in prime-con- dition. Someone has sald Wiat the best teacher ip @ community isn’t ail are the one in charg. of the sch superintendent or teacher, but pecs be some ve ®arwer wakes up the community to new pos- sibiJities and who develops a new line of thought and: startg a new enter- the bad. taste In Cynicism is 7. Meo oes Cg ee sree ? = eee - ah. eed ber previ, who - apart 1 too ae in ht the announcement that fs to join the family of is hard to realize how far South 1924 bro e coun gaye ‘atrica has emerged from a “dark continent” status; and Nouthern Rho- desia's rise has been kaleidoscopic. Should an airplane Jat d you to-day ‘at its metropolis, Bulawayo, you might be invited to lecture about your trip before a group of men in evening dress.. You would find the conveniences of a modern hostery in Bulnwayo's vig otel. Struil dowel a broad, paved,.elce- tric lighted street, however, and yuu would encounter many natives, peace- able and nearly nude. Less than fifty years ago the blood-thirsty Lo- bengula held sway here over the war- This chief had an idea ta pain could be cured by the sacrifice of a head from any chance passerby. And he seemed to have as many pains as a highly clvil- ized hypochondriac. ith the finesse ot a William Penn, Cecil Rhodes bought the min- ing rights to Lobengula's domain for a monthly aes a thousand rifles and some a unition. But the em- pire- butlder's pron famous exploit any years later in this, mien colony. After a native outbreak was put down by rd like Matabeles. da the tribesmen took to the Matopos mountains, Thither coreg Rhodes, with only two companions, unarmed,| camped along the hilis watil h had interviewed every rtan chief and concluded a peace. two months be remained, surrounded) by fierce, blood-thirsty savages While in these mountains on that precarious ° sitoaie Rhodes is sald to have -agiected the site of his world- famous burial place, which he bit “the view of the world.” Betw two great boulders is the suountaia top grave with the simple rare tion, “Here Lie the Remains o John Rhodes." A second grave, that of Dr. Jame; son, recalls the occasion when this «slight, bald, mild little man” led his heroic handful of men against the Matabelea at Bulawayo. ‘There the savage horde made r last stand after a series of forays against set- tlers. Jameson wired Rhodes for ad- vice and got the laconic reply, ““Read Luke Mii 31." n gent for a lonary Bible and found this injunction “Or what king, ake substan “ANT right I have honed ie and thie ‘planted the British flag firmly in Bulawayo and crushed Lobengula's power. . Everybody knows, in an aggre dimensions—a mil wide and from 250 to nearly 350 feet high—means little. The Leap tshaer of this great volume of water hb off through a 100- foot outlet Saia a yawning gorge that ‘winds away for forty miles. And the over this gorge at nearly four nyeeree feet above the water level. Plumer and eight hundred soldiers © ea ‘A 4 4

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy