4 Sulk: 0d ; * ud Nh Whereas it appears that _ abbey steeples, though equipped with bells alâ€" most capâ€"aâ€"pi¢, were not proof against the sword of God‘s lightring. Yea, genâ€" #erairy when the heavens in tempests did etrike fire the steeples of abbeys proved often their timber, whose frequent burnâ€" ings portended their final destruction, It has anciently been roported, observed Lord Bacon, and is still received, that extreme applause and shouting of peoâ€" ple assembled in multitudes have so rarefied and broken the air that â€" birds flying over have fallen down, the air mot being able to support them, and it is believed by some that great ringing of bells in populous cities has chased away thunder and also dissipated pestiâ€" lent air, f *That causes you brain softening to ' dread, Woeuld you send him to a college where _ , _ they try to hammer knowledge _ Into people that are foolish in the If a gentle jokesmith jabbers nutty nonâ€" sense in a way If a singing stegomyia stung a Jap upon ‘ the jaw .y*And injected venomed virus in his ¢ veins, MWould the microbe not prove sterile, . _ since each one‘s a Yellow Peril, ~ If the homeopathic theory obtains? Arrant Nonsense, ~~ * (Clevelard Leader.) If you saw a pink pug puppy playing ping pong with a pig, ~Or a great gray goose aâ€"golfing with a goat, Would you think it was as funny as a big, brown Belgian buany _ Blowing bubbles with a bishop in a +% boat ? If & gormandizing gobbler gobbles goobers by the gross, .. Which he pilfered from a peanut pedâ€" dler‘s pack, Could he earn his absolution by an act of restitution, _ If he gave the Dago man his full crop back ? a sixfold efficacy, viz: Men‘s death I tell by doleful knell, Lightning and thunder I break asunder; On Sabbath all to church I call; The sleepy head I raise from bed, The winds, so fierce, I do disperse, Men‘s cruel rage I do assuage. an effectual charm against lightning. The frequent firing of abbey churches by lightning confuted the proud motto commonly written on the bells in their steeples, wherein cach entitled itself to ‘themselves, afterward by the servants mnd sometimes by those inacapable of other dutics, as persons who were blind. Jn the flourishing days of Popery bells were actually baptized and anointed with ‘?he chrism, or holy oil. They were also exorcised and blessed by the Bishop, from a belief that when these ceremonics _ had been performed they had the power to drive the devils out of the Air, to calm tempests and keep away the ‘plague. The ritual for these ceremonies is contained in the Roman Pontifical and is still used in Roman Catholie counâ€". tries, where it is usual to give bells the name of some saint, as was formerly‘ done in England. part of the service, "Sancte, Sancte, »Rancte, Domine Deus Sabbath"; purâ€" posely that those persons who could not eome to church might know in what solemn office the congregation were at ‘that instant ergaged, and so, even in their absence, be once, it least, moved to life up their hearts to Him who made them. Bells at one time woere thought The saints‘ bell was not so called from the name of the saint that was inscribâ€" «ed on it, or of the church to which it belonged, but because it was always rung out when the priest came to that The arrival of kings and great personâ€" mges was snciently grected by ringing ‘the church bells. Inguiphus, abbot of Croyland, who died about 1109, speaks ‘of them as being well known in his time, «and says that " the first abbot of Croyâ€" iland gave six bells to that monasteryâ€" ‘that is to say, two great ones, which ‘he ramed Bartholomew and Beladine; ‘two of a medium size, called Turkebelâ€" ‘Jum and Betcrine; two small ones, deâ€" mominated Pega and Bega. He also eaused the great bell to be made called Gudla, which was tuned to the other tbell, and produced an admirable hkarâ€" mony, not to be )'cqualled in England." ‘The bells used in‘ the monasteries were somctimes rung with ropes having brass or silver rings at the ends for the hard. ‘!l‘hoy were anciently rung by the pricsts Eike many others, serves to remind us of former times. Paulinus, Bishop of kNola, is generally considered as the first bperson who introduced bells into ecclesâ€" kiastical service, about the year 490. Ard Iwe are told by ancient historians that fin the year 610 the Bishop of Orieans, ‘being at Seno, then in a state Of siege, ‘frightened away the besieging army by ‘ringing St. Stephen‘s Church belis, which Ms a clear proof that they were not at ‘that time generally known in France. ‘‘The first large bells are mentioned by [Bede, in the year 630. Before that perâ€" liod the early British Christians made ‘use of wooden rattles to call the congreâ€" gation of the faithful together. Hand bells probably first appeared at religâ€" lious processions, and were afterwards ‘used by the seculars. The small bells ‘were not always held in the hand; they were sometimes suspended upon a stand «and struck with hammers. * Church bells are of very ancient origâ€" hn. The ancients, as we learn from the "direct and incidental mention of them Pby the old historians and other writers, N bells for both szcred and profane tmpurposes. By Strabo we are told that g'iutkct time was anncunced by their teound, and by Pliny that the tomb of an â€"ancient king of Tusecany was hung fround with bells. The hour of bathing ml made known in ancient Rome by sound of a bell; the night watchâ€" iAman carried one, and it served to call up L-tbe servants in great houses. _ Sheep {had them tied abo@t their necks to (frighten away wolves, or. rather, by way :‘?f amulet. I‘r! our own day this eustom, #v hoesd a A 9 ols ie m mm Furiznt Rugs cce Laborâ€"Saving Eulogies. (Washington Star.) "Did you secure your title of ‘colonel‘ in the artmy?" asked the formidably frank perâ€" son. ‘‘Certainly not,‘" replied Colonel Stillwell. "It is the expression of general esteem by friends and neighbors; not a mere formality of red tape Indian Summer. (Providence Journal.) Indian summer is not any mild weather that comes along in the fall, but that particâ€" ular seasom after the leaves are off the trees when, just before winter sets in, the sun has for a few days something like an August warmth. Somewhere between the fifth and the fifteenth of November is the time of Indian summer. C As even the best, of the deep sea sounds have failed to determine the depth of certain parts of the ocean, it will be seen that this method is parâ€" ticularly useful where the great depth of the ocean bottom would prevent the usual piano wire device beinz used. VPeep sea sounding by sound has beâ€" ’come the fad of a Norwegian inventor, who has brought his invention to a practical form. In his device strong sound waves are sent perpendicularly inâ€" to the water and the return sound is caught *by a microphone. _ It being known definitely how rapidly sound traâ€" verses the water, the problem becomes simply one of multiplication and diviâ€" sion, ‘The gound wave travels to the bottom of the sea before being reflected, and, the time in scconds and fractions being determined, it is reduced to feet and this divided by two. rhoea 1 E_4 Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup should always be used for Children Teething. It soothes the child, soothes the gums, cures w;‘lng colic and is the best remedy for Diarâ€" rhaas Address the BELLE’V‘ILE COLLEGE, LIMITED, Belleville ery department gives special t satisfaction. Gray‘s Syrup or Reo Spruce Gun Souvenir Post Cards 12 for 10¢c; 60 for 50c; 100, $1; 200, $2; 500, $5; all different. Largest and finest stock in Canada; 500 mixed, $3; albums, all prices. w. I â€" Aitamee neuiid t k CEVT eR ETT TT HADIT T Ty *# / _ Gerrard east, Toronto; under Princiâ€" palship of T. J. Jobnstou; cighteen years‘ experience; gives thorough training for railâ€" way operating; catalogue free; write for particulars. EOWE CV T MCC 212120) 2L * business partnership or hotel? Conâ€" sult Canadian Business Exchange, Temple building, Toronto, Ont. L2 0 t e vaaaaas C HRIST HOSPITAL, JERSEY CITY, N. J., probationers wanted; to enlarge the galnlng school. Apply to Superintendent of Nurses. 4* free. AK. ton, Ont. _ WANTED. YOUNG MEX FITTED FOR commercial travellers in four weeks, "home study evening; positions guaranteed. Write for particulars. American School of Commercial Training, Rochester, N. Y. 1j EDP TUTITIE 4000002 E UBV AA sale; Grey county; or would sell maâ€" chinery for removal. Johnson Wright, Waraham â€" mls Wareham, Ont. B areaw LIST OF Amat : LWE _ Wisinawics AGB.\‘TS wWANTED. WHY NOT® HAVE the best looking sample case, best goods and the best terms? Alfred Tyler, Teas, London, «Ont. 1ENTRAL TELEG AGB’N’!’S. WE ARE PAYING LARGEST commissions of any company doing an honest business; we manufacture the highâ€" est grade of flavoring powders in America; you can make from five to six dollars a day. Apply to us for particulars, Iwanta Masufacturing Co., Hamilton, Ount. 4A like others, can earn from three to ten doliars daily selling stereoscopic views, §nionu Stereoscopic Co., Dept. H, Toronto, A Diamond Hall guarâ€" antee meansan absolutely perfect stone. It is not without reason that Canada‘s largest Jewelry house should be known &s Diamond Hall. And now as Diamonds ! 25 ¢ â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"LIMITEDâ€"â€"â€"â€" 134â€"138 YONGE ST. TORONTO â€" ONT. RYRIE BROS. TUMBER _ AND SHINGLE MILL FOR nmthmm,wmâ€"hm-m the sorenessâ€"heals the throatâ€"strengthens the lungs. None the lessefective be:nuae it is plensant to take. Just try one‘bottle an. mhowquicklyyoug!tï¬d‘ of that cough. At your druggists. 25c. bottle. GENTSâ€"LET US PROVE THAT YOU All over the Contiâ€" nent this store is famous as giving unequalled diamond values. _ A permanent buying staff at Amsterdam ensures advantageous purchasâ€" ing, and our customers receive the price benefit YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL AGENTS WAMTED. MISCELLANEOUS, Deep Sea Sounding. FOR SALE, eerete «WWe SCY T OF FARMS MAILED Brown, Department L, Picâ€" _ which ordinary remedies have not reached, will quickly yield to d RAPH â€" SCHOOL BVILLE BUSINES3S Belleville, Ont.; evâ€" special training and That Cough No, Maud, dear, the people who are in the swim do not comprise the floating population. Danger in Hair Dye. (Tales.) Knott Yetteâ€"You mean to say use of hair dye is dangerous? Ben Thayerâ€"I do. Let me tell you someâ€" thing. A dear friend of mine, a happy bacheâ€" lor, found his hair was turning gray at 30. Well, he had it dyed a deep black. Four weeks later he was married. Regeneration. Nature makes good the ravages of war and pestilence in stricken countriecs by straightway boosting the birthrate. To what natural force can the merchant look to repair the ravages time makes in his business? Customers die, and move away, and for varoius reasons transfer their trade to other firms. They must be replaced, but it does not pay to wait for an increased birth rate to restore the equilibrium. _ New names must be entered on the books as fast as the old ones are stricken offâ€"faster, if the business is to grow. There is no natural remedy, but there is an artifiâ€" cial remedy that never fails if, rightly applied. Publicity does the trick. Adâ€" vertise in the Times. 2 CHRISTMAS SHOPPING IN PARIS. We had an exhausting day in Paris, but managed to get pretty nearly everyâ€" thing. _ The little children were easily disposed ofâ€"â€"dolls, drums, wooden horses, )etc.; but the bigger boys and girls, who have outgrown toys, are more difficult to suit. However, with knives, paintâ€" boxes, lotos (geographical and historieal) for the boys; and handkerchiefs and work boxes, morocco bags, etc., we did finally get our fifty objects. There are always extra children cropping up. Shopâ€" ping was not very easy, as the streets and boulevards were crowded and slipâ€" pery. We had a fairly good cab, but the: time seemed endless. ‘The big bazaarsâ€" Hotel de Ville, rue d‘Amsterdam, etc.â€" were the most amusing. _ Really, one could get anything from w fiveâ€"sou doll to a menagere (the little cookingâ€"stove all the peasant women use in their cotâ€" tages.) When we finally became almost distracted with the confusion and the crowd and our list, we asked the boy what he had liked when he was eleven years old at school, and he assured us all boys liked knives and guns. â€" From Christmas in the Valis, by Mary King Waddington, in the Christmas (Decem:â€" ber) Scribner‘s. f Like armies on invasion bent They march, and surge, and sway, Descerding on department stores In bold and fierce arrayâ€" j The shoppers who lay in their wares Before the Christmas day. They surge around the busy clerks, And pull and jam and baul, And load themselves with heavy weights And let their bundles fall, And push and punt and kick and squirm And slam against the wall. The fat, the lean, the short, the tall, The big and little, too, They mingle in the mighty fray, A frantic, fighting crew, And all desire to talk at once, And that is what they do. At early morn the rush begins, The clerks begin to wrap, The women come with firmâ€"set jaws All ready for the scrap; They fill the stores, and then, of course, The trouble is on tap. They jab each other in the ribs, # And gouge each other‘s eyes, And pound each other blatk and blue, Nor stop to sympathize; They riot through the stores in droves . To bluff and tyrannize, 4 They struggle madly to and fro And mingle in the fight, And every woman in the bunch Is soon a perfect fright, And many have some 3â€"cent toys When they get home at night. Blindfold a person and then let each person of the company give him a spoonâ€" ful of water from a glase, until he guessâ€" es who it is that is feeding him. ___Stand two forfeitâ€"payers at opposite side of the room, each holding a lighted candle. They advance slowly and graveâ€" 3 look into each other‘s face. When ey meet one says: "The Princess Huggerâ€"Mugger is dead, defunct and gone." "Can it be possible? Alack and alas!" Then they walk back to their starting point with the same solemnity. They must not smile or laugh at any time. i A German band is announced as about to give a performance. Three or four forfeitâ€"players are requested to imitate the sound of some musical instrument in concert, to some familiar air. A boy is told to lie on the floor full length and rise with his arms folded. A cane orâ€"umbrella is given to the forâ€" feitâ€"payer, who rests it on the floor, putâ€" ting both hands on its top and resting his forehead on his hands. While in this position he must turn around three times, and then, with head erect, walk straight ahead. One is told to kiss himself, or herself, which may be done on the reflected imâ€" age in a mirror. Two persons are ordered to "sail the ship." ‘Their feet are braced together and they must swirl rapidly around, and then slowly come to a standstill. The gait of the "sailors" immediately thereâ€" after will suggest rough weather and a heary sea. A piece of paper is pinned to a eurtain pr a portiere, and the forfeitâ€"payer, blindfolded, is told to find and remove it. It is very convenient to have a numâ€" ber of forfeits ready for use when needâ€" ed in playing a game, and the following might be preserved or memorized: Here Are a Few Hints That May Come w8 Wl o PAYING Shopping. 25 ¢ ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TORONTO say that the Hoaxâ€"‘"I had a terrific cold and took the wrong medicine." Joaxâ€""Had no scents of right and wrong, eh?" Another and similar device for keepâ€" ing telephone numbers where they are handy is intended where but a single instrument is in use. The transmitter is eurrounded by a collar formed of flanges which are lettered alphabetically. On each flange there is roomâ€"for a dozen names and the numbers are always handy to the ‘phone. A Selfâ€"Acting Telephone Directory. The newest idea for telephone users is based upon the automatic annunciatâ€" or idea. It consists of a circular plate on the desk, which has upon its outer circumferemce spaces for from fifteen to fifty names and telephone numbers. To notify the operator to call a desired number it is not necessary to shout the name through the desk telephone and then wait while the number‘is looked up. The indicator on the dial is moved to the desired number, a bell is rung, and the office central operator finds the name and number indicaced upon a duplicate dial. The difference between love‘ on earth and love in heaven is not to be conveyâ€" ed in words; but in tranquil and pure moods it may, eyven on earth, be appreâ€" hended by the sight of the spirit. Love in heaven has realized all that earthly love aspires to; and from that goal its progress begins, never to cease. The sky toward which it yearned in the world has become the ground on which ‘it stands herg; but now another sky is above it. We forecast heaven as reâ€" pose and peace, the fulfilling of the heart‘s desire, the immortal â€" presence with us of beauty and happiness. But man is not so poorly content. We leave behind us on earth the obstacles of the body, and in heaven we labor not for bread, raiment, or shelter; hearts are not parted by space and time; we deâ€" ceive not, strive not one against the other, scheme not to outdo others for the gain of our own name or fame. Yet in heaven are labor, emulation, ambition love‘s holy fear, and humility deeper than hell is deep below the heavens. Tears we have also, and awe of that want which only the divine fullness can supply.â€"From Julian Hawthorne‘s "Lovâ€" ers in Heaven" in the December Centâ€" ury. "Then I started to take Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills, and the first night after using them I slept soundly. _ In three days I threw away the belt I have worn for years. _ Dodd‘s Kidney Pills cured I would come in tired to death from a run. _ My sole desire would be to get rest and sleep, and they were the very things I could not get. Finally I had to lay off work. "Long hours on the engine and the mental strain broke down my constituâ€" tion," Mr. Rafferty says. * My bac‘ gave out entirely. Terrible, sharp, cutâ€" ting pains followed one another, till I felt I was being sliced away piccemeal. They Brought Back His StrengthWhen he Could Neither Rest nor Sleep. Winnipeg, Man., Dec. 4.â€"(Special) â€"â€" Mr. Ben. Rafferty, the wellâ€"known C. P. R. engineer, whose home is at 175 Maple street, is one Winnipeg man who swears by Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. LIFE ON THE RALL IS A HARD ONE " Th emues Sn ic Om t oc o i CAMUBPOVOOL ANIRUL arcls That spirit sh»>ud be in every Christâ€" mas gift throughout ithristendom. The most thoughtl»ss mad or woman would recognize the truth, if they could look at it quietly, with due rezard for the real meaning of the day. But after Laving heard and asser‘cd to the truth, the thoughtless peovnâ€"e would, from force of habit, go on wi‘i the same rush and strainâ€"Annie Payson Call, in Leslie‘s Monthly Magazire for December, | CHRISTMAS PRESENTS. If we ourselves loved a truthful, quiet way of living beiter than any other way, how would we feel to see our friends preâ€" paring to celcbrate m birthday with strain, anxiety and confusion? If we valied a loving consideration for others more than anythirg else in the world, how would it affect us to see our friends preparing for the festival with a forcel sense of the conventional necessity for giving? "Who gives himsed with his gift feods threeâ€" Himself, his ha igry wcighbor and *c." Love on Earth and in Heaven, Equally good with hard or soft water. ‘. R. Engineer‘s Experience with Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. cause for complaint. 4 light by the dealer from whom Your Money y Sunâ€" Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto _ The perambulator was trundled by one of the natives attached to the party, and after some observation it was found that they could not comprehend the reaâ€" son for trundling the odometer along the ground. They were willing to make concession to the white man to the exâ€" tent of pushing the wheel before them so long as they were in sight, but conâ€" gidering the order but a foolish prejuâ€" dice against the native custom of "totâ€" ing" everything upon the head, they were no sooner out of sight than they adopted the more comfortable mode. It was finally found necessary to send a white man with the native to insure proper measurements. That precions remedy, is a positive cure for afl female discases. Write for Cescription circular and free sample. !} S. MeGILL, Simcoe, Ost. This is trundled along the ground in a straight line and the readings of the inâ€" dicator show exactly the the distance the indicator show exactly the distance measurements are obtained with exactâ€" ness even when the ground is so rolling as to be difficult of measurement in any other fashion, but the surveying party for determining the boundary between the English and French claims in the Sierra Leone soon found that the meaâ€" surements were absurdly short of the probable distances, One of the most useful instruments in use by surveyors is the odometer for measuring distances by the combination of a single whee} and a cyelometer. To kiss three girls the same dayâ€"Exâ€" travagance. To kiss a blushing young widowâ€" Quite another thing. k To kiss your motherâ€"inlawâ€"A sacriâ€" fice. Mrs. Kendall, the London actress, has favored a Leeds audience with an amusâ€" ing disquisition on kissing. Some of her dicta on the subject run: To steal a kissâ€"Natural. To buy a kissâ€"Stupid. NC To kiss one‘s sisterâ€"Proper. To kiss one‘s wifeâ€"An obligation. To kiss ugly peopleâ€"An act of galâ€" lantry. To kiss an ugly widowâ€"Shows déâ€" votedness. but is best when used in the Sunlight way,. Buy Sunlight Eoap and follow directions, Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or Milk Pan FIBRE WARE aAarticees FARMERS AND DAIRYMEN FREETE BR ELE Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, Orange Blossoms INSIST ON BEING SUPPLIED WITH EDDy‘s EvERY Te THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE Mrs. Kendal on Kissing. How Miles Were Lost. YOU WILL FIND THEY GIVE YOU SsATISFACTION EVYER2Y TIME E. B. EDDY‘S 3t ask your grocer for & in© presemis. Address, C The Dr. Armour Medicine Co.,'} ¢ FUR DE". "_'.;'97 mm' 0“‘ \‘ a* mm-mu.câ€"uunn-&m-, s eopht 158 ‘‘Not at all; I‘m gwing to fire all the old onés toâ€"morrow and I can‘t live twenty years longer. It7l be a good nd." Getting Up a Reputation, % (Cleveland Lezader.) "I wish," said Titewodd to the lawyer who was drawing up bis will, "to leave $25,000 to each of rmy emplayees who has comâ€" pleted, twenty years in my service," _ *‘But that is too generous," stammered the astonished lawyer. Dear Mother Doubling the Demand. By advertising her public lands Minneâ€" sota has secured $15 an acre for ground appraised at $6 and $8. This does not mean that buyers hare paid double the value of the land to foot the advertising bills. It means a doubling of the demand for farms and a consequent increase of their actual worth. There are other things than public land the value of which may be materially enhanced by stimulating demand through adequate publicity, Advertise w _ _ °_ Via Lehigh Valley Railroad, Friday, Dec. 15th. Tickets good 10 days, and only $9 from Suspension Bridge, Niagara Falls, to New York City and return. Tickets good on all regular express trains except Black Diamord Express. For further particulars, call on or address Robert 8. Lewis, Canadian Passenger Agent, 10 King street east, Toronto. $9â€"NFW YORK EXCURSIONâ€"§%9 At first many people were inclined to pookâ€" pooh the idea of a wedding director, Toâ€"day, however, they have learned that even to ruo a wedding properly takes some expert knowlâ€" edge. Mrs. Bliffins is a student of design and decorative art as well as of the changing fashions. Frequert visils to New York and occasional ones to Paris enable her to bring back ideas of how they manage these thing= in other places, But more valuable yet are the many suggestions her woman‘s wit and her woman‘s taste erable her to add to the convenience or the beauty of the wedding.â€" Philadelphia Telegraph. . The value of the work of the wedding diâ€" rector is best attested by the popularity it has attained. Most of ber business, Mrs. Bliffins says, comes indirectly. It hï¬ grown on the principle of the advertisomBnt of a certain merchant some years ago: "If you do:'t like it, tell me; if you do like it, tell others." Mrs. Bliffina is at the church door before the marriage ceremony to give the last touches to the bride‘s gown before the bride enters the church. The girl‘s mother is even saved from having to see that the rooms are put in order after the newly wedded wife has gone on her wedding tour. Mrs. Bliffins aitends to all that. con street. Mrs. Bliffins‘ method is to get to the house carly and to give her first attention to the trousseau. She sees to it that the dress, gloves and slippers are just right. She then takes charge of the packing. The bride eats her luncheon in comfort, knowing that everyâ€" thing she needs will be in her bags and trunks, carcfuly inventoried in a little book as to itts precise location. A wideâ€"awake woman in Boston has found a new outlet for woman‘s activity by taking charge of weddings. On the day of the marâ€" riage ceremony the bride and the bride‘s moâ€" ther are generally too busy and too tired to give much alitention to the management of details. As a helper in this household emerâ€" gency the wedding director fills a longâ€"felt want. The name of this phoneer is Mrs. Neiâ€" lie Bliffins, and she lives with her husband Woman Discovers New Way by Her Sex Can Earn Money. ISSUE NO This remedy should be in every household. SHILOH take. Itis guaranteed to cure or your money is returned. The price is 25¢. per bottle, and all deaters in medicine aell ® _ q13 what it has done for so many 2 _ It is said to be the only reliable remedy for all diseases of the air passages in children. It is absolutely harmless and pleasant to Fall and Winter weather -'â€"â€"“siï¬ Cronmptin Ca the Lung Ti and what it has done for so manv » ol:';' satd .d-:n_‘-w- r on Boston‘s aristocratic Beaâ€" ISs A WEDDING DIRECTOR. Revoluticnary A Among Tro 7 «911 M 1 riild 11 mel dle 6,0080,000 | th Many Russi Official 6l 104 Great Staugh MA thr FIFTEE JFWS th Relief Commit OO( tï¬ &tan bed 1 m The secretai had been esti Gomel, Kieff, onâ€"Don, Nimp travellit nï¬ ni n I‘] mt ata W Af | t t} Central A WATT (¢ IEWI }) Hal it 1 d