West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 19 Aug 1915, p. 3

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

E‘“Wen, y an en tho was it. F speed. Ml tho brat-co; D I Mt Noodle, Ire, bot 'ou buy bunni- had. replied and. wander- stead“ 4 wire, n, and h that rth and ," and win“. men- Mttt ing at Mary. aston- M asked " tell hat am Teq " he , AGAINST CALAIS many offered Russia Galicia and the Manon”, with a guarantee of the Integrity of her frontiers. Germany stipulating for Egypt on the pretext The Berlin, which carried a crew of 450 men. entered the Norwegian port of Trondhjem on Nov. 17, to escape British warships after attempting to escape from the North Ben to act as a commerce raider in the Atlantic. Butty during the present war com- manded the British fleets which in August, 1914. sank four German war- phipc " Belize“ and won a vic- Three German citizens have been sentenced to terms of imprisonment for attempting to smuggle copper in- to Germany. T A A tourist without money in a tramp and a tramp with money is a tourist. "Why are your whiskers so thin on the right side of your face, Mr. John- son?" asked little Winnie. "Oh, that is because I nlwsys sleep on my right side, and that rubs the hair away!” was the reply. “Well, but father doesn't stand on his head when he is asleep!" objected Winnie. A despatch from Petrotrrad says: The Nova Vremya confirms the tu- mor: of German over-tum for upo- rate pace. It is silent] that Ger- A “patch from London says: The Mich! Gazette announces that Sir David Be?ttChts Myrolgoted A despotch to Christiania says: Twenty-five members of the crew of the German converted cruiser Berlin, interned " Trondhjem last Novem- ber, attempted to escape by swim- ming across the Trondhjem fjord, but they were observed by a guard and caught. All were provided with bun- dles of civilian clothing, money and knives. Several were drowned. "Every day our strength grows both in England and in France. Not- withstanding the formidable re- sources " the disposal of Germany, it ls not possible that the resources of the allies will not name them when the time is ripe for complete victory. ' -- GERMANS ARE DROWNED IN EFFORT TO ESCAPE on the other hand is capable of mak- ing a strong offensive. It: morale is good; that la to say. the army is pre- pared to remain an it is if necessary. “We GG an- army which at the present moment is armed so " to withstand any shock. " gymy_whigh Albert Thomas. Under-Secretary of War in charge of munitions, tells the Petit Pnrisien that Pranee's efforts to produce munitions ere different in method, but equal in results, to those of England, which he recently viewed. The newspaper quotes him he follows: A tsitrnifleant order of the day pre- dieting resumption by the Germans of e vigorous otreniwe in the west has been issued to the Teutonic nrmies in Flanders, decoding to the Amsterdam Telegruf. An extract from this order, telegraphed by the Amsterdam correspondent of the Ex- change Telegraph Company, follows: The French otneiat communication chronicles the recapture through counter-attacks of part of the trenches lost in the Argonne, and the repulse of enemy attacks " other points. There was also some rather aevere fighting in the Voegee, in which hand-grenades were used. - Movement cl Ger-s- Troops Through Belgiu- Continuous for Days. A despatch from London says: The Daily Mail's correspondent " The Hague telegrsphs that s prominent neutral citizen, who has just mived from Brussels, says that the move- ment of German troops through Bel- gium to the western front has been constant lor several days. "Our work now is medically fin- ished in the east end we are about to begin in the west. Pence is cer- tain in October." M - Cin "‘ -""e.Bql" Inu ovum 1",'%lli PtiiTiiiiitl',l A} Ta", m at - BtertU to provide not mercy o to be J1,ttt htatitute Und tad transportation, but maiden “he! 1t,eueyFii.iii7' 'l'ooertottdethe Ioldior settlement “0 In: “mumm- '" Steris..til' “Productive period. ir11t'!'d'lket,'at"'ii be the baek-l An "nieration Igent who kn jut “I. ',i'dtera:1sutiraiiiii"i"ia'i'r'T'tteJtra'%d'r"t “Whith- 'feeArtui)TGii'i'iiiUi7rri'i'l2"a"c'2'.C.', ether colonic, or in Great Britain. Inda. Many enquiries were received ”it; ia than {:10 J'd,e,Tt,t the from young croften reaffirm pala- e l r . . . ter e Mitt”. The 2'2'.1.t ee Bpeeta m the Dominion i """"'N".e "1. land: 2,UeiiiEi'e1t!d"i'ltut'lt Excess of Employers‘ Profits Over be Paid Into the lmoerlal E tkheme smut] I. Rumors of German Peace Overtures iuirneil A despatch from London an: DI M Lloyd-George, Minister of Inni a “up-mu "on London an: Da-Mr. LU d-Geor e, "Parliament has M Lurdauorm Minister of Hui-assured tyhat tef2'.fiieC, made by work- tions, announce: that 846 establish-men are made for the nation " a Ptn.tt.tpsre been declared "eontro11edwhoie and not for the advantage of "tabliahmenta" under the Munitionsindividuals. On the other hand, dur- of War Act. " a result of this eon-ing the period of the war, any rules .t.mi. the protits of employen near shop customs which may have the limited. Any excess over such a limiteffect of limiting the output of muni- become- parable to the National Ex-tions are suspended in controlled ea- chequer. “By this Provision," says tabliahmenta." MW 345 mom , dun-u Sr David Beatty Appointed Vice-Admiral sud ls Back-to-the-Land Principle, Pt'eferatrty In Canada l. sf: David rot1ts Over Fixed Limit to Imperial Exchequer navy. tory over a German squadron in the North Sea the following Jamar-y. In this fight the German cruiser Blacker was sent to the bottom. .Vice-Adminl Beatty is only 45 years old, and the youngest officer ever promoted to the rank of a vice-admiral in the British- 12,000,000 Quintals to Be Bought in America. A despatch from Rome says: The latest official reports regarding the harvest show that Italy needs 12,000,- 000 quintals more of grain for her consumption until next year. A quin- tal is approximately 220 pounds. Most of this grain, it is understood, will be purchased in America. A despatch from Amsterdam says: The ofricial organ of the General Fed- eration of Trades Unions of Germany states that " one result of the Brit- ish blockade the average German workman’s family last May had to expend 36.49 marks (about $9) week- ly for food, as compared with 24.70 marks (about $6) in May of 1914. of ceding the same to Turkey and for a free hand to deal with Russia's allies. "This attempt teatities," says the journal, "that in spite of her bril- liantly organized espionage Germany entirely fails to discount the senti- ment of the Russian authorities and of the whole Russian people." WORKMAN IN GERMANY PAYS MORE F.OR FOOD. The treatment of cerebro-spinal meningitis has long presented a Beri. ous problem for medical science. Up to a comparatively short time ago it may be said that there was no effee.. tive treatment for this disease, known popularly as "spotted fever," or "the black death." The medicinal proper- ties of the oil obtained from leaves of the eucalyptus tree have long been recognized. It has been used in treat- ment of mierobie diseases of lungs and bronchi and employed as an anti- septic. A despatch from Melbourne says: The discovery of a speeifle for cere- tmi-spinal meningitis has been an- nouneed by Dr. Richard Bull, director of the bacteriological laboratory of the University of Melbourne. Dr. Bull stated that eucalyptus would de- stroy the germ. TROOPS AT GALLIPOLI SHELLED BY SUBMARINE A despatch from Mitylene says: After the sinking of the Turkish bat- tleship Barbarossa the allies' submar- ines also sank a large gunbost and empty transport in the neighborhood of Gallipoli port. After the coast had been cleared of enemy ships two submarines drew in close to shore and shelled a column of troops marching toward Gallipoli town, causing them very heavy casualties. The destruction of the Barbarossa re- moved a regular thorn in the allies' side, for the accurate tirc of its well- calibred, high-trajectory guns across the peninsula had more than once seriously hampered the movements of the allies’ ships approaching from Saros. DISCOVERS A SPECIFIC FOR SPINAL MENINGITIS. WARNING AGAINST FOOD IN TIN BOXES. Cardboard is Best Plan; Germans Need the Tin. A despatch from Ottawa says: A warning has been issued by the Wo- men's Canadian Club of Ottawa not to send food and parcels in tin boxes to prisoners in Germany. It is stated that several cases of eatables sent in tin boxes have not been received, while in many cases estables have been reported received but minus the tin boxes. It is pointed out that un- doubtedly Germany, which is badly in need of tin has been confiseating all boxes of that metal. Those send- ing eatables are asked to use wood or cardboard boxes. ITALY NEEDS MORE GRAIN. Duluth, Aug. 16.--Wheat-No. 1 hard, 81.50%; No. 1 Northern, 81.45% to 31.49%; No. 2 do., $1.43%; September, $1 . 10% ; December, $1.08%, New York, Aug. 1tk--Iloyr firm. Rye flour steady. Hay fi-tir Paps steady. Hides quiet. Leatlcr 1"r.tu', Minneapolis, Aug. 16.--Wheat-No. 1 Northern, 81.42% to 81.53%; No. g do., 81.38% to 31.60%; September, t,'dl'A'i' December, $1.06%; No; 1 ard, 81.53%. Coin-No. 8 yellow, 82 to 82%. osts--No. 8 white, 68% to tue. Flour unchanged, except Bee- (a? tr" reduced to $3.80. Bran, Montreal, August 16. - Corn - American No. 2 yellow, 90 to 91e. Oats-Canadian Western, No. 3, 61c; do., extra No. 1 feed, 61e: do., No. 2 local white, 60%e; do., w. 3, 59%c; do., No. 4, 581ke. biia'.Ciid'. Spring wheat patents, flrsts, $7.10; do., sec- onds, $6.60; do., strong bakers', $6.40; do., Winter patents, choice, $6.25; do., straight rollers, $5.60 to $5.80; do., bags, $2.65 to $2.75. Roll.. ed oais-Barrels, $6.25; do., bags, 90 lbs., $2.90 to $3. Bran, $26 to $26.50. Shorts, $28. Middlings, $83 to $34. Mouillie, $35 to $40. Har-No. 2, per ton, ctr lots, $20.50 to $22. Cheese-Finest westerns, 18%e; do., easterns, 13c. Butter - Choicest Creamery, 27% to 27%c; do., seconds, 26% to 26%c. Etrttsr-Fresh, 27 to 28c; do., selected, 26c; do., No. 1 stock, 23e; do., No. 2 stock, 20c. Dressed hirgs---Abattoir killed, $13.75 to $14. Pork-Heavy Canada short mess, bbls., 35 to 45 pieces, $29; do., Canada short cut back, bbls., 45 to 55 pieces, $28.50. Laid-Compound, tierces, 375 lbs., 10e; do., wood mils. 20 lbs. net, 10%e; do., pure, turees, 375 lbs., 13 to 18%e; do., wood pails, 20 lbs. net, 12 to 12%e. Bacon-Long clear, 14 to 141he per 1b., in case lots. Hams-Medium, 18 to 18%e; do., heavy, 14% to 15c; rolls, 15 to 16c; breakfast bacon, 20 to Me; backs, plain, 22 to 23e; boneless backs, 25 to Me. - - - Lard-The market is quiet; pure lard, tubs, 11% to 12%e; do., pails, 12 to 12%e; compound, tubs, 10 to 101ke; do., pails, 10% to 10%e. Cheese-15%e for large, and at 15%e for twins. Old cheese, 21% to 21%c. . Straw is quoted at $7 a ton, in car lots, deliygred on track here. _ _ "iiar--No. 1 new hay is quoted at $17 to $19; No. 2 at $15 to $16. "P"ouiirv--chiekens, yearlings, dress- ed, 16 to 18e; Spring chickens, 20 to 22c; fowl, 14 to 15c; ducklings, 17 to 18e. Etrfs-'-'rhis market is quiet, with straight stock selling at 21 to Me per tra; in case lots, and selects at 23 to 4c. Manitoba flour-First patents, in te, bags, $7; second patents, in jute ags, $6.50; strong bakers', in jute bags, $6.50, Toronto; in cotton bags, 10c more. Ontario tfour-Winter, 90 per cent. gatents, $4.60; do., new, $4.10, sea- oard, or Toronto freights in bags. Millfeed--Car lots, delivered Mont- real freights-Bran, per ton, #h' shorts, $29; middlings, $30; good cod flour, per bag, $1.90. Butter-Choice dairy, 22 to 23e; in- ferior, 20 to 21e; creamery prints, 27 to_28%e; Ao., solid}, 21 to 27.e., _ _ Markets Of The World Biiekwheat--tar lots, nominal, ac- cogding lo heights _outside. Ryer--No. 2, -nomindiriaording to freight; putside. Breadstuthc Toronto, Aug. 16.--Manitoba wheat --No. 1 Northern, $1.38%; No. 2 Northern, 31.37%; No. 3 Northern, 319%, Pack. laltt ports., -- A Manitoba oats-No. 2 C.W., 63c, track, lake ports. American eorn-No. 2 yellow, 84%e, noeinal, track, lakg Potts. -- Ontario 'oa’tsLiiiéi 2 white, 57 to 68e: No. 8 white, 56 to im, according to freights optside. Ontirid 7 w"iGrtU.INo. 2 Winter, per car lot, $1.12 to $1.15; do., new, $1.02 t9d$l.04, according to heights out- BI e. Peas-No. 2, per car lots, nominal acgordjng te frtsitrhtspstsyide, B.artefr-ihiofiGiiiiiiriGrier, nom- inal; feed barley, 60c, according to fre_igh_ts _outside. uvuuuul, u’ucn, HIKE ports. Canadian corn-No. 2 yellow, nom, inal, _tra_ck, Toronto. LEWIS MACHINE GUN CAPABLE OF: FIRING . OVER FOUR HUNDRED ROUNDS PER MINUTE Baled Bay and Straw. Business in Montreal. Country Produce. U. B. Hugh“. Provisions. Some one has said that" Time is money," but somehow a man's friends appreciate the money he spends with them more than the time. In Germany a mile is four times as long as in England. Paris Authorities Take Over Realty Worth $40,000,000. A despatch from Paris says: The civil tribunal of the Seine has seques- trated the property of the German millionaire, Herr Jellinek. This pro- perty, consisting for the most part of real estate in Paris and the Riviera, is worth about $40,000,000. Montreal, Aug. Ith-Fairly good steers sold at $7.25 to $7.50; fair stock sold at $6.75 to $7, and the common and the medium at from $5.50 to $6.50 per 100 pounds. A few bunches of choice butchers' cows brought $7 to $7.25, and the lower grades sold from that down to $5.25, while bulls changed hands at prices ranging from $5.50 to $7.25 per 100 pounds. The demand from packers for ending stock was active, and all the offerings met with a steady sale at $4.75 to $7.25 for bulls, and at $4 to $4.50 for cows. Lambs sold at $8.25 to $9.25, and sheep at $5.25 to $6 per 100 pounds, as to quality. Calves, $3 to $15 each, as to size and quality. Hogs, choice selected lots, $9.50 to $9.60, and rougher lots at $9 to $9.40 per 100 pounds, weighed off cars. mg“ to tur,' 'calvés, “$4.50 td $10.7IV, hogs, off cars. $8.90 to $9.15; $3.,4ged and watered, $8.75; do., f.o.b., Toronto, Aug. 16.-The notations were:---; heavy steers, 11ll."dr1 to $9; butchers' cattle, choice, $8 to $8135; do., good, $7.40 to $7.60; do., medium, $6.50 to $7.20; do., common, $5.25 to $5.80; butchers' bulls, choice, $6.75 to $7.50; do., good bulls, $6 to $6.50; do., rough bulls, $5.25 to $5.75; butchers' cows, choice, $6.50 to $7.25; do,, good, $6.35 to $6.50; do,, medium, $5.25 to $6; do., com- mon, $4.50 to $5; feeders, good, $6.50 to $7.50; stockers, 700 to 900 lbs., $6.25 to $7.25; canners and cut- ters, $4 to $5.25; milkers, choice, each, $65 to $95; do., common and medium each, $35 to $50; springers, $50 to biii light ewes, $6 to $7...60;, do., bucks, $3.50 to $4.50; yearling Iambthf6.60 tp, $8; Aprintr, l_a_mbs,} SEIZE GERMAN PROPERTY. pan or much: and the Allies mu.- won me up "I ilw um: pun: rum” “In "BN'. U! w... I... no account of the runner Germ- colonies which lune Izrcn conquered H. " I." m 00. CH 3:1th or PM forces -'--- -- . EUROPE AFTER FIRST YEAR OF THE GREAT WAR i a tif, A servant was telling her mistress the other day of the boasting indulged in by the servant next door about her young man in khaki. "I can't under- stand how he's got on so fast," she remarked. "He's only been in the army a few months, yet she told me in November that he was a corporal; last (veek she said he'd been made a sergeant, and now she says he's to be a court-martial!" . As each application for'a pension takes three or four months between the time the soldier falls or is wound- ed and the date on which the applica- tion is flna11y passed, it is altogether probable that the $2,000,000 set apart for pensions during the present year will be sufficient. It is estimated that already about 1,000 Canadian men of family have fallen in action, but as stated, only a small proportion of these cases have been dealt with. These cases are first passed on by the Pension and Claims Board of the Militia Department, and then referred to Major W. B. Conger, Canadian Pensions Officer. Up to the present, however, the number of Canadian soldiers receiv- ing pensions as a result of the pre- sent war is only 160, and the amount paid out up to July 31 has been $25,- 000. A despatch from Ottawa says: That " the end of the war Canada will have 5,000 or 6,000 pensions to pay is the estimate made from the experi- ence of the Militia Department so far. While the uncertainty as to the length of the struggle precludes any very accurate prediction, it is practically certain that there will be added to the Dominion expenditure 9. sum of at least $4,000,000 per year for pen- sions for the wives and families of dead soldiers and for disabled men. PENSIONS Ti) COST $4,000,000 l YEAR Militia Department Figures on 6,000 to Maintain After the War. About Ber Young Man. w, Bot Weather Yum. I wish that I could find a cool And quiet glade, And spend the summer by a pool Of lemonade. Thomas Harlow shot a woodchuck near Bradford, Pts., and the bullet de- fleeted to the body of Herbert Green- wood, aged 9, seriously injuring him. Mrs. Mary Coulter, of Hartford, Conn., is suing Capt. T. P. Kenney, of Colehesrter, for $5,000 for getting him out of an asylum, and $10,000 for breach of promise. Because he sold fireworks to his daughter, through which she was burned to death, Joseph Moretzky asks $10,000 of Paul Lange, of kan- sas City. Aloysius Sheppard will be hanged at Denton, Md., for an Isuult on I Federalsburg girl; a huge crowd awaited assurance of the death sen- tence. A wealthy woman of Wilmington, Del., Mrs. M. K. Grant, gnve (party in honor of the 14th birthday of her horse, with music, ice cream, etc. The capture of a huge maskelonge overturned a canoe at Boulder, Wis., and drowned Geo. Truttschell, She- boygan civic official. The poor of Detroit were allowed to tear up a condemned city pave- ment to gather fire wood; crowds soon cleared nine blocks. Sitka, Clark County, Kansas, ap~ pools to Governor Copper to send along some husbandleu young men for the girls. At her father's funeral Mrs. Kath- arine Savarez, of Long Island, was killed when one of the tum: run away. Jamesi Hawkins, aged 10, of Plea- santville, N.J., will die from injuries suffered in an attack by a shepherd dog. . The latest business on trains pun- ing out of Atlantic City to Philldel- phia is the sale of good ten-ceilt box- es of ice cream. The mother of Max Staudte, re- stored from criminnlity by operation at Passinc, NJ " won't take him back, not believing he is made good. The Miasodri Ptseitle Railway bu I dining-ear service on day coaches and other cars-the tlrat in the West. Giuseppe Costello Ind Anna Foti, both deaf and dumb, were wed in New York City Hall by interpreted signs. Of the 320,000,000 pounds of chem produced yearly in U.S., Wisconsin makes nearly one-half. The National Tempennce Amok- tion will have tilttu, made to show the evils of drink by movies. Ralph Elrose,'2o, mining from his New York home two years, is wanted us heir to $60,000. Julius Binder diivG I cow around Lorain, o., 1nd milks it at the door of residents " required. Latest Hunt-ling: In Big Republic Condensed for Buy Benders. Chicago In: tn electric pie-mnking machine; six girls turn out 28,000 pies 1 dly on it. The Mayor of Buffalo refuses to unction itteretusetg of 81,500 a year to the city court judges. __ - Milwaukee will no longer atiow mu- sic in saloons, and a clean-up has put 500 out of work. ACROSS THE BORDER Adupntch nonhuman”: ttu ottieia11r “nomad that the Austrian submarine U-12 in been toepedsst1 Ind sunk with all hulls in the uppt Adriatic Bea by u: Italian submrina. m mmncement as made in a launch: issued by then Navy Do. WHAT IS GOING ON OVER IN THE STATES. Enemy Warships Bomhard Southern Italian --Uttie Damage ls Occasional IM2luB8lilliMlN0rrghI,I,imgygm .3... ”2“!!! . " w ( - GWARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO I The Maharajah Jam Sahib of Na- ywnnagnr. better known as K. S. 1PNit'il"yry the famous cricketer. has presented his English home at I Staines to the A','.',,'.' as an hospital i for wounded of rs. corps. The men to be chosen must be under fifty-five and uble to give level: Inocuaive duys' service in and! month. LLOYD .GEORGE ENLISTS HELP OF SCIENTISTS. A despatch from London says: That he may avail himself of all the latest diacoveries in appliances for the manufacture of munitions of war. David Lloyd George, the Munitions Minister, has formed a "munitions invention branch" of his department. In this department he will be assist- ed by twenty-flve "ientists and en- gineering experts. A cheque for $4,375 has been re- ceived from the Government by the Rev. A. E. Johnson, View of All Saints, Scarboro. towards the cost of making good the damage caused by I German shell. A commercial traveller, visiting a large factory, made a bet with the manager that he would pick out all the married men among the em- ployeea. Accordingly he stationed himself at the door " they came back from dinner, and mentioned all thou whom he believd to be married, and almost in every case he was right. "How do you do itt" asked the may ager in amazement. "Oh, it'a ple," laid the knight of the "quite aimple. The married man wipe their feet on them Theda- ale men don't."' 7 Dudley Town Council has decided to purchase fifty-five scres of land from Lord Dudley at a cost of $70,000 for the purpose of . housing scheme. The matter has been before the Town Council for twenty years. In the East end of London there is s men of over 60 yours of age who until recently was a psuper receiving outdoor relief. He ins now got work in a munition {notary and is earning sometimes as much u 375 in one week. The War Office is about to take over for home service some of the members of the various volunteer brunette- to we”. pave. in in!!! and, but t,edtoGI Mr. Brace, Under-Secretory for the Home office, states that between May 13 and July 6, 7.144 alien ene- mies have been interned, and the total number now interned is 26.713. Colonel Deacon, commanding the Essex Yeomnnry, whose fate has been unknown since the gallnnt charge by the regiment near Ypres, hos been reported to be I prisoner in Germany. Dog-coils" studded withpeulu. ,ndeortietebetwa-t88/i00nnd"o0, Mr. Herbert Samuel, Postmaster- General stated in the House of Com- mons that more post office men are to be released for the wnr, and wo- men employed in their places. Occurrence- in the Land Tint Belg-l Sure-o in the Con-et- dd World. Prince" Henry of Battenberg visit- ed the Red Cross Hospital It Gatl- combe (Isle of Wight) and distribut- ed pipes among the wounded soldiers. The death is announced of Mr. Chnrleu Fish, for many years cox- wain of the Rumsgate lifeboat "Brad.. ford," who had served in the harbor for over forty years. London is now the principal mur- ket of the world for opium. _ The British Navy in" to be increased by 60,000 dice" and men. A Unr' person occupying I room with n brilliant light It the seaside in now liable to a tine of $500. It in oath! that the beam: of Prin- ce" Louise, Duchess of Argyle, in muting wane unmineu anon; the members of the Royal family. Colonel Sir Chnrle: Wakefield, who will in the ordinary course be next year'l Lord Mayor, has been elected Master of the Cordwniners Compaq. Under the will of Mr. Alfred Bil- brough, I local resident, who died Int week, I number of Leeds Chart.. ties benefit to the extent of upwards of $150,000. The chapel of St. George and the English Martyrs in Westminster Cathedral is to be dedicated u I memorial chapel to the memory of fallen officers. No fewer than 19,648 boys who have received their training in re- formatory uchoola in Great Britain have served during the war in the naval or military forces. The first factory for the msnufsc- ture of British violins has been in- stalled st Hsmpstead, where arrsnge. menu sre being nude to employ dia- abled soldiers and sailors. NEWS FROM ENGLAND The widowed mother of Private Barber of Wilinslow was so overcome by excitement and by joy at her son's home-coming that she had an upo- plectic seizure and died. NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT JOHN BULL AND HIS PBOPLK wave-0mm. 111mm- ntrrteoeintrhmnterutdn-." bud“ BU,' . aGio V spine; Gd iii. feta (Southern Ihly, on the Add. atic). One civilhn was killed and 'rrrtastmtKsrhitAndB.dt “hem- Green in an ill-becoming cola for Quite Simple. Td

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy