West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 24 Apr 1919, p. 2

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wol "is tA o L; ® Vnss EWE aMtef i9 W been blo of, He wondero.:’ hhe were .flh‘l?nfive & ~Ae s srkhs that was more than a month ago. The crowd carried him on, and he found himself in the vestibule of a motion T‘cture theatre. He glanced inside. It was a full house. A proâ€" cession bearing the flags of the alâ€" lies was on the screen, and the audiâ€" ence was applauding . vigorously. Hurlbutt wondered vaguely if he aught to applaud too. Corporal "appi Hurlbutt paused;’withou at the corner of the street and gazed | kiddo," about him. It was night, and he fe!t[ not w just a trife bewildered. He had only | your f arrived from the front that morning, don‘t 1 and he had not yet become accustomâ€"| every | ed to the life at home. He looked alâ€"‘ you‘re most in awe at the blazin electric}'nitin" signs which were silhouettes against| I‘m tel the black sky, and at the glare of the "But brilliantly lighted stores. _ Automoâ€"| "Wel biles filed past him in a steady | waiting stream, and the bustling crowd; He _ shouldered him roughly because he turned interrupted their path. His mind‘Corpon went back to (Fhe last town he had| motion stopped at in France. A group of eyes o ‘;omfen h.d’l'h been ltandi'ng on thel'mding atform. e ere ess n e ghck."‘;h reca?lez the ‘gngrnigrz L; toslie ‘ had spent in London; London the| the car greatest city in the world, with dark' looked : and deserted streets. He had been ton:‘lytl awakened from his sleep that nixht' ith by the crash of bombs and had seen turned the searchlights splitting the darkâ€" towards ness and bad heard the familiar crack of bursting shrapnel. He had gone out to see if he could help. He remâ€" embered carrying in his arms a tiny "The C girl, clad in her nightdress. Her arm | . *"*. With a final glance at the mirror, Rosic followed her friend downstairs. "Oh, shucks!. You can do that toâ€" morrow. You know Eddie don‘t like waitin‘. Come on." began Rosie paused irresolutely, glancing at the photo. "Ready, kiddo? breathlessly. "I se MHe‘s got the car." writing. She never pictured a warâ€"weary boy in a foreign land anxiously waitâ€" Ing for a letter from home, and wondering when the mail was sortâ€" ed, how it was that others should receive so much whilst he had none at all. It was the fact that he had not written to her that she dwelt upon and she endeavored to make herself believe that she was badly; treated. Dick had no excuse for not writing, she argued. He had nothing to do all day but sit in a nice cosy dugout and Â¥Ae ought to be glad to write letters to wile away the time. Her reverie was broken by the sound of footsteps hurriedly mount. | ing the stairs, and her bosom friend burst into the room. | iaud 100. t |gt‘ ‘l::op:f a girl jost in front tide was writ ¢yes turned instinctively to a silver frame which held the portrait of a cleanâ€"looking boy in khaki uniform. She rec-a!leith perhaps the llifit- est tinge of remorse that she d| promised to be true to Dick Mellish when he went overseas. But tbat' was nearly three yars ago now, and ‘ surely there was no harm in going’ for a ride with a boy friend. Besides | it was nearly two months since shei had received a letter from Dick and | he had always written so regularly before. It was true that she had not written to him very often lately, but she had been so busy that she simply _ couldn‘t find time to write. There 1 was a party, or the movies, or a Joy ride almost every night, and so she | was forced to postpone her letter, T Tietedterymig: tairabntP is w c ArtsiPasrcaddics .23 of importance, and his condescending manner showed he realized how comâ€" pletely he held the weaker sex under his power. He had a car, too, and of late it had been his pleasure to take Rosie for moonlight rides, acâ€" companied by others of the younger set. And he was smart! He used to brag continually of how he had "put it over the fool tribunal" and would j flaunt his exemption certificate, vowâ€"| inz that no military government | would get him to fight other people’s' battles. ‘ As she thought of this the girl‘s ) was up to her to live up to the repuâ€" tation. It must be admitted that she dressed well, and, according to her kind, she deserved the praise of the admiring Eddie, for she spent every cent of %er trivial salary on the finâ€" ery so dear to the heart of her kind. And Eddies‘s opinion amounted to something, for â€" his formâ€"fitting clothes proclaimed him to be, in his own estimation at least, an individual mirror, Rosie Seldon consuited a tiny wrist watch which was quickly tickâ€" ing the minutes away. She sighcd Impatiently and once more reâ€"arrangâ€" ed the overcurled curls which hung on either side of her powdered face. She was proud of those curls; they made her look cute. It was only the day before that she had overheard Eddie Bealby allude to her as "a cute little chicken," and she felt that it ought to write a letterâ€"" she Pausing for TRYIT .L & "CALADA®" Positive Definite Knowledgeâ€" â€" of its Matchless Quality and Vaiue- has been the forceful power that has created a sale of 25 million packets AnnUualiy.__â€"=â€" IF YE BREAK FAITH 2?" she _ inquired seen Eddie outside. 909 moment before her a Teaâ€"Pot Test is better than a Volume of Arguments. BL49 July 1 is set for the date when it is hoped to have the Provincial stockyards at Prince Albert, Sask., in operation. ‘ bore a hole in one of the back steps and insert the eightâ€"inch stub; then trim the broom off square and youw have an exceedinilcy satisfactory scraper for muddy boots and l‘hoel.‘ With a defiant toss of her head she turned her back on him and walked towards the car. (The End.) The old broom has apparently outâ€" lived its usefulness, but saw off the handle eight inches from the broom. | "Is he really dead? Sure*" she | asked. "Poor kid. I‘m sorry. Gosh!" | she added â€" irrelevantly, “{ nearly | sent him a ‘Parce] last week. Lucky I iidn't, eh?" ‘ | young man Lin a formâ€"fitting She looked irresolutely from one to the other. Her gaze wandered to the car, then back to the soldier. She looked into his face and read the conâ€" tempt in his eyes. es He walked towards the car and turned to _ see if she would follow. Corporal Happy Hurlbutt made no motion to interfere, but he kept his eyes on the girl’fi face as though reading her thoughts. 1 ippnalinen‘s h en t + n n se ic i < 154 I‘m telling you." "But Efidl’e. I wanta ask himâ€"â€"" "Well, get busy then, only I‘m not waiting long. So you know." M 2 t cedfi s $s3 4B c acd without turning his head. "Look here, kiddo," he addressed the girl, "I‘m not waitin‘ here all night. Who‘s your friend anyway? I might say I don‘t like my lady friends talking to every common soldier they meet. If you‘re coming, come on. The car‘s yaitin:.“but I do'p't wait much longer, A young man in a formâ€"fi costume caught the girl by the and gave her a slight jerls:' ‘ "Xeuse me," he said to the sc S mt Cmmc TE Rentcl. The soldier looked at her in amazeâ€" ment; then shrugging his shoulders he turned away his head without conâ€" descending to reply. _ | , ~"He did sayâ€"something â€"about . writing." % | "Me writing? â€" Say, I really meant:! to, I‘ve been that busy every night., But he hasn‘t written for a long time.| I bet he‘s got some nice little French | girl now." | "I hardly think that‘s likely now,") said Hurlbutt shortly. "How d‘yer know ?" "He‘s dead." The girl looked blankly at him for a moment; then she commenced to giggle. "Aw, quit your kidding," she said. "You almost had me scared.", The girl took no notice Dick send any more messa asked. _ ihere‘s Eddie," she whispered. "He‘s passed us twice now. Don‘t keep him waiting." the town were closed. The people were taking a holiday, I suppose. It was a place called {'pres. Perhaps you‘ve heard of it ?" The girl became conscious of the irony in his tone and flushed uncomâ€" {lortably. Her â€"companion nudged‘ er. _ "He sent you a message." "Eh?" "He wanted me to give you his love and to say that he would never forget you." "Oh," she said slowly. "Is that all?" she inquired. â€" s Hurlbutt‘s lip curled. "I‘m afraid it Is," he said quietly. "Iâ€"I thought he mighta sent me a present or something." ‘ "I‘m sorry, but ail the stores in the town were alnumt ° Whao avclr. _ "What if I am?" enquired the girl, with a toss of her head. _ "Dick Mellish told me about you. I‘m his chum." "Oh," she exclaimed, "has Dick come home?" | Huributt eyed her keenly for a moâ€" ment. "No," he said deliberately, "Dick has not come home." "Oh," she seemed at a loss for something to say and stood regardâ€" ing her dainty boots. l "He sent vou a massaos" _ "If you are not, T‘ said the soldier, "but I I‘m mistaken." "There‘s Eddie," th For Muddy Boots. rimmiliittec. . Bs B lt more messages?" she not, I‘ll apologize," the soldier don‘t think "Didn‘t arm 1] A °C >CCVCRCG 10009 and belie. "If | she understands how vitally importâ€"| , "After all, it rests with the motherl entirely whether or not the children | drink milk and grow strong, rosy and . healthy," with a look of pride toward‘ pinkâ€"checked Teddy and Belle. "If "One mother 1 knew used to paste a pretty picture on the bottom of a tumbler, then fill the glass with milk. Her little girl gladly drank the milk in order to seethe new picture. Anâ€" other mother induced her children to drink milk by using pretty, oddâ€"shapâ€" ed tumblers and cups, while still anâ€" other kept on hand a supply of small hard candies, one of which she dropâ€" ped into each glass. You can readily | believe the children never refuse to} drink the milk when the last swallow meant a piece of candy. | f "Yes, I know," replied her niece, | "but it‘s the mother, not the chi!dren,{ , who is to blame. Weaning time to most women means jumping from | babyhood to manhood, skipping by: 'childhood altogether, so far as diet . is concerned. As soon as baby beâ€"| | gins to take solid food, the mother ; | decreases the milk supply. She lets , [ him have tastes of alr the victuals| the grownâ€"ups have, and his stomach | gets too full for milk. Yet all he husl eaten is not half so beneficial as a| _ much smaller quantity, supplemented by a glass or so of milk. | "Of course, if a child really dis-F likes milk it may be necessary to do a little coaxing, but a little ingenuity | and patience will usually have the de-, sired effect. Let the mother make cocoa or cereal coffee entirely of milk, using only sufficient boiling' water to dissolve the powder, and; offer it to the child in winter. In‘ summer, a bit of sugar or syrup with | a few drops of flavoring, added to: the milk and the concoction termed | ‘liquid ice cream‘ may go down when ; milk alone wouldn‘t. | | "But I fail to understand," continâ€" | ued Aunt Anne, "how you get them ‘to take it so well. Most of the chilâ€" | dren I‘ve seen detest milk after they are a year or so old, even children | living on dairy farms." i stt MDOie I | _ "Because ! know how necessary it ‘lis for the children‘s wellâ€"being. 1‘ know that nothing so well provides | all the necessary elements of growth | for the young child as milk. Thereâ€" ‘ fore, I make it their mainstay. The cost per quart is high, I know, but when breakfast and supper comistI ‘almost entirely of milkâ€"I ulunllyi make cream soup, creamed toast or isome other such dish not only for | their supper but for our ownâ€"so few ‘ other foods are used that the cost is | greatly _ reduced. Practically â€" all| cakes, crackers and cookies, which laltogether too manyâ€" childrer make', a practice of filling up on, are ex-:, cluded entirely. If a lunrch is reâ€"| quired between meals a slice of ; j bread and a glass of milk suits them | admirably, while milk desserts take!( the place of pie at dinner and a ghssj of milk reduces the quantity of meat‘ consumed." n| Milk! Milk!" echoed Belle. Their j mother smiled. * z) "That‘s the answer," she said. "It‘s | no secret." â€"| "But do you mean," _ asked the el' Aunt, "that they drink milk in any +/ quantity? I should think they were ii old enough to eat solid food." | "But how can you afford to let them drink so much with milk costing what it does here in the city?" "Truth is, Aunt," her niece laughâ€" ed, "water is refreshing, but it hasn‘t very much food value. _ They drink plenty of water between meals. At present, they are having breakâ€" fast." "Well, I never!" exclaimed Aunt Anne. _ "Why don‘t you give them part water instead? They‘d drink it just as easily." _ _ NM 0t course they eat solid food, Aunt, but their diet is based chiefly on milk. Here, kiddies," placing their chairs at the table, "your Lreakfast is ready." With a merry scramble, the chilâ€" dren were in their chairs, and the next moment, two little noses wore concealed in the cups of creamy milk. Not @ill every drop was drained did they turn to the waiting cereal, toast | and fruit. Before they finished each, had demanded and received another cup of milk. | "Oh, of course they eat Aunt, but their diet is bs on milk. Here, kiddies, their chairs at the tal Lreakfast is ready." BPRIP Ts Brsr sn B Prssssadnt k: 2i 5. Ad ing them with a hug and a kiss. "I don‘t see whom they take after, Ruth," turning to their mother. "Neither you nor their father has any health to boast of. What‘s your secret?" | FrOuntry, _ ipstead of temporarily | housed on a fiftyâ€"foot city lot." | "But who in the world ever drinks i it all?" persisted the aunt. As if in answer to her question, ; into the room bounced the two rolyâ€" poly youngsters, Teddy, the four.. yearâ€"old, ~ and â€" twoâ€"yearâ€"old Belle, bright and smiling and ready for| breakfast. 1 "My, don‘t these children look| well?" exclaimed Aunt Anne, greet.|. Milk! _ Why don‘t you keep a cow?" asked Aunt Anne the morning after her arrival at her niece‘s house, 8$, she heard the rattle of milk bottlesâ€", five of themâ€"on the verandah. i "I would," gaily answered her | niece, "if only we were back in the| country, instead of temnorariiv! want my milk," shouted Teddy. 4 awsi adl & sA L Milkâ€"Fed Kiddies. is light enoug'h to use\;â€"llenxt i: ‘f:;i‘l' of bubbles. A flannel bag filled with hot sand is a good substitute for a hot water bag. Instead of grating cheese for some dishes that are to be baked, slice it thin and save time. Two heaping teaspoons of boiled rice contain as much nourishment as two and oneâ€"half boiled eggs. Egg stains may be removed from spoons by common salt. 1 It saves time and fuel to cook a whole pumpkin at once. { Creamed potatoes with cheese make a pleasant change. ' A dustless mop can be made from the fringe gi an old bedspread. In hanging clothes lreâ€"emt-l.).at they are pulled straight on the line. Children require a special diet up to ten years of age. Hot drinks are better than cold for old people. , k Delectable dumplings â€" are made‘ with dried fruits. % | Clean lard will remove wagon grease, stove and sh6e polish. ‘ & S Oe oi on o uie S ols Ninthâ€"Fresh air, sunlight and clean premises prevent disease. A | _ First and last of all, swat the fly. | Swat him early and late. It is posâ€" lsible with very little trouble to keep the ‘house absolutely free from this menacing pest. l Firstâ€"Keep the house screened. Secondâ€"Kill each and every fly in the house. \ Thirdâ€"Do not allow food to stand in an exposed condition. Fourthâ€"Keep the garbage pail well covered. Fifthâ€"Disinfect the garbage can twice a week. Sixthâ€"Do not allow rubbish to acâ€" cumulate. t.| _ The approach of warm weather 1| brings with it the discomfort of flyâ€" , time, During the season thi§ houseâ€" r,| hold pest thrives and multiplies by s| the millions, and quickly. The house-; r) wife must wage a definite war ‘against the fly if she wishes to banish . this deathâ€"dealing, diseaseâ€"breeding r' parasite from her premises. , l The fly not only carries poison, but ; also typhoid, infantile paralysis and' "many kindred disease germs. Food‘ , that is exposed in warm weather ofâ€" , fers a very desirable breeding place , for this dangerous pest. f Clean up the premises and yards' f and see that all garbage cans are dis-; { infected and kept covered. Do not | / allow any piles of rubbish or waste , / to accumulate. Do not take a chance| ,‘on leaving the windows and doo;;),'j open in warm, sunny weather, wit =| ‘out placing in the screens. See that" all windows and doors are securely | | screened. Cover all foods that are| exposed with wire or mosquito nstâ€"| |ting; these screens can be made by removing the ends of a box and then‘ C proceeding to cover it with wire or | netting. \ t ho n 220 m yR op Pnd be kept carefully screened with netâ€" ting to prevent flies from coming near him during the early spring and summer. Do not permit milk vessels or cooking utensils to stand around; rinse them with cold water and then cleanse them with hot water very thoroughly. If there are small chilâ€" dren, watch them carefully when they: are eating, so that no food is left b,vj them to attract flies. The baby should ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO |_®"You are right about our children | not having especially healthy parâ€" ents to take after, but we are bringâ€" \ing them up right, and, Aunt Anne, | do you know any healthier children than these?" ‘ bread sponge made with yeast "Indeed I don‘t. I always said how lucky you were to have such healthy children. Now I know it wasn‘t luck, but good care and milk." ; ant milk is to her children‘s health, and realizes that a dollar spent on milk for them could be invested in no better way, she will teach them to drink milk and they‘ll never acquire a distaste for it and think it just for babies. | Household Hints. Banish the Fly. It is ‘hard to say how rapid the march of important inventions will be when nations agree to go forward amicably instead of with deadly cross purposes. Carrying on a conversaâ€" tion audibly between distant points anywhere on the globe is an aimost In the recent war Paris was saved twice by battles on the Marne, which was quite as near as hostile batteries could be allowed to approach. In proâ€" portion as the spirit of militarism is banished from the world the conâ€" structive forces of peace get to work. Their possibilities were never more interesting. , Marvellous Inventions Inspired by War May be Surpassed in Peace. Subjects of increasing interest are telephoning without wires and flight | by airship across the ocean. Both {ideus are in such a hopeful way that ‘they may be said to be virtually asâ€" sured and likely to be soon put in operation. These matters are better !worth thinking about and spending _money on thanis poison gas or canâ€" non with a range of eighty miles, though guns of that calibre promote antimilitarism by rendering useless a girdle of fortifications around a city. l The ‘"notions" counter in most shops has readymade button holes to offer. They are sold in strips, and are great time and labor savers. But for pickâ€"up work there is nothing like having a strip of button holes of your own making on hand. 1 buttints ic tot t ts tcixtrstcaiedi nds utcsinactees Wls natea tm Trind Peaitio Ar PP C ECY ltwo minutes. |â€" How about telephotography, or the Save an old white kid or chamois visualizing of distant objects with the ’Klove if your corset steels and bones aid of the electric current? â€" It has have a habit of wearing through. A been waiting for development since mend with a bit of this will last a 1881, when it was first brought to long time. | notice. _ Experimental results were When the little girls‘ dresses of favorable, but the invention has not embroidered flouncing are too short, been pushed as have the telephons, lengthen them without taking off the airplane and wireless telegraphy, all, band, in this way: Stitch to the under{ of which are in practical use and side of the scallops a double fold of| have been advanced by the expendiâ€"| lawn or batiste about three inches‘ture of hillicns. ‘ wide. TMs gives the appearance of| Telepathy, or the supersensory| a hem. |transfer of thought and feeling, is A wire brush with some gritty cleanser cleans the roasting pan in two minutes. cut them in as long and thin strips as Spossible. NEW WONDERS EXPECTED | will renew them. We pay carriage charges one way and gua satisfactory work. Our booklet on household helps that save ; will be sent free on request to PARKER‘S DYE WORKS, Limited Cleaners and Dyers 791 Yonge St. Fe % ho ryo SEND IT To EXPERTS Parker‘s san clean or dye carpets, curiains, laces, draperies, gowns, etc., and make them look like new. Send your faded or spotted clothing or household goods, and PARKER‘S â€"PARKER‘S Tires, Coaster Brakes, Wheels, Inner Tubes, Lamps, Belis, Cyclometers, Saddles, Equip» ment and Parts of Bicycles, You can bug your supplies from us at wholesale prices. showing our full lines of Bicycles for Mem and Women, Boys and Girls, Write toâ€"day for our big FREE CATALOGUE the open air. Caneâ€"seated chairs that have sagâ€" ged can be tightened by washing them in hot water and soap and rinsing them in clear water. « Dry in "A time comes in most men‘s lives when the bell rings for prayer, and unhappy are they who, when it does, have nowhere to carry their heart‘s supplication."â€"A. Birrell. K Telepathy, or the supersensory transfer of thought and feeling, is more recondite and nebulous. _ But, with peace, zew wonders will doubt. less unfold. S A C T All grades. Write for prices. TORONTO SALT WORKS G. J. CLIFF . . TORONTO startling conception. But it seems near at hand, and so does air flight over indefinite spaces at a speed of 300 miles or over an hour. MoTOR CYCLES MOTOR ATTACHMENTS T. W. BOYD & SON, and guarantee Toronto money It Arabia the horse is a favorite artich of fiesh food. The exâ€"Emperor William IL we> the «y king of Prussia who ever lo:t h } throne. Adve=ses in the dawn, For the black ranks of winter Kave suddenly withdrawn ; A gt)ry marches through the world And camps upon my lawn. With dignity and with certainty of acceptance he had surrendered; calm ly and without doubt he had proffered his little substitute for a sword. It was, I felt, infinitely preferable to an y guttural and cowardly Kamerad! Foe} ing somewhat shamefaced, I accepted the weakly struggling ant, gentiyv lowered the simail saurian to the ground and opened my fingers. He went as he had surrendered, with steadiness and without terror. From the summit of & fallen log he turned and watched me walk slowly out of sight, ard I at least felt better for the encounter, to be bound in cvhlulr;" by- thé credltgd customs of his race! '] For several weeks, says the author, 'the jolly little trail Mzards had been ‘carrylng on mo? enthusiastic courtâ€" | ships, marked by much bowing and | posing, and a terrific amount of | scrambling about. * The previous day | â€"that of the first Mns ~numbers of lizards appeared, and at the same time 'the DI/WA tree lizards initiated their season of loveâ€"making.; I had often watched them battle with one another â€"combats wholly futile far as any damage was concerned. *Put the vanâ€" quished invariably gave up o his conâ€" queror the last thing he had »ewallowâ€" ed, the vicior receiving it in a glutâ€" tonous rather than a gracious Spirit, but allowing the captive to escape. 1 surprised one of these darkâ€"brown chaps in the trail and setzed him well up toward the head, to preserve his tail intact. Scarcely had I lifted him from the ground when he turned his head, considered me calmly with his bright little eyes, and solemnly spat out a still living ant in my direction. The look he then gave me was exceedâ€" ingly embarrassing. Who was I, not Seldom is a chance encounter in the jungle as delightful as this one that Mr. William Beebe describes in Jungle Peace. _ The quaint little adventure happened on a trail in British Guiana, along which Mr. Beebe was danderâ€" ing, tired from a bong day of work in the laboratory., Quaint Customs of the Tree Lizards in British Guiana. "In the late eighteenth century the Panmure estate of the Maule family came to the Ramsays by marriage, and a younger son assumed the Maule surâ€" name and became in 1881 Lord Panâ€" mure. ‘The eighth FRarl of Dalhousie was a Waterloo general. His son was the famous Governorâ€"General of India from 1847 to 1856, who received a marquisate. He died in 1860, and the Scottish@honors for the marquisate, which had become extinct, passed to a cousin. _ Fox Maule, Lord Panmure, Palmerston‘s Secretary for War durâ€" ing the Crimean War and the Indian Mutiny. With him the Dalhousie and the Panmure lands became united, forming together one of the most valuâ€" able estates in Scotland. "The Ramsays were a Lothian fam ily, and have lived since the twelfth century at Dalhousie Castle. An early Ramsay was one of Bruce‘s knights. hero of the the ballads. A later hoad fell at Flodden. ‘The union of crowns. the first peaceful Scottish invasion of England, gave the Ramsays their first title. In 1618 Sir George Ramsay was created Lord Ramsay of Dalhousie, and in the next reign the baronetcy became a Scottish earldom. Regarding the history of the houses of Dalhousie and Mauleâ€"Princess Pat‘s bridegroom unites both strains â€"we read: | "No Scotsman seems to see anything _remarkable or to appreciate the ‘bl'llch of custom in a princess of royal blood marrying a commoner. _ Sco| land hugs its nationalism tightly and looks on those commoners who have married into the Englisn Royal family as securing nqthing nifore than their due. There is gratification, of course, but it is mixed with a spirit of indeâ€" pendence and the severe consciousâ€" ness that a Scottish line of Campbells or Ramsays is as long and exclusive as a Royal house in England. In Scotâ€" land the feudal relationship has per gisted much longer than in England and developed a more intensely conâ€" scious aristocracy." | Hon. Alex. Rameay‘s Family Dates Back to the Twelfth Century, The smooth manner in which the marriage of Princess Patricia of Conâ€" naught with the Hon. Alexander Ramâ€" say, a mere Scottish noble, was ac complished, the apparent absence of any objecting to such an "uneven" tie on the part of King George, may have surprised many continental Europeans who usually have a diferent concepâ€" tion as to how such things are looked upon in the spheres of royalty. In !Grut Britain, however, and more es , pecially in Scotland, there was no such feeling of surprise. A correspondent . writes to the Manchester Guardian PRINCESS PATRICIA‘S A JUNGLE ADVEntuUuRrCE. fag The Hosts of April. mv enthusiastic courtâ€" bÂ¥ much bowing and a \\errlnc amount . of out. ° The previous day fArst hmâ€"fl:Mhbers of BRIDEGROOM. Lord m Care of and an which : “I‘; p.‘ mediat, envelop wl ts Ruthor Sid t 4 0 +# 1 M | f Â¥* 1 a W d P Add The pe i Condy Phe Wi Fos

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