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Durham Review (1897), 2 Sep 1920, p. 6

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4 the » fores the are who. the titi} ing \ the 'I» early ands the * hilat d ienf nigh tal’ Wa, Veé t flce late wh tio. vot act chig to rat for ad_ vO+ Ur op Pa to re, wh w Th j Ts . SOVIET COMMITTEES IN POLISH _ ~â€"â€"~â€"â€" OTESs COURTMARTIALED AND SHOT 37 we A despatch from Vancouver says:â€" Steamship companies on the Pacific Coast haxe raised the first class fare from San Francisco, Seattle and Vanâ€" couver to Yokohoma to $300, and no reduction on roundâ€"trip tickets. Preâ€" vious to the war, in 1914, a firstâ€"class roundâ€"theâ€"world ticket, via Suez and return by the Pacific, or viece verso, eould be purchased for $625. At presâ€" ent it could not be obtained for less than $1,200. Mrs. Lioyd George Honored. Wile of Britgin‘s Premier, who has been awarded the Order of the Dame Grand Cross of the British Emâ€" pire. She will now be officially deâ€" signated as Dame Lloyd George, G.B.E. Globeâ€"Encircling Fares Are Double Preâ€"War Rate Fails in Attempt to Swim English Channel ‘‘The Reds are bringing up reâ€" serves," he said, "chiefly from the border of Finland, where a substanâ€" tial guard was left following the estalishment of peace. Further real action by the Reds will be impossible for months, but indieations nr:fl;h.t' the Soviet is its ies in the interior m for an offenâ€" sive. The munitions factories in the larger Russian cities are working day and night under the direction of Gerâ€" man foremen. Several German muniâ€" tions experts arrived in Moscow reâ€" cently to speed up production. I beâ€" kKeve the Red losses in the recent camâ€" paign are about 100,000. Advices fromi‘ the South ind:cate that the Reds may; try to take Lemberg,. The efforts to capture that city might be considered, more as an gttempt to restore a shatâ€"| tered morale than as part of a real| aggressive movement against the Polish armies." & | Warsaw is becoming normal. Those[ A despatch from Dover, Eng., says:â€"Another attempt by Henry Sulvan of Lowell, Mass., to swim the English Channel from Dover to Calais, France, has ended in failure. 7 Sullivan started on the swim last night at 8.40 o‘clock, and was in the water for 18 hours. Owing to the rough sea he was forced then to abandon his attempt, when only three miles off the French coast. In 1913 Sullivan swam to within six miles of France, starting from Communists Who Formed Organizations in Cities Taken by ‘ Bolshevists and Recaptured by Poles Obliged to . Face Firing Squadâ€"Warsaw Becoming Norâ€" _ â€" malâ€"Expects Renewed Attack. . The direct route between Dover and Calais is 20 miles. A despatch from Warsaw says:â€" The Soviet committees formed in Polâ€" ish cities that had been taken by the Reds, and have since been recaptured by the Poles, will be dealt with through field courtâ€"martials. Several members of these committees have already been shot by firing squads following convictions. * Northern Polish army, said he believâ€" ed Russia would take the offensive again as quickly as she can reâ€"group Wine! 5 roRr?!? EV _ u4 _ Aap â€" As‘ s s f C * * e l ) p ?‘; l L 4 ‘\\‘1' -"’. the CANADA‘S FAMOUS _.. _ ARMY IS NO MORE The fourteen N.C.O.‘s who were emâ€" ployed to conclude the statistical work of the army have just writt= "30" records covering every unit and every records covering everyu nit and every man who ever donned the Canadian uniform. * The Polish cavalry on the southern front, after a short handâ€"toâ€"hand fight, wiped out the 72nd Bolshevik brigade and made prisoners of many of the men, including the brigade chief of staff. A despatch from Ottawa says:â€"The Canadian Expeditionary Force is no more. Just the number of records kept of every individval man would come as a surprise to even the scoldiers whose records they are. The Militia Departâ€" ment has originals and duplicates of about twentyâ€"one army forms relating to everyone who served. Asked what was going to be done with the thousands of apparently useâ€" less books and army forms, a Militia Department official stated that they would be carefully preserved and lockâ€" ed away. Canadian Caitle A despatch from Ottawa says:â€" About 2,000 head of Canadian cattle arrived at Antwerp a few days ago, according to word received here. The city of Paris, which is expected to complete a contract for the purchase of cattle in Canada, had two repreâ€" sentatives on hand to examine the quality of the animals sent to Be!â€" gium, their cond:tion on arrival, and the requirements for receiving such cargo. It is also understood by the Trade and Commerce Department here that within the past few days retail prices of meat have fallen considerâ€" ably in Belgium. A despatch from London says:â€"â€" Owing to the cont‘nued rise in the price of foodstuffs the King is putting the Royal establishment at Balmoral on rations, Even for guests the alâ€" lowance includes a quarter of a pound of sugar and of butter to each and half a pound of jam periweek, a quarter of a pound of beef or mutton and an ounce of cheese a day. A news agency despatch declares that a~portion of the Red troops that ‘had been fighting the Polish at Mlawa have been broken through and are retreating eastward rapidly. Ossowetz, the fortress northeast of Bialystok, was taken by the Poles Tuesday afternoon, agcording to a communication just issued. There are no details. The communication adds that the Centre army is continuing its progress beyond Ostrolenka. Food Rationing places east of the city which only a few days ago were in Russian hands. A despatch from London says:â€" The Russian forces at Bialystok and Grodno are resisting the advance of the Polish army, according to official advices received here by the Polish Legation. The outcome of the clash, it was said, cannot yet be determined. The Polish news of the fighting is corfirmed by a Russian communique which says: "Important rear guard actions are in progress toward Rialyâ€" stok and Lomza. In the neighborhood of Lemberg our forces reached Stryz. who fled are returning by the thouâ€" sands. Food is more and more plentiâ€" ful. Fresh milk is again on sale. Passenger trains are .running to On the Crimean front the forces of General Wrangel are being pushed southward." A With Our Expedi Shipped to Belgium in Royal Palace France and information from other countries, show that Canada and the United States rem@in the only saivaâ€" tion of France and Europe. The French wheat crop will be oneâ€"fourth less than previously estimated and 78,000,000 bushels, approximately, less than the 1918 crop. The quality of the grain is below nornal, the weight being 3 per cent. less than usual., The yield per acre is slightly greater than 1913, but the total averâ€" auge is oneâ€"third less. To meet the normal demand of consumption France will have to import 80,000,000 bushels of wheat. The Itaiian harvest is also disapâ€" pointing and Italy will have to import virtually the same amount as France. England is hoping to make up the bad crops of Australia and India by the Russian negotiations and purchases in â€" Barrelled meatsâ€"Bean pork, $41; short cut or family back, $54; for same the United States. There is little hope Wholesale Grain. |back, boneless, $55; pickled rolls, $61 Torente, Ang. 31.â€"â€"Manitoba wheat to $66; mess pork, $40. â€"No. 1 Northern, $2.74; No. 2 Northâ€"| Green meatsâ€"Out of pickle, 1¢ less ern, $2.71; No.‘3 Northern, $2.67; No. than smoked. 4 Northern, $2.52; No. 5 Northern,| Dry salted meatsâ€"Long clears, in $2.42; No. 6 Northern, $2.22, in store. tons, 27 to 29¢; in cases, 27% to 29%¢; __ Man. barleyâ€"No. 3 CW, $1.31% No. 4 CW, $1.26% ; rejected, $1.11% feed, 1.11%,‘in store Fort William. American cornâ€"No. 3 yellow, $2; nominal, track, Toronto, prompt shipâ€" ment, i Ontario catsâ€"No. 3 white, 80 to 85¢. Ontario wheatâ€"No. 2 Winter, per car lot, $2.20 to $2.45, shipping points, according to freights. Peasâ€"No. 2, non#nal. a Barleyâ€"$1.35 to $1.40, according to freights outside. Buckwheatâ€"No. 2, nominal. Ryeâ€"No. 3, $1.75, nominal, accordâ€" ing to freights outside. ing to freights outside. Manitoba flourâ€"Government standâ€" ard, $14.85, Toronto. New flourâ€"$10.40 to $10.50, bulk seaboard. Millfeedâ€"Car lots, defivered, Montâ€" real freights, bags included: Bran, per ton, $52; shorts, per ton, $61; good feed flour, $3.75 to $4. Country Produceâ€"Wholesale. Egxgs, selects, 63 to 65¢; No. 1, 59 to 60c. Butter, creamery prints, 59 to 61c; choice dairy prints, 49 to 51¢; ordinary dairy prints, 45 to 47¢; bakâ€" ers‘, 35 to 40¢c; olecmargarine, best grade, 34 to 38¢. Cheese, new, large, 28%4 to 20%4c¢; twins, 29%4 to 30%¢; Stilton, old 35!4 to 36%c. _ Maple syrup, 1 gal. tin, $3.40; 5 gal. tin, per gal., $3.25; maple sugar, Ib., 27 to 30c. Churning creamâ€"Toronto creameries are paying for churning cream, 58 to 60c per pound fat, f.0.b. shippirg points, nominal. > _ â€"â€" _ . > Provisionsâ€"W holesale. Smoked meatsâ€"Rolls, 33 to 34¢; hams, med., 48 to 51¢; heavy, 41 to 43¢c; cooked hams, 65 to 68¢; backs, plain, 54 to 57c; backs, boneless, 60 to 65¢c; breakfast bacom, 49 to 59¢; cottage rolls, 89 to 41c. PaF s A despatch from Paris says:â€"Preâ€" dict.ons of experts on the French grain crop this year, based on the first results of the harvest in all parts of Ontario flourâ€"Government standâ€" ard, $12, nominal. FRENCH WHEAT CROP FAR BELOW NORMAL Will Have to | Since the close of the world war cockâ€"fighting has been resumed on a large scale in Scotland. It had almost died out during the war. Fighting cocks are being bred in lirge numbers and constantly increasing throngs attend the fights between the game birds. Some of the contests are held openly, the police conveniently turning their backs, while others are held in barns and out of the way places,. Photo shows two fine game cocks in action in a pit in Scotland. "REG‘LAR FELLER S"â€"By Gene Byrnes ve to Import 000 BusK:h. COCKâ€"FIGHTING IN SCOTLAND REVIVED Weekly Market Report ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ‘ Live Stock Markets. | Toronto, Aug. 31.â€"Choice heavy | steers, $14 to $14.50; good heavy steers, $13.50 to $13.75; butchers‘ catâ€" | tle, choice, $18 to $13.50; do, good, |‘$12 to $12.50; do, med., $10 to $11; do, com., $7.50 to $9; bulls, choice, $10 to $11; do, good, $9 to $9.50; do, rough, $6 to $8; butchers‘ cows, choice, $10.50 to $11.50; do, good, $9 to $10; do, com., $6.50 to $7.50; stockers, $9 to $11; feeders, $11 to $12.50; canners and |cutters, $4.50 to $5.50; milkers, good | to choice, $100 to $165; do, com. and med., $65 to $75; lambs, yearlings, $9 !to $10; do, spring, $14 to $16.25; lealves, good to cho‘ice, $18 to $20; | sheep, $3 to $8; hogs, fed and watered, |§$20.25; do, weighed off cars, $20.50; do, f.ob., $19.25; do, do, country lp°irzts- $IS _ s : i cse. 0. o. A despatch from London says:â€"| ‘ CANADIAN GRAIN Munitions and hydroâ€"airplanes valued o y Rao", at nearly $2,000,000, which recently| Prices Expected to be as Good were confiscated by the Entente Comâ€" as Last Year. mission in the Pintsche works on the < Spree River, were destroyed Thursday _ A despatch from London says:â€" evening by the 3,000 employes of the Canadian gra‘n is beginning to make plant, many of whom are communists,| !ts appearance on the London open says a Berlin despatch to the Londonl market for the first time after sevâ€" Times. eral years during which its sale has The Reichswehr was summoned out’ been controlled. It is not the actual but proved powerless to act. _ The) Erain itselfâ€"for that is being harvâ€" Government is sending representaâ€" e:tedâ€"but the necessary | financial tives to the scene. preliminaries to its disvposal, known Wititamerinbininninnernleien es ies trernrerreernreeerommmmennniecrmemegy 'as the buying of "forward exchange." Montreal, Aug. 31â€"Butcher steers, good, $10 to $11; med., $8.50 to $10; com., $6.50 to $8.50; butcher heifers, med., $8 to $9.25; com., $5 to $7.75; butcher cows, med., $5.50 to $8; canâ€" ners, $3 to $4; cutters, $4 to $5; butâ€" cher bulls, coms, $4.50 to $6; good veal, $13 to $14; med., $8 to $13; grass, $6.50 to $8; ewes, $5.50 to $7; lambs, good, $13; com., $8 to $12; hogs, off car weights, selects, $20.50; sows, $15 to $16.50. Montreal Markets. Montreal, Aug. 31.â€"Oats, Canadian Western, ,,No. 2, $1.18 to $1.19; Canâ€" adian Western, No. 8, $1.16 to $1.17. Flour, new standard grade, $14.85 to $15.05. Rolled oats bag 90 lbs., $5.60 to $5.75. Bran, $54.25. Shorts, $61.25. Hay, No 2, per ton, car lots, $31. Cheese, finest easterns, 24%¢. Butter, choicest creamery, 60 to 61c. Eggs, fresh, 68c. The Reichswehr was summoned out, but proved powerless to act. The Government is sending representaâ€" tives to the scene. Dry salted meatsâ€"Long clears, in tons, 27 to 29¢; in cases, 27% to 29%¢; clcar bellies, 30% to 31%¢; fat backs, 25 to 27¢ Lardâ€"Tierces, 26% to 27¢; tubs, 27%4 to 28%c;.pails, 28 to 20%4¢; prints, 29 to 30c. Shortening, tierces, 22% to 28¢ per Ib. | â€" . For rye the figures are: 1913, 56,â€" 000,000 bushels; 1919, 30,000,000 bushels; 1920, estimated, 35,000.000. GERMANS BURN ALLIED MUNITIONS $2,000,000 Worth of Confisâ€" cated Property Destroyed. of wheat from Argentine, as, due to the local ghortage its export is proâ€" hibited, though if the December crop is good the prohibtion may be canâ€" celed. c The French wheat crop figures are: 1913, a yield of 309,000,000 bushels; 1919, 109,000,000; 1920 estimate ,231,â€" 000,000 bushels. â€" Raymond, Alta â€"James S. Anderâ€" son, a farmer in this district, recently refused an offer of $150 per acre for land on which he is growing alfalfa. Calgary, Alta.â€"The city has set out 1,500 young trees along its boulevard stnips this spring, making the total number of trees planted in the thorâ€" oughfares 12,000. The city has also planted 25 acres of land to potatoes this year and an additional 10 acres to other vegetables. Calgary Gas Co. will spend another half million dollars in drilling for gas in Southern Alberta. * Sturgeon Falls, Ont.â€"The Spanish River Pulp and Paper Mills are makâ€" ing a new addition to their mills here. From 250 to 300 men will be employâ€" ed at the work al}l summer, and on completion the output of the mill in paper will be doubled. Sherbrooke, P.Q.â€"Confidence in this city as a business centre is indicated in the action of the L. R. Steel Chain Stores Company, which has purchased a property for $200,000. The building will be completely remodeled as a fourâ€" storey department store. | St. John, N.B.â€"A sawmill for the manufacture of long lumber is to be erected at Kennedy Island, Upper St. â€"_‘ vaaud i1IvIi VuUOL U VUNRUV$ The force of personulity stil @8 Sondicireindonniitgmmns superior to the power of machinery ; ‘cati of IsM:Se-iti.,inM.wfi'Opfllldmy. Mission, B.C.â€"As an indcation of for the manufacture of spoo s Never will the creature of man‘s hand tledcvdopmcntolthsnndlfufitinrgm“m‘m"‘?d j mniu enable us wholly to dispense with a is > ./ ... have commenced will ship a‘ 1 e.. We still go from dustry in the province, this. district, C2°C Co" week, An export of about eis c k oo AAceurt _mood and can ?o taken as an example. Where in 599 conds of pulpwood is expectel from' ;mmand oo "the yranny of 1915 there were 65 acres of raspbetrâ€"| this point next winter. 'thines for :h?"flowm' and the thrill of ries there are nbow 600 acres; 28zacrest TMNMNPWPMO""‘; i contact: of strawberries have increased to 600;‘ :; ;s stated, asks a guarantee up t0| "He led his sou}, his cause, his clan five years ago the jam factories made four million gallions of water "l day M; A little from the ruck of things." 50 cdses of jam from gooseberti¢s) their pulp mill at Pleasant Point. They Could a higher tribute be paid to while last year they turned out 2,000 wip nay for the first million gallons manâ€"power than these words of Rudâ€" ecases. g | at the rate of $2,500 per year and in yard Kipling in praise of Joseph â€" Raymond, Alta â€"James S. Anderâ€"‘ syeecs at the rate of one half cent per berlain ? son, a farmer in this district, recen‘tly' thousand gallons. j | Till the man comes, an army is but LONDON BIDS FOR A despatch from Toronto says:â€" It is expected that substantial effort will be made to arrange for the imâ€" portation of large quantities of Westâ€" ern Canadian coal for use in mills and plants of Ontario and Quebec firms. Already the Ontario Mining Association has investigated the feasâ€" ibility of using western coal for minâ€" ing and milling operations; and it has been found quite switable. The next step will be its importation in suffiâ€" cient quantities to ensure an adequate supply for eastern industries. John River. The high cost of American steam coal due to freights, exchange and other things is one of the factors miliâ€" tating against its continuous import for use in Ontario mills. According to Charles Gamble, manâ€" ager of the London branch of the Bank of Commerce, there is a very bnisk demand for Canadian dellars on the part of London brokers, which marks the resumption of open tradâ€" ing following adoption by the Canâ€" adian Wheat Board. As a result a steady rise in the value of the dollar in sterling may be expected. While the pound is being qusted in London toâ€"day at $4.03, exchange for futures is already as low here as $3.96. This demand for dollars comes from the London grain brokers. The Royal Commission on wheat supplies, which in past years has made its arrangements with the Canâ€" @dian Wheat Board, will now buy through the brokers here who in turn will deal with brokers in Canada. To Ship Western Canada Coal to Ontario A silent, keyless clock, which conâ€" tains only four wheels and no springs, has recently been patented. ‘ Canadian bankers here expect the Dom‘nion crop will be disposed of at prices at least as good as last year‘s when whest was quoted to the Greek Government at over three dollars. V. R. Nason and Son will operate â€" Canada From Coast | | Of the 69 per cent. of Nova Scotia‘s arew fit for cultivation and grazing, only 38 per cent. is occupied by farmâ€" ‘ers. The province has more than one i million acres of well watered pastures ‘and its commercal fruit belt covers : an area of one thousand square miles. Mrs. Lloyd George Made Dame of British Empire A despatch from Lordon says:â€" Mrs. Lloyd George has been awarded the Order of the Dame Grand Cross of the British Empire, and will now be officially d« signated as Dame Lioyd George, G.B.E. A despatch from Teheran says:â€" The Persian forces which recaptured Resht, on the Caspian Sea, from the Bolsheviki, took five hundred prisonâ€" ers and a number of machine guns, and freed the Province of Ghilan from the Bolsheviki. The amount to be spent on the roads of Nova Scotia during the next five years is greater by $4,000,000 than the total sum expended on provincial highâ€" ways, since Confederation. Statistics show that during the year 1919 there were 26,000 fur skins chipâ€" ped out of Nova Scotia, the majon‘ty being bear, skunk and raccoon. A despatch from London says:â€"In the announcement that Sir Percy Cox is going to Mesopotamia immediately to establish a native Arab Governâ€" in 1918 to sst up Arabian indepenâ€" dence under a ruler of their own choosing. Cox is going out with an open mind, and is not committed to any form of government or to any man as ruler. Persian Forces Capture Red War Material ‘Oumy Ee Te C HBar sR U ES P s es ce igs, years, and since Confederation, the provincial government has spent the sum of $57,000,000 in maintenance alone. ~ The deposits of salt recently disâ€" covered at Malagash, Cumberland county, have been estimated to conâ€" tan at least 500 million tons. Selfâ€"Government for Egypt. Lord Milner, upon whose report on the condition of Egypt, and recomâ€" mendation, Great Britain is considerâ€" ing the advisability of granting local autonomy to the land of Pharaoh. Halifax, N.S.â€"The expenditure noâ€" cessary to maintzin the various public works of Nova Scotia haseincreased by 100 per cent. during the last ten The yearly output of the Dominion Coal Co. is now 42 per cent. of the toâ€" tal coal production of the Dominion. Britain, perhaps somewhat belatedly, is now carry.ng out the promise made British to Establish Arab Gov‘t. in Mesopotamia It is believed that it is un\ikely that Fe‘sal will be chosen. |_ At a roud conference in Paris it was decided that the proper spreadâ€" | ing of tar on macadamized roads is an | effective means of preventing dust. |The method is largely used in France, About oneâ€"third of a gallon of tar is used for each square yard of surface. | The roads last longer and the cost of | maintenance is reduced. The practice of sati is as old as the Shastras, the sacred writings of the Hindus. Close on three centuries passed in India before atiempts by Akâ€" bar, the famous Mogul Emperor, reâ€" sulted in any steps effectively limitâ€" ing it. Finally, in the time of Lord William Bentinck, nearly half a cenâ€" tury ago, the right of a woman to take her life on her husband‘s funeral pyre was limited to wives of certain age. Eomm . mE Ets 3 human nature and choose wisely the subordinate factors. Sometimes the striker, caught up in the hecte hour of communicative imoulse, forgets that the business of which be was a part did not run of itself and did not automatically bring in the money that he received in his pay envelope. It was a success beâ€" cause a man higher up, a man making the hard choices, taking the knocks and facing the respons bilities, framed and followed a wise policy. Large inâ€" dustrial dealings are forever looking for a genuine directing ability, beâ€" cause great sums of invested capital A despatch from Ketmandu, indeâ€" perdent State of Nepal, India, says that after a fight lasting half a conâ€" tury a law has at last been passed there abolishing sati, or the sulcide of a widow on her husband‘s funeral pyre. Sati is now an offence under the law of Nepal, and inciting to it and abstting in it are punishable ofâ€" fences. Later this law was amended and sati was forbidden where a wife was about to become a mother or in the event she had minor children. Thus the wall of ancient custom and reâ€" ligious usage was broken down, untii at last the right of a wife to take her own life at the death of ber husband is denied. The present Prime Minister, Mahaâ€" raja Chandra Shum Shere Jung, is responsible for the new law. During his term of office he has put a ban on the use of opium in Nepal and is conâ€" ducting a strong campaign against the use of intoxicating drinks. are imperiled by executive decisons. The cheap man in a place he is inâ€" competent to fill may be disastrously expensive, for his plan is not feasible and the money that he spends on the scheme is money wasted. In Canada oil is eraployed to a conâ€" siderable extent to prevent dust and preserve the surface of roads. The oil is spread from carts during the making of the road to the amount of one or two gallons a square yard. pm'p;)su. â€"T{a_e coâ€"ordinating hand is needed. There must be some one who sees from top to bottom and from end that a man should be heard for hs much speaking. His silent presence may be most effectual. His written word may reach a vast audience of readers, invisible, afar. But the power of the man is felt in all his whom we can place our trust, for he is fearless and unselfish, as he is Till-t.l;:-l;n comes, an army is but a headless horde; a nation is a mere assembly of «tates or clans or facâ€" wlr;ve;'y;rulit of life or work of human beings people count and perâ€" sonality prevails. It is not necessary imagine, accept The French road engineers recomâ€" mend the planting of trees along roadsides as a means of proventing dust. In France all roads not less than thirtyâ€"three feet wide are reâ€" quired to have a single line of trees on each side, at distances apar; vary» ing from sixteen to thirtytwo feet, Taber Rye Pro'dn; him an example. As an instance of the r;;i:l manner inwhiehdul”OuopinAlberhu being handled, the first car of rye arrived in Calgery Wednesday mornâ€" ing from Taber. According to George Hill, Dominion Government inspector, sample and weighs 62% pounds to the bushel. It is said that the Taber rye would run about thirty bushels to The Science of Roads. persondl ©DIIIARIE« "He led his sow), his cause, his clan A little from the ruck of. things." Could a higher tribute be paid to anâ€"power than these words of Rudâ€" _ . LCC Cup > s sls Sati is Abolished by State Don‘t criticize your neighbor; The Presence of a Man. despatch fl'@ _Q.l“t)‘ says:â€" n his one who can plan and 30 Bush. Per Acre in e l â€" stant autoâ€"su; gest m(mm a fals« j n 18 t A "Parad the an: % M Jean Finot has wri! hm eciantific sut f study, says a 1 geores of cases ” lived for mo completed a gtone phir *1 met the ©s€ *J anpleted a trout: embraces the r« fA1€ J« Th c "Wh «e Perfocts h scientific t1 EU 7° On :y heig pert the 1 read aws | the bee upon it num sh r conditic not great ; toâ€"day. y 70 year t1 Long Life. gity, claiims 10 U Pominion which §te ownâ€"Colen: m“. ‘.\'iawl" Holmes, V~C. 6 Metal H nc h SpTif t 100 ct

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