West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 23 Jun 1921, p. 3

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HREE INTERESTING NATURE STORIES Paris Museum of pointed out that rations in repose change r Cast! : _or thirty & ‘cquire a rate 350 a minute. ration favore heat by evapâ€" iry vesicles. ssed, ut of * the little or not nary taking anspiration, : the dog to and persistâ€" : family, on twoâ€" the O ‘ess this n tigers, lor their ver long ises pulâ€" ~~ high . constt ipply of iluable mM ath. and ‘wo l in ped ind the the ery ire h @ in water seees wto newnet, _ / _ DROWNING GREAT LAKES DIVER The discovery is the result of years i:;uatl of experimeiing with blood elements| cess A despatch from Paris says:â€"The, ond microbes in order io make posâ€" discovery of a serum rendering eattle' sible the firation of th> bacillus of immune to foot and mouth disease has| frot and mouth disease, which is so been made by Professors Vallee and' infinitesimal, that it could not be reâ€" Carre, of the Alfortville Agricultural| tained in the most minute â€" fiiters. Research LabOdratory. This anounce-[ Once this was accomplished, it wonld ment was nrade on Thursday to the,be possible to cultivate the germ. Agricultural Commission of the Senâ€"| Fixation now has been accomplished, ate by Senator Baaumont. !and the serum has been made in small The discovery is the result of yearsrquantities through a phagocytic proâ€" s# mmmarthntivens . ambele WWe cpilc 2p9 It has been the custom for the Govâ€" ernorâ€"Ceneral to be installed at his port of debarkation. Hon. Arthur Meighen has arrived in London to attend the conference of the Prime Ministers of the Empire. us Euks I s m ues Sss P It is presumed that the installation of Lord Byng as Governorâ€"General of Canada will take place at Quebec, inâ€" asmuch as it is anticipated that he will arrive in Canada while navigaâ€" tion on the St. Lawrence River is still open. The Depgrtment of the Secreâ€" tary of State, however, has not yet ascertained the exact date of his comâ€" A machine gun was brought into acâ€" tion and Westmoreland â€" street and Sackville street were swept with bulâ€" lets. Searchlights lit up the city. Parâ€" ticular attention being paid to the roofs of houses and offices. Installation of Lord Byng Probably at Quebec FRENCH SCIENTISTS CONQUER _ FOOT AND MOUTH DISEASE There are various rumors as to the cause of the outbursts, which took place about 11 o‘clock. Officially, the oly reason assigned is that a number: of civilians fired on sentries outside the ruins of the Customs House, but the most intense fire occurred in the centre of the city. About midnight,! it is reported, a party of the Crown forces were sniped as they crossed| O‘Connell bridge. b; of buildings and f sitions. Severe engagements between Crown forces and Sinn Feiners ocâ€" curred in Dublin on Wednesday night and carly ThursGay morning, the firâ€" ing being the heaviest which has been heard in the city since the rebellion five years ago. General military head-‘ quarters declines to issue a report. _ _ Five cavairy regiments invested Carrickmacroes, Monaghan. carly on Thursday morning and commandeered several private houses. They made several arrests, including a despatch earrier of the "Irish Republican Army." _ Similar raids occurred at Wexford and Athlone. A despatch from Dublin says :â€" The Government forces have been making a swecping roumd up of cerâ€" tain arcas in the last few days, with the apparent idea of making large captures and sifting them for men who are "wanted." _ The operations have been in progress in Monaghan county all this week. Hurdreds of arrests were made, but on Tuesday all were released with the exception of about a dozen persons. i SWEEPING ROUNDUP _ BY CROWN FORCES Sinn Fein C000 S en mt To ENUvdet Sul as the helmet worked still looser. Damon sigralled frantically to his matss on the lighter above to be hauled up, but in some way, it is said his jerks at the lifeline were not frey, a diver in the empl Great Lakes Towing & Wre on Thursday, when the gre helmet he wore as part of dress became loosened in : while he was down 25 feet o tom of Georgian Bay, near I rent, Ont. Little by little the water trickle inside Sm Mbocats =__! * _ A cGespatch from Sault Ste. Marie says:â€"Death in one of its most terâ€" rifying forms came to Damon S. Godâ€" es A on e â€" despatch from _Ottawa says L nB ue tnet Bs draict 20220 C c 2 inside the diver‘s rubber suit hglmet worked still looser. r in the employ of the Towing & Wrecking Co., Gunmen Arrested ut alifites ind in ds i â€" This ie 2+ when the great copper as part of his diving loosened in some way by men on the roofs from concealed poâ€" 25 feet on the l;(;t‘- y, near Little Curâ€" began to I A forest fire naturally proceeds in the general direction of the wind, burning an eliptical shaped area with head, flanks and tail The most efâ€" fectual places to attack are at the head and flanks. If one can have only a single tool to fight the forest flames he should choose the shovel. With this he can cut the edge of the surface fire and throw it back. He can also throw dirt on burning embers to reâ€" duce the temperature and to exclude oxygen. The plow is likewise a good tool, where it can be used, to limit the area of the fire by plowing a narâ€" row strip across the path of the} flames. Where there is danger from these fires the community should be organized to get out in force upon‘ a moment‘s notice. |_ _ Over a considerable portion of the 1 prov.nce, particularly in the northerr | districts, forest fires continue to be \l'a problem during periods of drought‘ Jand while public agzencies me beingi | developed â€"forâ€" effectually â€" meetiag situations as they arise, the individâ€" | ual is not losing his interest in pracâ€" Itical methods of combatting flames : in wooded areas. In this week‘s mail) | came some very practical suggestionsl! !from a man who has had wide exâ€" | perience in protecting forests againstz | damage by burning, and with the apâ€"| ‘proach of that season of the year| when dry spells are common, it would | _seem to be appropriate to give pubâ€"| licity to the suggestions. _ The best time to attack a forest fire, he states, is at the break of dawn. At that time a halfâ€"dozen men will accomplish more than fifty men can expect to do at two o‘clock in the afternoon. From seventyâ€"five to nineâ€" ty per cent. of the perimeter of a surface fire actually goes out withcut any human assistance whatever be-‘ fore sunrise, but if nothing is done while the flames are at low ebb, they! will, by the middle of the forenoon,| have abain started sufficiently to pre-l sent an unbroken front. | _A despatch from Lethbridge | says:â€"Amid a downpour of rain the first sod in the Lethbridge northern irrigation project was | turened on Thursday, with Lieuâ€" | tenantâ€"Governor Brett and Preâ€" ‘mier Stewart officiating, and other members of the Governâ€" ment and representatives of ‘Federal and Provincial Parliaâ€" ‘ments in attendance. Active work has commenced on the big project, and the majority of the earthwork will be completed this season. Britain will give Mesopotamia Arab Downpour May be Godfrey had been in the employ of the Great Lakes Company for 15 years, and was consideted one of the most expert deepâ€"water divers on the Great Lakes. He was 55 years old an‘ ‘ived at the Canadian Soo. His wife, three daughters and four sons survive. ‘ Finally, when no; further signals were received the, hclyers became alarmc1 and hau‘e! th> diver up. When the helmey was unscseweil Godfrey‘s head toppled over to on> side. He had béen dead for several minutes, 4 properly understood owing to the lines becoming tangled, and the men at the air pump continued to send down fresh air. $ Fighting Forest Fires. Favorable Omen Heâ€"*"Well, you still do your best to make things hot for me." Sheâ€""Before you married me you used to say that I was the sunshine of your life." The University of Toronto is struggling to do an immense work on a relatively meagre income. The acâ€" ceptance by the Provincial Governâ€" ment of the University Commission‘s Report would solve the problem. °_ "A university supported by the | state for all its people, for all its sons |and daughters with their tastes and |aptitudes as varied as mankind, can | place no beunds upon the lines of its |endeavor, elso the state is the irreâ€" ‘pavablc loser." (From the inaugural address of Charles Richard Van Hise, ;Iate presicent of the University of | Wisconsin.) ' | _ Service such as that indicated in | this quotation is being attempted by \the Provincial University of Ontario, | but this service is greatly curtailed |by the lack of funds. The University { of Toronto must "get along" on an annual income on which a United | States university of equal size would starve. So cramped are the accomâ€" modations of the Provincial Univerâ€" sity that the President‘s home has | been expropriated and is being "made | over" into classrooms. Of all the | | dreary and uninspiring envimnmen.t.si' imaginable for purposes of teaching ithat of an old house made to serve as. a school is the worst! Yet the Uniâ€"| versity of Toronto uses six old housesf for classroom accommodation! | Province? As well ask a father how much money his child is worth to him. On June 10th approximately rrin.e: hundred graduates received their de-,‘ grees from the Provincial University.| Computed in dollars, what are these| highlyâ€"trained leaders worth to the! The War Minister will be unable, therefore, to call more than 100,000 to the colors annually as was originâ€" ally planned. k Staff Officers and Subâ€"Officers Included in Total Permitted to Receive Training. A despatch from Berlin says:â€"The Reichstag on Thursday passed a new law fixing definitely the exact number _of officers and men which the Minisâ€" try of War will be permitted to hold under arms. The law okoys orders given by the interâ€"Allied Council Comâ€" mission. The total number of Gerâ€" many‘s military forces is not to exâ€" ceed 100,000, including staff officers and subâ€"efficers, the numbor of which is not to exceed four thousand. The| law further provides that the numberl of officers to be discharged anmually | shall not be more than five per cent.' of the total number of officers andl men. 100,000 LIMIT OF GERMANY‘S ARMY THE WORK OF THE SINN FEIN The picture shows the Dublin Customs House burning just as the fire fighters arrived. Sinn Fein forces seized the building, poured petrol on the papers and floors and then fired it. University Finances. She Did Her Part. REGLAR FELLERSâ€"By Gene Byrnes | These four men constitute a board | representing the ‘Treasury Departâ€" { ment and the Mint, and it is the‘r task to check up and calculate the \ amount of gold now heyl by the | United States Assay Office, with cerâ€" | tificates held there, and to certify the ,ramounts as correct to the last penny. o Ed ’ Just how much gold the members of the board will be obliged to count will not be made public by the Assay Office officials. In«fact no figures ever have been given out as to the amount of gold the vaults hold. It is known, however, that the amount is upwards of $10,000,000,000, and probably close to $1,250,000,000. â€" It is the largest amount of gold ever concentrated in one spot. | lreasury. |_ A despatch from New York says:â€" | The task of counting, piece by piece and note by note, the largest amount |of gold and gold certificates ever | brought together in one spot in the l~hi3tory of the world has been underâ€" | taken by four of the fastest counters in the employ of the Government. Will Take Four Men a Month to Count Money in U.S. BIGGEST GOLD PILE IN THE WORLD Mrs. W. E. Sanford w President of the National Council of Women, now in session in Calgary. London, June 16.â€"Murders by rebels in Ireland since July, 1920, have totalled 568, Sir Hamar Greenwood, Chief Secretary for Ireland, stated in the House of Commons on Thursday. The number of Crown forces convictâ€" ed for murder in the same period, he added, was: The miliâ€" tary, none ; the Royal Irish Conâ€" stabulary, one; and the police auxiliaries, one; the latter being found to be insane. J Past Year‘s Murders C Total 568â€" Honeyâ€"Â¥0â€"30â€"\b.. tins, 19 to 20c per lb.; 5â€"2%â€"b. tins, 21 to 22¢ per Ib. Ontario comb honer at $7 per 15â€" section case. Beansâ€"Can. â€" h'and;pic'liéd, bushel, $2.85 to $3; primes, $2.40 to $2.50. _ Maple productsâ€"Syrup, per imp. gal., $2.50; per 5 imp. gals., $2.35. Maple sugar, lb.. 19 to 22c. Cheeseâ€"New, large, 17% to 18%¢; twins, 18 to 19c; triplets, 18% to 19%4e¢; old, large, 33 to 34c; do, twins, 33% to 34%¢; triplets, 34% to 35¢; New Stilton, 20 to 21c. Butterâ€"Fresh dairy, choice, 25 to 26¢c; creamery, prints, fresh, No. 1, 30 to 32¢c; cooking, 22 to 2§c. Margarineâ€"22 to 24c. Eggsâ€"No. 1, 36 to 37¢; selects, 37 to 38¢; cartons, 40 to 42c. \ Millfeed â€" Delivered. Montreal freight, bags included: Bran, per ton, $25 to $27; shorts, per ton, $25 to t8;39; good feed flour, $1.70 to $2 per g. Hayâ€"No. 1, per ton, $20 to $22; straw, car lots, per ton, $12. Manitoba oatsâ€"No. 2 CW, 46%c; ’No. 8 CW, 41%c¢; extra No. 1 feed. 41%c; No. 1 feed, 39%e¢; No. 2 feed, ‘39%& _ Manitoba barleyâ€"No. 3 CW, 18%¢; No. 4 CW, 75%¢; rejected, 68%c. All the above in store Fort Williar. i 4:merican cornâ€"No. 2 yellow, 42 to Ontario wheatâ€"No. 2 Winter, $1.50 to $1.60, nominal, per car lot; No. 2 Spring, $1.40 to $1.45, nominal; No. 2 Goose whest, nominal, shipping points, according to freight. | Peasâ€"No. 2, nominal. \ Barleyâ€"Malting, 65 to 70¢, accordâ€" ing to freights outside. | Manitoba flourâ€"First pat., $10.50; second pat., $10, Toronto. j Manitoba oatsâ€"No No. 3 CW, 41%c; ex 41%¢; No. 1 feed, 39 394 c. Toronto. Manitoba wheatâ€"No. 1 Northern, $1.85%; No. 2 Northern. $1.84%; No. 8 Norti:ern, $1.76%; No. 4 wheat, $1.69%. ’ The sources from which England’ A despatch : | received this butter show an importâ€"| diers of the c‘ | ant change. The Antipodean colonies‘ mobilized earl; which increased their butter prod.uc-;the Rhine, in tion during the war are eager to beâ€"| commenced ret coms the most important source of i Thursday. JEngIani‘s future permanent suplply.} Two thousan | Argentina is also looking to the Eng-'i to the city bar | lish market as an outlet for her surâ€"| be demobilized plus production, having delivered 22,~! turned to thei 697,584 pounds of butter in England] The 1919 clas during the first three months of 1921,} being replaced compared with but 4,245,584 pounds diers of the cl: during the same period in 1912. Canâ€"| are in training. ada, while not fulfilling the hopes of mosess the English butter trade, is now pm-' Plenty c moting the butter industry, confident "Imagination that the United Kingdom will afford: isa‘t it?" an unlimited market in the future. â€"| "Yes, 1 supj Denmark, always the chiof sourcef made you think of England‘s imports, is meeting the| "Oh, I‘ve just new competition offered by New Zeaâ€" sood catalogue." ’ England during recent months has been importing butter in quantities unparalleled since 1913 and scarcely paralleled since them, having received 112,729,680 pounds from January 1 to April 1, a total almost twice as great as that received during the corâ€" responding period of 1920. The amâ€" ount of butter imported in England during the corresponding period of 1913 totaled 114,001,440 pounds. Anâ€" ticipation of an advance in price fol-: lowing decontrol may have been reâ€" sponsible for the unusual volume of 1 recent imports, Ontario flourâ€"$7:©0; bulk, sea \ ONTARIO WLLBEDRY _ l AFTER THE EICHTEENTH OF JuLYy E AETC DE DOCC ) 200 AHAV is, on July 18, the sections of the Canâ€"| force it ada Temperance Act prohibiting imâ€"!it is 3 portation of intoxicating beverageos allow t into the province shall become op€râ€"| mits sa ative. That is to say, on and afte" hotels : July 18, importation of such liquors, | uous lik except for medicine, industrial and| dors to sacramental purposes, into Ontario take of Act and to provide for two plebisciics elsewhere _ was published in Sâ€"tâ€" urday‘s number of the Canada Gazette. The proclamation affetâ€" ing Ontario provides that thirty days from its publication, â€" that A despatch from Ottawa says:â€" Proclamations to give effect to ths result of the plebiscite held in Onâ€" tario under the Canada Temperonse Canrada Gazette to Cfima'miprochmntion Giving Effect to Result of t'I:e Ple.l_icciu:-Act Becoms Opcrative Thirty England Imports Much Butter. Weekly Market Report Days From Date of Fublication. Cheese, finest easterns, 14% to 14%c. _ Butter, choicest creamery, , 28% to 20%4c. Egps, fresh, 35 to 86c. Potatoes, per bag, car lots, 50c. |__Good veal, $7 to $7.50; med., $5 to | $7;sfllgves, $3 u‘)lfi.i; la‘nl\gs,’zood, $12.50 | to ; com., to ; hogszoff car | weights, selects, $12.50; heavies, $9.50 |bo $10.50; sows, $8.50, com., $2 to ‘s"{'@‘;’ z;;;"es"’" gZZ;': "&;r’ The rinfan;ogs Teheka is to ; choice, $10 to 512; hog's, fed ‘M‘Or. ra(her. it is to become the watered. $11 to $12; do, weighed off "Black Hundreds" and loses n cars, $11.25 to $12.25; do, f.0.b., $10.25 its old power, It is no longe to $11.25; do, country points, $10 to; provocateur, sheriff, prosecut $11. 'tomey, judge and executione: Montreal, has been., Oats, Can. West., No. 2, 60 to 61¢;! Altogether the reports have go, _ No. Ril 52 to t26c § Flour."%{:%n.‘ Lenine is making a long s<ar pring wheat pats. rsts 50. | pulli dow thi p Rolled oats, bag 90 The., $3.05. Bran, been building for more in .o ‘27.25- S»horta, ‘29.25. HI)’, No. 2, years the edif he l: R i _” per _ton, car lots, $21 to $22, J’ o ie he has «iven Cheese, finest easterns 14% to.a“ his life. Somethinz more i 14%ec. â€" Butter, choicest _ to his scrap heap every fow d 14%c. _ Butter, choicest creamery,| t* !_Choice heavy steers, $8.50 to $9.50; ‘good heavy steers, $8 to $8.50; butâ€" chers‘ cattle, choice $8 to $9; do, good, $7.50 to $8; do, med., $7 to , $7.50; do, com., $6.50 to $7; butchers‘ 'cows, choice, $6.50 to $7; do, good, $6 to $6.50; do, com., $5 to $6; butâ€" ’chers-’ bulls good, $6 to $7; do, com., $4 to $6; feeders, best, $7.50 to $8; do, 900 lbe, $7 to $7.50; do, 800 Ths., $5.75 to $6.75; do, com., $5 to $6; canners and cutters, $1.50 to $4; milkâ€" ers, good to choice, $50 to $85; do, com. and med.. $30 to $50; choice springers, $40 to $60; lambs, yearâ€" lings, $9 to $10; do, spring, $13 to: $14; sheep, choice, $5.50 to $6; do, | com., $2 to $4.50; calves, good to choice, $10 to $12; hogs, fed and watered. $11 to $12; do, weighed off. cars, $11.25 to $12.25; do, £.0.b., $10.25 ;o $11.25; do, country points, $10 to| 11. I | _ Lardâ€"Pure tierces, 12% to 18¢; | tubs, 13 to 18%c; pails, 13% to 13%ec; | prints, 14 to 14%e; Shortening tierces, 11 to 11%¢; tubs, 11% to 12¢; pails, [12 to 12%c; prints, 14 to 14 %c. | _ *"Yes, I suppose it is, but what 'made you think of that now?" l "Oh, I‘ve just been reading the new Cured meatsâ€"Long clear bacon, 17 to 182; clear bellies, 15 to 16c. Smoked mcoatsâ€"Hams, med., 36 to 88¢; heavy, 80 to 81¢c; cooked, 48 to 52¢; ro!":, 27 to 28¢; cottage rolls, 28 to 29¢; breakfast bacon, 33 to 38¢; special brani breakfast bacon, 45 to 47¢; boneless, 41 to 46c. The 1919 class troops gradually are being replaced on the Rhinc by solâ€" diers of the class of 1921, who now are in training. Two thousand of them went direct to the city barracks, where they will be demobilized in a few days and reâ€" turned to their homes. A despatch from Paris says:â€"Solâ€" diers of the class of 1919, who were mobilized early in May for duty on the Rhine, in the Duesseldorf area, commenced returning to Paris on Thursday. tha‘ country during the corresponding period of 1913. Butter prices are declining graduâ€" ally in Eng‘land. The large governâ€" mont <trot* remaining unsold on March 31, when decontrol took place, exerted a depressing influence unpon the English butter market. ‘ 1919 Class Troops Replaced by 1921 Class land, Australia, Argentina and Canâ€" ada by accepting lower prices. _ In spite of that fact, imports from Denâ€" mark during the first three months of 1921 show a decrease of 48.2 per cent. compared with imports from dors to residents of the prO\;irr-nvrei take effect. c.ectorai officer, on the question "wlzc';hcr or. not importation of liquorsi into that province should be prohibitâ€"| ‘ed. _ A third proclamation provides , for a vots in Quebec City on the quesâ€" tion whether or not the Canada Temâ€"| perance Act should continue o.peutivef in that city. The Act has been in force in Quebec for several years, and | it is now proposed to repeal it and* allow the provincial law, which perâ€"‘ mits sale of beer and wine in license:l} hotels and provides for sale of spirit-i vous liquor through Government venâ€"| Plenty of Scope for It. "Imagination is a wonderful thing picture. Lenine dominated the recent Communist Congress much as the #oung _ Napoleon & dominated the "French Assembly after his "whiff of [ and just before the Eighteenth Therâ€" jmidor. i _ It appears that the "strong man of Russia" is climbing to the top. What he wil mean to Russia and to Eurâ€" ope is a riddle that waits upon toâ€" , to I There are hints that Lenins and Trotzky are fighting a quiet and deadâ€" ’ly battle for control, that there must be a break and that bo!sheviem will split into two or more factions. There is little evidencg of this. Lenine emâ€" erges more and more as the stronger man of the Duumvirs, as the future dictator of another and still different Russia that may be even more danâ€" gerous to the world than the Russia of the Soviets. Power seems to be passing more and more into the hands of Ienine. Trotzky apmears less and less in the Just what is happening is and doubtful; but there kas been kind of change going on in M for three months. It it impossi know how much of it is ESoviet paganda and how much of it genuine change of front. | Lenine, or it may > his h. | propaganda, is working w‘t | these summer days. Ho has | the factory system, given u» : of making good Commur â€"*s the peasants, restored ccina authorized trade and profi{ within the last month. Moscow dispatches now that the good Bolshevist wi!l fare hereafter when ho mildos, will} buy a stamp when he w mail a lettor and the de pori private moneys in State Lan} be restored. True, these a operative State banks" @and ma Lenine‘s ends in ways that do : appear; but banks are a part "capitalist system" which Lon fought all his life. â€"| _ Ore suggestion is that the present e‘ canal be decpened and widened antil n | it becomes a seaâ€"level canal. That was 1/ the original recommendation of a d+m¢'on‘ty of the commission of enginâ€" â€"|eers that examined the problem in 1, 1906. It would mean dee;cning the â€" excavation something like 100 feet, .]an:l widening the channel to several )| times its present width. It would cost a groat deal of moneyâ€"as much, no | doulst, as it cost to build the canal .| as it stands; probably more. When it | was completed it might offer a canal |a third of a mile wi‘s and would be â€" capable of handlivg muany times the ! busine=s that the prosent canal can | accommodate. | _ Another srpgcction is to build a | second lock cansl across the i~*}mus. | It would naturaly be not f2; from | the Panama Canal, but :t wou‘l be, if fpclli.ble, so situsted as to avoid the “slip'ping', crumbling, basaltic rock of | which the Culebra hills are comsosed. IOne or another of the neighboring rivers would probably be used as the I('t.uur's«e of the new canal and would be \dredged and darimed as the Rio i Ohourines aitine ouk Khowmnmns agua w..l be chos emargement of the CAT on Lake Nicaragua. The rive;s San Juan, which flows from Lake Nicarâ€" agua to the Atlantic. could easily be canalized, and the orly serious and costly excavation wou‘ld be beiween the lakes ard the Pacifc at San Juan del Sur The chbjections of route are the preva quakes in that par; o the expense of keey canal in repair Bui son to doubt that th« ticable, and by the t:. Unitec States acquirs to vse if for building it comes to desidia> b A New Canal? Although the Panama Canal has been in operation only seven years, engineers are almrcsdy talking about enlarging i+ or diryging a second canal parallel with it From an economic point of view the caral has been more successful than anyone anticipated. The time when it wi‘l be inadequate to the commercial needs of the world is already reasonably near; some authorities think it is only fifteen years away. The value of the great wa‘erway as a convenience to the naval defence of the United States is beginning to be impaired by the size of the Republic‘s newest battleships, which could pass through it with difâ€" ficulty, if at all. it n Lenine‘s Scrap Heap. " had swept the boulevards ay be th etions of the Nicaqagua the prevalence of earthâ€" rl of the world and keeping so long a But there is no reaâ€" S¢ ° me IL223, TBOY ho whon he wants to the deporiting of State banks is to _ thess are "coâ€" s" and may serve s that do not now ire a part of that which Leninc has the r wes tho i~‘Pmus, e not f2; from t it would be, if &s to avoid the nt offer a canal ‘e and would be many times the cseont canal can drean s muc nger t euting ) 0o a 12 t} PÂ¥ nr h of ) be OY to ht it p« #4

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