West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 25 May 1922, p. 3

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enter Comment. on lulcmutiunl minding. AGE USED IN '. AIR. WAVES a)”. " and!” u F he can!“ ' tied um. 08km or l. 0"“. and in. adult and”: may do 'lon , nab mako Mt Lb, what by '7" "I hat at erq ut " ' )1. in The modern spark plug is so well made and gins In blah trouble that "any owners are poutd when the engine begins to miss. Often they do not recognize the trcubU " missing, and even when they do they do not know how to go about finding R. If the engine u provided with pet cocks the misusing cybinier may be 1oeated by opening the cock. one at a time and noting that cylinder is not fhintt. Flame may be observed at an cock: except " the one that is missing. It is likely that if 1 new spark Nutt is placed in the cylinder the musing mill be cured. One cf the best lubricants and pre- "evativer, for the have: of automo- br.'o springs " fhrke white and hsbricating cil mixed to a consisumy Inf 1 pane ant applied with A paint 14-min. Thin prevents the accumula- tim, of rum. and contributes to the " "Y pir'Iug‘ qualities of the part. 1mm T' " tuo iuiumrt'.t is about the same him" as a full-strc, and h formed try) mtdir; a dnt of bismuth on to the end I f n tiro p'atinum wire. The joint In p.'ar" I irvide a vacuum tube con- taining: a thtorite window, and connec- ted by :a'mrsL invisible wires to a tralvanrmtrter consisting of a fine coil " vim and a tiny swinging mirror. The who Is then Mama maid. a haw asironumical telescope, which is on so that the ray: of the star will fall upon the icirrt. Became of the dif- ion-m prcpvrties of the two metals- biemurh and pratinom--atn electric current is generated. The current fhrws through to the galvanometer, Bra' the mirror is moved wording to the amount of heat that has played upon the joint. . To maintain as Trerfeet a vacuum Is possible. the tube is surrounded with calcium. which absorbs the air, Ptttom'te window. no need been“ ftrwrite is always tr.nsttarerrt; some my; cannot penetrate ulna. It in history. 195c the princigal :1 Thu town “a? Tends when sk lot-mine. Ho tt rowing“ b95391 known as Perm! "no", ’vu \vu... ....-., -- i- {actually than by eatlratI him a Ger- mnn. Yet hock at the word "Fraree" primed large across the map of that may, and comm" its origin. Is it not dtrircd from the Franks, a who r-or, rather. a confederacy ot yum-Ty German tribes who descended from the Hartz,Moantains and con- noortyl France in the sixth century, (Eris. their king. making Paris his alpha}? Irkfatrl was wighully Hibernia, a A; Ht: an in: M. vaeta'.'n Ccok was the fret white man to Tani in New zealand. Has it ever occurred to you Ito wonder why he, " Englishman. should Wave given to the m terri- LGamrtrettrtet TtsofaatiBthrst qtqrtairs o" H ttrth'mq to (be l " pm. minim ted h: um" lt" you wished to annoy a woman man. you could hardly do 99 more at there Measuring the Star's Heat. When Wheels Wlblle. Wa'rr'c'.r whack, besides wearing mints an! ctherwim racking the whine, have an equally 6estruetive fut on tire treads. A slight wabblo (My one degree actually drags the re vV'ewi.set 920 feet in each thou- m! miles. This tagging- increasee rd miles. h the ser tyt two I jrawr Locating Ignition Trouble. at of Aunt Brake Adjustment Lthrieant for Springs. m it d to be derived from a a word meaning "furthest ." It gets to prove that; he days cf King Solomon, r. This raping Wm Karim-mess of the trouble. ndition is easily corrected mot only tire-, but the car "ve strain. th D hed to annoy a French- VI It ar 1d most sensitive in world has been con tween t es, th In tly, New] for men 'cr- " by the “an, it W History in the Atlas m 19y should not , for on may right with one ard will bind ryinz its full t.'ghttning up l candle M the astern nok-e hard $1M naming of the islands. This had 5 been done long before by the Dutch- ?man. Tasman, who, after discovering (Tasmania, which he called Van Die, ', men's Lard, sailed on to New Zealand, (which he named but upon which he ldxd no: land. _ massive Oiling. Excessive hmning; cf 031 in cyiinders my be rome:Nel by vying a different grade of c".!, mcbairly a heavier mantle, or, if neon-wary, by ramming pitt:snn and rings ar.d c’eanlng away the car- bon that has unloubteliy accumphtd on them. Sometimes the trouble lien in the use of too much tr'.1 in the ersevk use, or tin engines that have had many thousands of miles of travel. Worn eytioders, pistons and rings mum was this sucking of oil into the combustion chambers. To weed is human; to get caught a fine. Health Rules for Motoring. The following precautions should be observed in all garages: First-Always open the garage door bcfcm starting the engine. Becor.r--Do not allow the engine to run for any length of time in a closed garage. Trr3-Do net work near the ex- haust of a running automobile engine. Fourth-Special precautions as to ventilation are necessary when in g; rage pits. Fifth-When the exhaust is used tor heating a elosed car, the system must be free from leaks. Person' overcome by exhaust gases from auto- mobiles and gascline engines should be removed to fresh air and artifieiat respiration performed tmtil a physi- el-itll arrives». Sum motors run sweet. Home u where the at ia. A soft tire torneth 6NttSS cash. While there's gas there's hope. F0023 pass on hills and m. A wise driver maketh a glad auto. It is better to be slow than sorry. Declines make the wheels Co faster. Dry springs squeak louder than "birds." come appearance ge -' Where there's a nail there's a. Pune- turn. Spin and the worker/ms with you; stall and you stall alone. Twilight occurs only in countries that are tituatcd at some distance from the Equator. In India darkness falla quite suddenly-as soon as the sun dips below the. horizon. The reason is that in Utitutes like our own the air is charged with tiny particles of duet and moisture, which one can see in the mom: of a sunbeam. When the am has set its rays no longer fall upon the surface of the land, but continue for some time to strike the masses of particles Boating high in the air. A body's an old as its paint; motor's as ohl as it pulls. for Each " these acts as a minute re- flettor, receiving sunlight and sending it (Pow nwarda. As the sun sinks far- ther and farther below the horizon its rays strike the particles higher up in the air, and the light, having a greater thickness of atmosphere to penetrate, becomes ttradually dimmer. The name Newfoundland speaks for itseu. This. the cldest of British Col.. onks. in the first piece ot the New World cf which Errglisshmen took pos- $03510“. Thaw are several parts of the Brit, nh Empire of which the names com- rremurate the dates af their discov- ery. Trinidad was so named by Col- umbus be causo he first sighted it upon Trinity Sunday, in 1496. Natal is no called because it was on Christmas Day, in 1497, that the Portuguese ravigator. Vasco da Gama, discovered it; an I so its name commemorates the Feast cf the Nativity. St. Helena, again, was di9eovered-a1so by a '., 011231956 'stsiy.e--ort St. Helen's Day, in the itur 1502. San Salvador, one ot the Bahamas. bears in its name everlasting testi- mony to the single-hearted purpose of that great navigator, Christoyhcr Columbus. tray after day he had managed to keep his territled, almost. mutinous crew in order, until at Ian they forced him to punk: that if no land were may wild}! the putt At sunrise the process is reversed, the first faint light coming to us from motes floating many miles above the earth. twenty-four hours he would turn back. That was on October 11th, 1492. That very m land was sighted, and Col- umbus. in his deep gratitude, named the - utter the Saviour. As the wheel is bent so the car will Fer an hour after the sun has set, is still light enough in this country r m to me quite well; and in the " morning. the twilight begins to me along before the sun makes its Twilight Caused by Dust! Modern Motor Mottoes. _ The once potent but now humble monarch saw before him a man taller, older and more fut-rowed than himelf. This man alto had a white beard and a brow creased with wrinkles. But he was weighted down not with sins but with virtues. This was manr fert in his quiet movements, his low and even voice, his clear eyes Mid his gentle assurance of manner. By Helene Fiend King Myrrhus was weighted down with years and crimes. He was weary of his burdens. He wished to make confession and die, and thereafter to enter into the peace of the gods. There King MyrAus found the hen mit'g cabin. He knocked at the door. One morning he quitted his palace, a staff in his hand. He directed his step: toward a. forest in whose depths lived a wise man. ganetified by silence, abstinence, poverty and meditation. At the end of the afternoon a vaga- bond, who smelt of the bark of the trees and of the damp grasses, pointed out to him the way to a clearing. Some forest animals lay at his feet. A carlk in a saucer sent forth a few feeble rays of light. A "I stole a box of jewels which my man entruoied to me. It represented the ransom of her husband and the fortune of her son. But I repent." The hermit dropped another atone into Myrrhas' hand. It tho changed into a leaf. A hare ate it. Myrrhua wiped the sweat from his brow. and in your soul mu your pa:- rieide." Myrrhus, almost in s faint, took the stone, and suddemly he felt in his hand a dead leaf, which blew out through the cabin door. "I have tortured my dogs, my horses and my slaves. But 1 repent." "Weteome, siranger!" the sage said to Myrrhus. "Here are bread, water and fruit. If you wish to sleep there is a bundle of dry moan Nr you. You will dream of your youth and of the braokaide where you were born"---. "I poisoned mi father in order to succeed trim." And when he had made this terrible confession Myrrhus fell at the uge's feet. and bowed his head in the dint. "If you repent," said his host, "and your crime is forgiven, this heavy Mono will turn in your hand to a frail, dry leaf. Take this stone, Myrrh”, The king smiled sadly. Still knee- ling at the wise man’s feet he said: He stretched out his hand towamd the mysterious sage and the slurp stone, smooth and glittering as a knife blade, which the latter tust into It, wan also transformed into a dead leaf. The sigh which Myrrhus gave rose in the air mu was lost in the thin smoke of the twigs which burned in the fire.. place. "Some roots which I am going to eat for supper." "How goal they smellt. What do you season them witlA" "Ah! hermit," amid the king, "how I envy you! The presence of the gods makes itself felt about you and it seems as if they were going to take their places at your table or play the forest flute, soaked on your cabin "What are you cookng in that pot?" asked Myn-hus. Myrrhus offered his open hand to his confeswr and judge. He frmehed a little under the weight of the stone which the litter next gave him. Bat it changed to a dead leaf and he hand. ed it back. The use crushed it under his fact and bent over Myrrhus. 'Speak.'" he said, in a low voice. A lamb bloated at the sage's naked feet and the rays from the candle shone in his tranquil face. “Tail: to me about yourself," said the sage. "Your heart is not yet purged. I am 1tillysteointr." - A ”and the worst is yet to come mailing-g I E" . TJkt? , "in ' " 'tel'.':' "ss, r . " A MW? fiL-. THE CRIMES or KING MYRRHUS soul execrtrte your pox- The conversation lasted a long time. The night had come and a sudden storm tossed the branches of the pines and the firs outside. "Speakl" the sage eontinued. And each time Myrrhus found a dead leaf in his hand, instead of the atone the man of many virtues gave him, But he still felt as burdened as he did when he entered the bermit's hut, The storm frightened him. He trembled like a tree shaken to the roots. "You haven't told everything," the sage whispered. "No," "t am Listening." "l corrupted a man who sang, who loved life and who worked in his shop. I was jealous of his industry, of his freedom from care, of the winged phrases which came out of his mouth. I taught him to drink, to blaspheme, to gamble, to insult women, to scorn mercy, to renounce hope and to hate the sun. I made him rich and sad. He died cursing me." The stone which the sage dropped into it escaped and fell to the ftoov with a crash that shook the cabin. It turned to a rock at Myrrhus' feet. Tho tempest tossed the trees and the recluse lifted his head, Deadiy pine, torn with anguish and despair, King Myrrhus again extended his hand. "I repent, old man. I am ready to do anything you command me to do to expiate my misdeeds. But tell me, is there no pardon? Can't I be wash- ed clean ot this crime?“ "l don't know," the sage answered. "I am not yet close enough to the gods, in spite of my eighty years of contem- Nation and solitude, either to condemn you or to reassure you in their name, my son. "After a“. what do the gods care for the bodies out of which you have driven the spark of life, for the beasts and the sharia whom you have tortured under the lash, for the wealth which you have seized, even for the poison which you gave your hater? What do these crimes matter no long as you didn't touch the souls od your victims? "Bat how," the old man minded, breaking into We, "emdd I toll you that you will u pardorte6--you who have murdered joy t" At this moment a violent wind up. rooted a tree, which fell against the and the gods, by bringing terror into his house, had made the hermit under- "tlol" he aid to Myrrhus, in ' gentle voice, hut. The animals howled and tled and the candle which the hermit kept burning tiny and might went mat. stand. " repent," poured the aged king, who felt that the relief he sought in death was still far off. "Gol" the hermit repeated. And with a gesture he waved Myrr- hus out irpto the forest, etill filled with the fury of the storm. Firm Suppl!" Tea 300 Years. Tea is still being supplied by one London than to the descendants ot their customers ot 300 years ago. He is not really rich who is liable to be poor to-mor- row; he is not rich who can be made poor by theft, by fire, by flood, or disaster at sea, or by! business failure at home. e only is wealthy who carries his riches with him, who would still retain his greatest wealth if every material thinglie possessed were burnt up or lost in a shipwreck. Many a man who prides himself that he is rich and powerful to-day, tomorrow may be a failure, by some great financial dis- aater.---Marden. "it The average Canadian who, when he meets a woman friend In the street. raises his hat, shakes hands. and "re, pvritely, "How do you do'."' would be astonished it he couid see some ot the strange torma such greetings take in other lands. 'Was, when a South Sea Islander meets anyone whom he wishes to honor. he pours a jar ot 1mm over his head; and the native of Central Africa an such an occasion stripl the other man ot his robe and me: it round his own waist. The native of the Gcid Coast favors a hum ot sanitation little has; strange; for, after bowing profoundly. he slips his outer garment from his shoulder! and tolde it under his arm; while in Mctroeeo, when a man on horseback sees a. friend approaching. he charges in" tilt at him, reins up his bone and- deniy within a few feet of him. and tires a revolver over his head. To uncrver the head is the Clue-‘uul thus the dim“ continues for alien way ot showing tttttMemes" and “one minutes before the two men "get respect; but the Chinatntut, when he to holiness." wishes to be polite, puts " M on. Mai It you were to make a formal call head if it in not there already; whileion at Jun! of Brazil, your host would the gentlemen of Japan shows his re- 'purer you a seat and would sit absu- trpect by inking " hie Show. It, ilutely silent for about a minute. Ttren whilst walking in Mandalay. you ihe would startle you by exclaimiug in should chance to meet the King at a loud voice. "Are you were?" as if Burma, you would be expected to Mop l he were still doubtful of Foul' pre and remove your shoes; but you would ' some. . be allowed to approach the Shah all When a Baeutu greets his chief he Persia. only it your feet were bare. ltuidrersee, him as "Wild lites-t“, mhiett, It the natives of Chittagong should l however "tttttOtt/tte-tttary ft may chance to see two Canadian women wound. is; muuiv- to the thief}: Pars. im- lues each other on meeting, they fit is a tribute to his, courage .aml would open their eyes in wonder: tor1feexscity. And it a good Tsioelrn; mums their method ot greeting is to place‘t'a Jew he grttls him with the words. mouth and noee on each oUtet"s cheek I "Death to you!" lo whit-h the Jew, my: and take a long and vigorous sniff. , to be outdone in politeness, “qu.th Translated into English. they would 1"The some to you!" Only 5 per cent. of the soldiers on farms who were given assistance by the Soldier Settlement Board had had no previous agrieuftuml experience, according to Major Barnett, Chairman or the Board. Fifty per cent. however. were not on the land at the time of enlistment. In many cases men, who were farm laborers before enlistment, had taken up land for themselves. The total value of loans actually made was $87,740,000, of which sum $11,- 885,000 have been repaid, It the natives of Chittagong would chance to see two Canadian women kiss each other on meeting, they would open their (1'03 in wonder: for their method ot greeting is to Disco mouth and nose on each outet"s cheek and take a long and vigorous sniff. Translated into English, they would Employees as a class raid the lartt- est amount cf income tax in Canada during 1921, according to an official statement of the Department of Fin. ance. Their total was $11,301,805. Manufacturers were next with $8,217,- 730; merchants, including wholesalers and retailers, paid $7,689,521; famterg paid $661,786. The balance of the 1921 total of $46,381,806 was made up ot $11,823,563 credi/,cd to "all others," and $4,0M,8M from groups not classi- Nova Scum fishermen have decided'; to ask the Canadian Government. tor assign aeroplanes to aid them in tind-' ing felt schools, following a plan of the seal hunters of Newfoundland, whol use aeroplanes to locate seals on the! ice. The success of the French experi. . ments in spotting schools at fish from! the air is cited by the Nova Scotia tuh-l emen. It is claimed that French; aviators unsigned to this work by their; government were able not only to tlndl am. but to distinguish the variety. I Lobster tuhing on the Cape Breton coast began May Ist, instead of May 16th as formerly. The opening of the lobster mean at on earlier date is the result of representation made by fUhermen to the Fisheries Depart- ment, who claimed that the regulation fixing the opening date as May 16th was a. handohip. With touching whammy the Gov- srncr-Genem1, Loni Byng of Vimy, mweiled at Witdeot Station, at Mont- real, the headquarters of the Canadian PtteiN, Railway, the “mosque wu- memorial to empMyeee of the com- pany who made the meme matinee in the Great War. tu'multanemmly similar unveiling: were taking prim in oil parts of the wo6h--in Inndon, Liverpool, New York, Hon. Kong, Vancouver, Winnipeg and other Can» diam divisional point-tem of the far-ttune transmutation system from which 11,600 My”: joined the colors, out of whom 1,100 were del- tined to remain in the soil they fought upon. A total of 18,889 ex-eoid-ien have found employment with the com- pany. "What-who?" mammary: the pro- fessor, atrserttly. "Why (Ina-mm me --brn't my wife at home l"' Our-priced Hlmulf. An Irishman, who um to return to his. native land try n mum steamer, arrived on the pier Just a tho vessel was Martine-Att tact, Che was alrudy on the move. Too Quly. The professor was absorbed in sume goieettifh, subject when ttttr nurse an- nounced the and“! of a boy. Tum; a tUitsg leap, he covered the intervening space of six or can feet " a bound, but tripped on alight!“ and hit hi. head, temporarily stunning himself. When he recovered his some. the muse! was a couple of hundred yards out at sea. "Be Jubersi" ta exclaimed. not realizing what had happened, "what c Jump'." Singing a. son; without any mutu- mental accompaniment I: a muslcnl nanny which is becoming populty: the song: mutt be specially writtu to be really successful. Foreign Greetings That Amaze and Amuse Bits of Canadian News. TORONTO Mutual Novelty. 1. Ivory from Palm Pods. 2 Most of us faster. cur clothes with i buttons made of " gewble ivory. which is obtained from the needs of .: vxtriety of palm that Brows in pans pd South America, say to each other. not “It!!! me," but “Smell me." And when 3 Mongolia! Mixer k In In cautions" mood, he does not kh- " children; he smells their " Among Arabs the common motive istoki-thqtteetttr_; Multan person saluted ta of higher link. the been of " Dormant must be “and. Where the Briton an. “How do you dot" the Mann; “How do you - yourself?" and the (lei-mm, "How does it got" or "How do you tind yourself?" the Arab, after chuk- ins M. friend's hand about I. down times. greet: him with the words. "The peace be upon you." to which he re- when tor answer. "Upon you be the hence." theet" he comma“. "God Mass and preserve thee'." men his friend; Ind thus the ditrltsgues continues for some minutes before the two men "get to busineaes." "rear," answered Jones. upon beinul qtutettoeted, “my wife Is til. Don't - just what's “my her. She "iiril up this mornin' and had mum for) ‘m and the hands at tive, and than the‘ l, did some washin’ Md some mum and “he churn-1d and . little cleanln'. be lee',', wditre'ar' acme wen and a. weedin' . patch ot garden. tehe sot dinner, and WM newln' and mendln' this afternoon what: the sort o' heeled must. I can't think hrhat can be the :ntter, toe ain't been dodn'potidng shut keeMh' accuse here, awry-like, tot ithe hm Mm years." : When-gee inquires after Ms friend’s health, the stereotyped reply is. "an be to God'." "I: it well Mm The palm beans pods abmst the vize of u man's head, and each pod com um: from six to nine egg-shaped nuts whim: mall potatoes. When the pods are ripe, the nuts drop out and are gathered. Eeunthr and Colombia export enor- mous quantities of these nuts, which are collected by the natives and brought down the rivers to the coast in canoes. When the nuts are dried the irtterior substance vegetables ivory, being white, finely mined. and very hard. " takes a his!) polish and may be dyed my color. The ivory nuts are used meaty for making buttons, but they are used also in the manufacture of umbrella The doctor had eatted at Dun Jona' home. The occurrence was so alumni that std Smith. trom the next tum. decided to investigate. Tiny Tower Bridge. A Md modelling feat has but) accomplished by a Chicago ttMMU- facturer of pipe fittings. Re In: constructed a model of the Tower Bridge in London, from valves 1nd ffttfmts of his own make. The model is to be used for display pur- of piping of 230 different kinds, and 16,251 joints were used. Special! In» chinery raises the arm of the bridge and the “its. Thirtyilx electric has. tight the bridge, while colored light; result“ the bridges and want Me. poses in hit Londm office. It in ntnemen feet long. eleven feet high, four feet wide, and each span manne- fifty-tseven inches. The mutiny. that rise no twenty-two inches long and thirty inches wide, and there is a lift in each of the towers. The model consist: of 15.368 pieces Dr. W. John Murray says the worst that a man can do is to make a temporary fool of himself, because he is predestined to be the image of Him who crsatcu' him. That is, that the ulti- mate end of every human being is to COMIC inizi the likeness of his Main-r: Hm is his goal. No matter how long he may wonder, in sin and crime, his destination is the image of his Maker, and while he is in sin. it does not yet appear what he shall be. but he shall ultimately come into Jlis likeness. A Temporary Fool of Strange t In the northwest proeime of In“: new uni-city beta- the lo- Wm and the Mindue mm Hail, My in the district- where tho two we“ an uncut equal in numbers. And tmfortmtatdy the "mun! Noll-m- mednn (an of Hum-mm W to fill on an: of the teaat day: of tho Hindus Inuit-bl, on that day an n'vul - an we to ooh-idle. all the rem-it is a riot, with consequent RI (can. mm? (in British for not "otdine better ”auction. Then both lib! tumu- their m -inst etch other until next you. " i. not any for the arthritic. to give tho desired protection. for the mtiva police themsehes an likely to be more or lean partisan. Of count the au- thorities could refuse panama for the parades. but they refrain from doing that, because they dislike to inter tere in any way with the religion of the natives. About the beet they can do, therefore, in to pass an away and perspiring day in the hope than somehow the festivities wilt and with- out blcodshed. Then uprose . British Solo-on mom tttrm-a may comminfomi~ in one of the larger cities. The - of Muhamm was at hand, and mi reports brought to him indicated pct- par-Minn- tor as riotous a day as In] Hindu or Mclaatttte:Un could how for. The dtputy at dam to think. When be rode he had deim'mined that it would be better to use diplomacy than to pm. his trust in farm So he sent fur the hair: of the maxim. who, like the Mchatttmedtttvt, - Lbcut to pmsem their annual Nana-t for a permit to hold a plum-mun. "Listen to “hut 1 have to my.” ho told them. "or eh.e then- can be no nemii. Itrantcd this war. Nov, ull told them. ' permit grar mo. in v,hic hum; rel ie for u and)" deput mom that l wr, "yous" they wanted gerter tho" (alien. "are not orrly as :1 Uthor mad I mother to us. but you an m mm a second Suleiman {Solomon} In ID not of mstbrrity. We wirh that you may no continue {own-r!" "No, dew, you're mkmkar imwnlt‘ cannot go to heaven ”he people" Duh"- oyu tuud wittt mn, but My no out!“ Mammal “Amu. do to to haven. tor the Bible can the PM“ Land u now- Inc with milk and hon‘y, rad, tg then» m mount. “1.0600509 " In milk?" I. Tum! "Daisy." :1.an My Hum“ School (new. "don‘t low your not too mud); What would you do ft tt ded-- you wouldn't me it again?" "in the new o ss',' “send with come surqn' "True,' said the (Lt-31.x have decided it will he nu you to hold your prrad;s mou when the mm begin toward the was! and to u rays on your holy city of me whether the yuan ht you." "Oh. you. catcher: t mama no " In heaven." that of the Mu “1123‘ When the HM: gem the dumb,» of the Mohumnu "Now, you Md " have Milk! y with you comm your pmcoss-ion. ever, I will ask l direction lies )0!) operative amt. Home flie- rave a W mm of (fight. he Int in. that. ed with Quay tttned-f In. an: “i afterwards refused m tnheo with len than twenty!” but. it 0W Dix mite. _ . Chen-lion- at no ueeastto.1utttseeemuoer'ltre6_ ”out to show that ttles came - the wind from Cuba . "ipsty-five mi“. Integrity, may pad “an. l (I Bt'narc~?" In the 1:151. sahil h il' Ind It ll Nttut' ABritiahSolomou y nu pr. Wt, hit' mm tttotr annual MM ' to hold I ptoeession. I what. I have to my.” ho 'or else there an be no ted this year. Nou. all h direction lie, guvr My 'res'.'" ,.n ....L1L " .1.” "s.. 1..“ |‘, " tl al m “A AN nid th 1 the , hm- " " H " wrung, C “an“ I" TM {II-4 4 u, , our ct. tho ‘N mo to JO I. n

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