West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 7 Sep 1922, p. 6

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March is tho month when the Itt, diana on the Brilfdh Cclumbia cont put up their bum" frr the entire year - and it is Bathe td from a M. which "new only once a roar, for about the. weeks' time. It sounds ridietr ion to tell ot a butter-giving tish. but that ls “many what the eulachan. or camiiqtLqtt. is, for the tats derived from it serve the indium as an equivalent foe the life-sustaining material which WHOM [at out of butter. and - nnd the people of the comb ot Mace out of olive oil. Tho eulachan b the Indians’ moot "Odom fish. and I- quite an tnrsteri. on. In its way a the much-wide! al- - Like the utter. it come. you): from the unknown deep: of the home all was up fresh-water than aiontt a. Paciiht roan. On the Columbia .0 m la " February: rant-0r north. tt In” from two to "no. weeks in An locum of Over Twenty Million. Compared with the your 1921. the total value of permits throughout Ca. nada shows an increase of $20,688,500 nwr tho vahw of the some period. In Ontario the value of construction un- dertakon tas practically doubled. and Toronto has led all (‘anndian cities in the building undertaken so far this your The "on distribution of the kinds of building undertaken is clearly lllustrntml in the Mures for June. 1922, the value of permits. 335,620,400. being the second largest monthly ttttttro since May. 1914. Of the total. residential building accounted for 36.4 per cent.; business, 29.1 per cent.; industrial. t3.8 per cont: and public works and utilirirs. 20,7 per cent. The amount of contemplated new work throughout the Dominion at the and ot June was ”6.117.400 The buildings undertaken during the ftrst six months. from man to coast, For the fttut six months ot tho you 1982. building permits in Cnnnda had u: aggronto nine of $132,462,000 " compared with $itt.T68.60iy in the ttmt in]! of "" 3144.741100 in 1920 cud 378,113,300 in 1919. in 1922 the Pro- vinm ot Ontario accounted tor 874.- 586.900 of the total permit value; Que- bee 831294.200; tho Maritime Pro. vinces 85.521300; and the Western} “rm-mm 321.049.200. m the Ite) no can of $53,435.31» is accountedi tor by residential building; titsmo,-i 000 try business construction; 810,-j minim» in industrial mentions; and' $29,305,100 in engineering constmr-l t ion Since the beginning of the you. Oenede he experienced a distinct re vital in the building industry “tor e virtual stagnation which exited throughout the wet your: sad into the post-war ere. Price. ot building materials a. well u the high out of lehor seriously curtailed oonetmotion od ell kinds, and cortittted it to such no we. ahanlutoiy neoeeeery. With the shim-lament ot I new level in the "he ot meta-mi end the maetttrrt. Int ot the met ot labor e decided invents was given to the building in ”try from the opening of the build- lu season. There hes been an!» pegged nativity. and the ttttttres tor the ttrst six months idicate the aceont) ilshment of a volume of constmction‘ unequalled in any year since 19i1 I Return to a Normal Amount of Construction is Indicative of Prooperous Times Ahead. DISTINCT REVIVAL m THIS BASIC INDUSTRY. Statistics carefully compiled in the United States mul the not that 45.0 per cent. of the people of that country m tttmir own home: And that 54.4 per out. livo in ranted quarters. The sum. nannies no not Ivdhblo for canada, but tor the purpose- of . rude eo-tsom "urea hue been secured on the In most populous cities of tho Dominion. sad tt is found am " not 1922 B h BUILDING YEAR IN CANADA Jtt.ttrsCmtadai.atanttotNrm owners. when the team. farmer is wtically unknown. to i. the Do. minion a. country when (my dweller-I an largely own the prom they raids upon. It prosperity in to my mom to be paged from the extent of home posse-clan. which i. usually tho prim him of human annuities. than Condo is a load of prosperous and civic urban population. A comparison between (land: not! the United States, hr instance. shows the Dominion to be in " least " desirable I situation in the matter ot individual home own- u’uhip u the richer and [mater re"; public. l yummy no moot dominant of .In’s instinctive desire. in to on NI the. of residence. POI-foe: mum- nom and satisfaction do not become .0 lot of the tumor until to in ”lo mu ot the ind he yearly an. 1nd an the harvest he garner. II wholly I lb. Bo it in the iim of a." alms among 1 any dwe.rrqm to purchase . home, which shun be not than man. has). I Ind the 'Mteoanplishtttetst ot thb I», come. the prime object. of such manic. Ice-n beau-aide from tTi"iiiii"iiil of the “Wkly my envelope. I The Fish That Takes Cow’s Place thaahal,attldluehniers r""-"""'"'-"-'-"""'"'""-"", w...“ ,__4.___- ,etc.. still stick to this method. They I claim that the mu produced in their _ own way is superior in "vor and tex- i ture to that boiled in the white man's 3 way. And this is true. A parallel may be cited in the old and modern wlys sot making maple syrup. l' " of the fish. They are dumped in "great bins of trpda- logs and left to soften. When the euiachan have sort- eued from a week to 10 days- or other ‘ periods. a great deal dependmg on the weather ttey are trani'terred to great vans and bviled in hot water. The In. ‘Idlan method ot heating the Mr is ,to drop tot stones into the rate; and ,thong-h this in I mach more laborious pay than boning In modern Reina. many of the Indians today, though fthoy have adopted the white man’s gphonomphn. drag saws, motortmata, The Indians are on t] the beginning of the run yo' is indicative ot hope and of faith in the immediate future. No other dis. turbance of the years following the war caused such inconvenience and upheaval as the cessation of building. and. in View at all it portends. noth- ing is so gratifying as the return to a normal amount of construction. The habit of fscking at everything from the bright. hopeful, expectant side, instead of from the doubt side, the uncertainty side, will improve ton, Winder». Ottawa, Vancouver, Que-l First lady (in village shop, speaking bee, London. Saskatoon. Port Arthur, to another patrcn)---"Would You mind and Calgary. l if I made my small purchase first? We The resumption of building in Ca. I have a horse outside and he won't keep nude on a substantial ecele. more so‘ quiet." than perhaps any other factor. may; Second lady -"Certainly; but you be taken as an Indication of the rey wont be very long. will you? I have turn of brighter and more settled a husband outside and he's rather times and a further emerging tromlrestlve. too." post-war depression, for building in, -rrrr.--t-r----; the Dominion is so indicative of pro/ Where " Might Have Helped. grass and expansion that it has oornei "Don't talk to me about colleges'." to be a gauge which marks. in a fairly; scoffed the self-made man. "Look at accurate manner. the trend of econo-lme! Do you suppose I would have mic affairs; it estimates the status or, been any more succusful than I anti business and reflects the prosperity if l'd had a college education?" l of other industries. In a resumption; "No," admitted the Professor, "but of building is reflected the downward you might have been less inclined to‘ trend in the price of all materials used, brag about it." in building, and a decline in the cost‘ .e-e-"ee'P-'rrP--"r"e-re-rr-- of labor to a level closer approximat-‘ in; the pre-war level. More building --and the “If“ In Regine. Moose Jaw, Brandon, Leth- bridges Edmonton, and other western centres. as well.” Halifax, Moncton. Sherbrooke. Weetmount, Fort Wil- Hun. Kitchener. when Peterboro. and other cities ot the East. In con- struction luresdy accomplished this you. the lead“; cities in order are Toronto. Montreal, Winnipeg. Hamil- ton, Windsor, Ottawa, Vancouver. Que- bee, London. Saskatoon. Port Arthur and Calgary. show nu have” ot practically tl,. 000,0000 our the coreoponding period in 1081. In Calgary. for the same some of time. the million dollar mark was pasted. Improvements are noted ems. of more than 300 per mt. Montreal and Tomnw. particularly the latter. have exceeded by s wide mar- gin the "he in permits for the same titrtq last your. In Winndpog the per- mit: tor one Bnst II: months ot 1922 The resumption of building in Cm do in not confined to ceruin section: but in general. nnd exceptional con- struction activity is evidenced in nil cities from coast to coast. According to the reports received from " Cana, dinn cm. there is a building increase ot over M) per cent. in comparison with 1981. Quebec Province reports and increase ot more than fifty per cent.; and Saskatchewan shows an in- are summarized as tollomc--69 apart- menu. M churches. 124 factories, 196 public wages, " hospitals, 54 hotels, 103 otBee buildings, 46 public build- trugs, 10.725 residences, 248 schools, 823 stores, " theatres, " warehouses. 79 bridges. " dumb and wttarvsm, 108 t"r,"n, and Inter mains, 161 mad. and streets and 138 general engineer I Taking only Cnnadn's larger centre. [of population. these are found to pos- veen A greater proportion of home own» 'ers than the corresponding centres ot the United States, though, in justice. ; the great disparity in population must 3 he considered. London, Ontario, 1tsttdq ,tho Dominion with 80 per cent. of its population owning their own homes. (Hamilton and Calgary have 60 per Icent of their people Living in homes {they own. The city of Toronto has I z ttne record tor-the eecond moot popu- Hou. city ot the Dontttuon---tt has Mr, lper cent. of it. people living in homes , owned by them. Fittyone per cent. of the people of Halifax are home owners. 'ivssn,ooavor, the fourth Canadian city in population, is another Btut example of home ownership with " per cent. of its people home owning. Edmonton foils rightly behind with " per cent., uni Winnipeg, Canada’s third city, Just after this with " per cent. 0t- tawa he 40 per cent. of its population owning their own homer, and Mont- real, the an city of the Dominion. he a scan 6 p. cent.. pull“ the overuse of the ten cities down to as per cent. when it might have been more thu _ cent. in than are ovum of their on gnome: When it is considered that itho minder ot tho country com- ;' prises Agricultural [and Ind the mnaib , er ton and villus. and that the tend- ' my is for a larger proportion ot home , owner- tho amulet the settlement. it x will readily be conceded that the per- ,centaxo tor the entire Dominion must ‘be higher than that of the United , States. uncertainty side. w (mire outlook on life Activity In General. , on the lookout tot he run, and take mu- They are dumped in E Second lady ‘ "Certainly; but you won't be very long, will you? I have ',a husband outside and he's rather I resttve, too." troal,-- A house, a. coop, a. kennel, or a trada, me state, an intrtitutJtyn or a soul,-- Fbr building, not tar wrecking, swing your blade. toreat,--- Iconoclasm shut within the book,-- An oditico must rise, the bravest yet. " matters little what mar be your Tooth abut, eyes open with a forward look,-- Futh an the vision. willingness to frown H And smiling, one can do the work ot three Build, for the world is sick of tearing down; Your hammer must be one or industry; Smile, it is more constructive than to With Joy I watch the spiders wave a veil For dainty bridal roses; I behold The Marigold: when. touched by titmu drops pale, Seam all the more hike heaps of yol- low gold. My garden in a. very wondrous place Eapeclnlly in the early morning hours; When fairy dreams the river still em- Lam/elm“ and white, ---- A golden any placed in the middle, mm. The ttlusbelh, chime for bretuttaab-- I must go. The Mayoress ot Lewisham, England, ing open the borough's new swimming bath, 'Tits then I hold communion with the tiowem. A Both Impatient. comos with nun footsteps and the worst is yet to come spread their linens son Heralds. --John Glrdler. --Ailoen Ward. TORONTO Push!" His Motto. A mnart boy ot titteea entered the oft1t?e ot a prosperous merchant and asked for employment. He gave Bat. isfactory answers to a few questions, and then the merchant inquired: "What is your motto," “Same as yours," the boy replied. “Just what you have on your door-- Never Judge an'yonu to be so thick- skinned that they would not feel a friendly pat on the back. Never limit your mental exercise to jumping at conclusions. It's " hard to live up to a good re- putation as it is to live down a bad one, A million dolhm’ reward will never bring back lost time. A minutes carelessness can undo a. whole day's work. Those who carry scandal are worse than those who make it. It's a. “an of wisdom to admit you've been a fool. To delay is not always» dangerous. That which to always your own ig your future. Oven-Married! Hero lo a Mary of Lady Astor and her old Noam nurse, Aunt Betty, whom she met again during her re- cent vlslt to America. She was show- ing Aunt Betty some pictures ot Cllvedevn, her beautiful home on the Thames; with its wonderful lawn: and gardens. Aunt Betty looked at the photographs, looked at Lord Astor, and then at Lady Astor. "Well, Miss Nancy," tube said at last, "aid 1’9 got to say is dat yo' suttlngly did overman-y yo'relt." ter the disastrous explosion in 1912. had noticed Mr. Smith going down with a rescue party. It had quite alip- ped MI memory, but the Queen had not forgotten. It transpired that the Queen, who visited the Cadeby pit immediately " mummy "summon. but vellum the best is that about his timt presenta- tion to Queen Mary. "I have seen you before,” WM the Queen's iirtrt remark. “I don't think so," replied Mr. Smith. "Oh, yes. I have," Her Majesty in. sisted. "You were the his man in the little brown Jersey who went down the Cadeby mine.' The Queen's Memory. Many stories are told of Mr. I bert Smith, the new President ot .Miuer?r' Ntaratioer, but W95 He got the Job THE DIVING MAYUi-itzm I, Miss Kathleen Dodd, takix A Little Wisdom. Stories of Famous People ot Mr. Her. , taking a high dive, bar novel method ot deck:- Soon after 1887 there wan a. further development, and one which was des- tined to have . grant erect. though not in this country. At the Whitehall Electricity Works the eduust steam from the engines we used to heat water, which was supplied to one hun. dred houses and tho in the neighbor- hood. Thig utilization at "waste" was Nevertheless, the new light soon be- gan to gain ground. in 1883 a men! stimulus was given by the use of the system tor lighting the railway from Westbourne Park to Paddington. A popular novelty in many (owns about the same time was skating by the an: light. Soon afterwards the incandescent lamp made its appearance. In August, 1878, it was installed in the Gnlety Theatre. where it made a. great sensa- tion. A well-known expert declared that it was not suitable tor street. “mung in London-an opinion which, strange as it seems now, was borne out by the failure of the new system at Blllingsgate. where it was abandon- ed early in 1879. When John Tawell killed Barth Hart at Salt Hill, near Windsor, in 1845, a message announcing his Bight was ftashed along the line to Padding. ton, and the arrest which followed was the ilr:et to he brought about by tele- graph: " is little more than titty years since that leiegraphy was the chief purpose to which electricity could be applied. The “electric telegraph" was then comparatively new on railways. though the firat installation. which was from Paddington to West Dray- ton, was made in 1838-9. The recent celebration of the Jubilee ot the Institution ot Eleetrieal Engin- eers is a reminder ot how rapidly his- tory has been made in connection with the science practised by in tntrtntrera., says an English writer. Measures Tea. Withdrawing a slide in the bottom ot a new metal container allows a tea. spoonful ot tea to drop into a. teapot. Mr. Edison said the early resolved to concentrate upon electricity in all its various phases. and he said lt had yielded him marvelous results. If he had split up his attention on a great many different things " many eman- er inventors do, he would not now have been regarded as the greatest living inventor. When Lord Northclmo was in thin country and was asked the secret ot his success. he said he didn't attribute it to any one thing except concentra- tion. "I concentrate," he said, "upon whatever I take up and keep my mind wholdy upon it until I use it through." The Grimaldl family bu a Much stretching back for hundreds of yarn, and has had many ups and downs. One member of it, tor instance. It. 1 Duke of Spam. while another was O poor eabirtet-matasr In London. The throne of Monooo is now clum- ed by a meat salesman. He in Mr. George Frederick Grimaldi, of Btntttt. t1eld Market. in tendon. who“ mat title is the Marquis Grimuldtl. Ho ha gone to Monte Carlo, which b praeti. caily the whole of tho an: out. ot Monaco, to establish his right to an " the throne. Ho sum that the late ruler, Prince Albert, was not the legal heir, and the College of Heralds. which has examined his claim, agree- with this. An amusing story at Mr. Wham Churchill's expense reached me the other day. On one occasion during the war the Forage Committee received . letter signed “Winston Churchill," satin: what the committee meant by com- mandeering his hey. In reply it In. pointed out that the hay we. taken under an order signed by the Minister for War-at that time Mr. Churchill himself.' After that there was no tur. ther correspondence on the subject. Moat Salesman Claim. a Throne. Concentration. A Church"! Story. lighting the Earth at Night was a Church ot Engltnd clemman; and Alexander Graham Bell. the in. ventor of the telephone. In: t ienclr er ot the dent and dumb. Huber. new" in the domain ot Implied electricity wu puticnlarly re- markable, became. judging from son. memoranda he left. he nearly utici~ pated Marconi. In 1879 he made some experiments in wireless telegraph. and actually received sign-l: over con. siderable distances. Unfortunately for the world, however, " wu lub- Jected to such plentiful douche: of cold water by fellow-se-tttsta that In abandoned his experiment. in about. " kg Inc-A "-..._ __ _ - - 7â€"-â€"vâ€"- III “m"- If he had kept on we might hue m wireless telegraph! about “no“ years sooner. and bk an. 'ttight have been blazoued all out It. a“, David Hughes. the inventor of the microphone. was a musician; Edison was a mllny newaboy. Hennings. to whom we are indebted tor the tele. phone transmitter now in common an. Electrical engineering subsequently made enormous strides. as is evi- denced by the great increase in the membehsdp of the institution of Elec- trical Engineers. Ten years attor- its foundation there were only one thum- and names on its books, but new it has more than ten thousand members. A curious fact connected with com- paratively recent oleetrteat inventions is that they were mostly mule by men who had no training Is electricians. Some ot such benefaetom, indeed, did not hove the adnntage even of a ttcietttitie education. Chlnm Ira-dunk The Chinese breadtruu. otherwise (the pamelo. ht a. citrus fruit that may gbe desermed as I. cross between the ‘onnse and the grapefruit. combining étho good points of both. It is renni- 3ed by many as the ttmrgt fruit grown I in the Far East. subsequently practised on u: enor- mous Beale in the United States; but It did not spread In Brit-in. Recent- ly. however, a 'ointhtteeutttr ot the In- stitution of Electric“ Engineers and the Institution of Heating and Venti. latlng Engineers was told to consider whether waste heat from modern power stations could not be similarly turned to account. Germany Hui No Anthem. At the present time the German peo- ple have no national tnthem. accord~ in; to an ottieial announcement ot the Berlin Government. The not Is that the houoelly Is by origin a tropical Insect. It cgtgtetot en- dure cold weather. In convent. Inu- tudes a few houseium mango to live over‘ the winter In heated ttttutter--. axiom ot them, that b to any. to at"! a. fresh crop in the touowing spring. He found two entirely new species of mosquitoes. Home Meg were abut» (but everywhere. But there were no housemu. In vain did he explore my mm Multan. convenes, garbage dumps and other “holy places tor them. This interestintt fact was definitely warming! by Dr. I. M. Aldrich, ot the United States National Museum. tn the course ot a recent “Indium: which he and. tor the purpose at undying Alaskan Insect; Everybody know; that monume- m a. mum put In Mun; but it in new! to learn that housemea do not exist there. Next comes the inking. The knap- per hold. the - in his left bend and cannot his knee. end tapping Any at an incredible speed he split. the ttint into this than! six inch. long end one inch: wide. Not all the Battetr are ot use for ignition pummel. the great meta-icy be“ hard, and um ty it we: discovered that thle waste material could be used for foundations tor concrete than were thousands of tone ot bad an... the accumulation of centuries, in Brandon’s beckya-rds. Another bunch ot the lndusiry in the shining .of f1inta tor decorative put-pone tor churches and other build. When the ttint has been qunrrterd it I. handed over to the “happen." or gun ttint makers, who, Judging from the rim of the “one wheat, hit which “y It will mu. break it Into motions. The hardest Mow ttaaieurt the grain would not cm the am. Any of the twhwbttnnto of Bran-don my quarry tor the mm to long u he does not open more than two Pita at a time. He must " them In "ttlet when exhumed. They are the aim happen ot Brun- dom Ind though then as not two dozen men engaged in the Industry to day. there was n time when Bmdon was known to the world for the qunli. ty of In tlint tool- nnd weapons. In the beginning mm arrow heath 1nd axes. hammers and plough. were made In the smnll town, and owing to the tine quality of the flint found In the district Brandon m prosper-cm; Wuhan morale began to replace stone, however, tinder boxes wen the only things for which tiittta were used. until the discovery ot gunpowder and the Invention of cannon and shot guns re- lieved the tnde dept-anion. ’03!" "tr. mhoso men can trace back their dol- oont M ttre hundred yearn. and . un the families in" been caused In the nine industry. NoFlieoinAlukl. 5 Recently a veal teacher of was: “using in the pub": 2(3th and: i "Youth In the period for laying a good foundation (or the "(mung of nuhim! instincts. for the unfulding of taiont and making prevention top utter Iyeom A year or two or vcire Waring ', like this would be of great vuluz- and 'lultnx benefit to every swarm tak 1 has It. Thoee especiany gifted wunld [not only have nimble preliminar,. gunning. but having meted their. “I look. would teel no and" as to tro ad [Viability of pursuing further weal f may If the! In desired." Kenn Gold. The Xenon dutrkat of Ontario is no In: acutely pro-pocket! tor cold ttad Clint. " an' licences trelue iatmed. Seven: dum- m boll. strip Mil. trench“ And an“ by engin- oon "tatned by Men In Toronto I“ [m Wile Attnt-"i ttairiiimodiatej Ink. secret Inuit-in n to his ability to provide thin“ to cook. my dear Pretty Niece (Washing! - - Aurtie, um wculd you do it you learned that 1 you; nun was secretly lnqu‘rinx about your ability as a cook? ‘l'l_- . . Clan singing instruction i school Imus a healthy rump spirit. and the "shes ot ittspitu thought of the tetuthor benettts rather thin a single Individual. private teaching. I Tho tutor] modulus ggeveml new:- ,pn.pen in " printing works. Alto. l [other there are 650 new: of Port Sun- i: light-a complete. hcauiiml gum-:1 I city. { hdhsemee of Public Schools in 1 MtmieAaeeiatiem. ‘ There this been tor a long time much feeling among private mmic teacher: that the public school music “when are 'mperftcinlly educaied. drill mote“. not artist; This tact. however. is merely 1crsg-r"ttsiinr, pr"- judice. The publir ttct-c',-, aw train. ing more for musical upprociatlon. pm- duclng “Home for cur smyphony at chasing, for the opera and litre um- tom thin any private agency. Private talcum Ire usually :‘pecia!i~L. of a heyboud or of o tlttgerboarri Tlmy com, you. but not in the ln'lm-‘tx .- of “when. me public school manic (when are developing musical viti- lens and lovers of music. apt 1M towers of strength in the lilo " um country. as ar 15 th,, wr.lvsprral in, lowest in music counts. picture-cu. houses. which they re- fora. tow mum;- a week. T/ey have ovoryunng they need In the way ot "nurse-tttent-ing tieida, a theatre. I "bury. restaurants; and there are whack. thumbs. and I hospital. Them I: .110 I ant-rate bud cum- poled at workers. nomad. leaving n wild block ot " ' hundmdwoight of may in out tram Thou blocks no divided horimuiiy into slabs. which an min out up by “other mehinc in- I to bun. in.” urethanpiwod in“. ‘lmll‘ Mina. which deliver "an,“ uxou to n conveyor __ an 'ondh- bolt which runs down n long it”. on dither “do at which girl. Mud-smoke tatr1arta,wmrthtm in one” paper. and pack than: Into Md not“. These an plus-d in bout and an ingenious [nu-bin. units on we‘d; Mu thla there a an enormouu output of perfum- uul 0th.: toilet manna. Port Sunlight. with In four huge mpg-leg can make 4,000 tons . week, or two-hundred times the amount ot cap which could be produced u the company's original works many-s1: you. no. In the packing-room cardboard and tin boxes an turned out of Ingenious mchtm; the labels are printed and attack on by mother device. Darin: the mum of a year 20,000 tons at (labor 3:! nude into ten mil, lton bow. In mount too- toilet - in undo. the color and perfume being automa- wly placed In the tablets. which no out And stunned by machinery. Then ' visitor is alien into tho mtod-ttod room, when the aide. of the 110er It. led into I machine. which cut; clots in them. Another machine mount the side: into . tram. and “manually unil- them. in the use ot bots. mod for exporting soap. iron binding- u'o put on u tho “In. time by machine. Jar GU pouch-tn boiled for hour. by moi!- of has. Imam pipe.» Each ot the pun U loam (out deep and nblo of holding any can. of to... Hon the oils Ind alt-limit“ tonic-'5 now are mile. The mm: to Int tnttem in!» tho m “m room," 'hOl'O thee. It. At Poet Butstight the workers live 'r, Time to “wanna. a we ol “1an pm. healthy cums-191m" "r moms mung Individual. n ta Inspiration-1 ttt the an Ira: "ylwht, no" "u; If") a a. “no 'l'" .1 y ot on ppi or] u ot I! "IN the H Dom-m v . to in f In. In M tt 'trot drir Om} but the New of " (on. _ pirate This r, any. am A week I “NOIHW appeared . “I! a} VW to Captain I the bor., tt (hose 0} their 80m and born tells how tton w“ One of tl master, TI really a S was WM pork roo t) _ cut-um He U “on. w tle do All to I ”We “'0' Another , “amount [at century 911nm We. "go' my chin any color crew of des] was upon M In em one Sunda." BrititA “(my enemy chm them. Some of t more akin on ot th we IIMOTY - VI ber crew an - with In She was .od neatly I up who M -eeo hm his [teem upon a Cart and! Denim of (Ms ttrtvt we Ind tit - her T both MN; out (Hound an occasion tr (lever Co for Is When ”In onion 50 N ”u to Imuzi Win, I "of, ”WI! She met was. m Richmond w cone an an! " He rl mod the " ' picture: " Mary I on wtto m fr be ”tuna two In

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