West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 8 Nov 1923, p. 3

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# Advantages and Drawbacks of the Species of Clay Called Benton‘te in Roadwork and in Industrial Operations. A nonâ€"metallic mineral which proâ€" mises to be of considerable importâ€" ance when it has been further invest1â€" gated is the clay known as bentonite. During the past season the Mines Branch of the Denartment of Mines has bad Mr. H. S. Spence, Mining Enâ€", gineer, in the fic‘d making intensive Investigatic:s as to posstble economic occurrences, uses arnd markets. Mr. Spence will also review present conâ€" ditions and developments in several industries on which special reports have already beon issued. The occurrence of bentonite in Canâ€" ada was first noted in 1911 by the late Joseph Keele, ccramic engineer of the Department of Mines at Camrose, Alâ€" berta, and later, along the Red Deer River in Alborta and in the Nikola Valley in British Columbia. As desâ€" cribed by V‘r. Koole, bentonite, when freshly exposed, varies in color from a light yoliow to a light olive green with a waxy lustre. It is exceedingly fine #rained and has a soapy feeling The occur; ada was first Joseph Keels Department berta, and |: River in A)} Valley in B cribed by NV freshly expo a light yelic with a waxy lhke it its An Uâ€"zcommon Mineral and its Varied Uses tablished of benton gumbo so laboratori as the ber soil consti if a wate rC present Man was made to live outdoors. N&â€" ture did not invent base burners, steamâ€"neated apartment houses and tactory buildings. Men designed these things, and man must make the best of them. But let us not overlook the necessity of getting as much good, Maan. wholesome fresh air in our sySâ€" necessity eclean, wh tems as w whe 0818 m prevaient aiiNRCR avoided. It isn‘t that gives you a ( effort to dodge it is because we al Introduced . into throats and lung enough good air to kill them. cut down Imctory 5 alr was ficiency Maybe theso fAgures do not mean much to you. What does mean & great deal, however, is your health and that of your family. Guard it. It is easy It merely means that you should sleep with a window open every nightâ€"even the coldest nights. You should have some â€" air cireulating in the room whorever you aro, and as soon as you o out of doors you should not hunch down into your coat of furs. but throw up your bhead, take a deep breath of the crisp, fresh air, and put disease to fight. on( T1 There‘s magic out in Tinley Woods, where Caesar‘s feet once trod. And folk have seen on Halow‘en & shaggy woodland god; The goblins have made mischiet there since first the world began, And now it is a Fairyland for Timothy The diseases most C holesome air are onia, bronchitis, dip is and colds. Cold evalent ailment and roided. It isn‘t the at atves you a cold; LC And now it is x FairyigDG IOFP AAZRUCIIE and Ann. ! They‘ve hung the cloudy twilit skies with woof of Makeâ€"Believe, And no one but the nightâ€"wind hears the foolish dreams they weave. An knight is he of high degree, and she the queen of all, The trees become their menâ€"atâ€"arms, the stars their tapers tall. And he forgets the knives and boots, and she her pots and pans. . . . The music of the world is made by Timotbys and Arus. â€"Westminster Gazette. r ty Ready for t Anu Irishman wh ticles on board a sl his name with his cbangivg the pen & finished it. "Sq you can write with cither sand, Pat?" asked the officer. "Yis, sor." replied Pat. "Whin I was a boy me father always sald to me: "Pat, learn to cut your fingerâ€" nails wid yor teft hand, for some day ye might lose your right!" t Hot Weather 5tuff. Mra. Gabbâ€""My de&r, I‘ve a gow!p that‘s too good to kaep! Mrs. Stabb (coldiy)â€" ‘Put # und 4 won‘t apoil." â€" tm research laboratories of Alberta rsity are reported to have esâ€" hed the fact that the presence ntonite is responsible for the ) soil of western Canada. The tories have also reported that : bentonite conteut of the gumbo nstitutes the hardening element, waterproofing material can be mically provided a high grade bed can be established. Under nt conditions the absorptive proâ€" > diseases most common from unâ€" some air are influenza, phneuâ€" i, bronchitis, diptheria, tuberculâ€" and colds. Colds are the most tent ailment and the most easily ed. It isn‘t the cold wintry air gives you a cold; it‘s your clumsy : to dodge it, the doctors say. It cause we allow the germs to be duced into our noses, mouths, ts and lungs, and then don‘t get gh good air to enable our bodies I1 them. medtcal man â€" declares that emâ€" ained w ot. is to as inal vo! esearct edtcal man â€" declares that emâ€" s of a large lnstitution lost 18, orking days a year through illâ€" A ventilating system was put building, and the days lost were wn to 10,114 a year. In another y 500 employees did the work it ken 600 to perform after fresh is introduced as & factor in ofâ€" Keeping Well. In W1 Tinley Woods. can mM me en for the Worst. who was signing arâ€" a ship began to write his right hand; then, en to bis left hand, he welve times +4 on ice bit of and perties of bentonite forms the country | roadways into a wet, sticky mass. Re-' search work is being carried on at preâ€" ' sent with the bitumen sands of the . MceMurray district as to the possibility of using this material as a waterproof ; coating for western roads. ‘ While its presence in the soil is nn-{ doubtedly a serious drawback in reâ€"| gard to transportation, bentonite husl already a few commercial uses. One is as a filler in the manufacture of paper, for which purpose it is claimed to be superior to kaolin, at present largely used. There is a patented proâ€" cess for its use in the deâ€"inking of old news print. It is also used as an inâ€" gredient in pastes for attaching paper labels to metal or leather surfaces, thus preventing the labels from curlâ€" ing up and becoming detached. . It is finding some use as a filler in the lead pencil and crayon industry. It has been used as a ‘hoofâ€"packing‘ in veterâ€" Not in the Dictionary. ‘ Sho wrote him a note which read: \"Dear Johnâ€"Meet me 2t the trysting ‘pluce ut 6.30 this evening, without ‘fale." And John answered: "In that ‘lexicon of youth which fate has reâ€" served for a bright manhood there is | no such word as ‘fale.‘ " inary practice. Other suggested uses for bentonlte‘ are: as a filler in rubber, leather,| phonograph records, cordage, pressedi and moulded insulating materials, and in'-.(:fléai) soaps; as an ingredient in gypsum and lime plasters, and for glazes in ceramics, as a water softenâ€" ;r, a carrier of printer‘s ink, and as a substitute for fuller‘s earth, and as an adulterant in cheap candy. It is largely with a view to estabâ€" lishing the fitness for the above purâ€" pases that the investigations are being carried on by Mr. Spence, and as a reâ€" sult of his enquiries no doubt many additional industries will find a new raw imaterial available for their manuâ€" facturing processes. Spartan Discipline in Royal House Strong, We‘ll Say. Wifleâ€""Mercy, John, but some of these highwaymen must be mighty strong!" Hubbyâ€""How so°"" Wifleâ€""The paper tells of one that bheld up in it." gent observer that the chief interes‘ of King George during the past twenty] years has been his children. E As a much younger man than he is toâ€"day, he sensed the direction affairs wore taking, the breaking down of the old, substantial aristocratic, the rise of a democratic spirit the like of which no royaity had ever faced beâ€" fore, and the need of a royalty equal to the conditions which have arisen. _ #a his children, the King has been To his children, the hing has DCCH a Spartan father. | There is nothing of the modern, easyâ€"going daddy about King George. Hoe does not enjoy the jolly, free and equal companionship of his children as most presentâ€"day fathers do. After twenty years of a domestic discipline which never has wavered or weakenâ€" od, King George has rather the re spectful love of his children, after the manner of fathers and children half a century ago. The formalities of royalty have not been responsible for this altogether. But ha has always insisted on the forâ€" malities. That is to say, that when the Prince of Wales, when he was livâ€" ing with the royal family in Buckingâ€" ham Palace, came to say goodâ€"night to the King, he entered the King‘s pre seunce, even though it were the drawâ€" ingâ€"room or the King‘s study, with forâ€" mality, and addressed him as "Sire." After the formal goodâ€"night was said, they would unbend for a moment, and behave as father and son. But the irâ€" reverent atmosphbere of the ordinary intercourse between father and grown It has been evident to every intelli son has ‘fiever existed between the King and the Prince who wiil foilow Thero is little or nothing of King Edward‘s jovial and beaming spirit in King George. He takes most of his character from his Danish mother, and a little of . Queen Victoria‘s . active sen§e of responsibility. He is an aloof man. Rather a shy man. He determined, after the manner of a shy ard serious man, that his childâ€" ren should grow up not merely with a sense of responsibility to the siate but with characters adaptable to servâ€" ing the stateo. He was determined that none of his children should grow into bored and blase royalty. Whenr at Windsor Castle, twenty vears ago, it was cuetomary for the royal children to go walking each afâ€" terngorn. And their walk took them past the cottage of & lady. who liad a an automobile with four men stt @pacmaag‘y > i t NTA + the chief interest ng the past twenty the manner of â€"AND THE WORST Is YET To COME _ Foods That Make Men Strong. The hardest work in the world is lumbering, for it means working af top speed from dawn till dark, and usually in intense frost. â€" Lumberers live principally on beans baked with pork and flapjacks (a kind of panâ€" cake) eaten with maple syrup. They also eat quantities of steamed brown bread. Iow o e o o in i ce t DICIN: i It is a mistake to think that a lot of meat is necessary to make muscle. ‘The coolie, especially the Chinese.‘\ who lives on rice, is more active and enduring than the Negro fed on meat; l and the Arab, who lives largely on dates, is extraordinarily wiry and can travel all day in burning heat that would kill a meatfed man. Among the strongest men in the world are the Turkish porters. Two of these have been known to carty a grand piano up & flight of stairs, and one will carry a load of 1001b. twenty miles in a day on his back. â€" These men live almost entirely on dried fruit and olives. The Spanish peasant works all day and dances halft the night on black bread, onions, and occasionally a little cheese; while the Italian, who is the best nayyy in the world, does his work on an equally simple diet, of which the principal part is chestnut meal, onions and fruit. Dr. Stefansson, the Canadian exâ€" very beautiful and inviting croquet lawn. The children insisted on playing, and the nurses and attendants asked permission of the lady. Day after day, the children CAMC and played with the greatest zest. They held a long series of matches beâ€" tween themselves. The lady one day said to the attendants of the children that they should be got a croquet set of their ownâ€"they seemed to enjoy it 80 "The King has refused to let them have a set," she was told. "But why? It is a harmless game." "Oh," sald the attendant, "croquet is one of the things the children have to do without." That was the King‘s system. There were certain things which the royal princes must arbitrarily do without, just for the sake of doing without. It was possible for them, naturally, to have everything. But the King arbiâ€" trarily refused them certain things. It ha_sv been the same throughont RacLaARr CaIeks the children came plorer, who has lived longer in the Arctic than any other white man, °Xâ€" isted for months on nothing but fish. All day he was out in temperatures below zero, yet he has put it on reâ€" cord that during that time he actually gained weight. » The staple diet of the Roman> solâ€" dier was coarse brown bread and sour wine, yet on this he built roads and carried incregiblv weights. of armor and baggage over extraordinary disâ€" tances A French physician has been carryâ€" ing on some interesting experiments to determine the amount of force exâ€" pended in piano playing. $ 1 w We C ar o He finds that to sound one of the white keys requires in its doing anr application of energy equal to that in handling a weight of something more than two and a half pounds. For a black key the weight increases to a bit over three pounds. To play Chopâ€" in‘s Nocturne in C Minor requires an expe;x‘d-l't{x;ew of force equivalent to nearly 40,000 lbs. Ough;"x;{anlsts to be classified as artists or athletes? Ignoring Failings. Mrs. A â€""How do you w ences for your cooks?" epitaphs." their lives in all things. They could not do what they liked or have what they pleased. Thousands of wealthy families have been ruined by it. The wealthy classes of England toâ€"day are spoiled by their boredom. But the princes of Britain are not spoiled nor bored. In every relation with life, in their relations with people of every sort, they are fresh and interested and unâ€" affected. It is a triumph for King George, at some expense to himself. For it is known that the princes fear him not a little, and that the royal family is goâ€" ing through that uncomforable stage when a family of boys who have been brought up under control reach the age of manhood and control must cease. The removal of the Prince of Wales from the family circle to quarters of his own outside the palace was only agreed to after long delay on the part of King George, who has always been Can It Be True? :AA 1 would write their you write referâ€" , in their of the Princess on the Stage. The youngest child of the late Czar Alexander II. of Russia, Princess Catherine Yourievsky, recently made her first appearance on the musicâ€"hall | stage at the London Coliseum. l She and her husband were made prisoners as soon As the revolution broke out in Petrograd. "Hidden by friends," she said, "I lived through a dreadful period of terâ€" ror. At one time I served as a maid at an inn, and at another I passed as the niece of a gardener and his wife, doing all the cleaning and cooking, and sleeping on bare boards. "At last I managed to become atâ€"| tached toâ€"a unit of the Red Cross, and so finally crossed the frontier." As Hall Caine Looks Toâ€"day. In a beautiful suite at this hotel, aftâ€" fording a wonderful view of the| Thames and a vast area of London, L/ found "the Manxman." Time, which transforms us all, has not neslected“ Sir Hall Caine. His famous shock of red hair has now the yellowish white that is frequently reminiscent of forâ€" mer redness. The wellâ€"known con:â€" tour of his distinctive and luxuriant coiffure is â€" completely preserved, though the upper part of it is very vtransparent, revealing the shape of his lentire cranium. His features seemed _ Stories About Wellâ€"Known People ©|(~ Kingdom Ward, who has returned from Burma after eleven months spent in the Tibetanâ€"Yunnan marshes, made a complete traverse, cast to west, of that extraordinary beit of the earth‘s crust through which the waters of the Tibetan plateau escape. Here four of the greatest rivers of Asia flow in a strip of mountainous country not more than seventyâ€"five miles wide. IEIESE TTCC There is nothing elsewhere on the earth‘s surface to compare with these mighty rivers â€"the Yangtse, Mekong, Salween and Iriawadâ€"running paralâ€" lel to each other for a hundred miles and separated only by rock partitions which in places attain altitudes of 25,â€" 000 feet.â€"â€"London Times. Fact vs. Theory. Little Janieâ€""Mother, if baby was to swallow the goldfish would he be able to swim like one?" Motherâ€""Oh, my heavens, no child. They‘d kill him." "But they didn‘t." here awhile!" somewhat at a loss to G lively spirit of the Prince The Duke of York, who is more like his father than is the Prince, is afâ€" filcted with a very severe stammer. He sometimes has to stop dead in his speech and struggle painfully â€" for words. I spite of this, he goes out to functions and makes public addresses, and generally takes his share of the burden of royal appearances. This is another evidence of the King‘s hand, for the Duke of York was most shy of public appearances. Consider these royal folk as human beings. And who ever heard of a man with a stammer who gladly spoke in public? But the King, who conquered an instinctive distaste for public appearances, handâ€" led the matter to the King‘s taste, and lthe Duke of York enjoys a popularity not much less than that of the Prince. A Mighty Four-ir_t-Hapd. Simple tastes, in keeping with royal| appearances, have been used by the‘ King to keep his children unspoiled in | a spoiled world. | .. The, King hbimself is a toiler. He has his ofice in the palace and has his | office hours. Every document of govâ€", ernment that he is supposed to see, he sees, There is nothing of the perfuncâ€" tory figurehead about him. There are thousands of heads of great businesses who know less about their business than the King. HMe studies every bill brought to him for signature. He has ministers and secretaries closeted with him to explain points of law or administration,. â€" Historaus and essayâ€" sts may say he is a formal head of the state, but he doesn‘t admit it. He investigates, â€" studies, . argues, checks everything brought before him. His reason is this: governments come and governments go, but the King reâ€" mains. He is the continuity of govâ€" |ernment. Just the Place. Mosquitoâ€""Ha, I guess I‘ll park These things he has impressed on his sons, particularly the Prince of Wales, in the frequent formal discusâ€" sions he has with his sons. He cateâ€" chises them on their studies (or used to), ‘lectures them on their duties, deâ€" portmient. . A Shy, reserved man, thrust into kingship. unexpectedly, who has ridâ€" den the waves of a turbulent democâ€" racy in his ‘reign, who has seen milâ€" lions of his subjects ground and torn in the mightest war of the agesâ€"seryâ€" ing him. . R "A;tiâ€"v;lio has made a success of his God bles : the King! loss 1 $.av. i1 dis size by the long hair, : dwarfing them. The color of his skin tu uniformly pink, and he is not so thin ‘as portraits of him had led me to exâ€" | pect. â€" His picturesque aspect was lhel;htened by a distinctive manner of i dress. His doubleâ€"breasted waistcoat to have settled~like a sediment into tho ceâ€"ninarstively small area of his triangular face, the forehead, emphaâ€" was cut low, revealing a hugs Ascot cravat of black satin.â€"From "Porâ€" traits of Pen and Pencil." By Waiter Tittle. From Clerk to Playwright. "Robert E. Lee" and "Oliver Cromâ€" well" are two of the finest plays in London; the former is drawing crowds to the Regent Theatre, and the latter is at His Majesty‘s, says an English writer. The young man who wrote both of them, Mr. John Drinkwater, poet, draâ€" matist, and critic, began work as an insurance clerk. He stuck to his desk for twelve years, and then the call of literature and the theatre became too strong, and he launched out as writer and actor. He wrote "Abraham Linâ€" coln"â€"an inspiring playâ€"and "Mary Stuart"; he is, too, one of the leading modern poets and the joint editor, with Sir William Orpen, of "The Outâ€" line of Literature and Art." The Canadian tourist when in SCOLâ€" land should endeavor to spend a day or two in royal Deeside. Many tourâ€" ists visit the Trossachs mainly owing to the spell of Waiter Scott, but though the Trossachs have undoubtedâ€" ly a charm Deeside is in many reâ€" spects superior. The crowning glory of Deeside is Balmoral Castle, the highland home of King George. The castle is beautifully situated in a roâ€" mantic and delightful country. For n few months in the fall King George: is in residence and visitors flock from afar. ‘The great event of the season is the Braemar gathering. when sports are engaged in and the kilt, the one time national dress, is much in eviâ€" dence. Englishmen come for the 00 casion who have probably never worn a kilt before and strut about in all the glory of Scotia‘s martial garbh as to the manner born. The kilt is seldom worn except at this time, when it is the fashion. Ladies dress particularly for the event and their frocks are duly chronmicled in the press. The ladies, as in other countries, aAre well adâ€" vanced, but so far they have not donâ€" ned the kilt. 8 â€" PV sulcu ts the Braemar gathering. 1 are engaged in and the l time national dress, is n dence. Englishmen come EEWUL MITC MITCC To the south of the castle stands! * wamn i 1 _ _1 MHk._. "dark Lochnagar‘â€"a mountain some | Public School Mu 4,000 feet highâ€"which is celebrated | The greatest present need by the poet Byron, who spent his earâ€" school music in Canada L on im enel t omcel ies cola w i 0 ooo en act nc es â€"the n e dur t en ly years not very far from it Queen Victoria had a great regard for Balâ€" moral and kept it as secluded as posâ€" sible. She would not allow the railâ€" way to be extended, so that there is a motor coach journey of eight miles from the railroad terminus at Balâ€" later. The surrounding scenery must be seen to be appreciated. In an obâ€" scure part of the castle grounds there is a statue of a faithful retainer, John Brown. He was a great personality and a prime favorite of Queen Vicâ€" toria. A few miles from Balmoral is Grathie Church, where the royal family worship when in residence at Baimorâ€" al. Motor coaches come from all parts and the church is invariably crowded. At other times it has been known to have very few worshipere. King George is a model landiord and he has no more loyal subjects than his Deeâ€" side people. From Balmoral it is a short run to Braemar, which is in the heart of the mountains. It was bere that Robert Louis Stevenson conceived and partly executed his famous romance "Treaâ€" sure Island." Here also he made & beginning of the nursery verses which afterward grew into the volume "The Child‘s Garden of Verse." King George‘s Highland With regard to the phrase, "white elephant," Mr. Hermann Norden, in "From Golden Gate to Golden Sun," gives some interesting information. The white elephants are kept by the King of Siam in the Royal stables at Bangkok, and are not really white, but merely lighter in color than the norâ€" mal beast. They are supposed to be animated by the spirit of some great king or hero. According to Siamese faith the soul of Buddha existed in the body of a white elephant before it was Incarâ€" nated again in Prince Gautama. In ancient sun worship aiso the white a white elephant before nated again in Prince ancient sun worship al elephant was a sun emb elephant was a sun emblem. The King keeps these sacred aniâ€" mals in great luxury. "But the ownerâ€" ship of one by a prince was by no means a plece of good luck, for the king made war on him to obtain posâ€" session. â€" This is the source of our commigeration of anyone who has a ‘white elephant‘ on his hands." Siam‘s White Elephants. A Live Wire. "That fellow fairly shocks you with his energy." _ "Yesâ€"ho‘g‘ s live wire." % 1 “1 Jyo" @ i ie‘ TORONTO Home. when in Scot but "It is in Western Alberta and Briâ€" tish Columbia that Canada‘s mountain scenery reaches its sublimest heights. Here among the great ranges of the i Rockies, Seikirks and Cascades is, as ‘Protulor Adams of McGill University says in his The New Canada (Dutton), ‘A sea of mountains washed by the waters of the Pacific on the west, the most accentuated and beautiful part of the Dominion. HMere, in the heart : of the Rocky Mountains National Park ‘fsurrounded by towering summits, nestles Banff and near by idyllic Lake Louise, and near here is that most _ complete picture of natural beauty, i O‘Hara Lake.‘ Off the beaten path, . too, is that other area . of natural ~beauty, the Waterton Lakes National Park." The Literary Digest, in its annual reâ€" view of the attractions ofered by this continent to summer holidayâ€"seekers, has this to say about Alberta and Briâ€" tish Columbta: norâ€"| â€" Aithough the American view is that | the moon is composed of a number of ated |small meteoric masses fAying through ; or space, British scientists wil} share Sir the | George Darwin‘s theory that the y of| moon is a plece of the earth which carâ€"| flew off fifty or sixty million years ago In | owing to the terrific «speed at which hite 1 the earth was then rotating. Now the earth is slowing down. If the speed amj.| Of the rotation could be increased to nerâ€" | what it was when the moor was supâ€" : no posed to have been filung off, every "The Ban#fâ€"Lake Louiseâ€"Field region of the Rockios and the Glacier region of the Selkirk range are intersected by the transâ€"continental line of the Canadian Pacile system," The New Motor Roag. "Penetrating the very heart of the wildest Canadian Rocky Mountain scerery is the new Governmentâ€"conâ€" structed Banff â€" Windermere motor road. This highway is 93 miles long, and is the last link of a $,500 circle tour that touches at ten national parks â€"American and Canadian. It ailso completes a smaller Canadian motor circle touching at Calgary, Banff, Sinâ€" clair, Hot Springs, Windermere, Cranâ€" brook, Fernie, Macleod and back to Calgary. It is estimated that at least 15.000 automobiles will pass over this road in 1923, 75 per cent the United States." "An unusually attractive feature of vacation life in the Canadian Rockies is the series of bungalow camps open from June 15 to September 15, which provide comfortable accommodations and good food at reasonable rates, Those in the Canadian Rockies are Moraine Lake camp, Lake O‘Hara camp, Lake Wapta camp, Yoho Valâ€" ley camp, Emerald Lake Bungalows (connected with the Chalet). Sinclair Vermilion â€" and â€" Lake Windermere camps are in the Columbia River Valâ€" ‘ley on the west curve of the motor loop completed by the Banffâ€"Winderâ€" ‘\mere bighway." THE ATTRACTIONS OF CANADA The greatest present need of public school music in Canada is that of awakening in a large number of leadâ€" ers in public school work, who have not looked upon the subject with much favor, a conviction of the real values of music to a people. This number inâ€" cludes some of the heads of training school, superintendents, principals of high and elementary schools, and genâ€" eral supervisors. The least delinquent are the grade teachers, because up until a very tow years ago their training in public schoo!l music was a mere perfunctory affair. Patrons are not delinquent im the matter, because wherever musio is well taught it is given hearty finanâ€" cial support. Those then, who need the awakening most are this group of uniformed leaders, and comparatively few of them have any worthâ€"while conâ€" victions on the matter. A number, it would seem, have little knowledge of | the subject technically, historicaliy, ‘and psychologically, to give thera any basis for consideration of its values, Because of their ignorance on the sub» \ject, these leaders have been content ‘to give no serious thought to musig ;u a subject worthy of much attention in the public schools«. | In fairness it should be raid there | are leaders in public echool work who | do recognize the values of music. These are in almost every instance conn‘pcted with the city system of eduâ€" | cation.. It is the schools of the emall \city, the village and rural section that are barren in real music toaching. . The leaders in education are the ones 'very largely responsible for this copâ€" | dition. Canada Needs Awakening in Public School Music. cific Ocean, Learn how to creep; you use same motions in climgng. Mystery of the Moon. them from d h4 * To ds t Y f.‘??{?‘i.‘ y$ im AL adt 1 f adt & 4

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