West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 9 Dec 1926, p. 2

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" " "tre an, an an remember tho In! the they kl) In awe? Mum-PI Inc We In ttrodmttrhterots house not In Bolognn. Bho was a dainty can. a... not! an settoetterr - an a in (mm a window. Ttttrl “It!“ I when ot "wind." “I “I. when her rather was out of tho: way. Sho moved the one of a Pstl, Incl born one Mdo at tho cool-1m ”Boutonndm; M’s-com would no.“ what. 0mm walker use bone analyst-AM. and tho to In”. ended. . . The VIM 3nd (I. Viceroy. .’ Pooh who know the In. hon! Cur- m- m by horny mun. hue imat 1nedhtmtotrotttolaatmaatoMow bk VI“! to be mistaken Mr blame“ on ”Inmate occasion wth Vtoemy at but. not he has and. thoetottf_on human In some paper- wrmon abort- tr W9 ha dSed and Just publbhod. tht on. match an Indian an!) Inh- took Mr. Harris tho Valet. tor the Viceroy and told him that sixteen “you were waiting in tho fungle man by rot htm to shoot them. At which Mr. Hank dug the an): in tho ribs To the homeseeker of limited mourn. bidding, perehenre, {Nowell to child< hood scenes, the "newness" of the country to which he turns his he. is on. of its moat nppenling features. It MIDI free or cheap land, socisl equsl- ity and opportunities for httrtneHI new and personal advancement that are practically beyond his resch in his native environs. Cumin In. long been a favorite field for homo. uokers. The successes achieved by the many thousands who have vultur- ed into this great Dominion have hastmed the settlement of the vast are: of free '.and unto available. Fm lands are now largely restricted to the outlying end rapidiy retreating "fron. tier" regions of the emailed "newer" In the rush and eonfusion attending the settling of with extensive areas it was inevitable, remarks the Natural Monroe! 1ntellhreneo Service, that thoroughneu could not " all times be maintained. Hence for economic, pol- itical, or other moons various smaller district: were pused over. During the recent period of general renduntment e stock-heme of resources has thrown the spotlight on many such areas. They are to be found in grater or leaner dimensions in every province of Canada, including the "older," or ”tern provinces, as well u the 'h-er," or wentern one-a Included in such districts at. for. not timber reservations, now culled out or cut over areas formerly unfit for settlement became of Zack of" drainage, mince provided; once intte. eouihk- are” later traversed with rude, and lands reserved for sundry purpose. but now thrown open. Tim- hor and wild lands held by private owners for cutting or npeeulatlnn and now breed on the market probably represent tho grate-gt proportion of tho new new available for settler. ment throughout the various settled ”nod-agave"! provinces. , Mr. Hares dug the up]: In the “be. “I like to read criticisms“ my Matt uud told htm to quartet the numborCitttr," he ndded "but when a Jam Lord (tun-um. who was when“); th.;orlt1c wet stated tonne deem that incident. wu highly unused I l 'srutrocated' my audience I You It was " stoommhtorm Itouetdtttattho A Worm. Tum. lerttietrm had been wrongly translated Mr. David Masters. who” boot. from Japanese into English. tho critic “How to Ihrrttturrr Consumption," bu having nanny written um. I w my "teto-t a bold plan tor Managing out “Idiom “but.” provineee It}: to he. tho economic and mini dam-Magoo usually entailed in so doing by rum of renwieneu and isolation. Though such district: no locally of n pioneer nature their more ndvnnced surrounding: make avnilnblo tho nmitlen of civiliution and pro- vido new. for the enterprise and im dustrr of the settler and an outlet for his products. Opportunities in sueh districts are Alike availnhle to new- Ct mon to (Innan and to those in sur. Intent and mm. crowded are“. Suell trait: of new lands are of non than usual interest and value. They ttive the pioneer his opportunity to make his home and“ a living from the primitive land without hav. The Bank of Enghnd was foutt by a Schumann who died in poverty. Natural Resources Bulletin. 1 When Winter Comes. MUTI' AND JEFF-BY Bud Fisher. The Paul" Returned. MEN AND WOMEN OF TO-DAY 23? f JEFF, swu- Ym‘wmskees‘ me Been SHAVED ore Too LOOK wmv YEARS Voweca! t've 66C ‘Mu IOCA! SUP on THAT cnuss lt"tess am» T'LL oer Nou A I ma no vNubemue AS THE KsWoNoest Fwe NEAR om crutb IN Ttlc Womb! fr" the - I. I vol-known union journalist, Ho bu been . um oe “gems" tor may r---and worms- Whoa balked in mammalian“ to sunrise visitors by asking them it they would “he to one " pot. worm. They wand goon: to maul-dd: all. marl», than would be only tho up of the worm'o tmit sticking at In tho new. But he would stroke tt with . blade of grass, and tho worm would come out and arch It: back. "You see.” he would my, "men tb worm Ilka. u ttood turn." I "Him." for John McCormick. I Mr. John McConnell. the humour "rut, tomr. ham Just returned from s tour in China and Janis. when ho on; before ltugo man Moon. In Japan, he an, the people Imam! with a strange “auto ot bruth through nursed lips. "i had premium 1y hard ot this form ot upplam" and Mr. McCormack, "but I must conic“. nevenrthofeos, that tor one Instant at. tet my am number the wave ot sub- ;d-usd sound that swept through the :amu-torlum seemed to me a little too mach like tho dreaded his: ot dilap- proval. Mushy, don't tall into that very com. mon error of dropping " outdoor exor- cise when winter comes. Skating. hockey. em. can always be indulged ist. while. for the elderly who do not feel up to the exertion of games. .wtv'Altttt wll! do wonders. Exerclse. ln the fresh cold air, warmly hut lightly clad, does more than anymlng else to ward oft that unpleasant feeling that Coma trom annoy. being hall frozen. But the truth of the matter is that such trutrohtettu remedies as tho abovo do more that good. the root ot that "atone eoid" teem: being I faulty cir- culation. lute-mid warmth. anmdored by means ot heat-giving foods, In much more otttrettvq than any morass in clothing. Far trom clown. all doors and windows In the hed-rooms, a good supply of trash alt ht most important in winter. toe people who breaths in. pure air get out ot conditiod very quickly Ind this ls at the, bottom of half our winter Ailments. Hot-water bottles " night, numer- ous blanks“, and evuy door and win- dow shut tight and fast seem to trttomt them mu. mullet. tad they shiver their miner-am. w” from November to The ad6nt ot the winter months ot the year always bring: misery to those chilly mortals who seem to "feel tho cold" tar more than their followu. The cheapo“ taritt evar devised tor tong-Quartet; telegraph came Into operation reoemly. with the opening of the new beam wireless system. an an English writer. Thls system enables the diary! for wholes” lusmnago-s m be rwducs-d from turrtttlrtst between r.m- shilling to Bre stamina a word down to three-half- pom'e a word. The mlnlmum charge La 2.1. 6d tor twenty words or less. Tests have been carried out over a long [method between stations at Bod- mm. In Cornwall. and Montreal, and men-usages haw Mn dispatched at more than a hundred words a minmo ht hulk dtreoitottg slmalttutssousty fur oiettteoet hours out ot twrrnly-tour. Ike-am wit-eta" In worked with short wave-u at unusually low power and In dinmlunul -that in ttroamoatt mess- - can he picked up only by nation- tn thte with the beam. At first many "pom [we dmtbttttl about the mm system, but it is expect- od that a number of vew stations will sum- ha in operation 'ttt differvnt, part: or the tempire. At present radio-Leic- grama can he mutt to a" parts ot Can.. ada. NewtoundUm,t. the West. India. the Uniled Stare-s. and "thor "otttttries teached wrung!) (‘unmht The Wireless Beam. Lor' 2 we. have a threetoid function. They inter-pose a barrier to the outside air; they should conserve, within ventila- tion limits. the warmth generated in the body. and (when loose) permit a lone of warm air to form between this body and themselves. In wooUen clothing. too, the fabric. it loose-a tight vest is not half as warm as a loose ownthers in its oelr'.a pockets ot warm air. Further. heavy clothing mp8 vitality, and that Instantly nuke: tho body more sus- ceptible to cum. 50-40040 clothing tor warmth. Make tho practical test If two persons. of equal vitality. went out on a cold day, and one was wmpped up In heavy and "eloetrtittftttt gnrmouts and the other wore loose clothing or medium weight. the latter wank! be (at warmer. C'lothea, you It is because vitality varies con- siderably betwéen individuals that come of us feel the cold more than others. But many are cold because they don't know how to keep warm. . THE Above is Shqul an l (frown Prim-v Leopold or Ann“ of Sweden. posed The Flagship Revenge with a has my for the great naval dlsplny " Portland. Don't Be Cold. '12. ROYAL win: We Newman after tht photograph of the royal hrido and 8mm. and the men Macaw. formerly Prince" ir civil wedding in Stockholm. BRIDE AND GROOM . No man will ever write the true story of himse1f.--Jerome K. Jerome. of wearing a mutttee In tight lows. and then loosely. Then there 15 tood. Just " mm coal produces more hyat than other varieties. so also does toad - the body's med. Porridge, bacon. herring» pork, and so on an 'warm" foodl. Amazon and Thamu Rlvers. The width of the Amazon River at its mouth is more than equal to the entire length of the {among Thames River in England. _The vision of that duy a When human strength my - the common good, _ And man, forever loyal to the nee, Find. tar beyond our season: ot dia. may. The guerdon of its gram: Ono hope, one home. one song. on. brotherhood. TORONTO The Day. --Georgo Start-mg. I It In found mainly on the rich prairies of the Mississippi Valley. and its peculiar powers were well known ?to hunters and settlers long before IGeneral Alvord discovered it. When _ lost on dark nights they would search I tor it and, by feeling its leaves, obtain (their hearings. In Korea women um taught (but. the greatmt feminine virtues are silence. humility and tlmlmly. Happineu In Good. We mum. distinguish between felici- ty and prosperuy, for prosperity leads often to ambltkm. and ambition to dis- appointment: the compo is then over; the wheel mum mm! but once, while: the mutton of goodness and happi- ness is peytusu.--Laatdor. “I bought an old one myself and got the trimming myself." Rubbing a car with amuse-Vs and Chamois shouvid be done in mraight lines rather than in circles. To pre- vent water from drying and spotting. it is won to clam one panel at n time. Amid applying chamoié, and especial- ly tho sponge. with!” mt. pressure. and do not rub after the surface rg dry. A Compass Plant. A party ot travellers who recently returned to Texas owed their lives. when lost in a terrible norm that swept the prairies, to a plant which In. on more than one occasion. been responsible for saving humn beings. Known as the campus plant. it I" ceived its name from the stuns. pm- p'orty exhibited by its lens ot pro coming their faces to the rising and, setting sun. The compass plant in al perennial. and during its first yen; been ndicai leaves only. In iu-sec-. ond year it is a. flowering herb. with', tour to tivtt leaves measuring from: twelve to thirty inches In length. r A ping: which is said to be nine to predict earthquakes and volcanic eruptions beam the treientitte name of Abrus pracatorious. It is a. native ot Cuba, has no flowers, and consists of a long stalk from which branch numer- ous twigs containing row: of delicate- looking leaves. The leaves frequently change color or close, while the twigs bend themselves into curious post. tions. _ This plant, which was tirttt brought to the attention of the aeiotttifit world by General Benjpmln Alvord, is one ot the moat remarkable in the world. This plant in highly sensitive to electric and magnetic itttiuencea, Ind by being able to interpret the move- ments of the plant in "h%NrtttMb to 6100 trie currents the scientist is enabled to predict great convulsion- of Nature. Knew What Ho Wanted. "Mr new car In gray, trimmed with Siienco Held Woman'. Virtue. Use of Sponge. Luck Was Against Mutt, That's All; " cm W. Eli-"- We cannot ”nthwndlllon that the drift (was fun to city h tho direct mug of s "Wt drift from Gouda to the United States. Also that tho'former eannot be no- gurded u a mere accident, but bu l lubstmtid sock! and ecanomic foun- dation. Whether or not the cause- can be wholly Ciminated in a question which might possibly huve to be .m- wered in the negative, because they are to u very loud degree of world- ...:A. mrurmnce. Tut.thia exodus on Mf. Otto H. Kahn, the famous hm, erican multi-millionaire banker, deal.. in: with the astrieultursl situation in the United States. recently mad. the following trenchant observations: " . . . . It is not suff1cient snswer to the farmer's complaint to refer him' sternly to.the rigid functioning of the law of supply and demand and to the doctrine of the survival of the fittest; because in reply the farmer will con- tend that, in other respects, for rea- sons which seemed vuiid to Congress, We have not scrupled to interfere. through sets of governments snd otherwise. with the untremmelod workings of that luv and that doe- trine. And he. wlil snd does claim that we either adhere to them strictly all round or give him tha etNtstivq, hd- untsgs of diapsmrntiom' similar to those which hue been granted in the use of other csllinp.” Mr. Kahn ha I reputation for sound, constructive thinking, and his views might well be seriously con- sidered by nil clam of Cnnsdiann. Coupled with n vigorous immigration policy, we must dew-top a now interest in the problem of inn-cued agricultur- al development. A tine churaeter does not demand on what ,mu mass-u. but gunman” c'a- pend on chnnwsn' " won an 6tVery other good an“ trttitrlt man. to mm In ladivldul‘a or-“ I. ouatmutai4y.-- SocMea. "if there is one culling which has I higher Claim than another upon the helpful eon.iderntion of the State it is that of the farmer. The farmer's problem is part of our problem. The farmer's welhrro in an emmial part of our welfare. "Both justice and self-interest de- mend of the community at large that every legitimate endeavor be put forth to the end that tho farmer’s griev- ances be redreaaed. If that redress can only be accomplished by methods which, while practicable and economic- ally warrantable and promising to be effective, are novel and perhaps un- palatable to the established ways of business, then the less important will have to yield to the more important, i.e., business conveniences and cun- "lt is harmful and menacing to the commonwealth that so nuniemua and so valunbla n portion of the popula- tion should feel ditssu'.udUd and re- sentful and be without prosperity. The situation lends itself peculiarly to the incitement: and wiles of the demlgogue and to the plauaible fur- ments of the economic visionary. tank. to the rehabilitation of the fuming Industry. , TheDrifttotho m Founder... to the Towns. - I w. psi-loll. t up. the conch-loll that tum to city u tho l _ -nk-mulmt drift, to My; soon. at. Mud-o" ' will - m and .ieh----in um. r - “no. to conquer. MC Ming “enlist. But lo. u M! ”an that the mm rt " a“ ettttmatittq and unmv ' 1 my. Mac why We dream Ir.it -rrofHtte w I. now uvm- ri,rr-r , --" an do - than were an: "n “on d - thousand yet»: at '1.emedtrta a amnion: In.» I Minn-WWII!" it Its, GINO H "mm (mushy: .' with ot I blind man vim .1- " or guidance. write. an I 'r, l mu have aux-Ar- ', fun gin; prapetr".it {or I: " ileum-fly paid 1m aurn' , lemons and nrnmhu‘n. it "will; than tit nuly hs Bumption. How 'lie; x. It: mystery. Gut um" bone people or tlt Am: belt began to tittd war "M land)“ ot (how :4 to “at! that the roam; Malta to a new diet mauled-t- To b. an that “Just as 5mm» nut-II Wot life. an aw» an int n W phmumumr than." do.- not My. rm _t' thing. '0 - mainly and dr‘mn; l may. How to It that although In 9w. tho “I! no out of action, Me who: de-tat Why 102mm} “limb of the mind” Wm? W, K-ao am a. srlwvv “alums am much dbmnei and in“. you!“ through thr. and a. but "radon: of thing: have Waxed. or of things hm hue thought at in our wakm: mm" bow on that theory be r and with the itttiinrsutobio __',' many dreams m not duccrtel, mu of outed] salon. and tha: In not Yuri-non! ot things: my kW? . Ind with tho sloop-living h- . pm ot dmamir mum") I m to than damn-puma s? It than it no "natural" "sph of drum, doe. that mum ti 0mm must he mum?" Dunn- m m effect; an mew “as“; what to the canw ol K the handout aotjtttem (I! tn can. other Mm "a. may An explode” theory the: urine. with not. in obvit,u, tamblo. Science. It Is evld.:. not oxttnin tho mo of (than been» on. can out the any“?! on. I: obliged to deny um l In". meanings. "Meanings," l t' must be taken a incluuiw or in“ Invention, infurmaticm, , Nru.-aho Swiu Town .1 l bu the honor of being the "x: a unity in Ettmpo to put a r bobbed lair. My Cflilllhvs ', amount usual“. with»! sho: l. Shoo tho amount embarra,se, , . woman of tho town my ', _ worth it, eonsiderine thr. Rl.'r . of abort Mir. “In. aumen ago the dam-mt "rMer-uot on su night-that t boy on a cymn Not In the first din-um. but mtoomh thare aprearvd, m: a t “Mon. the date Aug. 6. Iltt tho Just before noon, (allowing a un- nmll. the troy rude down the per the writer lWhed him torm h dun. a. terrttied, be swept by. or who. In behind that dream? Hundreds at pantie have tl death or Injury beam“ of tire: the "warnhe' type. A rwmx parish mu ulinbury NM tlie that he dreamt (but H mm .- od and with the sleeplh'lug by t he was so impressed um he a: ', when. The was (an! "ttora-tat Wat-mango? Does Bgtrhtualituu--4ho lw'irr "tor trhrsieal death our real an In spirit form. with our 1 out, complete save mat mu "m- of lull” has We, and Ham 4 with tA.gomhe tteine can b,. PM [It to rib pun ot the way J cut and: and than dismount, L, trot “In deqtnat stopped just and his Whom-ere within a 3 crashing our the cliff to Hm The place was Htghclifhr, no“ l church. c train in Pram-3 H o'clock " night ml at F in: I can It“? Ire tit ih Kayla. it Dark An American w:" mum: on hit mum hem the ' " native mlmtry. "Why." ho vxplux' I. ttgtr.s mic-mum to " his, l dmuud that he un 'ttl " Tho ullnr war {dead} menu“: w and emu-end: "H'ttt'. We'd. on our railway hour-t at but" COMM”. City Mu (to (armor: 'W"iy M. heel "iea arc.tttli. no t a It?" . "rmer---N sue a Jul WHY WE DREAM PM. Nobody Can Solve. Tax 6n Bobbed Hair. Rats Take M Cite-1.: 5w": liming the sacrum“ thatched From Death in”. GI from VIN-”V "on. “to Mada-1, ' who. f bar; IAIN-0 th ll STORE KNOV

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