West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 21 May 1931, p. 7

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ovesd ‘air Sunday Lon# Scouts throughout the provâ€" n inco will be gratified to hear that, on , s tha nomination of the Chiet Scout for Canada (His Excellency the Earl of | w Bossborough), a very wellâ€"known and | p outstanding man has been elected to the Presidency of the Canadian Genâ€") a eral Council of the Boy Scouts Assoâ€"| t clation. This is no other than E. W.) T Beatty, Esq., KC, LLD,, otc., the| a President of the Canadian Pacific Railâ€"| & way, who for many years has taken a great interest in Scouting activities in | this country. The fact that such outâ€"| standing men as this are pleased to | associate themselves with our move | ment is a further proof of public te scognition of the value of Scout trainâ€" |~ inz, and we have every reason to be ‘ proud of the fact that we are members of the Great Brotherhood of Scouts. Recently a very interesting Lone Bcout meeting was held at Markham, when Scoutmaster Don Hutchison of the 2nd Troop, together with Mr.! Edgar Jones, Provincial Field Secreâ€" tary, visited the "Lonies" in that town. ! Tho local hotel proprietor klndly. placed a room at the disposal of tbe; Bcouts, and the evening was occupied , with the playing of games and instrucâ€"| tion, and Mr. Jones had his lantern‘ with him and entertained the boys with pictures of Scouting activities, In the course of the evening a Patrol was formed and officially recognized, which is to be known as the Peewit Patrol, and Scout Muir North was elected Patrol Leader, It was tentaâ€" tively arranged to organize a joint meetingz, some time in the near future, of tha Markham, Stouffrille and Unionville Lonies. We congratulate tha Peewit Patrol and wish them all good luck. Last week we told you about the | ‘ Artificial Respiration Campaiga, which M is being carried on by the Scouts all over Ontario during this month, and we told you how to go about obtaining instruction on this subject, Recently "The (Globe" published an editoral about this matter, commending the Boy Scouts \ssociation on their organâ€" ization of this campaign, and for the benefit of those Lone Scouts who are unable to obtain the information elseâ€" where, we outline below the st;mdatd method of applying Schafer‘s Method of artificial re piration. * 1. Lay the patient on his belly, ono‘ arm extended directly overhead, the: other arm bent at elbow and with the face turned outward and rosting on nand and forearm, so that the nose and mouth are free for breathing. #. Kneel straddling the patient‘s thighs with your knees placed at such a distance from the hip bones as will allow vou to assume the first position, a distance Lrom UNO ANP TUM9T 27 0 opd allow you to assume the first position, which is as follows: ‘ Kuees on floor opposite the hips of . 1 patient. Body slightly bent torward.t( palms of hands on the small of back! with fingers resting on the ribs, the ; | little finger just touching the loweet‘ vib, with the thumb and fingers in & | natural position, and the tips of the| fingeys just out of sight. Arms rigid. | *. With arms held straight, uwlngi forward slowly so that the weight ot‘ your body is gradually brought to boar‘ upon the patient. The shoulder should | be directly over the heel of the hand at the end of the forward swing. Do} Northern QMES®EO Y UEA M n of revenue than its farm lands andl vich mineral deposits. One of theso is the crop of blueberries, which grow bountifully in that part of the counâ€" trvy. This year about 140,000 bushels were shipped from northern Onwiof to Toronto and other centers, Durâ€" ing the height of the season as many as 1100 baskets were shipped daily tfrom North Bay by express. While principalty famous for mining, nor thern Ontario is also a very produeâ€" tive mixed farming . area, and has zreat rosources in forests and w.:tor ' _1 smcs Nkes #» 20â€"Storey Building in Paris Has 10 Floors Under Ground power.â€" Paris has no skyscrapers and the | Versailles authorities bhavye recently | banned a project ‘for & building 193s | than 100 feet high as being too lofty tor its classic landscape. Yet Paris has a building twenty stories high, alâ€" though few people know it, writes & corraspondent of "The Christian Sciâ€" ence Monitor." _ Hait of its twenty stories, it is true, are underground 2 42. aaiÂ¥imnes m{d th'e m; itvo. such low that the building does not 1c high against . the horizon â€" CCC CCC se 4s a LiA d cccmmiabt there is no denying it it is a twenly* satorey building. . It is the structure which houses the archives of the Cour dee Comptes. Ontario Berry Crop PVER MR CCC sn ‘Canada Week bY Week." Ontario has other sources than its farm lands and Still, twoutyâ€" not bead your elbows, This operation should take about two seconds. 4. Now immediately swing backâ€" ward so as to completely remove the pressure. S Ar 5â€" After two seconds swing forward again. Thus repeat deliberately twelve to fifteen times a minute the double movement of compression and release, a complete respiration in four or five seconds. 6. Continue â€" artificial â€" respiration without interruption | until natural breathing is restored, if . necessary, four hours or longer, or until a physiâ€" cian declares the patient is dead. 7. As.soon as this artificiat respiraâ€" tion has been started and while it is being continued, an assistant should loosen auy tight clothing about the patient‘s neck, chest or waist. Keep the patient warm,. Do not give any liquids whatever by mouth until the patient is fully conscious, 8. To avoid strain on the heart when ‘ the patient revives, ho should be kept: lying down and not allowed to stand or sit up. If the doctor has not arâ€" rived by the time the patient has re vived, ho should be given some stimuâ€" lant, such as one teaspoonful of aroâ€" matic spirits of ammonia in a smaill glass of water or a hot drink of coftee He should not be moved from this point until he is breathing normally of l his own volition, and then moved only I in a lying position. Should it be necesâ€" sary, due to extreme weather condiâ€" tion, etc., to move the patient before ho is breathing normally, resuscitation should be carried on during the time that he is being moved. 10. A briet return of natural respirâ€" ation is not a certain indication for stopping the resucitation. Not infreâ€" quently the patient after a temporary | recovery of respiration, stops breathâ€" ling again,. _ The patient must be | watched and, it natural breathing , | stops, artificial respiration should be _| resumed at once. or tea, etc kept warm, 9.'Iier§d;cltation should be carried on at the nearest possible point to where the patient received his injuries. | It the above method ts carried out .by trained persons after an accident, inm-o is no doubt that many persons \ will be alive to enjoy next Christmas !that but for the action of artificial ‘respiratlon would have passed on. I "Lone E." perfectly. $. Keep the patient warm. 4. Carry out artificial respiration until the patient breathes or there are definite signs of death. (Success has hours of effort.) "757.7 Tnnsport the patient to home or hospital in a lyingâ€"down position‘ and put him to bed. 3 German Production of Paper Shows Heavy Decline in 1930 German production of paper. in 1930 was adversoly affected generalâ€" lyâ€"newsprlqt production perhaps leas Te ie s 2 : than other lines, although the lattor attained only 539,500 metric tons in 1930 as against 556,000 tons in 1929, This a 3 per cent, lorr, compared with a decrease estimated at between 15 and 20 per cent. in sales of refined p‘per- a 64 3 E* The aggregate paper production in 1930 was 7 per cent, less than in 1929, while board output shows a loss of 6 per cent., according to figures comâ€" piled by the Central Paper and Pulp Industry in Berlin, _ Paper producâ€" tion totaled 1,961,394 tons, as against 2112500 in 1929 while the: board output amounted to 401,487 tons, & loss of 25,5§13 tons,.â€"U.8. Commerce Reports Young Swimmers Liteguards aro now preparing tor] their summer ‘work at the various watering places and with the swimâ€" ming season in the offing, parents arg warned to seo that their children ar@ first acquainted with the depth of the water in which they intend to bathe or swim. : 20 Lk alsk WE HCCCY Childron, these liteâ€"guards point out, often seek the first swimming place available when the weather becomea warm and plunge into the water withâ€" out knowing its dopth or currents. P _v itdcan â€" Irnaw '.hQ L The patient should be i;asi been achieved after 8 »at at European Lines Stress Faster. Quieter Travel London. â€"Higher speed, new longâ€" distance routes and greater silence and comfort in flights are combining to make the summer timetables of the airways of Europe something | like "magicâ€" carpet" documents. Transportation experts of twen‘ty European air lines are putting finishâ€" ing touches on timetables: of superâ€" speed holiday and business travel. . The main lines of Europe, through increasingly cordial coâ€"operation, now dovetail at all important airway junceâ€" tous. Transierring from one line to another this summer will be done without delay or inconvenience., Thirtyâ€"seven . passenger machines‘ employed by Imperial Airways will permit the saving of a quarter of an hour between London and Paris, Trins to Malo, Sweden and Prague, Berlin and Zurich avre now oneâ€"day affairs. A fast service will be opened this sumâ€" mer from London to Le Touquet and Switzerland, with connections to the Mediterranean. Maita may be reached from London in thirtyâ€"five hours by a combined use of airplane, flying boat and train. Lord Hampton, chief commissioner of British | sociation, will be guest of Boy Scouts of America meeting to be held in Memphis, Teun,. M e 0 C OSE There is less free oxygen in the water of the Pacific Ocean than in that of the Atlantic, and there is morte in the water of "great deeps of both oceans than in that from moderats depths, â€" says . "Popular Mechanlcs': Magazine." Theso discoveries were made by Dr. Erik G. Moberg, oceanâ€" ographer, after a chemical study of thousands of samples, Since all plant and animal life in the ocean is depenâ€" dent on oxygen, the results announced aro of fundamental as well as theoretiâ€" lcal importance. Oxygen Species of Fly Thrives on Oil C " > 9 T Despite the fact that oil is usually'l fatal to moast insects, one strange species of fly spends its fancy at the\ bottom of oil pools, says "Populat Mechaniecs Magazine." 1t answers t,o‘ the imposing namé of "Psilopa pe trolii," and is found in parts of the Galifornia oil field. Its larvel life is apent in shallow pools of waste oil, left aftor refinery processes have reâ€" moved the more volatile materials. It comes to the surface to breathe, proâ€" truding a tube to obtain air, then subâ€" ‘merges again, féeding on the remains of other insects in‘ the oil. Winston _ Phelps, . s{ School _ of Journalism, University, has been Pulitzer prize of $1,800 _the constituents OL CONUCICID 29 â€"7""°| mandet. . *. 1 | construction of foundations, ~dAM%| _ when "It Has beenvestablished beâ€" | ‘ road surfaces, buildings, and building | youd ‘@ll doubt that a genuine .offendâ€"| blocks, cement mortars, and for many | ar has been caught, the commander j | other purposes. It is one of the most| is to prepare & summons. Coples "Of | | important of our structural matetria‘s: | this, and also of. the relevant ovidâ€" ; | Materials suitable for the msnufq%- ence, must be forwarded to m‘ 1 wroppy eCc l 1CM . XIB aakasl 4 nr Portland cement is used as one of the constituents of concrete for . the construction of foggdafions. dams, road surfaces, buildings, ‘and building blocks, cement mortars, and for many . fi 15. "a# tha wmast A Constituent of Concrete Prize Winner * Guest of Bov Scouts Oceans Studied student _ at n, Columbia n â€" awarded ! Paris.â€"Colonel â€" Beckles Wiillson, Canadian author and, resident of ! Paris, has succeeded in muffling railâ€" ~road whistles within Paris. } Colone!l Willson, who wrote a book , on American Ambassadors to France, lives close to a railroad station in one ‘of Paris‘s most exclusive quarters. He was awakened at all hours of the ‘night by the shrill shriek of engines. | _ Colonel Willson wrote a firm but poâ€" llite letter to railroad officials and | government authoritics requesting the )\ muffling of the whistles, He received ‘| many polite answers asking how could they control the whistles, the only s | language known to engine drivers and 1| railroad employees. Sleepless Canadian M Whistles of Paris But Colonel Willson was obdurate. He argued that the trains whistled tvo! much and too loudly, insisting that the number and volume of the toots cou‘d be reduced to a minimum, Being of a sciéntific turn of mind he even demonâ€" strated new types of whistles which would serve the same purpose but not awaken persons sleeping a short disâ€" tance from the train tracks, Eproney CERVs en neerrs The «fficials experimented with the whistles and found them satisfactory. The Ministry of Public Works has issued orders that within two months all trains must be equipped with the muffied whistles. French Police Put on Trail Of Truant School Children 0 Truant schoolchildren of France| will tremble when they read a circul-\ ar which has beon addressed by the Minister of War to the National Genâ€" darmerie, Henceforth, writes the Paris correspondent of "The London Daily Telegaph," it will be the duty of every member of that force as he goes on his rounds to look out, not only for housebreakers and poachers and motorists who are breaking the law, but also for boys and girls who \ought to be at school and are not. The circular, which would be reâ€" garded by any collector of literary efforts of this kind as a masterpiece, is explicit. â€" "Gendarmes should disâ€" play great tact and discretion," it is explained, "intervening only in cases of deliberate absentecism and not in cases of brioft accidental absences. â€" Without going out of their way gendarmes will question children of school age whom they }moet during school hours, asking them what their motives for absence "are and reporting to the brigade comâ€" Spring Sonnet For Devon Review, Boy Scouts‘ As at 21ist annual obdurate. isheq 4e (Proure axe have hbeen found In 110 (p _ol“d_iuamel dAtstrict; bordering on Ufl“*i â€"“'m ‘They probably date from the | Soplesior | périod 1400 to 1000 B.0... Much otder, | rant of1dâ€" | t:n of especial interest for geologists, | us Pre.| BTO & gnnmavheuotmboru-g o se hy o4 uids Queen Mary Adds . |"Empire First" _\ Plans Flight . _ to Rare Collection‘ Not "Canada First"; _ Over Himalayas Fine Strings of Gems Acquirâ€", ed in Frequent Visits to London Antique Shops ‘ Loudonâ€"Queen Mary not only is an expert at valuation and selection of jewels but she has one of the finest collections in the world. She is particularly interested in their history. Â¥ UIDLOL}. L In addition to the crown jewell.\““‘ she has a collection of her own which | 4°! has taken many years to gather,| n‘ She passes much of her,time in | T‘ searching antique shops, especially | th for jade and amber, and she has lateâ€" | 40 ly acquired some fine strings . of Mc these goms. These have been + placed together on black satin beds | Ca in a cabinet in her boudoir, l Br Her collection is usually kept in a chippendale cabinet in the blue drawing room at Buckingham Palace, and it is a special favor to be asked to view them. The most admired pieces are those of the rare "creamy" jade, several of which. have been presents, There are also some beautiful sets of amber jewelry. The Queen bas some other rare treasures among hor personal préesâ€" ents, including a . magnificent diaâ€" mond bracelet and drop pendant, & gift from the King. The wearing of jewels is an art, and fow women can display gems ul well as Queen Mary. _ Her stately bearing adds to the dazzling splendor of her regalia when she is attending state affairs, _ Her jowels always seem particularly lppro&ropriate to her dress. They are Mways careâ€" fully chosen and never does she apâ€" pear twice successively with the same jowel scheme. Emeralds are among the Queen s fayorite stones. . The royal set ot these green, and usually regarded unâ€" lucky stones, have a romantic hisâ€" tory. They were wotn by the Queen‘s grandmother, the Puchess of Cambridge, in a lottery. Afterwards they were bequeathed to the Duchess of Tock, and then later were left by her to Prince Francis of Teck, Since they have come into the} Queen‘s possession she has added. many other pleces, with the result: that her collection of emeralds . is now one of the finest in the world. Her favorite pieco in the sot is an exquisitely carved emerald pendant. The Queen is also fond of pearls, and on unofficial occasions may ofâ€" ten boe seen wearing a double row of these goms with single pearl earâ€" rings. _ This partiality to pearls was also held by Queen Alexandra and Queen Vietoria. Manitoba Free Press (LID): . !7""| question of the deportation of British citizens from Canadaâ€"ruthless, inconâ€" siderate, brutal ejection of our OWn flesh and blood for the crime of eco-‘ nomic failureâ€"is again before the atâ€" tention of the public both of Canada and Great Britain. Is there no voice to be raised in defence of these people who were invited and urged to come to this country, and who came with itho hope and expectation of making homes for themselves? 10 PRETTTC O TISICCCT ad | _A royal salute fired in Hyde Park a1| at noon was the chief notification to ot| the people of London that ansthing on | out of the ordinary had occurred. Vancouver.â€"R. Chaplin, who will . accompany Capt. T. Neville Stack, | English airman, as coâ€"pilot on an atâ€" tempted roundâ€"trip flight from England to Australia in 21 days, is the son of Lieutâ€"Col. and Mrs, Reggie Chaplin, Vancouver. ‘ Chaplin is wellâ€"known in Vancouver and Ottawa, having served as aideâ€"deâ€" ‘camp to Lord Byng of Vimy while Governorâ€"General of Canada. He seryâ€" ‘od as an officer in the 10th Huzzars, his father‘s regiment. Canadian Coâ€"Pilot A start was made on the fight, but bad weather over the Rhine Valley forced the fiyers to return to their base to await more favorable condiâ€" base to tions. New Glider Record Munich, Bavaria.â€"Pilot Groenhoff of the Rhoen Rossitten Glider Flying Society, recently set a new sail plane mark when he flew his motorless maâ€" chine from here to Kaadn, Czechosloâ€" vakia, a distance of 165 miles. â€"'Hlâ€"o' "m;vloul mark was 101 miles, held by Robert Kronfeld, King George Begins 22nd Year of Reign London.â€"King George V completed 21 years hpon the British throne on May 6th and observed this auniverâ€" sary with characteristic absence of formality at a quiet family rounion at Windsor Castle. [brouze axe have been found 4n .100 ) ANMAMB VPAL 7 * "" 00 200 war 5"9"101 district,; bordering on m"l London.â€"Weighing twentyâ€"five carâ€" ania. ‘They probably date from the| ats, a black opal, declared to be one | Pérind 1400 to 1000 B.C. . Much Older,| of the finest in the world, has arrived ! and of especial interest for geologists, | in London from Nw South Wales, L. [ a number of pleces of amber unâ€"| Atishuler, finder of the stone, estiâ€" earthed in Neudorf, Wost Prussi®," mates its valuc at $10,000, Ho calls thirty miles inland from the Baitic. it "Queen of the World." ht ts incniscone clptarse* Jml‘x? Pn ns omm avdinz", m ‘s" A Champion Needed Various implements of boue and a among the Queen‘s The royal set of On Record Flight avo been found in the Black Opal Valued at $10,000 Press (Lib): The ON I AMIVY Sir Arthur Duckham, Dritish Trade Envoy, Stresses Need of Coâ€"operâ€" ation ; Montrealâ€"With the world facing crisis more dangerous than the Great War, coâ€"operation between Great Briâ€" tain and the other nations im tho‘ British Empire would solve the Emâ€" pire‘s difficulties and be a potent force: | for peace, Sir Arthur Duckham, presiâ€" dentâ€"elect of the Federation of British Industries and a member of the British Trade Mission now in Canada under the presidency of Sir James Lithgow, declared recently, in addressing the Montreal Canadian Club. TORONTO The cry, he said, should not be Canada first, Australia first or Great Britain first, but Empire first. A change of heart had bean exporiâ€" enced by British indastry, Sir Arthur said. He predicted industry was exâ€" ploring the possibilities in Canada. Nations must buy if they want to sell, and Canada, it she wanted to sell hor Wheat' w she sells Canada, Sir Arthur added, would be a nation of little importance without the Empire; and her only hope, as it was the only hope of Great Britain and the other British nations, lay within the Empire. Born a Liberal and a free trador, Sir Arthur had changed. "World conâ€" ditions have changed our minds," he commented. "I was a free trader so long as imports to our country meant more ‘Wwork for our people. Toâ€"day that is not so, and it is time some change should be made if the Old Country is to recover from the de pression of the last 10 years." Referring to the aims of the Trade Mission, Sir Arthur said, in part: "We \ know it is no good to come here and iry to compete with home industries, but we feel that there is much Canada buys that might be bought in the home country, and that by coâ€"operaâ€" tion we in Great Britain could compleâ€" ment and implement our manufactures so that the turn of trade may go east instead of south. That is the line that has been taken and it is possible to go along it." Berlin.â€""Russia today is cither the most stupendously magn‘ficent experiâ€" ment or the most diabolicat plot the world has ever seen," said Henry B. Sell, New York advertising man, upon ‘ his return here recently from Mascow, , where he spent a week, "What is more, I doubt whether _ anv one can honestly say which it i%," mc.e is Coarming Uhreepie.e suit of soft woollen in tan, with a short jacket. _A white hat and blouse complete the outft, "What is more, i GOubt WnELNE® any one can honestly say which it is," he continued, explaining that his opinâ€" | ion could go either way from the presâ€" ent point. He said it was the "first time any people ever seriously iried to spend 90 per cent. of their energios in building for future generations and only 10 per cent. on themselves," and that only time would tell whether Russia would live up to her plans or whether they would devolve into a Napoleonic means of aggrandizement. _ ‘The temptation must be great for the men in the Kremlin, he believes. ' He said he thought the tempo of the fiveâ€"year plan was showing plans of flagging and that the people were beâ€" dnniubfanwmyondmmex- hortations to do bigger and better EHPUIE TD RCICCO ARRAMAT 20000 must buy in proportion to what gray s we*» *~ Finds Russia Puzzling rmape Th pories Apgeime m e mm riggm~ ~ Chic! Survey of Sinkiang for Motor Routes May Restore Trade of Huge Proâ€" vince to China Shanghal, â€" China.â€"Seven â€" British motor trucks have arrived at Tient» sin and are to be shipped by rail to Kwelhua, after which they will strike out on a 2,000â€"mile trip inte Sinkiang to prepare landing fields tg)f a British survey airplane which will fy from the south, over the Himaâ€" laya Mountains late in July, and bee gin an eighteen months‘ period of aerial exploration, The leader of the expedition is Lieut. Col. James Stewart, who has obtained permission‘ for the expediâ€" tion from Nauking, has been assur» ed of the coâ€"operation of the Sinkiâ€" ang Provincial Government, and has been to England to obtain permis sion of the British Government to Ay from Rawalpindi over the Karaâ€" koram Range to Yarkand. ‘This will mean crossing at a height of 13400 feet . On his return to India by plane eighteen months later, the Himalayas will be crossed at & height of 18,500 feet, and new passes will be photographed from the air, The motor trucks, leaving from the China coast, will first prepare & landing base at Yarkand, and then proceed to Urumchi to prepare AN» other field, _ The aerial surveys wilt cover about $0,000 square miles o the 400,000 square miles which comâ€" prises . the Province of Sinkiang, formerly kuown as Chinese Turke â€"stan. The fight from Rawadpindi, it dm expected, will be made in four and a half hours. _ The trip by camel caraâ€" van now takes fortytwo days. ‘The motor trucks should reach Yarkand in five weeks. _ The caravan trip from there to Peking consumes from three to five months. ‘This trip is believed to nave A great significance politically and e00â€" nomically, and to be a British step assisting China to combat the steady Russian . absorption of the trade of Sinkiang. By virtually â€" encircling Sinkiang with the Turkâ€"Sib Ral}way, Russia has brought Urumchi vastly closer to Moscow than it ever was to Peiping, and the incessant civil. war® and banditry in China between Petâ€" ping and this "{ar northwest" â€" has served to cripple trade to the point that the old caravan routes are deâ€" ‘ sorted and now almost obliterated . . If t0 Sinkiang can be given a quick | and relatively short trade outiot ‘through India, â€" Russia‘s â€" economic domination of the huge province can Lbe checked, and if the expedition "ncvaa tha Tanslinility of a motor If to Sinkiang can be given a qQU/CK and relatively short trade outiot through _ India, Hussia‘s â€" econowmle domination of the huge province can be checked, and if the expedition proves the feasibility at a motor road from Tientsin into‘ the heart of Sinkiang, China may again renew the bonds with the now almost loat dependency. Britain Revives lish on a scientific basis the onte flourishing sponge industry of Britâ€" ish Honduras (statos the annual reâ€" port) are proving successful, _ The experimental sponge cultivation beds have turned out well and one con. Zeppelin To Meet Friedrichshafen, â€" Ger.â€"Dr. Hug* Eckener, master of the Graf Zeppe lin, recently announced that he will start for the morth pole in his big ship about the middle of July to meet Sir Herbert Wilkins, who is going there in a submarine, This attempt to make a contact with Sir Hubert at or near the pole, he said, should clarity the question as to whether the airship is the most appropriate means for landing polar expeditions near this destinaâ€" tion, picking them up later and proâ€" viding them with supplies during their stay in the arctic. The Graf will carry 45 persons on the arctic flight, including Liout,» Commander Smith, USN., Profes sor Samolovitch, who was abroad the Krassin when it rescued the Nobile expedition, â€" and â€" Lady Drummond Hay. e Lo hi Because of her greater speed, the Graf will not leave Pranz Joseph Land until Sir Hubert‘s submarin® Nautilus, is within two days of the pole London.â€"King George is fond ol billiards although better still he likes a game of pool. He :s often to be found during the two hours after dinner, playing a game of billiards or pool with a friend or one of his staff. The King, however, would be amâ€" mtbofirdto.dmitflutbhby no means a good player. Recently he received the Australian Waiter Lindâ€" M ing Finds Recreation In Pool and Billiards y\ m )1 has been given out is hbelieved to have Sponge Industry efforts making Wilkins at Pole iich 1e the taly CBPE

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