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Durham Review (1897), 6 Aug 1931, p. 6

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K It would take too long:â€"to go into the reason why, but the act remains; an insect as big as a swan or even as a thrush is, luckily for us, unthinkable. Small size is in itself a disadvantage; The great advantage which the birds had over their ~ertebrate comâ€" petitors in the art of flying was that they, possessing feathers, could make a wing of these; while the skinny flightâ€"membranes of bats and pteroâ€" dactyls had to be stretched taut and so demanded attachment to hind as well as fore limbs. Bats cannot run or hop, nor could pterodactyls; their logs are subordinated to their wings. But birds kept their legs clear of this entanglement, as the ancestors of man kept thsir fore limbs clear by runâ€" ming; and so birds were free both of‘ the air and of the earth, having on* pair~of limbs for each element. ' a are the equals of birds in fix&; but they are inferior inl r. They can never grow big. There have been three other groups of animals to acaive true flight: one, the fAlying insects, arose from a wholly different stock; two, from the same backâ€"boned stock to which the birds belongâ€"the flying mammals or bats, and the flying reptiles or pterodactyl!s, the latter all long extinet. Birds, in fact, are an offshoot from one kind of very active reptile, prob ably related to some of the smaller dinosaurs. They became birds through the evolution of feathers out of seales, which first, by acting as a heatâ€"reâ€" taining blanket, allowed their temperâ€" ature to be kept at a high level, and, secondly, made flight possible. These feathered creatures, what are they in the economy of Nature? What is their history? â€" How do they compare with other kinds of living things? There are no other animals built in at all the same way as birds. How did they come: to evolve into their prosent condition? The first thing that evolutionary study teaches ~: is that birds mwere not always so different from other crealures as they are today. The fow fossil birds known from the upper Cretaceous age, 70 or 80 million years back, ‘all had tecth, like any lizard. When we reach the Jurassic period, near twice as long ago, the only two‘ specit ens of birds so far found we:‘e{ so unlike ary ordinary bird in their construction that, if it were 2not for the lucky accident of their having been embedded in such fine mud that the imprint of their feathers is still preserved to us, we should have been in doubt as to whether they were birds at all. They might have been agile reptiles, for they were toothed, had long jointed tail bones, and big' claws on their fore limbs. Eminent Engiish biologist and To watch birds is delightiut in itsell; bat most people ii‘:2 ground against which thâ€"y . their observations. Birds Necessary To Human Welfare The : Feport . which : who liy 'e\”‘lI“_\ Orilics | r o NRe to see taig ir>i>c.ization beâ€" tween the Lonies aud !.~> city brothâ€" ers, and we are pleas=l! :o state that quite a few members of the Lone Beouts have gone c camp this year with regalir troops, :t the latter‘s inâ€" Â¥itation. We like to see this tween the Lonies aus ers, and we are plea: quite a few membe: Later the Lone Scouts were invited to visit the camp of the 90th Toronto Troop at Sandy Point, on Sturgeon Lake. They hiked over to the camp on July 8th, and to their surprise met an old friend who turned out to be none other than "Cookie" ("Colonel" Waiton), who was so popular at the Lone Scout Camp at Ebor Park last summer. . The Lonies stayed over might with the 90th, an? entered into their programme enthusi~ ‘L.cally, hayâ€" ing a great time at the > ening counâ€" cil fire. | We aro pleased that as a result of the publicity given to Lone Scouting through ‘theso columns many . new members have joined the movement during the past fow weeks, This week epplications for membership have been received from Cobden, Hyâ€" dro, Burkes Falls and Harriston, and at Durham there is every prospect of | a full Patrol being formed. J A recent check up of the records of the Ontario Lone Scout Department showed that since its inception two years ago about 460 boys have been admitted to membership in the moveâ€" ment. Of course quite a few of theso have been since transferred to ro-" gular troops which have been formed as a result of Lona Scout activity. ‘ The Lonies at Fenelon Falls under | Senior Patrol Leader Doug. Warren | have had a very busy time just recentâ€"| 1y. On July 4th they had the plemmrell of again meeting their friends of the‘l 5ist Toronto Troop, who camped near .‘ the town. ‘The Lonies helped the|‘ Toronto Scouts to make camp, and enâ€" | tered ito their activitios with zest. 1 JULIaN 8. HUXLEY m m Falls Lone S ! JY ( RkC i# t3 AWITH THE ~ :‘ Cown authâ€" »cach, which 1i enough > a backâ€" can set NESC uts also 1 Turn" : Lonies _ They The birds as a whole stuck toâ€" a meat diet; but their average size deâ€" termined the average size of their prey. The great majority of them are so moderate in bulk that they can orly eat small creatvres, though they will includs worms and snails and spiders, will for the most part be inâ€" sects. Some of the larger birds eat What part do birds play in the elaborate system of exchanges which constitutes the balance of Nature? The great majority of them are eaters of other animais. For this they have stuck to the ancestral predilections of vertebrates, which were all in origin flesh eaters. | _ However, though birds can grow | big in comparison with insects, they | are limited in size in comparison with | other vertebrates. This comes from | the fact of flight; the laws of aeroâ€" | dynamics make it very inconvenient for a flying bird to weigh over 59 | pounds, and quite impossible for it to rwci'zh as much as a horse or even a leopar1. It is only birds which have given up flying, like the ostrich or cassowary, which have even begun to ‘gmw big according to mammalian ’standards. The stock size for birds, in fact, is from something under an ounce to about 10 or 15 pounds. ' Birds and mammais developed from two quite distinct reptilian stocks. Birds have kept reptilianâ€"looking scales on their feet, and have stuck to the repti‘es method of reproduction by largeâ€"yoked eggs. In some ways, however, the bird branch has evolved beyond their rivals, the mammais, ard in these resperts must be regarded as at the very tiptop of the tree of life. Birds have the highest temperaturs, anc therefore the greatesi speed of vital chemistry, of any creatures. The have the greatest activity, the greatest emotional variety; they show the highest extremes of beauty in color and pattern, they have the most striking and highly developed courtâ€" ship of any group of animals, and their songs are by far the most beauâ€" tiful and elaborate music that the world knew befcre the coming of m«n. The aze the most mobile of creatures, and so are at a great advantage over every other kind of animal in high altitvdes; for they canâ€"breed there and take advartage of the riches of the Arctic lands and still more of the Arctic seas during the summer, and then migrate to temperate climâ€" a regular Troop, for reason of locality |or other handicap. Applications | should be sent to the Lone Scout Deâ€" | partment, The Boys Scouts Associaâ€" tion, 330 Bay Street, Toronto, 2.â€" ,“'[40110 E." the outer world. They cannot achieve the constancy o° living possible to a bird or mammal, and are at a great disadvantage in winter, being put out of action more or less completely by the cold. | 3. Make three artificial flies (either ‘after three standard patterns or in limitation â€" of different natural flles). Make a neat single gut leader at least \ four feet long, or a twisted or braided \leader at least three feet long. Splice !the broken joiat of a rod neatly. it brings the further disadvantage in its train that it prevents an animal from heving a constant temporature higher than its surroundings, for its bulk is so small in proportion to its surface that the heat generated by the chemical combustion in its muscles all leaks away in no time. se insects are not only small, but the whole tempo of their lives goes up and down with the temperature of Applications for membership in the Lone Scouts will be received from boys between the ages of 12 and 18 incluâ€" sive, who cannot become members of 4. Giveo the open season for the game fishes in his vicinity, and explain how and why they are protected by the law. 2. Show proficiency in accurate sinâ€" gleâ€"handed casting with the fly for disâ€" tances of 20, 40 and 50 feet, or in bait casting for fistance of 40, 60 and 70 feet. l 1. By the usual angling methods catch and name sevon different spe cles of fish. At least one specimen must be taken by flyâ€"casting or troHâ€" ing and one by baitâ€"casting. In single handed flyâ€"casting the rod must not excoed sevon ounces in weight; in double handed flyâ€"casting the rod may be one ounce weight for each foot in length; in bait fishing the rod must not exceed ten feet in longth nor twelve ounces in weight. I This week‘s Summer Time Proficiâ€" ency Badgo is the Augler‘s Badge. The requirements are as follows: ] Lone Scout visitors to Provincial f Headquarters in Toronto recently have included Bill Gilbort, of Essex, ant Jack Bassett, of Listowel, and Harold Nickle of Harriston was in Toronto a short time ago, but he did not pay us a visit. Lonies who come to Torounte for any reason are always welcome visitors to Scout Headquarters, so we hops you won‘t forget to pay us al call. we think was exceedingly good work, as we have seen quite a few beaches recently that could very well benefit by a similar "Good Turn." An archaism is removed from these instructions having reference to the graut of pardons, etc., by the Governâ€" orâ€"General. Previously His Excellency had the authority to prescribe banishâ€" ment for political offenders. That obsoleto form of punishment is done away with by merely deleting the senâ€" tence which conveyed that power. He who prays as he ought will enâ€" deavor to live as he prays.â€"Owen. The same deletion occurs in the document containing the King‘s inâ€" structions. _ Specifically, they remove from the Government of the United Kingdom the last vestiges of control exercised by that Government over"the appointâ€" ment of a GovernorGeneral to Canâ€" ada, making it a direct and personal one by His Majesty, acting on the adâ€" vice of H.M. Government in Canada.; Formerly in defining the powors and | authority of the Governorâ€"Ganeral, the | letters patent directed His Excellency: to carry out such instructions "as may , from time to time be given him under; our sign manual and signet, or by orâ€", derâ€"inâ€"Privy Council, or by us through | one of our principal secretaries of| state." In the new issue, the last two‘ references are eliminated. | New Letters Patent i For Governorâ€"General _ Ottawa.â€"New letters patent conâ€" stituting the office of Governorâ€"Genâ€" eral of Canada have been issued by King George V., together with new inâ€" structions for the guidance of the conduct of the Governorâ€"General. The last time letters patent were issued was in 1905 by King Edward VII. In general the recent documents bring the office of the Governorâ€"General into accord with the recommendations of the Imperial Conference of 192%. which were adopted by the Parliamorts of: the Empire at various dates since that year. i turns a fast ome during a set which he won from Sydney Wood of New York. So birds have a place in civilizatioa. While we are mechanizing life, we should see that a place is kept for them, for our delectation and that of our posterity, â€" _ _Now insects are in the great maâ€" jority vegetable feeders. So that in regard to what we may call biological tradeâ€"the complicated cireulation of matter through lifeless forms in earth, water, and ~ir, through greon plants, animal bodies, and microscopic scavengers like mou‘ds and bacteri, and back into lifcless forms againâ€"â€"â€" the ret effect oi nirds is to be a chock upon insects in their consumption of green plants and their products In this way they are allies of max. ‘ creatures up to the scale of frogs and mice, or are carrion feeders, or prey on smaller birds or on fish. But if we could take statistics on the food of all birds, we should find that insec‘ts headed the list. Three charming young ladies are gas masks at the Society of Chemica Westminster, England. â€" The exhibitio marvels of science. Prayer Austin, England‘s ranking Davis Cup tennis player, reâ€" British Star 18 ladies are exhibiting the latest typos of y of Chemical Industries exhibition held in The exhibition displayed many of the latest ONTARIO ARCHIVEs TORONTO One farmer, resident in Manitoba, for 36 years, declared it was "the earliest date for wheat cutting in my . experience." St. Adolphe is two miles south of Winnipeg. Early This Year Winnipeg. â€"Wheat cutting comâ€" menced in the St. Adoiphe district of Manitoba on July 25th, the earlâ€" iest, it is believed, such operations have occurred in Manitoba. ‘ Burning of the insects was decided upon when farmers feared their cattle would die after eating the bodies of grasshoppers which. had been killed by poison. Jity and town dwellers also are witnessing the march of the grassâ€" hoppers. Gardens and trees are left leafless. Hungry grasshoppers swarm solidly on the houses, gather in clusâ€" ters and fall to the ground from treoes and telephone _ oles. Harvesting In West Fields, green today, may be splotched tomorrew _ with _ barren stretches. Another day, and the ferâ€" tile Platte Valley may be barren. inss checked soon, they will be in conâ€" trol of the entire tier of Northern Neâ€" braska counties. Entymologists said the grasshopâ€" pers soon would sprout wings and inâ€" crease the area of their damage. Unâ€" The insect invasion has devastated gardens, crops and fruit trees, and behind their advance stretches a sere swath. Damage already is in the millions of dollars. At some points the bodies of the grasshoppers were piled high on the rails, impeding trains._ At others they made the ground slippery beneath the tires of automobiles. Some of the farmers, their crops destroyed, raised money by packing the dead grasshoppers in preservaâ€" tives and selling them to fishermen for bait at 20 cents a pound. | Country Left Barren in Wake 1 of Hordes Despite Desâ€" perate Offensive Buffalo, Neb.â€"Wooden fence posts, wagon tongues, even clothing hung out to dry, were quickly devoured by th: srayâ€"yellow horde. Anything containing vegetable fibre attracts the hupgry grasshoppers. Altnough farmers said several milâ€" lions of the grasshoppers had been killed, additional swarms are expectâ€" ed when eggs mow infesting the ground have incubated. Fires in which bodies of the slain insects were being burned dotted the plains tonight. Inâ€" troduction of poison as a weapon reâ€" sulted in the death of thousands of the insects. Grasshoppers Still Invade Nebraska |._Toronto.â€"A freshman has been adâ€" mitted to Queen‘s University, Kingsâ€" ton, for the summer classes, who is | 70 years old, is an exâ€"mayor and also an oxâ€"member of the Canadian Parliaâ€" ment. Mr. I. E. Pediow of Renfrow, Ont., is Canada‘s oldest "freshman." l Mr. Pedlow‘s collego days will be l followed with great interest, for he has ‘carved out &n honorable and useâ€" ful careor for himself, and is now tlk-i ing â€"his studies, which usually come Efforts are being made to adopt a more uniform system, both in the forms in which contract bridge is now played and in the methods of scoring, in order that international competiâ€" tions may be arranged between leadâ€" ing bridge clubs. 70â€"Yearâ€"Old Man Dr. Herrmann thinks that bidding by players themselves, in duplicate contract, will rapidly be superseded by the employment of an announcer, thus eliminating all likelihood of informaâ€" tion boing wrongly transmitted by inâ€" flexion of the voice when calling. ‘ The cards, made in Austria, lessen the chances of a revoke at contract bridge, a game raptdly hecoming more complicated. Hearts are red, diaâ€" monds pink, spados black and clubs dark green; the cards themselves are longer and narrower than thoso at present used and are made‘to fit the presontâ€"day duplicate contract boards. Zurich.â€"A new kind of playing cards, according to The N.Y. Times, will soon be adopted by bridge players all qver Europe and America, accordâ€" ing to Dr. Paul Herrmann of Zurich, an authority on the gamo. All bearings within the engine are cold and lubricated by tho water itâ€" self. New Cards Invented _ To Aid Bridge Players It has no exhaust, as the water is used over and over, The control system is simpler than in the steam engine. Its mechanism is simpler and the working parts need be opened for inâ€" spection only once in four years. There is no incessant boiler cleanâ€" ing, no water gauges, no risk of shortâ€" ness or foulness of water. It loses less heat thaa other engines and its outside shell is cool to the touch. It runs and changos speed more noiselessly than conventional engines,. Only a small amount of water is needed and this reduces the size of the engine and allows it to be used where water is scarce. Rapid heating ad cooling of the liquid water are necessary in order that the water engine will operate. This was accomplished by Mr. Malone through the development of a novel form of heat transfer within one of the cylinders of the water engine. Other advantages claimed for the engine are: Water Stays Liquid Both the new water engine and conâ€" ventional steam engines use wator, but i nthe case of the steam engine the water must be changed to steam beâ€" fore any work can be done. In the Malone engine the water stays liquid even under pressures of tons per square inch created within the engine. Since steam and other engines have been worked always by the expansion of gases of one kind or another for some 300 years, this new kind of prime mover that is operated by expansion of liquid instead of expansion of gases has created much interest in engineerâ€" ing circles. It is the invention of J. F. J. Malone, engineor, of Nowcastleâ€"onâ€"Tyne, who has experimented with the novel water engine for several years. The details of its operat‘ 1 have just been revealed. London.â€"A new kind of engine that uses liquid water instead of steam, discards boilers and condensers, deâ€" velops more power in less space than ordinary steam and gas engines, with freedom from explosion hazards and heat wastes, will shortly be offered for experimental commercial use hore. Water Replaces _ Steam in New British Engine Tradition of 300 Years Upset by Invention Using Liquid Working Substance A daughter‘s challenge to her father is one of the features of the race. Capt. The Hon. Frederick G. Guest and his daughter, Miss Diana Guest wili fly moth planes, leaving together 28 minutes and nine seconds after the first starters. No »ne would be surprised if the trophy remained in feminine hands for another year. Miss Wincifred Brown, who last year was the first woman to capture the trophy, is heavâ€" ily handicapped, however, leaving an London. â€" Fortyâ€"two â€" competitors, including seven women, are ready to start in the 1,000 mile race for the King‘s cup, British air race classic. The field includes the first Canadian in the event, John C. Webster, of Monâ€" treal, filying a Canadian machine. Seven Women Fliers to Compete h In British Air Classic Enters University CCCE â€"anl, on wa‘ch the aged iny will be | worked steadily all winter at for he| Myers, Fla., have made it noce nd useâ€"| for Edison to take a vacation ow takâ€"| the laboratory, kconi.g to y come| brotherâ€"inâ€"law, uohn V RWrhip.. _ M T iPitiaaR i icinares Pn 36. s( 0 Myers, Fla., have made it nocessar for Edison to take a vacation fror the laboratory, 'accor?( to hi brotherâ€"inâ€"law, «ohn V, Werâ€"a va cuation that may presage retirement, NORP toie iwagh Bs tsindtis . .A ... C : Overwork during experiments progucing rcbber {from the woldea plant, on which the aged inve worked steadily all winter at | Myers, Fla., have MAde it naaaâ€" % Ing| According to a bulletin issued by the a bl‘ttle e -uo-‘"-ng;bomiuion ;ureau of Statistics, births | Regira.â€"Saskatchewan is shipping registered in June in 52 cities of Canâ€" | ied oo‘ o5 Sb Bet fracle to Grenr j Notintered 48 : 7,457, deaths 3,369 and II Britain as a result of contracts enterâ€" matriages 2206," y compared â€" with [ ed Ytea lb”gth.e ib methe (oae se caaee EP i * P 3,644 doaths and 4,300 Whoesae‘ocley. i e Py A x ‘ During the visit of officials of this :::;;':‘:: {::::fi:eztl;liu;i:a:;n{?.fl‘ bI society to Regina during the ‘p"n‘lbiruu and decreases of 7% per cent. | it was suggesled approximately 100!“"l 1’4 per cent. in deaths and mar. head be shipped weekly. Officials of riages respectively the Government and the Saskatchew For tils (Sik ibonths Fabuaryâ€"June | an Live Stock Pool did not feel that birtus "showed "a «ecrease Of 4 por the province was in a position wlcont deaths an increase Oof 3% per handle this order, and suggested li!rb | cent.‘ln d marriages a decrease of 10% l \‘vnth‘a small shipment and inâ€" !per cent. from the corresponding six creasing it as the pool became supâ€" ;monthl of 1930 plied. * | __As a result it was learn from unâ€"l _"‘”“"". | official sources shipments had grown | “Re&k‘o Wnlnng” to 150 hel? per week under the conâ€" f A charge of "reckless walkino" wae \ tract. i West Orange, NJ Fdison, inventor, has â€" ceaso active work at th L Mn Arratnetistdsnes T. .2223 IS‘ the 123rd language into which tho : Religious Tract Bociety has translatâ€" | ed the famous classic. | This edition has eight colored iNlusâ€" . trations, and some thousands of valâ€"‘ umes have already been dispatched, On arrival they are made up into suitableâ€"sized packages to go up counâ€" try on the heads of the native bearers, Londonâ€"Civilization and education | have wrought such a change in the headâ€"hunting and oneâ€"time cannibal | tribes of New Guinea that an urgent | request came from that country lor‘ Bunyan‘s \Pilgrim‘s Progress" in the Tubetube language, This is one of ; the tongues of a Papuan tribe, and is] t umm s d Former Cannibals a pericd of years indicated that it i could and would isolate the bacteria ; 01 a majority of the malignant disâ€" er.ses. Regira.â€"Saskatchewan is shipping 150 head of cattle per week to Great Britain as a result of contracts enterâ€" ed into by the British Coâ€"Operative Wholesale Society, During the visit of officials of this dison Forced To * Cease Active Work Fut Orange, N.J.â€"Thomas A Isolation of the infinitesimal germs means that such discases as sleeping sickness, paralysis, influenza, cancer and rheumatism may be traced to their primary causes and that physiâ€" cians hereafter may be able to devise specific cures ‘or taem. Saskatchewanâ€"Britain § Catt!e Trade Growing A small intestine »f a rabbit, dog, swine or man, chemically treated, is the essential ingredient of the soluâ€" tion, he said. He asserted that his experiments in Chicago hospitals â€" ver is hard at work on a paper describ ing his "K Medium" in detail, so that it may be manufactured in laboratorâ€" ies other than his own. Dr. lendall has developed what he calls the "K Medium," a soupy soluâ€" tion in which the invisible bacteria now may be isolated. His experiments are not over despite his years of reâ€" search, be said, and practical use of his discovery is yet to come. He now "Dr. _ Kendall‘s _ accomplishment: means that we now stand on the‘ threshold of a great discovery," added Dr. Edward C. Rosenow, eminent bac‘ teriologist. t | "The discovery is as startling the the scientific world as the discoveries of Pasteur," said Dean Irving Cutter of the Medical School. The man is Dr. Arnold I. Kendali, professor of hbacteriology at the Northwestern _ University _ Medical School for the last 20 odd years. His discovery consists of a process of making visible under the microscope bacteria so tiny that research workâ€" ers heretofore have been unable to identify it, Chicago.â€"A â€"mildâ€"mannered little man, described for fellow scientists here recently his disease germ discovâ€" ery, expected to have as farâ€"reaching effect on the treatment of human ills as the processes evolved by the faâ€" mous Louis Pasteur. Scientist Explains New Discovery New Germ Isolation Process May Aid in Devising Cures The scratch competitor is Flightâ€" Lieut. C. B. Winchott, whose plane is capable of a speed of 150 miles an hour. He starts two hours, 33 minâ€" utes and 13 seconds behind the first planes. + has been forcei .t:;I ¢ at the age of 84 | ‘ng experiments ;i,, Demand Classics © Sged inventor winter at Fort ade it nocgmr, a vacation from °°fl‘:' & to his V.â€"Milletâ€"a va. is one of I w _ be, and is +/3 o vhich the | Russia‘s Population °U ERERE 4 COLCU | During the year 1930 the Physical | Testing Lnbor_utory of the Topoâ€" Eraphical Survey, Dept. of the Interâ€" .. dor, subjected to test for the Dept. of , National Revenue nearly four hun. , dred hydrometers, These instruments are used by the latier department for the purpose of determining the gravi. ties of spirits, oils, and other liqui is in conmection with the sollection of CUbtOMs and . 0.; "" e " Sm CmmE sPue n customs and extise duties, 200 ®CC ent muucg 1220, reaching a total of 2,7456,000. The population of Sverdlovsk, for instance, has grown since 1926 from 134,000 to 234,000, or 79 per cent. ‘The population of Ivanoveo â€" Voznesensk reached 162,300 Against 108,700, an inâ€" crease of 49 per cent. Moscow.â€"The census of : lation taken this year show cow has increased 355 per 1986, FBRCRINE A Hiknl x# ae m _A charge of "reckless â€" recently brought in a Pa ithe first time, it was sa legal history, Damages ¢ demanded by the plaint worker in a dressmak, ment, who was hurryin Rue de Rivoli when she the defendant, a banker tif maintained that he sprained when she was 1 by the collision. |_ Births, Deaths, Marriages The clog is the traditional footwear of the Lancashire industrial workers, but even the muchâ€"talkedâ€"of trade deâ€" lpresslon has not brought them back to popularity. Depression or no de "prusion the mill lasses of Lancashire wear high heels and silk. For the six months Janmuaryâ€"June births showed a decrease of 2 per cent., deaths an increase of 3% per cent. and marriages a decrease of 10% per cent. from the corresponding six T Lancashire Clogs London.â€"Lanca®hire â€" lasses â€" have taken so largely to highâ€"hecled shoes and silk stockings that a moving picâ€" ture company which has been visiting that famous British county to make films of mill workers, has had to send to the south of England for a supply of stout woodenâ€"soled clogs for camera models to appear in, "A creative dressmaker, to be sucâ€" cessful, must understand the psycholâ€" ogy of women better than a surgeon understands their anatomy." â€" Paul Poiret. ® High Heels Replace "There is nothing that so kills the ambition of & man as criticism from his superiors."â€"Charles M. Schwab. "It is very difficult to make women believe anything that is so."â€"Thomas A. Edison. "Poverty is opulence where there is happy marriage."â€"Rupert Hughes, "Young people ought to be paid to go to school."â€"Henry Ford. "Joy is a fruit that Americans eat green."â€"~â€"Amando Zegri. "After all, it is not entirely certain that every question admits of a reaâ€" sonable answer."â€"â€"Albert Einstein, "The dream is in large part of warnâ€" ing of something to come."â€"Dr, Carl Jung. "We are now asking the landowner to render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar‘s."â€"Philip Snowden. "Physical discomforts in prisons are being removed, but spiritual, mental, emotional _ discomforts remain." â€" Lewis E. Lawes. "The sophisticated reader does not like being led by the nose any more than the sophisticated writer likes leading him."â€"John Galsworthy, "The provailing pessimism is a good sign because the crowdâ€" always â€"lags behind the event."â€"8Bir Harry Brit tain. Keith "I am certain that Americans are beginning to realize that material posâ€" sessions are not essential to a happy and blessed life."â€"Albert BRinstoin. "As a gardenor, Nature has two sides, a good and a bad. She plants and she also prunos."â€"Sir Arthur Economic boundaries are no longer identical with political boundaries anyâ€" where in the world."â€"Nicholas Mur ray Butler you delfy So They Say: The consus of urban popuâ€" B cce esd Gains 35 Per Cent. ol "reckless walking" was ught in a Paris court, for 1e, it was said, in French . Damages of $2,000 were y the plaintiff, a woman & dressmaking establishâ€" was hurrying across the )li when she collided with thsptnlPete ies i hi itc i.2 01 . in deaths and marâ€" ly, months Januaryâ€"June a decrease of % per increase of 3% per shows that Mosâ€" ‘\_The plainâ€" r wrist â€" was thrown down and the indifferâ€" cent. since A speciai pa tropical heat, ha Kondon Zoo fo warieties of mo birds from the â€" ways ap} planatior plun A1 h0o mo ie ©0 wl in w gers sery &« tha pa; 6@ V MAni Wc Fx © bi th tir ®C #1J tinc Ame frier hills Jude ©lot wor ter ©. He TÂ¥ T ti 1 1y Y% wl th« Bc lo w On D but #is turn« Paimy Da d it Her tell: th €( rt kn ol Lo pt t« We ki «C ©1 Th J% his v outs ©ove ghe w ©ourst with vens tities, 4 disoov« In the writer, a ness for

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