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Durham Review (1897), 7 Jul 1932, p. 3

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ts pp Is He a t Weather Tell 1@ 1P 0 Tit« t nd » Paris.â€"The Bois de Boulogne, a faâ€" shion parade and playground by day, is, after nightfall, a game preserve. Deer, foxes, quail and pheasants abound in the wooded coverts and are often seen late at night.* * * The first scheme would radically alter the medical organiztion of Great Britain. In addition to universally free medical service, a national hospiâ€" tal system is urged. It is proposed that « facilities be arranged which would enable all citizens to have conâ€" tinuous medical supervision from birth ished t» death; that scholarships shall be granted to poor=students wishing to become doctors, and that the existing "poor law" medical service be abolâ€" An organization called the British Provident Association has just launchâ€" ed a comprehensive scheme for enablâ€" ing persons of small means to obtain private beds in hospitals and firstâ€" class medical or surgical treament at reas mable prices. A report to be presnted at the anâ€" nual meeting of the Socialist Medical Association will urce universally free medical service under central and local &. rernment supervision,. Members of Parliament are being asked to sponsor a scheme which would enable persons who have incurred expenditu;;;â€"vf;r medical care during illiness to claim rebate on income tax. London.â€"The economic situation as it affects the ill is reflected in three schemes for the relief of persons reâ€" quiring medical or surgical treatment here. From the Stores Department, for a few cents, you can obtain a Flag, to tie unto the end of your Scout Staft, on which is depicted the animal which you select, and which you can use as your banner, Naval Cutter for Sea Scouts A fine naval cutter was recently preâ€" sented to the 1â€"t Barbados Sea Scout Group by the captain, officers and ship‘s compan> of H.M.8. Repulse. The sresentation was an expression of appreciation of the courtesies exâ€" tended Deep Sea Scouts when ashore. English College Scout Visitors A change of policy to travelling within the Empire instead of visiting Europe is bringing to eastern Canada this summer a Scout party of the 2nd Framlingham â€" College (Group, Woodâ€" bridge, Suffolk, England, under Scoutâ€" Free Medical Care Advocated in London Lone Scouts should also individualâ€" ly, where they are not members of a Patrol, select an emblem as do the Patrols, and study the habits of the bird or anima} they select, in particuâ€" lar, concentrating on this emblem to A greater extent than on the other live creatures, ° 20 V° SSerul information in so doing. How would you like to be as patient and industrious as a Beaver, as cunâ€" ning as a Fox, as strong as an Eagle, to stalk as well as a Panther, or to be as agile as a Monkey? Pet, such as the Bulldog Patrol, etc., whereas others sometimes find a dead specimen of their "name," which they stuff and mount. (Scouts, of course, do not kill animals or birds wilfully). They study the habits and surroundâ€" ings of their bird or animal, and learn a lot of useful information in so doing: what !s In a Name?: In the game of Scouting, Troops are divided into Patrols, and each Patrol is called by the name of some Animal or Bird. _ For instance there is the Bear Patrol, or the Eagle Patrol, etc. There is a very large variety of name~ to choose from 2 1 in the ~ ne Scout Department also, _ wherever there are suflcient boys available, Lone Patrois of from four to nine boys are formed and they choose a Patrol Name for their group. ‘ Thes : patrols endeavor to collect as much information as is possible about their Patroj Animal or Bird. Some of them are even lucky enough' to obtain a live specimen for a Patrol mus 20 T 1 Game Abounds on' Bois. What Is In a yeyrs [ aaee xon _ Sthan. : __ |&3) you co to Hek Ar gJurt‘s AbvertiseD x wasy‘‘t m C LOVE flere abveRmiscmien(| | ReSPonSibic FoRr My JTsesm) uive witHour tierâ€" BRrovetkTt wire‘s petBTS. r 21 Tie worlDbâ€" sua ‘ Quict, |} yY ~6attA sevaRke iT ‘A stars To M resuutrs â€" |B, Somé wAY, swb fi is ty eve BuT # w 4A Iw o Es ~â€"4 ~<Jk MKS: y 4 *sâ€" a5t m éi‘é hutt was || * {% Ap o PP [ I QuickeR, || .. i"v> 4 e J Fea muce [JP =. us d s *i _ QuickceR. ,‘[,' â€" JP ap ;:: â€"6 \CB S ag U "afi,@ fig j li 3 y | | R [NNJ Lo / U cce YA _ [ ”‘VT ; NhgT dduG ,// Col) _ * ied fl’! _ TA 4 ;\ | L ‘ dor se '! / o ‘/ “\\Â¥@§- R \igms« ol e. s spome~ / es MUTT AND JEFFâ€" By BUD FISHER ‘*{ 1;-3H;I.H,E\ :%fi X:.S NESCOU1 _JeFF, E‘m _ SsoRt AbDVERTIS&ED & | RresponsiBic Fol wire‘s pests. â€"GqettA savaRke \ Somé wAYÂ¥, Sir Walter Scott, while travelling in Ireland, was one day accosted by a beggar. He‘"felt in his pocket for a sixpence, but finding that he had nothâ€" ing smaller than a shilling with him, gave it to the woman with the words: "You must give me the change next time we meet." "*"I will, sorr," replied the beggar, "and may yer honor live till ye get it." The Human Mind The human _ mind _ will become more various, piercing, and all comâ€" prehending, more capable of underâ€" standing and expressing the solemn and the sportive, the terrible and the beautiful, the profound and the tender, in proportion as it should be illumined and penetrated by the true knowledge of God. Genius, intellect, imagination, taste, and sensibility, must all be baptised into religlon, or they will never know and never make known, their real glory and immortal power. Thus life‘s reward for every task Is that I shall fulfil The further service life may ask, And do my duty stillâ€" Since at each morning‘s opening gates Another sacreq duty waits. â€"A. B. Cooper. True life is just a going on To duties still ahead. For, when today is past and & Tomorrow comes insteadâ€" And thus the duty I have done Is prelude to another one. Perhaps you too would like to be a Lone Scout, if you cannot join a Reâ€" gular Troop? If you are interested write for particulars to the Lone Scout Department, The Boy Scouts Association»â€"$30 Bay St., Toronto 2. Full information will be gladly sent, and you will be placed under no obliâ€" gation.â€""Lone E." C adia Sc attc ing co~t ~cameâ€" mers World Scout gathering in Hunâ€" gary will go as members of the Briâ€" tish Empire group, and probably will be attached in small units to Old Country troops. Several Scout districts in Hungary are inviting British Scouts to visit them for a few weeks this summer. Their idea is to develop friendships and improve their knowledge of Engâ€" lish. camp. Kurt is 15 yea;'s old, andâ€" ;v:; Capt. Furminger pleased to see him again? Oh Boy, I should say! Empire Scouts at World Gathering The number of Scouts to represent the British Empire at the next World Scout Jamboree, in Hungary, next summer, has been increased from 2,500 to 4,200. The park is now at its best, and the swimming pool is great, and there is no doubt that those who attended this year will want to repeat the exâ€" porience at the first opportunity, An interesting point which will unâ€" doubtedly appeal to all Ontario Lonies is that a friend of our Commissioner, Scout Kurt Topp, of Troop 800, Chiâ€" cago, I!1., has journeyed all the way from Chicago especially to attend this When this paragraph appears in the press the boys who were fortunate enough to spend two weeks in camp at Ebor Park ~with the Lone Scout Staff from Headquarters will just be thinking of returning to their homes, and we know it will be with regret. Although the numbers who have atâ€" tended this camp are not so large as we had hoped for, due, we presume, to the difficult times we have recently passed through, nevertheless there are enough Lonies to make the camp worth while, and to have a great deal of fun together. Camps The Suffolk S;g‘;is- are visit a numbc> of Can master the Rev. R "AO‘R »couts are anxious to a numbc: of Canadian Scout Lone Scout Camp â€"Channing, (Fenelon Duty a going on ahcad, is past and gone . H. W. Kneese _ The deliverance fror: Egypt was to| the anniversary of their delivers the Israelites what Calvary is to the| from Egypt came round, the peopl Christian. Each of these great reâ€"| Israel should reâ€"enact in this sol cemptive events came to be symbolized| and dramtic ritual, the great exp in a suitable ritualâ€"the deliverance| cnee of redemption through wl from Egypt in the Passover, and the| they had passed. The redeeming g1 sacrifice of Christ in the Lord‘s Supâ€"| of God would, in this way, be brou per. Moses delivered the detai‘ed proâ€"| vividly to mind. The difficulty of . visions for observing the rite to the| ritual ceremony, however, is *hat eiders, and the elders, as the tribal| n.ay in time lose its original mean and clan leaders, would pass them on‘ and become just a ceremonyâ€"a i to the people. Not all of these details{ mal act from which the spirit of are now clear to us, but there is no| and truth has fled. To overcome mistaking the main features of the| danger, the Israelites were requi ceremony. It should be noted that|to instruct their young each year while the Passover was to be observed|the meaning of the rite, vs. 26, by the whole people, it was largely a| Under this wise provision, the c family affair. "According tc your|dren of Israelitish parents were w families," said Moses, v. 21. Each| grounded and informed in the gr family, as a unit, was :o draw a lamb|articles of faith, as well as in from its flock. _ Perhaps the later|chief historical experiences, on wh popularity of the Passover above all|the nation of Israel was founded. other Israclite institutions lay in the|looking back over the passage a: fact that it was primarily a family | whole, we can see that there w festival. When the paschal lanb was|{_ree constituent features in the pa killed, its blood was caught in a basin overâ€"first, the historical: experie and appiied to the lintel and the doorâ€"|of redemption, then the ritual wh posts with a wisp of hyssop, a shrubl : mbolized it, and finally the interp which formed a suitable brush, cf.t«tion placed on the ritual by fuith. INTROLUCTIONâ€"The book of Exodus comprises both history and legislation. The dramatic story of the exudus is broken off here ard there to include a section: of laws cr directions for various institutions. ‘The reason for this is twofold. On the one hand, the historian obviously sought to set forth the inner soul of his people by exhibâ€" iting the kind of laws which governed their lives; on the dther hand, it was considered that most of Israel‘s laws and great institutions had their orig:n i~ the formative period when Isracl vas delivered from Egypt. At this jincture of the story, then, we have the directions for observing the Passâ€" over. A serrs of dreadful plagues Lad failed to convirce the stubborn heart of Pharaoh that God really inâ€" tended to set his people free from the bondage of Egypt. . Another plague, more awful than any of the others, was yet to comeâ€"the destruction <f all the first born of Egypt. It was while Egypt was thus stricken that the Israclites made good their escape. The Passover had its origin in that night of divine triumph for Israel. I. THE PASSOVER AS A XMTUAL, vs. 21, 22, 1. TH | PASSOVER AS A RITUAL, vs, 21, 22. II. THE PASSOVER A; A REDEMPTIVE EVENT, v. 23. III THE PASSOVER AS A MEMORY, vs. 24â€"28. s July 17. _ Lesson HI!â€"The Passover â€"â€"Exodus 12: 21â€"28. Golden Textâ€" Even Christ our Passover is sacriâ€" ficed for us.â€"1 Corinthians 5: 7. A permanent folding stairway, a dormer window and dressing platform are the features introduced in this new upper berth, eliminâ€" ating many of the discomforts of train travel. LVE wiTHout Te woRLDb \/)sm’fis ) °w 15 (A* ANALYSL It was desirable that each year, a the anniversary of their deliverance from Egypt came round, the people of Israel should reâ€"enact in this solemn and dramtic ritual, the great experiâ€" ence of redemption through which they had passed. The redeeming grace of God would, in this way, be brought vividly to mind. The difficulty of any ritual ceremony, however, is that it n.ay in time lose its original meaning and become just a ceremonyâ€"a forâ€" mal act from which the spirit of life and truth has fled. To overcome this danger, the Israclites were required to instruct their young each year in the meaning of the rite, vs. 26, 27. Under this wise provision, the chiiâ€" dren of Israelitish parents were wellâ€" grounded and informed in the great articles of faith, as well as in the chief historical experiences, on which the nation of Israel was founded. On looking back over the passage as a whole, we can see that there were {..ree constituent features in the pascâ€" overâ€"first, the historical: experience of redemption, then the ritual which : mbolized it, and finally the interproâ€" Psalm 1: 7. The ceremony was to he Leld at night. All Israel was to keoep indoors that night. Verse 11 further tells that the flesh of the paschal lamb was to be eaten in haste, while those who partook were to be shod and ready, as though for a journey. This trepidation would make the ceremony in pressive, but it must have been a gruesome sight to wander throigh an Iscaelite settlement and see the froat of each house bespattered with blood‘! II. THE PASSOVER AS A REDEMPTIVE EVENT, v. 23. It was a redemptive event which tlis grim but impressive ceremony symbolized. That night the destroy»er (v. 23), sent by God, passed ovai Egypt and mysteriously slaughteroi the firstborn son in each Egyptian home. Appallinz as this feature of the story reads, yet it spoke home :o Israel a profound truth of lifeâ€"that a proud aud stubborn people, €ike the Ezyptians, who attempt to resist God, come ultimately to destruction. At that time men believed that the worid vas full of spirits who might work all manner of evil on men. In this case the malevolent spirit, the deâ€" stroyer, was sent by God himself. Beâ€" lieving as they did in the presence of larmful spirits, men sought to ward them off by means of charms placed at the entrance of their hoases. To this day the people of Palestine place charms over their doors to repel the "evil eye." It was blood that warded off the destroyer from the HMebrew households. Blood was, in fact, the essential feature of the Passover cereâ€" n.ony. Blood, to men of ancient days, was mysterious; it was the seat of life (Lev. (17: 11); it could not he eaten, Lev. 7: 26. Further, the blood of.the paschal lamb was substitute for the life of the firstborn of the Hebrew households. The great truth of Calâ€" vary was thus driver home upon Isâ€" rael that one life must be sacrificed that other lives might be saved. III THE PASSOVER AS A MEMORY, vs. 24â€"28. wer. It has been found in the past ten years, more than in the previous twenty years, that more people, when they have trouble in the colon and exâ€" pect to be operated upon for a posâ€" sible cancer, fear the discomforts of what is known as an artificial anus, fecal fistula, colostomy, or as most of the people say, that the bowels will move in an abnormal place, or that they will have no control. First, this Recently the cases of cancer of the colon, occurring in a period of forty years has been studied and cases deâ€" monstrated long before the advent of the xâ€"rays and diagnosis by their means. What is the explanation of this? It is very simple. The cancer causes obstruction, if it is at the pylorus of "e stomach or in the left colop. Twentyâ€"five years ago Kocher of Switzerland@ recorded thatin all his permanently cure . cases of cancer of the stomach, the cancer was a freely moveable mass at the pyloric end of the stomach where a little mass proâ€" duced obstruction early. The left colon is no smaller than the right, but the fecal matter is harder, and the least narrowing of the lumen causes obstruction. Unfortunately nature has not provided that all cancers of the bowel produce obstruction so early that people are forced to the operatâ€" ing room for relief. But fortunately all cancers of the bowel or stomach give symptoras just as (oâ€"finite but not as urgent, as obstruction, and if an xâ€"ray examination is made at this time, the defect will be recognized just as easily as if there were obâ€" struction. ® In years of xâ€"ray studies of these cases the evidence confirms this stateâ€" meont. I If you place an individual in front § of an xâ€"ray machine and have behind him the xâ€"ray tube, and then look at him through the flaoroscope in a darâ€" kened room, you can witness the heart beat and see the lightness of the lungs, the darkness of the liver, and if you give him the bariumâ€"milk mixture to swallow, you can tell at once the normal oesphagus, and as this mixture passes into, and fills the stomach, and then passes through the pylorus and the duodenum, within five minutes you will know whether there is a fillâ€" ing defect â€"c not. If t‘ ~ fillin~ defect is on the duodenal side of the pylorus, you can say to the patient: "You doâ€" not have a cancer of the stomach, but you may have an ulcer or some adheâ€" sions about the duodenum which may be cured by tre@ ment, and if not, by operation." But when you see the filling defect in the stomach itself, you must think of the possibility of cancer and the advising of an operaâ€" tion.. Some hours later ou will get the picture of th» colon in the fluoros â€"ope or on the film, and if there is a filling defect in the colon, you must make another film by injecting the mixture through the rectum into the colon. With the rarest exceptions is any seriâ€" ous lesion or trouble of the oesophâ€" agus, stomach, duodenum, small intesâ€" tine, or colon overlooked. The chief danger is that this examination will be made too late and not that it will be made in time and misinterpreted. ‘The great anatomist and zoologist Leidy of the University of Pennsylâ€" vania remarked in 1890 that he would not pass a dental student in anatomy who did not know something about his insides. Leidy did not realize that he was establishing a very important principle in preventive medicine. Denâ€" tists must know a great deal about the teeth, because it is their profesâ€" sion to treat the teeth. But dentists, as doctors, need know more about the inside of the body than anyone else. But everyone should know something about the oesphagus which carries the food from the mouth to the stomach and about the stomach and the first portion of the small intestine beyond the stomach called the duodeum, and then there is about thirtyâ€"two feet of small intestine and about ten feet of the large intestine called colon, and it more important to know about the ten feet of colon than about the thirtyâ€" two feet of the small intestine. This article has been written for the Canadian Social Hygiene Council by an eminent specialist and in addition has received the endorsation of the Provincial Department of Health of Ontario. Cancer of the Bowels Easily Detectable By Xâ€"Ray Love Sends Its Message. I have grown to believe that the one thing worth aiming a; is simâ€" plicity of heart and life; that the world is a very beautiful place; that congenial labor is the secre; of happiress.â€"A. F. Benson. Recent researches at the Dominion astrophysical Observatory, Departâ€" ment of the Interior, at Victoria, B.C., confirm the existence, throughout intersellar space, of an extremely tenuous cloud of gaseous particles. So rarefied is this cloud that milâ€" lions of cubic miles of ‘it would weigh only a fraction of an ounce. Notwithstanding this extreme tenuity it betrays its presence by its action On the light coming from distant stars. 1 Many interesting wild â€" animals| i i known to most people only in a zoo lhlllll Cu' to H.ve can be seen and studied in their naâ€" s moa Skyu:nper tural environment in Waterton Lakes (;crpoa.â€"(;‘enoa will be the first Itaiâ€" national park in the southwest cor.|‘"" city to go in for skyscrapers to ner of the province of Alberta, _ In 2"Y COnSiderable oxtent. A new city this reserve there are bighorn aheen.lpl‘" which has just been made calls Rocky Mountain goat, black bear, for tall buildings at the four corners moose, elk, beaver, and many kinds of the recently constfucted Piazza of small furâ€"bearers. Dante. The only other examples of M unusyally high buildings in ltaly are on l e cÂ¥ e c 04 in Milan and Brescia. Since 1880, fielg oflicers of the Topographical Survey, Department of the Interior, in the course of their regular . surveying and _ mapping operations, have made about $0,000 measurements of the direction of pointing of the magnetic compass needle. Such _ measurements may be taken by the surveyor in a few minutes, at very little additional ex. pense when he is already on the ground with the necessary instruâ€" ments. f The Forest Service, Department of the Interior, maintains a plant _ at New Westminster, British Columbia, for the extraction of forest tree sooeds. Following the season of 1930, this plant extracted 2,933 pounds (near. ly a ton and a half) of forest tree seed, practically all of which was sent to the Imperial Forestry Comâ€" mission and the Forest Service of New Zealand for use in reforesta. tion work. °CC UPoeralion should be as safe lndl The general theme for this year‘s successful as the removal of the apâ€" discussions was the practical working pendix, |o( local authorities and the training Remember, it is the *â€"rays that deâ€" and recruiting of lJocal government ofâ€" tect troubles in the oesphagus, stomâ€" | hcers, ach, duodenum, small and large lutes-‘ w meniifffmemmmemoniye tines, Always ask your physician: "Dd s ° I require an xâ€"ray examination *" | Gem.'n Air Llne. Cancer of the large bovrel has a very low grade of malignancy, and more cures are accomplished every day and more cures will be made in the future, be ause this cancer may begin in a polypoid tumor not cancer, This polopoid tumor gives symptoms and, if examined and recognized then, the operation should be as safe and successful as the removal of the apâ€" pendix, llduuthchctthulnthobecin- ning of surgery of the colop practicalâ€" ly all the patients came l:‘o the hosâ€" pital with obstruction and had to have colostomy first to save their lives, and usually the tumor was so large that after its removal the continuity of the bowel could not be restors. to normal. Toâ€"day this temporary colostomy is becoming less and less necessary, beâ€" cause the majority of people are exâ€" amined â€" with the xâ€"rays before obâ€" structicn and :; the early stages of cancer, Again, we are \ arr‘ to perâ€" form a temporary colostomy or safety valve of the cecum in the region of the appendix. With the rarest excepâ€" tions, we never make a permanent outlet in the abdomen unless the tumor is situated deep in the pelvis, in the lower sigmoid or upper rectum where complete removal and end to end suture restoring the lumen of the bowel is possible, but, very dangerous. Therefore, usually colostomy is an operation of choice to avoid danger rather than an operatio of necessity, and none toâ€"day should bother about a moder colostomy. It is much better to choose this than a dangerous operaâ€" tion. It is very important that the press should aid in eiiminating the unâ€" necessary fear of colostomy. Astrophysical Researches Checking the Compass Interesting Wild Life Forest Tree Seeds ONTARIO ARCHIVES C Simplicity whereas formerly the trains were comâ€" posed exclusively of thirdâ€"class coachâ€" es, several secondâ€"class coaches have been added this year. Rome.â€"One of the most popular innovations introduced by the Minisâ€" try of Communications last year was the running of Sunday excursion trains during the summer at very low rates fromy all the principal cities to various points of interest,. The trains have been resumed this year and promise to be as popw‘ar as ever, The le_rvieo has been improved because, _ Many New Jersey dairy farmers !are effecting a substantial saving without decreasing the milk flow by substituting soybean oil meal for lii« seed oil meal in the dairy sow ration, ecntends E. J. Perry, extension dairyâ€" man at the New Jersey Agriculturel Experiment Station. Although cottonâ€" seed meal is slightly cheaper than the soybean the latter gives the varicly of ingredients always desirable in a dairy mixture. Tosts conducted in Tennessee and Ohio show that soyâ€" bean oil meal produced more milk than either cottonseed or linseed meal, said Mr. Perry, It is the residue left a‘ter most of the wil has been extractâ€" ed from the soybeans and carries as r.uch digestible protein as cottonse=d meal, 13 per cent. more carbohydrates and a little less fat. Italians Shown to be It should be added that in Italy the word "skyscraper" hardly has the Amâ€" erican meaning. Most Italian cities have fixed an upper limit of 70 to 80 feet for new buildings. Any structure ~xzseeding that height is therefore conâ€" s‘dered exceptional and is technical‘y a skyscraper. The four skyscrapers here will have a height of about 200 feet, which would certainly not qualâ€" ify them to figuzre among the tad buildings of Americ. l Berlin.â€"Germany will make a bid , for the fastest commercial air service l of the world this summer when a fleet of planes now under construction is expected to be put in operation on imâ€" portant domestic and international lines. The planes are reported to Leave a maximum speed of 300 kiloâ€" | meters an hour, _ Today‘s average 'spred in the Germa. commercial air service is 180 kilometers an hour. The extent of the airline net to be eormered by thee fast expross planes remains to be determined, but officiaia Io( the German Lufthansa have al> | ready worked out a tentative plan. It is intended to make it possible ior commercial tray (»rs to fly from Borâ€" l‘ to such traffic centres as Munich, Stuttgart, Frank{furt and Cologne in two hours. This, it is pointed out, will enable them to attend to thour business and thon return to Berlin in the evening. The record in the decrease of fAying time is hoped to be attaincd on the Berlinâ€"Vienna line. A run for whick express trains now require fourtecn kours should be covered by the new planes in two hours, «0ndon. â€" "Coâ€"operation of the world‘s peoples in matters of , every» @ay concern to everybody" was the description applied by Dr. Â¥. von Loy» German Air Lines ___ Aim At Speed Record den, Prussian Minister of the Interior in the Braun Cabinet, to the Interna tional Congress of Municipal Authori ties held in London recently, Municipal administrators who are faecd by the same problem all over the world came to London from countries as distant as the Hejar, Peru, Mexico, Cuba, Persia and China, in the hope of learning useful lessons from the solutions evolved by their colleagues in more advanced counâ€" tries. City Officials of World .__._ Hold London Parley Nearly 800 mayors, town clerk®, coumcillors and engineers from 44 countries assembled . to exchange everyday experiences in all aspects of local government. That those who wield local &uthoriâ€" ty greatly appreciate this practical coâ€" operation is best shown by the amaz The International Union carries out its action not only by organizing conâ€" gresses, but by fostering international relations between the municipalities through the medium of its permanent oflice at Brussels which collects and disseminates information on local govâ€" ernment throughout the world. ing growth of the International Union of towns which held its first congredt® at Ghent, Belz., in 1913. This original meeting. was attendcd by delegates of 162 mucipipalition from 28 countries. ‘Toâ€"day the number of towns and other local authorities affiliated with the union is estimated at 50,000 and the total population at 190,000,000. Dairy Cow Rations _ are reported speed of 300 / Today‘s ave! ai. commercial on on im ernational ported to 300 kiloâ€" 1

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