West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 13 Oct 1932, p. 6

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CANADA Ne and. Men George Bernard Shaw nys there are no no“ In or women in the world. “I can write plays and you can't. That in ell." he "lurked. “It I couldn't. I lholld mommy be a trump. As it is, I an no we“ on that everybody we tend: I In much more respectable then I really am."--Hatgt0tort Herald. He Tuned In "Idea A prorninent Pictou County tamer brought two calf-skins to market. and could only get twetttrfHe cents for them. He also wanted a few yards of leather belt lacing. He could pot get enough for the calf-hides to buy the few laces. Re was mad clear through. Being s long-headed Scot. he threw the hides haei into his wagon and started homeward. “Hang it," he mat. tered to himself. "l'rn not going to let these fellows beat me. In the old any: they tanned hides; why can't P." He did. The process entailed some work. He used the river tor a soaking tank. He applied the proper solution to soft- en and toughen the leather. it work. ed. lie cut a lacing from the hide, and tried to break it. He couldn't, and came to town to show the result ot his work. He has several dollars worth of good strong lacing for the belts of his machines; .‘But ~what pleased most was that he beat the machine that was op- Posing ttim.--New Glasgow Chronicle. Out " Hm in the City _ l There is little tor tor a rollicking high-med animal naming loose in a world ot crowded streets. The ner- vous tension at (billing car wheels Ind being chased iron pillar to post because of a succession ot wrong-do- Inns innocently arising trom the sheer tor ot living. is suiliclent to arouse ir- ritability in the most companionahie beast and eventually bring down coals ot are on his head and that of his own- pr. There are tow things more touch. ing or more. worth while than the ion! rommny ot a big. goodmatured rascal who. through his very freedom ot though and action can nuke lite seem a much pleasanter business to the her- lied human mind. Like everything else. however. he has his place And. If he is not intended tor the tenure: the leash. that place Is in the country, or " least. the loss camped portions at the city where he may enjoy the liberty so Asentaioto bringing out the best titat is in him.-Edmorttott Jour. [it A Fallacloua Notion Motorists who clamor tor the re- moval of speed limits claim that it is not speed in itself but reckless or in- competent driving that is responsible for so many distressing highway ac- cidents. But a member ot the eta! ot the National Safety Council ot the United States. Curtis Billings, argues in the Atlantic Magazine for October that the increase in the death rate due to motor accidents coincides with in- creases in the power and speed of motors in that country. With the coming of last cars and broad, paved roads the notion became ttxed in the minds of motorists that speed in ii'.) selt is not dangerous. "That nouott.", he says. ‘is as tallaclous as it is allur- lms.” Having reviewed the statistics on the subject. Mr. Billings quotes one enuineer as saying: "The taster I vehicle is going the more damage it can do because its energy increases as the square ot its speed. That is to say. it the speed is doubled the force of the impact in case ot accident is tour times as great. This is a com- non-sense as well as an engineering view to take ot the eitects ot increased speed. The sittttitieanee of the argu- ment lies in the tact that it comes from an expert engaged in Safety First wort-iron" Mail and Ettt- pire Too Much Cutting Down . All over the province the high] schools and collegiate institutes are} tryng to out down expenses. In fact all over the province everybody is try- ing to cut down expenses, even thoee who have no reason at all for doing so. People who have their 1938 itt. come are pinching like the test. This reducing ot expenses, thla retraining from buying anything that can he done without. retards the return of hnalneu activity. And yet a force like this operates inevitably and no argument can prevail agnlnst it.--Torottto Star. Hanging The oMeial hangmgn in Poland gets " per execution. and says he enn't make I living at that rate. BI: ur- vices are not tmiBeimttly In demand and most ot the time he is Just has- in; arouttd.--stratord Beacon-Herald. THE EMPIRE w". -. "w _.V....i..... ""'"""'l Ottawa and World Trade of Fisheries. A revival of trade within the Empire ------<.----.- la calculated to increase British pros- British Motor Train. perlty everywhere, and nothing can . . prevent that from operating benetieN1- Installed Mt Rm-ii, ly elsewhere in the world. It means Bucharest, Roumania.-alightmotoe much that so great a commercial na- trains from England have been in- tion should tind its feet again. Ot- stalled on a number of secondary tawa, it is well said, has furnished I lines. link between Lausanne and the World It la believed that they will be Economic Conference. The ultimate cheaper than the regular trains and outcome must be the tMmeAt of all. and will help reduce the large railroad do. the immediate result la to 'irrtgi1tr the Beit. e' wider problem, although the ttrat tor. ‘If they piimiritisfaetorr, more eign reaction is to compel adjustment will be introduced. l to the changed eortdittr.--Auett1attd Weekly New". _ . ' British capital is tremendously need- ed in til the Crown Colonies, and there are bitter" complaints from time to time that-British investors are shy ot investments in them. Yet when it comes to s bncticsi snort " s Bri- tish investor to begin an enterprise in these colonies, he is met, as often as not, with a cold water douche of sus- Ir1cion.-Trlnidad Guardian. ArtgltrDartlstt Relation. Denmark has been one of the 'iritt foreign countries to show readiness to adjust itself to the new trade condi- tions created at Ottawa; and its W cuiiarly intimate commercial rotations with Great Britain are illustrated " the fact that last year this country took no less than " Ser cent. '0! all Danish exports. The Danish people seem determined to overcome the dit- titeultieg created for thenr'by the new Ottawa duties; and a new trade treaty will no doubt be negotiated at the earliest opportune niomehll' 'In the meantime the British Exhibition will exemplify the enlightened pelt-interest that draws the two countries economi- cally and culturally together--Londott Times. ' - _ "tr “Hoe Recovery new"! l I believe that the process of recov- err has begun and is welliunder war/ even though there is little visible evlw deuce of it as yet. But convalescence‘ must at the best be slow, owing to the terrible network at constrictive bands in which the world has contrived to envelop itself in its desperate and tu. tile efforts to escape from, the conse quences ot its own economic folly. I have little faith in the powers of _ World Economic Conference to pro- duce a formula tor the unravelling of the tangle. The only real hope lies in a steady and unrelenting pressure of business men for the piecemeal re- moral ot obstacles to tradenand in the natural ingenuity of the trader. Every importer or exporter who can find a way (preferably legal) through. round or over a taritt, duets or exchange com trol deserves well of humanity at the present 'unetuie.--O. R. Hohson in The Spectator. London. T The cure for the Red movement in China is peace and prosperity. This is not to say that active and resolute action is unnecessary. but Communism grows from the hotbed ot distress arising from famine. disorder and cor- rupt government. Aeroplanes and local volunteers can disperse a min. ority ot bandits and rogues; but a great peril arises when normal and or- derly people are drawn into such a movement Then the revolt grows to the proportion ot civil war, with il- limitabie possibilities for mlsehlet. - Hong Kong Press. OTHER OPINIONS Monotony Most of us can draw up our belts an- other hole and cut our lunch allowance in two tor a spell ot weeks, but there comes a time when, it we are 'iiiii) with a spark ot imagination, we cracki under the strain ot monotonous exist. ence. A brain-storm sweeps away all our good resolutions. the self-denying ordinance is overborne. we are almost ready to play ducks and drakes with our insurance premums and payments to the cooperative bank and like Pile pa, give ourselves a holiday. It is worth all it costs sometimes, to waste the price ot a plain nourishing meal on a red necktie or the price of a much needed pair ot shoes on a broiled lob ster with all the tixings. - Boston Transcript. Obnoxious Billboards l There are two counts against the billboard on the highway. It not only mars the landscape and destroys the natural beauty of roadside scenery, but its garishness also distracts the attention ot the driver ot the car. Im- portant trailc directions posted along the road are often lost in s waiter of commercial signs. In the interests ot safety the most conspicuous signs on the highway should be those placed there by the highway department to direct tratBe.-St. Paul Pioneer Press. Brltiqh Capital in Crown Colonie- vatteouver.--Camted salmon pack in British Columbia up to Sept. " totalled 949,211 cases, compared with 645,015 for the corresponding period last year, according to I statement issued by Major J. A. Motherweii, chief ot the Provincial Department ot Fisheries. British Motor Trains Installed in Romania Bucharest, Roamania.-Eight motor trains from England have been in- stalled on a number ot secondary lines. B. C. Salmon Pack The Red: In China Me~mapie tau-gar industry or Can, adwhtb experienced increased activi- tr this, year. Lower prices appear to have stimulated sales, and there was an increase in the production of both sugar and syrupvover the re- sults ot.1931. In the Maritime Prov- inces and Quebec the season was ions and productive, while in On. tario the flow of sap was much restricted. . Production ‘of maple sugar, so for as reported for the season of 1932, was 7,217,300 pounds for the whole Dominion. Last year the sugar out- put was 5,484,100 pounds. Syrup production this year was 1,744,479 gallons compared with 1,314,700 gal- lons in 1931. The highest produc- tion of sugar during the last tive years was 18,798,109 pounds in 1928, while the biggest yield of syrup in the same period was 2,185,379 gel- Iona in 1930. The total Value of sugar and syrup sold this year Was $2,746,757 for the Dominion, a redaty tion ot about $800,000 trom the previ- ous year, owing, of course, to the de- cline in prices. The record ot pro- duction value for the five years was $6,118,656 in 1929. Ot the total value for the current year sugar yielded $692,480 and syrup $2,054,- 277. The values given tor the pres- ent year should be regarded as pre- liminary since the full production has not yet been sold. Maple Sugar Industry -. Ieports Goad Year New Guinea Home of One Hundred Raft? Sydney, N.S.W.--More than 100 different races are to be found in New Guinea, which is Australian mandated territory, declared Mr. E. W. P. Chinney, government anthro- pologist for the territory, in a recent - - .. . . __ 77,.‘L " 1'v-VQ-uv -v- _--- __ _. address before the Advancement of Science Congress here. Probably many more are not known. he said, for part of the territory has not yet been explored. Natives num- bered so far total about 400,000. Mr. Chinney advocates teaching the na. tives trades and agriculture. Mia JV.,.Horwood, riiht, and Miss C.cMttao-etrknorrn woman athletes pt,England, as they finished the mile walk in a dead heat during the Duke of York's interlcountry championships. Tomorrow they'll battle it out, but today they walk arm In arm. Miss A, do Gunsbourg and Miss Pauline Donn were titmlhtta in the girls' open so]! thtunplomehlp much " Stoke Poses, Englwd, recently. Friendly Enemies Combine F armed in Britain To Protect Trust Companies London.--hn association of invest- ment trusts, representing a combina- tion of 250 to 300 of the largest Brir. ish Trust companies, with a total capital of _ about 300,000,000 pounds sterling, has been formed here. The objects of the organization will be to protect the interests of the invest- ment trusts and their shareholders, especially against default of home and foreign borrowers. The central or- ganization, it is also pointed out, would enable the trust companies to speak with one voice in any particular problem of default. The trusts represented include the Investment Trust Corporation, Indus- trialjmi General Trust. Mercantile Investment Ind Gemral Trust and the British Investment Trust. Vlt 'is anticipated. that the associa- tion will act in eo-operation with continental and American organiza- tions where firms with which they deal have foreign interests. Los Angeles.--" speed of 300 miles an hour, the fastest time ever made by a land plane Over a distance course, has been accomplished in an offieial flight between Los Angeles and Sun Francisco. Colonel Roscoe Turner raced his monoplane between the two cities, 370 miles apart, in 1 hour, 14 minutes, an average of a itat 300 miles an hour. The flight lowered by 17 minutes the mark set last year by Jimmie Wed- ell of New Orleans, pilot-designer and builder of Colonel Turner's ship. Land Plane Flies Colonel Turner, making a non-stop round trip between the cities, flew the distance of 740 miles in 2 hours, 41 minutes, averaging 275.77 miles an, hour. The 300-mile average was made on the southward trip with the aid of a tail wind. National Aeronau- tie Association oifkitas timed the flight. . 300 Miles An Hour mo ARCHIVE-E TORONTO -irt,/.rit..i ' Oxygen“; Berlin.-Nuiiu omen" is the name given by the Vouische Zeitung to an invention which, it is chimed. my save hundreds of lives in peace, and hundreds of thousands in war. This beetetieent discovery com-ht: of the chemicnl fixation of oxygen in such I. my that the cu any be ur- ried about in the form of hrquuetbes and yet be immediately “silty e for breathing purposes. The briquettes are contained in tins similar to those used for aimed asparagus. They will cost from tro to 60 pfennigs (about 10 (mats). The-cannea oiygen nay be stored for years Ind moved about to any ex- tent without risk of explosion or fire. After an initial warning-set tn action by . blow-the briquettes (it is explained) give off for hours, without pressure, an even exhalation of oxy- gen. The gas is so highly eoneentrated that it could be contained in one of the usual steel bottles now used for the purpose only at 1 pressure of 850 atmospheres. If canned oxygen had been nails“: 9. little earlier all the hundreds of lives lost through the colliery explosions in Germany during the past few years would, it is said, have been saved. Every collier, every member of ti 5 bmarine crew, and, during the wan every inhabitant of I town sig,',:',:,',".,";') by gas attacks will, it is suggested, in future always have his tinned oxygen; hriquette handy to save him from death from tvsphyxiatmg fumes. I Discovery to Effect . More Cures of Cancer New Haven, Cons-Professor Wil- liam P. Graves of the Harvard School of Medicine, to the Clinical Congress being held at Yale University, has an- nounced the discovery by Dr. Walter Schiller, of Vienna, of a method of detecting cancer of the cervix uteri in its early stages, when cures can be effected in a. high percentage of cases. At that period of its development, Professor Graves pointed out, such cancer was not apparent to the eye or the touch. The cancer, he said, had its origin in irritation of an indifferent cell in the epithelium, which produced a virus stimula"mg surrounding cells to abnormal growth and spreading la- terally. Dr. Schiller, he said, discovered that normal cells of the epithelial layer contained an appreciable amount of glycogen, a form of sugnr, and he de- vised u method of staining part of the layer with an iodine solution, which caused glycogen particles in the nor- mal cells to appear almost black under the microscope. The cancerous cells, containing no glxcogen, appeared white or pink. Professor Graves said that Dr. Schiller's test had been subjected to intensive investigation in the Harvard laboratories and was believed to be of "inestimable value," being simple aid apparently reliable. He advocat- ed its general use in the campaign against cervical cancer. Ontario Ranks Third in Highway Mileage Ottawa. - Saskatchewan leads all the provinces ot the Dominion in high- way mileage, with 155,609 miles open for trattle on Dee. M, 1931, according to a report issued recently by the Do. minion Bureau of Statistics. Alberta came next with 62,426 miles, and On- tario with 52,119 was in third position. Other provinces with their mileage: were: Quebec, 35,763; British Colum- bin, 22,459; Nova Scotia, 14,719; New Brunswick, 11,825; Manitoba, 5,230, and Prince Edward Island, 3,650 miles. The total highway mileage in Canada is 378,094. Rio De Jamsiro.--Fruit culture in “NOW Bunk .tr. Y! Brazil hu made great strides in the coined at the British I last few yen-s, according to 3 Depart. The Yugoslav . coins. Iment of Agriculture report, which! e.11or to the British tsil states that the 1931 crop was valued! currentfates the ten I at $25,000,000 and that the 1982 mp‘ thg .equivalent of up! (will be larger. The largest users of shilling. 'Bruiliun fruits are the British and -----+-- _ the Argentina. Fruit exports during The Com l 1913 amounted to $200,000 nnd sound The optimist MMI ' to $8,000,000 in 1981, 0mm bur perity, spaces: and opl was and pimpplen no the clad in!» Tho MW ”a duct: for exportation. failure and limitation. London-After -n years oi declines in the blrthrate of England and Wales, the Registrar-General report announces a slight increase, amount- ing to 2 per cent., per thousand, for the June quarter of 1932. the first such gain in that period tor the 11 years. Birth Rate In Britain - Showg Upward Tendency There were IG,456 births, ot whom 1,051 were boys to each 1,000 girls. . Infantile mortality also showed some little improvement, deaths among infants one year old and under being but 7 per 1,000. Whole Emily Budapest.--The peasant family of Brnndhuber in the village of Csobank indulged in en orgy a matrimony re cently. The grandfather, Joseph Brandhuber, end his wife celebrated their golden wedding; their son, George, and his wife their silver wed- ding, Ind two grandchildren were married in the perish church. The whole villugo took part in the four- fold wedding celebrations. Brazil Raises More Fruit Inl’opulnSiuo -'e'"eew"'" - e Ind neither: of the animal tint“. - lives new“ 'ttdeft';') t'rmdred end two hundred years. It; I uid tint when Meander con- Iqua-red indie he took one at Kill Your largest eleph‘Intl. named Atmr, ‘and turned him loo-e with this in- icnption on his, collar: "Alex-rider. 'the non ot Jupiter. dedicated Me: 'to the sun." This elepinnt. the leinry has it. we: ruptured three 'huv'dred end titty yeurs later 1 I" It has been claimed tint u a. gen- feral this there in I direct relation L",'?,':'".") the duration of life and the time re'quired “to develop fully: but Jo this there ere maifeet exceptions. The eat is mature before it in a year lfold: -yet it 'may’ attain the” Hr',ot twenty years. rested» wwshevrg‘urtggnr relation to longevity, the elephant I tTfid""ttRr" Mtttttr" lreing My . held to be the longestleed ot. untangle: bat here again‘ enters the" iixeititom.1 {since the little beaver lives more {than twice as Ion amt V'WPf"a"? l The average 'W-ti new and! " estimated as (0119?: all. thin! lyean; Abe“, “emf-e earl: Wt. ititty yam: tadebaénuty-M been; cat. iltteett years; Chamois, "rentr-: Bre years; ox. orentrtt" yearn: deer, twenty years; dog, fourteen years; fox. fourteen years: goat. '.' twelve years; gulnea pig. tour yearl; , hare, eight years; hippopotamus“ “twenty years; horse. twentvae ”years; hyena. twenty-nve yeara; jag- . ner,_ twenty-f1ve years: leopard. 1'tf,i,i:',it,rtjiis, years; lion, forty yeara: _' monkey, seventeen years; moose. ",jiiii"r" years; mouse, six years; pigs, , fifteen years; rabbit, seven years; /rat, seven years; rhinoceron. twenty ”years; sheep; ten {Quin “111ml. t eight_years: stag. tive years: tiger, "ltwti,hr,f,iv/', years: wolf, twenty: years. .'; While the average age of the iettnle ["13 -gomewhere between one pundred '/ and two hundred years. Cuvier he- . --7 AL... “AM. 't,zlgydt,'di,tf,' use. yam - With Dickens - -"--'- WW \ _ An educated mule that 113d on snowshoes was the latest addition last winter to the transportation facilities of Northern Manitoba. . Natives of this northern trapping and mining ccntre were becoming somewhat bored by the frequent tttr-' rivals of roaring airplanes, screaming 1ceomotives and barking dog tenrnsl when Bill Klonwick walked in from his tn; lines with his p';i,,l',rof_e"l)') mule quietly pulling : tobaggtn to give them I new thrill. l - _ . . 'L_2‘_ __j In-.. "rid, mule's name is Lizzie und her snowshoes were about 18 inches in dia- ueter. Klonwick taught her how to use them white working on his trap lines 600 miles north of Sherridon, Msn., and now she refuses 'o walk in the snow without them. She makes good speed over the high drifts. One of Australia's are marsupinls, which had been lost for nearly 100 yen-s. he: been rediscovered, follow- ing the bountiful “in. that recently reawakened plant and animal life in the centre of the continent. This is the rut kaglroo (ealoprymtuietuttper tris), which was found by Mr. Harry Finlayson, of the Adelaide University staff, on a recent trip in Central Aus- tralia. "Extinct" Australian Robert Briirault in Scribner's Magazine (New York): Human na- ture is no less capable of good than of evil. It has " times appeared vile, that is because vilenes: has been thrust upon it by a social anarchy that has made internecine strife its law and fostered the haunt impulses. The poll of that agelong pessimism in lifting. A new faith in humanity in possible. We know that the way to amend human nature is not to pro- fess high sentiments, but to amend the social and cultural factors that mould and fashion it. The little animal, which stands about I foot high, w‘s believed to be extinct. It is aid that the only three specimens of it in the world are in the British Museum. Vienntc-Trroi is threntened with a total prohibition of motoring, the local press was informed recently by the road. department of the Tyrol Gov- ernment, us many urea complnin that they hive no funds to pay for the upkeep of the roads. The Icon! auth- orities demand the right to levy toll: on pusing cars, " wu done up to two years ago, in order to be able to keep the roads in repair. Britain Mints Yugoclnv Coins Lmdon.-New ten diner silver coins recently put into cimulntion by the Yugoslav Government through the "rational Bank of Yugoslavia were coined at the British mint in Indian. The Yugoslav coins ere than“ in alloy to the British silver coinage At current rates the ten-diner piece is the equivalent of approximately one shilling. The optimist nee: washing prov peritr, 59m_qnd opportudty. Mule Dons Snowshqgs Tyrol May Bar Autos The Ascent of Man of this northern trapping 1g centre were becoming bored by the frequent Ir- "ring airplanes, screaming Animal Revives 1i"iiieiiFfiLri'itier gstqtotriorrarrhr its}. . . . t had to tetthhit I thought. (ttgi',' I came trrm who " VII. [ ere r was golng. or how could I 'Iccount tor mynelt and my presence 1hestdsrfitm td Mr. Osgood's out? So i! begun. sstama"reiaglyrto snare: " question. When the train mweu w. ...- -- three minutes at North Bewick, the mph on the side of the car next the station suddenly srose end look- ed engerly out st some object at - pnrent Interest. l was not. It sny use. s person to git still In her Bear when others were looking out ot _.a...a...,. and my smsll nose was “i can (to. Holllc. mine, and I'm going to Charlestown to visit my uncle. My mother And its main went, In your realm: In! light, but iot canine three couldn't go from the isnme tlmlly. it was so expensive. so " stayed at home. Non. tttat's my mm listen ls left behind In Hollis. She's too small to' so on 1 journey. lshed. to rename m- puw n. - W. with m; that ht In“ meal. land I known u._ever [-11an we left Port- lubed. 1 13nd ".uvvnt- We--".. _ - - _ had no plan, no preponuon. no ll- tenuon. cerulnly no punctual; . ,,_n.‘ Inn-nu. " tmtttott, Cam-n, -- r, - Mt inwylo'rop'e! W meant a! my tent. and, needing " the title. KW“! myself breethleuly “a timogouelf "tht. ti: unbidden we“. in the m1 'ot tiodoi: I had I mo- ment to recover my equenimlty. for Dickens wu looking out ot the wii dow, but he turned suddenly, " said with instineble surprise: "God bieu my soul, child, when did you come tram?” __-_ ._A..n. a... um yuu WII-v -.-_V Mr hurt VII an my mouth. but there we: still room to exercise III tongue, which wu genenlly the cm. I we: frightened. but not so can- pletely frightened u it I Ind been meeting a stranger. You see i know him, even if he did not know me; no but she wanted to so to the readlng dreadfully. Tint. was} Indy then who had Inger heard of My Trot. wood, Ind had read only twd at ycur books!" "Welt, upon my word'." In said; "you do not can to any that you hue read them!” "Ot course!" I replied; "every one of them but the We “at I. no " ing to buy in Boston, and some at them Ill times." “Bleu my soul!" he enema“ nun. “Those long thlck books, uni you such a Blitt ot I ching." "Of course,” I expldnod con-den- tloully, “I do skip some of the very dull parts one. In I ville; not>tho short dull parts. but the long ones." He hushed hurt“; "Now that ll Iomethlng that I hear very little "out," he ma. "t dl-tlnctl'y want to Ian: more about thou very long dull puts." We were now tut npproeching our destination the nation in Boe- ton-and the women began to collect their wraps and bundles. Mr. Osgood had two or three times made " npmnnce. but had been waved nwny with a smile by DttAettq---t Imlle tint seemed to Bay, “You will excuse me, I know, but this child In- the right of why." “You no not traveling alone?" he Inked, " he arose to put on bl- overcont. “Oh! my sMnesI!" I uld. com- ing (Iowa to courier the Int um. line. I had Men my out bend. hirn-"eertainlr not; I but! I mother, but I torso: on about her." Where. upon ho told. “You Ire ttatrttttitstre" of the at of "ttery',"--) "Mr Garden ot lemon, In Autobio- mphy." by Kate Douqu Wiggln. If any country Wlntl itrstt-rate bella it bu to come to England to buy them. There are some famous bell: in the churches and public buildings of foreign countries, but the beet of tlese were made in England. Belt- founding is one of the oldest of our We: and it is still I very Bottriah- LiGer knew he! l The other day ringers belonging to nearly five hundred British churches gnthered " I Croydou foundry to an the lecoud him hell in the worn. It has been made, dong with meaty- one others, for the chapel of Chic“. University. The oeventy-two Ire to he hung u I cerillon. This will have " full octaves of not“ end semi-tone. gnawiubeehletopleyhlmostuy music. The big hell weighs Ieventeen tons. and the total weight of the seventy- two is over ninety tone. Electricity will be used for ringing the bigger Berlin.--tt your wife or sweetheart is jealous of you ith, 'troutsly beau. she bu too much iodine in her blood. Scientist here lave come to thut coa- clusiou after determining that tho blood of a jealous woman other: can. tains 100 per cent. more iodine than that of n from who isn’t fueling! toward jealouq. British Bells are Best CuyeofJodousy stopped for two of be cumulus! In the Car " but the so “Ml" urn can of the fun 'ttht them."- ( "You've y hunt now, ,relt as the 1 Ford corporut men "tt Us Judw by huge Walter I “Them In or a lien in t? h drum" Bernard 5 "One h -aeted in on of on “the It In a pr "Facts, a ebleetr whit and put in n “W is ecrtain display “The Inger-t tar be lorgar cm: i ewes beard rent and "The " up“ ied I“: . one can with the l Afar I M tutr "In o at three dated 9 the mor Igltnin: "t sows h unlit “plain nae so terent might bt tion. I'll!) Mr. [ the 1 hard " Ot new 'hllq ”I. I Met aimed may ot I Vidal"! . " " Delhi: “bit Bade One t corn “we “III trad t and i loud use the“ buck .101 In to: Ttte YO u thin Iln In an the " “The u Inemp "Th “FM met "wr Twt Nothir a to be we A Hint B M " W

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