West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 10 Nov 1932, p. 6

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«xi #s x‘s & THE EMPIRE M The Ottawa Agreements The Ottawa agreements are in many Fespects experimental, and wo make no propkecies about them. Only exâ€" Vehicles in the Dark Another case is reported from Cadilâ€" lac, whero a farmer on the road with a waggon was run into by a car and fi:e of the horses either killed or badly jured. Cases of this kind aro hap ning all over the province and they rm continue to happen until lights Rre carried at night on all vehicles. A more deaths and casualties will ely have to occur before a proper w is put on the statute books. Going t at night without lights on a busy way is flirting with disaster.â€"Reâ€" Leaderâ€"Post. | The editor of the National Revenue Review tells a good one about a memâ€" ber of Parliament for one of the Montâ€" real constituencies. The member spent a vacation at a fashionable resort this year, iad, when ho returned, someone asked him if he had enjoyed the change and rest. "I really can‘t say," replied the M.P. "The bell boys got most of the change, and the hotelâ€" keeper got the rest." â€" Border Cities Star. verses due to weather conditions 7or other causes.â€"Gananoque Reporter, The prices of farm produce may be low, but the harvest is large. Everyâ€" thing that the farmer raises has been produced in abundance this year. He may not have much ready money, but he need not go hungry. Nature has beon prodiga! this year. Taken as a wholé, the principal field crops in Canâ€" ada have seldom attained such total volume as during the present season or been of a higher quality. Yields were generally satisfactory in each of the provinces, despite sectional reâ€" #pring ada s 0 market in ada m Canada will fessional or realize the « Rioting is Futile The unfortunate incidents in London and Belfast show how useless demonâ€" strations of this kind are to settle our present difficulties. Baton charges and revolver shots are certainly not going to provide food for the hungry and drink for the thirsty. Everyone knows how the people are suffering. In unâ€" happy days like these they are always inclined to lay the blame on the social order of the day and the detonating action of a few agitators is enough to cause an explosion. Imbued with reâ€" volutionary ideas, the latter take adâ€" vantage of bad times to excite the pasâ€" sion of the crowd. They egg it on against the authorities and forcible reâ€" pression becomes a necessity. While honest and brave fellows are being killed, they sneak away and hide in cel‘ars and sheds.â€"Le Soleil Quebec a former Secretary of State for the Dominions, was fined for reckless drivâ€" ing and deprived of his license to drive for five years It is the only way to deal with those who so flagrantly abuse the convenience of a modern amenity and turn it into a menace.â€" Ottawa Journal. gures | CANADA It is the Only Way Severe penalties for reckless driving are being imposed by magistrates . in the United Kingdom. One 20â€"yearâ€"old driver of a motor van was disqualified for 25 years from driving any motor vehicle, and fined $15 and costs. He had been driving a motor van which swerved across the road, mounted the sidewalk, knocked down a lamp standâ€" ard, and killed a pedestrian. His exâ€" planation was that a "jar" wrenched the stecring wheel of the van out of his hands. Another young man, son of,‘ ?omom Five fathers of Reigate, Eng. have on awarded certificates by the town uncil for their proficiency in knowâ€" ; what to do with a fretting infant, w to detect mumps and measles, and ier skill in tending their small offâ€" ingz. These awards indicate that hors can be adept in babycraft if s try.â€"St. Thomas Timesâ€"Journal. nts in retain traffic but >wn in th , London. ada Inalisnable Advantages ent evidence goes to show that la, _ despite some discourageâ€" in the last few years is certain ain and enhance her prestigo as cat exporting country. _ Export s issued recently show that Canâ€" output practically dominates the ‘t.â€"Fort . William Timesâ€"Journal. Rest and Change Five Real Fathers A Bountiful Crop Autumn Weathes fellows are being away and hide in Le Soleil, Quebec. The General Postoffice believes the scheme will bear fruit. Anyway, it is an economical, form of advertisâ€" ing, for the Postofiice is able to send telegrams for nothing. "I cordially invite you to become a telephone subscriber now, so that you may enjoy the advantages and comforts of telephone service during the coming Winter.â€"Kingsle Wood, Postmaster General." Nearly eighteen thousand persons not now _ subscribers and whose names were collecied by the district postoffices have received telograms as follows: AMERICA Tit For Tat, and Quid Pro Quo "He that taketh the sword shall perish by the sword" is hard doctrine for tariff makers. United States exâ€" porters in textiles, in iron and steel, in glass, in telephone equipments, in automobiles and automobile parts, and in a dozen other lines will lose heavily as Canada puts into effect the Imperial preferences agreed on at the Ottawa Conference, minor hitches between Otâ€" tawa and London having been ironed out. With the British Islands, Canâ€" ada‘s policy is quid pro quo. With the United States it is tit for tat. â€"Brookâ€" lyn Eagle. London â€" Britain‘s campaign for more telephone subscribers â€" conâ€" tinues, the latest advertising schemoe being put into operation recently by the General Postoffice. Free Telegrams Increase Use of Telephone | To bury one‘s head in the sand is not shakably confider an intelligent policy. On the other cess is on its wa hand, to try and recognize the facts as ‘and will eventual they are courts the danger that a bad | mc« tendency may be fortified and set upâ€"| + on an irrevocable course. Those whoi Christmas Tre before 1914 steadily foretold the Great! _ Montreal. â€" TI War did their bit in producing it; for| Christmas trees : war is the climax of a general state of, market has.comn fear. _ By the same token faith is wick. Already c proved to be a practical weapon in| bert County, cu: human affairs. It follows that it is | buyers. Several every serious person‘s duty to cultl-" ed out of Albert vate confidence in peace and to enâ€"| Most of the tree: courage others to a. like confidence. to five feet in len But faith against the light is dlmcult.f twelve to fifteen When a man sees that the League of, monstrations. Nations whose essential object is the sactras encouragement of a general belief in! Bars Pistols peace, has become so enmeshed_ in thei Knoxville, Tem policies of those particular politicians | of Knox County, who least believe in peace, as itself the carrying â€" of e s | to provoke an a'ctn'e sense of fear} Other published among large sections of the people of ; of tobacco and c the world, then it seems wise to 100k | schoolroom . StrIC facts squarely in the face with a view| intoxicants shall to mending them.â€"George Glasgow in | school premises The Contemporary Review (London). | 224 aemmaraars The Australian Loan | _ By increasing taxation, cutting down all public expenditure to the bone, reâ€" ducing internal interest rates, lowerâ€" ing wages and salaries all round, and drastically restricting imports, Ausâ€" tralia has managed to meet in full her obligations to her overseas creditors. It is now the business of those creditâ€" ors not only to show their appreciaâ€" tion, but also to help her to carry on the unequal struggle, by coâ€"operating wholeâ€"heartedly in her efforts to reâ€" duce the burden of her overseas debt by wellâ€"judged conversion operations. By so doing they help not only Ausâ€" tralia but themselves as well, for in | these difficult times a wise creitor | will make it as easy as possible for fms debtors to meet their obligations. | â€"London Times. 1 Peiping or Nanking? l x As things look in China toâ€"day, the' W question of the site of the capital prop would no longer seem to be of any ‘ tyaj great practical importance. The Ku0â€" Tho mintang party is losing its influence'spe( and power from day to day, and the tion wholo country is breaking up, and will pee, most likely end in some loose federaâ€" ;n ; tion of independent states. That is to ingj say, for a long time to come there will sely be numerous subâ€"capitals but no cenâ€" tpat tral capital at all. Under the present | staq conditions, therefore, the British And | way other Governments will be very ill-ai-;requ vised to listen to the advice of those wo who wish them to move their legations in h from Peiping.â€"W. Lewisohn in The slow National Review (London). Pirvat. Modern War Whatever happens, the mood that declares statesmanship to be helpless and war inevitable must be fought at all points. It was precisely this kind of fatalism which paralyzed the will to peace before the great war. But there is a difference between then and now. The preâ€"war statesmen had at least . the excuse that they did not know what the war was going to be. The only war . which the warâ€"makers had in mind was the war of the Schlieffen plan, the short sharp strugâ€" gle which was to lead to victory "beâ€" fore Christmas." Postâ€"war statesmen have no such excuse. They know that modern war is a senténce of doom for victor and vanquished.â€"London Newsâ€" Chronicle. perience will show their value. But a certain measure of fairness is required of all who presume to discuss them.â€" Leeds Mercury. Arms and the League Berlinâ€"Airplane â€" taxis _ equipped with meters to calculate crow flight distances ‘have been put into serâ€" vice at the Templehof Airport here. They make London in less than five hours. Knoxville, Tenn.â€"The school board of Knox County, Tenn., has barred the carrying of pistols to school. Other published rules include: Use of tobacco and chewing gum in the schoolroom . strictly forbidden; no intoxicants shall be permitted on school premises, and novels, papers and periodicals having no connecâ€" tion with the studies are not to be allowed, P Metered Taxiplanes Installed been seen in individual communities in respect to private combat between individual men. We do not delude ourâ€" ,selves as to the difficulty of the road that lies before us nor as to the obâ€" stacles and trials which stand in our way We are well aware that it will require the utmost patience and faith. We know that all such developments in human organization are extremely slow, We realize that it took cenâ€" turies to eliminate ordeal by battle in the settlement of the individual quarâ€" rels of individual men. But we are unâ€" shakably confident that the same proâ€" cess is on its way among the nations and will eventually arrive. Montreal.â€"The annual cut of Christmas trees for the United States market has.commenced in New Brunsâ€" wick,. Already crews are out in Alâ€" bert County, cutting for New York buyers. Several carloads are expectâ€" ed out of Albert County this season. Most of the trees average from three to five feet in length, with some from Christmas Tree Cutting Begins By Henry L. Stimson, N.Y. Secretary of State. We have a right to take courage. . . For ourselves, we believe that evenâ€" tually the reign of peace will come. There will be among nations in reâ€" spect to public war, war between naâ€" tions, the same development that has Bars Pistols From Schools The Prince of Wales seems greatly interested in a kerosene stove used by the Swedish polar explorer, S. A. Andree in 1897 on hisâ€"fated balloon trip to Spi zbergen. It was found in perfect condition, 33 years later. For An End to Wars The Prince of Wales Inspects Polar Relic _ mewilon, track speed demen, skidded ar> this fifteen times without a mishap. In feet for public deâ€" Racing Demon Flirts With Death The new company‘s machines will fly by the shortest possible route from Karachi to Moghal Sarai, a short night‘s journey fro Calcutta, where the mail will be transferred to the railway train for Calcutta. In default of facilities for night flying this arrangement will provide for as early a delivery in Calcutta as would be possible if the mail were carried ‘he whole way by air. The mail for Delhi and other stations now served from there will be dropped at Agra. The service will supersede the presâ€" ent arrangement whereby the Delhi Flying Club has carried air mail beâ€" ween Delhi and Karachi. That serâ€" vice‘s contract with Imperial Airways, Lid., expired at the end of last year, but the club, in conjunction with the Jodhpur Flying Club, which provides a link at Falna Junciion with the Bombay mail, has run its service with only one lapse, due to a forced landâ€" ing. New Service Will Carry Air Mail Across India A company is being formed which will establish a now airway across India, according to the Simla corresâ€" pondent of The London Times. "Ninety per cent. of the persons under 30 years of age who have died or have been invalided by heart disâ€" eases in this latitude have got their beginnings in these childish rheuâ€" matic pains," he said. Dr. Scott recommended a treatment of prolonged bed rest and quietude. He said a majority of children suf. fer damage to the heart between the ages of five and 15 by rhéumatic fevers which often are unnoticed or pass as "growing pains". .Dr. Scott, a professor of the Mediâ€" cal School of Western Reserve Uniâ€" versity, \1rged"early recognition and tredtment of heart diseages. * Indianapolis, Ind.â€"Diseases of the heart have passed cancer and tuberâ€" culosis in the mortality tables, and now kill more persons in North America annually than any other ailâ€" ment, Dr. .R, W. Scott, of Cleveland, reported recently to the assembly. of the Interstate Post.Graduaie. Mediâ€" cal Association. Diseases of Heart Cause Most Deaths and avound Jeffries‘ track at Burbank, Ca ance of wl the laws of balanceâ€"wo‘d say. T10 ARCHIVES TORONTO Birmingham, England.â€"Two â€" cases of insanity caused by bad teeth have been reported by the chief medical ofâ€" ficer of the mental hospitals here. Chalonâ€"Surâ€"Saone, Franceâ€"Fleeing, perhaps, from invading Huns, some old Roman buried his treasure on the banks of the River Saone. After 1,600 years workmen, deepening the river, came upon it. So far 150 bronze coins have been found. Osloâ€"Nine great tombs of Viking : braceâ€"rod runnit rulers of Norway have been inclosed; to the dash; : at Borre, Vestfold, and the area which the doorâ€" made into a national park. The‘ Wet and leaf tombs are huge mounds under which <umn‘s specialty were buried the kings with their ing . bazards, a: ships, chariots and horses. i the anr: «tmmre s Preserve Royal Viking Tombs 1rento, Italy.â€"A monument to 500 miners from the nearby region of Brez who died while working in mines of North and South America has been erected in Brez village, centre of a district where men are noted for their skill underground. 1,6CO0â€"Â¥r.â€"Old Treasure Found Dr. Alfonso Dampf, chief entomoloâ€" gist, stationed at the Federal Agricul!â€" tural Defence office in Chiapas state, has gone to the Guatemalan border to organize the fight on the third invaâ€" sion, which began about October 10. Memorial Honors 5090 Miners Locusts Invade Mexico / Mexico City.â€"Scientific study of| the origin of locust invasions, three of which have occurred in Southern| Mexico this year, is to be undertaken soon by the Department of Agricu!â€" ture. | Lay Insanity to The Director / Agriculture Mr. G. L. Sutton, believes the average yield will be 15 bushels to the acre, and if ke is right 50,000,000 bushels of wheat will resuit. The people are arcouraged and there is a hopeful feeling everyâ€" where. Perth, W. Aus.â€"A "bumper‘" harâ€" vest is anticipated in Western Ausâ€" tralia. Acres and acres of splendid wheat crops supplied at the right t + with plentiful rains are coming to fruition. Football heroes have come more and more to monopolize space in local newspapers. In a recent .ur of Trinidad by a team representing the Club Sportativo, of Caracas, Venezuela, the Governor attended every contest. Port of Spain.â€"Football, which has gained steadily in interest in recent years, has become the outstanding sporting event of Trinidad Island and near by mainland points in Venezuela this year, attracting prominent perâ€" sonages along with the mass of sports foll wers. Western Australia Has Heavy Wheat Yield He is iotally defeated, For although he stops their chatter, He has not divined their secret. He has merely made them scatter. They scurry, In a hurry, a+ With a low, delicious sound Like the mirth of many thousand Merry leaves upon the ground. â€"P. P. Strachan. Football Gains Lead In Trinidad‘s Sports When they gather close together He‘s more curious than ever. No doubt he thinks a pile of leaves inorcinately clever. They huddle In a muddle; P And their faces wrinkle up: Then he strides about among them Like a large, ungainly pup. And I can‘t control my laughier; It is plain he is not getting What he goes so widly after. He . blows, How he blows! You would think he‘d burst his face. Ana the leaves just leap around him Wih a tantalizing grace. I have watched him half the mornâ€" ~‘Wind in the Orchard | _ Another factor in seasonal safety ‘is brake condition. _ Without going in for an exceptionally close adjustâ€" | ment, which leaves too little pedalâ€" ! play for gently applicaiion, the carâ€" | owner should make certain that the | brakes are equalized. Unless he is | possessed of more than average meâ€" | chanical skill, the task of equalizing innd adjusting brakes is one that | should be left to a mechanic with the ability and the equipment to lmlke a good joh of it. ence; when you are a straight, cover up with a brushing lacquer or enamel any chipped or marred spots on the body of fenders. It the seaâ€" son should reveal any leaks around the top molding, the motorist will find several plastle fillers on the market with which these crevices One prewinter form of conditionâ€" ing that the carâ€"owner can allow to go over until later is that of drainâ€" ing, flushing, and refilling the transâ€" mission and differential. It is still too early to supplant the heaier lubricants used in these parts and, pending the need to change them, the car will operate well enough with nothing more than a replenishâ€" ing of the present filling. i Other points where the car ownâ€" er may spend a profitable few minâ€" | utes with screwâ€"driver and wrench {are the bolts, nuts, and screws holdâ€" |ing fenders, runningâ€"boards, and runâ€" | ningâ€"board aprons; the bolts which hold the radiator to the frame, and braceâ€"rod running from the radiator ;to the «dash; and the screws by which the doorâ€"hinges are attached. _ Wet and leaf strown streets, auâ€" may be treated. Because fall brings rain and dampâ€" ness, and they in turn cause rust, the carâ€"owner should be certain to The fact is that brakes have been violently used in the period of highâ€" speed driving now coming to an end, and that character of use is bound to have had its effect. | _ Another product of the season, we are told, may be a general loosem’ess.l | Long periods of highâ€"speed driving with vibration and jolting can hardâ€" ly have failed to have their effect.: | Body bolts, Mr. ‘Ullman ~ advises,‘ should be takenâ€" up not only to ellm-; | inate noises but to prevent frame !strains that inevitably ~occur when :the body is allowed to weave.. He continues : | | _ Several remnants of summer operaâ€" ‘tion should be removecl from all cars at this season. One of them is the scale that has collected in the 'cooling system. _ The average csr i has ranged far afiecld in the past ‘few months, and its radia or has been filled with water coniaining â€"a | wide variety of impurities. _ The more of them oi which the system is rid now by a thorough fushing 'wlth salâ€"soda, the be tor propared |it will be for the antiâ€"freeze soluâ€" |tion which it wil carry during the | cold months. the car steers as it should. This involves lining up the front wheels, tightening frontâ€"wheel bearings, takâ€" ing up any looseness in the steeringâ€" drayâ€"link, and thoroughly lubricatâ€" ing the entire mechanism, Tightening sprisg clips also will serve a double purposeâ€"that of reâ€" ducing the chance of spring breakâ€" age and increasing riding comfort. Engineâ€"bolts in many cars also will be found to have worked free. When you are |‘ Minor adjus:ments are all that are needed for the most part to make ready the car for the perlod just ahead. To conserve fuel, improve operating efficiency, and make startâ€" ‘ing easier, this might well begin with ‘the vaives.~The odds«â€"are that. sumâ€" i mer‘s highâ€"speed . driving on long trips has left yalve Adjustment quite. ragged. It has not shown u» in warmâ€"weather starting, . but it does when there is a chill in the mornâ€" ing air. any m t .5 AOPnmem cedb diiden froels:." I, Shaw: 2p ipatH h 15 senttee Pnb of feramge. â€" Some ot determine that the valve is opening ‘n:other ll‘:,bu o't o o o ud axfless. fully and freely, and the operating ; C oooee waoieonoiaihe 4y sars mechanism is in working order '..n CE is undeu.undlble t Te 1 Sparkâ€"plug gaps that have made huln’g'l.'y.n venguint Ob'm:“e l one no appreciable difference in engine i oi * y rev it e f in‘ freat. o ols operation when . the mercury was “rlght as rain"; dun'l'b as an oyster"; continuously high will interfere with dull as @itch.â€"water" will pass it both starting and smooth running ter.. Atk :vhen it comes to "happÂ¥ when the range of temperature beâ€" as a clam," we are «urely Assumint Comes authfinal.; If phigs, samadt an intimacy. with clamâ€"mentality that be cleaned and reset to P roduce N4 are stillâ€" far «from possessing. maximum _ efficiency‘ â€" _ Apart from Quiect as.a mouse," would never ocâ€" mileage recordsâ€"they should be re cur %to anyone Wwho hss stired & placed, Proper plugs will help conâ€" bedroon} wih this active creature, siderably now, and a great deal ie o. aprieâ€"ple sorder(=â€" er when the temperature gets really~ There is another class of partnerâ€" 16¢. _ ship, now based on â€" establ‘shed, Several remnants of summer opera.l overyday . fack _ That_ neverthcless tion ‘ shofld ""be removeG â€"fromall must at one time have been optional cafs at this: season... Oyie_of them â€"somebody‘s arbitrary choico. . Mr. [s tus soxte that nas Aploofod m 116 shouP. DNodghouse has. colled atten. cooling system, The average car" tion to the mccepted ‘Jink? BAtween has ranged far afiecld in the past h?m "fl .eggs! if the inevitability few months, and â€" its radiaer Jns of combining ham and eggs should h> C ocone T "* ~" * . questioned, , whaere should _ we evor The chances are against the 4l¢r, age car‘s needing to have the Car buretor mixture enriched. A majorâ€" ity, service authorities think went through ‘the "hot weather . with »too rich a mixture, â€" one that will be moperly lean for fail. Bur the choke â€" should receivo attention. Many motorists have not used 1i for months. It should be inspectel to determine that the valve is opening fully and freely, and the oporating mechanism is in working order issued by ington). While the transition from summer to fall is slight, the mctorâ€"Car is much more sensitive to it than its owner often realizes. _ Apart from changes in operating conditions, the Auiomobile had just emerged from its season of hardest use, and it needs attention on that score, too. So writes William Ullman in an article Autumn Problems Of the Motorist lll;m 'Efim;n in an article his feature service (Washâ€" ty in the way of drivâ€" are less danrgerous if an anvil have patiâ€" mctorâ€"car is it than its Apart from nditions, the merged from and it needs e, too. 89 harvest. All four units will be capable of a speed of seventy miles an hour, and will have a cruising range of 1,000 miles, at forty miles an hour. Since they are being built to a fivefoot alx. inch gauge, it will be impossiblo to submit them to extensive trials in this country, where a different track width prevails, God will give loe‘ to the sower in the spring, not alms to the sluggard in | There remain the words that are _ at the mercy of the lazyâ€"minded. Beâ€" ‘cause a phrase has been said many . times in their hearing, t is the easiâ€" ‘est thing to say. How tired these , hardâ€"worked words must grow of i their exhausted companions! _ Not only overused slang, like "nifty", and "swell", "cute"; those were al. ways meaningless. But _ words lwhoso birthright is to carry a deâ€" | finite thought; words that should 'move about among countless others, forming new patterns. We hear ‘them so often in their hondage, the | "awfully nice‘s" and the "simply l lovely‘s"â€" | Perhaps some day a generation | will arise that will take pity on these words, and allow them a change of lpurtner.â€"-Chrlsuan Science Monitor. Londonâ€"Work is now nearing com. pletion on the first of four great Dieselâ€"electric power units being built for the Buenos Ayres Great Southern Railway, MR Each of these units is the largost of kind ever constructed in Eurâ€" ope. One is a locomotive, seventyâ€" two feet long, for passenger and freight service; the other three are "traveling power houses," which will supply electricity â€" to longâ€"distance passenger trains, the comches of which will have electric motors on the axles. ed as a gamble holding the promise of big developments. This announcement. was a conâ€" firmation following an elaborate surâ€" vey that has been going on for two years. The main reef series now is known to continue beyond the presâ€" ent western limit for forty miles, and the operating company has obâ€" tained an extension of options on a line of farms occupying the entire belt. Traveling Power Plants Built for Railway Johannesburg, Union of South Africa.â€"Potential gold ore deposits, estimated roughly at 278,000,000 tons and possibly of vast importance to the Rand gold mining industry, have been discovered in a fortyâ€"mile exâ€" tension of the famous Witwaters Rand main reef, it was announced reâ€" cently, wis South African Gold Reef glop?" Why cpeam and: Ssugar; why oil and vinegar; why cornedâ€"beef and cabbage? Why should bacon alâ€" ways trail_along with livbr? _ And shall we rock 1[!%; whote soti@l sirucâ€" ture by including in these questionâ€" ings those stanch inseparablosâ€"bread and butter? such devoted friends as their comâ€" panionship would imply. They may well tire of each other‘s socie‘y, and long for a change. It might be worth while to inguire how these relationships came about in the first place, and from the reagon of the conneciion to judge whether the tie is irksome or not. . Sometimes two words stand for people, orâ€"animals, or places, or obâ€" jects, that were linked together in â€"story or in history, (The Jist of these is as long as the ages: Jack and JiM; Punch andâ€"Judy; Tweediedum and Tweedledee; Beauty and the Beast; Dr, Jekyl! and Mr. Hyde; St. George and the Dragon; even Amos and Andy. Or Cain and Abel; Caesar and Brutus; Lewlsg and Clark; Irvâ€" ing and Terry: and, more prosalcally, Telephone and Telegraph. Historical fact 6r ijmaginative ‘genius lies be. hind these pnflneu\i{ps; one word seems the necessary compicment of the other, They can have no reaâ€" sonable objection to this pairing off. The venture at present is regardâ€" Jt often happens wi.h words UMel when one is spoken or written, anâ€" other is associated with it and seems #«imost inevitably to follow. Perh «p8 it "is not too fantastic a pastime to wonder idly whether the words that are repeatedly linked together are such devoted friends as their comâ€" panionship would imply. ‘They may well tire of each other‘s socie‘y, and Extended 40 Miles Further Word Partners‘hizs wich words that, And Eve: Ther Wo The Whc bus t of n graph Becond : ell, 1 ha es durl tor made | was opel & womar eperatior The A earth w Adam‘s plansâ€"a them." One 1 bicycle : it jand + biggest women §# from mental comes :« living ~ erv« The time, t to have First Now wi taken o §t, but 1 nuisanc Three tect and gether, a was the all this. fire, . and ] him : stupi two whe own, try i ment 1 How bles In cloude And foan And berr when Ha Jos much time. The who : Norl He ful w pid 1 â€" they cu Jar motic Th it Of As 14 First O Jos Becond O one {in First O id two anager B: T4 Secor W I) M Two Overt

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