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Durham Review (1897), 11 May 1933, p. 7

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at . _ Tea. I.. _, 'N " . ' meat 'r"-: a- J Talks to London I Tolls Reduced tema'iorzl Bridge xDor Wrinkle tcrease mmunict- d London Public s on ' be. Oat., cent. cent. at er! alter will It! In " " Iiso Removes Possibility of Blood Clots Forming--- Pigeon Favored corctronted with I hemorrhage, even' a serious one, the doctor can now stop 2 instantly, under certain condition, " a simple application of the muscle A a bird. "Em; writes Dr. 031mm in Science a Monde (Paris), in I therapeutic novelty. _ It has even removed 1 union peril involved in certain operation-tUt of the possibility of g “1)”th olwd clot. But this is among the possibilities of the future. The certainties mm to be as follows. Writes Dr. Ogliar tn: "The blood, as all are now we]! “ware, is not, in I true sense, a liquid. "It is composed of a tsolid part furmml or microscopic elements rater- "It is composed of a solid paw form-ml of microscopic elements refer. rel to as globules, swimming in . "qunl substance called plasma. "The blood, as soon is it emerges {rum the vessels, undergoes physico- chemical modifications ending in its coagulation. "The clot is made up of a substance termed fibrin, presenting the aspect of meshes or links close together, im- prlsc-ning the globules. A- _ a.. 9, a, n__ --- b""'"""'"" -___ - “it appears that fibrin is the pro- duct of the action of a substance tech- nivally termed 'thrombin' upon an- other substance normally in the blood plasma and known as "firhzigenie'-- gning rise, that is, to fibrin." The tissues, and especially the mus» . lar tissue, of birds, contain the two .ubstances--the plasma containing, for its part, only the fibrogenie sub. stance. Dr. Oglitstri then proceeds to give us these further details: "If we previously remove the blood of the bird in such a way that it has no o,itcct with the tissue mass, the) Mud will remain liquid indefinitely, oas:uiation not being possible. These considerations have led cer- lam authorities to utilize the coagu- uting pwer of the muscle of the “Humrrhnges ere a real difficulty for the surgeon, and at the some time 3 great peril for the patient. ( "All physical expedient; hitherto adopted proving insumcient, Dr. de Martel and his aid had recourse to a Hological procedure based upon the homostatic action of the made of a bird. UII‘A. "Thanks to this procedure it has been possible to check hemorrhages that must otherwise have proved fatal. "Obviously a method capable of " fording such service to the surgeon was speedily found susceptible of more general application. "Other experts mm to it in varying cases, especially to stop hem- orrhages following dentnl operations or operations on the ear' or larynx; - .. . R---. 0.4- p Solves Problem of Hemorrhage: "Among the patients known mn- nically as hemuhi1es-ttltott trouble is due to more or less diirietilty where the coagulution of the blood is con- eerned---sueh hemorrhages may en- danger life. "Any bird almost can be used, but Dr. de Martel his employed the pid- (eon, because it can be obtained read- ily, and because its maladies, which are rare. occasion symptoms tmttieient- ly definite not to be Auoed." London Arts 9'05 The Arts Club, wnicn as: "w. domiciled at" IT Hanover Square, 1 London, since 1863, is laid to be con- l tempiating the sale ot name of its _ valuable literary relics. Its founder was Arthur J. Lewis, " amateur art- ist ot distinction, who married Ellen Terry'is sister Kate. No. IT Hanover Square. an old Georgian mansion with marble mouthpiece: and ceil- ings painted by Angelica Ktusitmanrt, was the tint clubhouse. Among the original members, painting was rem resented by Leighton, Poynter, Prin- Iep. Stacy Marks, Frederick Walker. Whistler, and Arthur Severn; archi- tecture by A. W. Blomtield and Hor- ace Jones; black and white drawing by Charles Keene, John Tenniel, and George Du Maurier, and letters by Charles Dickens, Lord Houghton and Edmund Yates Among the treasured relics possessed by the club are two checks drawn by Charles Dickens, one in favor ot the Artists General nunuvnlnnl Fund for 27 IM, dated by Charles Keene, John rem-m, - George Du Maurier, nnd letters by Charles Dickens, Lord Houghton and Edmund Yates. Among the treasured relics possessed by the club are two checks drawn by Charles Dickens, one in favor ot the Artists General Benevolent Fund tor ST 13s, dated March 22, 1862, and the other, prob- ably his last subscription to the club, nix guinea-", dated Feb. M, 1870. ole of a Bird Feedings hogs on camera: 3...“.-. either raw or cooked, without . li- cense is prohibited in Canada. The enforcement of this regulation is be. lieved to have a dim effect in pre- _.,,,- -ac-ba. " m cholera. In lieved to have a direct effect in pre- venting outbreaks of hog cholera. i':) the previous seale year 563 lieemed) feeders? premises and cooking equip- ment for 45,484 swine were inspected by the Dominion Health of Animals Branch; inspections tho being made an unlicensed premises to see that the minions were being observed. Fancy restrained mu be compared‘ to a fountain. which plan highest by. “manning the u/irur..-OM"rttuu Licensed Garbage Lulu, nu..- --'- w 17 Hwover Square, 28 1863, is said to be con- the sale ot some ot its hogs on coilected garbage, or cooked, withoyt . li- Club, which irir Sell Relics has been lt you are curious to know what is 'hnppening to her bust, waist, and hip l measurements. read her letter:--. ll) SEE Bill FAT (Ill N was 186 lbs. when I started tak. ing Kruschen three months no, and am now 163 lbl.. and l hope to reduce my weight etill more. Regarding my metuntrementg etore taking Kruschen: l we: 4X-ins. bust, 38-lna. waist, and "init. hips, and now I tun 391m. bust, 86lns. must, and 451m. hips, my use being 29 year}. A 75c. bottle of Krutr chen lasts me a. month. I take one halt-teaspoontnl in a tumbler ot hot water each morning before breakfast. Apart rom losing weight, I feel so much better in health. I do not wake up in the morning still feeling tired. and do not get headaches like I used to. I cannot thank Kruschen enough." ---iMssts) M. A. H. Kruschen contains those six mineral alts, proportionately balanced, found in the waters ot those famous Euro- pean Spas used by generations ot tat people to reduce weight. Kruschen helps blood, nerves. glands and body organs to unction properly-- you train new strength and energy-- teel years younger-look better, work better. England Appraises Literary Leaders Eight New Writers Mentioned as Successors to Conrad, Hardy, etc. l George Moore and John Galswor- thy hive Just died. Arnold Bennett preceded them but shortly. And not so long ago Joseph Conrad, W. H. ‘Hudson, Thomas Hardy and Henry James departed. There is nothing left to do but to “sift amt appraise their achieve- ment." Who have taken their places? asks The Evening Standard (London). And it goes on to name Somerset Maugham, J. B. Priestley. Rose Ma- caulay. Aldous Huxley, A. J. Cronin, Louis Golding, Clemence Dane, and Charles Morgan. It is notable that D. H. Lawreneel is unmentioned either living or dead} Some living writers may think their omission an error; but the above is what The Evening Standard Utrts as the vanguard, and it turns to give some personal glimpses. Maugham is evidently the doyen ot the group, tor he was born in Paris in 1874: Cost This Woman TS: LUI LIV "nu-g ..-___ "He is cosmopolitan: his upbring- ing made him BO. Born in Paris; at school in England; thence to the Uni. versity ot Heidelberg. He came back to Mndon and began to walk an East End hospital. "Out ot his East End experiences came his tirst novel, ‘Liza. ot Lam- beth.' He has declared that there is little imagination in that book; ‘that all he did was to put on paper the things that were under his eyes.‘ "It decided him, anyway, to aban- don medicine tor letters. The Journey was not easy; he kenw hard times; 'Mrs. Craddoelt,' one ot his early nov- els. was refused by eighteen publish- els, was an. era. “He has the jaw of a. man who sticks to what he begins. He became a resounding success. timuteially Ind artistically. He once had tour plays running simultaneously in Lomioul, theatres. You are as likely to hear that he is in Siam. Borneo. or Singa- pore as in London, Paris, or Berlin." J. B. Priestley, son of a schoolmas- ‘ter, born in 1894, was no recently ‘among us, that his ability to irritate [from outspolrennest' must be still re- --- __-a “or“. "van 'F..""'."" membered. We read here: i "The outbreak of the war found him twenty years ot age. He at once enlisted and served till 1919 with the Duke of Wellington's and Devon Re- giments. When demobilized, he went to Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and then came to nee whether the streets ot hondon, and Fleet Street in particu- lar, Were really paved with gold. "A brisk descriptive pen gave him an almost instant success as a jour- nalist, and 'Briet Diversions,’ pub- lished in 1922, and 'The English Comic Characters (1925) showed him to be In essayist and critic of strik- ing quality. He wrote two novels, 'Adam in Moonlight’ and 'Benighted,' which, some ot his critics thought, did not suggest that he had a 'big success' in him. “In 1929 he collaborated with Hugh .. _-tvert.- novel success' In nun. “In 1929 he collaborated with Hugh Walpole in a. disappointing novel‘ called “Farthing Hall,' and in that same year came ‘The Good Comptttl- ions,' which made his name Letter known than_.hat ot any other writer of his generation. "The anonymous author of "rho Gold moron' introduces Priestley un- der a thinly disguised name, and says he caught Remaraue's reader' ‘on the rebound' from ‘All Quiet On the Western Front.' However he did it, he achieved a apectaculnr success not likely to be reheated for runny a day. "Mr. Priestley lives It Highgate in the house in which Coleridge wrote ‘Kubia Khan! " " “- “Kn women bu The first of the two women an.) Scots blood, but while We are told her male forebears became Anglican Parsons, such descent "hardly " counts tor the sprightliness and wit ot the author ot aiotteritun,' ‘Crewe Train,' ma many another novel”: i "Ught-heurtedneu remarhbly un- linked with lkht-headedneu has been the recipe for Miss Macaulay: work, and appraise their achieve- 6--Rents II-semis forth 13---Head covering 14---0.1416 15--Jewel 17--Fourth note ot scale lS-Unit ot work '20--1mpoverishes M-Hide M-Terrible M-To weep M-obtains M-Bench 28-To release M-Billiard sticks 30--Cloctt face 31--To wait 3e--clotsing time 34-Scottissh hillside M-Sindbad'ts bird and the real content wrapt in her charming tissue was rightly recog- nized when 'Dangerous Ages' was awarded Prize. "The latest novel, 'They Were De tented,’ strikes with success a deeper, unexpected note, b-Bag “Miss Macaulay once said: "My mother liked reading detective stor- ies and wearing her oldest clothes. She disliked sewing, mustard, cats, and very recently born individuals. My father liked walking and disliked afternoon callers. I share all these likes and dislikes.’ " Aldous Huxley, though not the youngest, seems to rank as the en. tent terrible ot the group. He was "He was educated at Eton and Bal. liol, is short-sighted. six feet fivtr inches in height, and has said, ‘I do not write tor my readers.' "His first published work was "the Burning Wheel,' 3 volume of poems that saw the light during the war. With each successive book he has more deeply enchanted those who like his work, more deeply antagonized those who do not. ' 'u0WK7 "lav uv ._--. “J. B. Priestley tound in him It deepening grievance against lite'; but his more virulent opponents would suggest that he can have no grievance against that which he has never Mt" prehended. He is as squeamish as a maiden vegetarian in a. slaughter- house, . 1...”. AI 110qu, "Since D. H. Lawrence's death, Al; dous Huxley is probably the most 'banned' ot authors The Alexandria Book Club burned 'Antie Hay'; ‘Brave New World,' which Bishop Hensley Henson declared to he 'repulsive,' was banned by the ‘Australian cus- toms, and, more intelligently, by the Irish Free State. .. - V LA 'at-r-eo. It]!!! race ”up.“ "Hig work is intensely idiosyncrat- ie, and an intelligent man must read it whether he likes It or not." - a A, ALIIIIV.H" ll Wuetuc. lay .A..i'mr -- V, A. J. Cronin is Scots, thirty-six, and a doctor who abandoned that pro- fession tor novel writing. His “Hutu ter's Castle" has been read her t, but probably less widely than some of the other authors mentioned. . Known here as yrurrtrlitst as well as novelist, Louis Golding has achiev- ed a huge success in both countries ‘with "Magnolia Street," which repre- ‘lsents Manchester, where he was born in 1895: -. ..qsc_-a '- . M... "He spent his c met where on eve announcements are dark eyes that tittsh at you are mum: ot Rachel or Jael. "He left Oxtord to become a wan. deter upon the face ot the earth, with Doomington, which is Manchester, al- ways in the background of his con- aciouaness. . "c., mum mun . amount-as. "He has tramped the world with a rucksack on his back. and he has writ- ten voluminously of what he has seen. Before 'Magnolia Street' came more were many books which testt1ied to his artistry. But that book was sure; to come some day. "For ten years, he was making sketches. tot it, because “the most mysterious and tremendous people I had ever met or should meet were precisely those shoemakers, tailors, humans, clerks, sailors, carpenters, among whom I was born.'" Artist, actress, novelist, playwright, chicken-farmer - that is CIemenco Dane: _ --_- I.-- -rAAf Ini. "But writing was her gr and she found success both e]: and plays. Out ot the 'A Bill of vivoreetnertt' we tmong Wuum * "a... m"... Artist, actress, novelist, playwright, thicken-farmer - that is Clemenco Success lg the memory ot I usetut' Dan e: 1itty--t life lived to the fullest ca- "But writing was her great lore; paeitr ot one'g gifts and meats. It Ind she found success both with nov- the Divine Creator has given but 111- eh, and plays. Out ot the proBta ot tie. tutd that little haa been used to 'A Bill of Vivoreetnettt' the bought . beautify the ,rorld and ttatt been derelict Devonshire term and made ot I Sat" to help "other-that is Horizontal [31 the Femlna-Vie Heureuse ed reading detective stor- earlng her oldest clothes. ed sewing. mustard, cats, recently born individutils. liked walking and disliked callers. I share all these OUR CROSS-WORD PUZZLE 'l'f K . , his childhood In . dis. on every other shop the Mg are in Hebrew and the mo Astseh at you are those tll Eff 1:1 . LII M-snare 38-operated M)--Species ot parrot 41---Title 4?.--Exelatnation 43--Law maker 45-Mutsical note M-Total 48-Dips My-Dead M-Tempest I-Sang 2--Egyptian god 3-Pronoun 4--Quid 6---one who Inherits 6-Weight measures 7--Conclusiot1 fr-Article b--To disprove IO-Tis leading role IT 35 16 32 Vertical "My " it a charming home where she and her chickens have a splendid time." “The Fountain" has made Charles Morgan well known to American read- ers. He was born in 1894, the same year as Huxley and Priestley. “Morgan was educated tor the Roy- al Navy. He served in the Atlantic and on the China station between (tttll and 1913. when he resigned. He joined the Navy again in 1914 and served throughout the war. He is now a dramatic critic. .“Charlea Morgan’s reputation as a novelist was very quickly made. It rests on two books: 'Portrait in a Mirror,' which gained him the Fe- mlna-Vie Heureuse Prize in 1930, and "the Fountain,’ published last year. Those who care may see in the two ititles something ot the essence ot 'Morgan's work: something at once ‘crystalline and liquid, pure ot dross, and a little lacking in the lively ani- lmalculae that intest beverages less malculae th; immalculate, "But anyone concerned 101' "=ch is glad to know that ‘The Fountain' was a great success in this country and America." The real Amwers to Last Week Puzzle TI plan, And, helping themselves, help their tellowman. And the sham men yelp at their,car. riage wheels As the small dog barks at the big There is at least one real one-horse town in Canada. It is Ahlalk, at the mouth of the Mackenzie Ever, within the Arctic Circle. The town boasts only one horse Ind no motor cars. There are tour horse troughs at every 51 crossroads. A Well-Waxed Horse 12---Meat dressing (pl.) Ir-Skinny 16--Mud Ig-Hellenic 21---Antennae 23-Muslcal study M---Unlawtul perquisite 27-Golt mound 28--Evergreen 36--Old coins M-Deity ot India. M-South American anyone concerned for letters _ _____ “,.A_‘_‘-y dog's heels shrub M-server 34--Wide M--To rave 3T--Retracting glass M-To repair 40--courts 43---To petition 44--Wheel track 47--ConJunction 49-T'tteretore REAL MEN men dare and the real men 21 HI l7 " NS [0 37 We ere told that a local housewife has painted the tollowlng suggestive lines in a conspicuous plus in her husband's bathroom: "He is talent who takes his daily scrub, twice blast in he who scours out the tub." Uncle Will had sent. little Marjorie I bottle ot lavender water. Uncle wiu-"Marlorie, bow did you like the gift l trent you?" 'iGroiri-Uat via-s .11 right, but I preler lemonade." When a hospital patient is "doing to well " can be expected,' he may be in any sort ot condition trom convuies- cent to one Jump ahead ot notice in- forming the world that his interment will be private "What happened when searched your house'." "It was tittet. The police found the trout-door key which my wife had hid- den, a penny stamp I lost weeks ago, Ind tour collar studs." Then the Feather. Flew A certain rather exclusive club had replaced its laminar black-coated male staff. with young and, in some cases, pretty waitresses. One {as member who had been Itrongly opposed to the change arrived " the club tor lunch. "iii,Aue duck?" he asked an at- tractive waitress rather grumy. "Oh, 1GGiiii'shrs reirued. "And hows the old pelican feeling himself?" Pat, the Irishman, placed seven-ana-l Sixpence on the counter at the village post omee. q want a license for my mother, mlss," he said to the postmistress. She gave hm a superior look. "You don't want a license tor your mother," she replied. "That 1 do," said P a dog." John Brew and Alice Beers were recently married by the Rev. Still, ac- cording to a Nebraska daily. The soles are too thick." sti1eaman--"Thetl I can assure you, madam. that the objection will grad- ually wear away." Some ot the older people can still remember the time when the farmer with the ambitious daughter was Bmu. ly induced to trade the old sorrel mare tor an organ. Chief-“You had yesterday oft to so to your mother-ln-law's Icneral, and now I hear shé is not dead." "clere-"Pareon me. I did not say she was dead. I merely said I would like to go to her funeral." A lot ot pity is wasted on animals. There are many contented cows. but who ever heard of a contented tanner? Folks are drifting back to the old- tashioned games. Some thought they would play a game of dominoes, and found to know how. Young Bon-"Dad, in there any dit. terence between I. new tad and a new wrinkle?" Filtrer--"certaitmr, my son. Young women have fads, older women have wrinkles." A man claims to have invented a perpetual machine, but requires $3,000 to start it. One can start aimost any- thing these days with $3,000. Portsmouth, Eug.--samuel McKen- zie Hammond, of Alexandra, London Road, Portsmouth, for more than so years steward and keeper ot the royal apartments in the King's Yacht Victoria and Albert, left 22,285. The class had been instructed to write an essay on winter: One chiWs attempt read: "In winter it is very cold. Many old people die in winter, and may birds also go to o. warmer climate." 1w,tomer--N don't like those shoes The King's Yachrkeeper Take Lygia E. will!“ ltcteodbthemumdhelpo totmnirrmupYoorrtt..iett.bte at. We will new mm was tein. amber“?! f.l!Ptt te. th women say. “It! uttthetgrrnttoo.Uq Mfm.umwdu. We had to tire Our housemaid Nan; She treated china Like Japan. to'thei} surprise they didn't luslstent Irishman, placed seven-and- n the counter at the village Real Sleuths IRRITABLE? 'at, "she's bought the police Ireland Establishes Bird Sanctuaries Rapid Development Humane Treatment to all Animals Throughout Dublin.-Mr. G. Bernard Shaw is a life member ot the Irish Society tor the Protection of Birds, which I- at present busy trying to foster the establishment ot bird unctneriee in uric!" parts ot Ireland. The sanctuary set up on the North Bull Isllnd. Doilrmouttt, in 1931, was the tirtrt on Irish soil. In its report tor 1932, the society says with regard Au- :vuu. “nu Evy-vi] 'e"".'" --._.. ___._7 - to this haven ot refuge, "The birds themselves hue. ot course,' lost no time in discovering u fact so im- portant to their wen-being. and by their remarkable tameness now lend I great charm to the dancianry, well repaying the Dublin public for the kindness it has shown them." Two great perils against which the birds at lreiand have to be guarded are the raid: ot "unscrupulous whole:.aie collectors" end the “un- ceasing clone" to supply English dealers with the eons birds which British law forbids them to capture in their own country. The chief suiterers are go1dtinehets. The rescue of 'teverai hundreds at these birds when about to be sent out of the country is described in the sooietfe last report. While legislation in the Irish Freel State perhaps lags, Northern Ireland but what is believed to be the most drastic bird protection meuure hitherto adopted in any land. The bill was passed unanimously in IMI. Under it, nearly all non-guns birds us protected throughout the year and the taking of their eggs is also forbidden In regard to the prevention ot cruelty to animus. Dublin reports steady trttd tstrtistttetory progress, It- hnrdest tight at present is against the export ot live horses to Belgium 1nd Fume. Recently a tax ot about 2d. " cents) 1 pound he: been in. posed on imported meat by both these countries. Consequently there has been a tendency tor the export ot live animals to increase. Under the auspices of the Dublin Society tor the Prevention ot Cruelty to Animals inspectors now watch the loading ot each consignment. The number ot horses shipped, and their destination, is reported to the Iuterttatlcrttil League against the EE.' port ot Horses tor Butchers, who" headqutirters is in London. This en- ables the boats to be met on their arrival, and constitutes some check on what happens to the animal: after- ward. The Dublin society now has al, donkey show each year. The psuell are awarded not merely pn the generul uppearance of the animal- on the any at the show but Illa on the way they have been looked utter during the three months before the "day" itself. Most ot the donkey: are bought by street hawkers trom the "tinkers" or gypsies at the Smithfield Merket. Expert advice is now provided tree by the society to help buyers cir- cumvent the shar.’ practice which hes been too common in the past. As in previous years. the Dublin ‘S. P. C. A, has a stand at this sear's spring show. An account is given in last year's report ot how those in charge ot the stand uttered, gladly an invasion ot hordes ot children. An encouraging number ot the children slipped pennies into the collecting box. “One very email per- son," the report uye._ "with when pennies were probably source, cum. twice to the bor, altered the penny mu in. end. he: been telling new took it out “an. But her qrigtt to ‘help the enimnls' wee “ranger then the desire to keep the penny end the third visit at the git: made." Including the Dublin society. more are now " B. P. C. All; In Iretnnd. Among their mum" are dogs' and new homes. Inspection "rt the cattle markets, street plank, investizml tion ot complain“ ot cruelty. tree advice to poor peopl- about [count after their annals and buying fresh one; supplying and promoting an DIXIE FULL WEIGHT Island MORE ENJOYMENT Plug Tobacco lasts 'A longer ---tftves A more enjoyment for the money. Buy the IA-ltr. plug and you save still more. lb. PLUG Ttte UN I AHIU AWHIV” TORONTO N OFFER 1") EVERY INV 'iiW/h A Lil! or “hillrd invention. mu " "nonunion um treet. the luv-1700.4- “. W)rld Pun-m Attorneys. trg bank W. .. -eeie . - Street. Ottawa. Gunman. FL 0 w E " IN} GLADIOIJ null.” treated. (00 mixed varieties. 'tla per 100 portpald. F. W. Krouu, uNeitttt, ontario. ALL 'QI 0 P - N U T C II" BARR“ Rock Chick. no Government AX proved, from blood-touted parent- I". no sired by approved cockereu trom R. 0. P. end Rulntered dun- with reo- orde from M" to 306 an. The avers“ production back at n: Burma Hock Cooker!“ need in 136 an. May when are extremely low, 310.00 per 100. Bend 10 per cent. depot-it tor tmmedlnte amp: ment with balance C.U.D. Live Deliver, guuuntged. Mill. mtctsery, Naomi“. Ontario, In. of humus kitten; twin. modal. um eertitiCV to member. of the Civic Gnu-d who hue dig. timished themselves in preventing cruelty, issuing leaflets und givin. lecture: to Ichooll on kindness td animals. New Type of Baum Found; Trinidad Sees Boost in Trade Port ot Spain, Trinidad.--'rhe " covery of I new type ot banana here is expected to mule economic hin- tory in Trinidad. Thom" Potter, the secretary ot the Agricultural Society, told an endl- euce here the beneue was of the mine temily u the local Canary Island. been: end wee immune to "Pen-me dileue." but we: the nine else and color In the Jemeice been); It promises to meet ell require ments ot the export trade end it dumbed u the "henna ot the tu- tm." A government committee to cently recommended e great ot dMe 000 to develop benene export- fro! the colony. The Tropical College I new experimenting to and the "t temper-euro tor lee trenevort We“. Prune from u friend, or cenlure trom I toe, Ar. lost on hearers that L o w E RING 9141:1014“ ”£11415 BABY can“. 0V"! " m can“! Harley-Davidson 0mm." Write It once tor our 'urgatn l uned motorcycles. Terms arm OFF COLOUR? HOW IS YOUR LIVER? Wake up your Liar. yu for lim'l I my amt“ on“. but it our Mini)! an put. your duo-live sud ohmmuu‘ owin- out of blur. by phagimm pour om a duly two pounds of liquid we um) yon bomb You woit oompirteir curred web I oonditie by manual-.011. mm! VI... kind" and) of chewing cum. I' {Stub-mow” they'rq moved our have y n mb-ood Q nod 'hll,',hli'l'G'l1t, y , art'- Haw": III]: "pl, m tlg M “In. your I . 're on not blatant”. Auk J,"pa2t."d'l'll.'iGT -iris I: u on In“ C know. omxou IVS-3'. " 18".. Kennedy & 421 College " Toronto ) Dt.tritrutet" ihilGt cam-ad our meritd --Hormt st of

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