West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 19 Oct 1933, p. 2

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Rt 'e 30“" . xy yo" .. .' ..' .--. §OK> J" {0 ix"?! “new But 200,000 Die ' Cy . V 9014+ “”3, i .'. ' h i tails. 0 ' . a s'ritn umor ns 1 . Rr", Ri gt o4t5.scrriv.v'iiia' we hare . United J. , Q8 b' Jett/st': {Wilding up columns ot . Ri 4 x" ‘bv. exiP.s 19%;“; thaf'the health ct its 5 . c?. f iratitieiit1; mproving." and J Rs Q} q8 0 Pt dli,5 "tl “What there have ' Jr Pb ‘Q' Litt,2 l"" . . 1totnoyle"eeidettt 59°“ pp 0 V V Lu?i/ - _ Pr vzmauumolle . a ' we J ob “Tag ti?', Emu! S es' hi o Q ir' tr a“ 'At I' x' l ‘11 home ' 0 o Ne arm” , 'l' -1 ' lo' 9999;. 6' .§ “if” ‘um qt oo se _ a N re as R d" ttry, it ther sh, A ‘13”! lathe 'tiirdds i" ‘0 AS 'tcr%iiuce 2i'd I 'i1'itcu, CANADA The Wont lnoeet Ttter Blalrnore. Alberta, Enterprise, oerioooly describes the visit ot a young man Ind hlo lady friend to a restaurant one evening. The young lady was an- myed by a large but lonely house " that buzzed round her lace Ind her food. "Waiter." called the young lady in a holty-tolty tone ot volce. “will you please remove this insect?" Before anyone really realized who was hap- pening the waiter had thrown the young man on his head out ot the res- tattrant.--PoreuNne Advance. A psychologist declares that Whit we eat we become. Let's try some rich tootr--0tt- Journal. Dead Town Comes to me After 25 your: the post once branch In Wawa is to be reopened. The scene ot the itrst gold rush in Ontario in the late '90's, Wow: was tor a few years a busy community, but the gold rush to the Klondike, niong with the later trtneogeritrs in other sections, served tor quite 3 period to divert ttention trom it and it became almost a "ghost town." Now it in coming into its own again, with active work going on at seven] mining properties in the Michi- picoten district. including two present producers and other prospective ones. " is once more busy and once more it has its poet once. Yes. they do come bace.--Sault Ste. Mnrie Mar. Probably nil. Is true. They so! In here and had to make it stith. They had no way ot selling out. But the" are other things to consider. The pioneers were not paying for paved roads. They wvre not paying tor an expensive school system. They were not paying to keep In army ot inspectors busy. They were not buying things on the Pionuro Escaped Something We have often heard people saying that the pioneers never got any assist. IIH'P when they came to this country. They were not buying things on the lnslallment plan. They did not have to fuvrst hundreds of dollars In harvest. in: machinery. nor did tiny have to k-w-p it in repair. They did not have to pay for interest on government bonds. All honor to the pioneers. but let as re- member that they had not humped in- to the loud ot taxation which the farm- er of today has to carry.~CI)rnwall Stamla About mzu- " week for some time mm, there has been noticed car alter (Jr "tieedinx eastward on Gore Street, filled . ith h )_\s and girls, young men and ladies. and the wonder for a time was where they were heading for. " Wa4 later ascertained that a barn huu- was the attraction. An immense ham has been erected on the farm ot Mr. Alex Manon. near Portland, in n in. h nut-time barn dances were week. ly orramiotv.4. and so popular have the aiaetnhiivi become that hundredl ot yum“: folk have been attracted there. The burn h, completely ttttOreo, and it is rumored that it is not for storing the season's crops, not at present any- how, but will be used entirely tut the dances, and that the whole undermi- in: is conducted by a company.---) Canada's Airports Canada has ninety-six licensed air. parts. It is a fair beelmzing, bat over an area as wide as this Dominion In aviator is liable to be a long way from a llnding Beld when it is most needed. The United States has 2,136 airports and landing fields. Many are lighted for night use. Canada will need to push on with this necessary ground- work to keep abreast of tle times In aviation as it is coming within the r, "(I few years-Ottawa Citizen. In: is o Kuwait T tf? death at the age of 74 or Tom W , m, the man who discovered Lake Lo l'., F and Emerald Lake. brings to as vscrat 121 impact realization ot the fact ttsl, Ar. are following very closely in. rd“ '! 'r, the tracks of the pioneers. FW- st' it4 ago lake Louise. today 3 Jtohri.f, :‘ge'ort known m every city of {'l‘i'hmlf.” any European capital. was St,',"] mu ther NMre has Ff)?, in the [W St s’ campaign {IP’IHIIHIE natu I pr ~men by {an mm crop tigur eti.llere a .. the results: “ a1 crop in 2;? ,n-ars. Oats---' £fx on n a» years. Rye---! new a - in " yuan. -rci:t.'i"t'ii1"-r', aux in tl years um. 'l.' iy slight: ver 91 lnw reccrd. Bully} -Lo r wire. or: years and about equal IR [tit fur 19004 J03. Corn-Larger than am 1930. but much lower thquverq an». In Western Canada the “its 2? Telopmo _ has wanted. The Inc! d A In D , --.o.--.---------"e I When a Barn is Not a Barn Voice of the Press by white men tor the Brst .3' Albertan. Lake Louise .. "' we" U) "Mia '_ti1i/,ii'ili,ii.ll,l?,)eii'iji,ii,ii' McC G' al crop It w Cr-' - ' $‘1 ion Irist Yr:---.' H1- so a ll a Cort '. ___',:,,:::":)),"",,!))',)-,',-:-')"),)':!,'";"':':, dent Ir .} slisttul 'vor 51% peol' nlv‘}*‘L0 r lh&r& ever than: equal tox‘e; twef 'urn-Larger than ill much lower th yer, 1 In Canada the tet' g? . The EmpirevriJ1ttlF1elyyt9p.e, ttrttat, highways r In the e-------------""" yeld this year is estimated at 264,000; 000 bushels ls compared with over 400,000,000 bushels last year. and other MM crops show a corresponding de. tield crops allow a co eiine.--C'aigary Herald A useful cainpaign.-whlch has been in force tor some years, is now being pursued all over Canada-the cam- paign to buy Canadian goods. It is not necessary to push chauvinixm to the point of boycotting all merchandise of foreign origin; this is neither possible nor practical. Nevertheless it is' rea- sonable, each time we get the oppor- tunity. to show our preference tor what is manufactured in our own country by our own teuow-citir.eas.-La Tri- hmw, tqherbrooke. P16; THE EMPIRE Fat Years and Lean Very good reasons will have to be produced before the Australian tarm- ers will consent to a restriction ot their output. A limited sowing of wheat may be followed by a bad sea- son. and the farmer may lose every. thing. It may be followed by a bad season in other countries, and the farmer in the country in which the season has been good will miss the gain that would have been his had he sown a lull crop. The wheat grower has to take risks ot weather and ot market. Even now. while the subject i., being discussed, news comes lore- shadowing a partial failure ot the United States' crop. It may be that nature will redress the balance and im. pose all the restriction neefiary.-- Melbourne Australasian. Many Young Duke: 1 The Duke of Roxburghe. who will be twenty on Thursday, is Joining the Royal Horse Guards (the Blues) from Sandhurst. thus following the example of his father, who died last September as the result of wounds received in the Great War, and of his uncle, Lord Au. stair limes-Ker. The latter com- manded the regiment for tour years before receiving his present appoint- ment as Equerry to the King. During his two years a. Sandhurst the young Duke has shown himself a promising polo player. It is, by the way. remarkable that a number ot dukes at the present time are young and unmarried. Premier Duke and Hereditary Mar. shal ot England, the Duke ot Norfolk was twenty-tive in May. The Duke of Northumberland, richest ot the tour, is Just ot age, and the Duke of Grafton, a year younger than the Duke of Rox. burghe. was nineteen last month. The bachelor royal Duke. the Duke ethica- cestor, is thirty-three. New Zeaiand Sheep l {Sic-op docks in New Zealand have shrunk 3,064,000 since the pearl: year, 1030.) The siege the sheep farmer has endured has been a desperate one. He was the first to feel the depression in all its force, and he has suitered in loss ot income more than any other prim- ary producer. His flocks were built up to record heights in 1930 under the in- ftuence of very favourable market con- ditions in several years preceding. Their subsequent retreat trom that level is tar from being disastrous. It, as common justice would suggest, and as the prices tor sheepskitvr, tat stock and croasbred wool seems to promise, he is to be among the first to enjoy an instalment of recovery, to restore the flocks to their former aggregate should be neither a difticult nor a very lengthy process. That they have not decreased more is indicative ot the tenacity with which the sheep farmer waits for better times. - Auckland Weekly News. As Disraeli wrote, "Oh to be a duke and .vrsung.'"--Londort Daily Mirror. The Great Gold Rush Mold is moving to England at the rate ot $20,000,000 weekly). London is the great gold market ot the world. Here the boarders come to buy their precious metal. The tear that the paper currency they hold may deprecl< ate in value. They would do better to invest their money in productive en- terprise and keep trade moving. If their terrors were well founded and trade come to a standstill, their gold would not buy them bread.--Londott Daily Express. THE UNITED STATES Memorable incident John McCormack sang at his daugh- ter's wedding in a London church rr~ cently. This is the sort of incident which can make the whole world kin. It was his only daughter, and the great tenor must, notwithstanding his happi- ness, have felt some ot that intensity of emotion which a swan is said to feel in his song ot death as he saw his daughter going trom him. This scene was ot the same fabric as opera. which McCormack knew in his younger days. It was high drama as touching " the Irish folk songs which have made Me. Cormack known and loved. Such inci- dents tend to elevate the hearts ot all people " least tor a moment. What- ever " other great achievements be. tween birth and death this incident ll possibly be one ot the to! which t characterize this man and make gnetittorable.--New York World. Pitta; my Canadian 7......" Offer Subsidies for Each Child in Effort to Increase Population . . Germany-France In Baby Contest Germany anfFYance are enga,cd in a race for population which might be amusing it it were not in deadly earn- est. In Germany the Large Family League, a State organization to help parents with many children, has been called into being to carry out Hitler's campaign to lighten the burden ot the family man and increase that ot the bachelor. Lower railway and tramcar tares, it is stated, will be granted to mothers and fathers travelling with tour or more children. Under recent decrees marriages are subsidized by a State grant ranging up to E50. The grant is nominally a loan, but it child- ren are born the debt is cancelled at the rate ot £12 los. for each child. In France a measure of great social and industrial importance has been quietly set going by decree. This is the family subsidy, which went into ettect throughout the country on oe. tober 1. when the workmen's depend- ent children became a charge on the payroll ot the employers. In each ot the ninety departments or Eastern France. offices and funds are now being established. Employers will make compulsory contributions to the local funds. These funds will be distributed to the workmen according to the tlttttF ber of their dependent children up to the age ot sixteen. At first the French law will apply to certain key industries only, notably mining, metal working, textiles, chemi- cals and colors, electrical equipment and building. It will be extended dur. ing the Winter to all trades. The scale of subsidies is fixed by decree. Though it varies in detail by locality, it begins at "is. 6d. a month for the first ‘.\'irn." bald-headed eagle, with "i.toot wing spread, shot at Keg. witk, Lake Simcoe. Ontario, by Marvin Clark, 38 Saulter St., Toronto. Clark is shown here with the eagle, said to be very rare in Ontario, A vessenger coach cut some strange capers when a Grand Trunk passenger train collided with three swltch englnes. running tandem. near Fenton_ Mich., recently, but no one was killed and the Only serious injuries were to the engineer and fireman ot the passenger locémotive, who Jumped Toronto Man Bug. Basie ohrtAAt No Fatalities! TORONTO child and increases for each additional child, without maximum limitation. The father of tour children would re- ceive between 375. 6d. and 503. a month. Rates tor additional children range from 5s. to 30s. in special cases. Simcoe. - Despondent because he was obliged to attend school with children younger and smaller than himself, Clieord Herron, 15, com- mitted suicide by shooting himself through the heart with a .22 calibre rifle. The boy's body was found by his father, Charles Herron. In a small p2..yl.ouse situated in a barn back of the family's home on Col- borne Street. He had been dead tar several hours. The boy had often exprosbed dis. satisfaction at attending public school, and had planned to leave next month when he would have been 16 years of age. He failed to attend school one day last week, and did not return hams for his meals. Thinking that he had spent the night in the barn, his father early in the morning commenced a search. The door was bolted from the inside, and on forcing it open he found the body ot his son. On a table was a note explaining the reason for his action. Coroner Dr. J. S. Boyd stated there will be no inquest. Despondent Scholar Takes His Own Life Sweden To Break From Tariff Truce Stockholm, Swedev.--Sweden in- tends to denounce the tariff truce agreed upon at London as a prelimin- ary to the World Economic Confer- ence, it was reported authoritatively here. Surviving are three brotllc-rs_ Alger, Harvey and Glen, .md two sisters Lillian and Peggy. Tenant" Landlord Co-operate - F I ' Novel Plan Proves Satisfactory Unemployed Paint Housés on street-React, -Produces Cash Toronto, Oct. 6. r-. Cooperation be. tween unemployed tenants on I Tor. onto street and their landlord, a big corporation. has resulted in improve- ment to every house on the street, bet- terment ot the landlord's property, and has lowered rents arrears and pro- vided some cash tor the families. it was revealed last night by J. F. Hen- drie, real estate agent tor the Canadian Pacific Railway. Possibility ot the scheme being adopted by other owners or holders ot large blocks ot properties led to' the explanation by Mr. Hondrie ot the sys- tem evolved by his company and his tenants on Marlborough Avenue. Ten- ants, he stated. are pleased with it, and the company was more thanusatis. tied with the results it produced. "The ORR. is owner of 86 dwellings on Marlborough, parallelllng the tracks near North Toronto station," he stated. "Many ot the men, handy men or un- skilled laborers, have been hard hit by the times and had fallen in arrears on New York. - Marie Dressler, the grand old trouper who came out or Cobourg, Ont., to entertain audiences with her slow, catching smlle and ability to turn pathos into mirth, " to have an international birthday celebration. The idea was hit upon by a group of New York admirers ot the veteran actress, who has entertained tor close to halt a century in vaudeville. on the stage ard screen, after launch- ing on a circus career. They thought movie clubs in the various cities would join in with informal birthday parties. But the plans went ahead and pro- gress ls reported. The Syracuse, N.Y.. Herald Movie Club, quickly Joined the movement with plans tar a gala party. lowering birthday cake and all. even though Miss Brenner won't be able to attend personally. An invitation was sent President and Mrs. Roosevelt to head the Dressler Birthday Club of Washington. Canada-US. To Observe Marie Dressler's Birthday "Pishaw. I'm not that important. I've been having Birthdays tor years." Miss Dressler was in New York on vacation and they approached her with the plans. The reaction was happy tears, then--. BeNin.--A new law making jour- nalists public officials and regulating their rights and duties is interpreted as ending finally trt‘JILIII of the press, as understood in the United States. German Journalists Any infringement may remch the ottender trom further opportunity to pursue his profession. A system ot registered lists was introduced " tordiug the Propaganda Ministry in means of keeping a vigilant eye on writers In their new status Ct nalists must bow to tl “leadership principle." tit they must take orders In which permits no appeal Chancellor Adolf Hitler recently signed the measure. It put down iron rules for German journalism, by which Aryanism and National So- clalist patriotism were made primary professional qualifications. Monessen, Pa.--Wouttded soon after he went to the from in France 15 years ago, William Fields ot Browns- ville, pleaded with a nurse: "Please don't let them cut " my arm." She patted his shoulder reassur- ingly-and Fields came back home with his arm intact. He never saw her again In_ France. Buffalo, - One mortth's accumull- tion ot dust on an electric bulb re. duces by about 40 per cent. the amount of light which it dluuaes. This Important information tor economical housewives is establish. ed by n measuring machine erhibil- ed here nt the convention ot the " tlonnl Assoc-lotion ot Power Engi- Den. That nursi--Eteotor Schoolhart ot Monessen-was handed a parking the- ket in Brownsville and told to see the Burgess. .. As She placed the tag on the Bur- gess' desk, that onclal, the same Wll. llam Fields she befriended overseas, looked up and recognized her_ She paid no tine. This meaneu thief entered the home ot a deaf and dumb woman in Oliver St., St. Thomas, Out, and took away her supply ot charity fuel. He was evidently aware ot the w0man's physical detects, as he carted "vary the wood under cover ot darkness without fear of detection. st. Thomas-Ar/other claimant to the title ot “meanest thief" In re- ported here. --.- War-Time Service Has Earned Title Of “Meanest Thief" Machine Tell; Dat Heck ls Repaid " Last Face Strict Rules German jour- the so-called meaning that from the top. their rents despite every work on their part to make ends meet and ply the rent. The majority, too. were tenants ot long standing. _ . __. lnnnlhnr u| IVs-5 .u..._....,. "We had a mutual get-together. therelore. to seek some solution tor their problem. We decided that the unemployed tenants would paint all " houses unded the supervision of one of their own number as toreman. The company supplied all the material, in. sured the men under the woriunen's Compensation Act and the work was started. E "The results have been most gratin lying tor all parties." continued Mr. Hendrie. "The unemployed tenants have seen their arrears at rent grad-i ually erased from the ledger. and the property has been made spick and spanI at a reasonable cost. in tact, the scheme went along so smoothly that it was decided that all the labor would , not simply be credited on the rent ledger, but that each man would drawI triii/rienuure in cash to help keep his family and himself going." Typists Advised To Marry Boss Learned Chicago Judge Gives Stenography Lecture Chicago.-dudge Edward B. Casey believes that although a stenographer be ever so adept with pencil and key- board, she is not 100 per cent. emcient unless she also understands and prac- tices the artistic use of paint, powder and silk stockings. Moreover, Judge Casey told his youthful listeners that a steuographer interested in promotion and churn-tor development should plan early to our ry her boss. Casey so informed 1,500 students ot stenography in a lecture here. "It you are succesaful." he sud, "you probably will find you have developed your tinegt characteristics." Montttal.--hYunatttic questions ot interest ta Canada and the United States will be di.wussed at an inform- al meeting ot representatives ot the Canadian and the United States Cham. ber ot Commerce, it is announced here. The conference will take place " the Signory Club, Que., during the coming week-end. Canada and U.S. Parley By Commerce Chamber Hollywood,---' young w. man struck down and'killed by an automobile driven by John Huston, '2ii-yenr-old son of Walter Huston, the Toronto- born actor, is identified as Mrs. Raoul Roulein, wife of the noted Brazilian actor who has been appearing in the Spanish-speaking films in Hollywood. The Gov.rnment has authorized the slaughter of 2,000 buffalo in Bufulo National Park, Wainwright, Alberta. for the purpose of keeping the herd down to specified proportions. Tenders are now being invited for the purchase of the skins from the animals ttr be slain, comprising GOO males, two years of age; 150 males, three years of use; 200 females, three years of age; 400 males, four to 15 years of age; 650 females, four years of age and over, and 100 aged animals. The animals are to be slaughtered during Novem- her and December. Orders Killing Nurses and Housemaids Butte, Mont.-When they aren't toting a pigskin, several football pUy- ers at Montana School of Mines are nursemaids, housmaids and firemen. But six members of the squad have added a new occupation to thé list. They offered themselves as profession- al blood-donors to raise school e"e penses. _ Lottdon.--rn a Brtaneial statemen7is. sued recently, Neville Chamberlain. chancellor ot the exchequer, sated that unless a setback occurs, prospect- exist ot a budget surplus next Athit. F ootiell Players Act As Foresees A _Surplus The chancellor reported revenue re. turns tor the ttrgt six month: ot £275.- 7M,000, an increase ot more tlttttt ST,. 000,000 over receipts tor the correl- poudlng period ast year. and expendi- tures ot fh"e.4,0M.000, a decrease ot $242,000,000. Reduction in the tax on beer we: held responsible tor n decline ot EC 000,000 in excise revenue. but trelsury experts had expected the loss would be heavier. Income tax receipts were down 1):.- 000,000, but the greater part ot these is mid during the lust half ot the yeu, the statement read. Montreal.--, new international tour- ist highway connecting Canada and the United States in now practically completed and will be known " the Sunshine Highway. Thin highway la the only international project otvita size cut 0 (the Becky Mountains. New Highway to Connect ftet.k _and United States Actress Killed Of 2,000 Buffalo In, British Budget Rent Arrears _ Attenficd 7 _ Aer! Princioal infactorv, Visiting Edmonton In close touch with the student prulo lent In China, Mi" Bendelack H2): thnt comlng hack tron: western unirer I titles they simply want to take the Ian In their own lands, and are as a mat Iter ot tact much more thoroughly tar united than any other group In ('hina Studonu' "tftuettee I Recently they comp-id the I Ilium“: i government to boycott everything Jan Fuse coming Into the country, and ‘ whacked stores m tunnel: of Japanese ‘goods. They busiege me govt'rnmvnl (or the removal of their Idmlnlalratu- a In the colleges. and simply go on an ..t to nttnin their ends. One college m Miss Gertrude Bendela s".. prim-nu ot St. Hildu's'school in Canton. chm... is a visitor to Edmonton. Educated at Oxford null 1tvrer.torkimr her mun-n degree and diploma ot (dm'lliuu at Melbourne university. Australia. M Ftt Bendelnck in 1909 went to Sl. Mt ph en's college in Hons Kong, ('llllm'u tiret girls' school. At that time trip were put in their covered rimming.“ .n side lhelr own homes and were In, " out lulu only liter they more V. ho the school walls. 'Canton had three ticctLtuceilorr, III Tone year. Miss Bondclack said. aha herself bus been able to keep he! ‘uchool tree from goserutnent (‘nnlrrvl "and bus thereby saved herself embar- [rnssmont as well as being able to give IChrlsllan teaching to those who wish Ito take It. although her pupils are by no means att Christian. St. Hildn's was opem-d In Mm p, u dellck in 1916. but your one ol l I students completed medical walk A. Lyons. France. and anothrr who " ttend ot a very large sciiool in U. .1: Kong, has just gone back from Anm. ca, where she took an hmmrs CUttlit' Hwy nitlve girls from the school hue trained u nurses In the gmernm m hospital It Hon; Kong. where lhv-y qualify under the British Nursing, As mention. _ Pour other graduates are at present on the tench“); but! at their aim. mater. but most of them Ire marrwd u soon " they no through school, no less than 21 in the past yep. l-Jdu outed women are now much in demand on wives end mothers. Miss Baum-lad says, and within the school compound there is I school where older marl ied women are brought by their husbandu to lenrn to read and write. Miss Bendellck had the iuterertimt experience last year ot crossing the Paeitut with Pearl Burk. author ol "Good Earth." Asked the attitude oi the Chinese people toward this book, Min Bendelack said they resent it. " cause while the cross-section ot Oiitr ele society which it describes doo exist, it is in a most remote part of the country and does not reticct (him-u lite in general. Utended St. Step' 'n's Col lege in Hong Kong China's First Girl's School Foot Binding Exists " is n mistake to think that he binding no longer exists in China, ac cording to Miss Beudelack. Visiting it south Inland China only very recently she told her interviewer that in the evenings she could hear the cries ot little girls " their feet were unbound tor the night. " is only in the treat) ports and where missions are estate "shed that the custom has been alml ished. Miss Bendoiack is fond ot her Chin cue pupiil. She ttttds them eager Mu dents and thinks it would be very try ing now to teach western children. win would never cause her, she think; in her Chinese have Cone. to make wry rigid rules that during certain hours ot the evening, books must be ion un- touched. ' Chinese education is much more dit Aeult tam western because Its liters ture and history go luck 8,000 year- and Oriental study is very thorough It" Bendelnck has been studying Canadian Btludlrds ot 5dwation and what she In: to any ot them isn't mm pllmenury. Only Cow of North Greets Stock Tram Gillan. Matt.--Mertie, the only cow in the North Country, brought here in 1927. experienced the thrills or I lifetime during the weekend. Provider ot milk tor this In”? Hudion Bay Railway setllnnn-nt. Mertie, greatly excited, dashed wild ly to the trucks when the tirst stark trun over me Normal-ad railway " rived here en route to Churchill. She tparaded both sides of the li cu train, exchanging hurls with the cattle destined tor the markets ol the United Kingdom. As the train handed northward. she stand on the trucks Ind bun-led a lusty farewell Rats in Belmont Have Musical Tastes Belmont, ottt.--Wilfred Weaver, It"! wont district farmer, has stumbled an an innovation tor the extermination ol rats. The nu are apparently of the nine inclination as those who lulltm ed the Pied Piper. as they Irv ttttrad ed " music. One in his fervor cram Mi Inside ot Mr. Weaver's radio, where he in electrocuted. Harry Wilson. Bel Ito-t resident, reports a mother rat installed her (daily in his radio and I“. her-ell 1 contort-Ne little next I. that the could enjoy her concern “I” u In... _ Older Women's School ”W I _ ““0.-. - jun ‘I ltuglnnx' V,: ',t _ l " one minim it a ', x 1 at \‘Illllll‘ li, w'ts 1t1.Fi',ii, if: mini?" if Qiiires Hiam an} te um tuct; Kw kc if e large rne'ce ct ta oar Attention and on on that a small part o. the I ire like mechali'us “no 51 portion ot the new emu: - of mechanism at In laboring. and mm. 94 - “in. In a won . - - mutual, l '.rt.--os" Dilute. I": UNI] ll ...SMILE ii LIFE A

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