West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 2 Aug 1934, p. 6

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t â€" Mn e Om Heee with pay, It is strictly the _ playâ€" ground of the democracy, but Marâ€" gate is very proud of itself, but Marâ€" was just like Margate‘s impudence to offer to supply the sand for the Cunarder‘s Lido. The Clydeside folks immediately waxed indignant. They would hae nane o0‘ that English sand. It had tae be sand fra the banks o‘ the, Clyde or m}hiu. â€"â€"St. Thomasâ€"Times Down on the south coast of Engâ€" land, near the mouth of the Thames, is a seaside resort called Margate. It is a place where London ‘trippers‘ %o by the thousands to spend an odd day, or their annual two weeks Mi: 7© Compn cce im iss E uol s eP e on enjoy artificial sunlight, _ In every way the environment will be realisâ€" tic. The new Cunarder now building on the Clyde will not have a mere bathing pool like other big _ liners, but a real bathing beach. _ Bathers will walk down into the beautiful green water on a stretch of sand, just as they would do at the seaside. Then they can lie on the sands and That is what makes him sanely baianced and his country an abode of levelâ€"headedness. â€" Vancouver Sun SHE‘LL BE ALL SCOTTISH personality, Jockeys were described. This was not because the people of Great Britain are so deeply conâ€" cerned with horseâ€"racing or with the result of the Derby. It was because the Derby was a national play festival, a symbol of the Englishman‘s appreciation of the value of playtime he takes off from business with an air of almost indifference. Derbys long past were reâ€"examinâ€" ed. The scene at Epsom on the Sunâ€" day before the race was described by special writers. The horses were writ ten up" as though they _ possessed personality, Jockeys were described. HAVE WE LEARNED HOW TO PLAY ? John Bult certainly knows how to revel in his playtime. When the great and historie derâ€" by was run, the English press devotâ€" ed pages to all angles of the race. The Journal is to be complimentâ€" ed on this good work, and it is setâ€" ting an example worthy of the atâ€" tention of Canadian newspapers from coast to coast. â€"Halifaz Herâ€" ald tion Johnny Mann has been _ lifting weights since he was five years old. M+ and his four younger brothers have been trained since early childâ€" hood by their father who won the York hire wrestling championship in 1918. All the children have won prizes in baby competitions. Their mother, a tall, stronglyâ€"built woman has ailso achioved some reputation as a weight lifter. â€"Border Cities Star. ENGLAND‘S "SAMSON® Johnny Mann is the boy "Samson" Wokingham. He is aged _ tourteen years, and can lift 130 pounds with his teeth, hold two ponies pulling in opposite directions or lift a pony from the ground. Johnny, a tall and brightâ€"faced lad is anxious to vecome a professional strong man. He has alâ€" ready received an offer of L20 per week to perform in a cireus," his faâ€" father, Mr. Ernest Mann, said, "but the education authorities require hm to stay in school until the end of the term at Easter, and he has not been able to accept the offer," Johnny Mann has been _ lifting it was necessary to remove the chicks from the nests early, howâ€" ever as their instinct did not teach them to take food the way the mothâ€" er crows brought it to the nests. However, Mr. Goertzen said this presented no difficulty, and he says he is quite satisfied with his crow incubators. â€"Lethbridge Herald. CROWS HATCH CHICKS We have heard of hens hatching ducklings and wondering what it is about, and of cats mothering foxâ€" es and young coons but J. F. Goertâ€" zen, a visitor in the city from Stetâ€" tler, Alta., rather startled us the oâ€" ther day when he said he had had better luck in getting crows to do the hatching of his chickens than he got from the old Biddies themselves. He and some of his neighbors _ conâ€" ceived the idea of making the much despised crow do something useful for a living. So they found some crows‘ nests put three or four hens eggs in each and in due course apâ€" peared the baby chicks. A list has been published of 31 moving pictures to which exception has been taken by those who are cruâ€" shding against unclean films in the United States. It is interesting _ to note that ten of the thirtyâ€"one were not submitted in Ontario at all, that the board of censors completely reâ€" jected seven of the remainder and that the other 14 were, without exâ€" ception, altered by the Ontario board â€"in some cases new scenes in subâ€" stitution for objectionable ones were furnished by the producers. But not one of the 31 pictures got through "as was." â€" Toronto Star. Voice of the Press Canada, The Empire and The World at Large TO to a new class for whom 1 movement and the liberty work are bound to be e upon." We must not be C about the efficiency with relieve and dragoon the un unless we can be satisfied have done everything that PUTTING P. E. P, INTO THINGS One need not be a convert to "planning" for its own sake to share the fear expressed in _ the latest broadsheet of "P.E.P." (the Politiâ€" cal and Economic Planning group) that we may be making "a new national institution out of ablebodâ€" ied unemployment," and “c:reatingri a new class for whom liberty of | movement and the liberty to choose | work â€"awe ) KameÂ¥ 222 ._SRITAIN AND THE JEWSs Foreign visitors to this country are often surprised by the high place taken in national life by the Jews, and by the respect universally accorâ€" ded to the Jewish race. For centâ€" uries this has been typical of the English. The ageâ€"old European pracâ€" tice of the "pogrom" has never been a national pastime, nor a relief for over strained nerves. In times of crisis Englishmen have never sought for an easy scapegoat and turned to Jewâ€"baiting. The result has becn that the Jews in England are loyal, worâ€" thy, and happy citizens....It has been said that every country gets the Jews it deserves. Britain and the _ Jews have always deserved well of each other.â€"London Evening News. The Empire ROMEO AND JULIET It was the curious experience of the late Count de Caserta â€" (who later headed the Carlist troops in fought against Garibaldi in 1860 and Spain) to see his . son marry the daughter of Alfonso XIL., against whom he had fought for Don Carâ€" los. It is not the only instance of the Romeo and Juliet motif in his tory. It is well known that the Wellington and Napoleon â€" families were united in _ marriage through the union of the Marquess of Wellâ€" esley with the â€" sister of Elizabth Patterson (Jerome Bonaparte‘s first wife), Scarcely less unexpected is the fact that Napoleon‘s cook was afterwards in the service of Wellâ€" ington.â€"London Observer, In spite of a striking decrease in the total imports _ of bacon _ into Scotland in the first quarter of the vear, shipments from Canada reveal a large increase over the corresâ€" ponding period of 1933, Purchases from Denmark and â€" the Netherâ€" lands were reduced in each â€" case by about 50 per cent. as compared with the first quarter of 1933. On the other hand, shipments from the Dominion increased almost 300 per cent.â€"Brandon Sun, ROCKING THE BOAT Once more when one reads of drownings by cansizing of canoes, by the going to pieces of rotten boats, by the "rocking the boat" idiocy or getting caught in a squall with his swheet made fast and all that sort of thing, one is reminded of the remark of an old sea captain who, when askâ€" ed if a boat was safe, replied: _ "No boat is safe, madam, unless it is in charge of a safe man."â€"North Hasâ€" tings Review. AND WHAT A LAUGH THEY GET A Johns Hopkins authority claims that sunâ€"bathers get the benefit only from the rays that touch their hands and faces. This proves, as some have thought all along, that persons who go in for sunâ€"burned backs do so for the amusement of their friends.â€"Kingston Whigâ€"Standard, ‘ The old Dime Novels are beginâ€" ning to bring big prices. Not all of them, of course. But First Editions of some of these books are in high demand and sell at from $1.50 to $5 each. "The Shawnee Witch," from Mconroe‘s Library, and "The Swamp Riders," or "The Blacksmith of Camden,‘"‘ from Beadlie‘s Dime serâ€" ies, are listed at $5 each. These books would toâ€"day be published at $2 or more and are not loss artis tic or _ distinguished _ for literary quality, than many best sellers. â€" Hamilton Herald. In OJLD DiIME NOVELS IN DEMAND CARE AND VIGILANCE ' Pedestrians must accept their fair share of responsibility for their own safety, and while motorists operatâ€" ing lethal agencies, must â€" exercise special precaution, particularly _ at intersections and other portions of thoroughfares where they are likeâ€" ly to come to close quarters with peoâ€". ple on foot, they cannot be expected to do all the dodging, especally when pedestrians engage in the practise of "jay walking."â€" Victoria Daily Times a literal as well as figurative sense. Then there is the direct practical vaâ€" lue to be obtained from growing the vegetables and garden produce. â€" Hamilton Spectator. SCQTS BUY OUR BACON There is nothing like working the soil for the health of both body ana mind. Philosophers are agreed upon the necessity of man "cultivating his garden‘" and this may be taken in IN THE GARDEN to be encroached not be comphcentl cy with which we n the unemployed satisfied that we the Netherâ€" in each case . as compared is humâ€" d Em Mey Cotde At first the driver in front took no notice, but when the noise did not subside he turned and observed, symâ€" pathetically: "Is Mummy‘s darling wearying for her bottle?" During a traffic block in Lo baby car drew up immediately a stately saloon. As the hold: somewhat prolonged the driver baby car started an irritatin~ toot" from the bulb horn, Mepapmrahiin drigpartiiateRicih ... 12 3 ated milk. Blend thoroughly. Cool and freeze in twoâ€"quart freezer, Remove dasher, Pack in ice and salt for one hour or more after freezing. Makes 1% quarts, 2 squares unsweetened chocolate, 1 1â€"3 cups sweetened conâ€" densed milk, 1 cup cold water, 2 cups thin cream or evanoratai wmin. ] They are distilling death in the j laboratories of all "civilized" coun. | tries, and our own country is not | behindhand. Today we are told that | no expert can now produce a gas mask which is proof against certain kinds of attack. One group of chemâ€" ists invents a new means of dealing death. An antidote is found; then, out of the devil‘s broth of research comes a new compound which renâ€" ders the _ defensive deviee futile. But such a disaster as modern war need not occur. It is not written in the stars. It can be prevented, â€" It will be prevented if Governments seek peace with oneâ€"half the persigâ€" tence, the energy, the skill they now devote to preparing for war. If the Governments will not move, the peoples they rule must compel them. â€"London Daily Herald. SHouirommmmmmnreng in ce w CHOcoLaTe ICE CREAm Melt chocolate in double boiler, Add sweetened condensed milk and | stir over boiling water for five minâ€" utes until mixture thickens, Gradually | add water and thin cream or evapor. | t afiel uollle nreca e ESmE en ect assistance by abatement of cus toms, special railway rates, _ and so forth; _ restrictions on the coasting trade, especially severe round the United States; â€"vexatious consular and other dues; all manner of prefâ€" erences and penalties on passengers, and Government contracts. These things amount to a sort of universal war against British shipping.â€"Lon-‘ don Morning Post. BRITISH | SHIPPING Before the War â€"most foreign countries were content to allow their trade to travel in British ships. Durâ€" ing and since the War almost every nation has aspired to build a merâ€" cantile marine of its own, and in that process used methods which amount to unfair competition. It would take a volume to contain the different means by which various countries encourage their shipping and disâ€" courage oursâ€"as for example, dirâ€" ect assistance in shipbuilding, indirâ€" anly possible to reduce their numâ€" bers. The _ "P.E.P." group urges with force that what we need now is an "employment police" â€" which should aim at diverting a great part of the existing â€" ableâ€"bodied unemâ€" ployment into channels where it can not only do less harm but can be positively beneficialâ€"that is, into extended education (as through the raising of the leaving age and the institution of continuation schools) and earlier retirement.â€"Manchester Guardian. * WAR I1S PREVENTIBLE Mrs, Muriel Cornell, of Mitcham, London, Eng., claims she is the busiest sportswoman in the world. She looks after her home, husâ€" band and baby girl first. She is honorary secretary of the Women‘s World Games which are to be held in London in August. She looks after all the correspondence of athletes from the thirty competing countries. They are seeking information in almost as many langâ€" uages. She will also compete in the British Empire and World games. Between times she will probably knit a few sweaters. FEEDING Time revented â€" if Governments e with oneâ€"half the persigâ€" energy, the skill they now preparing for war. If the in ice and salt for one > after freezing. Makes 2 squares uns weetened 13 cups sweetened conâ€" _1 cup cold water, 2 ‘am or evaporated milk. up immediately b;ifin;l- 1. Ag tho_l;oldup was now produce a gas proof against certain _ One group of chemâ€" ew means of dealing irritatin~ "tootâ€" London a BUSIEST ‘SPORTSWOMAN of the "I feel my private life is sacred to' myself, If I discussed it, the public‘ would be offended."â€"Mary Pickford. To ho lt sat Paddk Amirnaty‘ Eight attempts had been made to m;fi:.b::’:" °'::’ what our finite save her life through transfusionsâ€" To live as if the moment, the time, flvTehafter ahe ?ntered the hospntql. the day were so important that it e case which uttncto;d wide symâ€" would live for ever. pathy, seemed from the first, a losing To estimate people by some out_lba'ttl.e. The attending physician, Dr. side quality, for it is that within‘ William F. Rexer pronounced it leu. which makes the man. ' kemia in an acute form. ‘ Not to alleviate if we can all that [needs alleviation. Not to make allowances for the weaknesses of others, To consider everythirg impossible that we cannot ourselves perform, To believe only what our finite minds can grasp. To live as if the moment, the time, the day were so important that it would live for ever. j 40 endéavor to mould all disposiâ€" ’tlons alike. Not to yield to unimpor. tant trifies, To look for perfection in our own actions. ; To worry â€"ourselves and â€" others about what cannot be remedied, 1 To endeavor to mould tions alike. Not to yield tant trifies, To expect to set up our own stand. }ard of right and wrong and expect everybody to conform to it. To try to measure the enjoyment of others by our own. To expect uniformity of opinion i2 this world, To look for judgment and experiâ€" ence in youth, Scientists have found here that two or three bleedings prior to slaughter. ing give better results, MOSCOWâ€"The Soviet Union is conducting experiments in bleeding as a method of fattening animals, the Tass News Agency reports. Hitherto, gelding has been the proâ€" cedure, This, however, was found to lessen the albuminous content of the meat. Rodney, More than a dozen tentative deâ€" signs have been drawn up embodyâ€" ing new features. The ships are to range from 22,000 to 35,000 tons, the size to be determined by the naval treaty of 1935, While the Adâ€" miralty desires to standardize the future battleship at 22,000 tons, Britâ€" ain is prepared to follow if the other powers want 35,000â€"ton ships,. As Italy is about to lay down two 35,â€" 000â€"tonners and France has two 26,â€" 500â€"ton vessels already in hand, it is likely that the new British battleâ€" ships will be about the size of the TL css asncnlssi o bre. Except for unimportant areas, the upper and shelter decks of the whole structure will be virtually bomb. proof, it is asserted . The positive antiâ€"aircraft defense is to include at least eight, and probably twelve, quickâ€"firing guns, besides numerous multiple machine guns of heavy cnli-‘ h'fi They will have guns of a new type, firing nearly twice as fast as the 15â€" inch guns now in service, and they will be armored and otherwise proâ€" tected on an entirely novel plan. It is said they will be capable of defyâ€" ing any form of air attack. J Londonâ€"Great Britain‘s new batâ€" tle ships to be laid down in 1937 will be radically different from all fightâ€" ing ships now afloat, according â€" to Hector C. Bywater, writing in The Daily Telegraph. w Britain Will Build New Type Warship Mistakes of Life , 33,900 tons. BLEEDING The child‘s father, Fred Bivona, said the family could not afford to pay professional donors for blood, and frequent transfusions were the only The child had been in a Brooklyn hospital three weeks fighting the disâ€" ease, which dstroys the red corpuscles in the blood stream. Brooklyn, N.Y.,â€"After a gallant battle in whih sailors of the U. â€" g. fleet gave their blood for transfusion Rose Bivona, 13â€"year old sufferer of leukemia is dead. "It is my opinion ; dualistic system has good for the greatest the â€"socialistic system Walter Duranty, conducted hotels an'd rest The three archduchesses ana, Agnes and Margaret burg-Lorrnlne. They Are da the 84â€"yearâ€"old Grandduche Toscana, widow of Grand | inand IV. of Toscana T\hree unmarri duchesses of the of Austria, have at the Austrian . conducted hotels maw ‘op _ _1~~ .. " ~â€"C teserted _ The paper described a rush to the Bank of New Brunswick, where the valuables haq been taken, Banker: and business men were permitted to place their valuables in the â€" vaults and cellar of the building. Anrorcnmmenninemitoomremeentrmimemmcny FORMER ROYALTy Now IN HOTEL BUSINESSs ul c 0003 0 * Umg . AP0 Withess sick, infirm and aged persons being dragged through the streets in search of a place of safety, which it was very difficult to find," said the paâ€" per at one point. "Women and childâ€" ren wept freely, and even full grown men could not restrain their emoâ€" tions. Streams of blood, the results of injuries, marked _ the faces of several men, and others had receivâ€" ed bruises and were maimed in vari. ous ways. Many men and women might be utterly exhausted with fat. igue and the heat which became in sufferable, dragging bedding _ ang pieces of furniture and other articles through the streets a vain task in many cases, as the new places of refuge sought out often proved as unsafe as those that were deserted. The Paper described a rush to the Bank of Now m..._ ", 8 "@n"ishments were burned to the lground. Five newspaper buildings, including the Telegraph were desâ€" troyed, and the special single sheet edition issued the following day was made up in one of the few printing shops untouched by flames. "The personal losses of some of our compositors have been so great, and the claims of their fanvlies â€" so pressing, that they were not able to give us the benefit of their services for this issue, and hence we are unâ€" able to describe to our readers, in any proper manner, the disasters of yesterday or to address our readers in fitting words in regard to them.”l said the Telayrawt P Th Wrvet Arpelits es 12 A. Damage of $27,000,000 and the loss of a dozen lives occurred when 1,612 dwellings and 615 business esâ€" tablishments were burned to the ground. Five newspaper buildings, including the Telegraph were desâ€" troyed, and the special single sheet edition issued the fallawi.."% Single Sheet Describing Saint John Fire is Published Again, Famed Edition Is Reproduced "It _ _ tarving machine but he found that a moter registerina 30,000 revolâ€" utions sz minute was required. Varâ€" ious cieclrica‘ firms declared that they could not make such a motor, as 3,000 revolutions a minute being the maximinn. r The furniture is produced by means of an invention which grinds the waste matter from ths factories into a tough pulp, out ~f which scores of different things can be made. Mr. Kristofferson was first educated as a wood carver, and tried to construct u‘ wood carving machine but he found I P jullaistsbatetatats hi.3 .. h ture made in the Renaissancee style out of the waste products of celluâ€" lose and textile factories, 6,000,000 tons of which are at present said to do nothing but pollute the world‘s riâ€" vers every year, has been shown here by Mr. Olav Kristoffersen, a Norweg 1 ian enginter, SAINT JOHN From Waste Cellulose Material _ Lots of Books By mears of I ©EO00 CHemrd d the Telegraph, _ was heart-tending to Sudt.â€" . ' my opinion that unmarried Oslo, Norw. vidow of Grand Dui;-i"erd‘ of Toscana. 13, LOSES HER BATTLE TO CONQUER DISEASE, and Margaret o‘r ‘l-;tps- ne. They are daughters of old Grandduchess Alice af many men and women utterly exhausted with fat. the heat which became inâ€" + dragging bedding and fnnjem Heceuw l o g) sn ‘pinion that the indiviâ€" m has worked more greatest number than ed Hapsburg archâ€" oneâ€"time royal family _founded a company Spa, Bad Gastein, to _ Women and childâ€" and even full grown restrain their emoâ€" f blood, the results ed _ the faces of . â€"â€" Picturesque furniâ€" snevual study the 17 restaurants thus far." ", where the m. B.nkel.s permitted | to the vaults are Germ. gallant hope â€"The Daily Alice of witness _ 1 4 / "~ARAWRCE That of the nilingl girl. The first sailor who gave his blood L. E. Warner, 19, of Oakland, Calif. ornia returned to his battleship and | told his comrades ‘she was awful} white, and thanked me kind of weakâ€"! ly,‘ A number of other sailors volunâ€" teered for blood tests before the fleot left port. One said ‘n> matter how many sailors they neeg. they will be here," When the call for blood to the fleet, thirtyâ€"two s pd forward for tests to d their blood matched that o girl. Then the fleet came in. In a letter to Admiral Daviq F Sellers, then the commandmant, Bivona sought air for his child. To remove rust from a boiler, heat ’lhe water to boiling, put out the fire and drain while the water is Still dis. turbed by the heating and before the rust particles have had a chance to settle, ‘The ordinary drain valve is too small to be effective:; the return pipe should be uncapped or disconâ€" nected. The rush of water which reâ€" sults should clean the boiler thor.j oughly, The following is u: some hospitals, Add baking soda to a pi bran and put in a bas ficient warm water paste. Immerse the utes and a gre & magic superior to all dwarfs the wit and clev ers, and makes these 0 beside their own attrans ~1CU00° always explain why they so pleasant, They may not be h tifulâ€"they are often plain; they not always robust peopleâ€"â€"they sometimes invalids ; they are noi ways the wittiest; but they nos _ Pleasant people make a full cheerful ; they have somewhat of same effect in a room as an open or a bougquet of bowers ; they m us feel for the time as if everyh was pleasant because they are, cannot always explain why they §0 plessant. ‘‘Thay mue sls LA0. . Dr. Pabst added that , headed in the sun did not i growth of hair but usu; the hair to become brittle off "Don‘t sprinkle perfume or toilet water on the skin before exposure to sunlight. This may produce a severe inflammation of the skin called derâ€" matitis," 10 mos Peaete "Beware of scanty at half or more of the bod sunburned with the form; ters, serious illness and may result, Even a n that causes only redness i4 dangerous if it affect skin surface, P Ifhtieiiertstadfiicle stvtatsads hh iz s24 ‘Don‘t go out in the sun after eatâ€" ing a generous breakfast of buckâ€" wheat cakes or drinking highballs. Ecience has proved that such subâ€" stances as quinine, alcohol, buckwheat iron and iodine, when taken interâ€" nally, render an individual extremeâ€" ly sensitive to the rays of the sun.‘ "Beware of scanty attire. If oneâ€" NMV 7 NOR Nn eA c nb F i Don‘t get your sunâ€"tan l suming buckwheat cakes C advises, Dr. Charles F. F chief dermatologist of a Brc spital, warning against the the sun‘s rays, Here are Dr. Pabst lays down for vad REMOVING BoilLERr RUST Skin Specialist Warns Against Scanty Bathing Attire It is expeited that this invention, Some of the books forbidden in will be commercia[]y exploited in‘ the free State are: Shaw‘s "Black Dusselorf, Germany, and at one of| Girl in Search of God," Wells the cellolose factories at Sundsvnll,,“nulpi“mn of Blup" and "Work, Sweden Wealth and Happiness of Mankind," oo rrremmmmmmmmemmmmâ€"â€"â€"â€".| SiINCIAiF _ LeWwis‘ â€" "Ann Vickers," s # Joseph Hergesheimer‘s "The Party AVOld Sunburn After Press," Henr Barbusse‘s "Inferno" o C and Sir Wm Arbuthnot Lane‘s "New Drlnklng Alcohol | Health for Everyman." _A ‘Renaissance chest apparentfly made of oak, dolls and other figures for exhibition can all e made of this pulp. Mr. Kristofferson says that he can cast a figure in 20â€" minutes at a cost of $1.25 compared with over 830' in the ordinary way, ‘ ""“'b:‘l“i”:i. sufficient skill to Nativye * Authors Among manufacture own motor. â€" He i then had the opportunity of experiâ€" Those Whooe. Works Hav.e menting with sulphite lye at a celâ€"| Been Prohibited â€" Periâ€" lulose factory, and pro¢uced a pulp| odicals Also which he treated with chrome acid. uenc The product resembled rubber but DUBLINâ€"Books banned in the appeared to be unstable, whereupon| Irish Free State under the Censorâ€" he made a machine for the production| Ship of Publications Act now total of a material consisting of ninety| 418, according to figures issued by per cent fibre and 10 per cent jye.| the Department of Justice with the This finally gave the right material| latest instalment of the black list. for molding T_h‘e Bo‘ard ‘of Censors nas been e the feet in this for 10 min a great relief will be felt. FOR TIRED Feer PLEASANT PEoPLE e wit and cleverness of makes these of small i own hib utccs: h tests to determine if o a pint of in a basin wet water to forn kwheat cakes or alcohol . Charles F â€" Pabst, the two seamen attractiveness the torma'tior; ;; -l;lis used by nurses , but out the fire water is still dis. & and before the had a chance to peopleâ€"they ar, s they are not al ‘ss and even death n a mild sunburn redness is extremeâ€" t affects the entire 1 tablespoon sunâ€"tan after conâ€" 0‘ _ common wet with suf. form a thin rs, they make s if everybody they are. We was issued al going bareâ€" 10t increase the usually caused they possess these which hy they are not be bean. ness of oth. small value a Brooklyn hoâ€" . the perils of are the rules r vacationists. sun after catâ€" and break open fire full day surface is | And seemeq to ur , gently down, | How lovely, had y drown! â€"Oriana Atkinson * He who finds el« ! pleasures in the fe j a true poet, thourh Selfishness is that which no one will fc and no one js witho Henry Ward Beecher are in of lifetime the cooler air That licked white brow breathing breast ; The nibbling seaweed ; foating hair. SECEth And traiteq her glory with tips, The silence cradled us; we essed By wineâ€"warm waves ana touched ou;- Against the moon There Ne went down through ; to the sea, Stippea from our robes a ebbing tide Completely gave ourselyes were we, So filled with some stran that beside The wash of heave wikld. "Marriage and a mix," she said. She is now twent, would thirty Marry Until cumbs at 23. LON DONâ€"Flow ers the grounds of Sk 4 Palmers Greéen, N. w the crowd of more the mostly women, who wedding recently _ by Saffelle, the world‘s q quin, to Mr, Geoffrey Miss Saffelle is 6 1 Young is 6 ft, 1 in, A year Ago Miss ©. Had 6 Ft. Mannequin Is Now Married Con O‘Leary ang A have suffered by _ the Some of their works ; mitted to circulate â€" in country. Swimming At Night is own expense six copies of the ,publication for forwarding to _ the members of the board. Weakness of the Act According to prominent _ clerics here, the weakness of the act lies in the fact that offending publcations may not be detected until they have generally circulated in the _ Free State for many months, Censorship is mostly confined to the lower priced books because a price more _ than $1.50 is regarded as pretty sufficient to keep the book out of general cir culation, Apart from Bernard Shaw and George Mooke, | Trigh sam .. l weorge Moore, Irish nuth:m. l?ke Liam O‘Flaherty, Sean O‘Faolain, Con O‘Leary and Austin â€" Clarke houwe «onfkanrade 20 oul Anybody discovering a book conâ€" sidered unfit for reading in Irelana may set the machinery at work, though enthusiasm _ is sut®cwhat dampened by the regulations obligâ€" ing the complainant to purchase at ExNE3 ' | A Drawback _ Under the terms of the Censorship Act, books and periodicals may be banned from the Free State for "inâ€" cecent or obscene tendencies" or for advocating birth control which the act defines as "the artificial or unâ€" natural prevention éf econception.** Censorship is not digectly cxercised by the Department of Justice but by ar advisory board of‘ ecnsors comâ€" posed of clergy and laity whose reeâ€" ~mmendations are by the Minister. beach Irish Free State under the Censorâ€" ship of Publications Act now total 418, according to figures issued by the Department of Justice with the latest instalment of the black list. The Board of Censors nas been working for four years and during that period, books have been blackâ€" listed at the rate of two a week. Thirtyâ€"three periodicals, â€" including "Ballyhoo0" _ and _ "Broadway and Hollywood Movies," publisned in New York, have also come under prohibition orders. ° 2C@> ‘€offrey H, Young, _ Saffelle is 6 ft. 2 in, Mr, is 6 ft. 1 in, ‘ar ago Miss Saffelie said she not marry before she was though no sound, W ult Sscc :. 1 our lips moon, now wel} within sÂ¥ 8 that detestable vice will forgive in others without in dimself.â€" seaweed caught our reen, N. were c of more than 1@ m°en, who atte cently _by Migs 6 world‘s tallest . Geoffrey H. y felle is 6 ft, 2 ] heavy ripples on twentyâ€"three waves some st range l“.ufl', d a urge us gently, we only dared to through the Summer , New â€" were crushed by than 149 people, ho attended the b)' ul.ls Jo.nne with our .n‘"- and by the career _ do John‘s and scarcely York Times and to the i¢ _ censorship. _ are not perâ€" in their own and shrubs in n ver questioned ; so hushed were car. wuldn‘t Church, manneâ€" and the e S t B Ap the future now, but not the same wo sume, 1N CPrr. "Lxecuse me, you‘re both wrong, it‘s a misplacing of the aspira Melville tel}s this one: At the London Zoologics “‘Q‘!‘:‘O'lnc was overhea; : *That‘s a heagle, Mother: _ "Yoy hignor that‘s a how]." A FEW YEAR =â€"»London‘s famo: up by hand, the cupied the full 1 men, says Mrs. delightful book * Big Ben, by the s but the big be}} â€" ing. The name Be amin Hall, who w Works when the c We 30 inct his sp« ing in the in whose ton C« booted inches, knight 10 inct esty‘s Arr Lord, the land) : an« Apropos the COMIN« two mos I7th Cer not Mmal (tra thies of midy quot ow MIDGT of h heigt adu cort Burn« W orl feet 1 way . LV MID IT HAS BEEN that there are a in existenceâ€"one th The spell w; crett), but it m Haig would r« eyes had decei, "THEN THE boy ward and the old semething. His audi their eyes on the bo the ground. The f gently moved his h the audience follow their eyes. He see instructions to the ing the spot where hi ever upward. Then dawned on me. He his audience. 1 went *"*The boy is still gir,‘ I called, ‘and t moment he threw it Att circle round the watched from a near "I saw the old f: round of the circle he says, "then I saw rope. He moved on the circle and then, ; with one hand, shot mir with the other. Oothers sat with their An WHAT HAPPENE Field Marshall Ea known as Sir Dougl victim to it during dia. The idea is to n piece of rope stand while a boy climbs 1 Haig was particuls ing it performed, a noted fakir turned where the famous ing, a performance the soâ€"called India trick" recalls an o« n n it THE REVIVED + ©#Â¥n th M t K Her in his book ig." Haig a H women wi OCK? RH W

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