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Durham Review (1897), 27 Sep 1934, p. 6

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York os::a she will sue Rudy for $250, damages, alleging breach of to marry her. Vallee even a nodding acquain Was it Rudy Vallee or some other chap who proposed to Fran ces Singer (above), Kansas City entertainer? Her lawyer in New anyl. "A delight \from bMemming to end," "she shuuu\&:‘l‘"‘mmxs in the (uture," poetic at IpDaweful in. te: sretation," were somep{ (he phras. &s used, and she had a.&!muslasllc Feceution fromy a bewmes _ .. _ bwis wih REMARKABLE PIANIST © The very critical London Press re. cently gave generous praise to Miss NMÂ¥py., Muno, a 24â€"yearâ€"old girl from Vlmhnr. Que.. woaen she gave â€" a piano recKal recently in the West Fud trom tlta.gorks of Bach, Chopin, Beethoven, Hrahm Rave! @ad Doh M ~ * UOHoHKPrinme i ucce s l 22 Henceforth it is decreed, only the most unexceptionable kissing will be allowed in American movies shown in Japan, Mothers and lathers, and even uncles and aunts will be allowed to kiss babies, Husbands may kiss their wives, wives may kiss husbands; the sweethearts may kiss, but only if their intentions are honorable. But kissing in imported movies between a man and somebody‘s wile between a woman and somebody‘s busbandâ€"no it is not to be permitted, "Kisses," says the Cespatch, very solemniy, "in native Japanese productions will aot be per. mitted under any circumstances wh:xt.l soever."â€"Vancouver Province. A long list of persons arrested in CGermany for insulting remarks about Nazi leaders, together with the nature ol insults, conveys the impression that oue of the things these leaders lack most serious:y is a sense of humour.â€" Kingston Whis Standard A aonvicted slayer who escaped from the state prison at Bismark, of North Dakota, was recaptured in Chiâ€" cazo, but had to be released when the Dakota authorities could not afford the $125 that would be required to bring him backâ€"so they said. The digzaiy of the law! NAZ! DEFECT Ther There are still persons who seem never to have heard that automobiles sometimes are stolen. That must be the reason cars are left unlocked on the streetsâ€"sometimes cars worth thousands of dollarsâ€"or locked with the key left in the ignition for the convenience of crooks and ‘joy.riders,‘ â€"Ottawa Journal. drive faster than an express train without giving a thought to the things that are vital to safety. â€"St. Thomas Timesâ€"Journal, THINK THIEVES DoN‘T TaAKE CAR ception from a large Miss Munn has been is too big for immediate adjustment, the engine is put in the repair shop and another one substituted. The en gineer would not feel sate without that knowledge. The same assurance is required by an airman before be goes up. Personal efficiency as a driver is not enough, Too many motorists are content to see that their car has gas, oil and water, and that it is kept nice. ly polished, But they will #o out and This raises the questionâ€"do drivers take sufficient care to govern the rate at which they drive by the condition of their tires, their brakes or any other part of the car? No one should drive fast unless the brakes are in a condition to stop the car within rea. sonable distance. over and checked up, If the oiimlb;}; find anything wrong they either see the defect is put right, or, it the job A railroad engineer never takes his train out without having an assur. ance thgt the engine has been looked with her. V2° TTOm a large uudq(‘?. Munn has been blind Trom her She bhas also a bliad, brother a United Charch ont er, © are many fine -m;fi- who DIGNITY OF U.S. Law i Whig Standard, KISSING IN saranNn bMemming to ._‘"'“)ings in 1 C PC HIZ one, the figure for 1934 being 734,000 pounds agaisat 307,500‘ pounds for June, 1933, For the purpose of these 1 vuring the first six months of this , year, according to reports from 146 local authorities collated by the Min.]| istry of Labor, <plans were approved : for building factories and workshop.' throughout Great Britain at a total estimated cost of approximately 3,000.‘ 000 pounds. This compares with a fls.l ure of about 1,8000,000 for the corres. | ponding period of 1933, an increase of , 66 2â€"3 per cent. a still greater in. | crease of more than 100 per cent, was shown for the month of Inna 11 tactful and discerning visitors who come here and tell us so, So rapid, in fact, is our advance, that Professor Coulter, of the U.S.A, was made to feel like Rip Van Winkle on revisit. ing us after only five years‘ absence. We have, he tells us, "an integrated communal machine, a group coâ€"operâ€" ating various agencies, a longâ€"time plan, a city socialâ€"conscious, dynami. cally interested., with a clearâ€"cut pur. pose," Ho might have added that we also have a system which permits horned cattle to run loose in the prln-l cipal streets, Very few modern cities can â€" say the same.â€"Johnnnesburg' Times: ' Johannesburg, it is almost superfluâ€" ous to remark is a very progressive city. We know this for ourselves and even if we didn‘t, there are plenty of tactful and discerning visitors who COMYG Rere and H8W ma on es it ces! . THE SCOTTISH HERRING 4 INDUSTRY Lady Houston, the Boadicea of our generation, has been adding to her good works by urging the British pubâ€" lic to cat more herrings. It is a lamâ€" entable fact that the Scottish herring industry is in a dreadful condition, Surely it is enough to challenge the sea for a livelihood and to go out in all weathers without having to des. troy the catch because there is no market. Why not make Wednesday a Herring day* The Sunday joint should! be given out by that time, and a goodi red herring would bring health to the : eater, hope to the fisherman, and sat.‘ isfaction to the Chancellor, as it WOnIdI reduce our import of foreign l’ood.â€"' London Sunday Referee. AN EMPIRE TRaADE PROBLEM There are two aspects to the (Brit-I ish Indian cotton trade) situation, In the forefront is the need for Lanca-' shire to find more and more use lor’ the standard Indian short staple cot.| tons, of which these are ample sup.f plies. In the background is India‘s | task to grow more longer staple cot-' ton as a substitute for American varâ€"| leties, upon the use of which the Lan.| cashire industry has been established, Lancashire‘s problem is to tind an as-! sured market for the cloths made in whole or in part of Indian cotton and | to persuade the spinners who hava, never used Indian cotton to take it up.â€"Times of India, Bombay, ’ THE RIFT WITHIN THE LUTE ; MORE FACcTORIES During the first s "They hated me, That was obpvious, 1 stood for all that women who wear jewels represented. Yet they were fas. cinated,"â€"Brockville Recorder, "There was no envy of the gems in the eyes of those who observed my jewelry, There was only hate, "I seemed to revive ftor them _ the memory of old Russia and otten dur. ing that interesting evening I could almost feel the blade of the guillotine at my throat. mer‘s ®eandard of living is down, not because he knows no better but beâ€" cause he cannot help himself. The farms are depleted of consumption and capital goods, They used houses and farm buildings; they need imple. ments; they need furniture; they need clothing; they need motor cars; they need a thousand little things that the cities look upon as common necessi. ties, But they can‘t get them until agâ€" riculture is rehabilitated. It is almost as much to the interest of the cities to rehabilitate the farm as it is to the larmer himself that the farm should come back, â€"Vancouver Province, A THRILL IN POOR TASTE A New York woman, wife of a for: mer publisher has returned from a vi. sit to Russia in the course of which as she relates, she gave "poor dismal Russia a thrill" by making ‘he rounds of Moscow night élubs bedecked in all her jewels, including the Hope diaâ€" mond, which is supposed to bring misâ€" fortune to its wearer. The woman gives her impression as follows : I A PROBLEM 4 A Polish physician is said to be usâ€" ing a solution containing choroform to "dope" pyjamas so that insomnia vic. tims may get a good night‘s rest. That may be all right for the night, but how does he propose to get his patients up in the morning? â€" Lindsay Post, A TWOâ€"WAY PULL â€" There is a tremendous iatent de. mand for goods of all sorts on the farms‘ot Western Canada, The far. are blind. Deptived of the ordinary reâ€" sources of recreation they take to music and develop latent gifts in a remarkable way. Being blind, they naâ€" turally concentrate upon their studâ€" ies with an intensity and interest that those with sight are liable to miss, Music is their all, _ their greatest source of pleasure, hence their skill.â€" St. Thomas Timesâ€"Journal, month of June al. 1934 being 734,000 ve years‘ absence. us, "an integrated + a group coâ€"operâ€" cies, a longâ€"time BEING BUILT . So rapid, in A foreward by Charles lets you in on the full meaning of this joke â€" the Lindbergs, in emergency equip. ment, had prepared to walk half way across that ice cap if necessary, When the airâ€"ace spends five hours going the 40 miles between Amster. dam and Rottendam, his wife remem. Hall way across the fearsome Greenland iceâ€"cap, Lindy hands back a note of comfort to his wife: "Every fire minutes we save a day‘s walk," In snatches, Anne depicts whole in. cidents, Lindy, by mistake, landed at an out of the way point other than the one for which he aimed, A lonely Greenlander asks as a favor that Lindbergh carry a letter for him, and adds to Anne when the favor is granted: "It is too bad that I did not think to send a goose by the fyer." emerges as a friendly and folksy per. son, when penâ€"pictured by bis wife in her first travel article, appearing in the National Geographic Magazine. In it she reâ€"enacts their last summer swing by air around the north Atlan. tic. Washington.â€"Mrs. Anne Morrow Lindberg, temporarily turned author, has undertaken in gay, intimate paraâ€" graphs to humanize her famous hus. band, Lindbergh Is a if Although the doctrine of the Comâ€" | monweaith may be fundamentally ,| simple, in practice it is aot so. For | the theory is now advanced that while ‘lhe Crown is the centre of unity for | the Commonwealth as a whole, the ’King is the soverign of each Dominâ€" ion independently and separately. Hence the problem: Can a Dominion remain neutral if Great Britain is at war? It is an issue which bas already | been debated in these ~olumns, The lresponsibilities of League membership go far to make it irrelevant, But pub. | lic opinion often loses sight of the fact 'that freedom to make separate treatâ€" 'ies has been concealed, At Locarno, for instance, the United Kingdom was )Hze only member of the Commonâ€" wealth to sign, The Dominions de. | clined to sign. If Great Britain become | involved in war through the Locarno |'1‘reaty it would be technically quite ,’legiumate for the Dominions to ab. _stain, The truth is that in their presâ€" ;ent stage of evolution the Dominions favor constitutional and administraâ€" tive devolutions within the Commonâ€" wealth, They are nervous lest their foreign policy should become subser. vient to foreign policy at Whitehall, Whilst enjoying the sense of security born of the knowledge that they can count upon the support of the United Kingdom, ift they become involved in a war on their own accuuali, they <>re reluctant to commit themselves to any war in which the United Kingdom might become involved through enâ€"| tanglement in the affairs of Europe,â€" Pietermaritzburg New Witness. | "Folksy" Person So His Wife Says in Telling Their Little Jokes to Each Other statistics, Great Britain is divided inâ€" to 10 areas, In June, 1934, the North and West Midland area was easily first, the figure being 337,000 pounds or nearly half the total, â€" Industrial Britain. The Statue of David Livingstone, the missionary and explorer, as it was unveiled on the brink of the mighty Victoria Falls, which he discovered in the heart of the Dark Continent, which he first opened to the world. The ceremonies took place in the presence of the largest (‘rou(rid ever assembled at the Falls, Southern Rhodesia‘s great natural wonder. everâ€"aloof Charles EMPIRE PROBLEMS TORONTO Livingstone Statue Unveiledâ€" Lindberg _ Dividing feminine faces into two classes, the long, narrow countenâ€" ance and the wide, full one, he reâ€" commended that in the latter case rouge be applied on the centre of the chetk and shaded toward the ear. The sides of the ‘face should be powdered with a darker shade than the forehead and nose. In the inâ€" stance of the long narrow face â€"he shades the rouge from the centre of the â€" cheek toward the nose and powders the face from the forghead to the chin with darker powder than is used near the ears. To tone down a double chin he adâ€" vocated putting it in the shade by using a darker face powder than that applied to the forehead. Likeâ€" wise if the feéminine nose is too prominent it can be subdued by a deeper shade of powder than that used on the cheeks. Rilling‘s theory of makeâ€"up is based on harmonizing lights and shadows, and by creating illusions to change, if needed, the contour of the face. Chicagoâ€"Women this fall, if they follow the advice of Paul Rilling of Chicago, former European makeâ€"up expert, will require at least two shadâ€" °s of powder. Speakers emphasized the efforts beâ€" ing made to standardize the prices of the Nova Scotia wood products to conform with the prices in other parts of the Dominion, to eliminate compe. tition, * Rufus _ E, Dickle, of Stewiacke, chairman of the manufacturers‘ secâ€" tion, Lands and Forest Association, presided at the meeting and outlined the aims of the association, GRADING RULES. Truro, N.S.â€"The Nova Scotia Lumâ€" berman‘s Association in annual ses. sion, placed themselves on record as favoring definite grading rules to meet the conditions of the United Kingdom market, It was decided that the direcâ€" tors of the association would draw up grading rules to be submitted to each member for approval. Dominion Now Occupies Secâ€" ond Place in British Market Ottawa.â€"Canada is rapidly captur. ing a larger share of the British marâ€" ket for its lumber, British Government figures issued here for seven months of the year show that Canada has climbed to second place as a source of supply, being exceeded only by Finland by a narrow margin,. In the corresponding period last year, Canâ€" ada held fourth place being exceeded by Finland, Sweden and the United States, and in 1932 she occupied fifth place with Soviet Russia leading all other countries, Canadian Lumber Is Popular in U.K. owder Away Double Chin and Big Nose "We were trying to reach Geneva through what I considered a very thick fog, but which my husband said *wasn‘t bad at all.‘ Perbaps it wasn‘t bad. I only knew we spent a great deal of time circling small ponds un. der the mist. I thought we were about to make a forced landing, but my busâ€" band said he was looking at castles," bers it as a fine chance to poke a little fun, as follows: In September 1931, she entered the School of International Relations unâ€" der Professor Alfred Zimmern at Ge. neva, Switzerland, returning to Canâ€" ada in November of 1931 to organize social work for the city of Si. Cath. erines, She joined the staff otf Hamilâ€" ton Department of Public Wellare in July 1933, as supervisor and director of social work. She also was a member of the Manâ€" itoba Government staff as a visitor for the Mothers‘ Allowance Commission, In 1926 she went to Windsor, Ontario to take charge of social service work for that city, In 1930 she resigned to attend the School of Economics, Lon. don, England spending two months in Vienna the following year studying the social conditions. Miss Wark bhas had a distinguished career, and is chief supervisor and di. rector of social work in Hamilton, She is a native of Manitoba, and was eduâ€" cated in Carman, Man,, high school and Brandon, Man., Normal school, She taught school for five years in foreignâ€"language communities of Saskatchewan and Alberta later takâ€" ing a two.â€"years course in arts at the Wesley College, University of Maniâ€" toba, She graducited in sociology at the University of Chicago, returning to Winnipeg to join the Social Serâ€" vice Commission. ( Toronto,â€"Miss Nellie H. Wark, pro. minent social worker of Hamiiton, has been made a senior official of the Ontâ€" ario Department of Public Welfare and will take over a post practically the same as the position of an Assist. ant Deputy Minister, Announcement of her appointment was made recentâ€" ly from the offices of Hon, David A,. Croll, Minister of Public Welfare and Municipal Affairs. In a statement by Mr. Croll, accom Woman Appointed To Welfare Post ;’ Vancouverâ€"Extent of _ reciprocal trade between Canada and the Antiâ€" podes is evidenced by the cargo being loaded into the liner Aorangi which sailed recently for New Zealand and Australia, via Honolulu and Suva. Fortyâ€"five hundred tons of cargo, including 130 motor cars of Canadian manufacture and salmon, newsprint. flour and general merchandise, was being put on board. Forty thousand box*es of Australian dried fruits, apricots, and raisins were brought in by the Aorangi. British Columbia _ and Australia are doing a reciprocal busin®ss in onions. Recent shipments to Australia amounted to 2,000 sacks. Next spring Australian onions will be imported, owing to complementary seasons. Miss N. H. Wark, Hamilton, Engaged by Ontario Govâ€" ernment Mis;qT!mmpoon. the wife of the novelist, Sinclair Lewis plans to g0 to the Saar territory,. Paris.â€"Germany, in the opinion of Dorothy Thompson, American newsâ€" paperwoman, who was asked to leave it. "is becoming the most comfortable and hygienic prison in the world." Miss Thompson arrived in Paris the day after secret police in Berlin asked her to leave the country imme. diately. The request, she said, "is evidently a part of a campaign of terrorism against foreign correspondents," but apparently was based on an interâ€" view she had with Adolf{ Hitler in 1931, before he became (‘hancelior. ‘ "Hitler is no longer a man, he is a religion," she asserted. | Canadian Autos In the growing tendency toward nu. dism, there was contained a.direct and ringing challege to the clothing dealers, "By supporting this moveâ€" ment by going without hats and un. derwear, we are digging our OWn graves," he declared. Hitler Is Not a Man, But a Religion Sinclair Lewis‘ Wife, Dorothy Thompson, Comments on "Der â€" Fuehrer" "For every nudist there are hunâ€" dreds of semiâ€"nudists," claimed the speaker,. "There are men who have eliminated underwear, who go withâ€" out hats, and who are discarding neckwear, socks and garters, as a direct outgrowth of the nudist move. ment." Speaking of garterless males he hinted that considerable money had been spent in a nationâ€"wide research in the United States to determine the opinion of women with regard to male hosiery that drops unsupported, "The results will surprise you," bhe added, â€" Toronto.â€"Garterless males came in for a slashing attack, byâ€" a manufac. turer of these articles speaking to clothing merchants of this city. Fears Masculine Fall Towards Nudism It‘s Refreshing to Hear Charges Against Men Inâ€" stead of Women on This Count. Go to Antipodes It might be "finig" to her roâ€" mance with Max Baecr, world ' heavyweight champion pugilist, that Dorothy Dunbar Baer is writ ing here, Despite rumors of reâ€" concigation, th; l'c.t:eu who once was Baer‘s wife petitioned â€" a Los Angeles court for permission to drop the "Baer" from ha» a2ett London, â€" The Admiralty has deâ€" cided states Fleet Orders that in the future, with No, 3 dress (frock coat with epaulettes) and white trousers, white shoes should be worn on board and, weather permitting, on shore, Wellingtons â€" or halfâ€"wellingtons ~will continue to be worn in bad weather on shore, The cradle is of the finest woods, covered with tortoise shell and adorn. ed with coral and cameos, Two partic~ ularly large cameos placed in the centre on each side, bear exquisitely cut reproductions of Mount Vesuvius the Bay of Naples and some of the city‘s most ancient castles. Duke Niutta, high commissioner of Naples, making the presentation adâ€" dress, said that hundreds of Italians in North and South America had conâ€" tributed to the purchase of the cradle, Naplesâ€"A beautifully wrought cra. dle, in which it is hoped a new prince of the House of Savoy will repose, was presented by the people of Naples to Crown Princess Marie Jose, soon to become a mother. She The previous aggregate age records of any family in the provinse of Que. bec had been that of the Tremblay family of St, Joseph de la Rive, Char. levoix county, the ten living children of the late Capt. Georges and Madame Tremblay of the Charlevoix village, having added their combined ages up to 718 vears. Princess Maria Sixteen children in all were born to the union and the ages of the 12 still living are: Brothers 76, 73, 72, 67, 65, 64, and 56; sisters 78 70 68 61 and 59. ‘have the full approval of the women ‘ of the Province of Ontario, and par. ]ticulurly of those connected with pubâ€" \lic welfare and social private agencies ‘Her most important duties will be in 'connecthn with social problems af. ecting women, and she will rank as a !senior permament officer of the Deâ€" partment." Quebec,â€"The records of a f«amily of 12, seven brothers and five sisters, whose combined ages rearhed a total of 809 years have been filed at Drumâ€" mondville, Que, The 12 children, the oldest of whom is 78 and the youngest 56 were born to the late Mr, and Mrs, J. L, G. Manseau, The father was a notary a native of Bale du Febyre, while Mrs Manseau whose maiden name was Jennie McConville, was of Irish descent, born in Ste, Emelie del L‘Energie, Que, Manseau died in 1897, while his wife predeceased him by five years, ‘ Emm Ceeh Pomect C "I am pleased to anmounce the apâ€" pointment of Miss Wark because she has a wide knowledge of social work which makes her eminently ‘qualified for this position," Mr. Croll‘s stateâ€" ment said. "Most important of all is the fact the sees for the future the larger question of social security for all persons, ‘ Total of Quebec Family _ of T welveâ€"Oldest is 78 panying the announcement, it was pointed out that the task of administ. ering the Public WelMare Department in Ontario called for an outetanding social worker of wide experience and unquestioned ability, . White Shoes For Navy Civen Cradie By People of Naples 809 Years n'ure the appointment will Name from her name, for â€" y _ j * "DrGs and tones alike May cheer the wounded soul, Bring comfort to the aching heart, Beset with doubts and. fears, And pl#ad the pensive prisoner‘s part And dry the mourner‘s tears, This is the place I fain would ga And this my longâ€"sought goal That all my words and tones ali May cheer the wounded soul, Bring comfort to tha anhr‘" 1" Where mighty men of earth have a stood But I would ask this from Thy hand Oh, help me to be kind and good, To all the trodden ones of earth, Whose hopes lie in the sand With empty home and barren hearth > As strangers in a hostile Jland, The following "pro unknown author is 3 sive that to live up to form one into a livin that is taught in the I do not ask, 0, Lord, Where mighty men In a speech delivered before the Canadian Chamber of Commerce at Winnipeg, Mr. James Y. Murdoch, of the Noranda, Hollinger and Wrightâ€" Hargreaves mines, noted that this years Canada is producing gold at the rate of $190 a minute every minâ€" ute of the twentyâ€"four hours of every day; that the goldâ€"mining _ payroli has this year reached $30,000,000 per annum, with an average wage â€" of $1,600 for each operative. The whole Canadian mining industry last year paid out $100,000,000 in wages. Last year our copp®r production would have filled a freight train 95 miles long. Trainloads of copper, â€" nickel and other minerals mean new revenue for all Canada and for every in. dustry in the country, As the world continues to emerge from the depresâ€" sion, this rountry‘s increasing output of precious and base metals will place it commercially in the forefront of the nations, â€" Toronto Mail & Empire. ed. Little Long Lac and God‘s Lake have fired the public imagination, only to be followed by this latest new camp. It has now been amply demonâ€" strated that the great gold belt of the North Country, which begins in Quebec, extends across al! Northern Ontario into Manitoba. The foundâ€" ations have been well laid for one of the greatest and most productive inâ€" dustries in the world. Already the second largest gold producer in the world, Canada promises from this time forward to be more and more in the world‘s eye as a producer of the yellow metal on a tremendous and exâ€" panding scale. What this will mean in material wealth for the whole nation is difficult to estimate. Month by month the riches of the preâ€"Cambrian area are being revealâ€" gold mines, new goldâ€"bearing tracts are coming to light. ~The Sturgeon River area, lying to the east of Port Arthur, is hailed by mining men genâ€" erally as a fresh mineralogicai disâ€" covery which will probably prove to be of major significance. A rush of prospectors is on, and a large nhmber of new and promising veins have alâ€" ready been located. "Ontario‘s 1934 gold field impressive and exciting" runs a headline in The Northern Miner. The mining industry continues to forge ahead. In addition to an inâ€" creased production from established Another interesting evening sandal is a modernistic one made of black saâ€" tin with gold and silver bands in an intricate design, A gold kid 1â€"strap is joined to the ankle strap of black saiâ€" in, which fastens with a dainty rhineâ€" stone buckle, Canada‘s Mines Place Nation on the Map While the gold kid foundation of this strap is cut as described, the velâ€" vet remains wide and is held in at the narrowest point by a gold ring, set with simulated topaz stones, There is an inchâ€"wide strap around the back of this sandal which actually leaves the heel bare. This strap is fastened to the draped band by a narrow T. strap and is clasped ‘at the side with a small buckle matching the ring holding the drapery, The sandal is highâ€"heeled and is of crushed silk velâ€" vet lined throughout with gold kid, It also comes in black, red and oyster white. ’ New York,â€"Shoes are more import. ant this winter as a part of the whole costume than they have been in years, There is a dignity about toe new clothes which not only demands ele. gance in shoes but also extreme care in their selection, The shoe a woman wears should either harmonize with or accentuate the style or color of her gown, according to New York stylists, This is particularly true of evening slippers and the new formal afternoon shoes, We bave in mind one very beautiful Grecian draped evening sanâ€" dal in a rich dark brown velvel. It has an open toe and a draped band which curves across the vamp varying in width from an inch and a half to about threeâ€"quarters of an inch at the nar. rowest point, Extreme Care Needed In | ection; Must Harmonize A BEAUTIFUL PRAYER 18 so comprenhenâ€" up to it would transâ€" living image of all Take On "prayer" from â€" an increasing output metals will place the forefront of Toronto Mail & ‘ gospels: , to stand would gain ing the men fork to the Unmindf ul and her wh stepped into grasped the place. A: unemploy penny ca« Duchess â€" their load Duke of Yo potatoes wit try and take replied. WJ mbie poison« that #ho\ fires The s be in t dangers perty a The put brand p more to pertr wict« Duchess 7 can alw; have bee has been to locate sponsible should b punishme There are one ways t} ed but pr avoidable by license laws casion farmer proper astrous set by & barre ries. 7 cidenta es left carless thrown throup} of it starts #xp« abl 1A gr C The ty tr W courage the wheat and put into op« 488,800 bus of 508,716 « planted are €1,586,921 & was 40,265, cho (1,510,% Since the practically â€" h in the vari wheat crop yield 44,84 estimated is 45.000 tr EC official ®fforts eoncey aurt the thi €Oou tior ing improv Although plant ment‘s five ject, incug istry of a; enable the requiremen achieved mhead of + rice h« Complet Of c Ja D 1 Per the Burni up on 0 x he

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