West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 11 Oct 1934, p. 6

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Â¥C With the canoo season definitely here and the local â€"boat livery advisâ€" ing canoeists to make sure of getting & boat by having one reserved two CANOE COMMANDMENTs. We havre mo reeords which can be consulted, but our impression is that this gemeration is produciog a fair share of men who are of the six foot typeâ€" or over, . Within recent years there bave been a number of them in the collegiate, and they have been well built so they carry their height with case. We can think of one famâ€" ily where three sons, all of them quite young fellows yet, are over the six‘ foot mark.â€"Stratford Beaconâ€"Herald. Hamilton police departmert has apâ€" plications for places on the force from several young men who are six feet four inches tall, but they fail to compete with Harry Shelton 22 years of age, who is seven feet one and aâ€" balf inches and weighs 218 pounds. The chief and his associates are said to be favorably impressed with this young man and he stands ; :ood‘ whance of receiving appointment. OUR TALL YOUNG MEN Just been _ republished in a special contenary edition, the goverror‘s wife wrote as follows under date of Oct. 30, 1793; ‘At eight this dark evening we went to see salmon speared...... secing them swimming in shoals aâ€" round the boat is a very protty sight ... . The flights of wild pigeons in the Sprinz and Autumn is a #urprising sight," Where are the salmon and the passenger pigeons in the Toronto area now? Where, for that matter. are the pigeons anywhere?â€"Toronto Star. Ju « AMD WHERE THE BEAVER ?â€" In Mrs, Simeoe‘s Diary, which has eauct h FANCY THATâ€" The Scripps.Howard papers. _ comâ€" prosing 2% leading dailies Including The New York World Teleszram, have placed themselves behind the Canadâ€" fan proposal. praising Canad‘an holiâ€" day attractions, Thus before the House ot Commons has voted the money, Cansda is getâ€" ting some direct benefit from, the D nnis plans.â€"Victoria Times #} COME TO CANADA.â€" «a Phe Detroit Free Press, <peaking of this exhibition of enterprise" said: a‘ter seeing their own courtry first moericans cannot do better than see P al of their occupation â€"should be expected to understand for distinctness of speech neglectful in this regard. not seem to nnderstand the The result is at once apparent those who attend a public function any sort. There is no distinctness the speakers, Those who hy nat mada next The Scerip CLEAR ENUNCIATION.â€" The necessity for correâ€"t expresâ€" sion and voice modulation has for many years received halfâ€"hearted atâ€" tention in the schools. A greater need which should be the precursor of all the graces of speech has been strangely neglected. This is the need for distinctness of pronunciation, A good way to park a car at the curb when the space is small is to back it in, It takes an expert to do this, however, without serious damage to the bumpers and finish of the cars front and rear of the short parking $pace. It is a useful stunt if done ex. pertly, but downtown streets are not the proper practice ground,â€" Otta'ai Journal. ON PARKING a CaR It is scarcely understandable that human beings have remained so tolâ€" erant of the rat. The latter has in« vaded virtually every community in the world except the polar â€" regions. Even in a country of limited populaâ€" tion such as Canada, the depredations of rats cost millions of dollars â€" anâ€" nually.â€"Sarnia Observer. cosT oFr rRats. atistician 8 use sufficient white »iner each to make a girdle around the 50C miles wide However, we relv ‘rust nothing of che sort will tempted. Think of all the pretty "*#irl »nhotos yvou‘d miss‘â€"Bor. "ties Star. napers uld ‘cording to the â€" Financiat ed States newspapers are favorable comment on S vis plan for a burean of I ittention of p ow . but m. that ht is fignured ont that the ‘anada and the United the iinancia} Post, newspapers are makâ€" comment _ on Senator r a burean ot tourist ‘city for Canada. And s Americans to visit f bl pronunctation Calzary KHerald of . from oice of the Press that other our law courts m a spectacular is _ for _ hearing s usuunlyr imnos. ‘CU nets be audâ€" 1 awavy but is the andience, unciation needs , The Empire and The World at Large htndinenaimenciant dachit mes.â€"likeaprek «‘v impos. rom whom ‘_ speech, er to the * officials hy nature properly the need are often They _ do t the purâ€" people In common with the people of Ausâ€" tralia, New Zealanders will regret the reason which will bring tiem the pleasure of a visit by the Duke of Gloucester instead of that projected for Prince George. Princs George has completed a particular!y arduous tour of South Africa and it is not at all surprising that the strain upon his health should make it inadvisable for him to undertake so soon afterwards another, extending over six months, of Australia and New Zealand. The members of the Royal Family live lives of incessant duty, The ideal of service is deeply implanted in their hearts. They give a lead to a vast variety of social causes and their example is farâ€"reaching. Bur particu. larly when they are engaged â€" upon Empire tours, the King‘s subjects, in their delight to bonour them, may become hard ‘taskmasters. Thig has been seen in New Zealand. Every | Royal tour has become a test of enâ€"| durance. That must have been the _ case in South Africa, and it will un. HARDWORKING RovALTy There has been too much snobbery about golf in the South. it cught to be everybody‘s game everywhere, as it always has been in Scotlard. Workâ€" ing lads from Troon hoisted _ their sawmill comrade, Jimmy Wallace on their shoulders after his vi<tory over Jack McLean, at Prestwick, in the amateur championship, The Prince of Wales, mixing in the crewd, saw that match. Golf, properly regarded, is a great levellerâ€"the mest demoâ€" cratic game of all.â€"Manchester Sun-‘ day Chronicle. to of of goLFr Democratic at the beginning of the cotit growing less and less, so that Nineteenâ€"Sixties the children Actually outnumbered by their â€"London Morning Post. A decreasing birthrate and an in creasing expectation of life are alterâ€" ing the balance between youth and age, Whereas in 1901 there were legg than 1 1â€"4 million people of 65 years and over, in 1976 there will be 5 3.4 millions of or over 65. Whereas in 1901 there were 12,000,000 children up to 15 years of age, by 1951 there will‘ anly be 6 1â€"2 million of such children. The proportion of ckildren to old peo-‘ ple, which was nearly seven to one BATH } The young man who has been conâ€" fronted by his aunt with the choice of marrying and settling down before Christmas Day, 19%6, or of forfeiting £100,000, should be a prey to conâ€" flicting emotions. "Give me liberty or give me death," exclaimed a historic patriot who was not, as it happens, faced with the necessity of embracing the one as the only â€" alternative to losing the other.â€"London Evening News. SHE STARTED somETHing which blew British seamen sky high in that campaign of bloody memory. For whom are we making the shining instruments of death?â€"Loncon Daily Express, "C° "VP0, A gun captured from the Germans. and bearing a Beitish trade mark. The Dardanelles were _ sown thick with mines, made in Britain, Business is The armament Sorry, there w that........When t British woâ€"km: will they be n Bedford Park 3 war trophy, _A ANOTHER BUSINESS 13 BNOOMING _ JUCCC camp before dark. Erecting & tent, or preparing a meal by fire. light, is not easy. / Learn how _ to prepare _ simple meals over a campfire. Unless familiar with wilderness traâ€" vel, never attempt a trip through unâ€" imhabited country without competent guides, Charts of the route and good maps of the surrounding country are essential.â€"Lindsay Post. Avoid crossing large lakes or in rough water, Make camp before dark. E1 Do not make _ your packs _ too heavy; about 40 pounds is a good ayâ€" erage, Never run a rapid making sure that it with safety. Examine it logs, boulders and other Two canoes should not at the same time. Learn how to swim, an methods. Do not sit or lie on ground. Leave your campsite clean. Bury all rubbish, bottles and cans. Never throw glass or tins in the water where others may bathe, Build your campfires small, close to the water‘s edge on a spot from which the leaves and moss have been scraped away. Drown it with water when leaving, and stir the ashes with a stick to make sure no live coals are left, _ _ _ _ â€"_ _ _~/+* anead of time, no doubt many young people are planning canâ€" oe trips for a vacation. Ten commandments that will as. sure a happy and successful camping trip are: or three days ahead of time CHAIR VERSUS craDLE nament _ industry here will be no . When those guns of wo‘kmanshin g~ a THE EMPIRE is pickin _of the cantury, is less, so that, in the the children will be & rapid without first that it can be done Examine it carefully for ‘age on a spot from $ and moss have been Drown it with water other obstrucfions: up «!sewhere try is active tured from the i Bsitish trade If and first aid Mt cheers for admirable W _ where m look in \ notable d from the run a rapid elders the bare rivers Among the instince great work boinz done through the Pospita! blind man who hak t« Montreal.-â€"()pn.-almns have become quite the rage among the natives of Jobat, India, and no patient feels that he has reccived Lropes® _ treatment without one, arcordingz to Miss Isaâ€" bel MceConnet, missiorary, speaking at the biennial meeting of the counâ€" cil executive of tne Women‘s Misâ€" sionary Socioty, Pre sbyterian Church in Canada (westorn division), This represents a change in attiâ€" tude, for the firs( surgical patient was so frigh:ened at the idea of bein "put to sleep" that he jumped from the operating tab‘e and ran home. Among the instinces showing the Sn $ Ceslln l ce c n c â€" ! Must Ste said the Harvard experiments indicated that the lead was not sol. uble in persvirstion, this was true in ths Pennsylvania State College exâ€" periments, _ only while the lead. weighted silk was very new. After it hid been 2ged a few days the lead washed cut in water. Miss Ressincer said these rat ex. per‘ments seem to contradict results obtained at Harvard upon human beâ€" ings, who show :d no ill effects from the lead type of siik. _ Not all silks are weighted, _ and not a.l the weightea silks â€" are treated with lead, Other metals may be nsed. Miss Kessinger said, for example, _ tha‘ tinâ€"weighted _ silks showed no bad effects on her rats. The rats wers chosen as models because they are among the few aniâ€" mals which perspire. They were enâ€" closed in silk sacks, tied about their necks, for one hour daily for 10 woeeks. They were kept warm enough to perspire. Their skinge became irriâ€" tated from contact, _ One rat died. Other rats simi‘ariy garbed in silk without lead showed no signs of‘ trouble, New York.â€" â€"~The tate of rats which ’becu.nc ill or died from wearing silk weizhtcd with a lead treatment was described recootly to the American Home Economics Association. The silk, saic Miss P Belle Kessâ€" inger, is the same material sold over the counter to w omen, without adver. tisicg to warn them that it has been leal treated. She made the experiâ€" meit with the rais at the Pennsylâ€" varia State Coilege, under a fellow. shin of the Amsrican Economical As-[ sociaiion May Hurt Women Weavers â€"Metal Content Dangerâ€" ous Experiments Reveal Leads in Silk The story of the presen; economic conditions in Canada is a heartening addition to the recent evidence of imâ€" provement in Australia, in South Af. rica and in India, ‘The Empire as a whole is out of the depths. In Canâ€" ada every one of the ordinary tests of wellâ€"being shows the Dominion makâ€" ing rapid recovery.â€"London â€" Daily Telegraph. EMPIRE REcovery questionably be the case in Austraâ€" lia and New Zealand.â€"Auckland Weekly News ONTARIO ARC TORoNTO Dreaded foe of the world‘s an aid at United States Fores ing tanks of oil, workers spray ablaze, Controlling crew follows Have Operations Not All Weighted Kills Rodents € for the people _ was that of ; tn he lod thara. world‘s timber growths, fire Forestry Station near Ood follows with Fire Fights Insects "We can‘t go Ti‘tyJifty betwee New Deal ard the Old. _ We either go or wilh the New De abandon it."â€"FEdward A Filene. All chnngm; :,ecoxix'e effective Doâ€" mirion Lay, The rste to Colombia, _ Ecuador, Venezuela, Datch Guiana and French Gmana, is advacrced from 45 cents to 55 cents for eack halr ounce. Scale for Argentina, Boliyia, Brazil, Chile, Pavragnay, Perv and Uruguay, is adâ€" vanced from 45 czents a half ounce. ; Kegistration, if desired, is in addiâ€" tioe to the reguilar air mail fees. | An increase has been ordered in the rat‘s to West Ingies, British Guiana, Mex‘co, Cub#, Contra! America, Asia, Africa and Australia, This will be 35 cents for each % ounce, instead of 15 cen‘s as before, No change is mage in the domestic rate of six cents for the first ounce and five certs for each subsequent one. The scale for Great Britain No:thern Ireland, the Irish Free State and Newfoundlard is the same as the domestic one The rate is to be six cents for each ounce,. Previotrsiy it was eight cents for the first ounce, anc 13 cents for each subsequont ounce. The rate to Bermuda will be the same as the new Unied Scates one. uflawa â€"Air mail rates from Canâ€" ada to the United States will be reâ€" duced July 1, according to an anâ€" nouncement issued by the postoffice dep=riment recextly. ® Scale of Charges from ada to U.S. Reduced ‘mner growths, fire is being proved y Station near Ogden, Utah. Carryâ€" insoct-infost_ml trees and set them Change Air Some of the girls received cheques for as high as $295. Lucien Rodier, K.C., counsel for the Quebec Labor Department told the court that Cooperberg had committed only a technical offence against the act. He failed to obtain necessary permits to allow these girls to work for less than the minimum scale. It was pointed out that Cooperberg could have merely pleaded guilty to. the infraction and escaped with a maximum fine of $50 and costs, Chief Judge Gustave Perrault complimented Cooperberg from the bench on his gesture. | Montreal.â€"Fat cheques were handâ€" ed recently to 27 girls in the employ of the Cooper Dress Company here because of failure of Morris Cooperâ€" berg, their employer, to comply with the Quebec Women‘s Minimum Wage Act, Charges against Cooperberg were dropped when the Quebec Labor Department announced receipt of an accepted cheque for $2,533.05 trom‘ Cooperberg covering minimum â€" wage discrepancies for the 27 girls over a‘ period of one year. 3ig Cheques Given Women and who, after cataracts had been removed, went home unaided. The gratitude of the patients is most touching, stated Mss MeConnell LC over Low Pay-â€"Charges; Against Montreal Employâ€" er Dropped. ’ shovels the Old. We must ydifty between the Mail Rates McConnell or The boy or girl who wants to be outdoors and dcar knows they should be much of the time will proâ€" bably rebel at first against finger craft. and viceâ€"versa. Yet if it can l Naturally when he is away from | chains it is right and proper that the 4 child be left largely to his own devâ€" | ices. If we are going to supervise his play as well as his obligations when will there be time for him to develâ€" op on his own account ‘ The idea is to suggest a hobby and then remove oneself apparently from the scene of action as far as his part ,in it is concerned. We can help with | a hobby but never boss it. HOBBY MUST INTEREST ’ At first he may rebel against the ‘stamp album or the camera and its _attendant laboratory work. Or she may resent collecting patches and working out the intricacies of a quilt. But once interest is cornered it does very well by itself. A mother will know the disposition of her offspring and this helps in introducing someâ€" thing suitable. By spare we mean "free" timeâ€" the hours not actually filled with school, practicing or home duties. If we don‘t help children to fill in their spare time they will fill it in for themselves. The truth is that a child won‘t have any «pare time if he can help it. % To keep the adolescent child hapâ€" py and busily interested in something is very helpful. Hobbies should be enâ€" couraged and shared. | _ There will be some trouble of course ’Time and again they will protest. Each day there will be a new probâ€" lem to face. You will have to be very cheerful, very sympathetic but firm, Social and sex facts should be told to girls by their mothers and to boys by their fathers, and warnings are necessary; but to harangue on the subject forever may set distrust or resontment and ir thai way lies danâ€" ger of another kind. WHAT PARENTS CAN Do It is not wise to immure a girl aâ€" way from boys too long. Such a plan has failed in too many ways. _ The ‘crowd" wellâ€"chosen and chaperoned, (yes, chaperoned) is the best answer, Plenty of parties in homes, mothers and fathers entering into the crowd spirit and learning to know the friend of these children. Parents have two jobs to do. One is to keep youth‘s faith in youth, the other is to be entirely aware of the company these children keep, where they are and how they spend their time. One thing that will spoil it comâ€" pletely for any girl is to tell her conâ€" stantly that boys are not to be trustâ€" ed. While it is true that some are not one of the finest persons in the world is this very youth who is so â€"cockâ€"sure of himself and who springs surprises on us every day by his vagaries and comedies. As far as that goes, we. could tell him that some girls are notl to be trusted either. Therefore we do not want them disâ€" illusioned or bitter. Nothing should spoil the emotional beauty of this time. can glow with rosy romance. _ Look back and sigh for those lovely lost years and then try to realize that your boy or girl is going through the same thing. % There is something to be said on both sides, but experienge inclines toâ€" ward the latter. A ROMANTIC PERIOD During the fourteenth and fifteenâ€" th years especially, and even the thirteenth and sixteenth, depending on the boy or girl and their adult: outlook, it is necessary for mother‘ and dad to exercise that eternal vigâ€" ilance which is the price of safety. This does not mean that our chilâ€" dren are not to be trusted, but they are likely to get confused. These are beautiful years when the world unâ€" folds its doors to a new fairy land. The flowers are of more bewitching beauty, the moon one long shudder of delight even a street car or a fence ' Moreover there is a difference of opinion about freedom during these years. We read one day that we keep our children babies too long and deâ€" prive them of responsibility at an age when they should be learning to stand on their own feet. The next day we hear some master mind declaâ€" ring that children during adolescence need m(ie protection than ever, beâ€" cause they have nc jndgment and may‘ pay too bitter a price for experience. And not only is the mother, but to the child, whether boy or girl. Also it is the most difficult for writers on thild trainig because each growing youngster now becomes an individual with a vengeance and no blanket rule of handling may be aprlied. ‘ Probably the most discouraging e poch in the life of the child to the moâ€" ther is the time of adotescence. But Don‘t "Boss" Himâ€"Encourage Him to Deâ€" velop Hobbies by Sharing Them with Him Adolescent Child Needs # Guidance From Parents The revolver is a weapon for which the average Canadian has no particular use, and the sooner it is outlawed altogether the safer it will be for merchants, bankers, and priiâ€" vate individuals. _ The revolver is playing a part in far too many crimes these days yet few things are more rare than reports that such weapors have done any good. â€"Lindâ€" sav Post. No longer wiit the card for the iceâ€" man to leave 25 or 50 pounds of ice be the only one Droppec in the front window, as cards have been distributâ€" ed for the use of the bouseholder or business firm, who will place it in a conspicuous place to nctify the letter carrier that «tamps are required. Calgary, Alta â€"The Calgary post office authorities have notified the citizens that in frtare postage stamps would be sold by the posimen on their beats, Cards Tell ‘Postie‘ Who Needs Stamps * Paris.â€"Schiaparelij devotees look ravishing on the beach with her new Rumba hats ‘The net sun veil which she attaches under the rolling brim 2t the back lends Andalusian allure, These hats form the high note of the whole costume, which consists merely of a pair of !‘nen tweed trousers or a kneeâ€"length jersey skirtâ€"of the windâ€" blown tunic variety â€" worn over l‘ plain knitted swim suit Schiaparâ€" elli as usual gives us some charming freshâ€"color combinations. The hat generally matches the maillot in color and the sur vei: affords a clear contrastâ€"white bat and maillot with a sapphireâ€"blue veil and a gay plaid skirt, or navy anrd whiteâ€"checked trousers, navy swim suit. navy hnl and a vivid rose veil. Schiaparelli Offers Rumba Hats see that the boy detendant/\_vo;xld be held in some proper place other than a penitentiary, Although sentence was pronounced the court granted a stay of execution to give the court time to decide what special provisions should be made for the boy‘s iaprisonment. The defence made no effort to preâ€" vent a conviction, and contented that its chief interest in the case was to "I expected to get punished," he said, following his conviction for the kidnaping of Baby Dorette Zeitlow, two and a half years old. He thanked "everybody _ eoncerned" _ for their "kindness" to him, and said: "I don‘t know why I did those things." "Those things" included luring the little girl with the promise of a nickel to an abandoned ice house, where he stripped her of her clothing and then abandoned her. She was found many hours later, weak, but still alive. She died later in a hospital, The crime was done last April. Chicago.â€"Pourteen Rogalski, believed to person ever convicte is resigned to a 101 prisonment, HMobhies stop the dawdling, timeâ€" wasting bored habit. They sharpen wits and ingenuity and promote amâ€" bition. They are good things for evâ€" erybody. We mention stamps and patches, but almost anything under the sun may be used. Carving or shipbuilding is good boys‘ play, making notves on the habits of birds in long walks, or kite flying. This is a real science. As far as girls go they are usually interested in the same things as their brothers only not at the same time. â€" PARENTAL COMRADESHIP If a father for instance feels that his child is getting away from him, has lost interest and comradeship, he could do nothing better than to go inâ€" to partnership in his son‘s new interâ€" est. For father and son to share an urge for stamps is a tremendous tie. They are boys together sharing triâ€" umphs or disappointments alike. A mother and daughter scavenging for bright silks for patches, getting their heads together over designs, thinkâ€" ing up new ideas with their woman‘s wit makes a fine hour for confidences ry to Find Proper Prison For 14â€"yearâ€"old Kidnapper This is the one great thing about a hobby. It doesn‘t greatly matter what it is, but it acts almost invaâ€" riably as an agent through which its rider may be reached. be managed this is often the very thing needed to balance his developâ€" ment. No use trying to force a hobby on a child it just won‘t work _ but sometimes it will be the means of put> ting over something the mother had faild in before, once he is interested. THE REVOLVER A Problem neved to be the youngest convicted of kindnapping, to a 10â€"year term of imâ€" ourteenâ€"yearâ€"old George s the maillot in vel: affords a clear * and maillot with i and a gay plaid :d _ whiteâ€"checked m suit. navy hat yond our dmn;;?h; maker, mile, to go beyond his and make it twain. Such would revolutionize home munity life, and brins a 1.. Such an idea} may seem a of perfection, but ‘at least make a start towards its ati by considering more highly i own the rights of our Joved o the futile effort to find tt which is halt way let us s the eager desire to go "the mile." ‘The Good Book says would compel us to go with | mile, 10 BOo DEVBnH ‘ Lin _ . If we could only learn to be more concerned about the other person‘s rights than about our own, what a wonderful world this would be. How hearts would sing with kappiness, how homes would glow with the spirit of love, and how nations would reâ€" joice in peace, If it is a question of "rights" oae usually suffers infinitely more, in the long run, by taking from one who loves us (or from any one, for that matter), more than by taking jess than our rights. Is it worth while, do you think to risk so wonderful a thing as happiness in the search for anything so small and unimportant when found*? Y et people constantly do it. "It‘s a ticklish place to F1d, my dear; a ticklish place to find. Half way! I‘d druther hunt for a needle in a haystack!" C "I‘ll go half wayâ€"not an inch more!" said a little new wife, 0: whom Ruth Fargo tells, and a wise old aunt replied : "I‘m willing to go half way!" It is usually said with a. pout, by the quarrelling child, the contentions adult or the young bride who means to have "her rights" in the domestic sphere, Mclntosh Mills Who wills the love of God know ‘ In terms of human kin Must seek that wondrous truth subâ€" lime In comradeship with men The mind that‘s swayed by noble thought Above the common clod, Has recognized the tie that binds And comprehends its God. â€"Written by Phil Leeder As science with her vast research The scroll of truth enrolls The vision of a broader life, The human mind beholds. A life enriched by common aim, Inspired by common good That finds the God of all mankind In human brotherhood. The mind of man is not supreme But subject to her laws. By deep research in Nature‘s ways We aid the human cause. The thunderbolts of ancient Jove So oft in anger durled Are used toâ€"day for industrial powe Or radioed around the world, ‘Thor‘s hammer strokes resound nc more Old Vulcan‘s forge is stilled Those ancient myths so powerful once Advancing tune hath killed That stern old dame whose child we are Is ever at the helm, The choicest wisdom sees and knows She is monarch in her reaim. The mountains trembled at His word The heaving waves grew still, The tempest and the earthquake‘s power Were creatures of His will The hammer strokes of ancient Tho The thunder bolts of Jove Were symbols of that unseen power Whom priests enthroned above, The God of light and truth and love Who serves all human need Is found revealed in daily life And not in cults and creeds. The prophet and the priest of old Enthroned their God on high, A being endowed with magic power Who dwelt beyond the sky. ['ro think in terms of fellowship, To serve no selfish end To ever keep before his mind His neighbor and his friend, Who keeps this simple rule of life Who this path hath trod, Will find his soul in fellowship And make his peace with God. Who seeks for God in cults and creed: His favour thus to gain And yet ignores his fellowmen Will make his quest in vain, Some wag has said "Man never is But always to be blessed." Discerning minds can pass this by, As philosophic jest. Despite the failures of the past In spite of all that‘s done ‘The student of collective thought Must regard the race as one, In spite of all the mists and fogs Of man‘s contentious strife To feed the fires of human hope Through a broadening view of life, The ageâ€"dong dream of social bliss . To be achieved by man Though long deferred has ever served The fires of hope to fan, To keep alive in human thought That glad and happy day When man to man shall brothers be And truth and peace hold sway, "C@ 000 _ his â€" eompuision it twain. Such a spirit utionizge ~home and .comâ€" and bring a happiness beâ€" Bit of Philosophy Half Way of our loved ones. For t ~to find tho place way let us substitute ‘ may seem a counsel but ‘at least we can owards its atiainment more highly than our go "the second ook says. if one go with bim one Globe Homeâ€" be more person‘s what a ¢.â€" How A g00o@ substiinte fe bumus ic ths form of i muck soil as common!y #ers. This has a siimula on the old grass, and p scellent seed bed when proper quality, the grass, bu* this mat very expensive, but gi wible for the avorage procure. This layer nees n« tion of an inch thic quarter of aa inch is one timeâ€"bai it shoi material, wuaich wil tain, and wil provid cew gras» seed as we the roots of the old g On goli courser, e: putting green, it is c & rich composted soil Topdre .] spread loamy s and work grass pla: rake or s eure an ¢ terial. "Yes, de say to hin Noticing th wrrived, the h medal for tact *You n ten slimy worst. Y A certain were seated their .club, like a shrew docile spouse Unnoticed by quNsintances a shot just as . this : A dear old : He knew w It was : Old Guz And he Was pla opdressing And Wrot (A1 Wi An H W W W It 01 W lNeve differs Th LeyI mina t ton m Ore T4 ericar his w asked rainbow eolors w} On a hug the sincle "In B ‘I'flly f braced a Ing a To iJs red a ishin Lawyer & fAnishe; Witnes: M M M y We Hear n Ha

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