West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 25 Oct 1934, p. 6

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F t.d . r ' : (i., I x.‘ l .A " my be some cont-elation to the people ot the Unned States to tell!“ that if their country had an [one at the gold standard, the Lind. burgh kidnapping light In" "min- " unsound. The moon wu paid in gold "rtnteates, called in by the trot-my but you, Ind it I'lI the nt- n, at this currency who: wanted! by the suspected kidnap”! that “It thou} his Brreat.--Brttehvttte THINK NOISE A VIRTUE. To some, indeed, noise In accepted an a virtue, as n sign the! we are " and coming, I hauling, hustling lot who are getting than done. Bo, year utter your, we so on linking lore noise. forever Wealth; and um; Intel-nu Cotttrimeqq of loud, until. the air, whether it be light or any, hideous with ttttntMt.-Hrttt"m Journal. young people wiped out by the World War, and in years to come Emma athletes will be I chullonxe to the athletes o! my other nation. - at. The luccesses of Great Britain in m the past year or two shows that a an generation has nrrlved to take the place or the generation ot young people wlped out by the World War, and in nus to rune Brill-h Melvin Bunion was sentenced " lndlinnpolls yesterday '0 nerve " yearn tor holding up a roadside tar. Pt'tt-tgttd he laughed. Why not? Al a contrast to the chap who drew " yclrs sud 10 luhes in Supreme Court at Sandwich the other day tor a almllnr crime. Melvin known the chum-ea are he’ll be liken to lone INC. homey place of eortihtetrtertt and gun a cell with futuristic rurnllure “a a Southern exposure, Just in line to Helen to the World's Series. _ Border Cities Star, The Township ot Scarboro In On. uric, with I population of 20,000, nu not had a cue of dipntheria tor a year. Thin Is the result of a ten. year program ot innocula'don in the schools and among children of In. ttmn school Me. ll not the lesson ottrious?--gatett John Telegraph- Journal. Messrs. Httll and Kent doubt " Mrs. June: Roosevelt, " wu then in the habit of reading to her lot: at the bra-Hut table and they hind. ly suggest that the President contus- ed Mr. Sinclair': "The Jungle" with Rudyard Kipling) "Junste Books," which In: In" mind for ruding‘ Iloud to ettildren.-St. Thomas Times.‘ Journal. Mr. Sinclair's book, “The Jungle," was not printed until 1906, when Mr. Roosevelt was 24 you- of age, had been out of Harvard two fall you: and was one year nun-led. A sedate book reviewer, Theodore Hall, of the Washington Poet and an Mart columnist, Frank It. Kent, ot t're Baltimore Sun, have an ucollent 1m: on President Roosevelt Waen liptoa Sinclair let! Hyde Purl utter his call with the President he quoted Mr. Roosevelt as saying: "Mr. Sinclntr, when t I'll young my mother used to read "The Jungle‘ aloud to no at breakfast. and it quite spoiled my pork chops." JEST ON PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT PIOPLI To COMI. It u inevitable that, with Cunar- Illllou ot urn of lot-"lo land nun 'rttettitivated, than wlll be, itt future you", an inmtx ot nnw population. That wlll only come when the an. employment crlnls bu puud Ind when urlculture his become more prosperous, Then the ottporttutities ot the country, mad the exp-anon whlch will be renewed, will slum-b in I normal way 1 considenble ftow of Immigration - Winnipest Free From. i What a shock we- the has or one hundred and thlrty-lonr live. In the burning of the Hume-New York liner, Morro Cutie. We venture to any that fully to men, lives are loll every month In "one accident. on our “this", but "an. about them bu become Inch 3 daily bob]! that they do not register I shock, unles- Iome relative or friends ehould be I "rtltrt.-9rtmer Expreu. PARDONABLE MERRIMENT. GIANT. To RURAL RAM. Certainly the rivalry that In crout- od by the“ 1.11 run an the Macs. tloul irttiuettee that they curt in unwitting the exhibitor. to mun the highest MIG degree of excel. lance more thin commute for any outlay tho provinclll government may ”not. RECOVERY " ALL-ROUND Full. 80,000 "arCii, Gila 'nflotr.--rumitton Spectator. cwu m CUttRttttCT, HIGHWAYS AND THE SEA In tbs r-t.--Bmattford It: OBVIOUQ LESSON TRAFFIC NOT! some reuon Sunday hale " ul an it kn taken Mam the Protector“. In 1922 Sulznn Fund prochlnod him-ell King. The Paris fortune teller wu right utter all. - London Duly Toucan. “V03 Then ceme the war. HU nephew, the Khedlve Abbas Hllml, we. de- throned. Prince Fued'n elder brother, Prince Huuein, beceme Sultan. Two you! Inter he died. Sultan Hululn'l eon renounced hie right. Prince Fund succeeded. When mum ehollehed true. A king wu wanted for Al. hula. Italy was ma to support his candidature. But 1 German prince In chosen. FORTUNE TELLER'S PROPHECL. When 3 fortune teller In Paris In- formed Prince Fund he would die n king he laughed. He was tar from the succeuion, Besides, Egypt had no king. In 1913 it looked for a mo. ment " it the prophecy might come true. A king wu unmm on- Ag l In particular he ndvocatea I good , finishing type of education for those l THE EMPIRE whose interest does not lie along academic lines. To this end. he sug- ', TRAGEDY OF YOUTH gests the development of i.itth forin Thirty-tour thousand more wa .classes of various kinds in public 19rnerg in Brltish homes today this schools to .provide o complete course a month ago. That is a good result.) of instruction, ending at et the A big achievement, Compared with at "t.tt 16; esublishmenf of inter- year Mo there are 376.000 more mediate schools, transferring of lower people " work and earnings Vases.‘ school work from the "eondarr . to It Ill shows Iteady progress. It only. the elementary schools, and establish. we could dam new. of dealing with, ment in the colleginte institutes of I the young people who come on my general course covering two yearif labor market we could make the In. work, provement far more pronounced, '-1j ----- London Daily Express. _ - --- TRAGEDY OF YOUTH. Thirty/our thousand more wage earners in British homes today than a month ago. The: is a good result. A big achievement. Compared with 3 year ago there are 376,000 more people " work and earnings wages. It on shows Iteady progress. It only we could dome means of dealing with the yum: people 'hn Mun: an ”-- The provincial highway debt ot Canada in 1933 was "38,000.00tt with annual charges ot 23% million dollars. Ontario led with $186,410,000 at " millions of interest on the average provincial rate of tire per cent. Que- bee coming next with $57,877,000 at 83,628,000 interest. Britisn Columbia was third with $40,441,000 and inter- est ot almost two millions-Dominion Bureau ot Statistics. l It wlll lie within natmnal parks throughout its entire length and, " cordlng to the engineer In charge, will not present any steep nudes, while the roudbed I: mostly being bowed out of solid roek.-Edtuotrtoit Journal. one ot the continent's great scenic highways. Vlsltorn to June:- Park who hare motored along the 34 completed miles of the mountain road that will event. unlly connect Jasper and Lake Louise, are agreed that It will prove to be um mm: mm Finally, it the Prince ot Wales had The ('anwiiuu Government has first a daughter and then a son, the t'0rttHltjted a sire/tl Vapor-light son would be the heir-pests-e-- vitamin-r or ilo,000 cubic ieet capacity] a position which Princess Elizabeth at the Port of London, England, for holds today.-The Spectator. inhaling chilled and frozen meat. The ---- chamber is the result of experiments BACON, EGGS AND MUSIC. conducted by the National Researchl Sir Henry Wood Invented the name Council ot Canada upon -,he defrost. ot Paul Klevonsky and published " in; ot frozen toodstuths and is oper.I own work under that name. He found ated by the Port ot London Authority. l, that the music of the foreign Klevon. It is deoigned to prevent the con.' shy made a tar bigger mice in Brit.. demotion of waterwapor trom the aid than the music ot the plain British outside atmosphere upon the pro- Wood. It is a national vice with us‘ ducts after removal from the ships' to pamper the foreign producer of holds. Thus, one ot the bugbears in!music, And that goes for beet, bacon the transportation ot tttmen and and eggs, too.-London Daily Express. chilled products has been removed.; ------ I Caaada Week by Week A most important advance has been made in the handling ot Camc dian chilled and frozen products transported by ship and rail. The bogey at Iain-van)" ruttdematstion has been laid. ’ Conditions in our largest cities are ‘bad enough but we do not believe that the picture ot the typlcai lamlly in my of them, it painted, would be nearly u drab us this. And the fu- ture is with Canadians, rather then with Amerlcans among whom the peek ot materiel development but probnbly been reached. - Quebec C'ltronlcle-'relegrtoh. l According to this announcement, ly/i; York's typical family consists Iof mother, father and one child, tw. ing in a tour-room apartment costing 833.21 a month in an apartment house built before my ot the three was born." Some 20 per cent. of the homes are considered crowded or overcrowded. But when bud times come, there in little doubt oboul the average Canadian being better " than the our.“ American. This Important he: is impressed upon us by an an- nouncement just made by Dr. Rob- inson Newcomb ot the United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com., merce otter study ot figures taken from a survey made last Spring by the New York Housing Authority. MIXING MAX WITH $0.3. One of tho but things published in I long the ”poured recently in n ‘Gennnn Nu! book on nntl-8emiuc l promnnde. It an: "While Lord Buverbrook cells him-elf I Claudia, he is n Hunnrun Jew, nn-cd Ralph D. Bituneaeid." Thu is almost enough to nuke the Beota, to say nothing of the people or New Brunlwlck'n North Shore, send out the fiery cross Ind rile In defence ot this 'eor. ot thel, 'riBm'e."-isturiehton Dally Gleaner.‘ INVESTMENT IN ROADS. DEFROSTING CHAMBER ROAD IN THE ROCK CANADIANS BETTER OFF, Some ot you young people any "I did my best," In I very meek voice, as though you were apologizing. When you can honestly say "I did my belt," however, you nre making us proud I boast u ever tell from human lips. Some one has said that only ten per cent of the energy stored in coal ll used when it ll burned In the turnnco; the not is wasted. Expert: estlmte that human enbrgy also, I largely dll- Ilpntod. Not even ten per cent or it ls utlllud. How ensy It is to say, "I'm doing the but I can." Some ot you young people than soy this It a tucker crltlclsu your work, or on employer finds fault. Well, iti"ruethatgou can do no more than your boot, but the point in that too few of you do TORONTO-The curriculum should bear a close relationship to the needs, lives and interests of the pupils out. side of school, says Dr. C. C. Goldring, superintendent of Toronto schools, in I report to the Board of Education. On a tour of his diocese in a small car he was prevented from crossing a.awcllen river. A lorry wls obtain- ed to take the party and ctr across. In order to get the car onto the lorry, some trees had to be felled. Dr. Burg- man, it is said, himself "swung the donglns" with the deftne" of a royal show woodchopper. SYDNEY, New South Wales-The Right Rev. Dr. Burgman, newly sp- pointed Anglican Bishop of Goul- burn, New South Wales, recently put his skill with the " to good use. BACON, EGGS AND MUSIC. Sir Henry Wood invented the name of Paul Kievonaky and published his own work under that name. He found that the music of the foreign Klevon- sky made a tar bigger noice in Brit- ain then the music ot the plain British Wood. It is a national vice with us to pamper the foreign producer of music. And that goes for beef. bacon and eggs, too.-tondon Daily Express. If a daughter should be born to the Prince of Wales she would take pre- cedence over any child, male or fe. male, of any of the Prince's brothers. So long as the Duke oi York's daughters survive they take preced- once over any son that may be born to Prince George. But if a son should be born to the Duke ot York he would take precedence over Princess Eliza. beth and her sister, THE ROYAL SUCCEBSION. The discussions to which Prince George's engagement have given rise regarding the succession to the throne have not always been based on knowl. edge. oNTATtit5 Scheme of Study bank, The greatest liner afloat, the gigantic Queen Mary slides own Scotland, before 250,000 spectators who braved pouring rain to Your Best TORONTO That's about all we an think of to any this week, except that The Continental should be Bit No. One This Winter, and so Beitth-Bo, until next Week. and} _tirst, trumpet wits some-tGi.' We don't believe that any of you who have heard Jack Dale will think that we are over enthusiastic when we say that he is the finest of the finest of the finest popular singers every produced in Canada. We under- stand he is a young Ukrainian from way out west, who had an op- portunity to study vocalism in Mont- real and, by Gad, if some blind sponsor (for they must all be blind and deaf here or otherwise how could they permit such atrocities of entertainment to represent them on the air) doesn't scoop him quickly, he will be leaving us for a radio field where talent is appreciated. Jack Platter’s band isn't half bad on that C.R.C. programme, but he sadly lacks a decent rhythm section D. must needs add another'. Mme to his lone list of reliefers. In the first place, Bob Crosby doesn't sound any more like Bing than Buddy Rogers does. In net, Bob Crosby's voice does resemble the former "Ameriea's, Sweetheart", and on top of that, if Bing’s young brother attempts to get dong solely on the merits of his voice, Funklin An of which prompts us to reiterate with more gusto than ever, that the pyblic isrnlways wrong. At one of our night spots around the town we overheard I young thing in this conversation: 8he---mtve you heard Bob Crosby? He-No, I Gven't. She-Well you can't tell his voice from Bing’s. He's marvellous. He-Yeh! Mte---And they said that he's try- ing so hard to get along on his! own name, and that he hopes people will listen to him just for his voice. But you really can’t tell him from Bing. Walter Winchell carried an inter- eating item the other day. He says, that when the show Mademoiselle Modiste was in rehearsal, the pro- ducers had planned us their big number, I burlesque on the type of music popular then. Fritzie Seheif iwas to clown her wny through a song written for the show by Victor Herbert. Opening night though, came her turn to do the bourlesque and instead of riotous laughter from the audience, cheers and encores greeted her number. The producers im- mediately chnnged the setting about the song and Fritzie Beheff has been singing it ever since. You've probnb- ly guessed the name of the song by now. Yes, it was "kiss Me Again". "Smoke gets in your Eyes" was one of them, and the "Toueh of your Hind" wu the second. Smart guys on Broadway. Well, we leave you to judge us to the possibilities of that condemned music. said. You know, the night the show opened in New York, the critics were unanimous in their praise for every- thing but the score. "Jerome Kern didn't do it this time", the msies It was rather odd, the big suc- cess they did make. We mean those tunes from the show "Roberta". “WINS-u By Jack Cooke les own the wnys in 1agnehing " Clyde- rain to see christening by British Queen. home. ‘Just uy that we met " I rodeo [dance In “Mlle, last year," In. ‘Mccmerty told '"""parrrmen. In. Mclefeny, then Mia Gates had liv- ed on . dude much no" Modal. Wye. tor 14 months prior to her du-r. Inco from there u month Mo. A search In which Federal department ot justice “an: Dunlap-ted was gutted utter the girl left the ranch And ruled to return to her urentn' ll _ -__ -. -_- “-v. a. nu- n:- Puroy, putor ot the Ito-cow lie. thodUt Episcopal Church. The blonde blue-eyed bride And her durk curly-haired husband provlously had said they met by maiden in Boise and hnd hitch-hiked to Moscow, the nest at the ante university, where they were mun-ted by the Rev. J. Ed. l The young couple left Boise "by train" using moey telegraphed to them by Thomas Gate: the president of the University of Pennsylvania, and a. former member of he firm ot J. P. Morgan and Company. Along with this revelation ot their immediate plans came an asaertlon from the newlywed: that their marri- age was the culmination ot a romance that hem with a meeting a year no.1 Virginia Gates McCafferty's Marriage Culmination of R0- mance Begun at Dance Boise, Idaho - Virginia Gates Me- Cafferty, 22, nee Virginia Gates. Phil- ndelphia heiress, who hitch-hiked her way into romance and marriage with Dan McCatterty, erstwhile boxer, and wrestler, mechanic and vegetable field worker. is “California bound") with her husband fortified with funds‘ supplied by her wealthy father. Heiress Met Her Husband Year Ago Mr. Frobisher told the C0tttrttiaitttt- era the ocean line would link up with the British airways ayatem with Ca. nadian and American systems. For the trtutstvtltuttie service, planes up. able ot carrying eight to ten passen- gers and with u speed ot 230 miles an hour would be used. [ St. John's. N. F. - A projected dai. ly transatlantic air service from the British Isles to Newfoundland has been outlined to the Newfoundland Commission Government by Mr. Ch”. Frobisher, representing Atlantic Air- ways. it was disclosed lest week. Mr. Frobisher seeks the right to use St. John's Harbor as a base for flying boats, l Dr. Buck Sars" that boy; are" bet- ter "strummers" than girls. "There is of course, no great virtue in extemporizing rubbish," snid Dr. Buck, "but there is I lot of fun, 1nd when you get fun into music you have (one tt long way." Daily Transatlantic Air Service Being Planned can sit down at I piano and impro- vise a tune has acquired more music- imship by doing it than he would have acquired by learning that Bach had 22 children. He decided unhesitatintrly in favor of strumming-even at the cost of quite heroic forbearance on the part of those who are forced to listen to it--beetuse, he said, the child who OXFORD-ro strum or not to strum? Dr. Percy Buck, King Ed-l ward Professor of Music at London: University, discussed this iluestion' when he spoke recently to members of the Oxford Course in Music, Training. Strumming' Upheld As Musicianship Aid By London Comm ... "The future' belongs to the mat 1 than of the 1ltiiled and the ttUF Ir iieir"cas"ieriiek-rihit"1' . "-i ' .. m "This is perhaps n world when everyone is wanted, but no one in wanted very mueh."--Dean Inge. l -----. l “In America by the time I crimiml come: to trial but the witneuen gamut him have dimspeaeed and be. itNutttt,siiii5iiriiiri7ll,t ing of old "cu-mm, L. Mencken. "Capitalism is not dead; but it In dirty. It needed a good wuhing."-.‘ Roger W. Babson. i _ "a“... , our economic order will be adjusted Along lines that will permit gain for the few."-; Sybil Thorndike. "We can have our choice between progress by education and prom by "stolutionary violenee.'c-rGr' Elmer Barnes. "It is one of the defects of the modern world that it provides more for plenum than for tteHitr.".- Beltnnd Russell. tongph or fungi on the inside of theI walls of a house, proving defective building, which had actually been used as legal evidence Another prov ed how useful photographs are in: ascertaining the suitability of a par- ticular cloth for a particular ".,,,._l pose, One of the exhibits showed tognph of fungi on the insid1 we!!! of a house, proving 6 The motto of the exhibition was "Photography Serves the Nation." Little known illustration: of the cImEn’s usefulness were, given, such " the reminder that every week low power photomicrogrnpha provide a record of the quality of the water in London's reservoirs, end that tho Building Research Department not the comers ta measure distribution of sunlight in rooms. l "The future' all work," the camera. shown it" tid recent London Exhibition of Modern Industrial Photpgnphy. L0NLON--Pim, revealed in "pip- less' onnges. "eueolo- problems solved, old Egyptian mnnuscriptl de- eiphered, forgery detected - those were among the illustrations of the handiwork of the modern "maid of “I think the time i Visitors to the municipal gallery ere naked to eo-operate by giving con- structive criticism and comment upon the lectures and by suggesting per- ticullr expect: of painting and sculpture which they would like ex- plained in lectures delivered in front of the original works. [ "It is of their work with great enthusiasm md are each finding out by experi- ment which put of the gallery they can deal with most effectively. So Gr, these lectures by specially qimlitteyr guides have proved success- ful. The guides. five of whom are al- ready qualified lecturers, are enter- his into training for this new section BIRMINGHAM, Entr.--Daily lee. ture, by uniformed guides Ire help- ine to popularize the art collection of tho Municipal Art Gallery here. The free-moving services, cost of, which are born by the Federal Ind Provincisl Governments, are making it possible for many farmers: 1ti:) their families to seek new locntionl| with renewed hope of auccees. Dryl trees where soil drifting has ruined; the farmers will be taken over by tho' Government Ind the soil built iii) A scheme to plant wide belts of trees] Icrou the country in included in the plans for restoring the arid districts. 1 Daily Mr. P. S. Grind-lo, Minister of Agriculture, explains that the re- settlement is being made only in areas already settled and only on improved farms that have become vxcant. There are buildings on all of the farms listed by the depart- ment. 1 Some diiBeulty is bring "trerierteed in finding auiuble locations for so many families. A list of available plus. in tho north and near north ha been prepared by the Govern- ment, and his been given to appli- cnnts to facilitate them in making I choice. In some cases intending set-1 tlertr are trunking personal iiGUGi/ ine inspection trips into the urea: where farms are to be had. i the northern section: of the Prov- ince. Already " eertiiteateg In” been hailed to funnies ready to mow by the agricultural department, And upwards of 400 families are pup»- ine to trek either this winter or only in the spring. 1 For Fertile Fm EDMONTON. Alta.--A start bu been made in the exodus of hundred. of "miliea from the drought-ridden In“ in southern Alberta to more fertile districts Ind farm lands in MP“. ScutTrokToNodll So They Say Art Gallery Visitors 'Maid of All Work' in coming when . ---- “nu-er Ml . __ . ' l . . " . 1mrtieular pur- 'tt,7'gttiuei' 'r, at; The eldest of the tow ---- ticial penance, "the m1 ysay prince, Bernard, Duke This young men II the - and earl or Buglend, end Ieteet.s of the she! end heredlury mu ', provides P,','"' ‘ ler ot Euhnd ll one of for tuttdtr. - people permitted to rem: . heads covered in the 3m choico hor--., 'IKine. will not mt- a not "mule-.4 Gi/ a . .. (lg-mum of “M , . _. , He inherited an estate worth rough. ly 325,000,000 hu 50,000 more: of lllld, (our country "an, 1 racing stable a mum town house, gold and silver plate welding a ton And a La". and Annual, I cutie that yield: Nice to the hon! cutie of Windsor none. The Duke of Northurntrerund inher- ited 812,000,000 from hit father. He llves um, neatly in India, :hootiu N; can. Although he owns palatal homes in his“, ecu nine: in Nor, 1ttunstrerund Ind Ala-Sch cutie on the Emma]; bolder. n his- toric (omen with u temntry of " 000. I London, _ An Iter the Brill-h I itreesedittms. y1 ldukel to m. a _ Roxburghe, I ,_e_ w um u. They ere the duke- ot Roxburche, Norfolk, Nurthumber. land and Gratum. Reusing In use trom 20 to I. you. they are with except- tion of the Prince of Wale. himself the mo“ eligible bachelors in the country. Elebonte celebration. hue Just marked the coming of use of the Duke ot Roxburrhe who has inherited 69,000 acres, A couple ot cutle- and I m-naln- _-- - . . “.000 acres, 5 I mansion in House Termee, mother, the to A girl In . Hurt a. Gain: yoirie'if tttet mum ot one Moles, fie. l: Four Wealthy Eligibles-.o Young and Fancy Free 9. Before plain; fun behind I parked car much for the street tref- fir, 7. Always, stop and pissing alloy: and sung before crossing a street stepping off I am: cm- 10. Kain In line ad, you are there 1. room to pus the a: a and remember to practise Care, I tony and Common Sense. To Mauritius: 1. Watch your “on, 7. Do your slowing down It In In- tmseetion. Be prepared to stop. 8. Back up n ma. u poutblv_ but It you mun back mud your horn tfrat end then watch with great care where you are going. lube sure that there is nobody In the way behind you Always notch out carefully for chil- dren. Keep your eye than on them as you moot tell what they may do when .thtr are near your roadway. I ing serious concern to may omni- I rations. J. F. K. Wyn, general nu- uer of the clinic sum Dengue, [he]. an the citation in no lei-ion that exceptions! cure on the part of {drivers Ind pedestrians in. become A My and accordingly he inn Harem the following him- tor both clun- which are won worthy ot cue- I in! attention: l To motor vehicle drivers - I 1 When starting out check the con- dition of tires, mirror, Makes horn, I lights and windshield Witter Make I this I habit. 6 Between spud and surety choose lately every time. 5 Never pun manor wank-Io on a blind curve or approaching the crest of a hill and especially ttot u n in- tertteetiott. 8. Even it you hare the right of wuy give the other driver lots or room at interseetioeta. He only need It, 4. Watch tor light and nigrtala Ind obey them. t. Report and have fitted any mech- attieat trouble. Do not drive with I nuke-hm repalr. With more ”(or "we!" on the roads than there were a yur Mo, detail from motor eccldenu In Ont- Brio Ire upon the Increase and during August they resulted in the loss of " lives, 3 circumstance the! 1. av- British Dukes tt, _ Any gtrl “WHO; to en British poem no. ttaa ow "'“u'l on I tombstone " churchyard at Bonnoet' tum. . ' '. the 'toe. all": Gardner, t Mtarrir I; at. punt: m. "I "atttonaue Carlton ee, Lrndon. From his former May Godot of " he will inherit . for d a “300.000 netd m en tea,Ci,' Iell' constantly Iain-1 oncoming motor we. It We wim'their tho presence or the For Motorists (our dukes In op , - Illustriou- he ot Norfolk" the premier duke , Rttd as earl In“- “WM-l sad but- on: the u: ahead the very few ‘md look before and Beige cowl-o wealthy The: "(i Comu sure During the month a net collections were tlt min“ "0,6ti6,448 coll tuber In! year. an “.4“. Receipts f and excise duties more: tiattv. erase. " for the $851,668. National Re Up St M what u “I A lt ll then wink} Jun Ichoc today term: I. ‘he .01 " And m ll " nq Mr Heard il and You

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