West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 10 Jan 1935, p. 6

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y l &1 T td e 9 THE DROUGHT AREA, t It is true that governments are â€"«â€"»»â€"~â€"â€" pending a lot of money on rellef to western farmers and on transporting _ animals to regions where fodder and . ., . ;. pasturage age more abundant; it is true also that private charity is *‘‘~*showing itself very generous toward m* w the victims of the drouth, distributâ€" dxpte o8 0 ind 6 t '.“ ‘ A .;‘, bas X "’.l:_tl C3 â€" «ht wht zid i% ’:b’ w W hi is 0 W The suggestion that floodlights be â€"â€"â€"placed at some of the more danger. ous curves on Western Ontario rogdâ€" ~ways has merit. With the majority of main bighways in this section of the , province served by a network of ~ Hydro \ines, it has been â€"pointed out "by sevr‘al ifiterected organizations *#that â€"the cost:. of putting .up.two or * three.lisghts at bad curves would not ~obe syeat. The idea is a good one in . ;that the cost is negligible and _ it .. might be the means ‘of pi‘e’vtntlnj a _ great _ many *Aectidents.: â€"> Guelph "" Mecury; +A THOUGHT ON HOCKEY. In a fast game like hockey there are bound to be hard knocks, but when players deliberately go in for this sort of thing, they are just fools. Neighborhood hoodlum tactics, and deliberate assaults with sticks, should not be tolerated, and the men who perpetrate them on the ice ,show themselves to be utterly childish in spite of their awbility to give it and been injured in the hunting field and removed part of Nis brain, Several yoars later they met at a party, and the surgeon _ avoided his former patient. "You don‘t seem to remember me?*‘ said the officer, Bir Frederick Treaves explained that he did, but in view of the operation was . alraid to meet him. "That‘s nothing," said the officer, "I am now head of the Intelligence Departâ€" ment."â€"Ban®f.hire Journal, Sir James told a story of the late Sir Frederick Treves, who, he said, ©perated om an army officer who had BRAIN SURGERY. There was â€" celebrated in London last week, by the traditional Engâ€" lish method of a dinner, the jublle® of the first operation for the remov. al of a tumor from the brain, which was performed on November 25, 1884, by> Sir John Rickman Godlee, Lord Horder presided, and among those present was Sir James Crich tonâ€"Browne. who is the sole survivâ€" or of those concerned in the opera. tion, and who was 94 years of age last week. bottles in the medicine chest, avoidâ€" ing the‘use ~of ‘stairways as the resting place of parcels and papers, kav‘cg revolvers to policemen â€"in other words, by exercke of simple commen sense. â€" Kingston Whig. Standard.. . "â€"â€"~~ _ MHOME ACCIDENTS. The majority of accidents in the home are preventable, They result from falls, poison, loading guns, cuts, burns, escaping gas and so on. They aAn. bel‘prevented by such measures as standing on step.ladders instead of Htkoty‘ chairs, clearly _ labelling * â€" _ 100,000,000 $HEEP Australia . in â€" the . comparatively near future is expectéd to carry 50 million more sheep witiout being pwerstocked. Recent experiments in districts prepared with‘ new grasses resulted not only in decreasing dhesp parasites, _ but in _ incréacing. the weight of wook per sheep . as well. Australia now carriges approximately 100 million sheep, each produmng 8 to 9 pounds of wool a year. ~â€"Branâ€" der HOW INDEED! 1 Sume people thln?. that th6 blow. Ing of factoty. whisties should! be ab olished. But if thete were no Sactory whistles® how would we keep> the clocks straight? â€"â€" Brockville Recor. it.â€"St. Thomas Times.Journal. FLOODLIGHTS AT CURVES DAVID COPPERFIELD STREAMLINED TRAINS FOR BRITAIN? In an experimental journey under ordinary conditions a steam train covered over 370 miles at an average FLYING The unusual is news, When an air. plane accident occurs, the report is flashed throughout the world with all the distressing detawils; the fact that every day thousands of planes are performing their routine duties withâ€" out mishap is ignored, while the public imagination fastens on the new tragedies as confirmation of a false impression that one is playing with death on leaving "terra firma," â€"Hamilton Spectator, ° It used to be that it took three genâ€" erations from shirt sleeves to shirt aleeves. But we lveâ€"in a speedier age. It is possible now to make the whole tour in one generation. UPS AND DoOWNs There are seven exâ€"millionaires on the Los Angeles County â€"poor farm. EARLY DAY RELICS The automobile is so all present that it is difficult for our children to visualize a time . when all traffic either was on foot, hoseback or be. hind horses. Earlier days and their manners and imploments almost are forgotten, and probably it would be dificult to gather together a complete set of the implements and the relics of ploneer days. We forget so quickâ€" ly that one can scarcely remember what the first motor cars looked like, Yet the early days should not be forgotten and it would be a good* thing it it were possible to provide a place where such relics of our ear. lier history ~migit be viewed.â€"-Nlâ€"‘ agara Falls Review, . ’ WAWA LAKE T _ The original name of Wawa Lake in Michipicoten was spelled Wawaâ€" gomk or Wawamagonk. The last.part of these old names is‘ the @dverb of location, and thus signifies that,. . it, was a specific nameâ€"for the lake â€" "Good Lake There," as . outsiders would call it. Residents would se the ending "ing"â€" hore,â€"Sault Ste. Marie Siar, ' _ THE TOT OFâ€"RUM,~« . ., { .. The daily grog to naval, men aflioat | dates from the days of "the wooden, }yalls of EngJand." Ships made 16ng" voyages and took a long time to tiake them. "having only sails, "The! crews had‘to live on "salt junk"»and there was no fresh meat or fresh vegetables." ‘The art of canning bad not even been thought ‘of, Neither . did.the medical service know anyâ€" thing about vitamins. The result of the lack of fresh food was that sail‘ ors developed scuryy. Then some body found that scurvyy could be~ thwarted by daily administrationg of, rum, or by lemon juice.â€"St. Thomas, Timesâ€"Journal. T "E.",D'c.s:ufi.:u a38q Most ofâ€"us, ofâ€"éonrse, have‘quirks and prejudices. Folks aresinfinenced to ‘read the. things that feed their prejudi¢es <or. viewpoints. A man who believes in a new papk(qilgnx-y‘s- tem usually reads everything he cin‘ find to support his views, ‘If it is‘ suggested to dim that be ofght" tw‘ read â€"something ‘on ‘the othet‘side he refersâ€". to it as ."propaganda" ~aud. passes it up. Quite.often this is .true of the other type of man ..who ,, is afraid of a new idea He keeps away from speakers and books tJl'u?. might be upsetting to what ‘he belisres is a ‘sound view of the questfon.â€"+Reâ€" gima Leader.Post. "~‘ \C 84 0 td jogy inz food "clothing and ‘so onl ‘"But nothing is being done to theâ€"landâ€"dtâ€" self, . And this must beâ€"attended to, or else the. desert will remain des. ert forever,.. From this point of yiew the que tion is a truly national one. â€"The La Presse, go'x_itrel'i. § H4alt THE EMPIRE P Curd The nextday Peggotty takes David toher brother‘s boathouse at Yarmouth for a short visit. There he meets Uncle Dan, Ham and Little Em‘ly. He loves the little fishing villaie with the proud cailing vessels in the harbor, but he is soon glad to be journeying home again to his mother. The i IN EGYPT ALSO;,~ The memory is still fresh of the heroic students who.started business with barrows of cooked beans rathep than wait for. jobs that were invisible.. THE MAKING oF PaciFists Ernst Toller has said that he be. came a pacifist after listening to the piteous cries of a soldier who took three days to die on the barbed wire, Anniversaries such as that of Armis. tice should make pacifists less painâ€" fullyâ€"Trinidad Guardian. The choice of Polyphemus for one of our big cruisers now building is criticized in ‘the service as inapt. Al though the name is not without its traditions, the last vessel to bear it was a torpedo . ram of doubtful utility which saw no actie service, â€"London Daily Telegraph. ’ Contrary to the Gerrhan practice, only four battleships in the British fleet commemorate famous admirals. These are Nelson, Rodney, Barham and Hood. In preâ€"war days, however two large groups of captal ships bore such names exclusively, Cradock and Arbuthnot <were two of the ‘fighting seamen of the Great <Wair whose names the Navy would like to see bestowed on future ships. A _member of " Parliament â€"who brings in the same"bill session ‘af. ter secgion‘ is sometimes misunder stood: ~ There «was »the//old! member who, after. many. . vain attempts . to have the cleaning of, windows from the outside made illegal, at last inâ€" ducd a sympathetic Home Secretary to issue a. departmental order to that effect, and was congratulated on the success of hisâ€"persistent effort to make window. cleaning. safer for the cleaners. .‘No, no, safer for my. self," said the member,, "When walk. ing the streets I used to be afraid that a window cleaner might fall on me.â€"Aberdeenshire ‘Mail® / \ ‘at «10 â€"6‘clack.And after 10 o conld. mot. keep awake .in.theâ€"House,;: with results which were,sometimes, rather ludicrous, ,, A Mr, Bouverie, sqt.up one, night after 10 to ‘deliver a tremenâ€" dous ‘attack ‘on Mill ‘and asked him‘ ‘a number of Thetorical questions. The‘ House between‘laughter and curiosâ€" ‘ ity! watched (MHIl .ashig chead jark= ed upâ€"and .doivn in â€"sleep, sometimes apparenily. about..to.. wake and then fading into, slgep,,agatn‘-y.\lanohestgr Guard!an, n extreme case of sleeping durâ€" i'n?'spzé&gd'fiqma; of Jégnj Stuart‘ Mill, who Cifme rathér laté ‘itito the Commens‘after‘‘sz Mfé® in which "he‘ had "been‘ accubtomed "to ‘go ‘to. bed: ot 124 " m.iph. PThis 4s ‘a notéworthy feat but it does not prové the stoam» traih 'to,)eerequ:luorlnupevimx-zo‘ the stream,lined oilâ€"driven.type:â€"London, Daily, MAK. 1) 41 vstmuila‘t o w NAMES FOR BATTLESHIPS ./ FrolicKing chiff®en 'mt&ifii:' merfy ) England. ~A eontinuou$‘and heavy ‘rdirl Anterfered) with travel sanit transportation . Ardvantage of . the situation. ‘,, _ ... ;« ; SLEPT THRQUVGH 17 "‘HI9 rREaASoN Weekly Serial Onige MFSG | giof of sleeping durâ€". a strange TORONTO Children Find Cloy@‘ __th ThIT makirig meriy in‘ the"ft6bdéed "maili‘stÂ¥eet»Bf "Iste® 6f. Brewstor,° Somerset, d &:éavy ‘Thitl ""labtin@‘¥8 »(veverat<lay$} played havoe with roads and senotusly transportation.t Wh@niss mmp.shone again these children were quick to, take . Ak $199 U |© 1010 T n« norg>r d antrailuot‘® ut I w4 ws that Mr. Murdstone is Aaw hi. 157 "6"°.°18° N0OTrOr, The Murdstones dismiss Peggottz an that Mr. Murdstone is now his ste!rfathu. Anew tearfully bids her farewell, sure he w existence begins for him. "The Black Panther" see her agin. Thenâ€"Mr. Murdstone, thr and his sister Jane are cruel and merciless Mr,., David with the cane, tei him he is a wi Murdstone is harsh to Mrs. Copperfield and *eats and is bei:f sent to London to workr% David for the slightest reason. A Zear. later little David fare in the great city? â€" David‘s mother dies., . â€"â€" . s k t se e e in n n w K J The lira is on the gold standard and will remain so, said I1 Duce‘s organ.. "The drastic measure taken at. the last Council of Ministers is more eloquent than.any discord could be on government policies" is its statement. This referred to the measure making the Government ow erseér and controller of every cent of Italian money invested abroad. A rumored. tax â€" on . coupons for consolidated bonds and other :emisâ€" sions is "grotesque, because the bond conversion last February brought a 30 per cent reduction in the income of bondholders." A rumored further per cent cut in government salaries, it Said, is untrue because ""at the present time costs of living are going up." MILAN, Italy. â€"â€" Itaiy‘s liva is on the gold standard to stay and perâ€" sons who promote rumors to the conâ€" trary will be punished severely, Preâ€" mier Benito Mussolini‘s newspaper, Il _ Popolo d‘Italia, assured, the naâ€" tion last week. This, proposed extension of. the dole system to land workers will require parliamentary approval to make it effective. _‘ Weekly contributions probably will be the equivalent of six cents‘ each for workers and employers and 12 cents ‘by the government, for workers over 21 it is expected the‘ Benefit will be about $3 weekly with.an exâ€" tra 50 cents for wife and child; . italy Will Remain The | statutory© committee ~which: investigated the whole question has now . recommended inclusion ‘of perâ€" sons, employed .on the land, whether, in straight farming or horticulture. London, â€"â€" ;Wide extension of the British. dole system is contemplated. Seven hundred and fifty thousand landâ€"workers who hitherto have been exeluded from ‘unemployment inâ€" surance are ‘expected : shortly to be ~brought within its scope. # l anvikanmants "aaRA" MUHMNA .A N"”";}'fi .,flr!VAF.‘?.'}m.e},lp,. and &?E}}fl- of . theit styrdier ‘forefdthers.‘"" * e:x;.}:péal of the s'fx‘éfxuoufi"inc"s‘lmme"l 6"is re. céedifig with ‘the yeats, and ‘déo#sequent dissatisfactionâ€"‘with the «present is: increasing.. Egyptians are«<~loth to take,, their,,..life.battleg, into .. other climes, with ,the, result that this alâ€" ready closely ,pgcl_xgg_' yalley.is, , near burstingâ€"point. "‘There is a ’reti:ed;"," but" 1t "has "bedn "d@dferted BY"thrée successive‘‘Cabthets. =="Phe Sphinx, Cairo," noty‘P. 4 h I '!“fig Jfiéfib?&yed“'m "bt ‘educated â€"roun $ #men‘ib‘ rapi@lt. indreasing.) The schoolg ane. grindimg):them out‘ like ifinighed articles;rtrom a. {gotoryt» The youngsters,are, gelting jdeas of, high .er gradee,0f, living .than the humble Plan Extension Of .. 408. ds 4 4, 3%] On Gold Standard MABHMUK] 4Hâ€" ilkaks w po ;A ier®) Miks Dole System "_/~" westering field! PeC â€"Alanâ€"Creighton in "Poetry * e t 2 C e e \ thrill , a% ;~!f They come and> go from in and. out of gloom Beside cool pastures gossamered with bloom, They chave forgotten kitchen work and plon‘h, ¢ For, springing night fires burn within them now _‘ To forge from out two hearts a glowing shield, a While® sundown giants tramn â€" the ked the day With plod ‘of heavy 1i less clayâ€" And there are dance * _ streesâ€"are still. With. pliant wreathing afternoon _ Is glittering upon Now laugh and i Where only Below a lop of furrows, widely With shadow lengtas, the cle: "To. those, whose interests a closely connected with geaâ€"born traffic,‘ said the railway presiden "the magnitude"of this latest unde taking=of the Halifax Harbor Co t mission : is particularly impressive, The courage, and foresight display ed in the .addition of 2500 feet of deepâ€"water berths to the already exâ€" cellent facilities possessed by the maritime port is constructive opâ€" timism that should do its part in justifying the growing feeling that conditions are: improving." Anew " *HALMFAX, °N. S.‘â€"‘ The formal opening of Pier B is looked upon as another evidence of the everâ€"grow> ing importnace of Halifax as an ‘out standing port, declared E. W. Beatty, president . of the _ Canadian . Pacific Railway. s "To those â€" whaen‘ â€" inkumants â€" mul iNCKVIS@ES C us uiinuye 4 $ ’ It is an easy step from disheliev< ing and being repelled by certain ad< ‘\-egtisemgn,t's to becoming s,lgepticaj of" @11 advertisements, he‘ warned ‘Dépretating‘ ‘ the ‘¢leverness "‘that wrenches and‘ twists Eriglish to conâ€" ‘trive mew words. ~Mr. ‘Nelson urged his listeners to realize that the «dicâ€" tionary has sufficient vehicles of exâ€" pression,,,to... define ; any . meaning desirable for public use. . , R 6 mods nitd .‘_â€""»â€"4 F Dasi) F6 .~ AQRONTO®*â€"â€" Madérn: trendy, in ‘ a'dw}'grtising nq& descent to terms and "phrases"that ‘are ‘dOffensive were‘ deâ€" ploréd ‘by ‘John Nélson, presiderit‘ of Rotary Intérnational} in"&a recent add "dress‘â€"here at ‘the annual:â€" convéntion of» the Association of Ganadian Adâ€" NOKISQKB® \mal uninuys i & New Haiifax Pier Deplores© Toâ€"Day‘s ‘Trend uooo = 0 si~Of Advertising i1 shnadow lengths, the clear latq‘- afternoon ‘ $ littering upon the country‘ fair, ‘ laugh and jiggling music swim , the airâ€" 8 N ‘Te. only soilâ€"faced trudging marâ€" d U TS & 0C s# Country Fair Proof of Recavery dapcen while limb, like pulseâ€" and a flurri tramp â€" the World" strewn Eighteen of the boys have banided together and organized u:e!r own do. mesti¢ "Sétente css Tn" competition sooWn 4A c ccl s ‘"Well, : eve 'yu n nice flufl; fiiez‘tyfloflumlfi cake, creamed peas andâ€"Oh, spinach," _ _ Wrhaeeling, W. Va.â€"When the boys in Wheeling High School go home to mother they may say: ‘"Well, | w nhavgs nice fluflt Jihez‘tyfloflug‘vfil I{o with the girls 15 Philadelphia Lawyers PHILADELPHIA. _~â€" â€"~Lee Kumâ€" evidently hadn‘t heard of the proâ€" verbial sagacity of the "Philadelphia lawyer," . The sauve gentleman swifldletl‘ at least 10 of that profession‘ out" of $50 each, Dgtect'ge-Serguntthcglb W gaid, telling) them he needed an “advnnce,"’ to u’dw; him ovâ€" er until a $200,000 draft arrived from,; his father, supposed, rich merâ€" chant in the Orient They‘ll Make Good LITE PFEHY C Pm PRTUITTTT 1 PP aas bstaidis c ili s â€" novelist, at a lecture at ‘Bedford Col. ~~‘°8%° &And Plentyâ€"184¢," lego for Women, . .»~ dik. Y s , Conflict Was Lackng To begin with, the lecturer saiq,|,. P°2Gé and Plenty, M women must trust themselves, and | _ !t W388 & hundred.acro farm wi must rely upon that trust rather than | 2° O# 0r ©oal or gas Sstations, or ev. vupon an external self.assertiveness,| & I4TY berd, Justâ€"a farm, The c)j which t:hey do not Ndm: lhe'1m,“'n up with tdfi most w \lhlt-l" must cultivate an objective view of | USPOSition® There were no contfli¢ life; stop being,persopey; stop gve ‘t T" ;r{th 2Â¥ _( deringamt&q‘thoy) r getmI:l;. t red, too ‘mtluch to ¢ fair deal; stop ‘ being unduty conâ€"|*°@4*With? TodLy‘s children ar, “'3 scious of the fact.thit they are wom. ) °U6 PArticularly the city children Chinaman Gyps Smart Londonâ€"Propogdls, for @vercomng prejudices against women in the laâ€" bor market have been given here by Miss V. Sackville West : wellâ€"known novelist, at a lecture at Bedford Colâ€" lege for Women. . ~ ; mioonk ryinuine would advise other women ‘to m‘rr'y even if they could not get along The,. majority . of the, married womer . With " fobd Ugtoed " tnkd" Eney partly throughA the natural desire of husbands to take entirely upon themselves© the task: of supporting theig , families. & 4 EGr‘R 3 Worman Told Methods Of Ending Handicaps Worki M closed, bands, s h« to greater ambition believed ~thatâ€"their~ jobs* made them more stimulating â€" companions. for their husbands. w x ‘ to greater ambition, par% through the ex-dm.{amnu vest gnd partly through the natural desire of pier wivey, if, they . ,.{flfl,.m; be j'udge‘d ‘ny slafls&cs‘ 'g?t?.er at Coâ€" lumbia University and made public last weeky Of 632 women yepresentâ€" ini}G kilt;s, Juhose dpjnion rls askef most said that outside work gave them.an. outlet.for energy and selfâ€" expression and brought ;;Iénsant outâ€" side contacts. Half the women also New Yorls=Married women * who havéciontside*jobswand ‘stil ‘do‘all their household duties makethe hap= Originally,.the publishers intended to sell the edition u&l.guiufia. F Jt was t was, the that ia%wmfimt};be*‘ior ;l%lch :?;; luxe edition _ But later it was déâ€" cided %to uge â€"thp full) resources »of the. press, im stheâ€"«helief that»«Bhakes« pearg.. will,; again. ;prove . bis ,.popuâ€" l'nt}f' to howalls gevaget® OBb€! .Of Married Women Worl:er}s ~ _..__ """"Afe The Happiest pages. The type was chosen by Mr. Bernard Newdigge P itagn‘ foremost typefipiisr"%xm 't?sl ’ woodout. frontpiececandva series «of. heraldic designs, drawn., by &wo«wellâ€" known illustrators. @ is beings sold ds 68. y been ;pla i R ookselâ€" Nee figtf |Jube) Bin) "Ye: ottes ee (hige! { Jube) Bdiga)" Yor o ge LQNDONâ€" eis now ve s beder hat Schoiend NO" Count on And ‘the »price it© which »the * book Wives For o To Proye Bext GeUét; e . ho soply; eff fPemConflict m likke o A Home l.;:ex‘ \fig&.&&d‘ Mike / A -dhoicc [ PUDWTT FoOOC, A2°° CHRS h‘ ren, up wit®‘h the most wonderfu '»dllpoflthl. There were no (~0u2’11¢> to w th Out. ¢ $ )1‘!‘{3 l;;;ed;too much to c@nâ€" end*with? Todks‘s children are w n " | out, particularly the city chitdren,‘ " |_ _ Two truths." I think, should be borne in in the parents of little jari. see:1 to me to be fundaâ€" mental to redi happiness. One is a quiet household. _ The "Gther regular routine in which each Womnn L.w . eedloaeoy tA 180Â¥ ibarrister will _ We should make a choice for our way of life an)l then stick to it with. out grieving. There are always some ahead of usâ€"there always will he. Jealousy and Latred quickly ruin ans disposition, ~Opnflict Andermines the temper, and patience, f Home should be a peaceful place and the IMINIY HBHL eumual . Ceylon‘s First One is a yuiet household. _ The other regular routine in which each one know;, each day just about what Thé hour _ will bring, time for duty and time for nlay, Not too much out. side world intprfering. Not too many ghofces to maze, or nnuro be fliâ€" led. [‘o‘â€"..‘,-‘:d'. y §3 w J iN EL AVCRAETTS. "unf. \_Yet they were content. | | »@nie nnomv-nm.' ‘shy *Fet." It was | because of it all they were comlent, i think. And they did not deteriorate or become sodden and ccoarse, W} @n 4§-bsccd.$in'mhenmm.m 1 think of my greatâ€"grandmother PH ‘eighty in‘ a lonely brick farmhouge miles ‘from‘ ln,Vw“H"v, dreésgod each "dty after lunch, regu‘ar‘y, in slate gray silk, black lace cap and lace ap.. ron. Her, daughgersy dre:ged .foo. . i lluve the woven coverlet still, a beanâ€" ty,. made.by her as a young mother in which is woven "Salina Gille and P uids tm lhe dheb . litÂ¥epyat ; $i¥€ cand wak No, it was not all potato peeling «and~cburning and â€"feeding thrashers. There was time for relaxing in spite of all opinion to the codtary...Time "Tor reading too."""" * Hemersemeel It‘s too bad that our young mothers joday cquld not have hadga peep into m e m homes. . Nfifi&t n rm is not ‘alll A ul, but the point is epgu| JÂ¥4 onl aw@k itself, ’w’;'y to tgl'v'el. to absorb, to be et tained through the air to get sorts ,of »bright magazines, ‘or m; ort‘i"or‘serwicovtq make shopping ea Achildren out, writes Oljve , Roberts Barton. The everlasting war between {what we want and what we®» have, choosing between two, dwlles having to.wear down an urge to be one thing anotherâ€"all mesmzy‘ :une! while life points 1 inger at anotherâ€"all these fights with ‘ourselves are ruinous. ‘~‘We say wey wopt) go :Jbagk o the farms our grandparents lived on or the slavish work ‘m&g We | women wouldn‘t daily tine that bent sh ers, twisted lmdl and m«bfli '\ih(gny long before its day. quiet and peaceful, but the that those people of Jong ?.'n'i dfd Ang Mrknun;fl , . Buit I had a lot ocmw E?tlves and as I look back i 18 days, one tKing registers in memory, The ‘tHimness of their t4iu the quiet peace of their ¢yes their good humour. And I ren,enF tatting and knitting too, balls of pewed rags for rugs, and neighbors driving in for & aConflicts wear us figr Our:Way Of Life And Thin Stick To It Without Grieving t ol #1 F®FaAal until supreme, Eesd any daily t sh ers isted te’fli %th?gny ay, f o(m tives k i wm«;m. irs in memory, The r te&u}u the quiet yes their good me tatting and Wt itself, rb, to be etor. ir to get ines, ‘or m shopping easy, at, ‘ *VÂ¥et." ‘It was vere. comient, i 0t deteriorate ccarse, WJ Efefrtemiont, 1 andmather ‘x ck farmbhouge dresgd eadh ary, in slate p and lace ap. are wotn They wear buth, aid, nen h n The International Wheat ence meeting in Budapest mended Australia‘s quota be ed to 100,000,000 bushels, Whtent between the major expor countries is reached. ‘The re« mendation was made subject to «tipulation that Argentina abide its quota. CANBERRA, Australia. â€" Australian Wheat Advisory Cor recommended recently that Aust mrecept an export quota of 120, 900 bushels if a new wheat a; the dept the Australia Willing To Cut Wheat Q ing l‘l”l dept th m‘ 7% m 1 W K 1¢ gC ut CC M in house plar Lemarke M M friend M rea World‘s Biggest Nos Heard? * en POQi 0u enal ©2 whe and proj 0@ l eak W at

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