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Durham Review (1897), 6 Jun 1935, p. 6

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said his constience prompted him to London, Ont., lncon-ort'a'xv '("l'l:e reâ€" ceived three cents from a man who ; _;__, * _ "" "4 Nas been considered advisable by the authorities, faced jwith a tremendous growth in the number of motor accidents, to order reâ€"eramination of drivers granted permits during the past few years with more rigorous demands being made upon them by the» examiners. It would be no surprise eventually to see a similar policy adopted In‘ this country, it ‘not a general re. examination of all drivers with more searching tests than those which are now imposed.â€"Brockville Recorder. TEsTs or DRIVERS In England it has been cor “V}ubl. by the authorities seen by some person llltloll has some everybody reads the Border Cities Star. ue _ . _ ~rCedmone â€" F6 _that the advertiser who uso; newspapers al. one is getting the best available cov. erage at the lowest cost .* There were plev‘y of figures to back .up the paragraph above, but one does not need to consult figures to appreciate the soundess of the Cconclusion . Every â€" magazine has wome readers, Every billboard _ is seen by some persons. Every radio station has _ some â€"Hsteners. But‘ everybody reads the newspapers.â€" MR EW c manb w oo c 2el advertiser who u one is getting the erage at the lowes veying the whote fiel modia and reporting to Nawspaper Publishers now meeting in New EvEervone reaps The Bureau of h However, this onl Us to preserve our Earthquakes we canr 10 & EFORE awhomk o. Ivia as in _1 _ °C Compination of the three which provides work.for hundreds of thousand: of men and women all over Cauada . â€"Kingston Whigâ€"Standard . NoT sucH# a sap ‘OLE! Millions are starving in China .. Thousands have recently been killed in an earthquake in Formosa. One way and another this seems to be & fairly good corner of the world. Even when we suffer from what we regard as a flood the damage is «omparatively slight. We are far enough from the Euro. pear continent to watch without un. due alarm the developments there, albeit our interest is not untinged with some anxiety. We do not have to try in absentia batches of fugitive rebels and sentence them to death mW Bs Mbskccs es BUSinESSs success There is altogether too muc gonse talked about businers wold is full of theor.si~, n can to‘l others how a business be op ratcd, but who have bren ab‘e to make a success themselves. To conduct a i successiully three things are tia‘: money, ability and a tr ous capacity for hard and str work. It is the last of the which contributes the greates to the success of a business, is a wise combination of the which provides work_for hundr thousand: of men and women al CHOYCEEG. =â€"<â€"EMGIEH U kcb Cns .. . SPEAKING OF HITLER wasa‘t much _ of a misnomer some one used der furore inâ€" of der fuehrer, referring . to ussy man in Berlinâ€"Winnipeg on the highway Do serve all traffic rules s‘gnals"â€"Quebec C graph . ~veD to your own side of the road? Do you become excited when con. fronted with a sudden emergency? Do you always keep your car in per. fect mechanica} condition? Do you "cut in" when passing another car on the highway ? Do you strictly obâ€" serve all traffic rules, stop light; and s‘gnals"â€"Quebec Cronicle Teleâ€" te i a vale Do you give all your attention to your car when you are driving? Do you always drive at a reasonable ©peed, giving due consideration to trafic, road and weather conditions? Do you always give the right of way to bedAsstriang, especially _ children and older people? Do _ you always keep to your own side of the road? Do you become excited when con. Wonblket 12. I =Port FACILITIEs AVAILABLE Banners carried by Edmonton unâ€" employed on parade included â€" one reading "we want ham and eggs." Judging from what is heard about Alberta‘s broad acres suited ty mixâ€" ed farming it shouldn‘t be dificult S0¢ LCNE Utr DEndAxtis ushoue sys .. _ oi great extent we | e';n Control | conditions by forest conserva. â€"Saint John Telegraphâ€"Journal. uc C Cm®r P eegud i Greece. We have no battle ragâ€" over a 120â€"mile front ag in Bol. arines MmMoDdeL pest Without further additions, the debt of the City of St. Catharines by 1937 â€"and that is only two years awayâ€" will be a million and a half, the low. est of any city in Canadaâ€"St, Cath. meufwas use s L ting in New York, says final conclusion is that C READS THE PAPERS rau of Advertlolng. sur. whole field of publicity reporting to the American Publishers® Association, \ oct i to produce what -t'hey--want Arthur Newsâ€"Chronicle. EVERYTHING CANADA C000 _ "Cues are essen. ability and a tremendâ€" or kard and strenuous the last of the three utes the greatest part of a business, but it our _ happy â€" state. cannot prevent, but Do you? only puts it up to i! your attention to ou are driving? Do ‘ at a reasonable 1e consideration to weather conditions? cor.iic, nen who a business should who Aave never a siccess of one says : a business much non. 1ers The THE HEALTH OF THE NAvVY The increase announced in naval sickness must have caused a reac. Time clocked in the air drome â€" to aerodrome, d time spent in takeâ€"off and oolutions, was 54 minutes, average speed made §g00« ground of 233.3 m.p.h.â€"1 craft Society . Piloted by Mr. Hugh Buckingham, one of the de Haviland test pilots, and carrying one passenger, the air. plane taxied to a standstill outside the customs building at Le Bourget airport, Paris, 59 minutes after reâ€" ceiving the signal to take off " from Croydon. In spite of a beam wind which never feil below 25 miles an hour, and bumpy weather conditions that obliged the pilot to throttle down for considerable periods, the average speed over the 210 miles of the jourâ€" ney was, therefore, 213.6 m.p .h ]:n;ll-h-Anstr;H; _'â€"l;eo broken all records for LONDONâ€"PARs RECORD First of two Comet monoplanes orâ€" dered by the French Government, the machine which finished fourth in the HeasmsBbnk d ulc k ols Mlig s 0 se onl . To the latest Ministry of Labor Returns the number of persons on the regâ€" ister who were applying for benefit or unemployment allowance totalled 1,933,623, and of this fAigure about 56 per cent. had been out of work for less than three months, 69 per cent. for less than six months, and 20 per cent. for 12 months or more.â€"Indus. trial Britain, ¢ thet BRITISH UNEMPLOYMENT To enable the unemployment figâ€" ures to be viewed in their true per. spective it is important to consider the duration of the periods of idle. ness suffered by individuals. It is frequently overlooked that there is not an unchanging body of over 2,. 000,000 persons who are constuntly" out of work; in fact, in the majority of cases the period of unemployment‘ is comparatively short. According ta 7 Aintriisaitceiylitcodviedisclls.is} is language like "Will you marty me?" and she says "yes," then he stands committed. Lord Revelstoke may have been carried away by enthusiâ€" asm, but he showed wisdom in using apt alliteration‘s artful ald to express his sentiments. The result of this action for breach of promise is a vindication of the man who had a grudge against small words.â€"Torontol Mail and Empire, is the supremest, sublimist, "suberi:: est "girl in the world" without com. mitting himself, but if he uses simple Terre usls o auge sc A FULL.TIME JOo8 ’ What are the funct ons of a lien. tenantâ€"governor? â€"asks a constituâ€" tional writer. In Manitoba, the duties start daily, Sundays included, some. where around 8 a.m., and last freâ€" quently uutil the clock turns to a.m. of the following day. Not more thun{ a thou and organizations of one kind ard another have their eye on the governor as a prospective guest at one or more event.â€"Winnipeg ~Triâ€" bune. | "Now, fancy that," said Mrs, Far. mer. "Baby mislaid my weight that day, so I just used the pound of sugar you sold me."â€"Brantford Exâ€" positor. TRIED IN THE SCaALES. The wile of a small farmer sold her surplus butter to a grocer in a nearâ€"by town. On one occasion the grocer said: "Your butter was unâ€" derweight last week." [ YOoU TAKE vyour CHOICE The reputation of at least one On. tario weather prophet is going to be gone before the summer has run its course. A Fergus editor has predicâ€" ted the worst drought in years in Ontario while a Sudbury minister, 4s." ing the stars as a basis for his foreâ€" cast, says that there will be plenty Of rain this snmniar «P mds o Press _ _ _2 10 "S275!000, there remaings tae question: How does a homing pig. eon, taken away in a box, return hunâ€" dreds of miles to its own loft? There seems to be a great deal of uncanny wisdom in the feathered klngdom.«‘ Toronto Globe. INSTINCT oF Birps What instinect was it that prompted a bewildered woodcock, trying to find its way about the skyscrapers of New York, to fly against the wind. ows of the quarters of the National Association of Bird Societies? When that is explained, there remains tne question: How does a hamin» ~i~ turn in that has been takin asses. It was a for the who! Beacorâ€"Herald . LIKED HIis woros LONG s that there will be plenty this summer,â€"London Free ©«0CAOEves, jgiving an made good over the m.p.h.â€"British Airâ€" taking snlphnE e ;;nri-"mol- was always said to be good whole syatem.â€"Stratford 1e THE WORLD AT LARGE EMPIRE air from aero. , disregarding and landing evâ€" lividuals. It is d that there is body of over 2,. _ Are constantly in the majority f unemployment race â€" has the London. According to Probably he "I should much prefer to be a banker, provided 1 did not have â€"to go to the bank and work." â€"Hilaire Belloc. ; l dvs ’ It takes several hundreds of _ orâ€" anges to make a galion of orange oil, which is of two kinds, bitter and sweet, made from different species of fruit. Due to the development of the citrus fruit export business in Jamâ€" aica, British West Indies, the proâ€" duction of oranf> oil in that island kas been steadily declining. An oil is also produced from limes. ‘ _ Particular interest in the Old Land _at the moment is focused on aviaâ€" tion due to Mrs. Mollison‘s presiâ€" dency and this is very interesting, but Mrs. Douglas feels ‘that the future of women in engineering lies in electrical development. "Women," she said, "are particularly â€" adapted to bring electrical power into the home and women can speak to woâ€" men about these things particularly well." ‘ Many of the younger women of the society are doing intensely inâ€" teresting pioneer work in the fields of electrical engineering and metalâ€" lurgy, securing the highest available degrees and distinguishing themâ€" selves as inventors, said Mrs. Dougâ€" las. They support themselves in the most interesting lines of endeavor. One owns and operates a garage; another, Miss Kennedy, past presiâ€" dent of the organization, is general manager of a large tool making firm, having made the post for herself and working up from the bottom through sheer ability. Miss Holmes, another officer, is interested in railâ€" way engineering and has invented a device now in general use on British railways. She is employed in the British patent office. Another member is manager of a large nail ‘ factory and many are fliers one makâ€"| ing a splendid business of taking | aerial photographs. 4 Mrs. Douglas is viceâ€"president of the Women‘s Engineering Society of Great Britain which has a memberâ€" ship drawn from the British Isles, Canada, Australia and the United States, and of which Mrs. Amy Johnson Mollison,| famous aviatrix, is the president. Although she is not an engineer, her work as director of a yacht yard in Southampton water entitles her to membership and makes her a valuable asset to the adminisâ€" trative side of the society‘s work. _ Edmonton â€" Marvelous opportunâ€" ities are open to women today, in ‘the opinion of Mrs. C. H. Douglas, wife of Major Douglas, exponent of social credit, who is spending a few weeks in Edmonton with her husâ€" band. She is believed the only woâ€" man director of a shipbuilding yard in Great Britain and a person of wide interests and experiences. She is keenly interested in Canadian women‘ and their various fields of endeavor. wWOMAN SHIPBUILDER Sees Many Opportunities In Electrical Field For Women | tion of painful surprise to those who imagine that the sailor, enjoying the benefits of unlimited ozone, is not prone to the diseases of ordinary mankind. Actuallyâ€"as a contributor in this issue points outâ€"the figures are really an indication of the inâ€" creased care which is taken, by means of preventive measures, to safeguard health. The Navy works on the principle of that â€" ancient school of Ciinese physicians who, it will be remembered, were paid by their patients only when they were in good bealth. The doctor could end in no biils when his charges fell i!!.â€"The Navy (London). Left to right: Robert W. Bingham, American Ambassador to Gr Kent, representing the King; and the Earl of Derby, guests of honor at Pilgrims in Lnodon. â€" American Ambassador At Pilgrims Jubilee Dinner of at _ Women‘s hats for 1935 will _ not cover their eyes, but enable them to have a clear vision. Fronts are much longer, acting as sunsh1ades, and give unhampered view, writes a Lonâ€" don stylist. They are extremely chic, especially the Haniburg type, made of ‘ felt. t:, 3 Speaking at a private‘ "Press‘ view NEW MILLINERY sHADEs suT DOESs NOT COVER EÂ¥YEs Duchess Of Kent Wears Homburg Hat est streamletg in the woods, and they could scarcely get him along. "On his approaching a small hut on the Ottawa River, rather than go into a house close to the river, he turned short and ran into a barn. At another house he ran from them into the woods, as if to shun the sight of water. His disorder was now rapid. ly increasing. But on arrival within six miles this side of the newâ€"named place, Richmond, after suffering most excruciating torment, he died, at 8 o‘clock on Saturday morning, the 28th of August." Thus perished in miserable state the fourth Duke of Richmond and a monument erected by the Historic Sites and Monuments Board near the village which continues to bear his name records the fact.â€"Brockville Recorder. The Duke was setting forth on a tour of inspection of what was then Upper Canada and thought nothing of the bites received from the fox unâ€" til he reached Perth where he began to complain. "On the way from Perth towards the Ottawa River," said a letter written by a member of his staff, "some of the attendants obserâ€" ved his irritability and extreme aver. sion to water on crossing the amall-l women‘s fashions for 1923, the Dorchester recently, ] Canada knew for a brief period the fourth Duke, who, after service as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, succeedâ€" ed General Sherbrooke in the Gov.â€" ernment of Canada in 1819 .Death cut short his career in August of the folâ€" lowing year when he died at the set. tlement near the river Ottawa which continues to bear his name of the bite of a tame fox, not suspected to be in a rabid state, with which he had been playing at Sorel. I a war disability which paralyzed his legs and left him a cripple for the re. mainder of his life. Another Duke of Richmond has died at historic Goodwood, the eighth to bear that title and the victim of Lord Rothermere described Germâ€" any as a "growing military power, far superior in strength, far superior for offensive purposes and full of agâ€" gression which which may take at any time a hostile attitude in regard to this country." His statement created a sensation in the Uupper House, even though Lord Rothermere‘s Daily Mail has been pounding away at Britain‘s lack of air defenses and has claimed reâ€" peatedly that Germany has a secret air force running into five figures. The Reich‘s bombers, the newsâ€" paper publisher said, are "of long range and high speed, capable of carrying a ton of high explosives." [ London, Eng.â€"Lord _ Rothermere, branding the British Government‘s plan to expand the Royal Air Force by 1,000 planes as "childish and useâ€" less for defense," told the House of Lords recently. "I say with full reâ€" sponsibility tiat Germany at the preâ€" sent moment has 10,000 bombing planes." Old Story Recalled Says Germany Has 10,000 Bomb Planes held ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO “Secufity means a.:uarnm that. we shallhave tomorrow w we have today."â€"James M. Warburg. «k * # + "It is better to have Joved and lost ; than tb have reasoned well." â€" Wilt "Well, yes," said the other, "we took them from you all right, but you can‘t say we‘ve kept them," having an argument about the ways of their respective races. "You people," said the Jew, "have been taking things from us all your lives. The Ten Commandments, for instarice." i 11. If it is a money game, always stop when~you are ahead, It will leave a lasting impression and folk will always remember you., 12. Always explain your plays, parâ€" ticularly when set. It shows your card knowledge, 13. Don‘t show lack of interest when dummy. Help your partner out with suggestions, ‘ 14. Disagree with established rules and conventions. People will know you ate a person â€"‘of=~independent mind, © 15. Eat chocolate carmels or other adhesive candy while playing,. It keeps the cards from skidding. 10. Don‘t try to ramember the rules, It is too confusing. 7. Talk about other subjects durâ€" ing the game, It makes for good felâ€" lowship. 8. Feel free to criticize your part. ner. He will do much better as a reâ€" sult, 9. Always trump your partner‘s trick, Never take a chance. 5. Occasionally ask what is trump. It will show your interest in the game,. s 3. If your partner bids first, don‘t hesitate to raise. He has to play it. 4. Never hurry. Try several cards on a trick until you are sure which one you prefer. 2. It your hand is rotten, mention it. It will guide your partner in his bid and play 1. Pick up each card as dealt. You will be ready to bid ahsad of the others Contract bridge having so many devotees, we publish the following rules in the hope of standardizing the game: One of the most popular types I saw yesterday was the Homburg. Made of felt. This is chic, and is going to be one of the big favorites this year. Instead, they fit close to the head at the back. Most of the now hats are all front ........ giving that "eager" and "I must get there" appearance. SO THEY SAY Gibson hais, so I was told, are com. ing back into fashion, but they are not the type that mother used to wear. Referring to the display which was given in connection with the B. I. F., Lord Derby said the Fair had worked itself up to be one of tne finest and biggest in the world. it was bringing employment that was badly needed. Derby, president of the British Tex. tiles Exhibition, said he was not an expert on fashion and knew his place. Therefore he would not make any comment on the dresses. SEEING THE RACING:! "But there is one thing I am glad to say," he added, "and that is that the 1935 ladies‘ hats for Ascot will enable them to see the racing, inâ€" stead of having them over their eyes, as they generally are." | The Duchess of Kert wears one Some New Bridge Rules Great Britain; the Duke of at the Jubilee dinner of the and an Englishman WWerkon . s3 . [, d uRl | very pious man, got on his ki and A. L. Sanderson, all of Vancou. pray. The Englishman, out o ver; J. D. MacFetridge, Middle Musâ€"| spect for the Irishman, took : quodobolt, N.S.; p, v. Atkinsgon, hat. The Scotchman thought th Halifar; A. E. McKear, Halifax; R, Englishman was going to pas N. Rush, ‘Galt, Ont. ; T. R. Stroud, hat ‘and dived overboard. Sioux Lookout, Ont.; C. x l"ockhr,] reoliggmenmmmmmmmms, B. G. Miller ; d L. ®. Nelson,â€"aln + : "When a nation talks of its of Toronté; G,;nlf- â€" Neiison, ‘Mont: ‘tige, ;t means ‘no more than its real; C. g. Baker, Meota, Sask.; anq tation {or belligerence." â€"â€" 4 B. L. Maurshall, Saskatoon, Sask. , Milne, ue 1 * so in h en Te ie & .p s ue 6: urmae: a 2. * Ottawaâ€"â€"The Radio Branch, De. department of Marine announced reâ€" cently that the following have been awarded commercial certificates _ of proficiency in radio: $ 6. #. G. Macdonald, Royal Oak, BXC:;~3. L. Clover, J. R. Randal! an d a x C _ It remains to be seen rubs off mors easily , urday Night, wedding â€" I are not real. EOE 0 h Ooh mt ARHrEEs If you like something which is "different," there are plenty of feath. er flowers made so perfectly that only a horticulturist would know they The main thing, of course, is to wear the right kind of buttonhole on the right kind of suit â€" something fresh and springlike with your tweed and morning frocks, something a little more gay on your afternoon outft. A boutonniere of some kind made in pique, broderie anglaise, or plaid linen on your last year‘s suit will help to bring it up to date. Or if you want to glitter, you might try gard. enias in gold or silver kid, quills; dip. ped in gold and silver lacquer, or posâ€" ies of brilliant leather flowers . Smart Boutonnicre Helps Rejuvenate Old Suit The machinery installed _ at the Printing Bureau for the purpose of setting up the voters‘ lists cost $124,â€" 855. _ Oftawa,â€"The total co:t of the Doâ€" minion Franchise Act so far is $1,691,â€" 046, according to a return tabled in the House of Commons recently . Payments to registrars and enumerâ€" ators totalled $1,207,729 while the salaries of the staff, printing costs and other item; made up the balâ€" ance. 4 Voters‘ Lists Cost Already $1,691,046 As a result, 50 men and 50 women 'â€"all lay teachers in the public and digh schoolsâ€"will arrive in Toronto on June 15 and on the following day be welcomed by President H. J. Cody, the minister of education, and the deputy aninister of education. The women will live in Whitney Hall, the men in the men‘s residences. All deâ€" partments of the university have sigâ€" nifled their desire to coâ€"operate to make the month profitable. l Now for the firct time a reciprocal arrangement has been made through the coâ€"operation of the University of Toronto and the Ontario Department _of Education. A deputation from Que. bec recently visited Professor F. C. A. Jeanneret at the university here and details were worked out. The project was urged by Hon. Athanase David, provincial secretary of Queâ€" bec, who is in charge of education in that province; Hon. Cyril Delage, suâ€" perintendent of public instruction and ‘ C. J. Miller, inspectorâ€"general of schools there. For the past nine years groups of teachers from Ontario who were inâ€" terested in speaking French, have been going to Quebec to live at the Sillery Academy where they have been entirely in Frenchâ€"Canadian sur. roundings and have been required to speak French only and to study phon. etics, Frenchâ€"Canadian menture.l history and art. f Toronto.â€"Arrangements have been completed whereby 100 Frenchâ€"Canâ€" adian teachers will come to the Uni. versity of Toronto during the sumâ€" mer to live in an atmosphere of English and to speak English enâ€" tirely throughout the ses:ion, it was announced recently. TEACHERS W LEARN ‘ Bread. Bread, i Ruvrrall C 1M En‘l.nd and to the continent, ers _ from Paris, Among them was , who came to see at first sight. The _ the late spring . een whose glitter ily.â€"Detrolt Sat. « R. Randall all of Vancou. , Middle Mus. A Scotchman, an Englishman, and an Irishman were on a raft in the middle of the ocean. There was no kope of rescue, so the Irishman, a very pious man, got on his knees to pray. The Englishman, out of reâ€" spect for the Irishman tnaal aff 1.;. C0 OeR AEAAACOO CS e tIce Te absolutely necessary at night. The regulation is more for the protection of the cyclists themselves than for any other reason. The Highway Trafâ€" fleActulllfuturedMectoron the back of every bicycle, and an amber reflector or lighted lantern in front. BJCYCLES MUST HAVE ism can be greatly iuflueneed-'by dietary changes, and by hunter and by endocrine factors." [VCHVa may be based on as yet unâ€" hrecognized toxic fartors, As a thatâ€" ter of fact it is known that seneâ€" scence in certain of the lower organâ€" o n e NT NHC I€ "Such observations naturally raise the question," they said, "whether Alzheimer‘s dJsease and senile deâ€" mentia may be based on as vet unâ€" In a few of the cases described, the two physicians said toxic influences â€"poisons in the systemâ€"seemed to be significant. Two of these showed toxic conditions could be associated with changes in body tissues similar to the changes noted in both senile dementia and Alzheimer‘s disease. four per cent. of all cases x;m;h'i'cl'l autopsies were performed were found to have been suffering from the disâ€" l Washingtonâ€"New evidence that man‘s normal span of life may be increased by medical science was ofâ€" fered recently to the American Psychiatric Association. Studies of Alzhelmer‘s disease, one form of premature old age, were deâ€" clared by Doctors D. Rothschild of Foxborough, Mass., and J. Kasanin of Howard, R. I., to indicate old age may be a disease that medicine can retard. Only about 100 cases of this parâ€" ticular kind of premature senility, which strikes between 40 and 60 Research _ May _ Resulit In Lengthening _ Life‘s Span > I passed up the Champs Elysees recently about 10.30, and judging by }the look of things the experiment bids fair to give good results. Quite a third of the shops between the Rond Point and the Arc de Triomphe were open and seemed as busy as if it were five o‘clock in the afternoon. Crowds of people were examining dress materials and choosing hats; a carpet dealer was offering prizes for every purchaser over 50 francs, while the pastry cooks and sweelts shop seemed to be doing good busiâ€" ness. QLD AGE CURABLE? One of the features of the Paris Season is the possibility of midnight shopping on the Champs Elysees, writes a _ correspondent. Some time back the society known as the Amis des Champs Elysees apâ€" proached the leading shopkeepers along the famous thoroughfare with a view to making this bold experiâ€" ment, the aim of which, of course, is to stimulate trade and to further the "Brighter Paris" movement. Most of them have responded favourably and as a beginning the plan is to keep open until midnight on one day of the week onlyâ€"Friday. TAKING NO CHANCES ' To which it may be said that most writers are guilty of seeking i for the highlights in words, the sport writers these days resort to slang terrible to relate â€" letter writers to the newspaper do not hesitate to use grandiose verbiage when they have it, and the reader would be just as well satisfied at all times if the meaning were made plain in simple language easily grasped. In fact, the more simple the language, . the plainer the meaning.â€"St. Catharines Standard. Midnight Shopping The Latest Thing In Paris 'ago. A recent article by the same | writer in The Ottawa Journal has | attracted attention, because therein ’with the most simple words of the 'lmge, some of the most moving ‘ passages of English literature were was written, makes apt comment. . . «+ . quoted. Seotchmt;â€"ti:;’ug'l:;nth: t.;lo The Use Of Simple Words Journal, for which the articel on bicycles is to pass the took off his its presâ€" n all the timeâ€"I mean life Cantor. "J.ong ago the thinkin, wealized that a high standa Sng by itself does not brin ®r progress."â€"Andre Siegf: Monito: DPr. Samue] Johnsor mapplause of a sing ®f great consequen Popular entertain Seit in the honeye that assail them. the rank and file .« trouble with fan n quitable distributio But there is that, for the x ®effective. Noth like a little ho "wvery kno from our warious b monished w©ur work, Give us «ommenda gell . Such and dow may be the fact th letters in 1} him a "pam *â€"far more believeâ€"are quietly find waste baske paeans to «© on rough fo. Foseâ€"tinted : wrtist. cravir "The biggest g Aâ€"ray treatmen bher over the fiv« physicians said in sound health it to be the fir «ancer known as been arrested. Physicians at wt the success : emall percentag« successfully trea Drs. Newel] and has refused to ope When first broug} pital in San Fran: eancer of the bra parent recove; was told at t! tion of the C wociation by 1 Edward Leet mit had by physic be marric ww} For the . is that the kid. The which were being replac yectangu‘ r and are able mble tiny o} pensable to *The claps is tortoiseâ€"she}! closes down «ecorated by gram which geason. Praise and Cri ensemble in w} yose, very soft perforated in and the glov the same wh cutâ€"out desig a backgroun éress. A b trimmed wit black dress belt and box, croc. the seale to dark novation plete stre and it is €very day One amples semble Fansian ways to ward ma sirl easily » softened ©eolors, ; sgembles which w @pproval for sports H sories cannot Acces s ori Final Note And Evening ~RAY CURE BRAIN popi P ar 11 ugh of t» W The the mek ame of all he n n use fi he n@#s Its n ym U

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