West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 4 Jul 1935, p. 6

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1t It took them six weeks in a cov. ered bullock wagon to negoiate the passes of the barrier mountains and to reach the place where Narromine, & thriving town, stands today. THE RURAL SCHooL Time does not permit the rural school teacher to give much attenâ€" tion to the soâ€"called frills of educaâ€" tion, but when it comes to the funâ€" damentals of learning such as read. ing, arithmetic, spelling, grammar. etc.. the rural pupils of Waterloo County are up to the standard and can give a good account of themâ€" selves when an opportunity presents itself,â€"Kitchener Record, THE PATHFINDERS. Here is a story that comes from the faroff Antipodes. In 1$49, aged two years, John Thoms set out with his pioneering parents from the Township of Sydâ€" ney, Australia, into the vast unknown plains of New South Wales. could make use of a trénendc;ui.â€"-u':;- ouat of paint.â€"Regina Leaderâ€"Post, wWHAT THIs country NEEDS. Anyone who travels across Canada must realize that one thing this coun. try needs is a good coat of paint, The state of buildings pretty well across the Dominion suggests that a million pounds of paint could be used in Canada with good effect within the next year or so. Penhaps it should be a balf million pounds, perhaps two millions, At any rate, the country A stenograpter for the League of Nations at CGeneva, has been given $1,650 compen ation because of the €laim that smoke, coming from â€" a chimney into the room where she worked, caused her to become bald. If a number of men in Brantford and elsewbere could cash in on this basis there would be a severe strain on the monetary | system.â€"Brantford Expos. itor. IT‘s a compLiment. We can forgive the Stratford Beaâ€" conâ€"Herald almost anything, except, however, when it quotes the Standard as the St. Catharines Journal â€" St, Catharines Standard. Or is it that the demand is equal to the supply, but that many are unâ€" able to purchase because of lack of work and money and have to be con. tent with less than the es entials of life"â€"Niagara Falls Review. isn t it a queer world? Many of us remember the scientists telling us that, about now, the earth would not There is as yet no of convinecing teacher more important than there is here a great the junior fishermen thorough investigation mate benefit.â€"P. W, ver Province. Some ardent fisherboys have tried to mollify teachers by surreptitiousâ€" ly leaving on her desk a very dead fNatiish or a oneâ€"legged crab, after the manner of Teacher‘s Pet bringing flowers or an apple. ‘The bribe, how. ever, has never worked, except in reverse. MA‘ARM TEACHERS and FISHING Teachers, especially maâ€"arm teach. ers, have a horror of fishing, They be. lieve, perhaps righly, that fishing and hookey are closely allied, They have been known to despatch spies to known haunts in search of absentees and when this fails they demand satâ€" isfaction next day. °0 Wieir glands, In short, he says that whatever we are, whether we are good, bad or indifferent, is decided for us by our glandsâ€"St. Thomas Timesâ€"Journal. "0"nces toat if people are clever it is because of the kind of glands they have; if they are "dumb," it is owing to their glands, In short, he says that MTMEKEGYOX wio are . witubtiaw en .2 IT‘$ THE CGLaANDS, An American physician who makes a special study of human glands anâ€" nounces that if people are clavar it FARM LABOoR Some idea of the effect of machinâ€" ery upon agricultural employment in Canada may be glimpsed from the last four Dominion censuses. In 1901 the number of workers on Canadian farms was 45 per cent, of all those gainfully employed in the whole Do. minion, In 1911 the percentage dropâ€" ped to 38. In 1931, according to the census it was found that agriculture was employing only 23 per cent, of all those gainfully employed.â€"Winni. b*g Tribune. QuEERr woRrLlo Remember how pleased be year â€" after â€" year HINT FOR BALD HEaps CANADA THE EMPIRE \ oct CANADA iployed in the whole Doâ€" 1911 the percentage dropâ€" In 1931, according to the as found that agriculture yet no known method cler that fishing is han geography, and reat opportunity for men to conduct a ation for their ultiâ€" Ce we used as the Vancou HOMEWORK. A big change in school life may be brougtht about by the examination now being conducted into the effects of homework, It will be some time beâ€" fore the survey is complete and the verdict be issued,. But evidence is accumulating that the educational value of homework is dubious, to put it mildly. Children can be overwork. ed as well as underworked. And in the average simple home, with its shortage of rooms, the conditions unâ€" ¢ ht ed in an armchair, At the base of the pedestal Little Nell gazes affec. tionately up at her creator.â€"London Daily Mirror, In the public garde;s“at Philndel: phia there is a fullâ€"length sculptured memorial representing Dickons seftâ€" I happen to know, however, that some American admirers, in their zeal, have overridden this stipulation, f * sightâ€"seeing visitor asked me yesterday why London has no fullâ€" sized statue of Charles Dickens, The answer is ty be found in this quotaâ€" tion from the great novelist‘s will: "I conjure my friends on no ac. count to make me the subject of any monument, memorial or testimonial whatever. I rest my claims to the remembrance of my country upon my published works." In 1916 Mr. Cross was awarded the medal of the Society of Chemical Industry for "conspicious services to chemical industry,"â€"London Daily Sketch, A company was formed to the spinning of artificial silk The discovery was made while the two men were experimenting with bits of wood. A solution was found, which was poured into a container with a hole in the bottom and â€" a cyele pump was used to pull it out through the hole like a thread of cotton. Mr. Cross had no idea of the boon to be conferred on women when ne and his colleague invented the celluâ€" lose process for spinning _ artificial silk over 40 years ago, 1922 ‘ MmADE IT BY AcciDENT. Charles Frederic Cross (79), PR 8. the man who gave women artiâ€" ficial silk stockings, has died at his home at Hove, Sussoex, The late Lord Melchett once _ deâ€" clared: "If it had not been for two English chemists, young _ women would not have had the wonderful stockings they wear today," One of the two chemists was Mr. Cross; the other, K. Bevan, died in "It is estimated that Lake Super. ior exceeds in size its nearest fresh water rival, Africa‘s Lake Victoria Nyanza, by a thousand cquare miles," â€"Port Arthur Newsâ€"CHronicle. Using all the information it could obtain from atiases and encyclopedâ€" 'la. this paper proved. to its own satisfact‘ion at leas‘, that Supgrior was the larger and thu; the largest lake in tie world. This was delinite it depth were considered, for it apâ€" pears that large portions of Victoria Nyanza‘s surface is only a foot or so above t?e bottom and much of it fill. ed with reeds and gras:es, We now find the following paragâ€" raph among those issued by a science service for use in newspapers as something "lnteresting to Know." ; LARGEST LAKE, A year or so ago the Newsâ€"Chronâ€" icle entered into a discussion of the comparative sizes of Lake Superior and Lake Victoria, Nyanza in Africa, Someone, including some school tea. chers, advising their pupils, had deâ€" clared the African iake ; to be the larger. During the time shown 23,610 bun. ches were welighed and dispatched in 141 railway wagons to various parts of the country, and 28,344 bunâ€" ches distributed by road vehicles to the London markets. This was &A record performance compared with the handling of any previous ship ment of bananasâ€"Brandon Sun. Last month, the docks records show bow it took into its maw more than 50,000 bunches of bananas, one big ship‘s cargo in one day, The Jamaica boat arrived at the West India dock with 51,954 bunches of Bananas, and the ship broke bulk at 8 am., the whole cargo being discharged by $.40 p.m, the same day, KNOW THEIR BANANAS. London, of course, has an enormâ€" ous appetite. It swallows food of all sorts from all parts of the world in shipload lots. And there, in brief words, and the experience of one man, is the whole history of modern progress in trans. portation.â€"Halifax Herald. Aged 88, John Thoms, a successful contractor, has just returned to Syaâ€" neyâ€"by the first trip of a new plane service,. It took him just two hours, REQUEST oFr pickENns. THE EMPIRE 1e THE WORLD ATlT LARGE formed to develop , The rank of patrolwomen was originated in New York city during the World War, when it was thought necessary to have a feminine force |to police parks and other public ,p]aces where large numbers of solâ€" diers and sailors congregated. These official chaperons were not in uniâ€" form, but carried badges in their bags. Patrolwomen do a good deal of detective work in plain clothes. They are sent to get evidence against illegal practitioners of medicine or to discover social irregularities at dance halls or theatres. Poli¢cewomen, who are likely to appear most in uniform, may be seen in police stations and prisons, where they look after women deâ€" fedants and care for children. Howâ€" ever, they are likely to be assigned The function of these two classes are so intermingled that it is hard to difâ€" ferentiate them. Their rating is the same. There are today 140 policewomen and patrolwomen on "the force.‘" One hundred are in the Bureau of Policeâ€" women, of which Mrs. Mary A. Sulâ€" livan is the director, and forty are in the Crime Prevention Bureau, of which Inspector Costuma has charge. mu o & o o.. FET J The real pockets of the blouse are on the inside. Relatively few New Yorkers have ever seen a city policewoman â€" at least to recognize one â€" but now this member of the force can readily be distinguished, for she has a new uniform, and this Summer she will be on duty at tie beaciies and other resorts where great crowds gather. A few days ago the policewomen and patroiwomen held a dress parade in their new tuan‘cs, which were evolved after considerable thought on the part of the Police Department com® mittee on uniforms. The uniform consists essentially of a blue serge skirt and a blouse, orâ€" namented with gilt butons, bearing the department insigna. The blouse is doubleâ€"breasted and has a belt which is sewed down at the back to prevent anyorte‘s grasping it in a personal encounter. _ What appear to be outside pockets with flaps arel merely external ornaments. One can therefore be whirled through the English countryside while immersed in the studio settings of Holiywood, or ride to York surrounâ€" ded by the scenery of "Rome Ex Press."â€"Manchester Guardian". Policewomen Have Bottles and Gun THE CINEMA VAN, There are tho.e weo read in trains, there are those who eat in trains, there are those who sleep in trains, and doubless there are those whose attitude resembles that of the Old Countryman, who, when acked how te spent his time now that he was pensioned cff, made answer: "Well, Miss, sometimes I sits and thinks, and ometimes I just sits." For those who "just sit" (and who also app>n to have a shilling to spare) the Northeastern Railway Company has now provided an additional relaxâ€" aton in the shape of a "cinema van," which made its first journey from . London to Leeds this week, v h a preliminary blessing at King‘s Cross Station from Mr. J. H. Thomas, The van has a sloping floor, it can accom. modate an audience of 44 and the charge is a shilling for a program that takes an hour. John W. Harrijgton in New York der which homework is attempted are wellâ€"nigh lmpossiblé.â€"Lonrdrcrb:l-'I)aâ€"ily Herald, Mother, dad and the baby take the English countryside on ingenious many family groups taking part in Cobham, England, recently. “By e.Byen OII Times. Haunted by the ghosts of joyous, farâ€"offt laughter, Would menory "break" you . . . make you understand? It would not matter much . . , what followed after . , . If you and I were walking bhand in hand." l ‘ at twilight, (Sharing this secret thrill, as in the nights gone by,) I wonder, would sight of red leaves hung on twisted branches, Or shadows merging just beyond the blue; Or lonely Autumn winds that mourn of parting, Mean more than "Just another Fall" to you? 3 LOVE WALKS THE DREAM TRAIL "If we could turn back Time tonight, My Dear . .. For one last walk together, you and I, If we could watch the newâ€"born stars _ Sympathetic understanding is the basis of every cure. The psychiatrist has first to win the child‘s confidence, often accomplished by a joint attempt to solve a jigâ€"saw puzzle, before he can diagnose the cause of its sufferâ€" ing. Parents who punish what seem to be unnaturally rebellious or wanâ€" ton chillren, are guilty of a cardinal sin; they chould consult a clinic. "Didst thou never hear That things ill got had ever bad That such a being as a naughty child exists is flatly denied by the London Institute of Medical Psychoâ€" As far as salary is concerned, paâ€" trolwomen and _ policewomen are on the same basis as patrolwomen. They get $2,000 on the first year, $2,250 the second, $2,500 the third, $2,750 the fourth and $3,000 the fifth. These salaries are at present subject‘ to the customary depression cuts. ‘ All members of this branch of the force have entered it through the Civil Service. They wore admitted as physically perfect, or as nearly so as human beings can be. Their vision, hearing and muscular strength have passed muster. Their intelligence quota: is exceptionally high. Many of them were school teachers, registered nurses, secreâ€" taries, social workers and the like before they entered their present calling. A few are college graduâ€" ates. success?" â€"Shakespeare. Most of the women police officers are married and some have children. Where a policewoman is assigned to a station house, the regulations reâ€" quire her to have available a sterilâ€" ized nursingâ€"bottle and know where she can get milk and suitably modiâ€" {y it for the comfort of infants asâ€" tray. She also has a firstâ€"aid kit. Contrasted with this, she has a .32 calibre, sixâ€"shot revolver and she reâ€"| ports regularly for target practice. I to other duties, more or less unger cover. _ Both classes will be seen in within the city dimits. _ There they will keep order, see that bathing atâ€" tire is reasonably decorous and watch out specially for lost children. | the highroad for an outing in carryall. This was one of the recent outing of bicyclists at Don‘t Push Them â€"Francis Smith, Toronto. Testator gave the use of a house in Arbour Street, Southport, to his brother Thomas and his wife, toâ€" gether, with £416 a year. "On conâ€" dition he or she shall use long lace curtains in the front windows, and they use curtains of any other desâ€" cription the annuity is to be reduced to £312." â€" Daily Telegraph, } We see that between these years the male population decreased by over 100,000, while the females in. creased by some $00,000. Thus nearâ€" ly a million spinsters were artifiâ€" clally created during these seven years . . , Of course it would be wrong to imagine that this is caused entirely by the war. . . â€" The Army, Navy, and Air Force Gazette, She outstretched her arms, so that all might see that she was real anc human.â€"Daily Express. New Statesman and Nation (London) Cheering, singing shouting and crying, And then the King! A pale radiance, a slenderâ€"whited shadow â€" the Queen behind dim , . The Queen then did a strange, an unusual thing. Seaforth Expositor: Persons walkâ€" ing on the highways at night never seem to know or care, for that matâ€" | ter, that when they are between the | lights of two approaching cars they | are practically invisible until the cars |are actually upon them. Highway fatalities have become altogether too ‘ common, but the blame does not alâ€" ways lie with the motorists. Of course, the pedestrian has rights on the highway the same as the motorâ€" ist, but asserting those rights in the‘ face of a fast moving car at night usually meets with the same fate that befalls the car driver that atâ€" tempts to beat an express train over a level crossing. If one must walk on the highways at night, would it not be wiser and safer to stay on the right side of the road, and to make doubly sure; would it not be wise, too, to carry a lantern or light of .some kind as well? l I would such wings were mine that I might rise Up from the earth and, flying follow him Out where the sun sets and the dayâ€" light dies, Until the surges‘ solemn requiem Was hushed along the world‘s reâ€" ceding shore And I was one with silence everâ€" more. F. L. Montgomery in the New York Times It was at evening: From the river‘s breast A seagull rose on wings of peari white, Flashed _ upward _ through the gathering shades of night And circling once, twice, thrice, as if in quest Of points directional, or thus might test His strength, swung swiftly seaâ€" ward on his flight | And in the deepening dusk was lost to sight, « Leaving me wondering would dawn bring him rest. "Don‘t worry, guvâ€"nor," retorted the now thoroughly fedâ€"up conducâ€" tor; "I‘m gettin‘ it wrapped up for you." "Oh, ali right," replied the conâ€" ductor, somewhat shortly. "I say," repeated the American in a louder tone. "I want your Saint Paul‘s Caâ€" thedral â€" and I want it quick." "Say, conductor," he exclaiméd, "I want your Saint Paul‘s Cathedral." The bus conductor had had a harasâ€" sing day. First of all, it was raining. Troublesome old ladies, irritating old men, and other bus pests had all comâ€" bined to do their worst. It was getâ€" ting late in the afternoon when an American tourist boarded the bus. Railway officials got their heads together, and in 1929, the Canadian Pacific put out their "River" serâ€" ies of solarium cars. The glassâ€" "I can have my bath on the Atâ€" lantic, and my bath on the Pacific, but â€"for four full days I have to go without it on the train," he wailâ€" ed. â€" ‘"How can they expect a man to keep clean on these dusty prairies?" an Englishman asked indignantly, as he explained he was going to Ausâ€" tralia via Canada, and he would not do it again. "Why don‘t they have baths on these trains?" grouched an Ameriâ€" can one time, after four sticky days or the train. Montreal. â€"â€" Canadians may be clean people, but they won‘t take baths on trains. To find this out has cost the two Railways tens of thousâ€" of dollars. "This England" Canadian Travellers Prove Baths On Trains Are TORONTO Dangerous Practice Down River Ready Soon "Success does not consist in never making blunders, but in never mak» ing the same one the second time." } Atlantic City, N.J.â€"Persons with cold feet should never drink coffee. _ _That advice, used last winter on New York street cleaners who dug Manhattan out of its blizzards, was extended recently by Dr. William Bierman of New York in exhibiting to the American and Cnnadinn‘ Medical Associations results of his research on skin temperatures. On the other hand he found that wine and whisky are excellent mediâ€" cines in treating some diseases of the blood vessels by causing them to expand and thus aid circuhtionl of blood. Sufferers Told Cofters Makes Them Colder Hay and Cloverâ€"During the winâ€" ter of 1934â€"35, the following perâ€" centages of hay and clover are esâ€" timated to have : been winterâ€"killed, with the corresponding figures for the previous year (1938â€"34) within brackets: For all Canada 8 per cent, (12); Prince Edward Island 3 (4) ; Nova Scotia 5 (4); New Brunswick 3 (1); Quebec 2 (5); Saskatchewan 3 (10); Alberta 2 (3); British Columbia 3 (1). * ed, leaving an area of 604,000 acres to be harvested in 1935, as comparâ€" ed with 587,100 »acres harvested in 1934. In Ontario 70,000 acres were sown; 6,000 acres, or 9 per cent., estimated as winterâ€"killed and 64,â€" 000 acres left for the 1985 harvest. In Manitoba 77,000 acres are estiâ€" mated for harvest out of 79,000 acres sown, with 2,000 acres, or 3 per cent., winterâ€"killed. In Sasâ€" katchewan, $11,000 acres were sown, 12,000 acres or 4 per cent. estimatâ€" ed as winterâ€"killed, and 299,000 acres remain to be harvested. In Alberta 171,000 acres were sown to fall rye, 7,000 acres, or 4 per cent. winterâ€"killed, and 164,000 acres left; for harvest. | Fall Ryeâ€"In all Canada, where 631,000 acres were seeded to fall rye last autumn, 27,000 acres, or 4 per cent., are estimated as winterâ€"killâ€" the autumn of 1934, 126,000 square acres, or 19 per cent. are estimated as winterâ€"killed, leaving an area of 637,000 acres to be harvested in 1935, as compared with a harvested area of 425,600 acres in 1934. Fall Wheatâ€"Of the 663,000 acres s_eeded to fall wheat in Ontario in Tle 1934 winter killing of fall wheat, fall rye, and of hay and clover meadows is officially estimatâ€" ed as follows: Winter‘s Toll Official Estimates Given Of Fall Wheat, Rye, Hay and Clover Meadows al public, It is also to be noted that fish are rich in vitamines, When, therefore, it is urged that more fish should be consumed it is not only in the interâ€" ests of fisherman but of the generâ€" We know that goitre is much more prevalent in the inland country, and therefore a particular health reason for getting food that stimulates thyâ€" roid activity, That is sea.food. Aside therefore, from the fact that fish is so palatable, it is a healthy diet most necessary in parts of the country reâ€" mote from the sea. } In seeking a larger inland market for seaâ€"food from the Maritimes the particular value of this food in preâ€" venting the disease called goitre may well be stressed in advertising, Goiâ€" tre is a term used to indicate various diseases of the thyroid gland, and we are told ijodine is an essential to thyâ€" roid activity, Land plants and animâ€" als contain relatively little iodine, while sea.â€"food has a high content, and therefore is of «pecial value. i Just the other day the Canadian National took the baths out of them, converted the space into a lounge, and sent them back out in service. The Canadian Pacific are said to be thinking of doing the same thing, and converting the forgotten bath rooms into useful space. “ After costly experiments, the railâ€" ways pulled their bath cars off the road. They have been idle in the shops for about three years now. _ There was only one trouble. Noâ€" body ever bathed in _them! i _ ‘The Canadian National then inâ€" troduced their bath tub cars, and they too ran from ccast to _c_out. ended River Rouge, River Moira, and other "Rivers" soon were familiar sights at the end of the Transâ€"Canâ€" ada Limiteds. _ The most important thing, the mostâ€"advertised item about them, was their baths, tub and shower. | â€"Food â€" Goitre the House recently. ‘Those retired because their positions were abolishâ€" ed totalled 78, of whom 62 were in the Department of Interior. Ottawa. â€"Twentyâ€"eight Civil Serâ€" vants under the age of 44 years have been retired on superannuation beâ€" cause of ill health since August 1, l?”;lceol’din‘ to a return tabled in 28 Civil Servants ’ As a depression measure, for exâ€" _ample the streetâ€"car of Kansas City, Mo., issued passes good for a week for $1. It was calculated that a pass would be used 22 or 23 times, making the fare approximately five cents. But use of passes has grown so rapidly that they are being presâ€" ented from 34 to 37 times, returnâ€" ing the company a little less than three cents per passenger trip. With operating costs rising, the company‘s plan proved financially unprofitable. It has become so popuâ€" lar, however, that the experiment will be continued. cost than the oneâ€"fare ticket ihouci the financial results have not always begn satisfactory. Writes the Baltimore Sun: Reâ€" duction of fares on a number of railroads has resulted in large inâ€" crease in passenger traffic, showing that the cost of transportation has much to do with the extent to which the public will patronize the roads. In the streetâ€"car field experiments have shown that similar results folâ€" low the sale of passes which permit a certain number of rides at less It was a happy coincidence that the silver jubilee of the institution, Sir George said, was in the same year as the silver jubilee of King George V. There is nothing closer to the hearts of Their Majesties than such work as the sanitorium is doâ€" ing, he said. Sir George Perley, who collected donations of original contributors that made the first building possible, was among those who attended. Oitawa. â€" Twentyâ€"five years of service and progress in combatting tuberculosis, during which the death rate per 100,000 of population has decreased from 140 to 35, was celeâ€" brated here recently, on the occasâ€" ion of the silver jubilee of the openâ€" ing of Lady Grey Hospital, first unit of the present Royal Ottawa Saniâ€" torium. ' Young lambs, calves and tiny pupâ€" pies they are all out every day gamâ€" bolling in the warm sun. One lamb five weeks old and answering to the name of Nancy is a houschold pel. Nancy craves human company and she shows little interest in the doâ€" ings of other lambs, preferring to wander around close to the farmâ€" house door or trot at the heels of anyone walking around the yard. Back to the Land Then there is the man who has gone "back to the land." _ Formerâ€" ly a worker in the Sault. the depression left him without work. Finally, with his wife and children, he settled out in the country, where he is able to raise his own foodstuffs. "It‘s a living, but I hope I‘ll soon be back in the Sault. How are conditions there?" he wanted to know. ’ Epics could be written of the pionâ€" eer spirit of some of those who are struggling to bvild up farms. There are the two women who are left with a 240â€"acre farm of rich rolling land which they work themselves, _ "It doesn‘t give us time for anything else. But there‘s a depression and we could not sell the farm now," the daughter said. Seeding, which means extra work, and a busy time for all, is the only time they have employed outside help this year. f "Come on in and sit awhile," is the general invitation wherever one goes, for the Algoma farmer is hospitable. He is glad to see a visitor and loath to let him go. "Won‘t you have a glass of buttermilk?" one farm woâ€" man asked, taking a trip down ints the cool depths of the basement to bring up a pitcher of refreshing butâ€" termilk. Take a certain farmer with whom this reporter talked. His horse had died suddenly, and the man was worrying what he would do for work. "A lot of work I could have had on the farms around here is lost, just because my horse died, Now I don‘t know where I will find the money to get another one," he said. Algoma farmers, like others, are faced with problems, have their little excitements and good times and the same worry of where their next dollar is coming from. Car Fare Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. â€"â€" Dashing through the countryside in your new car, or ancient bus have you ever thought of the lives of the people who live on the farms you whizz by? asks Florence Craig in the Sault Daily Star. Two Women Till 240â€"Acre F a rm By Themselve Under 44 Retired women w« ages, Th eomplied f summary « eates that men are p the family lis have migrat« vinces. receiy lished | may ot num time Relative Ofl Oil M who Gern ation nan tory fathc * Public i tions and a Canadian M gratified by Buperintend perintendent Black of the Fred R lived ir years, relative oil mas BOC1A Both service each h fortuna public and _ c Manito years, after ent M Rocke Ass! Inve take Jeavi of a side: vore ente Broc thousand ti had much educated p« atempts . to have often superstitiou: eontinue to and hygien subjects in the germ is I heard took her family « ing fro: ate inte thought baby to hb)‘,‘ n monia :; woman : it must | Face o in one boy, w up all and s) the di{ father "Are y hVQ beco easionally Bome we ing the ( and Gor» with a :« Write New 8: Ix O} Insta Hs O‘ H« K He 0) Ar He Of By Confusion RCMP «t Angel« id. ms Amateu Ber t IV. PT

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