West Grey Digital Newspapers

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

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" i] The “out of money angst by 168,000 ”or!” touring Quebec. most of them for weeks, must have hem ettotaetttU. mm hue run into mrz-zy minionq. Which emphasizes ugain, we think. the tremendou- Balm to Canada " the tttqr%t but. no. ht: use 'ed-or-Bare, 130.000 MORE TOURIST: According to Mr. J. E Pursuit. Minister of Roads, ”netting like 130,000 more tourists clue to Que- he thin you than lot. The number of United Sate. can remaining in tho province " hours was 130,000 as against 114.000 last year; the num- Mr mailing anywhere tram two days to two months 168,000 a. anoint 139,000 in: you. l ..... . . . we sometimes seem to know minor too much about the world tor our own good. It bu no surprise; left for as. Our imaginations do not to: enough and» nod that in bad for In an. - Quebec Chroniete-'rete. th::t Surnw If tht, h’zzvt wireless pa'ngram , y"tiv? of the finest and must "r.," :‘sirv I'miluros. were do. lightful ilu. bi, while but mighty Pror busirrsss for the large tirms making thvn possible. Ills explana- tion was that the programs have worked up uncut fame tor certain ”lists, bu niizhty little tor the pro- ducts ttw artists are :upposed to ad- venue. by way of illustrating this point. this gentteman said that 110' had taken the trouble to inquire trom, several ot his [Honda as to the sponsor-‘ IN, of one or the Mn moot celebra- ted. - costly program. ot tNe mon- to whom " Ind spoken, only on. was me to mm the pro- duct “unload. - Windsor Star. MITHlNO To WORRY ABOUT seven them this I typicc .8791] "Did you hear Io Ind Btt'tt speech on Saturday night?" someone asked. The newspapennan said he had Its. toned to the whole of it. One doctor admitted he had heard part. The rest 1nd no heard one word ot it. The newspaporman commented that he had listvnvrl all through as a matter ot porsmwl professional interest. P -trtr'" “no attach so much Impor- tam.- to tho radio as a means ot gt: m: their messages - business. urinal! “I nthovwfsn - to the pub, lie m s 1;: p.'v,, smu- eousidoratio.n to this in :;-l :turwy. lbre we have a 1:30 in a local hotel recently. Seven were Wittooritetr; the other was a Detroit visitor. In tho group were tour medical men. one retail mer- chant. one wholesaler and one news- paperman - all of Windsor. will be far fewer gashea for the doc- tor to now up. _ Brockvlllo Recorder. BOTH NOT FOOLIOH There were many careless drivers in the old days, but not as many no- cldents. The horses had some sense. - Winnipeg Tribune. RADIO SPEECHES l Eight men sat at one luncheon FOR GREATER SAFETY tuttrtterarroot gins will be obliga- - In new cars Bold in Ontario next you. which means that there will be tar fever sashes for the duo- sure reckless drivers whose permits have been cancelled. do not drive during the suspension period, such persons ml'st bring their license plates to couxt. Some men may drive tor a Con idersble time without driv- ing Permits, but they will not get very far without "can 0 plates. other magistrates might follow this excellent example. - Niaghra Fails Review. l : "' Lu" gum some consideration tt ti.s in 4231:: -I survey. "we we hare , 'pical pulp or (unadizm citizens, Man of 'r-ut. am on y one of the Iven hrcil t.he adzlrws. Five ot em hi rd to [war a ward of it. Yesterday we heard a man remark at some rt the biggest wireless ogram. same of the iUtest and out expr‘nsive features, were de- rhtlul for the public but mighty or bmlnpss for the Infra sr- HITCH.HIKEB A NUIOANCE It is impossibe to drive snywhere today without encountering s patient droop-shouldered chap who stands " the roadside and continuously Jerks ht; thumb across his chest. He is s hitch-hiker. one of the strongest pro- ducts ot the auto age snd he is set. ting to be an unmitigsted nuisance. no collects s great desl ot tree transportation. promotes the exis- tence of n vagabond class Itch does the country no good and creates s new opening for a lot ot oidJao‘Jioned highway robberr.--Guetph Mercury. GOOD EXAMPLE A good precedent has been set by Magistrate Tinker, ot Toronto, who‘ in; given instructions thar, to make for the Canndlul stocks on and prices would be soaring to height: Canadian farmers have not permitted themselves even to dream ot tor the the last ttre years. The Candi”: reserve needles the situation. It ohould not be forgotten, however. that these reserves were accumula- ted in the succelslul alert to get a much higher price for wheat in 1982. '33 and '34 than the farmers would otherwise have received. - Winn-l peg Tribune. The truth I; am JiGGGre, liter levers! bad years, the when mar- het qutlook in bright. " It were not CANADA THE EMPIRE toit,:t,,, WHEAT l3 BRIGHT the programs have at fame tor certain rhty little tor the pro. , are supposed to Id. my ot illtutratiittts CANADA a: a ward at it. card a man remark _ bigzvst wireless of the ttttest and features. were de- puhllc but mighty , the Inge arms one luncheon 'r"i'iht, ot tages - Jamie; H-.." ..uu w pay Interest there in ot advantage to the English investors; and undoubtedly it is right to pre- ter. as indeed it must, the English investor to any other except the Cot. onfal investor. Bat the local investor should come tirst In a colony " 119‘ does in England; and when both the Colonial and English investor can' share the benefit or interest on al loan, each should be well tratistieds' a'cd should teel that there has treernl a his aljus‘ment ot nnnnclnl nann.’ tngen - The Gleaner, Kingston." FINANCING AT HOME One of the tlrat dudes ot a Colon]- al Government (as we presume It to ot its first desires also) lg to benetit both directly and Indirectly the coun- try whose man: it admlnlsters. tt knowa that to otrain tt loan in Eng. land and to pay interest there is ot advantage to the English investors; and undoubtedly it is right to nre-i Almii'uliu mus awaken to the tact that in matters of trade and taritt sho (an no longer have her own way unrcsnrnimni. We have had a long run. We have, hor more than halt a I‘miiuz‘y maintained high tariffs peanut Creat Britain and have thus :hoitvrml our own industiivs; and it i: no for us oither to complain that Britain should impose one duty on om.- ct our products or to repine that we have to suffer from the new Brit. ish policy. After all. a tax on meat is Preferable to certain other meas-' urea which hare been suggested. One of these was the payment ot a very large subsidy to the British produc- era ot meat. This would have enabled the Britizh to undersell the Australi. In producer in the British market. iAnother suggestion was the "mite. lion of Australian exports to Great Britain. This would have led to, a restriction ot the production in Aus- tralia--tg policy of domestic despera- tion in a new country It seems that the tax will injure us less then would any other measure. - The Aus~li trulasisn. I There are so many dangers on the highways wibout the added risk ot dilapidated cars, the e:sentiai parts or w'nioh function imperfectly it they function at all, that adventures ot this kind should be prohibited. ---st. Catharines Standard. l No doubt the youths had a good time-ot a kind-the exploit being tun to them. but we trust this auto. mobile has slnce been junked or that the Police will put the new law in op- eration and seize it as a menace to the public. I A dos;patctt trom Owen Sound about the adventure ot a youth and three friends in a 1919 motor car purchas- ed for $5 lends itself to an appeal ‘for the removal ot “Junk ears" trom the public highways. The quartette made the trip trom Owen Bound to Toronto in nine hours. They had all sorts ot trouble on the way, " may be imagined, and when they came to hills they had to push ft, the other tramc behind being he'd up until they readied the top. Hls marriage was hastened by his condition as his wife wi bed to help look after him. Perry must have been in very great pain as he. fought as well as he could in tho balance ot tho match and his display was an. other evidence or good o d John Bull pluck. -4 Bl'aml'ord Expositor. PERRY'O PLUCK An x.roy medical expert or New York reports that Perry, England's great tennis player, who fell heavily in the early portion ot his ttetttitinal match with Wilmer Allison tor the us. ohampionship, was in reality badly hurt. no sides that he suffer ed severe Nb, abdomen, and spine contusions, in addition to kidney injury and that he will be unable to play again for eight weeks. l We in Canada spend and have been spending large sums of motter-mu. lions - to develop other industries. We ought to be prepared to spend more than a tew hundred thousand dollars to develop the tourist indus- try - one of our very greatest. - Ottawa Journal. Last year Canada established 1 Travel Bureau. It has done excellent work. it has done Inc-h good work. has paid tor itself so many times over, let it be hoped that whatever Government is in oillce next year will develop and enlarge the Bureau’s activities. l When we export our puipwooa, or our nickel, or our ubestos. we sell something we cannot replace. Our scenic beauty remains, a permanent asset, a thing which, no matter how much we exploit it or how much money we derive trom it. remain» with us forever. 1 tens ot millions ot dollarl left in Canada, and this without depleting any resource, without consuming any national wealth. TIMES HAVE CHANGED THE EMPIRE“ J, , "V. ff" Ci' C"""" um.” he was accorded a sporrtaneou, Ci/ac. k. -__ [mutton] Ewusnor. 'ticn by a gathering of 7,600 people “JUNK" ON THE HIGHWAYS h. “A A__-..,> ., . * was THE WORLD AT LARGE /ii3B, SECOND ADDRESS l . Reconstruction ot the debt struc- nture by (a) Application ot the princi- . ple ot the Parmers' Creditors Ar. rangement Act to city homeowners; I (b) Debt conversion at lower inter. t es: rates; te) No more tax-tree bonds to be offered by the Dominion jiiii) _ernrttent; (d) Cttatgterntinn mm. -..... ernment; (d) Ctr-operation with prov. inces and with municipalities in re. funding operations; (e) Establish. meat ot ion council; 2. tnereaaeere. I FIRST ADDRESS I. To maintain peace for Canada. 2. To maintain higher standard of living by (a) Returning to Agricul- ture add industry to normal activ- ity; (b) Decreasing Canada', bur- den of debt; (c) Restoring the labour market to a sound condition; (d) Removing unjust and unnatural ‘inequalities; (e) Better utilization of our natural resources; (f) Bet- ter distribution of the products of agriculture and industry; (tr) Strengthening the Confederation of Canadian provinces and so increas- ing our power to work together and achieve these purposes; 4. No sur- render in trade fight with Japan; 5. Minimum wheat price of 87% cents, basis No. I northern at Port William. Here is a summary of the points driven home in the four addresses: Incidentally, there is plenty of meat in the four radio speeches of the Prime Minister to keep thinking minds busy for a day or two. Boiled down, they show Canada's Man of the Hour and Man of Action has the; nation's problems at his finger tips, that he is a few jumps ahead of the other political leaders in this cam- plign. "R.B." and sought to shake him by the hand. It was a real Western welcome - sincere enough to dispel any doubt in his mind as to whether his titanic labours of the past five fears had been ‘in any way futile. a quarter to make his way through" the enthusiastic throng who greeted him familiarly and {sincerely as Then on to Calgary, his home town. From the railway station to the hotel where he would stay is less than an average city block. Yet it took Mr. Bennett an hour and if. _..- p-.- , of economic crisis unequalled in the history of the country; and to the courage of the Prime Minister in opening his public speaking cam- paign in the very heart of a district that has felt depression’s sting the keenest, made worse by successive years of crop failures through drought. Mr. Bennett went to Lethbridge from Regina-another hard hit dis- trict. His reception there was even better. The pendulum of enthusiasm was swinging more solidlly toward the Prime Minister. Here and there, at divisional points, he had stepped from his railway car to greet and chat with groups of people eager to hear his message. Nothing in any way formal - just a Westerner talking to Westerners. in the Armouries that has never been equalled in the history of the Queen City of the West. It was a striking tribute to the man who has brought Canada through five years 12ttawac--Leaving Toronto Sep- tember 14, immediately after the last of a series of four radio ad- dresses, Prime Minister R. B. Ben.. nett has moved from personal triumph to personal triumph in Western Canada. First he went to Regina. There] ottawac--Leaving Toronto dved in REV -f Above is scene The Week In Ottawa Amid tttttul. welcoming Lear-ml welcoming scenes 204 passenger: and 69 members of the crew York in gpecial train from Florida wh are they were landed from m anxiety gave why i; tGG"iiiui' has 'never To those who know it Ottawa needs no selling. Still in a transi- tion sta e it must be visited at in- tervals Z) keep abreast of its many changes. It has gone far sinc’e a cynic dubbed it "City of sawdust and civil service.” For all its pence, its dignity, its air akin to aloofness, Ottawa has a colorful background quite unsuspected by those content with the obvious. It is breath taking .--that story. of the selection of what is now its site, the development of its surroundings, the personalities of those who made possible what it is. ___ ___-......, _ to the North, and with a Southern boundary that needs no armed pro- tection. Whnt Ottawa will become no man may foretell but its foundatons are strong and its ever increasing importance seems maul-ed. made on Parliament Hill,--- an over- grown town masquerading u 1 met- ropolis. Quite apart from its national importance it is a city of grace and dignity let in a garden spot of the world. In inculculnble ways it is linked with a country stretching from ocean to ocenn, reaching far Canadians shduld become Ottawa conscious. The Capim is not Just a landmark yhere Federal lam, are Remarks Mr. Marston:-0ttawa is still Canada's Capital. The re- minder isn't necessarily a waste of words. Of course it is a fact cos- mopolitan visitors remember when carrying away pleasant recollections of its buildings, its beauty, its charm and its famed hospitality. In Europe its importance is recognized and not unheard of in Asia. That is the for- eign siNiation. But among the native born there seem to be many with i) wrong slant towads their eountry's Capital. To some it is unknown and unvisited, heard of but unsung. There are those to whom Paris is a familiar playground, London a dream fulfilled, and Ottawa merely 1 piece back home. Grace, Dignity. That is Ottawa 1. Investigation ot whole Canadian problem, including highway, air, and water. as well as rail, by new Eco. nomic Council; 2. it railway amai. gamation recommended by this body, people to be asked for mandete be. tore ac.ion taken; 3. Reduction ot costs ot production; 4. Fuil inquiry into whole question ot power indust. ties; 5. Take steps to relieve trea- sury from debt burden; 6. increase support for civil aviation; 7. Improve- ment ot national radio broadcasting; 8. Complete trans-Canada Highway, 1. Continuation of reform program; 2. Controlled may”; 3. Easier ere. dit; 4. Lower Interest rates, mort. gage rates; 5. Pledges of 1930 liter. ally totalled. Callaway Marston Writing in the Ottawa Journal Gives a Picture of the Domin- ion's Capital that E v e r y Canadian Should Read. ‘venues by direct taxation; 3. lncreas. ed trade with the U.S. by reciprocal arrangement; 4. End unemployment; 5. Retirement of workers on pension at age of t or 65 years " make room for young men; 6. Ask Parliament tor money tor technical training ot boys and girls whose parents through unemployment are not in a position so to train them. l Wuhan here they were linked" ian-riser 4?}15'1353: smiles " sight of loved ones. , When Mr. T. Sissons wait "pairing a pillar-box at Hutton Cranswick, Yorkshire, he found a postcard his son had sent fifteen years ago to a isuter in a neighbouring village. The chief held that she had “de- filed'" the has], which was forbid- den ground to one of her age and re- lationship She had, he said tres- passed on the has) and polluted it by throwing water which had been in contact with her body on it and had committed specific amuse by breaking the clay pot. He awarded 25 .damages. pot. But the pleaded, niuJJTEst it Justification, having been jilted by the '.rPtlyrrnery son Skimbme. Rosanne Kunene, the woman, ad- mitted that she had entered the kra. al of her lover, taken a clay pot to obtain water, and after having a bath, had deliberately smuhed the Ladysmith _ A jilted native beauty'a revenge upon her former lover, a subject of Chief Walter Kumalo, has led to an appeal in the Native Commissioner's Court “tins: the Chief's decision that the woman pay damages This is Adding --the coast to coast commuter, and travellers whose tickets call for less mileage-should use up all stop- over privileges and see for them- selves. Canadians should study their Capital and all for which it Manda. Adult and child should know the poignant significance of its Peace, Tower, the dignity of the buildings on the Hill, and learn at first hand‘ of their country in its making. Ottawa's charm is elusive. Its environs suggest the quiet poise of some old university town. It repays study in all its aspects. Standing at the country's crass roads many paths meet before it---a Junction where the life and interests of a 'nation blend. There is'little use try- ing to describe the city. Tourist agencies say it with adjectives, and guide books praise it with many words. But a thumbnail sketch can- not do it justice, or convey an idea of its resources. To read what Ot- tawa is will arouse interest, but to know it awakens enthusiasm. Those to whom it is little more than a name 'that will endure. Though modern it is already mellow. Even in its com- parative youth if, seems mature. Escaping the curse of blatant new.. ness it blends with the hills that are its background. It has long lost the pioneer brand, and in its pluce achieved a sort of patina usually as- sociated with age. Ladysmith - A In spite of its marvellous setting Ottawa must have been ugly in in- fancy. Undoubtedly it was touched by the commonplace. Today it can easily hold its own. It varies marked- ly as two towns do, and bits of the immediate past mingle with newer developments. Though it lacks all-l cient monuments it is building those today. These things combine to make a bit of modern history fuller of act. ion, daring and deviltry than my weaver of wild west romance would presume to put before his readers. Wonderful tales there are of pione- ers, of lumbermen and soldiers who had vision-who built its first bridges, laid out its streets, engineer- ed the canal that so adds to is picturesqueness- It is not a. story of long ago. A century and a half covers the span from "forest prime- val" impressivencss to the present. Compared with cities that date back to the days when New France .was young Ottawa is as a modern novel to an old fashioned "three-deeker." Iniurt To Injury 9: as. Dixie, u. TORONTO TOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and nddren )lninly. giving number and a!” " pattern wanted. Enclou 16e n stamp: or coin (coin prefer- "ed; wnp it carefully) and " ireaa gout order to Wilson Pat. 'ern ervice, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Here's Just the ensemble you're looking for to mold tho silhouette dong fashionable and youthful inels. It's dainty on well u pne- ticn . Rayon utin and crepe silks ore excellent mediums for we de- reloprnent of this quickly made on- unable. Style No. 8111 I designed for fte 14, 16, " yet", M, " end 4 -lnches bust. Size 16 requires 2% yards of 86 or 39-inch m- :erinl for.slip with 1% yards of nee edging. Separate panties re- attire 1% yards of lace. 10W TO ORDER FAWN-‘9"- This is the neuon of the you when one feels the need of new Indies, for foundation men-menu, should be considered first in fail ugdrobe. I All classes of agriculturnl workers in England arid Wales, numbering in all 672,100, showed a decrelse ot 15,900, or " per cent., in 1934 com. pared with 19M. The latter your com- pared with 1933 also showed I. de- creue ot 27,600 workers, or " per cent. I The linen industry ot the United Kingdom is almost entirely tttttMined to Scotland and Northern Irellnd. In the opinion ot members ot this Scottie-h linen trade who lane a knowledge of Canadian ttax, the Int- ter is eapeciaity suitable for the dry spun yarn produced and woven in Scotland. l The busy mother may think she has no time to prepare such “tal- lals" of meals, but she will find that it does not after all take up much time and thought if she keeps a small stock of the necessary packing materials, and she will be repaid a thousandfold by the improvement in her child's health and well-being. '; The lunch should invariably in. elude some raw fruit, nnd with I 31188 of milk them in no need to worry about the hea1th-triving quality of such a meal. When sandwiches are taken they should be made of wholewheat bread, eat thinly, and it is a good plan not to make them all of one kind. One half might be of grated cheese, and the other of tomato, or one half of cold ham and the other of hard-boiled egg and crest. All leandwichea are much improved, from 'the point of view of their vitamin content, if a leaf of lettuce in placed on each aide of whatever ftlh'ng in chosen. The variety of fillings should be " grent " possible. the greeter the variety the greater their value as nppetisers. The sehoo! child's lunch packet should he varied from day to day, says I writer in New Health magaz- ine. Nothing kills the appetite more surely than the terrible unvarying monotony of sandwiches and bread- and-eheese, though both of these are , convenient and we11..balaneed way of giving the child the three neces-, sary elements of food-carbohydrate,: food and fat. But they need not be 1 given every day. The bread may be given " toast, with butter and a tiny pot for potted meat, or a hard- boiled egg, or even the huMtrle sausage wrapped in a leaf of lettuce, and followed by a few biscuits and a piece of cheese. Seuolchildhrllenelt Should be Varied Dainty and Faction] -- - "awn Nova Booth; Bout Afr 475,000 cm. of when I In 1934. Canada was the ot supply. the South Am cr ot when Inning out ot production. Up to 1930 Cumin wu a net In. Porter ot canned “nume- but the. that "5: kn become . net export.- or to In Incl-Cum; about, the ex. Ports in 1984 being higher than in my year line. 10:: when shipment- of tomato products to the United sme- (whm the puck um short) were exceptional, heavy. The Bee Canadian manutaeturtrtg commie- lpocluhln; in Itorrt now- gn produced 24,“! mine; In 1984. ___ __._.-... "-1 are nhnost enentlnl tor the best re. lultl. The amount of [my required my be greatly reduced It corn en- may. 1- tumble. Turnipn or roots of my kind on nloo etree.'ient. Tho-o duh-tn: to (omen rung. ‘feeder lunhn nhonld oomnmnicnto with A. A. Mailman, Auoclnte Chief. Field Sonic... LIV. stock Branch, 01:71. Some Indication should Do “an of the “communion nun-No, the mount of (and on hunt, and but experience In (atoning live nook. Bomethine like Saskatchewan lamb: will be ap. proved before shipment by an or. ticittl of the Dominion Live Stack Branch and will be shipped In double. deck can eortaittittg 290 head. Care imust be exercised during the ttrat month in getting the Inmbs on gran teed. Whole oats ls epnsidered to be the latest min to feed " this time. When lambs have become accustom- ed to eating . pound of [run duly they my " led n more ntenlng min feed by gradually adding our. Icy. when let-gelling: or other home. we 3mm. Clover or mun My In 1934 nearly seven thousand head ot feeder lllllbl were attend in On- uric under the Leah Feeding Pro. Met. The but feeder- were ehle to make nine at high " forty-seven pounds per lamb. The selling price tor teeddot lunhe when :old u tat lambs " Toronto was almost on n basis ot seven dolin- to seven doi. in" end thirty-live cents with the Xmu and New Year trinket nt eight ‘dollnre and eight dollars end " y cents per hundredweight. Townrde the end ot May the price ndnnced to eight dollars end seventy-iive cents per hundredweight. Lambs on the range usuaiiy weigh between tro and 60 pounds. The feeding period in from 100 to 150 days depending on teeds. management. etc. _ Under the rancher-teeder agree- ment tor 1985. the feeder receives the nine ot ell the gain in weigh. pine sixty per cent. ot ts unread utter freight and marketing chutes hue been deducted. The rancher receives the nine at three dollars and seven- tyJive cents per hundredweigut. Home Jew Weigh“. plus forty per cent. of the spread. to the Initial price charged union the feeder when lamb: so into the teed-lot. A valuation ot three dollars and tseventy-tire cents per hundredwelght I: placed on the Inn!» at the Moon Jaw stockyudl when otheint wagin- aro enabUahed. Freigh: from ship- plug point to teeduot will be added Under the Above protect tax-mere who are approved as lamb feeders will not be required to lay out any can. The (night chergee to teed-lot will be proud by the Dominion Deport. meat ot Agriculture, reimbursement being made from the proceeds ot sale when lambs are tattened end have been marketed. Feeder: are required to have euitnble equipment in the form of feeding aheds, plen.y ot teed and good water. They are also re. quired to feed and market in accord- bence with the procedure prescribed by the Dominion Live Stock Branch otBeiala. Ranchers reta'.n ownership ot the lamba until marketed " that under the agreement the rancher and the feeder receive their reepec in share of the nets proceeds after the lambs are marketed. FARM “ASHES The Dominion numb Feeding Pro. tect which was so successfully carried out in ma end 1034 bu lulu been insuunted tor 1988. The project - possible the feeding and in. tenin; of Western rsnxe lsmhs dur. ing the tall end winter on (arms in Eastern Csnsdn where there is ample building necommodntion. good wnter jiiiiiii nnd s plentiinl stock ot reed. including clover or attalta hsy and home grown ruins. For the third consecutive year sheep rsnchers in the Maple Creek sres ot Southwest. ern Suhwhewsn who ore members ot the Southern Sukstchewan Wool Growers Associstion have coopernt- ed with the Dominion Department ot [Agriculture in consigning lambs un- der the tattetteraeeder sneement plan. omen:- of the Dominion Live Stock Bunch Field Services are " the moment busily engsged in Iocst- in; farmers who sre desirous ot iced. in; Ind totteniu lsmhs this coming tall and winter. Approved For 1935 - Range Feeder Lambs Made Avail- able to Farmers in Eastern Canada. Lamb Project 'tedt Africa uoorsi when: tron cum:- fhirotate coal- ttte only were; Africa detueiers " .ent, the ". Wu . net In. n trhiptttatstta tho United in short) ot sham" “bull. fashion M has I sm hula, but has q cries out toll h love Bum trad i when w! ch. col Don tttr I in Tl Alt SY At " 1y fi O ll ten for ret in are d with l Deiv the pm Octobe cil he: direrto found hugs a: w e e k Roosevc Adoption 'trqte-- n Ode: of that go ' Wash Us my Mover Th Aw:

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