West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 17 Oct 1935, p. 6

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m h] in qtamps or coin (coin prefer- red; wrap it carefully and ad. dress your order to ilson Pat- tern Sereke, " West Adelaide Street, Tmm‘ . " Writ. your name and address p'ainly, Mvtrttr number and size of pattern wanna. Enclose 15e Style No. 3044 is designed for nizes 2, 4, 6 and 8 years. Size 4 requires 2% .vards of 39-inch material with " yards of M. iwh lining. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Today's pattern is suitable for the toddlers as well as for the brother and sister of school uge. ,Tho dean cut in one with the shoulders. And the rest in easy enough tqrut totrether. - The English influence persist; for knockabout coats for childr'en. mrringbones, nubby tweed mix. st,','." and neat checks no favour.. es. Leonard Lyons tells the stcry in the Ncw York Past.. Diana Churehip, Winston Church- ill's eldest daughter. has just an- nounced her ugazement to Duncan Sandys. But there's more to it than a mere matrimonial notiee--a story that Hollywood should go for. Sandys ran for office in the last election. Miss Churchill’s family opposed his nomination. During the campaign her brother described him " I "po- litiesl eentipede with 1 foot on every fence." And so they'll be married . . Romance is not dead, despite what Industrial production in Canada is almost normal and has reached 96.2 compared with 88.4 in July of a year ago. The United States figures were 78.5 in July of this year and 69.4 in 1934. Revenue for earload1ngs are down slightly. but Canada's position is better than the United States. In July the figures were 67.1 in July 1935, " compared with 68 a year ago and the United States 55.6 in July 1934. compared with 58.4 in 1934. i --Labor Leader. These iittures show that conditions are en the upgrade in both countriu, but that Canada is far in the lend toward: restoration of condition: be. tween 1925 and 1929. In July of this year the index for employment in Canada was 92.6, while in the United States only 79.9. A year ago the figures for Canada were 87.8, and in the Republic 78.9. In other words Ornada’a employment in manufac- tures 13 7.4 points of being normal as based on the employment of the) boom years. I The Bank of Nova Scotio his il- Iced I circular comparing business trends in Canada and the United States. The United Statue indices are those of the Fednl _Reserve Board; the Canadian indict: are based upon data from the Dominion Bantu of Statistics. Each series has been corrected for seasonal verhtion. The base of 10 is the monthly overuse of i the period between 1925 and 1929. i English Coat: For The CANADA ON THE UPGRADE CANADA IHE EMPIRE ~16“) CANADA ROMANCE 'r"i"'i tltt, _ _____ r-..‘-n-~=a "II-U the fish. The acid also serves to keep down the bacteria, which cause reddening of the fish. The method is proving satisfactory. F --The Pas Northern Mail. CRANKY STOVE PIPES It's easier to open a tin can than it used to be; they have new devices which take the top out and leave no jagged edge; the eat can stick her‘ head in the tin now with safety. OneI has no more to use a fork, a knife! and corkscrew to get a bottle of ket-f chup started and the percolator and; the drip make it unnecessary to drop, an egg in the coffee pot to hold the grounds at the bottom. But the stove, pipes are just " they were. Like the,' ears on a donkey they have not changed. l _ Now chemists at the Canadian VOICE OF THE PRESS Fisheries Experimental Station at Prince Rupert, B.C., have discovered that a tough "glaze" can be formed over the fish by freezing I solution of borie acid on them. This boric acid ice does not crack easily and a chip may be broken out of it with- out injuring the surrounding surface. Very little cf the aeid penetrates into the fish. The acid also serves to, keep down the bacteria, which cause ROAD SAFETY Ample evidence now exis film of ice in order to keep the nat- ural moisture in the flesh. This layer of "glaze" is easily broken in hand- ling, so the method has not been en- tirely satisfactory. _ FISH FROZEN IN ACID Freezing fish in a film of borie acid solution is proving a boom to Cana- dian shippers of tinny foodstuffs. When frozen fish are shipped in an unprotected state, they lose moisture rapidly and the flavor of the fish is impaired. For some time it has been the practice to seal the fish up in a film of ice in order to keen tho "Ll LOOK BEFORE YOU SHOOT It should be the aim of every man who pulls a trigger to take due care to see that so far as he is concern- cd the hunting season of 1935 will be unmarred by maimings and killings. This requires no extraordinary pre- caution, and unless this is taken, life is safe for nobody in the woods and, any hunter may find himself to lit undoing on the wrong end of the rifle. --Halifax Chronicle. I In Lambton and Simcoe counties roads of yet another new composi- tion are also being built this year. In these cases, common salt rather than calcium chloride is the ingredi- ent mixed with gravel and clay. I NEW TYPES or PAVEMENT Leeds County Is at the present time witnessin’: the introduction of a new type of highway surface, formed of a mixture of calcium chloride, which, it is claimed will, in edition to other /ad.yanttures, lead to a marked "e tailment of maintenance coats, a con-i sideration not to be ignored duringE this period of necessity for the new) cise cf the utmost economy in pub- lie expenditures. Roads of this type; have been in succesful use for some years in New York Mate and their: practicability in Ontario may be equally well demonstrated. l Resolution was presented at a church meeting at Woodstock that missionaries should be sent to Rus- sia. We read (as other day win e a man tack off his coat to save a drowning person and his money was taken; of seven persons in one eity, accused of fraud against the relief: department, and so on. There are a few odds and ends which need to be attended I) at home beftre we tackle Russia.--Strattord Beacon-Herald. DELICATE QUESTION ' United States Government will take $6,600,000 of the $12,600,000 estate of the late Edward L. Doheny, so that a millionaire is not always pleased when the Secretary of the Treasury asks about his health. The minister may have an ulterior motive and be making up the estimates. 1 -Niagara Pars Review.! The very day we read this we read another list of present-My name: which were heard called out by a dancing inatruetress as she addressed her pupils; here they are: Chairmian, Virginia, Lorraine, Juliet, Jennifer, Raine, Celia, Sonia and Caroline. --Wiarton Canadian-Echo. --Strattord Beacon-Herald, NAMES HAVE CHANGED The St. Mary's Journal-Argus pub- lished a picture last week of I school class of boys and girls of 1870. We read over the names and noted the contrast between then and now. Then there was a predominance of Mag- tries, two Belles, one Lizzie, one Jane, one Ruth, one Janet and In Aggie. the pessimistic "realuts" tell in WORK AT HOME --Broekville Reeirder was a, they lose moisture flavor of the fish is ome time ii has been eal the fish up in a THE WORLD AT LARGE exists to show il. Indicated produciion ot all whea: L, the United States in 1935 is 607- than; 678,000 bushels. While showing a ices , sharp decline during July, prospective , no l production is still 110,740,000 bushels herjreater than the short crop ot 1934, One , but 252,892,000 bushels below the five 1ifelyear (1926-1932) average. The pre. ket- liminary estimate ot 1935 production and of winter wheat is "1,703,000 bushels rap compared With a. production ot 405,- the 552,000 bushels in 1934. ovel Indicated production ot all spring the . wheat is 175,969,000 bushels, Compar.. not ed with a production of 91,377,000 bu- liaii, in 1934 and the five year aver. . use of 242,384,060 bushels. . Reports indicate that the quality at the spring‘ ',wheat crop will be poor, with test aw. weighfs per bushel for below To - iweights pc- busherrtrttrttne tar below " normal. The serious and inescapable fact remains that the weather, which cart. n not be controlled, is a main factor, 'e in regulating output. Although man t.. in pride at his seemingly growing e control over the forces of Nature, L has forgotten the old saying: it is - still true that 'man proposes but a,God disposes." It is a humbling jlthought for the seientihe planners ;[that they cannot yet reckon without 2 Providence. The Minister of Agri- culture in the U. S. overlooked that factor when fixing his acreages for wheat, maize and cotton. Drought supervened and created shortages in last year's harvests. Only the sur- ‘ pluses from the bounty cf Providence in previous seasons saved the United l,States from the necessity of heavy limports. Even so, she is having to [buy butter from abroad. Similarly [the vaunted Five-year Plan did not exempt millions of Russians from famine. At the present moment the weather is imposing an involuntary I quote on dairy production in several [ districts of New Zealand. So it must ever be in the equation of produc- ition. The weather remains the un- l ‘known ffftor--droueht or flood, ' heat or cold, rain. frost, hail, fire and , wind, which "bloweth where it list- 5 eth." The greatest of modern far. a lacies is to turn from the horn of l,, plenty, refusing Nature', abundance. _ Not in that way will market problems 5 be solved. The riddle to be answered lt is not production, but distribution q ione, and in the attempt has exposed .the serious weaknesses of the whole : situation and the urgent need for per- manent machinery for Empire con- (iifiii1'i'in,' the adjustment of differ- ienees, and the pursuit of common I aims. " J'ERMANENT EMPIRE "I Regarded as a unit, the Empire 'h' came through the strain of the War a magnificently. As a unit it has 3’ come through the strain of the peace V; beter than the rest of the world. It f: has been a real League of Nations 1’ between whom the pmssibilitrct war 3. was genuinely ruled out and all of . whom accorded general support to lone common, and highly pacific, for- eign policy. But even in foreign pol- icy large changes with disintegrat- ) Tng poss'bilities have been made. , Canada hcs its own diplomatic reare- sentative in Washington, Ireland in » several countries. India has her own ‘I trade representative in Germany, and ,within the Empire her own political yrepresentative in South Africa. But iabove all there has been no common (iii'ln'i'y'i'; policy. Ottawa represents (the first serious attempt to devise, lone, and in the attempt has exposed ,the serious weaknpsgn nf on“. s,r%..t... U. S. Wheat Crop (that the road safety campaign has won a very real initial success. In the last M weeks the number of in- juries and deaths respectively were 111,776 and 2,885. In the same per- iod of19M ' injuries totalled 121.052 and deaths 3,474. The steadily ris- ing curve of road acidents has not merely been flattened out. It has been pressed down, despite big in- creases in the number of licensed vehicles. The Minister of Trans- port and the Ministry officials are justly entitled to congratulation. "MAN PROPOSES AND GOD __ DISPOSES" cu proachon ot all wheat nited States in 1935 is 607-, bushels. While showing 3 iiine during July, prospective n is still 110,740,000 bushels ban the short crop ot 1984, 2,000 busheis below the the 6-1932) average. The pre-l estimate ot 1935 production] wheat is 431,709,000 bushels lleichsfuhrer Adolph Hitler hott Airdrome in Berlin, Germany, ---London Daily Herald. but datrhGiiii." " éAuckland News --Caleutta Statesman Hitler Leaves James Payn was not only a delight- ful novelist, but a brilliant humorist, says Harry Fttrniatr, noted artist (in his Memoirs). He, was a splendid companion and a great favorite am- ong literary men at the Reform Club where his terribly hearty laught was so frequently heard. Apropos ot this, someone made the remark; "Thatanan laugh like a. cmnibni." "Yea, that my be," ejaculated "r gathered," says Hicks, "that Crosland, who had been dining audie- ienty well to become slightly untan- keroue had insisted on being driven in a. cab with a. white horse. There was such a cab but it was at the very end ot the rank. It could not be hired until the others in; front of it had found fares. So Crosland hired the whole rank and drove to his des- tination in his white.horsed cab at the head ot the procession." 'ngers like water, was observed by Sir Seymour one day "making a. m. umphal progress round Leicester Square (London), surrounded by I. cheering mob and followed by a dog.. an empty hansom cabs." A curious yarn about T. W. H. Crosland. (whose book "The Un, speakable Scot," caused a turore when published years ago) [I told by Sir Seymour Hicks, newly knighted actor in "Between Ourselves.) Cros- land, who ht mnnpy flow through " "What delighted me more than any thing," he reminisces (in "Everyman Remembers") “was that, sitting by an open fire, Russell Lowell drew out and lit a. short clay pipe, the only time I had seen that implement used in American good society." An invitation to lunch with James Russell Lowell (whom hewhad known when Lowell was American minister in London) came to Ernest Rhys, the editor ot "Everyman's Library," dur. ing " first vizit to Boston. Maybe you’d think they'd have to buy dyes for the wool. Not Alec. His Mek is divided between white sheep and black sheep, so most ot his weav- Pithy Anecdotes Of The Famous er. Alec works at the ancient loom In the attic ot the house. The loom and the skill to use it came from his father, one ot the pioneer Highland See a to settle on Cape Breton Is. land. The farm has I. Bock of sheep, ot corrae. to provide the wool that Kat.. ty makes into yarn on an old spin. ning wheel inherited from her mom. puts up for the winter months. They have their own came tdr beet and milk; their own chickens and pigs. Fisherman David MacLeod, a neigh. bor, trades part ot his' catch to them tor homespun clothing. Driving along the highway. you ’see a sign on a gatepost; "Huk Rugs and Homespun for Sale Here." ttam.. plea of “link" rugs and home spun quilts and table covers are draped cver the railings of the porch. This, says Katty proudly, is a "sort of a'- vcrtising like they have dune in the big *torcs in Sydney." But the MocLeod homestead is more than a factory; it is an econo. mic entity. They grow all their own vegetables and fruits, which Katty puts up tor the winter months. They have their own cattle for beet and The venerable Weaver and his housekeeper-business manager have built up a i"sltuuttt1eiertt home indust- ry that's depre trlon-proot. They live in a house by the side of he historic Cabot Trail on Cape Breton Island and watch the troubles ot the world go by. "The Lord’s been good to us," says Alec, who is nearly 80, and mod.; est "1 would no. trade poseetions with‘ any man." Depre tsions, politics, unemploy. ment, high priees---utese mean noth- ing at all to old Alec MacLeod and his elderly sister, Katty, says a story from Baddeck, Nova Scotla. Brother And Sister Lead (right) salutes commander Garganico on his departure from Temple- ', for Nuremberg, where the Na! congress was in session. They Have Built Up a sem.sutirsent Home Industry on Their Nova Scotia Farm "It In untrue that all 3 bay learn: in I. modern college In to smoke. 1nd drink, to swear and gamble. He learns all those things In prep. school -Rintt bum Jr. “Boys will be ttora.'" murmured Rogers with a smile. "Why," he cried. "they're in the smoking car with big black cigars in their faces and by the language they are using. they are an older than I “Whats the idea," growled the con- ductor. "Those fellows but fare?" “What’s the matter, conductor " said Will. On one accusion Will Rogers, atter giving the conductor halt-ta. was presently approached by that client, fuming and nngry. Depression-Proof Lives Years ago Eddie Cantor and Will Rogers were members ot a troupe ot performing young stars. Will being several years older than the others sort ot fathered them. For instance. when making railroad jumps. he took charge ot the tickets. For the purpose ot travel, be ft stated, the boys nu put on short pants. I "Whata the idea.'" said Ziegfeld. "l thought your wife and children were perfectly satisfied with tour hundred a week'." "They are," replied Will. "But since then I've trotten another child and he's kicking." ' Next year, Rogers asked tor hundred. Ziegfeld promptly fulfilled dream. "When I let.. Oklahoma I promised my wife and children that some day I would make $400 a week, and it ever I could make that the dream ot my life would be fulfilled." An amusing story about Will Rog. ers is told by Eddie Cantor (in his reminiscences, "My Lite la In Your Hands") It .reems that during Will’s third se.on with the Ziegfeld Fol.. "es--he was then earning 8350 per week-he went to Ziegfeld saying: Payn, "but sir I have never been Ible to swallow you." "Not all year, onnyway. Canal do much in the weentertlme. Ah weal, we are getting a bid auld, and never believed in a person working himself to death." Kaity and Afec don't even consid- er that their Work is hard or long. I So you can see that Alec and Kat- ty do handle some ca h. It'tt ctged to pay "rates," or taxes. PROOF OF PROSPERITY Alec has heard “a good slug" about the depression, bu: doesn't believe it possible that time: really could be very bad. "Why, there was an artist mon came last year and paid Alec " a day jist to sit out under that oak with a pipe in his mouth while he painted a picture. ! na'ls to fasten the hoops; asilrii'i, sapTings and notches them, and they make a tighter job. Fuel ls no problem; plenty of wood. Butter and cheese - Katty makes those. Workmen tom the nearby In- dustrial town of Sydney come up oe- casionalfy to tuy the cheap, sturdy and beautiful materia‘s produced by the MacLeods and other Cape Bre.. ton wegvers. Business is beat. in sum- mer, naturally, when the tourl,ts are here. Winters, Alec occples hitrtselr, making and selling barrels to upple‘ growers. No, he doesn': even bur, lag is done in white, black and varia. tions ot grey. New and then some fancy city folks order some goods in color, but then they pay tor the dyes. MAKE CLOTHING FOR OTHERS I The make clothing tor themselves, for the fisherman and the blacksmith, and for a grocer who trades them flour. “A'course there's ale," added, Katty, pausing and looking at Alec‘ in a meaningful way. "But there’s} a man dune Baddeck war--" She; paused, then concluded, "Weei, we! make sweaters and such for his chil.’ dren." l TORONTO six his l Harvey played tor Toronto Marl. ‘boros along wLh Joe Primeau and [Chuck Conacher in 1927-28. signing _ with Toronto in 1929. In 1931-32 Jack. 'son led the league in scorlng with " , points. _ Note: Maybe you fans would llko {to ask some sport questions, or nay. be you would llke me to cartoon your sport idol in this column, some might even have suggestlous or comments about "Bport Hot Dhoa." . It so, I would be very planned to' hour from you wort tons. ' t m.‘ dreu your letters to Ken Al'dlt Wilson Building, " Adelaide Street, West. Toronto. {y‘GENERAL - WAY.-- OCT. 8rd I; HOT anon I "HOT SHOT" JACKSON l Maybe it's kind ot early to be tut- r ing hockey, nevertheless it lean: to .‘be in the wind. H Here is Harvey "Busher" nelson for the Lents. one of the mos: alum. And most specuculnr member. or let. club for the put tour or avg years. I "Baaher" was born in Toronto, Ont. " years ago. He 13 the feet, eleven! Nachos an and weighs 185 pounds. In} fmy opinion Jackaon In one ot tho' lgreztest left witteerrirt the ("no to. day. Calcutta Statesman: - A few years ago dancing was, we believe, " generally thought of in India " " "' eccentricity of Europeans, young in i and elderly, slim and rotund, oranot It. entirely reputable item in the eele-) ‘bmtions attending weddings and 'devenine parties. Now all is changed yiowinsr to the recent discoveries and t'li1e.th.Litlstfs" about them. Old dances Ci Hindu, Moslem, aboriginal. have s _ been found persisting in remote vil- ylturess; they have been studied with Bicare and cleared of damaging ac- "rctionss; and now they are in great " favour as a form of exercise and I part of a training of the whole'man {for the service of the country! I .l In Bengal this development is .lmore pronounced than anywhere; ,'else. owing to the enthusiasm of an 1 , Indian Civi'an who has made ii.'):, . study of these thinrrs much more i _ than a hobby, has shown how theyz‘] can be used to enrich the life of the” people, and has infected with his! ’enthusiasm all kinds of people, from I a ,'lisrht-hearted schoolboy: and villageit lurchins to anxious-browed collectors, I f Iand even commissioners. All over I iBengal this new interest has spread. I d 'The Bratachari movement, as it isr“ called, is a force to be taken into n i',',.',?.'."'.'.?, in any survey of the condi- a tion and activities of the people of the province. During a typical week of the ew. periment with over 280 hogs offered the dressed price wu 811.80 per ewt., which worked out " In "er- nge live price of 88.69, whereu the ott-truek price alive for the “me week we: only $8.50 per cwt. The first week's relultl were suf- ficient to convince that the change made in marketing wu a wise one, and the follow-up experiences thor- oughly eoniirmed earlier convictions. n dressed weight beats. The method is optional but it is nnticiputed that it will be universally Adopted by farmers producing fair to top quali- ty hogs. l The experiment of selling all hon ‘on their dressed percenuce and grade on the nil which we: started I few weeks Ago in Prince Edwerd blend is now to become omcinl. J. A. Gillis, secretary of the live stock marketing board of Prince Edward Island reporta that good re- aula have been obtained by rail; grading of hog: and marketing on: Be System In Selling Hogs Meets With Approval KEN EDWARDS- GradedonRail - a- v']. [ Factime Romano (to young mos. men): "And to think that when I In: your no I could bite girls only ‘on the taco and luau. The on Cynic The' American Peopl Into two can”. hon they are " good u u ttsou, who ttti" [ha- l Charlotte Acres . . . . . . . . En Bien .............. Neil Hurley .'........ Janet Bheather '....... Mar Looney "......... In. E. Armstrong . . . . . . Beeatue if was felt to _ unhir to pit the womtn lg men in such an endurance special rum, in which scum prizes were awarded. was the women. Old-time (Toronto Teiegrmx.) I A correspondent writes 10 {pl-en “king why a price of i- was hung up for the men's 5.2.1.. the C.N.E. while the wo, ;.n '.r swam the same distance Was 1 awarded $1,000, ttnd ini'ntntu 1'. was uttttCr (Par-v rr'r. t. '. :~ the fair sex. But is such the u. .u. In the first place tl.c 1. :1. _ not either $1,000 or $2,500 for P,".', min. tive miles, but for cz.mm;: hat in o swimming race our course tive mLIes long. If the I swim had been thrown open to n. and women olike an it Watt the fi, time the marathon was 512m Charlotte Acres, the Vancouver g. who won the women's race wuu not have won even $1.000. The time-for the 'men'u race Wu G. Gunbi ............. 2.08.53 P. Pritchard ".o........ 2.11.40 W. Nolan b...........: 2.13.30 lo- Bhioldo ............ 2.14.20 Chum Boos .........'. 2.17.35 S.Pe Padgett q...... 2:20 THAT the fiance of the illustrious Florence Nightingale, Rev. John Smithurlt, who became a missionary in the Canadian Northwest, lies buri- ed in the cemetery of Elora. Ont? 1 THAT Timothy O'Sullivan. an Irish I captain of Spanish dragoonl, who , Wu captured by Privateer, nnd I brought to New Englnnd. emigrated : to Canada in 1720 to become natural- , ind " Timothee Silvan in 1724 in Montreal where until 1749 he noted " the royal physicion? _ THAT the enrliest record in Can- adian history where women enjoyed ee franchise was in New Brunswick from 1788 to 1791? THAT Varennes Re la Vorcndrye. discoverer " tho Rocky Mountains, was the son of Marie Bouohpr whn [ THAT when Parrtown was in- corporated in 1785 and named St. John. N.B., it became the first muni- cipality in Canada to acquire that distinction t THAT Sieur Couillnrd on April ST, 1628, drove the first cxen plow to till a Canadian farm? ntttrtied when only. sen, who nedorGanied the-fha/ii, explorer, Jens Munk. in his search for the Mgr-”west Plunge? THAT the first Protestant servic. en in what in now Cnmdn were con- ducted in Port Churchill, Hudson Bay, in 1619, by Rev. Rumus Jen- THAT Thoma: Scott, plymanter of the Seventieth Regiment of Que- bee, who died there February, 1823, wu I brother of Sir Walter Scott. the Scottish poet? THAT Joseph Fleur-y de In Gor- cendiere, with u record of thirty-two children from I single marriage, in aid to led all Canadian "thers in the number of direct descendants? THAT Loui- Joliet, the discoverer of the Iiuinippi River, was the ttrat Canadian organist when presid- ing over the org-n imported into Quebec in 1669, the first of its kind in British North America? THAT the Earl of Selkirk in 1811 put-eluted for ten milling-I from the Hudson's Bay Company 116,000 square mikes of land in the Red River district? THAT the that general election ever held in Canada took place Nov- ember IS, ttU4t THAT lotterie- were conducted in Canada during the French regime, two being held in Neutral in 1701 ..-...the Cut-logue Lottery in June and the Bigotviile Lottery in August? THAT the first lymgogue in Cin.. ndn, known as Sharia: Intel, wu establilhed at Montreal in 1777? 'no you KNOW THAT Among the coin: circulated In Cumin during the French mine were the "denier"--o-lfth of n cent; the "linrd"--ot-rter of I cent; the “sou" - one cent; the "livre"--twentr cents; sad the “ecu" --the equivalent of a dollar end twenty cents? Thfu I. DO ra KNOW YOUR GMM? I on: on“: "rs-- Brlcall people are ¢.vide¢ Inset-hon who think I good u anyone else. and think they no better'. ; the women lgninst the I In endurance tes:, n in which generou- casn awarded. wu held for brDnW.A.L.Strks Wu felt to trr- 'omnto Swims even_ $1.000. the men's race Wu ........... 2.08.53 '.-........ 2.11.40 .C.'......I 2.13.30 ........... 2.14.20 .........'. 2.17.35 The Day. hues de la Verendrye. the Rocky Mountains. If 1rrrie Boucher who M.ott.trtttl A dad/tii, twelve years of .. 2.52 2.32.2 2.38.10 37.15 37.50 1.15 . gm weuld was race ‘13P th If " n " in“ water “tent by t That aux: ”Man. That Ind Ir I and Him In " tr It th, ow in“ win in Th eyes! in " cur syno- kind to th it I dew te who h work l idle nu " har hm uh " It v the t the: in "I I Bett y- qtand ing Aunt dear? I Dol The bii M in Dom val wonder!“ spend a l! day her l Por Son date mph We have And h Now And he If his t he Hits ad: We rem As I For his Home: “ouch bu There) And a t For S4 The W nth in Now belle

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