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Durham Review (1897), 31 Oct 1935, p. 6

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1| A §4 Â¥6 ai. to‘d the. reader would grow weary before he had waded half. way through it. The newspaper, like the cour;, aims to get at the essential truth. The reporter selects I1 Duce may never be wrong, but to our way of thinking anyons who drinks the stuff deserves a break. down, Sanctions, or no Sanctions. â€" Hamilton Herald. WEALTH OF. THE NoORTH Another gold find is reported on the shores of Lake Athabaska. The riches of the north are great and even yet are baroly tapped. â€"â€"â€" Edâ€" monton Journal. THE REPORTER‘s PICTURE «.. It is the same in newsraper reporting. The whole truth can not be told. There isn‘t time to write it. â€" There i n‘t sp;:ce enough in the Paper to hoid it, and if it could be all to‘d the. reader would â€" grow We have drunk that stuff. One drops dried Camomile flowers into a tea pot and pours hot water on them. _ If one desires one alds til. leul mint and verbena. The re. sult ts not uniike dish water in which seaâ€"weed and _ pepperimen: d:‘osz have been steeped. Furthermore, when one searns that he has been drinking, not Cey.â€" lon or China tea, but Camomile tea, one loses reverence even for the steel thing on his head. SLEEPLESS, DRINKS TEA A Toronto mornng newspaper pro. duced a picture of Mussolini already familiar â€" a picture of the fellow with a terrible scowl on his face, wearing a steel helmet. Above was the cutline: "Sleepless, Drinks Tea." One finds it difficult to feel any quickening of the pulse over II Duce‘s approach to a nervous break. down. One feels that, had the ner. vous breakdown been complete and occurred some ten years ago, the world would be a happier place to. day. duced a p familiar â€" with a te: wearing a the cutline of the w =â€"Chaths is h makes the skin rough and dry, so the nudists can easily strike their matches. â€" Brandon Sun. PREVENT WAR ANYWHERE "The best way to keep America out of war is to do what we can to prevent there being a war anywhere into which she can be drawn" aavo makes the skin the nudists can matches. â€" Bra considerably less cost the grave risks that tended the dog team Montreal. comfort over a vastly I'arger area at 102 mlies, in less than four hours. Aeroplane service has also made medical service possible over terriâ€" tories which in bygone years were covered only by dog teams making one trip per season. This is now re. placed by many trips per season in In Canada air transport has comâ€" pletely transformsd the service of government medical oflice:, as may be seen from a record of a recent tour of camps in western Ontario, when in less than four hours a doe. tor using a plane was able to visit four different â€"camps, carrying out complete inspections and travelling th gont an which ir of In‘ Canada we have Ing doctor" service su possesses, but invaluab rendered for some cor pas: by the Canadian vice. The ambulance company contain scoy There was an item in the news. papars recently and by actual meas. ure it received one inch of space. But it told a good deal. It came from Amule:, Sask., and said that farmers of that district were shipping truck. loads of carrots to less fortunate farmers in the north. In dried.out years â€" and Amulet had its share of trem â€"â€" farmeors there received sup. pies of vegetables from other see. tions. Now they find themselves in a position to help and they know where others are who need help, so they are keeping the thing going. It is well that those farmers in Sas. katchewan shipped vegetables to those in need; it is well that some person who heard about it had the good sense to see that it got in the newspapers. What a wor‘d we would have if the farmersâ€"and.carrots idea began to expand! â€" S ratford Beaconâ€"Heraid. BEFORE DAYs OF ROUGE Aiter listening to the usual dam. 2ging comparison between the girls of teday and the girls of years ago, pert Miss Teenage remarked: "Well, if they were all 8o darned innocent, how did they know when to blush?" =â€"Exchange. ) seve 11 THEY HAVE THE BiG D. Baker. At iat in these ‘ possible to CANADA THE EMPIRE \ ow* FLYING poctors dog team tours would not CANADA we have no official "fly Sing a war anywhere can be drawn," says *. And he might have hese modern days it e to start a war any most of the nations uld not be involved. suche as Australia uab‘e aid has been considerable time and without inevi ably at. es of rec neth from miles â€" al notes 31IG IDEA in the news. "~¢ ht n of m in the material sense, but he rightly !aid emphasis on the grea‘ gain rep. resented by the passing of the de. pression mentality. Internal adjust. ments inherent in the financial rela. ticns between States and Common. wealth still involve many difficult problems, but so far as the outside world is concerned the position of the country as a whole is one of growing strength. â€" London Finaticial Times,. peech Mr. R. G. Casey gave well founded evidence to prove the extent of ie advance towards prosperity in the material sense, but he rightly ar Having regard to the serious et., fects of the depression on Australia‘s | economy, the _ recovery _ already achieved is the subject of justifiabie se‘f.congratulation on the part of | those who have seen the country through its troubles. In his Budget â€" Sor tion of the British m newsprin‘. The Brit showing the way t« London Daily Express AUSTRALIA‘S BUDGET SURPLUS ten of the Prosperity is reaching Canada, too. The Canadian West always held the view that dollar wheat was a paying proposition. Now, once more, they are bordering on dollar wheat At the same time the earth of Canada is not yielding whea: only. There is an immense output of nickel, copper, silver, and other precious commodiâ€" ties, to say nothing of the Dominâ€"‘ ion‘s forest wealth, which supplies ie American market and a large por.| tion of the British market also withl newsprin‘. ‘The British nations are‘ n Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, and those responsible for medical reorganisation ac ivity â€" in Trinidad have reason to be gratified by the manner in which this move. ment has spread ty other colonies in tha Caribbean. Barbados, the Wind-i ward Islands, British Guiana, Jamaiâ€" ©* â€" all have instituted medical ser-l vice investigations of a more or less comprohensive kind which are expec-f ted to lead to important reforms. â€" Trinidad Guardian. , PROSPERITY comEs To CANADA : Midland _ divisions, where the provement in coal mining was m: felt. The numbers of unemployed on | is 'the regis.ers on August 26 were l.-"_‘ 533,259 wholly unemployed, 334,4l9l3} temporarily stopped and 80,236 nor.! li mally in casual employment making| f2 a total of 1.947,964. &1 This was 24,977 less than the num.} at ber on the registers on July 22, and| in 188,614 less than a year before. re The reduction during the month in; in the numbers of unemployed occur.| of red chiefly in the Northâ€"Easern andfev' Since January the total number of registered unemployed has dropped by over 377.000. Thus the upward trend notice. able since the beginning of the year is maintained. STILL ON THE UPGRADE Slowly, but surely, Britain is re. ducing her number of unemployed. Oflicial â€" figures _ issued recently show that at August 26 there were 43,000 more in;ured persons at work than a month praviously â€" 244,000 more than a year ago. 20CSC C cven nunured booss do not contain a fair amovunt of what is called literature. L. is hard‘y prob. able that so many men and women should aim at the mark and without exception miss it. â€" Ottawa Journal. one determined to persue all of would find himself committed to a day over the year. This is, we submit, a lot of ing. and we should be surpris these eeven hundred books d contain a fair amovunt of wh called literature. I% is hard‘v '1' YES, WE HAVE CaNADIAN ; BOOKS It is the habit of some of our Can. ‘| adian {ntelligentsia, when they fore. E gather about cocktails or coffee, to ; | speak with something like shame of the shocking s ate of Canadian lit. ‘| erature It ranks, they would have us : believe with the literary productlon‘ | of the Laplanders; it has neither tradition nor background, little past, no present to speak of, at best a mighty uncertain future. Nobody is writing stuff that will liveâ€"outside, naturally, the ranks of those then presentâ€"and the outlook is black. Perhaps all this is trueâ€"we shou;id not like to get into an argument about it with this same intelligentsia â€"but certainly we are turning out books, even if they are not literature. The Toronto Public Library sends us a booklet of sixty.four pages listing "Books published in Canada, about| Canada, as well as those written by || Canadians, with imprint of 1934." ] In these pages there are listed, we‘ q hou‘d judge, more than 1,100 books.‘l Forty pages deal with publicazions 1 in English, twentyâ€"four pages list thel 1 French works. They cover a vast|} ramge of subjects â€" philosophy, so-” ciology, commerce, the sciences and c the arts, biography, history, tmve!,’. poetry, fiction and so on â€" and any.| TRINIDAD SsHOWS THE waAY his details and builds his picture, the things that do not matter he leaves out. He is a painter rather than a photographer. â€"â€" Vancouver Province. THE EMPIRE ‘ions, where the im oal mining was mainly P 1e5° THE WORLD AT LARGE to prosperity.â€" of justifiable the part of the country i his Budget 18 _ Leord Dalkeith, M.P., who has the °; pink cheeks and the shyness of a )diâ€" schoolgirl in spite of his war record, inâ€" is a contemporary of the Prince of ies Wales. He was up at Oxford, at Orâ€"|"The House," when the Prince was ‘ith]at Magdalen. Judging by the numâ€" Are ; ber of menâ€"mostly â€" fellowâ€"memâ€" «â€"~, bers of Buck‘s Clubâ€"who call him ’“Walter". he must be very popular. US , Pomopous people are seldom referred 9f~',to affectionately, and one even forâ€" A‘s‘ gets that they own Christian names, 4Â¥ So Lord Dalkeith is not really stiff € â€"just shy of limelight, which he of| leaves to his wife, who is a great °y beauty and was Mollie Lascelles, et.kinswoman of Lord Harewood. o % se s o Cgenn dn c lc NR e ced beauty and was Mollie Lascelles, kinswoman of Lord Harewood. ; Lord Dalkeith was in Grenadier , Guards, like his uncle, Lord Franâ€" i‘cis Seott, who married one of Mary ;Lady Minto‘s handsome daughters |(another connection with the royal family, as Lord Minto‘s mother is regularly in _ attendance on the Queen), and of all Lady Alice‘s relâ€" atives Francis Scott is most likely. to capture the admiration of her soldier husbandâ€"toâ€"be. 8 For Lord Francis is a great warâ€" riorâ€"to use a grand old word â€" and did his duty nobly by the Brigade of wi ed them three if )t " EDC OPTIEHIT ETE U UHC ’ other are not endowed, Lady Alice is very much one of the family. She ,has always known the joy of having sisters and brothers to share her llit‘e. a joy which members of large | families take for granted, sometimes ’grumbling against the little annoyâ€" | ances and disappointments of living The "Scott girls" are always bunch at pointâ€"toâ€"points, meets Border races, their numbers in a crowd, though in their hearts realising a crowd‘s mighty comfortâ€" ing in good times and bad. Being one of many also "rubs the corners off," even if you are a Duke‘s daughter or a King‘s son; you grow up with a "community spirit" very useful in every walk of life. "SCOTT GIRLS" Though she has artistic tastes and abilities with which some of the ’ They have a great lock of each other, with their clear fair comâ€" plexions, brown hair and unexpectâ€" edly black eyebrows, strongly markâ€" edâ€"brows which are said to denote the royal Stuart stock. Pretty Lady Burghley, tall Lady Sybil Phipps (always so graceful with her wilâ€" lowy figure), and indeed all five sisters (like the Duchess of York‘s sisters) have a strong _ "family look," making it difficult to say which Lady Alice resembles most â€" a typical Scott is the verdict. s ) The betrothal of Lady Alice Scott, t] daughter of the Duke and Duchess of | Buccleuch, to the Duke of Gloucester ‘| has given particular satisfaction to / the whole of Scotland, writes a corâ€" -lrespondent of the Glasgow Herald, | but nowhere was ithe news received ‘lwith keener pleasure than in the Borders, where the future bride and | her family are so well known â€" and esteemed. ‘ _ The brideâ€"toâ€"be spends most of ;her time in the South of Sectland, | and indeed is not widely known outâ€" isidc the «Borders, where she hunts, sketches, and goes to all the local functions. One thing we are certain of is that Lady Alice will have her s:ster, Lady Angela, in her wedding retinue. Attractive Brownâ€"Haired Fiancee of D Strongly Marked Black Eyebrows Stuart Stock.â€"Of Artistic Tastes Henry Ford and Mrs. Ford pictw Detroit, as they watched their home t Series with the Chicago Cubs. The an enthusiastic fan. Royal Betrothal Thrills ScotlaTd are always in a , and Generally the fellow who makes the most fuss about the way the elections goes did not vote. The fool thought requires izyst as much time as that which turns out to be a big idea. Love is the sweetest story ever told until somebody pulls the trap door from under you, The world contains an over supâ€" ply_ of average meon. They used to beat th: swords into plow._shares. But now they beat the plowâ€"shares into niblicks. D HEO B0 EmCPE TTURE, A checkered career often a striped suit. contact with "big business." To trace the ramifications of . the Montagu . Douglas â€" Scott family in Scotland alone is too long a task to attempt here, but it‘s quite safe to affirm that one and all will give Lady Alice‘s husband a great welâ€" come and feel pride in their kinsâ€" woman‘s good fortune and interest in the new life which opens out to‘ her as a "Royal Highness". much in the public eye bert Scott, who, as Rollsâ€"Royce, brings the contact with "bis busin contemporary of Lord Dalkeith, Another of the Prince‘s generation is Lady Sybil Phipps‘s husband, an old Life Guard, while another Scott sas C Bs se wl \ A SAD COINCIDENCE It is interesting to recall that the Duke of Gloucester was at Eton in the same house as the _ tragically bereaved King of the Belgians, while Prince Paul of Serbia, now Regent in Jugoslavia (where the Duke and Duchess of Kent have been staying with him at Bled), was an Oxford contemporary of Lord Dalkeith ibtniteiadiliias. 1: l 4. VOrE: I But we must not imagine | Lady Alice‘s fiance is an inhuman "wood. en soldier." Hasn‘t he a big circle of hearty men friends, including his brother-in-]aw-to-be, Lord _ William Scott, and hasn‘t he finally shown the good sense to fall in love with a Scots lass and plight his troth in the bonny Borders? _ If only they could be married in Scotland, what a great day for our country _ that would be! The Scotts are â€" related to so many Scottish families that even were the wedding fixed at Westminster there would be a treâ€" mendous gathering of the Clans. ‘ mveryone knows the Duke to be a [keen soldier, a good horseman, â€" an adequate dancer (who is not overâ€" fond of soph‘sticated parties â€" preâ€" ferring a Hunt Ball to a night club), and a thoroughly good fellow in the pleasant sense of the phrase. Until lately it was not â€"realized that he had the same diplomatic gifts as the Prince of Wales. He seemed just the typical British soldier with a taste for sports and a sense of Msscs s rsce ce EV uho einme The Duke of Gloucester â€" love: IKenya for its sporting appeal, and Lady Alice loves it for its artistiâ€" appeal, judging by the excellent landscapes she exhibited at Walker‘s Galleries in Bond street last July. So as a married couple they are quite certain to revisit the colony. ALREADY wELL ACQUAINTED The Duke of Gloucester has been such a regu‘ar visitor to the Duke of Buccleuch‘s home for so many years that he‘s already well acquainted, as we say in the North, with his future inâ€"laws, and they in turn are already attached to him by the affection which comes with friendship, as well| as by mutual interssts such as hun:~} ing, soldiering, and the simple life Guards, returning to the trenches after wounds so severe that anyâ€" one else would have continued | a most justifiable convalescence. Eventâ€" ually he was crippled, and after war was over settled in Kenya. rv _ 200. L brows Said to Denote 'Roy;i Tastes and Abilities. red in their box at Navin Field, team in opening game of World @ motor magnate proved to be of Dulce. pf Gloucester Has 2006 NIOn Iriendship, as well utual interests such as huntâ€" liering, and the simple life. one knows the Duke to be a dier, a good horseman, â€" an _dancer (who is not overâ€" soph‘sticated parties â€" preâ€" s ts eR se s s without sign of boreâ€" must not imagine Lady s an inhuman "woodâ€" isn‘t he a big circle friends, including his oâ€"be, Lord William i‘t he finally shown ‘ eye is Lord Herâ€" as chairman â€" of of Gloucester loves? sporting appeal, and’ es it for its artisti':l & by the excellent‘ exhibited at Walker‘s d street last July. So { family into y ends in The Duke is a majar in the Hussars and was nominated to the Staff Col. lege at Camberley by the War Office recently. It is expected the Duke will join the college next January. London, â€" The Duke of Gloucester and his bride.â€"toâ€"be, Lady Alice Scott, will make their first home at Camâ€" berley, Surrey, 35 miles from Lond. Regal Couple Will Artificial tee h are made of a spe. cial porcelain. Before this was discov. ered they were sometimes carved out of solid jvory." The variety in shape is equally wide. In all, the dentist has a choice of sor:iething like 2000 different shapes. The first artificial teeth were made white, and dentists were obliged to stain them; nowadays they have no trouble of that kind for they have no fewer than 30 different shades from which to choose, and there is no tooth in the world that cannot be pertectly] matched. Observes the Milwaukee Journal "Novelists talk â€"of heroines with "pearly white" teeth, but no human being ever had teeth that were while or anything like white, says the Mil. waukes Journal. Examine your own against a background of white paper and you will see how true this is. More than that you will make the odd discovery that your teeth are not‘ all the same color. The first big event of the winter "deb" season when the beauty and charm of the deb class is presented to society is the autumn bail a: Tuxâ€" | edo Park. From then through next January, the "debbies" will swirl al. ong the stag lines at society‘s func. tion, dash through round after round of cocktail parties and teas, serve on assorted committees, model clothes and undergo the stress of being pho. tographed for the rotogravure pages, ’ One of New York‘s wellâ€"informed society editors defines the debutante as "a young gal in her late teens (an average of 18 or 19) whose parents fee‘s she‘s of marriageable age and ought to be meeting some eligible young men. A debut is fair warning that Josie or Susie is in the market, It‘s a happy medium for putting her before her public, which is the stag line, composed of likely looking young men in tail coats. New York, The coming fortnight looms as a crucial period of preparat. ion for the 1935 season of giddy wehirls, heartbreak and lack of sleep for some 300 of Gotham‘s â€"fortunate young women, â€" in short the debu. tante season. Fishing, farming and hunting are still free. So it is not economically ’necessary for the natives to work for a few pennies a day for same great [Italian corpcration. Italy, if it conâ€" quers Ethiopia, will remedy this. The farm land will be taken away from ‘ the peasants. Prohibitive taxes will be put on fishing and hunting. Slavcry’ will no longer be necessary. Ethiop.| ians will have to work or starve, and ' their masters will be relieved cf the | obligaticn to feed them when there is | no work. I "In The Marriage M*}"!‘?t" â€" Definition The reason for slavery is revealed in a passage of the Foreign Policy reâ€" port: "Oneâ€"half of Somaliland (under ~Italian control) would repay extenâ€" sive irrigation; but the natives, once freed from slavery, have been loath to work." edict providing the death penalty for slave trading and emancipating all children born of slaves. Slavery in Ethiopia will probably be eradicated in this generation. 'ed in 1923), Great Britain objected on the grounds that slavery still exâ€" isted in Ethiopia. At that time _ the British feared that the Covenant of the League might interfere with their plans for control of the Lake Tsana region. In 1924, in pursurance to pledges made on admission to the League, the Emporer of Ethiopia published an Just as in civilized Italy When France and Italy sponsored Ethiopia for membership in the League (the black Empire was admittâ€" The slavery issue is always raised by the Power which at the moment hopes to annex part of Ethiopia. The charge was first brought not by Italy, but by Great Britain. 1Mbenallst Rivalries in Ethiopia." ’ Slavery exists in Ethiopia. A conâ€" dition of serfdom not easily distingâ€" uishable from slavery exists in British Kenya, which adjoins Ethiopia. And actual slavery continues to exist in Italian Libya, as Italy was only reâ€" cently forced to admit before the League of Nations Advisory Comâ€" mittee of experts. Light is thrown on the question of slavery in Ethiopia by the latest Foreign Policy Association report on ‘‘Imperialist Rivalries in Ethiopia." Of New York Debut THE SLAVERY on cce i e t g uc agye t c cigs Teeth Live TORONTO IN ETHIOPIA PCP SeeiP vaut t uts d 1 43111 % yard of 89â€"inch contrasting ind 1% yards of lining for skirt. HOW To orpERr PATTERNS, Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enciose 15¢ 12 stamps or coin (coin preferred); wrap it carefully, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 78 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Style No. 8852 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 46, 48 and 50â€"inches bust. Size 36 requires ;l‘ yards of ‘89-Inch material with anmselp o n 40 4 Black satinâ€"back crepe is . ring for this model with shiny surface used for collar cuffs. ils smart for the normally built woman and will have a slenâ€" derizing effect for the heavier bema Yes! You can make t with today‘s pattern line or a tunic dress. view! It‘s smart for _4€e8s, uncle," replied Tommy, "but I want to thank you for parting with it, just the same." Tommy," he said. saying, ‘a fool and soon parted‘," "Yes. uncle" ran I’ air, C _ | So city bells may further clang the & hour, _ |I tread on brittle glint when every. f where ; The felds turn white and panes burst into flower The wind has coasted down our thln-i ning elms Like unseen oceans roaring out _ of space, And sudden earth is one that over. whelms With windy beauty springing from its place! | Hillâ€"pastures, roads and maples for | | wi08e sake 1 Uncle John came fore he left he ga dollar bill, "Now, be careful Auttmn as worked with all i‘s force and sound Lose not thi; stirr‘ing hour but dare to take The color and the wind that wheel around! ‘ Daniel W. Smyth in the New York Sun: ‘This is & TPSRIY Artea That shskucus chance Be colored with some sweet romance; Lightâ€"heartednessâ€"some joy supreme Fufilment of one treasured dream. May I have happiness to hold Before I‘m oldâ€"before I‘m old! ed. Before my high ideals are sold, Before my tale of life is toldâ€" May I forget all sordid truth And tread the carefree ways of youth May life dold laughterâ€"love, . per. ed, The song I would have sung is hushâ€" No longer do I feel inspired Dear God, I‘m young and very tired, The hopes that lived in me lie crushâ€" "I guess we all get a little careless" he said with a grin.."My own place certainly needed attention." When he arrived home, Mrs. States thrown in â€" the career of Schuetz met him with two bushel ; William Wallace Atterbury ran true baskets and a broom, with a word to story book requirements. _ Dead that it might be wise if he followed now at 69, this Hoosierâ€"born product his own advice. | of Yale and flower of capitalism "I guess we all get a little careless" ‘ leaves big achievements for a monuâ€" he said with a grin.."My own place | ment. » Manitowoc, Wis. â€" "Clean up your" From shop man‘s apprentice to attic and basement and lessen fire the presidency of the Pennsylvania danger," Mayor Arthur Scuetz told Railroad, with a commission as Manitowoc residents in a broadcast. | brigadier â€" general of the United Just Like A Woman |He Knew F To Be So Practical es , uncle," replied Cuts To Size 50! ‘ohn came to visit, and beâ€" left he gave his nephew a used for collar and 33§2 !s_ designed for a frosty drive that sharpens Autumn Force careful with thqt money _ 42, 46, 48 and Size 36 requires pomeal omm ETs said. "Remember the make two dresses Wistfulness Joan Frances Austen his money are â€"straightâ€" See small stunâ€" the . _ _ C °". eaeureger said. The gift was being made as a mark of appreciation of Canadian goodwill towards Australia, among the public‘ i city, among those among the poor. _ Winnipegâ€"A qi raisins was preser Winnipeg recently was made to x.y L- R- u.ccretor' commissioner in mayor opened a }, hibition. se Sixthâ€"Do you radiators, glow ]; types of portable where they may | ¢ with combustible m Remember â€" all are potential fire | quire constant care Winnipeg Gets Raisins As Goodwill Token Fifthâ€"Do you | « electric iron conne swering the telephor are caused from this electrical cause, Fourthâ€"Is the ¢ fron kept on a metal in use, and are all Aâ€"1 condition? It is tion to have a servic in connection with th dicate when the enry. Thirdâ€"If you had one of the old type portable gasoline or simiâ€" lar type stoves about the house, the simplest precaution is to get rid of ’it. as sooner or later it is apt to cause trouble, If absolutely necesâ€" sary to have one of these burners use the coalâ€"oil type, it is much safâ€" er, and while we speak of coalâ€"oil never start or hurry a stove fire with it. It is certain disaster if you do. Secondâ€"Are you using flexible rubber tubing instead ot permanent metal piping for connections to pgas mains* â€" Rubber tubing deteriorates rapidly, permitting gas to escape and connections may easily be broken with the possibility of explosion and fire. If absolutely necessary to use flexible tubing be sure the shut off valve is located in the solid connecâ€" tion of piping only and not at the stove. 2 eeeeeet eE Raneonks Firstâ€"If you use gas plates or portable stoves is the support for them of incombustible material or protected by incombustible material such as metal or asbestos? If not, heat radiation will frequently cause ignition. The â€"following sup; those which experience thoroughly â€" practical _ of your most careful ai Never Leave Electric Iron Connected While Answerâ€" ing Telephone Heating Hazards In The Homs _ In 1926 Atterbury came to Cleveâ€" land for one of his periodical visits and was taken to see the hole in the ground at Public Square where the Union Terminal was soon . to rise. What he said is not recorded, Anyway, the Pennsylvania‘s decision not to run its own trains into the hole still standsâ€"unhappily. Though the general was a Reâ€" publican and a member of his parâ€" ty‘s national committee, he was not averse to resigning from the comâ€" mittee in order to oppose the Reâ€" publican Pinchot for governor. Nor did he hesitate in the Hoover heydey to recommend a downward revision of the tariff. U C ""9~»VH _ AAC Whe of the type portable gasoline or simiâ€" type stoves about the house, the Wl t ue 2c c . Among the first of railroad men to realize the significance of the day in transportation, when trucks and busses demanded recognition, Atterbury early «xrecommended that the railroads utilize these new agâ€" encies in connection with the longâ€" distance haulage of freight and pasâ€" sengers. "It may even be advisable," he wrote, "to rebuild some of the branch line roadbeds as highways. These, having railway grades and curves, could be far superior to most highways." raising As viceâ€"president of the Pennsylâ€" vania in charge of operations, beâ€" ginning in 1912, Atterbury so imâ€" pressed himself on the railroad world that when Woodrow Wilson five years later needed a man to fill the office of director of transportation of the: American Expeditionary Forces he turned to this Philadelphia Reâ€" publican. Atterbury answered the call. He directed the construction and operation of that not inconsiderable rail system which carried American soldiers and supplies from French port to battle line. |(From the Cleveland Plain Dealer.) $ presented to the recently. The pres public inltit-uvtionl glow lamps â€" and other portable electric heaters y may come in contact ustible materia)? er all heating devices ial fire breeders and re. â€"A quarter of a ton of nre aill connections in n° It is a wise precauâ€" a service light installed i with these irons to inâ€" the current is off or on. you ever leave the _ connected while anâ€" telephone? More fires Mayor John a metal stand wi{ev;;; r, Australian trade l C.Md.. as _ the local Australian exâ€" se on relief, or 1 Mr. MacGregor the electric pressing place _ electric : _ More fires than any other suggestions the city of presentation " Queen by distributed _ has found §nd _ worthy of the When Mr. T. 5; 1 ng a pillarâ€"box at J wick, Yorkshire, he 1 eard his son had sent 2 to m sister in a ©nd econon; RDY case s), when s d ®ration to ; “ is a , # Jittl, Canadia bish. 1;, that. y woman, ©upation ducts, noses chandi: when ; "Or bon‘ «€ith fron bot) subj from rous. and in t) ken . Ing « It is Br qu H« Th 8t tin of th &A tr re: #a qu« W inc no her me? erei this da Or H+ m m« 44 ©0r W tha 1t des prir n Phe tr Jay tha uat con thr stit the i the the artif latio T na the proj whe es existen apolop Aem !~ expand teemin; ‘II‘ its lusion ; that f. this c now g where of "rei and ty terribl of the €o the navics bombir But

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