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Durham Review (1897), 16 Jan 1936, p. 7

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lout times the 50¢ size twice the $1.00 sire, «e to go to dinner h a real appetite? 10OSFERINE. Tust OSFERINE . In Month â€"In Liquid or Tablet ng reduced prices cal and ERINE ONIC OY OT $1.00 â€" $1.50 H our s ‘cal crops each lft- you up. eals you sleep nded you xÂ¥ wells«of in now ves ty "ASPIRIN® | CDECID, 44Dcts are made in Canada. "Aspirin‘ is the registered tradeâ€"mark of the Bayer Comg:n)'. Limited. Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every tablet. 1 e PORTCET CC PECERTETCICS and all common pains . . . and safe for the average person to take regularly, emnememe _\ "Aspirin‘ Tablets are made in Remember "this: :‘:’\spirin" is rated among the fastest methods yet discovered for the telief of headaches soue d oo ons & BI-ZFORE you take any preg(z:r:k lion you don‘t know all about, for the relief of headaches; or the pains of rheumatism, neuritis or neuralgia, ask your doctor what he thinks about it â€" in comparison with "Aspirin,‘"* We say this because, before the discovery of *"Aspirin," most soâ€" called "pain‘‘ remedies were adâ€" vised against by physicians as being bad for the stomach; or, often, for the heart. And the discovery' of "Aspirin‘ largely changed medical practice. Countless thousands of people who have taken "Aspitin‘ year in and out without ill effect, have proved that the medical findings about its safety were correct. Don‘t Entrust Your Own or Your Family‘s Well â€" Being to Unknown Preparations th wh From Your Doctor if the "Pain" Remedy You Take Is Safe. "~o you‘re M she said. "[ q somebody like t] he is." Gladys for | offensive after at Eve, Clements, Eve hated her instine She disliked the cloties she wor the emphatic perfume which she she distrusted her appealing eye the droop of hHer sensnons man h )y €y ly tie jlelit soon afterwards, and the morning dragged on without any word Shortly before noon Frankie invaded Eve‘s room with a serious face. ‘"There‘s a lady outside demanding M What is scott ?" As To her surprise, she in quite his normal ht was unruffied, and he Gordon f former fian London and lieves he i: typist, obta fice. the bi mine. To hey sn m ‘‘an Prescott and Gordop w find gold in the arid bush 0f Au They stake their claim and st: long fourney to the coust. Westerby has a fiancee, Gladys ents in England. but when they in Sydney he marries a pretty . Gordon forwards a photo sof I former fiancee, Gladys Clement London and when Dan arrives s lieves he is Gordon. Eve Gilchri typist, obtains work in Mediicot fice. the broker Who is floatine t} Find Out t is your business with Mr. *" Eve asked coldly. my business, and not yours," _ quick reply. "Mr. Prescott, Westerby I call him. And I _see Mr. Gordon Westerby, he goes by that name or by * of Prescott." ‘ vescott is very much engaged ning," Eve said. "Mr. West. it present in Australia." * Gladys asked, throwing a see her anyhow," Eve on as she set eyes o M rumed, and he twinkled at he familiar fashion as he remark her appealing eyes and her sensuous mouth. her part, assumed the r an appraising glance ir. Prescott‘s secrtary!" thought 1 should find this. It just shows what ‘"e set eyes on Gladys hated her instinctively. ‘prise, she found Medlicott normal humour. His calm in Medlicott is floating she wore and Clements, rrives she _ CHchrist Giadys Clemâ€" m they arrive Prétty blongde 1 feel like must » hear decided Te in eica elP ,the quality of dearness, shared with Better to keep in mind the happy the squirrel (the beaver is by famâ€" scenes, lily an aquatic squirrel), the penâ€" Days that were bright, undimmed by ‘guin, and the kinkajou, â€" London cloud or rain, ‘Times. i Pictures of joys whose memories e‘er. shall last?" ~ > Or sorrow‘s days with all their sighs What shall we keep from out the misty past? f What keep in mind through all the _ passing years? used; LONDON.â€"The total tonnage of merchant ships registered under the British flag declined 2,668,492 tons between 1930 and 1934, the Board of Trade Journal revealed today. On December 31, 1934, there were 8,â€" 662 steamships registered with a total of 12,878,412 tons; 4,168 moâ€" torships of 2,826,160 tons, and 4,435‘ sailing vessels totaling 359,409 tons,} according to the Journal‘s statistics. Westerby Australia. start the British Tonnage In Sharp Decline "It‘s not my business, Eve said pointedly. "At f then. Good morning." Dan it 2" "Why shouldn‘t you» Eve â€"said. "I‘m Mr. Prescott‘s secretary, and it is my duty to arrange interviews with him." "Probably not," Evo said icily, "I can suggest pothing else,. If you wait here you may wait for hours. And ill he does not wish to see you, he will probably find some way of escaping,! even then." ‘1 suppose you‘re right," sighed. "It‘s a funny husin ing her tears "ITmen off he goes to London on business," Gladys went on. "Not a word for days and days; not a word for weeks. Then I read in the news. paper about this goldmine which was the same name as Gordon‘s mine. So mar said I‘d better find this Mr. Pres. cott, and that he‘d probably be the same as my Gordon." "And you wish to see him?" said Eve, who could endure no more of it. "I cannot say when he will be in; but if you care to return at four this afternoon you may find him here. I‘ll do my best to arrange it," "Can I trust you?" Gladys said darv. "Please!" Eve shudder, ofâ€" the â€" ‘‘Mar said that perhaps I was too cool," Gladys sobbed on, unheeding. ‘"But it wasn‘t so, Miss Whatsâ€"it, I‘m warmâ€"hearted by nature; and, see. ing 1 was properly engaged, I wasn‘t afraid to show how much I _ loved him." be "You have not Eve said coldly. you ?" "L was hysterically happy for two short days. Two days of bliss. No girl ever had a more devoted lover than Gordon. All the gir‘s were green with envy. Nothing too gcod for me, while it lasted." 1 1o "What would you do yourself, and what would you think?" she sobbed. buke intaiediiainisiniaes. don sc & ’“Wbat does Mr. Prescott‘s secretary say to that?" I might have known what I would find going on behind my back. More like somebody from the beauty chorus than an honest sec. retary." J "You must bridle your tongue ma-! dam," Eve said, with a successful ef-lf fort to preserve her dignity, "or else| I must ask you to leave this office." ’ Gladys burst into tears at the re. # "Then why did he call himself Gor.â€" |don Westerby when he asked me to marry him?" Gladys asked. "Tell me that, you who call yourself his secre. tary. Secretaryt" "Mr. Prescott asked you to marry him?" Eve exclaimed incredulously, "Westerby, I call him," Gladys corâ€" rected. "That‘s the name he slgned! to the letters that prove it. That‘s tbe, name by which he is known to my friends and my family. I suppose you’ don‘t believe me. What about this ring | he gave me, and this wrist watch?" ..| Eve felt that her heart had turned’ ‘to stone within her, for the girl carâ€"| ried conviction. How could she have| a photograph of Dan Prescott it she| were just an impostor? Besides, she| was so eager to see Dan, and so paâ€"| tiently burning with anxiety to call him to account. . TO BE CONTINUTED Eve tried to steady her it shook as ie faltered ; â€" "That is ceritainly a phe Mr. Prescott." "Wel} »" photograph is that * funny business, isn‘t asked Gladys trium phanily begged, restraining on the Gladys said, dryâ€" been treated well," What can I do for ~~*CV among them, and the Knaves oup L""ff:," on’six. The Knaves, on the other hand,’ ‘”'". on. Not .: have a monopoly of symmetry, for lays; not a wor | two look to the right and two to’ fad in the news-]r the left, whereas both Kings and dn“"e' Wh'}'h was| Queens are "eyes left" in the proâ€" ordon‘s mine. So portions of three to one. m{ fsis Mr. pmfl: Little matters like these emphaâ€" proba ts Ds ABC] Sioo) the ‘Pafl ‘of the invisibility of| im 9»,. 5. ;3 | the familiar. How many people play| see him? said bridge regularly, and would yet be! e no more of "‘] puzzled to answer this examination | ; he will be “'f; paper, "unseen"?â€" { [ ‘at four th'lS (1) Which King shows only haif| a id him here. I‘ll his face? "J ileadj:'.s yaia: are. (2) How many jewels are there in t the royal crown? ’( 1?" Eve said.| . (3) What’ do the Queens carry in l‘l‘ cretary, anda it] their hand's. interviews with (8) Which King has two hands ? (4) Which King carries the orb?l'S\ > said icily. “lf (6) Which Knave is threatened | tt se, If you wait) with an axe? ni hours. And if‘ (7) Which King has a moustache] it ‘e you, he will| that does noi curl? ty y of escaping,| (8) Which King wears ermine? | w (9) Which Knave has a W on his| an ght," _ Gladys) shoulder? a+ , â€" anyhow," four o‘clock, table. "Then who photograph of ‘and its dislike of others; and the beaver has always been lucky. .To have stood on a dam and see a lodge in some far spot of Canada or New. foundland, and even to have looked for, without seeing, the bubbles or the noseâ€"tip that mark the passage of a beaver, is to feel a special, alâ€" most proprictary, interest in the creature, But even so little as that is not necesary. To have read of beavers is to love them, They have ‘ 0 Pn n Cen ce 0 voice, but _ In nothing is human nature so unâ€" fair as in its liking for some animals i C : Se ce s mds Sss IB T The style of all the cards is emâ€" phatically â€" Tudor. The King of | Hearts is said to show Henry VIIL in his proper robes, and the Queen lis a picture of Elizabeth of York, 'wife of Henry VII. But the ladies, as a whole, are an insipid lot. The kingly attitude is one of authority rather than bonhomie. The Knaves offer more variety of type, but they are uniformly poor creaturesâ€"as knaves should be. The practice of duplicating the figures, so as to be equally intelligible from either side, is comparatively modern: it would be interesting to know whether the| earlier pictures gave fuller details of costume.â€"London Mbsarva»r ‘ their (3) (4) (6) ~| _ It has been left for a corresponâ€" ,dent of The Times to point out that 0) the club suit of cards "is the only .] one in which the royalties together 1| possess six eyes" (the knave being â€"| counted, for this purpose, as a royâ€" | alty). All the others have no more | than five. It is perhaps a matter of gallantry that the Queens are the only figures who always get their | full set of eyes: the Kings have only seven among them, and the Knaves six. The Knaves, on the other hand, | have a monopoly of symmetry, for‘ [two look to the YÂ¥ight ~anit / tarn. s1 Oddities Of Playing Cards ‘| To the credit of the tree planting program was â€" placed better farm | gardens, adequate protection against | windstorms, improved appearance and added home comfort, retentiun! of snow moisture, an an‘d in growing ,lfruit successfully, protection for | stock and poultry, _ attraction forl’ ‘bird life, protection against drought l‘and provision of small fuel. , | _ Fifty thousand trees were planted | in 1901,the first year the federa!: ’government directed the work. Since then, Manitoba has planted 18.700.-: 230 broadâ€"leaf and 344,693 ever. greens on 32,705 farms and Albert:n'; records showed 37,879,855 broadleaf and 661,370 evergreens on 11,124 farms. t Cier lor western agricuiture ' Folk who pulled up stake: | Maritimes and Ontario â€" an, !west‘vard at the turn of tha _ 3" [ .n _ wno pulled up stakes in the Maritimes and Ontario and moved westward at the turn of the century or came from the Old Country brought their love of home beauty with them. And in that was born‘ the tree planting program which is proving its value in dollars and cents today to modern farmers. ‘ Norman M. Ross, chief of the tree planting division of the federal forâ€" est nursery station here, and h‘s asâ€" sistant, C. A. Edwards, dipped into facts and figures and found the love of trees brought by farmers fron: older settled areas provides the le.'-l‘ ClGt $0F WaStAPn | amvinidis.ll" â€"London Observer .. Providing shade in s1 in winter and aiding their war on drought :, ing, 145,000,000 trees planted as â€" sheiter be farms _ in Manitoba, and Alberta in 35 year atic planting. Five will be nlanted in 1002 Beaver Cc o2 COs PIng / neésitiUWays. . be sympathetically treated. ,And apart from these organizations, y jewels are there in | there is always the church. All 2 ‘churc«bes have youth organizations in the Queens carry in which _ amiable companionship â€" can lusually be found. the invisibility of / or o many people play|in v ind would yet be C.A. this examination’ance aced _ better farmi protection againstg roved _ appearance comfort, retentiun,’ Sask.â€"Western Canâ€" he fcrest to its farâ€" . its agriculture. SAE UV }ud)‘“l vogue today, or through the Y.w. id yet be|l C.A. If a girl is living at some dist. amination | ance from such organizations, a let. ter to the secretary will, I am sure, only haix‘,always be symnatheotinally sraataa be NOTE: The writer of this column is a trained psychologist and an au. thor of several works. He is willing to deal with you problems and give you the benefit of his wide experi. ence. Questions regarding problems of EVERYDAY Living should be ad. dressed to: Dr. M. M. Lappin, Room 421, 73 Adelaide Street, West, Toron. to, Ontario. Enclose a (3¢) stamped, addressed envelope for reply. l f’ The best thing to do is never an-‘ ‘[swer an advertisement of the nature [,that has caught my correspondent napping. I have known cases where; jit has led to the ruin of a splendid| type of girl. To my correspondent I want to say, if this man turns up and begins to pester you threaten him with the police. If he persists, communicate with t~a police. If he} does not turn up again, you may count 4 yourself extremely lucky, but be sure P !that you have profited from your ex. P perience. Don‘t let it worry you. Put t the whole thing completely out of A & your mind. Join some church society or the Y.W.C.A. and find companion. i ship that will enable you to forget 1 about this nasty jJar which you have g received. 10 me, it is somewhat surprising that anyone will seek companionéhip through press advertisements, There are so many legitimate channels through which one can make friende ;| _ My correspondent seems to have a grudge at the paper in which she saw the advertisement, but that is foo.lish. In all fairness it ought to be said that the greatest care is generally |taken to see that advertisements ac. cepted for the papers are bona fide. But even with the greatest of care ad. vertisements will sometimes appeax" that not what they appear to be on | the surface. Such advertisements are ‘usually inserted by very crafty people| and are cunningly _worded. If they' ’were not so, no advertising managerl wou‘ld accept them. Every reputable‘ paper wants to build up circulation, | and such advertising wou‘d only pull down the circulation figures. Clean, straightforward advertising is the de. ; mand of our press todav answer such °)* >~ [Ce20HCent is fortunate indeed if she has been able to free herself before becoming wholly ensnared. To say the least, it is always risky to ["] ‘"#I live all alone in a small apart. C ment and go out to business each 'day. I have always been back ward e and slow to make friends and, con. â€"| sequently, 1 have very few friends. ;.’None that 1 call intimate friends. 9| Lately I have been feeling loneliness ei rather keenly. I noticed an advertiseâ€" n‘ment in the â€"â€"â€"â€"â€". inserted by a -l"gentleman" who would like to meet & companionable woman of my age to n'accompany him to parties and break i,' the loneliness of life for him. At first , 1 hesitated, then 1 pictured a young | ,'man in a similar position to myself, | 1 so I replied. It has turned out very | l’much differently from what I expect-! ;zed; This man was evidently: lodking for something other than complnlou-, ’ahip and 1 have had the greatest difficulty getting rid of him. The ex-" | perience has greatly upset me and 1 l "am in constant dread of him turn-,l ling up.‘" I i There it is. A very old game and Oone that is being played daily. Hunâ€" dreds of innocent women and girls have been caught in the mesh of such rogues and have learned by bit. ter experience that it is not always safe to answer such advertisements. My correspondent is fortunate indeed“ if she has been able to free herself ’ I have a leiter before m« |pical of a good many lett« !have received from time to raising a matter about whid a‘ways intendod to write. | | me to sound a much needed This letter gives me an o: â€"a@ spinster of thlrty.fl\"e‘ in part:â€" n‘t let it worry you. Put thing completely out of Join some chureh society C.A. and find companion. EVERY DAY LIVING A WEEKLY Tonic by Or. M. M. Lappin advertisements 1e can make friends always find compan. good many letters that 1 iter before me now, ty. from a young woman m time to time, and about which I dhave to write. It enables 27 20 warn ns opporiunity Sheâ€"writes one :' EDMONTON.â€"Teq Bishop, found. |er of the University of Alberta Wo. ‘men Haters‘ Club, is going to the National Federation â€"of Canadian University Students‘ Conference at Kingston, Ont., next week. And Ted admits he may seek formation of women haters‘ clubs in ’every university in Canada. He orâ€" ganized the women haters‘ organiza. tion here a few years ago and it has a membership of five. So if other varsity clubs do gpring up, coâ€"eds won‘t have to worry unâ€" less the membership goes over bigâ€" ger than at the University of Al. berta, Women Haters Getting Anywhere In Alberta College sideration of her ca: "no confirmation or that she had even red at one time to 160 York Hera!dâ€"Tribune 2 _ _ . °_ PHOIdG, moreover," said the board, "be acceptable hygenic models for their pupils in the mat. ter of weight." As to this, the board of examiners added that Miss Freistater was now. back at 181 pounds, which substan. tlated the original opinion of the ex. amining physician that any reduction in weight would be merely temporary and the condition in the middle years of her life might become a handiman Not only, said no record of a 1. 777 702C of examiners said in its answer that its requirements as to weight and other ~physical char. acteristics were those adopted by in. surace companies for standard risks. The board held that such require. ments were reasonable, in view of the insurance aspects of the teachers‘ retirement system, ‘Teachers should, moreover," said the board, "be acceptable hygenic models ~for theliv miunifa in an0 Lool ’ The board of exa its answer that its i 'to weight and | other acteristics were those surace companies for The board held that ments were reasonab the insurance aspects « retirement system 4ais request had been refused, said Miss Freistater, an action on the part of the board of examiners which she characterized as "arbitrary and unreasonable", | _ In her application to Com ‘Gra\'es for a review of the . Freistater said that she had able to get down to 150 pour months. The trouble was, that her mother had not 1 during the sixâ€"month period had to devote so much tim that she had been _ unabl. wholesheartedly and had |g only to 160 pounds. She had : board, she said, for an exte another month to get rid of pornds. ‘J Miss Freistater applied for the ‘license in March, 1931, The board of j!examinel-s denied the applicatton be. | cause she wieghed 182 pounds. Miss :’Frelstater, being five feet two inches ‘,mll, should, in the opinion of the the board, weigh 120 pounds if she ’was to be licensed to teach in New York, ] The board agreed to issue the |litense, however, if Miss Freistater ,conld reduce her weight to 150 pounds 'wlthia the next six months. is delicious get down to 150 pouh&s in six ‘Swever, if Miss Freistater uce her weight to 150 pounds e next six months. application to Commissioner t a review of the case Miss said that she had not been id the board, was _ application for 1 her case but ther ‘e »0ard, was there pplication for recon. * case but there was or official evidence" n reduced her weight 160 pounds. â€" New and had got down ds. She had asked the . for an extension of to get rid of the ten 0 much time to her been unable to diet she said, been well 1 and she TEA Phillips® Milk of Magnesia Tabâ€" ( lets are now on saie at all drug k Stores everywhere. Each tiny tabâ€" â€"<o@l ‘ let is the mf“? afle(n;:. of f « ‘ a teaspoonful o nâ€" ~ .t uine l!tnlhps Milk of @ "@.*\Q | Magnesia, C .. ¢ i | [ | Puiruips® 7 6| )p : y eW Ver (Mis â€" And Atmways Say | "Phillips » When You Buy. Your | child deserves it ; for your own peace | of mind, see that you fet it â€" Genâ€" | wne Phillips‘ Milk of lTagnesia, f Also in Tablet Form : | Doctors Say PHILLIPS® For Your Child When it comes to the frequentlyâ€"y *"milk of magnesia,‘" doctors, for o 50 years, have said "PHILL]] Milk of Magnesia â€" the safe remg for your child." Remember this â€" And Atways S "Phillips » When You Buy. Y child deserves it" for vour anet, aa. "The day has gone by when any physicist thinks that he understands the foundations of the physical uniâ€" verse as. we thought we understood them in the nineteenth century,"â€" Robert A,. Millikan . One of the exhil a Cambridge shire nard Jackson, was made entirely of on a foundation af Economy was especially ,ln the Thrift Workshop, |b|.nana crates made baby Bits of linoleum made soles room slippers, of which the were made from last year‘s d felt hats. Hen‘s feathers and wool which had been picked : the hedges, were used as fill dainty quilts. The iriumph of creative | in an age of machinory wa ted by an exhibition in I which women in villages q England and Wales sent wo exhibits wore shown by the Federation of Women‘s Istit they combined beauty with The Duchess of York, oft choice of a gift, bought f: pigs. MADE IN CANADA foundation of coarse esia Tabâ€" t all drug ‘ tiny tab» | Es I \&; â€" SSz.eN| | , for w Aed | *o mss * ;' es | 'v;}u exhibits, contributed by snhown by the Nationa!| Women‘s Istitutes, and ! beauty with economy, of York, offered her ift, bought five velvet’ doctors, for over d "PHILLIPYy the safe remedy woman, Mrs, Ber. a beautiful rug old sill stockings especially apparent de baby cradiles. ade soles of bed. which the uppers the uppers 8 discarded work. _ The | nd sheep‘s d up from fillings for sacking, »"ncarin »iue, made specially im Yorkshire for export to China. Ruby, the red of the precious stone takenâ€"from Chniese vases. Lotus bud, a delicate pink, the same color as the flower. Faience blus, a pale blue of the type known to the Chinese as "sky after rain." Tropic red and sail red, two "iron jrust" colors, â€"*The Chinese were masters of color," Wilson declares. "I have spent a long time, with the kind asâ€" sistance of the museum authorities, matching up my colors." ONTARIO _ _Coolie, an unusual type of Saxe blue which the coolie of Ching dyes his clothes with to this day. Corn stalk, a golden yellow with which the Chinese loved to decorate their beautiful vases, * Mandarin blue, made specially im Now he has produced a new color card with 24 colors, most of them Chinese, fop millinery in 1986, Here are some of the colors, taker from the pottery of ancient China. _ For the past few months, R. F, Wilson, of the British Color Counrâ€" cil, has been working at the musâ€" cums in South Kensing.on, adopting subtle shades from Chinese vases, many of them dating back to 200 B.C There !Colors For 1936 | Inspired By Old 5 Chinese Poitery Colors from pottery made by ar who died 2,000 years ago will ad« the hat of fashionable Miss 1936. T _ De0 Py snow, sicet and ice. Suitable precautions should, â€" there fore, be taken to guarq against such hazards this coming winter, Employees should be encouraged ,to report and correct unsafe conditâ€" ions and practices, In short, good housekeeping ‘on the part of all concerned will greatâ€" ly assist in eliminating â€" the many needless accidents, and their costs due to falls.â€"N. 1. Accident Preâ€" vention Association. should be cleaned : and provision should prevent a recurrence. Puddles and dripp water make the floo |__ine majority of falis of workers on level surfaces are due to slippery lsubluncen. defective flooring, proâ€" truding nails, materials in aisles and passageways, cetc. If the floors are kept in good shape, materia‘s propâ€" erly piled and stored, and refuse disposed of, all aisles and passageâ€" ways kept clear and unobstructed and well lighted, much will be done towards preventing such accidents. Eplintered floors are particularly dangerous, Falls from scaffolds, â€" stagings, runways, platforms, etc., may . be caused by defective materials, slipâ€" pery surfaces, lack of protective rail ing, etc." They, therefore, should be constructeg of suitable material, inspected regularly and kept clean and in good repair. The majority of falis of w on level surfaces are due to sl substances, defective flooring, truding nails, materials in aisle Winter presents its peculiay ds. ‘The chance of slinnin» â€" The principal causes of falls from ladders are: breaking of ladder or parts; slipping, twisting or falling of ladders, _ Ladders, therefore, should be constructed of substantial materâ€" ial and periodically inspected and maintained in m safe conditinn ‘Pi.. _ It is obvious that stairs ar should be kept free from substances, loose objects and provided with substantial an erly maintained handrails a lighted. EuCC 2200 CC Cemmutk, VC Un [ufe ladders, 14. Substitutes for ladders, such as boxes, barrels, chairs, etc, 15. Stepping into or out of elevators which have b‘gn stopped a little aâ€" bove or below floor level, 16, Poor eyesight. 17, Winter‘s SHOW, ito and chuss, 13, see well 11. Une loose soles. 10. Walkin and stairs, _ 2. Greasc, oil and staips, 8. Stepping on material shift under foot. 4. Floors irregular or in Accidenis Due To Falls Take Heavy Toll A STUDY ot accident reports reâ€" veals the fact that accidents due to falls constitute a heavy drain on com pensation funds. Some 0f the chief causes of the falls are listed below for your considcration, with the hope that these hazards will be elimâ€" inated insofar as possible in your individugl OberaÂ¥Kon.. Unguarded floor openings. Loose covers over floor openings Improper use of ladders, or unâ€" Shoes with 1@uUa! operations Tripping over o subnuntia__l arid-;a;;); in places ings of oil and r slippery â€" and up immediately be made to and water on run te and sleet. stairs and steps ‘ from Vslippery objects on | StePs or stairs no handrails o« over heels er too dark to in poor com men and well PA that will debris, ety floors floors

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