West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 27 Feb 1936, p. 2

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M h TV it tis FTime was when bankers, whether through shyness or modesty or for reasons less admirable, were all tacâ€" iturnity. If they spoke at all it was in a jargon which made their business seem a mystery, I . A sign of the times, and among the wholesome ones, is the change in the annual statements of our bankers. If a dozen or 20 people in any ehurch went up and sat in the desert. »ed front seats we believe the minister would at once begin to preach better sermons. â€" Peterboro Examiner. â€"____ "mC place near the back." That leaves a great wide space up in front between the preacher and his people, and that in itself is sufficient to dull the fire in the beart of any man. The man in the pulpit must feel at times as though he would like to «ome down and stand on a seat ln“ front of the congregation where e «ould be close t,, them. He must at limes grow weary of the isolation to which the back seat custom has doom. ed him. If he has some fire and brime. stone in his message then it will have ehance to wegken before it reaches the occupied pews. Oor "some place near the That leaves a great w in front between the pre: people, and that in itself to dull the fire in the h man. The man in the nul Those Empty Front Seats Probably there wili be no answer to the question, but it should be ask. ed: "Why do people prefer to sit in the back seats at church?" As a rule the front seats are empty. Ushers ex. plain that a good many people ask to be shown to a seat "not too far up."‘ U "SONMbG Aiena mous s% . m . ol l Bankers Good Reporters The Ottawa â€" Journal man who repeats balft 1 talks too much: but the says the trouble is that repeat twice what they maybe so, but we still th ean teach us a thing or t get together. Some of â€" know how to multiply 1 Iwo. â€" CiratfAnd Preis. ne was probably than most of the things ars comm A man who had never than a mile from home, : ver ridden in a taxi, stree boat, who had never atte: «ting, a ball game, a movi fight has died in Maine, a he was probably a good « Apparently the rabbit had been rac. Ing across the cemetery. It stopped to rest and froze sitting upright. â€" Re. Kina Leaderâ€"Post, The rabbit, perched on its hind legs was found in a ground depression in Regina cemetery, stiff as a poker, and nearly covered with snow, a victim of the ceold spel!. R A jack rabbit was frozen solid while witting npright, its ears back and eyes open. er of Canada and had many Canadian friends. The will disposing of his esâ€" tate provides that all oil and water eolor paintings in his possession are to be given to the American Academy of Arts and Letters to be disposed of at private sale. Proceeds of the sale @re to zo to establish the Hassam Fund for the encouragement of painting in the Unâ€" ted States and Canada, the income being used to buy works by artists of both countries. The pictures thus obâ€" tained are to be presented to public art galleries in the United States and Canada. â€" Winnipeg Free Press. The latest instance is a bequest by the American painter, Childe Hassam who died recently. He was an admir. While the Peace Garden on the boundary is a permanent and visible indication of friendship between the United States and Canada, there have been many other evidences of good. will. Among them have been the ben. efactions of wealthy people of _ the United States which have been offer. ed to Canada as well as to their own countryâ€"such as the assistance for higher education from the Rockefel. ler Foundation. The traffic accident statistics for British Columbia last year, as just announced by Inspector Hood, of the Provincial Police, show that 90 perâ€" sons were killed and 834 injured by motor vehicles in our streets and our highways, and that this was "the highest total for any year since the beginning of the depression." â€" The principal reason for this toll of death on onur roads, says Inspector Hood, was fast driving. â€" Vancouver Proâ€" vince mile from home, who hadâ€" Rabbit‘s Fatal Rest We Can Learn V OICE commonplace Contentment â€" The Speed Demon TOROoNTO what they hear. _ Well we still think our wives thing or two when they Some of the ladies do multiply by more than ord Beaconâ€"Herald. A Friendly Act a taxi, street car, or a _never attended a wed. THE WORLD AT LARGE CANADA ‘. &A movie or a prize Maine, aged 76. And a good deal happier people to whom such urnal â€" elaims â€" any balf what he hears Toronto Star ome of them been more or a Mountie" for a huil;â€"a;d: UV MUNTON.â€"Interested bacheâ€" ’lors may learn something to their advantage if they call on Mayor J. A. Clarke, who has been asked by a Toronto girl to assume Cupid‘s role. The girl, 24, and weighing 165‘ pounds, wants a "northern rancher| In that tiresome matter of examin. ations, for instance, which has itself been under criticat examination late. ly, what a different place the world would be if one knew beforehand the ,unswer to every question that would be asked. Then there would be no need to write to The Times, as one young malcontent is reported to have threatened, because the examiners had been so grossly careless as to catch him out by setting the same questions precisely, two years run. ning." â€" London Times. The thought must have occurred to many of the young hearers that the lot of the baby spider is much hap. pier than their own. How simple and easy life would be if only they too had been born fully equipped to do even the most difficult things, ‘ EDMONTON _ At one of the recent juvenile lee. tures at the Royal Society of Arts a great many interesting things were said about instinet in animals, Among the illustrations given was the happy case of the young spider, This gifted creature, just out of the °g#, can ac. complish that miracle of construction â€"a spider‘s web, without teaching or without hesitation. oronto Maiden Prefers Rancher ofi the T us es s eE ‘ From a small town in New â€" York state comes an interesting and though provoking story of local economy, The community was faced with the necessity of naming a new chief of police. The complete uniform of the previous incumbent, purchased at a cost of $200, was available for the use of the next. There were half a dozen applicants for the job,. What was the municipal governâ€" ment to do? Its members decided finâ€" ally to combine prudence with law enforcement, They named as chief of police the man who came nearest to fitting the uniform, thus saving the price of a new one and getting a law enforcement official in a single move, â€"Kingston Whigâ€"Standard. So far as the press is concerned it is itseif in business and profits most when business in general is flourish. ing. Its own business, however, in. volves giving the people the news. In that it seeks to be fair. Otherwise it would certainly have a very limited cireulation. The newspaper has regard for the reader, the community, socâ€" iety and journalism, and most news. papers regard this as a trust, â€" St.' John Telegraph.Journal. | ’ Not tong ago.'w-hlle the of Pendleton, Indiana wa an explosion of gas took I roof of the city hall was The fact that the counci] sion is surely an unnece Winnipeg alderman shoul IDK, â€"~ WINRIEAD Wistf uc . l There is ta abolishing the ’ls wanted is crooners. â€" _about banks creating wealth, which they don‘t and can‘t. Had they been told a little more often in the past, with a greater effort at simplification and less propensity for jargon, it would have been better for the banks â€"and for all the rest of us, â€"Ottawa Journal. J We have before us, for example, the addresses at the annual meeting of : the Canadian Bank of Commerce, Its | general manager, Sidney H. Logan, | shunning the usual statistics about trade and industry, gave an intensely interesting exposition of a bank‘s role in the field of credit and money. _ It was not an easy task he set himself, "ut he did it efficiently, made the thing clear, we shoutd say for tlm’l average intelligent business man,. 4 More power to him. So many peo.| . ple confuse money with wealth, and so many more talk the idie nonsense 4 THE EMPIRE I They are different now. Anxious to be understood, certainly considering it desirable, they have become xood’ reporters, have been turning their | onece dryâ€"asâ€"dust financial rigmarole’ into readable human interest stories. "7" fNcCat miére were half a pplicants for the jJob. was the municipal governâ€" do? Its members decided finâ€" combine prudence with â€" law nent. They named as chief of ie man who came nearest to ho d Man to Fit the Suit Winnipeg Tribunoc It Is Their ~Cause the examiners grossly careless as to _by setting the same PRES $ imely Warning hey Still Croon 8 talk across the border of the word "croon" but what is an effective muzzle on â€" Calgary Herald. knew beforehand the question that would there would be no The Times, as one Humans Fail CANADA, THE EMPIRE counctil was in ses unnecessary detail i should take warn. e the city counci1 ta was in session, took place and the blown â€" off 43 plainl: ses. Paris doesn‘t mean to drop her beloved black this spring, _ She compromises by letting a comor inâ€" to the scheme. _ For instance,, white crepe accents the flattering neckline and trims the sleeves of this slenderizing black crepe dress patterned for today. Black and acqua is also smart, Sty] It was not until years later that Kipling heard of it in London. He ihad been on this side of the Atlantic, knocking about the Gloucester walerâ€" ’frorrt for nautical color, when he heard of the black "Scots", He brought them into his book in young Harvey Cheyne‘s meeting with the negro cook of the salt banker We‘re Here, fishing out of Gloucester. Dan Troop, son of the skipper, tells Harvey the cook comes from "the in‘ards of Cape _ Breton, where the farmers speak homemade _ They wouldn‘t believe that the negro tongue could master the "vyolâ€" leying syllables, the sighing cadeneâ€" es, the long wash and roll of the Gaelic," as one Scottish writer desâ€" cribes the ancient language of the Celts. And they stirred up a minor controversy over the point. f For discovery it was. Few,; even in Nova Scotia, knew the province held "coalâ€"black Celts‘"â€"as Kipling called themâ€"until he told of them in his "Captains Courageous". And â€" even then, the scoffers were many. _ HALIFAX, Canadaâ€"Rudyard Kipâ€" ling‘s keen eye for the bizarre gelâ€" dom spotted a more striking bit of literary material than they did in his discovery of Nova Scotia‘s Gaelicâ€"speaking negroes. "Coalâ€"Black Celts" Down Cape Breton in any hurry to avail themsel;'e;';-f- the Leap Year privilege of doing the asking, The comment was aroused by the fact thgt the coâ€"eds have not been look bored and are apt to be rude in this respect, even to the point of not thanking their escorts for the thoughtfulness and trouble involved in giving them an evening‘s pleasure. If these same girls were forced to ask the men out for a few months‘ and pay the bills they would realizel their privileged position." | MONTREAL.â€"Learning what it costs to finance an "evening out" should be part of the education of all women students, is the view €xâ€" pressed in the McGill Daily by a group of men undergraduates. "Toâ€"day too many women take beâ€" ing asked out for granted," one student commented. _ "They often Male Student Says Women Often Prone To Rudeness With Escorts A Neat Model coin (« carefull TO THANK YOU coin son Pat. Adclaide The judges who ars W.J.W. Lennox of Toronto, B.B. Cohoe, of Woodsice and J. w, MacKay of Ottawa for the corn, and Professor W. J. Squirrell of Guelph, and S. B. Stothers of Arthur for grain and seeds were met with a :large number of entries and will be ‘busy throughout the show. Chatbam â€" With 13 open and four special classes, and five sweepstake »:ompetitions, judging in the annual Southwestern Ontario Corn and Seed Show continued in the Chatham Marâ€" ket Building after a long session the other morning, Southwestern 7(â€");1tario Show Featured by Big Entry List not come to Cafigc_ia"i-t' was ; to farmers living in a state lately adjoining the Canadian 1927 C. Edson Smith, Montana 1928 Ed Edson Smith, Montana 1929 Jos. H. B. Smith, Albtrta 1930 Herman Trelle, Alberta 1931 Herman Trelle, Alberta 1982 Herman Trelle, Alberta 1933 Frank Isaackson, Saskatchewan 1934 John B. Allsop, Alberta 1985 W. Frelan Wilford, Alberta It is significant that in the four years in which the wheat crown did Ns es o mvy AGIL: 1911 Seager Wheeler, Saskatchewan 1912 Henry Holmes, Alberta 1913 Paul Gerlach, Saskatchewan 1914 Seager Wheeler, Saskatchewan 1915 Seager Wheeler, Saskatchewan 1916 Seager Whecler, Saskatchewan 1917 Sam Larcombe, Manitoba 1918 Seager Wheeler, Saskatchewan 1919 J. C. Mitchell, Saskatchewan 1920 .. C. Mitchell, Saskatchewan 1921 G. w, Kraft, Montana 1922 R. D. Wyler, Saskatchewan 1923 Major H. G. L. Strange, Alberta 1924 J. C. Mitche]l, Saskatchewan 1925 L. P, Yates, Montana 1926 Herman Trelie Alhorta _ Wifrelan Wilford of Stavely, Alâ€" berta, was awarded the championâ€" ship of the world for an exhibit of Reward wheat at the 1935 Internaâ€" t.onal Grain and Hay Show in Chiâ€" cago. His victory marks the 21st time in 25 years that the title "Wheat King" has been bestowed on a mea-i dian farmer, Following is a list of world "wheat kings" since 1911: I "Fools!" he exclaimed. "Didn‘t they know I would not put such a thing down if I were not sure of the facts I" Meeting Kipling in London later, he told of the discussion over his negroes. _ The author‘s reply was characteristic of Kipling‘s certainty of the factual material â€" that went into his works. w A few years after "Captains Courâ€" ageous" came out, a Nova Scotia edâ€" ucationist visited Whycocomagh and met some of the negro Celts. He found they spoke the language like natives, even then. These early Cape Breton negrocs came to Nova Scotia originally | as servants to United Empire Loyalists fleeing from the United States. Later, they drifted down to Cape Breton, where they took up farming. _ Gaelic was an essential in the Scotâ€" tish communities of Cape Breton in those days; and the negroes, . perâ€" force, had to pick it up to get along. Today, English is the common language of these communities, but the Gaelic heritage still stays with the few negroes who remain. _ But they have conquered the diffiâ€" cult language as completely as they might be expected to in small farmâ€" ing communities such as Whycoâ€" comagh. And they come by it honâ€" estly, for their forebears have been handing it down to them for gener-l ations. anda‘s Wheat K ings The Kipling character stretched the truth a point, though, when he told the gaping Harvey that Cape Breton was "full" of those negroes. Only a handful of Cape Breton blacks speak the Gaelic. neotch," and where the negroes "taik like the farmers â€" all huffyâ€"chuffy." mv s ye. q. J Scotch," and where Corn Judged ‘16_as they arrived in New York City on the S.S. Majestie after completing a brief research trip in Central Africa, He and his party bagged 200 animals for experimental purposes. The prize of the eollection, a 14,640 1b, bull elephant, was shot by Dr. Crile. Dr. George W. Crile, noted Clevel: Crile as they arrived in New York City completing a brief research trin in Centr: 3 open and four five sweepstake in the annual Corn and Seed it was awarded a state immedâ€" border. Crile, noted Cleveland, O., scientist, and Mis [ Question : â€" R. J. Peelâ€"I want to increase _ my yields of Silage Corn. I have been growing White Capped Fellow Dent, and manuring pretty heavily but I don‘t get as good yields as some I have seen,. My soil is pretâ€" ty heavy, What vamety of Oats will mix best with O.A.C. 21 Barl. ey and ripen about the same time. Answer â€" The Golden Glow variety of Yellow Dent Corn has given the best results for silage purposes of any varieties of corn which we‘ve tested for central and western Onâ€" tario, If answer is desired by letter enclose stamped and addressed envelope for reply. Address all inquiries to Proâ€" fessor Henry G. Bell, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. W.. Toronto. Ontario Through this column farmers may secure the latest information pertainâ€" ing to their difficulties, To introduce this service Professor Bell has prepared the following typical problems to inâ€" dicate the information which should be given in order that a satisfactory anâ€" swer can be made. _ The business of farming is yearly becoming more and more dependent upon facts that have been gathered reâ€" garding livestock and livestock manageâ€" ment, crop production, soil management, disease and insect control and business organization of the farming industry. Individual problems involving one or more of these, and many other phases Oof agriculture, engage the attention of Ontario farmers from day to day. Durâ€" ing the winter months there is a little more time for study of the most acute problems. REGINA. â€" Payment of $8,262,â€" 415 to the Canadian Wheat Pools by the Canadian Wheat Board is asked in a resolution to be placed before the Saskatchewan Legislature by Clarence Stork (C.C.F.). Payment of $8,262,415 To Wheat Pools Asked T and again during the services at the grave. This is preeminently sensible and becoming. The notion that people must expose themselves to danger in obedience to an antiquated observance is ridiculous, and the sooner it is abandoned the better it will be for those who attend such â€" gatherings. The King‘s sickness should be a warn. ing to the entire world. â€" Brantford Expositor. ( ye It is somewhat noteworthy that j King George V was a war casua‘lty, l: When be was in France reviewing " | the troops in 1915 his horse became "|startled by the explosion of a shell, _|reared and fell upon him crushing | ; him severely so that he had to be taâ€" P _ | ken to the hospital, It is said that|j even afterwards he had spasm of pain | { | in his stomach, Then, again, at the|; | Armistice services at the Cenotaph | ; | in Piccadilly Square, in 1928, he | j |stood with bared head among _ his| ¢ people on an inclement day, paying| t tribute to the fallen heroes of _ the Empire. He contracted an jliness that | 0 confined him to his bed for many | h months, during which his life at times | it hung in the balance. It was nearly a | y year before he recovered sufficiently | pi to return from Windsor to London.| t The significance of this is that on | uj such occasions the dangerous pracâ€" ti tice prevails of men standing with |ta ’bare heads, thereby exposing them:| P selves to the menace of severe ill. | â€" nesses which frequently prove fatai. | 9 It is a useless and senseless custom, fo and one which should be discarded., Many thoughtful ministers in con. | th ducting funerals during the winter| 48 season set the example of keeping k their hats on while the cortege is be.| * ing borne from the house to the hearse King George Was A War Casualty with the coâ€"operation of the various departments Ontario Agricultural College. onducted by Professor Henry G. Bell arm Problems Manure Manure a good supply of manure on hand, 1 would advise you to supplement it with super phosphate (20 or 16 per cent), In 1935, a test was con. ducted on the farm of Mr. A. Mc. Kinney, Brampton, prominent dairyman, in your county with the following results: Treatment Rate Yinla ns is Prof. Henry ('} Chemistry, O.A.c. 11.4 ton anure 10 ton 13.2 ton 1.8 ton anure 10 ton % s. phos. 250 1b 17.0 ton 5.6 ton % s. phos. 250 lb 14.5 ton $.1 ton If you do not have a supply of fetrilizer for the corn, addition of fertilizer carrying phiosphateâ€"pot. ash, such as 0.12.10 or complete fertilizer, such as 2â€"12â€"6 or 2.12.10 used at the rate of 250 lbs. per acre, should give you more and . better Ensilage, according to ex. periments that have been conduct. ed in Peel County, "‘The indulgence in grief is a blunder."â€"Beaconsfield. "Grief is a species of idioness Johnson. + r+ark, Northwood, Herts, Eng. TORONTO, â€" The average elapse The father, Kop de Careil, is the of t.ime. betv.veen a call for police largest dog known of this breed, and and their arrival at a given spot T " lis considered the most perfect of hi two minutes under the new police species, radio _ system, §‘erge¢nt Richard ‘"The dogs come from the remot« Pountney, officer in charge of.police | fastnesses of the Pyrences," â€"saia communications, told_l g.tl?ermt or’Mme. Fontaine, _ "A ‘p(-rfectly bred the Institute of Radio Engineers .t'upecimen is one of the rarest occurâ€" the University last week. The meet"mnces in the dog world. ing listened i", on po!lcc calls dur. *These dogs are immensely valu ing the evening while , the "",“‘:St’able. I have been offered $7,500 fo» e i e t o i se Thion" 6e carell aald refused it. scribed their benefits. uts F4 ‘ Your soil may be running low in some of the plantfood nutrients, as phosphoric acid, or possibly phos. phorie acid and potash. If you have Prof, W. J. Squirre‘l, Dept, of Field Husbandry, O.A.C, jeties ripen at the same time as O.A.C,. No. 21 barley and are the varieties commonly grown in Onâ€" tario where barley and oats â€" are grown in mixtures for grain proâ€" duction. Police Answering Calls Within Two Minutes But mostly, as the word afflicts the sensitive ear in this recent usâ€" age, it means little more than is exâ€" pressed in the good old Angloâ€"Saxon "meet."â€"Vancouver Province. to see hisâ€"you meet him or "meet up" with him, and you "proposiâ€" tion" him. If you are going to conâ€" tact a man, why shouldn‘t you proâ€" position him while you are abgu; it? â€"why should you strain at your gnat of elocution when you have so comâ€" fortably swallowed your camel? You "contact‘" some party or other of the second part; you meet him and you have some other dealâ€" ing with him. You question him, you find ou; what he is up to, you put your cards on the table and ask It is to be noted that Webster, the lexicographer, admits the verb "to contact" to its prettyâ€"nearlyâ€"allâ€"emâ€" bracing pages. Contact: verb transiâ€" tive, says Webster means "to bring into contact"â€""too touch." _ Literâ€" ally it means pretty much what is intended to mean in most of the reâ€" cent newspaper usage which evokes the protests here cited. i them in their protest against the use of the word "contacted." . . . Some way after the Toronto Globe, The Ottawa Journal and the Vicâ€" toria Colonistâ€""after" in point of time, and not at all in the quality of its detestationâ€"his respectable family newspaper desires to support He won for Labor the Western Isles of Scotland â€" a constituency which he had to cover by motorboat as well as car.â€"Overseas Daily Mail. in two years than some members of Parliament have done in twenty. He is a singularly quiet, selfâ€"possessed young man, of medium height, fair hair and fresh complexion, with brown eyes. He wears hornâ€"rimmed spectacles. Mr, â€" MacMillan was "on the stump" before he was 20, and has probably done more public talking _ He is going to be very busy, for, in addition to Parliamentary duties, he is studying law, and has yet to take his arts degree. But Mr. Macâ€" Millan is not a bit dismayed. He is going to take the arts degree at Edinburgh, and, unless Parliament makes it impossible, continue his law studies. er than the Father of the :ouse, Mr. Lioyd Georgeâ€"has taken u good look at the House since the general election, "I think I shall like it all right," he said cautiously. T hat Weasel Word Malcolm MacMillan, the youngest M.P.â€"he is 22, and 50 years youngâ€" Britain‘s Youngest M.P. Rate Yield G‘n Ac Bel!, Dept. of The yield of potatoes in Canada in ’1985 is estimated to show a reduct jon of 9,309,000 Cwt. or 19 per cent as compared with 1934. This large do. cline was due Partly to a decrease in the acreage of €2,400 or 11 per cent and partly to the summer drought in Bastern Canada and British Columbia which reduced yields per acre to lev. Bis below those for 19424 ana 2i c .000 time average, One serious aspect of soil dri that is seldom mentioned is the possibility of keeping the dirt ou the home during dust storms, and grime must be endured in i in beds, in furniture and on the f1 until the wind subsides. Then it necessary to clean thick | layers loose soil from everything, only have the experience repeated wii new wind storm, *~C!400al Railways, Great Britain im. ports on an AÂ¥erage of 917 short tons of timothy seed a year, valued at ap. proximately 90,000, Purchases for the oos ow en Py tion of her timothy seed from _ the United States, approximately 80 per cent. The Baltic States supply 15 per cent and the remainder comes from Canada according to the Agriâ€" cultural Department of the Canadian National Railways. Great Britain im POTCS ONB BN RHSrREs GOf §H" churaug 42. Britain "Bringing the dogs to this coun try and paying for veterinary ser vice, special food, quarantine fees, |has cost me more than $10,000," said |Mme, Fontaine, "but I do not regre it." _1 cannot tell you their wort! separately, for their points differ but the whole litter is worth muc) more than $5,000, "Iannctte is only old. Great Britain gets ’ This is Tannette de Boissy, a white Pyrencan mountain dog owned by Mme. Harper Fontaine, of Moor Park, Northwood, Herts, Eng. The father, Kop de Careil, is the largest dog known of this breed, and is considered the most perfect of hi species, A litter of puppies worth more than $5,000 has just been born to one of the most valuable dogs in the world, Holidays over, ministers were a; riving back in Ottawa over the woe}k end and m Cabinet council will h« held. Steps will be taken at on« to establish the national commission on unemployment, one of the noew administration‘s policiee the Prim« Minister wants to see in operatior at the earliest possible .noment. A call will go out shortly for the gathering in Ottawa of Dominion. Provincial committees, appointed a: the December conference, to dea with the British North America Act, financial relations between Dominion and provinces, agriculture and min ing. Most Valuable Dogs In T he W orld It is considered certain that o», of the first measures to be presentc to Parliament will be an act + amend the Bank of Canada Act ¢0o, the purpose of transforming th= institution into a publiclyâ€"owno utility. This was a deinite plank i; the Liberal platform, reiterated i; Prime â€" Minister Mackenzie King‘s election night platform, & ’ While the Liberal platform do. not commit the party to any radic; ’departurel there will Ibe several a,« vocates of advanced monetary r+, form, low interest rates and wide distribution of purchasing powe, within its ranks, _ Notable amon; these is Mayor Gerry McGeer o Vancouver. OTTAWA. â€"â€" Tariff reform an monetary policies will figure large); in Government deliberations during the next month or until Finan« Minister â€" Charles Dunning bring down his budget, anl much intere: will attach to whatever steps the now administration will propose with ) spect to these matters. Tariff Reform and Monetar Policies Engaging Governâ€" ment. â€" Public â€" Owne Bank > OTTAWA PRESSING WORK ON BUDCGET lelds per acre to lew for 1934 and the lons Seed From U.S. the greater por eighteen months ured in food on the floors soil drifting Is the jm. dirt out of with Grit 18 of to Bacon by

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