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Durham Review (1897), 24 Mar 1938, p. 3

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ish Educationist Says I€, | ‘hey Can‘t Come Down and wies‘ Dream .~* Girl Athletic se ldeal In Those Th vinces Is Lithe, Dashing t Handâ€"Can Be Read Continually es Backwzrds y Pedestals® For Womenfolk' ting is mental, to my ng, and to her a natural Compete w;hâ€"fi' Emot his jenologist," he nfl which affects the |Clations At Qh d of Education, hen he gave a co ; idea of mere m "¢ women on a rimarily, he said, woman will thus ind unable to st with him. tional Dummies ." came the #por roval Irom '.. i rominent represe y 0 H AT ector of Tectiy nermar things in reâ€" the tops whe» ‘s more natd ackwards with nally with ber Brunette th and poor men vomen folk sepap "@ world as durm. > hang theip owm Pp« he sald, likeq to : felt was his in. was because ho his place by hig © got home from ave 30.00“ “ "The wealthy nd of the scale as a substitute iself 1# not able ashioned of the Associa s and Secretar sense and oldâ€" ivalry in indug» ing aim, she deâ€" men away from employ ment. ~C@Uon, 'tl't“ Fave a contenm ( mere man‘s reg en on a ”w . he said, because will thus beco.. ble to step down lc ns her into & hang diamonds tals to E. Key m _ of ptome‘né y glasse®, itcomer}ys, ‘Put her +M bting Ine audience Dresentativeg added thefty â€" ‘‘Men M i to ennoble Key, omq of Womer, mapes and Ly this i® sSpontancoug ac. of 10e pitomize entative inte “3‘... i dashâ€" distine is the 1MCTAâ€" five Sho Kimg nnd he ©# at @3 OWk Al own The wall is of threeâ€"inch plank fin whed externally with weatherâ€"boardâ€" ng. with underâ€"felting and an interior Inish of a three quarter inch airspace ind threeâ€"quarterâ€"inch plaster board. A wall of this type has greater inâ€" pulating qualities than a nine4nch brick wall, it is contended, and as there is no need to wait for it to dry out, the house is habitable as soon as it is crected. like BEHIND THE VICTORY: Simulâ€" tancously with news of Hitler‘s Ausâ€" trian coup came reports of a big inâ€" surzent drive in Spain meeting with siuch successes that the Government armiecs wore being driven eastward toward the sea and that the civil war was rapidly drawing to a tragic close. Genevieve Tabouis, the noted French tria (population 4,000,000 more) has contributed little but scenery. Vienna stood ready to service a much larger countryside, with plenty of natural resources. ‘Toronto would be in the same position if it were cut off from cCour all the rest of Canada except for what lies with a Toâ€"mile radiug. The tourist industry alone could not keep Austria going forever. Red Cedar Finds Favor In Britain The method of construction is based ipon the use of preâ€"fabricated cedar wall sections. The firstâ€"floor walls of both houses were in position within wight hours of starting work. Preâ€"Fabricated Walls In Houses; Highly Resistant to Weather HULL, Eng.â€"A selling point of iwo "show" houses constructed here m 11 working days is that the Britâ€" wh Columbia red cedar used is dryâ€" tot proof and highty weatherâ€"resistâ€" int. THE FINAL GOAL: An editorial in The Yorkshire Post, influential Kritish newspaper which is owned by the family of Mrs. Authony Eden, we believe is well worth quoting from: "Germany‘s final goal in the drive inaugurated by the Austrian coup, the nowspaper declared, is the total destruction of France, "not to gain French territory, but, as ‘Mein Kampi‘ (Adolf Hitler‘s autobilography and polâ€" Jtlcal testament) sets out, to remove CGermany‘s last serious Continental military rival and thus free her hands for the seizure of as much territory castwardâ€"as she may desire." "The military occupation of Ausâ€" tria will be followed by an attack on (Czechoslovakia in order to clear that eastern route. Assurances to the conâ€" tra vorth just as little as have bee !I the rest of Germany‘s assurâ€" Commentary on the Highlights of the Week‘s News . . . By Elizabeth Eedy Fravse Fikacle h past twenty years the great ieuna with its 2,000,000 inâ€" has been like a huge head : body. All the Indfitries, i1 institutions, etc., of the ave been concentrated withâ€" fines while the rest of Ausâ€" ‘lation 4,000,000 more) has d little but scenery. Vienna HAZING: Those hairâ€" f the annual freshmanâ€" are gone forever from : of Western Ontario. iovernment there voted abolish initiation altoâ€" icral opinion being that cuple of years the legâ€" has heen gotting pretty HOT () DUT A BODY: On 8. the Austroâ€"Hungarâ€" ally came to an end. ade into a separate : _was proclaimed a ie constitution later for union with Gerâ€" ublic was predominâ€" but the subsequent prohibited _ such a to see that Germany : kept apart with not mion allowed. these facts, it is not id the attitude of the who, although temâ€" erent from their Gerâ€" peared last week to Hitler as their new do away with the f the sophomoreâ€" but we do not wish and glamor depart entirely, nor the a bunch of stuffy before their time. 10n il m between the t and the Fedâ€" the relief grant been making clief appropriaâ€" unemployment ising. Premier he Federal Govâ€" the promise of al problem. ‘s, too, claim to ‘lief costs. ve months since ¥‘s relief rolls 166.000 to 260,â€" Music is a wonderful release from the cares of the day. That is one reaâ€" son why it has won such a commandâ€" ing position here during the past tenâ€" years. Other reasons are the availâ€" ability of the victrola and radio. Its Healing Value Even the ancients realized the healâ€" ing value of music. The Romans beâ€" lieced that sciatica could be relieved by the tones of a flute. Today music is used to quiet excited mental paâ€" tients, and as a stimulant and tonic to brace up those suffering from melanâ€" cholia. The waves of music, the vibrations of applause, affect the nerve centres and influence the heart and the circuâ€" lation. This produces a reaction in the brain which gives the spirit new strength and courage. Music thus beâ€" comes an emotionâ€"food, and a concert a banquet for the starved and sick at Why Music Soothes The Savage Breast During the first two months of this year, a slender, whiteâ€"haired Italian has been the subject of more newsâ€" paper columns of ecstatic praise than has been bestowed on almost any American in recent years. Arturo Toscanini, brought back to this conâ€" tinent by NBC to conduct ten concerts over the radio, became almost an obâ€" ject of worship to American music lovers. His theory also harmonizes, he points out, with recent discoveries about virus diseases. Infantile paralyâ€" gis is one of the diseases caused by viruses. The latter have been identifâ€" ied in some cases as nonâ€"living proâ€" tein substances, which could @me from deranged metabolism. Vitamin B is found in tomatoes, unâ€" polished rice, spinach, legumes, eggs, yeast, kidney and other glandular tisâ€" sues. Vitamin B, (usually called B1) is the nerve vitamin. Only in the last three years has it been available for medical experiments. It has already been found to prevent the nerve disâ€" orders and forms of partial paralysis caused by too much alcohol with too little food. Similar Symptoms Dr. W. J. McCormick, of Toronto, who offers the vitamin theory for inâ€" fantile paralysis, finds his justification in a comparison of this disease and beri beri. The latter is the Oriental disease which led to discovery of vitâ€" amin B. It is caused by a lack of this vitamin. He finds that the suceptibility of children to infantile paralysis can be explained by the fact that they do need more vitamin B than adults. He explains the summerâ€"time occurrence of the infantile outbreaks by asserting that the summer vacation increase in children‘s physical activity depletes their vitamin B. Eggs and Spinach Have It He says the average American diet is lacking in this vitamin. Infantile paralysis, writes Dr. Mcâ€" Cormick, shows much the same sympâ€" toms as beri beri, such as flaccid leg paralysis, digestive disturbances, and muscle pains and tendâ€"rness. anud loaves our final action entirely up to us." A new theory of the cause of infanâ€" tile paralysis, 1blished in the jourâ€" nal of the Canadian Medical Associaâ€" tion, attributes the child scourge to lack of Vitamin B. It‘s a Polio Caused By Lack Of Vitamin B CONSULTANTS â€" ONLY: What President Roosevelt said offâ€"theâ€"recâ€" ord at a press conference in 1933 throws a light on the policy the Unitâ€" ed States is likely to pursue in the present world crisis. At that time Mr. Roosevelt declared: ‘"Do not get the idea that it means that we bind ourselves in the first inâ€" stance to agree with the verdict. . . . We agree to consult. Therefore, it does not tie the hands of the United States in any shape, manner or form Is Latest Theoryâ€"Compares Inâ€" fantile Paralysis With Beri Beri "If all the nations agreed to set up some kind of machinery for consultaâ€" tion in the event of an act of aggresâ€" sion, we will be very glad to have somebody there to consult with. I consider that to be a step forward. political observer, commenting on the Franco victories declared that by them she could see that Hitler had already begun to repay Mussolini for Italy‘s acquiescence in his seizure of Austria. The repayment, she said, consisted, in part, of shipment from Germany to Spain of heavy artillery, aeroplanes and munitions, giving Franco enough equipment to guaranâ€" tee success of his drive against the Government. The Cares of the Day From CANADA‘S PEANUT IMPORTS From 1929 to 1936, Canadians ate 106,000 tons of peanuts. The amount of peanuts import%d in 1936 was 15, 000 tons; in 1935 practically a similar amount, and 17,000 tons in 1934. Also known as ground nuts and earth nuts, peanuts are used for human food, for feeding live stock, and as an oilseed, yielding oil for culinary and industrial purposes, and oilcake for stockfeeding and fertilizers. The bulk of peanuts in world trade is made into oil. Canâ€" ada imports a small amount of peanut oil for soapâ€"making and canning fish. India and China are the chief peanut growing countries. PINK SANDWICHES A Manchester (England) catering firm has started baking brown, white, pink and green loaves â€" mainly for cocktail parties. You can have a sandâ€" wich to match your drink, or even your dressâ€"for there is hardly any limit to the colours obtainable. New casual clothes of the softlyâ€" tailored or spectator sports types will be important in spring fashions for 1938. Popularity is forecast for suits and jacket costumes. Style Forecasters Say People Will Wear Less Garments are becoming _ more streamlined. The slim â€" silhouette dress is in vogue from bungalow boudoir to Biarritz ballroom. Baby rompers are going more Hollywoodâ€" ish,. As the flair for sports and play elothes becomes stronger among girls, an increase in the percentage of more natural, healthy figures is expected. Abbreviated Sportswear Man, however, is becoming less selfâ€"conscious in abbreviated sports wear and is appearing in shorts on the tennis courts, at the beach and at the lawn mower. Accustomed to showing off his shanks at summer colonies he may become emboldened to expose more or less knobby knees in office and shop. Further improvements are expectâ€" ed in waterâ€"repellent fabrics. Materâ€" ials made from glass, glass and milk are here. Crownless hats are made of cellophane. In the future we may be wearing glass raincoats to shield us from lightning. Designers predict new versions of the fitted waistline, modtned so that it is easier to wear. 5. Glass raincoats may serve also as protectors from lightning. Streamlined Clothes Style observers say Empress Euâ€" genies may pop up here and there to put their fleeting stamp on the fashion world but it is the sports girl of the future who will set the pace for the long puli. 8. The familiar collar and tie may be supplanted by a lessâ€"binding, modâ€" ernized tunic, with perhaps a soft, soft neckerchief for prominent Adâ€" am‘s apple concealment. Latest Predictions Have It That The Sports Girl Will Be Fashâ€" 1, Women will wear less and less clothing, the simplicity and the comâ€" fort of sports apparel becoming more and more popular. 2. Men, too, will be wearing far fewer clothes 25 years hence. (The hot weather town suit of 1963 may well be washable shorts, shirt and jacket like the Tyrolean mountainâ€" eer‘s costume.) 4. Fabrics which resist rain, perâ€" spiration or spilled drinks, will be in common use. NEW YORK.â€"Fashion experts who are not afraid to go out on a limb to forecast the future clothing styles are predicting that: The %50â€"acre cypress garden owned by R. B. Kittredge, Jr., of Charleston, S.C., is again the source of much satisfaction to nature lovers, who have goen invited to s pend leisurely hours paddling through the immense park. Forty tons of bulbs have also been planted to add to a floral display. Huge Cypress Garden in South Carolina Thrown Open To Public MOSCOW.â€"Soviet Russia, fearing that Germany‘s annexation of Austria has brought the danger of war close, is ready to fight with France as an ally if Fuehrer Adolf Hitler attempts any invasion of Czechoslovakia, it was stated authoritatively here last week. Three bodies of troops strongly supported by aircraft, mechanized equipment and artillery started the new offensive from Liangâ€"hsiatien, where desperate Chinese resistance halted the initial drive in this sector early in January. SPAIN LOSES OLIVE OIL MARKET Spain, before the civil war, used to supply Canada with olive oil. Now the Dominion gets its supplies prinâ€" cipally from France (12,000 cwt. in 1936) and Italy (4,000 ewt.) World trade in olive oil has declined in reâ€" cent years. New Pulp Industry TORONTO.â€"Establishment of a $7,â€" 000,000 pulp industry in Northern Onâ€" tario within the next few weeks was forecast this week in the Legislature by Hon. Peter Heenan, Minister of Lands and Forests. Bodv Is Recovered RENFREW, Ont.â€"â€"Body of Mrs. R. A. Hoffman, 42, mother of three chilâ€" dren, was found in the Bonnechere River a few hours aféer an employee of a nearby powerhouse reported he saw her drop from the powerhouse platform into the water, Advance On Suchow SHANGHALâ€"Reinforced â€" Japanese troops fighting southward along the Tientsinâ€"Pukow _ Railway _ advanced this week on the strategle Lunghal rail junction at Suchow,. BERLIN.â€"News commentators this weekâ€"end posed Germany‘s absorption of Austria before Czechoslovakia as a warning of the need of "an early and satisfactory solution" of her minâ€" ority issue. The German press, apparently on instruction, told the neighboring warâ€" created republic with 3,500,000 Gerâ€" mans to be reasonable about meeting German demands. They are usually accompanied by a large sun spot, but this is not necesâ€" sarily so because the disturbance on the sun may exist below the atmosâ€" phere, or surface level, and not be visâ€" ible to astronomical observers. Magâ€" netic and radio observations may, therefore, furnish astronomers a means of tracing sun spots before they have reached the visible state and after they have disappeared from view. Aurora Borealis A strong magnetic storm is usually accompanied by a display of aurora borealis. This happened a month ago, when these northern lights were seen as far south at Florida. Scientists are trying their hand at making predictions concerning the coming of magnetic ‘storms, the disâ€" turbances that blank out communicaâ€" tion on certain wave lengths of radio channels, make the magnetic needle erratic and are accompanied by the aurora borealis. Magnetic Storms Are Predictable Usually Accompanied by Large E J reectre000e 0046 00004â€"0â€"0â€"0 + +6 0 4 Ask Czechs Be "Reasonable" News In Review * ) 'f?", . 4 K.; iyt Russia Will Aid o NesA in ‘This housing problem is a matter that is financial, social, humanitarian, moral. For six months, in a good or a bad year, it makes our courts resound with quarrels between* tenant and landlord or simply between tenantsâ€" a fact which brings out another asâ€" pect of the situation. It takes, in our Province of big families, an added importance and an appearance that is often dramatic. In Montreal it creates an endemic evil in given zones that contaminate the human capital of the nation. If the State votes millions for the hypothetical deâ€" fense of our coasts it should be able to find money to save lives, which are not vague ideas, but which wither and fade, like poor forgotten flowers, from lack of space, or air, or sun.â€"Montâ€" real La Patrie. The decision of the British Broadâ€" casting Corporation to deny Right Hon. Josiah Wedgwood the radio air to comment on Hitler‘s or Mussolini‘s policies is a sign of which the Parliaâ€" ment of Canada should take due notice. We may as well admit now that there is in certain parts of this free Dominion a sinister growth which unless curbed may, sooner than most people think, become malignant. Much has been said about the Governmentâ€" controlled radio commission in this country of late. Objection to an inâ€" crease of the annual fee by fifty cents is, comparatively speaking, an insigâ€" nificant matter. The fact is the Canaâ€" dian people distrust control that may result in suppression of views of pubâ€" lic men whose sole interest in their country‘s future is her welfare and the preservation of her free instituâ€" tions.â€"â€"Victoria Daily Times. The Montreal Star says that "counâ€" try towns with good highway connecâ€" tions tend to develop and prosper." Experience in the case of Ontario villâ€" ages is probably the reverse. When good roads arrive, the trade that forâ€" merly went to the village stores more often passes their doors and is reâ€" ceived by establishments in the larger centres, Dozens of Ontario villages are actually poorer, in point of busiâ€" ness done, for the better road comâ€" munications that they now possess, while larger towns and cities are enâ€" riched by the same development, â€" Brockville Recorder and Times. Deadly Houses If an automobile is driven at a speed of thirty miles an hour, its life will be three times the life of the average car. Economically as well as every other way, speed is expensive. â€"Chatham News. No Help to Villages Speed Is Expensive Canada Should Take Heed A survey of municipalities shows that many cities, now in need, have borrowed to their limit. It is sure tough when you can‘t live within your debts,â€"Winnipeg Tribune. Forgotten Provinces Within One‘s Debts Sir Evelyn Wrench speaks of the Maritimes as "Canada‘s forgotten proâ€" vinces." It is evident that he has nevâ€" er been in Ottawa when the House was in session.â€"Peterborough Examâ€" iner. VOICE THE WORLD °_ AT LARGE CANADA of the IMPROVING DRESSED POULTRY "It is apparent that all the Canaâ€" dian exporters of dressed poultry are responding to the representations of the Poultry Services, Dominion Deâ€" partment of Agriculture, to improve their export packs of chickens and a continuance of this policy will eventâ€" ually land us at the objective we are all trying to attain," states W. A. Wilâ€" son, Animal Products Trade Commisâ€" sioner for Canada in Londan, England, in a recent letter to the Department. A member of the importing firm of John Loudon declared there was no doubt Canadian eggs were fresher than most other countries, were better packed and handled, thus commanding higher prices. Indian Remains Are Identified BRANTFORD. â€" Professor J. C. B. Grant, head of the department of anâ€" atomy at the University of Toronto, said last week that examination of the skulls and bones found near His Majesty‘s chapel of the Mohawks, on the borders of this city, last week, were "definitely" those of Indians and were characteristic of those found all over the country. He expressed inâ€" terest in the theory advanced here that the remains are those of memâ€" bers of the Tutelo Indian tribeâ€"incorâ€" porated with the Six Nations. Nearly 200 of the Indians, or virtualâ€" ly the whole tribe, were wiped out in a cholera or ship fever epidemic which swept this part of the country less than 100 years ago. The mode of burial appeared to preclude possibilâ€" ity of them being the remains of the older Attiwandaron or neutral Inâ€" dians whom the warlike Iroquois exâ€" terminated nearly 300 years ago. Canadian "Although there is little possibility Canada will capture the market outâ€" right from Denmark," the importer deâ€" clared "it is certain if negotiations are successful Canadian eggs will deâ€" mand a good place on the London Supply Quickly Exhausted It was originally intended to carry on the experimental shipments for a period of eight weeks only, each shipâ€" ment consisting of 50 cases of 180 exgs. The demand was so keen for the Canadian product that the supply was quickly exhausted. market." Toronto University Professor Inâ€" terested In Theory of Plagueâ€" Direct negotiations for a regular and increased supp‘y have already been opened between a leading firm of London importers and the Quebec authorities. An interesting point remarked by Earl de la Warr is that, for a country which still thinks of itself in terms of youth, Australia is curiously prone to prefer government by older men, The age of Parliamentary representatives in Australia is well above the average. Why should a relatively young counâ€" try distrust youth in its political counâ€" cils? Why do not our young men choose politics as a vocation? Or is it that the existing party machinery discourages theâ€"enlistment of youth and bars the way to preferment to all except the mature in years? These questions are well worth asking and better worth answering. The youth of the Fascist countries is being fired with ideals and enthusiasms which we do not share, but democracy ought equally to inspire its young men with the ambition to serve and excel in the political sphere. Otherwise, the restless and ambitious among them may be attracted by other ideologies, to the detriment of the democracy whose spirit is being extinguished in so many lands. No more than in the days of the Pitts is it today an "atâ€" rocious crime" to be young. The poltâ€" tical education of youth, and the search for talent in leadership in its ranks, is surely an appropriate task for a country which is young in traâ€" ditions and outlook, even if it must now be reckoned mature in years.â€" Sydney (Australia) Merald. LONDON.â€"Again Canadian exportâ€" ers have launched a successful chalâ€" lenge to Denmark‘s longâ€"standing domâ€" ination of the United Kingdom‘s egg market, Experimental shipments of Canaâ€" dian ezgs, sponsored by the Dominion Department of Agricuiture and coâ€"opâ€" erative organizations, have met with such success that steps have been takâ€" en to establish the scheme on a perâ€" manent basis. Complete With Danish Project On British Market Youth and Politics ONTARIO ARCHIVES PRESS THE EMPIRE Winning Favor m IF Kotins. 0s Abiieme cigns . 2l c isnn THE EMPIRE Youth‘s Attitude Seen Dangerous Englith Author Declares Children Seem Convinced of Incvitubil« ity of Another War. . Vera Brittain, Englishwoman and author of *‘Testament of Youth," which is her autobjography and deâ€" picts a generation smashed by war, believes that there is a danger that the present generation of children and young people believe in the inâ€" evitability of another war, She help ed sponsor the Peace Pledge Union, which is completely pacifist, and alâ€" ready has 130,000 members. This organization, according to Mrs. Brittain, is discouraging gas mask drills in schools in England. We believe these drills to be a form of conscription," she recently stated, "which leads to warâ€"mindedness. Beâ€" sides, gas masks are ineffective, They offer no protection against mustard gas, and they cannot be worn by the population for any length of time." Mrs, Brittain nursed in London, Mailta and France during the World War and lost a gifted fiance, a musiâ€" cal brother and many young friends in the conflict, Through her work with children today, Vera Brittain is striving to keep faith with those who died in the Great War before they were 23. ° ' Sheepherder On Scot Takes On Lonely Job For are used to living the lives of "lonely Scots". Before signing on for Raster Island they had lived ten years in Patagonian outposts, including Tierra del Fuego, by the Magellan Straits, VALPARAISO, Chileâ€"D. J. Munâ€" roe, a Scotsman, his wife and son have arrived on Easter Island, one of the world‘s loneliest outposts, where they have clected to stay for four years, Mr. Munroce having signed a contract for that period. They took the Allipen, the small anâ€" nual steamer, cearly this year to the Island, which is rented from the Chilâ€" ean Government by a British merâ€" chant firm for sheepâ€"raising. Mr. Monâ€" roe will manage the sheepfarm, One Boat a Year His experience on the Island, as the only European, will be somewhat easâ€" ier than some of his predecessors, as the Chilean Government recently es tablished radio communications with the mainland. He had also taken the family radio set with him to listen in to home programs. But if any members of the Munros family should want to come back again, he or she will have to wait unâ€" til the "next boat"; and there‘s only one hboat a year, Neither husband nor wife anticipate any longings for the homeland. ‘They People who are colourâ€"blind can see colours, but they do‘ not experiâ€" ence the same sensatiofis from all the colours that normal"#ighted peoâ€" ple do. The difference usually is in red and green. Some people are greenâ€"blind; others are. redâ€"blind; while still others are both,. To these people, green looks about the same as grey or blue; and reds and greens are confused, for the red also looks grey. Gases of violetâ€"blindness have Canadian output in 1937 of 3,645,â€" 000 tons was 14 per cent. more than in 1936 and 1,731,000 tons, or 90 per cent. more than the low figure of 1,914,000 tons made in 1932, Canaâ€" da‘s tenâ€"year record has been approxâ€" imately 2,600,000 tons annually, reditary and occurs mostly in men, Children with one colourâ€"blind parâ€" ent and one normal parent canno; be colourâ€"blind. 35 44 M Dominion Leads in Production For World Consumption been known. New allâ€"time high records in the production of newsprint were run up last year in Canada, Great Britain, Finland, France, Japan, Newfoundâ€" land, Sweden and Norway, with slight changes in the minor producing countries, World production of newsprint paâ€" per in 1937 is computed to have been 8,971,000 tons, an increase of 9 per cent. from the 8,215,000 tons producâ€" ed in 1926 and of 43 per cent. from the low point of 6,276,000 tons in the depression year of 1932, accordâ€" ing to a report issued by the Newsâ€" print Service Bureau at New York. The average annual world output of newsprint paper for the past ten years has been approximately 7,250,â€" 000 tons. : Output Reaches 41 Percent The 8,971,000 tons of newsprint made Jlast year was supplied to the extent of 41 per cent,. by Canada, 12 per cent. by Great Pritain, 11 per cent. by the United States, 6 per cent. ly Germany and about 5 pef cent. by Finland, France and Japan. In the United States, the gpiton picking season averages 100 days an Colorâ€"Blind People

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