Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 5 Jul 1934, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

1 i 24 Listening to a case before the asâ€" gizes last week one could not but be struck, and that disagreeably, with the fact that in one small and by no means unsafe community, although somewhat removed from any large centre, several men were in the babit of toting revolvers, all as a matter of course, because they were afraid of the other fellow‘s gun. ‘ We cannot help thinking, and be lieve it will be borne out by the facts, that all of the men mentioned gwere »»t natives of the country or propeily established citizens, but inâ€" THE TRAGIC GUN a "good man." It‘s one thing to be a successful man, a wellâ€"known man, a popular man, but it is something more to be able to qualify under the general title of a "good man." â€"Stratford Beaconâ€"Herald. Good tand, Lenora, we were not ex. pecting anything like that, When a professional woman, one steeped in the lore of clubs and all such affairs, rose to speak we expected something about the inborn desire of the presâ€" ent age tor self expression, something about women‘s purifving _ influence when applied to world affairs and so on. Never did we expect to hear that the woman young or old, would chuck the whole thing and go scampâ€" ering off from the moorings of singleâ€" ness if a good man came her way. Wa must admit, though, that the lady qualified her statement when she said something about marrying Mrs. Lenora Z. Meder, attorney and wellâ€"known club woman of the Middle West. was speaking in Chicago, after having been elected president of the Chicago Business and Profecsional Women‘s Club, Among a number of other things the lady said this: "Every clubwoman and â€" every professional woman, old or young, would gladly chuck her career to marry a good man." TRUE â€" Many a man‘s soâ€"called dignified si. lence is due to the lamentable â€" fact that he doesn‘t know what to say.â€" Ottawa Journal. wouLD weo Where the dog was accused of spoiling gardens and tempers, the cat is pointed out as a sly and slip pery hunter of birds, If she would sharpen her claws for sparrows, no fuss would be made about ‘t. But #he seems to prefer song birds So It has been suggested that the cat should wear a little bell that shall ring merrily when she approaches a robin. Perhaps even a license might be required ... ‘ One thing only have the city fathers overlooked. It is all very well to deâ€" vise schemes for making cata andible in day time, but a muffler for night use is even more lmpern(l.ve. A feline serenade at midnight ‘with beils acâ€" companiment is almost too awful to contemplate.â€"Edmonton Journal. Now it is the stray cat that is enâ€" goging the attention of the civic fathers........ Halifax Herald ow asout murrlErs? That is a remarkable recordâ€"the record of a veteran Maritime editor, J. Sutton Boyd. who has passed away at Moneton in his T6th year Mr. Boyd was editor of the Mone ton Timesâ€"and he was a very able #di‘or, recognized from â€" coast to coust in Canada as one of the ablest In the profession in this country.â€" Half a century of service as direc tor of the editorial policy of that Rewspaper, Unbroken service one newspaper. finally were duly ironed out. The remains of his permit, after the process, were produced in court. The writing was gone, the paper was bieached. nothing but the number reâ€" mained. But that was enoughâ€"case dismissed.â€"Halifax Chronicle. DEVOTED sERvIcEâ€" TDmpion behind even the strictest law. The letter killetb, the spirit quickeneth, It remained for Goderich to proâ€" duce an unusual case where the driâ€" ver unable to produce his permit was baled into court. To the satisfac tion of the magistrate he showed sufficient reasons why he was unable to produce it. He had had it in his Overalls, his wife put the overalls in the washtub, they went through the guds, the rinsing water, the wringer, Bew awhile on the clothesâ€"line, and finally were duly ironed out © There ‘was a case, it will be reâ€" ealled, in New Glasgow, where a gentleman, his office being on fire jumped into his car in his pyjamas, and fell into the clutches of the law because he omitted in bis haste to put his license in his pocket. This reduces everything to an abâ€" surdity. Commonâ€"sense is the preâ€" sumption behind even the strictest e Oe y P t mE vious how it assists in identification kn case of search for a stolen car, for @ample. The law requires the motorist . to produce his license to drive whenâ€" ever he is asked for it. The law Itsolf is wise enough, _ with the one pndition that a little commonâ€"sense 3 used in its application. It is obâ€" sSPEAKING OF PERMITS 0 WED aA "GOOD Man.â€" Lenora Z. Meder, attorney and own club woman of the Middle was speaking in Chicago, after been elected president of the o Business and Professional i‘s Club. Among a number of hings the lady said this: CANADA oice of. the Press + rhe El'npire has passed away ith year or of the Mone was a very able of 63 years with Much has been written of the unâ€" satisfactoriness of the Indian worker; of his absenteeism and dilatoriness, his objection to new methods of workâ€" ing, his propensity to shirk. _ He is badly paid because he is feeble and unreliable and inefficient, and he is these because he is badly paid. Nor in his present state of ignorance and inexperience can he provide capable leaders out of his own ranks, while those who from outside constitute themselves his leaders may be only remotely interested in the betterment of the worker. But the cotton worker of Bombay is not so foolish as to beâ€" INDIAN Lagor D ser DOMmeEstTic service Â¥ear Deaths _ Rate ’ T92E |acrseetisiecsess" XTIH 69.3 TSE : serverice e ces : EG09 81.5 ’ POOE + e earirevervecse 3,825 110.0 Dr. McCullough indicated that the Ontario rate made a further rise to 113 in 1983, â€" The Toronto rate topped 147. Medical science has done great work in curbing such disease as tyâ€" phoid fever, smallpox, tuberculosis, diphtheria _ and _ diabetes. But the cancer problem remains still to be solved. The extent of that problem is indicated by the figures given, â€" Toronto Star. "" UHLaTo will ~die of cancer this year if the 1933 rate is maintained. The Toronto statistics are even more startling. In the provincial capital this one disease will claim one out of every 680 inhabitants. Dr. "J. W. McCullough has recently given imâ€" pressive figures as to the increase of deaths from cancer in the province. By tenâ€"year periods the number of deaths and the rate per 100,000 has been as follows: Year Deaths _ Rate T92E |acrseetisiecsess" XTIH 69.3 TSE : serverice e ces : EG09 81.5 mt .. _ . * »wase 110 a | and The World at Large Cinnenne 00e O Or AF BC1 CANCER‘S INCRE, TOLL.â€" One person out of in Ontario will die year if the 1933 rate The Toronto statietiâ€" Recent complaints of ‘ranchers in the foothills country, adjacent to Calâ€" gary, and particularly along the upâ€" ber reaches of the Elbow, on the care-' lessness of picnic parties and campâ€" ers in leaving their fires unquenrhed,' and in tossing matches and clgarettes: into the underbrush, thus causing a grave hazard to property and stock! owing to the intensely dry comlitlonl of the country, should be taken to: heart by all who love the wide open spaces. The thoughtless aciion of beautiful seeners. the loss of li‘e and , property, and the alienation ot the| goodwill of those owners who have permitted the public to have access to their land.â€"Calgary Heratd. | "° °0 ~" population has been reduced to less than half. In the memory of Mr. James Peaire, sheriff!s officer, never has he taken so few prisoners to Kingston as this year. In the five months of 1934 he accompanied five to the penitentiary; last year, 18; in 1932, 36. Where he took â€"seven in 1932 he now takes only one. And the crimes for which people are comâ€" mitted are less serious.â€"Hamilton Spectator. LUNATICS aT Larce There are in the jai oners, two of whom & compared with 110 a prison population has FEWER IN JAIL SSE CECUBH penalties for this offence of carry. ing frearms.â€"Kamloops Sentine}. Lime t lth s 8B iscc n acao that they are dangerous because they are "quick on the draw." We cannot have drastic enough mesaten 2 o COs 9 8 _2 ’dividuals who have come in here with & wholly erroneous idea as to Cana.â€" dian customs and ways, still believing that this was a wild and woolly counâ€" try, where to carry a gun was rather a manly thing to do, Originally the idea comes â€" from absurd fiction, the western story kind, backed up by equally absurd motion pictures. These men want that sort of thing, it appeals to some sort of roâ€" mance in them, or what takes the place of romance, and it is believed quite a number of them are drawn to remote places, thinking they are devils of fellows and like to snxn-t‘ that they are dumoamnine Â¥esuuul n Pus THE EMPIRE a nursery than in INCREASING DpEaATH out of every 885 living in the jail today 44 prisâ€" f whom are women, as th 110 a year ago. The ome in hbere with idea as to Canaâ€" Â¥8, still believing and woolly counâ€" gun was rather tied to The doodle bug is believed to be the most meditative creature on earth, It has been known to remain â€" fully awake and absolutely motionless for months at a time. ul oo o on ns SR oS T It made no difference whether cigarettes contained tobacco f which nicotine had been extrac The effect was the same. A yc man smoking a "standard brand" arette started with > fingerâ€"tip | perature of 92. This temperature d ped 10 degrees in i5 minutes while was smoking one ~igarette, The cigarette exhibit shows the effect of tobacco smoking on the outâ€" er layers of the blood circulation, parâ€" ticularly those lying close to the skin. Â¥a s 0y u) OS they Clevelaud, Smoking one cigarette will cool the temperature of the skin on your finger tips by 10 to 12 degrees This and other similar cooling due to smoking is explained in one of the scientific exhibits set up for the anâ€" nual meeting of the American Medical Association. ‘ Smoke Cigarettes‘ To Cool Finger Tips These coats are broadening in efâ€" fect, and are most becoming to the young and lithe. The stripes are usâ€" ually broad and of varying wiiths in striking color schemes. On the other hand, many oda sports coats take a horizontal . the striping. For these long, verticai, parallel lines give an illusion of beight and slimness, for which plump women are most wistful Stripes i~ a diagonal crossâ€"way grain are no strangers to us, but when we saw a charming coat with the stripes running downwards we could not resist it. For it is the handl‘ng of striped materials, which are practically alâ€" ways in fashion, that gives them the desired distinctive â€"and upâ€"toâ€"theâ€" minute air. go . The first question one asks when a striped dress is under corsideraâ€" tion is "Which way should th« stripes gfl,” Stripes Running Downward Give An Illusion of Height other communities is still being faced by the reliet department. Recent cases have been discovered where the relief recipients have been advised to return to the communities from which they came. _ STRATFORDâ€"There was a deâ€" crease of 242 persons from Stratford‘s relief lists during the month of May, as compared with the number on the lists in April, according to the figures given to the reliet committee of the city council at a recent committee meeting. The total for May was 1, 802. There were 413 heads of families, 1,320 dependents and 69 other _ in. dividuals. The total cost of rélief for: that month was $10,654.67. The problem of giving relief to those who move into the city from other communities is s#till hain» faaaa are with him, that railway man and men of the jute mills and coal miners will strike because he does. He is more likely to reflect that if Bombay gives half a chance Abmedatbad will leap to pick up the trade that Bomâ€" bay has dropped.â€"Caleutta Statesâ€" man. lieve that all Four Indian officers, chosen from George‘s official Indian orderly i4 at Buckingham Palace. They w occasions during the season. Th Left to right: Suadar Major Badz: Singh. Smaller List ned tobacco from had been extracted, the same. A young standard brand" cigâ€" th fingerâ€"tip temâ€" is temperature dropâ€" 15 minutes while he India‘s textile workers __ ONTARIO ARCcHIves ~ i TORONTO chosen from the whole of the native officers of the Indian army to be King in orderly officors â€" & coveted honor â€" were received recently by the King . _ They will be on ceremonial duty as the King‘s bodygzuard on all state season. Three of ie officers are shown here leaving for Buckimgham Paluce. Major Badzen Siagh; Hisaldar Krishma â€"Chandra Singh and Riss‘dar Xhanati , short iine in the was then a stcrekeeper and poultry raiser and ouyer at Kenmore, Ont., made two arge shipments, the first of 800 birds and the second of 1,000 birds which were sold on che Clasgow market at a price which netted him a very satisfactory return. From then, until the present, Mr. MceArâ€" thur has been buying and selliag poulâ€" sull 0 9 on a 4s W us We C 22 s on n eiie ECHT C try and he believes that if farmers The quality of Canadiâ€"n Aressed poultry shipped frem the Ottawa disâ€" trict was known in the Old Country 85 years ago, for C. F. McA thur, a merchant of Russell, Ontario. who There is a brisk demani for Canaâ€" dian dressed pouitry in the British market and recent shipments from the Dominion have created a good imâ€" pression. A recent issue of the ofâ€" ficial organ of the British wholesale poultry trade stated: "What Canaâ€" dian Foultry we ‘+ave had this year packed under Dominion Government supervision and grading have been all that could be desired and ‘t is certain that next season our markets will be able to.take any quantities that can be put up, If the Canadian shippers will only let the buyers know early in the season what quartiti= they can safely ship, it is certain that after this season early contracts will be made with large buyers in Fritain, especially witkh Grade A and B birds."" Canadian _ Pioneer â€" Merchant on Poultry Opportunities Posture and Health But the truth is that a straight backbone and chest held up and out, with room for the vital organs to do _ There is a différence in children, naturally, and besides some have compensations that others lack. For instance, a child who gets plenty of air, food, sun and exercise, even if he has a poor posture, may be strongâ€" er physically than his straighter cousin who has none of these advanâ€" tages. It is difficult to sort out tables of figures, but the above statements may roughly speaking, be taken as facts Posture improves somewhat as children get older unless there is some physical weakness, illness or defect, Nutrition and Posture Nutrition and posture are interdeâ€" pendable. The poorlyâ€"nourished child will not be likely to have correct configuration, but on the other hand the child who stands badly will very likely not make the most of his food. Scholarship and deportment improve as good posture and physical trulning‘ get in their work. Crate Fed Poultry About 80 per cent. of school childâ€" ren have imperfect posture in varyâ€" ing degre»s, Children trained in correct attitude and given physical training improve in about threeâ€"fourths of all cases. Boys as a rule use their bodies bet ter than girls, but do not hold them selves as well. Thin children have a poorer posiure than fatter ones. Looking up statisties on posture we find some interesting things. Children â€" before entering _ school have a better posture than those who have been in school for two or three years. T Encourage Child to figicl-f-limself Straight Telling Him How Splendid He Looks CORRECT POSTURE ISs MOST IMPORTANT TO GOOD HEALTH King Receives Indian Orderly Officers Mr. McArthur says that the most money he has mace since te has been in business has come from poultry. Long before grading of dresseq poulâ€" try was established by thke Dominion Department cf Agriculture, he adoptâ€" ed it, and did all he could to encourâ€" age farmers to adopt it From ‘the time he started in the businsss, his object has been to demcnstrate to. farmers that it pays well to produce only quality products; or to give serâ€" vice. The local pouitry pools which have recently keen organized would, according to Mr. McArthur, be well advised to organize a crate feeding system amorg the farmers. Let them know there is money for good quality poultry; that the market is glutted with poor stuff; that they muct work' and work hard and give service, if they want to succeed. "I have neve'r' seen the time when I sould not sell good, well fed, properly prepared birds" he said. **Let one farmer in a locality show what can be done in thh, directionâ€" and he will induce the others to emulate his examaple. It is leadership that is wanted, and if the pools will recognize this, they have hope of success, not otherwise" will carefully crate feed their birds so as to get quality, they will tind _ a ready and profitable market for all they can produce. In nis opin‘on one of the principal faults of the farmer in the Ottawa district, at least, is that they are losing by not properly finishing their products for the marâ€" ket. ‘ There‘s no use trying to get a halfâ€" sick child to stand correctly. Yet if he will do so, it will probably _ help him considerably, Posture isn‘t evâ€" erything, but it is highly important. Children who take cod liver oil usâ€" ually have a better stance than those of a generation ago who never tasted it. ‘ Now back him up against a wall with his calves, shoulders and head touching. Then take a â€" lookâ€"see. What a difference. The pelvic bones (the broad, flat plates spreading like saucers from each side of the spine) will be thrown forward. This draws the loose abdominal muscle in. The breast bone will be forwanm! and high, If not, tell him to lift it up and keep it up. The chin won‘t be tilted, eltberl forward or backward, but will take its place naturally above the breast. It may even have a drawnâ€"in look at first, but this will disappear. | Avoid the Slump " Encourage every child out of school, to hold himself properly. In school he may slump over his desk but youf won‘t be there to see. Don‘t nag forâ€" | ever, but show him how splendid he‘ looks when he is straight. I â€" Take a side survey of your child some time when he is undressed, Are his shoulders hunched forward? Is his chest hollow, and does his neck slant forward from the Atlas verte brae with a chicken slant? If s0, we can tell you what the rest of his body is doing. His abdomen is inches too far out in front, and you could set a teacup in the deep curve of his back, thus giving the silhouette A figure "S" appearance. | their work, ail contribute to health. good by Six horseshoe crabs, one 14 inches across _ brought recently from Amerâ€" ica by Professor J. Y. Simpson of Eâ€" dinburgh University, are attracting much attention at the Edinburgh Zoo Aquariuh. educat i y _ Plans for Canada‘s â€"part in the, ie T:ir:n:f 'éi'.’fli i:tc.:l?:ct?::dorzbl:t-. ’ third triennial convention of the Panâ€"| 4 [ R x 7 o | cloths whicn contain an w?oynprvc Pacific Women‘s Association which i h * record of the guests of her dimn@r | will meet in Honolulu this |ummer| T | ‘*, parties. _ Long ago there were more | August 6 to 22, are being organized by lnk s parties, Each guest is handed & : Miss M. L. Boliert, dean of women at 4 j " pencil and asked to write hi> name. | the University of British Columbia, : o s : ; Skillful artists then embroiver the | chairman of the Canadian section. gra mak in oi .; Arrangements are under way for'.uw phs t.o A the:n.\ usfink the attendance of a delegation dnwnl u;" Sh Meole stel lrted tais custom !from the Canadian Council, com.|~ """ °"*° W48 a £irl. posed of heads of national womenm‘ Was Attorney‘s Daughter ’ organizations, groups of lnterelted, Few peop!» now recal! the romance women, and certain individuals who, Of the steel magnate and Louise have special contributions to lnke{ Whitfhield who was the 28â€"yearâ€"old toward the attainment of the aims of, daughter of John W. Whitheld, a the Association. 'wnlth. Un oo NR sn in uy o y s Objectives are to strengthen the bonds of peace among the peoples of the countries bordering on the Paâ€" cific ocean, by promoting a better understanding and friendship and to initiate and organize coâ€"operation for the study and betterment â€" of existing social conditions. "A man without an asdress is un' vagabond. A man with two nddmseli is a libertine" â€" Georre Bernard | Shaw. j "It is an old adage that charity should begin at home. This is equalâ€" ly true of justice and fairnoss" â€" Harry Elmer Barnes, "We are probally moving toward a period of humanity reposirg on a lower standard of life" â€" Renito Mussolini. "War is a racket. I krow because I‘ve been in it for thirtyâ€"five years." â€"General Smedley D. Butler "All the Englishâ€"speaking peoples are enteriny now upon a fight for their own life and those democratic conditions in which they believe"â€" Stanley Ba‘ldwin. "The new theatre av lience de-s Y ork mands intelligence, truth and honesty| _ By in character portrayal." â€" George throw Jean Nathan. !' mind "Only by disarmament can the’ gress peace and progress of the world nnd: Natio the national security of each country ed, i: be truly promoted" â€"â€" Norman H.. Sever Davis. l "The world is getting totter and better."â€"Daniel Carter Seard. "Looked at in terms of space, the message of astronomy is at best one of melancholy grandeur and oppresâ€" sive vastness "â€"Sir James Jeans "It is sentiment, love, that gloriâ€" fies a woman and makes her beautiâ€" ful."â€"De Dolf Hopper. "Imagination is the only door to a reality richer than dreamed of by the seeker after material wealth." â€" Theodore Dreiser. "In the life of every hyman being good luck and bad luck often come squarely face to face" â€" Andre Maurois. "The scenic designs on cperatic stages look like last week‘s laundry and the stage settings are usually very primitive,"â€"Deems ‘Taysor. "Every one should plan out his life fifty years in advance." â€"â€"Logais D. Brandeis. "The American people temperaâ€" mentally are either very optimistic or very pessimistic." â€"Roger W. Babâ€" son. "Any new effort, the psychclogists say, wears a new groove in the brain."â€"Owen D. Young. \‘They re Telling Us! Mrs. Carnegie Lives "Nothing is ever accom plished by a committee unless it consists of three members, one of whom hapâ€" pens to be sick and another absent." â€"Henrik Van Loon. Of Panâ€"Pacific Association "Strong men are made ~t opposiâ€" tion ; like kites they go up against the wind."â€"Frank Harris. "Whenever I hear people discussâ€" ing birth control, I always remember that I was the fifth."â€"Clarence Darâ€" "If I were to marry, I would have to spend the rest of my life being what my wife would want me to be." â€"Prince of Wales. "We women to talk toc much, but even then we don‘t tell half we know."â€"Laiy Astor. "Many poeple‘s tombstones should read: ‘Died at 30. Buried at 60.‘"â€" Nicholas Murray Butler. "For a long life be moderate in all things, but don‘t miss avything."â€" Dr. Adolf Lorenz. 1 HORESHOE CRaBSs It pays *o put inte spe. ch ever, kkigd thought every iaspii‘ug hope, every courageo‘.s determinationr The thourht thatâ€"saps the courage, drain away the ambition, and cestroy h=pe had better never be spoken Bearing the date, 1917, an English gun was found recently 2t the bottom of the bay of Ostend, Belzginm I1 you have sometaing pleasant to say about a perso you cannot say it too emphatically, nor too often. It you have something unpleasant to say write it on a scrap of paper and put it in the fire. If you ha~e something to say that will ad4 ., the general hope and cheer, speak it out. If you have a e nviction that life j a practcial joke on unfo tunate amanit», ther»e is no special reason to be gloomy and disil. lusioned yourself. Why should you try to ?m'oy the hope and faith of oth ore Then she asks played and gives sitting erect "as one of the great Widowed now, she carvies on the Carnegie traditions. Perhaps, someâ€" times, she watches the skyâ€"=crapers climb the sky â€" higher than her faâ€" mous husband dreamed tha they could go â€" daughter of John W. Whitheld, a wealthy New York attorney, when the 53â€"yearâ€"old Scotman wooed and won her. _ At first she ‘et his treâ€" mendous wealth interfere with her decision. Finally she decided neither yee.n‘ nor money mattered. !_ _ The Castie on the moors», long | both her late husband‘s and her own fflvorite house, continues to be her | summer home as well as that of her | sonâ€"inâ€"law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Roswell Miller. and their chilâ€" | dren. igress of the world. _ The League of | Nations, of which her hustand dreamâ€" ed, is one of her primary interests. ; Several years ago she visited Genâ€" | eva as the guest of he Amecrican â€" committee of the Association When ‘she returned she remarked that afâ€" | ter her personal contact she believed | that her hustkand had beern a crophet | and the League of Nations a fulfillâ€" ! ment of his life work. i Rarely in the News \_ Her name appeared again. ye}ra ‘ ago, when she attempted to ous* a ’night club that had opened on some of her property during a sojoarn she had made abroad t i _ But though the past walks.quictly .through the rooms: Mrs Carnegie‘s | mind keeps active step wi h the proâ€" The New York society coumns mention her regularly twice a year. When she sails for Skibo Castle, in the Scottish Higblands every May, and along about October or Novemâ€" ber when she returns. i So she dresses simply, sits in orâ€" chestra seats at the opera instead of !uking a box, travels an inexpensive _ocean liners ‘refuses interviews, and never dismisses servants They stay with her until they die or are penâ€" sioned. The red plush furniture is the same in the old house as it was when Mrs. Carnegie ard Andrew Carnegie were married on April 22, 1877. _ When the doors of the mansion open the lumbering green buses of Fifth Avâ€" enue goâ€" down the road and don‘t come back. _ The skyline over Cenâ€" tral Park stoops down again. _ It is the gilt era â€" the show era â€" when young gentlemen drove broughams and Adelina Patti and the Florodora Sextette were the favorites of New York. Mrs. Andrew Carnegie iives in Manhattan‘s geatest prvate resiâ€" dence, a house that occupics a whole city block, at Two East 91s+ Street. But the woman whuse husband‘s name is so well known goes her way so quietly that hardly anybody knows who she is _ Long, long ago the late steel magnate and philanâ€" thropist told his wife that x lady stays out of the limelight She has remembered. son since the dollars would go to a charitalle project. 7 It was probably becauss is was & benefit day for the Anne Brown Nursery School that she let het lawns be viewed ut one dollar a perâ€" Mrs. Andrew Carnegie opened to the public the gates of the gardons that surround her huge pink and white stone house in New York, the other day. It had never been done before. â€" Through the yvears â€"â€" more than half a hundred of them â€" the garden has been closed to a‘l but & few personal friends. Widow of Famous Magnate Out of Limelight. Left Unsaid With the Past away to memories, &A lafly should" plush chair . to have th organ Advice to Stay RLCY CTTTTT =7°CC Oun rush of applications from wish to take advantage of to rent small farms at 25 a4 2 PC 11 months and {, hospitals, ard the creation services had been ima men took the lead and did part of the work in this ; Â¥ice, It might be said tha missions had created t m fessionAbroughout Asia. To thousands o lands the relies p _“‘ M!_ the The change worked in the of women, and tian women too forms was the + Dr. J. R. Mot: World Missiona: ing of women w denominations a The effect of upon the lives suflcient seviden vince him of th missions. An ad« in the devotion : ©f Christian won "Were men wage for wor} simplified woy! Cardinal Hoyes. end and a; receiving ; Hiros| Sait« -Ulmeslnry will occur ever *You cannot ha economic | contro} M."â€"O‘don I "The best F civilized perso it‘s not always Englishman ."â€" "On the w} "It has been the gangster f« than the Unite, trude Atherton. "If I had wouldn‘t. "Man‘s t Benito Mus "The may be saint o counted of wis self j greater been n years." â€" whole awbly Frank Christian Mis erful cou newlyâ€"cong first been Emil Ludy Will be Bchwat the ; the | of ¢ more s Idea of on t ments Ko amc sho our selfâ€"made p ter to be n 10 be made Holmes . en If The Ith who, fo, the pert« Mille. Ame Butle ans *"The pers bothered by ArUSt in A llteury art Free State Holly w« n H ear. There j o t w by Karl supply f n imer t} rom t m m €

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy