Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 2 Aug 1934, p. 7

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rs _ Among Works Have cd â€"â€" Pertâ€" of Books ig ht ly rried al sume, We read that women will be just as beautiful in the future as they are now, but not the same women, we asâ€" J m a Keeper:r‘;ixecnse me, Misses, you‘re both wrong, it‘s a nawk." Apropos the Coekm?’l misplacing of the aspir: Melville tells this one: At the London Zoologie the following was overhea Child: ‘That‘s a heagle Mother: _ "You hignor that‘s a howl." has left us several exeelient miniaturâ€" es of Cromwell." COMING to more modern times, the two most important midgets of the l7th Centery were Sir Jeffry Hudâ€" son, a courtier, Captain in His Majâ€" esty‘s Army, and a Kright of his Lord, the King (Charles I., of Engâ€" land) ; and his friend Richard Gibhson, a famous English painter, some of whose pictures hang today in Hampâ€" ton Court Palace. Sir Jeffery, "when booted and spurred stood 3 feet 9 inches," and is the only . midget knight in history. Gibsor was 3 feet 10 inckes, "and it was in keeping that his specialty should have been paintâ€" ing in miniature. He painted most of the important men of his day and Uroesus, wise and wealthy King of Lydia in the 5th Century B.C. (traditionally considéred the wealâ€" thiest man who ever lived), wrote of himself that he was a midget, | Cicero had a 3â€"foot rival. This was C Lucinium Calvas a Roman gentleâ€" man who challenged the polished Cicero‘s superiority as an orator. Attila the Hun was a dwarf, if not an actual midget. MIDGETS have a histery of their own and it is an honcrable one. To quote Messrs, Bodin and Hershey : Nebuchadnezzar was known as "the dwarf of Babylon." Tradition â€" says Aesop was a midget, J IT HAS BEEN reliably estimated that there are about 2,000 midgets in existenceâ€"one chila n every milâ€" lion born is destined for midgethood, say the authors (Walter Bodin ard Burnet Hershey) of "It‘s A Small World: All About Midgets"â€"a perâ€" fect title, isn‘t it. A midget, by the way, is defined as a man or woman, correctly proportioned, less than 4 feet 6 inches in height. The smallest adult on record was Pauline Musters, a native of Holland, who at the time of her death, at 22, had reached the height of 1 foot T inches. The spell was broken (adds Seâ€" crett), but it was a long time before Haig would really believe that his eyes had deceived nim. "THEN THE boy was brought forâ€" ward and the old fakir mumbled s¢mething. His audi¢nce now turned their eyes on the boy, who stood on the ground. The fakir slowly and gently moved his hand upward and the audience followed his hand with their eyes. He seemed to be giving instructions to the boy and addressâ€" ing the spot where his eyes rested â€" ever upward. Then the whole thing dawned on me. He had mesmerized his audience. I went sut at once! "‘The boy is still on the ground, gir,‘ I called, ‘and the rope fell the moment he threw it up‘" "I saw the old fakir make the round of the circle several times," he says, "then I saw him uncyil his rope. He moved onc>a more round the cirele and then, pointing upward with one hand, shot the rope in the air with the other. Haig and the others sat with their eyes turned upâ€" ward. \ WHAT HAPPENED is described by Sergeant T. Secrott, Haig‘s soldierâ€" servant, in his book "25 Years With Earl Haig." Haig and three brother officers were seated on cushions in a cirel@ round the fakir. _ Secrett watched from a nearâ€"5y window. Haig was particularly keen on seeâ€" ing it performed, so when one day a noted fakir turned up at a station where the famous soldier was visitâ€" ing, a performance was aranged. THE REVIVED INTEREST in the soâ€"called Indian "magic rope trick" recalls an occasion on which Field Marshall Earl Haigâ€"better known as Sir Douglas Haigâ€"fell a victim to it during his stay in Inâ€" dia. The idea is to make an ordinary pigce of rope stand up on its end while a boy climbs up it. Pithy Anecdotes of the Famous ho was Commissioner of the c{ock was put up. e Cockney‘s frequent _ the aspirate, Lewis this one: BIG BEN Zoological Gardens overheard : MIDGETS neagi¢, muyvver." hignorant child, , but How to keep cool is the chief probâ€" lem of these warm days. One thing you can do to your house that the enâ€" tire family will appreciate is to take up the rugs and put up Venetian blinds to darken the room. Also, try taking down all ornaments except those that are made of glass or white porcelain. Penholders and stainlessâ€"steel nibs provided in post offices are popular "loot" with the public, Of 1,900 holdâ€" ers and 9,000 nibs provided in 75 of the largest offices in London, only 700 penholders and about 1,800 nibs reâ€" mained at the end of a month. Ratepayers in England and Wales paid £147,700,000 in the year 1933â€"34; this was an increase of £1,450,000 on the previous twelve months. It is the first increase since the slump in trade. In 1929 the figure stood at £166,460,000. _ Damage done by lipstick to frocks being tried on by mannequins and customers have caused some London dressmakers to introduce a "lipâ€" mask," a paper shape covering the mouth, with a projection behind to be gripped between the teeth. Separation or maintenance orders to the number of 17,000 are granted in British courts each year; this is about four times the number of diâ€" vorce decrees. Are You Siuggish ? To Throw Off Energyâ€"Stealing Impurities, enjoy a.ggsouwo' Motor cars to sell at $175, bicycles at $7.50 and gramophones at $4.25, are being imported in British Empire markets overseas from Japan. Classified Advertising Apart from news ana travel films, nearly oneâ€"quarter of the . cinema films shown in the United Kingdom picture theatres are now of British origin. Fortyâ€"seven deaths were caused in British mines last year by miners smoking and carrying matches, which is strictly forbidden. ~____ qach week of Energizing, Effervescent Face powder can be obtained in more than fifty different shades, while there are fortyâ€"eight shades of rouge, London‘s burial grounds together equal an area six times the size of Hyde Park, which covers 390 acres. A railway engine of the larger type will carry as much as 5,000 gallons of water in its tender. Women of Great Britain buy 5,000 lipsticks every week. KEEPING COOL British Briefs D1X IE PLVG SMOKING ToBaAcco ing gum, or roughage, don‘t go far enough. You need a liver stimulant. Carter‘s Little Liver Pills is the best one. Safe. Purely n’ouble. Sure. Ask for them by name. Refuse substitutes. 25¢ at all When you feel blue, depressed, sour on the world, that‘s your liver which isn‘t pouring its daily two pounds . of liquid bile into your bowels. Digestion and elimination are being slowed up, food is accumulating and deâ€" uylni inside you and making you feel wretched. Mere bowelâ€"movers like _ saits, oil, minéral water, laxative candy or chewâ€" iN[NCTA! WATer, laxative candy He added that wives make better school teachers than single women. Your Liver‘s Making You Feel Out of Sorts Wake up your Liver Bile â€"â€"No Calomel Needed "Single _women," he told the Naâ€" tional Educational Association, "are more likely to have distorted person. alities than married ones because problems such as their love life have not been settled." WASHINGTONâ€" Dr, â€" willi: White, nationallyâ€"known psych took his life in his hands a nounced that married women superior to single ones. MARRIED womEen sUPERIOR To T ORC PV V TTUME home. Common sense you must deâ€" velop yourself, Knowledge is what the world hands you, _ Judgment comes only with the years Exper. ience is a bitter medicine adminisâ€" tered by life itself, and must be taken with a bit of conscience. Wisdom is a phantom often chased but seldom overtaken. Success or failure are & ) matter of opinion Reputation is the golden scale, Contentment the llnall objective, Henry Huss, Meaford watchmaker, has succeeded in drilling a hole thru a common pin from end to end withâ€" out breaking it, Huss, who has been in business therefor the last twentyâ€" five years, has been experimenting for the last two years. The hole, made with a fine drill, ‘s just large enough to thread a hair out of a man‘s head through it. Despite the high speed, the engine showed every reliability and the travelling in the train was perfectâ€" ly comfortable. The train weighed 380 tons exclusive of the engine. ‘ It is the express "Princess Royal" built last year. During a record run from Liverpool to London the exâ€" press covered 193 1â€"2 miles in three hours, 12 minutes. This included two ctops, and was €ight minutes quickerJ than the fastest schedule. The averâ€" age speed maintained was thus 68 miles per hour, whiue speeds of 80 miles an hour or over were renorded at five different stages, and the maxâ€" imum speed of 85 miles an hour was registered at one point. | Intelligence. is what Henry Huss Crewe, Eng. â€" This town where last year the famous "Royal Scot" engine was built for its travels in Canada and the United States, now claims the distinction of having built the fastest express engin© in the Lonâ€" don, Midland and Scottish service. Locomotive Pulls Train in New Fast Time â€" Proud Home. British Engine _ Breaks Record MECHANICAL Fear INTELL!ICENCE known psychiatrist, his hands and anâ€" SPINSTERS you get from William were waited on by their batmen, one to every six students. Dressing for dinâ€" ner thus makes its entry into the blueâ€"clad ranks of London‘s policeâ€" men.â€"Toronto Mail and Empire. LONDON BOBBIES Go To COLLEGE. The Metropolitan Police College, reâ€" cently opened by the Prince of Wales at Henden near London is the equiva. lent of a staff college in the army or navy, but there is nothing quite like ilt in any police force outside of Inâ€" dia, Lord Trenchard, Commissioner of Police at Scotland Yard, wants to develop a younger and better educatâ€" ed type of police officer for the upper ranks of the Metropolitan police. The college lies somewhere between an English public school and an Indian regimental mess, The students are required to dress for dinner and are the bread and cheese is defrayed by a collection ammng the parishioners. As the worshippers left the bread and cheeseâ€"cut in smzll dice and car. ried in basketsâ€"~were thrown in handâ€" fuls to the waitiag erowd congregated on Church Tampâ€"London Times. The origin of the custom is some. what obseure, but the privileges it "commemorates date bick to the 12th century, when a grant of woodland was made to the inkabitants of the parish of St. Briavels. The parishionâ€" ers of St. Briavels bavre the right to this day to cut and take all the tim. ber they require for their own doâ€" mestic use from the woodiand known as Hudnalls, The cost of providing ‘ The picturesqne village of St. Briâ€" avels, in the Forest of Dean, was the ’scene on Sunday evening of a time honored eustorm â€" which perpetuates certain rights enjoyed by the inhabiâ€" tants of the parish fcr more than 700 years. The occasica was the annual distribution of Pread and cheese af. ter the service in the church on Whitâ€" sunday evening, BREAD AND CHEESE "The motion pictare industry of the United States :s the most glaring exâ€" ample of what nncortrolled imaginaâ€" tion can do."â€"S. Parkes Cadman. "What the Freach theatre needs for its commeorcial salvat.on, apparently is a good dirty wind."â€"George Jean Nathan. "Life seems much more pleasant in America now. There is less empha. sis on money."~â€"Hugh Waipole. ‘"What we want is not less goods but more goods,. produced at cheaper prices, for more peoj Je."â€"Ogden L. Mills. "The mark cf the ortist: Always unfaithful to his carlier work because he‘s in love with the new."â€"Emil Ludwig, "The fiveâ€"day week should be fect everywhere. li would give time to spend iteir money,"â€" Ford, "It is up to the government to mainâ€" tain its most sacred trust, the welfare of its citizens."â€"â€"Frarklin D. Roose. velt. â€"Dean Inge. we may be certain, but Vthey are mostly things which do not matter." "The real pessimirt is the person who has lost ivterest."â€"William Lyon Phelps. "This is a timo for: good cheer and clear thinking."â€"â€"(Charies M. Schwab. "Obsolescence is that deterioration which takes place in a thing, not be. cause it is not as good as it always was, but because there is something better."â€"Owen D, Young. "Taken as a whole, the American people prefer the emotional to the intellectual _ lifs."â€"â€"Nicholas Murray Butler. "Greater coâ€"operatioo, more consid. eration for the who‘e economic strucâ€" ture is the necessary path to modern prosperity,"â€"Frances H. Perkins. "There is ny Joubt wha prosperity is retnrning to States,"â€"Sir Joeich Stamp "There are a few things of which ‘"When a rule 0 etiquette adds no. thing of valuo to beauty, to comfort, to ease or to happiness it is a use less rule which may as well be thrown into the discar1."â€"Ermily Post. "The parole principle 4s a corner. stone of progressize penology."â€"Har. ry Elmer Barnes "War or revoiution will not strike America,"â€"Baron Rothschild. ‘‘The world does owe man a chance to earn and fair payment for his labor,"â€"John W. Davia, "Good heredi‘ty may to some extent make up tor bad environment and good environment may to some extent make up for bad berecity."â€"Havelock Ellis. "We can have democracy only as long as we are wortby of it."â€"New. ton D. Baker, * ‘ AT CHURCH, the United in ef. people ' JAM POT covers â€" To make excellent jam pot covers, dip rounds of greaseproof paper into very hot starch. Put it over the jars immediately, fixing down firmly to the sides. When dry, this paper will be like parchment and absolutely â€" airâ€" tight. | 'ueroy Of May 29, 1834, _ Thirty years ago, Mr. Dunstan purâ€" chased a bracelet made of hair from Plenipotentiary‘s mane. He located the souvenir in Tahiti. It has a gold mounting inscribed. Originally, the bracelet had been studded with diaâ€" monds, but these had been removed before Mr. Dunstan purchased it. ‘nlmul' Bd too much, and bones ds no. mfort, I v;,he“ thei a use.| 05 on a g hrown | 0 T. J. Dunstan, of Vancouver, has an interesting souvenir of Plenipoten. tiary‘s victory in the historic Epsom Derby of May 29, 1834. LYDIA E. PINKHANM‘s souvenir or perey oF A HUNDRED vears aco Fat children are not always lazy, but a bit of roughage won‘t hurt them as a rule. At any rate, "Grandâ€" ma" had a good idea. Jumpy Nerves 1 S Lo oc Om o l oeve ~EAEEE r€) Grandma got hold of im® They shipâ€" "."| ped me out to her farm. The old lady took one look and said, ‘Well my little pinâ€"cushion, here‘s where inâ€" you lose about fifty pounds. â€" You "°| work out there with the men. You *â€" | do your share or you don‘t eat. Not a bite. Pa will take care of you.‘ t SoLVING THE PROBLEM Ie" "For about a week J soldiered, y | And I went hungry. Those people Â¥ did what they said they would. They sweated me and worked me and 4| starved me. I actually got thin. At 6| first I was miserable, but ~after a 1| while I liked it. When 1 worked they fed me like a prize piz. When I left to go home for school Grandma said, s |‘Go ahead and be as fat as you like, r | but remember you can‘t impose on .| the world. You‘ve got to work and|‘ work hard, if it‘s only piling up stones and tearing them down again.‘| : | Then she gave me twenty cdollars for|| ) new clothes and a pound cake and put | F me on the train." 0 "Thank you," said nis visitor ferâ€"| : vently. "I have an idea now, There are rugs to beat. No rugsâ€"no supâ€" per. But it seems a little cruel," "Cruel, nothing," chuckled _ Mr. James. "And by the way, â€" send Jimmy over to me. He‘s too thin,| 4i I‘ve got a farm â€" _ _.» the lady | 80 looked worried "â€" _ _ and â€" I‘m | ‘t, going to fill him up on milk and I‘]] | °8 put ten pounds on him, I"! guaranâ€"|£2° tee. And he‘s going to sleep fifteen | 4 hours a day if I have to hold him I‘::l down myself. He‘s going to learn Sh how it loaf and like it. _ It won‘t cr us cer spoil him." Then she saw Mr. James coming down the street. Mr. James was so fat he could hardly walk, but he was a kindly busy gentlen en who had a finger in every townâ€"pic, was a leadâ€" ing citizen, and had made money. "I‘ll ask him what to do," she thought. ~So pretty soon she was down at his store and sitting in a hbig easy chair in his office. She put her problem to him. ‘ Mr. James chuckled as she talked. "Isn‘t it strange," he said at last, "I was just thinking about it this morning. I was looking at your fat boy. I look at him every day and ke‘s always taking life easy, ‘"Well, that‘s the way I wase nutil will # P l;';'"' luitio, Don'mym longer. Begin taking it today. DL x L2 0 e e Whskg 1t | munching doughnuts, 4| His mother called out, â€" "Arthur, t / stop that stuffing and go and do *X | scmething." "Nothing to do." "Well, Jimmy has. He â€" always ‘© finds something. He‘s out there now " / tinkering with the lawn mower." "‘What good does that do? He‘s _ | just fussy, Always worrying people * | and getting others ‘taiked: at‘ when they don‘t fuss too. Anyway, I‘m _ | tired." r: His mother began to think â€" what Arthur said was true. Jimmy dig ‘too much. He was nothing but skin _ | and bones, yet he couldn‘t keep still, ~| When there were no duties he went ‘| off on a goose chase of his own. ) OPPOSITE CAsEsS ‘ Fat lazy Arthur needed more ex.| ercise and Jimmy needed less. Arthur | | needed to eat jless and Jimmy needâ€" j ed to eat more. Strance that nature who put high-strung, nerves in some | people couldn‘t give them bodies +o C back their energy. _ Arthur would|/ always be happiest because he was)c placid. He never did anything for| 0 anybody, never worried and as long | is as he had food was co‘tert. Then she saw Mr. James coming |s; down the street. Mr. James was so 5 #ek a 2." 100C 1 Yield to the soothing action of this medicine. You will eat bemtu;sleepbede_r::-: better : :: look better; â€" A Little "Rough" Treatment Will Cure Fat, Indolent Boy Fat way I was until lay on the | _ "About a fortnight ago," the Gaâ€" zcite story ran, "there happened in Frederick County as comical a wedâ€" ding as we remember to have heard of. A couple, with their guests (havâ€" ing obtained a license) came to the house of a reverend clergyman late in the evening, after he had Mf ]uoma time in bed, and desired in ha hclvere 1. . L0 s m CHe Bs thing, he should be obliged to pay all hetdebu,udulbocm(ro-th ‘He, willing to oblige them, got up and dressed himself in order to perâ€" form the ceremony, but the brideâ€" groom, havinb imbibed & notion that ifilu married a woman with anyâ€" Ahidanin ols c 50 o Heap y 5c ue o The article then recoants in full deâ€" tail how a New Jersey bride, minus clothing, joined her wosver in wedlock while two women held a sheet beâ€" tween her and the minister, ‘This account the reader may per. haps look on as improhable and unâ€" true, but we may be assured, it is a certain and naked truth." Crougng n g ce netene ty Chme . NOR dE the late Benjamin Franklin nothing new in nudist wedd Franklin‘s paper, the Pen: Gazette, chronicled a nudist in Maryland on January 4, 1 °O 7 °"~»1600 on January 4, 1752, % "A naked truth," the Gazette said in headlines. NARRATENAKED TRUTHOF _ 1752‘s NUDIST NUPTIALS it, and where the morn early that the day has t golden hours as those « He is to be pitied wh in some valley of grief hills, with the longest r shortest day. Home si centre of joy, Home s centre of Joy, equatorial â€"Beecher. what | rgfrige y did| foods | t skin | refrige ) still.| and sa went| â€" Soft ‘ if they box and e ex.| plate. . rthur | wire se needâ€"| USE ature| â€" Make some| ay pron s o) Or crear rould | hot kitel was| on the ¢ for| Of ice is long| is the d; To av ning | smal] qu $ so| overs p was | that hav d a| the first e‘d' table ar A man‘s house should be hillâ€"top of cheerfulness and se so high that no shadows rest CV o aiiy 2 AOn c onl Frederick, Md Crackers and readyâ€"toâ€"se sals which lose their crispne ly if exposed to the air, may ped by placing in the oven or fifteen minutes, They s| rooled before servin«~ ! It is wisest to buy f1 sals in small quantities weather lasts, Dry food paper bags should be glass or metaj containe against mice and weey cereals and sugars shou airâ€"tight cans. > ETT P EIR W Bread and breaj crumbs particular care in Lot, humic ®r. rumbs and odd slices o should not be allowed to ace in the bread box. Those not for toast should be dried the in a cool oven and saved for ing. Frequent scalding and â€" of the bread container helps vent mold too. Buttered toast should never 8d in the bread box. t Make a habit of putting foods awâ€" ay promptly after mea‘s. When milk or cream are allowed to stand in a hot kitchen or left unnecessarily long on the dining table, an extra amannt â€" _ ; . 0C Cetemiorate quickly and must be prepared premptly for the rgfrigerator and stored. Cleaning the foods before putting them into the refrigerator keeps the ice box tidy and saves ice or electric current. Soft fruits like berries keep better if they are taken at once from the: box and spread on a platter or large plate. Cover with a cheesecloth or wire screen and keep in a cool place. USE LEFTâ€"OvÂ¥ERS FROMPTLY Cmm bo Putide Inodls 3. _ _ j CC *TNBEIF ~Keqp. ing foods in good condition in hot weather is a wellâ€"selected set of conâ€" tainers. They may be made of glass or €arthen ware, @namelware or alâ€" uminum for covered dishes in any of these materials are excellent for storâ€" ing foods, both cooked and raw, All perishable foods should be put away as soon as they come from the market. Milk, fresh vegetables, fruits and meats deteriorate quickliv ana before servingl Storing in P is Aid in A MAN® A home » lm.“:- _.‘;.’d u.)'.rd' keep small ql{nntlt'ieév;v-l;ile metal containeré,flt:) gay has twice as mo,n)" as those of other men, pitied whose house is and weevils, 7F'lso‘t;r-s‘: sugars should be kept in nudist viedd'ing;.- longest nigixi"uvl;d the Home should be the , the Penns;lrv'/aniu to buy flours and Dry foods aéi;vered in $ House. y BUTTER orRumMBs bread crumbs require in Lot, Lumid weath â€" 1 odd slices of bread allowed to accumulate o itg and saved for crumb. snould be on the ness and serenity, hadows rest upon morning comes so readyâ€"toâ€"serve should never be stor On the word of 2 ~~Câ€"SCrve cerâ€" criepness quickâ€" air, may be crisâ€" he oven for ten They should be should be the 1 and tropical. ’rgper Containers between the ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO reservation , there is and sunning wedding turned into 10t useable thorough} y guard Flours, nd cerâ€" the hot to pre shirts to cover coubtful. about her cireumstances. "The obliging bride, to remove all incumbrances, stripped....and two women held a sheet between her and the clergyman, while he performed his office, and sh,e hay ng forgot her cap at undressing, it came to her mind in the midst of the ceremony and she pulled that off too, and flungy it on the bed, and was married to her spouse (if not in a wedding suit, in her birthday suit) "After the ceremony, the brideâ€" groom put on her one of his own province of New Jersoy Coubtful: about her cir» For quick relief from Brideâ€"1 know dear much too good for an Newly Wedâ€" married me.â€"I‘m you, They‘re wearing _ cherries strawberries in their ears now ficial ones of course with b nieres to match for the lapels, STOPS ITCHING _ Ridicule, which chiefly arises from pride, a selfish passion, is but at best a gross pleasure, too rough an enter. tainment for those who are highly polished and refined.â€"Henry Home, return The sacred way they went â€"Elizabeth Brown. 7 Our feet cannot return The way they went, Nor daylight ever burn Dark sacrament Of rapture lightly spent. Whatever lesson there be | learn From those strange fates , through fen and fern Our «iscontent, We know but thisâ€"our fe« D. D. D. Prescription Speeds Rehef An alien ’Now moonlight mists those hills And crickets ery, As light along the rills Palls silverly And secret laughter spills, Here have we walked togethor, and 1, And heeded how the hidden dark , tills Its sombre chemistry . But night is broken and the ala w fulfilis 20 CC PRTRECAT. Various types of messages | are available to the business community, Rush messages are sent immediately on receipt and take precedence over all others, "Day letters" for transmisâ€" sion and delivery before 6 pm. . are handled after al} rush messages have been dispatched and are considerably cheaper still; these are tran=mitted during the night and are delivered to their destination on the morning of the first working day _ after filing. Cheap rates are also available for shorter messages sent under similar conditions, in One Minute o 2 m timag‘,3 _ C NAs multiplied many times the physical capacity of exist. ing wires, is now generally in use throughout the System, Today, in Canada alone, the Carnadian National Telegraphs operate no less than 164,â€" 795 miles of physical wire and 2,094 offices, l Through Western Union, the Cana. ’dlan National Telegraphs provide a direct exclusive domestic service to _any part of the United States or Mexico; by virtue _ of an agreement with the Angloâ€"American Telegraph Company, the same service is carried by cable to the farthest ends of the earth. Even ships at sea may . be reached by telegranh through a work. ing arrangement with the coastai wireless of the continent. Myuul. . 8 adians ara ,, . _ ‘__ _ e telegraph, Canadians are more and more each year using this service in sending soâ€" cial messages, greetings, congratula. tions and business communications, Canadian Nationa} Telegraph officials declare. Of particular interest is the money iransfer service by which money payments may be made at once by wire in any town or city the monepy being collected by the telegraph comâ€" pany at one end and paid ont at the _ether on the receipt of wired advice, In this forward stride in the Aeld of telegraphy, the Canadian National Telegraphs have taken a leading part, The carrier cu.rent system of teleg. raphy, which has multiplied many times the physical capacity of exist. ing wires, is now generally in use throughout the System, Today, in Canada alone, whe Canadian National Telegraphs operate no less than 164,â€" 795 miles of physical wire and 2094 offices. Conscious of flloâ€"bueltn to be d&. 'r;lvod“{m- the use Of the televrank FRUILTY EARRINGs know dearâ€"but you were good for any other girl. destiny The her â€"I don‘t see why you I‘m not good enough for Nostalgia same service is c:rr-i:d e farthest ends of the e . ce of messages | are business community , are sent immediately t.lke precedence over , he was very fates who weave Telegraph hidden dark dige the morning of $ _ after _ filing, ) available for t under shmilar feet cannot The Lyric of the telegraph, left the â€"da v®g W, ArLâ€" boutonâ€" to and

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