Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 13 Sep 1934, p. 6

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ON ADVISING THE FARMER How easy it is for some persons with imagination and giftes with a flow of words to sit in a comfortable arm chair feet cocked on a desk and dictate to a stenographer instruction how a farmer can better bis condiâ€" tions, One of these eMusions recent. ly reached our desk and bere it is: "The application of engineering to agriculture bas for its purpose the utl. lization of engineering principles, me thods and equipment to decrease the unit cost of farm products, to reduce the amounts of irksome labor in proâ€" ducing crops and caring for livestock and to increase the satisfaction _ of farm living." What a wonderful thing this must be for the farmer, The application of engineering to farming is going to show how he can the more easily plow, sow and harvest, how best to unload his grain in the mows, cut and hoist the corn into the silo! milk his cows and with the minimum of ener. gy and in the cheapest mannert; weed the turnip patch and get the weeds out of his corn and potatoes while the farmer‘s wife is to be told how to perâ€" form her multiplicity of chores about the house so as to Increase the satisâ€" faction of farm living. 1t lk authors of some ol the non. sensicf stuff emanating trom city ofâ€" fices were to write their articles leave them on the desk until the following morning, and then read them before they began the work of the day, we fee} sure much of it would find a place in the waste paper basitet.â€"Perth Expositor, A DANGEROUS PRACTICE As woll as being against the la w , it is dangerous to use trucks to conâ€" vey chitdren or aduits to picnies _ or other gatherings, The other day live little girls were serlously injured when part of the side of a truck gave way. Trucks are not built for such work and carrying passengers in vehicles not adapted for that purpose is a dangerous â€" practice,â€"Niagara Falls Review. fash teen saD BUT TRUE A fellow doesn‘t realize now old he is getting until he finds that one deep breath won‘t blow out the candles on his birthday cake â€"Regioa Leaderâ€" PROBLEM FOR JEEVES P. (G. Wodehouse well known Brit. ish author, has bad a tax lien filed szainst him in the United States for $250,703 â€"â€"$123,826 original levy and penalties and interest of $126,877, It is effective against the many royalties he receives for the stories he sells across the line and his film right. It looks as it Jeeves would have to put on his thinking cap in dead earnest to get the popular writer out of this atâ€" tack on hbis bank account.â€"Brantford Exjositor, Post DEATH DUTIES The important role of the death duâ€" ties as part of British revenue is seen in he fact that the estate of the late Viscount Tredgar will contribute alâ€" most $6,100,000 to the treasury ot (3-'-v~.;l vuririlain,w.\'iagara Falls Review THE COUNTRY‘S FOUNDATION We old highbrows are apt to forget that the sloppy love the crooners croon about, is after all, the thing that makes the world &0 round,â€"Moose Jaw Timesâ€"Herald. HIS WEAKNESS Barbara Hutton complains that her Lbubby, Prince Alexis Mdivani, is payâ€" We old highbrows ? that the sloppy love croon about, is after al makes the world . go VERY LIKELY Much of the sighing for good old. shioned meals is sighing for a thirâ€" en year.old stomach, â€"â€" Brantford CANADA Bleak| IN DEFENCE ing more attention to the polo ponies she gave him as a wedding present than he is to her. He‘s a groom but not the right kind.â€"â€"Border Cities Star THERE WAS Another man lit a match to see if there was any gas left in his car, and the coroner‘s jury was informed that there were a couple of gallons,â€"Strat. ford Beaconâ€"Herald, There were some remarkable inâ€" creases in Canada‘s domestic exâ€" ports to British Empire countries in June. Compared with a year ago the increase to Great Britain was from $17,997,000 to $26,497,000, the gain beâ€" ing $8,520000 or 47 per cent; Australia from $$41,000 to $1,630,000 a gain of $789,000 or 93 per cent; British South Africa from $378,000 to $1,082,000, the increase being $704,000 or 186 per cent.â€"â€"Brandon Sun. omic n bertan MAKING aA DIsCOVERY Some June bridegrooms are finding life one grand refrain, instead of one grand sweet song. Refrain from cards, smoking, booze and fishing trips, â€" Kitchener Record. CcRUELTY If there is a humane society in the St, Catharines district, it needs to do some educative work among the peoâ€" ple of the city and surrounding dis. trict. It was some inspired mind in St, Catharines a month or two ago that hit upon the extraordinary idea of alâ€" lowing the children to see a movie show for two starling legs, Whether the children put the starlings to death in some way before tearing off the legs we cannot tell, but it was found that they were offering the legs of robins and other birds at the ticket offee, and so public spirit forced this scheme to be abandoned,.â€"St. Thomas Timesâ€"Journal. cost oOF wWar Ol cvery dollar we pay the federgy treasury in taxes sixty cents goes to pay for our part in the Great War, So Brooke Claxton reminds us in Canad. ian Business, There ars indirect costs as well. Twoâ€"thirds of our internation. al trade, exports and imports, has disâ€" appeared as a result of growing econâ€" 5 LOST EVERY DAY Two women‘s bodies are found, one by accident in search for the other, Lists cf girls missing from British homes are combed, and the public is shocked to learn that they number to 10,000 Scotland Yard, seeking to iden. tify the Brighton victim, have named a large army of them. In London woâ€" men disappear at the rate of five per day, A few are found alive or dead, but the fate of the rest is a deeper myâ€" stery than that which now engages the police at Brighton,â€"Manchester Sunday Chronicle, N.Z. Beef For Britain, |] It should be remembered that the | success gained with chilled New Zea. ] land lamb in the British market came| neither by luck nor favor, It was won || by hard work, close attention to de-'; tail, and by serupulous care to Im;uret1 that every carecass corresponded to“ what its grading implied, A London | butcher suggests that the position ot!“ the Argentine supplier in the London | Market is not unassailable, But if New | Zealand wishes to gain a place . the task must be tackled resolutely and | systematically. It is a commonplace | that this country has not, at least in | any quantity, beef cattle of the qualâ€"; demanded by the British consumer, The answer to that is to acquire the : foundation stock and breed on the proâ€"| per lines. As indicated in the advlce! already quoted, it would be no use trying to break into the market wlthf inferior beef. There is plenty of that | already. But it is also suggested that ; there is ample room for the best, | again a reasonable proposition, That | ity demanded by the British consumer, . farming industry should consider very ; seriously, and then determine if it is: prepared to engage in a contest for a share of the British beet market, | â€"Auckland News. : EDUCATION COSTS IN U.S.A. | South Africa is probably the only , country in the world that spends ti quarter of its national income (about | 9,000,000 pounds a year) on education, | Twenty years ago that expenditure . was 2,500,000 pounds, In this country | education is not only free to rich lndl Ipoor alike, but it is also compulsory i to a higher standard than in most; other countries, Primary arfd second-: ary education (that is, free education) costs South Africa three pounds and 10s a year per head of the European population (man, woman and child), and nearly one pound per head of the total population, white, black and col. ored. In the Transvaal the expenditure is even greater, and is said to be the highest in the world. Out of an annual revenue of not much more than 4,000, 000 the Transvaal spends nearly 3,000, 000 on education, which is equivalent to more than 4 pounds per head of the European population of the Proâ€" vince and to one pound 2s 90 per head nnti(;nalism abroad:â€"Calgary Al. THE EMPIRE EMPIRE EXPORTS ! ‘"The Canadian hay and clover crop | which in the four years of 1926.1930, |averaged over 16 million tons, had fal. len to 11,433,000 in 1933, and, for the ‘current year is estimated at 9,884,000 tons. This decline is, of course, un | equaly distributed across the country ‘being most pronounced in Saskatcheâ€" \ wan and Southern Alberta, | "It Is the policy of the government ito see that such local surpluses of fodder crops as exist in accessible | parts of Canada, should be _ made ‘available in the first instance for re. ‘lief of conditions in the deficit areas. : In view of the high ratio of transporâ€" | tation costs to the value of the pro. ‘ duct, it is not expected that it will be :economlcally advantageous to ship ; such feed stuffs over long distances, | by rail, It may be anticipated that iwhere surplus areas in Canada are : contiguous to deficit areas in the U.S. (or vice versa, if conditions warrant, | arrangements will be. reached for \ movement of feed stuffs across _ the ‘line," License Hay of the total population. It is true that the latter figure is less than the exâ€" penditure in the United Kingdom, which is about 1 pound 17s per head; but it has to be borne in mind that naâ€" tive education costs the Transvaal only 1s 3d per head of the native popâ€" ulation and about 1s 2d per head of the total population,â€"Johannesburg Times, Ottawa. â€" Confronted with a serâ€" ious shortage of fodder crops in secâ€" tions of Canada, the government has utilized nowers conferred by the new Marketing Act to license the export of hay and straw, An order.inâ€"council passed under the act requires export. ers to obtain licenses for shipments abroad. It also makes transportation companies see that shipments outside Canada are covered by such licenses. A statement issued recently from the prime minister‘s office explained that drought and heat had so affected the aay crop in some sections that an acute lack of suitable cattle feed was being felt. Both Canada and the U,. S$. had found it necessary to take steps to conserve the cattle feed, Where surplus areas in Canada were adiacent to deficit areas in the United States, and vice versa, it was intimatâ€" ed, arrangements would be reached for moving feed across the line. The statement reads, in part: "In view of the seriousness of the shortâ€" age of fodder crops in several areas within the Dominion, the government by orderâ€"in.council under powers conâ€" ferred by the Natural Products Act, has taken steps to regulate the export of hay and straw. _ The prolonged drought and heat that have afflicted large areas in Canada and the U. S. have compelled the two governments to take immediate action to relieve the acute lack of suitable cattle feed that is now apparent and to prevent speculators from exploiting the conâ€" sumers and producers of fodder crops, Dominion Actionâ€"Reciprocal Arrangement With U.S. Planned. When‘ the ‘unwilling juror asked to be excused from duty _ because he could only hear with one ear, the judge told him he‘d do ali right, as only one side of the case would be heard at a time. A fire ranger no longer smokes on the trail. He has found it too much of a chance to take. Neither does an exporienced camper, or woodsman pull out his pipe until he comes to the end of a portage. And when he is finâ€" ished he knocks his pipeâ€"ashes into the water, He runs no risk of leaving fire behind to destroy his wildâ€"life friends, and despoil his favorite haunts, Make Forest Protection your personal policy for 1934, After seven years of labour and an expenditure of $500,000, Old Fort Niagara has been reâ€" stored. Photo shows air view of the Old Fort from the Lake Ontario side, Left to right, in foreground, British Blokhouse, Millet Cross, Lombardy Poplars, Rushâ€"Bagot memorial and old french castle; along the wall at right, British Hotâ€"shot oven, artificer‘s cabin, French powder magazine, French barracks and British Blokhouse; beyond the barracks may be seen the Dauphin battery covering the Portes des cing Nations (behind blokhouse). Straw Export ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Such a course has been introduced at Ridgetown and Ridgetown . may well be proud of its secondary school system for there is no other just like it in the Dominion of Canada Dele. gations from Australia, Western Canâ€" ada and many parts of Ontario have visited the school during the past seven years, and all have been most favorably impressed, The school was established as an experiment to find a practical soluâ€" tion for the problem of vocational education for boys and girls in the smaller and more rural centres, The trustees at that time were men of considerable vision, Some ol these men are still members of the board and could not be pried from office they are so enthusiastic about the new school. It was their opinion that the high school course was not providing the right kind. of a training for a great many students who had to be absorbed by the community and that Accordingly courses were introducâ€" ed providing agricultural subjects and farm mechanics for boys and houseâ€" hold science and arts for girls, in ad. dition to the essential academic subâ€" jects. That the experiment is provâ€" ing successful is shown by the fact that of those who have left school over 80 per cent. of the boys have returned to the farm and the girls to the home, where they are putling inâ€" to practical use many of the things learned at school, During the seven years that the vocational school has been in operation the total average attendance in the high school and vocational school has been well over 200â€"at present 265â€"compared with 160 before the opening of the vocaâ€" tional school, Contrasting the atâ€" tendance at Ridgetown with that of other towns in Western Ontario, of the same population, it will be found that from 50 to 100 more students are enrolled for secondary _ school education, Thus it is seen the comâ€" bined schools are meeting the needs of a larger percentage of boys and girls. RURAL HIGH SCHOOL EXPERIMENT HIGHLY PRAISED THE RIDGETOWN EXPERIMENT. as the community had to pay the bills it should be benefiting to a great. er degree, ' One of the fealures of the Ridgeâ€" town vocational school is that the first year is more or less of an exâ€" ploratory year, Parents are not always sure that the vocational course is goâ€" ing to meet the needs of their boys and girls. In the larger centres more than half of the students who pass entrance attend vocational or techâ€" nical schools. In so doing, however, they must definitely decide upon the futuro course of studies they wish to pursue and a change in their plans results in a loss of time, A student enrolling for the first year in the Ridgetown Vocational School does so with the assurance that he can transâ€" fer to high school at the end of the first year and proceed to a matriculaâ€" tion or normal school entrance withâ€" out loss of time in either case, This leaves the choice of course open unâ€" til the end of the first year by which time the student has had some °xâ€" perience of secondary . school work and is better able to decide, In the meantime a valuable training in pracâ€" tical subjects will have been receivâ€" ed. Or, if the student remaings at vocational school for three years, he can then transfer to high school and have just as many credits towards a normal entrance as the student who has taken four years of straight high school work, The main difference in the courses of the vocational_school and the high sehool lies in.the fact that: no languages are taken iwWthe former school, ‘ thus leaving time for subjects of a more practical nature. The two schools are under the same pri:cipal and staff. Corresponding Principal Ridgetown High and Vocationalâ€"Agriculture Schools By J. W. Edwards, B.A., B.S.A., B. Paed., graphy, etc., are taught by the same subjects such as English, history, geoâ€" teacher in the two schools, Both are of high school grade and pupils from the vocational school may write deâ€" partmental subjects and secure stanâ€" ding in the subjects taken the same as"those in high school classes, This arrangement,, coupled with the fact that vocationa! school students make transfers to hizsh school without loss of time, absolutely eliminaies any feeling that one course of studies is the inferior to the other. Another feature of the vocational school course is the advantage to the student who attends school for one or iwo years only, Boys attending for one year only receive training in meâ€" chanical drawing, woodworking, rope splicing, belt lacing, | norticulture, poultry, soil physics and livestock, not taught in high school, and girls, sewâ€" ing, cooking and home management, Boys attending two years reccive furâ€" ther work in farm mechanics (includâ€" ing forge work), seed selection and other agricultural topics; girls, furâ€" ther work in sewing, cooking and home nursing, and both boys and girls, bookkeeping. Girls who complete the threeâ€"year course receive a diploma and may stop school or transfer to high school to complete a normal enâ€" trance course, or resume their studâ€" les elsewhere to become dietitians, nurses or teachers or millinery and sewing. Boys at the end of three years may graduate to the farm, take a fourth year in the vocational departâ€" ment to qualify for entrance to the O.A.C., or they may continue their studies at high school, But perhaps the most unique feaâ€" ture of the system is the attention that is given to adult education. Ridgetown is, 1 believe, the only rural high school in the province that conâ€" ducts a winter short course for young men and women who have stopped school. This is a day course and covâ€" ers a period of six weeks during January and February and has been offered now for four years, Last winâ€" ter 21 boys and 24 girls attended and at the end of the course expressâ€" ed themselves unanimously in favor of an extension of the course to eight commercial law were added for boys, and household budgeting for gills and these subjects proved popular, Accompanied by Miss Eunice Dyke, secretary of the Canadian Council‘s division on maternal and child dhy. giene, Dame Janet will visit all the largest cities in Canada as part of her educational campaign to arouse greater interest in the problems of maternal welfare, Her visit will coâ€" incide with the annual meeting of the National Council of Women at Ottawa in October. Ottawa. â€"One of the outstanding figures in maternal welfare in the Englishâ€"speaking _ world will visit Canada for two months this autumn, according to plans announced by the Canadian Council on Child and Famâ€" ily Welfare, Dame Janet Campbell, D.B.E. (1924), M.D., M.S., (London) who has just retired as Senior Mediâ€" cal Officer for Maternity and Child Welfare of the British Ministry of Health and Chief Woman Medical Adviser to the Board of Education of Great Britain since 1919, is coming here She is a member of the Health Committee of the League of Nations, and at present closely associated in its studies on maternal and infant welfare. s Dame Janet Campbell, an Outstanding Figure in Maternal Welfare Work Will Visit Canada This Autumn There is absolutely no question of Distinguished Woman to Visit Us the value of such a school to any centre that serves a rural commun.â€" ity. Nothing that has been accomâ€" plished at Ridgetown is impossible clsewhere once the facilities are provided. _ There is no doubt but that our whole rural educational sysâ€" tem .needs a good overhaulic‘ and that other communities Miould be served by agricultural departments, in their secondary schools, such as we have at Ridgetown, Jur courses are by no means perfect and changes are being made from time to time. I believe that evening classes might be introduced for our young men and women giving instruction in subjects which would be of benefit to them as citizens, and I am of the opinion that the first year high school course should be made more general with languages set over until the second year to give fifth form students a better chance and the first year stuâ€" dent more time to adjust himself to new conditions, ‘These are trouble weeks, In some cases these students attend the regular classes, if the class is not too large, but most of their time is spent with special instrucâ€" tors who are added to the regular staff, The practical subjects taken are similar to those taught elsewhere in the school and some time is given to stimulating an interest in good reading, in municipal affairs and pubâ€" lic speaking, Last year farm, bookâ€" keeping, business administration and some times and we are not yet out of the woods, and economics must still be practiced but it is not posâ€" sible that there are public projects that might be set over for so imâ€" portant an undertaking as the modâ€" ernizing of this branch of our rural educational system, The Dominion Government has recently _ extended the program of its Technical Educaâ€" tional Act until 1935, Ontario is supâ€" posed to have obtained its full share of the grant, but perhaps some conâ€" sideration might be given to the united claims for a new deal to the rural high schools and the farming population of Ontario. There has been a great dea‘! of talk about the intermediate school, but apâ€" parently wecan not expect too much from it. Dr. Rogers, director of eduâ€" cation for the province, speaking on this subject, said that he could see no hope for the establishment of the intermediate schools in rural commuâ€" nities unless the administrative unit was changed and school districts conâ€" solidated, I believe that reform must be effected by making our high school courses more elastic, Everybody â€" every man, woman and child has a stake in education. _ Passive accept. ance of present day educational maâ€" chinery is not good enough if, through our organizations, something belter can be obtained for the boys and girls of our secondary schools, Boards of trustees and citizens with the welfare of the communities at heart, and the young men so courageously engaged in the new Canada movement should champion the cause of our rural high schools and see to it that they are modernized so that they will command the interest of the pupil and the approval of the public. From personal observations I| am convinced that these suggested reâ€" forms would at least have one wel. come result, Some 20,000 pupils in rural high schools in Ontario now struggling needlessly with courses leading to university entrance would know a new happiness when transferâ€" red to work adapted to their needs, and rural life would in time benefit by the higher standards of more eMâ€" cient, more openâ€"minded and rational citizens. Our expectation of life has increasâ€" ed grea‘ly. A newâ€"born boy baby can now anticipate living fiftyâ€"six years, and a girl baby sixty years. Half a centry ago, the figures were fortyt+wo and fortyâ€"five years respectively,. Loudspeakers installed in one Manâ€" chester factory have increased the output of the workâ€"girls, and, as they are on piecework, their wages have gone up in proportion. There is music for one hour.in the morning and an hour and a half in the afternoon. Dame Janet retired from her post with the British Ministry, in Decemâ€" ber, 1933, but continues to serve on many of the Ministry‘s and the League of Nations‘ committee on health subjects. Dame Janet was educated at the London _ School for Medicine for Women, and followed with post graduate work in Vienna, After exâ€" tensive hospital work she was called in 1919 to the newly formed Ministry of Health, as the Senior Medical Officer for Maternity and Child Welâ€" fare, at the same time remaining in her senior post with the Board of Education. In 1928 she was named the mediâ€" cal member of the Committee on the Training of Midwives and also of the Committee on _ Maternal Mortality and Morbidity, It is in connection with her intensive work and studies in the intervening years that Dame Janet is known throughout the Eng. lishâ€"speaking world, and is regarded by the League of Nations as one of the outstanding international authorâ€" ities on the subject, Selling Trip While the holder of the altitude record was smashing the distance re. cord, the holder of the distance reâ€" cord broke the altitude record. The two rival pilots are Mr. G. E, Collins and Mr. P A. Wills Mr Collins flew from Dunstable (Beds) to Holkham Bay, near Wells, Norfolk, a distance of 95 miles, The previous record was set up by Wills last March. And the two record holders exchanâ€" ged titles. j Â¥ Collins took off as the unofficial holder of the 6,000 feet altitude re. cord, w;l‘il;e same night he heard that while he was breaking Wills‘ record, Wills had broken his. Gliding from Sutton Bank, . near Thirsk, Wills reached an officially re. corded height of 5,100 feet above the starting point, and 6,000 feet above the sea level. The previous official record _ was 4,600 feet, During his flight which lasted for three and one half hours, Collins reached 4,000 feet. Although he was not wearing a parachute, he looped the Joop before landing on the beach, Each Breaks Record Held by the Other â€" Aces‘ Daring Feats. London, â€" Two British gilding re. cords for distance and height were smashed simultaneously on the same day recently, ‘â€"‘it Ivl'lt;ted that he could have flown much farther, but was prevented by the North Sea. The world distance record is helo by a German, Heini Dittman, who las: month, starting from the famous Wes serkuppe slopes, flew two hundrec and thirtyâ€"three and one _ quarte: miles. Nearly $100,000,000 is being spent at Bonneville, Ore., and Grand Coulee, Wash., to harness the Columbia river, These dam projects will provide cheap electrical energy, improve nayâ€" igation, produce water to irrigate thousands of acres and reduce flood dangers. Improvement in business has been apparent in many industries, Agriculâ€" tural prices bave increased, idle mills especially lumber plants, have reopâ€" ened bank debits have gained and bus. iness failures decreased, His tour of the Northwest met with tremendous personal success and preâ€" sumably â€" strengthened Democratic party lines. All over the Northwest are numer. ous PWA, CWA, SERA and kindred federal projects, Thousands of citiâ€" zens are receiving monthly pay cheques from the government and still more are recipients of direct and work relief. Roosevelt Tour Leaves Its Impression on Northâ€" West Portland, Ore, â€" _ President oo. . velt‘s selling campaign of the Ne# Deal and its purposes had left its im pression on the Pacific Northwest, h Sdnporteru and critics alike agreed that he had kept political promises made prior to his election, Democratic leaders hailed the arâ€" rival of the President as the most val. uable asset possessed by the party in fall campaigns to elect state and federal office seekers. Residents of Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana understood better the aims of the President to insure "a more abundant life for Americans." Poor termina! facilities for authcrs »nd speakers often nullify all tâ€"sir excollent wisacri. A man may possess all kinds of useful knowledge, but fail in "discerning when to have done." brief. Brevity is the tuochstone of success in any field. You may offeni your customer, your reader or your hearer in one respect and please him in an other. But if you tire him by your tediousness, you lose him altogether. The newspaper leads the style toâ€" day in pith and cogency and has educated the public to the expectation of receiving much in little. The wellâ€" executed cartoon, will impart a whole philosophy of life at a glance, or proâ€" vide silent comment on current events worth a column of words. It‘s before marriage that a young man has his girl constantly in his mind, Afterwards he has her on his hands, "Selfâ€"abnegation, by which we lay down all for Truth, or Christ, in our warlare against error, is a rule it Christian â€" Science." â€" Mary â€" Baker Fd4dv. Brevity is the soul of wit. Yet they who have wit, or think they have, are in special danger of saying too much. Some one has said: "It is better to say nothing and be thought a fool, than to open the mouth and dispel all doubt." The world is in a hurry; please b«* Be brief! Is Successful EP TV EPDUTIBU RUIUE «lone mt a cost of a thousand and It is proposed to place it Old district called Taban, wh ©a the Buda side of the Dan Many years later the Agure tune was overthrown by a st the mechanism which prodi amusicâ€"broke. Bodor refused t :‘d the mechanism and di revealing its secret, D believed the reconstruction ©Carved pillars, The cupola, 1 d by a figure of Neptune, mechanism which produced MUSIG" which was played . hours ard could be heard mrea Of six or soven miles, "..“ as the eighth wond COREACGDCd i0 iwo or thi when Bodor was comm ©onstruct the musical well With the fantastic hut he constructed a printing «his doorstep, so that . eaused a tenâ€"florin note Sn the cellar!t Bodor nev & false note, but some o were not so serupulous, €overy of his press brr ®entence of twenty year ‘~llled to two or t The recent discover plans of the once musical well, constr Bodor at the beginnir century, das brought this mechanical genio ence again. One of hi mble achievements was &t Marosvasarhely, co out a single nail beins It consisted of a basin ree thousand | pailfuls 0Â¥e which terraced step ed in a cupola support« "Good, now cup of coffec. Those who k like their coffe this story of th who, in a count caution of askir his coffec, if th in the house. T the affirmative, her to bring all ©ry to him. Sh« ages on the tabl« ever is accomplished less interested in it tha to improve It, Educa be a thing finished, b on which to build. Joi Je a start in Christian be in a hurry to wri for those things that have been started. All going forward indefnit It is not o manufacturer attitude. It s World‘s Eighth A man who does m mechanical way d after it, If he does, finis over his name, electric light, the fi fArst automobile wit} product, and the two lated. Radio is con yet all the manufac ing along the line o "That The discase is «eriain parts of | become epidemic periods of crowd and privation. A« ton J. Rosenau « School, the outbre in institutions th: of jail, asylum, dysentery. Flies, water and food a mre the spreading spect dysentery is Anybody may c Bacillary dysent mll frouts during . The first outbreak lipoli, in 1915, an« for a high proporti easualties from : mrea. Dysentery ki than bullets CONDITIONS Oor The New Jersey is distinctly a tro disease. Dr. H. S. on general of the wice, informs the partment that S worker, _ discover nature in 1898. Kraus extended o Flexner variety o most frequent in and is the one wi City must deal, in the The dysentery | New Jersey and York is a very dif that which broke hotel in 1933. A «ause of the Je Chicago a parasit protozon or am'ma{ In the World Wa dysentery occurreq some military unif When You all same soldr was (h ng a 18 m of n

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