Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 16 May 1935, p. 6

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Pb |p *4 PARADOX on tme rarm. Although (the Washington Governâ€" ment has takenm unprecedented steps in the last two pears to reduce farm Guides, camps," clubs, choirs â€" and athletic teams. The process of relatâ€" ing education to this more socialised existence is in itsel! a problém of importance.â€"London Free Press. ORCANIZED CcHILDOHOoOoD The school child of twenty years ago knew little or nothing of airâ€" planes or radio orâ€" automobiles, but today those are a part of his life. Child life is also organized today as never before with Bov Scouts Cirl A SPECULATION, The population _ of the _ United States in 1800 was 5,308,000, less than half the population ot Canada today. Even in 1820 it did not exceed 9,636,â€" 000, or 1,500,000 less than the numâ€" ber of people who live in this Domâ€" Inion now. The rate of â€" increase, however, was consistently greater than that of Canada, owing to the heavy immigration which continued until drastic restricive regulations were imposed filteen or twenty years ago. When economic conditions have improved it may be predicted that Canada‘s population will increaso at & greater rate than at any other time . in her history and may reach 20,â€" 000,000 within the next two decades, â€"â€"Victoria Times. Which gives the stage "early 4* million peop ~â€"a number actually gre population of France, | Wales, and four timesg the total population of of Canada.â€"Halifay . F.urope America Asia .. Africa . Oceania "THE STAGGERING TOTAL® Any attempt to establish the abâ€" solute total of direct and _ indirect v.ciim; of the war in the whole world, Professor Hersch of the University ot Geneva sums up, "is doomed to failure," in the first place "because we lack reliable data for the backward countries." But, he adds, "even with these gaps we arâ€" rive at the following approximate esâ€" timates" of deaths directly and indiâ€" rectly attributable to the world War: Military Clvil Kurope ...... 12,637,000 12,219,000 America ......... 170,000 _ 1,500,000 d oo i eliac ces 69,000 â€"13,700,000 AleTOU ~ss2e0x aoors 99,000 900,000 Oceania . A 16,000 €0.000 BRITAIN‘s ProGgrEss The soundness ot the basis on whica British recovery has been built is shown more clearly than ever in Nevilie Chamborlain‘s budget for the coming year, The average Briton‘s «standard of living has steadily imâ€" proved The cost of living last year was substantially below the level of 1981, when the National Government came into power. Industrial producâ€" tion rose 12 per cent. last year; exâ€" ports increased $145 NNN in __Wri~.s peg Tribune =â€"â€"San.t Stay ISLAND sTEPPING sToNEs Soon every little island _ in the ocean is going to find itselt important and it is certain that, with aviation developing as it is, places which in the past have not even been spots on the map will become centres of interest. Here, for Instance, is the case of the Wake Islands, away out in the Pacific Ocean,. These are three small islets, witi a tota! area _ of not more than 2,600 actes, yet they are to be a point of cail on the proâ€" po ed U.S.â€"Chin« aip route, plang l'nr‘ which a~e now we‘ ncder way with MENTALLY ILL. There is decided merit in the proâ€" posal of the Hon,. Dr. J, A. Faulkner, the provincial Minister of Health, that the word "insane" shall be deâ€" leted from Ontario‘s statutes wherâ€" ever it may occur and be replaced by the phrase "mentally ill and deâ€" fective." We have made much proâ€" gress from that dim period in which individuals suffering from â€" mental illness were considered to be in such a hopeless state that they were conâ€" fined in virtual prisons and set apart from the world for the remainder of their days.â€"Brockville Recorder J d STYLE CchHance The girl who used to spend a lot of time in front of the glass making sure her hat was on straight now «pends the same amount of time making sure it isn‘t, â€"â€" St. Thomas Timesâ€"Journal. Voice of the Press CANADA vhen the National Government into power, Industrial producâ€" se 12 per cent. last year; exâ€" increased $115,000,000.â€"W inniâ€" CANADA THE EMPIRE \ ow* iillion people destroyed" actually greater than the f France, England and lour times asg great as pulation of the Dominion Halifax Herald TOPPEITTE CERC CE the staggering total of th Boy. Scouts, Olrl clubs, choirs ~ and n Airways and the Unit lovernmeni coâ€"operating 13,055,000 28,379,000 world War: y Clvil 12,319,000 _ 1,500,000 _ 13,100,000 AGES OF man The age in which he doas not know anything and doesn‘t know he doesâ€" n‘t know anything. The age in which he doesn‘t know anything but thinks he knows it all. The age in which he is convinced that his father is a dumbell. The age in which he comes to find out he doesn‘t know it all, The age in which he discovers that his father is possessed of normal good sense. The age in which he discovers that he really knows very little. The age in which he discovers hig father was possessed of more sense than he has. The age in which : he has a son who thinks he is a~ dumbbell.â€"London Opinion, ; Whatever directions the wanderâ€" lust takes individuals, it would be a dull world without it. â€" Kingston Whigâ€"Standard y Sometimas it gets into the feet and pulls its victims along strange paths towards wondrous places, new lands, unexplored wastes. Sometimes it gets into the mind and leads towards strange theories and after strange objectives, some of them real, some chimerical, some good, ~some bad. Sometimes the lure of the unknown draws toward strange political, morâ€" al, social, economic or metaphysical "isms"â€"some of which prove sound and safe, but some unsoun‘d and deadly dangerous. Many wanderers perish on their journeys â€" along strange mental lines.. Others return, sadder and wiser, It is, perhaps, the modern sympâ€" tom of the wanderlust to which manâ€" kind in past ages was able to give rein in the mass. Wanderlust is wonâ€" derulst; longing for the unknown things to be seen at the end of strange waters, Individuals of all ages and all generations have known itâ€"have felt it dragging them from the beaten tracks to trails that lead into uncharted regions. Some never return. Some return in rags, weary and broken, with scars to prove their adventures, A few return in fine raiâ€" ment, enriched, with stirring tales of good things founmd and evidence that bears them â€" out. Wanderlust takes many forms, LURE OF THE UNKNOWN, This is a time of year when a spirâ€" it of restlessness takes hold of many of us. We feel a desire and an urge to break away from our accustomed tasks and occupations, to go wanderâ€" ing in search of change, and sights that are new or different, It seems our ancestors are blamâ€" ed for a lot of things these days. We had believed that many modern headaches resulted from irregular hours, and sometimes excessive eatâ€" ing or drinking. There must still be a variety of causes to produce the effect, depending upon the indiâ€" vidual factor, of course; but what a final excuse a man may @lMer hereâ€" afterâ€"that an ancestor is responâ€" sible for his "morning after‘ feeling, â€"Border Cities Star. * FIXING THE BLAME A medical man recently â€" opined that heredity is a factor in deadâ€" aches. And _ Mrs, Russell meu;xs"'t'our o‘clock in the morning when she says "early."â€"Stratford Beaconâ€"Herâ€" ald. Like a good many others to whom length of years has been measured in increasing degree, Mrs. Ri sell had something to say about the secâ€" ret of a long life, It had nothing to do with diet, but it was merely that getting up early in the morning was the place wherein the secret rested. SECRET OF LONG LIFE,. Mrs. William Russell of Mitchell, celebrated her 101st birthday _ on March 25. S$p unusual is such an event that it comes under the headâ€" ing of remarkable: EXPENSIVE AND sLOW It has been estimated that it costs $25,000 to kill one man in modern war. Worse than that, the grandson foots the bill for tha man his grandâ€" father killed.â€"Toronto Mail and Emâ€" pire. production, an odd turn of events has resulted in a substantial increase in the number of farmers. Census burâ€" eau officials estimate that at® least half a million new farms have sprung up in the United States during the depression. For the moâ€"t part, it is believed that this is due to the reâ€" turn to rural areas of city folk whose jobs vanished when factories shut down. Over a period of many years the American farm population steadâ€" ily declined. ~It is surprising enough to find this itrend reversed, over a fiveâ€"year stretch; but to try to unâ€" derstand just how this reversal fits in with reducing farm production is quite a task.â€"Quebec Chronlcle-’relo-‘ graph, THE EMPIRE anything but thinks The age in which that his father is a e in which he comes q125 THE WORLD AT LARGE rica in Times, lic Health Act, need revision and reâ€" adjustment, The position has been luâ€" cidly reviewed by the Secretary for Public Health, and the remedy has been evident for many years past. The present time provides an excelâ€" lent opportunity for initiating the reâ€" forms that alone can make satisfacâ€" tory provision for a healthy South Afâ€" rica in the future.â€"Johannesburg o0 POPUR 21 The great obstacle to the general adoption of more hygenic measures every where appears to be the relucâ€" tance of the community, and also of Provincial and local authorities, . to pay for them. The provision of pure water, and of adequate sanitary facilâ€" ities, costs money, and many people do not yet seem to realize that it would be money well spent. Many loâ€" cal authorities, on the other hand, have not got the money to spend, and for that reason it has been suggested to the Provincial Finance Commisâ€" sion that the whole organization of the Public Health Services, as well as the financial provisions of the Pubâ€" More than 100 fa burned effigies of the Ar stration at Ashford, Kenty, auction of nine dairy cow: Feclestiastical ‘Commission the hn‘ fire sA az;s o+ so low that to most train travellers these sentiments will seem â€"revoluâ€" tionary. And in truth nothing short of & revolution is wanted. The adâ€" vantages of travel by train are in danger of being buried in a doleful wilderness of ugly dark termini, oldâ€" fashioned stations and Victorian carâ€" rlages.â€"London Daily Herald. BRIGHTER TRAINS. Yesterday the chairman of the Southern Railway did a little electriâ€" fying himself, Waitingâ€"rooms, he said, would be made into places where anyone could enjoy the waitâ€" â€"ng. Though here and there travel by rail ‘ias been much more cheerful lately, the general standard remains , THE POPULAR BRITISH POST OFFICE, By an energetic campaign of adâ€" vertising by the systematic study of the public needs, by the drastic cheaâ€" pening of the services, the Post Ofâ€" fice has been transformed, almost overnight, from a semiâ€"obsolete burâ€" eaucratic machine into an enterprise charged full with vitality. Sir Kingsâ€" ley Wood deservres the gratitude of the country for this farâ€"sighted and courageous achievement, â€" London Morning Post, J PUBLIC HEALTH IN S.A Scene on parade grounds at the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md officers of the U.S. Navy go through their puces in first dress parade of the year. \it ledlithibdinke? 1 canin itc‘ of nine dairy cows seized in Ilue 9e a . P Comn‘issfofi;l;t.-“i'f;: m Emm €ASIISL C the Archbishop of Ca:terbury in Te ce m 0s 32R wee furme{s. protesting against the British Farmers In Tithe Protest E bauke C 0. o aoce i on Snsce _ "Nevertheless as far as determin. ing whether an individual shall be proud, sensitive, suspicious paranold individual; or a timid, â€" shutâ€"in, dreamyâ€"schizoid person; a boisterâ€" ous, jolly, hailfellow wellâ€"met cy. cloid; or a moody pedantic, egocen. tric epileptoid individual, the endocâ€" rine glafids would seem to have little say in the matter." testing against the tithe collections, +"Queen > Anne‘s bounty," f Canterbury in clerical garb and Queen Anne, during a demonâ€" The protest w as staged after lack of bidding had prevented the an effort to collect more than $300 in tithe arrears for the above photo shows the effigies being carried to the scene of ‘"The energy drive is augmented to a greater or less degree by corâ€" recting any deficiency of the pitui. tary, thyroid, adrenals or gonads. He added: _ "Two important funcâ€" tions, as far as the personality is concerned, may be safely granted to the endocrine system, These are emotional stability and energy and drive. The irritability and emotional instability seen in hyper thyroidâ€" ism, in hyper inculinism, in hyper parathyroidism and in certain othér endocrinopathies, are relieved by re.â€" storing the normal endocrine balâ€" ance. It is true, Dr. Freeman said, that numerous _ personality _ tendencies were seen which appeared to be asâ€" sociated with whether one or another of these gland3 was extra large or extra small. a mouse, or the power of the orator who sways millons. THE ENDOCRINE This answer was found in measurâ€" ing and weighing the endocrine, or internal secretion glands, of 300 perâ€" sons who died at St. Elizabeth Hosâ€" pital. They had been long time paâ€" tients, their personalities in life carefully recorded. Dr, Walter Freeman, of the Black: burn Laboratory, St. Elizabeth Hosâ€" pital, and George Washington Uniâ€" versity, Washington, reported to the Amerien College of Physician; that they explain the drive which makes a sclentist spend 50 years studying Ality is just a matter of glands, The answer is no â€" the glands do not make personality, but they are its powerhouse, They leave unâ€" explained why one person is a geniâ€" us, another a pauper, but for whatâ€" ever talents man possescse they fur. nish the "drive." Piladelphia, April 30. â€" From 300 of the dead, medical science has its answer toâ€"day to one of its major mysteries, whether human personâ€" ality is just a matter of glands, DECLARE GLANDS SUPPLY ‘DRIVNE Midshipmen Hold Parade TORONTO _ All this is of moment in considerâ€" ing the work that Dr. I. Daniel Shorell of New York describes in American‘ Medicine. _ He is a speâ€" cialist it/ the treatment of diseases of the ear, nose and throat, and sinuses attract his attention. _ Like others in his field he recognizes the benefits of heat treatment. Also he sees that the heat radiated by lamps and sources of infraâ€"red rays canâ€" Because there is so much guessâ€" work about these heat treatments, Dr. William Bierman has actualiy sunk thermocouples in the flesh and thus measured the relative efâ€" fect of powerful incadescent and infraâ€"red lamps. Contrary to the prevailing view, he found that heat from the electric lamp penetrates more deeply than heat from the infraâ€"red â€"radiator. What happens when a diathermal current or shortâ€" waves penetrate tissue no _ one knows exactly. _ It is impossible to measure temperatures in electricalâ€" ly heated tissues because the meal-' uring apparatus itself is affected. Much of what constitutes modern physiotherany depends on the appliâ€" cation of heat by electrical apparaâ€" tus. _ When a physician invokes diathermy he sends through afflictâ€" ed tissues and organs a currgit which has the proper characteristics and which, as it encounters internal resistance, generates heat. â€" More recently shortâ€"wave therapy has come to the foreâ€"â€"a treatment in which waves shorter than those used in radio penetrate the body without the use of anything that touches the skin. Extraordinary results have been achieved in killing the bacteria of some virulent diseases in this way. The hotâ€"water bottle, the electric lamp and the radiator that emits inâ€" frwâ€"red rays have no such power. Warmth Is Supplied by Water Run Through Tubes in Nostrils _ There probably never was a time when heat was not regarded as a means of alleviating pain. Just wha: occurs when a hotâ€"water bag is apâ€" plied to a lame back or an aching ear is still obscure; physicians talk of stimulating the circulation, of doâ€" ing something to cells that is still the subject of speculation. The plain fact is that heat often aids nature in achieving her own ends. HEAT FOR SINUS DISEASE , as the future To be cussed seems to be 4 tural state ‘of man. . Even th mail carrier is more cussed single trip he‘ misses on a , day than he is ble:sed for . trips he "mnakées right "on" Trmma Mule spinners‘ cancer which has for generations been the dread of Lancashire cotton spinners bas at last been conquered. Its cause has been traced to the spinner‘s contact with certain lubricating oils as he leans over dis niachine, and an ef. fective preventive consists of smearâ€" ing over the exposed parts of the body with lanolin and olive oll be. fore and after work. During the last few years thousands of experiments have been conducted by Dr. Twort,, head of the Cancer Research Deâ€" partment at Manchester University, and his brother, Mr. J. M. Twort, of the Manchester Cancer Commnittee, with a view to discovering lubrica. ting oils which may safely be used on the spinning machines, and the evidence to date points the finger of suspicion at the dearyâ€"oil engines as ' the greatest offenders, Machines that have been run a long time without in:pection, especiâ€" ally those more than forty years old, deserve to have a thorough inspecâ€" tion at least once a year. Give that machine of yours an opportunity to gontinue faithful service, Find out it it needs repairing or tun‘ing up. ’ No man has ever constructed such a marvelous, complicated piece of machinery as nature has put inside of his body. No watch is more delt cately adjusted â€" each part dependâ€" ent on the other. i Quite unknown to you, most of the time that amazing machine of yours is making its own repairs. Minor adjustments are automatically made. Sometimes, though, outside help is needed â€" delp from a comâ€" petent man or a surgeon. | The conclusion is drawn that ear infections, which may result in acute or chronic catarrhal deafness, may be treated by way of the sinuses with good results. Dr. Culâ€" lom is apparently in favor of operaâ€" tions of some sort. Dr. Shorell reâ€" lies on his modified heat treatment and presents his case records to supâ€" port his stand. ‘ ‘ In his article in American Mediâ€" ; cine, Dr. Shorell rofers to the imâ€" | provement of hearing in cases of !chroni(‘ catarrhal deafness that folâ€" lows this treatment of the sinuses. The reason may possibly be given by Dr. M. M. Colium in a paper which he read before the American Medical Association and which is published in its Journal, _ Cullom presents statistical and pathological evidence of an association of sinus disease and infection of the middle ear. "I have the feeling that, owâ€" ing to the position of the sinuses at the top of the respiratory tract, they are a menace to all lowerâ€"lying structures," he ventures. Drainage from infected sinuses contaminates everything it reaches. It is astonishing mnov much heat local tissues and bones can stand. At first the temperature is _ only 112 degrees F., but every ninely seconds it is raised one degree. Usually 128 degrees can be endured without discomfort. Patients lie on their backs and let the hot water circulate separated from the muâ€" cous membrane only by a thin wall of rubber. A treatment lasts from fifteen to twenty minutes. The sinâ€" uses, which lie near the mucous membrance of the nose, are beneâ€" fited, as they usually are when subâ€" jected to heat treatment. In this case the benefit is especially markâ€" ed. Undoubtedly some heat is conâ€" ducted through the adjacent bone. HEAT TREATMENT RECORDS What actually happens is not clear| in any method of heat treatment.]. But beforeâ€"andâ€"after Xâ€"ray pictures| of 170 cases of sinus disease treated | by this dry heat, hot water method | , show sometimes a complete disapâ€" pearance of telltale shadow, someâ€"| ; times partial clarification and only|, rare‘y no improvement at all. P In the treatment of sinus disease, tubes of purest rubber are insertei into the nostril as far as the hard palate. Each tube is divided lengthâ€" wise by a partition, and each branches from a main tube leading to a compression and suction pump. The business of the pumps is to drive hot water through the system of tubes in a ceaseless flow. An electric heater keeps the water anâ€" tomatically at the right temperaâ€" ture. Valves control the pressure, which varies from one to three pounds. What we have is someâ€" thing like the hotâ€"water circulatory system by which houses are someâ€" times heated. The rubber tubes are simply heat radiators controlled by a thermostat. cians who specialize in the treatâ€" ment of diseases of the ear, throat and nose. His modification makes it possible to apply heat not only to the region of the bones and cisâ€" sues affected, but to control it auâ€" tomatically. not penetrate far into the _aiam_ec. machine, and an ef. ive consists of smearâ€" ‘xposed parts of the )lin and olive oil be. work. During the last J on a stormy | sum sed for all the was $ _to be the na. Even the rural cussed for the â€"_ Cigarette «smoking in Canada conâ€" tinues to increace,. In 1934 the conâ€" sumption of factory.made cigarettes was close to five billion, an increase Of 12 per~cent, over 1923 C 4 NC * Mrappled the ice, and things like that mylinng. we gathe, . A repair job takes from six and «a half hours to a month, our host told us, and the Field always carries a month‘s supply of fresh food, and lots of canned stuff, besides. Work is possible only when the sea is calm, and in winter things got protty difficult, with long spells of tossing around waiting for the wind to drop. &C:bl- have to be grappled under o NE MÂ¥ g i â€" deâ€" physiâ€" treatâ€" "nd recover. The cables tested, unâ€" reeled back to the bouy, â€" spliced again there and dropped overboard, as good as new. We learned that lots of things _can damage cables. On certain patâ€" ches of the ocean‘s bottom, mysterâ€" lJous strong chemicals rot them. ‘Ter. edos (marine worms) _ weakezed them by building their nests on them, submarine eathquakes are the devil, and so are carelessly dropâ€" gfll anchors of fishing â€" schooners. nce, a few years 0, a whale got tangled up lnytho nfi.‘.‘, and drownzd. The Field had an awful time getting :ii:ch off. Another time a schooner had hit an iceberg sank two hundred and fifty fathoms right onto the cable, parting it neatly, C »mmints *o q( 9 C n ped anchors of once' a few year tangled up in‘ the The Field bhad .. When the cable appears on the surface, two men go over the side in boa‘ns‘ chairs and make the line fast with chains at two points, with some lhck between. The slack is with a cable that doesn‘t belong to Western Union at all, and for all she knows she may have repaired a ‘f'e: Po.g.al cables accidently. When she arrivees, grappling hooks are dropped and the area is slowly dragged, across the line of the cable. A dynamometer at the bow tells when they have caught something which they hope is a wire and it most generally is, though not always the one they want. _Off the tip of Newfoundland, a regular cable crossroads, they‘re likely to raise half a dozen before they find the right one. All cables look alike, mossy, black, and cold, with no distinguishing marks whatâ€" ever, and knowing the right one is someting like knowing your own hat. Once in a while the Field is emâ€" bl.l'.l‘llled to find that she‘s fooling | from Newfoundland to Key West, to "| the depth of a mile. â€"| Except that the grappling machinâ€" !\ ery at the prow is pretty conspicious ‘\ the Field looks much like any other / sigleâ€"funnelled 1,200 tonner, Though | belonging to Western Union, she‘s & ‘| Britishâ€"vessel; her home port is Hallâ€" fax and she carries a crew of British. | ers, Newfoundlanders and Canadians, Most of them were ashore for the afternoon, we foundâ€"quite naturally this being the one week out of 5% when they‘re not either at sea or on 24â€"hour call at Halifax â€" but there were a few men aboard and, Britishâ€" like, they invited us to tea. Over a scrubbed oak table we learned someâ€" thing about cable repairing. When a cable goes bad, Western Union can tell pretty accurately where the trouble is. If their charts show that the break‘s beyond the oneâ€"mile depth, they notify their deepâ€"sea ship, the Lord Kelvin, but generally is (cables rest eas‘est in deepest waters), they call the Field, giving the approx‘mate distance of the break along the line in ohms. (In ohms is what they said). Th‘s is worked out on the ships map to latitude and long‘tude, and she steams thither. Down at the foot of . J‘OUTLCONUR Street in Hoboken, we found the cable ship Cyrus W. Field, lying in dryâ€"dock for its annual week‘s over» hauling. This is the boat that repaire Western Union cables in the area of The remaining 15,000,000 fry be distributed in the next two 1 his Queen‘s Park office recently after spending three days in superintendâ€" ing the release of the first 25,000,000 of these fry. The area chosen for their release was from Catre Rich as far north as the Bayfield shoals on the south shore of the Bay. Eo ertttredt oo S ote Torontoâ€"Forty million Whitensh fry are being distributed at the preâ€" sent time in Georgian Bay from the Ontario Government hatcheries at Collingwood. H. H. MacKay, director of the Fish Culture Branch of the Department of Game and Fisheries, returned to In Georgian Bay Thae slow New Yorker REPAR SHIP of â€" Fourteenth Pr ‘e‘lt YÂ¥ min Franklin *"*The man who procr struggles with sin."â€"Hesiod *"There is no mmm-r.t"j resent; not only so, but, is no instant force and in the present , . . « orth., ‘ *What is a budget?" *Well, it is a method of before you spend instead wards." Vife evens itself itself well. All of us have rela we are ashamed of, and tives who are ashamed of Youngsters don‘t go wild #een. They just begin to 1 #ffect of ninetsen years of Cohen appeared among | ene morning wearing & m @iamond pin. His associ impressed, and one asked Associateâ€"I say, Cohe id you get that diamond? Cohenâ€"You remember Associateâ€"Yes, but h Jeave you any money, did } Cohenâ€"No, he didn‘t. his executor, and he left & memorial stone to be p him. This is it The tissue of our life to with colors all our 0 And in the field of destin as we have sown! The teacher had just the Ten Commandments ®f beginners in a locs Bchool. In order to test wls, she asked: Teacherâ€"Can any little me a commandment with words in it? Little Girl (after wai minutes)â€"] can, teacher. Teacherâ€"Well, let‘s ha Little Girlâ€"Keep Off 1 *Never leave that till to lich you can do toâ€"day."â€" Stage Handâ€"Poor girl. back in the chorus again. you married a millionain Chorus Girlâ€"So did L Never quit a good thin have something to take Look at the fix we‘re | the word "flapper." Householderâ€"Are you €ident or life? Burglar (menacingly) know what danger you‘ successful, the turtle « « tree until he had to Motherâ€"Do gtience? Father (inte m bare hope t means what she Little Janeâ€"Moth« ing to teach us dome school now. _sne court is deeply the charge against Your bitter and unsee must be at once ex *The charge is new says: ‘That you w sleep,‘ And since your grief “pi "h‘t’l b‘kk plaint ? *"The way that I‘m ab for folks to realize, Until they estimate the the rock she used." [A "The is the anchor ever else you of value. we sometimes doub made of dust, for du tles. . . . Fortunate i: really deserves the o wf himself. . . . So won‘t be ashamed to | parrot to the town goi is the Of c Short Inspi What are you ; «an no longer . now? . , , Keeq welf; but shar wthers. . â€" . A every day: "I‘; terday!" . . . P manship if you? The easier it i the oftener vou Butc tomers Custome they are, of money. The yo wait unti her hand, whows his urse ROCK ME To e married me the turtle co HE y O Uj ne

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