Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 15 Dec 1920, p. 9

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OY CQURTESY OF CAR ~~ (1) The British Ministry of Labor v have adopted a six months trainin, for war widows and unemploy overnment women workers at the of Arc Hostel in Plumstead, near London, the classes include dressmaking, ladies' tailoring, laun- dry work, shorthand, typewriting and cooking. This picture shows the cooking classes. (2) Her Majesty the Queen as she appeared at a recent visit to the Borough home at Park Hill. (3) Training the war widows and ex-war workers--The laundry class ironing. (4) Disabled soldiers employed as hair dressers. (5) Training the war widows and ex-war workers--The shorthand and typewriting class. (6) The Prince of Wales ready to start out fox-hunting. 8 (7) These are not German guns but the new German power station chim- neys, each 330 ft. high--A new great rival to Niagara power. (8) The unknown British hero's eof- fin as it layed in Westminster Abbey, \ Day, November 11th, 1920, when the body of the Unknown Warrior - was brought home from France and buried in Westminster Abbey, London, Eng., one of the most admired objects were the windows of the Canadian Pacific Railway in slgar Square. The me of forming up the hundreds of thousands of people who wished to file newly-unveiled Cenotaph into queues resulted in most of these thousands filing P.R. office. In the window was a small model of the Cenotaph with a wreath of maple leaves, in their loveliest autumn tints, from Hamilton, Ontario. This wreath was by pictures of famous battlefields issued by the Chemin de Fer du Nord of and the rolls of honor of C, P, R, men in Europe who served in the forces,

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