HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1958-10-15, Page 3Awl:09.44.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED EVERY
SufFEREw OF RHEUMATIC PAINS
OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY
PIXON'$ REMPY,
mutsmo's DRUG. STORE,
335 ELGIN,
$1.25 Express Collect.
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you. itching scaling and burning .ecze•
ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless odorless ointment regardless
of how.stubborn or hopeless they seem,
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE $3.00 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES -
2865 St. Clair Avenue East
TORONTO
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
MONEY from spare time hobby, Small
investment. Raise Golden Hamsters.
New and interesting pets. Free litera-
ture Gerald Saunders, Box 114, Delta,
Ont.
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great opportunity Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant, dignified profession; good wages. Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates,
America's Greatest System
illustrated Catalogue Free.
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
358 liticoBrrSatn.chWe,s,; Toronto
44 King St., W,, Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, ottawa
PATENTS
FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company
Patent Attorneys, Established 1890.
600 University Ave., Toronto
Patents all countries,
PERSONAL
ADULTS! Send 100 for world's funniest
novelty joke cards, Free catalogue.
specialities, herbal remedies, vitamins,.
food supplements. Western Distribu.
tors, Box 24-FC, Regina, Sask,
BEFORE SPACE TRAVEL, TRY FIG-
URE SKIING. Outdoor Interests, Good-
wood, Ontario,
ATTENTION SPORTSMEN
ACCOMMODATION available for 20
hunters, Thanksgiving week-end (part-
ridge) and Nov. 1.12 (deer). Guides on
request. Home cooking, book now.
Taylor Lake Lodge, Whitestone On-
tario, in the Parry Sound District.
$1.00 TRIAL offer. Twenty-five deluxe personal requirements. Latest cata-
logue included. The Medico Agency,
Box 22 Terminal "Q" Toronto, Ont.
SMOKING TOO MUCH
CUT down the easy way, Chew "Kwits,"
the new anti-smoking chewing gum,
Takes the craving away for hours,
.Contains Lobeline — a new discovery.
,Price 690 package, 3 packages for $2.00
postpaid., WilSon's Lab Products, Box
200, Markham, Ont. or your local Drug-'gist can procure them for you.
PHOTO SERVICE
NEW FAST
COMPLETE Photo Service designed for
speed and custom Photofinishing. Ex-
pert enlarging. 8 Exposure roll, Con-
tact Size 40c Double Size 50c. 12 Ex-
pOsure roll, Contact Size 450. Double
Size 70c. You will appreciate our speed,
quality and friendly dealing. Renown
Photo Service, Erindale P.O., Ont.
REAL 'ESTATE FOR SALE
150 ACRES, 20 miles west of Kitchener
highly productive, buildings modernly
equipped. Malcolm Davidson, Newton,
Ont.
RABBITS
NEW ZEACANI3 REDS
JUNIORS from registered stock, all
pedigreed, $20.00 trio. Write: Pat's
Rabbitry, 14 Kline St., Halifax, Nova
Scotia.
ISSUE 40 — 1958
YOU
SLEEP
C.:AN TO-NIGHT .
All KUM NEIVOISNIN
TO41011011if
TO be happy and franitull Instead 0
nervous or for a good night's sleep, take
Sedicin tablets according to directions.
SEDIC1N®
$1.00—$4.95
TABLETS
Ong Stem Odrf
I
Use your SPARE TIME to
build an interesting and
PROFITABLE
BUSINESS CAREER
0 —
• wag ,t4r:
I',,
550' 9,4
SWINE.
A LANDRACE breeders' sale will be
held on Monday, October 5th at 1:30
P.M. at the farm of Omar SWalize1V
Irober, R.It. No. 2, Petersbtirgi 0154
lade, ilighways No, 7 and 8, Ph miles
east of "Baden arid 8,miles west of
Kitehener. Telephone ,Baden 205 R 23,
Fifty carefully selected head of Land-
race will be offered. The sale will eon-
sist, Of carefully selected guaranteed
in pig vows and gilts, service age
boars, sows and gilte, with litters and
open gifts from the herds of Fergus
Pindrace Swine Farm, Fergus, On,
tario; one of the oldest and largest
breeders and importers of Lanclrace
Swine in Called; .Omar 8wartaen- trul?er. Ne, ; Petersburg, On•
tario and the Tottra Stock Farm, li,11.
Lidd ed
Holland Centre, Ontario, An
attraction will be sows anti gins
carrying service to champion boars
$uott as Craig Atlus 6th, champion of
the Aberdeen ShOw at Scotland,
Maryfield Solid 26th, Champion at the
Petereborough show in England, Chartwell Prince and Chartwell
Viking? bred by Winst6n Churchill
and, other outstanding Scottish boars
with Canadian or U,S, papers, All
stock guaranteed breeders, Sale will
be held under cover. For catalogue
and, mail bids, write or telephone, any
of the breeders or auctioneers, The
auctioneer's are Tom Babson and
Hugh Filson, perifield, Ontario, Tele-
phone Ilderton collect. Also Clinton
Jantzi, Baden, Ontario, Telephone 146
Baden,
MERRY MENAGERIE
'You're supposed to go OINK
OINK—not BEEP BEEP:"
C •
EARN EXTRA MONEY
EASILY
BE A COLONIAL AGENT
Sell a Completeline of Christmas Cards — Everyday Cards
Sacred Calendars — Personal imprint Lines
Novelty and Gift, Items
FREE CATALOGUE AND INFORMATION
INTRODUCTORY SAMPLE OFFER-2 Boxes (46 Cards Retail $2.00)for $1,
COLONIAL CARD LIMITED
489 QUEEN 'STREET, EAST
TORONTO 2, ONTARIO
Calls at Quebec
EV INDIES CRUISES
,
cook.641" e,;si A
Bd. 3 Bd. 11
Specially conducted' Chili Mali Sailingi
See y6(410631 agent—
No one tan serve you' better
CUNARD LINE MAURETANIA
eq
itself, with cows. As a result I
drank real milk, the only place
where I drank it during the
whole of this trip; elsewhere,:
Was just tinned or, more gener-
ally, powdered stuff — even in
Tokyo.
There is a racecourse — the
English population could not
live without that — and there
are three golf courses, two of
them on the island, the third on
the mainland.
But side by side with this
wealth there is great poverty—
inevitable in view of the' tre-
menclous increase in births each
year among the Chinese and
also through the flow of refugbes
from the mainland.
Vast numbers of new flats have
been built on the mainland , sec-
tion of Hong Kong. They're fine,
handsome blocks, but they soon
become slums, because the Chi-
nese live many to a room and
put out their washing to dry on
poles stuck out through the
windows.
I have seen nothing like it,
not even in China, where every-
thing appears to be orderly and
clean. But here the streets are
littered. People crouch on the
pavement to eat. Girls grab men
by the arm as they walk by.
Touig offer to take you to sor-
did dance hails.
What 'a blot all this has
brought to one of ,the most love-
ly settings in the world! But
every effort is being made to
clean it all up, and I have no
doubt that in time it will be very
different.
The squalor, however, is con-
fined to the mainland. The island
itself is spick and span with
tidiness. It rises in glorious tiers
to the top of Victoria Peak, from
where the views are truly
breathtaking, particularly at
night, when the lights give it the
splendour of fairyland.
Scores of ferries travel to and
fro all the time and you can go
from the mainland to the island
in less than five minutes, taking
your car with you. The English
club occupies a site that must be
worth a fortune, right on the
seafront in the centre of the
town.
There are many streets of mast
fascinating shops, offering you,
duty-free, the choicest goods
from the ends of the earth, You
can buy a Japanese camera
there for less than you would
have to pay for it in Tokyo; and
superb opera or field glasses
which would cost you thirty
tOLOW The battered
face Of, Art (doldert. Boy) Arai
Ran bedts. Witness to' the:Aiveide.
punching of ,one-lime thiddl&
Weight Icing ilo
BLasilo .'.knocked Aragon but'. to
rife 'eighth round iii .LOS Arinelei
to W r the right to fight Sugar
Ray Robinson, for the Middle--
Weidhf Atte, It Sugar .46601 re*
fire first, that
Beauty, Squaor
Go Hand In Hand
Looking through the 'plane
window as we arrived over
Hong Kong, I wondered where
on earth the landing ground
could be, for I could see nothing
but fold upon fold of crags and
rocks. It must have been diffi-
cult for the pilot to know just
when to swoop down.
The airfield is, in fact, not on
the island of Hong Kong but on
the mainland of China, or rather
that portion of the mainland
called Kow-loon, which forms
part of the Crown Colony,
Our colony really consists of
three sections. First there is the
island itself. This was ceded to
us in 1841 after what has come
to be, known as the First Opium
War. It was a brief war, lasting
less than six months, The two
sides got together at the end of
it and the Chinese offered to give
us Hong Kong. Eliot, our chief•
representative, accepted.
When this news reached Lon-
don, Lord Palmerston, Foreign
Secretary at the time, was furi-
ous. He dismissed Hong Kong as
being "no more than a barren
island with hardly a house upon
it."
The Chinese Emperor was
equally ' furious with his repre-
sentative, He refused to sur-
render Hong Kong. "It is an im-
portant place," he said. Both the
Chinese representative and our
man Eliot were instantly dis-
missed — and the war was re-
sumed.
A few months later this sec-
ond flare-up ended. We had de-
cided by now to keep Hong Kong
and we insisted that China
,should open five ports to us for
trading. Two of these ports,
known as Treaty ports, were
Canton' and Shanghai.
It is a pity that those who had
doubts about' it at that time
cant see Hong Kong now. It is
without „question the loveliest
place I have ever visited, The
houses and trading offices, some
of them in the style of some-
what modified skyscrapers, rise
in tiers to the top of the peak,
and the view from all parts is
truly magnificent.
It was soon obvious, that the
island wasn't large enough for
the rapidly developing trade, and
by 1860 a part of the mainland
was ceded to us by China. This
is part and parcel of the colony
and is completely British.
But before long we outgrew
this, too, and we began to nego-
tiate for still more land. The
Chinese agreed to lease this, not
sell it.
This third section of the col-
ony is the largeat part of it --
356 square Miles in allAti depth,
it stretches as far as from Lon-
don to Tunbridge Wells.
They say in Hong Kong that,
it is "bursting at the seams," The
population, only 750,000 a few,
years ago, is noVv• close on three
Millions. Slowly, this trenien-
dais grOwth is being absorbed
by the new industries that are
rising almost daily in 'these new
territories.
There are factories for mak-
ing eigatettes, others for sugar,
paint and textiles. I saw. large
numbers of studios ,inaking
Chinese pictures, for sale ill ,Red
China, writes Minney in
4'tit-1311S.P
there is, iii. feet L.quite a big
trade between this British island
of ours and China proper. Ex- .
cetlent new roads Italie been
built, arid a railway nOW runs
from Kow.ledii, on Our part of
the hidiriland, right up to the
Chinese' frOntieit from where
one cart go ey ttaith to Can
ton and Peking. This is all 10
the good and has made the
island extremely proSperotit
The houses are. of the villa
type, ,such as yoU see the
Sotithttaned, and are Stir-
rounded
of,
lovely gardens with
the .most beautiful exotic flowers
Thete are farms on the island
Odd. Goings-on In.
Foreign Legion
The Pony/els 1)01W into hoarse
cheers when a drum, was de.
livered every morning, to
prisoner in a Frennh
Foreign Legion jail. For clank-
41g inside the drum was the
convicts' illicit wine ration,
The PritiSher was an ex-Lon-
doP, policeman who had been
Lenient to street bookmakers op
hiss Hackney beat; fact, he
fOund h pact to be, otter losing
money at, Burst Park races on
his days oft
Word" of this reached his
superiors, who were about to
suspend him from duty when he
panicked, abandoned wife, family
and a pension only tlwee years
distant, arid fled to Dunkirk to
enlist in the Legion,
He'd also been an Indian Army
bandsman, and now,, in prison for
a minor offence, his huge drum
was delivered to him every
morning for "Practice;"
"Our jailer knew what was
inside the drum of course, but
good wine makes friends of all
who taste it," says John Lod-
wick, who was in the prison at
the time and tells the story M.
a dashing account of lkis varied
experiences. .131d the Soldiers
Shoot."
Lodwick must have seen the
inside of more prisons than any
other man during the last war—
seventeen. His first was La Val-
bonne, when he'd enlisted in the
Foreign Legion in France M
1939 and "been imprisoned for
mutiny against a Corsican ser-
geant,
,As well as the ex-policeman,
his fellow-prisoners, included
some queer Legionnaire types: a
Ruthenian who, for religious
reasons, had refused to have his
hair cut; an Italian ice-cream
seller who'd disorganized the
feeding of several hundred' men
by commandeering half his com-
pany kitchens in order to con-
tinue his trade!
In another of his many spells
in foreign prisons, Lodwick met
a man named Fontier who, like
Lodwick, was captured trying to
cross the frontier into Spain.
He had a remarkable story to
tell. Sentenced 'in 1935 to ten
years for murdering his wife's
lover, he'd broken out of jail
in 1938 and made his way to
Ouargla, in Algeria, where he
worked for two years as a
mechanic,
Then a nagging homesickness
made him think it was safe to
return to his home town: Mont-
pelier. For two months his
friends helped him, and the po-
lice were not suspicious, for
he looked, and evidently was, a
different man — his papers
proved it.
Then his former wife, who'd
divorced him and remarried,
chanced to visit Montpelier and
saw Fontier In a cafe.
"We spent more than an hour
together," he told Lodwick. "No
one could have been more af-
fectionate. There was our child,
too. I had been sending money
for him, through a friend, all
those years. A lot of. Money,
every sou I could afford.
"I loired that kid, but I never
tried, to see him. Why let him
know his father was a jailbird?
"I asked her to let me see a
photo Of• him, but she said she'd
left them all at home. She kiss-
ed me when she left to. catch
her train.
"On my Way home, 'i friend
told me the police were 'wait-
ing at my lodgings. She must
have gone straight to them. I
left twon with just what I had
on my back. Spain seemed my
only chance. . . .
"Oh, yes, She had her reason,
but it was left to the police to'
tell me. She'd put the child in
a foundlings' home in the very
first yearl' and had been keeping
the money for herself ever since.
She was frightened I'd find Min"
Foritier , calculated he would
get two Months for ,the frontier
job, phis the seven years he
hadn't done, with no chance of
remission. After that he would
be free—and get his revenge.
And, sure enough, in 1948 a
Man named Fontier was charged
with shooting his wife at Nancy.
She'd moved hundreds of miles,
across 1-h.ance, brat he had foun•d
her:
The jubr decided there were
extenuating eitctinistaneeS. He
got.seven years'.
Dodwicit deactibea, vividly cis ,
adventured with the Legion in
the retreat oh Paris, and later
as a parachuted aabotenth oc-
cupied Vitiide. It is an engross-
ing personal narrative,
GEt ID OF tho Way 1 Did.
TURE
Simple home treatment,
Quick results natural, heeling',
teniplete. instructions 53.Otl MoritY
refunded If not Satisfied,
Oita JOHN'row dart, ATV
pciun'clein England can"be 'bought
for 'two or' three pounds,
Within twenty-four hours a
,firm of Chinese tailors made me
a suit of tussore silk for the
equivalent of pa 10s. It was an
excellent fit. At another place I
got a silk dressing-gown for 30s.
No duty and a low -cost of liv-
ing make• all this possible.
rood is cheap, too—or rather
such fond as is grown there. But
rents are high because of the
restricted spade.
There i wonderful' bathing
from Wide; - sandy beaches, The ,
life appears-to ',be ideal; but I
was liold,by those. who live there
that, ;the „summer is almost un-
bearable,
Winters are warm, like our
spring, By the'end of April it be-
gins to get hot. Those who can
get away do so. The rest have
to swelter., in the steamy atmos-
phere.
I found at the back of the
island a quarter that is known
as Aberdeen, so called, I was
told, after a regiment that was
quartered there a hundred years
ago. To-day 46,000 people live
there—entirely in boats. They
are not refugees—they have al-
ways lived like this. The boats
are huddled cheek by jowl; you
could walk across them for half
#it mile. Somehow the owners
manage to get Out, and set off
with, their nets 'for fishing. It's
a picturesque colony, swarming '
with youngsters who push ashore'
and hold out their hands for
coins.
On the, edge, of this colony
there are two floating ,restaur-
ants, where visitors sail out for
a meal. The food is good, and you
can get English as well as Chi-
nese dishes.
Servants are easy to get; the
average English family has as
many as four indoor servants
and one or more gardeners.
There are large numbers of
nightclubs, but the cabaret, most-
ly Chinese, is poor. Some of the
girls I saw were pretty, but the
turns were very inferior imita-
tions of what we get in our own
• nightclubs.
Rocket; Probe
Sun's Eclipse
Astronomers ,all over America
are • excited at the prospect of
giving man on October 12th his
first "look" at ,a total eclipse of
the sun from outside the atmos-
phere.
A ship bristling with rockets
is being sent to the South Pa-
cific as part of this unique ex,.
periment. Scientists explain that
a ship is being used becatise the
zone in which the sun will be
totally obscured crosses no large
land areas.
On the, ship's helicopter flight
deck will be carried eight rock-
ets, each equipped with a vari-
ety of instruments to , record the
different aspects of solar radia-
tion, and radio telemetering
equipment to transmit the data
back to earth.
• The rocket firings will be car-
ried‘out, as the ship steams 'back
and forth near the Danger is-
lands, a 'group of atolls easl of
,Samoa. The experiment will call
for extreme accuracy in launch-
Mg the rockets.
Before their nature 'was fully
understood, .SOlar eclipses were
regarded with superstitious .
dread. In the wilds Of North,
West Australia it Was Said that
the sun was "being stolen by a
dreadful rnorister,i'
The tetal eclipse of 1810, vis-
ible in Spain and Italy, took
Wade while France and Germany
Were at War.
Many French astronomers wore
shut up in 'Paris. At great danger
'to himself one managed to.esCape
in a balloon frem the 'besieged
city with 'the essential parts of
his telescope.
Ile got to Spain safely in time
for the eclipse, but found the
8pahish skies completely biter
tnst.
•
AGENTS WANTED
00 INTO BUSINESS
for yourgelf, Sell our exciting house.
wares, watches and other products not
found in stores. No. competition. Prof.
Its up to MIK. Write now ror free
colour catalogue and separate cuntl-
deoLial wholesale price sheet, Murray
Sales, 384 St. Lawman, Montreal,
ARTICLES FOR SALE , .
VELVET BUTTON BERETS
814111:: in E sections, Block, Drown, Navy, god, Beige, Coffee, Powder,
Sand, Dior, Mint, Coral, Orange, Tan-
gerine, Turquoise, White, Pink, Yel,
low; Grey, Royal, Cold, Purple, Bottle,
Wheat, Wine, Head sizes, 2/1/2, 22, 221A
incites, $2,00 each. Money Order, Post,
paid. r, & B. Hat Manufacturing Cons.
pany, A1801A St, Lawrence Blvd., Mon, treat, five,
BABY CHICKS
ASK for Bray prieelist on 7,8 week old
dual purpose pullets, prompt ship. meni, Dayolds to order, Also Ames
dayoid and started for high produc-
tion, low maintenance, Order Novem-
ber,December broilers. See local agent, or write Bray. Hatchery, 120 John
North, Hamilton,
FOR SALE
WOOD FIBRE .— CHENILLE
ALL materials for artificial, flewers in-
cluding plastic foam, Write for whole-
sale or retail price list, Flowercraft
Supply Co., .4603 ,Kingate,,ay, South
Burnaby, Vancouver, 13.C,
COLOR T.V.
New "COLOR-PIX" screen filter in-
stantly changes dreary black and white
pictures to' `wonderful color tones of
blue, amber arid green, etc. Just place
outside your T.V. screen. Enjoy color
on your T.V. now for only $1 ?II pre-
paid or C.O.D, charges extra, Send today! State whether for .17" or
21" screen,
HUR,LBEKT AGENCIES,
Rockville, Yarmouth, N,S.
INSTRUCTION
EARN more! Bookkeeping,' Salesman-
ship Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les.
sons 500. Ask for frec• circular No. 33.
Canadian Corre4iondence Courses
1290 Bay Street, Toronto
LIVESTOCK
Carruthers SaKirTablets
ARE an inexpensive and quick treat-
ment for the FIRST SIGN OF SCOURS
IN ,CALVES: Give 6 tablets every 6
hours up to 3 doses. Purchate from
your druggist,-or mail order to
CARRUTHERS DRUGS, LTD,,
LindSay, Ont.
LIVESTOCK FOR SALE
REGISTERED Shropshires: E w e s,
lambs, rams, M. L. Kent, R. 1, Oak-
ville. No. 5 Highway, 11/4 miles West of
Trafalgar.
Paid For Land
With Clay Pipes
Who smokes a clay pipe now-
adays? Not, many people, accord-
ing to Mr. Macqueen Pope, the
famous historian of the theatre.
"The old clay has gone, I fear,
with the old times," 'he said re-
cently. Clay pipes were regularly
smoked by rich and poor until
the late fifties of last century.
Mr. William' Swnyard, of Alder-
shot, Hants, who 'for nearly half
a century turned out clay pipes
from his kiln at the rate of 4,300
a week, said that the clay lost
popularity among soldiers after
the South African. War.
"During the war Tommy At-
kins acquired the •cigarette habit
and this was one of the reasons
why the clay pipe industry be-
gan to fall away," he added. A
certain number of clay pipes are
still made to-day, but most of
them are bought for children to
blow soap bubbles with.
At Whitstable, Kent, in 1956,
more than 200 clay pipes were
washed up on the beach at high
tide,
Cay pipes in the past often
figured in barter transactions.
Three hundred of them were in
the list of articles given by Wil-
liam Penn in exchange for a
tract of land in what is now
Pennsylvania. Another record
shows that, in 1677, 120 clay pipes
and 100 jews' harps were ex-
changed for a plot near Timber
Town, New Jersey.
FALL
TO BRITISH PORTS:
First Class from $274
5\ Tourist Class from $179
tl
tt
lb. DISAPPEARING "MAN'S WORLD" — Woman has Invaded ...another• time-honored retrcc,i of
the male --the pool hall. Here Masako Katsura, the First Lady of billiards, dazzles male on-
lookers with her skillful performance. She ca roms one ball off another on the table and the
first ball jumps up to knock the third ball• off the top of bottle,
it
0
Mn.GARONI 20
tiltiLANNid
5 411edlietaaide „Oahe ,
• CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
Investigate how Shaw Schools will
help you prepare for a career that
will assure your success and security.
Underline course that Interests you—
• Bookkeeping • Cost Accounting
• Shorthand • Typewriting
• Stationary Engineering
• Short Story Writing '
• Junior, Intermediate and
Higher Accounting
• Chartered Secretary (A.C.I.S.)
• Business English. and
Correspondence
Write for free catalogue today.
Many other courses front which
to choose.
Bay & Charles Streets, Toronto
Dept. No. H-13
SHAW SCHOOLS
AND WINTER SAILINGS
Round Trip
$344
F ROA
TO FRENCH PORTS:
First Class from $284
Tourist Class from $184
tot!. EMpire 2-291 F
Bay- Toronto
.•
Otirrelof r'es or friends 'from Eu , reprt bps their Offisayai Ja teaeitit 51,ECIAL LOW FARE5
iaqiiire about
A G 000 o Meat' Fiiiiiige teen teheriiii
Ont.
ci
ci
—1"
CUNARD TO EUROPE
'VESSEL to. .. . .
Frain MONTREAL .. VESSEL from NEW YORK . ....... ..... ....,„ .... to, ......„..,......„
BYLVANIA
15AXONIA
CARINTHIA
fIVERNIA
SYLVANIA
fSAkONIA CARINTHIA
tIVERNIA
SYLVANIA.
f5ABONIA. ) CARINTHIA
'11YERNIA,
SYLVANIA.
* SAXONR. ••
'Fri. OCT. 3
Fri, OCT. 10
Fri OCT, 17
Fri. 'OCT.- 17
Fri.. OCT. 14
'Fri. "OCT,. 31
.Fri. 'NOV. 7
Fri. ' NOV. 7
Fri. NOV, 14
Fri. NOV.. 11 •
Fri. ,NOV.. 15
OA. NOV, 28 „ . , ......- ._
From' HALIFAX.
Sat. DEC. 13
Sun. DEC: 14 ' .. ...... .... ...
• •
'Greene* LIverpee 1-iiee.,Sdolharoptoii
:''Ghientick, Liverpool
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'Fri. NOV.21
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