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The Clinton News Record, 1920-11-25, Page 4LEAGUE OF NATIONS COMPLETE ORGA IZATIONAT GENEVA MEETING Silt Vice -Presidents Elected—Arthur J. Balfour Given Inv portant Post—Business in Full Swing, A despatch from Geneva says; In a e somewhat agitated seeeien .on Thurs- day the League Assembly completed its organization by the election of six vice-presidents, who, with the six chairman of the . committees already elected, i'nrm„a sort of executive eon- miteee, the assembly, The nen- Europol.,.. nations, for whom much solicitude was shown, had no com- plaints to make as they obtained four, vice-presidents, instead of the three they had asked for. These were: Viscount Ishii, Japan; elonorio Pueyrrecion, Argentina; Sir George E. Foster, Canada, and Rod- rigo Octavio, Brazil. The other vice- presidents .are; H. A. Van ICarna- beck, Holland, and Dr, Eduard Bones, Czecho=Slovakia. As an act of courtesy, Guiseppo Motta, president of: the Swiss con- federation, who had delivered the ad- dress of welcome, was elected honor- ary president of the first assembly of the League. Arthur J. Balfour, of the British delegation, was elected chairman of the Commission of General Organiza- tion by the League of Nations As- sembly, "While it has been said insome countries that the League is. dead, the council's report shows it to be very ratuoh alive,” Lord Ieobert Cecil declared. Referring to,,- criticisms of the League that it was spending all its time getting ready to do somethingi Lord Robert said that a machine to work well must be set up well, He considered the report showed great progress has bean made, The cot of the League to date had been 8500,000, The delegate said: "1'h6 sounds like a large sum to some minds," he continued, "but ceen- pare the amount With a single day of the cost of the war and you have a ridiculously cheap ,insurance rate." Decision has been reached by the League of Nations to entrust Poland with a mandate to carry out the military defence of Danzig, accord- ing to information received by the Swiss Telegraph Agency. Great Britain and Spain will send military contingents to Vilna to main- tain order during the "popular con- sultation oe the inhabitants." This announcement was made this evening by the Assembly. It was added that the French and Belgian Governments already had agreed to despatch con- tingents thither. There had been no DUKE OF. DEVONSHIRE OPENS SCHOOL FOR BLIND SOLDIERS. The annex to Pearson Hall, 'Toronto, declared open by the Governor- General, Nov. 10th. The- building le for the vocational training of blind soldiore. Trade Agreement Ratified by Jamaica A despatch from Ottawa says :—A cable from King- ston, Jamaica, announces that the Legislative Council of Ja- intimation here that this action by 7naica has ratified the Canada-, the Assembly was impending. West Indies trade agreement. This is stated to be the fourth Dominion News i ref Victoria, B.C.-The 1920 :minion "Pack of Alaska, British Columbia, Puget Sound and the Columbia River section will total 6,055,000 cases, • valued at approximately $60;000,000, according to revised statistics. The Alaska pack accounts for 4,226,000 cases, and British Columbia, it is ex- pected, will aggregate 6$0,000 cases, •an increase over last year, whereas the Alaska pack shows a decrease. A New York company will build a pulp and paper mill north of Prince -Rupert and a Japanese firm has ac- quired a tract of timber on Louise Island in the Queen Charlotte group • 'with the intention. of erecting a plant there in the near future. Edmonton, Alta. -On account of the splendid crops 'this year experi- enced throughout the West, soldier - farmers who took land under the Set- tlement Board find themselves in an enviable position, able to pay off a large part and sometimes the whole of the obligations they incurred last - year and which would ordinarily run " e for some years. Twenty-two and one-tenth bushels per acre is. the Provincial Govern- ment's estimate of Alberta's whets: erop based on reports from all parts ef the province. The average yield of eats is estimated at 39 bushels, and barley at 28. These figures are con- ▪ sidered conservative, judging by re- turns already received. Regina, Sask.—A moving picture entitled "'Saskatchewan Schools and the New Canadians" has been pre- pared by the. Department of Educa- tion of the province ' depicting the process of transformation of foreign - born children into young Canadian citizens. The film staged within the province has aroused much interest. The total value of the wheat, oats, barley, and flax produced on the four Provincial Institutional Farms last pear was $30,516.64, as compared with $29,760.12 for the ,previous year. The farms . comprise those attached to the mental, hospital at Battleford, and the jails at Regina, Prince Albert and Moosohlun. The sum of $10,000 has been set aside by the provincial Government for the extension of the travelling 13- bra'ry system in the province. Prac- tically every rural district is now served by this system of circulating libraries. Winnipeg, Man.—The Winnipeg City Council has authorized a bond issue of $300,000 to be used for rais- ing sufficient money to build a further 100 homes under the civic • .ousing scheme. The bonds which are for a period of twenty years will bear interest at the rate of six per cent. ' Ottawa, Ont.—It is stated that when the work of the Soldiers' Civil Re-establishment Department closes, which will be about the end of the present year, the total number of 'in- quiries and problems dealt with will have run to one million and a half. • Up to the present time, 1,218,472 cases leave been dealt with. The sta- tistics show that the number of men who have received medical treatment with pay and •allowances is 49,369; the total number of clinical treat- ments is 422,235; and the total of dental operations 84,576. Under the vocational branch, the !total number of men who have commented train- ing is 48,414 and the total number a graduates 28,273. The totalnum- ber of positions found for disabled men Is 175,157, and fit Hien placed in positions total 101,000. The total amount of loans to soldier settlers approved by the Soldier Set- tlement Board to October second was $78,285,752, and the number of set- tlers' -loans 19,526. These were dis- tributed as follows:—Prince .Edward Island, 291; Nova Scotia, 392; New Brunswick, 491; Quebec, 464; Ontario, 1,374; Manitoba, 3,233 Saskatchewan, 4,765; Alberta, 5,625; British Coluin- bia, 2,991. The Canadian Battlefields Memor- ials Commission, which will carry out the work of establishing memorials to the heroism of Canadian troops on the fields of Belgium and France, has been appointed, the positions being honorary. The sum of $250,000 has been appropriated by parliament for the -memorials, and the commission will decide after a competition for designs, etc., just exactly what form these permanent memorials to Cana- da's dead will take. Campaigns will be carried on throughout the Dominion to secure $1,000,000 to be devoted to bringing destitute war orphans from Ukraine to Canada. Delegates will be sent to Europe to select the orphans and ar- range for their transportation. Fredericton, N.B.--E. P. Bradt, Deputy Minister of Agriculture for New.Brunswiek, has sent in his resig- nation and will retire from the pro- vincial service. He will take up the commercial growingof fruit at Ni- agara -on -the -Lake, Ontario, where he has purchased an extensive Trait farm. According to information supplied by Premier Foster to the press, the sheep of the province have increased from 140,000 in 1917 to 280,000 at the present time, or an increase of 100 - per cent. in three years. Halifax, N.S.—A new directory of 1920-21 estimates the population of greater Halifax at 85,000. During the past decade the city has nearly doubled in population, - Greek Affairs Take a New Turn A despatch from Athens says :—Parliament wiII be con- vened next Thursday, and Queen -Mother Olga will then take the oath of regent. Great Britain as noified Pre- mier Rhallis that it will refuse a credit guarantee for a new issue of bonds amounting to 400,000,000 drachmas. Former officers and civil servants under King Constan- tine are being reinstated, while the Venizelists are resigning office. It is expected that General Nider will be the new com- mander of the army. If the Balkan balance is up- set it is anticipated here that the Serbs will' grab Salonica. Finland has 8,720 miles of telegraph( and 2,891 miles- of telephone lines and ono radio station with a 000 -mile radius, 1 cANS' STAN O -TNA`"` FELI.ER- NIS Vd0R0 1•4SANb hoTHiNG M 1h of the West Indian states to ratify the agreement the en- dorsation -of all, as well as rati- fication by the Canadian Par- liament being necessary be- fore the agreement becomes effective. The agreement is expected to come before Par- liament early next session. CANADIAN GIRL DEFIES THE - - TURKS. Miss Elizabeth A Thom, 167 Grey Street, London, Ont., a veteran of service in France, who is sticking to her post in the Caucasus despite the continued advances of the Turks into Armenia. She is a member of the Near East Relief personnel In the Caucasus, all of whom refused to abandon their work among the hun- dreds of thousands of orphans and adult refugees. - HOUSE SHORTAGE HALTS DIVORCES Decrease in France Is ' Very Marked in Past.Month. A despatch from Paris says di- vorces are decreasing in Franee be- cause of the lack ofhouses and apart- ments, Toronto, Nov. 23,—Good heavy Before the war the monthly list of steers, 712,60 to $13,50; butcher steers, divorces attained in Paris a total of choice, 711 to 712.50; do, good, 710 to 711; do, med.,$6,60 to $8; do, cone„ 1,200. In October there were only $6 to $6; butcher heifers choice, $10 945 applications, and this month the to 711; do med.,77,5.0 to $9; do, one., total is expected to be further re- $6 to 77; -butcher rows, choice, $9 to d to 650. 710; do, med., $6 to $3; canners and According to lawyers, Imiulreda of cutters, 73.60 to 74,50; butcher bulls, good, couples have accepted rec$66onciliationsfeed s,26cis, fair,• $7.60 to $88 to $7.0. do, cone,.5.50; feeders,, and agreed to remain living together best 710 to 711,50; do, good, 900 lbs. for the simple reason that they can't 79.50 to 710; do S00lb, 78.75 to 79,26.;- find 9,26; find places to live apart, other than] do, come $6.75, to $S; milkers and in small hotels. . Sooner than suffer; springers, choice, 7100 to $160; calves, this discomfort, Mr. and Mrs. Paris choice, $17 to $18.50; do, med., 718 to have decided to tolerate each other's 715; do, coin., $7 to 712; lambs, $12 la presence in the conjugal domicile at $12,60; sheep choice, $0 to 77.50; do, g heavy and bucks, $4 to $5• do any rate, rate, until apartments become less sings, $10 to 710.50; hogs, fed and scarce. I watered, 716.25 to $16,50; do, off cars, Figures just published show that; 716,50 to 716,75; do rob., $15,26 to is he "war divorce” stampede is end-! 716.50; clo, to the farmer, 715 to 716,25. in '. In three months of 1913 2,850' ielontreal, N'ov, 23, --Good veal, 713 g to $14; m°glutin, 710 to 713; grass, ccopies were divorced, whereas in the $6,50 to $5.75. Ewes, 74 to.77; limbs, first three months of 1920 no less good, 712,50 to 713; cons,, $8 to 731,50; than 8,005 decrees were pronounced. hogs, off oar weights, selects, $17; But since that time lists have been sows, 713. ' steadily decreasing, until now the fig - res are below those of before the war, I know a man who, in the sunnh'er, takes a few boarders from the nearby S" t cities. On one occasion an anxious A bottomless half -bushel measure young mother who wished to being her fits nicely Inside an ordinary grain balyy to the country for the eelluner; sack. Place seek and measure on the asked this old gentleman whether the ground, fill the messure and, by lifting anile served at his table was pastere- it up, the contents are dropped into elude "Why, of course it isle said the sack, The process is repeated until old fellow indignantly. "Don't I keep the sack is full of potatoes, walnuts, all my cows in the pasture all sum - or whatevef'is being picked up, mer?" It's a Great I..afe If You Don't Jehken Markets of the World Wholesale Grain. Manitoba wheat—No. 1 Northern, $2.111/4; No. 2 Northern, 72.09%; No. 3 Northern, 72.07; No. 3 wheat, $2.02. Manitoba oats—No. 2 C,W., 611/4c; No, 8 CW, 5'7%c; extra No. 1 feed, 56%e; No. 1 feed, 53%sc; No, 2 feed, Manitoba barley—No. 8 CW, 71.05 No. 4 CW, 95e; rejected, 80c; feed, 80c. All of the above c.i.f. bay Porte. American corn—No, 8 yellow, 71.23. Ontario oats -No 2 white, 60 to 62e. Ontario wheat—No. 2 Winter, $1.95 to 72, per car lot; No. 2 Spring, $1.90 to 71.96; shipping points, according to freights. - Peas—No, 2, nominal. Barley—$1 to $1.06, according to freights' outside., • , Buckwheat—No, 2„nominal. Rye—No, 3, 71.60 to 71.65, nominal, according to freights outside, Manitoba flour—$12.90 top patents; 712.40 second patents. Ontario flour -78,75, bulk, seaboard. Millfeed-Car lots, delivered Mont- real freights, bags included: Bran, per ton, 738 to $40.26; shorts, per ton, $42 to 745,25; good feed flour, $2.76 to 73.. Country Produce --Wholesale. Cheese—New, large, 28 to 29e; twine, 29 to 30c; triplets, 294 to 801,c; old, large, 33 to 34c; do, twins, 331/4 to 34%c. Butter—Fresh dairy, choice, 49 to 60c; creamery, 2nds, 55 to 58c; finest, 68 to 61c. Margarine -35 to 870. Eggs—No, 1, 64 to 66c; selects, 70 to 720; new laid, in cartons, SO to 85e. Beans—Canadian, hand-picked, bus., $4 to $4.50; primes, $3 to 73.50; Ja- pans, 9/c; imas, Madagascar, 101e; California Limas, 121/4c. Maple products( ----Syrup, par imp. gal., $3.40 to 73.50; per 5 imp. gals., $3.25 to $3.40. Maple sugar, lb., 27 to 30c, honey -60 -30 -lb. tins, 26 to 26o per lb.; Ontario comb honey at $7.50 per 15 -section case; 61321,4-1b, ties, 26 to 27c per Ib. Provisions—Wholesale. Smoked meats—Hams, med., 47 to 60c; heavy, 40 to 42e; cooked, 64 to 68c; rolls, 34 to. 36e; cottage rolls, 41 to 43c; breakfast bacon, 50 to 56e; fancy breakfast bacon, 56 to 62e; backs, plain, 52 to 540; boneless, 60 to 64c. Cured meats—Long clear bacon, 27 to 28c; clear bellies, 26 to 27c. Lard—Pare tierces, 30 to 301/40; tubs, 301,5 to 31c; pails, 30% to 311/4c; prints, 323,. to 83c. Compound tierces, 22 to 2371o; tubs, 22% to 241/4c; pails, 231/4 to 23�'4c; prints, 26 to 27e, Montreal Markets. Montreal, Nov, 23,—Oats, Canadian West., No. 2, 831/40; do, No, 3, 71%.o. Floe Man, Spring wheat patents, firsts, $12,20, Rolled oats, bag of 90 lbs,, $4,05, Bran, 745.25. Shorts, $45.25, Hay, No, 2, per ton, car fats, 730. Cheese, finest easterns, 231/. I3utter, choicest creamer`,, 66 to 66c, Live Stook Markets. • ak Tach Children To Save.. canimittce of eduoetiohlal experts recently passed •a resolution in which it le said; "Instruction in'tha practical aspects of thrift and economy, we think, is the only Mane e.2 stemming the tilde -of waste lard exteavaganae." ' It was often said during the war that our people, practicing habits of ecou orny and purchasing Victory Bonds, were loarnlpg afrugality that had been hitherto a somewhat unfamiliar virtue among tie. Under the stimulus ef our direct concern in the 'welfare .of those who stood for us en the flrillg line, we simplified our diet and our costume, we rationalized our whole plan of living, ' We fondly believed 'that this regirnee would persist. But 'with the lifting of the pressure of the war upon our lives and our habits the pendulum swung back to the opposite extreme. In the first glad access of relies.' we allowed ourselves extravagances and flung off restraint. Joy had supplanted care and folly reigned once more, There were. mann- ers al! over the land and en all the earth who could not forget and have rat yet forgotten. But for the rest of us the cry went up, "The war is over!" and we returned to a feverish exuberance of ways and means, which we were pleased to style "getting bade to normal," Thoughtful people are endeavoring to encourage a durable impression of the lessons the wear wes,supposed to have taught at a cost so tremendous. To do this it is wise to begin with the children. There Mee many things not in the books that it is good for the young to learn. What is the meaning of arithmetic if the arith- metician never knows the difference between saving a cent and spending a dollar? What is the good of Latin or chemistry or the spelling -book if character is demoralized by vulgar display, by cheap amusement, by low standards of thought and of action? The child who has too much to •spend, through parental -indulgence, is a child who enters the race of life under a serious handicap. The home ,influence may undo all the good the school accomplishes if the scholar goes from an atmosphere of serious work, economy of time and simplicity of habit to a family life that wiIlfuliy disregacds the value of each day and of every dollar and mis- spends them both. The Will Will to Win. It is not the teaching of human history that those who were most successful started with most. There are plenty of eicamples of persons who started with a great deal and lost it and of others who began with one talent and multiplied it exceed- ingly. Success or failure is largely a matter of how much you wish to get ahead and how much you , 7!•e willing to sacrifice. Some are quite unwilling to practice the self-denial needful to a conquest'. Any one can admire and .envy success when it comes to another and declare it down- right luck. It is easy to ignore the fact that the successful one had to pay a big price. He had to world and worry a lot for all that has come to him. The rewards that are his did not fall like manna from the skies. He knows that the old rule holds and that bread ,is earned by the sweat of the brow. Those who are quite 'Un- willing to work as he has worked are always ready to flock round him de- manding a portion of his gain. Of profit-sharing we hear much and talk a great deal, but,l'abor-sharing is not so popular an idea. Lok at the career of glint who went onward and upward and you will find that he arrived because he refused to be answered with a "no"; he failed only to fight harder; he was flung, but he got up again. Other men decried his plan, refused him aid, shut their ears and doors to him, went back on a p ledged word, ignored a contract, played -him false, collapsed beneath a trust they held from him. Yet he did not grow 'bitter; lie did not waste an hour in bewailing the mischances; he did not give up the fight and join the army of vagrants and mendicants who try to sandbag society into sup- porting then. No; lie kept on; he held that we are "baffled to fight better." .Stich a man must win in the long ran Defeats are the raw materials'of this achievements. He learns -a lesson from every adverse experience, An Edicon does not reach the goal of an invention without indefatigable repe- titions, each teaching hint something and each bringing him a little nearer what he seeks. If you cold see all thee° is to see in the career of one who appears to be uniformly success- ful you would learn how 1110011 has gone awry, fallen short, tumbled in ruin on the way to make the result that now seems a "happy accident," Real genius is not granted to the generality of mankind, But a mea- sure et persistence .is supplied to the character of ail normal persons, and ie we use,.iv+hat we have it willin- crease by the using and the rasult will surprise us. It has been demonstrated by a French scientist that ocean depths can be determined and the character wweerweeetettaeteweeweew- TO tB OF NAMELESS WARRIOR IN ABBEY VISITED BY 1,500,000 PILGRIMS Stream of Mourners From All Parts of the British Empire to Westminster Abbey..: Helpless Soldier;, SaluteLasst Resting Place of Nameless Comrade. A despatch from London says; --A wonderful pilgrimage to the grave the "Unk;lown warrior" in hVestmin- ster• Abbey came t0 a close on Tillers. day afternoon, A dozen inoapaoitated soldiers, finable to wollc, evece wneoled in chaer'e by their wives or 000008 through the dun aisles to give the last salutes at the shrine, The pilgrimage had been In progress for a week, and the Canon of West - Muster In charge told the correspon (lout that a careful estimate of the numbers ,who made it showed 1,500,- 000 ,5007000 persons passed by the grave in the. nave of the abbey. 'Eveiy weekday since the Az`nrietee Day anniversary, even while services Mote been teeing an and between ser- vfooe on Sunday, en endless sti'eanl of maurriors have been entering the abbey In foul's and passing the grave, They began to tomo early in the intern - Mg, and an sortie days they continued until past 11. o'clock at night, They C14/135 from all parts of the British hihnpt•ie, eta even greater number of people made the pilgrimage to the cenotaph. Whitehall, even now, Is filled with a .double stream of people, reaching to Trafalgar Square on one side, and eom- ing from Westminster on the other, Trinidad Grants Preference to Canada A despatch from Ottawa says:—Canadian food and cattle stuffs exported to Trini- dad are to be given preference over goods not produced with- in the Empire, according to a cable received from Edgar Tripp, Canadian Government commercial agent, Port of Spain, Trinidad, The cable reads: "All duties have been removed from food and cattle stuffs produced in countries of the British Empire. Suffi- cient duties will be imposed on foreigngoods to give Can- ada a preference." Fortunes Tossed Away. Most people, it has been said, throw away a fortune In the course of a life- time through waste in small things, and certainly the "cheese -parings and candle -ends" do count for more than Is usually realized. Take water, for Instance. A New York crusade against dripping taps produced some astounding figures. In two years alone a saving of forty thousand million gallons was effected by a tax of two dollars for any defec- tive tap, Since such a leakage will waste 1,600 galons per day, this will be readily uuderstood in Canada and elsewhere, Articles of food habitually wasted, are fruit and vegetables. For even In these times much fruit which might bo sold or bottled is allowed to rot, Dither from carelessness or the dliffi- eulty of finding a quick and handy market. The thrifty country -folk of b'rance Immerse their potato -crop fur a few secends in boiling water before putting them away, and this steeps them sound until the next crop is available. How many men bother to untie par - eels and preserve the string? Blore frequently the cord Is damaged by cutting, and Is then thrown into the wasto-paper basket. Some Idea of the loss involved may be gathered from the known fact that the rag -pickers of Paris have gather- ed string to the value of 41500 a year from the rubbish -boxes 1u the publlo places of that city! Few articles occasion mere waste than the ordinary match. A cigarette - smoker would be surprised to find how many boxes, containing forty or fifty matches, he has used in a week, Soviet Will gave Winter Camp a m p . aign A despatch from Copen- hagen says :—A special to The Berlingske Tidende from Kov- no reports that from different articles in the Pravda it is clear the Bolshevists are preparing for a winter campaign, a de- cree having been issued calling all citizens up. to the age of 36 under arms. All able-bodied men in factories are to be re- placed by women, and in the district of Moscow-Vitbsk 15 new divisions are being form- ed. The Japanese woman is entirely re- spansrbie for the management of her household affairs. In a small town, not long ago, after a fire, some children held a fair. The sum realized they sent to the pastor of the church, Their letter read: "This 730 was raised by a fair, and we are sending it to you, Please hive it to the fire sufferers. P.S.--We hope the t suffering is not all over." CANADA HONORS GL'ORiOUC DEAD In all parts of the Domla!on citizens paid homage on Armistice Day to the men who gave their lives Ior the Em- pire in France, and floral tributes dec- orated cenotaphs and monuments is practically every town and city. Photo shows the Oenot 1.11 in front of Toronto's City Hall, ATHENS CITY IN STATE OF SIEGE Allied and U.S. Destroyers Despatched for Use in Emergency, A de_patch from Cc„t.:ntinople says reports from Athens iudieate that a state of siege bas been pro- claimed, following rioting over the de- feat of ex -Premier Venizeios. See - mai allied and American ole: ;royers have been despatched to Atheee, for nee in case cf an emergency. The defeat of the present "ludic Government 18 interpt'eted ns a re- pudiation of its imperialistic polity, at the expense of Turkey, which has driven Mustapha Kemal Pasha re- lectantly into the hands of the Bol- shevists. If Gree,:e changes her policy, al- lowing Turkey to keep Smyrna, it is possible the e:emalists will not only be pacified, bat will serve 110 a brtf- fer against Red erpen3len in the Orient:, The present physical notion nccont- plished between the Rud: and the Nal1000)i:-ts Is probably+ tea formid- able to be overcome be the hn!liteey forces here. Oflielal vile -lee here S015 the policy of Resell. taking Con- stantinople, as }ioumniea i3 not re- garded as a serious ebet.tcle, But Bulgaria is resentful ef the Creek occupation of Thrace, and already is almost Bolshevist, end, with the Iced armies operating among those countries., and the Ketrlists th or:gh Anatolia, the problem, ,rpm a mili- tary viewpoint, would net be diffi- cult. The now' Greek Ministry hos been formed and th'r Queen Biother will be proclaimed Regent. M». HUGE LIGHTS GUIDE PLANES AT. CHANNEL Paris Plans to -operation in Scheme With London.,; A despatch from Parts nays: An- other step in cross-Channrl pt'ivate and commercial aviation will he talten next week when a series of powerful searchlights will be placed at various places to enable airplanes to fly on darkest nights from Paris to London without danger of being lost in the darkness. There will be nine lights between Paris and Calais and six on he 'English side of the Channel to aide the airmen. These lights rise will enable filers to land in ea::o of ccident at chartered points. The -French Ministry of Aviation is importing the pian and is underetoad n bo considerating co-operation with he British Air Ministry to a proposal or lights to be placed aboard ships ditch ate to be permanently anchor- d in the Channel five mince npart in arious directions. The lights con- e iplated shall, it is proposed, be of 0,000 candle power, a light powerful nough to pierce the darkest (right to Height of a anile and a half. Of the many materials which Abys” atria le ltnown to coihtain only potash is bettig p> oducerl err tit c°rnmcr curt scab In Gorinany takes on hhcontes ire • erease11 1,370 per eon",. from 1915 to 1920, S,ngliaii interests have established an aviation echool an an island neat Ilio :cumin to train liflots far Brazils Ian aerial snail a114 paasehrgot' 5015102, • 5 t .t t e v t 5 0 a ate ,n r o - Wl1P-N i�'bw.\rL t IJ 11a.l t ;' `rbc } � � t t SAY A,g�"TyLli ttyN G ^�^ �1! VER ClA046E M`i M1riD n ,r � x�' ,}� y r , e`t. 11 _'' ' i e _.. 404 THAI'S I 6.00"), `'Nn Newemee s , ,�QM�+,1LiR�R II~tTeItE STING -1'ei1IN6S Youn Saeib ABOUT PA(tNg BACK 1HAT Fig% D0k1. 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