: ee | Lane and ended et Pie for 1 on. moire . . 7 a t , i. s ner ‘ ‘ ‘i «The fire that razed the City rast, Rect. lls = Cs in Nild- tato field’ look promising De- goof London in a September ~~ ; “2 fers, spite dry weather in all areas 4 a | er ee years ago seemed 4 - e mes t .. f mova Sect, excépt Cape solicit funds oo malicious in its devasta! ! : eee fa RS on, the grain -harvest has ! slat . | tion ‘to be aceepted at the ae : with fairly good yields | st. JOHN'S: Nf. (cP)— rrtime merely as an aimless | : ene | [reported Rain -is meeded soon Progressive Conservative aie catastrophe. ; Brees for the Aannapolis Valley apple Wednesday appealed for -finan-°: crop. . : cial support from the public for The New Brunsw potato its campaign for the Sept. & the previous year, the fire of crops also look promising.Some Newfoundland election. : Sept. “*8, 1666, caused. only | * /grain has been harvested “Tn an anathytires-eolumn four known deaths by burn- : 28s 7. aae. i ETE T Wemsneell TELET normal yields. - dvertisement in the St. John's ing. But shock or exposure e . siapaniny . Seti eaD Grain harvesting is under way’ News, the PCs asked donations killed uncounted numbers | SRRae: . " : “> fn southern Quebec. About 85 from ty supporters, uncom- among the 100,000 Londoners te : - |per.cent of thé early potato crop mitted voters “who recognize’ left homeless and hungry on has been dug. with good yields the fairness of\having alf ‘polit- suburban moors. reported. Summer apple picking ical parties on af<.even, basis’ - Pushed by an easterly wind has started, ‘with satisfactory and from Liberals “ believe from. its. start in ‘a Pudding yields. Sugar beets and flax’ are that on the continuation the Lane bakeshop near the end promising two-party system of governm | of London Bridge, the fire Recent rain has brought re- ."eSts the future of democracy.” ‘| rushed through 400 narrow lief to drought areas in Ontario The advertisement. said: and for once rainiess lanes. and harvesting of a record yield), ' The Liberal party in New- destroying 13,200 lath - and - of a good quality winter wheat foundland always seems to have plaster homes, &9 of the city’s ‘lhas been completed. The corn UMlimited funds at its disposal | 109. churches and more than crop has shown great variation, a SRST campaigns!" The 50 centres of trade and craft | , , rotiid becoeenv ative message to “all from the apothecaries’ hall to | feat favorable weather would “you know from what /rources | the woodmongers' livery. | a SC if i \bring average yields. The sugar the Liberal campaign chest | SCAPEGOAT OUGHT 7 ese ae ek eet ereeerpmeee t COLONEA ene wt ee ee / / beet crop condjtion is excellent. kept full! , , ; . ee : ; ae ‘ It outlined i The fire devoured almost = ojiver, Cromwell's | Puritans at the railway station by an im- quarter of the wheat and coarse In British Columbia's Okana- | and a gy a eae a bg H i \ s | everything ‘in a path }'2 miles h cc . : I t : ; ; . z owe : ad killed the Catholic migration department officer— grains has been swathed. Warm, gan Valley, McIntosh and De- statement: “t 0 Shah eae and one-half “mile wide | Charles J. and six years. after mmigran but he couldn't speak/German. dry weather is needed, particu- F foe ‘ are ebut_ Contributions ma. cot ie high “” through’ the “cramped com- 4, With the- help of Eric larly in the central and north. (C!OUS apples § Promine “Du _ Following the great plague | that took 56,558 London lives | © os monarchy. was restored were asked in. the advertise- aaa the: Scion teat lives under, the nominally. Protes- . » Schmidt, a. naturalized’ Cana- ern districts, Winesape, will be: below: earlier: vont, with @ footiote that i was SAY aha kata ; ~ -p dant Charles: I}, whose hrother comp alns dian of German descent whom’ 4 two-week cool, wet spell has expectations paid for by----friends of . the Sn & 2. + Leave erte eatin etaié = And. heir James was a Cath they had met on the ship, the delayed crops maturing’ in Ale | The—oaly —rust-to develop on (Party ” a : a = a = ie : He . ‘ : e : olic “ : s - : -—Graus-fotind temporary quar- berta. Little harvesting has been A Pp TRUGKE CROSS JUNGLE THE_FIRE started in-avbakeshop near London} the noise whictr the as Lie Foreigners of any kind were | EDMONTON (CP) They ters in a basement suite with done except in the southeast the Prairies was a cereal variety s JUNGLE Bridge 300 years ago. An easterly wind carried it | upon = elas vrai: an beaten in the burning streets. “Promise everything at the im: another immigrant family. ,, Where grain cutting Is general. which is expectéd:to cause oomme gies are terruine peeneeh den Sr he flames devouring almost — | Li A 1m- Protestants -accysed Catholics Migration office in Germany, ‘The housing situation here {s 2 Ma c' thi neh London, - a : _ ais and halt | phleteer, Rev. Thomas Vin- | |, starting. the fire, Catholics Dut when you get. here there's terrible.” “Mrs. Grau said. “In COULD BE GOOD : jamal losses. tn Manitoba. 084 ito Z am bia from Tanzania, everything in a path a RAO Bae ay : | cent. ‘You might see in some aig the fire was holy retriby. "othing and nobody cares.” Jermany you couldn't rent a In the Maritimes, Prince Ed- Saskatchewan. oe around the Rhodesian blockade mile wide, an.area ‘in as hich 600,000 peopie lived. | places whole streets at once . tion for London's Protestant |. Helga Grau, who arrived there place‘like this. They just don't [ore etcctacncien le anatomy ' Whole streets wre in flames at.onee, as shown in| in flames that issued. forth as haveeu in May from” West Rerlin. was exist anymore. We've lived in this 18th century: history -book -etching.. (CP) | /f they had. been so many warcHmMAKER HANGED repeating ja an interview "a cheap plates before. ul, pexer Photo) aoe RESAly SOLE E RATAN. INO. DED Ory Hubert Hubert’ a’ deranzed familiar “complaint of immi- jn a basement . : is Canada : : French. watchmaker de. &rants to this. part of Mr. Schmidt -helped Mr Grau might see the house stumble, | socined by diarist’ Samuel She —ssid__she. her husband fing 9 job with. a_ construction w \ tumble, tumble from one end ~ , ane : and two-year-old son were met company.. Jobs were not as 300th anniversary recalls of the street to the other with Fenye: 08 OA mene Pee aes : plentiful as a newspaper adver- : a-great crash.” tea ha at p eae ge was deposed in 1688 and was laereat in West: Berlin had led é See q urn ee-for the alleged. ar- ‘ or . § A i The search for an explana- . had obliterated” finally~~onty in them to believe, Mrs. Grau . s. . : | , the great fire of London | ter sree ie 2 rece en mat amy ater bat a : scapegoats. and provoked a | Other . consequences — were | sions until they. finally ‘almost “Things are a little hetfer a : ae | Breat post - mortem eontro- |. pitted the known facts. more. beneficial to London and now, but a week ago my hus- By CART MOLLINS . great fire of- London, “‘was oe- | — : . i ? |. The king's fireworks-maker, the world: insurance and fire band wanted to’ pack = and ; -LONDON cP PNG C8 ea hy the isin” ot° elute wee ie Bcrol at war ve | a French Catholic named Rel- brigades, for example : go back If it hadn't heen for = = lamity,"": the English’ parson pairs Puddi oan Net mioue * Suspicion "| taad, : came, under © stispicion The unrecoverable material Mr. Schmidt,“1 don't know, . told his congregation after the tony. for wgan at Pad ing | was rife just 17 years after | and was said to have fled losses were worked out by an) what we would have done He . — ae - | hostile citizens to sanctuary assiduous - 17th century ac- -helped -us- when nobod¥ — else | inside the canopy bed of an countant at more than £10,- cared what happened. to us.” aristocratic patron, Lady Kil- | 900,000, staggers fortune y ; ligrew of Whitehall. ..| in these-days. Insurance _sys- 2 For other Puritans, the fire | tems began to be set up as the aln ampers ne | was divine punishment, But | City. was rebuilt—this time of % : “|i the. parson who. blamed glut- briek and stone. under royal Z Tee patie : | tony was at least partly mis- ‘| order. Nicholas Barbon; a go- early harvest ; ae ahead .young merchant, estab- island furriers Itd. | taken. x The fire did break out tm _ lished the first effective form OTTAWA (CP)—Bad_ weather sos : ; | Pudding Lane—in’ the hake. Of insurance ip 1680 has interrupted the early. har- _@ : |} shop of a man named. Fary- FORMED BRIGADES ~ vest im much of the Prairie : ey are reaming wo: ‘a out Re 7 “Stor at about ‘lam on Sun Within 40 vears of the great green belt. the Dominion Bur- pes ; ; - (epee day, Sept. 2.-Bnt at Pie Cor- fire, insurance companies be- eau of Statistics feports. Crop | ner, a mile to the northwest. gan -protecting their pre- prospects, however, remain fa- the fire was only checked, miums_ with eompany : fire vorable. 2 ‘@ mi 9 ee ao . . i: not halted, on the Wednesday. brigades, the first. in the All told, about .a quarter. ef . . j . ay es : A statue of a fat little boy ‘world. Insured buildings were the’ Prairie crop has hee eole eir : ac : 0 C 00 o . — still stands -on_ the corner, fixed. -with a company plaque swathed. Two weeks of warm ss though it no longer bears the | —a sun, a thistle, a phoenix, -dry weather is needed to bring - = : inscription _ that once’ pro- clasped hands—to show each _Jate-sown crops to. maturity 2nd Fashions that maatch the stride of claimed: “'This boy is put up ‘brigade which. property to speed and harvest, the ‘bureau - ag ae : | in memory-of-the late fire of save. ‘i _ said. : era - : Ls : om ae mat every ~‘‘going college gal... from | London occasioned by the. sin The confusion . of firefight Ina» report based .on__tele. #- oo si Wardrobe from ee 8 % assrooms to —week:end-—-tate--.y py OF gluttony —in- 1666 | ers—sometimes “known to {g- graphed information from crop : See 25 “| SOME BLAMED CHURCH | nore a burning building it it correspondents, the federa! | - rat here in our store! Scholars More serious were the-ac- | hore a rival company’s plaque ~agency said most of the Mani- < ae 4 i : ~cusations of a popish plot.. | —finally combined as a single “toba harvest activity is im the . . - ere ar flock to. see_ our selections... and -Thesé persisted even after a | force in 1832 and became @~ south. “Manitoba yield and qual ca 3 tae ws } . ‘| Parliamentary committee con- | municipal brigade in 1866. ity are better than expected, - se any y 4 amey, fo. cones: them (dor mae owe | cluded in January, ..1667, that-.|-London insurance companies with wheat-at 20. to 30 bushels = - “ wardrobes. Jom the. march of the : ; “nothing hath yvet- been found still contribute to: the costs' of: an acre and barley 25 to 45. ; i @ a ea J to argue the fire to have been | the London fire brigade. ~ ~ Harvesting was interrupted by = ws: zs ee : campus swingers. . You'll pack a | othef than the hand of God | . Present-day -town.. planners ..coal,showery—weather-tast-week-|— . P : ey : windcamd—}-and motorists lament the fact but should be normal again this | : - : a | | the pedestal. of the 202-foot higgledy - piggledy fashion “Saskatchewan -harvest and Dorie column raised by Sir | than before. Wren was the slowed ripening of. late crops. aes 3 } Christopher Wren as a memo- | atithor ‘of one of five plans The wheat harvest began in the : = ‘ Summerside | rial monument bore the submitted to—the king within -south with the south-central re- Water Street ; ar Stayton ‘ | inscription that the fire was | a fortnight of the fire—all of gion most_advanced. ; “| “hegun and carried on by the | them with broad avenues and Throughout the _ province - a _treachery and..malice.of the--—open spaces: Although Wren ‘= — oo | popish -faction."” The charge | rebuilt 51 churches and St.’ | was erased after Catholic | Paul’s Cathedral in 50. years, } upon us,_a—great— 5 - 5 | the season so very dry.’ that. the City of London was week. i Fifteen years after the fire, | rebuilt im only _ slightly less Wet weather has halted the ae iif an § an COT $ . 78 GRAFTON ST. 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