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IN A NUTSHELL

ANNIVERSARIES. 1851.—Earthquake in Southern Italy ; 14,000 lives lost. 1863.—Field-Marshal Lord Clyde (Sir Colin Campbell) died. 1870.—Battle of Metz. 1874.—Temperance Hall, Moray place, opened. 1900.—Peking captured by Allied Army 1908.—Jra D. Sankoy (Moody and Sankoy) died. A goose owned by a Harrow man enters the house each evening, settle* down close to the wireless set, and listens attentively to the music. Earl Fitzwilliarn has closed Edlington Woods, a Yorkshire beauty spot, owing to damage done by picnickers. Special tyres, 7?it in diameter and IGin in cross section, have been mad® for the world’s largest aeroplane. A bronze head of a wolf, with a ring between its teeth, has been recovered, from Caligula’s galley in Lake Nemi. :

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19290814.2.6

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 20253, 14 August 1929, Page 1

Word Count
118

IN A NUTSHELL Evening Star, Issue 20253, 14 August 1929, Page 1

IN A NUTSHELL Evening Star, Issue 20253, 14 August 1929, Page 1