IN A NUTSHELL
ANNIVERSARIES. 1841. —Sir "William Alartin appointed Chief Justice of New Zealand. 1852.—General French born. 1862.—First stone laid of arch of Lyttelton tunnel. 1895.—Pasteur, famous chemist, died. 1902.—Emile Zola, French writer, died. 1909.—Tug Duco lost with all hands. 1918.—Bulgarian request for armistice refused.
London’s 142 hospitals had a total income of £3,811,000 last year, Austrian authorities have forbidden parents to register children with the Christian name, “Hitler.” Foreign nobility is cheaper now in Hollywood, where grand dukes who formerly got £S a day now receive
only half that sum. Barons and j countesses are rated at £2 a day.' I Eight British towns—Boston, Bridge* I water, Carmarthen, Grantham, Hartlo. I nool, Lerwick, Margate, and Tiverton—- ; hold the record for having no fatal street accidents last year. At a meeting of the Gisborne. Racing Club it was decided that the Government he urged to reintroduce the doubles totalisator, the telegraphing of money to the totalisator, and the publication of dividends.
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Evening Star, Issue 21219, 28 September 1932, Page 1
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161IN A NUTSHELL Evening Star, Issue 21219, 28 September 1932, Page 1
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