The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 23, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 3 October 1912 — Page 7

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N the dusty records of the great anaritime world’s movements the ,-bTief entry of the missihg x J > awl I Pandora will read Irke I this: { i , “Pandora: yawl. Penth, Australia. Captains Blythe I and Arapakis. From New York for London, J/uly

4 "prl fed i JM M

20, 1911. Not reported.” —Maritime ■ MisCel. The words give no intimation of the mystery, or perhaps tragedy, which lies behind them. Only to some bronzed skipper who knows the North Atlantic in all her moods will their meaning be clear. These two words are all the world has time to give to the fight of two brave men against the unconquered strength of the sea, against starvation and thirst, against the winds and the storms and ice and unbearable heat. In some cases “not reported” tells merely the story of a schooner lost through carelessness, but in the case of the little Pandora and her brave skippers a volume might be written of their adventures. Theirs is the story of the call of the sea. the song to wh/ch their ears had been trained for generations and to which thej’ listened once too often. Three years have passed since they heard it the last- time, and more than a year ago the Pandora left New York harbor for London after her thrilling voyage from Australia. She has never been, seen since she dropped past the pilot’s boat. • No vessel passing in or out of New York or any other North Atlantic port has ever sighted the sturdy little yawl. Now she has become a part of that mysterious fleet of which the Flying Dutchman is the flagship and which has the Sa/gasso sea as its place of gathering. ' The story ,of Capt. Samuel Blythe and Capt. Peter Arapakis is one of two men who saw more than the tepray in a breaking -wave. To them the sea but meant life and liberty, freedom of action and thought, and for years they made it play its part. Then the waves rose and demanded their dtie, and the Pandora, with her skippers, was the toll. i The Pandora was 36 feet long jyid of generous beam for her length. Her keel was stocky and dwarfed and her mainmast the size of a derrick boom Her sails —she had three sets —were of the best grade of heavy naval canvas, and as for interior fittings, she had none other than demanded by ab solute necessity. The Pandora was not for pleasure saye in an inverted sense. She was to sail around tbo world, but her owners also intended to make certain nautical observations 1 which they hoped would be of value to the world. So, .one fine day three years ago she sailed out of Perth harbor, provisioned for a four months’ cruise and with two men on board who had / answered to the call of the sea. The Pandora was bound for Cape Horn, but she was to call at several South ' American ports for fresh supplies. The voyage across the Pacific was uneventful. fair winds and a calm sea was prevailing all the way. Along the Chilian coast they put into two harbors for food and water and as each day passed their admiration for the little Pandora grew, for she was proving worthy with every new emergency. So far the sea had permitted the Indignity of two men in a thirty-six foot boat and had left them unmolested, but just after they set out to

Making Yourself Fit

trouble isn’t so much with ready-made clothes as it is with readymade men, Life remarks. It is perfectly possible, not only for sculptors but for scientific craftsmen, to find lout just what the proportions of the human body are and to design models which will set properly and bang properly. If these shirts and coats and waistcoats do not fit you, something may be the matter with y<?u. The

Footstool Church. Mr. Raymond Unwin told a story redating to the building of St. John’s church, ’ South Square, Westminster. The architect, he said, was reputed to have worried Queen Anne about the design. Her majesty at length losing pa‘tience kicked her footstool over and remarked in anger: “Build it like that!” The architect fulfilled the royal wishes and the church was built as it stood today—with corners protruding up■ward liko the four legs of a stool. — jßeynolds’s Newspaper.

round th> Horn it rose in majestic indignation and began to refute their theories. If it were not for the unmistakable signs which such an experience would have left on the yawl the tale of Captain Arapakis could hardly have been believed. But the dents which the compass box had made on the cabin roof and the scar on Captain Arapakis’ head were enough proof without the photographs of the Pandora after the storm. The Pandora ran into bad weather tw’o days after she started around Hie Horn and before she had passed the entrance to the Straits of Magellan. There was a wind of about sixty miles velocity and it had, during the course of an afternoon blown up waves from sixty to seventy feet in height. Toward evening the wind suddenly veered completely around, with the result that the top of each wave was blown back and folded over, much after the manner in which a cook would treat a piece of dough out of which he intended to make a Parker House roll.''"The little Pandora was trying to live out the storm under a try-sail and sea anchor and was succeeding in her usuaj manner, much to the gratification of her designers and builders, when the sail was carried away by a gust and the kedge anchor went by *the board. It was the third they had lost during the afternoon. • ' As soon as the restraint of the sea anchor was lifted the Pandora swung into the trough of one great wave. Up and up she climbed on the wall of water until it grew thin and weak at the top and was folded back by the wind. The wave broke ’ just above the yawl and crashed bacjt, carrying the little vessel with it. Then the Pandora turned completely over and for a space of twenty seconds everything in her cabin, including her skippers, rested on the root. By the law of precedent she should have sunk like a cannon ball, but the Pandora was not built along , those lines. She righted herself and lived, but her main mast had been snapped short and all of her rigging, with the exception of the jury mast, was acting as a flail as it followed along in the trough. It was half an hour of hard work before the foul rigging was cut

Years Devoted to Sleep

Remarkably Large Part of Man’s Lifetime Spent in More or Less Happy Slumber. “The days of our lives are threescore years and ten,” sings the Psalmist. and the man or woman who attains that age snends years of his life in doing what are regarded as common, daily actions. The average person of 70 has spent no fewer than 23 years of his life in bed, assuming that his nightly sleep had been eight hours throughout life. Most people about fifteen minutes a day over the care of thelr teeth - The septuagenarions have thus spent almost a year in this way. How long have they spent at table? Allow hall an hour for each meal, and the answer is six years. They eat on an average one loaf of bread a day. In all their life three miles of loaves have been consumed, supposing that the latter are put end to end. Including tea. coffee and milk, 300 barrels of liquid have been accounted for. The office man of 70 has put In five years in walking' to the station and to

remedy is not to have your clothes made to order, although other considerations besides fit enter into good clothes; the remedy is to have yourself made to order. . For this purpose there exist physical culturists, osteopaths, chiropractors, bone setters and ordinary surgeons, "and even the old family doctor might help out in a pinch. It is quite feasible to have yourself designed so that, no matter

Cures Hams by Electricity,

A Cincinnati packer some time ago discovered a method of curing hams by electricity. He found that by introducing an alternating current through the pickling brine the haras could be cured in from thirty to thirtyfive days, as against ninety to a hundred by the ordinary method. A large plant in Cleveland is now curing meat by this process. The plant generates direct current tor use to various ca-

away. All night the Pandora tossed in the storm, but she came through on top and was into port under her jury sail. So great had been the force of the storm that long of the copper sheeting which covered her hull had been torn away. Perhaps this fact accounts for her later loss. With a new mast and another set of sails the Pandora made her way to New York and she reached Quarantine more than two years after she left Perth, phe looked like some sort of a dejected mongrel when I went on board her as she lay at the Atlantic Yacht Club anchorage, but her captains were proud and spent sever: ! hours telling of their little yawl’s performances under the most trying conditions. ~ Captain Arapakis was of Greek descent, but how far back it was he could not tell. He was not an un* imaginative sailor, for his talks about his life and his boat were full of philosophies that come only to a man who has spent solitary months at sea. The little cabin of the Pandora contained a number of books, such as one would hardly expect to see in such a place.- There were Darwin. Spencer, two volumes of Balzac, the sea tales of Kipling and Kingsley. Captain Blythe was more the usual type of stolid British merchant skipper who always talked with one eye cocked to the weather and his other resting with a pleased expresion on some pet line of the Pandora. While the Pandora was in New York one of the Greek societies gave to each of the men a medal. Two weeks in New York was enough for them. They had hoped to take the Pandora out of water and repair the torn copper hull sheathing, but the weather was so fine and the winds so even that they decided to get under way for London. On July 20, 1911, they hoisted sail and started. That is as far as the story goes. Three months |ater Captain Blythe’s brother, J. Forbes Blythe, of Cove? try, England, wrote a letter to the custom house in New York asking for information about the Pandora aWd saying the little vessel had never ported in any English or Continental port. No information could be given to him.

ll’s office. A woman of 70, even simple In her dress, has taken seven years in clothing herself. A man and a woman who have reached the allotted span of lite will have used 600 pairs of boots between them, 400 dressqs and 500 hats.—Lon don Answers. Genius and Marriage. “The married life of a genius is usually unhappy—so is that of his wife.” The speaker was Miss Helen Gould, who —apropos of her reported stinging rebuke to the Colorado parson whe wished to banish old maids—was discussing marriage in general. “To be the wife of a genius is bad,’ she said, “but to be the husband oi one is worse. At a musicale I heard a lady say: “ 'Who is that man with the softbosomed shirt and Windsor tie?’ “ ‘He is the husband of the vronden fulJcontralto, Viva voce,’ her companion answered. - “ ‘Yes,’ said the other, ‘but who was he before his marriage?’ ”

where you meet, a coat or shirt that is properly put together, you will fit it Documentary Evidence. The geography class was In session One small pupil astonished the class by stating that in a certain section of South America there were talking monkeys. When the teacher questioned the statement, the youngstei opened his geography and triumphant ly read: “This region is inhabited b? a species of monkey; properly speak ing, apes.”—The Delineator.

pacifies, and a portion of it is converted into alternating current by means of a rotary converter, to pro vide the energy used in the curing vats. Horses Used to Mix Clay. Horses are used to mix the clay by treading it in many Argentine brickyards instead of employing more expensive machinery.

MENAGERIE A COSTLY THING Captured Animals Cost Circus Man No Small Penny, Though Their Value Is Fluctuating. “I want to take little ’Georgie’ to see the animals,”, is what every father says when he starts away from home on his annual visit to the circus, and the same bluff goes for little Gwendolen on Commonwealth avenue and little “Mike” at the north end. Fond relatives always are glad of the excuse to teach the youngsters all about the animals—and see the circus themselves—but the chances are that they do not appreciate the true significance of a menagerie. To the circus vis- i itor it means strange animals and thrills, popcorn and peanuts. To the circus company it means something like $750,000, says the Boston Transcript. This figure, however, is by no means arbitrary, for the value of wild beasts fluctuates remarkably. Today the value of a rhinoceros may be , SIO,OOO, but let a few more rhinos be hauled from their African lairs and i be put on the European market, and , the value per animal may drop 50 1 per cent. Another thing that affects the valu- . ation of wild animals is the question i as to whether they are acclimated or ! green.” The mortality rate among the latter —animals fresh from the jungle —is exceedingly high. The wild animal that has demonstrated the fact that it can live in a cage, particularly a cage that hops, skips and jumps over the country with a circus, has more than tripled his value. A fresh chimpanzee from Africa is worth from S3OO to SI,OOO. Let this same chimpanzee prove by his continued existence that cage life is not mortally tedious to him and immediately his value leaps to $2,500. Aipetner instance is the giraffe. In -spite of the fact that it is a rare beast, its market value is only about $7,000. The simple reason for this is that the giraffe in captivity has such a small chance of continued ex istence that the average showmar does not care to gamble $7,000 on it. The elephant market fluctuates a great deal. The price of a “green” elephant runs from SI,OOO to $5,000. Get that elephant used to captivity and his value jumps; but train him to stand on his head, ring a bell, beat a drum or balance himself on a rolling ball, and immediately his value soars. That is why the herd of 40 elephants in one big show is valued at more than $2.50,000. The animals born each winter in the menagerie of a large circus are worth about $40,000. Japanese Wedding. “From beginning to end, curiously enough, religion does not play even a small part in a Japanese wedding. No priest appears at any stage. On the evening of the great day, the bride, with a white silk covering on her head and face, and entirely dressed In pure white—hot the color of joy, but of deep mourning, for the girl is now parting forever from her parents, more so, indeed, than if it was death that had taken her away, for after death her spirit would continue to be present in the home of her childhood, whereas now both body and spirit are gpne— is carried to Imr new home. There she her mourning for a festal garb.M^ feast is celebrated ♦ * ♦ the young couple withdraw and • * * in the presence of only the middleman and his wife and of two young girls who act as servants, they pledge each other in very solemn form, three times from each of three cups. This ceremony * * ♦ is the essential part of the marriage celebration.”—Japan of the Japanese, by Joseph H. Longford. Power of the Mind. Some people give up all mental effort as soon as they get sick or afflicted. but there are some minds-that no pain or suffering can subdue. The most powerful warship afloat, which was launched in the Thames in England last February, was built by a man who can neither sit nor' walk. The most famous of our racing yacht designers is blind, but he could build a boat that was good enough to defend the America cup year after year. The head of {he Thames Iron Works company that built the Thunderer is a victim of chronic rheumatism and passes his days lying on a trundle bed upon which he is wheeled all over the immense w*orks and oversees everything that is going forward. He knows every foreman in the shops and has the design of every piece of machinery by heart, and they point to him as a wonderful example of the truth of the old adage. “The eye of a master- can do more work than a thousand hands.” Would Never Do in New York. Russell Hastings Millward, the explorer and author, whose recent dis- ■ coveries in Guatemala have aroused much interest, w-as being quizzed the other day by a friend about life on the Isthmus. Millward happened to mention the fact that in many Central American cities there was a novel system in vogue for the collection of bills. The official collectors, clad in uniforms with brass buttons, much scarlet and gold braid, are put on the trail of a creditor and follow the unlucky one day after day until he gives up in despair and pays the bill. The friend was dully impressed. “Great heavens!” he exclaimed, “think of what havoc that would work in New York. Why Broadway would look like an Austrian parade ground.” Swift Turtle. July is the month when the turtles come out of the sea and lay their eggs in the hot sand of the Florida keys. A turtle will accomplish this task in half an hour. She will emerge from the blue water, crawl up the beach, well out of reach of tide, dig a trench four feet long and a foot deep with her flippers, make in the middle of the trench a deep cylindrical hole, and, laying in this hole about one hundred eggs, she will fill up both hole and trench again and crawl back to the water. If the hen could equal this celerity there would be more money in chickens than in Standard Oil.

EXHAUSTION OF THE SOIL. Prof. E. H. Farrington of Wisconsin Agricultural College, in speaking of Soil Exhaustion, made a very interesting statement regarding the selling of iairy products from the farm as compared with selling the grain producdons directly off the farm. Here is »hat he says: “There is a great difference in the (mount of soil fertility removed from .he far-frPhy selling crops as compared with the selling of cream and butter. The constituents of the soil that bePQme most easily exhausted by farming operations are the nitrogen, the phosphoric acid and the potash. These ?ach have a market value per pound md can be bought in commercial fer:ilizers. They are also contained in | farm manure. “An analysis of different crops and of milk, butter and cheese will show bow much of these 1 various constitu- I ents are removed from the farm when a certain, quantity of these products ire sold. For instance, by using the ■ same prices per pound for the follow- [ , ng crops, etc., we find that the fer- | ] tilizing constituents taken from the ‘ I soil when one ton of hay is sold from | j ihe farm have a value of $4.34, one ton ; i as corn $5.36, one ton of wheat $6.63, ' pne ton of milk $2.17, one ton of skim- I i milk $2.31, one ton of butter'49 cents, ane ton of whey 84 cents, and one ton pf cheese $14.19. The value of each ton of these different products is well known. For Instance, the ton of hay may be sold for $20.00, while the ton i of butter pf cheese $200.00. These figures show, , however, that if the crops raised on ; the farm are fed to the cows and either cream or butter only is sold, then tor every $600.00 worth'of butter only 50 cents worth of fertility is drawn from the farm.” In encouraging the farmers to engage in dairying, Prof. Farrington says: “Dairying keeps up the fertility of the soil as already explained. “Skimmilk is very valuable to tho farmer not only for the reasons given, but because it is profitable for a farmer to become a stock raiser—that is, raise calves, pigs, poultry, etc., rather than a crop producer and a seller of grain. “Dairy products, butter and cheese, are not bulky to market, being much more concentrated and the cost of transportation less than it is for hay, grain, etc. “Dairying utilizes waste land, such as stony pastures, timber and swamp land, which may be used for pasturing the cows if these are kept, but which otherwisesw-ould give no returns. “Dairying gives profitable employment during the entire year and idleness is not good sos either man or beast.” A visit to the National Dairy Show at Chicago. October 24th to November 2nd next, will give every one a short course in dairying that cannot be equalled anywhere in the world, and all such matters as here discussed by Prof. Barrington will be illustrated by the world’s experts in every branch of the dairy industry. Opportunities to view the best representatives on American soil of the leading dairy cattle, and meet the. men who are devoting their lives to the advancement of the dairy industry Is here afforded. Everything will be shown in a big, broad, educational way that all may be enabled to keep abreast of the most modern methods in appliances and the best results in breeding and feeding dairy cattle, and preparing for market and the marketing of all dairy products. Adv.

WISE YOUTH. SsJv - The White Boy*-Humph! Why don’t you fight? The Moke —’Cause I draws de white line, dat's why.

BABY IN MISERY WITH RASH Monroe, Wis. —“When my baby was six weeks old there came a rash on his face which finally spread until it got nearly all over his body. It formed a crust on his head, hair fell out and the itch was terrible. When he would scratch the crust, the water would ooze out in big drops. On face and body it was in a dry form and would scale off. He was in great misery and at nights I would lie awake holding his hands so that he could not scratch and disfigure himself, i tried simple remedies at first, then got medicine, but it did no good. “Finally a friend suggested Cuticura Remedies, so I sent for a sample to see what they would do, when to my surprise after a few applications I could see an improvement, and he would rest better. I bought a box of Cuticura Ointment and a cake of Cuticura Soap and before I had them half used my baby was cured. His head is now covered with a- luxuriant growth of hair and- his complexion is admired by everybody and has no disfigurements.” (Signed) Mrs. Annie Saunders, Sept. 29, 1911. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card “Cuticura, Dept L, Boston.” Adv. The Style of It. “How do they serve meals from that lunch wagon?” “I suppose they serve them a la

PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Coior more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors all They dye dye any garment withouV ripping apart. Write for free booklet-~~How to Bleach and Mix Colors. MONROE DR U G COM PANY« Q* y»__ n . ir

ill.. MJ 'igW sS “I Got This Fine Pipe With Liggett & Myers Duke’s Mixture” St All kinds of men smoke Duke’s Mixture in all kinds of pipes—as well as in cigarettes—and they all tell the same B story. They like the genuine, natural tobacco taste of art Rr, d then granulated—every grain pure, high-gmdo tobacco — that's what you get in the Z W Afyers Duke's M ixture sack - You get one and a Aaifouaecs of this pure, mild, delightful tobacco, unsurpassed ia quality, fcr 5c —and with each sack, you g* K 0 get a book of papers free. * Now About the Free Pipe Inevery Duke's Mixture we now pack a coupon. You can exchange these coupons for a pipe or for many MQ * other valuable and useful articles. These presents cost not ono MB penny. There is something for every member of the family— B®* skates, catcher’s gloves* tennis rackets, cameras, toilet articles. suitcases, canes, umbrellas, and dozens of other things. Just send MU ( us your name and address on a postal dgg as a special offer during Sep- BES tember and October only we will BSE send you our new illustrated cata--MajMHfe'il -AfowiL logua of presents FREE of any t i ' charge. Open up a sack of lAggM ■■ f I'| v-2 V j £ J/yau .Duke’s Mixture today. | . I . ■v - -g Couficns from Duko's Mixture may tm assorted tvitk tags from HORSE SHOE. Mug i- J.T., TINSLEY’S NATURAL LEAF. I K F/l GRANGER TWIST, and Coupons from WS I . FOUR ROSES l/rc/ot double cotd>on). • kWWM&L, fig PICK PLUG CUT. PIEDMONT CIGArettes. cux cigarettes, and other tajts or eoupous issued by us. W gfflvmaibjg Premium Dept. ? St. Lords, iY' : ' Mo - 4® 1 Purham,N.C. ? ESjtfl 111 I li

Almost Entirely. “Dick” Quay, at the Congress hotel in Chicago, was talking about a notorious politician. “And he’s worth eleven millions,” Mr. Quay ended. “And is an entirely self-made man, too, I believe,” said a correspondent. “Entirely so,” Mr. Quay answered, “except for nine thick coats of whitewash that have been applied to him by various investigating committees.” A Paradoxical Ballot. “I should think the women voting in the new suffrage states would strike one obstacle.” - “What is that?” “How can she matrons of a party cast their maiden vote?” Wasted Energy. Nimrod (just back from fishing) —I got this string in less than an hour. Nimrod’s Wise Wife—There’s a fish store nearer than that, John. Impossible. “Jaggs is a man of loose conduct.” “Hardly, for whenever I see him he’s tight.” Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces intlammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Adv. When a man does get even with another he is never satisfied until he gets a little more so. CURES BURNS AND CUTS. Cole’s Carbolisalve stops the pain instantly. Cures quick. No sccr. AU druggists. 25 and 50c. Adv. The principal difference between a cur dog and a thoroughbred is that the cur can pick his own living. Red Cross Ball Blue, all bhie, best bluingvalue in the whole world, makes the laundress smile. Adv. A woman has no business, with a family if she can’t take something old and make it over into something new.

For Headache Nervousness and Backache due to disorders of Kidneys and Bladder W.LDOUaLASZV SHOES *3.00 *3.50 *4.00 *4.50 AND *5.00 U W FOR MEN AND WOMEN , ' F Soyswear W. L. Douglas $2.00, $2.00 $ $3.00 School Shoes, because one pair will positively outwear two pairs of ordinary shoes, same as the men’s shoes. . , W.L.Douglas makes and sells more $3.00,53.50 & $4.00 shoes Vw'/ than any other manufacturer in the world. ?<. 11 $ \rT2W THE STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER 30 YEARSThe workmanship which has made W. L. Douglas shoes famous the world over is maintained in every pair. Ask your dealer to show you W. L. Douglas latest fashions for fall and winter wear, notice the short vamps which make the foot look smaller, points in * .hoe particularly desired by young men. Also the conservative styles whidk have made W. L. Douglas shoes a household word everywhere. If you could visit W. L. Douglas large factories at Brocktoh, Mass., and for yourself how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they are warranted to fit better, look better, bold their shape auA wear longer than any other make for the price. Fast Cole Eptth. CAUTION.—To protect you against infemr shoes, W. L.. Douglas stamps his hame on the hot. ton,. Look for the stamp. Beware of suhrtitutes. W. L. Douglas shoes are sold in 78 ere stores and shoe dealers everywhere. No matter where you live, they are within your reach. ' If your dealer cannot l uppfcr you. write direct to factory for catalog showing how to order by mail. Shoes seat every whore, delivery charges prepaid. W.L.Dougla*. Brockton, Mass.

The Army of I Constipation Is Growing Smaller Every Day. CARTER’S LITTLE A LIVER PILLS responsible —• they . ! w; •.’Jx < stipation. | • I lions use If*! them for k Biliousness, Indigestion, Sick Headache, Saßow Skui. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS llf you feel‘-out of sorts”—“run down’’or’‘(tot th® j blues.” stiffer from kidney,bladder.nervous diswwws. chronic weaknesses, ulcers, skin erupUo»s,piUesJt®_ : write for my FKKE book. It is the most > rre.ru cuvwmedical book ever written. lttellsallaboattk.se ' diseases and the remarkableeu res effectedbylheNow . French Remedy “THKRAPION” No. 1. Ko X Nu» and you can decide for you reel! if it is the remedy for ! vour ailment. Don’t send a cent. atesehnthr i if REE. No* follow-up"circulare. DrdheClercaMU i Co., Haverstock JRd., Hampstead, TRIED AND PROVEN ■ SHESSS3S EBKOBHBHR Result of Twentv-five years’ pe rental experience with ITCHING PILES. Wehwwhk it has done for others. Cooling and healing I Send for sample and you will bless the day. ! T. & P. REMEDY CO., iO7 West4Bth St.,NewYorkCß, i r, FARM-HOMES at Fractioe I S' Illi 131/1 of the usual cost in the big ilvliUU Co-operative Colony . now locating here, A.B.HAWK, Crystal SwlassjtktMe* lo*i> EARN MONEY NURSINS Shows llo» PHILADELPHIA SCHOOL FORNI'MHKS 222. Chestnut Street . Pa 1 A WatsonE.Colcmau, Wasta ■! PATENTS W 1 ? JjS SORE EYES _T._ _ W. N. U., FT. WAYNE, NO. 40-1912.