The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 2, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 8 May 1930 — Page 7

The Crippled Lady °f Peribonka Oliver Carwood WNU Serviee <©• 1929, Doubleday Doran & Co, Inc.)

CHAPTER Xlll—Continued He had an odd feeling of not knowing what was going to happen as be left Ennerdale and entered his home. He could feel himself "under a strain rousefl by Mie nearness of explanations which It was Claire's right to hear and his duty to make. It would he hard to talk about Carla; as he must, even should Claire In her wisdom ask for nothing. Claire was grafting tpr him tn her room. This act of thoughtfulness pleased him. She knew that In a peculiarly embarrassing moment they should be alone.' Both were sensitive. each a little fearful of what one or the other might betray In their first greeting. He was thinking this when tie went to her. As her door closed behind him. his first Impression was of a Harm tilled with flowers. Claire, like Carla, loved them. The air was delicately fragrant with, their perfume. Claire was bending over u mass of white roses when be entered, ami then Jame toward him with both hands held 'out. She did not put her. arms about him or offer him her lips., yet never had he seen such a light of happiness shining In her-eyes. He made a movement to klss her.’.but she drew back In such away that her mt seemed scarcely to be repelling him. . ■ ' "Not now. Paul. Not until we have talked. Then, if you want to kiss me. you may.” She was astonishingly free ot the tension which he bad anticipated.’and ns she stood with her "ngers clasped warmly ttbout his. telling him how glad she was that ne wrtt» alive. .and . how doomed to despair and unhappiness she would have been if he turd not lived to return to her, he wondered If it were Claire, his wife, who was talking to him. t»r another Claire —some’one lie had never known. For she seemed, all at once, to have drawn herself farther away from him than she had ever been, Opt tn such a sw-et and friendly way tluA the change in'tier seemed one which? could not bring hurt with It. , It was Claire's figtit that was bard e x t. It was golr ? to take a Joan of Arc courage to say what she bad planned to say. She made him sit rear her. so they were facing each other. •'Paul, we are going to he honest Yon will promise me that?" lie knew tie was preparing to equivocate as ht gave his word, A He to sa-e Claire, from hurt was more credit Hable than truth. The Impulse to - shield her, tb keep Oom tier all sus piidon of his loy.e for Carla, swept over him as he looked nt her. She was like the flowers in the table, ns easily crushed, he thought. More vividly than ever ae saw the differ ence between tier and Carla. Carla would fight on through tragedy, even to death. Claire, suffering more. Would driMip and fade like a (>etal In a rose, shrinking from the quicker ■ and more physical action which the other would rind for r.imself He was not analyzing hlniseil. or her The thought — tike a picture—lmpressed Itself upon hint arid Claire, gazing at him in these epic, Introspective mo (j merits. as if partly seeing the swift visioning In his nilhu. surprised him by <«ylng, “Paul. I wonder If yon know, Just how much I honor and respect you I wonder If you realize how fine you are, • have failed to play my part—ns your wife. I na v e not let you know these things as=t should. The fault In oilr lives Is not y ours., It is mine. I tiilhk I could have made you love me Yet I saw ttie unfairness of It unless I could make myself love you first. I hoped and prayed for that. “There wasn i love whence were • married, oh t-ilher side. You did not love me. not In the way you l wanted to love a woman, and my feeling for you was an immeasurable respect and admiration for an n< nornble gentle man It seems trite and supermini to kny that the Interests of our fam Hies brought us together, does it not? But It Is true, t wanted to love you ° But I discovered—after a little while — that something was In my way." "I know." he found hlnwielf saying “You couldn't love an animal. Claire 1 was that, until the day you nt me to Hie Mistassini. I have been blind and brutal (»i«l knows 1 am only buff worthy of you!” “And Carla?" ° .. So softly did his wife speak ('aria's name that for a moment it seemed as if he had not heard II “We have promised ourselves to be honest." she continued. “Du you retnernber a letter 1 wrote you from Paris in which I said I was coming to you and that I was sure a more Ira

Commuter Ready Victim of Star Salesmanship

There !s an art In salesmanship. This has been observed before, but It was made plain to the commuter, when he bought for the princely sum of s2u ■ dilapidated car minus paint and with all the fenders buckled. Knowing nothing about cars, as soon as trouble developed. and It wasn’t very long before It did. the commuter hauled the wreck to the garage. The garage mnn was a salesman. He looked the car over and be didn't even gndle. He handled it like a highpriced purchase. Then be turned to the commuter. "Been driving long?" he asked. "No." the commuter admitted. "Well." res|M>nded the garage man In a confidential manner. “I’ll give you a tl|x There are a lot of car thieves around. When you leave your car even for a few minutes, turn the Ignition key and take It with you. To make doubly sure that nobody steals the car. turn off the gaa.” . I’be commuter s opinion of the car

portant thing would happen for us in your woods than any Journey, like your promised one aruund the world, could give?" * "Yes. I remember." “Do you know—now —why I told you that?" “I have only wondered." “It was liecause 1 bad seen, because I had •end between the lines of your letters, because I knew at last a great love had come Into your fife, and that Carla Baklan had brought it to you. You do not love the. You love Carla. And. loving her. yoy would sacrifice every tiling for my sake." His fabric of lies was gone, his soul laid bare under the gaze of his wife's eyes. “1 want to hear you say it. Paul.* She was repeating Carla's words whispered to him in the blackness of the earth. “That is why I came to you there. A woman may hide her love frbm a man, hut out from? another woman, and it was impossible for Carla to keep her secret from me. Yours was still more open, though 1 saw you making a magnificent tight. I know, Paul. But- I want to hear It from your lips. I must hear iL Do you love (’aria Haldan?" “Yes. I love her." “More than any other woman tn the world?" “I could oply love one woman tn that way." j . lie was conscious‘of having struck a deadly blow, a hurt tie would rather have died than inflict upon Claire, l.t mill dragged itself from film In spite of bis determination, and he waited for tils punishment, its effect on her. Claire's eyes did, not waiver. She did not flinch. A starry, radiant light came Into her face, and she gave a breathless, hulf-articulnte cry, not of shock or of pain, but of Joy. He wiw the blood flushing tier cheeks, the tenseness leaving her body, and they sat for » time in silence, neither making tin effort to si*enk. Then tie said: "I tlipucht I would hurt you. And you are glad!" - “les. I am glad. I thank God you love Curia." She rose to her feet, and took a letter from the table. She was trying to keep from crying as she gave it to him. “I ward you to rend It and then come back to me," she .said. “This evening. If.you will. Paul. I lack the courage to tell you things. You will understand when you o|>Cß If. alone." He went to the Kirke-Dunitid build Ing and lost himself In the human stream going up with the elevators On ’otip of the floors was an office, al wnys ready for him. He shut himself in and lin ked.the door. He o[H-ned the letter. There were many pages, closely written in Claire's hand. With almost childish candor they began to tell him of a woman’s tight to triumph over herself. Like an redolence they breathed the soreness of.Claire's faith In 1 ••rself. Without emotional- effort she told him that unless (’aria had come Into Ids life she would never have let film know what she was about to reveal. There was na man In the world more worthy of a woman's love than he. she said. Yet, from the beginning; she had been unable to build] tier respect and admiration into greater things she should have given him , That was .one reason why. repelling the Thought of making him cure greafiy fur her when she could riot love him, she hud kept herself away from him so much. Ones p:tssion for another. In its holiest form. Was guided by a single force. One might] stem that and hold it back, hut it was Impossible to make it die. Such a love was Carla’s for him. Then she spoke of another, man it was of Jimmy Ennerdale. the scirti’tor. who wns driving his way so persistently to success. She bpd accepted ,Jim my almost as a brother during her girlh<|od, bitt Very soon after tier marriage the truth Jiad come, to tier, she said, and had grown stronger with each year. She caret for Ennerdale just as Carla cared for him. It was Paul who might have been tier broth er. vVith such frank and um-mbar-rassed simplicity did she confide in him. She knew that Ennerdale loved her, and re|»eiiteiJ that a man could not conceal that fact from a woman, though he did not express It In words atjd she was sure Jimmy bad no Idea of her sentiment toward him. This love for Jimmy was the other reason, the (none vital of the two, which hnd held her aloof from Paul. She loved Jimmy's work and wanted to become a part of it She had never held it to be |»ossible. and had not thought of It In that way until she knew that he loved Carla (TO Be CONTINUED)

soared high. He hadn’t considered the probability that any thief would waste his time «»n the wreck that he owned. If the garage man thought enough of It to warn him then It must be a good car. Probably a high-grade engine he mused. In fact, he was so Impressed that when the garage man handed him a bill for $75 for 30 minutes’ work he didn’t even feel annoyed.—New YorkSun. Inventor* Kept Busy To each succeeding uge It appears that "Everything seems to have been done." So It seemed, writes Merle Thorpe in Nation's Business, in 1883 to the head of rhe patent office, who wanted to resign because he felt the limit of human Invention had been reached and that there was no further need of his services. By 1860 there were less than 43JMX) patents recorded; by the end of the century. G4P.WMI. Today the applications fvi patents bate risen to 9U.UUU a year I

FARM t POULTRY INFECTED CHICKS SPREAD DISEASE i ■ —, Tainted Birds Immediately Become Menace to Others. (Prepared by the United States Department ot Agriculture.) white diarrhea, also known as pullorutn disease, may spread from infected Chicks to .healthy, chicks in. : the same incubator, even though the chicks are not actually in contact, the i Cnited Silates Department of Agricub rare anpdupces In reporting progress in the study of the cure, prevention, and eradication of this serious disease. !>rs. Hubert Bunyea and W. J. Hall ] have demonstrated the danger of this i type of infection in investigntidns ! under for two years at the bui reau of animal industry experiment I station, ilh-tliseiia. M<l. Their ‘work wns part of a program of study formulated by the bureau and the National Poultry council. The committee in ] charge Os these investigations .consist- (•<! of Dfs. M. Dorset, M. A. Jull. and H. Bunyea. all of the bureau of animal industry. The eegs used in the experiment chine from two flocks, one known to have the disease. Jhe other free fram i-it as shown by the agglutination test. trays for the two kinds of < ggs were used in the incubators, and 1 tie chi|Cks, xvjien hatched, were prevents! from coming in contact with those In the other trays, in four different types :of incubators It was found f that pullorutn disease was transmitted from inftsted eiiicks to normal checks. The-infection ranged, from -45 per cent in ti e still-air type /to SI per cent in-the agitated-air type. The control chicks, l.a'tched in separate incubators from eggs obtained from tion-reacting liOiis. showed less , than one-tenth of one per cent infeci tion. ! In all cases the spread of the dis(>a<e (|c< urr t e<l within a period of from IS to -JI hours after hatching. Apparently a's a result of air circulation. In no case did any. of the chicks from one (ray have direct contact, with i those] In tray. . Deaths of healthy chicks-exposed to the disease showed that even when the chicks I were brooded under the most favorable conditions, a large percentage lied‘within two weeks result of . the Infection. The expo’ritnent showed that from the tpomeat »it comes out of the shell an Infected chick immediately becomes a meitace. to all other chicks in i the i same incubator. An Infected ! chuk is also a menace when placed in ISbr'ooder with healthy chicks. Incubators for Ducks Is Now Common Method The desire to Incubate their own eggs has, been bred out of many -strains of ducks, particularly the klnj Eor this reason the egg must be batched.in incubators.or under hens, j l)uck eggs should be gathered daily, kept in a cool place and turned daily. They should be syt as soon as possible; after laying, as they do not keep as well as liens’ eggs. In incubating duck eggs artificially, they are handled about the same as hens’ eggs except that the tare should be held at 102 degrees for the first' three weeks ami more moisture' supplied in the machine. may be tested for fertility on the i fourth or fifth day. Don’t Waste Sunshine Needed by Chickens Even if you are feeding cod liver j <di and have substitute glass in the I windows, don't waste any pure, raw sunshine when you have a chance to tie it on the chicks Be willing to open the windows and doors on still. <unn.V days. Then watch the weather and close them up when clouds and raw .winds appear. Let the chicks epJloy tlte warmth of pure raw sunshine wlienever possible- A little extra in caring for the windows and the ventilating system will be repaid in the improved vigor of the chicks. Eradicating Lice For eradicating lice fram poultry j’e sodium fluoride. It kills all varieties of lice —body, head, and feather. This chemical may t»e applied by dusting or by dipping- Either the "chemically pure" or the “commercial'’ -grades may be used, but the latter is cheaper and more easily obtained. I Young chicks require very little, and a pound of powder costing about 50 I , cents should kill the lice on a flock ] lof 100 chickens. Dipping the fowls is still easier and cheaper. Clean Ground Best The chief of the poultry section of ] .he lowa experimental station says: j Even though the old birds show no ■ ] signs of infection, it is not safe to i allow young birds even to have access i to the same yards, runs or ground r where old stock have been. Just try I getting the 1930 chicks on dean | ground entirely away from the old i ‘ birds. Infection can be easily carried I on the shoes, by old stock, and in many other ways. Prevention is always the best cure. — Moving Pullets The pullets will not be disturbed So much if they are moved at night. Shipping crates or catching coops are convenient appliances in transferring the birds. In catching and removing the pullets from the coops they should be handled easily and carefully to avoid injury. It Is generally necessary to confine the pullets to their new quarters for a period of two weeks before permitting them to have free range. And then put them on clean ground.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

Old Crops Often Found Disguised New and Fancy Names Give Impression of Discovery of Value. (Prepared by the United States Departmen. ot Agriculture.) Every now and then some old but little-known name gets considerable notice in stories and advertisements in the press. Many people get the impression that by some magic power a new crop has been discovered which has all the good qualities and nbne of the short comings of the crops commonly grown. - To some extent this is the situation which now exists regarding proso or / “hershey," says Dr. John H. Martin, cereal crop specialist of the United States Department of Agriculture. Proso is not a new crop, it was introduced into the United States during the early colonial period, and has been listed in rhe catalogues of leading seed dealers for mapy years. Neither is it a "magic” crop, but it has both good points and bad points. Called “Hershey.” Hog millet, broomcorn millet. Early Fortune millet, and Manitoba millet are the names by which the crop is best known, says Doctor Martin, but it usually is called “hershey" in northeastern Colorado and the adjacent sec- ’ tions <>f Kansas and Nebraska. Proso Is grown mostly in the Dakotas and in northeastern Colorado,' but is found occasionally on farms in many other states. It is best adapted for growing as a late-sown catch crop in the northern great plain states. Even there it usually does not yield as well : s other grains sown at the proper time, but can be sown later than other spring grains. Proso usually Is sown on land which was not prepared in time for other crops or on which some other crop has been destroyed. It matures within GO to 85 days from seeding. Not Satisfactory. Proso is not as satisfactory a hay crop for lat ? seeding as Sudan grass and the foxtail millets, adds Doctor Martin. Tn the southern plains where grain sorghums yield well or in the northeast where buckwheat is adapted, these crops produce more grain from late seeding than will proso. Seed of this crop is an ingredient! of most mixed bird feeds, .many chick feeds, and some scratch feeds. It is a satisfactory Teed for poultry, hogs,, and sheep,' and can be fed also to. horses and cattle. Proso lias been found to be practically equal in feeding value to corn and barley when fed to pigs or lambs. Vitamin E Is Essential for Breeding Animals For many years chemists have known that some substance in the germ of corn and wheat vitally affected the growth and development of animals. Just recently the discoveries of Herbert W. Evans and George O. Burr, published in the proceedings of ' the National Academy of Science, gave official recognition of this- substance as a vitamin. It is called vitamin E. It is found abundantly in nature; its chief source being in the seeds and -green leaves of certain plants as well as in some of the glands of animals, as for instance the liver. This vitamin has a great deal to do with the reproductive ability of animals. Some authorities claim that it is solely responsible for the very existence of living organisms. Researches indicate that animals, either male or female, that are deprived entirely of foods containing vitamin E appear to be absolutely Incapable of reproduction. Spraying Potatoes Is Profitable Practice Surveys by the Pennsylvania Potato Grower’s association show that a man cannot afford to raise spuds unless he sprays often and carefully. A number of growers of long experience averaged 359 bushels for spraying an average of 12.6 times, while plots treated otherwise the same, except that they were unsprayed, yielded only 241 bushels; Careful spraying gave an increase of 61.4 per cent, a difference which will.always boost the net income. s . Water Is Essential for Good Health of Trees Trees need enormous quantities of water to keep them tn a healthy condition. the United States Department of Agriculture. An apple tree thirty 'years old gives off approximately a barrel of water n day in summer, and a good-sized birch tree gives off nearly two barrels of water on a hot day. A single oak tree is known to have given off into the air in the , form of vapor more than 100 tons of water in a single growing season. 1 I 1 I 1 i l-H I I H-W -l' Hill I d -HAgricultural Notes 111 IHIId I 11 H-H-H II 11 IW The safest insurance for the dairy 1 cattle breeder Is the use of a proved ! sire: the element of risk Is reduced to the minimum when proved sires are used in breeding programs. • • • The value of the nrilk produced In the United States in a year is equal to the entire national gold reserve, which is four times greater than that of any other country In the World. Particular care must be exercised at this time of year to insure the herd sire not being neglected. Allowing him to run with the herd during the hot season is an especially bad practice. • • • The barn should be provided with a system of ventilation, so there may be an Intake of fresh air without causing a draft on the cows. There should be four square feet of window surface per cow.

DAIRY SUMMER MINERALS • NEEDED BY COWS Calcium, Phosphorus Store Up Energy for Winter. To Insure healthy, robust animals, able to produce the milk needed this coming winter. Dr. L. A. Maynard of the Cornell university agricultural experiment station says that cows must have plenty of calcium and phosphorus during the summer. The usual summer ration of pasture and grain, he says, does not contain enough of these elements. Further, experiments show that cows will make better use of mineral supplements during the pasture season than at other times. The liberal feeding of minerals now will not only provide for current needs but will also enable the animal to store up reserves for the period when their assimilation of food is more difficult. A mixture of equal parts of steam bone meal, finely ground limestone and salt, or a mixture of two parts of the bone meal and one part, of salt a good mineral supplement. The simplest way is to place one of these mixtures in a box In the barnyard where the cows can eat it at will. Some sort of a cover should be built over the box to protect it from rain. It is a good thing to give tire cows access to one of these mixtures even when the grain mixture Contains minerals, because the grain fed during the summer may not contain enough. A better way to feed tlie minerals, but one that takes more time, is to mix three to four ounces of the mixture with one of the grain feeding each day. All animals, whether dry or milking, should be fed the extra minerals. Aside from common salt, calcium and phosphorus are the only tnirierals that are needed *as a mineral supplement. The purchase of a complex mineral mixture containing laxatives and tonics-is a waste of money, says Doctor Maynard. Water Materially Helps Maintain Flow of Milk Water is as necessary to life as food, but how rarely is it given ad; equate attention? particularly in .the summer. To maintain the summer milk flow at the highest pitch a liberal supply of pure water is needed. No matter, how good the pastures, the cows cannot produce well if they are deprived of water. For both digestion and assimilation of food, water is necessary. It the temperature of-tlie body, and provides for the water content of the milk, which is more than B<> per cent by weight of its volume. Experience has proved that cows in milk need approximately three pounds of water for every pound of milk produced. Very heavy producers then may need from ten tofifteen gallons in 24 hours. During summer many herds are not supplied with enough water to meet this need. If the water is not before the cows all the time, they shpuld have access to it at least twice a day. preferably three times during the hot weather. If this is done there will not be a .falling off in the milk supply. , — ——— i ——— ■ t Poor Market for Dairy Products Is Advantage It is generally conceded that a poor market for dairy products .works to the advantage of' the efficient dairy farmer, because marly of those producing at a margin are bound to go under in the crash of butterfat prices. Therefore the efficiency with which a farmer feeds determines: whether he will remain among those producing at a profit. Herein lies the one great hope of the producer of dairy’,products, for in the narrowing of his field of Rmpetition, low prices at the same time provide for under-production and a subsequent, rise in prices.

Dairy Hints 11l -I -H-H-: I■l -I- I -H-H I I-l'l-l -i-Hri-A gond pasture increases the "content” in contented cows. • • • Soy beans are an excellent feed for dairy cows. They take the [dace of linseed meal or cottonseed meal. • • • So long as the heifer is on excellent white clover and blue grass pasture It will not be necessary to feed her grain. • • • About 87 per cent of milk is water. For plenty of milk, don't forget to give the cow all the water she cares to drink. Cows should be kept in well lighted, well ventilated, clean barns. Flies can be kept out by hanging burlap over the windows and doors. • • • Feed which would taint the milk should not be given immediately before or during the process of milking. • • • The partly covered top pail, in some form, is preferable to the open top. Pails and other dairy utensils should be of the seamless type, or flushed with tin cover up the seams. Dairy calves make excellent veal. It Is the whole milk rather than the breed that gives veal its desirable quality. • • • High producing dairy cows frequently suffer a severe strain on their calcium reserve and need to have that reserve replenished. • • • If ewes are gaining in weight when rne ram is turned with the flock, the lambs will be stronger and more vig orous and the number of twins increased.

5 ■> 12 of My Famous Simplified Cake, Pastry and Hot Bread Ju MB' Recipes, Inside Every Sack of Gold Medal "Kitchentesf«d”Flour. GetFullSetatYourGrocer’sToday. CidlJU Luscious Dessert z Baked By 123 Women K With Perfect Success -Hg First Time And Not A H Sh singZe Failure. Actual I H| Mixing Time 3 Minutes, w 4 <1! I Ob/ AY An Example of Simplified Baking STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKEToday women everywhere recipes for unusual cakes, cookies,’ are changing to a new, far pastries and hot breads, including, simpler way in baking—Gold that for Strawberry Shortcake, Medal Flour illustrated above. and Special "Kitchen-tested” Recipes. Get a full set of these remarkable recipes from your grocer today Just to find out how it works, ac- inside every sack of Gold Medal cept Free 12 famous simplified “Kitchen-tested?’ Flour. "Listen in to Betty Crocker, 9:45 to 10:00 A. M. Tuesday and Thursday, Central Standard Time, Stations: KYW, WOC, or KSD.” L Gold Medal J I, "Kitchen-tested" -JI “ ■ Ei-OHR ™

Great East Indian. Festival Kumbha Mela is the mighty religious festival which occurs once every 14 years in India, ft is then that some 17.006,00 G people come to bathe at the junction of the three great rivers, Ganges, Jumnia and the underground Saraswatl.

yet Coetmti 1 5 Find fr**S ,ii -jMjS= When <\ p®ta illffl P are upset J fgjj ilv ■ Ihy ■ htfi Hr-Su^tS*"—"°L B Baby ills and ailments seem H twice as serious at night. A sud- hJV den cry may mean colic. Or a *• sudden attack of diarrhea—a con- . jPpffljMJgJiJjSJS® dition it is always important to \Su. check quickly. How would you meet this emergency—tonight? tion always on hand. But don’t Have you a bottle of Castoria keep it just for emergencies; let ready ? There is nothing that can it be an everyday aid. Its gentle take the place of this harmless influence will ease and soothe the but effective remedy for children; infant who cannot sleep. Its mild nothing that acts quite the same, regulation will help an older child or has quite the same comforting whose tongue is coated because of effect on them. sluggish bowels. All druggists For the protection of your Wee have Castoria; the genuine bears one—for your own*peace of mind Chas. H. Fletcher’s signature on —keep this old, reliable prepara- the wrapper.

Foot to Head “So you worked your way up from the bottom." ? “Yes, I started as a bootblack and now I'm a hairdresser,”—Montreal Star. Wealth From Quarries Missouri stone mines and quarries produced more than $5,000,000 of material during 1929, reports compiled show.

Old and young can take ,al this family laxative; pngm | free trial bottle! I The next time you or the children need a laxative, ffl try this famous doctor’s prescription which aids jgl the bowels without doing any harm. Dr. Caldwell’s SYRUP PFPCIM* fl Syrup Pepsin, containing pure senna and laxative j f "! jd herbs, is effective in a gentle and helpful way. Its I :a| action is thorough, but it never weakens the bowels. a MPOUMB 'aj It stimulates muscular action and is thus actually — |g g6od for the system. So remember Dr. Caldwell’s | coupn nation Ji Syrup Pepsin when coated tongue, fetid breath, I ’•i«sooht s headaches, nausea, jaded appetite or biliousness || tells the need of a thorough cleansing. Druggists keep it in big bottles, or wrjje Qr. Caldwell’s Syrup lg Pepsin, for a free trial bottle. ~ ■ Jr L.G&agivi Does much to keep a I / iLfrWftßl i f good clear complex- 3 / ion, no matter what A 'JI, J IRwmsH = weather! ' 1 X. " Soap 2Se. Ointment 2Se. and Me . | Y"VI4 \ \ Ik \ ; F Talcum tfc- Proprietor.: Pottar I \XU \ 1 ■* X r Pm* CiWWMlOsa.MaMw,Msi 1/1 I i

Fox’* Nickname Old “Reynard” designating the fox, as well as “renard,” the modern French word for a fox, are taken from a celebrated medieval animal allegory called the Roman de Renard of Reynard, in which proper names were given to each beast.

Opens Easily When opening a can where a key is necessary, place a small screw driver through the end, of the key and then turn. It will, turn easily’ and quickly without hurting the fingers. Transparent Cheats Cheats easily believe others as bad as themselves; there is no deceiving them, nor do they long deceive. —La Bruyere. V

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