The Brussels Post, 1919-12-4, Page 6Preparing the Car for Winter. 1
Motor car ownere who wish to store;
their touring modcle until spring
should have in mind proteetion against
cold and dampness, two flutters which
can do more injury te yetis' car than
20,00(' miles of delyieg.
The first and obvious thing to do
is to look over the gree end see if it.
is weather proof. If it meld be her
metkally sealed it would be ideal,
but as this is impractical, do the next
best and see that all cracks and tepee-
iege are closed up, doors tit properly.
and generally prepare it so that your.
ear will he snug and warm as possible,:
Now as to the preparation of the car;
itself;
1, Wash and thoroughly clean the1
car and jack it up from under the
frame. Do this by placing four wooden
trestles under the frame, the best
points of support being elose up
against the two front shackle bolt
brackets of the front springs. Sup-.
porting the chassis in this manner
relieves all weight from the springs"
and wheels.
2. Remove all tires from the rine,
and completely exhaust air from the
inner tubes and rub them down well
with soapetone, sprinkle with French
chalk, fold them up perfectly flat, care
being taken not to crease them, and
place in inner -tube hag. The tires
should be laid down flat. Store both
tires and tubes in a dark place.
3. Clean and shellac all rims.
4. Drain off water from the radia-
tor and cylinder block. Flush out the
radiator with hose. To insure that
all water has been emptied from cyl-
inder block and water pi•pes, start up
motor and run slowly for a few min-
utes. This will convert any water
into steam which might have collected
in the water jacket. Replace any
pings removed to draM on the water
and elose drain cocks.
5. Empty gas tank and drain car-
buretor.
0, Disconneet electrical ('tbles at
battery and remove the battery. Smear
entte of cable with vneeline. Fill with
distilled water and Store in ti dry
phew where there is no danger of
freesing. Battery shoull. be taken to
n charging stationand reeharged
every two months in miler to best pre-
serve it.)
7, Release clutch by propping open
with strip of wood between •clutch
pedal arid floor board.
e. Wipe all machined parts of motor
and transmission clutch and steering
gear with oil -soaked rag. Cover motor
completely with canvas burlap or an
old rug, and replaeo hornet.
0. Oil all steering joints and con-
nections and wrap up with rag.
10, Fill -shackle bolt cups with oil
and wrap up with rag. Fill and screw,
down all grease cups.
11. Pry open spring leaves and in-
ject graphite and bandage with ;met
er canvas.
12. Put the top up and cover the
vhele ear with a dust sheet which will
completely cover the car on all shies
and attach tape or cor'ls to the ends
and tie together underneath the car.
Also write the following reminders
on a tag and tie to the steering, wheel,
eo that you will be sure to do these
things when you want to again drive
your ear in the spring:
1. Fill radiator with water.
2. ;See that the draM cocks are
closed.
3. Empty oil sump and refill with
fresh oil,
Thoroughly ell and area.e as per
oiling chart.
2. Refill battery with dietilled water
' and charge.
6. Flush out carburetor with gas.
If the above features are carefully
' carried out, you can leek the door of
your garage and have the. assurance
that when the time comes to USS your
car ngain it will Iodic and drive as well
I as the day you put away.
Shouting Round the World.
An invention which promises to re-
volutionize wireless telegraphy and
wireless communication of all sorts is
at present exciting the attention of
scientists.
It is known as the thermionic valve
or tube, by which it is possible to
shout a whisper round the world.
It may be likened to a series of ;
valveless pumps, one above the other I
-sometimes called a cascade. The ;
principle in this cascade is that each
takes up the water at the full speed
with which it is delivered, by the
lower pump adding to its owu niomen-I
tum. So with this thermionic valve or
tube, which is used both for receiving
and stimulating wireless waves. Each
successive compartment multiplies I
the sound transmitted to it.
Some idea of the capacity of this in-
vention may be gathered from the fact
that a telegraphist in London can lis-
ten to a conversation taking place in
Feria, or even New York, by no more
elaborate process than a bit of wire
fixed to his bed -post, or a piece of rah -
bit -wire stretched on his roof!
An egg is mostly water. Keep a
good-sized galvanized iron bucket be-
fore your flook, and see that it is
filled each momning with f resh tool
water, My twenty pullets drink a
bucket of water or milk each day.
Gambling in Bulbs.
Among the strange chapters in
trade, the growing and export of tulle
bulbs is probably one of the strangest.
The trade first started about 200
years ago, and developed into such a
mania that fortunes were mitclegatfa
lost by gambling on bulbs. Enoriatous
prices were at one time paid for rare
varieties, and although these have
dropped, two or three guineas are still
often offered for special bulbs.
For a while flower culture was a
secondary consideration, and like the
run on "rubber" shares in recent years,
speculation in "tulips" ran mad. Tulips
were introduced into Holland from
Constantinople and the Levant. Mil -
Hone of bulbs aro exported from Hol-
land every year.
Haarlem 1s the great centre of the
bulb -growing industry, tulips, narcissi
and the daffodils being cultivated.
Tulips became very popular in Ameri-
ca some years ago, and an extensive
trade in bulbs grew up between Demme
and Canada.
General farm management must be
learned lee actual experience on the
farm, and the colleges should aid
students as far as possible by operat-
ing as nearly as possible under actual
farm conditions.
Color's Influence o gre, ans
A New York physician who gives ;
more credit to nature than he takes
for himself in the cures he has
wrought is a great believer in the ef-
fent of colors en the 1,1110111) race. To;
a patient who showed *Iglu,' of getting
into a critical state as tile resalt 4)1
extreme nervouehess he handed out
the following advice in a light, 11012 j
joking manner, but with enough seri-
ousnese in his tone to warn his hearer
of the latter's condtlou:
"Hike to the mountains as fast as •
you can get there. Get away from the
depressents that are so numerous in
the city. Nature is the beet teecher
in these thinge. Yee will find in e.011
smeemelings in the r-,,tltry no Meek
and very little red. 11111 mot yollow
are combined 01 the re tee.11. i
green.'
There is no doubt. 0.e 0,,.or-,0
tends, that the wearing 'elet'S: 1.
an evil effect on beth t,;:e
epirits. These who have made a epe-
Malty of occult etudies point to the
fect that Meek le the itolor of Saturn,
the Wisest of gloom inlefortune, fa-
tality an other evil things. Black was
never wiypn by the ;••ncielitc, who made
ethey of Ile-' ,ven their
mouthin5 was white.
If one iviehee to bo happy and brils
liant blue is the color to wear, in the
opinion ef. t1ieo who have the Idea
that thee here delved into things oc-
celt. 11 lo suet that the spirit of evil
hetes blue inteneely and flies at the
I eight of it. nine also calms the nerves
and therefore it is a good color for
22,0 '14.0)1ltO1l5.
sholdd lo ',:•.,:r1w1..,!1 from the
re, 142 0- who aro ill. 41(111 MIS
51 2101111,5 ,..;Mot 417A tends to 111-
c1.:4,..c fever. T11,1 liaith*:.vits and the
5111 1i''Y sivairJr1 the ef.
21 2 2 -.Acts '.71-aut they adopted the
1!%-r4 as their etahlein.
Soldiers' Settlement
CROSBY'S KIDS Schetne.
t
1111‘) \;11111tre.1‘1.17.1At4I'ilil14P11(1.1 111Virt't.C111).toillgm'i.'1ho
returned soldieee in Canada, etatisties
show that one man in every five de.
eired to follow a new calling on re.
catering civil life. and this naturally
mewed a. disturbatme, not necessarily
unrest, in - tho indtuarial re -adjust -
meet of the eountry, unquestionably
the tendency to (tango is due to a
gentled disinclination to yeturn to old
conditions, and et desire Inc better.
merit of the 'dation in life. This
epinion Is recorded in the light of ex-
perience gained through contact with
mot 111 various phaees of army life.
The majority of men who have
served in the Canadian army have re-
; turned, or intend to veturn, to their
previous occupations. They are satis-
fied to resume the work they were en-
gaged in when the call came which
traneferred them from the fields, the
factories, the offices and places of
trade and commerce, to the stern buss
ness of war; but 1111111)' of these
iattentivsiotlyel.lers havennW
plaed 0110, and
desire' to enter different spheres of
Of 273,444 members of the Cone..
tm
Heligoland a Bit Shelter
If the special 00111111I))01511( to which sort that there gs perhaps 110 better
the peace 00100112010111311 e
cntrusted the place (101131 tho European covet for
task of 11111 titspastti Ht,ituaktmt 1110 the establishment of 0 wild bird re-
' servation. Although restricted In size
former Lerman Gibraltar in the North _1-lellgolniul is lees than ontefifth m
Sea, wishes a suggestion for 110 "Ill' a mile squere-41 to in the centre of
tion of the problem. 0110 le 000red be' the path of bird migration and at its
tile Royal Society for the 1'';) 131011 piebest point is 190 feet (1110V0 8011.
of Birds in England and bY (be Per- lovol, a lighthouse to flying birds, The
1(11(110111 Wild Life Protective Pond of ' 5150 uf the 11111011is against it, it is
the United Staten. These two sock,. sesin the shape of a 10,13100 chop, a 1010ties, Retire' Jointly, uggt that the short of a mile in length and 1,700
island be made an International Dere- feet wide at Its greatest breadth. Bet i
dine for birds, 011observation station 11 would act es le resting home for '
011(1a sanctuary for 1(111'1(111'feethermi birds on their amend fall and spring.
friends in their migrations north and
south and vice '00(80 along the coast
of Europe.
In this solution of Heligoland there
is implied no. suggestion that the
"war" island be returned to Germany.
In fat the bird lovers of England and
the United States much would prefer
to have it b0101110 an international ems- of Heligoland and num) are to bo de.
session with the world supporting it struyed under the supervision of the
in the endeavor to Promote the wild Allies by German labor and at Ger-
life ot E01'0110. The movement has maey's expense. They may not be re -
Saskatchewan's Growing
; been indorsed 13y L. Mardiner, secre- constructed or any similar fortifica-
Dairy Industry.
tary of the Royal Society for the pro. Gone built in the future,
diarmy in France, England and
Lection of Birds, and also by 1)r, Wit- Thereeore, argue the lovers of wild
Ti;e ennual report 4)1 1118 Dairy then- Canada, after the 80111t53100, who cumItem T, Hornaday of New York, a feathered life, Heligoland will becoifie
-
missioner of Sasketchowan for the pleted the demobilization. question- ' trustee of the Permanent Wild Life eat for further military or naval duty
year closing. April 20, 1919, shows a aires issued by the Department of Set.. Protective Fund. The suggestion has and its size will prevent its use in a
remarkable increase of 1,3.70 per cent diers' Civil Re-establishment, 53,890 been forwarded to the peace confer- commercial way. Turn the $7,500,000
for the PrOVillee In Dairy production. expressed a desire for a change of 110 emu and in turn to the Special 00111- Germany expended to make it the
The Detry industry in Saskatehe. cupatIon. This -represents 19.7 pso mission, which is deliberating over its
wan has grown enormously during the cent, of the active forces of that Ita812. . .
past few years. Time was when Sas- period. It was found that 87,771 men ; The backers of the movement as -
hatches an was 0(1151 101(111 solely 05 0 desired to engage in agriculture and 1 ........-
pilgrimages and no longer be a men-
ace to the peace of Europe.
The treaty o2 peace with Gerintiny
made 110 reference to tho final din-
posal of the island, The treaty pro-
vided
"The fortifications, military etitab-
lishments and harbors of this island
Gibraltar of the North Sea to waste,
but retain the island as a mark of
peace and refuge for birds.
graimgrowing province. Now, without stock vaising. Of this total, 172,218
losing any of their reputation for the had been so employed previously. Of
the latter, 4.175 desired to quit that !
occupation and enter others; while I
20,209 intended to desert previous
callings and take to the land, leaving
in Saskatchewan had to send outside a net gain for agriculture of 15.553
of the borders of the province for new reeruits. Mach has been written
their butter. Not B0 now, however, of the drudgery and toil of the farm,
growth of wheet, basketehewan hom-
ers are showing that they have not
all their egge 111 one basket. 11 13 not
a great many years ago that farmers
They make sufficient butter in the
province to supple all the domestic
requirements and large quantities for
export as well.
During 1e18, ninety-seyen cars con-
taining 2.425,000 pounds of creamery
butter were sold to outside markets.
The quantity ('08 011001 equally di-
vided between Elestern and Western
Canada. This year, a considerable
quantity of Saskatchewan butter has
been sent to the United States as well
as to European markets,
The velue of the ninety-seven cars
sold to outside markt ts in 1013 was
about $1,215,000, The total quantity
of creamery butter manufactured in
1913 was 5,009,000 pounde. Nearly a
million dollars is invested in plants
and equipment of Saskatchewan
creameries.
-et
Noses.
There are fourteen bones in the
nose.
The sense of smell is said to be
more acute iu the dog than Mn 'any
other animal.
Some physiologists declare that the
olfactory nerves are destitute of the
power of sensation otherwise than to
detect odors.
"Nosology" does not refer to noses:
The term comes from two Greek
words, and means the scientific classi-
fication of diseases.
Lobsters can smell as well as ails
mals which live on the land. A piece
of decayed meet suspended in the
water will 140011 attract a crowd ot
hungry lobsters.
The nose of a swordfish teats weap-
on of offence and defence.
Caution Regarding Canned Foods.
No canned products should be used
which show any one ef the following,
signs of spoilage:
1. Gas bubbles in the jars, the tops
of the jars blown, and a squirt of
liquid as the top is unscrewed.
2. An odor somewhat resembling
rancid cheese.
3. A mushy or disintegrated appear-
ance of the solid parts of the contents
of the jam.
Do not test for spoilage by tasting
but discard all products showing these
signs.
Local Time.
Mr, Hall was metering through a
country vilifies. and, meeting a small
boy who was driving a couple of cows
home from the fields. stopped his car
and asked:
"What time ;,-; it, my lad?" "Almost
12 o'clock, sir," answered the boy,
"Twelve o'cloA!" exclehned Hall, "I
tigeethi. it Was more."
"It's never any more here," return-.
el the boy in surpri;;e. "It jest be-
gins .at 1 egaln."
and, on the other hand, Of the lure of
the city for the men oi tho laud, Yet
here is proof that not only is there'
an increase of those seeking rmea life,
bet that the professional, mechanical
and general classes, till of which are
city dwellers, offer the greatest num-.
ber to swell the land army.---lereder-
ick num. Bureau of Canadian Govern-
ment Information.
Mariners.
Men who have loved the ships they
took to sea,
Loved the tall masts, the prows that
creamed with foam,
Have learned, deep in their hearts,
how it might be
That there is yet . a dearer thing,
than Thome.
The decks they walk, the rigging in
the stars,
The clean boards couuted in the
wetch they keep -
These, and the sunlight on the slippery
spars,
Wil haunt them ever, waking and
asleep.
Ashore, these men are not as other
men:
They walk as strangers through the
crowded street,
Or, brooding by their fires, they hear
again
The drone astern, where gurgling
waters meet,
Or see again a wide and blue lagoon,
And a lone ship that rides there
with the moon.
Memorial to tritish Troops.
It is announced by the War Office,
says a London despatch, that the Bat-
tle Exploit 'Memorials Committee has
under consideration the question of a
0)010001111 10 the troops of the British
Empire who fought et Ypres.
The Belgian Minister of the interior
stated recently in the Belgian Chem.
ber that the authorities at Ypres had
been late in passing the plans tor res-
toration, An official meeting had
taken place 02 representatives of the
Belgian overnment, town authorities
of Ypres and the British War Office
Conunitteo on Battle Exploit Memor-
ials, and preliminary measures had
been taken to protect the Cloth Hall,
the Cathedral and the adjoining
bowies from desecratiom
These ruins in their actual state,
besides being an eloquent testimony
of Teutonic barbarity, would remain
a place of pilgrimage to which the
allies may come to perpetuate the
memory of those soldiers of theirs
who died to keep MOM the last strip
of 13olg01n soil,
Buy Thrift Stamps.
British Columbia's Record
Crop.Apple
, British Columbia fruit growers are
feeling elated at the success of their
apples in the 'Settee States. The
buyers from across the line contract-
ed for a large part of the cm) while
still on the trees, offering a price
above the market price then etuling.
This is really the first year in which
British Columbia apples have been ex.
ported to the United States inany
quantity. They are meeting the
American apple In the open market,
and apparently finding favor. Large
quantities of the famous Macintosh
Retie, grown in the valleys of British
Columbia, aro now being shipped to
New York.
In addition to the American orders,
about 300 cars of apples have been
shipped from Brtlsh Columbia to On-
tario. Between one hundred and one
hundred and fifty cars are also being
shipped to Great Britain and aboat
eighty cars to New Zealand. Added
to these consignments, are, of course,
the large shipments made to the
Prairie Provinces of Canada, where
there is an ever increasing demand
for British Columbia apples.
In Full Uniform.
Although a soldier with an umbrella
seems as absurd as a soldier with a
fan, Mr. Bernard Baruch of the U.S.
War Industries Board, met one the
other day in a deluge of rain. He
stopped his car and said:
"Young man, this is the first time I
ever saw a soldier with an umbrella."
"Well, boss," the youth answered,
"maybe it's the first timo you ever
saw a real, live, up-to-date soldier."
Some "Big 'Uns.
"Behold there came tbe champion,
the Philistine of Gath, Goliath by
name," whose height was "six cubits
and 11 51)011"
When you realise that a. cubit is
equivalent to one foot nine inches, it
will he seen that Goliath must have
starenearly twelve feet in his san-
dComiug to more recent times, the
nearest approach to Goliath's height
is one John Middleton, of Hale, Lan-
cashire, who was nine feet three
inches high. His limbs wore in pro-
portion, for record mentions that his
hand measured seventeen inches in
length.
King George the Fifth'e -porter was
nearly eight feet tall, while Frederick
the Great had a regiment of Grena-
diers in which no man was under
seven feet high.
The Westminster Aquarium ex;
Whited, in IMO, an eight -foot Chinese
giant, named Chang-Woo-Gow.
The tallest woman of modern times
was the "Amazon Queen." She 310118
born in the middle of the nineteenth
century, and topped tho rule at eight
feet two inches, whilst Ann Swaim, of
Labrador, was seven feet tall,
A Russian girl bids fair to go down
to posterity as the tallest woman, for
at the age of twelve she measured
nearly seven feet, and is still growing.
1)
Deriding What Is New.
it easy to pour emitompt on what
is strange to us, 'Phe first impulse of
human nEttere 18 to deny the extols
ence of that which lute not come with-
in our O31011 experienee, The invention
will nut work bemuse we never sew
anything Illte it in opermeon, erbe
novatIon is impossible because it
breaks a rule. The fact 1; not a fact
1.)0C11110(1 our ereed (Moe net oontaln it,
We are reedy to Issue a weeping tle-
nial because our 8011803 1111111 not pro-
vided lei with corroborative cvklence.
The philosopher flagella finite that
to a largo 1(11111100' of people o. 11010
idea gives positive pain. &Mention
spells unrest, It makes us meteor'.
touts. Wo have eeen something bet.
ter than what 1031 are, but we hate to
admit that it is bettor. Improvement
is puseible, and it is not pleasant to
(Weever that Ivo ave not perfect, Let
us, therefore, shut the floor on the
Prospect of ameliorative alteration,
We are satisfied with what we are
The knowledge we have menthe:1d ens
flees for all our wants. :Moro would
destroy the bliesful state of ineoceeco
which lets 115 11(1(112 WO have nothing
important to learn.
But if a man respects his own mind
-if he feels that he might. 08 3114111 113
dead as to stagnate or vegetate ehe
will open all whitlows to the 5111.118
that blow. He will be patient with
ideas he has not heard and devices he
has not examined, for them might be
something in them. Ho will be
strangely gentle with an awful bora
who may have a glimmer of sense or
the scintilla of an idea.
1asrw t
evelgl.etti"at()C' .12
01:taaeoratherregrde1
801110 one as a rabid crank? Was the
path strewn with roses for this man
who insisted that the force 'which
lifted a kettle ltd would haul a train
ofcars? 1)10 we sympathies) or Kneel.
at the man who aseured its that 3100 dld
not have to wait till we got to Heaven
for our wings? To propuse any 110001
scheme is to startle at once 0 swarm
of doubting Thomases and carPing
cynics who drowsed in. tile shade ef
the wall till the pilgrim came along.
The fashions of the time are am
Proved as sensible by thoee who are
fashionuble, but as they look back on
the dark ages they ale) filled with
ridicule, and could they leek ahead to
what will be they would be equally
prevolted to mirth. Wo behold over
the rim of the world the things they
do in Africa or India and we tind tho
way of life in those far parts ridicu-
lous; but those who live there may
be reciprocally amused at our out-
landish ways. It is not wise, asented.
ly, to dismiss whatever is foreign 11
impossible, whatever is new as pre-
posterous. That exclusiye atttude 120-
p00e501hes our lives.
Most Rubies Come From
Must Deposit $100.
Under the new Immigration Act
adopted by the Bermuda Legislature,
every person who goes to Bermuda
to work must deposit £20 in the Gov-
ernment Savings leank for five years.
Dogs in Many Proverbs
As 09.0 traces the proverbial com-
ments on doge through the concen-
trated wisdom of the centuries their
their best friends,
But the saying did not originate In
France. It goes hack to the Romans,
Burma.
The greater part of the world's
rubies are derived from the mines of
the Mogok Valley, in Burma, where
much modern machinery and the very
latest tools are employed to facilitate
the examination of a large amount of
byon, or ruby bearing clay, Near by,
in the valleys of the Bennetts, the
search for rubies is conducted very
much as it was centuries end centuries
ago. The digging and washing there
is a matter of hand labene but they
aro still getting the rubies, the finest
rubies In all the world.
In the Mogok Valley, however,
where large workings are always in
hand, a scientific system has been in.
trothiced with -corresponding results.
Similarity is most impressive. For who say that "whose is desirous ot The 'Von 18 extracted by the open
example, the Latins told one another beating a dog will readily ilud.a stick." quarry- method at 1801001031 all the
to "Beware. at a silent clog and still The Italians inherited it froth the surface down to the ruby bearing clay.
waters," concluded that "Dumb dogs Romans. When it got to Denmark -lit This is then dug up, carried on trolleys
and still waters are dangerous," and took this fovm: "He who events to it,oasteleied teiti.ereittullghtteiviseietigaa110111,11,aleirce,11i1eAtel:
ly scrutinized for rubies and Eminels.
In addition to the cern ruby, pinel
or bales rubies, Etre found in large
that "Dogs bark and the wind cavries find a stone." Tho Germans also say, quantities in Nogolc. Whenever the
it away," but the French, Spaniards, very characteristically, "a bashful dog rubyisie;ntitllmlr;tlt
Germans and English, who have in- never fattens." Betharetraaleefaahiai,
herited more than they 'wish to as- As one proceeds into Asia he finds varying shape, 'While the true ruby
knowledge from ancient Rome, all conflicting Views about dogs. The itiiitaeybrojesettikeihteol:Jseammletgut,t1.7(11-11dittililt111107111,..e,'1,
magnesium, the present:, of which !i:!•:.•
110118 its hararlEISS by
-There is in use at these mines an in-
Strumnt called the d!chroseope,
whereby rubies are sepeteted from the
spinets with the utmeet ,iseuracy red
certainty. 'Phe gem Is plaecd in the
instrument in 5001 a way that a ray
of light passes through and is polar -
lied. The 11110 ruby hrtoWl a pure red
ray, 00711re05 the diaelovez 11
slight tinge of blue with the retl. •
Among the comparetleele few nue-
ufficent spluels 111 0:,.:4;005`9 may bo
mentioned the groat Aelecourt ruby
1n the Tirkieli crewn.
Math Letters etr1 White.
There is a tendency on the part of
railroads to adopt sgus with white
-
lettere on 11, black background, not
realizing that the black letter on a
whits) background is easlor to read iind
can be seen at 1, greater dietatemThle
tones's in an thieve:Item wey front the
structure at the retitle of the eye.
13141,012 lettere grow et the
link of vision and are still recogaiz-
able, while at the some diet:ince white
letters grow thisker and ceenot bo
tinguiehed. There 111.0 circinustanees,
beweVer, when it to necessary to Use
White lettere, but in such woos 16,2;1
Witty will be fulnrovod it they are
made with a thin istroke 11,210 etrontelle
t;
htod Black lollop as) Mere die -
tinct 12 (01149 with a heavy etrolte,
now nutilber exeeta 1,,000.,
Wornott in'aperty 403101151)500
ere 144
characterized an, insklious traducer as
"A dog that bites silently."
The Russians, who were only eliglit-
ly influenced by the Latin races, say
hang a deg is sure to lind a rope, or
"to say that the dog bites the sheep."
And the Germans say that "when a
num will throev at a dog be will soon
agree that "barking dogs do not bite,"
and we have also in English the warn-
ing, 'to have a care for a silent dog
and still water," which is clearly a
tree translation of the Latin original,
The French tell us that "there are
good dogs of all sizes," but this has
not prevented them from discovering
that there are dog haters who Will
stop at no villany to satisfy their
grudge, Thus "a man who wants to
drown hie clay says it is mad," France
is so near klegland. that this saying
Tamils, of southern India, whose shins
are al etmy mark for edam teeth, say
that "on finding a stone we rice 110
dog and on 500015 a dog wo find no
stone," as though a dog existed only
to be stoned. A little further east, in
China, We find that "dogs have more
good in them than men 1111012 they
have," a saying that could r ot have be -
corns embedded in the proverbial wis.
dom of any but a kindly race with a
friendly feeling for all created things.
And the Chinese Ow say that "a dog
messed the Channel and became ac- hes 110 aversion to a poor family," as
01 heated he spite of the fondness of well as "a dog under:geoids his 11108-
a nat,on of animal lovers for one of tor's nod,"
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