Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1920-3-11, Page 4PAGE 4 Dyed Her Faded Skirt, Also a Coat "Diamond Dyes" Make Shabby Apparel Just Like New—So Easy: Don't worry about perfect results. Use "Diamond Dyes," gauranteed to give a now, rich, fadeless color to any fabric, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, -caresses, bloi•ises, stoekings, skirts, children's coats, draperies,—everything) ' A. Direction Book is in packagge. To match any material,' have dealer Allow you "Diamond Dye"*Colo]• Card. E k tter Pa.y The 'Price I)o'r'.t he .ten)pteta ,Lu cheese cheap {r welery, rear Ire -her to pay a fair price snit know exactly 1V11;U volt ere gots ing, You will never be tlorry---Per its a. mutter of money, it is easily the sliestwicelotil ictal, Tote has beau said an ni`ten that everybody by this time should know ib and vet there is no scarcity of Mimea,jetvelry in the land Now to gob pommel —If toe would like to amiss that sort togethee— UOME H11RE If yon would like to bap where nothing but hi0 qualities are dealt in—COME HERE And evenr , at that, no person eve said aur prices were unfair W. R. eounter .ander ;Ind OI►ifciat u er .el Licenses J. A. Ford & Son • FLtOUR &_E'EED yIiIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR— BARLEY OATS and BUCKWHEAT --- LOGS WANTED — QUANTITY OF MAPLE, ELM, IIASSWOOD, BEECH, HEMLOCia, and WHITE ASH. ENQUIRE AT SHOP FOR PRICE, Phone 123 DR. M. A. AXON DENTIST Crown and 'sledge work n Spcctaity. Graduate of C,C.D,S.., Cbioago, and 13,0.73.14 Toronto. sayfletd sn llmtdnvs, Mao- fat to is OR. 11. FOWLER, , DENTIi3T. OHfase over O'NEIL'S pore, Speclsl nitre taken to make dental stet monk as Datniess as •'osstble, Vitnu .;s'uiililg Mr. James Doherty wishea to l - form the public that he is pre- pared to do fine piano tuning, tone regulating, and repairing. Orders left at W. Do'herty's phone 81, will receive nromnt attention THOMAS. GUNDRY five stank and general Auction G.ODERIOH ONT farastor6 sues a epeeraiai Cracks 11 NEsr ERA "wane, rism, sly attends t . Terms tameable, oeable, Clinton,'Warmers tale not* ilsoonated Medi.;ai'r DR. "J, C. DANDIER OFFICE HOURS 1.30 p. m. to 3.30'p. m. 7.30p.m.to9.00p.m Sunday 12.30 to 1.30 Other hours by appointment only. Office at Residence, Victoria Street VV. RtCYDDONR ''• BA1UtLST'IU 13OLICITOR NOTAR PUBLIC, F1T0 CLLNTOely'ti. 1511'3,1 H. T. RANO•• El 'y Public, Convey'tncer, Pfinancial and Real,Estate 1NCE:At3ENT—Representing 14 Fire euranoo Companlea, ivisiou ()ourt ionise. ,J.e'Istegare 141. U. McTagga clra9 art Bra2, • 'RANKERS LBEIIT ST, CLINTON • GI:a tDral thanettantii Bela' Her. Wa n:Muted .COTES DISCOUNTED r/ Drafts Monad. Interest allowed til deposits rhe ,McKillop Mutual Pere Insu'raii1Ce d'o fiatlas and Isolated Tosses Peep erty Only insured, Mend iee a ONfor1,h, Ont • • ' Officers J. Connolly, Coderlch, President; Jas. ant, Beechwood, +Vice-Presidentt hos, E, Hays, Seafortb, Secretary. reasurer. Agents • ,Alex. Leitch, No. t Clinton; Edwai t ncbley, Seaferth; Vtlm. Chesney, Bg ondviiie• J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R, G rmuth', Brodhagen. Directors Wm, Ilan, No. 2, S'eafort ; Jahn Ben. l*Weik Dirbdhasest JanisEwers, IlOW& Mondl'M, Maw* Oileloei 4010011 tlstnofly, Go,itriAYl D.y!, Morbeverfu 3, Seefortin .1.,•G, adters...- drt; 1Itlifir BONI i~ ,'Itarleett' Gen of Tree Betirata V. SiCcpsn# .,r227ZS 401107 Canclair "Oh, I don't care whet you think of ale," the girl Interrupted recklessly, "12 I did 'I wouldn't be here. I'd tilde behind the conventional rules of the game afro let yon blunder along. •13u1 I el(n't I'm not gifted with your Whet egotism, Whatever Yee ,are, that 23111 or yours loves you, and if •ypu cora anything for Mtn, you s1Hrld be with bine I would, it I were lucky enough to stand in your shoes, I'd go with 111111 (10'0'1 Into bell itself ghrdly If he wanted "me tor" "Oh 1" . Hazel gasped. ''Are you clean +mud?" "Shocked to death, aren't yon?" Vesta floored. "Yon can't eteder•Stand, can you? I love tum—yes. I'w out' ashamed to own It, I'in no sentimen- tal prude to throw up my hands le her. ror at a 'perfectly, natural emotion. But he Is not for%cue. I dare say I couldn't give him en added heartbent If I tried. And 1 have a'little too much pride—strange as It May seem to you —to try, so long as hole chained hand and foot to your chariot. But you're making ir1(11 suffer, And 1 care enough to want hitt[ to live nil tris days hap• play; He is a roan, and there are so few of them, real then. 1f you can make pini bappy,_Ia! rnmpel you to do so, 1f Livid the power. • You couldn't understand that kind of a love, Oh. I could choke you for your slupdk! ills• lo3;alty. I could do almost anything that would spm' you to action. I can't rid myself of the hopeless rceltless stood he is in. There are so few of his Irttld, the patient, strong, loyal, square dealing ame'n, with a woman's tendo• nem and a' lion's courage. Any woman 1411011111 be proud and glad to be his mate, 'to mother his children. And you—"•. She threw out her hands with a sud • den, despairing gesture. The blue eyes grew misty, and site laid her face in her palms. Before that„passionate outburst hazel sat dumbly amazed, staring, uncertain. In a second Vesta lifted her head defiantly, Z hard no notion of breaking out like this when 1 came up," she said qulet- Iy, "1 was going to' he very adroit. I intended to give you a friendly boost along the right road, if I eould. But it has Mt been bubbling inside me for a long time. You perhaps think it very unwomanly—but 1 don't cure touch what you think. My Tittle heartnehe le incidental, one of the things 11•re deals us whether we will or not. But It you care in the least for your hos. • band, for God's sabre Hake some ef- fort, some sacrifice of your own petty .little desires, to make his road a little pleastuiter, at little less gray than It must be now. You'll be well ,repaid— li you are the kind that must always bepaid in full. Don't be a stiff-necked Idiot. That's all I wanted to say. Coodby 1" She wes at the door when she fin. shed, The click of the closing catch stirred Hazel to speech and action. "Voids,: Vesta P" she cried, .and Biu. out pito the corridor. But Vesta Lorlrner neither heeded nor halted. And Eraser went back. to her room, quivering. Sometimes the truth 1s bitter and stirs to wrath. And mingled with other emotions was n dull pang of Jealousy—the first she had ever known. For Vesta Lorimer Was beautiful beyond most women;. and she had but given ample evidence of - the bigness of her soul. With shamed tears creeping to her eyes, tia- zel wondered if site could love even 2111 so.tntensely that she would drive an- other woman to his arms that he might win happiness. - Bet one thing stood out clear above that painful meeting. She was done fighting against the blankness that seemed to surround her since Bill went away. Slowly but steadily it hall been forced upon her that mucin which she deemed desirable, even nec- essary, was of little weight in the, bal- ance with him. -Day end night •she longed for him,' Tor 105 enecry voice, the whhnsit'1(1 good humor of 111111, his tataTfise Old. Bird" i HEADACHES O ,. , edLsE,tit' O EHAN D • You never had a head- s aearlle When youi were !wolL To keep well its to keep ca 'an, t ->aside. To relieve headache, and a:x prevent it, keep the liver active and industrious the bowels as regular as a clock. Two generations of healthy, vigorous people have done this by taking one pill at bedtime, regularly—a large a or dose when nature gives t the warning. CARTER'S IVER PILLS (coielne bears tSygeefurt Colorless fates ofteltx.shi>w to absence of Iron 111 tht;' Mood. CAQTE,l, NPI e$IR� will heti Shi'S coil i'tio,L semis', Se. • 3. sow*. - • - Idle anti hisanntlo, 1ndubl,tntity Vesta borimer was: right to, terns tier a surf. necked, selfish fool, Uttt 11' pal folk were sal.urated 'with the .essence of i -1 i t(e 1 hetwas 1 t is 1 4 l � hut l Une thins t be done, •.Silly pride 1111(1 to go b, the, hoard. If to rues gayly a built sh'drencled were the prier or, enalu1. bra heartache—arid her tiwa.-,t price she would pay, and pay with a grace bat lately learned. rte lay down on the lounge Meto. The 11d pains were back. Antl ns she endut•ed, a sudden startling thodgltt flushed across her stied. A possibil- ity? -yes. She hurried to dress, won- dering why it had not before occurred to her, and, phoning up a test, relied' downtown to the'uttice of Doctor hurt. An hour or so later she it@turned. A picture of her man stood on the man- tel. She took It down and $5(l'cd at It with a tremuloes'sntlle. ' ,y1 "Oh, Bitty -boy, Billy -boy, I Malt you knew," she whispered, ''But 1 was coming,' anyway, Bill 1" Thal evening, stirring about her preparations for the Journey, she paused, and Wondered why,' for the arm time slice Bill left, she felt so utterly at peace. , CHAPTER XVII;. Home Again. Twelve mouths works many a 10.1 10"p r,-, n charring awake.. hazel found Oils so. When she carne to plan hex' route She found the 0. '1. P. bridgi Ing the last gilp in a tt':tnscoul11uartnl systeln, its trains weatbouud already within striking distance of Fort George.- She could hoard a sleeping Cllr at GrolIvtlle and detrain within a hundred tulles of the ancient pilling post --with a rapt river bout to carry her the retaining distance. Fort George loomed up n Jumbled area of bosses anti teats, lug moldings frame structures yed10ty 111 [herr newt netts, strangers to pular 08 yet On every baud others • sheer in varying stages of erection. Polka hurried ab net the stately beglnning of a fn Lure greatness. Anil as she left the boat and followed n Dew' -laid walk of planks toward a hotel, Jake Lauer stepped out of a More, squarely Into Iter path, Ills round face 111 up with n smile of recognition. ,And. Hazel, fresh frond Hia Round Face Lit Up With tf.-3m11• of Recognition. the long and lonesome journey, swas equally glad to set eyes on a familiar, n genninely'friendly face. - "I am pleased to' welcome you 'back to Gott's country, airs. Vagstaff," he said. "Und let. me carry dot enid ease' ali�etty," They walked two blocks to the King's hotel, where Lauer's family was housed. E•ip was In for sup1)110s, he told her, and, of course, hist wife, and chlldren accompanied hlm. "Not dot Gredde las afraid. Site his so goot a mar as,l tin der ranch vett 1 tun gone," he espialned. "But for item ft fsa a •change, * Und 3 bring by des town a vaigonloat off bobodoes. By cosh, dem bobadoes las sell high" It fleshed into hazel's 1n1u1 that here was a heaven-sent opportunity to reach the cable without facing that' hundred miles' in the . company of chance -hired strangers. But she did not broach the subject at once. In- stead she asked eagerly of Bill. Lauer told her that B111 had tarried a few days at the cabin, and then struck out alone for the mines. • And he had' not said when he would be back. Mrs. Lanai', uticha nged' from a year .l earlier, welcomed her with pleased friendlluess, • And Jake left the two of them and the,chubby kitidies in tat King's oRice ti+htle•he betook himself about his business. I eeel haled hug wife and the children to her room :as 00011 as one was nsslgtiec1 to her. And there, almost before she knew it, she was, murmuring brokenly leer story 111• to•aneder diet listened tvith,sympathy.. I and ,utlderstauding. Only a woman can, grasp some- of a 'lv*loari'i needs. O'lretta Lauer petted llama's shoulder with a motherly hand, and bade her cheer up. a" lilome a the, place far you, dear, She study Sm111ngly. air ou, just come right along with His, Veer man will come snick enough when he 'gets word, And well take good caro of you In the t..eantiree. La, I'm all excited over it, It's the ftiaest thlag could hap- • pen for you both. drake it from me, deflate, ',kilo*. We've had our trout' bles,•Xake tad .x, And, seeing I'm 'only" slit leucitis abatt of,belni , graduate roams, you needn't tear, Well, web i" i "I'll treed to have food healed 'lit," THE CLINTON NEW Ell* \. GUARD- AGAINST THE '_FLU SerioueOutbrealts of Influenza all over Canada o GOOD HEALTH IS THE SUREST SAFEGUARD "FRUIT-A-TIVES" Brings Vigor and it Virah y anr, Thus Protects Against Disease ' 'Phare Dan be no doub' that the situation regarding the spread of Influenza throughout Canada is one of grave concern. It is quite true thet,•the number of eases dons not eoristtute an epidemic suehes caused the suffering and 'sorrow during the terrible.days of 1018. Yet there is no disguising the fact that everyone should be on their guard against the disease. In Montreal alone, from January 20th to February 21st, three thousand, one hundred and twenty-two cases of Influenza and 139 deaths from the , disease were reported to the Health Department. if the outbreak had come at the beginning of the winter instead of the end, we might reasonably 'feel that the very cold weather would check the spread of the disease. But Doming as it has, at the and of the winter, there Is.grave fear thatan epidemic may occur. For spring, with its slush and rain under foot Its dampness and chill, its constant changing from cold to warm and back again, is a prohibit source of coughs an colds, pleurisy and pneumonia. . The best protection, in feet, the onlyafeguard against the 'Flu, is, GOOD HEALTH, • Those who are not as well and strong as theyshould be ; those who are underweight ;' those, 'who are "run-down" through overwork or sickness; should build up at once. What they need is a Blood•purifier, a body-builder, a strength -giver, like "Fruit•a-tives", the wonderful fruit medicine. ,. "Fruit -a - tives" regulates the kidneys and bowels, causing these organs to eliminate waste regularly and naturally as. nature intended. "Frain-a-tives" keeps the skin active, and' insures an abundant supply of pure, rich blood. "Fruit -a -tares" tones up and strengthens the organs of digestion, sharpens the appetite, brings restful sleep and renews the vitality of the nervous system. "Fruit-a-tiyes" contains everything that an ideal tonic should have ;. to purify the blood, to build up strength and vigor, and to regulate the eliminating organs, so that the whole system would be in the best possible condition to resist disease. ., Now is the time to buildup your health and strength not only as a precaution against [the ravages of Influenza, but also to protect you against "spring fever" and the inevitable reaction which comes wfth the appearance of warmer weather. Get a box of *'Fruit-a-tives" today and let tliia fruit medicine keep you well. a "Fruit -a-[:yes" is Sold by ell dealers at OM a box, 6 boxes for $240 trial size 25o, or sant postpaid du t otltpi pf Price by Prult•t-O,et Lind ,:OVtiat/tk, Aa1r111' Y brge tt- "eta take - I wish Hilt went Marc trim afraid x71 be a. lot of both- er. Won't you be heatily loaded, as it - le?" She recalled swiftly the odd, mnke- chlft tenni that Loiter depended nn•• - rhe• mum, 'top-rettotd nee soh^ann "lar tiretrhee tIot cn.a•.". •l:hr' 1114 red. d,'. , 101 1,0,71' (111•'". a11u11,.:"r ,1'+ 00 I1,. 1••1 ., •,• .• U^].,l Paths About the Heart ANY derangement of the heart's action is alarming. Frequently pains about the heart are caused by the forma- tion of gas arising from indi- gestion. Relief from this condition is - obtained by the use of Dr. Chase's I<fdney-River Pills. Chronic indigestion results from sluggish liver action, eon stipation Of' the bowels and inactive kidneys. Because Dr. chase's Kidney -Liver Fllle arouse tlteee organa to activity they thoroughly dare Indigestion and overcome the nutny annoying amp.. tome. ®4: fir. h a• A Thursday, March 21111, 1920, rift she had been forestalled there, she learned In the next hr•outit. - "0:1, bother nothing," 1drs, Lauer de. cured, "Why, we'd be itsbamed if we couldn't help a little, And Par's the load woe's, you ought to see tho four beautiful horses your husband let Jetta have You.don't $now heir muelt Jnite nppreclirtes 1t, nor what a fine elan he thinks your husband 1t. We needed ho Sea so. bad, anti dldu'tt have the mouey to buy, ' So Mt'. Wagstaff didn't say u tieing but got the team for us, 11511 Jake'si'paying for them in clearing and plowing nail making 1m- peovetpents on your land. Honest, they could pull twice the load c'e'll have. Therelis a good wagon road. most of,the way pow. Quito a lot of settlers,. too, as [Hoch as fifty or sixty miles out. And we've got the finest garden you ever saw. Vegetables enough to feed four fetniltes ail win- ter. Oh, your old cities! I never want to live In one again. Never a day have the kiddies been sick, Suppose it is a bit. out of the world/ You're all the more pleased when somebody does happen along. Polio is so different in a new country like this. There's plen- ty for -everybody—and everybody 'helps, like neighbors' ought to." Lauer came- up after a time, and Hazel found herself unequivocally In their hands. With the matter of trans- porting herself - . and -supplies Utas sorted, she' set ouf to find Felix Cour- volseur—who would know,how to get word to Bill. tie might come back to the cabin In n month or so; he-mtght not come back at all unless he heard from her. She was smitten with' a great tear that be might give'her up es lost to him, and plunge deeper into the wilderness its some mood of reek-- lesscess. And she wanted him, longed,, ,for him, if only so that she could make amends. - She easily found Courvotseur, a tall spare Frenchman, past middle age. Yes, he could deliver a message to Bill Wagstaff; that is, he could send a man, Bill Wagstaff \vas in the Klep- per) range. n g "But if he should have left there?" Hazel suggested uneasily. "'19 weel leave weeth W'itey Leweea -word of w'ere''e go," Courvolieur reas- sured her. "An' my man, witch ees my bru'ryer-law, w'ich I can 0308' fully true', 'e weal follow 'eem. So Beet, -ees arrange. '133 ees' say mos' partee- cular if madame ees come or weesh for forward message, geet teem to me gneeck. Out. Long tam Beef ees know me. I am for depend always." Oourvolseur kept a, trader's stock of goods in a tventher-beatenold log house which sprawled a hundred feet beck from the street. Thirty years, ' he told her, he had kept that store in Fort George.. She guessed that 2111 had selected him because he was a fixture. She sat down at his counter_ and wrote her message. Just a few terse lines. And when she had delivered it to Courvotseur she went back to the hotel. There was nothing now to do but wart. And with the message un- der way she found herself impatient to reach the cabin, to spend the wait- ing days where she had %first found happiness. She could set her house in order against her man's coming. And if the days dragged, and the great, lone land seemed to close In and press Inexorably upon her, she would have to be patient, very patient. Jake was held up, waiting for bap - plies. Fort George suffered n auger famine. Two days later the belated freight arrived. He loaded alis wagon, a ton of goods for himself, a like weight of Hazel's supplies and be- longtngs. A goodly load, but he drove out of Fort George with four strap- ping 'bays arching their powerful necks, and champing on the bit. "Four days ,ve rill make It by der ranch." Jake chuckled, "lilt der mule and Gretchen, der cow, von reek It take me, mit half der Mat." Four altogether pleasant and satte• f3'tng days they were to Hazel. The worst of: the 1131 pests were vanished for the season, A crisp. touch of frost sharpened the night Winds. Indian ' mummer hung Its mellow haze over the land. The Clean, pungent air that sift- ed through the forests seomedrdoubly sweet after the vitiated atmosphere of town.. Fresh from a gridiron of dusty sl.reets end stone pavements, and but stepped, 1114 one might say, fr0n'"dnys of ituprlsounlene in the barrow con - lines of a railway couch, she drank the n'iney air in hungry gulps, and Scared In the soft "yielding of the turf be- neath her feet, the fern and peavlue unmet of the forest floor, It ivns her measure at night to sleep its She and Bill hnd.siept, wlth'her face bared to the"'sters. She would draw her bud a. little aside from the eamp- 11re and 810(0 til: low seclusion of a thicket lie watching the ratable flaures at their merry dance, smiling lazily at the grotesque shadows cast by Juke and his frau ss they moved about the blaze. Anil she' would wnk0 111 the tnoeuIng clear-headed; alert, grnteflil for "the piensunt woodland smells arising wholesomely from tine fecund bottom of the earth. n .Lauer pulled up before his 01111 Cab- in at mid-afternoon of the fout'th day, unloaded his own stuff, and drove to bis nelgliber's with -.the rest. ' "I'll walk back after a little,' Hazel told him, when he hurl piled her goods in one corner of the kitchen. Tberattle of the wagon died away: She was alone—nt home, Tier' eyes filled as she roved' restlessly' from kitchen to liviug-room and on into the eedrooln at the end. Bill had un- packed. The **rags were down, the books stowed in familiar disarray up - tin their shelves, the bedding spread In semi-Iliaorder.0011ere be had lust slept and gone away without troubling to smooth it out in hoilsowtfe1 "fashion.. Elio cams back to the living -more (Continued next Week.) "[LENT" 'MIME For forty days we can afford rile -rasa' frofim diluter, da,1ce sod revel '4 r 5143t s 'l,dtt" utile the. Lord ii.• ' : 1• , tt1 to the devil, �pn-r+,np-Orn..-".aM'p•;,^, r -,n. m.e AP� , 0Iferlk fee 2" (04-44 .•.1, .644 What Makes a Good .,,rlr.w.. ; Not alone the large plate glass wind -owe an the main street, nor the fine t,howcases inside, nor even the genial, I friendly proprietor.. . The QUALITY OF THE GOODS • said is what rca:ly tells, and brings you back again next'tiite.• That's just the case wish the famous Hebb.; Cold Medal Lines. The store that carric34o.ois b::trin„ t?ria tea:: is a good store to trade at. • Look for the Gold Medal label on Flzrv-:t.T3 1, Gal -dm Tools, Lawn I'✓iu1:••ers, Cewing i\'Ia:hinr>, W1'.h`+ e tt'•d Wringers, Reerx r rntur:, Cutlery, i �:nc_r ing, Safes, Spolt.rg Geo:is, etc. SensibLa F &MI 2.172 SiSt. .Jpc m « GOLD MEDAY, Tdols For .Salo by All First-cl sa 1"•1::1irhira. o Dz•a lora - rK1'vsTAW Arnendments to Public Health - .Act These are the seven amendments to the existing laws which Dr. Hastings, M.O.H. of Toronto, asks the Legislat- ure to pass and which he has submitt- ed.in a report• to the civic Legislation Committee of tate City 'Council: i—'l'o amend public health act so that "Owner" will be defined as "the person for the time being receiving the rent." 2—Provincial Board of Health to ad- vise Government officers re heating of apartment houses and other living pre- mises. 3—To direct the alteration or de- struction of buildings unlit for human habitation, 4—To prevent overcrowding in hu- man habitation, 5—To control unnecessary noises. 6—To transfer control of lodging houses from police commissioners to city 'ceunei•i. 7---'ro regulate and control all places where foodstuffs are made for sale or sold.• Pointed Paragraphs It isn't what a man is going to da 1 that adds to his bank balance. Children. Cry �s�a...�� FOR FLETCHER'Sp� CASTO FR I A Hope is the one, thing you can't bunko the average man out of. Children Cry ,gymA Q FOR FLETCHEIR'S C - S T O I l' 'Sa I A, A woman is always grateful to the Man who gives her a chance.torefuse him. Proof is positive when founded upon facts plus experience, BEECHAM'S PILLS have been used for 60 years by people all over the globe, BEECHAM'S PILLS AnyLMedicine in Any Medicine do of the World. Sala sr.r,wh.r. 4 Gude, 1, ben,, Two -Part; t Line Telephone iService NECESSARY curtailment of new construction during the war, followed by the unprecedented; development since the armistice, have resulted in a universal short- age of telephone material. • In order to utilize our svpply of 'e'quipment to the best advantage Ito reduce delay in installations to a minimum, and to avoid refusing service to anyone, we ask those in- tending to order telephones to con- sider the advantage of " two-party line service. The cost to the user is substantial. iy 1arw+er than for individual line, and the service of a high standard. The ratefor two-party line is, for Business telephones $19,80 and for Residence $19.80 per annum'. We will be glad to furnish full in., formation to anyone interested. ' 'Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Station' Mrs, C. Rumball, Local Manager The Bell T, e. tli.o*e * Coin ani.... llwfi' Cant*, I.