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The Brussels Post, 1919-10-30, Page 6When No Oil Shows. 1, Oil is exhaiioted. (It may have: leaked out though a loose pipe.) 2. oil pump is worn and doesn't "take hold." (Ra ‘+e the engine for a moment or two.) tl, Strainer iQ clogged. (Take it out and clean it c:elth kerosene.) 4. Oil is too dirty and full of carbon. (Drain it out by uuserewiree the ping or opening the pet -cock; if very black and thick, flush out the tiling system with kerosene before putting in fresh. oil )• 5, Oil feed pipe crank caee is chok- ed. (Disconnect the pipe and blow out with compressed air.) 6. Choked oil feed tube. (Clean it out.) 7. Broken pump. If you are going for a train or a (Mctor, and have not time to make all these investigations, pour a little oil into your gasoline—say about half a pint to a gallon. Tubed, this was the favorite way of lubricaVng old-time' engines. I ran a motor boat for sev eral years in this way without e, er putting a drop of ell in the cylinder o:l•ers. Sometimes, tyhen the crank ease it drained, a quart or so of black, gum- my oil runs out. I thin ,it with a little kerosene and strain through a piece of cloth, set in a big tin funnel. This strained oil isn't fit for any high-speed math -Mee, but will do quite well on off -stones, speings, rusty haste, creak- ing hinges, etc. One man I know usos it for a fly repellent on live stock. But remember fanning your car withonee oil, even for a mile, is about the worst thing you can possibly do. It Paye Me To Keep An Automobile. One morning in June, 1213, a ne,gl: bor phoned for my nephew, Sam, to come up and take a ride with him, as an agent was there trying to sell them an auto. With fear and trembl- ing we saw Sam go, for ears in this community had not been used, and the most we knew of them was the accidents we read about in the news- paper. Sam took the ride and came home for dinner enlht::,rustic, Our neighbor had bought one and -sacn the agent •come to see ole. 1•Sat11 did not say he had told him to come, but I geese h•+ had.) Soon Sala came rushing into the house and said, "(.let something on your head, aunt, and come take a ride." I went, and the result vas I bought the car; for, I said, "Sum will here one sometime, end we had just as well help him to enjoy it." The first year the agent was to keep iu repair, which he did; but there v,'tre ea many extras to buy—hump r1, -he•1:•ab arberce, different lights, etc. much more we would have to buy a —that finally T_ told Sam if we bought! new dashboard to hang things on. For two ycare we ran the car, Sam prow - hag to be quite an expert in tatting; (etre +,f it and running it. Last year'. GoL�'? I'vE eARRIeD % 'THIS A MILE AN' II.LSW6Ak IF ITAINT GeT'Trro, J 4liGHTER i 2" asst. f'�•cvosb Young Old Folks in the British Isles.. Do the English, the Scotch and the Welsh live longer than wo do? And 1f so, why go? --one can wonder with- out drawing eemelusians. During the war The Lundell Tiniee, either wittingly or unwittingly, pub- lished innumerable, items about the very old emu' and women in the Bri- tish Empire who wore dying off, Their great age, their longevity, formed a melancholy contrast to the slaughter of youth then going on in Europe. Dur- ing one six 1110111 It in 1010, 312 persons over 100 years old died')in the British teles, but the figures of young men who fell during that time before the pilus of the enemy and who died with influenza mounted toward 0 011111011. Not elle of the old, be it said In Pass- ing, cried from "fit." I Mrs, Downing Cardiff, of Liverpool, was 102 years old. One Sunday she ! draw to church with her oldest child, a slaughter of eighty, and on Mande)" morning she finished knitting a sock The Oldest Custom in the for a great -great-grandchild at the front and died quietly in her chair, British Isles. j John Doolan, aged 104. belonged to a I r'n^luded to ]teep�an account of Wheel the war flung the world into large family of a1leePherders in Ros ire tt.kcn fond money spent to see confusion it laid its staying. hand on common, One night he drove in his if et would not pay me better to hire the oldest custom ill the British Isles, Herd fooling "hl his usual state of a ear r eu 1 went. : a nest curious practice that lies conte health;' but next morning he could During the year I rode in the car from the far-off time of the druids and not get up to eat his a o'clock break - let :-:'i' th The long it trip tv ss had flourished from then v; ltlu,ut a fast. He had died in the eight, 1e ri t .n nice thiety-fig a miles away,• break until the year 1015. 1n Burin- David Leslie was the oldest: free- •., vi_it l vendd not have attempted if head, a little fishing village on the man in the city of London when he (1101 at Christmas time at the age of 1 lied ,sat ',smiled a ecar, Took five trips, Moray 1O'Irtlt, this custom has been to tee city, shout seventeen mitespracticed from the very dawn oP 101. a relative of sway-, The ether trips were to our human society. It is the strange ritual Mrs. Amelia Sl1l'n r e , cenotr;• ei'•leges. going to store and. of the burning of the clacie. , the poet Keats, was 104 when she to church. I The cluvie is made of a 1101f barrel : died. She read without glasses, but, :emu 't,e1 the car for his own roughly put together and attached to . 111ce her sisters long ago, she did not pleeeur0 ani business seventy-eight' a long pole by which it is carried. A approve of Keats and read no lino of times. I paid out 101.04, hut do not stone is used to hammer in the wood- hint. know how emelt Sam paid for oil, etc.,' en pets that serve for nails, for it Is 1 ,11rs. Peter Gilchrist, of Helens - when I was rot along. So I find it considered as unlawful to allow iron burgh, was 103; while Miss Margaret coot me ever `?'e a trip. But the to touch the wood. 01d tales tell howRodger Pittenween, of Dumbarton - pleasure derived from it more than a wicker basket with a fish inside ! 511100• the Firth of Forth,, was only paid, for had it not been for the car used to be burned. Perhaps, when the j 101, as was Mise Frances Scatty, of I deobt ;if I would hoe e been off the first druid lighted the first clavle, the London, when they died suddenly and Place more than four or five times sacrifice was something greater than unexpectedly nue day. 11 three of during the year. Then the pleasure a fish. Within mare recent times ( 111ese gobd ladies"walked without we have given to others counts, as we neither basket nor fish appears, but canes and read the newspaper daily." nearly always took one er two neigh- the Clavie is filled with chips of wood hors with us wherever we went. and shavings plentifully sprinkled So, all things considered,. I shall with tar. The whole plass is set on keep my own car another year, for fire by means of a burning peat. if I depended on hiring one I would With an oilskin coat over his should - not go very much, for I maid not ers, the Movie bearer lifts his burning always find one to hire 11 I wanted to burden on his back and sets off to the go. When I have the car I can go to site of a Roman camp, a rocky pro- , church in good weather; when I did montory that thrusts itself out into not lha•:e it I went two or three time the sea. Here a stone pedestal has a Bear.—Margaret Roiley. been erected to hold the fire. In this 'strange ritual druidical and attendance for eighteen days, and in Christian customs are strangely inter - their picturesque garb of bright red Woven. The lighting with peat is pag- 014(11, with cloak and cape embroider- an and harps back to the sacrificial ed with the royal arms and the king's fires of Baal. The circling of the lilt- ed in gold,4.they must have pre- lage sunward. is front the same source; sented an attractive appearance iu to the druids, the sun was an imtnedi- the presence chamber of the palace, ate object of worship. " The use of Their fee for the whole "wait" was wooden pegs rather than of iron nails thi'tysilt shillings apiece, in addition to the use of a hammer are Chris - to their board in the palace, which in- tion, for the early Christian would not to fuluble through the pockets of niy eluded a gallon of Meer a day for each use the iron \viii which our Lord was frozen clothes and get out my match man, n Shakespeare at the Peace Conference of 1604. Shakespeare has been credited with many occupations, says the London Sphere, and many experiences have been attribnted to him; but hitherto he has not generally been supposed to have bad anything to do with a peace conference. Yet it is a fact, that by command of King James he and his associates of "tits King's Company of Actors" atter-ded tbe great conference held In Landon in August, 1604, be- tween the rninietcl.- of the King' of England and the d•_l:gcttee front the King of Spain and freta ilte archduke and duchess of the Spanish Nether- lands, Shakespeare's duties had nothing to do with the negotiations of the con- ference; he attended ia1 the chief en- voy of the Bing of Spate, Juan de lee- lasco; Constable al Castile, who came with a suite of two hundred gentlemen secretaries and servants, all of whom were entertained at King James's ex- pense in the old Somerset House. For Shakespeare it most have been an interesting experience to be in such close contact with those engaged in a work of international importance, but we can only wouder what he thought of a peace that robbers Eng- land of so much that It had won in the war. He and his fellows were is Mrs. (Gilchrist performed light house- hold tasks on the clay before she passed away. The Lord Chief Justice of England It ie n singular but a little-known fact that the familiar title that ileude this article was created by statute Others trace the name h1 the S almped lever 11po11 the 1)11 or the bridle of the war hor.+e. 51111 othere cllscaver How Did Humans Learn to Talk? Talking and the words used came into being through the 4(1011'0 02 mo0 to corunlunicate with midi other. Be- fore forty-six years age. Lord Gobs- It in the Duke of Lancaster's livery, in Pohe lvnrds become known and used ridge was the first Lord Chief Justice which the letter S pers'atontly figures, man talked to thusc about 111tH by the whose patent Authorized 1111)1 to as- There ore at least emir a dozen other flan of signs, goatu20a, and oilier stone the title in full. Before 1873 surmises, but these suffice to show tlln movements of the body. F01. t fo•4ay the incumbent of the office was knows antiquity of the controversy, '1111) it when men meet who cannot talk the 118 Lord Chief Justice of the King's 1s derived from the Lancacto1• livery saute laugna.?5t ialt will be Herm try Bench, and more than three hundred seems the most pro11ahhe conjecture, !ng to conic to an understanding by probable because Jehu of (1stunt, whom the ue(1 of signs land rte. '1'11 and Shakespeare caps "time-honored Lan-1generally with fair results. The Hoed caster," x11018 or 1tichar4 II., first 1001•e or more sighs and 8estu'e) to exilrees the 5.5, Bullar. 1350010 the abolition i a coneta11tly increasing number or ob- jests and thoughts led to the Introduc- years ago a famous judge, Sir Edward Coke -wllo wrote the famous law beak called Coke upon Littleton—was indicted, among other things, for call - fug h!ms01r on the title page of his of those ancient oflicee, the Lnrd Chief tion of sounds or eon111ination of famous report, "Lord Chief Justice of Justice of the Court of Common Platte rounds 001(10 with the vocal cords to England." and the Chief Baron of the Exchequer s.ceallpany oertahl signs and gestures. The Lord Chief Justice is the only were also entitled to wear the S.S,' In this Nay man eventually developed a very considerable facility for Ox- Pl•essfllg 11011501f, Sign by sign, ges- ture by gesture and sound by sound, language was 8101v1y developed. A twenty-eight S's, twenty-seven garter 1111111 would bo trying to explain 80113e- twont two pons, twee and the rete; tiling to another lip sign or gesture and knIts weight in solid gold is four pounds to make it more clear would make a avoirdupois. judicial functionary entitled to wear collar. on state occasions the collar of S.S., This relic of Plantagenet tithes grew which means Sanctus Spiritus ---al- until to -day the splendid ornament though how the Lord Chief Justice's that on state occasions decks the Lord office became connected with the order Chief Justice of England consists or of the Holy Ghost is not known, Some find the explanation in the fact that the links of the chain are formed in 111e shape of the letter S. Perils That Lurk in Mine Choking An Alligator. Shafts, Very curious, while often exceed- ingly dangerous, are the "rock Waste" that occur ill very deep Iniues. Far down 111 the depths of the earth the rocks are necessarily under emir - mous pressuee. Ander such circum- stances this pressure may cause them actually to explode into the mine. Fragments are thrown out with viol- ence, and somebody 111ay get hurt or even stilled. In Michigan is the deepest mine in the world, shaft No, 3 of the Tama- rack, which has reached a depth of one mile, lacking only eighty feet. This, however, is by n0 means the deepest hole dug by 111a.n. Wells drilled for oil and gas have gond much deeper. The deepest well is eight miles southeast of Madrment, W. Va., and belongs to the Hope Natural Gas Company. le is 7,570 feet deep, not very much short of a mile and a 11111f. Twenty miles south of this hole is another well, the second deepest in the world, belonging to the same con - Fighting Arctic Frost. cern. It is 7,336 feet in depth. groped among the itot, soft folds of The temperature 7,500 feet down in flesh. Managing to got a grip on them, Frozen hands and feet continually the deepest well was Pound to be I pulled with all my strength. The threaten the Alaskan trapper, as a slightly more than 168 Fahrenheit. flesh in my hand hardened, then the contributor to Outing can testify. T Anything that can be learned about brute choked, gave a cough line a froze my left foot, he' writes, one I the rocky crust of the earth and its morning when the temperature wasblast from an air valve, and literally make-up is interesting. What shall be blew me out of his mouth. Needless thirty degrees below zero. Thad ;lust said, tion, of the discovery of a "fossil broken through ice up to my armpits, to say, I lost no time in reaching the ocean" at a depth of 6,260 feet in an- shore, illy right leg was so badly M- in a woodleas partof the canon. The other very sleep well in the sante re- first thought that enters your head i Bion? Actually sea water was found coolies that I could not stand, soil the when you break through the ice is coolies had to carry hoe to the 117a11a- at that level, imprisoned there pre - fire. bungalow. fire. If I ever ran for my life, it war, sumebly since Palezoie time. after I had wriggled out of that The strata of sand, lime and slate treacherous current. sound or combination of sounds to pet more expression into his efforts. Finally the at110r plan would under- stand what was meant and he would tell sun100n0 01St, using the Sano In rho timing of 1880, when I was signs, gestures tied sounds. Later on learning slew to grow and cure coffee it would develop that to express thus ;Ula Pepper 1n the sultanate of Jabol•e, any certain thought, 11011 or the name writes a contributor to the Wide of a thing, all of the people in the cone - World Magazine, the plantation mance inanity would make this same cont• ger and 1 bee evening rowed across binatim2 of Sounds, signs and gestures lite rive • to a new clearing to See how to CxpresH the same thing. Finally the the work progressed. INC wore our pastures and signs would lin dropped swimming clothes, and as we drew in - Mood it was fount that people under- to the beach I dropped overboard. stood perfectly what war. mount when I heti bean swimming for a short only tho sound or combination, of time when suddenly I was grasped by somlds was produced, That Wade a the wrist and flung into the air. The word. All the other words were mailo next moment i discovered that I was 111 the satin ivory, one at a time, until the prey of an alligator that had alis• we had enough words to express all judged its grip. When I fell back into tke ordinary things and the combine, water, the brute closed his jaws Han of words became a lytn gunge, The nu my right leg and shook it, as if children learned the longings by hear - Theto wrench it off. ing their parents talk it, and that is T12e manager and the coolies came how men learned to taut. running to the edge of the water, but - --- _ _..-- rho manager dared not use kis rifle, Birds of Paradise Adoon Men. lest he 01101101 shoot me, or launch the boat, lest my captor should carry d4ew Guinea- is the Veins of largo 109 orf. percentage of the world's birds 0r Suddauly an flea came to 1)1e. paradise. The supply of those beatlti- Bending forward, I pushed my right fun birds is fast failing. Not only do hand into the alligator's throat and the women of Europe and America d maud feathers for their bonnets, but When 1 reached timber I managed penetrated by these borings are War Scarred Fish. ardent sedimentary deposits, laid down upon the floor of a vanished. sett. the natives of New Guinea and sur- rounding islands snake lavilll use of the plumage as head dresses. Some precautions are 110w taken to prevent vtaiture to New Guinea from killing the "most beautiful birds in the world," but the natives tire left alone, and they continue to deck themselves out in capes and headpieces more gor- geous than any seen on our stage beau- ties or the wives of our millionaires. In New Guinea it is the elan who affects birds of paradise decorations. The women, like the female bird of paradise, are inconspicuous in dull Some strange -looking fish have re - colors, Gently been landed at Swansea from To obtain filo much pri :ed fcttthe±s ailed to the cross, bottle. I drew the corp with my teeth - Why the customlingered in quaint and Amokout three or Your matches the trawlers, says an English pap0r•Many arrive with parts of their bodies the New Guthea natives set out for the little Borghead we cannot tell. In into the frozen mitten of my right The trees along this city street, missing, and some of the fish aro forest, knowing that the bird of 1>nl^,1- 1015 the Admiralty forbade the show- hand. I scratched them on the hoots .lave for the traffic and the trains, minus toile and eyes, while othersdish scalls to conceal his rainbow hue:; 1n^ of all li=lite xeawerd and the of my parka and soon had a little Would make amend as thin and sweet .have been blinded and badly scarred In the tie1190 foliage of the thee. 1P S 0 they eau find no haunt of the desired acre field of late potatoes. an enter- Clavie was left enkindled, This year, blaze of birch bark and dry twigs. As trees 3r_ country lanes; by the explosions of the depth bombs however. this sole British survival of Even then I was mortally afraid that birds they start calling In excellent pri: iuri Ohio farmer used a smoke And people standing 1n their shade which were used during the war to imitation of the shrill, 111t1y cry of the screen to prevent the potatoes from the worship of fire, the first of all re- my hands would freeze solid before I Ont of a shower undoubtedlyNoudestroy Gorman submarines, A few liglons and rituals, was rekindled.freezing,. Because of dry weenier in Bee. But dry spruce makes a quick • • moues,• to save m fish appeared to be wearing medals,Upon a country tree, bbd of paradtse to its mete. This but on close examination it sus found ruse le neuully successful, tali! a bird that tabs had been attached to diem shows Itse1P only to iso sol:red or shat down with arrows. 511 statingseason the male bird dances before the female he desires as a mate to (Deploy hie beautiful feathers, and at such a time so ab- sorbed more the birda in their own af- fairs that large numbers 111'0 taken easily by the Ivfly,natives. Skiing in Norway. Mountain skiing in Norway le, with the minor variation due to local condi- tions, the same as elsewhere in the world; but forest skiing is essential• ly the pastime of Norway. Those who are accustomed to the long runs over perfect ,snow common ite Switzeriaml find little pleasure in following - the narrow and tortuous tracks through forest, and are, of oourse, incapable of marking out such a trach for them- selves, since forest skiing requires skill of a wholly different order from that necessary 111 the open, The paths are often hard and very bumpy, speed is quickly gathered, and great can - Mend over the skit is neceseary to keep the balance and- tante the sharp turns between the trees. Those in position to speak authori- tatively assure us that there are few more exhilarating sights than a troop of Norwegian soldiers ldii.i:lug tln'ough the forest in Indian file, bard on one another's 110010, all going full speed, prodding with their sticks to increase the pace overt down the hills, 1;0vor faltering at the bumps, anti swinging routed the bends without a check, The coarse of the fifty kilometer race which allies 111aao annually be- fore the great jumping competition at Holinenitallen is laid right through the great forest of Nordmerkon and is covered by many of the eampotitare In about four hours and a quarter -• not bad going for thirty -ale 101101) 1.111 hili, down dale and across lakes, with the finish no lower than the start. l L 9 ' '.1!10I 'f f �_ �, ilii s so ld h '<� 1I?,-.] I //r•. l u` ° ° l'I : : ' ) The track to be followed is u115(1(od by little red streamers .hung to the trees at intervals, It Is laid by the olllcinls of the ski! club, who delight. 121 choos- ing the most difficult, way they can find, and the actual tacks of whose sidle conStitltto trio comas, Baked gsotatoes are delioiays if a slice of bacon is glut itiaitle, Make a hole in elle potato with an apple cores', roll e. piece o* bacon, place ,In the bale anti ,bake. • Saving the Potatoes. When a frust threatened his tweet" - City Trees. July and August, the potatoes were just heglnning to mature when the The Profiteers. iemperat.ul'e fell suddenly in Septette ' her, Dut the farmer had anticipated Was it not ever so? All Wars that the emergency, end had piled haled were ' strl:w ubl,ut in the field. Had both a grim reverse and giord- That n;,;111. 01.tce wet straw pro- sus race: duced the heaviest clouds of smoke, To nobler things the noble felt the he threw water on the piles and then lighted 112en1 and kept them burning until morning, when he found that his oxperimcnt was a success. Although all other vegetation was stilled, the potatoes were still green. He had used about ten tons of straw In his strngglo against the frost, Distance of Bird Migration The distances which some birds cover in their migrations is almost be- yond belief. The golden plover, which breeds in the Arctic regions, is known to winter as far south as the pampas of Argentina, fully 5,000 miles from where it rears its young, It is be- lieved that half this distance is cover- ed in a single non-stop flight. Tho birds are known to launch out over the Atlantic in the vicinity of Nova Scotia, and there 1s only an occasional record of their being seen again until they appear in northern South Amer'- ca, The Arctic tern is a. greater traveller by far than the golden plover, It nests from Maine northward to within a few degrees of the Pole. Those that go furthest north thus spend the sum- mer in a land of continuous day, When the Arctic tern migrates it goes to a region in the Antarctic ovally near the south pole, where it again spends the other half of the year in perpetual daylight. The only time some of these birds experience full darkness is thought to he the few days it takes them to ernes the tropics. Certain in- dividuals of this species must travel nearly 22,000 miles each year In their migrat.ione, spur, But base end craven hearts grow yet more base. No war was ever ended but remained 'The unclean foo that preyed upon the State; And, since he had no honor to be stained Gave rein to greed. So have we seen but late. What need to name them—they who aro our foes— Who hold the gifts of Ceres far aloof And shrink the poor man't loaf? And they are those Who thrust a poor plan from be- neath a roof! Seems this not War—even while we murmur "Peace?" Who shall its slaves and trampled otos release? While laying, a hen's system must tire, end I soon felt safe awl comfort- able. When I left, the fife I overlooked one important fact --my woolen stockings wore not thoroughly dry. Before I had travelled two miles I had to try suottshoeing in my stocking feet and, finding that experiment a failure, started to build another fire. The ra- vine at that polnt offered green cot- tonwood and greener spruce and white birch. The best I could get was a tiny birch fire that nearly drove me mad, I tried to put my shoepack on my suffering foot, but the leather was frozen solid, About a mile farther up the ravine a coal prospector had a cabin, and I decided to make my way to the shel- ter. The prospeetor saw me coming, and diagnosed my case as a frozen foot. He ran out for a pan of snow while I ripped the outer sock with my ].tnife. I tapped the floor with my toes; thefe was no seneation, and the sound produced was like rapping two bones together. The foot was frozen solid. The prospector applied snow for twen- ty minutes before I could wriggle my toes. That evening, when I returned to my cabin with my face twisted with be supported exactly the same as pain, I made a solemn vow that I when she is not laying, in addition to would never again visit my trap line being supplied with material for mak- Without an extra pair of soclts in my ing eggs. pack. air leaves many pockets of. space 1 valve a real wind. Oln, little leaves that are so dumb Against the shrieking city air! -- I evatcll you when the wind has conte; I know what sound is there, by the Fisheries Board to trace their migratory habits for scientific pur- poses. t The Reason Why "Where is the wind when it is not blowing?" The answer is, of course, that there isn't any wind then. To understand this perfectly we must study a little and find out what wind is. In plain words, it is nothing more than mov- Ing air. If you make a hole in the bottom of a pail of water, the water will run out slowly. If you knock the whole bot- tom out of the pail filled with water, the water will rush out before you know it. That is about what happens to matte the wind. Tho air is constantly 01111 of air currents, line the currents you can See in a river. Down the middle of the river you may notice a softly flow- ing ourrent going straight. Along the shores there will be little side cur- rents going in all directions, and you may find some little whirlpools. That is exactly what we should see in the air if we could see air currents. The movement of these currents of where there is no air, and when one of these is uncovered the air rushes in and creates a wind in doing so. These air currents are continually pressing against each other to get. some place else. They change their direction ac- cording to the pressure that is being applied to them. Sometimes the pres- sure will be very light in ono part of the air, many miles away perhaps, and then the air in another part, which 1s under great pressure, will rush with great force into the part where the pressure is light, and thus form a big wild. When the pressure stops the wind stops. We have probably felt the wind which comes •eut of the valve of the automobile tire when the cap is taken off to pump 1141 the tire. It is a real wind that comes out. The reason is that the air in the tube of the tire is tinder great pressure, and when the opportunity is given to get where the pressure is 11ght it starts for that place witb a rush and comes out of the HELLO' CLANCY• YOU LOOK Ar-lz4) 'y0 "at I AM • YOUR WJI1 F TOLD MY vele( THAT i WUL A l3Qt4E' HEAD aa,s ama�•,ca a,w-s zv0ms.'0-+,.�.mnusmm..m.um . „am. aumesas5..3.5 62=aeauvusrx,>samI ,sva +,esmaim•�cmnn .._ .__. - - i .t5 »OE '3:,y.t".-a 15" 491i. `kLm f5 k to :Et DIDN'T YOUR I'LL NOT STANn L. WIDE, KNOW IT? FOR )DEIN CALLED • A 00H41 HEA°. ee Ir „ r) taert oaf ;1 AND 1'M C,oit " DEMAI`1D RIGHT OVER r� I-IER? 1 TO `000,3) WIFE. ) AI -1' DEMA1'D HER 1.0 1 ,A\1 oLLCICove.• 1,.r_ 1..„(^~"-----. u,.,:,--, RI \NELL - D TiltsIiT CzIR • OVER, TO MR CLANC.`P'S