Ontario Community Newspapers

Grimsby Independent, 16 Jul 1930, p. 2

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dently the time had come when this| Because of theso things she passed house, too, mus. reluctantly be fnishâ€"| the first policeman they met. _ , ed with the night. The scond window,| The young man, sometimes leaning directly beside Elizabeth, grew pale} out of the van to ask advice himself, as some of the lights were switched| brought her safely to hpr destination. off. He stood with his hands in his pockets ‘Then, while there was still a little| watching and lstening while she sold light left in that room, a young man| ber strawherriea. Ho concinded, as came to the window and parted the| she prepared to catne away with nineâ€" curtains to let in the dawn light which | poundsâ€"en and o fruit, that this could was grow!ng «lear. . He must haye, bardly be the first time sha had <a« been unseen to anyone in the nmt.lmuud the baffling uproar %« CO‘ but from where she sat WMIW Garden at four in *%« morning. could clearly see his head and shouldâ€") Mis curiosity Increase4. | ers and his nands. l "And now?" he said, when her busiâ€" house, too, mus. reluctantly be finishâ€" ed with the night. The scond window, directly beside Elizabeth, grew pale as some of the lights were switched At last, before the dawn was more of sweetscented strawberries who inâ€" than a rose in the eastern sky, Rlizaâ€"‘ sisted that he should sit beside her. beth came to London town. At m.l "I think." he said to her, as he: hour London was already nlll‘.lrlllh-‘ into the seat, ‘that 1 must Other vans were rattling towards the bave fallen asleep reading the ‘Ara«‘ market, and the street cleaners were blam Nighis Entortainments.‘ . Don‘t busy, But here and there, behind curâ€"! wake me, will you?" . tained windows, shafts of light stols‘ Elizabeth said nothing, fo: she was out, to show that to some folk it was thinking swiftiy and clearly. ‘The still night. | obvious thing to do was to keep him Near Covent Garden the trafic sudâ€" beside her until she knew a little denly incresse until it became imâ€" more, or found a policeman She said por .e to drive quickly. Vans ot presently: ‘ *.ult and vegetables were in front and| "You may have notlced that I‘ve behind biocking the road. come up from the country ?" Floally, outside a tail, grey house,| _ "You are the country," he said earnâ€" Klizabeth had to sit sttll and wait, in estly. "You‘re a June morning, bring» company with many other van drivers,| Ing your strawberries with you. Yes?" all of them anxious and impatient; for| _ "Well, I‘ve got to go to Covent Garâ€" the narrow street ahead of them was den, and I don‘t know my ay about closed by a middleâ€"aged farmer from London. It‘s important to me that 1 Sussex, whose van had broken down.| should go to the right place quickly. He had been bred among horses, and| You look s if you knew London well; could not understand engines. _ He| and you look decent, too. So I thought While she watched one of the winâ€" dows suddenly became dark. Evi dently the time had come when this aweated and strugzled with his van and with the advice other drivers poured out to him. Elizabeth, patient when impatience did no good, sat still and looked about her at the City who has always someâ€" thing new to show her lovers. In the tail, grey house beside her there were three windows that showed yellow light behind their drawn curâ€" tains, _ She watched the curtains, which sometime: stirred, and wonderâ€" ed what they hid. The,windows were uglyâ€"too narrow and tallâ€"and the lromwork of the balconies in front of them was dingy. For Elizaboth, at twenty, with eyes the color of blue lac, and skin with the warm whiteness and fragrance of white lilac, had no time for moonlight, or nightingales, or loitering between the summer hedge> with a good comâ€" panion. She had to consider arithmeâ€" tie, and how, if she should bring back so much as eight pounds for her straw» berries, she could pay the water rate. They come from the country, drivâ€" Ing through the dark lanes at first, in vans piled with fruits of the generous English earth, to sell in the dawn at Covent Garden Market. Elizabeth Leverett was one of them. She drove her father‘s van, because Leveratt himself was iIL. He was a bnn.m-n.-l-ul.hli mmumw.uaw‘ mmâ€"umumn‘ ging in bis market garden until the doctor drove him to bed. | Slnce then Elizabeth had taken his place in the felds and in mm-; houses. She had helped to grow the fresh strawberries packed in baskete bebind her in the old Ford van. .o‘ had helped to pick them, to sort them, and to stack them in their baskets; and she had gone to bed, tired out, at two in the moonHit morning, to join the band of adventurers who drive thoir wares to London, to the market which is built on what was onts a convent garden, Elizaboth drove at first through some of the loveliest country in Engâ€" land; she passed gardens from which enchanting scents drifted on to the moonlit lanes; she beard nightingales sing, and saw the summer stars grow pale before a midsummer dawn; she amelt the honeysuckle in the hedges. And all the time she was thinking: "Two hundred poundsâ€"no, two hunâ€" dred and seventyâ€"Aveâ€"and then wo could always be sure of water in the meadows. If 1 had that money, and a strong, willing man who «anted to help, 1‘d pull the lot of us out of the mud. ‘Two hundred and seventy.Ave By L4zte Dennia In the dark hours before the dawn, a band of adventurers come driving One London Dawn . on any trip, .m!!‘lh'dm It‘s delicious flaver adds sest and enjoviner.t. 'l'h:’ :-nn-‘u-lv the y scoms long. In short it‘s good and good for you. um No. 28â€"â€"‘30 It would be your duty, of course. I‘m mioald It‘s an ordinary story, Middleâ€" class decent relatives who died too young, a snobbish school which only toaches the young how to spend money, ani then an Inheritance. And aince thes a binge" . He sald with some satisfaction: "It really has been a classlal dingo, my dear!" "Now, about that revolverâ€"have you used it already, or are you think» Ing of using It when I leave you alone ?" "Ab! 8o you saw that?" "Yes." "And being a young woman of charâ€" acter couldn‘t J:t it sest there? No. | "Sorry!" he said meekly, He seomâ€" ed abashed, which made him look very ; young. In fact, ho was twontyâ€"four, and a little Roman in appearance, hayâ€" ‘ Ing a square head and heavyâ€"lidded ; eyes; but his mouth was kind, and his . eyen themselves very tire. Me followed aer into an eatingâ€"house which sho seemed to know, and sat down with her at a quict table, She ordered breakfast for two; and after it had been eaten and pald for sho upoke: "Breakfast," she said. *« know a place near here where we can get cofâ€" fee and ham and egzs. You‘ve been very kind, and J can‘t er you a tip, because you‘re a ger.leman, 1 think. If you really are oue you‘ll let me give you some coffer .o set my mind at reat." "And now?" he said, when her busiâ€" ness was Anished. They looked at each other gravely; then Elizazbeth «miled. "I think." he said to her, as he elimbed into the seat, ‘that 1 must have fallen aslcep reading the ‘Ara blan Nights Entortainments.‘ . Don‘t wake me, will you?" Nearly anything, he knew, can hap pen in London; but never before, after a night of hectic and rather depressâ€" iIng entertainment, had he come out to the paverent to And = strongâ€"willed beautiful young woman driving a van of sweetâ€"scented strawberries who inâ€" slsted that he should #it beside her. "Well, I‘ve got to go to Covent Garâ€" den, and 1 don‘t know my ay about London. It‘s important to me that 1 should go to the right place quickly. You look . s if you knew London well; and you look decent, too. o I thought you might show meâ€"the wayâ€"without being funny." "Please‘" Elizabeth repe.ted. And the young man, looking into her lilae eyes, obeyed. Elizabeth noticed theso thincs and many others before they came to the market Itself. Sho saw that, though his evening clothes were excellent, he wore po links in cuffs which had obâ€" viously started ‘the nigh: with Hoks; there was a spot of wine on Ihnlln-‘ front; but there was no trace of scent clinging to him anywhere. | Me wore evening clothes and he held something in his hands, which he was examining closely; and Elizabeth saw that he was looking into the bar« rel of a revalver, which he held open in his hands and appeared to be load: ing. Then, as the last light was switchod off in that room, he stepped back beâ€" tween the curtains and vanished. Klizabeth wondered if she had seen the beginnings of a murder or of a sulcide. She besitated. Either must be stopped. Yet what can a girl from | the country, in charge of a van which must not be loft, do about so strange a thing as this? Ste looked up and down the street for a polceman, but there were »o pedestrians. She threw off her rug and prepared to jump down from her seat, when the door of the house opened and the young man "Jump up please‘!" she said. ‘The young man, still more amazed, stood still. He was pale and haggard. He turnâ€" ed north and began to walk quickly away. But, murder or sulcide, he must be stoppedâ€"for someone else‘s sake, or his own. Before he had gone ten feet Elizabeth called to him crispâ€" He was too direct and candid, she thought, to be a murderer; it must be sulcide. And at that moment the reâ€" leased trafic began to move forward again. Elizabeth had to move forward too. _ But ..ot without this strange young man, for she had Inberited her father‘s courage. She pointed urgentâ€" ly to the seat beside ber. It was unâ€" thinkable that on this lovely summer‘s morning a decent young man should :" permittedto go away and kill ll.-‘ + 1 "Young man, come here!" Me hesitated, stared at her, and then said pleasantly : "Is there anything 1 can do for Epllopsy is one of the most @ificult atate medicine. In trazing tas d¢ maladies doctors have io combat, Beâ€"| velopmeat 3i parermalism of ths asâ€" cause little is known definitely about tiomal government, Dr. Mmgan said it, anything which has been tried in‘ that now the state smy®, at leasi in the way of treatment and cure has|certain notable (nstamces with which been llitle more than stab in the dark. ail are familiar, "what Its citizens The Rochester pbysicians hars beew shall drink, what may and may working with this specia% diet fos n>* ouy and sell. = they may and slight years. During that time they : may mot 4; or ~ertain Jays otf the have followed 141 patien.«, who Kept| wsekâ€"In short, it has bullt #> such a fuithfully to the diet. Of these .3 aro‘ maze of thoush»!t & m‘a cured, Dr. Helmhols said. They have laws governing pet almire t not suffered eplieptic attacks for perâ€"|on» wonder« what mentt?" Epilepsy Cures A notable number of cures of ¢plâ€" lepsy were reported by Dr. Henry F. Helm} 4z and Dr, Haddow M. Keith, of Rochester, Minn. ‘The physician used a diet high in fat content, known as the ketogenic dist. It was worked out by Dr. Russeli M. Wilder, formerâ€" ly of the Mayo clinic and now at the University of Chicago. The diet gets its name from a substance called keâ€" tome, which is produced 1# excessive amounts in the blood of persons» fol lowlng it. Dr, Wiener treats his patients with epinephrine and advises strenuous ex ercises in an effort to increase the s¢â€" eretion of this substance by the paâ€" ea suprarenal glands, in 79 | «a.. . qiowing this method the near | algbseduess was checked. The n-’ tlerts were almost all of school age, weli nourished and developed, byt of ! an casy going, Inactive nature, adverse ‘ to taking exerciso. Dr. Wiener said‘ that while one type of progressive! myopla is benefited by this method | of treatment, another type shows some ‘ other influencing factor as yet n‘lr‘ covered. He lookes «t her steadily. And Eliza« beth found . erself remembering bJ moonlight am. the nightingales and‘ the gardens she had had to pass by, and the honeysuckie .he had never had time to oi:l. A little breathless she stood up. . "I think we‘d better be goingâ€"â€"* "Home!" he said. A metal found in Southâ€"West Africa, and known as zincâ€"blende, produces a bright light when struck or rubbed, even under water, ' From the supraremal glands, small eapshaped organs lying just above the kidneys, comes the potent epine phrino or adrenalin, as it is more comâ€" monly known. . This subsiance has Neen extensively used as a stimulant, Uir, Wiener found its stimulating proâ€" perties beneficla} to nearsighted eyes, Nearsightedness, or myopia, is not a diseaso in itself, Dr, Wiener explainâ€" ‘ed, but is a sign of congenital weakâ€" ness, This weakness affects the olas tJe part of the coating of the eye, so that the eyeball stretches and the lens of the eye gets out of focus. ‘The perâ€" son so afflicted is nearsighted. "Japanese work," he said; ‘nn‘ rare and old and perfect, and worth £400 or £500, Your capital and mine, Elizabeth, 1 won them eartier in the evening, and 1 was looking them over before 1 went out to sell them when the shops open." "Then you wer n‘t going toâ€"â€"* ‘ "Quit? No‘ 1 was going to sell them and settle down to work. Life‘s so interesting; but It‘ll be more inâ€" teresting working with you, Eliza« beth," he finished softly. We arâ€"ept the report of the Depart» ment of Agriculture that fewer perâ€" sons are leaving the farm. ‘There are fewer persons on the farm to leave. "All the way up today 1 was wonâ€" doring where I could find a little capt« tal and a strong, reliable man to help me t» pull things out of the mud." ‘ "Then when do ! start??" ; "You can come back with me this morning: but you can start mâ€"b‘ giving me that gun." He chuckled and drew from his coat« pocket two small ivory pistols, ex» quisitely .nade and ornamented with Detroit.â€"The latest development in the use of glandular substances lo‘ treat omumnnumuuuhi method to the relief of eye diseases. How the powerful secretion of a gland was used to treat progressive short sightedncss in 100 patients was told members of the American Medical Association meeting here by II" Meyer Wiener, eye specialist of St. Louls, 1 T t mm _ 0 O s "I took to playing cards for m« ney. I took to that last veek with, r-l Is W‘l‘“ afraid, the wrong playmat«s, They Ne have my inheritance and my cuffâ€"links, BY ANNABEILE WORTHINGTON but 1 have the gun you s+w." 1 vew ww ‘ "And your strength and your health M{ustrated Dres=aking Leason F irâ€" and some humour, You‘s» all right, mished Wi‘h Every Pattern ‘ All you want now is work. You never \ seem to have had any of that. 1 beâ€" w Neve you‘ll enjoy work when once you % get used to it." @ 4 ‘ "Perhaps. But being untrainedâ€"â€"* s | "That doesn‘t matter. 1 can give P ‘ you work; and train you, too." L. ‘ "Listen! We‘ve got a market garâ€" den; but my father‘s i!!, and I‘ve got more to do that 1 can manage. Wilt you help me? 1 can easily train you; and it‘s fascinating work, and you can make money if you know your buslâ€" "My name‘s Elizabeth Leverett, As. the binge is fuisbed ?" Minard‘s Liniment gives quick reliet. "Elizabeth, you‘reâ€"roya‘! Butâ€"â€"â€"* His volce faltered. "It would ‘e great work to help you. But do you really need help?" In Treatment of Eyes vides ?ln {ulness, Style 8473 comes in ml‘. 18 .years, 86, 88, i0 and 42 i bust, 1. It‘s an excellont model for the at« tractive summer cottons, as printed {dimity, pique, prints, embroidered luu-. MBA printed voile. ! Flat silk ezape in skylark blue, dusty» ; pink ghantung. coralâ€"red linen and lcandy atriped ‘silk shirting are atâ€" Ee CR Onm‘y T ip vAnip P viediet t 6809 T Â¥ mase of thoush»!t and m“:;m“&lg’: laws soverning pessumal alairs that fng: spzed _ of , thirteen At from it, ‘The present high cost of medical cere is not enriching the doe lors of the country, and cannot be used as a valid argument in favor of alate medicine. Jn tracing tae de velopment ai purernalism of ths asâ€" tional government, Dr. Mmgan said that now the state amys, &t leasi in certain notable (nstamees with which all are famillar, "what Its citizens shall drint, w«hat thew miy and may CEOIE!T Dolatie lnalanees WM WIDCE ; tory, â€" @leepa aix. } wur in all are familiar, "what Its tm'mu -g.m: shall drint, «hat they may and may| Sriect" batahcs nâ€"* our and sol! what they may and : lulél,m may not 4: or ~ertain Jays ot the| §UROU®® OH® C fis "No schom» has yot been evolved of state ln-urn'.- state medicine, . or whatever it may be called, that has demonstrated unequivocaily the advisâ€" ability of going the Mmit in the mat« tor of governmeatal eontrol over ladiâ€" vidual hoalth maintenance," sald Dr. William Gerry Morgan, of Washingâ€" ton, D.C., new!yâ€"installed president of the American Madiea) Association at the first gencral adwnlon .k‘:..lll warned yvehemently. against on« crouchment of state medicing, Nelther the public sor thae doctor would bene Shock Affects Stomach Shock of other kinds is known to afect the stomach, For instance, the shock of a brokem bome in arm or leg often causes nausea or vomiting in susceptible persons, who have easily upset mental and nervous systems. The secretion» of the stomach, liver and pancreas are distinctly influenced by shock to the mind and emotions, This condition has not received the at« teation it doserves, Dr. Molean said. . ‘ The femin‘ > influence is apparent }= a printed erepe silk with flared cap res and bow neckline. _ t is ‘the smart moulded silhouette with beited na.ural waistline. The back is slim and straight. Cireular flared front of skirt roâ€" Many operations could be avoided by careful s‘udy of the mental and nervous factor, Dr, George A. Moleen of Denver said at the meeting. He told of cases in which persons suffering from what appéared to be conditions requiring surgleal operations. Yet these people recovered when their mental distres: was velleved, without any operation. Severe mental and emotional shock may cause various disturbances of stomach and intesinal tract and may even playâ€"a part in lbi development of stomack ulcers, Dr. Moleea said. ‘ Churchill, 95; ‘Dean Inge, 91; H. G. lods varying from one to seven years. Thirtyâ€"two more patients were definâ€" itely improved while 66 definitely did not improve. Some of those who were iImproved were able to return to a normal diet, while others suffered reâ€" currences of the disease when they abandone dthe diet. ‘The results were obtained with cases of idiopathic epilejey, which was not the result of some other disemme, noOW TO (RDER PATTERKNS .. Write yw& and address plali What New York Is Wearing eraitine 48 lakg (hith ewners, .. _ _ s NTING, Ashi Hn.al-.‘;-l--.f-'n :: 7. Th met L. "Why not use it to coastruct a nice ; Ilb.h‘-.-.m-bor-hnu-obunl old men can be treated to a‘painless death ?" 1 "Weve just completed a beautiful $20,100 home for stray dogs and cais and have $1,200 left for the building Pineâ€"clad, whispering hills, With the shimmering fles of the birghes Mounting the hillside alsies, Like ladies in churches:" Gardens of larkspur and phiox, With an oldâ€"{ashioned charm, quaint enthralling; f Mearthâ€"fires at twilight, and peace, And the organ tones of the sea calling. Orchards, fragrant, stonewalled, Where the humming of drowsy beeâ€" Throbs through the long summer hours Y Like the chanting of friars. ‘lr. giving number and size of such im ogo ie ‘ or ; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toron‘o Up the strdam, Dodging stones, Surging laughter, Breathless noans! Over the alll, Across the lane, Fiat on the grass And up again: Light on the brambles, Splash in the moat, Mocking criea From a windâ€"white throat. In through a window ,, Flash on the stak, Wild bair fallen, White breast bare! Laughing surrender, End of a race And red mouth liftea To a lad‘s brown face! =By Margaret Phylils MacBwe»zey. T his double cabln New England Pastoral Plan Now For This Summer‘s Good Times! # 4 TAPAK TEA > â€"Ramona Graham. T .C.ll? and Bervice ”N A, 371 Bay Street Torante, Ont. 9 As a contemporary »seck on this viewpoint in regard +> dog dietetics, it‘ is interesting to snow that Dr. Herâ€"| bert Fox, directo of the pathological laboratory of the Philadelphia Zooâ€"| logical Society, ha . found that a diet of muscular meat fed to Hons and other carnivora 1» «aptiviy is not nearly so beneficial to them as a diet of sofwer meat which more nearly re sembles their choice in the wild state. Dr, Pox, who is also director of the Pepper Pathological fnstitu and author of works on the diserses of wild animals, is studying this subject to find out the facts responsible for the preference of the animals and the henefits derived. She: "We have been married a week and you come home as late as this." Me: "Yes, my love, it took me all that time to tell the fellows at the club how happy 1 am." ! The dog, loft to himself, is ordinarâ€" ily carnivorous and follows the inâ€" stinet of his wild cousins in eating the inner organs rather than the muscular fesh. It appears that these animals derive some benefits from the softer diet and from certain chemical properâ€" ties of the glandular or,ans. ‘ One of the main reasons for the reâ€" latively short lite #»n of dogs is that we do them an injurs. while thinking to benefit them, by feeline C em what we ourselvés would ky w be fed. ; Minard‘s Liniment for all Strains. To make dogs live to a ripe old age and stay healthy, do not feed them the cholce cuts of meat, but give them the soft internal orgns, the parts usually thrown away, That this is the proper way in feed our canine pets is vouched for by Dr. ‘William Lents, director of the small animal hospital of the Uniâ€" versity of Penusylvania. In a long research on the longevity of dogs Dr. Lentz has found that in dogs reaching a life span of twenty years or more, the great majority had access to the waste meat materials, the scraps, the soft inner pasts and the various unâ€" used glands thrown away by butchers, Doge so fed lived from thro to four times as long as dogs fed a careful| meat diet of the better portions of the firm muscular meat such as are eaten by humans. | i monthe of June and July, special care Do Not Feed Your Dog ChOice | hss 1o be exercised in feeding the Cutsâ€"Prefers Cheaper _ |200‘s large tamily. At this time the Grub |ho‘.nun‘-u|ui*tl- 'l:fl" dens are crowded on every fine day by ‘h-hd-ulnu.flwdllfl.vflm who have come to see the and stay healthy, do not feed them th¢/ paby animais and you ¢ birds. ind ehoice cuts of meat, but give them th¢] porhaps to feed theia. + is certninly soft internal orgins, the parts usuall} | she best time to pay a visit to U _ sarâ€" mnn.n:‘ny. fi:l‘fi‘_l_.h!_"m dens, for in June and July every Zoe Dogs Fed Soft Meat Live to Ripe Old Age LoL. O Wul .4. | greedy, but ‘he young bird of paradisa e these "‘-"'mu them all, for he will checrfully l nomicey" """I.u--muu-m.m r,ans. ' Swailowed a Blanket asons for the 19\ Ravens have a strong partiality for n of dogs is tBBL grapes, and will gorge on them «li% . while thinkIDZ they can eat no more. Any festher ofâ€" aline 1 em what rerings after saturation point has been h« wo be fed. |reached are stored away in ~!d corâ€" raeck OM thi* pnors against the time when appetite -““m.‘-'m w that Dr. Her| ‘The snakes being kept behin gla«s the pathologic®!, paneis, cannot be fed by visito«, and & CBFOI!!| yonity, ‘The fact that their digestive ; this is perbaps just as well, for snakes do not always know what is good for them. One nython actually sw»llowed a biraket which had been placed in Its cage. Another suake of the same , apecies tried to swallow a bambso pole | which was being used to push forward _a dead rat. | _ it got about two feet of the pole , down its throat before it discor=red its |um-lhu|uh. After much i painful sisug¢ling the unaatural dist , was happlly disgorged. l The monkey tribe, generally speakâ€" dng, has a tough digestion, which is as , well, «ince more visitors flock to the â€" monke house than to any other. What , is more, some monkeys discriminate . quite wisoly in what they eat. One of them, given as ‘seâ€"cream comnet, very politely handed it back to the donor. But perbaps the orang was even wiser. When he was giver icoâ€"cream he applied it externally, emptying it over the top of his head. ‘The toughest digustion in the whole Zoee is undoubted! that pos»ssed by the ostrich. "A digestion like an o# trich" we often sayâ€"so oftes that "it has become a proverbâ€"sud there is some truth in it. Unfortunately, even an ostrich can overdo things. One Zoo estrich died because soms "kind" friend had fed him with a tinâ€"osenor. The ordinary food given to the anâ€" mals by the authorities is carefully selected and contains all the needful food factors, so that it isa‘t really necessary for visitors to feed the aniâ€" mais at all. Mowever, buman nature being what it is, visitors are allowed to give certain foods to coriain anl mals, and to help them bise are the substances sultab‘e for some af the substances sultab‘e for so popular favorite:.. Visitors ma, give to t bread, buns, biscults, fr honey, treacte, and jJam. | fers a tin of treacle, with moved or a hole punched | Bruin has an amusing time him. powers may be slight does not weigh elther with themselves or with the public who feed them. Probably the biggest "guzzlers" at the Zoo are those with feathors on Monkeys are strictly Thdy may have fruil, letts buns, and sugar. . Parro given monkeyâ€"nuts and frv shoots with the bark, bu loves best is perbaps a {\ ana. Give him one with and watch the result. while, Bummer also being the time whea the "Eat more fruit" entbusiasts are at large, it follows that much of the food given to the animais is of this kind. But too much fruitâ€"or unsullt able fruitâ€"is a frequent cause of o digestion among 7Z°~ animals. It ‘is really astonisuing what some animais â€" will eat if given the oppor «A point to remember is wuts must not be given to mals, or, affered -lm%m ® parrots. No food at all : by visitors to the lars «mall cats, or otters, bu ways consolation to be Jumbe, Aithough each a regular authorized rs 200 Ib, of hay, corn and 1 mother is busy rearing ber youns. > be fed on suitable Lood ~â€" Answers anything that is offered, whether it is ‘~q~. Some time ago a certain fallow door became known for its odd habit of t« Ing paper, with the result that peopie plied the unfortunate animal with this very unsulte*‘. (orm of nourishmst «.‘ it died. A postâ€"morten examioaâ€" tion showr 1 that its stomach continâ€" ed sixteen pounds of newspaper »~d paper bags! You may say that the animal should have known better, bat what about the visitors who fed 1 * months of June and July, special care Zoo Animals v‘ave Tough Ir:digesuions By Crav sa Wit , Generally speaking, most anim: refuse to touch food which they do » "take to" by instinct, tut there » some which will readily eat aim: Me Never Says "! inn of oever na por diew, ict monkey» aquatle ant tA 4. ay be giver |. .-:'a'-l:.u‘. ind in 3 lephant has i awd greenm what Polly b=ized banâ€" he sakin om it is worth vegetariam, e, biscalt®, It, suUgar, ie who ofâ€" the lid reâ€" : It, to old in front of > bearsâ€"

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