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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN. UTAH Poultry BROODER HOUSE IMPORTANT SANITARY Clean Well Before Chicks Are Placed in It. Figured Fancy Dy IS THAYER WALDO "-- , .o tJ.pUg .u W 4q 3 Tha Blanktowa Daily Cauriar March 25, lain. 'T'llEIlE editorial Ru Good Will Offering to the People of United States. lia UldM-rml- coni-erne- Ann-rUa- . g double-breaste- d Keep the poultry house clean and plenty of dry litter on the floor. Separate the roosters from the laying flock and produce Infertile eggs. d Th cedars are not but (hey nearly to tall at lieve th!k trunk, as large a 47 A notable feel n circumference. I t lull feature the hurUontal br.tnehet are o thickly carpeted with ueedle that the heavy, Arm apiMutr a though up ended on a well kept lawn. On Republic's Flag. The lte of Ihe chief cedar grove I one of rare bounty, the tage of a manelve amphlthiMier tulle aero ltd 4.111 feel high. Immediately behind them the long line of the It I l.ehnnnti rln-culminating ridge, more than lO.iant feel above the Mediterranean. Twenty mile to the northwest I'm the port of Trlimlh The fnmout cedar arr In the Lehanee republic, at Ihe eastern end of the Mediterranean, JuM north of the Holy Land. Although the Is Inrluded In the French mandate with Syria, It ha It own government under a Syrian pretl The flag of the republic Is dent. the flag of France, with a green cedar of Lebanon In the center. The cedar of Lebanon alto p pear on the eal of the American Unlvenlty of Beyrouth, donor of the group of cedur to America, and lael butlon bearing the uni verity' Insignia are wrnm by grad ualea throughout the Near East. The cedars have been studied by Dr. teeialitt of the university. George E. Post, of the faculty, authority on Syrian botany, made the atuieuieni, "There I not and never ha been a rotten Lebanon cedar. The wood Is Incorrupt hie. The Im perUhnble cedar remain untouched by rot or Insect." The wood, like that of the cypres and the sequoia. Is close grained and aromatic. mid a long life. ciit-c- t I Hand Loom 109 Years Old Macon, Mo. A hand-mad- e hum) one hundred and ulne year old. fashioned with ax and draw knife by John Powell from walnut taken from a virgin Missouri forest In IS2I, wa In use here recently. do la Paix, Plan a Highway to Link East and West Coasts. Washington. The old Spanish Gold Hoad" across the Isthmus of Panama, with Its vivid memories of Peruvlun bullion. Pacific pearls and English buccaneers, may have a Twentieth century counterpart at no far distant date. The reconnaissance survey report on the highway, which Is being studied by the house committee on roads, contains a sug gestlon that a road be built from Pan ama City to Colon, by way of Juan Diaz and Madden dam to France n field. Trail Made by Spaniard. "This would take In sections of the old Gold Road used by early Spaniards In transporting bullion from Peru and Mexico to the Atlantic coast, the report said. A survey of this section was re cently completed by Canal Zone au thorltles. A large amount of con structlon might be obviated here bj linking the Madden Dam-Franc- e Women Is Painting Just Old Custom The modern art of womens faces Is Jnst an old Egyptian custom. Pigmentary adornment of the facial epidermis was no secret to the women who lived 4,000 years ago In the Babylonian city of Ur of the Chaldees. Archeologists have discovered Jars of cosmetics and powders of various shades, according to C. Leonard Woolley, who has Just returned here from bis excavations on the site of the ancient city. London. making-u- p Mules Anther of -THE BLUE ETIQUETTE." THE EXPENSES OF A WEDDING Post: DEAR Mr. for Doe the groom pay any thing beside the marriage l!oene, the wedding ring, end of cuurse, the clergyman' fee? (2) When the double ring ceremony la used, doe h pay for both rings? (3) I live In Neve York, and my Ounce does not, and Insist that In her town, the men tlweys buy the flowers. Must 1 follow custom In her community, or ran I simply tell her frankly that my father bought the bridal flower for each of my three sister If I have to buy all these flowers It I going to make an awful bole In the money I'va eared for our wedding trip. Answer: (1) 111 own, the best man's and the ushers' boutonniere, ties, ud If they wear them, glove and spate. (2) No, he buy the ring for the bride, and she buy the on for him. (3) I'm afraid that what your father did In New York has nothing whatever to do with what you w ill have to do In another town. I agree that It ran bo an appalling handicap especially at a December wedding I But the only advice I can give la that yon talk U over with your fiancee, tell her about your wedding trip budget, and suggest that tha bridesmaid carry muffa (very amart at the moment) of velvet or whatever goes best with their dresses. Then the only flowers would be those for the bride. To me the modern fashion of Including all flower (except boutonnieres) as part of the wedding expenses of the bride's family, who can at least control the type of bouquet to be ordered, le more fair then expecting the groom to assume a blind obligation, which he cannot control, and I usually embarrassed to meet A reader wrote me Inte.v of an wedding at which there were all bridesmaids, a maid of honor, and two flower girls, all carThe bride' bourying gardenia huge one of white orquet wa All the flowers were, as alchid The ways, chosen by the bride. groom who had never heard of this custom, returned from bis wedding trip to And a bill for nearly three hundred dollar The only way he could pay It was to arrange with the florist to pay It, plus Interest. In Installment Meaning that he began his married life with this utterly unreasonable Indebtednes 1 e field section with Canal Zone high- Bus and automobile traffic highway from Colon to Panama would be relatively large. The Panama City to Colon route is but one of several roads to connect with the highway w hlch was suggested to the Republic of Pannma In the survey report Other suggestions were: The transformation to a highway of the present trail from David, province of Chlriqul, to Boons del Toro would do much to advance the economic of the western end of Panama. A highway from Colon to Puerto Bello, which Is situated on a small deep-seharbor and which In Spanish days was an Important distributing point. Cost of Road Estimated. The report said that potential traffic on the Panama link of the projected highway cannot be estimated, but indications exist of a considerable Increase as the roads In the western section of the republic continue to be extended and Improved. The distance from Panama City to the Costa Rican border was given as 368.1 miles, or 590.8 kilometers. road Completion of an would Involve a minimum cost of Provision of a com$2,141,200. plete road, with 28 feet graded section and an oiled surface of 18 feet, The best would cost $6,420,013. graded sectype road, with a tion and thick concrete pavement 20 feet wide, was estimated to cost $19,407,S32. ways. over a BEFORE AND AFTER THE WEDDING trans-isthmia- rEAR Mr Post: Is It Improper for an engaged couple to pool their money and buy one worthwhile gift for a bride, to whose wedding and reception they both have been Invited? Answer: One present sent by two engaged people Is entirely proper. - t- n pack-hors- e Dear Mr Post: Is It permissible me to buy my husband a wedding ring now, after weve been married more than three years? The double ceremony was not used and be would like a ring, too. Is this ever done? Answer: I don't know that It Is ever done, but there Is no reason In the world why It should not be. If your husband would like to have a ring and you want to give him one, by all means buy the ring you would have bought, have It marked as It would have been marked, and put It on his finger with perhaps a pledge of even deeper tenderness than you could have made three years ago. for well-bein- a n Prison Work Taught Springfield, Mass. Springfield college has added a few new courses to the curriculum. They deal with prison work, probation and parole. It Is believed the only college In the country teaching these subjects. in Arkansas Knowledge of the function of pro In regarded as essen In poultry raising. teins in feeds tial to success ', Dear Mr Post: Is a flower girl out of place In a very simple wedding which Is to take place on the lawn of a country house? The bride Is wearing a simple white dress and hat, and her only attendant will wear the same type of clothes In pink and brown. They will wear What should the flower corsage girl wear If she may be Included? Answer: It would be quite all right to have a flower glrL If she Is very little, she might wear one of .her own white dresses. If she Is older, she would wear pink and brown to match the maid of honor. Post: My fiance My Dear Mr has two sisters my age, whom I know, but we are entirely separate I am having a party at group the country club this month at which the news of our engagement Is being given out Because of the nature of the party, ought I Invite these sisters to It? If so, should I ask their mother, too? If you are having a Answer: general party, I think you will have to Invite them all. But If It Is to be a very small party, and Including only a few of your Intimate friends. It will not be necessary unless you are going to make a great deal of the announcement. by d .V Convii is In Arkansas have been used Instead of mules for pulling planting machines on the state penal faun, as shown in this photograph. The work was not harmful, but protests led Governor Futrell to order tli state penal board to discontinue the practice. Roanoke Island BOOK OF SOCIAL USAGE," Etc. Pari. lice d la I'atx, to long known a the world's most faniou street, glittering with million of dollar' worth of diamond and dressbristling with fuahlotiHhl In Hi making houses, I deep shadow of an eclipse. It due to International and national economic upheavals. Prli tags, never before heard of on till thoroughfare now blemish Ihe landscape. Expensive csrs and forelabomlely clad pedestrian merly (baking the highway from the ttpera to the Place Veudotne, are absent. The ancient and venerable house of Worth, oldest of French dressmaking establishment here, fare a saddened world once animated by the laughter and luxury A customers and window shoppers. M. Jerques Worth, president of Ihe Chamhre Syndicate de la Couture I'arUlenne, says: "Other prob. lems than political hare been brewing for aome time, and the dress business Is one of the greatest sufferers. Our foreign clientele, as everyone know, conic largely from the United Stales, end with the depreciated dollar we have been hit. In addition the national spirit there la favoring American Industry, although they know that when It comes to materials end designs our products are euperlor. "We cannot blame them for that, however. Their dollar has gone down and their tax on foreign goods has gone up, a combination of affairs which makes It practically lmHisblble for them to pur chase French creations as formerly. "As for us, Ihe cost of production has mounted steadily, and distressing conditions are facing our workers In the de luxe trade, which Is one of the major foundations of French Industry." As soon as the government takes a hand In atnblllzing customs duties for the luxury trades here, the French Illy will again be glided and the Rue de la Pali resume Its pristine splendor. March 27, 193-1- . Mr. J. Lucius Doakes, edltor-In-chie- f of the Courier, has been grant- tltian-hnire- -- Panama Route May Use Old Gold Road Men No Longer to Be The Blanlctown Daily Courier ANNOUNCEMENT ed an Indefinite leave of absence due to the delicate condition of his wife following her recent arrest and subsequent removal to the hospital. Farm poultry records kept In Psychopathic Mrs. Doakes, It is alleged, placed Tennessee Indicate that 70 per cent In a local post box two parcels conof the Income from poultry was from egg sales. taining homemade bombs, one addressed to a famous screen star, If all the chickens on farms In and the other to Mrs. Timothy C. the United States were divided Martin of this city. The publishers of the Courier equally among the population, each feel certain that this unfortunate person would receive three. Incident will prove to have been all It Is their firm a ghastly mistake. The care and feed of a growing pullet will determine the laying belief that Mrs. Doakes. charming leader in ability of the full grown hen. The and petite best of blood backing may be of Blnnktown's social activities, would little value If cure and good feed have been quite Incapahle of this outrage. Moreover, absolutely no during the growing stage were lack motive for the net has been dls Ing. covered. By EMILY POST Economic Stress. Sent by tin Ainert Wahlngimi. lately been a disgust " lug amount of to do throughout can of Syria, the laud over the personality and a a goixl will tittering to the exploits of a certain motion pic- of the United St Me. 13 living rfnr !' In ffattf U, H V Uiuff. 14 ftarim. ni. S'fth ture actress. cedars of Lebanon fmui the I'lioenl To those SU iurvu iul rtf Ilit grv;i!it cliW k Iohmmi oociir chiefly, as wa should lie with Ihe cl. in roust at the enatern end of rlo wttlcli higher and finer things of life, this the Mediterranean were recently undjriiifc I ht ItrtMwllng At the direcli la cleo the womaus undulating hips, Indecent loaded In exposjre, and vulgar expressl ms tion of the President they were boiiM th'trMihiy before the chicks can only be revolting. lunted In the ground of Arlington tin il.irt III IL Her popularity and her possible Nalionul cemetery, overlmiklng the nlMtul having a sanitary T, hr null r hinie the poultryuian Influence umiu feminine manners, Potomac river. In the lllhle then majestic tree Kimiilil Hr.--1 ill the old ma- moreover, constitute a menace to borne life In this country. are railed "the trees of Jehovah, Amerinure mi'J dirt from the tower Side of Lebanon, which he a!N 'id II. Mr of the house end can women during the past few the cedar bath planted" Their most famoti cl, .Hi the wuter containers, t ash years have learned to malntalu a when slender and modest appearance. If appearance In history wa 1,..;mts and other equipment used this trend la reversed, we gravely King Hiram of of Tyre transported lu (e h"UM. After this thorough ant hmileal cleansing has been done, fear tha effect upon standards of Lebanon cedars to Jerusalem for the building of Solomon's temple. the lower aide walls, floor, water decency and right living. Famous Trees Nevtr Numerous J. LUUl'S DOAKES, containers, feeding equipment. Scholars differ a to bowr many briMi.ler Editor. state and ranopjr should cedars of Lebanon there were In be scrublied with a lye solution antiquity, according to the National Illunktown, March M, 1934. made by dissolving one pound of Geographic society. Ije In leu gallons of hot water. A My dear Editor Doakes: It Is probable that at no time I have Just finished slltr bristle briMitn may be used to reading what were the limestone ridge of the In wrote 'Mils you he solution. a mixture about your lye appl) paier will not only further cleanse the certain motion picture actress." and Lebanon completely clothe In these In ancient limes feel railed It to but also has germ killing take my pen In majestic trees. house upon the wood was already valued, not liwcr. Where the (Hiultryman bas band. only for Its great strength and re My Timothy aod I have been mara lire gun, he may use this Instead ried for twenty years and were slstanee to rot, but also for Its of the le solution. rarity. now. Well, a worn After the brooder house has been both forty-onSome decades ago, with the en thoroughly cleaned. It must be an, you know, hasn't all of her girlrlciiiud again at Intervals during ish charms at that age, and a man courngement of Queen Victoria, the the brooding ieriod. If the house Just shout then seems to get some small remaining cluster of giant lus s dirt floor, remove the top kind of funny romantic notions like trees was Inclosed by a Jtone wall. few Inches and replace It with clean he had at twenty. At least, that's The tree had long been considered how It was with Tim and me. I sacred to man, and Hadrian Issued dry soli, sand or gravel The use of wire frames on which guess he began to look at me a lit- an imperial orJer that the grove to place the feeders and water tle critically, or something, and saw should not be harmed. Later the Is ul advised. The house that I wasn't quite Ihe slender dam- Maronlte who have a small chapel amid this tiny forest, threatened exneeds to he free from drafts Slid sel he longed for. communication for anyone who If It Is motahle. It Is well to take It Anyhow, pretty soon I heard ruBut herds of mors that be was running around harmed the trees. to a new locution after cleaning. I si not crowd the chicks In the with some red headed woman who goat have showed less respect than house. About six square Inches of wore a sire 14 and looked the same man, and by nibbling at the sap fl.Mir space ier chlik Is necessary from all angles. I never taw her, lings have prevented new growth. A count of tree rings, made on but that was the description I got for good health. from the people who are always small brauches. Indicates that the lebanon cedar has a alow growth glad to let you know about such Dosing With Drugs Will things. Not Benefit Laying Hens I didn't do anything because I He Hosing the flocks with drugs will didn't know anything to do. not result In more eggs. That Is kept right on, going out oftener the conclusion of the poultry de- and staying away longer all the time. Finally I began to think It partment of the Michigan Agricultural college. Egg production Is a would have to end In a divorce or matter of Inherited characteristics separation, which would also have and of proper feeding. Mongrel birds been the end of life for me. are very apt to be unprofitable and Then one night he said, "Let's hens which are conqiplled to forage go to a movie." We always did that for their living have little time to when he wasn't stepping out He fill the egg basket. didn't seem to like being alone with Drugs do not change the factors me for an evening any more. So Inherited by hpns nor do they sup- we went down to the Superba withply needed food elements so the out bothering to find out first what possibility of nostrums affeeting was there. Well, It turned out to egg production are very remote. Dr. be a picture with this actress you II. E. Moskey, United States Dewrote about. Id never even heard partment of Agriculture, says posi- of her before, and I don't think tively that no known drug or com- Tim had. bination of drugs will Increase egg When It was over he said, Lets production. stay for the second show. We did, Itatlnns for laying flocks must and then half the night Tim kept supply the food elements needed to me awake raving about her. That, maintain the body weight of the he said, was the way a woman hen, to supply warmth and energy, should look and be. and to supply the material conNext day I thought a lot about tained In the eggs themselves, flood It and suddenly got an Idea. I grains, green feeds, milk, shell, and hunted around, found my old corset, and put It on under the Blinkiest grit furnish all the materials needed by the laying hen. dress I had. The effect was pretty Diseased hens should be treated good, and even better after I'd cut for the malady with which they are four Inches off the gown's neck In affected, and. In case of contagious front. The curves were really surdisorders, proper sanitary measures prising, but I wont go Into details should be practiced In the houses that wouldnt Interest you. and runs where chickens are conWhen Tim came In that night, I fined. Indiana Farmers Guide. was standing by the fireplace In the corset and the dress and about a Winter-Hatche- d dolalrg worth of dime store JewelChicks Winter hatched chicks are less ry and with my hair piled up curly-likHe just stopped dead and subject to diseases, cannibalism, and other vices than chirks hatched stared for about half a minute. In April or May, says a writer In Then he almost Jumped across the Successful Farming. Coccldlosls and room and said, "Good gash, honey, The linen which fashion- - this some other poultry diseases are you sure look like a million I Don't Is the uncrushable kind, held In check by cold weather. The think I was slow seeing It, but you Jacket suit so necessary for the warm days of what think me so I couldnt floored artificial heat necessary for the spring and summer. Its color is the comfort of early chicks keeps the to say. new dusty pink." Tailored In the floor litter drier and less favorable "Oh, that's all right, I told him, to the development of disease which trying to wiggle around a little, "I best British manner with slightly padded shoulders this suit carries is encouraged with damp litter. Canlike a guy what takes his time. high distinction In its lines. The Tim's all. about thats nibalism and feather-pickinWell, may be set-isleeves, straight to wants he and controlled among the stopped going out, with one large patch Jacket sumchicks by limiting the amount of take a second honeymoon this and a slim skirt make this light used. Covering the windows mer. I guess I've written an awful pocket one of the outstanding models of with burlap or tar paper excludes lot about things that dont concern A navy blue blouse the season. some of the light and Is very sucyou, but I wanted you to know that with a high collar and short sleeves cessful In controlling these troubles. the lady you called a wrecker of together with navy blue buttons on homes actually saved one. the jacket achieve fine color Yours very truly, POULTRY HINTS Mrs. T. C. M. winter-hatche- Good Taste Today GLAMOR OF FAMED DIMMED STREET Cedars of Lebanon Paris, Feds Are Planted in U.S. Emily Psat. WSV Servicb. Singing to Win Wife Singing for a wife is the custom of the nntlves of eastern Nepal. The young Llmbu tribesman, having led his prospective bride before the chief, bursts Into song, and Is only successful in his wooing If his repertoire pleases the chief. Otherwise x rival steps In and makes a match A It. Modern Transportation en Roenok hrn4 by KkllHiil Wuhtsstoa, U Sorlfty, 0Tehlarvlc. VM1 have engineers Dare trail the Island off the Nortb Carolina roast and built lb Wright memorial bridge across Currituck sound, bringing the Island Into touch with the modern world, yet the visitor atlll And In Iloan-ok- e Island the speech and customs common In the days of Sir Walter Raleigh whose followers established there the first English settlement In America. From tha aklpiier of the small mall boat that pile between the Islands one muy supplement hie limited knowledge of tide region supplied end by by obsolete descriptions copies of the original letter and mapa left by Sir Walter Raleigh's adventurer He learns that Roanoke Island perfectly exemplifies the of Isolation adage that byway pocket the choicest realities of life. Here Is a genuine, Inbred dignity, hosexpressive of a pitable folk. The Islanders are proud of their physique, speech, manners and custom historic survivals of old English Devon. The ubiquitous automobile did not reach Roanoke Island until less than a decade ago. For land transportation there were up to that time only carts end the sand ponies and occasional oxcart Even the little sand ponies' tradition went t)Hok to castaway vessel to the I'ortuguese and to Sir Walter Raleigh's voyager On Raleigh's attempts to colonization hluged momentous results In the New world. The "Lost Colonies, though they began and ended Sir Walter's ventures upon the North Carolina Sea Island were settlethe first ments In America. Discovered In 1584. In 1584 the adventurer obtained a patent from Queen Elizabeth, whose favors his genius readily commanded, and dispatched to the New world the first of bis expedition The little band, under Ama-da- s and Barlowe, sailed through an Inlet on July 4, 15S4, to discover Roanoke Island a spot so favored In climate and setting and so rich In fruits, game, and bird life that it seemed to them a veritable paradise. Back to England they sailed to describe it, taking with them two friendly Indian chiefs ; and also tomaize, pumpkins, bacco, sassnfra squash, grapes, and other fruit Their story created excitement, and In the following year Raleigh sent out Sir Richard Grenville with a second colony, numbering 108 souls, determined to make a permanent home on Roanoke Island and establish plantation They landed on August 17, 1585, and built a log fortification, to which they gave the name The New Fort In Virginia, also spoken of as "Fort Ifalelgh. However, they could not live at pence with the Indian and the entire colony sailed back with Sir Francis Drake In 1580, Just two weeks before the arrival of reinforcement Finding the fort deserted, the new group also returned to England, but left 15 men oo the Island. A third expedition, sent out by Raleigh In 15S7, found the fort demolished and no trace of the 15 men except the bones of one slain by The gruesome discovthe savage ery was a shock to the homeseek-ers- , and they willingly followed the advice of their leader, John White, to forestall future hostility by making friends of the Indian The plan succeeded admirably. Manteo, one of the friendly chiefs, was even baptized and given a title of nobility as Lord of Roanoke the first English peerage In America. Virginia Dare Birth. On August 18, 1587, five days after the baptism of the Indian, was born John White's granddaughter, Vlrgiaia Dare, the first English native of America. She wa baptized on the following Sunday. Thus was Elizabethan civilization anchored here by a baby, a mother and the American family. Around little Virginia Dare remained more than a hundred men, women and children. They were left alone for three years. Then John White, who had gone back to England after establishing the colfind that they had ony, returned--t- e disappeared. MODERN Virginia d English-speakin- Island. Tba only promising clue While found was the sign "CltO" biased on a tre Bine the letter were part of a cod agreed open by tbe colonists three year before, the rescue party hoped that their friend had gone to Croataa, home of tho friendly Uanteo, who bad promised sanctuary in emergency; but tho captain, pleading bad weather and lack of snpplle forced the party to sail away before tho Clue could bo Investigated. What had been the colonists' fate? The blazed algo was all that was ever found of the Lost Colonies exof departure, cept hasty mark burned chest rusty Iron Implement household effects and book Whatever the fate of tho colonist either they or their early successor left their Elizabethan dialect manner enstom and features In this American byway. As the little mall boat bobs along toward Roanoko Island, the traveller's thoughts turn from the story of Virginia Dare and the first colonists to another historic drama of tho Bank In 1812, Just across tho channel from Roanoke Island, on tho ocean sand spits of Nag Head, the pilot boat Patriot, carrying Theodosia Burr Alston, daughter of Aaron Burr and wlfo of Governor Alston of South Carolina, ended Its last voyage. After the tragic collapse of her father's career and the lose of her little ton, tbe only hope of the Burr family, Mr Alston was In the depth of despair. She eet sail from Georgetown, S. C, to Join her lonely father, and disappeared forever Life on the Island. ' A bit of life on Ronnoke Is revealed by a recent visitor, a woman doctor. An old midwife and nurse, the widow of a life service man, was to care for an aged woman In her ancient cottage by the sound, where she lived alone. Her name was "Mis'" Bashl the "Mis'" an Island designation for mlstres and "Bashl," she said, a Bible name after Bathsheba, the wife of Uriah ; but they call me Bashl." Surnames on the Island do not denote the Individual, for the families In a hamlet are usually allt members of one or two clan In a worn rocker In which the old woman had rocked her six children the doctor rested after dinner and listened to her tale of a remarkable life history. What she learned entitles Mis Bashl to a plaee In the annals of medical history. The old nurse belonged to the Island's remnant Her blood, ber sterling character, and her beantlful, broad dialect were heritages of the old Devonshire She was comely and castaway. agile, her visage one of strength and 1 slab-woo- d thought Of only five weeks "schoolin," she had never learned to read, bat had been tanght to work Indoors and out and to spin. At sixteen "out (old) she married and at twenty-on"out In a far life service station hamlet she undertook her first obstetrical case. "Doctor, I knew nothin of It ; but Mehaley read me a doctor book, and the moon was cornin' to full, so the baby would be thrifty. One born In the dark of the moon Is not" Mis Bashl Nursing. On her little plantation, In pine woods by the sound, though widowed later, she cared for a psychiatric mother, raised her own brood and her mothers and her brother's children, cared for cow pigs, and Then for 45 years she gardens. ministered to all the sick of the region, a local doctor coming only at rare Interval Her sand pony Napoleon carried cart through her In a woods and sand and water. In gale or sunshine to her patient Often afoot she swung with her Viking stride down beaches or through the wood and She was smart, knowing, thongh she signed by mark, and she was known as a (capable) woman. Her eoutliy dignity of bearing and courtesy were exquisite. Thus she fell Into role that nature east for her. Months later the doctor realized bow the personality of this Island woman, linked with a touch of science, prevented morbid results from household condition She established her own art of medicine and It worked. e d ex-.c- te |