Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, February 10, 1921, Image 4
1'ia> /m'* *
| Be sure you get |
BROMO
I Tbogexraino btm thi> ?lgn?tare
^^ zli iVfli i
iMBBiiJUflMaBM
temrizmifl 'JI i fibB I
I ntftt trot >_ clogged np lyiteni
Ittoaijrm lifetime of nUerysai
I DR. TDTTS UTER PILLS
takra <mm er Iwa at beddat,v
I fiickljp effedaalea all yolwuni
Doyou know
you can roll
SOAQOg
cigarettes tor
lOcts from
I one bag of
W IJ
GENUINE
j- BullDurham
TOBACCO
Hou? you
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago or Qout?
Take RHBUMAOUDKto remove tbeeausa
tad drive the poison from the system.
"imuoM 01 nu mi oa
run urauTia 01 to ootids"
At All Drn(|Ut?
ids. Belly ft Sat, WUUulo Diitribnters
Cabbage Plants
for Sale
Grown In tha open air on the eea coaat of
Booth Carolina. The Kind that we aet out.
which atand severe coble and make cabbages
fur ua. We have the finest lot of theae
planta this season we ever crew. Early Jersey
Wakaflelda, Large Type Wakeflelda and
Suceaalon. Prices F. O. D. hare by Express:
100 for 11.15. 1,000 tor 11.00, 5,000 for (5.75,
or 10.000 for 515.00. By Paroel Post In 9. C.:
600 for 51.60 or 51.60 per 1,000. In Oa. and
N. C.: 600 for 51.76 or 51.76 per 1,000. In
Fla., Ala.. Mlaa.. Tenn. and Va.: 600 fon
51.00 or 51.00 per 1,000. Will be glad te
have your orders for Cabbage Planta by Express
or by Parcel Poet at above prloee.
Address all orders to
The /emett fltft Ca, Box b, MegeE, S. C
W Disarmament.
k fl'll never forget," said Cactus Jo?\
I "the time Crimson Qulch decided that
BwOll us citizens ought to. disarm."
^ILpld the boys agree?"
^fces. It worked out fine till Tomi^L
Tom found out where the weapon^vere
cached and took possession.
. The^eeovefy of our fights to self
presAmtion was one of the most prof
longctmnud agitating events In Crimson
OuVh hlsiory."
Find the Cause!
It ian't right to drag along feeling
miserable?half nick. Find out what ia
making you feel so badly and try to
correct it. Perhaps your kidneya are
cauaing that throbbing backache or
thoae sharp, stabbing pains. Tou may
have morning lameness, too, headaches,
dizzy spells and irregular kidney action.
Use Doan's Kidney Pills. They have
helped thousands of ailing folks. Ask
your neighbor! ,
A North Carolina Case
<abr"'k ached as If It
'nCA'.iPv.'ii broken and
IjWMB V / apiyjpg was wenk and |?atnterribly
wca^.
floated before
. V ?|g&.v Y^ Vrything else failed
1/ to htlfi me I took Doan's Kidney Pills,
h Then atrengtbencd my back and ktda
nay Stand built me up."
|(B 4|sl0s?s^sa? Anjr8?e?e,d0saBei?
llm R A %1? C KIDNEY
lll/UAN ^ FILL*
BE co.. buffalo, w. y.
Hjfc I
ijii
^ HgP.-vVv V? VJSE^u'
nf^ > v* vQ^Hei^S^JB^^T $3BF^v?^*
:; . v*r 1
H^ Hat#-lM FastltnW for Farmer %
Oo By?Cattle At* Higher In
V V
81m Baxter's right leg was In temporary
retirement under a layer of
arnlca-eoaked bandages. He regarded
Lthe injured member with a glint of
metal' humor and spake thus to a
neighbor who had. dropped In for a
chat with the cheerful Invalid.
"Bert, tell me somethln'. How can
a feller tell when a mean white mule
named Anarchy is golu' to kick? I
mean, , bow can he tell In time to do
him any good?"
"Human knowledge goes no further
than to^say that -a white mule la always
goln* to kick. Is that the answer?
Then let me ask you a question:
How do you know whether to
buy your feeder* steers In the fall
or in the, spring? Do you mgke any*
uiing ny xeeuing tnem in me winter,
and will yon make mere if you let the
other feller feed 'em through? They
coat more In the spring than In the
falL Is there any way to be certain?"
+ Sim admitted that the tiling was
past* his comprehension and confessed
that he sometimes did the thing one
way and sometimes the other, but that
he never knew Just how he was coming
out.
In reality, as to the time to buy
stockers or feeders, there is no hard
and fast rule. The usual time is In
the fall when they must leuve the
grazing areas and go where feeds
have been harvested of stored for cattle
feeding. However, with a falling
market, which no one can foretell with
any degree of -certainty, the cattle
may not be worth enough more In the
spring to pay for the winter, feeding.
Yet they have been kept largely on
feed for which there Is no other market.
Consequently, what Sim and his
neighbor should know Is how much It
costs to keep stockers through the
winter on various rations, how they
lose or gain weight, and how they
gain through the summer as a result
of the way they have been wintered.
Being In a better position to carry on
feeding experiments to answer these
questions than the cattlemen, /.lie bureau
of animal Industry, co-operating
with the West Virginia experiment
station, conducted a series of feeding
tests In Greenbrier county, West Virginia:
The experiments began December
22, 1014, and covered a period
of four years, the results being now
Turning 8teera Into Beef.
published In department bulletin 870t
In brief, 30 yearling steers were selected
each year aud divided Into three
lota of ten steers each. When the lots
were carefully equalised, the average
weight of. the animals was 603 pounds
each. The steers were on winter rations
on average of 130 days, and on
pasture an average of 158 days each
year.
The tests proved that an average
daily ration of 10.8 pounds of silage,
five pounds of mixed hay, and 2.5
pounds of wheat straw during the
winter would maintain these steers
Without loss of weight.
An average dally ration of 23.1
pounds of corn silage, 4.9 pounds of
wheat straw and one pound of cottonseed
meal would give each steer an
average gain of 62 pounds.
A dally ration of 11.9 pounds of
mixed hay and 4.1 pounds of wheat
straw fed throughout the winter will
not keep the animal In good condition.
Tills ration was responsible for a loss
of 35 pounds per steer. Corn silage
gave better results than dry roughage
alone, nnd the steers that had
silage as a part of their winter ration
made greater total gains than
those fed on hay and straw.
The cost of feed averaged throughout
the four years was as follows:
Corn adage $ 6.00
Mixed hay '. 18.00
Rye hay 18.00
6oy-bean hay 17.00
Wheat atraw 7.00
Cottonseed meal 60.00
The bulletin records feeding tests
that will be extremely valuahle to the
farmers of Pennsylvania, Ohio, West
Virginia, Virginia, Kentucky, North
Carolina. Tennessee and the adjacent
Mates, and for then) It does much to
answer the question that puzzled Sim
and his friends. The bulletin may be
had on application to the United
States Department of Agriculture at
Washington, D. O.
Porker and Runt.
A plump little pig Is a porker, but
a puny pig Is a runt.
Be Careful of Colt's Mouth.
A colt's mouth may be spoiled by
severe bits, by a too tight adjustment
of the reins of the hitting harness, by
tight check veins, by unnecessary Jerking
and lugging on the lines, or by a
poor driver.
f \ Clover'as an Egg > Producer.
' Clover Is as much an egg producer
among hens aa.lt Is a producer of milk
among cows. It Is rtch in nitrogen and
gilnerat matter. Having a high nutritive
ratio. It la equal to barley, and
almost as high as whedt.
- V'' ?
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THKTi
1 ' pJ', ... '..
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MILK PRODUCTION PROBLEMS
????? ?<?'; . .J
Department of Agrioattvre Hn Boon
Carrying on Interesting and Instructlvo
Studies.
(Prepared by the United States Depart*
ment of Agriculture.)
For 180 cows that average less than
5,000 pounds ot milk annually, the
part of the milk check that represented
profit and reimbursement for the
owner's managerial ability was 28 per
cent. For 257 cows averaging more
than 6,000 pounds annually, the per
cent remaining for profit and the owner's
skill was 41 per cent.
For the last five years the dairy division,
United States Department of
Agriculture, has been making studies
which bear on this problem in many
uoii j gctuuua ui me wuyiry ; uuu
two-year investigations on the requirements
for fvroduclng milk have
now been completed on groups of
dairy farms In six of these communities.
One of the latest of these studies,
carried on In Vermont, is the one
on Which the above figures are based.
What It bns disclosed in regard to
economy of production and the requirements
for producing milk, may be
of value to the dairyman who Is Interested
In finding out where milk returns
are going.
These figures, which were obtained
from a study of the production records
of 587 cows which remnlned In
the herds a full year, show that the
average annual production of the 180
lower-producing cows was 4,140
pounds; also that the nvernge production
of 257 higher producers wns 7,144
pounds n year. After subtracting
from 4,140 pounds the amounts of milk
What Part of Your Milk Check Reprecente
Profit?
required to pny production costs (feed.
1,810 pounds of milk; labor, 800
pounds of milk; and other costs 570
pounds of milk)* only 000 pounds of
milk remained for the profit and skill
of the owner. For the high-producing
group, however, 8,074 pounds of
milk remained after the following de-/
ductlons had been made: For feed,
2.302 pounds of milk; labor, 800
pounds of milk, and other costs 002
pounds of milk.
Here, then, were cows In the same
locality, In some cases standing side by
side, and all requiring about the same
labor; yet some were producing three
times as much profit as others, even
though they were charged with greatex
quantities of feed and a large
aniount of "Other costs."
The figures adduced are significant
also in that they show that In milk
checks size Is not always a true measure
of real value; but that the per
cent of profit, as determined by the
cows that are kept, plays an important
part.
The figures upon which this comparison
Is based were actual records of
production;* feed,, labor, and other
costs were obtained by monthly fullday
visitH on each of the farms for a
period of two years. Careful reenwidn
/>?i flulto A# tho
unin w c? f iiiiiuc uiroc *10110 vi imo
dally milk production of each cow,
feed consumed, labor required, overhead
costs, etc. Using these data,
the requirements for producing 100
pounds of milk were worked out. 80
far as possible the requirements were
determined In terms of pounds of feed,
hours of labor, etc., so that constantly
fluctuating prices would have no effect
on the value of the figures. Results
may be Interpreted at any time
by using prevailing prices.
The requirements for producing 100
pounds of milk, based on 847 cows,
with an average annual production of
6,252 pounds of 3.0 per ceut milk, were
as follows:
Winter Summer
Qrnln (pounds) 33.1 8.7
Hay and other dry roughage
(pounds) 129.9 18.7
Silage and other succulent
roughage (pounds) 191.3 27.8
Hauling and grinding
concentrates 80.020 80.006
Bedding (pounds) 11.2
Pasture (acres) I... .10
Human labor (hours).... 2.7 10
Horse labor (hours) 6 .4
Overhead and other costs 90.566 80.426
Credit for calves ' .025 of .009 of
one calf one calf
Credit for manure (lbs.) 382 $8
WATER OF MUCH IMPORTANCE
Cow Should Have 150 Pounds a Day
in 8ummer and About 100 Pounds
in Winter Season.
A cow will drink 150 pounds of water
n /lost nt a OA .1
(i unj m ? icmticiaiure ui ou uegrees. |
but If the water is Ice cold she will
not drink all she needs. She will,
however, be chilled through and will
eat more to get h-arm. She ought to
have In summer time at least 150
pounds of water a day and in winter,
time about 100 pounds.
Assets and Liabilities.
A good bull with poor cows is an
asset; a poor bull with poor cows is
a multiple liability; n good bull with
good cows Is a bonanxa.
Features of Good Barn.
Significant features, of a good dairy
bam are a smooth, vAnshahle Interior,
and well Insulated skills and celling.
Proved Cow Is Profitable.
Each proved good oour In the herd
means a profit; bat ^he more poor
cows there are, the greater the loan
>ET MIX TDPM, TOST MOJ
Bp Bw-jyi|wy^ *1
MdTwkL^^PMkkSe
4 Vegetable Compound
Vernon, Tex.?"Far three year* I
offered untold agony each month with
gMMfaj^aidea^I
nsxy relief in doctor'a
elae I took untU^my
buaband saw an aoLydia
R^khjun'a
pound. I mentioned
It to a neighbor and
she told me she had
taken it with good
results and advised
me to try it. I was then in bed part of
the time and my doctor said I would
have to be operated on, but we decided
to try the Vegetable Compound and I
also used Lydia EL Pinkham's Sanative
Wash. I am a dressmaker and am now
able to go about my work and do my |
boose work besides. You are welcome
to use this letter as a testimonial as I am
always glad to speak a word for your
medicine."?Mrs. w. M.Stephens, 1108
N. Commerce St., Vernon, Texas.
Dressmakers when overworked are
prone to sucb ailments and should profit
by Mrs. Stephen's experience.
Write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine
Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass., about
your health. Your letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman and
held in strict confidence.
For CROUP, COLDS,
INFLUENZA Sk PNEUMONIA
Matter* iOouM kecy > *r of Bnw'i V^nirti
Mr* coorcnlcat Win Croop. Itlteaii ot Ml
meal* thrratetu thl. d*U(ktf*l Mir* n*M w?U <**
lb* tkroM. cbmm ud coder tfe* inu will rvlirrr tt*
rlwMw. biMk ooocMdoo sad praam* twtfil *l**a
wu. hot sum nucumics
We. NlmJ $120 e *1 Anajhft* ?r MS wmU Ip
JSram^Drni^o^^irwiUaMborOi^N^^
MM mwiHsiovs syrup
R|H TW Iaiiat*' ami CMUraa'i K*f*Ut?r
WHUPm Pl?Mant to ilrt-pliuut to
BKM take. Guaranteed purely vesrstable
and absolutely harm! eta.
\ It quickly overcome* colic,
H f 1 diarrhoea, flatulency ana
i* Zl ?iher disorder*, s .
S The open published iKfi
^PV f formula appears on Hn
g avery label. HI
\ A jt li. at ah n Hwr-I
?ais
Are You in a Rundown Condition ?
Does Your Headache ?
Elgin, Tenn.?"I can say that Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
tand his 'Pleasant
Pellets' have
been the means
of restoring my
health. I was
weak and rundown,
had sick
headaohes, and
my kidneys were
all out of order.
It was a misery
for ^me to walk
around. I began
taking Dr.
Pierce's medicine and they put me
on the road to good health right
away. I want to speak a good word
for Dr. Pierce's remedies to all sufferers."
? HARRISON SHEPARD^
R. P. D. 1, Bo* 18.
Sold by druggists for fifty years.
IILUIM 1
iVSTRIKE/f
wsturyM
CIGARETTE
No olgarette has
the same delicious
flavor as Luoky
Strike. Because
Luoky Strike Is the
toasted olgarette.
(H 'tLTTZ^m^
BETTER
DEAD
Life is a burden when the body
is racked with pain. Everything
nmrri.. ? *<< ?! ? -i ' 1 '
"???! <uni MIC VlklUli UCGDUieS
despondent and downhearted. To
bring back the sunshine take ,
COLD MEDAL ?
Ttaa national ramady of Holland for ovar
200 yaars; it la an anemy of all pains rasuiting
from kidnay, livar and uric add
troublaa. All drugrltti, thraa alias.
Lash laa IW. umt Cold Modal mm war baa
aa^ij accept so initetioo
Have Yen Wed Theml
Ask Your Druggist or Dealer
Trial Bias 10 eta.? ReedarSleeHcta.
OTUIUT BROa. * CO- Baltlmbra, M4
' f
I
QRAINS FOR POULTRY FLOCK
Corn and Wh?t, Art Best and About
Iqual In Feeding Value?8cratch
Mixture la Qood.
Cora, wheat, oats, and barley are
the principal grains fed to poultry;
kaflr corn and buckwheat are used also,
but are not so generally available
and usually cost more. Corn and
wheat are the two beat grains and are
about equal In value as poultry feeds,
although'wheat can be fed alone better.
than corn, which is inclined to be
fattening. Oats and barley, on account
nf thplr hulls nnH
??M\a UI^IICI Ui/VI WUICUH
are not so good as corn or wheat Rye
Is not well 'relished Ibg fowls and Is
seldom fed. Wheat screenings or
slightly damaged grains sometimes
y/y -S
v>je? * />*A
Well-Developed Flock Scratching In
Litter for Feed.
mny be bought to advantage, their
value depending entirely upon their
quality and condition, but as a rule
- r :?
Looks Insures Better Care.
Standard-bred chickens look better
and for that reason will get better
care.
Different Turkey Breeds.
The most widely known turkey In
the Bronze, after which cornea Ihe
White Holland, the Bourbon Red, the
Black, the Narrangnnsett, and the
Slate.
Vigorous Parent Stock Needed.
Good layers and good standard
birds are produced only from vigor
ous parent stock.
Insure Clean Eggs.
Clean nests for clean eggs; eggs
should not need washing.
Only Advertising Needed.
If you live on a main traveled road,
the presence of a good healthy flock
?f stnndard-bred chickens, ranging on
the farmstead. Is ftbout the only adv.
-tislng that will be neceskpry.
jf Good Job for Rglny Day.
|| A good rainy day job Is to clean out
f?e henboose. Tour wife will approdate
It as iquch as the chickens.
Won't ttand Neglect.
Ducks enn no more be neglected
than can horses or cattle.
only sound grains In good condition
should he fea to poultry, and moldy
grains should never be used. The
locally grown grains, which poultry
will eat freely, may generully be used
to the best advantage, snv poultry specialists
of the United States Department
of Agriculture. A scratch mixture,
consisting of whole or crncked
grains, made of a combination of nny
two or more of those mentioned, can
be fed to advantage. It is not advisable
to feed continuously any single
grain, especially corn
A mash made of ground grains, mill
products, and meat scrap should be
fed usually In addition to the scratch
mixture. Cornmeal, whent brun, wheat
middlings, and mea* scrap form the
basis of a good mash, while corn chop,
corn-nnd-cob meal, ground oats, and
low-grade (lour may be added or substituted
to advantage. Just as good
results can be obtained from a simple
mash, containing three or four ground
grains and meat scrap, as from n highly
complicated mash, containing ten
or twelve products.
A- large number of commercial mixtures,
both of scratch grains nnd of
ground grains, are prepared for poultry
feeds, but the vnlue of mixed commercial
feed depends upon the composition
nnd the quality of the grains
used In Its preparation. If n poultry
raiser does not produce nny grain and
keeps a comparatively small number
of fowls. It Is often better for him to
buy commercial mixed feeds. The
average farmer, however, should feed
home-grown grains, supplemented with
mill feeds and meat scrap, and the
large poultryman usually can mix his
own feeds to best advantage. When
two or three kinds of grain are raised,
and ground or mill feeds are not readily
available, good results can be obtained
by feeding only the grains,
piovlded they are supplemented With
meat scrap or milk.
PROVIDE FOWLS WITH TEETH
Fine Gravel or Coarser Part of Ground
Limestone Will 8upply Grit Needed
by Hens.
Olve your hens teeth* so they can
get the most out of the feed. Fine
gravel or the coarser part of the
ground limestone used for add soils
will supply the grit ngeded for use In
the crop. The limestone will help supply
needed lime.
SORT OF PULLET TO RETAIN
Fowl That Is Well Matured, Has
8trong Constitution and Lays
Early Is Valuable.
No matter what the breed. If the
pullet Is well matured, has n strong
constitution, begins to lay early and
Is of good size and shape, she is valuable
as a future Inhabitant of the poultry
yard. Cull out the Door birds.
J
? .
HlUltf Ss ' "?>; jMBBBBaki. f ?i
. tflBfc riPre/;JI
^B^RaQraaTSnBum
BWyfW A\^e$abkTrco*?baQlrAs
SB5M Tte^ftapotetPWs^*1 8
CheMftito8M?ndBwtCQ?Wi
BH neither Ophim. Morphine n?
Bggfijj Mineral NotNahcotw;
BM9MH jj$f* ii* i
^^^8 Constipation and DiATttwct d
TOgSfflM And Feveristawssimd I
LossoFSLEeP^ I
KTm ft^<ftin^tbefc^roai"tn^^^ *
Ihc^^S'^natg^ot
I<~ 1 IfcBGEiroumGOKPXB.
Bawl
n
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
The more bad habits n man accumulates
the less money he saves.
A single application of Roman Eye Balaam
on nolng to bed will prove tta merit.
Use It for Inflammation* of the Eyes.?Adv.
Mixed Tempers.
"You tohl me this lawyer was n
man of nminhle temper."
"Well, so he Is."
"Hut I found out at court he was
a cross examiner."
Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
Catarrhal Deafness requires constitutional
treatment. HALIV8 CATARRH
MEDICINE Is a constitutional remedy.
Catarrhal Derfness Is caused by an Inflamed
condition of the mucous lining of
the Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is
Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or
Imperfect hearing, and when It Is entirely
closed, Deafness Is the result. Unless
the Inflammation can be reduced, your
hearing may be destroyed forever.
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE acts
through the blood on the mucous surfaces
of the system, thus reducing the Inflammation
and restoring normal conditions.
Circulars free. All Druggists.
F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio.
HIMALAYAS IN SECOND PLACE
Exploration in Tibet Have Revealed
Existence of a More Massive
Mountain Range.
Among the greutest results achieved
by the Hcdln explorations In Tibet
was the discovery of n continuous
mountain chnin, 2,000 miles long,
stretching eust uud west, and which,
taken as a whole, Is the most massive
range on the crust of the earth. Its
average height above sea level Is
greater than that of the Himalayas,
and although its peaks are from 4,000
to 5,000 feet lower than Mount Everest,
Its passes average 3,000 feet higher
than those of the Himalayas.
The eastern and western parts of
this range were known before, but the
central nnd highest part, in Bongba,
was unexplored previous to Doctor
Hedin's visit. He crossed ten pusses
In the range.
A LRtle Cliff Dweller.
Four-nnd-u-half-year-old Marshall,
who is acquiring a reputation for his
childish repartee, added ne\v laurels
to his honors at a Christmas dinner.
His young interest was centered for a
time listening to the grown folk
asking conundrums nnd guessing as to
the proper answers. Childish repression
finally burst the bonds when one
of the older guests put this undent
query: "When is a door not n door?"
Instantly came Marshall's retort:
"When It's a in-a-door bed I"
JJUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU
a
a'
a
| The longe
j PoSTUM
i the bet
a
I 'four reward
a 1 r*
I richness or ti
ii please most c
drinkers.
mis pure, who
\ drink contain;
1 ful. Its regula
I a comfort anc
I Try
1P0STUM
I "There's a
| Sold by grocer,
| Made by Jbstum Cereal (
twwrwnnnnnnnrrminnntnnnr.wnnnnni
'ASTORIA
For Infants and Children,
lathers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always - w.
tears the /^t T
ignature//Jf*
a .Id* In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
;astoria
TMC CKNTAUR COMPART. RCW YORK CfTY.
Live cheerfully, watch against anger,
say little, and reform much.
ASPIRIN
Name "Bayer" on Genuine
Beware! Unless you see the nam?
"Buyer" on package or on tnhlets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed
by physicians for twenty-one
years and proved safe by millions.
Take Aspirin only as told iu the Bayer
package for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia,
Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache,
Lumbago, and for Pain. Handy tin
boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin
cost few cents. Druggists also
sell larger packages. Aspirin Is the
trade murk of Bayer Manufacture of
Mononceticueldester of Sullcylicacl4
?Adv.
LOVE SEEN IN NEW LIGHT
Old Idea of Affection All Wrong, According
to Pronouncements of
Modern Scientists.
"Science revolutionizes our ideas."
The speaker was \V. L. George, the
English feminist lecturer, lie resumed:
"A millionaire contractor was complaining
to a sclentilic friend of
mine that u beautiful actress hud
accepted his proposal of marriage.
only He Had just discovered that she
did so for purely mercenary motives.
"Hut my scientific friend poohpoolted
the millionaire contractor's
lament.
"'What a queer devil you are!*
lie suld. 'You want to he loved for
your looks irione?that is, for tlio
position In space of the atoms. Ions,
molecules and what-not which
chance, working through some Darwinian
selective theory, lias grouped
together in the entity that Is yourself.
lUdlculous! And you hate to
lie loved for your wealth?for a
financial achievement, that is to say,
whicli is an unimpeachahle testimonial
to your industry, intelligence, sobriety
and virtue."
A good detective has intuition; and
he has to have patience, too.
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