FREE! AL
Of Grand Forks • East Grand Forks July 25, 2013
The
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IGH TS RES 13 ERVED ©20
Issue # 827
Little Paper Ever Read®
Published by: Wick Publications • P.O. Box 12861, Grand Forks, ND 58208 • For Advertising Call: 701-772-8239 • wickpub@yahoo.com
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State of of State $avings. $avings. Sharon Opdahl, Agent Sharon Opdahl, Agent 2534 17th Avenue South 2534 17th Avenue Grand Forks, ND South 58201 Grand Forks, ND 58201 Bus: 701-746-0495 Bus: 701-746-0495 sharonopdahl.com sharonopdahl.com
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HOSPITAL TRIPS
Mrs.
by Janet Spencer
67% of the sickness treated are preventable. According to the National Institute of Medicine, 50% of the deaths today from the 10 leading causes of death can be traced to lifestyle. Come along with Tidbits as we visit the hospital.
Stop By Today for the Best Selection!
ANTICS & ANECDOTES • On Nov. 9, 1965, a backup relay on one of the five main transmission lines failed at a station near Toronto. The electrical load shifted to the other four lines, which then became overloaded and shut down. Within minutes, power plants in Canada, New York, and most of New England were out of service, putting 30 million people in the dark. In some areas, power was not restored for more than 12 hours. Nine months later, hospitals in the area noted a distinct increase in the number of babies born. • Janos Pek of Hungary had been confined to a hospital bed for 11 years after an accident left him paralyzed and mute. In 1975, he was listening to the opening game of the soccer season on the radio. When the announcer described the tripping of a player of Pek’s favorite team, Pek shouted, “Penalty!” It was the first word he had spoken in over a decade. Though he remained paralyzed, he spoke normally afterwards. Incidentally, Pek’s team won the game.
ack says...
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Why Medicap Pharmacy? WhyDrive-Thru Medicap Pharmacy? Window.
WEIRD REASONS FOR HOSPITAL TRIPS
Drive-Thru Window. “I love the drive-thru window. No walking through
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Quiz Bits 1. 2. 3.
4.
5. There is only one private sector industry that employs more people than the health care industry. What is the most common type of Name it. infection for infants and children? 6. What’s the 6th planet from the Sun? What country spends the most on 7. What was the native city of health care? explorer Marco Polo? How many millions of people are 8. What is the second-most popuadmitted to hospitals in the U.S. in lous country in the world? an average year—20, 25, 30 or 35 9. At what age did Doogie Howser, M.D. (TV show) become a doctor? million? How many babies are delivered in TRIVIA hospitals in the U.S. annually?
?
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• Owen Rutherford was an attendant at the Lincoln Park Zoo. One day he drove to the airport to pick up some snakes being shipped in. It seemed to him that the deadly black mamba snake was dead. So he poked it with his finger. The snake was not dead. Rutherford recovered in a nearby hospital. • Abie Goldberry was goalie on a Canadian junior ice hockey team in 1930. In the back pocket of his hockey shorts he kept a book of matches and a plastic comb. When a puck from a hard shot struck his back pocket, the friction caused the matches to ignite, melting the comb and setting his pants on fire. He was rushed to the hospital, and his team lost 2 - 0. • A 1961 game between the San Francisco Giants and the Philadelphia Phillies did not go well for the Giants, who lost 1-0. The Giant’s manager, Alvin Dark, was so angry at the team’s poor performance that he stormed into the clubhouse, grabbed a metal stool, and threw it across the room. Unfortunately, his pinky finger got caught on a rough edge of the metal and the tip of it tore off. He was rushed to the hospital and stitched up, minus the missing tip. His players felt bad, so to make their peace with him they found the tip of his finger, pickled it in alcohol, and presented the jar to him as a gift. • George Watts of England liked being in the hospital. He liked the free room and board, and he especially liked being cared for by sympathetic nurses. So he made a habit of swallowing coins, then admitting himself to various hospitals across the country. He would complain of chest pains, doctors would remove the coins, nurses would care for him, and the government would pick up the tab. When the government figured out his scheme, he was sentenced to a year in jail for obtaining hospital care by deception. Let us put a smile back on your face. Call Tidbits® for some great ad rates! 701-772-8239
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sports Quiz
4. Who was the last Reds pitcher before Homer Bailey in 2012 to toss a no-hitter? 1. How long is a standard bowl5. Through 2012, where does ing lane? Evan Longoria rank on the 2. In 2012, Matt Harrison tied all-time career home-run list the mark for most victories in for the Tampa Bay Rays? a season by a Texas Rangers 6. Only two NFL players have left-hander. Who else holds rushed for at least 1,000 the record? yards in each of their first 3. In 2012, Washington’s Robert 10 seasons. Name them. Griffith III had the fourth7. What is the best finish the highest passing yards (320) U.S. women’s national volby a quarterback in his NFL leyball team has had in an debut. Who has the highest? Olympics?
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WEIRD REASONS FOR HOSPITAL TRIPS • Donald Wright was installing a door in Toronto when he fell off the ladder, knocking himself out. When he came to, he found that he had fallen on his electric drill— which was on at the time. The drill was imbedded three inches deep in his skull. He pulled on it but it wouldn’t come out. So he restarted it, reversed the direction, and pulled it out. At the hospital they removed a bone fragment from his brain. Afterwards he was fine. • Police officer Timothy Day of Indianapolis made a trip to the hospital after picking up a bag of cocaine to seize it as evidence, and a gust of wind blew the contents into his face. MALPRACTICE • In 1970 in Indiana the parents of 15-month-old Rodney Brown were informed the child suffered from cystic fibrosis and would not live past his mid-teens. For the next decade, Rodney was subjected to all manner of medical procedures. In 1975 Rodney was chosen as Indiana’s cystic fibrosis poster child, and in 1976 he became the national poster child. He even met Pres. Ford. In 1980 the family moved to Maryland and took Rodney to see a new doctor. The new doctor found that Rodney did not have cystic fibrosis after all. He merely suffered from asthma.
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• A psychic suffering from persistent headaches had a CT-scan. The dye they used, she said, made her feel like her head was going to explode. Afterwards she found her psychic powers had evaporated. She sued the hospital. Although the jury awarded her nearly $1 million, the judge threw out the verdict. • In 1984 a 305-pound man in Virginia underwent a stomach-stapling operation to lose weight. He was still in the hospital two days later when he spied a refrigerator. He ate so much he popped the staples and required emergency surgery. He later tried to sue the hospital, saying they were negligent in allowing him near the fridge.
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NURSE AIDE TRAINING
FILLER PAGE 2 1Q09 - WEEK 03 JAN 11 - JAN 17
Valley Memorial Homes is screening candidates for the Nurse Aide Training TRIVIA Class held September 9 - 30, 2013
NEWSFRONT ANSWERS
PRESENTS TRIVIA NEWSFRONT™ by Kara Kovalchik & Sandy Wood
1. What British duo hit number one in 1983 with Contact your local agent Group “Sweet Dreams Made of information: This)? Contact your&local (Are agent for for more moreIndividual information: t for more information: 2. WhatMedical actress&portrayed Patsy Cline in the 1985 HARVEST <Agent Name> Medicare DreamsServices biographical film SweetFinancial ? <Agency Name> Coverage <Address> Parkinson • 701-772-1872 3. What cartoon characterRoger owned a ghostly horse <City, ST ZIP> named Nightmare? <Phone> 2750 17th Ave. S. • Ste. B • Grand Forks <Hours of Operation> > What 17th century author coined the phrase “To 4. ©2009 Medica. Medica® contracts with the federal government. 2009 Medica. Medica® contracts with the federal government. sleep, perchance to dream”? 5. What is the name of the villain in the Nightmare on Elm Street movie series? by Linda Thistle
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NUMBER PUZZLE
Fill in the grid so that every column, every row, and every 3 x 3 box contains the digits 1 through 9.
5
Place a number in the empty boxes in such a way that each row across, each column down and each small 9-box square contains all of the numbers from one to nine.
8DIFFICULTY 1 THIS WEEK: 6 9
3
Moderate
Challenging HOO BOY!
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8 4
NUMBER PUZZLE ANSWER
MENTAL PATIENTS OF GRAND FORKS
NOW HIRING PART-Time Positions Apply Online at:
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• Nathaniel Lee was an author who suffered from bouts of insanity and was confined to Bedlam Hospital. A friend once visited him there. Lee showed him around, giving him a tour of the hospital. His conversation was so rational that the friend hoped that Lee might have recovered his sanity. His hopes were dashed, however, when they reached the roof of the building. “Let us achieve immortality by leaping down off this roof!” exclaimed Lee. Coolly, the friend replied, “Any man can leap DOWN off a building and there is no immortality in that. True immortality would be achieved by going to the pavement below and leaping UP!” Lee rushed quickly down the stairs to see if he could indeed achieve immortality this way. • Catherine Yasinchuk came to the U.S. before World War I at the age of 15. She spoke only her native Ukrainian. She married, had a child— and was devastated when they both died. She wandered the streets weeping. The police found her, but she only babbled incoherently. The police sent her to a mental hospital. She was 23 at the time. She lived there for the next 48 years, where everyone assumed she was insane because she was unable to communicate. In 1968 a new director reviewed her case. An employee who spoke Ukrainian discovered she could communicate after all. She was released from the institute and went to live with the daughter of the woman in the personnel department. She died in 1983, having spent half her life in an institute because she spoke a different language. THE FINAL FACT • At the prison in McAlester, Oklahoma, death row inmate Robert Brecheen overdosed the day before he was to be executed. He was rushed to the hospital where his stomach was pumped. Then he was taken back to the prison and promptly executed.
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WOMEN IN HISTORY:
DOROTHEA DIX • Dorothea Dix was born in Maine in 1802 and moved to Boston as a child. As a young woman, she opened a school for girls and found that she loved teaching. • Her appetite for knowledge was insatiable. She attended lectures and read widely. She studied literature, history and the natural sciences with a special emphasis on botany and astronomy. She had an aptitude for writing and produced a number of successful books. • In 1841 she began teaching Sunday school at a women’s prison in Massachusetts, where she was horrified by the appalling treatment the prisoners were subjected to – especially the inmates who suffered from mental illnesses. It upset her that the mentally ill were housed alongside felons, which she felt was unfair. The prison had no heat and she immediately went to court in order to secure heat for the prison. This kicked off a life-long devotion to social reform. • Following this experience, she set about to conduct a statewide examination of how the state of Massachusetts cared for poor people who were also insane. Most towns simply hired local individuals to care for people with mental disorders. Because the system was unregulated and underfunded, there was widespread abuse. Dorothea presented a scathing report to the state legislature, pointing to numerous instances where people had been chained, beaten, and starved. As a result of her lobbying, the mental hospital in Worcester, MA was expanded. • Next Dorothea traveled to other states, working tirelessly to instigate social reform for the mentally ill. She documented conditions, published papers, met with politicians, and worked with committees to draft new laws. Presidential Quotes: “I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them.” ~ Thomas Jefferson
West Nile Virus in Local Mosquitoes!!! Several birds and mosquitoes from Grand Forks have tested positive for West Nile virus (WNV). This is a serious disease that is transmitted by mosquitoes. Most people infected with this disease will have no symptoms or mild symptoms but this is a serious disease and can be fatal. The Grand Forks Public Health Department urges citizens to take personal precautions to avoid mosquito bites. The type of mosquito most common for transmitting WNV is present in our area and is most active from dusk until dawn. Please take the necessary measures to avoid mosquito bites.
How do people get infected with WNV? Most people get infected with WNV by an infected mosquito. Mosquitoes become infected when they feed on infected birds. Infected mosquitoes can then spread the virus to humans and other animals. In a very small number of cases, West Nile virus has been spread through blood transfusions, organ transplants, and from mother to baby during pregnancy, delivery, or breastfeeding.
Can I get West Nile virus directly from birds? There is no evidence that a person can get infected from handling live or dead infected birds. However, you should avoid bare-handed contact when handling any dead animal. If you must pick up a dead bird, use gloves or an inverted plastic bag to place the bird’s carcass (body) in a garbage bag.
Why do some states and local areas stop collecting dead birds to test for West Nile virus? West Nile virus is found in all 48 contiguous states (not in Alaska and Hawaii) and the virus circulates in mosquitoes and birds every year. Because West Nile virus is well established, some states and local jurisdictions are no longer collecting dead birds for testing. Instead, they have chosen to shift staff and funding resources away from testing of dead birds to other areas of West Nile virus surveillance and control.
Who is at risk for serious illness if infected with WNV? Serious illness can occur in people of any age. However, people over 60 years of age are at the greatest risk for severe disease. People with certain medical conditions, such as cancer, diabetes, hypertension, kidney disease, and people who have received organ transplants, are also at greater risk for serious illness.
For information about West Nile Virus and the Grand Forks mosquito control program visit our website at www.gfmsoquito.com or call the Information Line at 701-787-8144
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Approx. Arrival Dates: August 6, 13 & 20 Pre-Orders: $31/box (~18 lbs) Walk-Up Orders: $33/box More info. & Order Forms available at:
www.gfyfc.org
Tidbits Laughs A young woman went to her doctor complaining of pain. “You have to help me,” she cried. “I hurt all over!” The woman touched her right knee with her index finger and yelled, “Ow, that hurts! Then she touched her cheek and again yelled, “Ouch! That hurts, too.” Then she touched her right earlobe, “Ow, even THAT hurts,” she bellowed, bursting into tears. The doctor checked her thoroughly and announced his diagnosis: “You have a broken finger.”
by Samantha Weaver
• It was President Abraham Lincoln who made the following sage observation: “The man who is incapable of making a mistake is incapable of anything.” • Researchers at Harvard University once decided to test several varieties of Coca-Cola to determine their effectiveness, if any, as a spermicide. The results? Diet Coke was the most effective, while New Coke was the least. Upon hearing of the tests, a representative for the company issued the following statement: “We do not promote Coca-Cola for medical purposes. It is a soft drink.” • The minnow has teeth, but they’re not in its mouth; they’re found in the throat. • Ever wonder where we get the term “blurb” to indicate a short summary or promotional piece accompanying a creative work? At a trade association dinner in 1907, author Gelett Burgess presented attendees with a limited edi-
tion of one of his books. It was customary to have a brief summary included on the dust jacket of such books, along with a picture of an attractive woman. Burgess followed this custom with a twist. On the cover of his piece was an image of a woman with her hand held to her mouth, as if shouting. The caption for this image was “Belinda Blurb, in the act of blurbing,” and bold letters at the top of the dust jacket declared, “Yes, this is a Blurb!” The name stuck. • On an average day in the United States, there will be 10 reported UFO sightings. • It seems that artist Leonardo da Vinci pioneered the paint-by-numbers style of art. He would sketch a piece, then number certain sections for his assistants to paint. * * * Thought for the Day: “People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid.” -- Soren Kierkegaard
© 2013 King Features Synd., Inc.
DOROTHEA DIX (continued): • Illinois opened their first mental asylum as a direct result of her efforts. The institute that was built in Raleigh, North Carolina was named in her honor. Pennsylvania followed suit shortly afterwards and opened an asylum in Harrisburg. • In 1854 she guided the Bill for the Benefit of the Indigent Insane through the United States Congress, which provided funds to build more asylums across the country. Although it was passed with broad support from both houses of Congress, the bill was vetoed by President Franklin Pierce, who felt that the federal government should not be involved in social welfare, which was the responsibility of the states. • Angry over the rejection of the bill, Dorothea traveled to Scotland and then to Nova Scotia where she continued her work. She mercilessly exposed the enormous disparity between public and private hospitals. After visiting with Pope Pius IX, he was moved to order the construction of a new hospital for the mentally ill. • Dix returned to the United States in 1856. When the Civil War broke out in 1861, she volunteered her services and was named superintendent of nurses. She was responsible for setting up field hospitals and first-aid stations, recruiting nurses, managing supplies, and setting up training programs. • In 1881, Dix moved into the New Jersey State Hospital, which she had founded 40 years earlier. The state legislature designated a suite for her private use as long as she lived. She died on July 17, 1887. • All in all, her tireless efforts over the course of 40 years directly led to the construction of 32 institutions for the care of the mentally ill in the U.S. and resulted in a major change in the way the mentally ill are treated.
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STAR H MAP
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Draw a star in exactly 10 of the empty squares in the diagram below so that each numbered square accurately indicates how many immediately adjacent squares (horizontally, vertically or diagonally) contain a star.
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SUMMER WORSHIP
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CEREAL
• In 496 B.C.E. there was a terrible drought in Rome. The priests thought if they adopted a new goddess, perhaps she would help. So they started worshipping Ceres. She became the protector of crops, and the caretakers of her temple became grain dealers, since she was responsible for the growth of grain. A new Latin word was coined meaning “of Ceres”: cerealis. That’s where we get our cereal.
• On Aug. 4, 1914, as World War I erupts in Europe, President Woodrow Wilson formally proclaims the neutrality of the United States. However, by June 1915, the first 14,000 U.S. infantry troops landed in France to begin training for combat. • On Aug. 2, 1934, Chancellor Adolf Hitler becomes absolute dictator of Germany under the title of Fuhrer, or “Leader.” The Fuhrer assured his people that the Third
first beneficiary and received the first Medicare card.
• On July 31, 1975, Teamsters Union president Jimmy Hoffa is reported missing in Detroit. He was last seen alive in a parking lot outside the Machus Red Fox restaurant the previous afternoon. Authorities have never been able to confirm what really happened to Hoffa. He was declared legally dead in 1982. © 2013 King Features Synd., Inc.
• Charles Post cashed in on the success of the cereal business when he came out with a cereal he called Elijah’s Manna. He tried to export it to Britain but they refused to register it, feeling giving such a religious name to a food item was sacrilegious. Post changed the name to Post Toasties. • If all the shredded wheat biscuits consumed by Americans in a single year were placed end-to-end, they would circle the globe twice. • After winning the Olympic decathlon in 1976, Bruce Jenner was signed up to sell Wheaties. On the air, Jenner claimed he had eaten Wheaties all his life. The assistant district attorney in San Francisco brought suit against General Mills, claiming consumer fraud. They felt that Jenner hadn’t really eaten Wheaties all his life. Jenner challenged the DA to ask his mother. The suit was dropped.
Answer
• On Aug. 1, 1943, a Japanese destroyer rams an American PT (patrol torpedo) boat, No. 109, slicing it in two. The destruction is so massive that other American PT boats in the area assume the crew is dead. Two • On July 29, 1909, the newly formed crewmen were, in fact, killed, but 11 General Motors Corporation acquires survived, including Lt. John F. Kennethe country’s leading luxury automak- dy, who would later become president. er, the Cadillac Automobile Company, • On July 30, 1965, President Lyndon for $4.5 million. Cadillac was founded Johnson signs Medicare, a health out of the ruins of automotive pioneer insurance program for elderly AmeriHenry Ford’s second failed company. cans, into law. At the bill-signing His third effort, the Ford Motor Com- ceremony, former President Harry pany, finally succeeded. Truman was enrolled as Medicare’s
• Grape Nuts is one of the few cereals with no added sugar. It has nothing to do with grapes or nuts, being made out of wheat and barley. Charles Post named it Grape-Nuts because it tasted nutty and he thought its taste came from dextrose, called grape sugar at the time.
Weekly SUDOKU
Reich would last for a thousand years, but Nazi Germany collapsed just 11 years later.
Answer
• On Aug. 3, 1492, from the Spanish port of Palos, Italian explorer Christopher Columbus sets sail in command of three ships -- the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria -- on a journey to find a western sea route to China, India and Asia. In October, Columbus sighted Cuba, which he thought was mainland China.
The History Channel
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Moments in time
• Oatmeal has more protein than whole wheat. Samuel Johnson said oats are “a grain which is generally given to horses but in Scotland supports the people.” A Scot replied, “That is why in England you have such fine horses and in Scotland we have such fine men.”
Professional Home Inspection Service
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Find at least 6 differences in details between panels
Differences: 1. Bow is different. 2. Hand is concealed. 3. Beads are missing. 4. Sign is smaller. 5. Tail is replaced by paw. 6. Glasses are missing. © 2013 King Features Synd., All rights reserved.
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CEREAL (continued): • The Trix rabbit is always trying to sneak a bowl JOHNbut DEERE. (continued): ofDEERE. Trix cereal, the kids constantly take • itItaway was while living in Illinois that nofrom him, saying “Trix is John for kids!” ticed the that farmers faced when During theproblems 1976 presidential elections, Genattempting to till soil. Because the area had eral Mills worried that this might be teaching formerly been woodland, the soilyou’ll was never rich kids a bad thing: try as you might, with your hummus, clumped reach goal.which So they put it toand theclung vote.toBy the blades of the plows farmers were accus-to sending in box-top ballots, kids were asked tomed to using. While repairing a broken vote on whether or not the rabbit wouldcirget cular saw, Deere stumbled upon an idea. He his Trix. 99% voted yes. Amidst great fanfare, employed his smith skills to fashion the steel the rabbit got to eat a whole bowl on the next blade into the shape of a plow. He affixed commercial. Oliver Twist, he held two wooden Then, spokes,like then hitched the device out his empty bowl and asked for more— only to a horse. It plowed the heavy Illinois soil tolike be atold he had to wait for thewho nexthappened election. charm. In fact, a farmer be observing the test run put • Into 1964 both Kelloggs andimmediately Post introduced in an order for his own John Deere plow. cereal that had freeze-dried fruit in it. They fruitDeere would absorb moisture from • thought In shortthe order, gave up his blacksmith the milk and be reconstituted in the bowl. Unshop and focused on making plows. The fortunately it took so long foradded the fruit to emrehycompany grew steadily and many drate that In thethecereal was hopelessly soggy ployees. late 1840s, John relocated theby entire Moline, the timeoperation the fruit to was edible.Illinois. Ashamed of his own lack of education, his • Indians brought popcorn to theJohn firstsent Thankschildren to the state’s finest schools. One of giving dinner with the Pilgrims, and the Pilhis proudest days occurred when son Charles grims liked it so much they later poured milk earned the equivalent of an MBA from Bell’s onCommercial it and ate itCollege like cereal. in Chicago. • • Kellogg’s makes four out of the the fivecompany, most popWith his son Charles managing ular cereals in America: Frosted Flakes, John found time to pursue philanthropic Corn inFlakes, Bran, and Rice Genterests.Raisin He co-founded both theKrispies. First Nationeral Mills’ Cheerios the fifth. al Bank and the FirstisCongregational Church. He was elected the mayor of Moline in 1873, • Cheerios spend more on advertising than any where one of hisproduct. first actions – the replaceother single food ment of the city’s open drains with a sewer • High stored lives at thebykid’s eye pipe sugar systemcereals – savedare countless reduclevel whereas nutritious brands are placed at ing the spread of disease. the adult eye level. Children’s cereals have • anThe original John sugar Deere but logo, registered in average of 44% adults have 10% 1876, depicted a deer that was native to Afrisugar. An ice cream bar is 20% sugar, but Sugca. Thirty-six years later, in 1912, it was rear Smack cereal is 61% sugar. placed with the image of a North American • 46% of Frosteddeer. Flakes by adults. white-tailed In are theconsumed decades that followed, the now-familiar “outline” logo took Thanks for Reading Tidbits! over as the symbol of the John Deere brand.
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