Description
Fallon Nevada NV Desert Canary Burro Donkey Churchill Co RPPC Postcard 35493. Titles = ["Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Room Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kalamazoo Co RPPC 33147" ,"Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Room Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kalamazoo RPPC 33147" ,"Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Rm Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kalamazoo Co RPPC 33147" ,"Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Room Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kal Co RPPC 33147" ]for tin titles: print(f"Length{len (t)} :{t} " ). Python titles = [ "Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Room Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kalamazoo Co RPPC 33147" , "Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Room Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kalamazoo RPPC 33147" , "Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Rm Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kalamazoo Co RPPC 33147" , "Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Room Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kal Co RPPC 33147" ] for t in titles: print(f"Length {len (t)} : {t} " ) Code output Length 82: Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Room Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kalamazoo Co RPPC 33147 Length 79: Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Room Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kalamazoo RPPC 33147 Length 80: Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Rm Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kalamazoo Co RPPC 33147 Length 76: Kalamazoo MI Pioneer Room Public Museum Log Cabin Interior Kal Co RPPC 33147 Python title = "Honor MI Platte River Natural Shoreline Cedars Deadfall Benzie Co RPPC 33148" print(f"Length: {len (title)} " ) Code output Length: 76 Nevada Desert Canary Burro Donkey Churchill Co Postmarked Fallon Nevada NV 1944 Vintage RPPC Postcard 35493 This Real Photo Postcard features a donkey heavily laden with supplies, captioned on the front as A Nevada Desert Canary, Fallon Nevada NV Churchill Co. The image serves as a classic representation of early 20th-century prospecting culture in the Great Basin, where these animals, often called burros in the American West, were essential for transporting gear across the arid Nevada landscape. While donkey and burro refer to the same species, Equus asinus, the term burro is the Spanish word for the animal and became the standard descriptor for the small, hardy pack animals utilized throughout the Southwestern United States. The term Desert Canary was a humorous frontier nickname for the animal, ironically comparing its loud, harsh braying to the melodic song of a bird. The animal is outfitted with a large pack saddle and canvas-covered panniers, standing in a rugged, sparsely forested area typical of the high desert terrain surrounding the Lahontan Valley and the historic mining regions of Churchill County. The stamp box is covered by a 1.5 cent Martha Washington stamp, but the card features a clear Fallon, Nev. postmark dated January 3, 1944. The postcard is addressed to Miss Marian Dodson in Divide Montana and includes a return address for Fern Harding in Fallon, Nevada, in care of Jim Lammers. The handwritten message, dated January 1, 1944, begins with the sender telling the recipient not to be surprised and mentions coming down with the Lammers, noting that much has happened since last Tuesday and that she is nearly well, though the desert pretty much got her down and was bad.