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About The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 28, 1911)
THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE ' A L. BARB. PuWAtf TwW, R IN ADVANCE f7o"RTH PLATTE NEBRASKA THE OLD-TIME PARLOR. Tboro used to be In almost every ni ral home In the country a sacred room tho "parlor." Every reader la prob ably familiar with It, for It still exists, though not so universally as It did fears ago, when no homo In tho land, in village, hamlet, or oil farm, was tonslderod completo or well-equipped without this dlnraal apartment care fully shuttered in against air and sun light; a Jar of waxwork on tho center labia; a collection of curious odds and ends on tho what-not In tho comer; mottos and chromos on tho wall; a vlv Id Ingrain or Brussels carpot on the floor. Tho sound of festivity so flom penetrated tho gloom of this pan tor, says tho Philadelphia Press. At rare Intervals distinguished visitors wero recolvod In it witnesses of wed ding or funeral. It was nover a pleasant room; It smollcd damp and (fuBty; tho children stood in awo of it; and yet it was their mother's pride. Happily tho day of tho pentup, un savory parlor is fast passing away. The children, going out Into the big ger world with observant eyes, have returned to tho homestead and Insisted npon flinging open tho doors and win flows and admitting a burst of sunlight tnd a rush of pure air. They hava mado a Hying, room of a tomb, In their childhood the kltchon was tho Boat comfortable placo In the houso; it was scrubbed every day, ventilated al ways, mado light and airy and clean and hospitable whllo tho ghastly for bidden precincts of the parlor word exposed to sanitary search not ottener than twice a year during the Inev itable spring and fall hounecleanlng. It Is only recently that they have dis covered a way of canning decayed tggs, and tboro aro bakors in tho largo cities who are so devoid of honesty that they would na soon uso rotten tggs as fresh ones. Thus a market is created, and' but for the fact that tha state under its puro food laws can itep in and condemn this product as unfit for consumption, the problom cre ated by cold storage would have been rendered more complex as the, year go by, says the Rochester Herald. It Is not beyond the bonds of possibility that meat which has been cold-stored to tho point of decay is treated in the tame manner. No one over hoars of It being thrown away. , I I And now the London police have discovered that the prisoner convict ed by finger prints, and who, it was re ported, had established his innocenca by indisputable evidence that, being in the army at the ttmo, he could not have been guilty, was, after all ,n fakir. He stole the army records ol another roan to bolator up hlBdefonse and camo very nearly gottlng away With it Tho police aro doubly pleased at tho dlscovory, since It prevents a guilty man from escaping and ro-estab-Ushes the finger-print theory as Infal lible at least bo far as experlcuco hni gotfe. Dut for a time tho fakir had both the London police and the finger print theory "groggy." Secretary Dickinson has just issued a report an tho militia of this country that shown how little the minds ol Americans are turned away from peace and toward war. He announce! that In 1810 the strength of tho organ ized milllla forces of the nation Is only 110,000 men', an Increase of but 3,113 In seven years, says the Boston Globe, He does not add that thore are almost to a thousand. -as many clergymen, printers, manufacturers, grocers, butch ers, stenographers or masons In the nation as thoro are citizen soldiers. But the fact Is true. A Butts i rap who Is being sued, foi .....t. ai- i.. Ji.-.;... breach of promise1 -Is charged- by th plaintiff with having called her "My Dear Tobacco." No wondor sho wanti 110,000, slnco he was not oxpllclt enough to say whether she was of fln out, or a mere plug, Returns from tho Now York public library Indicate that fiction fell off In demand as compared with books of e historical or scientific nature. Thli should spur the Indiana school of nov elists to renewed efforts or some thing. A San Francisco man saya he will rot -before he pays alimony to his di vorced wife, but it is bollovod ho will change his mind before decomposition gets 'a firm bold on him. ' it may be theoretically posslblo to (nnisnrt lo.oafl men across the Aim if Molwant and Hoxley Inthelr.mlud, the chances are that MOOf them wll. refuse to. be transported in that way China will saerlflee aoo.wu.uoo uueus for the artificial hair market this rear. and. all will be sent to Amerlck Tha take mb the Chlseee is that they v iut .u(ifi have ion out ol - - r fashion now, MOISTURE FOR CROPS Gftat Want of Farmer Is Water During Dry Spells. Many Localities In West Where Sup ply of Water Can be Obtained for Irrigation, Defying Drouths and Assuring Big Crops. Mr. H. II. Lybn says: "I had rath er sco tho government assist In solv ing sorao of our problems of wntor supply, than to soo so much money going Into Irrigation and other schemes at enormous distances from our mnrkets." Owing to tho fact that copious rains bavo frequently fallen soon after great battles, in which thoro had boon heavy artlllory firing, it wan generally believed that tho fir ing of heavy gunB caused tho mois ture with which tho nir was laden to bo condensed Into drops, and fall to the earth, producing rain In a dry tlmo. In order 4to test this belief, congross appropriated several thous and dollars, which was expended dur ing a great drouth in Toxnn by army officers, writes J. H. Ingram in the Country Gentleman. Tho heaviest guns wero llrcd continuously for a woek and brought no rain. Tho great want of farmers is mols turo in their fields when rains do not come at the proper Intervals, and tholr crops suffer or are utterly de stroyed. Tho person who could dis cover nn effectual remedy tor the so vero drouths to which most of our country is subject would bo n greater benefactor than the inventor of tho steam cnglno or electric telograph, A Wisconsin writer says: "A sufficient amount of moisture stored up In the earth would Bupply this want (rain in a dry tlmo) oven it no rains fell from the tlmo of planting crops until har vest tlmo." Had ho snld n sufficient amount of wator stored up on top of tho earth, I could hava agreed with him. In Colo rado, Utah and California, where thoy can obtain a supply of water on top of tho ground for Irrigation, they can defy tho drouths and raiso good crops evory year. Wator whero it can bo turned on tho fields when needed is a suro thing.' Capllhiry attraction, or tho wonderful rise of the ground wa ter to tho surface, In spite of tho at traction of gravitation, Is of lmmcnso vnlue to agriculture whon assisted by tho cultivator; but thero is a limit be yond which it will not work, nnd 'a reservoir of water n fow feet undor his fields would bo of no use to tho farmer unless brought to tho surfneo by a pump. Thro are places where thoro aro abundant supplies of wjitor stored in tho earth; but tho crops suffer as bad ly thore from drouth ns In any region of our country. In Kalamazoo, Mich., thero is a large oxtent of country un derneath which thero is an Inexhaust ible supply of wator which, whon tapped by artesian wells, rlsos nearly to tho surfaco. Tho city of Kalama zoo, containing 18,000 Inhabitants, is fully supplied by artesian wells. The water is underneath tho valley Uko a shallow lake, and Is forced up nearly to tho surface; when tapped, by tho pressure of tho rain water descend ing from tho surrounding mils. TJio bountiful reservoir Is too deep for capillary attraction to draw It up, and when tho writer was thoro du ring an August drouth there was no green to bo seen In tho meadows, nnd the grnsa In tho city park had to bo WPered to keep It olive. Thoro Is wator enough undor tho great Desert of Sahara. Wherever ar tesian wells have bcon bored a plenti ful supply has been found, and if ca pillary attraction could bring It up, there would bo no desert thoro. Level land plowed nluo lnchos deep will re tain all tho rain wator It is capable of absorbing, and &b much as If plowed deeper. Of course clayey soils will re tain more than Bandy, Whon tho rain wator has sunk much below tho depth wo usually plow, It haB escaped be yond tho power of cnplllnry attraction to bring it back to tho surfaco. I havo been in coal mines In Ponnsyl vanla, from which tho Bteam pump was working night nnd day hoisting out a Btrcam of water nearly enough I . ..... , .... .. to turn a mill, nnd yet tho farmers' Holds near by wore suffering for lack of It. Capillary attraction often Deceives credit for moisture which It does not upply, but which Is suppllod by con densation ot tho moisture In tho' at- mospnoro Uko tho condensation ot tho drops on tho outsldo ot tho Ico pitcher. You break tho crust that has formed on tho surface of your corn Held, and oxposo tho cooler earth below, tho air coming in contact with that cooler earth Imparts moisture to It. Tho condensation Is not so an parent as In tho case of tho lce-wator pltchor, because tho soil absorbs It, wnicn mo pitcher does not. Tho gov ernmont Has tried to got rain by fir ing cannon nnd failed. It la extreme ly doubtful whether It could got any water-supply for Mr. Lyon excopt by irrigation. Alfalfa In Orchard. SB, Jl9. th aHilS effects, and later plowed under as a green manure crop Average Yearly Returns. A United States government official "tl estimated to u good Colorado farmer t average yearly returns for n good i . ... j...... . . . gjviji wv" uuuof m uuen Bnouiu be $5Q per acre CONQUEST OF GREAT DESERT Time, Patience and Perseverance Re quired to Establish Homes In Many of New Districts. In evory attempt to convert desert land into fruitful fields there la a transition period which tries men's souls to tho utmost. Tho warning cry Is often given not to allow famlllos to attempt to establish homes in tho des ert lest they perish. It is truo a now Irrigated district may not bo a des ert, but iLls closely akin to it and It requires tlmo, patience nnd self-denial to establish homes In such places. Thero Is so much to bo done with so llttlb help and money that the bravest hearts often quail before tho task Is completed. It was comparatively easy for our forefathers to establish homes In tho heavily wooded states of tho Atlantic seaboard, nnd still easier for thoso who first settled on tho prairie land of tho Mississippi valley, writes 8. Fortlor In tho Field and Farm. These men had to encounter dangers and hardships, but tho winning of their livelihood from tho soil was cas tor than the task which confronts for tho first year or two tho settlor on a desert farm. Tho most profitable crops on an Ir rigated farm require tlmo to mature. The land for vineyards for oxnmple must bo first thoroughly prepared be fore tho plants arc set In the ground, then from two to threo years must elapse before any returns can bo ex pected. Meanwhllo, tho expenses of caring for tho vineyard have to bo met. Tho same is truo of all decidu ous orchards with the difference that longer period Intervenes between tho tlmo of planting and profttnblo re turns. Tho Btaplo crop of tho west s alfalfa, but ho who expects a heavy yield tho first season aftor planting It la too often doomed to disappoint ment Tho now Bottler with limited means has to conflno hlo efforts during tho first season to tho Becdlng of small patches of grain nnd tho planting of vegetables. Dy degrees ho can work Into tho more proQtnblo cropB, such as alfalfa, orchnrdo and sugar beets, but at first ho must bo contont with much smaller returns. This Is tho transition period which marks tho passing of tho desert conditions and tho Introduction of profitable crops undor Irrigation. If there Is over a time whon a now settler needs help It Is during this period. Tho outlay in oth labor nnd monoy for buildings, farm equipment, Irrigation ditches and tho proper preparation of tho land Is unusually high while tho returns from tho soil aro correspondingly small. BIG MISTAKE IN IRRIGATION Common Error In Watering Potatoes la to Turn a Large Head In Each Furrow. . Tho most common mlstnko made in tho irrigation of potatoes 1b to turn a largo head In each furrow, permit it to flow rapidly to tho bottom of tho rows and thon shut it off. This way of applying tho wator wots only tho surface layer and if It 1b now followed up Immediately by cultivation two days of sunshine will rob tho soil ot most of tho water which haB boon ap plied and soal over tho surface with a hard crust. In this condition tho crops soon begin to suffer and tho unskilled farmer fancicB that tho only remedy lies In applying more wator. A hotter plan Ih to turn only small amount of water Into a deep furrow and permit It to run without Btopplng for hours or oven for a day or night. In thla way tho top layer Is not saturated, tho soil around tho roots and beneath them recolvcs a larger supply and tho surfaco may bo cutlvatcd shortly after each Irriga tion so as to chock evaporation and retain tho moisture in tho soli for tho benefit ot tho crop. LIVE 8TOCK NOTES. No stock should bo exposed to cold rains and snows. Whole milk Is a perfect ration for young calves. Young stock will thrlvo on bluo grasB, needing no grain. It Is difficult to Bay what Is both tho beat and cheapest feed for brood bows. The pregnant ewes must have, as far as posslblo, natural conditions. Farmors make a mlstako In keeping their hogs too long. It ordinarily costs about ten dollars to keep a sow for a year on tho fafm. Above all thlngn, brood sowo, young or old, should have plenty of exer cise. Calves, kept In a cold barn, or In a placo constantly cold, usually look rough. With careful management from 12 to 20 pigs Bhould bo raised each year from a prolific, mature sow. It sheep are heavily coated with wool they may look fat nnd plump, when In reality they are very poor, Somo of tho best experienced mon pormlt owes to run on pasture with A - - l .11 . . piouiy oi gooa suuuer wnon desir able. If rlngwormB begin to show on tho little calves, usually around. th,e eyes, do not neglect attending to It at once. One way to reduce the cost of rais ing hogs very effectively 1b to Increase, the number or proline bows In tho herd and reduce tho number ot non-prolific ones. To facilitate feeding tho calves, they shouia no secured in small 8 tan chlons, so that they do not tip over each other's mess, or get In the habit ot sucking each other. AND OTHER. Crrics Firemen Often Fooled by Freak Calls NEW YORK. In tho faco of acci dent tho unrcsourccful Now York er flies to two sources of safety and rollof of tho pollco and tho flro de partments. He has no cbnfldenco In himself. Tho result of walking Jn tho same groove with his many brothers, day in and day out for so many years has left him with no Incentive to do tho work of rescue. The fire alarm box Is so handy and tho "cop" is so accessible, "what would bo tho use?" ho asks himself. For this reason no firemen In any eectlon of tho country are called upon to do such a vnylety of things as thoso In tho larger cities. Perhaps ono of tho most humorous calls for tho fire department In New York camo whon an epileptic, about to "throw a fit," had held a bottle ot mcdlclno to his mouth, which ho ex- plained to the court afterward, would havo prevented tho nttack. Somo self appointed guardian, imagining tho bot tlo contained poison, dashed It to tho Bloodhound's Luxurious Surroundings fejf-l (TIME TOT Rpy i& BANGOR, MB. Ono of tho finest , packs of bloodhounds In this part of tho country Is kept at tho Malno Stato prison In Thomaston for the moral effect on prisoners who contem plato escape. Tho pack Is a mixture of art Imported English strain nnd carefully bred southern stock. Ono of tho pack, when but a young imppy, was presented to Marguerite Owen, a Bolfast .girl, and tho two havo boon Inseparable companions for tho last threo yoars. Tho dog's name Is Hilda, Sho Is of a most sensitive and sym pathetic nature and feels a cross word much mora than somo dogB would u kick. Sho romps with tho children, her favorite diversion being hldo-and- seok. Sho knows tho children by name, and when sho Is "It," sho al ways finds tho ono sho Is told to seek. v. Hilda has a bedroom all to herself, fitted up with a llttlo Iron cot with real bedclothes llko onb of tho fam ily. Tho room Is lighted with elec How DesMoines Club YOLI'UDUY MY DOUGHNUTS DES MOINES, IA. Imagine tho wife of Gov. B. F. Carroll of Iowa begging funds on tho streets, and Im agine, too, other prominent society women, of Dos" Moines blacking shoes, soling doughnuts, working at day la bor, making candy and selling home made cheeso, nnd you will know how the women of Dcs Molnos' Women's club aro going about earning $2,300 with which to buy pictures and paint ings for tho Women's club building in this city. It all enmo about when at a meet ing of tho Women's club tho low con dition of the treasury was discuss ed. Something had to bo done, Mu slcalos luncheons, amateur theatricals all had been tried tlmo and time again. "Why not earn monoy llko working women earn tholr mone'y? Why not tako in washing?" suggested Mrs. Hi WTi City Finds Jobs for the Unemployed I'D MKE TO ClT A. JOB m A PIE FACTORY- pes J KANSAS CITY, Kan. A municipal employment bureau, operated un der the direct supervision ot tho city commissioners, which will furnish freo Jobs to applicants, haB been started hero. Tho employment bureau Is Just as much a part of the city's business ns tbe street department, flro depart ment or any other city department, and It 1b popular with tho public. The city employment bureau haB been In existence only a short whllo, but In that tlmo a hundred men and women havo boen given Jobs and tho names of . 200 more who want work havo been received and filed In tbe order of tholr presentation, to be sent to positions among employers who want workers are found. The bureau will furnish positions of any kind to men or women. pavement and called for tho firemen. Great crowds gathered about tho spot whero tho man lay and tho firemen nnd policemen of the district added to tho throng. The firemen wero dis gusted, tho pollco wero disgusted and eventually tho epileptic waB disgusted because ho was arrested for causing a disturbance. Last year ono ot tho innovations in the rescuo work of New York firemen which includes anything from taking cats from trees to rescuing peoplo in 42-story buildings, was tho rescue of an aviator whose mnchlno had be come entangled In a maze of wires in Brooklyn. A llttlo girl, eager to get a "look" Into a fine garden, thrust her head be tween two pickets nnd onco thero ,aho was unablo to roleaeo herself. The firemen and police wero called, but finally a doctor came forward with a llttlo vasallno, applied It on tho child's head and tho rescuo was ef fected. Recently n fireman was Injured by a fall from a treo whllo rescuing a cat that had escaped a canlnos fury. Thoro are scores of such happenings every day In great cities and among tho heaviest bills fire departments must pay are those caused by re sponding to false alarms. tricity, and each night her mistress goes upstairs and Hilda crawls Into bed, lays her head on tho pillow and waits to be covered up nnd tucked In. When this is done tho light is turned off nnd sho Is left or tho night,' rare ly stirring until' called In tho mbrni Ing. , Mention of bloodhounds usually sug Bests "Uncle Tom's Cabin" nnd tho great, bloodthirsty boasts that chaso Eliza across tho ico, but the big, fe rocious appearing "man tracking Cu ban bloodhounds" of tho show bills aro usually tho lumbering, good nn tured Great Danes, mautlfls or n cross breed. It Is easy to teach them to chase Eliza, when tho unfortunate womnn has somo cholco tidbits In tho pockets of hor apron with which to f fced tho dogs If they chaso her with satisfactory realism. Tho chief characteristic of tho gen uine bloodhound Is tho marvelous de velopment of their scentfollowlng In stinct, especially when trained to fol low human beings'. Their ability to keep tho trail Is tho result of Intelli gence and training and not on account of any animosity against the person being trailed, for, contrary to tho gen eral supposition, tho real bloodhound rarely If ever attacks tho person he haB been following. Women Get Money J. G. Berryhlll, wlfo of a millionaire wholesale lumber dealer, who boasts tho fatherhood of tho famous Des Moines plan ot municipal govern ment. The other women gasped. But, Mrs. Berryhlll. was In dean earnest. That is tho way It all camo about. Before tho meeting adjourned tho women wero enthusiastic. The next day tho women wero at work. Mrs. Ernst Brown, president of tho club, "earned" her first dollar selling eggs produced from a pen of flvo chick ens, for which hor husband, her first customer, paid $100. Mrs. Carroll, wlfo of the governor of Iowa, became so enthusiastic that sho was mistaken for a beggar while Bollclting funds on the street. Mrs. Berryhlll sold newspapers. Mrs. L. M. Mann, whoso huBband haB mado his fortuno in real estate, decided to do shampooing. Mrs, W. F. Mitchell, ex president ot tho club, has been sell ing home-mndo nprons. Mrs, George Aulmnnn began her fund by selling doughnuts. Mrs. Woltz preempted the kitchen and baked dozens of pies. Mrs. Frank McKay has boen soiling popcorn. In fact, every woman in the club Is doing all kinds of work, oven down to shining shoes. James Eads How ot St. Louis, nn tlonal president ot tho Brotherhood Welfare Association, and general champion, ot tho, rights. of the unonv ployed, paraded' through the streets of Kan bbb uuy, aio., several nays ago with reveral hundred of his followers and went to the city hall, whero they asked tho mayor for work. They snld, that tho city should provide employ ment for all mon who wanted to work, Tho mayor of Kansas City, Mo., told tho Jobless marchers that he had no Jobs to give to them and ho did not Bee how tho c(ty could help them out. This set tho Kansas City (Kan.) com mlssloners to thinking and they got busy. It Is not only to compel tho vagrants to go to work that the municipal om ployment bureau has been established, and tho JobB It furnishes are not re stricted to this class, Already the bureau has found posi tions for eight stenographers, two of them in tho city employ. About dozen- carpenters have been given work through the bureau, and 20 po sitions for stono masons are open and ready to bo filled by the commission em when the weather permits. Stop taking liquid physic or big1 or littls oills. that which makes vou worM Instead of curing. Cathartics don't cure- they irritate and weaken tha bowels. CASCARBTS make the bowels strong, tone the muscles so they crawl and workwhen they do this they are healthy, producing right results. CASCARBTS toe a feex for a week's treatment. AlldruraUu. Klffgeat iellrr la the world. Mllllou bote a month. Nebraska Directory RUBBER GOODS H milt at cut prtcti. RerxJ for t ree catalogu MYERS-DILLON DRUQ CO., Omaha, Nob. CURED In a few days without nain or a. inr- eieal tperatloa. Mo pay until cuitd. Send Ut literature. Dr.Wray,307BooBldg.fOmaha,Neb. Ever hear of a pearl lielng found in church fair oyster? Drink Garfield Tea at nlcht! It Inroret aormal action of liver, kidneys and bowel. Too often sermons have too much length and too llttlo depth. Judge. ONI.T ONK "nitOMO OtJINTXTV Tht ll LAXJLTIVB 1IUOMO QUININE. Look W tb lgnituro of" E, W. G'ltOVK. .Uk4 tb World Happiness grows at our own flre- sldo and Is not to bo picked in stran gers') gardens. Douglas Jerrold. Constipation cauecs many lerioua 'dl. eaies. It la thoroushlv cured bv Dr. Pierco'a Plcatant Pellets. One a laxative, three for cathartic. Caution. "I havo a remarkable history," be gan tho lady who looked like a possl- hlo client. "To tell or sell?" inquired tho law yer cautiously. -Washington Herald. ' i And In the Meanwhile. Lady Can't you 'find work? Tramp Yessum; but every, one wants a reforenco from my last em ployer. Lady And can't you got ono? Tramp No, mum. Yer see, uo's been doad twenty-eight years. rLon don Punch. Time for Stillness. Mrs. MacLachlan' was kind to ho American boarder, nut sho did not pro pose to allow her to overstep the 11m. Its of a boarder's prJLvllegos, and sho maao it very clear. Ono Sunday tho boarder, returning from a walk, found tho windows of her room, which she .had left wide open, tightly closed. "Oh, Mrs. IMacLachlan, I don't like my room to get stuffy," she said, when sho wont downstairs again. "I llko plenty of fresh air." "Your room will na' got stuffy In ono day," said her landlady firmly. " 'Twas nover our custom, miss, to hoe frech air rooshln' about the house on tho Snwbath." Youth's Companion. Granite of the Soutlc. When one speaks of granrw tho mind naturally revorts to Vermont It Is difficult to associate gvanlto with any section ot North America outsldo New England, yet It must now bo ac knowledged to tho credit ot tho South that Georgia, North Carolina, Mary land and Virginia aro producing largo quantities ot stone of good quality which Insures tho South' a placo in the market at any rate. Tho annual output Is now worth about ?3,500,000 nnd tho Industry is growing. It may bo ot comparatlvo interest to know that New England's output Is about $9,000,000 worth of stono annually. HEREDITY Can Be Overcome In Cases. Tho lnfluenco of heredity cannot, of course, bo successfully disputed, but it can bo minimized or entirely over como in some cases by correct food and drink. A Conn, lady says: "For years whllo I was a coffee drinker 1 Buffered from bilious at tacks of great severity, from which I used to emerge as white as a ghost i and very weak. Our family physl- clan gave mo various prescriptions for Improving tho digestion nnd stimulat ing tho liver, which I tried faithfully but without perceptlblo result "He was acquainted with my fam ily history for several generations back, and once when I visited him he said: 'If you have inherited one ot thoso torpid livers you may always suffer more or less from Its inaction. Wo can't dodgo our inheritance, you know.' "I was not bo Btronp a believer In heredity as he was, however, and, be ginning to think for myself, I conclud ed to stop drinking coffee, and see what effect thru would have. I feared it would bo a severe trial to give It up, but wheml took Postum and had It well made, It completely filled my need for a hot boverago and t grew very fond of It "I havo usod Postum for threo years, using no medicine. During nil that tlme I havo had absolutely nono of tha bilious attacks that I uBed to suf fer from, and I havo been entirely free from tho pain and dobllltatlng of feofts that used to result from them. Tho change Is surely very great, and I am compelled to glvo PoBtum tho exclusive credit for It." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read VTho Itoad to Wellvllle," in pkgs. "here's a Benson." Ever rd tha above letferT A new me appears from time to time. They re areanlae, true, ua fall ol fanmaa