The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 10, 1931, Image 7

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    STOP YOUR COLD
IN 12 HOURS WITH
I
\
L
_I
Little Damage Done by
Missile, as It Happened
Mark Twain, at a publishers’ din
ner in New York, talked of his re
porting days in Virginia City.
“We wore trying a horse thief
one day,” lie said, “and all of a
sudden the big, burly scoundrel
pulled off his boot and threw it at
the judge. It was a heavy boot, too.
It was studded with hobnails . , .
I am still rather proud of the way 1
wrote up that little incident, doing It
neatly, and at the same time getting
back on a rival reporter whom I dis
liked. I got it all in one paragraph
—something like this:
“‘Suddenly the blackguardly thief,
pulling off ills boot, hurled it with
all his might straight at the judge’s
head. This desperate act might have
been attended with most disastrous
consequences, but, fortunately, the
missile only struck a reporter, so
that no harm was done.’'’—Path
finder Magazine.
Stokes by Push Button
One man, by merely pressing push
buttons, stokes all the coal-burning
boilers in a 47-stor.v New York ho
tel. The boilers bum pulverized coal,
and when a button Is pushed exactly
the right amount of coal to keep the
fire at proper heat is automatically
released from the bunkers of the fire
box.
Confident
“I want yon to sell this property
for what it will bring."
“I can get a better hid than that?”
r — ' ^
If It’s Your Liver—
Your liver is adelicatemechanism.When
it happens to be out of order it needs
to be ' set right.” That’s exactly what
you ao wnen you a ring
a few cups of Garfield
Tea. The gentle but po
tent action of its puro ,
herbs flush the bowels \
thoroughly, restore the
normal action of your >
liver, and make you L.
feel fit and healthy. \
| At the nearest druexist Tec
GARFIELD TEA
ts4 Ttalumt'JZaxalivt Lfirink.
k ___
High Honors Accorded
Fourth-Century Hermit
The world laughed tolerantly at
last summer's “Monkey Marathon,'*
when small boys took to trees In en
durance contests; and there could
be no better proof that times have
changed. The Fourth century took
similar performances more seriously.
Consider Simeon Stylites. He
chained himself to a great rock on
which he began to erect a column
of smaller stones. Aided by his ad
mirers, who rapidly increased in
numbers, he raised the pile, first to
a height of 9, and finally to GO
feet. In this last and lofty situa
tion, he endured the heat of 90 sum
mers aud the cold of as many win
ters.
He sometimes prayed In an erect
attitude with ids outstretched arms
in the figure of a cross; but bis most
familiar practice was that of bend
ing ids meager skeleton from i lie
forehead to the feet, and a curious
spectator, after numbering 1,244 rep
etitious, at length desisted from the
endless account.
Simeon died, without descending
from bis pillar, as a result of an ul
cer on bis thigh. The ulcer owed its
origin to pride. The devil, so (lie
story goes, assumed an angelic form
and drew up beside the pillar top
in a fiery chariot. He invited Simeon
to ascend, as had Elijah, and the
saint was ready. As lie lifted his
foot to step in, t lie devil spanked
him cruelly and vanished in a cloud
of sulphurous smoke.
This chastisement to pride won for
the hermit great repute and when, a
few years later, his bones were borne
to Antioch, tlie patriarch of the city,
the master-general of I lie East, six
bishops, 21 counts or tribunes and
0,000 soldiers former the guard of
Lonor.—Cleveland l'lain Dealer.
A man may lie able to write a dozen
volumes and still he unable to fill one
pockctbook.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Remote* Dandruff Stops Bair Falling
Imparts Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair
60c and 91.00 at Druggist*
Hi*cox Cticm. Wk>.. Fatrbogue.N.Y.
FLORESTON SHAMPOO — Ideal for use in
connection with Parker'aHair Balaam. Makes the
heir soft and fluffy. 60 cent* by mail or at druy
yiata. Hiacox Chemical Worka. Patchoyue, N.Y.
The Ideal
Vacation Land
Sunehine Alt Winter Long
Splendid roads—lowering mountain
ranges—Highest type hotels—dry in
vigorating air—clear starlit nights—
California's Foremost Desert Playground
P Writs Crts A Chaflsy ^
dim Sprinsjm
CALIFORNIA ^ j
COEDS AGAINST
SLUMP PLANS
Utah Students Aroused by
Suggestions of Uni
versity President
Salt Lake City—(UP)—University
of Utah coeds are indignant. A re
cent declamation of their president,
Dr. George Thomas, is the cause.
Dr. Thomas recommended that
college students should avoid ex
travagances during depression. He
suggested that students should
abandon automobiles as means of
transportation to and from school,
and depend solely on streetcars. He
urged reduction of social expenses,
favored discontinuing such things
as flowers for dances, and hinted
that girls should share "date’' ex
penses.
The street car and the expense
suggestions aroused the most ire.
•‘If we must ride street cars to
dances, then I’ll stay home and read
a bcok,” declared Miss LaVon Crane,
“I would be rather hesitant riding
a street car in a formal dress,” ad
mitted Miss Ruth Noweu
Miss Virginia White, student body
vice president, was cautious and
politic. "We should seriously con
sider President Thomas’ hints," she
suggested.
OUTLOOK IS BLUE
FOR SPRING STYLES
You can be as blue as you like
about predicting spring styles,
and probably you will be right.
For of the 78 new colors, just an
nounced by the Textile Color Card
association, blues stand first and
foremost, preferably with a pur
plish caste.
Creamy champagne tones, shad
ing into light mocha, are new, and
added to them are a lot of new
light beiges and shell tints, and
a rich antique white that is, off
white in the latest modern ver
sion.
Reds for spring have either a
yellowish or orange cast, or they
arc unmistakably apple red.
Greens are more apt to be olive
tinted than bluish. Pinks come
into their own. some of them shad
ing from a deep pink to a real
clear cheery tone. There are three
new purples, but there is nothing
oldish about these shades, for they
all have a lively bluish tone to
them.
Hats are planning to follow these
new tones for springtime, which
probably means that when daffo
dils bloom again, you will find that
your hat and your dress must
match.
♦ ♦
Wolf Finds Too Many
At Doors for Welcome
-«r
Oakland—<UP)—Nobody wants a
wolf at the door these days.
This discovery was made by
"Boots,” full grown wolf which es
caped from the city zoo. wandered
in the wide open spaces, but re
turned to seek the shelter of his
cage. . ,
Dirty, chestfallen and hungry,
"Boots” opened the door of his cage
himself, entered and made him
self at home after days of wander
ing.
Fearing to alarm residents of the
city, officials kept his escape secret,
while a search was conducted.
Lingua Harvardiensis.
From the Dallas News.
Harvard students arc to hold a
series of dinners at which all speech
will be in Latin. How the waiters
will get on at that is not clear, al
though it is probable that a want ad
culling for gentleman with a speak
ing knowledge o! Latin and waiters
tiu'ss suits would bring on a swarm
of applicants. The real proglam,
however, will not be with the waiters
but with the guests.
For example, what is “depression’
In Latin now? Depressio might be
ambiguous, whde tempora calami
tosa scents too lugubrious. Discus
sion of prevailing problems in con
tract and auction will be distinctly
hampered in the vocabulary of
Caesar and Cicero. Terence would
have handled it in some fashion,
had he survived, but the chances
of his survival, even by reincarna
tion at Harvard, are slight. As for
touchdowns, gold-digging, 12 cylin
ders V-type and such like, the class
icists may have to resort to sign
language or blackboard diagrams.
In olden days it was possible to
speak one’s mind in such verbiage
and the noire and his clergy still
manage it after a fashion, but
whether Martial and Plautus and
Pliny would understand them or the
i liings they talk about is doubtful.
Anyhow, one is bound to a mire the
brave lads of Harvard w'ho enter
uch a banquet hall as they now
plan. They may be linguists of
great or limited powers; but there
is no denying that there is a distinct
sporting slant in a man who will
dare such emergencies.
NEVER TOO OLD
Memphis, Tcnn. — At 73, Mrs.
Sarah W. Bell is studying French at
night .school so she will be able to
enter college in two years. Mrs. Bell
has been a school teacher for the
last 24 years, and her desire to go
to college for a B. S. degree has
prompted her to take tip the pre
paratory French course. She has a
son who has already been graduat
ed from college and a daughter in
high school.
HOME RAMBLER
Kokoino, Ind. — Mr. and Mrs
James Swafford boast a rambler
rose which more than lives up to
its name. It has spread into the
house, entering at a window and
growing between inner and outer
walls to reaopear at another win
dow and extend outside again.
- — -♦ ♦ — --—
MUSHROOM WOULD FEED 20<t
Fitchburg, Mass?—(UP)—Joseph
Scinmino has grown a mushroom
which he estimates is large enough
to feed something like 200 persons.
It is 15 inches high. 71 inches in
circumference and weighs 30 oounds.
Out Our Way By Williams
f EE.-HLE ^LOOv^iT / SEH , BoT iTs HARDER \j
TH ©ECOmO inJ CcmmakiO / OM TH’ PR'mCVE. , Coz
TvJkaP OOvsIk> OFT Hv<=> |- "TH UiMG MAH STOoP
»H\GH HOPPE — - Jo'jT Aw^TlME. Am'
| - T-V PP'MCE HA© TO I
- WATCH CAREFUELV \ jl
\ THAT HE AiMT Jj
\ enj-niNJ^WHiLE /I
VTH’ KimGj'S STooP*Kj'. / J
HEROES APE MADE
MOT BoRM.
HCO. U. 8 PAT. Off.
Il-Zt ©1*31 BY NCA StRVICt. I WO.
MOUW POLAND CHINAS AND
POLLED SHORTHORNS HAVE
PROVED BIG MONEY MAKERS
BY FRANCIS T. MARTIN.
x'o chronicle the achievements of
the Mouw "clan” in Sioux county,
fowa, is quite a task when one cov
ers the multiplicity of its efforts in
an agricultural sense, giving due
credit to its worthwhile projects per
taining to progressive tendencies in
farming, and in the production of
improved livestock.
There’s nothing reprehensible
about the connection of the Mouw
clan with the higher standards of
agricultural effort, as its efforts
have been on the side of progress,
standing for progress, and register
ing progress, always.
Conspicious as a leader of the
clan was Peter Mouw. Poland China
adherents are familiar with his ear
ly day tactics as regards broad re
form. The question, however, would
the breed have achieved its present
high e?tate were it not for the ef
forts that Mouw had put forth to
' save” it from the downward plunge
it w'as making? Possibly, in time,
but wheii Mouw saw the necessity
of immediate action, he got busy
at once; he acted with promptness
and dispatch, and as a matter of
fact, he knew exactly what to do
when he put his plans into effect,
and the lesult was, he gave to the
world, the “Mouw Poland China.”
As a member of the Mouw clan,
therefore, is Sioux county, his name
looms big, It is a portentious name,
not only in the county that wit
nessed his achievements, but every
where in the hog raising world.
Ben Mouw was Peter Mouw’s broth
er. When he came to Sioux county
in 1871, farms were being “home
steaded.” He settled on a choice
tract of land two miles from which
is now the town of Sioux Center,
and when he became firmly estab
lished, ho gave vent to his desire for
good livestock. He favored the
Shorthorn, and the foundation of
his herd consisted of two cows and
a bull.
As time passed, ihe herd 'jrew in
importance as Mouw went in for
the practical kind, knowing their
dependability, their usefulness for
practical farm purposes. He raised
a lot of good Shorthorns, therefore,
and for years, the herd’s salable
surplus was scattered over Sioux
county, and in outlying territory.
Mouw’s record in the raising, and
selling of this good seedstock is
entirely commendable as he con
tributed vast benefits to the welfare
and prosperty of a new develop
ing country. He truly was a bene
factor in the production and dis
semination of this good seed, and
in so doing he added wealth to his
own community, he showed the way
whereby greater porfits could be
obtained in the use of better blood
in the livestock produced. His son,
William B. Mouw who was born on
the “homestead" is a true disciple
of the Mouw tradition as a lover of
good stock, as a believer in good
stock. When he left the parental
home, he went on a farm of his
own a short distance from it, and
Shorthorn breeding at once engaged
his attention. He produced the
foundation from his father’s herd,
and he conducted the business along
the same lines, adding no substitu
tions whatever in the way of its
management as he was satisfied
with the success that his father had
Shakespeare’s Gloves
Placed in Museum
Philadelphia—(UP)— More than
300 years ago there was a man
named Will in London.
And he had a pair of soft, gaily
fringed buckskin gloves. He was a
well known figure in the taverns
and around the courts where the
strolling players congregated.
He wasn't a very important fel
low then, so that when he died no
one was especially interested in his
soft buckskin gloves.
But now his gloves have beer
made and his ambition was to suc
ceed as he had done.
About 10 years ago, however, the
hornless "wave” that had swept
over the country had gotten a firm
foothold in many quarters, and
Mouw conceived the idea that he
would like to eliminate the horned
feature in his herd. Accordingly, he
bought a polled bull, and results
were satisfactory from the start. He
bought bulls afterward of strong
polled characteristics, and as , a re
sult, the herd today is strictly a
polled collection, and ith all the at
tributes, and the excellent qualities
of the true Shorthorn.
Mouw has experienced a lively
demand for the surplus of his polled
bulls and females. He has sold them
at good prices for the hornless
Shorthorn with beef and milk pro
pensities is a real farmers’ animal,
no matter what way one looks at
it. Mouw raises a lot of hogs in ad
ditions to his Shorthorns, and in
cidentally, a lot of poultry. In other
words, his 280 farm is taxed to its
capacity with quality livestock.
Mouw is a good feeder. He be
lieves in seeing his livestock well
kept, well cared for. This season a
partial drought hit Sioux county,
but Mouw provided an ample sup
ply of winter forage for his cattle.
He put up temporary silos, and sil
age as everybody knows is good feed.
Mouw is the kind of a farmer that
can make both ends meet even
when times are pretty tough. The
way he does it is that he raises
good livestock year after year, and
a thorough livestock man, that looks
simple enough. Perhaps all farm
ers can’t do as Mouw has done,
and is doing today. Successful farm
er breeders are the ones whose
views harmonize with their work.
Mouw. surely w’ill classify as a suc
cessful farmer breeder.
Sister Mary’s Kitchen
Some of the dishes of old New
England have been handed down
from generation to generation. They
are particularly adapted for winter
use when hearty fare is wanted.
Boston baked beans at Saturday's
supper and codfish on Sunday
morning is the old-fashioned rule,
still observed by many New Eng
land housewives.
Boston baked beans are a nour
ishing and satisfying food that
make a well balanced meal if served
with brown bread and a crisp salad
of cabbage or greens.
Boston Baked Beans
Two cups pea beans, 1-3 pound
salt pork. 2 teaspoons salt, 1 table
spoon molasses, 1 tablespoon brown
sugar, 1-2 teaspoon ground mustard,
1-8 teaspoon pepper, 1 small onion,
1 cup boiling water.
Pick over and wash beans. Cover
with cold water and let stand over
night. In the morning drain, cover
with fresh water and bring slowly
to the boiling point. When water
begins to boil drain and rinse beans
in cold water. This prevents them
from becoming broken and mushy
during baking. In the bean pot put
a thin slice of the salt pork and
place the onion, peeled but not cut
on the pork. Add half the beans. Cut
through rind of remaining pork
every half inch, making cuts one
inch deep, and put on top of beans.
Add remaining beans, leaving the
rind of the pork exposed. Mix salt,
mustard, pepper, molasses and sugar
with boiling water and pour over
beans. Add enough more boiling
water to cover. Cover bean pot and
placed on exhibition at the Uni
versity of Pennsylvania.
For Will of old London was none
other than William Shakespeare.
FREAK PLANE
An inventor in Italy has designed
an airplane supported by a single
disk-shaped wing that is rotated to
serve as a propeller and is filled
with gas to increase its lifting pow
er.
—- - -•.
AIRPLANE AS COWBOY
Hinsdale, N. Y. — A farmer near
here, Howard A. Crosby, is using an
*o local* lost cows. He lost
bake in a slow oven for six hours,
removing cover the last hour of
baking to allow the rind to become
brown and crisp. Serve from bean
pot.
Boston brown bread always is
steamed rather than baked. Rais
ins may be added to suit the mod
ern taste, but the original “Bos
ton brown” was made without them.
Boston Brown Bread
One cup graham flour, 1 cup
granulated cornmeal, 1 cup rye meal,
1 1-2 teaspoons salt, 3-4 cup mo
lasses, 2 1-4 teaspoons soda, 2 cups
sour milk.
Monday's Menu
BREAKFAST: Baked apples
filled with hot cereal, cream,
crisp toast, baked codfish cokes,
milk, coffee
LUNCHEON: Peanut butter
milk toast, cottage cheese with
shredded lettuce and Russian
dressing, grope juice.
DINNER: Boston bakes
beans, scalloped tomatoes, Bos
ton brown bread, endive and
pickled peach salad, Indian
pudding, milk, coffee.
Mix rye meal, corn me"! and |
graham flour with salt. Add milk
and molasses and mix until smooth.
Dissolve soda in 1 teaspoon cold
water and stir into batter, beating
hard for about thirty seconds. Turn
into well buttered mold and steam
three and one-half horns. Then put
into a moderate oven for twenty
minutes. Do not fill mold more than
tw'o thirds full and fasten cover
securely. Otherwise the bread in
rising might force off the cover.
For steaming, put the mold on
a trivet or any form standard that
will elevate it about an inch from
the bottom of the kettle. Add boil
ing water to come up halfway around
the mold, cover closely and ste*>.m,
adding more boiling water as needed.
One pound baking powder boxes
make attractive shaped loaves or a
five pound lard pail can be used
if regulation molds are not at hand.
---
Princess Mary Plants
Trees to Aid Jobless
Harewood House, Yorkshire—
(UP)—Extensive forestation schemes
are being carried out in the park
surrounding the home of Lord Hare
wood and Princess Mary. The pro
gram has been undertaken to help
relieve unemployment.
Approximately 10,000 trees are
being planted. Lord Harewood has
increased his usual permanent
staff of 20 gardeners by 200 men
and boys.
STEAM PLANE ENGINE
Chicago — A steam engine for
use in airplanes is being developed
by a local inventor. It is valveless,
has no reciprocating parts and has
no friction-producing bearings. It
is said the engine is always In per
fect running balance without use
of counterweights and therefore vi
brationless. It is said to be only
two-thirds the weight of an ordi
nary garoline engine used in planes.
CLEANING UP SLUMS
London—England is fast clean
ing up its slums as a result of two
acts of parliament which provide
that the slums be cleared and the '
districts be rebuilt with modern
dwellings. Since the war more than
1,687,000 new homes have been
erected, many of them in the slum
districts, and have succeeded in
eliminating the congested squalid
living conditions of England’s poor
sections.
four recently and, after looking for
them for some time, finally secured
the services of a plane and pilot
at the local airport. A few minutes’
cruising over his land located the
lost animals, after which Crosby
• . ' - ■ ■ ♦♦
AIL MAIL INCREASES
London—Airmail in England dur
ing the quarter ending September
30 increased nearly 10,000 pounds
over the same period last year, re
cent figures show. For the quar
ter ending September 30, 1931, air
mail poundage was 34,061. For the
same period of 1930 it was 26.248.
I ybe increase is about 29 per cent.
CITY TO FARM
MOVE W !OWA
Authentic Data Prove
More Perscnn Rrlaminy
to Rural Hrmes
IIV A. D. 8TEF*T,R!!I»,
Amiated Press SWI Writer.
Dos Moines - — Significant
figure; given with lit Me (eminent in
a recent publication **f the federal
census bureau, shew that, in Iowa
the mivemert of poi'idr-lli n Jg from
the city to the farm, and not tha
c-ppo-i:-, us is geoernllv believed.
From April 1, 1921' to March 31,
1930, the period for which the latest
authentic data are available, 20,39*
person; moved to fa> ms from cities,
village or othrr Ineea inrated place*
In lown.
This lotnl contrast- t limply with
figuies which show that 14,8118
Iowa ns left the farms to go
;itles and towns.
In ether words, about half ;
as many persons heeded the >■
the It a farms os set out to . c
fanu\ fortune, or mciely a livui..; ni
large centers of pt piOulkr
F ew Recent hiuthiiileji
Ini!:; 1 considerations of these
ilafH indicate that the farm-to-clty
movtri.cif that sociologies loudly
decried a few years ago has < cased,
that y< rrg people me staying on
the fann and that those who left
the In-ii come ycae ago found the
cities’ rthts not quite so taught a*
they had apparently hoped.
On the other hand, any inter
pret.- run an Individual wishes to
place upon these facta must con
sider that since the figures were
compiled, an opposite movement
may hme set In, that low an a may
hate ic!i-ned to farms in other
states, end thnt them arc few com
parable statistics for previous peri
ods.
Many Rcumiim
Several j eascns inuy lie offered to
explain this reversal of a movement
that wot generally at Itt) height
just before and after the World
war.
Most sentimental of these explan
ations fs that young people havo
decided that, after all, the Iowa
farm in a good plaec in live—a good
place to earn a llvuiniood oral en
joy life.
Maybe it Is that, the modi. i con
venience' limited until a «lei ■ < ago
almost exclusively to tew a- and
titles have removed what mme pier
sons have tonsidried n sort • . stig
ma attathing to th» farm, ih u.igery,
hard work, inck ef social contacts,
and the absence of entertainment.
Pei haps the autoieohiJc, radio,
newspapi. i elccti U itv, imp.oved
machinery, end ,i Urn ileyives for
relieving the iann «r Its isolation
have played no mnaU port in tho
return to the farm.
4 loltai at Devclopinrnt
lmpoitant m any explanation
must be such fin tom .rs boys', girls’
and adult;- il;r-, fa »i «i rmiifaa
tions, n wider 11 uiJminMy spirit, and
simiiH’ movement' for making the
farm community a n i IaI entity as
rohet ivc, though more spm rely set
tled, f;5 fl pitl Cl' fit'
Then m . to Le liLUe doubt
that people realtac now more than
Before that oppi rtunlty lor ndvniace
ment is not limited to. those living
in cities, thM l itwiVk-ec firtt I- Mieir
children ait if ft red eiliietnlonaJ ad
vantage; similar to those in towns,
and that ary ettmoto of cultural
advantages in the country should
lake into nccoiuit the increasingly
popular conception of the faun as
one cradle of thought.
Economic factors, also, i so
large in accounting for tin <k to
the farm movement that • / can
not be dismissed lightly. 1 >ny bo
pertinent to point out r tho
movement f;u imvnrdrj may not havo
been rt its height when the full
force of untoward economic condi
tions reached the Middle Wet.
In Wuxi bury county, 478pi < -ona
moved tc fanas it <utwerJUtAja.il 1,
1929, tc MSutTf4Sf7imrr. It.les,
villager i t I hcr Incorporated
places. This number rotinned to 15*
farms. Force a*1 moving from farm*
to cities end towns during this pe
riod numternt 1(0 in this comity.
A total of 73 farms reported tho
last figure.
The following county figures give,
respectively, the number of peirons
from the specified county who
moved to farms from cities, towns,
or other incoi pointed places; tho
number of farms t« the specified
county reporting thts figm*; the
number of pi sons wlui movcit from
farms to citli- etc, ;«rgf, finally,
the farm* In 1hp,;pagtUuil county re
porting the third figure:
Canoll 117. 53. 1*7. 52; Cherokee,
158, 50 99. 40; Clay’, 174, W, fiB, Bf;
Dallas. 267, 115 1*6 7b; Harrison,
257, 123 12C 67; Humboldt, 101, 7ft,
146, 62. Kossuth 2*9, 12J, 192, 75;
Lyon, 117, 44, 56, 26; Monona, 312,
117. 166. 73, OB. Ien, 24» W), 93, 43;
Osceola, 52, 28, 13 I; Plymouth, 299.
175.200, 108; Bui, 154, 62, 79, 36;
Sioux. 131. Cl 83, 42; Woedtury,
472, 156, ICO, 73.
BRUSSELS TO CONGO
Brussels— Aj rangejnwvta have ! „„
completed for I h«> BuiisseiB-Eclytaa
Congo air route, one of the longest
in the world. The- line is to pass
through Furl- Algeria, the So bar*
Desert, nrul French Equatorial Afri
ca. It is Wfail' to tskiiuir fu:%ht ser
vice not spring amt fellow wiUh
passenger servli • a few months lat
er. The route wlU have if) regulac
and 51 emergency htfidtl<gv1lffds
twelve
London— British commercial avia
tion celebrated its tilth anniversary
during August of this-year,'It v/«
August 25, 1919. that Cnpt. K HL
Law ford secern led fre>m Hounslow t»
pilot the first small thiec-]iassengn
plane entente: for Paris. From Uiia
route of 225 ni les, British ihivvay*
have g:owu to more than 0,00
miles.
Twenty-two- .rAnvitie In »>
South Dakota penitentiary at 8k t
Fails enjoy aJninsb complete hbe.y
wb.it working the prison fan*
t