The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, June 09, 1909, Image 3

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The Clew of the Liquor Bottles
'' Edited by William J. Bacon
ATrue Story of the Secret Service, asTold by Capt. Dickson
)ME 'years ago, before I be-
Scame conneciea wnn me
United States secret serv
Iaa in 1ia i4cf T vrae an.
gaged by a member of the
western express com
panies to do some special
work for them." began
Capt Dickson. "My head
quarters were in Denver
and my work, on the whole,
was decidedly interesting.
One adventure in particu
lar made me proud of my service for
our company, although it was largely
a matter of luck that brought about
my success in that instance. I am a
firm believer in luck, for it plays an
important part in every man's life, and
it has figured to a large extent in my
own affairs, I am free to confess.
"A daring express robbery had been
committed in the western part of the
state, near the Utah line, by three
men. The messenger had been mur
dered and the passengers throughout
the train robbed of all their money.
The hold-up men secured something
more than $15,000 from the express
company's safe and fully $5,000 from
the passengers. They took nothing
but money, however, leaving valuable
jewelry, diamonds and watches with
their owners, and ignoring the parcels
in the express car. This circumstance
showed that the gang was composed
of experienced thieves, for money is
the hardest thing in the world to
trace.
"I was notified of the robbery on the
afternoon of the second day after it oc
curred, and although I hastened to the
spot with all dispatch and made my
arrangement by wire.it was noon of
the third day before I alighted at the
nearest station. Here I had arranged
for two horses and a prospector's out
fit, deeming it best to follow the ban
dits in the disguise of a miner, as the
robbery had been made at a point
near the mining region of southwest
ern Colorado, and I expected to find
the criminals at some of the numer
ous mining camps.
"I have never been a believer in
disguises except as to clothing. All
efforts to change the face with grease
paints and wigs and the like only tend
to attract attention and direct suspi
sion to the man thus togged out The
casual observer might not notice the
deception, but the criminal, and espe
cially the hunted criminal, is no cas
ual observer. He has formed the
habit of noticing everything, and he
will detect the least false point in a
man's appearance and shun him as if
he were afflicted with the plague.
"A change of dress will work won
ders in a man's appearance. If a
man can wear other clothes than those
he is accustomed to, and wear them
easily and naturally, he can more ef
fectually disguise himself by this
means than he can with all the wigs
and paints and whiskers in exist
ence. "Coming across the continental di
vide, I had suffered a slight attack of
indigestion. 1 sent the porter after a
flask of whisk, asking for a certain
brand. He returned in a few minutes
with one of the diminutive little bot
tles customarily sold on sleeping cars
at a quarter a bottle. It was not the
kind I had ordered, but the porter ex
plained that this was the only brand
of liquor the company sold, and I had
to be content with it The label of
the bottle stated that it was put up
expressly for the company.
"On reaching my destination, I im
mediately assumed the character of a
miner and set about my inquiry. There
was little information to be gathered
beyond what was contained in the
express company's report of the rob
bery, of which I had a carbon-copy.
Satisfied that time spent here would
be wasted, I set out for the scene of
the robber', riding a wiry little pony
and leading another on which was
packed my outfit of grub and cooking
implements and miner's tools.
"The place was a desolate spot The
road ran through a broad alkali val
ley which had not at that time, been
brought under cultivation by irriga
tion. It was easy to pick up the trail
of bandits and follow it across the val
ley in a southwesterly direction to the
foot-hills of the Rockies, where the
trail disappeared, the rocky ground
leaving no trace of hoof-prints.
"From this point on it was to be a
matter of luck and guesswork. I be
lieved my men had made for Telluride,
Ouray, Silverton or some other mining
camp, but I was not rash enough to
venture a guess as to which it might
be at that stage of the game. These
camps, with their rough, shifting pop
ulation, offered capital retreats for
criminals, and from past experiences
I knew that my three rogues would,
in all probability, remain in one of
these camps until the excitement from
the robbery had subsided, and then
make for civilization to spend their
money.
"For three days I drifted at random
through the mountains, following trails
and paths, for there were no roads,
endeavoring .to pick up some clew or
find the place where my party had
spent the first night after the robbery.
The hold-up had occurred -about noon,
and. by hard riding, the three high
waymen could penetrate some ten or
twenty mile3 into the fastness of the
mounatins before it became too dark
to travel further. It was out of the
question for any one to advance
through that region after dark. I
hoped to find the place of their camp,
and felt sure I would do so by persevering.
SAYS BRAIN DOES NOT FEEL
French Professor Declares Stomach Is
Emotional Center.
The solar plexus is the emotional
b'.ain, says Prof. Francois Guyot An
amotion that attacks us is felt there
first Thus, if we feel anxiety it may
give us, if severe, a positive stomach
ache. It may even be productive of
nausea.
"While the brain does the thinking.
"Late the third afternoon I stum
bled on the ashes of a campfire, and
close beside it, among the firs and
cedars, I found where horses had
been tied. This was what I had
searched for, and I felt sure that I
would here find something of value.
I camped a short distance from the
place so I would not disturb it, leaving
my examination until the next morn
ing, when I would have a good light,
it then being too dark to attempt such
a thing.
"That night, by the light of my
campfire. I read again the report of
the robbery as given by the train
hands. Near the last of it was the
account of the sleeping car porter who
related, with evident grief, that he
had been relieved of $6.15 in silver,
and that the bandits' had "rifled "the
liquor cabinet of the buffet, taking
with them all of the whisky and a few
bottles of the rarer and stronger
wines.
"Early next morning I examined the
deserted camp of the highwaymen.
There Was nothing but a 'burned-out
pile of ashes and charred sticks and a
few empty bottles. The bottles gave
the clew for which I searched. The
highwaymen had certainly made their
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camp here. Each bottle bore the
label of the sleeping car company, and
some of them were the diminutive
flasks of which I had drunk one on
the trip from Denver. There was not
a scrap of paper anywhere else to
be found.
"Elated with my success, I made a
survey of the country and discovered
a half-obscure trail leading farther
into the mountains. I took up this
trail and followed it as best I could
until nightfall. Often I lost it, and
sometimes I spent an hour or more
casting about to pick it up again, as I
have seen hounds baffled on the trail
of a fox. About three o'clock that
afternoon I found something that made
my eyes sparkle. Shattered Into a
thousand pieces was the remains of
one of the small whisky bottles on a
large flat rock beside the trail where
it had doubtless been cast in a playful
mood Induced by its contents. Among
tho fragments I found the label of the
car company.
"It was- the dry season, and this
was in my favor, for no rains came
to obliterate the trail. For five days
I followed the bandits across the hills
and through the valleys, verifying my
route from time to time by fragments
of broken whisky bottles along the
way, and at the places where they had
camped for a night The buffet-car
must have been well stocked, for I
found many bottles in this journey.
"The trail eventually came to a
well beaten road, which, from my map,
I learned was the stage and mail route
from Montrose, the nearest railroad
point to Ouray, then a rather insig
nificant mining settlement I lost no
time in getting to Ouray, for it was
impossible to trail my men along this
road and I was sure they had headed
for the mining camp.
"Two days were spent at Ouray
without finding a trace of the three
Prof. Guyot opines that it does not
feeL The cerebrum, the major part
of the brain, is the intellectual, but
not the emotional center. The brain
represents the intelligence. The spinal
cord and the cerebellum, the latter the
little brain, not yet well understood,
and attached to the brain proper,
govern equilibrium and the muscles of
the body. But the emotions are lo
cated in the sympathetic nervous sys
men. They had not stopped there cer
tainly, so I took the trail to Telluride,
a mining camp farther on in' the moun
tains. Telluride waB then a camp of
800 or 1,000 souls, and there was a
6it of a mining boom on which daily
brought new prospectors to swell its
citizenship, fatuous souls brought
there by the greed of gold a lure
that neyer fails to attract victims in
swarms. For three days I searched in
vain through the saloons and dance
halls and other places where the rough
miners congregated without finding a
trace of my three rogues. That Infal
lible, sixth sense of mine was doing
its best to keep me longer in Tellu
ride, althonugh my judgment told me
to move on to Silverton; but in the
end my Intuition won the fight and I
remained:
"One evening I was drinking with
a raw-boned miner. The whisky was
abominable. The distillery where it
was made would never have recog
nized its product in its present form.
I complained of the poor quality of
whisky and asked my acquaintance if
there were not some better stuff to be
found in the camp. He said there
was not at any of the bars, but that
he had been given an amazingly good
drink by a miner, whose name he men
tioned. He said it had been in a little
bottle which held just enough to tease
one, but it was the best liquor he had
drunk since he left Kentucky many
years before. He licked his lips in
pleasant memory of the drink.
"I almost gave myself away, so
keen was my pleasure at this chance
remark. I inquired about the gen-
OX
TffPEP mA0O MM OfifV
erous owner of the good liquor, with a
show of indifference I was far from
feeling. He was a late arrival, it
seemed, and lived in a shanty far up
on the mountain-side with two com
panions. The three were making a
rather poor attempt to work a claim
they had preempted.
"Getting away from my loquacious
miner-friend, I climbed the steep trail
to the cabin and set about an investi
gation of it with great caution. The
men were at home, and from the
sounds issuing from its closed doors
I tguessed they were having a rare old
time that evening. I approached to the
very door and listened with my ear to
the planks to sounds of revelry within.
The men were gambling and drinking.
and I could hear the clink of coins
and the rattle of bottles and the ribald
jests with which they made their bets
and gloated over their winnings and
cursed their luck when they lost I
heard sufficient to make me- sure that
my much-sought bandits were in the
cabin, although there 'was no direct
mention of the express robbery.
Pittsburg Man
Perfect Fiend' to Quote Statistics, Ac
cording to Writer in
Harper's.
The Pittsburger can carry more fig
ures of large denomination on his per
son without your suspecting their ex
istence than any other citizen of the
United States. He is a reservoir of
decimals and statistics. He must
have ample justification, however, be
fore he turns the spigot, but when he
does there is a torrent no man .can
stem.
If provoked and inclined to extend
himself, in a five-minute talk he can
fill you so full of miscellaneous indus
tem ramifying through the body. Their
chief center is the great plexus of
nerves which lies against the back
bone and embraces the stomach.
This does not think, but It feels.
What it does sot feel Is not felt at
all, apart from pure intellectual cog
nition, and its purely passive and sub
jective sensations may often be re
garded as warning of danger or pos
sible mischief.
Trap for the Piano Tuner.
'No, cow don't you take that piece
"It would have been the rankest
folly to have .attempted their arrest
without assistance although I did
tackle such a job oncein my salad
day3, as this scar will testify," and he
pointed to an ugly wound at the back
of his neck, partially covered by his
flowing gray locks. "But that is an
other story. I decided to call on the
United States deputy marshal, a man
of tigerish bravery, for assistance.
There was no chink or crack in the
door through which I coujd gain a
peek at the interior of the cabin,1 so
I dropped down, on my hands and
knees and crawled around to the back
of the cabin -where I thought there
might be a window There was a win
dow, but it was closed with a heavy
shutter, and I could not find any point
to peep through; but I did find some
thing on the way around. My hand
touched something round and smooth,
and I clutched it involuntarily. It was
one' of the little whisky flasks. After
I had left the cabin I struck a match
and examined It. The label of the
car company was still on It
"The deputy marshal was found at
one of the dance halls and he soon
summoned a reliable posse. We sur
rounded the cabin, from which-stlll is
sued the sounds of revelry. The men
were stationed at every point about
It Then the marshal and I rapped on
the door. In response to our summons
one of the miners staggered across
the floor and threw the door wide
open. We tripped him up and rushed
over him into the cabin. The men
were too drunk to make any resist
ance, and we captured them without
F TV WPS
a shot being fired. They were hav
ing a big stud-poker game, played with
gold pieces and currency instead of
chips. There was some $8,000 or $10,
000 upon the table. Strewn about the
floor were many whisky and wine bot
tles. In a box beneath one of the
bunks was a solitary pint bottle of
whisky, the last remnant of the con
tents of the buffet car's liquor store.
It was, as I said, a clean case of
luck."
(Copyright 1903. by W. O. Chapman.)
(Copyright In Great Britain.)
Played on Ancient Instruments.
At a concert which took place In
the large hall of the Royal museum at
Stuttgart recently, at which the king
and queen of Wurtemberg were
present, no instruments were used
save spinets, clavicembolas and pianos
of the seventeenth and eighteenth cen
turies. The most interesting of these
were the one which was once owned
by Johann Sebastian Bach, and an
other on which Queen Louise of Prus-.
sia learned, to play.
Is "Loaded
-
tries natural gas, steel rails, tin
plate, petroleum, steel pipes and sheet
metal, fire bricks, tumblers, table
ware, coke, pickles, and all that sort of
thing that you will begin to feel like
a combination delicatessen and hard
ware store.
I have not begun to enumerate the
different data I have collected on this
subject as I have no desire to make
the reader feel small or to lose confi
dence in himself. As I have pointed
out before, the Pittsburger, or the man
who is under the influence of Pitts
burg, must be provoked before he un
burdens. C. H. WJiite, in Harper's.
of chamois," said the man at the
desk, as the hand of the woman wan
dered in its direction. "I know it's a
nice looking piece, but I bought it
specially for a purpose. I telephoned
the man to come to-morrow and tune
my piano. In the morning before "I
come down here I'm going to lay this
piece of chamois across the keys.
Then when I get home I'll know
whether ho has tune'd it or not If It's
gone, he has; if it's still on the keys,
he hasn't"
NOTES.
) ninAAl
MH7r
Alfalfa is growing in favor as a
notation crop.
Poor food and bad teeth are fruit
ful sources of cholic in horses.
The sponge for washing buggy or
vagon can be made to last a long
"ime by sewing it up in a piece of bag
ting. If the cows find a little feed in the
oxes in their stalls when they come
n at night they will not delay in com
:ng in. Try it
Clean feeding pails, clean quarters,
plenty of sunlight, fresh air and pas
'.urage as soon as the calves are old
jnough will insure gratifying suc
cess. We all like fruit, but too little of it
s found on the farm, many times.
Put in more fruit trees and bushes.
The health of the family will be bet
ter If there is a generous fruit diet
Better to spray once than not at all.
3ut the only right method Is to be
systematic and spray at the pre
scribed intervals. It is well to fol
ow the spray calendars which are
furnished by experiment, stations.
Plant more trees. In a few more
years they become a big-paying in
vestment Utilize every available
spade on the farm for this purpose.
Plan to never let a year go by but
:hat you have put in a few trees. It
Is too late to set any out now but
sake up your mind that you will put
some in in the fall and next spring.
The department of agriculture is
experimenting with a view to secur
jig a single germ beet seed. Last
rear's investigations were successful
m increasing the percentage of the
single germ seed to 50 per cent, as
compared to 26 per cent for the year
previous. By methods of selection
!rom single-seed plants this percent
age may be still further increased.
Fhe ultimate establishment of a sin
gle germ beet will revolutionize sugar
Deet growing, since the several
sprouts sent up by the ordinary seed,
ill but one of which must be carefully
removed by hand, constitutes the most
difficult problem in beet raising.
A large pocket knife with a sharp
blade should be carried when going
:hrough the orchard. With it one
can cut out small branches and do
a vast amount of good pruning that
will save much work later. With the
big blade of a lar&e, sharp pocket
knife a branch nearly an inch in
diameter may be easily and quickly
;ut off. To perform this operation,
pull the branch to the tree with one
hand and cut with the other. The
bending of the branch makes the cut
ting easy. Let the cut be clean, leav
ing no stub, or only a very short one.
Branches of pear trees that have
been killed with blight should be cut
out and burned. When they are
promptly removed the remainder of
the tree not infected will assume vig
orous growth and produce a heavy
crop of good fruit. A pear tree with
more than half of the large branches
killed by the blight may be saved in
this manner and become a perfect,
healthy tree.
It will be well for the fruit grower
who does not believe in the efficacy of
spraying to study the following tables
which set forth the results of experi
ments in two fruit-growing counties of
New York state Orleans and Niag
ara, made by the state experiment
station. The orchards in these two
counties have been placed in two
groups. The first group includes all
orchards, whether well cared for or
not; the second group includes only
the orchards which have received
good treatment Both the yields and
income per acre of the orchards in the
two groups is shown:
All Orchards, Good, Indifferent, Poor.
Niagara Orleans
County. County.
Bu. In. Bu. In.
Unsprayed 261 $45 245 192
Sprayed once 364 93 307 115
Sprayed twice 509 101 343 127
Sprayed hree times 577 171 322 139
Sprayed four times 390 183 569 211
Only Well Cared For Orchards.
Niagara Orleans
County. County.
Bu. In. Bu. In.
Unsprayed 266 $95 328 $103
Sprayed once 353 146 346 139
Sprayed twice 422 147 374 143
Sprayed three times 440 201 414 1S4
Sprayed four times 285 226 569 211
In the first group it is noted that
the unsprayed orchards in every case
yield very much less merchantable
fruit than those sprayed even only
once, and that as the number of
sprayings Increases the yield of mer--chantable
fruit also increases. In the
icase of the well cared for orchards
Ulw UWViUUkD yoiuAya ten auiuu,,
'.yet not the less convincing.
t Made Provision for Speaker.
The office of speaker, important as it
has become, is mentioned but once
in the constitution. Article I., section
2: "The house of representatives
shall chuse their speaker and other of
ficers." No legislation has affected
that provision in any degree whether
of limitation or of explication. In that
instrument it was not considered ne
essary to make any definition of the
word speaker or delimitation of his
powers, for the office was already in
existence by inheritance from the
set bbTeU ' BsaBssmssssssssssTAsssW.'s.P li
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Lucky is the farmer now who has
wheat to sell.
Owls are vermin destroyers. En
courage their presence on the farm,
An unprofitable farm hand Is the
fellow who is brutal with the stock.
The people who are looking for
trouble are seldom disappointed ever
notice that?
An occasional day off does dad and
the boys lots of good, even If It's only
a fishing trip to the creek.
.Yon would find a portable forge on
the farm will save 'you many a trip
into town for small repairs.
Charcoal Is good for the pigs and
the chickens. Be sure that there is a
supply always accessible for them.
It is poor economy to pasture the
grass too close. Don't try to keep
more stock than you can successfully
pasture.
A Jersey man has discovered that
box kites flying over his chicken runs
protect them from the attacks of
hawks. Worth trying.
Look after the horses teeth care
fully. If defects have developed it is
easier to fix at once than to let them
develop Into serious conditions.
Cheer up says the robin. There Is
always a bright side to even a cold,
backward season, and many a back
ward season has a good ending, re
member that.
What would the merchant be who
did not plan ahead and have the stock
he is going to need ordered ahead. So
with the farmer if he is going to be
successful - he must plan far in ad
vance. The condition of the horse's neck at
this stage of the farm work is pretty
good evidence as to whether the collar
was made 'to fit when the hard work
was begun in the spring, and whether
it has been kept adjusted as the
shoulders have settled to the hard
work.
Handle the colt just as you would
the growing boy in your home. Who
would think of leaving the boy until
he was 21 before teaching him what
it meant to obey and perform certain
duties? So with the colt He should
not be allowed to get his growth he
fore being what is called broken. It
is much easier to begin from the first
to accustom the colt to being handled
and to lead and drive. Try it
Many a farm can be made to yield
a larger profit by laying out the fields
differently and planning a rotation of
various crops. The .government will
be glad to send pamphlets to farmers
suggesting how this may' be done,
and will furnish special information
for individual cases where desired.
Farmers ought to avail themselves
more fully of the splendid services of
the government agricultural experts
than they do.
To throw a horse easily try this
method. Take a three-quarter-inch
rope about 40 feet long, double it at
the center and at this point tie a loop
about two feet long. This forms" a
sort of collar which is slipped over the
horse's head. The free ends of the
rope are then brought down and be
tween the front legs and each passed
under the fetlock joint of a hind leg
(preferably from within out), passed
once around itself and the end then
run forward through the collar. As
sistants now pull backward on the
ropes while the horse is backed. This
draws his legs well forward and up on
his sides. As soon as the horse Is
down the feet can be tied in this posi
tion with the rope.
The large cities are becoming more
and more strict as to the conditions
of the dairies from which their milk
supplies are obtained, and this fact is
an indication of the raising of stand
ards of production which dairymen
must recognize if they are going to
continue in the business. Pittsburg
is one of the latest cities to adopt
stringent rules and she has her in
spectors out looking after the dairies
which ship milk into the city. The
conditions which the city imposes
upon dairies are as follows: Tight
stable floors must be provided, prefer
ably of cement construction, provid
ed with a-gutter t immediately behind
the cows; proper ventilation of
stables, provision of at least 400
cubic feet of air space for each cow,
not less than one square foot of win
dow area per cow. Windows may be
very cheaply constructed of , muslin
instead of glass; that walls, ceilings
and floors be kept clean and that the
stable be whitewashed throughout at
least twice a year; that stables be
cleaned twice daily and that the
manure be removed at least 30 feet
from the stable; that the cows be
kept clean, no accumulations of
manure upon their flanks, sides, ud
ders or tails; that the milking be done
with clean, dry hands; that the milk
palls be clean and sterilized by boil
ing water or other sterilization pre
vious to milking. A narrow top milk
pail is highly recommended; 'that the
milk be removed at once from the
stable and properly cooled; a temper
ature of 50 degrees or below is pre
ferred; that 'the milk be placed in
clean vessels and kept cool until de
livered; that no person having an in
fectious disease, be allowed to milk
the cows or in any way handle the
milk.
0000l0l000i
English system of popular and repre
sentative government The historic
speakership having always been filled
by selection from the membership of
the body over which he was called to
preside, it was not necessary to make
such stipulation in the constitution.
Not Likely.
"You called me a crook."
"I did."
"Then I'm going to kill you!'
"Do you imagine that that would
make me change my opinion?"
BURDENS LIFTED
From Bent Backs.
A bad back is a heavy handicap to ,
those of us who have to work every
day. Nine times out
of ten, backache
tells of kidney weak
ness. The only way
to find relief is to
cure the kidneys.
Doan's Kidney Pills
have given sossd
strong backs to
thousands of as
aad women. Mrs.
Wesley Clemens. 311
Marios St, Manchester, la., says:
"Constant work at s sewiag machine
seemed to bring on kidney trouble. The
kidney action was irregular and the
pais in my back and loins so severe
I could hardly endure It Doss's Kid
ney Pills made me feel better In a
short time, and I took them until em
tirely free from my trouble."
Sold by all dealers. 60 cents s box.
Foster-Milbura Co.. Buffalo, N. T.
THE HINT GENTEEL.
Mr. Saphead By Jove, it's nearly
12 o'clock. Perhaps I had better be
goin.
Miss SmartWell, they say "Never
put off till to-morrow what you can do
tc-day.'
Sfieer white goods? in fact, any fine
wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to the way they
are laundered, this being done in a
manner to enhance their textile beaa
ty. Home laundering would be equal
ly satisfactory if proper attention was
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
improved appearance of your work.
A Significant Test.
"So you don't think the commoa
people have the nerve to defy those
who seek a system of financial op
pression?" "I am sure they haven't" answered
Mr. Sirius Barker. "Look at me. I'm
Just as sensitive to injustice as any
body. And yet I never hesitate about
handing a head waiter a comfortable
tip for doing nothing except look
haughty." . .
To Check Spread of Trachoma.
It has been reported that the dls-"
ease known as trachoma, or granular
eyelids, has been spreading rapidly
among the Indians. To check this
trouble congress appropriated $12,000,
placing it in the hands of the commis
sioner of Indian affairs, for the imme
diate investigation and treatment of
the disease and to check its spread.
With a smooth iron and Defiance
Starch, you can launder your shirt
waist just as well at home as the
steam laundry can; it will have the
proper stiffness and finish, there will
be less wear and tear' of the goods,
and it will be a positive pleasure to
use a Starch that does not stick to the
iron.
His Professional Habit.
"How did that sculptor leave sis
affairs?"
"In s strictly professional coadft
ticn." "What do you mean?
"In statu quo."
Lewis' Single Binder gives the smoker what
he wants, a rich, mellow-tasting cigar.
Occasionally a dressmaker gives
husband fits.
Food 1
Products
MmvmrVmrylm
QumNiyor Tmmim
because the utmost
care is. taken by fft
kym Okmfm to select
only the choicest mater
ials, and put these up in
the same careful manner
every time. You are
thus assured of uniform
goodness, and this is
the reason that the use
of Libby's gives such
general satisfaction to
every housewife.
Try these Js
Hi
For luncheon,
spreads or every day
meals, they are just the
thing.
Keep a sap
ply In the house.
You never ess
tell when they
wi!l come in has-
dy. Ask- for
and be
ou eel
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fallttm nnknnm: SO hn. wheat nrrim: -V- mit
alfalfa: healthful climate: 1rw timber: easy terms:
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