Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 May 1911, p. 2

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% % '-i:: ' • 'r« • '• ' f t /i LfA BOG^CDKl COfivejCHTSY SVAASO/r /Vff. C&. I (J ride into New York on a freight j 111, train is a heinous offense. The law 111 says so. Railroad companies sug- ||! gested the law and secured its epact- llll ment. They prefer to handle their f ]>.. i, passenger traffic in the regular way. > Wj Pares cannot so easily be collected iJ?lj rom passengers who are secreted J..:.•••--$& around the trucks. Besides, freight ^ rain travelers have gained the repu tnJljffiigi;ation of being uncertain persons. |- S l-f »' They sometimes steal small things that nch persons would not think of stealing. Yet, against them as the law is, patrons of the box- cars pour into New York at all seasons of the year. An Ohio boy, one morning last winter, was in court for beating his way into the metropolis. He was only sixteen years old, and rather small for his age. His coat fitted him a little too soon and anxle-grease was on it. Hadn't had time to slick up since lie was pulled from the trucks. Still, he was cheerful. Answered the court's questions as if it were a pleasure. Told all about the folks at home, and why he left home. He and another boy craved the big life. They wanted to be in the midst of something and be something. Only, the other boy had a little hitch to his ambitions. He wanted to go to Chicago, where he had an aunt who, in an emer­ gency, might be Induced to provide food. The boy who stood before His Honor waved his com­ rade away. ' i toid »iv eLiuui," ins saiu, "that I would rather be in New York, broke and hungry, than be in Chicago with a THE GREAT WMTE WAY v' & ••-&&"! IK /f,'A ' -A w8 mm meal ticket at every restaurant. right there. 1 paid my fare as far as I could and b#at it the rest of the way." *The court, some years back, having broken into town in substantially the same way, did not hear the boy's story without feeling. During the re­ cital, the judicial mind had gone back to that ofher day, now long gone, when he, a penniless lad, had said good-by to his native town. So he •aid to the boy: "My son, let me commend your judgment. Any boy who will ride the trucks to New York, in preference to going to Chicago and living with his chum's aunt, has the right spirit. I think this town needs boys like you, and I am going to let you stay. Discharged." Nothing can illustrate better than this incident tile lure of New York. Perhaps no other city ever bad so large a percentage of the world's popula­ tion bluffed. A bigger word than "bluffed" is needed here, but it does not come. The point is that the city has the power to cast a great spell, and casts it. She makes no comparisons. To make comparisons would be to admit that there are others in her class. She says only: "I am the wonderful city--come." The call goes north to the edge of the frozen world; east to the point where the east is west; •bath as far as a white man lives, and west till Hie west is east. Not everybody comee, but every­ body hears. Millions would like to come, but oan't. Everybody would like at least to see the •Iren city. And, untold thousands do come. One fftilroad thinks nothing of dumping 100,000 stran­ gers into New York in 4 day. t The reason for so much coming Is plain. Ev­ erybody likes to be mixed up with a ftuccess. The Trigger the success, the better. NeW York is uni­ versally regarded as a big success. , It has the tallest buildings, the richest men, the whitest ""White Way" that ever cut a streak through the night, and some of the most prodigal disbursers of the circulating medium that aver dazzled any community. In a variety of ways comes the message to mix with this great success--to become a part of this wonderful bigness. Perhaps the newspa­ pers and the stage do the most to spread the lure. New York date-lines appear over the most impor­ tant items of newB. There seems to be only one place in which anything worth while can happen. Has Mr. Morgan bought an old master or formed a new trust? Where did he do -it? New York. Has Mr. Rockefeller paid his annual visit to the office of Standard Oil? Yes--a New York dispatch says so. Has Mr. Carnegie slipped^ in the icy park and sprained his ankle? What park Why, Central Park, in New York, of course. And, when­ ever an Italian opera Binger, a Russian revolu­ tionist, or an Irish patriot comes to this country, where does he land? At New York. What city sends out the news? New York. A® an advertiser of the glories and splendor of this great town, the stage is second only to the press. Twenty years ago, a Nevada youth went to see a show in Carson City. The show w^s that old SfjTJMJLP iSQLM&F I left my chum classic, "The Two Orphans." In the cast were extremely few persons besides the orphans them­ selves, as railway transportation and board were both high. But the show made up In scenery what it lacked in cast. One scene, in particular, ap­ pealed to the chuckle-faced youth. It was a scene in which the two orphans were sitting on the steps of Trinity church. The snow was drifting down over their thin shoulders. Broadway waa thronged with pedestrians. Horse-cars flew along at eight miles an hour. Nobody looked at the or­ phans. But the orphans, silent as little sphynxes, looked straight ahead--straight up the street. There was Broadway! The infinite skill of the scene painter seemed to have carried the street clear to the horizon. Nothing but buildings and people and people and buildings till they blended, at the finish, into an Indistinguishable haze of paint. The Nevada youth could hardly keep his seat The painted scene had fired his mind with an intense desire. He must be off to New York. All during the show, which he saw not, though he looked straight at the stage, he kept his eyes riveted to the splendid vista of Broadway. The whole thoroughfare seemed to him to be a treas­ ure-house of opportunity. And, at dusk, when the lights begin to blaze up along the "Great White Way"--ah, it is all Just as he had dreamed it to be! All grand! All surpassingly great! But, kind friends, he dines at no lobster palace that evening. Nor do his magnificent Jewels glis­ ter in the "horseshoe crescent" at the opera. With the money that he can spare for his evening meal, he couldn't buy a lobster's tail, and a drygoods box in an alley would fit him better than a box at the opera. So, he dines poorly for sixty cents at a side-street restaurant, gets a glassy eye from the waiter for not giving a tip, finds a room in which there is no light by day, nor pure air night or day --and goes to sleep to dream of home and mother. The next morning, he is awakened by a mis­ cellaneous assortment of noises, ranging from elevated car wheels to horses' hoofs. As he puts on the shirt that mother laundered for him, his heart takes a sudden lurch back to the old roof. He calls his heart back. He is in New York to make good. It is up to him to do it. And, by the time he Is ready to go out to hunt for breakfast, his nerve is all back. With nothing to do but get a Job or starve, he looks for work. He hears that motormen are wanted on the subway. Half afraid to offer his services, he nevertheless decides to do so. On the way to the company's office*, he considers all of the situation's glorious possibilities. Never in the country did he dare dream that some day he might make a battery of motors bite off 2,000 horsepower of electricity and snatch eight loaded cars through the subterranean night. The good flews goes home to the old folks that their boy is going to run a train in the New York subway. Oh, if the boy couJd only see the min* gled sorrow and pride that light up his mother's eyes when she reads the letter. It breaks her heart to have her boy away, but It mends it to know how emphatically he has made good in the YOM WATS/? r,/Y?QM OJTy 2*> big town. Going to run a train driven by electricity! Going to run a train bearing fifteen hundred human be­ ings, each of whom has put his life, for a time, in her son's keeping! Such confi­ dence as the company must have had in her boy to in­ trust him with so grave a responsibility. Oh, it is such a comfort to her to know that her son, whom she has loved since she felt his first heart-beat;"for whom she has toiled and suffered and de­ nied herself--it is such a comfort to her to know that he has been recognized at what she knows to be his true worth, by the most won­ derful city in the world. A year latter, what rejoicing there was in the little home when the boy wrote that he was coming back on a vaca­ tion. Mother could hardly read the letter, she was so excited. Ran to the fields to tell father. Ran back to get dinner. Could hardly cook-- burned the eggs to a crisp, something she bad not done in thirty years! and had to fry some more. In such a hurry to put on her "other dress" and run over to Mrs. Pratt's to tell her: "My boy is coming home.** The boy came home. When he took mother in his arms and held her for a full minute, she couldn't speak. All choked up. So glad to see him, she couldn't say a word. And, when she did speak, the first thing she said, as she looked up into his brown eyes, was: "Oh, my boy, how pale you are!" He was pale. He knew it. Subway air makes no red blood-corpuBcles. Kills some of the red ones that exist Nor does the electric light of the sub­ way brown the cheek as the sunlight browns the cheek of the farmer. All the year that he had been away, mother had carried in her mind the pic­ ture of her farmer boy. Never had dreamed that her farmer boy would dbme home with a grayish- whltA face. Didn't npfid to she was shocked.. Looked it. The boy caught the message and laugh­ ingly replied: "Oh, mother, all city folks are pale." During the week that he remained at home, the boy was kept talking. Father and mother con­ stantly asking questions. Seemed to mother as if she couldn't a«k questions enough. Wanted to get first-hand information about everything of which she had read. Six months after he returned to work, his mother had an opportunity to see for herself, Just how big was New York. A telegram told her that her boy had been hurt. She and father found him fn a hos­ pital, with his head bandaged until they could bare­ ly see his eyes. At the end of his run, he had tried to cross the tracks to catch another train back and get to dinner more quickly. Didn't see a train running in the opposite direction. Car struck him. Picked up for dead. Seemed to have a fractured skull. Fortunately, did not. Revived in the hos­ pital and would get ^rell. Oh, but the mother's heart was glad when she heard the best instead of the worst Glad until she and father went, to the boy's room. Not his room in the hospital, but his room in a lodging-house. Glad until she saw how miserably he had lived. A dirty street. A dirty house. A dirty hall. A cheer­ less room. Little light. Bad air. A skimpy bed. A frayed counterpane. Not a decoration, save her own picture, stuck in the edge of a mirror. Her boy could afford no better place to live. His pay was only $2.25. a day. That is, his pay from the company was only $2.25 a day. The lure of New York made up the rest that was needed to in­ duce him to stay. Such is life for millions in New York. Not life as the newspaper dispatches describe It. Not life as the stage pictures it Life as it Is. A few draw colossal prizes. A few more draw good prizes. But if only those should ^ome to New York who can earn a better living here than they can elsewhere, a handcar, running once a day, would almost bring them'in. Ninety-two per cent, of the population have not dra^jn enough prizes to enable them to own their own homes. Yet people come. Come from every state in the Union. Come from every town in every state--every hamlet. Come from Italy, Norway, Sweden, Turkey--come from everywhere. CLOTH GOVERNMENT BUYS United 8tates Soldiurs Wear Clothes That Stand the Strain of Weath- » er and Work. The men Of the United States army come -nearer knowing to a certainty what they are buying in the way of cloth than do any other consumers in the country. Wtien the government f^-r, gives out a million dollar cloth con- tract, it sees to it that it gets material according to specifications. The spe­ cific contracts for various sorts of cloth are elaborate and go into the technical side of the matter; the num­ ber of threads to be use to the yard, the kind of wool to be used in the manufacture--for the United States soldier has to be well dressed in clothes that will stand the strain of weather and of work. On Governors island, New York city| there is a test­ ing laboratory for cloth. A specifica­ tion of the weight per linear yard of each kind of cloth Is weighed, and if it tails short of the proper weight it Is thrown out Next the question of wear and tear is considered and again the specification is stated that each special kind of cloth will stand a strain of so many pounds to the inch work way and so many pounds to the inch filling way. So after weighing, the next test is to cut a sample and try In a ma­ chine the strength of the cloth. If it won't stand thli test the cloth is thrown out. After the cloth has been pronounced perfect for weight and strength, the 1 dye tasts are made; it must stand two acid tests for perspiration and the ma terial must stand boiling for ten min utes in a certain soap solution, show Ing that it will stand washing wit! strong alkalis; and finally comes th« weather test, the material being ex posed 30 days on the roof without changing color appreciably. If th« cloth has passed its examinations suo cessfully, each yard of each piece ii inspected, being run over machine! for the purpose, while inspector! watch for any imDerfactions In tin wear*. Springfield.--Governor Deneen,. on •eeommentiation of the state board of pardons, issued a pardon to former Police Inspector Edward McCann of Chicago, now serving a term in Jo- : liet prison on a charge of grafting. | The pardon of McCann was the re- i ;ult of what many considered the | moat remarkable appeal in behalf of a I convicted felon ever made In this I tate. Before the board- of pardons, 1 sitting in Joliet April 24, a delegation of more thai two hundred persons-- settlement workers, clergymen, labor leaders, business men and representa- t ives of the city and state govern­ ments made an appeal for McCanD's pardon. Rock Island.--The United Christian party in conference here announced its nomination for national offices as follows: President, Rev. Daniel B. Turney, Decatur, 111.; vice-president, S. P. Cater, Howard Lake, Minn.; na­ tional chairman, W. R. Benkert, Dav­ enport, la. The unseating of Senator William Lorimer was demanded, and H. A. Simpson of Pana, 111., was rec­ ommended as his successor. Danville.--Burglars dynamited th* private bank of Alexander Pate at Wellington, Iroquois county, Illinois, and escaped with $4,300, all the bank's bal^pce, with the exception of $4. The burglars also stole some negotiable notes and a quantity of other paper, Kilbourne.--Since the robbery oc­ curred here the interested parties have put forth every effort to locate the guilty parties. Word reached here that a party of men are being held at Terre Haute, Ind., which may prove to be the men wanted. Messrs. Charles BecSwitix, Roy Guben, Will Edwards and Albert Jones left for that place to identify the men as the parties, whom they saw on the street here on the day of the robbery. There were many citizens who noticed strange faces here on that day. This is the first clue that has been report­ ed. Winchester.--Hon. J. Adam Bede cf Minnesota made the principal address before the Federation of Woman's clubs in this city on the theme, "Prob­ lems and Progress." Mrs. Min­ nie Starr Grainger, president cf the State Federation of Woman's clubs, gave an address. Mrs. H. M. Dunlap spoke on "Household." Some of the best musical talent oi the district and Winchester appeared on the program. Staunton.--A nonunion lineman, working for the McKinley system, was badly injured and several others bruised, they being hit with chunks of coal In a fight following the chain­ ing of the line repair car at Stauntoi to a heavy pole holding up the feed wires from the Staunton power house last night. The car was so badly damaged that it had to be taken to the shops and a network of wires, endangering the lives of half a hun­ dred employes of the company, wer* thrown to the ground. Springfield. -- First contracts for supplies for the second quarter of the year were let yesterday by the state board of administration for the char­ itable institutions of the state. Coo- tracts for furnishing flour and brun were awarded. Frank Weidlocher of this city received the bulk of the flour contract. He Is to furnish 5,000 bar­ rels at $3.75 a barrel. The Tato & Loos company of Quincy will furnish sixty barrels at $4.05 a barrel, &nd the Litchfield Mill & Elevator com­ pany will furnish 120 tons of bran at $1 .18 a hundred pounds. Virginia. -- The primary school of this city was destroyed by fire. More than eighty children were In the building at the time-, and the rooms were cleared in one minute. Golconda, May 8.--Sheriff McCor- mick and posse succeeded in captur­ ing Green Brush near Eddyville, who for several days in his barricaded home, had defied the officers and had been firing on any who came near. Catching him away from home, the officers captured him without a shot being fired. Christopher.--The Egyptian hotel, the largest hostelry in Christo­ pher, was destroyed by fire at a loss of more than $2,000. Several guests were asleep and barely escaped. The explosion of a lamp is thought to have caused the fire. Belvidere.--When Mayor Mclnnes announced a change in the fire department chiefs, the firemen at sta­ tion No. 1 walked out with the old chief and left the building in charge of Alderman Schaeffer, who was alone for nearly two hours with no firemen, while $1,500,000 worth of property was unprotected. Personal enmity exists between the new and old chiefs. New men were engaged and the fire fight­ ing force is complete. Chicago.--A fisherman known as' McElroy was found dead near his shack at East One Hundred and Nine­ teenth street and Lake Calumet. The police said death was due to natural causes, probably heart disease. The victim was fifty years old. Granite City.--The second dead red­ headed infant to bo found within a year in Granite City was discovered by D. H. Ballard and his son, George, while out hunting. The dead baby was found in the clump of bushes where a woman and her baby were found dead on the levee about a year ago. Freeport.--A fellow giving the name of Paul Huhn, who claims to have been shot through the lungs while doing service in the Spanish-Ameri­ can war, applied to Chief Root for permission to sell his photograph showing the bullet wound. 1 Centralia.--The officers of the Illi­ nois Music Teachers' association were elected here. They are: President, Walter Spry of Chicago; vice-presi­ dent, E. Lederman, Centralia; secre­ tary-treasurer, H. O. Merry, Lincoln; Program committee, Edward A. Wil­ son, Chicago, and Dora L. Merts, Car- bondale; auditing committee, O. V. Shaffer, Danville; Annie E. Lawton, Deluvan; Fred L. Ryder, Chicago. East St. Louis.--G. Wash Thompson, ex-sheriff of St. Qair county, was ap­ pointed chief of tne East St. Louis po- Uoe department »y the bpard of flr» and police commissioners. FIVE AMERICANS ARE SLAIN Captura All Houses, Two Bridges and Bull Ring---Gen. Navarro Reported Wounded--Loss Unknown. El Paso, Tex.--Insubordination in the ranks of General Madero's army caused a fierce attack on Juarez by 150 rebels and, after a day of skirmishing, culminated in a careful retreat by the insurrectos. The rebels not only succeeded la capturing some of the important fed­ eral outposts, but carried the fighting into the town. The casualties of the insurrectcs and federals are not known, but five people on the Ameri­ can side of the line were killed and at least twelve wounded. When the bullets began to fall like hail In the streets of El Paso Col, Steever, in command of the Fourth United States cavalry, sent couriers to Generals Madero and Navnrro bearing i this message: "In the name of the president of the United States I hereby protest against men under your command handling their arms in such a way that bullets fall into United States territory, as is happening." But the bullets continued to faty, and Colonel Steever later wired to Washington for instructions. Before withdrawing, the Insurrectos had captured all the customs houses, the two bridges joining Juarez and El Paso -?nd the bull ring- It Is believed by many that Juarez would have been taken had it not been tor conflicting orders from Madero. Early in the day Madero undertook to Dpen negotiations with the federals for an armistice. The negotiations failed and Madero gave notice that he purposed making a general attack. Shortly afterwards he countermanded this order and said there would be no attack. Generals Pasqual Orozco and Pan- ;ho Villa, a reformed bandit, com­ manding a section of Madero's army, disregarded Madero and made the at­ tack. Madero issued a statement de­ claring that he had not been obeyed and was not responsible. In the fighting it is said that Gen­ eral Navarro was wounded. It is not known whether or not the wound is serious. The fighting started when about a dozen insurrectos emerged from the barren hills around Juarez and, skulk­ ing along through the shrubbery to­ ward the federal outposts, fired re­ peatedly at a squad of federals cooped up in an adobe house. The federals soon left the house and fled, pursued by the insurrectos, who were headed by a Canadian named W. H. McKen- zle. At the first few shots two fed­ erals toppled over. Socn the federals abandoned the trenches and the in­ surgents fired interniittingly for a few hours without advancing. At last the federals brought their artillery into action and heavy cannonading began. They gauged their fire well and not only shot shrapnel Into the lnsurrecto advance, but far into the outlying forces of the rebel camp near "Peace Grove," where the commissioners were to have met. The Insurrectos, however, took ad­ vantage of the river bank and used it for protection, as the federals had been ordered not to shoot into El Paso. They came as far as the Santa Fe bridge, which Joins Juarez and El Paso, driving the federals back into town and taking possession of the cus­ toms houses. Carrying the fight into Juarez, the rebels entered the town, and for four hours kept up a continu- ous firs. lnsurrecto r6iG?orc6!56nt? reached the bridge, but did not fire, and withdrew at dark under orders of their chiefs. FREE LIST BILL IS PASSED House by Vote of 236 to 109 Adopts Farmers' Bill--Now Goes to Senate. Washington.--By the overwhelming vote of 23C to 109 the farmers' free list bill passed the bouse amid Demo­ cratic applause. There were 24 Republicans voting for the bill on final passage, made up of the progressives from, the middle west. It Is believed the decisive victory the bill got in the house will go far towards securing for it consideration In the senate, although it may not pass that body. The Republicans voting for the bill were Anthony, Anderscta, Davis, Han- na, Hubbard, Jackson. Kent, Kopp, La Follette, Lenroot, Lindbergh, Mad­ ison, Miller, Morg&Xi, Merz, Murdock, Neftcn, Norris, Roberta (Nev.), Steen- erson, Volstead, Warburton, Berger (Socialist), Heigisen, Akin (N. Y.). Seeks Bee Without Sting. Amherst, Mass.--The new bee-keep­ ing bureau of the Massachusetts Agri­ cultural college has set itself the task of developing a bee that will not sting, but will be twice or three times as industrious in honeymaking as the bee of the day. Buffalo Wars on Bad Egos. Buffalo, N. Y--A vigorous campaign against bad eggs, a myriad of which are on Buffalo markets, will be waged by Health Commissioner' Fronczak. Prosecutions in the courts will follow. Women to Race In the Sky. Cambridge, Mass.--An aeroplane race for women will be a feature of the summer aviation meet of the Har­ vard Aeronautical association. Three women have been selected to compete and each will wear the colors of her country. Vlan Eddy Monument. Boston.--Christian Scientists her* plan to erect one of the most magnifi­ cent monuments in the world over the grave of Mrs.j&ary Baker G. Eddy ta Mount Aubupt^emetery. Killing ie I to Kidney and Bladder Trouble Try This Remarkable New Treatment, Free. . Here la a treatment for kidney' and bladder diseases and rheumatism that la absolutely guaranteed, that is safe and positive, and that you can test yourself without investing one penny. It Is a new, scientific, safe, powerful cleanser of the kidneys. The new treatment, I>r. Derby's Kidney Pills, will save your kidneys, upon which your very life depends. If you have crucifying: or dull pains In the back, Bright's disease, diabetes, rheizma.ttem in any form, pain in the hlartder, profuse or scanty urination, or discolored, foul urine, do not let the day go by without getting a package of Dr. Derby's Kidney Pills and see a tremendous differenc* in yourself in 24 hours. If you want to try them first, tell any druggist to give you a free sample package. Dr. Derby's Kidney Pills--25 and 50 cents at drug stores or we will supply you if your druggist hasn't them. Address Derby Medicine Co., Eaton Rapids. Mich. A NEW IDEA. J Politician--There were several un- grammatical sentences in your speech last night. The Candidate--I know; I'm making a play for the uneducated vote. Breaking a Hobo's Heart. Manager Gus Hartz was standing near the opera house box office when one of two panhandlers who had en­ tered the lobby approached him, aud, holding out an addressed and sealed envelope, begged for the price of a postage stamp. "It's for me mudder, <boss," he sniv­ eled. "You'se wouldn't turn down er guy fer de price er de stamp, would youse?" "Never," said the manager, deftly grasping the envelope and throwing it thrpugh the box-office-window. "Here Fred," addressing himself to Treas­ urer Fred Coan, "stamp this and have it mailed." The velocity of the proceeding fair­ ly took the panhandler's breath way. Then, backing away to where his part­ ner awaited him, he whispered, "Noth- in' doing, bo--the guy's wise."--Cleve­ land Leader. The Lesser Evil. Grosham college in 1719 was the scene of a famous serio-comic duel be­ tween two celebrated doctors, Doctor Mead and Doctor Woodward, both of whom were lecturers at the college. While walking down Bishopsgate street one morning they quarreled over some medical question and ad­ journed to the square of the coiiege to fight it out with swords. Woodward fell, wounded in several places, where­ upon Mead magnanimously said "Take thy life." "Anything bnt yoor physic," hissed back the chagrined Wuudward ere he swooned away.--•London Chron­ icle. FOOD IN 8ERMON8 Feed the Dominie Right and the Ser­ mons Are Brilliant. A conscientious, hard-working and successful clergyman writes: "I am glad to bear testimony to tlfe pleasure and increased measure of efficiency and health that have come to me from adopting Grape-Nuts food as one of my articles of diet. "For several years I was much dis­ tressed during the early part of each day by Indigestion. My breakfast seemed to turn sour and failed to di­ gest. After dinner the headache ai)d other symptoms following the break­ fast would wear away, only to return, however, next morning. "Having heard of Grape^Nuts food, I finally concluded to give it a trial. I made my breakfasts of Grape-Nuts with cr^am, toast and Postum. The re- Bult was surprising in improved health and total absence of the distress that had, for so long a time, followed the morning meal. "My digestion became once more satisfactory, the headaches ceased, and the old feeling of energy returned. Since that time I have always had Grape-Nuts food oa my breakfast table. "I was delighted to find also, that whereas before I began to use Grape- Nuts food I was quite nervous and be­ came easily wearied in the work of preparing sermons and in study, a marked improvement in this respect resulted from the change in my diet. "I am convinced that Grape-Nuts food produced this result and helped me to a sturdy condition at mental and physical strength. "I have known of several persona who were formerly troubled as I was, who have been helped as I have been, by the use of Grape-Nuts food, on my recommendation." Name given by Pes tutu Company, Battle Creek. Mloh. "There's a reason." Read the little book, 'The Road to Wellville," In pkgs. Grtr r*sd the above lctfvrf A »mi mc attpMH from time tm tlM» They are urisntee, titoe, a«d fwll mt Iramaa latere* t.

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