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Show THE MOTHERS CJh. LAMENT. i Ms son. cnJ on!y one. was battle And now. t!:roaj5;r.::t .e fall and lli'ssed land, jLiln. and sweet Me On And lif was all Lite world, and Iuve-ord-tin- First Memorial j 1 gave him at my countries sacred fane, When Sherman marched Ids legions Three earthquake shocks were felt parts of Montana on May At Marysville dishes were rattled is. Win Fifteen Hundred Dollar. and clocks were made to strike by Over mountains and through enow, the disturbance. No serious damage wus Day Celebration , 'f n, to the sea. BIGGEST WEST TO EAST WALK EVER ACCOMPLISHED. r,! mortal dau, faithful band, v'e go. a flower-ladeTo spread on hero graves the bloom of Mag. more, to me; OOKING bark through i.sia of ::h years we the Miami ecta:le c,( f ii; re:i jji nhacrvaiice of be a of day, ui.di-- r Order No. 11, Rut for mg soldier bog that solace is Then coiiimaml of (Sen. John A. r.ot mine ; i chief of the Grand Army o! the Wltliln a southern vale, afar, lx Kojiuhlii'. May 3i, 1 S18, dawned glml o'Dily, as If heaven had smiled pro sleeps, And In mu heart is twined the myrtle j liitioiisly lor the day. illy to Hen. Uigan the orj vine, der elicited the heartiest r 1dm, and there rosemary droops j of all loyal citizens with the Grand Vriny of th" Republic In honoring the and weeps, iiieiiiury of the heroic dead, whose hielles lay "in almost every city, vil- lave churchyard In the laud. J he survivors of the civil war were lull ,he did not t h i! a larKc part of the population in Gruudiiintlier once lift her eyes. Flip sat directly ail (oininunttii-K- . They seized with ciiihiisiiism Hie suggestion of upon Him mi. Mb: of the Krave, her ;:ii-i- t Mrts nprcu'l us fur as tiicy would of the names and iii'iiMi-land (the d'l-dover the tlnwei'li-Hof t heir departed comrades, was k utli lug as calmly ua if she were assisted by patriotic petit bonniue-vated on a Utilipie, the he.ivi'ii-buri- i ceremony was chair In ln-- own rumi) She paid uo luu'iyiii'.itri with so much rever-eniia- l to Him atiioiilbhed group that eeial as to make an Indelible ht tippl'd before tier. iuipie.sslnn o:i the whole nation and 'Ahem!" coiikIu tl the master of i l'z peniiain-iicforevermore. rcri'iiiiiiilos, Henry KUke. So Inien-s- iug were the ceremonies Grandmother looked up. "Ilowdndo, that rniido au appropriation Henry." Then, looking down again, fur th- - publication of the riMKirts of "unit, two, three, widen; uuo, two. at many places In .1- the three, turn." must state and territory, a. also "Weve coins to decorate Cora rads in Old and New Mexico. Adamson's grave, lies lUted the pus The most imposing and Impressive sled )!lnk exercises were those at Arlington, "Comrade Adamson's grave don't where then slept more than- - 22.000 iici'il no ili i wrailn' the, six, narrow; Iicmie dead. Two thousand one hun- one, two " dn-of Hint number are In Ihe rata- Yon lialn't forgot It's Decoration combs of ilif itrnnito mausoleum upon (lav, imve you?" (iiicstloueil the man. which Is Inscribed "I'uknown." I "If have, Ive been the only mis It may In- of inlet est to many who t bat has. A flnurlrli of her necdls have iiol visited this Valhalla ot indicated the (lower decked mounds patriots to read the In- "Hut Comrade Adaim.ou wus a hero, clils- lci on this tomb: NcrlptJiiH ami lie " "iviu-aii- i tills stiiiie nijM the bones of "llei'iiiise ho was a hero is why I two I Ihiiimii ml uni! hundred and eleven don't want Mm decoruted. That's tha iinkniiwii- suMierx. nut tiered after the war tin- tl- - Ms f llun and thn routs only way to dlstlngnlrib him from tonmKuiHili:iiiniH-k- ef. Hull Their remains could them ns ain't In rues." lint be Melilllled. but their name! anil With a little sweep of her skirts, deeds are In ths archives of lliiilr and Its grateful grandmother rose In her feet. tumor ns of their notilo army of l "It's Jest because Jeremiah was a Muy they rest in peaCe! hern that his grave ain't gola' to bo muriyra. "Heiilember, A. I. IWlfi. strewed with flowers jest like the ones Surmounting the tomb are four rifled fluid pieces, one at each corner, and a stack of cannon halls. On Decoration day, 1868, floral shields formed the center of each aide, and upon them were appropriate Inscriptions. On the north side: On Fanis's eternal ramping ground Tlielr silent, tents srs spread. Anil Utury guards with solemn round Ths bivouac of Ilia dead." On' the west side: "Whether on tented field Or In ths battle's van, Tha Attest place for man to die la where ha dies for man." " On the east side: Here rest the brave who sunk to rest liy all their country's wishes blest." On the south side: "Ths grave should be surrounded by everything that might Inspire tender nees ami veneration for the dead, nr that might win the erring to virtue. It Is not the plnee nf dlssuet end dismay, but of sorrow and meditntlun." In addition to the thousands In the mausoleum there are hundreds ot graves In the grounds marked But few of the present generation know that the hallowed boner In the mausoleum and those in tbe graves whose headstones bear the word 'Tnknnwa," wore, melancholy through the efforts of that Incompa7ZS&A7V7 toSTXXSW&Y rable. patriotic woman,- Clara Barton, A'OXfaBB gathered from the many battlefields ot whero the babies and copperheads Virginia and from isolated places In Ilea, Tbs babies might up the forests around them, whlthei to he heroes, If they'd had a chanst, wounded soldiers had crawled and but they didn't, and theya three hun- died, nnd whose bodies were undiscodred ant! sixty-fou- r and a quarter oth- vered by the burial corps, who at best er days la the year to decorate their could do little more than cover over graves ln. It's almost a insult to their fallen comrades with a few to , spadefuls of earth after the sanWell, this day don't mean nothin' guinary struggle of many hours, beno more. It used to be set apart that fore they were obliged to press for we might honor the nation's dead, ward to hold advanced positions The but the day, like me and some of the springtime rains, the summer suns, others here, has outlived our useful- the winter snows beat ujion the hastiness and our time. Let It bs Decoraly made mounds or trenches and laid tion dny. If you want to, but don't bare the sacred forms which call It Memorial day any mure. It's naught save whitened skeletons Just a hnllJay for the young folks to Clara Barton conceived (he idea or have ball games and picnics, and the gathering them together and placing nldor folks to put flowers on the them In sclent I fle hands so a to claa graves of their dead. slfy and inter them In ArMnuion. Con "Jest look through them trees. Can gross adopted her suggestion and oryou tell whch Is the graves of soldiers dered the secretary of war to furnish who fought, bled, and died for this transportation and dHall men to acbeautiful country? If this day was company her on her mission of re,, what It was named fur, there wouldn't ruing the remains of heroes fiom obe a flower ln this hull graveyard ex- bliteration by further exposure to the ceptin' ou a soldier's grave. I reckon elements. It's little enough we do, even when we This sacred spot Is full of historic sot aside a whole day out of a year Once the property of the to them aa give their hull lives, and Interestof Washington, front whom U family mighty promisin' lives some of 'etc was Inherited by Robert K. I.ee and was, ton. when be deserted It to cast hl fat "Take your flowers. Put 'em op. with the confederacy It curiously any grave you happen to see. It don't the last resting place of thow matter. This Is Jest Deroratlon day who bad sacrificed their lives There ain't no Memorial day no defense of the union, which ia lee and more. Angeles Times. his cohorts had tried to ilisim-mber- . Tha program of May, so Is0$, Memorial Day. the decoration of ihe grates in ANo pages of a nations history are rlington was perfect. Tito presides more Interesting to Its people than his cabinet, the great of the those which record the brave deeds of army and navy and dlstluguk:, Its suldlery and no nation on the fare resentatlves of foreign eeu:r-.-e- i n of the earth has established so beau- the persons of members of tb, diplotiful a custom aa that which la con mat ic corps, many of Hie supreme templated by Memorial day, the strew- court, tbe senate and bouse ,.f repf. of over flowers ing the graves sentallves were present to participate spring of her departed soldiers. in honoring the fallen with May the full messing of the day the troops of the different hr.tnebei i conte to us with all its solemnity and the service In and about Washington all Its beauty, and with the patriotic am the long line of ex union soldiers lesson It presents. who composed the Department of the Potomac of the Grand An-.0f tj Sides with England, I'nder the direction 0f Republic. The ameer of Afghanistan says that I'rof. Seals, the marine and other the British government la within Its bands played the Miserere, fonird rights In building strategic railways la dirges and appropriate pairings air. " Intervals. that country. Mi-mo- iri.-uioii- -- In danger's thrrat'nlng cloud, at conn I ei-ii- Infs call, I He left mu side, and parting said to me; "'If Iln-xiicc- In the battle, mother, I should fall. Mu country and her Gcd will care for thee. I'-o- ! ; id, I AT A PATRIOTS I GRAVE Oraaimethcis Memorial $5 jryr'r-:'5CfAC- ir sou ournANT s Day Speech roe. 5i Evidently the Bushby Clarion Had a Genius on Its Staff. ! ; j t j pas-Mig- - j I , ! i - i Atiii-rica- ! last." "Oh, mother's an spry on her feot as yon be. I hadn't thought of her goln'wlth any one else, but I don't see why she couldn't. It'd be a real help. 8he ain't got nothin' to carry, for she took a big basket of flowers up thla morning, before breakfast. She's Just that wrapped up la Decoration day I couldn't disappoint her about goln'. She'a gcitln ready now. I'll go and see If It'll be all right." But grandmother, with what waa almost one movement, had stooped forward and slipped off her congress gait era, at the same time taking from Its She slipped a hand box her bonnet. through the round haudle of a little basket and scurried down the passageway and out through the back door. Oa the atep ahe deluyed Just long enough to put on her shoes; then, with her best bonnet carried more carelessly than ever before In Its dozen years of use. she hurried out through the hack gate. The cemetery was being made bright when grandmother flowers with passed through the Iron gateway, and her face hardened as she recognized some of the stooping figures and the gtaves over which they" bent. mound ahe At a brilliantly-deckestopped and. kneeling, said: I hate to do It, Jeremlab. but 1 know you'd want me to. I won't take them to any one else, though. Jeremiah. though 1 know you'd say fur mo to. If you was here. But dearie. I've keered fur these things ever scnce they was buds, Jest as tender as If they'd a b'en babies, and Jest bo's you and I Jest could have them can't tee any one else have 'em. llow would you like to look over these posies and see that lay lock wreath on old Dick Rayburn's tomb-stunYou fought, bird and died si most far nothin', Jeremiah, when that old copperhead glta Jest az many flow ers as you do. Grandmother had turned up the skirt of her blark alpaca dress and. Into the receptacle thus formed, had put every flower that had lain on Jeremiah's grave. She carried them all over to a far corner of the cemetery and buried them under a pile of last year's Irsves. Then she went tack to the hare mound. Soon the faraway notes of Cover Them Over with Beautiful Flowers," Cold that the procession was coming. d - to-da- ? NO SKIN LEFT ON BODY. For Six Months Baby Waa Expected to Dio with Eczema Now Well Doctor Said to Use Cuticura. ."Six months after birth my little girl broke out with eczema and I had two doctors In attendance. There waa not a particle of akin left on her body, the blood oozed out Just anywhere, and we had to wrap her In allk and carry her on a pillow for ten weeks. She waa the moat terrible sight I ever saw, and for alx months I looked for her to die. I uaed every known remedy to alleviate her suffering, for It waa terrible to witness. Dr. C-gave her up. Dr. B recommended the Cuticura Remedies. She will soon be three years old and has never had a aign of the dread trouble since. We used about eight cakes of Cuticura Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment. James J. Smith, Durmld, Va., OcL 14 and 22. 1906." be-ca- raj-tam- s , done. Forest fires in the vicinity of Clyde. Colo., have destroyed over 1,000 acres of timber and at last reports were moving toward the watershed of Colo- rado Springs, on the south slope of . j ; Pikes Peak. G. A. Flnkelherg, who resigned as Judge of the United States district court at St. Louis In 1907, on account of falling health, died in Denver on May 18. He was born near Cologne, Prussia, in 1837. Pierre Gouyet, Lew Gouyet and two French women are under arrest ln Helena, charged with Importing for dgn girls Into this country for !m-moral purposes. The crusade Is along the line of the efforts of Secretary Straus to stop this traffic. Lewis Ferris, accused of the crime of dynamiting the eastbound Burlington express at Butte on the night of May 1, when three people were killed, pleaded not guilty of the charge when arraigned In the criminal court at Butte, and bis trial haa been set for June 1. Judge Langdon of Carson, Nevada, has appointed Frank Wildes, deputy slate treasurer, as receiver of the State Rank ft Trust company, which It Is be-- ! suspended last October. lieved the bank will eventually be abln to pay the depositors at least 50 cents on the dollar. Ole Nordahl, a Musselshell rancher, waa arraigned at Lewlstown, Mont., last week, for the murder of the entire Sclileuter family, a mother and three children, who were found dead two months ago on a lonely ranch. Nordahl pleaded not gnilty. There ii no motive fur the crime. Snow which in many places reached a depth of three feet fell at Sheridan. Mont., last week. Fruit will be ruined and the suffering of livestock great. It is the worst spring storm in twenty-liryears, extends ovet northern Wyoming and parts nf Mon tana, also Into western Nebraska. W. It. Davis, private secretary tc the late Governor Sparka, died at hit home ln Carson, Nev on May 23, ot stomach trouble. W. R. Davis, bcttei known as Riley Davis, served as sec retary to Governor Sparks since the latter first took office. He formerly was a resident of Dayton, Nev. W. W. Hendricks, a foreman in the Construction employ of the Utah company, which has a contract on the Western Pacific, may lose his eyesight as the result of tbe explosion of a box of dynamite caps. One of his eyes was torn from Its socket, and it is feared he will lose the sight of tha other. Announcement is made that the next annual convention of the Amer- j : ! j ' j ' 1 e ican Bankera association will be held In Denver during the week beginning September 27. The date waa decided upon by Frederick C. Farnsworth, of New York, secretary of the association. after a conference with officers nf the Denver convention league. Three masked men robbed Old Kirk between Reno and To-snInn, half-waNevada, and . with revolvers forced the night bartender and a wo-- , man who waa In the saloon with the night bartender Into a closet They blew open the safe and completely Gleam of Hope. wrecked It with and seOrville Ardup Ah, here comes that cured 6980 and left the place on horses. Infernal bill collector! The announcement of the discovery Caller (producing folded document with alacrity) I am glad to hear you of a theft of dynamite from a car of ay so, Mr. Ardup. I've been here nine the explosive on the Dawson siding, times without having been a collector, near Butte, has caused much alarm you know. among railroad people aa the result of the recent dynamiting of the BurThe fairest of all things fair on lington train near where this powder earth la virtue. Shakespeare. waa stolen. The tracks are being closely guarded and every precaution y n taken. Truth and Quality , In different nltro-glycerl- - wen-soo- n ... Th '.th l,,shb1r C,ar!o , -hia c "eyed ,:aru1 ,bu, k h,s vtaI,or wIth a Hol,,,,n ,nK Bae' "Vtl wa,,t to kl,ow lf ther', town?" he a,,y Bod nor,,r ln Kad' bnpresslvely. there la. Well, There a (lid Hobart." "hat sort of work can he do?" he visitor, ,,H1" capabilities haven't had their ful1 chance yet." said the editor, alow- "h'lt he's getting on. and I'm afraid ahall lim.t him before long. Why, w,,ck that fellow wrote a twn l column account of a fire that wad thrilling, I tell you!" "Farmhouse, old mother, grandfather horn there, and so forth, 1 suppose?" said the visitor. "No, sir! said the editor. "It waa a deserted that's what It was. I can tell you, that taken talent! We can't expect to keep Giil with ua always." Youth's Companion. hen-hous- In-i- to-da- . WRITER OF REAL TALENT. y ha 1 of her depths GKANDMUTIIKlt bamlbui, but fingers touche 1 the stiff niching In the front of her best bonnet her attention was arrested by a ring at the front door. Aa though suddenly petrified In her grandmother walled stooping while Rusan Ann, her d:iim!.--r- , creaked through the way leal iug from the kitchen. At the first word of greeting grandmother straightened with a anap like Juck knife, and an angry color flamed on her cheeks. "Why, Murthy Ellen, what lovely roses! Hid you ever se the flowers so handsome as they am this year? Come right In. It's dreadful hoi, aint it? Seems like I never knowed It to warm up as curly as It has fhN season, hut, then, Ita been awful lino for the flowera. Tears like the roses and laylocks and piules has Just tried thelrs-lv- ea to s"p who could do the most bloomin'. Now, that's a pretty Idee, nlnt It. Mrs. Hay burn, that lay loek wreath? "Yes; laylocks was flick's favorite flower, and he set this bnah out Ills sel, and 1 thought I'd make a wreath to hang on tbecrnra on his toinhstun." on Grandmother The expression Adamson's face would have made a Krom a blase of auger good study. It passed through all the stages of horrifled scorn to a atony determination. The development of the conversation beyond the percovered board walla collected her nebulous chaotic emotions Into' a stern resolve. Susan Ann was stout, and she had grieved all the morning over the long Aa Bhe tank walk to the graveyard. ponderously Into a chair, ahe lamented: "I gtt heavier on my foet every day 1 live, and the heat la Just awful bn me. If mother hadn't hail her heart ao aet on It, I wouldn't try to go to the cemetery. I Just know IH tie sick." "Couldn't she walk up with ua?" lira. Rayburn asked. "We'll not walk - through wet, zl'ish and mud, freezing at times, and oppressed by heat at others, William Jucksou and R. T. Hay, two sturdy Scotchmen, walked every tulle of the way from Seattle to Chicago, Just arilvlng within a few hours of the time limit, thereby winning a purse of Fifteen Hundred Dollars given by the Seattle Athletic Club, fur accomplishing this feat within the prescribed time. Jackson and Hay left Seattle with but Five Dollars In money, were obliged to earn their way as they went and leave no unpaid bills, and complete the journey In ninety days. An Interesting incident In conneo-tha- t , h ,f each of wal' wa ;!on the contestants wore a p air of the wel known Mayer shoes, that neither ripped nor lost a stitch during the entire trip of LM.'iO miles the hardest test any shoes rould he put to speaking volumes fur the extraordinary wearing qualities of the shoes manufactured by the F. Mayer Boot ft Shoe Co., Milwaukee. iitte-citlt- DAM SOX ' , r s NORTHWEST NOTES 2450 MILES WALK The coroners Inquiry Into the deaths of Beaman J. J. Staub and F. Lulnskv of the New Jersey, who were killed by a street car at Bellingham, Wash., returned in every a verdict exonerating the motorman appeal to the It was walk of life and an essential to permanent and the traction company. seamen were riding shown the that success and creditable standing. on the front fender of the car, and it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs It. waa admitted that thla was against and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of the rules. A dispatch, from Missoula. Mont., known value, but one of many reasons of Henry Meyer, the states that body of personal and family better known aX "Dutch why it is the best Harry" uxativea is the fact that it cleanses, throughout Montana, has been .found wecteui and relieves the internal organs on a sandbar In the Missoula river. on which it acts without any debilitating Meyer is believed to have wandered while after effects and without having to increase Into the river and drownedwas a well Dutch Harry time. to time from the quantity known early day character during the of the Vigilante reign, It acta pleasantly and naturally and exciting axtime for Bill. Buntoii a freighter acting truly as a laxative, and its component at the tine he was taken from his parts are known to and approved by camp nt Drummond by vigilantes and strung up to a nearby tree. Harry physicians, as it is free from all objectionwan out looking for his horses and beneficial able substances. To get its when he returned to - camp found Bunton suspended from a limb. effects always purchase the genuine manufactured by the California Tig Syrup Stanley Peek shot and Instantly killed sale all Andy Saterro, a fellow emfor by leading drugCo., only, and ploye ln the Southern Pacific baggists. gage room at Reno, Nevada, and then telephoned the officers to come snd get him. Toek gave as the reason KNOW for his set the alleged undue Intimacy of Saterro with his wife. THE YET WEATHER A woman known as Evelyn Arthur COMFORT AND shot and badly wxunded a mining PROTECTION man. C. S. Johnson, In the tenderloin afforded by a district of Wlnnemucca, Nevada. The woman claimed Johnson had taken her money and refused to return it. ihiF while he declares ho never saw the woman before the shooting. At the annual tournament of the Clean Light of Association the Sportsmen's Durable held ln Walla Walla. Northwest, Guaranteed Wash., last week, G. L. Becker, of iWaterproof Ogden, Utah, one of the best shotgun 300 experts in the west, won the high Every where average gold medal, while the Ogden team won the three-matrophj Well-Inform- Accor-ingj- y, DOW Slicker? -- n j More proof that Lydia H Pinlc hams ogetableCoinpouiid savea woman from surgical operations. Mrs. S. A. Williams, of Gardiner, Maine, writes; I was a grout sufferer from femala Ii Pinkhams Vegetroubles, and table Compound restored me to health in throe months, after my physician declared that an operation was absolutely necessary." Mrs. Alvina Sperling, of 154 Ave Chicago, 11L, writes : I Buffered from female troubles, a tumor and inui-- inflammation. Two in Chicago decided of the best that an operation was necessary to save my life. I.ydia 11 1inhhams Vegetable1 Compound entirely cured me without an operation. Ly-li- Cley-bou- d'x-tor- j s FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years I.ydia K rink-ham- s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been tho Btardard remedy for female ills, and has posit ively cured thousands of women who have lieen troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, hbroid tumors, irregularities, Eriodio pains, backache, that feeling, flatulency, nervous prostration. indiges-tion,dizziness,- or Why dont you try it ? Mrs. Pinkliam invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. Disposing of the Baby. Little Freddy was the only child in the family, lie had no little sisters or brothers to play with him, so when he was told that a baby sister had come, be was very happy. But he soon found that father and mother did not pay ao much attention to him as they formerly had, and that baby seemed to be considered of more account than he. This worried Freddy; but he suddenly thought of something which would help him out of bis trouble. Some weeks before his father had put a sign up: "Ashes to Give Away; Inquire Within." Freddy remembered that a man had come and taken the aahea away. So he got to work, and one day surprised his father by displaying another sign, hung In a prominent place: "A BaBy tO give awaY. INqulre oF FreDdY." The Yeung Idea. "How many seed compartments are there In an apple?" he asked. No one answered. And yet," continued the school Inspector, "all of you eat many an apple- - In the course of a year and see the fruit every day, probably. You must learn to notice, the little things In nature." The talk of the Inspector Impressed the children, and at recess the teach-er overheard them discussing It. A ' little girl, getting her companions around her, gravely said: "Now, children. Just suppose I am Mr. Bay lor. Youve got to know more about common things. If you don't . ' youll nil grow up to be fools. Now, tell me. Minnie," she continued, looking sternly at a playmate, how many feathers are there on a hen?" Selfish Etiquette. Some rules ln an old book on etiquette seem to encourage a practice commonly called "looking out for number one." Here are two of them: When cake ia passed, do not fln- ger each piece, but with a quick glance select the best. Never refuse to taste of a dish because you are unfamiliar with It. or you will lose the taste of many a delicacy while others profit by your ab-- ' tlnence, to your lasting regret." Youth's Companion. DR, TALK8 OF FOOD . . Pres, of Board of Health. "What shall I eat? is the dally the physician Is met wih. i do not hesitate to say that in my Judgment a large percentage of disease k caused by poorly selected and improperly prepared food. My personal experience with the food., known as Grape-Nutenables me to ' apeak freely of Its merits. FYorn overwork, I suffered several Tears with malnutrition, palpitation of the heart and loss of sleep. Last summer I was led to experiment personally with the new food, which I used ln conjunction with good rich .cow's milk. In a short time after I commenced Its use, the disagreeable symp-- , toms disappeared, my hearts action became Heady and normal, the func- tlona of the stomach were properly carried out and I again slept aa soundly and as well as ln my youth. "I look upon Grape-Nutas a perfect food, and no one can gainsay but that It has a most prominent place ln ft rational, scientific system of feeding. Any one who uses this food will toon be convinced of the soundness of y ' - fully-cooke- d s, ' , - . s the principle upon which it Is manu- factured and may thereby know the facts as to Its true worth." Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new on appears from timo to time. They aro genuine, true, and full of human Interest . |