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THE CRAPY COUNTY PROGRESS^ CAIRO, GEORGIA.
RESINOL WILL HEAL
BABY’S ITCHING SKIN
ReBlnol ointment and reslnol soap
tre absolutely treo from anything ot a
i harsh or Injurious naturo, and can
(therefore be used with perfect confi
dence in the treatment of bablcB' skin
troubles—eczema, teething rash, chat-
lags, etc.—where you wouldn’t dare
tuse ordinary "skln-ouroB.” Reslnol
btops Itching Instantly and Bpeedlly
(heals even severe and stubborn orup-
. Itlons. Doctors have prescribed It for
tthe past nineteen years.
ReBlnol Boap and reslnol ointment
clears away pimples, blackheads and
dandruff, and la an Invaluable house
hold remedy for sores, burns, bolls,
tplles.etc. Sold by every druggist.—Adv.
Tell a woman she has a beautiful
loose and she will get cross-eyed from
•constantly looking at It.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets euro non-
istiputiun. Constipation is the cause of
unany diseases. Cure the cause and you
.cure the disease. Easy to take. Adv.
One touch of fashion may make all
women look like freaks.
>
The Los) Roses
of Sick Women
Life would be full of hope, and
ambition would lighten your labor
If you possessed that strength
which you have a right to claim
from nature.
The glow of youth was yours before health
departed, but the vigor of your mind and
will force has been sapped by that moBt
treacherous of ills, female dieordere. It
steals its way, draining the nerve tissues
of their strength, taking away the richness
from the blood, clogging the mind and re
ducing mental and bodily activity—it Is a
serpent in a Garden of Eden.
8TELLA-VITAE has put new hope Into
the hearts of thousands of despairing
women every year for the past thirty years.
It has renewed their strength, corrected
their irregular periods, put the roses ol
health into their cheeks and given them
back the joy of living.
Mri. Trieste VVafson, ot Swain, Ark., says)
“After taking only one bottle ot STELLA-
VITAE 1 feel better than 1 have felt for si*
years. It does away with that dragging,
all-gone feeling, bo common to women, and
1 think it will do all that Is claimed for It."
STELLA-VITAE will do all that is
claimed for it. Wie are so confident oi
this and want you to know it so much that
we authorize your dealer to sell you a
* bottle under the positive promise to give
back your money if that first bottle does
not benefit you.
When you havo tried the first bottle and
know what it will do you may buy el*
bottles for $5.00 and continue using until
you are again a well woman.'
Thacher Medicine Co.
Chattunooca, Tenn.
W.L.DOUGLAS
SHOES
Men’s li:gS 121°^^
Women's !UMg 11
GO &
MIsseS'BoyoiOhlldrenJ
$1.60 $1.78 $2 $2* BO S3]
Bogan Ou.ln... In
01,00e,27Bs
Iff&RMSStg
Sosglu oboe* In 1013 ortt '1011.
This Is tb« reason we live you the
same value* lor 33.00,33.6U, *4.00
and 34.60 notwithstanding the
enormous: Increase In the coat ol
leather. Our standards have
not been lowered and the price
to you remains the samo.
— _ Ask your dealer to show you
the kind of w. L. Douglas shoes he
Is selling (or 33.00. S3.su, 34.00 ami
*4.60. You will then be convinced
that W.L.Douglaa shoes are abso
lutely as good aaother makes sold at
higher prices. The only dlllcrcnce
Is the price.
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE
Hons genuine without W. L. Douglas' name
stamped on tha bottom. irw.L. Dougiua
iboee ore not for tale In your vicinity, order
direct from factory. 8bo«e for every member
>1 the family at all pricM r postage free.
Write for llluetrnted catalog ehowlng how
to order by mall. W. L. D0UQLAQ,
310 Spark Street, Brockton. Maas.
Co-Operative Farm
Products Marketing
How It Is Done in Europe and May Be Done
in America to the Profit of Both
Farmer and Consumer
By MATTHEW 8. DUDGEON.
(Copyright, 1S14. Wostorn Newspapur Union.
(Courtesy of \V. B. Hatch.)
Co-operative Concern in Copenhagen.
WHY DENMARK PRODUCES BEST BUTTER, BACON AND EGGS
OWNERS OF
MAXWELL-BRISCOE
2-Cylinder Cars
May Now Purchase Repair Parts for
These Cars Direct from Us
ALL LITIGATION WITH THE CARLSON MOTOR
TRUCK COMPANY HAS BEEN TERMINATED IN
OUR FAVOR. AND THE MAXWELL COMPANY
HAS OBTAINED AN EXCLUSIVE LICENSE TO
SUPPLY THESE PARTS TO MAXWELL OWNERS.
The Maxwell Company has been furnishing regu
larly and will continue to furnlBh to owners
parts accurately made from Jigs and templots.
ware ol substitute parts. All parts at jrem&rk-
Bbly low prices.
Owners write direct for Price List of Genuine'Parts
Maxwell Motor Sales Corporation
Newcastle, Indiana
RHEUMO
will cure
RHEUMATISM
Yon don’t believe it? I didn't. I cave It a trial
I am cured. You can be. A 12-day's treatment
costa you but $2.00. A euaruntee or money
funded accompanies each treatment
Rheumo Chemical Company, Dept.A
Brockton, Massachusetts
RS _ *Book in preparation
Mexican War ssa „
battlescenes. 400pages beautifullyboundincloth.
, Order now, $1.20. Descriptive circulars on request.
GILT EDGE CO., Pub. Agents, Highland Park, Mich.
CPRAY PIIMDQ Best *4.60 double action, brass
Orn#4l rumro spray pump on market. 4.000
•atlsfledcusuinieni. Write for descriptive Circulars,
J»' WHALEY, BOX 234, TI JETTON, GA.
SELLING TIPS FOR THE FIRMER'
OS rocejpt or 26c. C-OrZIUTlVS BALLS CO- Aiu-ii ti.
Copenhagen, Denmark.—How has
Denmark, a little country with less
than fifteen thousand Bquare miles of
area, established Itself as one of the
best agricultural centers In the world?
Why is It that Denmark produces the
best butter, the best bacon, the best
eggs, that have evor been placed upon
the markets of Europe? How can this
little country export each year fifty
odd million dollars' worth of butter,
over four mlllioh dollars’ worth of
cream and milk, thirty odd million dol
lars' worth of the finest bacon and
eight million dollars’ worth of eggs?
Denmark has no rich mines, no great
foreBts, no water power. The soil,
the one resource, Is not naturally fer
tile. In fact, Denmark Is a low-lying
expanse of wind-swept sand dunes,
with here and there small stretches
ot richer soil. Much of Its more pro
ductive soil is the result of scteiitiflc
drainage, fertilization and rotation of
crops. Chilling winds sweep over the
country the year around, and these,
with the prevailing fogs, render the
climate an inhospitable one.
Man has been no kinder than naturo
to thiB little country. In the eight
eenth century thp nobility and the
crown owned all the valuable lands,
while the peasantry were either serfs
or tenants under impossible condi
tions. Export duties made foreign
commerco unprofitable. Early In the
nineteenth century economic condi
tions had only begun to Improve when
the Napoleonic wars again spread dis
aster and poverty over the country.
Still a little later Denmark’s Ger
manic neighbors to the south took
from the already small nation the
province of Schleswig-Holstein. Then
Germany, In the early eighties, built
up a high tariff wall which excluded
Danish products. The commerce upon
which the people depended for their
revenues was gone, and the country
was BtlU again grievously stricken.
Its Present Prosperity.
Yet today, In spite of all these handi
caps, Denmark Is In proportion to Its
population the wealthiest country in
Europe. Eighty-nine per cent ot the
agriculturists own their own land. Her
farmers have been called the best
farmers and the most Bkllled rural
business men in the world. Rural
Denmark produces the best bacon, but
ter and eggs ever produced; their pigs
turn feed into pork more scientifical
ly than the porkers of any other na
tion; their hens lay more eggs, and
their cowb are more effective as milk
and butter producing machines. These
farmers havo worked out a system of
co-operative marketing so effective
that it Is estimated that over ninety
per cent of what the consumer pays
for Danish farm products actually
reaches the pocket-book of the man
who produces it—a rather significant
figure compared with’ the generally
.accepted estimate that the American
farmer gets only from thirty-five to
forty-six per cent of what the city con
sumer pays for his product.
How has Denmark reached this posi
tion agriculturally? Why is it that she
can produce the best bacon, butter and
eggs? The answer seems to be: First,
because she has an efficient educa
tional system; second, because the
government Is giving aid which, while
effective, is not unduly paternalistic;
third, because ot co-operation.
Danish Farmer an Educated Man.
It takes brains to raise the most
aristocratic sort of products that are
produced In Denmark. No ignorant
people could take the bleak, Bandy
plains of Denmark and make great
gardens of them, gardens supporting a
splendid aggressive, progressive, pros
perous race. It requires native
shrewdness to do these things, but it
requires something more. It requires
in addition scientific agricultural
knowledge, a big conception of the agri
cultural possibilities of the country and
a generous loyalty to state and com
munity—an aggregate of qualities that
none hut' an educated man possesses.
And’, the Dane is indeed in very truth
In every sense of the word an educated
man.. He has beeu trained to make
the best use of himself and of his en
vironment.
As a boy he was compelled by law
to attend school until he was fourteen:
His teachers were mature, well-trained
men of good Intellectual ability, well
paid, and, In most cases, community
leaders and organizers
From fourteen to eighteen is an age
when Danish boys and girls are grow
ing physically and working at prac
tical things, for the young Dane can
not enter the folk high school until he
Is eighteen.
Farm Apprenticeship.
The prospective farmer, however,
has not stopped his educative proc
esses during this period. There Is in
Denmark a recognized system of farm
apprenticeship for the future farmer,
It Is a common practise here for the
father who wishes his son to become
a farmer to put him for a period of
three years upon some of the accredit
ed model farms of the country. Gen
erally he stays on one farm for one
year, moving on to a second and then
a third in order that he may get dif
ferent and broader points of view and
may see agriculture specialized along
•different lines upon the different farms,
On these farms he is' glvea an oppor
tunity to learn, hut for the most part
his time Is spent in hard labor. He
learns to farm by farming.
Folk Schools and Patriotism.
, After his apprenticeship Is complet
ed he goes for at least a few; montii’3
to one of the folic high schools, which
aro In the broadest sense schools of
patriotism. Inspiring lectures aro
used for Instruction more widely than
are text books. The history and liter
ature of the country is the theme of
many an hour. Every class is opened
with a song, either patriotic or re
ligious, and each day extensive read
lngs upon patriotic and religious topics
are given. Practical political economy
and sociology are included in tlio dally
work. No one under eighteen may at
tend these folk high schools, but many
an older man or woman in later life
finds there that for which there was
no opportunity in youth. The schools
aro co-educational, but are co-educa-
tional In a thoroughly segregated
way, for the men attend in winter and
the women only in the summer
months.
These schools are privately owned
and not absolutely free. The cost of
five months’ instruction and board for
the mCn for the winter months
about $55, while the women, who gen
erally attend these schools in summer,
pay only about $30 for three months'
instruction, including board and lodg
ing. Small as these fees seem to be,
the state has various ways of -re
ducing the fees, especially for the sons
and daughters of the small holders
The total number of students in these
summer and winter schools the last
few years has never been less than
ten thousand.
University. Extension,
These folk high schools have, too,
an extension form of education some
what similar to the university exten
sion courses given by some of our
American colleges. The high school
professors frequently go out to the
schoolhouses for popular lectures upon
history apd literature, and upon soci
ological subjects. Generally a littlo
association is formed for the course
from six to ten lectures. Possibly one
crona (twenty-seven cents) for the
year is charged, or there may be
charge of twenty ora (four cents) for
each lecture. Here at the high school
building they also hold in the fall
Bpeclal community meeting for three
or four days during which three lec
tures per day on subjects similar
those taught in the school are given,
and in addition man of learning or re
nown from the outside are brought In.
At this folk school the young farm
er who has had his common school
training, with all Its contact with the
realities of life, and who has learned
in three years’ apprenticeship how to
farm, has an opportunity to learn how
to be a citizen and a patriot. But he
has not yet completed his school work.
Upon the farm he, has learned how to
do things. He has yet to learn why.
high school and agricultural college.
One Iiub put to travel through the ru
ral sections of Denmark to satisfy
htmsolf that the outcome of this
process of education is a finished
product ot extremely high efficiency.
The Stato and the Farmer.
The Danish government is not chary
the aid which It extends to the farm-
The aid, however, 1b always ex
tended upon the fundamental theory
that the best way to help the farmer
to help hint to help himself. Pos
sibly In no other way has the govern
ment so greatly furthered the Inter
ests of agriculture as In assisting In
the acquisition by each farmer of the
soil which he tills. Thanks to the
joint activities of the government and
the co-operative credit societies, it la
eaBy to buy a farm In Denmark.
If the would-be buyer has forty per
cent of the price to be paid for the
farm and all Its equipment he may
apply to a credit Boclety for a loan of
sixty per cent of the value, the loan
to run for from forty-five to soventy-
nlne years. Each year the farmer pays
from four to six per cent of the prin
cipal amount borrowed. This, how
ever, is not wholly interest, but In
cludes a small installment of principal,
so that at the end of the period for
which the money was borrowed not
only has the interest been kept up, but
tho principal has been, automatically
discharged.
There are, however, other forms of
loans even more advantageous to tho
borrower, particularly If he be one of
the poorer farm laborers. If such a
laborer Is anxious to become a land-
owner on a small scale he may under
certain conditions, procure a loan for
nine-tenths of the purchase price of
the farm and equipment. The condl.
lions which he muBt meet are: He
must have been a farm laborer for
five years (the law applies to women
on the farm as well as men); the
land must not exceed ten acres In ex
tent, nor $2,140 In value; he must
work the farm in a scientific manner,
and must agree to follow a proper ro
tation of crops and, by the use of
manures and otherwise, insure the
continued productiveness of the land.
For the first five years the laborer
pays three per cent interest and noth
ing upon tho principal. After that he
begins to add a small percentage upon
the principal in order to discharge his
debt. At no time, however, does the
total annual payment for principal and
Interest exceed four per cent of the
amount borrowed.
The government Is back of these co
operative credit societies. By benevo
lent legislation It makes their organiza
tion and operation possible; it assists
in supervision and Inspection, and in
some cases it advances to the co-op
erative Boclety the funds out of which
tho loans are made. There are In
Denmark about half a million families,
including those in cities and villages.
Co-operative credit societies have a
membership of over two hundred thou
sand—that Is to say, two out of every
five families in the entire country
Beem to be represented in these co
operative credit organizations. In
fact, It is because It is so easy to buy
land In Denmark that the tenant is
disappearing and the small land owner
is taking his place.
Other Government Assistance.
The government has also enacted
much other legislation calculated to
serve the interests of the farmer. It
has regulated carefully the manu
facture and sale of margarine, so that
it is impossible to import or export
or sell It under any false representa
tion that it Is butter. It has regulated
the quality of butter and has forbidden
the export of butter containing more
than sixteen per cent water, of butter
for the preservation of which anything
other than common salt is used, ol
butter colored with any substance de
rived from coal tar. All butter must
havo been made from milk or cream
which has been pasteurized; it must
have been made in an inspected dairy
it must have upon it the Danish label
guaranteeing its quality.
The sanitary condition in the cream
eries, the method of packing, and the
process of the sale of butter, are thor
oughly controlled by government au
thority. If any dairy which has been
authorized by the government to use
a Danish label for its product violates
any regulation or law the minister of
agriculture has the right to take away,
either temporarily or permanently,
tho authorization to use the national
trade mark. Butter from foreign
lands must not be marked In any way
to imply that it has been made 111
Denmark, and thOBe wishing to Import
butter must make a declaration and
be properly registered.
Co-Operation Cflief Factor.
Those familiar with the conditions
In Denmark concede that the educa
tion of the farmer has contributed
largely to the success of Danish agri
culture. Every loyal Dane Is proud
of the government which has seen the
great importance of furthering the in
terests of the farmer by every means
within its power. But no one who
knows, ever for a minute conceives
that Denmark could have taken her
present position as a produced of the
world's best farm products, without co
operative organization. It is because
of co-operation that It pays to farm
scientifically. The production of the
highest grades of farm products la
made worth while because co-operation
enables the farmer to take these high-
grade products to the profitable, In ex
haustible, and discriminating markets
of the world. It is co-operation that
has resulted in better farming, better
business, better living. Co-operation
:0AD
BUILDING
MAINTENANCE OF DIRT ROAD
So ho goes to an agricultural college
and lenrns the theoretical and scion- lias kept the farmer’s sons and daugh-
title why which Is back of the prac- ters upon the land and has stopped the
deal how. This is the story of Den- rush to the city. Co-operation, In tact,
mark’s farmer In the making, through j dominates the economic life of the
common school, apprenticeship, folk entire nation.
HE SERVANT
QUESTION SOLVED
So Far as This Lady is Concerned
—She Doesn’t Seem to
Need One.
Great Care Should Be Taken to Work
Out an Efficlont System of Drain
age for Highways.
(By JOSEPH HYDE PRATT. North Car
olina Stato Geologist.)
The dirt road Is more susceptible to
damage by water than, of course, aqy
of the specially surfaced roads; there
fore, great care should be taken to
work out an efficient system of drain
age for the road. Water muBt be kept
away from the road, and the rain
which falls on the road must be per
mitted to run off as rapidly as pos
sible, and by a very easy grade. It
must not only be taken off the surface
of the road as rapidly as possible, but
also out of the side ditches. Care
should be taken that these side ditches
are not too steep, and that every op
portunity is seized for turning the
water out of the ditches Into the ad
joining fields.
Many of our country roads are bad
because In their construction no ar
rangement was made for taking care
of the water, and thus they are very
muddy and filled with ruts and holes.
Instead of the middle of the road be
ing higher than the edges, eo that the
water can readily run off on each side,
many of them are flat, or even con
cave, with the center of the road the
lowest point. It the road has been
constructed so that it Is well crowned,
with the slope about one In twenty
from the center of the road to the side
ditches, and these ditches have been
graded so as to readily take care of
the water, and yet not Bteep enough
to cause them to cut deep gullies on
the side of the road, and if the water
Is taken from these ditches at every
available point so as to prevent seep
age of water under the surface of the
road, there should be little difficulty
in keeping the road In good condition.
Very often It le necessary to carry the
water from one side of the road to the
other; and when this la necessary, it
should be done by means of either
concrete, metal or -terra cotta culverts
or pipes which will carry the water
under the surface of the road. After
the system of drainage has been in
stalled, provision should be made to
keep It up, so that the drains and the
culverts will not become stopped up.
The surface of a dirt road should be
kept of dirt, and whenever any holes
or ruts have developed in the road,
they should not be filled up with stone,
or brush, but with dirt, and with dirt
as nearly as possible of the same char
acter as the dirt' composing the sur
face of the balance of the road. If, on
the other hand, holes or ruts are filled
with rock, gravel or brush, the wear
ing effect will be uneven, and the
Wheels will begin to scoop out holes
just beyond or on the opposite side of
the road from the hole filled up. It
there are stumpB or rocks In the road,
they should all be removed, so that the
dirt surface can be smoothed over and
brought to an even slope from the cen
ter to the ditches. After the road has
been well constructed and . the right
slope and surface obtained, It can be
kept In thlB condition very readily by
judicious application of the split-log or
King drag.
Pollock, La.—Mrs. T. S. Blair, ol
this town, has the following to soy,
which should be of Interest to women
generally: “For months, my health
was very bad, and the medlolnes I took
did not seem to do me any good.
I was very weak and nervous, and
some days, I oould not be up.
I asked my husband to get me a
bottle of Cardul, tho woman's tonlo,
to try, and before I had taken one bot
tle I was up and doing my work. Bo*
fore I commenced taking Cardul, I had
such spells I was not able to do any
thing. Now, I have only taken three
bottles of Cardul In all, and I feel
fine.
A few months ago I weighed 135
pounds. Now 1 weigh 168, and I do
all my own work, cook, wash and
milk—and feel like I did when I was
sweet sixteen.'
Taking Cardul has cured me.”
As a relief from the distressing'
symptoms of womanly ailments, noth
ing has been found,during the past 50
years that would take the place of
Cardul.
Its superiority is still unquestioned
as a mild, building tonic for cases of
womanly weakness where tired nature
needs help. Made from purely vege
table ingredients, Cardul has no bad
after effects and can do you nothing
but good.
Try Cardul.—Adv.
The Step for Him.
“This young man can't decide what
dance he wants to learn."
“Why not teach him the hesita
tion?”
MACHINE FOR /MAKING ROADS
Wheeled Frame and Shovel Scraper
Adjusted to Remove Surface of
Soli When Moved.
The Scientific American in describ
lng a grading scraper, the Invention of
J. F. Thomas and J. Haney of Odessa,
Minn., says:
“The object of the inventors is to
provide a wheeled frame and a shovel
scraper adjustably mounted in the
frame in such a manner that It may be
Grading Scraper.
caused to scrape and remove the sur
face of the soil beneath the frame
when the latter is moved, and may be
further adjusted to a position wherein
its contents may be either dumped as
whole or gradually leveled out after
transportation to a desired point.’
USE OF WIDE WAGON TIRES
Makes Hauling Easier and Improves
and Packs Roads Rather Than
Cutting Ruts in Them.
(By A. F. WOODS.)
The use of wide tires on wagonB has
made hauling easier and Improved and
packed rather than cut ruts In the
roads. The farmer who still uses nar
row tires for heavy loads Is not only
wasting time and horse energy, but lq
guilty of cruelty to animals and the
destruction of the public highways,
The relation between weight of load
and width of tire and the maintenance
of roads in each section should be
carefully considered and fixed by local
regulations.
A 25-YEAR CASE
OF ECZEMA CURED
Mr. Butler Edgar.of Danville, Pa.,
writes: "I have had an aggravated
case of Eczema for over 25 years. My
hands were unsightly for a great part
of that long period. I have used seven
60c. bottles of Hancock's Sulphur
Compound and one jar of Hancock's
Sulphur Ointment. I feel as though
had a brand new pair of hands. My
case has been such an aggravated
one. Hancock’s .Sulphur Compound
has cured me and I am certain it will
cure anyone If they perslBt In using it
according to directions.” Hancock'a
Sulphur Compound and Ointment are
sold by all dealers. Hancock Liquid
Sulphur Co„ Baltimore, Md.—Adv.
Spiritual.
The new minister in a western par
ish was making his first colls, and
when he reached the home of tho
Peevys he said to Mr. Peevy:
I don’t think that I have seen Mr.
Peevy at church yet, have I, Sister
Peevy?”
“Well, ,no, you ain’t,” replied Sister
Peevy. "The fact Is, Peevy likes to
lay abed late of a Sunday morning,
and time he gets up an’ has his break
fast and gets through the Sunday pa
pers an’ does his Sunday shavin’ an'
mebbe an’ hour or two of tinkerin’
around the house that he alius puts
off to do of a Sunday, an' then has a
smoke an’ mebbe cuts some o’ tho
children’s hair or beatB rugs for me,
or even mops up the kitchen If I’m
hurried—time he’s done all that it’a
too late for church. Fact Is, Peevy ain’t
a real spiritual-minded man nohow—
at least not the same as I am."—New
York Saturday Evening Post.
Cars to Have Noiseless Brakes.
A brake shoe having a strip ot as-
phaltum let into the surface has been
adopted for use on street cars in New
York recently. The new brake Is said
to be practically noiseless, while hav
ing good wear-resisting qualities.
A Sign.
Patience—Have you seen Mrs.
Styles' new hat?
Patrice—No. but I saw her husband,
this morning, and he had a terribly
long face. It must be a corker.
CAUSE AND EFFECT
Good Digestion, Follows Right Food,
Indigestion and the attendant dis
comforts of mind and body are cer
tain to follow continued use of Im
proper food.
Those who are still young and ro
bust are likely to overlook the fact
that, as dropping water will wear a'
stone away at last, so will the use of
heavy, greasy, rich food, finally cause
loss of appetite and Indigestion.
Fortunately many are thoughtful
enough to study themselves and note
the principle of cause and effect In.
their daily food. A N. Y. young wom
an writes her experience thus: . .
"Sometime ago I had a lot of trbu,-
ble from Indigestion, caused by too
rich food. I got so ; T vlas unable to
digest scarcely anything, and ipsdl*
cines seemed useless.
"A friend advlBed mo td-try Grape-
Nuts food, praising it highly and aB
a last resort, I tried it. I am thankful
to say that Grape-Nuts pQt only re
lieved me of my trouble, hut built me
up and strengthened Tny digestive or-,
gans so that I can now eat anything I
desire. But I stick to Grape-Nuts ’*
Name given by Postum Co., -Rattle
Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to
' Wellville,” in pkgB. “There’s a Rea
son.”
Ever reait the nhove letter?* A new
one nppenra from time to time.' They
ore .sennlne, true, and full of Unman
Interest.