Two little queries have come to me from friends, and I need help. 1. According to a postcard displayed on a website devoted to hemp products and brought to my attention by a collector friend, Mark Twain's works were printed on hemp paper. Bibliophiles, is that the case? Would book paper of that period have had a substantial hemp content? Or is this just another exploitation of MT's cachet for promotional purposes? (The postcard is lovely, whether bogus or not; see www.hemptrivia.com/Mark_Twain.htm) 2. An elderly friend in Tennessee seeks verification of family stories that his grandmother, as a young woman in Hartford in the 1870's, attended a "Tuesday Morning Club" that included Mark Twain. I know about the Monday Evening Club, which was undoubtedly too exclusive and formal to include a young woman. Does anyone know of further discussion-group action that might have had a wider membership? Thank you for any help. I am deeply disappointed that job conflicts will prevent me from coming to Elmira this summer and spending time among this fine community of enthusiasts again. I got a chance to repeat my "Mark Twain on Postcards" talk for a home-town crowd last night (including, scarily, my 11th-grade American Lit teacher, who must be 95) and found as usual that EVERYBODY is turned on by hearing about Mark Twain. Henry Feldman Newtonville, Mass.