T .y...p..ri,'.i;gi-.m :,i,:,,-,v;",rf..y.;;.i-. ..- ----v-iTnr,, r",iii. j yil4iMavi1jffir3M -- 3ZiCXxUfVttHWJlffikrmtm& lywMM..t-'- mi.., nufi ..,,, fvit.rum-' n i.iiwiw.y.MTiw.wH"i"'...'''--'""'lll" '' I I ml II ( II I ll . III ,. 1.1. i n 1 S to US ft The Chief C. B. HALE, Publlsncr RED CLOUD NEIRASKA MS III A VETO WOOL DILL RUNS AFOUL OF EX ECUTIVE PROGRAM. SEES NO REASON FOR HASTE Assurance Given That Tariff oars Will 8oon be Ready to Report- Effort to be Made to J L- Past over veto. Washington. Republican npplnuso which giccted President Taft's veto of tho wool tariff as It was read In tho house Thursday was followed by an outburst of democratic cheers when Mujorlty Lender Underwood tnudo tho announcement that ho would call up the bill nt ojice and move its passage over tho veto. ' Tho president's veto messngo reach ed tho houso while the roll was be Ing called on Mr. Underwood's motion to concur In tho sennto amendments to tho free list bill. When tho con ference report on tho bill In Us final legislative stngo was announced the reading of tho president's messago was begun, each member following the president's words from printed copies of the veto, which had been dis tributed. When tho reading was con cluded, Mr. Underwood rose. "Mr. Speaker' he said, 'I do not desire to ask that this message from the president bo referred to the com mittee on ways and means. I ask that It "He on tho speaker's table, and lve notice that I will call up tho bill Friday Immediately after tho reading t tho Journal, and move to pass It over the president's veto." Call on 100,000 Men to Strike. London. Tho strenuous, almost des perate efforts the liberal government 5ns made to prevent the greatest con flict between capital nnd labor that England ever has witnessed, are trembling In the balance. Representa tives of tho four organizations com prising the ntnalgnmntcd society of rnllway servants have Issued a strlko order cnlllng out 100,000 members of their allied unions. Tho men wcro asked to strlko "Immediately." Anarchists Among Laborers. New Orleans. According to infor mation from Panama, it Is believed that an organized bedy ot anarchists have been discovered among tho Spanish laborer). Tho discovery, It' Is said, was made through tho confess slon of n laborer believed to be Aqull1 lino Lopez of llnrcelonn, nnd alleged to have been Implicated in tho mas sacre of priests, nuns, nnd other re ligious workers in Spain two weeks ago. Earth Shocks In Portugal. Lisbon. A series of enrthquako shocks, gradually Increasing in vio lence, wcro felt In southern Portugal Tuesday night. At Mortela, Albufclra, nnd other points near the coast consid erable damage waa done nnd several persons wero Injured. At Iigos, tho dlsturbanro was accompanied by n tidal wave which caused a ranlo among those living near tho coast. Fisher to Inspect Alaska. Seattle, Wash. Secretary of tho In terior Fisher has booked passage for Alaska. The purpose of the trip Is to familiarize himself with tho actual con ditions In tlfo northern territory. Spe cial attention will be given to an In spection of tho lands about Controller bay and those along the Derlng and Copper rivers. Nebraska Law Finds Favor. , Grand Folks. N. D. P. W. Johnston of Davenport, la., president, formally rpened the meeting of tho northwest ern hotolmeu's atsoclatlon in Grand Forks. Uniform legislation affecting hotels in Minnesotn, Iown, North and South Dakota and Nebraska, will bo the principal topic of discussion, with .probabilities that Nebraska's "dead bent" liability and traveling men's Jaws will be recommend!. J Commemorate the Pilgrims. Southhampton, Kngland. Tho first commemoration of the sailing of tho pilgrim fathers was participated in by a distinguished gathering ot Amer icans nnd Drltons at Westgate, whence the traveler embarked on the May flower in 1C20 ' Marshall, Mo. Stealing nway from Jhe Notre Dame Deslon convent hero Just before taking the veil for life, Miss Roma Romlne, a pretty English irl, was married to Dr. Beecher II Said win of Elkhorn, Neb. O Grandpa Celebrated the Event. New York. -Theo, Roosevelt celo tirated the news of the birth ot his first grandchild Thursday at his homo n Oyster Bay by suspending hlill torlal work and takings holiday. Theo. Roosevelt, Jr., and Miss Eleanor But ler Alexander were married here Junt 20 last year. Industrial War In England. London. An industrial war baa been aclared and the employee on all the .railway lines of the United Kingdom THE HAPPENINGS OF THE PAST WEEK HI I I LATEST HAPPENINGS OF THE WORLD IN SHORT FORM. NORTH, EAST, WEST AND SOUTH I m m Events That Are Making History Information Gathered From All Quarter 0 the Globe. Washington. It is announced unofficially that Japan has declined to make an arbl trntloutrcaty with the United States. Secretary of Stato Knox has com plimented President de la Oarra on tali efforts to restjro order in Mexico. Fifteen millions of .dollars have been stolen outright from the United States government slnco tho union o( tho states. Tho tariff revision legislation ques tion will bo settled dining the coming week, which will In all probability mark the closing of congress. Tho wool bill conference report, a completo agreement between the two houses ot congress, has been sub mitted to the house by Representative Undeiwom'. President Tnft In a special message to tho house- of representatives bus vetoed the joint resolution providing for admission of Now Mexico and Ari zona to statehood. Representative N'orrls has an nounced that Senator La Follctte will be unablo to accept the Invitation of the managers In charge of the state fair to be held In Lincoln next month. Adjournment of tho present con gress August 22, ut 4 p. m., was pro vldcd for in a concurrent resolution offered by Senator Penrose of Penn sylvania, chairman of tho finance com mittee. Comptroller of tho Treasury Trace well has construed the last naval ap propriation act to mum that "every" employe In n ship yard where govern ment vessels nro building must be given an eight-hour day. Representative Darthold of Missouri hns sailed on tho Kaiser WUhelm II for Germany to present a replica of tho Baron von Steuben statue to the emperor on behalf of the pcoplo of tho peoplo of tho United Stntes. Rcprefccntatho N'orrls ot Nebraska has introduced in the houso a joint resolution requesting tho president to invite tho governors of tho various states to send delegates to n congress for tho purpose of proposing to the stato legislatures n uniform law upon he Eubjuct of marriage and divorce. General News. Premier Liurlcr opened his cam paign at Slmcoe, Ontario. Tho transport Buford has arrived from the Philippines with 500 troops. Western fairs have ngain caused tho railroads to Inaugurate low rates, Two men were blown to pieces In a powder mill explosion at Cressona, Pa. Thirty-four cases of sunstroke, four of them fatal, occurred in Berlin Sut. liny. Asahm Yama, tho volcano on tho Island ot Homlu, has bsen in eruption for several dajs. State labor bureaus nre organizing to foster tho "back to the farm" move ment In the west. General Clnclnnntus Leconte has been elected president ot Haiti unani mously by congress. Two peoplo wero killed and four wero fatally injured in a tornado in pivldo county, North Dakota. Spain is having a great deal of trouble In maintaining order in her military nnd naval departments. Tho strike committco at Liverpool has Issued an order cnlllng out all the street car1 employes in that place. Fire from a ran of grease started a 200,000 conflagration nt Chester Park, t pleasure resort near Cincinnati, O. Another attempt to rescue Range! and Silvn, the two liberal leaders con fined in the Juarez hospital was mude. In government circles no longer is it denied that tho Mexican adminis tration has on Us hands another revo lution. A company of coast artillery at San Olego, Cal has been Instructed to take the field for patrol duty from San Diego to Yuma, Ariz. Sunday was tho hottest August 13 since the establishment of the weather oureau in Germany, in 1848, Eighteen miners were seriously In jured and twenty-six others slightly hurt when tho hoisting machinery at n coal mine at Broehum, Prussia, went wrong and dropped a cage 300 feet to tho bottom of tho shaft. So eager were the homeseekers to register for lands In the Berthold res ervation in North Dakota that the government threatened to drive the crowds from the registration building it they did not cease In their efforts to be first to register. Friends ot President Taft are mak ing a quiet canvass to learn the strength of the president. There appears little hope ot averting the railroad strike at London, which probably will bo accompanied by a general labor revolt that will have. a tremendous effect on tho trade of the United Kingdom. Homesteaders In Oklahoma, Nebras la, Wisconsin and other western states whose crops have failed this fear on account ot drouth are per mitted to leave their claims until next April without forfeiting any rights Savings bank depositories nro to be extended gradually to practically all of tho postofllces in tho Unltec States. Union button workers of Muscatine, In., again threaten a general strike such as caused military rule here last spring. Floods in tho province of Anhul, China, havo destroyed 32S,000 acres of rice. Half a million persons aro homeless. Twenty-eight states wero represent ed In the registration for lands in the Fort Brotherhood Indian reservation in North Dakota. Railroad lines aro tied up and the country to the west of La Crosse, Wis., Is still isolated as the result of tho floods ot Sunday. The Alfaro government In Ecuador was overthrown Friday by a revolu tion organized by the supporters of President-elect Estrada. Prices of beef are to bo raised and eastern retail dealers say the advanco makes tho cost of meat pass the high water mark of last fall. Mohammed Al Mlrzn, tho ex-shah, Is reported to be In full flight, after a crushing defeat of his forces by gov ernment troops nt Tehoran. Senator James B. McCrcary, tho democratic nomlnco for tho Kentucky governorship, filled that office some thing like a generation ago. After more than 200 jears undei tho aldcrmanlc form of city govern ment, Mobile, Ala., officially passed under tho commission form, Governor Cruce has been notified that a clash Is impending between whites and negroes at Caddo, Okla., and usked to prevent violence. On August 23 Uncle Sam will throw open to settlement over 90,000 acres of land In northern Minnesota, 82,220 at Cass Lake and 8,884 at Fon du Lac. More than 500 lives were lost and great devastation nshoro and afloat resulted from a typhoon and tidal wave which swept over Japan July 20. Rising priceB ot meats have reached a new high record for the season In New York city. Retail dealers report heavy falling off in trade, Much property damage was done at Wnlla Walla, Wash., when the worst dust storm slnco 188G, according to the weather observer, visited that sec tion. Walter Clyde Jones, progressive re publican candidate for tho guberna torial nomination, began an nutomo bllo tour of the eastern cities of Illi nois Monday. Georgo Butcher, aged fifty-five years, city marshal at Missouri Valley, la., was shot and Instantly killed by two tramps whom he was trying to placo under arrest. When an emery wheel in tho plant of the Lennox Machine company nt Marshalltown, Iowa, bursted, a piece struck Nicholas Jujgos, a Greek labor er, killing him Instantly. Frank Miller, while digging a well near Pierre, S. D., fell seventy-flvo feet to tho bottom. A board near tho bottom broko his fall and ho escaped with a few minor bruises. Two people wcro killed nnd thirty were Injured at Fort Wayne, Ind., In tho tecond. wreck within a week of tho Pennsylvania ralhoad'a Chlcngo-New York clghtoen-hour train. A severe epidemic of black small pox Is raging In Guadaloupe, San Ygnaclo, Montezuma and other points in Mexico. The disease Is pronounced of tho most virulent form. Two aviators, William R. Badger of Pittsburg and SL Croix Johnstone of Chicago, both young men, lost tneir lives at tho international aviation meet in Chicago Tuesday. Following a parade of 8,000 striking garment workers nnd strike sympa thizers nt Cleveland Wednesday, tho pollco wcro called out to quell numer ous cases of rioting. A dozen arrests wero made. China has been waging an anti opium war lor year's In the face o( discouragement and temporary finan cial loss. It is estimated that the ag gregate annunl loss In opium revenue to tho government will bo about 50, 000,000. The feast ot tho assumption, ot our Indy of tho nngels, and tho ono hundred and thirtieth anniversary of the founding ot Los Angeles, wero celebrated Tuesday in accordance with an annual custom. Meetings with a view to settling U10 controversy between the railway com panies and their .employes were held at the London board of trade, but when they adjourned the situation re mained as far from being solved as when they began. Francisco I. Madera's efforts to in duce the disgruntled revolutionists In the state ot morelas, Mex., to submit to disarmament havo failed and 'Gen eral Victoriano Huerta Is planning to carry out his orders to "restore peace at any cost." At the international congress oa alcoholism to bo field at the Hngue next month the United States will bo represented by at least ten delegates, among whom will be Mrs. L. M. N. Stevens, head ot the Woman's Chris tian Temperance union, and Rev. P. F. O'Callaghan, head of the Catholic Total Abstinence union. The election of General Edwin A. McAlpIn aa national president and chief scout ot the American boy scouts, is announced at the national headquarters. The moat severe earthquake shock felt in southern California in years shook business buildings Friday with such severity that the occupants fled Into the streets. Tho Ittsv, Georgo B. Gilbert, an Episcopal clergyman, hns rented Lake View Park, an abandoned amusement resort near Mlddletown, Conn., and will conduct it in an Ideal manner dur. END OF WORLD IN 1915 FORMER CANDIDATE FOR GOVER NOR TEACHER OFCULT. NEWS FROM OVER THE STATE What la Going on Here and There That Is of Interest to the Read era Throughout Nebraska and Vicinity. Broken Bow. C. H. Harbaugh, ono tlmo candidate for governor on tho so cialist ticket, therapeutist and a be liever in the "House of Israel" cult, has announced tho coming end of tho world, which Is to occur In 1915. Mr. Harbaugh has onened a "llnnm. nt i. rnel" In Broken Bow and is teaching his strange belief to a few. Hn in vrv much In earnest, but is not making mucn nendway in his home com munlty. Unknown Hero Rescues Baby. Nebraska City. Sunday morning, as a heavy freight train was coming Into tho city down a long, sloping graded track, tho fireman noticed n baby standing in the middle of the track and seemed to be frightened by the blowing of the engine whistle. He did not hesitate to think of the danger, but dashed out of the cab window nnd ran along tho rail to the front ot the engine and down onto the pilot. He held on with his left hand, while with the right he reached out and grabbed tho child and lifted it clear of the track. Finds Trunk Full of Jewelry. Nebraska City. Tho A. F. Smith jewelry trunk, containing about 20, 000 worth of Jewelry, which was sup posed to have been lost or stolen somewhere between Omaha and Ne braska City July 31, was accidentally found by an electrician working on me new school building here. No Lack of Moisture There. Orleans. During the last thirty days it has rained on thirteen days here, tho precipitation totaling 17.60 inches in that time. The bottom lands along the Republican river nre flooded yet. The river went out of its banks August 3 and Is still out, reaching the highest point in the history ot tho county. A Petroleum 8trlke at Hastings. Hastings. While passing through ehalo rock at a depth of 150 feet, in boring a well at tho city water works, workmen struck stron g Indications of oil and the water which was brought up In the buckets when settled, would be nearly one-fourth crude oil. The oil was struck Tuesday. Ohlowa. The eleven-year-old-son ot ft farmer named Elznlc, living north of town, was killed by a caveln of a snnd Dlt in Which tin nml n vnnnir,. V,-tl,V were playing. He wbb burled under four feet of sand and was dead when found by his parents. NEWS FROM THE 8TATE HOU8E Secretary of Agriculture James Wil son has sent a telegram to W. B. Mel lor, secretary of the state fair board, stating, "will address our association at 3 o'clock September 5." Woman suffrage, Governor Aldrlch's Tcto of tho Sunday baseball bill and a protest against clalrvoyunts wero In dorsed by the Epworth assembly at its closing session. The governors veto was called "heroic." The Platte Shirt company haB pre sented a bill to the state for the de struction of a sewing machine. The machino was used at the penitentiary until a convict deliberately smashed it with a hammer. Deputy District Attorney A. W. Lano has filed in federal court a con plaint against the Gage County Gas, Light and Power company, asking that they be fined 110,000 for falling to make their report March 1 as required under the new federal corporation tax law. The minimum fine is $1,000. Hon. James Wilson, aecretary of agriculture, will address the farmers of Nebraska on "Reciprocity" at the state fair, September 5th. Owing to tho fact that this is a subject of mo ment In the affairs of the nation and will be' one of the leading political issues In the coming campaign, a great gathering may be expected. School bonds to the amount of f 10, 800, issued by district No. 16 ot Scotts bluft county, wero purchased by the state. State Superintendent Crabtree has given out a statement in regard to his prospective resignation from the office and his going to Wisconsin, where he will become president ot the state nor mal school at River Falls. Mr. Crab tree has not yet indicated the exact time when be will retire from the state urerlntendency, but flays it will be either at the time of the state teach ers' association meeting in November or at the end of the present year. Several hundred Incorporated vil lages in the state of Nebraska find, under an opinion written today by Assistant Attorney General Edgerton, that they must add a police magistrate to their other officials. In reply to an inquiry from Oshkosh, the Grossman police magistrate bill, passed by the last legislature, was examined and so Interpreted that It means that police magistrates will hereafter exercise in cities and incorporated .villages, and within a radius of three miles thereof, a part of the duties heretofore per formed by justices ot the peace. RIEF NEWS OF NEBRASKA. The state sacugcrfest Is In session at Grand Island. The business men of Roca havo oi ganlzed a commercial -club. Odcll has voted bonds for the erec tion of a new high school building. Dixon county old settlers will picnic at Martlnsburg Tuesday, August 29.' C. G. Miller, a Burlington brakeman, fell under the cars near West Lincoln and was killed. The Congregational church people at Genoa have commenced work on a $4,000 parsonage. ' September 14 and 15 are the dates set for the corn show and live stock crhlbit at Deshlcr. Joseph McLaughlin of Sutton was drowned at Ontario, Canada, while vis iting friends there. Prof. J. W. Crabtree has accepted the prlncipalshtp ot a state normal school in Wisconsin. Tho annual pow wow of tho Santc Indians took place at Center last week. Hundreds of Indians and many whltei attended the celebration. Rev. David Marquette, ono of th oldest ministers in tho state, died nt hla homo in University Place Satur day night. During n severe electrical storm ac companied by an Inch of rainfall, lightning struck tho Methodist church at Chappell. Otis Crouch, aged twenty years, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Crouch of Bel vldere, was drowned Friday morning In the Little Blue river, Robert Griffin at Nebraska City will lose n foot as the result of an explo sion of melted metal as he was pour ing a flask at a foundry. ' Thomas Nordbrook of Auburn died as the result of suffocation from smok ing some kind o f herb he was using in the treatment ot asthma. Mrs. A. W. Kelso fell down a flight ot concrete ..steps at Falrbury and sus tained numerous bruises, but It la thought none are serious. The first shipment of marble for tho court house at Pawnee City has ar rived and several cars of the same are1 already unloaded, and on tho ground. Carl Springer, a Fremont younr, man, was overcome with heat on tbe Epworth assembly grounds at Lincoln, and for a time was In a critical con dition. Mayor Griflln has Issued a procla na tion designating Wednesday, October 4, as the date for holding the election on tho adoption of tho commlr.slon form of government for Beatrice. Thomas Sharp, an 18-year-ohi lad from Corslcann, Tex., got caught In the bumpers while attempting to crawl through a train to avert a policeman at Falrbury and his toes were mangled. Several thousand peoplo attended tho ceremonies Incident to the unveil ing of the gran'.te-shaft commemorat ing tho celebrated Lone Tree of tho old California trail, two and a halt miles from Central Cty. After ou have seen the neroplano flights, heard Liberatl's band nnd grand opera singers, tho speed con tests, etc., do not forget to visit the Nebraska library commission head quarters at the stato fair and look uj the method of securing a traveling library for your town or community. Owing to the fact that of late n num ber of false alarms have been turned In "Just to see the horses make a run,' the firemen nt Hastings offer a rewnrd of $." to nnjone Informing them of the names of paitles guilty of such nn net. The gala day at Havelock to cele brato the opening of the new muni cipal water plant will be held on Au gust 26. It will be in tho nature ot a street fair with athletic stunts, a balloon ascension and various other attractions. Secretary Mellor announces that the state fair board has contracted for a gasoline lighting' plant that will fur nish 29 arc lights to light the track and the grand stand for night races and entertainments. A feature of the fair for young people as well es older ones will beday fireworks. L. O. Jones, who has served r.s presl dent of the Epworth ossemblj for fif teen years, was again re-electeu to that office. The other officers chosen for the year are: J. W."Embree, University Place, vice-president; Geo. L Tobey, Lincoln, secretary; C. E. Sanderson, Lincoln, treasurer; Rev. C. M. Shep herd, Lincoln, auditor; Mrs. C. L. Myers, Geneva, junior, superintendent; E. M, Furman, Hebron, missionary secretary; and Rev. I. F. Roach", Lin coln, secretary of Christian citizenship. Lightning, struck an old storage barn belonging to the Lincoln Traction company Friday night, destroying it and about a dozen cars. Because he wanted to enlist In the navy, J. V. Miller ot Lincoln sub mitted to an operation for straighten ing a finger which had grown crooked as a result of a fracture several years ago. Mrs. C. W. Martin of Fontanolle, la., and her sixteen-year-old daughter, Lurn, had a miraculous escape from death in one of the most spectacualr runaways witnessed In Lincoln In a long time. William Anderson 'of Tecumseh had one of his arms badly cut by flying glass from a pop bottle, which ex ploded while he was putting it in an Ice chest. The citizens of Valentine are put ting every effort into making tho fra ternal picnic, corn show and farmers' institute, which Is to be held there September 6 to 9 inclusive, four days of the biggest kind possible, Jacob Lehn ot Otoe county was tightening a bolt on a separator when his foot slipped, causing him to loso his balance and be thrown Into, tbe machinery. THAT AWFUL BACKACHE Cured by Lydla E. Pinknam't Vegetable Compound Morton's- Gap, Kentucky. "I suf. fered two years with female disorders. my neaitn was verj had and T hA continual backache which was simply awfuL I could not ntiitirl nn m faoft long-enough to cook a meais victual without my back nenrlv kllllncr ma and I would have such dragging sen. saiions x could iftd nnrfnnt In enrh alrin onnlrt nr,- ----..- w .UU, ywu.v. .IV. Buirm ugnt doming, nnu was irregular. I was completely run down. On ad. vice I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound and Liver Pills and am enjoying good health. It is -now more than two years and I have not had an acho or pain since I do all my own work, washing and everything, nnd never havo tho backache any moro. I think your medicine is grand and I praise it to .all my neighbors. If you think my testimony will help others you may publish it." Mrs. Ollib Woodall, Morton's Gap, Kentucky. Backache is a symptom of organic weakness or derangement. If you) have backache don't neglect it To get permanent rellclf you must reach the root of the trouble. Nothing we know of will do this so surely as Lydia . Pinkham's Compound. "Write to Mrs. Plnkham, at J.ynn, Mass for special advice. Your letter -will be absolutely confidential, and the advice free. DAISY nV KHIFW tttfWtott tllM. Nctt. ClMB. omuaeiiul, cmt Ittkcbup. IwNia mm. Cta'IMIlM Uportr, will not oa of Injur, anythtaff. Guaranteed effttt In. OlilllHhnM teat prvpaM lor 20c, nanoLP mnua IM D. Calk In. Bmalrt.1.1. B1TFMTC ftmntiM ma. in patent. Pro rt i m i tort your Id pi. oarM cngo bookfrra ITlUtenUd Oh. Ilos K. Whtngton. I. V. WjKBSSmF' 1 "-.BlVBah'A. 1 1 aw bSbbbw wM i 1 bBEsSUiCScIi3h3 Reason Enough. "What's the matter, old man?" asked the sympathetic friend. "Well," answered the Judge, "you aee, my wife nnd I have never been s able to get along very well. The re lationship has become so unbearable that we both want a divorce." "I see," answered the friend. "Then why don't you get one?" "Because," answered the Judge, sad ly, "I have sent all the bogus divorce lawyers to the penitentiary." SURE. Man in the Big Hat I've always made money out of politics. Man In Small Hat Are you a po litical orator? Man In Big Hat No; I'm the leader of a brasB band. The musicians al ways get paid, but the orators are tx pected to talk for nothing. AT THE PAR80NAQE. Coffee Runs Riot No Longer. "Wife and I had a serious time of it jhlle we were coffee drinkers. "She had gastritis, headaches, belch. Ing and would have periods ot sick- , ness, while I secured a daily headache that became chronic. "We naturally sought relief by drugs without avalL for It fa now niin enough that no drug will cure the dls nnuioer orug (coaee) sets up, particularly, so Ion n tha ,. which causes the trouble is continued. M-inauy we thought we would try leaving off coffee and usln Pnnrnm t noticed that my headaches disappeared iiko magic, and my old 'trembly nerr ouBness left. One day wlfa m tv you know my gastritis hM gone?' "One can hardly reallca wlmt Tn.. am has done for us. "Then we besan to talk n nth.. Wife's father and mother wwe both coffee drinkers and nuffnrra tvi. headaches left entirely a short time after they changed from coffee to Poatum, "I began to enquire among my par ishioners and found to my astonish ment that numbers of them use Post um in place of coffee. Many of the ministers who have visited our par sonngo have become enthusiastic cham pions of Postum." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellvillo,"lnpkgs. "There's a reason." Krer rmd the above letter? A aew fnr appear from time to time. The SSI iraaulaa -- k .". " mmm -;::;-" "" " an j -i -V .Tip ' VJ.V . " !.-.' K , 'V. jm v S 1 . ? Vf ' : " --J-ataaaaaaaaaaaaaajaaa a i iMW'imii ' nawwajja f7Af . .tvua1alBbrM'