The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, May 09, 1907, Image 6
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| PEACE BIRDS DEPART,
I' ?Drawn by Cartoonist
SPECTACULAR MARINE PAGEAN'
In Spotless Array Uncle Sa
in Hampton Roads the
Jamestown Ter-CenNorfolk,
Va. ? Americans have
turned from thoughts oMhe International
Peace Conference to the most
splendid international war spectacle
this country and probably the world
? has ever seen. The Jamestown Tercentennial
Exposition, the newest
A1\?-v milifurr r?o_
IWVi 1U & lclll , Mbi 11 uc a uxiinui j ? *am
, val, marine and historic exhibition,"
'.according to the official statements.
History will be given its due at the
Exposition as well as the arts of
peace, but the distinctive feature will
be the sight of Hampton Roads?al;
ready a famous naval arena?alive
with the fighting craft of many nations,
the shores glittering with soldiers
in friendly rendezvous.
Thp remarkable naval display is
made possible by the fact that the
Jamestown Exposition is the first
great American fair held on a deepwater
harbor. Practically all the civilized
nations have accepted the President's
invitation to send sections of
thfeir navies. As the summer advances
the varying types of fighting
craft, from saucy torpedo boats to the
largest war vessel afloat, will pass
through the harbor in endless procession".
The United States Government
will have an extensive display, showing
the evolution of guns and fighting
ships from the early days of the Nation
to the present. There will also
be 3 large encampment of militia,
Tegular army and foreign troops,
s "There are twenty-five battleships
ana jbrhisers in the line headed by the
Connecticut just off the Government
pier at Fortress Monroe, which trails
away up the broad channel leading to
Norfolk. The vessels are anchored
MVeral thousand yards off the Expo- 1
sition shore, and, arranged in a huge
semicircle, are visible from every part :
of the grounds.
Every ty?e of fighting craft in the
American navy is represented in the
present rendezvous. The battleships
range from the 16,000 ton Connecti- '
cut and Louisiana down.to the all but
abandoned T^exas. the oldest Ameri- ;
can battleship and sister of the Maine, ,
Which was wrecked in Havana harbor,
i The Texas was built at the Norfolk ;
navy yard many years ago, and, being j
a local product, is to remain at the
Exposition as a permanent feature of
the naval exhibit. With her sight
guns and paltry 6315 tons of weight (
T?o<! rol-i on ranwd nlnnirsirie the
I It mammoth Connecticut, which mounts
; twenty-four guns and displaces 19,000
tons of water, offers a striking
.example of the progress of the American
navy since thedays of 1SS6, when
the Teias and the first Maine were
authorized by Congress.
The Brooklyn, bearing on her after
turret the memorial plate simply and
eloquently inscribed "July 3, 1898,"
will also remain a permanent naval
exhibit during the seven months of
,the life of the Exposition.
The cruisers of the fleet are all
mbdern craft, though the variance in
size between the largest and the
smallest is as great as that which
marks the heavier vessels of the battle
class.
The armored cruisers Tennessee
and Washington, each of 14,500 tons
and__mounting twenty guns apiece,
are the heaviest of the cruisers. The
smallest cruisers are the Denver and
V the Cleveland?3100 tons each?the
j|?y third class of the protected vessels of
the navy. In the cruiser class the
most interesting vessel is perhaps the
;l Brooklyn, the flagship of Rear-Admiral
Schley in the battle with Cervera's
squadron off Santiago, Cuba.
h : , The fleet has been arranged so as
to give the visitors to the Exposition
| the' best possible opportunity for
* viewing the fighting strength of the
American navy. The glistening white
hulls, spotless in their new coats of
paint, ana tne duii superstructures ui i
the two and three piped line-of-battle
ships and armored and protected
f cruisers, form a marine panorama as
viewed from the water front esplanade
of the Exposition grounds such :
as- has seldom, if ever, before been ;
presented tc the American public.
The Navy Department has pre-1
pared a lis: cf the foreign vessels to
be in Hampton Roads.
$*: "" "
jj|V. Toulon Arsenal l ire.
Five large buildings were destroyed J
by the fire, alleged to be incendiary. '
A ?at the Toulon (Franc?) arsenal.!
Thirty men were injured and the sub- j
marine and to:_:edo static::-; were
damaged.
?-,:'
W'i':v her Unfavorable.
Coll worth or has prevailed over an
e onus a by large area, retarding agri- ,
cultural progress as we!! as trade in '
light weight wearing apparel audi
ai* otii.r spiing .goods.
tov: . .
hjif. + ' . A. \ -A,.: .
WAR BIRDS GATHER.
DeMar, for the Thiladelphia Record.
[OF ALL NATIONS AT NORFOLK
m's Great Armada Awaits
Foreign" Guests of the
tennial Exposition.
The British fleet will consist of four
armed cruisers?the Good Hope, Argyll,
Hampshire and Roxbourg. under
the command of a Rear-Admiral.
The German fleet will consist of the
armored cruiser Roon and the protected
cruiser Bremen, under the
command of a Commodore.
The Austrian ships will consist of
the armored cruiser Sankt Georg and
the protected cruiser Aspern, under
the command of a Commodore, who
will be promoted to be a Rear-Admiral.
The Brazilian fleet, under a RearAdmiral,
consists of the battleship
Riachuelo, the cruiser Barroso and
the gun vessel Tamoyo. The Brazilian
fleet will be the only foreign one
containing a battleship.
The Argentine Republic will send
the training ship Presidente Sarmiento
under the command of a commander.
The Japanese fleet, in command of
a Vice-Admiral, will consist of the armored
cruiser Trukuba and the protected
cruiser Chitoso.
It is noticeable that while Japan
sends some o? her finest warships to
represent her navy, and one of her
foremost generals, the Russian Government
will not be represented by a
single ship, nor is it known that any
officer of her army will come here.
The other foreign countries to be
represented will be France, Italy,
auu ruMu^ai.
Italy will send two vessels in command
of a captain, the armored cruiser
Varese and the protected cruiser
Etruria. Chile will send the protected
cruiser Ministro Zentene under the
command of a captain, while Portugal
will send a protected cruiser,
probably the Don Carlos. Spain has
not signified her intentions of sending
any war vessels.
The entertainment committee of
the fleet is now arranging a water
carnival. Each vessel of the great
fleet has been asked to provide a
float for the occasion. The pageant
will be on some evening yet to be determined.
Several ships have already
decided on the floats they will
send. Three will send three of their
cutters to represent the three old-time
craft which brought the Pilgrims to
Jamestown.
Another float will represent the
Great Harry, a renowned ship of war
of that period, and on the request of
the Admiral the Navy Department is
now searching the archives to know,
just what the vessel was like. Then
there will be pirate ships, gondolas, a
float showing Neptune and his trident
and much else besides. During
the carnival the ships will be iliuminated,
and there will be a hundred
searchlights playing over the brilliant
scene.
Aside from such diversions the
strong armada will have little to do
in the waiting days. The ships long
ago completed their toilets and are so
cnJr and snan thev hurt the eye. No
where. is, there an atoning blemish.
It is all spotless buff and white,
touched off here and there with the
glint of polished steel and the shimmer
of shining brass.
From the flagship definite announcement
came that the fleet will
disperse .on May 15. Two divisions
will then go to sea for manoeuvring
purposes, one division will go to navy
yards for such minor repairs as may
be needed, and one division will remain
here until relieved by one of the
divisions coming in from manoeuvres.
The four divisions, sixteen battleships
in all, are to reassemble here on June
10, set apart as Georgia Day, when
there will be a celebration in honor
of the birthday of the mother of President
Roosevelt.
As the foreign ships arrive they
are officially welcomed by a boom of
cannon from the Connecticut, ttie
flagship of Rear-Admiral Roblev.D.
Evans, commanding the Atlantic
fleet. All the American vessels now
at anchor belong to this fleet.
The unique feature of the Exposition
will be the harbor for small craft,
with an area of 1,2$0,000 square
feet, inclosed by piers, costing the
United States Government $4u0,000.
Ranker Arrested For Renting Wife.
Mrs. Augustus T. Post, aged sixty,
whose thirty-two-year-old husband, a
banker, is rated as a millionaire, had.
him arrested cn a charge of knocking
her senseless in their apartments at
ihe Holland House, in New York City.
Rank President Arrested.
Charles C. King, the president of
the First National Bank ol: Scotland,
S. D., was arrested in Chicago,
charged with misuse of the banri ?
funds.
' MOYER-HAYWOOD HOWL
Attorney for Men Accused of Murder
of Governor Steuenberg Issues
Their Statement.
Clarence Darrow of counsel for
Haywood, Moyer and Pettibone of the
Western Federation of Miners, who
are charged with complicity in the
murder of former Governor Steunenberg,
issued a formal statement at
Boise, Idaho, Wednesday night. It
was anticipated that the statement
would be a direct reply to President
Roosevelt's "undesirable citizen" letter,
but the statement is general and
the references to the president are to
former letters of the excutive. The
statement in part is as follows:
"We have been charged with kill- j
ing ex-Governor Steunenberg with a
dynamite bomb. Our trial is to begin
May 9. The details of the assassination
have been published
broadcast for more than a year. The
press of the country, especially of
that section of Idaho where we will
be placed on trial, has bitterly denounced
us,' and the Western Federation
of Miners, to which we belong.
"We were not in Idaho for years
before the crime was committed. Under
the law we could not be extradited
from Colorado. But in spite of
this, we were arrested on a perjured
affidavit, charging that we weTe in
Idaho at the time of the commission
of the crime, and that we immediately
fled from the state, and on this
perjured affidavit the governors of
Idaho and Colorado kidnaped us in
the night time, refused us an interview
with family or a chance to appeal
to ti}e courts and brought us on
a special train a thousand miles from
home and into a state and community
systematically poisoned against us by
newspapers and officials. We have
been in jail fourteen months and de
j mea oan, wane constantly ueiuaiiuius
a trial. Every effort has been made
to teach the farmers, business meh i
and working men of the community
that we are asassins and outlaws.
"Our case is about to be reached
and the president of the United States
?in no way interested, officially or
otherwise?sends two letters broadcast
over the country charging us with
guilt and crime. These are republished
in every paper in the land, and especially
every paper in Idaho.
"The governor of Colorado adds
his words of spite and venom to those
of the president and says that we are
not only guilty of the crime charged,
but many others. While the presiident
of the United States and the
governor of Colorado are sending out
their statements, the judge of tnis.
county has brought acitizen before
him for contempt on the charge that '
he tried to influence the mind of h
prospective juror by saying that the
state administration was trying to
railroad us. On the appearance of this
man in court, the judge told the
state's attorney that he. should have
this obscure farmed indicted for felnnv
hecause he tried to influence the
mind of a prospective juror. The pres
ident knows how much greater weight
will be given to his words than those
I of an obscure citizen.
"If we are to be tried in court, every
law-abiding citizen, however great'
or humble, should do everything in
his power to cool the passions of man
rather than add fuel to the flames. If
we are to be' thrown to the mob the
officers should at least open our prison
doors and give us some chance to
defend ourselves."
ROUGH MAY DAY IN PARIS.
City Witnessed Scenes of Disorder
and Many People Injured.
The expectation in Paris that May
day would pass without violence was
not realized. The day began in calm,
but toward the evening the working
center in the vicinity of the tradesunion
headquarters became the scene
of serious disturbances.The
sum total of the day's operations
was over one thousand arrests;
twenty persons, including policemen
and citizens, badly injured and a
greater number of persons suffering
from contusions, or from being tram-'
pled.
GIRL GETS BIG HUBBY.
Heavy-Weiqht Brinson, Tipping Beam
at 5S5, Weds Again.
W. T. Brinson of Waycross, Ga., who
weighs 5S5 pounds and is claimed to
be the largest member of the order
of Elks in the world, was iflarried
Sunday afternoon to Miss Lucios Allen
of Sophortcn. The wedding occurred
I at the Methodist parsonage.
Brinson is a wealthy turpentine operator
and is a wiuower cf about a
year. Miss Ailen, it is said, weighs
only 105 non^ds
IMMIGRANT RECORD BROKEN.
Within Twenty-Four Hours 20,729 Arrived
at New York.
All records for the number of immigrants
arriving at the port of New
York in a single day were broken in
the twenty-four hours ending at 8
o'clock Thursday night. By that hour
fourteen steamships had brought into
the harbor since S o'clock Wednesday
night 20,720 immigrants.
This exceeds by fully 5,000 the
largest number of immigrants ever
landed in a single day.
MORE GASH NEEDED
% \
To Complete the Buildings at
Jamestown Exposition.
BOND ISSUE IS PLANNED
Company Finds Itself in Sore Straits
and Appeals to Government Without
Success?Bona's Amount
to $400,000.
A Norfolk dispatch says: To complete
in detail the construction of the
Jamestown exposition and liquidate
all the floating indebtedness of the
exposition company, the board of directors
of the Jamestown Exposition
Company, at a meeting late Saturday
evening, authorized the issuance of
$400,000 in bonds, the 500 acres of improved
property, including magnificent
permanent buildings, being offered
as security. The matter of negotiating
the bonds was left with the
board of governors and Treasurer
Beaman.
Washington Not Surprised.
A Washington special says: An- |
nouncement .that the Jamestown Extosition
Company finds itself impoverished
before the exposition buildings
and grounds are completed was
received with no surprise by govern-,
ment officials.
From the time the company came
to congress and to the executive departments
of the government with requests
for appropriations there has
been a tendency among the government
people to refuse as far as possihlp
all concern in the Jamestown ex
position. It was only tfie last days
of the last session of congress that the
attempt to secure a substantial appropriation
was successful.
That the company was in sore
straits for money was evident ten
days befbre the exposition was formally
opened. A meeting of the
board of directors of the campany was
called, and it was decided to postpone
the opening owing to the lamentably
unfinished condition of the buildings
and grounds. This would subject the
company to law suits for damages to
concessionairies, an expense it was in
no condition to stand, even if the exposition
had to be opened in'an unprepared
state.
Before the announcement by the
company that it needs $350,000 to
complete the buildings and grounds
an attempt was made to get help
from the United States government,
but the government was not be won
over to the plan, and the company
then evolved the plan of getting out
a bond issue, secured by the land on
which the exposition stands.
PROMISES EX?\CT JUSTICE.
Roosevelt Puts HayWood-Moyer Affair
Un tn Labor People.
In a letter read Sunday before the
Central Federation Union, in New
York, President Roosevelt states that
if evidence is submitted to him showing
that there has been a miscarriage
of justice for or against Moyer
and Haywood, awaiting trial at Boise.
Idaho, charged with the murder of
Former Gpvernor Steunenberg, ho
will bring such evidence to the attention
of the attorney general for
such action, if any, as it may be in
the power of the federal authorities
to take.
SOUTHERN WILL FIGHT.
Rate Reductions in South to Be Resisted
in Courts.
News reaches Washington that the
Southern railway will resist in the
courts the attempt to put into effect
any reduction of rates as provided
for by various state legislatures in
the south.
Alabama has passed a law providing
for a 2 1-2 cent rate, North Carolina
has placed the rate at 2 1-4 cents
11 <.?>]. mlloe Innir and I
Uil all ILfaujj UTCi VV/ ivno mmv*
Virginia has adopted a measure for a
flat rate of 2 cents.
? * ;
SETTLED FOR $600,000 LESS.
McAfee's Damage Suit Against Railroad
is Compromised.
The suit of W. H. McAfee versus the
Atlanta and Birmingham Air Line railroad,
owned by the Seaboard Air Line,
for $625,000, was settled by agreement
at Birmingham, Ala., Wednesday, for
$25,000. This is the largest suit ever
instituted in the Alabama lower court
and grew out of a claim for pay of
construction work done on the road
between Birmingham and Atlanta. It
had been on trial nine days when settled.
BRONZE STATUE OF McCLELLAN
\
Unveiied at Washington With Fitting
Ceremony?President Speaks.
With civic and military ceremonies,
and in the presence of a distinguisned
audience the historic equestrian
statue m bromie of General George
11. McCieilan erected under the aus
pices of the Army or tha Potomac, j
was unveiled at Washington Thursday,
^resident Ilooeevelt made the principal
speech.
t
v.-.V,/;;---.
' ' ' ' ? . 'v V
V . 4 ' ; " - -..
i EXCHANGE
IS ENJOINED.
Price Charges That Cotton is Classi*
fied by Improper Standard?Seller
is Favored.
Upon application of Theodore H.
Price, Justice Bischoff at New York,
Thursday, granted a temporary injunction
restraining the clasisfication committee
of the New York cotton exchange
from classifying cotton by
what are alleged improper standards.
Under the order of Justice Bischoff,
the exchange is enjoined from classifying
cotton by samples drawn from
bales so long'before the time of classification
as to enable them to become
bleached, from classifying samples unless
the bale from which they were
taken can be identified, unless they
are compared with proper grades, or
without affording an opportunity for '
comparison with standards of every
grade, or from classifying * cotton
which is unmerchantable uecause of
sand and dirt.
The order also requires the classification
committee of the exchange to
deliver to members of the exchange
a set of the type of standards used
by it in certifying and classifying
cotton.
Mr. Price declared in his petition
that the classifying committee classified
samples which are not tagged so
as to identify the bale from which
it was taken, that the. classification.
is made by improper standards and
| that the committee is influenced by
undue pressure to produce an overclassification
in favor of the seller.
He asks that the injunction be made
permanent.
Late Thursday night, Henry W.
Taft, represeming.the New York cotton
exchange, secured from Judge Bischoff
a modification of the temporary
injunction. It was represented to
Judge Bischoff that, the - injunction
might seriously interfere with current
contracts to the Injury of the members
of the exchange. Judge Bischoff
accordingly modified the injunction so
that it would not take effect pending
a hearing in uie matter iuunuaj.
RECORD PRICE FOR CONVICTS.
Alabama Gets $45.25 Per Month Each
for 175 of Her Wards.
The ihaking of a contract for 175
convicts at $45.25 each per month,
which has been closed by the state of
Alabama, sets a new pace in the matter
of service on the part of the wards
of the commonwealth, while it serves
to indicate the great demand for re- liable
labor on the part of the industries
of the section. Tne contract was
with the Henderson-Boyd Lumber
company at Richburg. There was one
bid of exactly the same amount, but
for 100 men instead of IK.
The best contract other than this
one was that made with the Hand
Lumber company at Bay Minette, some
days ago, for $43, up to that time the
most remunerative ever made, it was
for 100 men.
There is a bad shortage of labor
with the lumber mills at this time,
caused by the farming people rushing
back to the farms for the spring plants
ing. . I
4 ' 1
ELEVEN BODIES RECOVERED.
All Victims of West Virginia Mine Explosion
Accounted For.
The bodies of eleven I dead have
been recovered from the Whipple mine
/near Charleston, W. Va., where an explosion
of gas dccurred late Wednesday,
and this was thought to be the
full, extent of the fatalities.
The number of injured is five. The
mine was very slightly damaged, and
the cause of the explosion is yet unknown.
' HOME WRECKER MEETS DOOM.
Husband Found His Wife and Physician
Together in Room.
Dr. Wayne McCoy, a physician at
South' Point, Ohio, was shot and instantly
killed Thursday night by Captain
John Dayis of the Portsmouth
i ferryboat. Captain Davis had returned
unexpectedly at midnight and found
Dr. McCoy in his wife's room.
PRESIDENT STANDS PAT.
Will Make Public Statement Declining
Nomination for Another Term.
A dispatch from Washington says:
President Roosevelt has decided to set
at rest all talk that he will be a candidate
for the republican nomination
for the presidency next year.
It is learned on the highest authority
that at the proper moment the
president will issue a statement to the
American people announcing his determination
in the matter.
- i
ADMINISTRATION TICKET
Will Be Taft and Hughes According to
Present Outlook.
Taft and Hughes is the ticket which
seems to the majority of the administration'followers,
and they point out
that the campaign is practically coni
ceutrated in the two states of Ohio
{-and New York.
| In each state the president has.been
; attacked personally and in each state
be has the right to ask for vindicaj
:lon*
|
v. .
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YOUR GRANDMOTHER USED IT.
. *
Bat She Never Had Solphnr in Sach
Convenient Form as This.
Your grandmother used Sulphur as her
favorite household remedy, and so did her
grandmother. Sulphur has been curing skin
and blood diseases for a hundred years.
But in the old days they had to take
powdered sulphur. Now Hancock's Liquid
Sulphur gives it to you in the best possible
form and you get the full benefit.
Hancock's Liquid Sulphur and Ointment
quickly cure Eczema, Tetter, Salt Rheum
and all Skin Diseases. It cured an ugly
ulcer for Mrs. Ann W. Willett, of Washington,
D. C., in three days.
Taken internally, it purifies the blood ,
and clears the complexion. Your druggist
sells it.
Sulphur Booklet free, if you write Hancock
Liquid Sulphur Company, Baltimore.,
/
Even the dignified man would rather
bend a little than go broke.
A Woman's Back I
Has many aches and pains caused by;' v?j
weaknesses and falling, or other displacement,
of the pelvic organs. Other symp- V;
toms of female weakness are frequent
headache, dizziness, imaginary specks or
dark spots floating before the eyes, gnaw- )$
ing sensation in stomach, dragging or t .
bearing down in lower abdomihal or pelvic
region, disagreeable drains from pelvic; ^
organs, faint spells with general weakness. . \
If any considerable number of the aboyo \ i };
symptoms are present there is no remedy!
th^t wrH^give quicker relief or a more per- j :
maient than Dr. Pierce's Favorite j
Prescy^?l>aSlt has a record of over forty | ^
years of curfet^ It is the most potent^'
Invigorating,mic ser.
vine k nown to med leal science. Itis made \
of the glyceric extracts of native medicinal
roots found in our forests aud con-, ' <
tains not a drop of-alcohol or harmful, or}
habit-forming drugs. Its ingredients are j
all printed on the bottle-wrapper and at~'
tested under oath as correct.
Every ingredient entering into "Fa-. ^
vorite Prescription" has tho written en- .
dorsement of the most eminent medical; ^
writers of all the several schools of prac-;
tice?morn valuable than any amount of? - ^
non-professional testimonials?though the
latter are not lacking, having been ton- >^jj|
tributod voluntarily by grateful patients.
in numbers to exceed the endorsements'
given to any other medicine extanv iot "-,ys
the cure of woman's His. <;
You cannot afford to accept any medicine' '' >'
of unknown composition as a substitute
for this well proven remedy of knowW:
composition, even though the dealer may
make a little more profit thereby. Your
interest in regaining health is paramount A
to any selfish interest of his and It is an
insult to your intelligence for him to try . $
to palm off upon you a substitute. You
know what you want and it is his business
to supply the article colled for. . > ?3
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are a* - m
original "Little Liver Pills" first put up
by old Dr. Pierce over forty years ago,
much imitated but never equaled. Little
sugar-coated granules?easy to take as
candy..
. The Age Limit. ' " > 5^
Pr&.ddent McCrea of the Pennsyl- ^ /'*
vania Railroad has acted wisely and
commendably in raising the age limit
at which men may enter the employ,
of his company from 35 to 40 yeaJ8. .; v^
There was never a mere senseless
notion than that which, would limit
the age of efficient service to 60 or . 5*
even 65. Many of the strongest men /.
in public and business life are over >.
60, and some of them are beyona 70.
Farragut was 60 at the beginning of
the Civil War, and Oyama was, over : }?
63 at the outbaeak of the war between
Japan and Russia. Hayrn wrote his . p
oratorio, "The Creation," after he was
67, Goethe finished his "Faust" ait S3 : .%
*-riA HnmhnlAt- his "Cosmos" at 76."*'
Among grand old men In the annals
of American statesmanship It Is suffi- $jls
cient to mention the. names of George ; Is
F. Hoar, John Quincy Adams and
Thaddeus Stevens. Henry Ward j:i|
Beecher never preached better than
in the last year of his life. J. Pierpont \ p
Morgan and H. H. Rogers, both over; " ^
60, do not yet begin to show signs of
senility, and Mark Twain is still "cut* 'j|
ting up," though -past 70.?Leslie's ,
Weekly. . i
, _ -i / ~
MAY HAVE DIED OF OLD AGE. ^
"They say Miss AHingham's mother ;t
used to be a grand opera chorus girl." |
"Used to be? Why, isn't she yet? ' $
Did she meet a Pittsburg millionaire?"
i?Chicago Record-Herald.
FRIENDS HELP . {/j
St. Pdul Park Incident. . .
? - < m
"After drinking coffee for breakfast
I always felt lanquid and dull,
having no ambition to get to my
morning duties. Then in about an '
hour or so a weak, nervous derange-: . "cement
of the heart and stomach would: ^
come over me with such force I: , ' f
would frequently have to lie down.
"At other times I had severe head- . ~ v
aches; stomach finally became affect-.
-J J cn (mnaired that I
t?U ttUU UigCOUUu ov ? ? '"ra^apiB
had serioub chronic dyspepsia and: >;
constipation. A lady, for many years ;::J
State President of the W. C. T. U.,, \ rV
told me she had been greatly bene' f
flted by quitting coffee and using f
Postum Food Coffee; she was troubled
for ' years with asthma. She
said it was no cross to.quit coffee
whqp she found she could have as
delicious an article as Postum.
"Another lady, who had been troubled
with chronic dyspepsia for years, *
found immediate relief on ceasing
coffee and beginning Postum twice a
day. She was wholly cured. Still ;
another friend told me that Postum
Food Coffee was a Godsend to her, ;
her heart trouble having been re
lieved aften leaving on cones ctiiu
taking on Postum.
"So many such cases came to my y
notice that I concluded coffee was
the cause of my trouble arid I quit
and took up Postum. I am more - J
than pleased to say that my days of
trouble have disappeared. I am well \
and happy." "There's a Reason."
Read, "The Read to V.'ellville," in