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THE SANDERSVILLE HERALD.
WOLF AT THE DOOR—“1 NEYtH COULD STAND FACTORY SMOKE”
—Cartoon by W. A. Rogers. in the New York Herald.
SOMETHING NEW IN SWINDLES.
Amazing Progress In the Higher Branches of the Criminal Art is Shown
by the Elaborate Cleverness of the Ruse Used to Separate a
Pennsylvania Hotelkeeper From His Hard-earned Wealth.
Sonic progress in the higher branches of criminal art is argued
by the following nnrrntivc of how a Pennsylvania hotel keeper was led
to part with $1 ft,<)()() of his hard earned wealth under the delusion that
he was betting it on n prize fight gotten up for the amusement of a
party of Chicago and Philadelphia millionaires. Of course the fight
was arranged solely for tho benefit of the hotel keeper. The “million
aires’’ are represented in the Itogues' Gallery.
The elaborate cleverness of tills swindle also argues that the coun
try is getting educated. A novelist nnd thousands of newspaper re
porters have explained again and again the trick of the “wiretappers,”
whirh has trapped many a man that would not have bet u dollar on a
straight horse race. Gold bricks are seldom sold nowadays, und the
green goods game appears to he so generally known by this time that
a confidence man is driven to his wits’ end for devlcesto part the conic-
on from Ills hoard. One ennnot help thinking that the same amount of
ingenuity expended on nominally legitimate schemes for getting some
thing for nothing or directed into absolutely honest effort would hove
paid the inventors of the fake prize fight much more handsomely than
their originality in crime did reward them.
JV
■few York City.—Swindling opera-, that they bad a prize lighter by the
tlons which have netted more than
$1,000,000 a year for the last three
years will be revealed, the police be
lieve, through the capture of Freder
ick GondorlT.
. Gondorff was arrested on the
charge of having swindled Frederick
Holznagel, a Scranton hotel proprie
tor, out of $15,000 on a fake prize
fight, and It Is said the evidence will
implicate him in the robbing of Will
iam F. Walker, who looted the New
Britain Savings Bank of more than
$500,000.
At the examination In the Tombs
Court every effort will he made to
have Gondorff held on the complaint
of Holznagel, In order to give the de
tectives an opportunity to locate the
band of swindlers. Although using
Holznagel's charge to hold Gondorff,
the detectives of the Central Office
are after much bjgger game, in the
shape of bonds, valued at $120,000,
which were part of the loot stolen by
Walker from the Now Britain bank.
These bonds, consisting of $49,000
of Chicago and Eastern Illinois Rail
road securities, $35,000 of Chicago,
Milwaukee and St. Paul bonds, $15,-
000 Rochester and Pittsburg bonds
and a number of other smaller par
cels, have never been disposed of,
and it is declared that they are still
In tho possession of the members of
the swindling band to which Gondorff
is suspected of belonging.
Hand llnd Immense Resources.
The Immense resources of this hand
1s Illustrated by the story of Holzna
gel, who declares that, while they
wore duping him, they made a flash
of $230,000. He says that this was
in genuine currency and not stage
money, ns he personally handled the
cash, and declares that it would have
been impossible to deceive him.
According to Holznagel the swind
lers pursued the same tactics with
him as they did with Walker, with
the exception that they used the prize
fight game, instead of the wire tap
ping scheme. One of the band, who
went by the name of Webber, stopped
at Holznagel’s hotel In Scranton and
gained the honiface’s confidence by a
legitimate business proposition.
Webber represented himself as a
bond salesman. Holznagel Is inter
ested in some coal lands in Tennes
see which he is anxious to sell. On
learning this, Webber told Holznagel
tilt he knew some millionaires who
were also interested in coal lands,
and that he might he able to dispose
of Holznagel’s holdings.
The specific millionaires mentioned
were the Cudahys, of Chicago. Web
ber, after some correspondence, ar
ranged a meeting with “Mr. Cuda
hy's secretary," by the name of
“Blair." It was while the business
of disposing of the coal property was
being discussed that the swindling
game was broached. Blair said that
his employers were "sporty," and
A French system of alternating eur-
rents, said to permit the use of twelve
keys on one wire, was laid before the
International telegraph conference at
Lisbon. *
Water, looked upon us 'he tamest of
liquids, Is as great an explosive ns
dynamite under certain conditions. In
one day water breaks up more earth
and rock than all the gunpowder, gun
cotton and dynamite in the world do
in a year.
Experiments have recently been
made with un tnllammuhle paste on
bullets. When the bullet leaves the
muzzle the paste Ignites, leaving a
stream of smoke zehind it. nnd en
abling the marksman to watch its
course and, if necessary, correct Ills
aim for lhe next shot.
Prussic acid Is popularly known ns
the most deadly poison extant; hut
cyanide of cacodyl Is far more dead
ly. A millionth part In the atmosphere
of an airtight cage caused the instant
death of four dogs in succession. The
vapor front a few grains diffused In
the atmosphere of a roomful of people
would cause the death of all present,
— Montreal Standard.
The Strange Night Rider “Tobacco War.”
Trial Is now being made In Parts
of a new system of paving. Steel is
laid on a bed of cement, after the fash
ion of wood paved fords, the inter
stices, too, being filled v/ltlt cement.
It Is hoped in this way .to avoid the
dangerous holes which soon appear in
wood paving, owing to the unequal
wearing of the blocks. The new pave
ment is expected to last for ten years.
Inhabitants of a well known region
of tho canton of Bern, Switzerland, a
district famous throughout, the Alps
for Its large breed of cattle and Its
brand of milk, are spoken of as "cof
fee-faced and flat-chested.” At the
last military draft 18 young mountain
eers were called up, and of these all
but four were rejected.
This result Is said to he not uncom
mon In these Swiss valleys, where
cattle and milk are the main sources
of income. The peasant feeds himself
too much on the milk and grudges
himself the meat.
name of Sullivan whom they were
willing to back for any amount. Blair
said they were in Bridgeport, Conn.,
and that Sullivan was with them. He
then unfolded a scheme by which
lie and Holznagel were to win $2 0,-
000 from tho "Cudahys.” He
said that lie knew a prize lighter in
Boston, Collins by name, who could
defeat Sullivan. Holznagel agreed
that it was an easy way to get money
and the prize fight was arranged.
Holznagel put tip $5000 as his por
tion of the bet. Blair furnished the
other $15,000. The "Cudahys"
backed Sullivan for $20,000. The
fight was pulled off in the Bridgeport
Fair Grounds. Of course Collins
lost, but Blair declared it was on a
fluke, and begged Holznagel to back
him for another fight.
Got $10,000 More.
i Tho "Cudahys" offered to bet three
to one on the second fight, and Holz
nagel hurried to Scranton to secure
more money. He returned with $10,-
000, which he put up on Collins, and
again he lost. It was at this fight
that $230,000 was bet, Blair ostensi
bly making wagers amounting to
$75,000. , - i
After the fight the "Cudahys”
turned tho money over to Blair, their
secretary, telling him to deposit it
and send checks to the winner. Blair
then made a proposition to Holznagel
that they run away with the money.
He lold Holznagel to go to Albany,
to the Ten Eyck, where he would
meet him and divide. Holznagel
went, but Blair failed to meet him,
and Holznagel came to New York
and consulted Lawyer John M. Cole
man. of No. 115 Broadway, who laid
the matter before District Attorney
ierome. Holznagel was taken to the
Rogue’s Gallery, where he identified
the pictures of Frederick Gondorff
and James Morgan, alias Deafy Mor
ris. as the two men who posed as the
Cudahys. The arrest of Gondorff
followed, and he was Identified by
Holznagel as one of the hand.
The arrest of Gondorff immediate
ly led the police to connect the men
of the hand with the Walker swind
lers. His brother, Charles Gondorff,
was arrested shortly after Walker’S
flight, and was charged with having
been a party to the swindle, which
looted the New Britain Bank. Charles
Gondorff was held for trial and after
ward was released on $25,000 ball,
furnished by "Boh” Nelson. He is
now running a gambling house in At
lantic Cily.
Walker, however, refused to impli
cate any one in his stealing. He said
that he did not remember the names
of the men who swindled him. His
taciturnity destroyed the last hope
the Pinkertons had of recovering the
money. Frederick Gondorff's arrest,
however, lias changed the prospect,
nnd it is now believed that the $120,-
000 in bonds may be recovered.
To prevent damage to underground
pipes by electrolysis an Insulating
material for the pipes themselves has
been placed cn the market. It is a
covering of a specially prepared as
bestos paper in laminated form, thor
oughly Impregnated and coated with
a waterproof insulating compound. It
acts as un insulating medium between
the pipe and the ground, arV, being
made of indestructible materials, is
permanently durable. The covering 13
from one-quarter to three-eights-of an
inch thick and is made in three-foot
sections to fit various sizes of pipes. Ait
joints are sealed by strips and insula
ting cement which are furnished with
(he covering. For sleeve couplings,
special sleeves are provided.
COST OF COAL IN LIVES.
There Are 3000 More Women
i Than Men in Evanston.
Chicago.—Is Evanston the uni
versity suburb, destined to become
an Adamless Eden? The question
was presented with great force to the
authorities of the suburb when the
census takers completed the- annual
■school census of the city.
The new census shows a surplus of
almost 3000 women In a population
Mont Blanc Climbers
Were 130 Last Year.
Geneva.—Statistics have just been
published showing that during last
year 130 Alpinists climbed to tho
summit of Mont Blanc. Twenty of
the climbers were English and eight
were Americans. Fourteen of the
climbers were women, the majority
being English.
The ages of the Alpinists varied
of less than 25,000. There are 13,- I from fifteen to fifty-five years, and
837 women and 10,896 men In the ! among them were a prince, a general,
city, a total of 24,673, and a ruajor-| two barons, a priest, several doctors,
ity of 2971 Jor the women. j lawyers and a Swiss chimney sweep.
Days Like the Ku Klux Rian Setmingly Revived by
the Bitter Hostility Between the Organized
Planters and the Tobacco
Buyers.
1,451 Persons Were Killed in 1907 In
Pennsylvania Alone.
Statistics telling a story of Pennsyl
vania's enormous production of coal at
a frightful cost of human lives was
put into The Congressional Record by
Congressman Cooper of Unlontown,
Penn. He was discussing an item In
the Legislative, Executive and Judicial
Appropriation hill allowing $150,000 for
an investigation of mine disasters and
submitted the figures therewith.
Mr. Cooper stated that the produc
tion of bituminous coal was 149,559,047
tons. During the same period the ten
anthracite counties produced 70,836,-
082 tons.
The cost to procure this enormous
production, expressed in human lives,
was 1514. During the ten years 1898
to 1907 inclusive the number of fatal
mine disasters rose from 200 in the
bituminous districts in 1898 to SoO last
year, and from 411 in 1898 in the an
thracite districts to 708 in 19o7.
This rapid increase, Mr. Cooper de
clared, should demonstrate for urgent
necessity for the adoption of some
means of prevention.
Lack of uniformity in legislation, it
is said, is responsible in part to lax
enforcement in states where the laws
are good, because the operators in
states where the statutes are all right
think that by being compelled to ob
serve the stringent regulations of their
own states they are put at a disad
vantage in competitive fields. Mr.
Cooper thinks that a Federal Inquiry
would go far toward bringing about
a desirable uniformity.—New York
Times.
Shields for the Soldier.
Recent experiments at Sheffield,
England, suggest the possibility that
in this cenutry shields may once more
form an Important part of the equip
ment of an army. Steel shields, three
millimetres in thickness and about 150
square inches in area, have been de
vised. which afford complete protec
tion against bullets fired from th^
service rifle at a range of 100 yards'
The small size of ’.lie shield, which
weighs only seven pounds, requires
that the soldier shall lie prone on the
ground in order to he sheltered. Each
shield has a loophole for the rifle and
studs at the sides, so that a series of
them can he linked into a continuous
screen. The idea is that by the use of
such shields the necessity of dieting
trenches may he avoided.—II* rj.oz’s
Weekly.
Stories of night-ride^ _raiding and
burning the tohac’o plantations and
storehouses of Kentucky have found nl-
most daily place in tile newspapers to
be revived In the South, and all be
cause of a strange fight upon the To
bacco Trust.
Tobflfcco, the most historic among
American agricultural staples, has been
the first to fall completely within the
grip of n trust, the Tobacco Trust, of
course, which, since 1900, when It cap
tured the English mntket, has In the
mailer of prices had things pretty
much Its own way especially in South
western Kentucky and Northwestern
Tennessee, which raise the hulk of ex
port tobacco, and have to contend with
the Regie in addition to the Trust. The
Regie is collectively the machinery
through which tobacco is obtained for
the four or five foreign nations which
make of its importation a highly prof
itable monopoly. The ltcgle antedates
the Trust, but until the Trust came in
to the export markets was In a degree
subject to competition.
Tobacco growers assert that compe
tition has been wholly eliminated, if
not by actual collusion betwixt Trust
and Regie at least by a highly effective
understanding. Through this under
standing, say the planters, prices were
put below the cost of production. This
is denied vehemently by men on the
other side, who say that prices fell
through glutted markets, together with
a condition of disorganization in the
trade. Truth probably lies between the
two extremes. When beliefs crystal-
ize into action, it is immaterial wheth
er they be true or false.
Four years ago the tobacco growers
began to organize. At present the or
ganization comprises more than 27,000
members, through whom it controls
the greater part of the export crop.
Members pledge their crops to It l'or
three successive years and agree fur
ther to limit acreage in strict propor
tion to the amount of lund under til
lage. The aim of the organization,
known officially as the Planters’ Pro
tective Association, is to put up tobac
co prices and keep them up. This
would be ridiculously easy with the
whole crop In hand. Here, there, every
where, men stand out against it. They
are known as ‘‘hill billys." Oddly
enough, they were the first to be ben-
efltted by the association, in that they
sold tobacco and continue to sell it for
bigger prices than can be got for the
pooled crops.
The reason is not difficult to find.
The Trust and the Regie have natural
ly a warm heart toward the hill billys,
who are at once their allies and their
weapons against the association. Hill
hilly prosperity is as ashes in the teeth
of the association hotheads, for hardly
anybody likes to suffer delay, priva
tion, actual loss, in the cause of the
common good and then see those who
refuse to suffer anything reap the ear
liest and surest reward of the offering.
The result is a situation, poignant,
piteous, yet recalling almost humorous
ly the story in the hack of the old blue
spalling hooks, In which the farmer
pelted the bad hoys preying on his.ap
ples first with tufts of grass. t>:U only
when they were laughed at as inef
fectual did he have recourse to stones.
First the hill billys were entreated,
even besought, to coine in the fold;
then they were threatened, then find
ing them persistently stiff-necked, they
have got the stoning with a vengeance.
The stoning has been nt the hands of
the night rider. He Is the most sinis
ter among recent American develop
ments, a man obsessed, doing evil that
good may come, with the ruthlessness
of a Cossack and the daring of a cru
sader.
Officially the association disclaims
him and all his works. 11 is, however,
beyond question that the fear of him
has sent many men scurrying into its
ranks. He developed early In the
game, but at first did no more, nor
worse, than scrape plant beds, thus de
stroying all chances of a tobacco crop;
warn away offensive tobacco buyers,
and leave scrawled coffins or bundles
of matches and switches at the doors
of hill billys. Waxing hold and holder
with each year, he has swooped upon
five towns, burning or dynamiting to
bacco factories controlled by the Regie
or the trust, has burned Individual in
dependent tobacco houses, also bains,
outhouses, threshing machines, sacked
wheat in the field, blown up other
»threshers—fiendishly in one or two in
stances by concealing dynamite or old
iron in the wheat sheaves going
through—has shot up sleeping families,
whipped helpless and defenceless men,
pulled up young tobacco, slit the
throats of pasturing stock and warned
away, under pain of death, those who
had incurred his displeasure.
Even that is not the worst that can
he set down against him. He has vir
tually paralyzed the machinery of jus
tice, so terrorizing the countryside,
that nobody dares to speak out against
him. He rides masked and armed,
sometimes ten strong, oftener a hun
dred— sometimes even three hundred.
He is still riding and raiding through
out Southwestern Kentucky, notwith
standing State troops are under arms
there and citizens on tne alert.
He has a definite purpose—It is to
make the trust and the Regie under
stand that they must in future do busi
ness with the association, and with
nobody else. The association has
raised tobacco prices until they spell
year’s tobacco crop is made on credit,
those who do the work getting advanc
es from landowners and factors. Thus
there is pressure to sell almost as soon
as the crop Is safe In the barn. Sale
through the association has meant a
long wait—a full year often. Mean
while, the men who raise It, going rag
ged, even hungry, are affronted with
sight of hill billys flaunting new
clothes and jingling money in both
pockets. The association can make
but scant advances. Since the panic,
indeed, it lias hardly made any worth
the name. With the trust nnd the
Regie buying from it as fast ns tobac
co could he fetched in, all that would
he changed. Thus the rank and file
would he delivered from temptation to
have the beneficent organization and
turn hill hills for good.
What the final Issue is to be passes
the wisest ken. Throughout the to
bacco district feeling Is tenser, bitterer
than even In the days of the civil war,
when neighbor was arrayed , against
neighbor. Strife over the tobacco situ
ation divides alike churches, schools
and general society. The scats of It
will go down through at lea^t two gen
erations. There is general unrest—peo
ple lie down trembling and rise up In
fear. Some say the night riders are
set on by the trust, which hopes thus
to make the best people fall away
from the association. The t\sociatldn,
indeed, goes to the length of joining
with the authorities In offers of re
ward for the arrest of such evildoers.
Still, the weight of authority favors
the assumption that the violence,
though not wrought in the name of
the association, is the work of those
who are blindly devoted to its cause.
—New York World.
A WOOD YARD CLEANING.
Uncle Sam Is Ridding National For
ests of Their Rubbish.
Uncle Sam 1ms begun a houseclean
ing job that will probably last twen
ty years. The old gentleman always
did hale to see rubbish lying around
in the wood yard, being mighty neat
and particular in his habits, nnd it
wasn’t the work for women folk, and
the capitalist hired man couldn’t be
trusted, so he just rolled up his sleeves
and went to work himself. The na
tional forests Is the official name o^
the backyard space that Uncle pro
poses to gel shipshape within a gen
eration, and then he will invite the
neighbors In to have a good time and
shoot all the bears and squirrels they
feel like. The underbrush and fallen
Umber accumulated for years are not
only n general Injury to the live trees,
but a menace in case of a forest fire,
so the thing to do is to clean up eve
rywhere and burn the rubbish.
A thinning out of inferior trees, leav
ing the finest and most perfect stand
of timber, is going on at the same
time. As a matter of fact, Uncle Sam
is too shrewd to bend his own back
at the job, but he supervises, through
his foresters, the work of private con
tractors and sawmill men. He lets
them cut down the undesirable trees
und makes them destroy the waste and
old stuff. A ranger goes through tho
forest and marks the Inferior trees,
such as have punk knots, spike tops,
low forks nnd scars of fire or frost.
These make good merchantable lum
ber, while their removal betters the
environment of the ehoiee specimens
that are saved. The sawmill man
doesn’t dare to take anything except
the marked trees; and he must cut
them so they will not damage stand
ing trees when they fall, and must,
leave n low stump Instead of a high
stump, as under the old reckless meth
ods. After settlers have helped them
selves to what they Want of the waste
the rest Is heaped up in conical piles.
All the small stuff, underbrush and
branches, is put in tho centre and the
heavier pieces stacked on thte outside.
It. wouldn’t do to bm*. tills mass In
dry season, because that would start
a forest fire that would clean up too
thoroughly. Nature supplies safe
means of solving the problem during
tho winter by wrapping heavy blan
kets of snow around the conical heaps.
Along comes the forester with a kero
sene can, bores his way into the centre
of tho pile, puts on the oil and applies
a match. The fire burns slowly and
eats its way through the heart of the
to tiie surrounding trees, because the
blanket, of snow keeps them down, and
waste material. The flames don’t rise
in a few hours a circle of black coals
in Rie snow shows where the pile of
waste stood.
After cleaning and burning the for
est officials look after replanting In
places that need It. Sometimes the
tops of first class seed trees are shak
en over the groumi, a rough and ready
way of planting.—K« w York Tribune.
abounding prosperity, notwithstanding
its weak spot from the beginning, has j rapt admiration to
been money. Move than half each | The Advance.
Leads Then All.
An instructor hi the Military Acad
emy at West Point was once assigned
to conduct about the pi ace the visit
ing parents of a certain cadet.
After a tour of the post, the proud
and happy parents joined tho crowd
assembled to witness evening parade
a most imposing spectacle. The
march past aroused the father of the
cadet to a high pitch of enthusiasm.
“There!” he exclaimed, turning to
his spouse, “isn’t that fine? But,’’ he
added, “I shall not he happy till my
boy attains the proud position that
leads ’em all.” And he pointed In
the drum-major.—■
§y ruptffirts
“fEWttloonna
tes&fcatt
arhos duo to L(
joi\:
---'ad
l jtipnt,o n ,
— - —— — 1 VI » I V L •
Best forMenVompn nnd CKilJ.
ren- young and Did.
lo £et its
Arts naturally, acts t'ndy Q ,
a Laxative.
ts HeneftcinlljM,
R^the bonuino vvhui
name of tlte Com-
Always Luv
lias the jull
ry CALIFORNIA
Fig Syrup Co,
r* HsJwdc&rA tsH ■ - a.
bywl
iy whom it is manufactured. printed
front of every parknOr.
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGC
—t—>y umuGGISTS
one size only, regular price 50< r . r Utllo!
FOURTEEN HUNDRED AND
SIXTY-FIVE MEN
with teams are selling our products to
FARMERS in thirty-four different dates
Seventy usetu 1 artides that country peopli
need. We furnish thegoodsanJ give ts
tinu to turn them into money. Addr ,
J. R. WATKINS CO.; Winori., Minn
WOOD, IKON and s ||, ,
MMaARbcOMPANY 1 . AUCi't: VI'A. «. A
Curran
CURES
CANCERS
Cancers, Carbuncles and all kinds Femslo
Troubles PERMANENTLY Cured.
Write at nni-o for rnfrrenrr, terms, el, \|,„u
with lull, rlsiii Instrurtlnns sent l>, t when
I Mities cannot lie seen, nildres.
J. M. CURRAN, - 167 1-2 Decatur Si.
With respect to educated Inserts,
(here Is the spelling bee, suggests tho
Salt Lake Tribune.
Hicks’ Uapudlne Cures Women’s
Monthly Pains, Backache, Nervousness
and Headache. It’s Liquid. Effects imn*
diutejy. Prescribed bv physicians witlVT.es't
id 50c., at drug storm,
result*. 10c., 25c., an a
Wisdom In a Brickyard,
A very sensible bit of advice ex-
pressed in homely language was giv
en by a man not long ago to nn ex
citable and quarrelsome friend. It
was in a brickyard, and two of tho
workmen had engage,] In an angry
dispute, which culminated In a fierce
encounter.
In the skirmish one of the com
batants was nastily hurt on the head,
nnd the employer, who happened to
come on the scene of action when
the fight wa3 finishing and was a
man of more temper than (".crotlon,
advised the injured one to gei a war
rant for the other’s nrrost.
While the matter was being dis
cussed by a number of workmen who
had gathered round, a big, burly fol
low, who had heard everything and
seen the whole affair, made his way
to the man with the damaged cranium
and said;
"You don’t want to get no warrant,
Bill. You just go to the chemist’s
shop and get yerself two pieces of
plarster—good, big onel—and put one
piece on yor head an’ the other ou
yer mouth, an’ you’ll he all right."—
Tit-Bits.
EQUINE.
“Did you enjoy your auto ride with
him?"
“No, the gasolene gave out and we
had to push the machine home."
"That wasn’t much fun."
"No. I never like horseplay."—
Houston Post.
ALMOST A SHADOW
Gained 20 lbs. on Grape-Nuts.
There’s a wonderful difference be
tween a food which merely tastes
good and ono which builds UP
strength and good healthy flesh.
It makes no difference how much
we eat unless we can digest it. It J*
not really food to the system until
Is absorbed. A Yorkstate woman
says:
“I had been a sufferer for ton years
with stomach and liver trouble, an
had got so had that the least bit o
food such as I then knew, would g ve
me untold misery for hours nfte
eating.
“I lost flesh until I was almost a
shadow of my original self and m
friends were quite alarmed about m •
“First I dropped coffoe and " se
Postum, then began to use Grap®
Nuts, although I had little f ,llt *
would do me any good. ,
“But I continued to use the
and have gained twenty poum 3
weight and feel like another P el! ’
In every way. I feel as if
truly begun anew for me.
“I can eat anything 1 Hhe n< j
moderation, suffer no 111 effects,
my feet from morning until 11 ‘
Whereas a year ago they had to *
mo away from home for rest '
others cleaned house for me,
spring I have been able to do
Belf all alone. v- u t 9
“My breakfast is simply Grap® ^
with cream and a cup of Postum, ^
sometimes an egg and a P L
toast, but generally only Grape ‘
and Postum. And I can w ° r o ‘ n0
noon and not feel as tired a
hour’s work would have M nid „
year ago.” “There’s a Iie “'’"" na ttl8
Name given by Postum 1 (0
Creek, Mich. Read, “The B° a
Wellvllle," In pkgs.
Ever reud the above letter- ^
one appears frontline I" 1 )liu , n
are genuine, true, *md full 01
iu teres t. /
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