Newspaper Page Text
Wayne County News.
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
' JESUP GEORGIA.
ns or THE WEEK
LATE NEWS OF THE WORLD
TERSELY TOLD.
SOUTH, EAST, NOHTH AND WEST
Notes From Foreign Lands Through¬
out the Nation and Particularly
the Great South.
Southern.
The census bureau announced the
population of Mlssiouri. The state
has 3,293,335 now, against 3,106,665
In 1900, an increase of 6.0 per cent.
Dewey L. Hamer has been appoint¬
ed postmaster at Statesville, N. C.,
■ucceeding John W. C. Long, who
was relieved “for the good of the serv¬
ice.”
Fire wiped out a whole business
J)lock at Gulfport, Miss., at a loss of
|$400,000. The Commercial hotel, the
Elite theater and the postoffice were
destroyed.
James F. Easterling, the bookkep
«r for Bustillo Brothers & Diaz, cigar
manufacturers of Tampa, Fla., who
was shot by striking cigar makers
(two weeks ago, is dead as a result of
the wound.
Safe crackers entered the People's
Bank at Pikevllle, Tenn., and crack¬
ed the safe, but got no money. The
robbers then shot up the town. The
men were finally frightened away by
returning fox hunters.
While descending the steps of the
main building at the Appalachian ex¬
position in Knoxville, Tenn., arrayed
in a hobble skirt, Miss Helen Hint
of Kentucky fell and was painfully
Injured.
A. F. Abney, a well known citizen
of Mineral Springs, Ala., near Bir
£ d ingham, by Sam was Johnson, shot and a instantly negro. kill- The
Bhooting occurred in the heart of the
olty, and no cause 1 b known for the
act
Tudor S. Rogers, a student of the
University of Chattanooga Law
School, has fallen heir to $197,000. He
Is a nephew of Albert and Mary Lou¬
ise Woeltge of Stamford, Conn., who
died two weeks ago, leaving an estate
to go to decendency. Mr. Rogers re¬
ceived a telegram confirming the fact
that the estate would fall to him.
Maj. William E. Wailes, chief of
the staff of Gen. Joseph Wheeler, in
the Confederate army, during the Civ¬
il war, died at his home in Dalton,
Ga. He was seventy-three years old,
and his death removes all but one of
General Wheeler’s old staff officers.
His funeral and burial took place at
Selma, Ala., his old home.
In conformity with a parents’ prom¬
ise that in the event of her death she
should be buried at sea, a casket
containing the body of Miss Marjorie
Miller was conveyed from New Or¬
leans down the Mississippi and,
heavily weighted, was consigned to
the waters of the gulf. Miss Miller
•was drowned August 28 in the Tal¬
lulah river, near Tallulah fi’aUs, Ga.,
while bathing with a party of friends.
State Senator W. B. Jones of Nortl
Carolina attacked Democratic Na¬
tional Committeeman and Editor Jo¬
sephus Daniels of the Raleigh News
and Observer on one of the principal
streets in Raleigh and a fight fol¬
lowed. The trouble grew out of pub¬
lications in Daniels’ paper reflecting
on Jones and his father, Colonel Ar
mistead Jones, who is solicitor of the
sixth judicial district of North Car¬
olina. Mr. Daniels was badly bruised
about the face, and Jones carried a
scarred lip as a result of the encoun¬
ter.
General.
The Chicago Record-Herald and the
Chicago Daily Tribune announced
that the price of the papers will be
reduced to 1 cent. Heretofore both
papers have sold for 2 cents.
The big organ in the Carnegie Mu¬
sic hall, Pittsburg, Pa., is a partial
wreck and the $10,000 keyboard re¬
cently installed is a mass of ruins.
The automatic device used to drop
the keyboard out of sight aud to raise
It to the level of the stage, broke
while being tested.
Antonio DeLuca, an Italian passen¬
ger on the steamship Aneonia, who
was refused entrance to this country
at the port of Philadelphia, because
it was believed he was insane, leaped
overboard from the vessel while near¬
ing New York. The ship was stopped
and a boat picked up DeLuca, but he
was dead.
One man was killed and much prop¬
erty destroyed by dynamite and fire
as the result of a riot among miners
at Monarch, Colo., a mining camp.
The plant of the American Olive
company at Los Angeles, Cal., the
largest of its kind in the world, was
totally destroyed by fire. Loss $400,
000, with insurance of only $125,000.
The origin of the fire is a mystery,
as the plant has been shut down all
summer and the company had only
within the past week put a force of
men at work cleaning up and prepar
Ing for the' coming season.
For twenty minutes Wolfboro, N.
H., was the center of a cyclonic wind
such as never before visited New
Hampshire. It left in it3 wake un¬
roofed whole groves of trees and top¬
pled over gravestones and monuments
in Lakeview cemetery.
Joseph H. Montgomery was appoint¬
ed postmaster ’at Birmingham, Ala.,
succeeding John R. Carter. Mr. Mont¬
gomery Is an Alabama iawyer and a
republican well acquainted with both
President Taft and Postmaster Gen¬
eral Hitchcock.
Fred Greenwood, the wealthy sev¬
enty-two-year-old Norfolk, Va., wid¬
ower, who believes that when a man
reaches his age he marries for com¬
panionship on simply a business
proposition, terminated an unromantic
courtship by marrying Mrs. Reu& F.
Crowell, thirty-seven years his junior.
George Robert Carter, former gov¬
ernor of Hawaii, and a Yale classmate
of Gifford Pinchot, arrived in New
York City with his family, on the last
stage of a trip around the world,
which they are making in an auto¬
bile. The party came from Europe
this way via Quebec.
Shay Pellman, the negro assailant
of 10-year-old Nancy Rankin, was giv¬
en a death sentence by the jury at
Stamford, Ky. Judge Walker set De¬
cember 16 for the execution. The ne¬
gro was taken by officers to Lexing¬
ton for safe-keeping, and the troops
have departed for home. The town is
quieting down.
All departmnets of Harvard univer¬
sity opened for the 275th year of the
Institution. Without actual registra¬
tion figures it was estimated that the
institution would Include about 5,000
students this year. The freshman
class looked to be the largest In the
history of the university. Last year
numbered 780.
Twenty-five dollars is the price said
have been paid for Joseph Kaniskl,
four years old, his father making
sale to his employer. The trans¬
was revealed in Detroit, Mich.,
when Kaniski was sentenced to 30
day3 in the house of correction for
selling his little boys’ go-cart which
he had purchased on contract and
to pay for.
Gen. Frederick Funston, In com¬
at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., paid
his bill and left a Kansas City hotel
serving notice that he did not
to stop at a hotel which at¬
its bell hops in the uniform of
United States army captain. It is
understood that other army of¬
ficers indorse the action taken by
Funston, and that the hotel
to be tabooed, unless a change is
in the uniforms of Its bell boys.
Washington.
Announcement was made of the ap¬
by President Taft of Wil¬
liam H. Northrop as collector of cus¬
at Pensacola, Fla., to succeed
John E. Etiliman.
R. S. Reynolds Hitt of Illinois, son
the late representative who for
years headed the house aom
on foreign affairs, was appoint¬
United States minister to Guate¬
President Tatf signed the order
will place assitant postmasters
first and second class offices, and
their clerks under the classified
on December 1 next. The or¬
was agreed upon during the se¬
of cabinet meetings.
If the postal savings banks prove
any measure to be the success
President Taft and Secretary
expect, no more Panama
bonds are likely to be issued,
the big ditch will be dug with
loaned to the government by
depositors of postal banks.
The awakening of American enter¬
to the commercial possibilities
the countries of South America Is
to make itself felt. Great
Germany and Spain, all of
had extensive trade with the
of the south, apparently are
a portion of that commerce
the United States, France and
are gaining it.
Foreign.
Aviator Frohlmann, who fell 150
while making a flight near Mul
Germany, is dead. The machine
demolished.
Japan and Russia have entered into
another agreement which so far has
not been given wide publicity. Its
Is intended to prevent much of
agitation that has been going on
in both countries, when some act of
government has affected the
The authorities deny reports of a
in Japan of the naval ex¬
fever that marked the policy
the government three or four years
and brought about much outside
and suspicion. The total
in the naval expenditures for
current year contemplated in the
it is pointed out, is less than
five millions of gold dollars. Japan's
dreadnaught, the Kawachi,
will be launched October 10 at Yoko¬
suka. The keel was laid last ApriL
Wynmalen, the aviator, established
new world's record for altitude at
Mourmelon, France, rising to a height
9,121 feet. The earliest best mark
8,409 feet was made by the late
Chavez. Wynmalen rose until
motor failed him and then made a
perilous descent
Federico Boyd, recently elected sec
ond designate, assumed the presiden
cy of Panama on the retirement of
Acting President Mendoza. He will
retain this office until the arrival of
Pablo Arosomena, the first designate
who will become president.
NEW YORK DEMOCRATS
NAME DiX FOR GOVERNOR
Smoothness of Convention Pro¬
ceedings Showed Harmony.
■num rooms
Sicond Place oc Ticket Goes to Thomas T.
Conway—Dix Yielded to Solicitation of
Leaders With Reluctance.
i
Rochester, N. Y.—A state conveu
vention that will go down in political
history as one of the most remarka¬
ble in the history of the Democratic
party closed by nominating John A.
Dix, chairman of the party’s state
committee, and a wealthy Washington
county business man, to run on a Pro¬
gressive platform of the widest type.
The platform, framed to cover the
issues which the Democratic leaders
believe were inadequately met by the
Republican convention at Saratoga,
gained no less attention and approval
than the candidate.
Regarding the platform there was
from the first little or no divsion of
opinion.
Congressman William S. Suizer was
the only other candidate for nomi¬
nation for governor who took his case
before the delegates, and his defeat
was decisive. Out of 450 votes he re¬
ceived only 16.
Thomas F. Conway was named for
lieutenant governor.
But the candidate was not chosen
until Charles F. Murphy, leader of
Tammany Hall, who, by virtue of his
213 delegates, was in a position to
control the convention, had canvassed
the merits of no less than fourteen
others. “I said I would give them an
up-state candidate, and I’ve done it,”
was Mr. Murphy’s comment.
The convention proceedings that
followed were marked by a smooth¬
ness and rapidity which Democrats
say indicated the harmony of their
organization.
COTTON CONDITION.
Average of 85.7 Against 70.7 Per Cent.
Last Month Shown In Reports.
New York.—The Journal of Com¬
merce and Commercial Bulletin says:
The condition of cotton, on an aver¬
age date ot -'September 23, as ascer¬
tained by over 1,800 special corre¬
spondents to the Journal of Com¬
merce and Commercial Bulletin \vas
66.7 per cent., against 70.7 per cent,
last month and 59.5 per cent, a year
ago at this time. This is a drop of
6 points, being less than in any of
the past ten years, except in 1906,
when the deterioration amounted to
only 3 points. The average deterio¬
ration for the past ten years, accord¬
ing to these special reports, is 6.7
points, while the average ten-year
condition la 67 per cent.
The heavy depreciation in Oklaho¬
ma of 18.9 points was due chiefly to
dry, hot winds and the boll worms.
Texas passed through the month with
only a loss of 2.3 points, owing to the
comparative absence of the boll wee¬
vil. Drought, however, caused pre¬
mature opening. Arkansas, Louisiana
and Mississippi lost 10:5 points, 8.3
points and 7.1 points respectively, ow¬
ing largely to the boll weevil and hot,
dry weather.
Minister a Suicide.
Chicago.—Rev. Arthur W. Little,
one of the most prominent and pop¬
ular Episcopal clergymen in the Unit¬
ed States, rector of what is probably
the richest Episcopal parish in Amer¬
ica, and the recipient of distinguished
honors from Oxford university, is
dead at his home in Evanston, a sui¬
cide, his brilliant mind having given
way under the weight of worry over
the fact that his wife had been men¬
tally unbalanced for the past five
years.
Alabama Man Tarred and Feathered.
Columbus, Ga.—Indignant that a
man should allow his motlffer to be
publicly chastised by a woman of al¬
leged questionable character without
even once coming to her rescue, a
crowd of citizens of Phenix City, Ala.,
tarred and feathered John Burnside, a
married man, 35 years of age.
127,823 People in Richmond, Va.
Washington. — Census figures for
Richmond, Va., given out by the bu¬
reau give that city a population of
127,823. This is an increase of 42,
678, or 50.1 per cent., in 1900, when
the city’s population was 85,050.
Wisconsin G. O. P. Very Radical.
Madison, Wis.—What probably is
the most radical platform adopted in
a generation by .a Republican conven¬
tion was promulgated by Wisconsin
Republicans here. The document is
radically progressive.
.. World’s Prize Cow.
Columbia, Mo.—Chief Josephine,
the prize cow of the University of
Missouri, now bids fair to become
the champion milk cow of the world.
Eight months ago keepers of the ani¬
mal began a race for the record for
one year. In the time that has elapsed
since then her milk yield has been
greater by 2,100 pounds than that of
any cow that has ever lived. Joseph¬
ine's daily yield has been 89 pounds.
Her record for a single day is 110.2
pounds. The cost of feeding is 40
cents a day.
ROOSEVELT IN CONTROL
Ex-President Elected Temporary Chairman
N. Y, Republican Convention.
Saratoga, N. Y.—The
state conveation this evening
nated Henry L. Stimson of New
City as its candidate for
The nomination of Mr. Stimson
one more victory for Colonel
velt, who personally led the fight
the nomination of his candidate,
pleting the unbroken series of
umphs from the moment the
tion was called to order until its
adjournment.
The entire state ticket as made
by Colonel Roosevelt, Senator
and his advisers went through
out a hitch.
Colonel Roosevelt said that
would take the stump in the
paign. He said that he would try
speak in every county in the state,
although he would not cancel
Southern trip, which begins on
day of next week, or his trip to Iowa
early in November.
AMERICA FEARED.
French Journal Says United States
Has Right to Fortify Panama.
Paris, France.—The Temps, discuss¬
ing the intention of the United States
to fortify the Panama canal, admits
the right of that country to do so, and
attributes the disquieKide in England
and Japan on this score to fears as
to the real purpose of the Aemrican
government.
After pointing out that the treaty
of 1803 reaffirmed the article in the
Hay-Pauncefote treaty of 1901 to fa¬
cilitate the construction of the canal,
guaranteeing that the canal should be
free and open and that no act of hos¬
tility shall be committed within it.
The Temps draws attention to the sig
nificant omission from section 1, arti¬
cle 3, of the treaty of 1901 of the
words, “the canal remaining open in
time of war, even to ships of the bel¬
ligerents." This provision is included
in the Constantinople treaty with ref¬
erence to the Suez canal of which the
said clause is otherwise an exact re¬
production.
MUCH COUNTERFEIT MONEY.
Secret Service unearths Extensive
Counterfeiting Scheme.
Washington.—The secret service
has unearthed what appears to be a
bold and extensive attempt at coun¬
terfeiting national bank notes.
tl is intimated the country may be
flooded with them. Notes of the same
denomination and issue were found
on the Pasadena, Cal., National Bank,
was discovered issued on the First
National Bank cf Williamsport, Pa.
Chief Wilkie is convinced that all
the bills are being made by the same
gang and has rushed orders by tele¬
graph to every secret service men in
the country to spread the drag nets.
The Williamsport counterfeit Is of
a higher degree of perfection than
those on the Pasadena bank, which
were pronounced by the secret serv¬
ice men to be the best they had seen
In recent years.
National bank notes in every city
will be examined immediately by se¬
cret service men Immediately by se¬
cret service men to determine how ex¬
tensive the issue has been.
TILLMAN MAY RETIRE.
Physical Condition Will Keep South
Carolina Senator Out of the Race.
Augusta, Ga. — Information from
South Carolina points is that it is
practically settled that Senator B. R.
Tillman will not offer for re-election
to succeed himself.
The statement is made that, while
the senator is not a sick man, his
physical condition, as a result of the
two recent attacks, is such that he
will not be aide to stand the strain
of active public life longer and fur¬
ther; Mrs. Tillman, knowing this, will
object to the senator going into an¬
other campaign.
China on Verge of Revolution.
Washington.—China is declared to
be on the verge of another upheaval
similar to the Boxer uprising. Gov¬
ernment officials in China express
the belief that an outbreak at any
time would not surprise them.
LaFollette Is III.
Rochester, Minn,—United States
Robert M. LaFollette, accom¬
panied by Dr. Philip Fox, his family
physician, arrived in Rochester to
consult Doctors Mayo regarding the
ailment from which he has been suf¬
fering for several years.
Postmasters Out of Politics.
Washington.—As a first result of
cabinet sessions which are In
progress at the white house, it was
announced that President Taft would
issue an order placing approximately
S,000 assistant postmasters in the
United States under the protection of
the civil service law and taking them
entirely out of politics. It was said
also that the President would recom¬
mend to congress this fall that all
second and third class postmasters be
placed under civil service rules as
quickly as possible.
Tax Traffic All It Will Bear.
Chicago.—The contention that the
railroad among competing lines which
has the largest investment, is the one
on which rates should be based, was
advanced here before the interstate
commerce commission in the plea for
higher rates by western roads.
The opinion was expressed by G- C.
May of New York, a public account¬
ant. Mr. May also asserted the
amount the shipper would bear rather
than lose the service was his limita¬
tion of what a carrier should charge
the
NEWSPAPER PLANT IS
WRECKED BK DYNAMITE
Establishment of Los Angeles
Times Destroyed By Explosion.
TWENTY EMPLOYEES ARE KILLED
Manager of Paper Asserts Tbat Labor Onions
Are Responsible for Disaster, Bat
the Unions Enter DeniaL
Los Angeles, Cal.—The building oc¬
cupied by the Los Angeles Times was
destroyed by fire, which was precipi¬
tated by an explosion. Nineteen men,
employees of the newspaper, are miss¬
ing, and are believed to have perished
in the flames.
Three hundred men digging unceas¬
ingly for thirty hours in the debris
have unearthed five of the nineteen
bodies buried in the ruins. The shov¬
el brigade is aided by a huge rail¬
way crane and derrick which is lift¬
ing out the remains of heavy steel.
Later, an attempt to destroy the
residence of Gen. Harrison Gray Otis,
publisher of The Times, by means of
an infernal machine, was made. Fol¬
lowing as it did the explosion which
with great loss of life destroyed the
buildings and plant of The Times, a
suspected effort to blow up the auxil¬
iary plant of the paper and the find¬
ing of a powerful Infernal machine in
the residence of Secretary Zeehand
laar of the Merchants and Manufac¬
turers’ Association, the attempted
outrage has wrought this city to an
intense state of suspense and excite¬
ment.
General Otis and the other respon¬
sible heads of the paper unequivoca¬
lly charge The Times building disas¬
ter and the narrowly averted attempts
at further destruction of life and prop¬
erty to labor unions.
With equal emphasis the leaders of
union labor here and throughout the
United States repudiate the accusa¬
tion, and locally they have offered all
aid in their power in the effort to de¬
tect the culprits.
A quarrel with the Typographical
Union twenty years ago resulted in
making The Times a non-union paper.
General Otis has fought unionism with
every resource at hts command. He
has been ably seconded in this fight
by the Merchants and Manufacturers'
Association, whose secretary was the
object of frustrated dynamiting.
In the hope of securing information
as to the perpetrators of the outrage,
Mayor Alexander has offered a reward
of $10,000. This, together with the
offers of local newspapers and labor
organizations whose leaders have an¬
nounced a determination to assist in
the search fro the criminals, raises
the total amount of proffered rewards
to $1S,500. The city’s offer is intend¬
ed to tempt any one having knowl¬
edge of a dynamite conspiracy to di¬
vulge the secret. There are no con¬
ditions.
The succession of tragic events and
the rumors of attempted outrages set
the populace of Los Angeles in a state
of mind bordering on panic. Hundreds
of policemen and detectives were
busy in every direction running down
clues and endeavoring to locate the
alleged perpetrators of the crimes.
But two arrests have been made and
these were only on suspicion.
The original suspicion that the dis¬
aster was due to the discharge of high
explosives was practically confirmed
by the finding of other bombs and the
statements of those persons in the
building or nearby at the time of the
the explosion.
The president of the local typo¬
graphical union has issued orders that
union printers may work in conjunc¬
tion with non-union printers of The
Times in any of the local newspaper
offices in getting out the edition of
The Times. This was announced af¬
ter a consultation of the union men
and the managers of the other news¬
papers.
Indianapolis, Ind.—President James
M. Lynch of the International Typo¬
graphical Union issued a statement
relative to the explosion that wreck¬
ed the plant of the Los Angeles
Times. He states that the union Is
in no way responsible for the catas¬
trophe.
Forty Sailors Drowned.
New York City.—There was given
out from the battleship New Hamp¬
shire a list of twenty-nine men who
were supposed to have perished by
the swamping of a barge or whale¬
boat which was being towed to the
vessel at anchor in the Hudson river.
The barge, heavily loaded with sail¬
ors, returning from shore leave, was
towed into the heavy swells of a
steamboat, The barge plunged into
the trough between two waves, one
of which broke over the side and
swamped it.
150 Killed in Mine Explosion.
Eagle Pass, Texas.—One hundred
and fifty miners, possible more, are
believed to be dead in mine No. 2
at Palau, Mexico, in the Las Esperan
zas mining distriee, operated by the
National railway lines of Mexico as
a result of two explosions, presuma¬
bly because of an accumulation of
gas. The men entombed are mostly
native and Japanese miners, although
thfe number includes several Ameri
cans. An explosions occurred in the
same mine a year ago, several hun¬
dred miners losing their lives then.
DOCTOR
ADVISED
OPERATION
Cured by LydiaE-Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Galena, Kans. — “A year ago last
March I fell, and a few days after
there was soreness in my right side.
In a short time a bunch came and it
bothered me so much at night I could
j! g;.; IPIH M not growing sleep. larger It kept and
ill by fall it was as
IS I I I large could as a ben’s egg.
*1 not go to
lll^a &■ m f bed water without bottle applied a hot
to that side. I had
one of the best doc¬
tors in Kansas and
be told my husband
that I would have to
be operated on as it
___was caused by rupture. something I like
a tumor a wrote
to you for advice aud you told me not
to get discouraged but to take Lydia
E. Pinkham’s vegetable the lump Compound. in
I did take it and soon my
side broke and Mineral passed away.” Galena, —Mrs.
R. R. Huey, 713 Ave.,
Kans. Vegetable Com¬
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
pound, made from roots and he^bs,
has proved to be the most successful
remedy for curing the worst forms of
female ills, including fibroid tumors, displacements,
inflammation, backache, irregu¬
larities periodic pains, bear¬
ing-down feeling, prostration. flatulency, indiges¬
tion, and nervous It costs
but a trifle to try it, and the result
has been worth millions to maxa
Buffering women. writ&
If you want special advice
f orit toMrs.Pinkham, Lynn,Mass.
It is free and always helpful.
Headache
“My father has been a sufferer from sick
headache for the last twenty-five years and
never found any relief until he began
taking begun taking your Cascarets. he Since has be had has
Cascarets never
the headache. They have entirely cured
him. Cascarets do what you recommend
them to do. I will give you the privilege
of using his name.”—E. M. Dickson,
1120 Resiner St., W. Indianapolis, Ind.
Pleasant, Do Palatable, Potent, Taste Good.
Good. Never Sicken.tWeaktn or Gripe.
10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold In bulk. The sren
uine tablrt stamped C C C. Guaranteed to
eiue or your money back. ay
Love's Crime.
George was a manly fellow, yet, sur¬
prising as it may seem, he was guilty
of a grave charge, a criminal offense—
theft, for had he not many times,
stolen kisses from his fair sweet¬
heart?
Maude, one of the most lovable of
girls, was equally guilty as an acces¬
sory; she received the stolen property.
Each seemed to have perfect confi¬
dence in the other, however, and when
sentence was pronounced by a proper¬
ly qualified official, they decided to
serve their time together.
They remained loyal to the end,
neither making any effort to have
their sentence abrogated or shortened,
but during the course of their long
term together several small offenses
were directly chargeable to them.—J.
W. B. in Puck.
Why He Wouldn't Hurry.
They were riding to church and
were late. Several of the party were
worried and one remarked; “The au¬
dience will be waiting.” “Well," ob¬
served the old pastor (who was to
preach that forenoon), “don’t let’s fret
over it if we are a little late. It re¬
minds me of the man who was being
taken to execution. His guards were
greatly exercised over the fact
they could not possibly get there
time. ‘Never mind,’ said the poor
low, philosophically. ‘Don’t fuss ovet
it The people can wait. There’ll be
nothing doing till I get there.’ ”—
Christian Herald.
Win by Being Prepared.
Those who are prepared for the
worst are the ones who generally get
the best of It
“The Smack”
of the
“Snack”
Post
Toasties
and Cream
A wholesome, ready
cooked food which
youngsters, and older
folks thoroughly enjoy.
Let them have all they
want. It is rich in nour¬
ishment and has a win¬
ning flavour—
“The Memory Lingers”
POSTCM CEREAL CO., LTD.,
Battle Creek, Mich.