Newspaper Page Text
VOL. XI. NO 19.
INDIAN SENATORS
Go on Verbal “War Path”
cm Floor of Upper House,
REPARTEE WAS DRAMATIC
Owsn of Oklahoma and Curtis of Kan-
ssa. Both of Whom Boast Blood
«f the Red Man, Lock Horns
* in Debate.
A Washington special says: One of
the most dramatic scenes ever witness¬
ed in -She senate was enacted Thurs-
day when Senator Robert L, Owen, of
Oklahoma, insisted in tragic ttfaes and
" V t 8Ce owmg much emot,on that
8
the five tribes . of civilized Indians were
dead, and that he, a s a member of the
tribe of Cherokee Indians, was not u a -
der the control of the secretary of the
interior.
The event was rendered all the more
interesting by the fact that Mr. Owen
SenaSrcLZcnii tTf i?aw 10 ;
Hn,« L a th^ Tw hid TT L ,Y iJT A \f ft r 1
in senators senYoL r vein f in ,h the senate e t Y chamber. ,‘ WniS ^
“ tOSe ‘ ““TH
with the W stderation of the Indian
«l on ’»h the part , of , Mr. f Owen Yh to have 8 " 6 l that 0r
* L TTf !h Y 0 ,1
n !, C( 3
S blflr 'f Yh, h a *”! H T s *MT Z m r B
■Tr Mr. Curtis sought £ f to y Interrupt T , lr Mr.
Owen before the Oklahoma senator had
concluded his first sentence.
But, interrupted the Kansas sen-
ator, your property is under the con-
trol'-of the secretary of the interior,
and ^ou know it. ’
2 Mr. d Curtis ° “f; insisted upon Mr - M his OW view f- of ,
the,status .. . . of . the .. Oklahon.a , ,
US senator,
He not contend that the
■of the senator from Oklahoma, aside
from, that owned as a member of the
Cherokee tribe of Indians, was under
the secretary, but that his tribal prop¬
erty was, “I think you ought not to
be under control of the secretary, but
yon are,” he said.
“I agree,” quickly replied Mr. Owen,
"with the senator from Kansu,- 'hat i
ought, not to be. I disagree worn him
that r am.”
n»
The dramatic tones of the Oklahoma
senator startled the chamber, The
two senators of Indian blood were
facing each other twenty feet apart.
They both appeared to have lost sight
of all parliamentary rules, and were
carrying on a personal colloquy.
Mr. Owen proceeded to say the su-
prerue court of the United States had
declared that Indians holding allotted
lands are citizens of the United States.
Rising to his full height, his olive-
colored face showing that his pride
had been pricked by the suggestion
that he was under the control of the
secretary of the Interior, and with tone
most tragic Mr. Owen continued:
“The Cherokee nation can demand no
allegiance from me. I owe them no al¬
legiance. The only allegiance I owe Is
to my government of the United States
and to the state of Oklahoma. I say
the supreme court has passed upon
this matter, and I shall insist that It is
right that the word ‘late’ shfall be
included in that amendment.”
Mr. Curtis then took the floor.“When
you made that statement about the
Delawares being absorbed by the Cher-
okee tribe, of which you are a member,
you should have told how they were
swallowed up by the Cherokees,” he
exclaimed, pointing his index finger
at his antagonist.
Senator Carter came to the rescue
of the senate, and attempted to show
that both senators were right. He
saH he did not wonder that the Okla¬
homa senator resented the Idea that ha
was under the control of the secretary
of the interior.
MOTHER’S HORRIBLE DEED.
Kills Three of Her Children, Wounds
a Fourth and Suicides,
Mrs. J. C. Spires, wife of a farmer,
three miles west of Basil, f?‘To, Friday
killed three of her children, fatally
wounded a fourth, and then committed
■suicide. One of the children was
drowned in a well and the others were
shot and their throats cut. Mrs. Spirc‘3
took carbolip acid, shot. bCQspif and
cut her throat. The aiyv^ving child is
a boy four years old.
/
4 :
Wl \ - CLfi j&L ctuo.
THE OFFICIAL ORGA/N OF CLINCH COU/NTg.
HOM KRVILLE. GA„ FRIDAY, MARCH T> V HN)8.
WAR ON ROTTENNESS
And Corruption Will Be Relentlessly
Continued, Declares President in :
Address to Educators.
That there will be no let-ups of Pres-
ideut’s Roosevelt’s policy of warring
SJSUSTLfil, S'Z'Si
idem Wednesday in an address to the
delegates of the department of super-
imeudents of the National Educational
Association during tlielr reception at
the white house. Continuing, tile pres- :
ident gave his views on educational
methods rt considerable length, and
wilh characteristic vigor and - . s
"It Wednesday's business session of '
the association Oklahoma C.ty was
' :
selected as the next meeting place,
and officers were elected as follows:
\v it David'
Ohio- '. first 1 vice president g” *. ).)’ 7
, obn on \ils . v ;
’ Hrnider,
p reeidea t , s Ida BuKato,
x. y.. secretary A. C Nelson Salt
Kake City, Utah.
President Roosevelt said ’ in parT: ‘
••]. u ' * ‘ , n ' „ f
, , . *,°* , ltduty , aiarmJ , .. it
about yoj
come in contact with
hero and with forces that you repre-
sent physically. Fundamentally, in Its
family life and in the outside actlvUle-:
«* Us -Individuals, the country is bet-
f(?r apd n(jt worw lha „ , t tormerly
was. This does not mean that we are
^ , )e wc|Jsed „ we fail (o war aga inst
rottenness and corruption, if we fail
^ effectively with the forces
«f evil; and they waste their time who
a «k m. to withhold my hand from deni-
‘ns therewith. But it is worth while to
smite the wrong fo, the very reason
that we are confident that the right
' iYt u Yiat
tr more and more our peo
will see to it that the schools train
toward and not awBJ . fron , thr farm
‘ . h ‘ . . w ^ . .
^ about th „ of labor
in this country but we have not acted
up to our spoken words; for in our
education we have , tended , . . to . proceed ,
S^LVhT^icS'away ^ rrom*’
and mV; towrnrd labor.
“One thing that 1 would like to have
you teach your pupils Is, that whether
you call the money gained salary or
wages, does not make any real differ¬
ence, and that if by working hard
with your hands, you get more than
If you work with your head only It
does not atone for it to call the smaller
amount salary. The term dignity of
labor implies that manual labor Is as
dignified as mental labor; as, of
course, It. is. Indeed, the highest kind
' of labor is that which makes demands
upon the quantities of both head and
hand, of heart, brain and body.”
| LOCAL OPTION IN OHIO.
Counties in Buckeye State Can Vote
Wet or Dry Question.
After more than two hours’ debate,
! which the members generally admitted
was all to no purpose because no vote
could be changed thereby, the Ohio
house of representatives at Columbus
Wednesday evening passed the county
l local option bill introduced and cham-
| pioned by Senator Isaiah B. Rose, of
Washington county. The vote on tho
: passage of the bill was 79 to 36.
I The measure will now go to the gov¬
ernor, and it is .generally expected that
| he will sign it.
! The hill, as it will become a law,
| provides that elections may be held
i in any county to vote on the question
of banishing saloons upon petition of
35 cent of ihp , ua!Jfied vot , r „. A
majority of the votes east shall deter¬
; mine. the policy of the county, but in
the event of a county voting wet no
township or residence district which
was voted dry shall be affected there-
by. Elections may be heid every three,
years. Stringent regulations and fines
tor the enforcement of the law are
provided.
The law will not go Into effect until
September 1, 1908, thus giving persons
Interested in the liquor business time
i to anticipate its operation.
ANARCHIST KILLS PRIEST.
Murdor Was Committeed in Church
While Services Were in Progress.
Rev. Leo Heinrichs, a priest, in Den-
ve r ( Col., was shot and killed Sunday
. by Giuseppe Guarnacetq, an avowed
anarchist and priest-hater, while the
j priest was administering the sacra-,
ment in St. Elizabeth’s Roman Catho¬
lic Church.
Kneeling at the altar rail, between
] two men, Guarnaccto pressed the muz-
‘ zle of revolver against the body of
a
j thp priest And shot him through the
heart. The assassin was promptly ar-
r*sted. ■ " i - b
BECKHAM DEFATED
-
n Bradley ,, r, Elected . , c Senator , . in
the Kentucky Legislature,
LONG DEADLOCK BROKEN
Successful Candidate a Republican and
a Former Governor of the State.
Victory .
Won by Narrow Mar¬
gin of Four Votes.
A special from Frankfort, Ky„
“ ~
«« the floor of the house ofrrepresent*-
llV ®\ “T" Governor William OVoa-:
««» was triday B^ley, elected publican to succeed candidate, James J *.
B ato - McCreary, for term In of the six Suited States beginning*” won- J
a years,
March 4, lnm He received 84 votes,
barely ell0U6h t0 wiu - aud wus enabled
to gain victory through the assistance^
of four antfBeckham democrats,
ators H. S, McNutt, and Albert Charl-f Mitel-?.,
ton, and Representative Chrys
ler * ° £ Loulsv * lle - and Representative?
K ’ W ’ Li!laid ’ of Boyle county ’
^»Lil Friday they had voted for dam
ocrata for senator - and tboir sudd ^
ra!Jy t0 Br adUy tot,k Beoklia,a
completely . surprise, although th
uy ♦
latter claim to have information that
<K ‘ al was cfe « cted by * bicb tb( ' li, >" o}
forccs fur ,be were 10 elect Dradlliy ‘^ ur l l
defeat ot tbe couuty unit bi!
*“ ^ seuat f-
Tbe compMon of the first roll enil
8buwed: B / adley ’ 6‘i Bd « k » a ' a * «°i
BIa <* burn - ^ B
the -^er could announce
tb<! rusult deraociat « Gained a
recapitulation, and attempted to break
the quorum by leaving the hail, but
back accompanied by Beckham,
v.-ho authorized the withdrawal of hi,
name and released the democrats froat
the primary nomination pledge to hhn
ln 1,<>i>e that BOn,( ' democrat
*°« ld ba wb " ™> ld
Bradley. The v four bolting uu '■‘ u ° democrats u e ’
were surrounded by lifelong
and T,>ghd'Vr :
support from Bradley, and elect James
B. McCreary, or any democrat they
might name, but they remained ob¬
durate, declaring that the proposition
came too late. The democratic leaders
promised a caucus to, select a candi¬
date to which the name of Beckham
would not be presented, hut the re¬
calcitrants refused all offers, and the
result could not he changed. The bal¬
lot, as finally completed after the dem¬
ocrats finished changing their votes,
was as follows:
Bradley, 84; Beckham, 15; .Janus,
15; McCreary, 10; Mayo, 5; Allen, 2;
Smith, 2; Peak, 2; Newman, 1; Hunt,
1; Eliiston, l; Stanley, l; Blackburn,
1; CantrllT, J • McElroy, 1. There was
great disorder in the chamber during
recapitulation, the) republicans demand¬
ing that the speaker announce result,
and the democrats seeking to delay,
hoping to induce one of the democrats
to leave Bradley.
In a speech, accepting his election,
Bradley thanked the speaker for his
fair and impartial, rulings. He prom¬
ised to use every effort, as senator, to
secure the repeal of tbe 8-cont tax on
tobacco.
Representative Dillard was the only
one of the democrats to explain ills
vote for Bradley. - He said he thought
the time to throw off the party shack¬
les and to break up the machine bad
come, and although he did support tile
democratic ticket for. forty years, he
believed his vote for. Bradley was the
best democratic vote he ever cast.
BOMB AIMED AT SHAH.
Ruler of Persia Has Narrow Escape
from Death in Streets of Teheran.
An attempt was made In Teheran,
Persia, Friday afternoon to assassinate
tho shah of Persia by a bomb. His
majesty was not hurt. Three of the
outriders who were accompanying him
at the time were killed. j
The bomb-was hurled from the root |
of a house.
CHIEF CREDIT TO ROOSEVELT. I
For P«6rvation of Game is Accorded j
:
by Buffalo Bill.
Praise for President Roosevelt for]
his active'interest in forest and game
preserves was a feature of, a speech i
dellyered Bill) 'at- the by fourteenth M’iHiam F. ^ annual a dinner ’^2 ■
to the guides, trappers, hunter, aid.
officials of the sportsmen show, in
Madison Square Garden.
Game in the Wyoming forest re
serves was more plentiful than ten
years ago, chief credit .for-this condi
tion, Colonel Cody said, being, due to
the president. - •
.
Georgia Briefs
-
Items of State Interest Culled
From Random J Sources.
Locker Club Members Indicted.
the names of forty iudl-
connected with locker clubs in
Arrests will follow *:•
« * *
G. A. R. Organized at St, George.
A branch of the Grpml Army of the
Republic was organized at St. George
°of ^hio
Warren ol Iowa, vice commander,
* * *
Wesleyan s First: Graduate Dead
Mrs, Katherine E. Benson is dead
at her home in Macon after several
weeks’ illness. She was the first gratl-
uate of eWsleyan college, and was the
first woman in the world to receive
a diploma from a chartered college.
was widely known and beloved as
a woman of excellent Christian char¬
acter. She had reached the .advanc¬
ed of 86.
* *
A., B. & A. Approves Mileage Books.
. It is announced by the Atlanta, Bir¬
mingham and Atlantic Railroad com¬
pany that tho new mileage books of
the Southern railway will he honored
bn tlieir lines under certain conditions.
The action of this road makes the third
road to become a party to the books
as the Seaboard and tile Atlantic Coast
Dine have already agreed to the South¬
ern’s plan.
r Can R Run 0 Only ,* , 10 * 4 M.I.. . * . an Hour.
Follow ng the report of an mspec
tion made by one of the track walk-
era in the employ of the railroad com-
mffon order to tbe the commission Fitzgerald, lias Ocilla issued and an
Braxton railway company, operating
'>■ twm-n those points h, south Geor¬
Bia. to reduce the speed of all pas-
:■ uger trains ov.-r Us line to ten miles
an hour until certain repairs which
Hie cornmismon . . deems necessary shall ,
n-mde.
8ft # *
Brewers to Ask Modification of Law.
There Is a movement on foot, back¬
ed by the brewers of the state, which
contemplates urging the legislature at
its next session to modify the state
prohibition law :,o as to permit, the
sale within the state of beers and light
wines. Those urging the modification
of tin* law, it Is reported, base their
hope in a large measure upon a pub¬
lic statement of Governor Smith, made
last December, to the effect that, he
hoped to see tho standing saloon elim¬
inated everywhere and such modifica¬
tion of the law as would permit only
th-' use of light drinks, such as wines
and beer, at the table as food.
Auditor Resigns Temporarily.
Special Auditor L. (!. Mathews, who
has been in the employ of the rail¬
road commission for some months, has
severed his connection with the com¬
mission, at least for the present,
though it is said to be with the un¬
derstanding that he will he recalled
whenever the commission has occa¬
sion to regime his services.
It is stated that the position spe¬
cial auditor was not intended to be
permanent, but. that he was employed
f ir certain work which has now been
completed. The principal part of this
: work is said to have been an examina¬
tion into the books and accounts of
the Central of Georgia Railway com¬
pany in Savannah, upon which the
commission now has a complete re¬
port. The Central afforded Mr. Math¬
ews every facility for making this ex¬
amination, although it does not con¬
cede, the right of “the commission to
make such inquiry.
* * *
. George Barton' Captured.
George "Barton, one of the prisoners
who made a sensational escape from
the Fulton county tower, Atlanta, on
Sunday night, February 2d, has been
captured in Bessemer, Ala., and re-
turned to the Atlanta jail.
John Harper, the other prisoner wdio
escaped with Barton, is still at large.
Tbe esca *’* of Biirt ' m a,id Harper re-
suited in the grand J^y finding indict-
ments against Jarm « Brown, the night
Jailer at the tov. ‘r, and two trusties.
Tf)r , williams and Etilaeo Wallace. One
of - the U . us , ie , has made a writ,. :,
eonf, ‘’ ;!don ’ in ^' !ch br ' say « lhat he *
w | tb connivane • of the night jail-
f , r> 0 p ane< i the cob:' of the two pris- ;
onf .. thus -maki:r.' tirntr esoap- pos&J-
ble. • j
Harper was und< >• sentence for mur-
fler> „ nr j held ..awaiting an ap-
to the Supreme court. Barton was
oba rged with robbing a safe. There
is an outstanding reward of $250 for ]
50 CENTS PER YEAR
the arrest of Barton, and one of $800
for the capture of Harper.
* * *
Want Fair to Be National.
Enthusiastic plans by which the an¬
nual state fair, to he held In Atlanta
next October, will be given under the
auSpices of the farmers of the state
will be proposed at a meeting of (he
district managers of the unions in At¬
lanta during the present month.
It is believed the farmers of the
state will enthusiastically favor the
plan of holding the fair under the
auspices of the union. Among ^the
plans that will be proposed will be
that of holding a mammoth national
convention of farmers in Atlanta dur¬
ing the fair. Two thousand delegates,
representing a membership of 2,000,-
000 people, will be present if the meet¬
ing is held.
President R. F. Duckworth of the
Georgia division will Issue a call for
the various district executive commit¬
tees in the state to vote on the sub¬
ject of holding a state fair in Atlanta
this fall, in connection with the At¬
lanta Fair Association.
Following this action National Pres¬
ident Barrett will take a poll rif the
various state organizations in regard
to making the. fair national in Us
scope.
* * *
Cotton Seed Meal in Great Demand.
According to the Febiuary report of
the tag. sales given out at the depart¬
ment i f agriculture the sale of cotton
seed meal tax has iiipreapeol by twen¬
ty per cent over the amount sold up
to this time last year.
This report also' shows a corres-
sponding decrease in the sale of fer¬
tilizer tags under the number dis¬
posed of a year ago. This tremendous
Increase in the sale of cotton seed
meal tags, which it is estimated will
bring the total sale of tags up to j
200,000 tons over 170,000 tons for 1.906-
1907 is attributed by the officials, for
the greatly- increased per cent which
is being used as a cattle feed in Geor¬
gia. The food analysis shows that
pure
cotton seed meal lias 38.02 protein,
whereas thy most generally marketed
is pure wheat-bran, which has only
14,50, protein or about one-third as
much'.
This is tile great tiling for Geor¬
gia, and the south, as it is turning
over our southern product and keeping
the farmers’ money close at home.
Another consignment of cotton seed
meals tugs, which go twenty tags to
the ton, has been ordered for the
spring use of the department.
*
To Enforce Pure Food Law.
State Commissioner Hudson has is¬
sued a statement in which he calls
attention to the fact that., beginning
March 1st, all violations of the pure
food and drugs act, passed in 1906, will
be hereafter certified to the proper
court for settlement as provided by
law.
The statement points nut. that since
the law went into effect last August
the department has i mducted r vigor¬
ous campaign of .education, with a
view to Inform tl;e public of the re¬
quirements of the law, hut that the
time has now come when further vio¬
lations must be loolud after in tho
usual legal maimer in the courts.
• The order will bo one of the gicat
eat interest to manufactur. rs, jobbers
and dealers In meats, milk, sausages,
other foodstuffs and beverages. The
order states that if the manufacturers,
.
jobbers and d'-tiers are not familiar
' wild the law- lb y sir ,;iii inform tnr.ii-
.-•civ. V. without delay, a - from this date*
on rto excuse whatever will be act ' it- •
ed ffi'.th.e vlulat.l;;n of the law, b.cause
the ‘ignorance cf the law is no ex¬
cuse.’ The order, c'o: ■ as follow -: |
"The one great fundamental princl- !
pie of this law is t.n:t" 1 uli.- bib*'
and thus putting the cmi aimer on no-
ti'M of the exact character of tic.- ar-
tide he is buying. Injurious sub¬
stances and harmful cn-lbring mustnci
he used in any foal product; for ex¬
ample, preservatives in milk, saiiaag.
meats and other foods as. well as
bev erage.s.
“All manufacturers, jobbers V d pi¬
ers in stock feeds shou'd infcim tin m-
selv; s of the provisions of the law r ,-
ulating the sale of their products anil
iflrdulil not offer for sale tn ' feed r ;,i j
cot)talng ........... !
any „„„ of „f tho£e -i........................ gubgtanceg [pe .
‘
clt|cally forbiddC(J ' by law .- '
"
. —*---------—----------
WHY WAGE REDUCTIONS?
--
'• Question Asked of Geor 8* a Road3
by the State Commission.
The Georgia railroad commission has .
propounded to the Western and Allan*
ti crailroad in particular and other rati- 1
roads of tho state in general, the qi:ua-
tioji as to why they have made or pro- :
ductlbn* pose to make, as the case may be, em-j re- j
in the wages paid their
ployees. |
Don’t blame the leap year maid for
trying to make a name for herself.
What Causes ITendaolie. A
From October to May, Colds aro the most
Bromo frequent Quinine can™ of Headache,. Laxative
Grove box. removes cause. * E, W.
on 25c.
When a wise man is too tired to
think Ills talk is sure to sound foolish.
Brown’s Bronchial Troches
have a world-wide reputation for cur¬
ing coughs, sore throats and relieving
bronchitis and asthma.
Even a busy man has time to feel
sorry for himself.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by, Woolford’s
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggist*.
IMPORTANT THING TO KNOW.
Professor (examining medical stu¬
dent)—-“If you are called out to a
patient, what is the first question
j'oti would ask?”
Medical Student—“Where he lives!”
—Philadelphia Inquirer.
i
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
with local applications, as they can-
rot reucli the seat of I he disease. Ca¬
tarrh is a blood or consliUitiamal diseas*,
end in order to cure it you must take inter¬
nal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken
internally, and acts directly on the blood
and mucous surfaces. Hah Catarrh Cur*
is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed
by one of the mid best physicians regular proscription. in this coun¬
try for years is a
It' is composed of the best tonics known,
combined with the best blood surfaces. purifiers, act¬ ho
ing directly combination on the mucous ot the ingredient* 1
perfect produces wonderful two results in
is what such free.
curing Catarrh. Send ior testimonials
F. .1 Chunky & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
Take Sold bv Rail's Druggists, Family price Pills 75c. ior constipation, i I
It Costs to Run a Big City.
It costs New Yorkers $31 a head
to be governed. Tn Philadelphia and.
in -Chicago it costs only $13 a head
and citizen.-, provided with police,! '
are
fire, sanitary and other protection-
common to large cities. Tn Buffalo
the figure is $12; in Washington,
Bridgeport, Schenectady and cities of
that sort, $11 per capita pays the
tax; in Houston, Tex., tho charge is
under $1.0; in lively Los Angeles,
$7.50; Scranton and Seattle each col¬
lect $6.50, and Nashville, Term., is
at the bottom of the list of progres¬
sive cities with a taxation of about
$6 per capita, less than one-fifth of
New York’s rate.
The average city tax throughout
the country Is probably between $10
and $11 per capita, or almost exact¬
ly the amount by which New York
has raised its per capita figure in
only nine years.—Broadway.
AT JAMESTOWN. j
A newly-married couple was tak*
Ing in tho Jamestown Exposition,
“Thare’s our biggest marn-of-war,
dear,” said tho husband, pointing to
one of the vessels in the harbor.
Just then a little tug was seen puf¬
fing around the big ship.
“And is Hie little one a tug-of-war,
Tom?” asked the wife.—Success Mag¬
azine.
OBI) SURGEON
Fonnd Coffee Caused Hands to Trem¬
ble.
The surgeon's duties require cleat*
Judgment and a-steady hand. A slip
or an unnecessary Incision may do ir¬
reparable damage to the patient.
When he found that coffee drink¬
ing caused his hands to tremble, ant
ills, surgeon conscientiously gave it
up and this Is his story:
“For years 1 was a coffee drinker
until my nervous system was nearly
broken down, my hands trembled so I
could hardly .write, and Insomnia tor-
tured me at night.
“Besides, how could 1 safely per¬
form operations with unsteady hands,;
using knives and Instruments of pre-i
cislon? When 1 saw plainly the badj
effects ot coffee, I decided to stop it,]
and three years ago I prepared some
Postum, of which I had received a!
sample.
"The first cupful surprised delicious. me. Tfcj
was mild, soothing, At!
this time i gave some Postum to ai
friend who was in a similas'conditioni
to mine, from the use of coffee.
“A few days after, 1 met him, and!
daring he was he full would of praise for Postum, cof-i de-j
never return to
fee, but stick to Postum. We then!
ordered a full supply, and within al
short time my nervousness and con-i
sequent trembling, as well as Insqjn-i
nla disappeared, blood circulation be-j
came normal, no dizziness nor heat)
flashes. .
My friend became a Posturn en-i
thnsiast, tit* whole, family ifting it ex-1
dusiveBb ,
who Brewed the Post uni If it did not
taste good when served,
"The best food may be spoiled if!
not properly made. Postum should]
be boiled according to directions onj
pkg. lhen it is all right, any onej
re * y on *' to
* b ‘* ” at f ’" a r J! ' "postum , <\fj
Battle Creek! Mick Read “The RoaS
to Wellvllle," in pkgs; '