THE BIRTH OF 1 Once Again The Old Year Passed to History is CARNIVAL SCENE IN NEW; YORK - " , ' ' 'i- " -' ' Navel Observatory at Washington Ticks Off Signal at 12,-1, 2, and 3, 0 'clock, Washington Time, to Dif ferent Time. Belts of the United Stuzs a:id;also Sends the Tidings to Eonoiuin, Guam, Minalla, Mexi co and West Indies No Effort j-de to Encircle the ' Globe This Yezr Signal wireiessea to oiiips at fee. . . , sshinyton, ' Special. Telegraphic tiirnals annonnemp; tho 'birth of 1906 'were flashed from the Naval Observa torv here through the;, medium of the "Western Union aiid, the Postal Tele- DVfl'nh Companies. "Olh'e signal was t-u-l-td off at ''12. 1, ami 3 o 'clock, respeeively, so as to conform with 1 1 niidmglit . Hour lor w asmngton, Central, 'Rocky Mountain" and Pacifiec coast 'time, respectively. The midnight 'signal was repeated to all points read- jlv available by the telegraphic eampa- me? : to Honolulu, Guam, and Manilla ; through Mexico and to points in the West Indies, aud, where possible, cit ies in South America and to England and France. ... The Washington mid- ui:ht signal also flashed to the Avire- lesss telegraph stationswitli a view; to its communication ;to ships ' at sea. No attempt was made, as on previous oceassions, to circumvent ' the globe with the flash. signal.; : Tte loiig distance telephone was al so utilized where available for com municating the arrival of the New .New York,1 Special.- The advent of the New Year Was the occasion to- nigbt., of " the . usual f noisy ? demonstra tions throughout the city of New Y ork The faeh that New Year 's eve fell on Sunday did hot . dampen: the enthuas- is sm( .x' ine t ens' or t uouyands ot ped p!e "who par aded'the streets blowing great tin horns, ringing bells of all descriptions, and finally, with the com ing, of midnight resorting to all sorts of methods for the production of noise The kdiimes. of? Old "Trinity brought to lower Broadway and Wall street the greatest throngs of" NW'-r Year iuen-v makers. For years the bells of this historic church have been rung as the signal of a iiew year's birth.' In the threatre .arid restaurant district oi upper rsroaaway, . me crowds on the streetsj Sunday nighl concerts and in i lie caies were me. largesyin years. On the up-town streets many merry inakeVs in ernavil spirit indulged in conietti , battles, . Everywhere there was a. spirit of reyelry and the new year's welcome was as noisy, as New i orkrs know. how to make it. ! r Ex-Governors Death. Boise, Idaho, Special. It developed that the assassanation at Caldwell of former Governor. Frank Steunenberg with a dynamite bomb was perpetra- trated by some ono person 'by pulling a wire that exploded, the dynamite as the iormer Governor was closing the rear gate of his home. It was at first thought that - the bomb was arranged to explode " automatically as the gate opened. It also -developed that two bombs were, both being exploded simultaneously, by means of wire and waxet fish line, remnants of which were found on the lawn. The con viction grows that Steunenberg was. murdered as resnlt of ? his activity, in crushing sminers' '.strike! riots at- Cour;d Alene in J899. On'thil theory cue man was arrested but his name is kept ' secret by the police, who sav evidence against the prisoner is strong x lve otner men nave been detained on suspicion.; - - r. r Vote For ChurchTInionr St. Louis, Special Aftera divis ion of 95 yeirs. :steps were Consum mated at a joint session "tf the general committees,, which, 'if '.formally rati fied next May by the General Assem blies, will unite the Northern Presby- Terian nureh and the Cumberland Ti'neK-jTAvir.1-. 1 J"v . .' A i a 'aI '- days were ' consumed -b"v sub-commit tees in arranging details for. the union. Receiyer Brief.' Norfolk, Va, Special. The' claim of the Edward' Stern 'Company -having been settledy Judge-WB.Martin Fri iday discharged T. Catsby-Jones from Jhe receivershin of t.bA SiitHprn Mn. ual Aid Association, of Norfolk, to phich he was f ftppo'inted: '.: Thursda. phe Birminam I Association k aftei- 'pf oi .1.-;. . . i i "nug lup ote m ciaun anuauneea us solvency.- F. S." Grimes, a stockholder m the Norfolk Association, instituted TU70t?t Idintrs fnr'nn uffrmtitlnrr jjominst I both I ompanies without asking for a fecenl Tship. 906 BRAVERY IS REWARDED S. H. Alexander, Defender of Emma ' Postomce, Near Asheville, Against i Four Armed Robbers, is Promoted Prom Laborer to Clerk in Depart ment and an Official Statement De scribing His - Brave Conduct is Is sued. . V ' ''.-'. '-". ' '. ' " 3 - "-. As a reward for defending the post- office at Emma, "four years ago against four burglars, President Roosevelt has waived the civil service regulation up on the recommendation of Postmaster General Cortelyou and S. H. Alex-. ander's" Christmas gift was a promo tion from a laborer to a clerkship in the Department. Not only has the brave North Caro linian been promoted, but to eccentu ate the honor, an official statement was issued which gives a full account of the deu The attempted robbery ook place on the night of February 6, 1901, and the effieial account, shows: "After the store in which the post- office at Emma is located was closed for the night, Mr. 'Alexander, who had been sleeping m the adjoining room, heard a knock on the door and in- quired what was wanted. He was told that some one living near wanted his mail, and he" unbarred the door. Two masked men entered, covered him with revolvers, and commanded him to give up his own revolver and open the fireproof safe. While one of the burglars, Frank Johnson, who had laid his revolver on the desk near the safe, was stooping in the act of looting the safe, and during a moment when the other- burglar, Ben Foster, had hit head turned, Alexander seized .the idle revolver and shot the ' latter- near the heart. 'He attemptedto shoot Johnson also, but failed to do so, as the revolver snapped. A , desperate rtrr.ggle followed. Foster, althonugh seriously wounded, pursued Alexander and shot him in the abdomen, the bullet coming out at the back. Alexander, seeing Fos- " 1 .L A " -1 i ' . a 1 ' . ter auuui 10 siiooi ai nun again, swung Johnson around, , so tlu.t the bullet stniek Johnson's left shoulder f rpmi t herea rssxughrongh. '.. th from which it was extracted. Alex- ander's face and hands were badlv cut and bruised "before he overpowered the burglars. . .. "Alexander managed, however, to put both men out of the building and then fainted. The ' postmaster, hear ing his sisnal, came to Alexander's relief, and found him lying fnint ' and weak in a pool of -blood. "His bravery is the more eccentiiB- tedwhen it is known that Mr. Alex ander is a man of .small stature, prob- .n un a a - 1 i ably not more than five feet six inches tall, and weighs less than 120 pounds. It would seem that he must Have been possessed of almost superhuman strength to oust the two desperadoes from the postoffiee. "Two accomplices, who were wait- ing on the outside, carried awav the wounded burglars to a house in which thoy were arrested the same night. 1 - f "The two burglers above mentioned, together with tho two accomplices. after trial were given the extreme penalty of ihe law, which, for the of fense committed in the State of North Carolina, is death. Afterwards, the sentence was commuted, in the case of : two of the burglars, to life imprisonment: The other two were hanged on February 26, 1902. - - Commission's Report. JRaleigh, Special. The Corporation Commission report on the condition of the State, private and savings banks at. the close of business No- "rember dth, has been issued and makes l-'l.1- 1. . ? '.. - mi i , ,jieiuai.auie snowing, a i.ne total-as- sets or 5pi,uyo,D3y, an' increase over a year asro. at the same timfi of $9,491,356. There are 238 banks against ,183 a year ago. Deposits subject to check aggregate $27,720,128. $5,000 to Hdspital. Asheville,Special. George W. Pack -has again demonstrated the keen in terest he takes in Asheville and" Ashe ville 's public and semi-public institu tions by a generous donation of $5, 000 toJ the Mission Hospital, one of the most worthy charitable institutions in the city. The managers of the Mission Hospital recently received a communis cation from Mr. Pack in response to a public appeal for $5,700 to complete the work undertaketj, offering to the hospital a donation" of , $5,000 if the remaining amount was secured. This has been accomplished after some, la- bor. , 3,000 Mill Hands Rest. ; Gastonia' Special Notwithstanding the fact that. Saturday morninsr was; inclement, crowds off, shopper's, ponried into Gastonia from all over the county nA ai,. w.wka v.:? and tlifl m Proliant a ili'd'a ViicTiino1 Vtcid ness. " The, citv .ordinance nrohtbitinn- the use of fipe crackers and other ex plosives, within the ' city limits was suspended by the' city fathers and Young America held full sway. NORTH STATE Items of Interest Gleaned From Various Sections . FROM -MOUNTAIN TO SEASHORE Minor Occurrences of the Week of Interest to Tar Heels Told in Para graphs. 1 Charlotte "Cotton Market. "These figures represents prices paid to wagons: s . Good middling:. ... .... ... .11 CO Strict middling.. .. ..;. .11 1-2 Middling ... 11 '3-8 Good middii ng tinges .'. ..... . 11 3-8 Strict middling tinge's.. ... .11 1-4' Stains. . .. 10 1-4 to 10 3-4 General Cotton Market. " Ualveston dull.. .. .. .. .II 13-16 New Orleans quiet.. 11 3 Mobile dull. . .:il 1-2-i Savannah dull and easy., Charleston steady. . Baltimore nominal.. . . . ..11 11-16 . .-.11 3-S . ..11 7-8 . ..11 7-S ..11 95 .. ..13 20 New York quiet ...... , Boston quiet ...... Philadelphai quiet. : . . Houston ea3r. . ...... Augusta quiet . . .... ..11 11-16 n Memphis steady .... Louisville firm .... . . . . ..11 11-16 ..11 15-16 Killed Brbther-in-Law. ' Wadesboro, Special J. V. Johnson shot and killed G. W. Johnsonl his jiuiuBi-iu-iaw vv eunesuay aiiernoon, near the town of Morven, this comity. There seems to have been an old fam ily grudge existing between .-the two men and Wednesday evening as Mr. G. W. Johnson was driving along the J 1 pnblic road by J. V. Johnson's house," the' latter had his double-barrel shot-" ; un out in the yard with him "and:! rhen he saw G. W. Johnson pass,i3g by, he jiinmediately shot him . in the back. When G. W. Johnson turned rr xnc wasrotrxcria sicea j : v . o oniiorr- . .... , . . . , . aam striking him in the breast and Killing him almost instantly. The slayer has not been arrested yet and it is rumored that there is a crowd in pursuit, and, if lie is captured, he may" be summarily dealt with. Shoulder Broken. Winston-Salem, Special. Mr. D. R. Hester, a successful farmer and well- I a. -j t ship, met with a serious accident on -p j u v.- i v, er was broken and the other was dis- located. Mr. Hester, who is 59 years old joined some friends early Tues- d ay moniing . in a fox chase near Oak Ridge. The dogs had jumped Rey nard and a beautiful race was on. Mr. Hester was riding a slow moving steed and during the race to keep up with the pack of hounds his horse ran into a wire fence. Mr. Hester was thrown violently to the ground arid the ani mal fell upon him, resulting in the injuries as above stated. The horse was also badly hurt. - , ' Grand Rapids of the South. ' ' ; The furniture manufacturing indus try has developed at a rapid rate in this State." Ninetyeight, factories re port $2,250,000 capital invested. These 1 lactones employ 6,250 men and 5 use 9,500 horse power. . In his Raleigh cor respondence Col. F. A. Olds says that North Carolina outranks all the States except Michigan in the onanuf acture of furniture. In his State there yet remains the largest f ojsst'pf hard and soit -woods east oi tn JttocKy moun- -J tains, tusa if omt is tne centre oi tna furniture industry and has earned the name of ' Grand Rapids of th South." Big Contract Let. Wilmington, ! Special. Burett H. Stephens, of Qhicago, supervisory ar chitect ,and consulting engineer for, the $250,000 fertilizer! factory which wTill be built on Northeast river, two miles above-Wilmington, awarded the. I contract for the carpenter work on the plant to contractor J. E. Elliott, of Jlickory. The contract is approx imately $70,000 and is one of the larg est ever given out in the Carolinas. It is generally undrstood that Swift & Co: are behind the factory proposition: Good Work of the - Audubon Society. .Since last March, when, the .fiscal I year ended, the Audubon Society; has pii0secuted successfully sixtypersons, h - - convrcted 0f violating the wno were couvicteu ui viuiiuu0 iuc State's game laws.' , Secretary Pear son is . very hopeful of the future of the orgaization, and is happy over what the society has already, accom plished. ? . t NEWS 'A BIG HOTEL IN FLAMES Piotel Porter Destroyed by Fire Early r This Morning Hotel Imperial and 1 Hotel Temperance Also. Damaged ; All the Guests Escaped With Their J Belongings.- ; : Niagara Falls, N. Y., Special. Fire iarly Thursday morning destroyed Hotel Porter, on Falls street. The Ho lei Imperial adjoining on the south Juid the Hotel Temperance, on the .lorth, were damaged. The gueste "jvll escaped with their effects. 1 Ammu nition in the store of George Rae, un Her the Hotel Porter, . exploded and i for a time great excitement prevailed as the bullets went flying through Njpacel : No one was injured. The loss at least $150,000. 5 Crime to Export Silver J Washington, Special-VThe Philip pine Commission has enacted alaw jaaking it a crime to export silver Irom the islands. This step has been uken on account of the serious men ace to the parity of the Philippine ,'urrency, which was threatened by he recent exportations of silver coins nd bullion. The law provides for ne torieiture oi sucn attempted ex wrtation, for! a fine of not more than i'.o.uuu m sroid, imprisonment ' ior a ear. or : both, fassenerers on tne - r o hina lP5ivino,:tiiftilnrid are allowed 'pieces $12.50 in gold m tase noi , more man iwemy:nvo -J The Pope's Jubilee in 1908. t r t " are lareauy going on iu ceiemute in isua the jubilee of the Pope's ordination ;s a priest. Being asked if h. desir 'ji a.. -i -i a 'teiQ ed the festivities to be -similar to those witnessed on the occasion of the priesthood jubilceC of the late Pope Leo, when an international exhibi- Uon was held in the Vatican, the 'Pope answered : 5 ' Certainly not. 1 n; e ceieoraiion to u strictly religious character.' : 15 Infernal Machines Captured.. Brussels, Belgium, By. Cable Ad vices received "here from "St. 'Peters burg say that the Semenowsky guards a regiment supported by the artillery, had been sent from there, to Moscow. Reinforcements are also being- sent from the neighboring post' to Moscow... The police at Kieff have discovered a bomb factory in the cel lar of a crowded tenement building in that citjy and fifteen infernal ma chines were seized. - Twenty-five Lost in Hurricane. Victoria, B. C.,- Special. A Brit ish ship, Pass of Melforth, Captain Cougal, was dashed to pieces in a hur ricane on Christmas night, together with a crew of 25. The vessel was caught on the lee side, off shore, in a terrific southwest gale, raging off the straits of San Juan De Fuca, on the western coast of Vancouver isl and. She was destroyed on Amphri trite point, known as the "Monu ments of Wrecks." The Pass- Mel forth was built in Glasgow, in 1901; Three Killed in Trolley Accident. Mahoney City, Pa , Special. A trol-, ley -car on the Schuykill railway was struck by a Lehigh Valley freight train: on a grade crossing, at Girad ville. ' Mr. Winkle of Mahoney City, and two Arabian 1 women4 unknown, from f Shenandoah, were, , killed out right arid several "others were injured. Two Little Girls Drowned. i ' ; Rockport, Mass., Special.Lydia, Anderson, 14 years bid and Catherine X. Cusyck, aged 13 years, "were drown ed by breaking through the, ice on the pond of an abandoned quarry. Two boys' 0uniiar Williamson aged .9 years and John Jacobson, 10 years old, were rescued. . , ,' v i - - . Cumberland University Opposes Foot- , .ball.- t ' t : Nashville,Tenn., 'Special.Cuinber land University. Lebanon, X goes" on Tecord as opposing football' as it is at . present played. . As a result of this decision, no foot ball. scheduTe will be made for tho, next .season. $3,200,000 Deal in Louisiana Lumber. Beumont, Tex Special. Colonel Samuel Park, president of the Indus trial Lumber Company, will leave for Chicago to close up the details of a lumber purchase t " involving 90,000 acres of virgin 'pine in Rapid and Vernon .parishes, in Louisiana. The amount to be paid is $3,200,000. Mutiny Among Sailors.' - St. Petersburg, By, Cable. Mutiny has broken out amdhg'the sailors' on the . warships, Abrek," ; Admiral i Korin ' loff,Okan, and: three ; torpedo boats ' lying at Liban. Orders wure. given t the vessels to proceed to Higato to" co-operate with- the Uandt forces .' in quelling the revolt there., The crews refused to obey - orders. The officers are powerless in thef act of this re fusal and the ships are still anchored 15,000 ARE KILLED Russian Riots Continue With Great Slaughter COVERS THE WH0LE COUNTRY Business is Suffering Seriously From Strike in Russia Letters All Cen soredAttempt - to Kill Prefect of Police at St.' Petersburg Soldiers Surround Hotel and Bring Up Ar tillery Two Regiments of Cos sacks Mutinied. V Moscow, By Cable. Firing in the streets, continued until midnight Wednesday night. The Governor General issued an appeal to the peo ple, which is displayed in the streets, urging the citizens not to trust to the false interpretations given the re cent manifesto and calling on them to give up the strike and take sides with the troops and the police in the preser vation of order, resting on the assur ance that the lawful authorities - will know how to protect lives and prop erty. ; London, By Cable. The St. Petrs- burg correspondent of The Times, rn a dispatch dated December 26, says : 1 " Governor General Doubasoff . tele- graphing reports that 15,000 persons had been killed or wounded at Mos cow. ..... : . : . "The latest news from Moscow says that the first regiment of I Don . Cos sacks, Tvern drasroons and the Nes vizh regiment of ; infantry ? mutined and are confined in their barracks." "I am informed from a good source that 2,000 persons wrere killed. and 10, 000 wounded. The revolutionists are making no headway but they show up signs of exhaustion." "All over the city . there sare marks of the battle which has raged in the streets for three days, and the distant, booming of ; cannon, shows that the fighting is not : yet at an end. Houses' have been completely demolished rby the artillery, - and j everywhere win dows haveeen smashed'by bviliets. " " Governor' General Doubasoff- has prohibited the opening of windows. The better classes are . afraid to ven ture on the streets owing to the fact that numerous "bombs' and other dead ly missiles are being thrown from theywindows; and roofs of houses. Near the triumphal arch could be seen today the red flags of the insurgents flying above their barricades. Sol-' tel and artillery was brought up as it was claimed that a shot had been fired from one of the - windows. It was with' difficulty that the landlord per- suaded the troops not to demolish the building. - As the correspondent entered the telephone exchange he saw two agita tors shot by a passing patrol: Artil lery can be heard at work near the Nicholas station. ','v . Two attempts on the life of the pre fect of police by students, one of them a woman, was frustrated. The stu dents were i arrested.. 1 ' "' J The Bourse Gazette says it is report ed that General De Pioulin, prefect of police, of St. Petersburg, has been informed by telephone that, the num ber of 1 0621 ?or wounded at Moscow number 10,000 aridvthat when s ques tioned tonight the general did not deny that such a' report had been re ceived. ' - 1 The merchants' here! complain that they are suffering seriously; from the strike in Russia, and are not receiv-j Ing the information in regard '.to' the situation there, as all letters are care fujly censored. , ';. . , : . S The correspondent , of : ; the . St. Petersburg Times, wires jthat it is re ported there, that ; a military terrorist plot has been discovered by . the .au thorities. Fifty arrests . have beea made in connection 'with this "discov-v ery. 1 .. . ' " - Fruitmen in Convention. '.. Des ' -Moines. In., Special. The Western Association of Fruit Grow ers opened its annual meeting here. The . attendance, is quite large and the. meeting , presents many, interest ing features.-. Many' prominent fruit growers and experts . from this and other fruit" States arevin attendance and J some highly important papers have been promised to be read. w Wedding Present for Miss Roosevelt. ? Washington, Special. The Presir dent's attention has been called to a dispatch, from Baker City, Ore. to the effect that a subscription is about tol; be started for 'a wedding present for 'Miss . Alice ? Rooseveltl President Roosevelt stated that "while lie : deep ly; appreciated 'the evidence of gcod will, he hoped nothing of the kind would be ' undertaken. In . fact, he wished particularly that the proposed collection of -funds should not be made. John G. Clark ha 3 just retired" froix! . the service of the Bank of , California after fifty years.' . - - --; ' ' 1 . George Fields, a Cherokee Indian livv Ing in Indian Territory, has been mar ried three times.' -jiMi'Ul William ,T. Palmer, founder of Colo rado City, Col.v.lias given that? city 000,000 or more in the, way of parks.' The Rev. William Howe, said to be the oldest iBaptist clergyman liTlng, will be 100 years old on May 2e l0O6.f John Hawkes, a Cincirinattlumber- : man, lias.i just -returned j from IBurope after crossing and recrossing 28 times, Mathew Faulds. a weayer of Kilmarf nock. Scotland has'4 been- at his "loom , eighty years. He is over. , ninety-nine years old. . " ,'. . . ' 1 ' ' - Dr. Hunt, . Yeovil's (England rnewt Mayor, instead of giving the customarx: banquet, has. decided to assist the local . unemployed with the money: ;sv' Professor Yoshitaro Nakamuro grad uate of the Imperial Agricultural Col lege, at Sappiro, Japan, is a student at the Minnesota State School of Agri. culture. .. - .: Jt. Ulh , Professor Koch writes; from .TJhehe that'he has found a delightful climate? in the-part of Germanf "East Africa, traversed by him. : The air has a splen did tonic quality. '4 ' 71 Peter J. Vieau, last suWitinjr sbn oC Jacques " ieau, Milwaukee's -first fur trader of whom any record , remains. is dead at his home in' Muskoga Cen-s tre. Wis., aged eighty-five. , ; . . , , . J. S. Van Buren, whose grandfather , was President of the United-Estates haa been appointed general agent -off the Great Northern Steamship Company, with headquarters in -Hong-Kong. " Andrew Jackson : Houston; Jlepubll can, who is contesting the seat of S. Brooks, of the Seccfnd' Texas Dis--trict; is a son ;of famous, General ; Sam Houston, formerly a Senator from-that State.1- ,-;"' . Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gna. and Mullen is Nature's great remedy--Cnres ' Coughs, "Colds j Croup r and Consumption: and all throat and lung troubles At drag gists, 25c. , W)o. and $1.00 per bottle.,. - ii , , In Dead Earnest. A ; travelling; man. received ther fol-r ; - lowing telegram from his wife : V " Twins arrived ; tonighti More by mail.'?, - ,;): ':.. y.v;.iy vjj:: :t He went at once, to thej nearest of-;i 6ce and sent the following reply :'; - ; - ' ' I leave for home tonighti If more 1 come by xaail- send - t& Dead 'Lettexrr" Office." January Lippincott 's. No Occasion for Mincing Matters. . "Theodosia, I do not wish to say f anything harsh or uncharitable of your uncle Geoffrey. I .will f not go so far as to charge him with penuriousness, but, he certainly carries the idea4- of I economy, to an extreme. . He hesitates , to make the most, trifling expenditure unless assured that it 'wilt redound ul- timately to his ; o wn, financial, ad van-1 , 'tage. . While, not ; wishing,. to be un-? just to him I cannot refrain from expressing the opinion1 that tie is al- - m6st too frugal, as it were, too too cautious-- . ,-., f. . V ;,.V; "ainma what's the use of all that fine talk ? You" know as well as I do that" he's a stingy niggardly, .mean. -, shabby, miserly, avaricious. old. tight-, .-wad!"' -.'; " r -v..;v- ; "Thank you,; ; dear." Chicago Trlb. tune. . I t:j- :sa -7 " h'. ; , A man's daughter may. not be beau- tif ul, but he " does not , have to lie ; awake nights worrying over -whether fehe is going to be ihazed . to death or r haze somebody else .to the .verge oZ o-mnw to State's nrifion. . ,4. ' , ' MALARIA 7 7 tr; 4 J: PERSONAL. GOSSIP. t. Generally That is wot tn Trouble s ft ' . . , $ ' ' i Persons with a susceptibility to mala i rial Influences should "beware ,ot coffee) w-hich has a tendency to load up the '" liver- with bile 'J -'lti $' -v A 1a U.e aAtM"nAtiAB ffi4 V snlrered for rears from emus Ana reverv, which at last she learned were mainly produced by the coffee he drank. r ... I f was also grieyously afSlcted' wltli i headaches .and indigestion," , she -say , r " . 'which I became satisfied were like- wise largely due to the coffee I drank. Six I months ago ii .quit its-; use alto--;! ' Wa4-Ka i on1 Kaflran tA f ilrlnlf . pAflfnm Food .Coffee,' "with the . gratifying Ire-; .. suit that1 my ' "headaches ; have disapi1 ...: niiu. ,. Aia e uvi uou jm itun,cuvcf (a . ; chills' and' fever , for more than ' three ' , - months. - I have- no: doubt- that :lt wa' h Pnttum hat'hmnrhrrm-rhirplfpf.:-fMP&Tv A. . U9CU JLW AUCUMU1C , W MJU . r V improvement nas. Deen going on.. r- Was really relief from cohgesUbnof the 5 1 liyer caused by 5. coffee.) 9f, ill? iiiVA.::'?-; ' '. f My. daughter j.has been as, greats a' , iAfraa. iiHnlrpr fl T ' finrf fnr VPflfft Wfifl . . afflicted 'withHerribIerslckl hgadache1?' ' which oftenv lastedifor,:? Wee at - J She is Yr&ln worker: arid .S-f j ..'eesslVe' application "together With the . headaches begatf to-affect her? memory j . rno.tno nithik flontnr franklv ad- , . vised her to Vinitcoffee and use Postumv : r-For more than odr .raonths she haa.;!i iot'.had pi ;headacheher.;mental f acul-.j j ; ties have grown more active and vigor- f v i, bus and her memory has been restore. " ' "No more teav coffee ofTdru .f or, . so long ffwean get ?ostum,.."ffam9-l.-j given by Postum Co.7 battle. Creek;" Mich. ' ' v : , . -. " There's a reason. ; . Reatd the little?: book "The Itoad to Wel!vll!e' In pkgs.

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