The Albany News (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, November 22, 1912 Page: 4 of 8
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THB ALBANY NKWS NEW YORK GUNMEN
I ♦
TEXAS NEWS!
A WEEK'S WORLD NEWS
PAUL BAKER, Publisher
ALBANY,
'I KX AS
The rest cum In now offered to the
baseball fain freo of charge.
JURY TAKES 20 MINUTES TO RE-
TURN VERDICT.
How do you like "wireless" as a
verb? We rather admiratlouleBS it.
It's a dull Sunday paper these day*
that doesn't exploit some new dancer, j
In the tlmo to come the reckless avi-
ator will be arrested for plain disor-
derly conduct.
PRISONERS WERE SILENT
Council Will Appeal From the Verdict
as in the Case of
Becker.
The man with the outrigger knees
III the street cars Is a good rival of
the end seat hog.
We may have the stlngless honey
bee. but the political bee will keep
Its stinger forever.
A western man says it is possible
to dress well on $50 a year. He
doesn't refer to women.
A Chicago pedagogue wants girls
taught cooking Instead of classics. Hot
he married one of his pupils
"A spade Is not an Implement of
wealth." says a Pennsylvania labor
leader. It Is, If It fills a fluith
That Cornell professor who predicts
another glacial epoch must be having
•erlous trouble with his furnace.
And If there were no world's series
of games how would our baseball play,
era break Into the literary gameT
A Newark woman tried unsuccess-
fully ten times to end her life. Noth-
ing succeeds like stlcktoltlveness.
The best press agent In the world
ta said to bo the girl who has an out
of town friend coining to visit her.
One person In 110 In this country
owns an automobile, but he should
not try to exterminate the other 109.
Forty thousand people work at mak-
ing gas In New York city. Now you
know what's the matter with the town.
A musical comedy comedian under
oath In New York admitted that he
could not sing. There are many oth-
New York "Gyp the Blood,'' "l>a-
i go Frank" and "Whltey" Lewis klll«d
| Herman Rosenthal, thw gambler, at
i tho Instigation of (.'hales Meeker, and
must pay tho penalty of death In tho
electric chair. The Jury, which has
| boon hearing the evidence against the
; four gunmen, so decided Tuesday
when It returned a verdiot of mur-
! tier In tho first degree after but tweli-
I ty minutes of deliberation.
The gunmen heard the verdict pro-
nounced against them without show
of emotion. The stood at the bar
looking straight ahead as tho foreman
of the Jury made known tho result of
Its deliberations, and they continued
to tar stolidly in front, of them until
the formalities of the proceedings
were concluded.
"Whitoy" Lewis—ho who was tho
most dramatic of the four when ho
testified on tho witness stand alone
walked with head bowed.
As they entered the door leading
over tho Bridge of Sighs, "Gyp" said
something to "hefty" In a wullen un-
dertone, which nono could hear. Out-
side, "Ijefty's" doll-faced wife, "I/efty'a
! Lillian," as she is called, wept on the
shoulder of her husband's father, who
tried to comfort, her. "Gyp's" wife,
known as "Gyp's IJlllan,' received the
news In the house of detention. The
two other gunmen are unmarried.
Former Magistrate Charles G, F.
Wahle, counsel for the gunmen, an-
nounced that he would appeal from
the verdict, and, aa In the case of
Becker, months may elapse before
their ultimate fate Is determined.
Meantime they will occupy colls near
the former police lieutenant in tho
death house at Sing Sing.
THREE KILLED IN HOTEL FIRE.
An eastern court has declared the
•afety raror a dangerous weapon, pre-
sumably by a Judge who shaves him-
self.
Tho plan to save birds will b* effec-
tive when woman ha* been convinced
that her hat looks Just as well with-
out them.
A Yale professor savs the average
American wastes three years of his
life. But that is putting It at a pretty
low figure.
A Ijondoti nerve specialist nays that
modern dress Is actually killing wom-
en Most of 'em, at that, aro dying
to bo In style.
An Englishman has Invented n sting
less bee. Now If he'll only Invent an
Itchli'ss woolen undershirt his famu
will be secure.
A Cincinnati woman <!• < lares that
she has married a man wI bout a fault
Just think of the trouble there is In
itore fur that ninti
A Canadian lumberman wedded a
ptlrl he, wi d through an Interpreter
Ami still tie v • ty that love baa u
universal language
A West Virginia rlti flagged a train
with In r iipi.ui and saved a wreck
Hhe never could have done It If sho d
torn a hobble skirt
A I of ' ii t ■ ' >r Is of the opinion
(h it >ou:ig p> i t ie fltotild be allowed
the privilege of flirting In chapel
\\ atrh bin liti ml • . •• • i m,
"The worst
(he 'I el. do I V
Is vet to con
h ipp.
fin s
not, 11
A New York court has ruled thnt a
fUH'i" i 'aIfe !i1 '\- - law, or at
least III it the eourt « ii t ot ►tup hiT
But so Is a gre i by liusl mil
A Chit ago Judne has held that lem-
on flavor i not lemon flavor unless It
has a lenton In it llat.ding a lemon
to the ultimate consumer, as It were
A western man promise* to raise
and fatten turkeys on grasshoppers
Perhaps he's going to put the birds
Into a turkey trotting stunt tu vaudo
▼llle.
▼
i
GATHERED EVERYWHERE
ITEMS OF IMPORTANCE CONDEN-
SED FOR QUICK
READING.
« d - •« J •
Why Is It that dwellers |p jroun
talnous countries are more belligerent
than those who live on the plains*
Does the luck of elevators uiaka tbem
peevish T
A German savant d- lares that th*
chataetei* . f is . re profound
Iv Influenced I \ tl.e li.> truiii' nts the
play Th" a, by ill na< ana, eliminate
the b iss drum; we h.o.. eM'..,;'
knoi i, ■ i s now
If anybody hi. It;\, • • ,j „ method
foot haa be,- a ,• •,...d in
tin ■ deadly railway frogs cai releasi
hit 'it a' onci and ;th ah .!ute <v r
talnty, said Inventor Is exoeedlnglj
slow In procuring a press agent.
Elevator Boy at Los Angeles Saves
Many Lives at Risk of His Own.
los Angeles. Oil : At least three
people were killed and about twenty
Injured by a fire in the S\ George
Hotel The blar.e started on the sec-
ond floor and, drawn up through the
elevator shaft, it spread so rapidly
that those on the fifth and sixth floor*
who did not receive tho warning In
time were compelled to jump from j
the windows.
Perhaps si score or more owe their I
lives to the heroism of Oscar .tones,
who ran the single elevator of the
hotel. Ilo continued to operate the I
elevator between the first and sixGi
floors with the small car packed with
humanity until flames and smoke
made further (rips Impossible. There
were numerous Ik role rescues by the
firemen
HEAD ON COLLISION KILLS EIGHT
Three More Badly Hurt When Trains
Crash in North Carolina.
Norlina, N. c Fight trainmen
Were Killed and three badly Injured
near here when Seaboard Air I,inn
through passenger trains, running be.
tween New York and Jacksonville,
1*1.1., collide! head-on Both locom.i
fives and tliren pa .wnger taw Ik .
«ire b tiiollshivl There were n.t pas
senger-, m the demolished .>a«'ht
Tlli) wrock <>■ utred seven miles
nurth of here, just as train No SI
«"; bound ' id rounded a Inn,; curve
In u deep fit! Both trains vere run
ning at full speed and neither en-
t aeer eotil I I iv< seen th i appro' !i
e the other for more than a minute
before the era h
The wr.H'k ig« did not catch fre ami
tin t•< was no i' im anion.; t pa
-en. ers The W r.', k Is s.ud to have
been due to an ruction of U tin
OI d'M'r
TURKS DRIVL BULGARS BACK
Constantlt uple Nazlm Pasha H nt
t' •• following tel. r mi "I he battle
wbl-h has been raging for dus
throughout the whole extent of the
1 li . lji lines has ended In our favor.
We repulsed the enemy's infantry,
which attempted to nU.mco In the
ei titer, and annihilated several of their
biittcru * (ill the right wing wo cap-
tured two machine guns mid a quuti-
titv of ammunition.
From one of the forts in the cen-
ter we Hortled at sunset and dispersed
the enemy, who had occupied a pos-
ition In the face of the fort The
greater part of tliem were killed Wo
captured L'u ' rifle - and a lurge niiuli-
tity of ai.timunltloii'
20,000 KILLED IN BATTLE.
War Spoils of Mon,astir Fight Fsti
mated Value $10.000 000,
n \ f.< I::r.id M'.tt. >, s.iys
thnt i' (l i thi' • day * 11 •• H (( ti • - nf
Mo- ■ r • '-'Si: in ' • : • '. -<0,
of w • It •••. Were Tut ■ - Th • war
| ,ti;.-..| «o • worth ... They
in.' Kb rl: • of ti e l.it• a| pat
I t■ ■ i it's i f ammunition and 16
hmvy ii-ius.
Work is in progress on 13,000
square feet of concrete sidewalk in
Terrell.
It Is reported that Gainesville Is
eoon to have one of the largest broom
factories in the State.
Tho new gas plant at Taylor is
about completed and the final work
Is progressing rapidly.
More than $200,000 has been spent
In permanent improvements In Knnis
within the past few months
Bobbers blew open the safe of the
Merrit Bank at Merrlt last week and
aocured about $4,500 In cash.
Boston wool merchants have bought
H.'iO.OOO pounds of fall wool from com-
mission men In San Angelo.
The citizens of Spur have recently
voted $r,.00l) In bonds for the purpose
of erecting a new school building.
It is estimated that building now
under construction In Tulsa. Okla., to-
tal in cost over one million dollars.
Work has begun on the $20,000
school building at Honey Grove, for
which bonds were Issued last sum-
mer.
The commissioners of Franklin
County have bought a $4,000-road
grading machine for use on the public
roads In (hat county.
The report that oil hns been found
In paying quantities at Dayton, N. M„
has created quite a stir in that part
in oil speculation
Cameron County drainage dietrict
No. 2 bonds, amounting to $102,620,
thirty-fives, 5 per cent, were approved
by the Attorney (ieneral Department.
Tho cornerstone of the Culberson
court house at Van Horn was laid the
past week, The building will be of
native sand stone and will cost about
$50,000.
At a meeting of the Fall Fair com-
mittee of the Fort Worth Chamber of
Commerce, appropriations approximat-
ing $10,000 was made for a four-day
meet In that city.
Five brick business buildings, cost-
ing $10,000, are under construction at
Flint, a small town near Tyler, and a
modern school building has recently
been completed.
Tho Alamo Oil and Refining Com-
pany's plant at San Antonio was de-
stroyed by fire Friday night at a lots
of between $250,000 and $300,000, with
the plant a great quantity of col ton
seed and oil waa burned.
The Young Men's Business Associa-
tion of Gainesville has been notified
by a Hubard City party that by De-
cember first he would liavo his plant
and workers in Gainesvlllo to begin
an awning and mattress factory bust- J
ness.
Wiciilta Falls' newest enterprise Is
a glazing company It is located near ;
the glass factories and will engage
In the manufacture of window Bash,
fitting the glass in, ready lor instal-
lation in buildings.
Work Is to begin Dec. I, on the
paving of nine blocks In the business
district of Taylor. The Taylor Water
Company is also preparing to Install
a h.vsi hi of water nuiiiis throughout
the district to he paved.
Herman I 'Iter of Muenlcr, Texas,
was killed by the explosion o' twelve
n is ol I* r.nmite which ho waa car-
tig to ins orchard lie intended
biasing out holes ill which to set tie*'
apple trees
I'iro of unknown orluin, but start-
ing in two places within the same
block ft! practically the Battle time, de-
stroyed four residences and a luinlnT
} rd it Palaelos, entailing a loss of
approximately f:' i.OOO
l ■ I i M .i.i oM son of Charles Cot-
tlngliain of l"gin, Texas, waH on his
way !o si hool with a companion and
started to nn e when the gut on Ills
i i i ■ bri throwing him to the
iro'iiel and Injuring him Internally,
!rom >, . h death resulted soon after.
rile Donna Pin tit at mi Company's
t.• ■ 'if ,r t 11. re. ntly completed tit
I I I 'MIS at II cost of I lO.iMlO,
wa.i open- d for business las! week.
Pile eotiipaiiy owns a plantation of 2,-
.' acres in that se. tion of the State.
Tit's is the fourth big sugar mill ojs
<i.e i in the lower Kio Grande Valley.
f I 11 nine, living near Tyler, rais-
ed sixtj five bushels of sweet pota-
toes on a quarter of an acre Uiib year,
which he sold for $ 1 00 per busheL
The averagi crop in that section this
year wns about seventy-five bushels
per acre, and the price was from S5
cents to $1 |« r bushel.
A representative of the American
Sui \r Refining Company of New York
was iti Sin Antonio recently for the
purpose of Investigating the possible
profits that might accrue from the
establishment of a large sugar reflu-
: cry in that section
It was thought that the Turkish
troops would be able to stand a
I lei; thy siej.li in Mouaelir, but it is ev
Id'ul tli ■ t e army was totally disor-
ganized and lacked provisions.
STATE, NATIONAL, FOREIGN
Affair* Given Here In Tabloid Form
for Busy Readara In City
and Country.
In the final count of the votes In
California it wns declared carried by
Col. Roosevelt by sixty-six votes out
of a total of 500,000.
It is stated that thirty-four South-
western railroads have agreed to re-
store the inter-chargeable mileage
system for traveling men In the South-
west, beginning Jan. t, 1913.
There were 1,453 men killed In coal
mines In the United States during
the first eight months of thla year,
says a report of the Bureau of Mines.
There were 2,719 killed during 1911.
Mrs. Chalmer W. Hutchison of Ft.
W'orth was elected president of the
Texas Mothers' Congress, In session
at Houston the past week. Mrs. J.
N. Porter of Dallas declined to be
elected the fourth time as president
o/ the congress.
it is figured that the next House
will contain 297 Democrats out of a
total of 435 or 6S.3 per cent. Eigh-
teen Btatea are solidly Democratic.
The Republicans and Progressives
and other brands of progreaslvea will
be 13$.
Jose Canulejas y Mendos, the prime
minister of Spain was shot and killed
by an anarchist in Madrid last week
aa he stopped to look at some hooks
in a book store window. The assas-
sin then attempted to take his own
life.
Gov. Wilson and party arrived In
Bermuda on Monday and was g>ven
a great ovation and welcome when the
steamer on which he sailed arrived.
In the party besides Governor Wilson,
his wife and three daughters are three
servants, one stenographer and ten
newspaper men.
Representative Carter Glass of Vir-
ginia, the ranking Democrat on the
Committee on Banking and Currency,
Is working out a hill on tentative
currency and banking reform, to be
submitted to the next Democratic
congress.
Over 5,000,000 pounds of wool were
shipped from San Angelo during the
1912 clipping season. This large
movement, represents over one-half of
the entire production of Texas, which,
according to the latest report of tho
Federal Department of Commerce and
I -abor, was 9,450,000 pounds. The pro-
duction of wool In the United States
as a whole, according to tills report
was 318,547,900 pounds.
All Greek subjects In the United
The Chicago, Peoj-la and St Louia'
aRllroad of Illinois was sold in Spring-:
field. 111., at auction by Master In,
Chancery Allen of tho United States
District Court to the reorganization
committee of the second mortgage
bondholders, who held the bonds which
were foreclosed. The bid was $750,-
000. The amount of the bonds fore-
closed was $2,000,000.
Penalties, the maximum of which Is
$40,000,000 and the minimum $1,000,-
000, and the forfeiture of their char-
ters, are asked in a petition filed at
Meridian, Miss., by Attorney General
Ross A. Collis against the Alabama
Great Southern and Mobile and Ohio
Railroad*, charging violation of iha
Mississippi anti-trust laws.
Mrs. John Nuckols, wife of Chief of
Police Nuckols of tho Texaa aide of
Texarkana, died aa a result of burna
sustained at tho family home. She
waa cooking the midday meal when her
clothing caught fire from the gaa
range. Her crlea brought aJmoat Im-
mediate assistance, but her body and
face were literally roasted before tho
flame* could be extinguished.
The second trial of Clarence 8.11 Har-
row, former counael of the McNamar-
aa, on the charge of having bribed
a Juror in the dynamite trial, waa
again postponed art l-os Angeles by
agreement of counsel. The case la
now deferred from Nov. 26 to aJn 6.
Senator Gore will introduot a bill
in next Congress which will provide
that the Government shall bear the
cost of Presidential CongresBlon cam-
paigns. Senator Gore's plan Is to baae
the amount of the campaign funds for
each party on tho number of voters
at the last preceding general election.
The allowance In the Presidential
campaign would be 15 centa and ill a
Congressional campaign 10 cents per
voter. This he eatimatea. Including
all iiartiea, would not exceed a to
taJ allowance of $2,500,000.
Juanita, the 4-year-old daughter of
Street Commissioner Homer Bowen of
the Texas side of Texarkana, died aa
tho result of burns sustained at the
family home, when the dry grass on
the lawn In the front yard caught Are
and the older children ran out to ex-
tinguish it. Juanita went, too, and
tried to mothers the blaze with her
feet, when her clothing ignited and
she waa fatally burned before adult
membera of the family could reach
her.
Jack Johnson, the negro pugilist,
who Is accused of violating the Mann
white slave act, and who was held
In a Chicago Jail for a week, has been
released on a $30,000 bond. As John-
son was leaving the Federal building
he was re-arrested on a charge of
having attacked a newspaper photog-
rapher as he waa entering the coun-
ty jail laat week, and waa releaaed on
a $400 caah bond. The photographer
immediately filed a ault aaking for
$10,000 damages from Johnson.
An increoso of 277 per cent In ten
years is the record made by the St.
lyouls Southwestern Railway of Tex-
as in the number of car loads of
States who served In the Grecian ar- fruit a nnd vegetables handled from
ni.v ns recruits In 189fi 1N97 and 189S Bast Texas stations. This Interesting
are called upon to return to arms, statement was issued by John F. I.e-
Tliey are expected (o Join the army I hane, general passenger and freight
within four months. It Is stated at \ agent nt Tyler, Covering every Bta
the legation that already between 10. tion on the lines of the company In
nun and 12,000 Greeks had returned Fast Texas foe each year of a decade,
United States under the statement Is an Index of prog-,
j ress in the development of the two
acres of fine agrl Industries. In 1902 the Cotton Belt
cultural land lias been reclaimed and handled 1,401 car loads of fruits and
home from tho
similar orders.
Two thousand
10,000 acris more put In a sanitary
condition, rendering It free of malar-
ia, hy a drainage project, in Fry town-
vegetables from Its Fast Texas sta-
tions. lu 1912 the number had been
increased to 3.XSS car loads. Hum-
ship, In the southern part of Tulsa marlzed iho statement shows (! cara
County, Okla which hns just been of strawberries, 74 cars of potatoes,
completed at a coal of $17,000. I.and 917 cars of tomatoes, 25 cors of can-
regarded ns worthless before Is now teloutycs. 121 cars of watermelons, 4
selling at $100 an acre It is destined ' cara of mixed vegetables, 2,730 cars
to be some of the best land in the of poaches, 3 cars of pears and 8 cura
After Dinner Joke.
In the great Pecos valley
country of New Mexico the latett'
rival is always asked:
"What Is worse than biting Into
apple and finding a worm?"
He Is stumped. They tell hint
"Finding half a worm."
YOU'RE "All
to the Good"
when the appetite it
keen and your diges-;
tion perfect;
bit what a differeaee
when the stomach "(oea
back" on you, when tho <
liver becomes lazy and
the bowels clogged. It
such cases you need
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH BITTCBS
right away. It really does
the work. All Druggists.
&
mm BfSSk-Mtar
lln« u< short bmlb In * ll daraftMt
mi tire relUf la U-U Oar*, ftal tmtaml
rBKB. aa.aaaasaaoss, an i, iiiaMMfr
Pel tits Fac Salvo
(MARTINI
S0REU0Q
Sometimes a burglar leaves UtU* to
be desire*. ,
As a girl grows older she become#
wiser and quits wearing so many pin*
in the vicinity of her waist line.
Tf your appetite la not what it shonl
perhaps Malaria la developing. It I
the whole system. OXIDINK will
away the grrms, rid you of Malaria .
generally improve your condition. Adv.
Very Hobble.
Mrs. Stiles—How do you like say
hew gownT
Mr. Stiles—Reminds me of a crowd-
ed theater.
Mrs. SUles—Crowded theater? How
•OT
Mr. Stiles—There seems to be slan&
lng room only.—Judge.
JH,1
Jr
SB
Counsel of Despair.
"I want a piece of moat without any
bone, fat or grlsUe," said the bride*
on her Orst trip to market "Tea,
ma'am." replied the butcher.
would suggest that you take an •a"
—Youth's Companion.
8tretchlng It Some.
The men were boasting about thetf
ricb kin. Said one: "My father ha
a big farm in ConnecUout It is so big
that when ho goes to the barn cn
Monday morning to milk the cows h
kisses us all goodby, and he doesst
got back till the following Saturday."
,"\Vhy does It take him so longf
the other asked.
"IlecauBo tho barn Is so far away
from tho house."
"Well, that may be a pretty big
farm, but compared to my father'*
farm In Pennsylvania your father's
furm ain't no bigger than a city lot!"
"Why, how big la your fathor'a
form ?"
"Well, it's so big that ray father
sends young married couples out to
the barn to milk the cows, and th*
milk Is brought back by their grand*
children."
SCOFFERS
Often Make the Staunchest Converts.
Arkansas Valley for alfalfa.
Frank and lvdwnrd Mali of ihe Hall
I Iron glass plant at Munlce, In.I., are
inukinr v tour of the Southwest look
of cabbages.
A package of money, said to have
contained $2,lnt), was stolleti from the
office of the Wells Kargo Kxpress
lng for loo.it ons for three additional Company in I'ort Worth on Nov. 8,
factories thex plan to Install
The preliminary survey for the
lar>;" Irrigation project at HiWIinger. \
lias been finished Tills survey cov-
ers a large area and is for the pur-
according to an announcement mado
public by off! dais of Hie company.
Governor Mann of Virginia haa
postponed the execution of Floyd Al-
len and his son Claude from Nov. 22
lose of darning the Colorado Hlver to Dec. lit. The respite was granted
wi'li a 2,500.foot dam. making a stor-
aiv capacin suffici'.nt to irrigate 129,-
000 acres of land lu Kunncla County.
The project will be financed by a spe
c.al bond issue
Presidentelect Wilson announced
so thai Claude Allen might take an ap-
peal to the I'nited State Supremo
Court on the constitutional grounds
that hla life had been twice In Jeop-
ardy.
Theodore Itoosevelt carried Mlnne-
u t
•.ni.ple The Sultan has nil-
P . S'.,le,| „n good
ivqilcsl Ik: Intervention to
iin \ moi " O, Minis! c tone
lei; w that lite ti. >,.s v , | be ui>k. .o
aoU Uiics ul TcbaUlJd
Just In-fore sailing for Bermuda on sola by 1!<,430, according to complete
his vacation trip that be would call ! returns tubulated by Secretary of
an extra session of Congress on April' State Bchmahl. The vote as officially
15, for the purpose of revising the compiled is: Roosevelt 125,R66, Wll-
tarlff f!ov Wilson will return from j son 106,426, Tnft 64,334, Debs 27,605,
Bermuda Dec 16. Chafln ",>*86.
George Harned, a farmer residing In ! A detachment of 100 British blufc-
the mountains west of Koswcll, N. M., J jackets has been lent by the British
has Just disposed of his entire crop | cruiser Weymouth to guard the Uni-
of cauliflower for the sum of $1,032.50. j ted Slates embassy, as the American
The total crop weigher 16,000 pounds station ship Scorpion has bf-en allot-
nnd represents the biggest crop of ted to duty on the upper Dosphorus
cauliflower ever prodijCed by one man and the American cruisers are not ex-
ln that State in one season i pected to arrive for two weeks
I>ee Mct'lung, treasurer of the I'nl The bid of the Pittsburg Water Fil-
led States, has tendered hU resigns- ter Company for the Installation of a
tion to President 'tnft K It believed filtering plant In Waco to cost about
$85,000 has been accepted hy the city
succeed commissioners of that city.
Willlnm .! Bryan will be offered the
and | post at Secretary of Slate In the Wil-
son Cabinet and will accept was stated
In Washington by a close personal and
political friend of Mr Iiryan, who Is
a member of Congress and has been
In consultation with tho Nchraskan
i! irlng his visit to that city. This man
al*o a political adviser of Mr. Wll
ton.
that Cartni Thompson, private seert
i <ary to tho President, will
hlin.
Plans are being perfected In
around Hoswell, N. M , for tho ornji
lrlng of n drainage company within
a few Weeks Drainage is rn'iuli'od
there to prevent the land from In-
coming worthless an-1 It Is ixpc. eil
that several thousand acre>< In tl;
P<«'os Volley will he underlaid with
t£« wltUlc tbc ooit year.
' The man who scoffs at an Idea or
doctrine which be does not fully un>
del-stand lias at luast tho courage to
show where be stands.
Tho gospel of ilealtb has many oon-
verts who formerly laughed at th*
Idcu that coffee and tea, for example,
ever hurt anyone. l!pon looking Into
the matter seriously, often at the sug-
gestion of a friend, such persona
have found thnt Postum and a friend's
advice bavo been their salvation.
"My sister was employed In an east-
ern city where she had to do calculate
lug," writes an Okla. girl. "She suf-
fered with headache until she was al-
most unfitted for duty.
"Her landlady persuaded her to qnlt
| coffee and use Postum and la a tew
days she was entirely free from head-
ache." (Tea Is just as Injurious u
coffee hecause it contains caffeine, tho
same drug found In coffee.) "She told
ber employer about It. and on trying
It, he bad the same experience.
"My rather and I have both suffer*!
much from nervous headache since I
can remember, but we scoffed at Um
idea advanced by my sister, that oof-
fee wns the cause of our trouble.
"However, we Anally quit coffee and
be,-an using Postum. Father hts had
but one headache now in four yean,
due to a severe cold, and I have lost
my headaches and sour stomach,
which I am now convinced came from
coffee.
"A cup of good, hot Postum Is aat*
lsfylng to me when I do not care to
eat a meal. Circumstances cauMd
me to locate In a new country and 1
feared I would not bo able to get my
favorito drink, Postum, but I wan
relieved to find thnt a full snpply la
kept here with n heavy demand for
It.." Name given by Postum Cb,
Ilattle Creek, Mich.
Head "The Hoad to W^lvlUe," la
pkgs. "There's a reason."
Fv*r rend tlie nbowe letter? A
one itppenrn from tlmo to tlm«. Th«f
•re genuine, iron, ami *
— V
V 7
r«u •(
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The Albany News (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, November 22, 1912, newspaper, November 22, 1912; Albany, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth393912/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Old Jail Art Center.