Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 51, Number 3, Jasper, Dubois County, 2 October 1908 — Page 6

WEEKLY COURIER

HUN KI). DOANH. Publisher. J SPKIt, I NIM ANA. man and hit uw.uei -tu üt w re parted. A woman to Influenced by her 1. t". a man t) his digestion. 1 1 we njo meeting r man who "., s paying his debt! A s'raight man c-s lame when ho el'.is into crooked path.-. upiii doesn't pay any attention whatever to a Hag of tiuce Man.v a man at'empts to stand up f.r h.s triends b lying. Linie drops of wa'er make big dollar tor the umbrella man. There would be leas trouble If nobody ever gne anybody advice. Do people who kill time expect the dead past to bury the dend? They are u-ing automobiles as hay wagons This is the last straw. A successful politician knows when nor tu suv arntii'iiK for publication. When an inp!rat.on strikes a man U'-s a sign that he needs the money. Some people can't stand prosperity because it ret'is.-s to stand for them. When a girl wants u man to kiss h r he doesn't want him to think she A nier matter of form has enabled i:i.m a woman to make a hit on the ht ige. Perhaps the Idiot who shoots at bal1 "m! is in idiot who formerly rocked ii-' boat. Orrasionly a newly made widower f .! lik a man who has Just escaped from jail. Dare to do rieh! and you will soon have a reputation for being poor but honesr. The girl who expects love to come afir marriage places the cart before t !i h r.-e. And if sometimes happens that the carpenter does better work on the Mage than the actor. The nan who fails to get up in tho w irld doesn't feel called upon to get ; and explain why. I' takes a rich man to bo able to ift-'-d an automobile and a porter h . i ist- stak nt the name time. Soni'time n man is born with a sllspwn in his mouth; sometimes he a- 'pare a collection from hotels. Kven a whispered call to duty can be h .rd by a deaf man If there's an oie,e salary attached. Instead of looklug a gift raulo in the mouth, get at a safe distance and keep your ces on his rear hoofs. While we don't pretend to know much about telepathy, we have an idea that it .a a second cousin to gossip. Don't judge a person's income by clothe. The richest man and the po.jr.-st woman are not always the ttll.il) I) i est. Water's getting more dangerous ever) day. Latest news is that a boy In l lifter, Pa., has gone blind from a told bath. The optimist of the Cincinnati Times star says "every time you lick a postage stamp you get a taste of sweet potato." Some day some playwright may write a play in which thero will he a rotiege boy who is not crazy. But unit will be the use? The man who tries to keep his boy tw ty from a swimming hole it pretty Mire to have the youngster regard him us an old fogy. Although a ir.au may imagine that he has married an nngfl hp should see hat she stays mar the ground while 1 -i-tmg her wines A bitter contest over the will of William B Leeds is predicted. Fifteen n.ilhon dollars ought to keep the law: yers going a long time. A Michigan farmer has cured a tike bite with coal oil. We hupo he is properly grateful to Mr. Itockof lr for the fact that ho could buy the neccessary oil. A Paterson (N. J.) woman who preri.fted that she would die on Juno 11 1 iUill allvo and In good health. Her husband Is said to havo become ono of r.iferson'B worst pessimists. one f,f the lady lecturers declares I . it me who wear starched collars lie fool, nut would the lady lecturer (ppr.)ve .f the men were to go around w h tlr ir -hins cut low or their arms uhjwng tl i'i iüh ip h work sleeves?

H00SIERISMS"

Little Items of Interest All Over the Length and Breadth of Indiana.

All Scratching at Brazil. Thero is nn opidomlc of hives at Brasil and tho wholo town Is busily scratching. Big Time for Vincennes.

the Mncenne hoiue-coiuiug week Mrs. Lycurgua Deesen, of Milton, sot for early in October promises to has n dahlia growing in her doorbo the biggest event of its kind ever yard that measures 11 feet in highl. pulled off in southern Indian. ; Tho plant looks well and hua a man

Work of an Assassin? Whit Bennett, of Ft. Hitnor. I,nwronce county, was mysteriously shot

in the back when entering his rosi-!for

dance. Wealthy Farmer Killed. John C. liechiold. ono of the woaltitlest farmors of Wabash county, was killed by a Wabash pussunger train near Andrews. Cork Strangles Little Girl.

The little daughter of George Hicks,' 20 years ago at 5 to ?10 an acre, and near Huntington, was choked to death which at that time was practically by a cork. Tho girl had been playing worthless except for grazing land, with a bottle. 'has devoloped under drainage into the j clrhest farm and hay land in the

Great Fire In Kankakee Marshes. A wall of Haine a mile long is sweeping through the Knnknkeo marshes, destroying everything in its path. It

Is T feared there w bo roWution of!ccod wife of Peter Baker, the Gor-

10 feet into the earth. Her Organs Reversed. Mrs. Philip Kratz underwent an , op ration tu Eansville and It was then that the phvsicians discovered the woman's hart was on her right side, her liter on the left side and her Kph-en ou the right b.-i. , I Killed by Mad Cow. 1 Moses O'.-rho:. aed v vears wealthy bachelor, was killed by a mad cow h biu j"t üough- a lu w as , leading the animal to his home, west of Goshen. Why the Rally Was Delayed. Tie- opening of a Democratic rally at Princeton was delayed half an hour by a cow swallowing the liy net of the horse of County Chairman Ballard, who was delegated to escort Thomas It. Marshall, nominee for Governor, to the opera house. Stabbed With Corn Stalk. Joseph Haker was perhaps fatally Injured while cutting corn on his farm in the western part of Johneon I county. While tying up a shorh, he fell backward, and, alighting on an upright corn stalk, it penetrated his body, Indiana Farmers Holding Corn. Many western Indiana farmers archolding their grain for future market, claiming that prices will advance rapidly as soon as tho actual coudi-. Hon of the preseut corn crop Is gen-: erally known. A movement Is said to ! be on foot among farmers in various localities looking to the control of grain until what is believed to be the limit in price Is reached. No Race Suicide Here. A fivo-monthsold chicken, owned by Miss May Deitrich, of Columbus, Is j demonstrating that race suicide has i not struck the chicken industry lioro. j Recently the chicken came off the , nest with seven young chickens hatched from eggs which this young : chicken laid. Trade Reviving In Anderson. Anderson is beginning to benefit from tho industrial revival. Nearly all manufacturing concerns are in operation and at many of the plants the working force has been very materially increased. Five of tho nine now factories secured by the factory committee aro rapidly preparing to begin operations. New Traction for Northern Indiana. The connecting link in traction railway lines between Toledo and South Bend seems likely to be built within tho next few months. A company has been organized at Kondnllvllle, made up of Kondallvllle and Goshen capitalists, to build a line from Kondallvllle to Goshen. Thieves Make Funny Joke. Thieves robbed tho orchards or sev eral farmers living between Dillsboro and Milton, hauling away several bUBhels of applos. peaches and winter nnars. Tacked unon the Kate of one farmer tho mrauders left tho follow ing notice: "We'll oat what we can and what we can't we'll can." Burglar Slays Prison Guard. Edward Quick, a penitentiary guard, was murdered in his home at Mich gan City by a burglar. Mrs. Quick was wakened by a noise, and, seeing a man at a dresser, she nudged her husband. The burglar commanded Quick to lie still. Quick nevertheless raised up on his elbow. Instantly the burglar flrod, tho bullet striking Quick ln tho head. The slayer escaped. Peanuts. Arachides, or peanuts, aro Imported Into Franco from east Afrlla. the British and Dutch East Indies. Argentina, Algeria, Senegal. Australia and the United States. Those imported ns nuts in tho shell yield edible oil, while decorticated peanut kernels produce inferior grades of oil, which aro usod mainly for sonp-niuklng. Something More Practical. "How tho spanker's face shines!" "Inspiration?" "Perspiration " New Orleans Tlmcä'Domocrnt.

; Drought Closes Schools in Monroe.

For the first tlino nine school in Monroe county are closed on account of tho prolonged drought. Mrs. Beeson's Big Dahlin. uer or lino Uowers Drought Hard on Fishes. Indiana fish art rlvinir hv thousands jack of wlltor ln . uoosler .streams. Millions of fish are crowdlug tho deep holes. Hoosier Farm Land Dear. J. Harris, of Morocco, a largo land 0Vner, soid 2lO0O acres of laud in the Beaver lake country, lu northern New tun county, for 100 an acre. This laud, which could have been bought county. Affinity Breaks Up Home. An allinity claiming to be the dldiann Harbor and is in parts unknown with H. C. Onrris, a mill ninn. while the latter's young wife and two chilI dren are In Apollo, Pa., the homo of her parents, the woman went under the name of Mrs. Walters and once delighted thousands as a trapeze per former. How'd You Like to Be Miss Cadmos? Smith Hutchinson, of Greenfield, who bred and raised tho pacing mare, M'ss Cadmos, received word from her owner, a Canadian horseman, that hc had made a mark of 2:05. Whon Mr. Hutchinson sold Miss Cadmos in 190C he took a pledge from the purchaser that the mare should have the best of care. She Is housed in a stnblo most as good ns a parlor, and her keepers are not allowed to drink, swear, chew or smoke. Blackoird Pie the Latest. Xot "four and twenty," but twentysoven blackbirds, were "'baked in a pie"by Mrs. Belle Judd of Plainlleld. Mrs. Judd has a number of young men boarders, amoug whom Is Murray Dobson, principal of the Plainfield high school. He told Mrs. Judd that he would kill nnd dress tho birds if she would make the pie, and as a result it appeared on the table in tho best of style, perfectly delicious, and Indeed a "dainty diah to set before a king." Purdue "Tank Scrap" Pulled Off. Nearly one thousand Purdue students comprising the members of the Purdue University sophomore and freshman classes clashed last week in the fifteenth annual class contest known as the "tank scrap." After forty-five minutes of torrilllc onslaught tho sophomore class won and the subdued freshmen, bound to along chiin, were marched to Stuart Field, Purdue University, whero tho conquered foe was suljjected to all manner of burlesquo stunts around a huge bonflro that illuminated the heavens for miles around. Strange Case of Shooting. Charged with murdering his sixteen-year-old sister Margaret. Charles Golsondorf, aged 19, is being held at Indianapolis police headouarters ponding an investigation. The girl was feeble-minded. The boy asserted at tlrst that he took n revolver from a drawer and that he didn't know that it was loaded. He declared the that tho shooting was accidental, and he claimed also that she shot herself. The boy finally confessed that she was chasing him with a llatiron, and that he fired tho fatal shot from anothor room. The powder burns on the girl's head indicated that tho revolver must have been held close to her. Wood's Slap at Hanly. Senator Will Wood, of Lafayette, Governor ITanly's former law partner, arrived in tho capital with a bill which ho intends to introduce In the special legislative session. Wood's bill Is considered a direct shot at tho Governor. It provides that it shall be unlawful for tho chief executive of Indiana to deliver nny lectures or public addresses anywhere for compensation during his term of office. It provides also that for the first offense a fine of from $100 to $50C shall bo assessed upon conviction For a second conviction a fine of not more than Sl.ooo is provided. "I am decidedly opposed," sain Sonntor Wood, In referring to his bill, "tc making the Governor's office in this stat nn advertisement for a lyceutn bureau." Prater Park. Tho largest park In Europe is the Prater, In Vienna, measuring eighty square miles. Chance for the Motorists. Pearl Belle boasts that she hns an "automobile heart." Buby Gracious ! What kind of a heart is an "automobile heart?" Pearl Why, any young man can have It who owns nn automobile. Chicago News. Try It. Would you adopt n happy plnn? 'Twill cost von naught to try It Then praise the weathor whon yov can, And when yon can't keep qulot. Dunvor News Times

PARIS FASHION HINTS.

M"" H Wh m $'1 In) 11! Ä

-..!. .Viisses' and Girls' Out -Piece Xiüht Gown, sllnned over head. FIno cambric, nainsook, jaconet or Persian lawn are all suitable materials ror tins model. Five sizes, S to 10 years. 24fi!. Child's Uox-Plaited Dress. with hlirh nr low neelr nml lone or short sloevcs. A pretty little frock, snitfihlo to thin jsertre cashmere, mo hair or any of the heavy linens or muian-nend cotton, i-ivo sizes, l to a years. 2521. Bov's Shirt Waist, with sep arate turn-down collar. A good model ror tancy suirtuigs. ponge i or nnnnei. Seven sizes, 3 to 15 years. 2.129. Girl's Tucked Apron, with front and skirt nortion in one. Lawn. batiste, cambric or linen is now used for Lho nnrnn of both irrowinir Irls and small children. Five sizes, 4 to 12 years. 2Snn. filrl's and Child's Anron. A slninlo little mnilol ensilv tnndn nnd especially adaptable to school and every-day wear. SI" izes, 2 to u years. 502. Jumper Shirt Waist of a con ventional design. Fashion Editor, 400 Century Building, Indianapolis, Ind.: Enclosed please find ten cents. Please send Paris pattern No Size Address Name . Men Should Brush Their Hair More. "Very few men brush their hair enough," said a down town barber. Fact. Most Ills of the scalp can bo traced to that fault. You see' it's this way: A man is generally in a hurry when he dresses and he never takes timu to brush his hnlr, simply smooth ing It down, generally only with a comb, and, as a result, dandruff is allowed to accumulate and trouble be gins. Now. with a woman it's different. A woman has to carefully brush her hair at least once a day. If she didn't It would be a pretty mess: its vary length saves her. for ln brushing it each day she gets out all sorts of impurities, dandruff and the like, all of whirh is for her own good. Now, that is tho chief reason why fewer women suffer fro'n dandruff than tho unfortunate members of the opposito sex, and it Is also the reason why the hair is a woman's crowning glorv, oven if she is fair, fat nnd forty. So brush your hnlr every morning thoroughly If you want to keep In tho swim. You're right. Next, sir." Philadelphia Hecord. The Most Costly Necklace. Tho knost costly necklace in the world V'longs to Countess Ilenckel. a lady well known in London and Paris society, the value of which is said to he $2f0.000. It is renlly composed of three necklaces, ench of historic interest. Oen was tho property of tho ex-Queen of Naples, sister of the late Austrian Empress; the second was once the property of a Spanish grandee, while the third was formerly owned by the Empress Eugenie. Not long ago a necklace composed of 412 pearl, in eight rows, the property of tho lute Duchess of Montrose, was sold for $00,000. The Empress Fredcrick of Germany is said to havo possessed a necklace of thirty-five pearls, worth at least $200.000, while Lady llrlnjster's necklace of black pearls is valued at about $126,000. Kansas City Journal. Why He Never Spoke. Thero was a ninn in our town, ami ho was wondrous wise; ho never spoko unto his wife of his mother's cakes nnd pies. Tho secret of his wisdom gupss It If you can; but if you can't, behold it ho was n bachelor rauu. A Test of Good Jam. "No, Tommle, dear, you don't got any more Jam. Next time, when you have ben a very good child, you got som more." "Sny, mother, do you think it will keep ho long?" Brooklyn Lifo.

111

THE SDNDAY SCHOOL The Senior Berenn Lesson for 3urfc day, September 27.

A TEMPEIIANCU LESSON, lsa. 5. 11-23. Golden Text Wino is a mockor, strung drink is raging fit brawler". Pro v. 20. 1. Tho Losbou To.xt. lsa. 5. 11-23. 11. Woo unto them that rlso up early in tho morning, thnt they amy follow strong drink; that continue. nil night, till wine inllume them! 12. And the harp.and the viol, tho tabret, and pipe, and wino, are in their feasts: but they regard not tho work of the Lord, neither consider tho operation of his hands. III. Therefore, my people are gone into captlvitj. because they havo no knowledge: und their honorable men aro famished, and their multitude dried up with thirst. 14. Therefore hell hath enlarged herself, and opened her mouth without measure, and their glory and their multitude, and thulr pomp, and he that rejolceth shall descend Into It. 15. And the mean man shall be brought down, and the mighty man shall be humbled, nnd the ojes of the lofty shall be humbled: 10. But the Lord of hosts shall ho exalted in Judgment, and God that is holy shall bo sanctified in righteousness. 17. Then shall the lambs feed after their manner, and the waste places of tho fat ones shall strangers eat. IS. Woe unto them that draw Iniquity with cords of vanity, and sin as It wero with a cart rope: 19. That say Let hltn make speed, and hasten his work that we may soe It: nnd lot the counsel of the Holy Ono of Israel draw nigh and come, thnt we may know It. 20. Woo unto them that call evil good, and good evil: that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter! 21. Woe unto them that aie wise In thoir own eyes, and prudent in their own sight! 22. Woe unto them that are mighty to drink wine, aud men of strength to mingle strong drink: 23. Which justify the wicked for reward, and tako away the righteousness of the righteous from him! The Lesson Outlined. I. The Crime of Intemperance nnd indifference. Vors. 11, 12. II. The Payment of Penalty. Vors. 13-17. III. Drunkenness and Dissipation. Vers. 22, 23. The Lesson Explained. The opening soction of chapter five is a familiar picture of a vineyard planted upon the sunny slopes of the hills around .Jerusalem. The greatest care was bestowed upon it by the vine dresser, but it was of no avail for it produced wild grapes and not the lus cious truit of culture. The application of the parable Is vigorous. "For tho vineyard of the Lord of Hosts is the house of Israel, and the men of Judah his pleasant plant: and he looked for judgment (justice), hut bohold oppression; for righteousness but behold a cry" (ver. 7). The woes which ho then pronounced show up the causes which produced this unfortunate state of affairs. In Vers. S-10 he exposed the avarice of the rich land owners, whose desire was to increase their property by spreading desolation among tho poor, who were cruelly ejected by theso men of In justice and violence. 1. Tho Crime of Intemperance and Indifference. Vers. 11, 12. Tho grasping monopolizer of the previous verses stands at one extreme, while in theso verses the dissipated drunkard stands at the ether. Pity and contempt alternate in this speech. Tho "strung drink" was made of apples, dates, pomegranates, honey, and barley, anil it was spiced to produce intoxication; "wine" was tho fermented grape juice. How lucking ln self-con trol must that man be, whose first thought on waking is that of "strong drink;" how lost to all self-respect whon ho spends the night in dissipation. When the apotites are in dulged they become tyrants and keep their unfortunate victims In abject slavery. Drink is a hard taskmaster. How the arts of music and poetry aro prostituted when used in the service of the saloon and drunken revelries! Such fleshly Indulgences unfit men for sober reflection on tho facts of life and blind tli'in to the certain judgment of the Lord upon sin; and induce a fatal Indifference to the claims of conscience. II. The Payment of Penalty. Vers. 13-17. Tho word "therefore" introduces the dire consequences of evil doing. So curtain is punishment to follow sin that the prophet pictures It as already at work. When tho conscionco hns become deadened there is a loss of all moral discriminations, and the way Is open Into captivity. Drink is a tragic equalizer of men. Those who aro under the Influence need not bo distinguished as "honorable men," or ns "the multitude." They should all bo regarded as tho subjects of tyranny, and alike exposed to famine and misery. Tho word ren dered "hell" is the abode of the dead. In his effort to make vivid the awful consequences of the drink evil, he personifies hell. It I represented as sur prisingly stirred by the extraordinary excess of the spoils which nro cast into its gaping maw by intemperance, so that Its capacity to receive all Its victims hns to bo enlarged. We who know what this curse lias produced of blighted lives, and ruined health, and desolated homes, and Increased crime, and pitiable poverty, and distress of lite most fearful kinds can well understand this forceful figure of Bpeech used by tho prophet. The penalty which has so pitilessly been visited puon tho people Is in keeping with the just retribution of a holy God, whoso pure laws can not bo violated with Impunity. Whore prosperity onco smiled upon the vineyards and ollvo groves and gardens, now dosolation had cast tho mantle of Its terrible blight. III. Drunkenness nnd Dissipation. Vara. 22 23. Tho prophet ngaln returns to tho subject of Intemperance, but ho confines his attention to tho

That's Proper.

nra. iiuiiiiuiii wimi uo t.- ,j, when tho city has dlbtliiguiMi. i v,j. I tors? Benimm If thoy aro men. gu. t ,.m luu iruuuum öl me city, ami u w . r - .i . ., , uetiuuiii oi uiu nry goous store.-. nur. pur s wuuiciy. Stopping Him. "At tho risk of holm: em..!. r., 1ÜW. "Constant exposure," Int n uj,iiHj Miss Peppery, "makes you nn n i', mo ns, I suppose, Mr. Uragg ' ndelphJa Press. ONE KIDNEY GONE. Hut t'u ml A firr Doetiira Snhl Thr Wn v.. II..... Sylvnnu t) Verrlll. MHford. M?, .ays: "Five years ago n hid It :urjr paralyzed nie ..nd affected mv Kid-' neys. My buck M irt me terribly anil the urine was L.nitj disordered. I).ks lord said my right kidney wn prac. tleally dead They alil I could nerer walk n im In I reH if l.i..nh Kidney Pills nnd began uMni, I hem. One box made me fdronser and ireer from pain. I kept on using then and lu three mouths was able to get out on crutches, and the kidneys were acting better. I Improved rapidly, dl enrded the crutches and to the wonder of my friends was soon completely eureu. Sold hv nil denler. .r0 cents a bor. Foster-M Ilhorn Co.. liuffulo. N. y. A Million Persons. Ono million porsons In a crowd, al lowing three square feet per person, would cover about seventv nere.s. in lue. allowing eighteen inches to each, they would form a procession of 2S4.1 miles long. Mascots. Mascots have had their place in tho vorld for many generations. Cats, as with the ancient Kgyptiaus; grashup pors, as ln Italy, and various other specimens of animal life have in their time been counted as sacred or lucky by different peoples. Pa Knew. "Pa. what is the anxious seat"" it is tne seat a man occupies a trolley car while a hatchet faced male stands at his elbow.'" Binninglam Age-Herald. In n IMneli, !; A Ilm' l'iinl-l'niir. A poivdor to Khaki- Into your hoe It rst the feet Cures Corn. Itunton. Swollrn, "Sore. llt. CaIIou. Aclilns:. S im tin.; ffft nnd Insmwlni; Nulls. Allen Koot ha. mnkes new or tlht shoe on.r. Sold ly all Dniuiflst mul Shoi Stow, 2."c Sampl mailed I'ltKK. Addrew Allen S. OltuatcU, U Hoy, N. V. The Busy Ten Dollar Dill. Mr. Brown keeps a boarding house. Around his table sat his wife, Mrs Brown; the village milliner, Mrs. An drews; Mr. Black, the baber; Mr. Jor dan, a carpenter, and Mr. Hadley. a (lour, feed and lumber merchant. Mr. Brown took ten dollars out of his pock et nnd handed it to Mrs. Brown with the remark that there was $M townr the S20 ho promised her. Mrs Brown handed the hill to Mrs. Andrews, the milliner, saying: "That pays 'for my now bonnet." Mrs. Andrews in turn passed it to Mr. Jordan, remarking that It would pay for tho carpenter work he had done for her. Mr. Jordan handed it to Mr. Hadley, request ing his receipted bill for Hour, feed and lumber. Mr. Hadley gave the bill back to Mr. Brown saying: That pays $10 on my board." Mr Brown asa n passed it to Mr. Brown, remarK ing that he had now paid her the $20 he had promised her. She in turn nald Mr. Hlack to settle her Imal am; nastrv account. . Mr. Black handed it to Mr. Hadley, asking credit f r tho amount on his Hour bill. Mr Hadley ucain returned it to Mr. Brown, with the remark that it settled for that month's board, whereupon Mr Brown put it back in his pocket, observing that he had not supposed a greenback would no so far. But suppose Mrs. Brown had sent to a mall order house for her now Don not. then the $10 would have gono out of town aud never come back. The moral: Spend your money at home. The Osceola (In.) Sentinel. Tortoise Shell Hats. In Samoa the smart ladles wear top tolse shell hats. AFKAID TO EAT. Girl Miirtlmx on I ll-Seleeled Fowl. "Several years ago I was aetunHy starving." writes n Me. girl, "yet dared not eat for fenr of the consequences. "I hnd suffered from indigestion from overwork, irregular meals and improper food, until at Inst my stom ach became so weak I could eat scarce ly any food without great distress. "Many kinds of food were trieu. n with the same discouraging effects. I steadily lod health and strength until - . . . . n I was bin. a wreck of my former self. "Having beard of Crape-Nuts and Its great merits. 1 purchased a package, but with little hope that It would help me 1 was so discouraged. "I found It not only appetizing but that I could ent It ns I liked and thnt it satistled the craving for food without causing dlstrefts. and If I may use th expression, 'it tilled the bill.' "ror months (!rnie-Nuts was mJ principal article of diet. I felt from the very first that I had round tli right way to health nnd happiness, and my nnticlpntlons were fully realized "With Its continued use I regained mv twin. 1 hnnlfli mill HtrellL'tll. TO d I am well and can ent nnythlng I Ilk'. yei urape-ui iuuu luuua u. mv bill of fare." "There's a Benson Name given by Postum Co., Bnttl ewnl- Mini. Ifnnil 'Plm null to Weil' vllle," ln pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A ne one aDDcars from time to time, i i'cJ ! a I kiiml aru genuine i'Uvi aim iuii wi u----interest