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> Retucumttybioya—teit-something—of + . ~ / { Up 10,~ }omonths’ > sleeping out in some pack with = nows- — pape! yen last night awould you have taken *. old offender, THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTE MBER 19, 190 ‘ Fie “NIT, TO-DAY ALAIN. HOME Young Mendicant Arrested for Seeking Alms the Son of a Wealthy Physician. LEFT HOME IN ANGER Thought He Could Make His Way, but Was Hampered by Crutches. Lloyd Whitney, who yestertay was « wagned Bowery derelict, woke to-day in the home of his father, Dr. C. A. Whit- at No, 1% East Thirtyfourth et, transformed from the trembling mendicant who last night confessed + to Magistrate Breen tn fhe Night Court that he was not Frank Thomas, arrest- ed as a panhandler, but the only son of the wealtny surgeon. A night's reat in what ‘ho confessed was the first comfortable bet he has slept in since he lett his home a year ago a brush and comb and a razor had done thelr work, and when Dr. Whitney sum- moned his son to his library the young man looked something like bis former aelf. : To an Evening World reporter Dr. Whitney told the story of hin. twolve search for his crippled non, which ended in a telephone message from the Night Pollce Court that the = ere waiting tobe! taken “The physician was plainly tresned by the publicity xiven to the strange case. He sighed as he spoke of his hope that Lloyd would start out anew and begin life over again. " Price Kept Him Away. “I suppose Y waa pride that kept him |’ from: home all this time,’ sald Whitney, 1 cannot explain it in other wi 1 understand that he had a@ quarre! with hle employer in the ma- ehine shop where I had placed him to study mechanics, and, fearing I would | be angry over the matter, he decided to try and make his own way in. the! world. He has not been able to, and | Dr. any now we must begin all over again.’ His Eyes, Paderewski $45,- 000 on His Fingers, Caro- lus Duran $30,000 on His _ Eyes, Lina Cavalieri/<s50,: 000 on Her Throat, and ‘Are Insured for $150,000. df a Wall street his bond-ciipping th: terrible loss and one for which he would ‘le recourse in the way of In- jagnate should lose nb It would be a have 11 fn the fine lines have it a At this point Lioya the room. He is a well-built, bright- looking lad, but his sojourn on park benches and Bowery lodging-hauses haye put lints in his face that were not there wheh he left home, He still leaned on the crutches he bought with his lant,money when, after his Gsap- pearance from home, the artificial limb he—Nore in place of his missing right | leg wore out. “I'm as my father says,” he said, “T am to begin again. Just how we have not yet decided. Somehow, however, I} hope to live down the memory of the | past year. Already it seems like a bad dream.’ Tho young man gazed round the well- furnished Ubrary. As his gaze rested on the books and pictures and other | surroundings of refinement his! eyes Billed with tears. “It ls very different here trom where I wag this time yenterday,” he sald. wuelf entered his wanderings while he was an out- east. “It doean't take long for a hungry man to forget all he has been brought © aATd, With downonsteyesy found after a day or two, when my. funds gave out, that {t was fairly easy to get enough to live on when people's sympathy waa excited by a physical | misfortane. But I never accepted more | than relieved my moat preasing neces: aities. ‘The money seemed to byrn my hand as I took it. Often when" I was over mo I thought of my home and ‘nade up my mind to return, but then I remembered the long time I bed and my pride wouldn't let tell you all I have suffered, ut it has been like one long nightmare. “Ig thd Magistrate had not questioned Your senjonce. Wise solifeading” your, Sdontity 7” “{ ghould have wished to épare my father—yes,” said the boy, flushing, JJoyd was arrested last night on the “Ty" wtation at Chatham square by Po- Hoeman MteMtutten; who accused him or} soliciting alms. He was arraiged in cout and there sald hiv name was Freak Thomas, and that he-lived at No. 180 Park Row. Wiss detectives eyes on him and played ; their eagie decided he was an{ But the keener eyes of | Magistrate Breen were not 0 eaatly | mised. 18lzing up-the young man's face care- fully, the Magistrate anid to hi: . "Your namo jen't Thomas. You're pot a regular beggar. . Tell me the truth, ‘There may be some one in the ety who ts your friend.” Kindness Brought Story, ‘The prisoner tried to smile array the question, endeavored to put on a bold front and take his workhouse medicine Mike a hardened criminal, ‘There was something in the Magistrate's manner, however, that brought out the facts long wilh a stream of tears, “I am sure there ja no one for me," the youth sobbed. “Out with your atory; tell me the truth,’ the Magistrate commanded. ; T'll tell you,” the prisoner said, arching A story of thrills f It warms and chill, Mitte Ku $50,000 and kept In a nice Ittle fur muff, ser. Everybody remembers how {t with the ether one one-handed fiddiera do not draw down large salaries except in,dime museums. If Jan misses an engagement owing to an accident crippling the hand he t entitled to $10,000 Insurance. ‘The capital | prize ts forthe loas ot hia hand. Paderewski,, the planist, money-making digits Insured for $45,000, while Carolus Duran, the famous French painter, has a policy for $20,000 In case he loses hie ey t and can ao longer see to assemble his wonderful color combinations, La Belle Otero, the fiery Spanish fan- Gapgolat, has Insured her twinkilng feet, game pair which has kicked thou- Kubelik Carries $50,090. on| La Belle Otero’s Trilbies! had hia right hand insured for | It cost him | 31,600 to do it, but it was worth {t, for | bas hie} A BEGGAR LAST [Famous Artists, Pianists, Singers and Dancers : Who Insure The Eyes, Fingers, Voices and Toes.| FVES®" MIVED UP | /Corojy, ( DEASns And these trilbies greatest Paid her in case of separately, too) 80 ge tor it, Just the handsomest And jul valuable 4 who. sprai dancing “in stopped t! to oasessions sands of francs Into her bark account, | than the greatest planist's fingets, tie yiolinist’s hand, the sum to be being $150,000. And each toe ts insured) to market!’ and gots run over by | @ buteher cart the danseus® gets ral vAnd there aro many others, Otro now--rnruch—nrore--tn— portant a pair of high-priced feet are compared wilh a bea be mentioned that Mme. Lina Cavalieri, Tend opera prima don: er throat for $60,000, placing @ third of the val Otero places on lier feet, Indicate that feet ot that an accident to "La Ronde dex Salsons' performance. ¢ Pir WOMAN WHO ~ LOST $236,000 WAS M,GEORE So McCafferty Says, and She San leaving the house as soon as he “LITTLE BRIGHT IN DIVORCE SUIT Wife Says Indian Spirit Runs Her Husband’s Butcher Shoo. Mra, Margaret M. Von der Hyde, of No, 229 Hancock jstreet, Brooklyn, to- y filed in the Stipremn Court an ap- plication for $00 attorney's fee and $35 a week alimony penging hex eult for separation from Ber husband, George H. Von der Hyde, who lives over his meat market, No. #5 Fulton street. She eayn hia income ts $100 w day. der Hyde has Med «@ sult for ab- te divorce, naming tighteen-year-old dward G. Dooley, whose address is Riven xa the seme-as—Mra, Von- der Hyde's = ™ her sult Mrs, Von Der Hyde sys Ris sausage making. The wife makes eMAavit Chat her Husband Is eccentrte, that he has beaten and threatened to kill her. Attorney Richardson in the husband's aMdavit*presente as reanona for his al- Jeged eccentricity the dull evenings of & butcher's wife. Von Der liyse, ike other butchers, has to be at the whole- pale market to do bis purchasing at 3 o'clock eact week-day morning, and as aw result he falls D each evening after supper, That left the wife with A «reat deal of time on her hands as each attempt to start a bright curver- sation Was met with @ soft mnore, The butcher alleges that hin wife be- fell asleep ovenings, and that on one occasion he woxs up in time to wee ‘her taking an alfectionate farewell of a “Mr, German’ in the wee hours. Yan der Hyde aftirms that ehe conféssid to him, and that Ge took her back at the learful solicitation of her foster-parenta, Bome Ume later, ho amMrms, she took up Mr, Dooley. | Wasa Holland House Guest —Not Known There. "30.000. ZVES. Inspector McCafferty, in charge of the Detective Bureau. said to-day he had learned that the woman eald te have} Jost $196,000 in cash and $40,000 in jewels | ‘on a New Haven train was Mrs. G. M. George, and that she had baen staying at the Hoilnnd House, Lieut. Carey was sent to the hotel, but was told by the manager that no “Mrs. George” was ricgistered there, nor had any one of that name been @ guest In the place. B. F. Norris, the Brooklyn lawyer for the mysterious woman, says ne now has two men under surveillance. Both of these are commuters and were on the train on which the woman came in from Larchmont, when she lost her treasure box. The lawyer says one of he men will probably be arrested. He said elso the bills were of such large denomination that he hopes to trace them. Mr. Norris still refused te tell the are valued higher the loss of her feet if “this litte pis] Aut ‘ul Volog itm, fe that are “fon ned her fost wht worth Insuri and he cried out this unusual state- ment ‘My father ta Dr. Whitney, of No. 120 Fast Thirty-fourth street, but I have not seen him for a year. I was in a WPivate schoo! at Caldwell, N. J., nnd there'I hurt my foot on « rusty nail. home, and father sent me to the .Poly- clinic. Hospital in West Thirty-fourth street, where they cut off my leg. “After that’ I was completely lost to myself,~ I couldn't get around as | ywed to, couldn't see anything ahead for me, and I guess I became sullen and wasn't a very good son. ‘For a time I did very well end had w_fob, but 1 lost {t because T was not ‘active enough:'on one leg. Then my Wooten leg wore out, and I had no money to get another one. I did suc- ceed in getting a pair of crutches. “Father to the Rescue. “After I left home I drifted from bad to worse, soiling papers when I could, sleeping out nights, cating when T Har the noney.TerT Kept my resotre not to go home. Last night I was hungry"—~ Magistrate Breen had heard the po- Neceman's atory, and didn't care for the Getails of the arrest. He wanted to reconcile the young man —with —htr father, ‘If your father will take you back, will you go home and do right?” the Court asked. Young Whitnéy’s voice failed, but he nodded his head, Dr. Whitney came in a hurry in an- swer to @ teleptione call, and the father and son fell Into each other's arms, Then thoy adjourned to the office, and for an hour were alone together, They talked over the future, and let the past take care of itself, When they again camo before the Mayistrate they were amil- ing, and walked up to the rail arm in arm. Dr, Whitney sald the story as told by his son wan true, but declared the hoy, who ts about twenty-one years old, ran away trom home without bid- ding him gooa-ty. ‘Lloyd wants to go home," he sald, “and I want him to live with me. 1 will give him a good home and sup- port him as long as he liye Tho Magistrate signed the discharge papers, and father and son walked cut to the’ street, where a carriage was waiting for them, Lloya witl’not, hive to hop about on crutches, for the best artificial leg on the iarket will be fitted out for hin. Saban Lene etre teneareed ING OF SAXONY THROWN FROM HORSE AT REVIEW. Are neautiful. part of some hous Lunching and di Bu added inches of hi rings, Of cours definite statistics sive hotel no proper chin doe: New York woman Ii Injured in Fall, but Remounts and Resumes Command of trom. his} beauty page’ tn every Ms sacal coming too atout. the host of dictetio ‘every 0} to reduce New York Women . _ Are Too Fat; Made So By High Living Too Many Establishments of Mirth and| Feasting and Lack of Ou‘door Exercise RE New York women too fat? — g - Hohas-been-sait-that the citrate and the mode-of-tiving-in- New York tend to make wo: Xt ia certhinly ¢rue that the average woman has every Opportunity to graw Tat here, since eating rich foods and abstaining from outdoor exercise are the chief causes of undue plumpness, New York is one place where the flishpots of Hgypt recelve that regard which {4 given only to the really im- portant things of life, to stroll a few blocks town without of mirth and feasting, and the downtown restaurants each have a definite place in the life of the town. Scratch any New Yorker and you will find an epicure, certainly a bon vivant. Walst Line Shows Invitations. pers are ever-present temptations to over-indulgence of the apporite, popular Indy might perhaps haye a rec- ord of her invitations to dinner in the years of growth are counted by its it {= Impossible to get any of atoutness place as large as thin, but the prosper- ous looking women I see in the expen- ‘and restaurants aro usually from twenty-five to fifty pounds beyond the points of slimnoss, pretty confplextons and bright eyes, but the chin ja leading @ double life, which & therefore conclude that the averaxe reinforced by the evident prosperity of clalty ta correcting human welghts, mul- plying pr eubtracting pounds, tie knows some woman who is ‘The butcher aaserta that he had dis- covered thia new affinity business and made her promise to cast off Dooley ‘here was another reoonciliation, and] the butcher fell asleep ax usual after supper each night. One night, Von der Hyde affirms, rhe told him she was moing up to call an her cousin, As ne drove to start for tne wholesale market at 3 the next morning, he ip yx, he mot Mrs. Von der Hyde and! air, Dooley coming jn. The butoher | chased Dooley, who hopped on a Fulton street car, Von der Hyde dragged him off, he mys, and 1 2ked him all over ths shopping dls- srict. With Yon der Hyde’ amMdayit is one by a Mra, Warren, a sister of ley. Bhe that on July 4, 19%, she dis: covered the butoh had captured Kittle Edward's fancy and tht on gan- Tronting Sire Von der Hyde” sie ge ured & confession and promise to te Uttle brother alone, . ibe cht Mra. Warren (af: nother brother ar : sve to North Beach, where neert hell they found Eddie Dooley and Mra. Von der. Hyde. Mra, Warren punched Mrs, Von der Hyde and the buteber mort a tha youthful affinity mrouna the plaoe, Then Mra. Warren, 80 she swears, took Mrs, Von der Hyde to hor home to with her. Pleading was ti vain, name of his client. ‘cuss the mysterious WOMAN DYING ~(S-FLED ROM but Others Declare It an Accident. Mfrs. Jane Clark, a middle-aged wom- an, of Pittsburg, Is dying at Bellevue Hospiail of gis polsoning. At 1¢ East Twenty-socond street station the case” tered as one of attempted suicide, | ‘but at the furnished reani houss of stre-) B, Hovey, No. 162 East Twentieth tract, where Airs. Clark was stopping, ip ts alatex (pat thre wromar: met ee {teft the turned on by accident. 1 A week ago her eon Thomas, a clerk in the Pennsylvania Raliroad offices at Derlence in treating this too, toa heavy.) Pittsburg, came on to New York to flesh. She sat in her handsome Wbrary, | spend his vacation. His mother accom- the walls Mned with Imposing TookImE panied wim. volumes, and expressed surprise that I| ping. Clark, who was a very gfevout should attempt to deal with 20 weighty | woman, attended services at a Catholic @ subject In the brief space allowed for) church im the vicinity last night. She {ts development "by the exigencies Of/¢etired as econ as oho reached the afternoon journayam. house. To-day when her son arose he She has writtes magazine articles on| gmeiied in the all and traced the the subject herself and knows what one! odor to mother's % : ought to be, and perhaps she would not | ot eet in the door, eo he climbed ont on a fire-excape and entered the win- approve of the audacious manner dally | Gow. the Contributory Causes. ‘By Edna Cain. men fat, and, consequently, not: It is impossible in almost any coming upon has of chucking the most| Alihough the sash had deen left open LR HSE HE Se TO “| several Inchea at the top, the room wan hdc " | full of gas which had escaped from Dr. Galbraith agreed that the high! Open jet Mrs, Clark was lying across Uving indulged in by people in Hew York the bed where whe had fal bertainly tended to ‘produce stoutness. | dently over dumme ap ale tt ag and after-theatre!Bhe treats @ great. many casos inci-! surgeon, worked over ithan an hour, but {opinion that she wo: | RESIGNS AFTER 40 YEARS. Theodore C. Eger Quits Line’s Service. Theodore C. Eger, Vice-President and General Manager of the Clyde line, af- ter forty years of service in that com- pany, has resigned, and leaves its ser- vicg, Oot: 1. Mr, Eger ts one of the best known men in steamship circles In the United States. During the four decadvs of hi dcnially in her practice among soley women. She adys poer women are apt to be fat, too, but they have not the time and money usually to be treated tor it, . Penalty Pald by the Rich. She believes {n common sense methods tn treating obesity and does not care for the various herbs and nuts fads. When asked what sho thought of “fletching” the food, a vulgar term for chewing derived from Dr. Fletcher's idea of eating little and chewing much, whe said she knew nothing ahout tt and a Walat, as a tree's Chrde in a They have KILLED WOMAN, THEN HE jaya and the family tur: bad ayers y turned Eddie AFFINITY TOO ALL ~—TOSTAND TRIAL Case of Young Woman and Wealthy Contractor Arrested Under New Law Postponed, “Magistrate Hactis in Wast side Police Court to~day called the adpourn- | ed hearing of Patrick Henry f the ratiroa4 contractor, and hin aftin: ity, Ruby Yeargin, the frst New York isthe of UG Hew Mw that clarsi/les | what the temperamentally artiett: call 2-“anton-of souls" ax platy aiultery. Or n0cmunt of thy tines of Rubee ce affinity, the case was powtponed tmtil Bept. %, by agreement between counsel, Mies Yeargin and her mother, xince thés/ were dispossessed from rhe War- wick Arms, at Elghueth street and Columbus avenue, —with—Hirs@h, hare mucoeeded in keeping themselves hid- den. a Mra, Hirach, who !s behind the pros- ecution of the foul unionists, waa the first to arrive with her counsel, James J. Fitagerald. Hirsch was attended by his lawyers, Daniel O'Reilly and Maur- ice Meyer. The deserted wife sat on the front bench in the court-room. When Hirsch reported he went inside aho ral! re- served for prisoners, and stood almost within reach of his wife, With a win- ning smile and @ low bow, ho mur mered “Good morning,” in her di- rection. Never in the Weat Sido Pollo Daa there been anvthing colder ti the reception Mrs. Hirsch acconied her | husband's emile, bow and salutation, He id not appear'to be muoh dixnvdsed, however, and frequently ghunced in hai direction while the lawyers arranged for the adournment. Mr. O'Rollly said that when the case comes up again Hirsch and Yeargin will be on and pregirat to submit to a complete lege) exanination. ———__.. SLASHED HIS THROAT. FRANKLIN, N. H., Sept. 19—Atter ® quarrel ag the breakfast table, Louts pervico with the Clyde lin has oo- oupled mAny positions of trum and importance. r. Eger contemplates spending the coming «winter in Europe, She approved of mastication, however, and sald a great many people grew fat through lack of oxidation, whilah means they’ eat @ groat deal end do not exer- cjso tn the open alr enough. Bho sug- gests jn agoctic menu, plenty of lean gras worth living meat, certain vegetables, no aweets, no| Whoever sos any dew here in this Hoh foods, no aweet wine, no bear. Laat | Prowpetone deeert Tt te never in Can: of all, only six or oeven hours sleep) But Dr. Galbraith says when the dew ond @ three-mile walk’ Jn the morning| is on the world the air is moat invig- when the dew ta on the gmaa ang vhe| RURE oot oat our cak dawn {a atill rubbing {ta eyea aleepily, | and remain alim and trim, petie fio! If thet is what te required to keep | sweet. bree na as toi an York women. from’ 4 ork ie what it ts, ladle in terror of be- ‘Thia conclusion is York do that sort of thing? Why they would not think ite was worth living. doctors whose spo- Nearly flesh, and every . vapet polite the New ‘and ale} hecause she 2 Cote, to-day, shot and killed Mrs. Nal- ie Clark Pennock, with ‘whom he boarded, at her home on Pemigewassot atrett. He then cut his awn throat vit A razor and died shortly aftor- ait. Mra, Pennock, who waa the di yorced wife of Fred A. Pennock, al _pawnbrokor, tad been deon’ Ilvi {a this city only about mx wee! {ng come here from Bath alleged, was angry with Pennock ordered him to leave [and wife and offer mich eevistasce—a1} indged with tasked mo-to-strengtiten iti KEEPING TABS ON ALL MEN WhO DESERT WIVES: Newark Bureau of Associated} Charities Adds a New Branch to Its Work. The World-Famed Dermatologist, | Face, Feature 1nd Scalp Specialist, HAS REMOVED to 30 ‘oppont 224 street entrance. Wife deserters in Newark will find it} dimoult hereafter to square themselves, ‘They will ba foliowed and tabs will be kept on their every move. Every ar- ralgnment in court will. be recorded. This record! wil) also include the names of thGse arrested for not property pre- viding for their famiMes and all In- stances of cruelty. Should they lea: the Mate and located, everey effort pos- will be exerted to tring them back, The directors of the Newark Bureau He ts now President of I Cultivating Co., reat, and cial cdmneotion n Any other office oF ute of Dermatology MISS CARROLL . AND COLOROSIB, thy standard one applies Hialr Coloring ef the World. 4 of Associated Charitles have decided Vo RAGS to add a department for such inquiries 7 OO ae dower Aad eireotil to its work. The Rev. James I. Vance, eppositell Riera Bre Pastor of the North Reformed Church, | Come and the tars that her husband is a follower Offend oma FC. J; Fs . Jacobson will hare deat equipped and most Bishop May Pepper. and that Little }charge of it. | artistically, furnished {Brat Eves the Indian spirl:, governs | ‘Tha: new moves the—eucome—ot | Institution ef tba dind Our wonderfrt-beauty doverted wives for assistance. booklet, “Thirty Years a Dei insmaces the deserters hay effort to hide themscives, or the olty. It haa ateo benn in some casos the. maa ta able, with « Utile persuasion, te Brovide for his famity- i The Berewu wit! at ail times endeavor | to effex a reconcilliatian between man | > Dermatelogisi free to/any address L CULTIVATING CQ, WOODBURY, Prew, opposite ven leave | found that | 't Make -Stained-Glass Windows. '| Out of Piain Glass Windows auRe wa add oontinudlle to our inre assortment Terlena tn “Windowphante’”’. some patterne must necoss WI enable them to get a new start tn the hope of bettering ther conditions, thereby diecouraging separations and desertions, To restore deserting husbands to ther | Wixes is the chief work of the new de- | partment of the bureau, but It will aieo | endeavor to do. lkawise in cases wirrs | "y be dincontinued.,. dae) the wits tn the deserter. Already san | yor Geaizna waited work of xetting the names and recor! | pindower sy) Of fe und husband derertors, at Ger tr records, h ar price : as bden begun. and FRIDAY. \, WAY" HERMAN LOST HS PARK JOB i i CALL TO-DAY IF’ POSSIBLE His “Elevation” to the Bench LORSCERTAINELOCREOS Is Reaily a Process of “Cunning, Raterrins-to his appointment of Park Commissioner Moses Hermann as a City Magistrate, Mayor MoClollan to-day said! that Mr. Hermann had in every meade _a_ most isfastory missioner, and that his appoin' the police bench was in no way-intended aa 8 polite way of aldetracking him Samuel Parsons, the Supertatendent, the Mayor acing Park Comm notice Mr. Hermann comes from the Twenty- ninth Assembly District, controlled by Thomas E. Rueh, a Murphy leader. ‘"fom" Rush te not on speaking terms with the Mayor, therefore there {a not | much surprise at the fact that the Mayor should put the Py Preshtent way —trom—n—} thee was lots of patronage and yon ky sterling froma #1 ME hhh Bey a wiil be loner tll” further pap to the lean lookout oa the police bench Some months Hi who was 9 ETRAT PATE gnad for this act ans mame: dai Tay Ti loonyince Me that W.L.Dong- ine $5.50 shoos thebestin the world Stores in Greater that the order te fromthe Ma’ ninstoner K houring a doyen, was nev ts sald somebody had to be made a goat in th case, VANNUTELLI NOT COMING. | ROME, Sept, 1%—The report t Cardinal Vinconko Vaanutelli, Anch- priest of the Liberian Bastion he Congregational Counct America asx Special Log ding the Fou: se Of -tha-Church int K in October was! ——— to. NEW HUSBAND Quite an Improvement on Old One, Loose, Dra; Wabbling, ‘fur, false teeth (if tlsht at the “'T have been compelled to stop drinking {t,) I said to a friend who of her good coffee. ‘Well,’ she sald, ‘that needn't bother you, for 1 have Postum Food Coffee here, which com pletely cured a friend of mine of sick headaches.’ : “T tried her coffee and It was very good, but when I tried to make it at home I was disappointed. I soon found that 1 wis not making {t cor- rectly, but by putting in two heaping | teaspoonfuls of Postum for each p¢r- son and Jetting {t boil twenty minutes, it was delicious, “Thad at that tlme been an Invalid for several years, but did not know my trouble was caused by coffee drink- ing, of which I was very fond, I im- mediately began to feel better after) Jeaving off coffee and using Postum, | and stuck to it. i “One day I met a lady who was) troubled the same as I was, and whose | appearance on the street really shocked/me, for she was so emaciated. | Sho exclaimed in surprise at my im-| proved appearance and. wanted to} know what I had been doing, She! § asked me if Chad had a healer of any| kind, I sald, ‘Yes, I have allowed| § Postum Food Coffee to work the al- most complete niltacle of curing-me. “My husband hxs been absent from home for some tims, avd hog been in| wretched health, heving. been in the hospital twice for Indigestion. 1 wrote him to stop using coffee and try Postum—told him also just how to make {t. Yesterday I recelved a letter from him in which he says: ‘1 am feeling vory much better, thanks i \ { WL! piande ter Laundi Who calle early Monday, Anawer to "Wanced! In The World Sunday, Ada, In | i Just hire hs That this te quite Bo the house on ocount of ds alleged “drink, vaete was. thirty-five yoare old to you and Postum. 1 sleep better,