1 - ' 1 ^ .> ' - ^ ^ V * ' ' " - , "" -jjk * U '» ~ * »f * r * . -<WyT"£-:T>'f* 7"" ̂ , *••'-* '*Y:t.r;y £*?•?•' JiiiiimiMaMmi!iai%ii4B«MiMMM«aMMii«iwiipM^ I Ji Y J. 'N11 ft'll1 WiliMW uimalra.. i; j^si»sTO The McHenry i'laindealei Published by F, Q. SCHREINER. McHENRY, ILLINOIS The Joy ride is general 17 lt« own Diamonds are one thing that erefcse in ralue after decreasing tin. in to Last Winte? was a very sever* on*, bat we bear no grudge agaiutu it now. s"*\j ; .;.r.f%s * *$£ * sf ~ *'* < < ?< k PERCIVAL'S VISIT TO U^CLE SI'S FARM AMERICAN DENTI3T AND GIRL ; COMPANION ARE JOINTLY CHARGED WITH MURDER. SHOWS BODY IS IDENTIFIED Laughing may make people fat, but that la not what stout people care to know. British Police Have New Evidence Concerning Victim, Supposedly the Doctors Wife--Arraign ment Mere Formality. In his modest, unobtrusive way the cricket is advising you to lay in your Winter coal. London, Eng.--Hawley H. Crippen, the American dentist, and Ethel Clare L«neve, his typist, were Monday ac cused of the murder of Belle Elmore, the former's wife, in the formal charge read to them in the Bow street police court. The woman was charged also with harboring and maintaining Crippen after the crime and while knowing that he committed it. --- I Inspector Dew, who brought the Will Thomas A. Edison please In- I prisoners back from Canada, intro- •ent something to geep ice from melt- j duced evidence to show that Crippen Tobacco crop short and revolutions la Cuba again. There ain't going to he no "butts." teg in summer? People who predict that this waa to be a hot summer are around men tioning the fact. When New York gets to bread by weight, maybe the bride will make a fortune. selling young Having had her eyes insured for $15,000, a New York chorus girl is pre pared to make eyes at all comers. contemplated suicide while at sea fol lowing his flight from this country. Crippen was quoted as declaring that his companion knew nothing of the trouble in which he was involved. : The fact that both were accused of ' the murder of the actress-wife of the doctor leads to the supposition that I the mutilated body has been identified | to the satisfaction of the authorities, i It also suggests that the police be- l lieve they have further evidence con- I cerning the Leneve woman's connec- ; tlon with the tragedy than they have I made known. Dew closed his testimony by repeat- •iri i'v •- no cnanc«o w even a striped red shirt MMRD IS VICTOR PtfcOT OF LOZfER DRIVES AT EL- OIN MOST 8PECTAOULAR j mi 1 ARE YOUR KtDNE>S WELL?.* AUTO RACE. OfcLY FOUR CROSS THE TAPE DEAD IN IDAH^ FOREST FIRES NOW PLACED AT OVER TWO HUNDRED. Were you ever so tired that after lifting one foot up you dreaded to - put It down again to complete the » conversation with Crippen when FINANCIAL LOSS $20,000,000 •tep? Another $20,000 diamond has been found In South Africa. All they have to do there la to pick up the wealth. If your socks, your tie and your hatband do not match in color you can still elude the critical by going swimming. Bread Is' to be sold In New York by weight Then the inconsistent cus tomers will complain if it is light and tf It isn't Now thai an aeroplane has been •track by lightning we discover that wind isn't the only thing the aviators have to combat. A homing pigeon has just flown 1,000 miles in about five days. That will keep the flying machine busy for time to come. the latter was exercising on the deck of the steamer Megantic on the re turn to Liverpool August 24. Crippen said: "I want to ask a favor of you, but I will leave it until Friday." Fri day was the day preceding the arrival of the vessel at Liverpool. The In spector replied: "As well now as Fri day." Crippen then said: "When you took me off the ship at Quebec I did not see Miss Leneve. I do not know how things will go. They njaj all right \ they may go all wrong. I may never see her again and I want to ask you to let me see her. I won't speak to her. She has been my only comfort for the last three years." Crippen was allowed to see his companion in trouble. After the introduction of evidence against the accused persons they were remanded until September 6, without havirg pleaded. Flames Still Rage and Many Missing Not Yet Accounted For -- Men From St. Joe County Return With Stories of Horror. Spokane. Wash. -- With 86 em ployees of the forest service known to be dead and grave fears felt for a number of others who are missing, headquarters of ths Cosur d Als&s for est at Wallace, Idaho, is anxiously awaiting news from the relief expedi tion sent to rescue Ranger Joseph B. Halm and 84 men who have not been heard- from since Saturday, when they were on the headwaters of the St. Joe. It Is estimated the loss of life in Idaho will number more than two hundred. All estimates of the financial losses DIE I GRAND TRUNK WRECK SCX KILLED AND OTHERS INJURED IN COLLISION. Second Section of Montreal-Boston Ex press Telescopes First--Fire Breaks Out and Passengers Are Cremated. Durand, Mich.--As the result of the rear-end collision between two sec tions of an east-bound Grand Trunk train two miles east of here, six persons are dead, seven seriously in jured and three slightly hurt. No. 14, the Chicago-Montreal train, left Durand at 10:01 o'clock, but was stopped three miles east because of a breakdown on the engine. No. 4 left Durand, also eastbbund, at 10:35 and crashed into the rear end of the stand ing train, splitting the rear sleeper in two and throwing its passengers and bits of wreckage to each side of the right of way. George Wilson, fireman of No. 4, says his train had gathered full head way and was running more than forty- five miles an hour when the accident occurred. He says there was no warn ing of the presence of No. 14. except one torpedo over which his engine Livingstone Is Second, Qrelner Third- Winner Average* 624 Miles an Hoyr^ Comtt Claaa *S V*nd#rbHt Cup Contest Time. Elgin, 111.--Ralph Mulford, driving a Lozier car, won the Elgin national trophy in a race of 305.03 Miles Satur day at an average speed of 62.5 miles an hour before a crowd of 100,000 peo ple. His driving was of the spectacu lar kind and when he finished he waa cheered for fully Are minutes. Thirty-six times the blond driver circuited the rough course of country roads--a course of eight miles 2,499 feet, or, roughly, eight and one-half miles--with but a single' stop. The remarkable feature of Mul- ford's run lies In the fact that he approached within three-tenths of a mile tiie maximum average in the* classic Vanderbilt cup event of a year ago. That such a run could be made on country roads, with prac tically no preparation and for a much greater distance than that of the Vanderbilt cup race, is looked upon by experts as little short of mar velous. Close behind the victorious Lozier was "Al" Livingstone, driver of a National, who broke another record In that his achievement was that of one man and one car in two successive races run at more than a mile a min ute, In the first of which he was vic tor, and totaling more than 500 miles. Livingstone's record as second at the goal was 60.2 'miles an hour for the ientire run of 305.03 miles. The third man, another driver of a National, was A. W. Grelner. His av erage time wfes 64.4 miles an hour, reduced far below those of the other two winners because of numerous stops for repairs and gasoline. In addition to the numerous unex pected obstacles that were met In full view of the great throng of motor fans, demanding cool handling of cars I and quick work on the part of the pilots, Livingstone was menaced by a j danger of which none save his mech- 1 aniclan and himself was aware. He ! entered the race in a machine which j carried two big cracks in its frame. j Livingstone discovered the cracks • MAKE8 TWELVE SHORT TALKS ON FIRST DAY'8 RUN. V ""JSr Ex-Presldent Hands Out Words sf Advice to His Hearers om' Va rious Subjects. Chicago.--After a Ion# and strenu ous trip from Utica, Col. Theodore Roosevelt reached Chicago Thursday night, and after remaining in the city LOF TWO UOuTD, on his spAAisj train for Cheyenne; Wyo. The coloned was on the road from one o'clock In the morning ithout interruption excepting for a brief sortie from thp train at Buffalo, where he had breakfast with the El liott club and again at Cleveland and Toledo, where he ventured out Into the clamoring crowds. The ex-president handed out words of advice to his hearers at the twelve stops where he made speeches. He talked abollt the pollution of the great lakes, declared in firm tones that it must be stopped, that the na tional governments acting in co-opera tion with • the Canadian government and the state executives ought to start at once to stop the contamina tion of the lakes. He came out upon his old stand for the severe punishment of the rich crooks, as he characterized them, but remarked with emphasis that he was Just as much against the poor crooks and that they should be punished too. He wanted a square deal for all. "Only there Is perhaps less excuse for the rich crook," was the colonel's qualification as be spoke to the crowds. Mr. Roosevelt assured his audiences that he would help all he could in bringing about what he called "cinching" of the corporations and the crooked man, saying: "I will make the corporations oome to time as I whi make the mob. I insist on justice for all, rich or poor." BIG CUT IN EXPRESS RATES The kidney secretions tell if disease IM lurking in the system. Too frequent or scanty urination, discolored urine, lack of control at night indicate that the kidneys are dis ordered. Doan's Kid ney Pills cure sick kidneys. ,S. E. Vaughan, 601 E.' South St., Iola, Kan., says: "Diabetes had set in and I ex pected to live but s short time. Kidney vdfo milky white and back pains were terrible. 1 was so dlzaj- wife had to lead me. After trying everything else, I began with Doan's Kidney Pills and was soon helped. Continued use cured me." Remember the name--Doan's. For sale by all dealers*. 50 dents ft b&X. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. T. NOTHING DOING. / Tramp--Help me, kf < ^r. I hart seen better days dis-- Mr. Jinks--So have I. This weather Is awful. DEATH THREAT IN I. C. CASE • Chicago professor says that skunks are good to eat, but until we Me the meat trust try to corner them W«'ll rpfnm tn IWIIPVA it Those billions of bacteria repented found in frozen eggs are not so im pressive since we dallied with the fig ures about Halley's comet London reports the presence of 130,- 000 foreign waiters. Class in men tal arithmetic, how much does this •mount to, at one average tip apiece? No man can sleep soundly after giv ing away a million dollars, says a Hew York preacher. Let's all gv?t to gether and disprove this statement. A New York couple got married the other; day because, they said, they both loved the game bull pup. The silly season is showing results all right New York druggist thinks rattle snake poison is a cure for consump tion. Consumption is also a cure for rattlesnake poison. But who gets the first bite? American tourists are reported to be the most eager patrons of dirigible balloons in Europe. Their experiences with the tip-custom in - their travels seems to make them careless of life. Th«> only doubt to be thrown on the story of those quadrillion of microbes In frozen eggs is that it is almost be yond belief that any self-respecting microbe would relish that sort of food. The man for whom the law should provide 1. particularly severe penalty when caught is the chauffeur who strikes a person down and then runs away from his victim. Director of Ostermann Company Tes tifies to Intimidation to Prevent Car Fraud Narrative. Chicago.--Hearing of the case against Frank B. Harriman, Charles L. Ewing and John M. Taylor, former Illinois Central officials charged with defrauding the company through car repairs, was resumed in Judge Brugge- meyer's court Monday. Theophile Reuther, formerly a di rector of the Ostermann Manufactur ing company, the first witness, testi fied that Henry C. Ostermann, presi dent of the Ostermann company, had threatened to kill him if he (Reuther) told the story of the defrauding of the Illinois Central out of $1,000,000 through car repairs. Reuther told of Ostermann's alleged attack upon him in the offices of the company when he threatened to dis close the gigantic steal. Thefts of valuable records, confes sions, letters, reports and other proofs of frauds, together with copies of important documents, came to light In the graft war as a rival to the $1,- 500,000 car-repair swindle, j Documents containing evidence . against the mea higher up in the huge | fraud disappeared from the Illinois Central offices two months ago simul taneously with the discharge of an employe in the railroad's secret-serv ice department. | Rev. F. G. Bingley, an evangelist, I who preaches to the women of the ! levee, turned the bulk of the missing papers over to Murry Nelson, Jr., chief counsel for the Illinois Central, | Monday. j "My boys, Paul, eleven years old, • and Cecil, nine years old, found the ! papers floating in the river," said the evangelist. THE WRECK ON THE GRAND TRUNK 3A-y ClT HURO SUM / 7®" NO * Lt FT OURfcNO AT- »0.»ff fr ANO CRA^MtO »*TO' MAD Q> NO 14 DURANO NO T4 UEFT OVRAHCK « LOTTI HM vast .TO tHVHt " f MITCHCU. O* HO M V** KtUcCO UNOE** HIS INWf Diagram shows point just east of Durand, Mich., where • ths tralnt crashed. Train No. 14, Indicated by arrow, stopped that the engine mJgW be repaired. Train No. 4, shown by the long arrow, speeding along In thj darkness, crashed into the Pullman oar on the rear of No. 14 and plowed under It. % PONTIAC We have got to have a copy of that aew department of agriculture bul letin on "The Life History and Con trol of the Hop Flea-Beetle," even if the government does charge 10 cents for it A New York man shook pepper Into his soup and then was seized with a fit of sneezing that killed him. Now the question is. did the restaurant- keeper make his heirs pay for the soup? Col. Roosevelt Is Snubbed. Milwaukee.--"In view of the ua» scholarly and unfair position that Mr. Roosevelt has taken in the discussion of the movement for which I have spent all my spare time and energy, it Is impossible for me to accept the intended honor." This is a portion of a letter of Mayor Emil Seidel, Social ist, to Frank Cannon, chairman of the Milwaukee Press club reception com mittee, in which the mayor declines to serve on the reception committee on the occasion of the visit of Colonel Roosevelt, who will be the guest of the Press club next week. place it at over $20,000,000, mostly in timber. Avery, Idaho.-^-The bodies of 20 forest service men who died fighting the fires near here were recovered Wednesday and brought to this city. Governniient agents declare there is little hope for any of the missing. Four negro soldiers of Company Q, Twenty-fifth United States infantry, are among the missing and are be lieved to have perished. Two Japanese employed in railroad work, who had been fighting the fires, emerged from the woods. They were severely burned and report that ten of their fellow laborers had fallen be fore the flames anl were dead. Spokane, Wash.--Rain, turning to ! snow in the high mountains, Wednee- day brought relief to a large part of Idaho, Montana and Washington dis tricts that havj been devastated by forest fires. The storm, according to reports from Missoula, has extended over an area of 100 square miles, ta king in the Coeur d'Alene district. It is now officially declared that 54 persons, and no more, have been killed There is said to be no war- •rant for the reports of loss of hun dreds of lives. All men on the list of government foresters employed In Idaho have reported to the supervisor or are known to be safe. The alfalfa cure for snake bite is Viewed with infidelity, but the snake bite cure for tuberculosis is vouched for in a recent case. Cautious people will prefer to have neither ailment ftfid use neither remedy. Easy Victory for Ten Eyck. Saratoga. X. Y.--In a sculling race which proved that professional oars- «!rl Drowns In Whirlpool. Joplin, Mo.--After rescuing her ten- Lady Dockrell has been instructing the young-women of England that hus bands must be healthy. Undoubtedly it is annoying to have a modern home cluttered up with an invalid husband. Husbands should agree to the reform With a corresponding stipulation on part of the wives. men over sixty years old can "come year-old sister and another child from drawn, while swimming. Cleora Dion, Hxteen years old, was drowned Thurs day in Spring river. back." James A. Ten Eyck, coach of the Syracuse university crew, Mon day easily defeated James H. Riley of this village over a three-mile course. passed a moment before the collision. Charles Spencer, the engineer of No. 4, is thought to have been fatally in jured. Engineer George Mitchell of the en gine pulling No. 14, was under his bro ken engine making repairs when his train was'struck and was fatally hurt. He died on the way to a hospital. A relief train was made up at Bat tle Creek and rushed to the scene of the wreck with doctors, nurses and hospital supplies. PERJURY IN BROWNE CASE? 8peclal Grand Jury Is Ordered Judge Brentano--Witness Tells of Orgy. by Chicago--Judge Theodore Bren tano Friday ordered a special grand Jury impaneled on August 30 to uflh- dertake an Investigation into charges of wholesale per jury In the t r ia l c ! Lee O'Nell Browne, accused of giving a bribe for the election of Senator Lorimer There are two matters to be in vestigated, one of which is wholesale perjury by the defense In the Browne trial, and the other matter, sad to be an important one, State's Attorney Wayman win not divulge. when he made a final close Inspection of the machine In which he was to make his fight for supremacy. He told his mechanician of the danger and told him that he could suit him self about taking the risk. The young mechanician immediately decided to enter the race. Only four machines crossed the tape before the judges' stand the required number of times. All of the others, except two--either machines or men-- met with accidents that threw them out of the running before the entire distance had been covered. Elgin, 111.--At the opening of the big national stock chaaslp automobile speed meet over the Elgin road course Friday Al Livingstone, in a National car; David Buck of Chicago, driving a Marmon car, and E. A. Hearne of Chicago in a Benz car, were winners cf the three races. Maintaining for the distance an av erage speed of 60.6 miles per hour, Livingstone captured first place in the Illinois trophy race. The dls- was 24 thnes around the 8^-mlle cir cuit, or a total of 203.35 miles. His time was 3 hours 21 minutes 8.63 seconds. W. H. Pearce, in the No. 2 Falcar, was second in this race, his time be ing 3:31:19.22. J, Dawson, in iha Marmon car No. 6, was third. Illinois Railroad Commission Demands That Charges Be Reduced and Made Uniform. Springfield. 111.--Sweeping reduc tions in express rates within the state of Illinois were made here Saturday by the Illinois railroad and warehouse commission. Existing tariff B were slashed in two in many instances and on small packages the reduction IS tn excess of 50 per cent. The promulgation "express tariff No. 1" by the commission brings the fight of the state against the express companies to a crisis. The reduction is made effective October 15, and the companies are preparing for a finish fight. They dispute the authority of the commission to regulate their busi ness within the state and assert that either they will ignore the new tariff schedule Or go into court and get an injunction restraining the commission from carrying its order into ef fect. In a lengthy statement which the commission hands down with its tariff schedule the business methods of the express companies are severely ar raigned. The existing rates are de clared to be unreasonable and ex orbitant as well as discriminatory in character, as it has been shown that the same companies charge different rates for the same service on different railroads. Unlike the reductions which have been made in some states of a fiat rate of 10 or 20 per cent., the Illinois commission has prepared a complete graduated tariff schedule, based on the weight of packages and on the distance they are carried within the state. The heavier reductions are made on small packages weighing less than 100 pounds, which cqnstltute the bulk of the express business and in Which the greater number of shippers are directly interested. Ail the Difference. The professor was delivering an elo quent address on cruelty to animals, and, to illustrate how a little judiclons forethought would eliminate to a great extent the sufferings that even small insects are subject to; said: "As I was coming through the hall tonight I saw a bald-headed gentleman very harshly treat a little innocent house-fly which had alighted on his ueau. "Now, if there was any justification for such bad temper, I would be quite justified in indulging in it at the pres ent moment, for a fly has just alighted on the back of my head. I can't see It, but I can feel it. "Possibly some of you can see It now; it is on the top of my head. Now It is coming down my brow; now It Is coming on to my-- G-r-r-eat pyramids of Egypt, it's a--wasp!" Pipe Gives Cadet Typhoid. . Midshipman Smith, who was strick en with typhoid fever on the Indiana at Plymouth. England, contracted the disease, it is said, from smoking a briar used nearly a year ago by his roommate at Annapolis who had a bad case of typhoid. This theory is taken as proof that concentrated nicotine cannot destroy a typhoid germ. The medical department of the navy will examine into the theory with the de- sult that midshipmen of the future may confine themselves to their own pipes. How Lightning 8pllts Trees. Lightning makes trees explode, like overcharged boilers. The flame of the lightning does not burn them up, nor does the electric flash split them like an ax. The bolt flows through into all the damp interstices of the trunk and into the hollows under its bark. All the moisture at once is turned into steam, which by its immediate explo sion rips open the tree. For centuries this simple theory puzzled scientists, but they have got in right at last. CONVICTS AT 0LE0 INQUIRY Moonshiners Are Brought From Pris on to Tell of Alleged Gigantic Conspiracy. Chicago.--Investigation of charges of conspiracy to defraud the govern ment made against manufacturers of butterlne may begin before next Mon day. William Broad well and Samuel Driesbach, convicted oleo moonshiners who are now serving terms in /ederal prison at Fort Leavenworth. Kan., and three other prisoners who were con victed in Milwaukee, Wis., for the same offense, were secretly brought to Chicago Wednesday in charge of a federal official. Their arrival at this time was unexpected. j New leads of Investigation will, in all probability, be pursued by the In quisitorial body in the examination of these witnesses, as the government is already in possession of signed confes sions from Broadwell and Driesbach, telling, BUP posedly in full, their In formation (oncerning the existence 01 a conspira< y between big oleomargar ine manufacturers and moonshiners to defraud the government. Whirlpool Railway Burns. Niagara Falls , X. Y.--The whirlpool Inclined railway, the last of the in clines on the American side of the Niagara gorge, was destroyed by fire early Monday. Father bf James J. Hogan Dead. Torrington. Conn.--John J. Hogan, father of the late James J. Hogan, the famous Yale football player, died iit his home here Thursday. He was fifty-nine years old and a native of Ireland. Shoots Two Aboard Train. Ellis. Kan.--Harry Pugh of Niag- *ra Falls, N. Y., became insane on a Pullman cdr of a Union Pacific train Friday. He shot the porter, named Young, and a passenger named Tem ple of Kansas City, Mo. Both victims may die. Save Young Tetanus Victim. St. Louis.--After having lain for three days in a continuous spasm, due to tetanus in an advanced Btage, Gertrude Bodener, a ten-year-old girl, was Friday cured by the use of aa unusual amount of tetanus serum. n , " ••'Every time we buy a new suit the «fmt is too short and the vest too long," complains the Atchison Globe. The obvious thing for the editor of the Atchison Globe to do is to cut off the tails of the coat and use the cloth to lengthen out the vest. Heinze Gets License to Wed. ! 1 New York.--Visitors to the mar- j riage license bureau in the city hall Monday included Mrs. Bernice Golden , Henderson, the «actress, and F. An- ! gustus Heinze, the Montana copprr ! man, whose engagement was recently 1 announced. Walks Off Train In Sleep; Dies. Poughkeepsie, N. Y.--Theodore Churchill, thirty-seven years old, walked off a New York Central pas senger train In his sleep Saturday, He was brought to a hospital here, where he died within a few hours. That daring navigator who had 40,000 miles of ocean in a yawl not been heard from for two years starting for the West Indies in his open boat. The fate of the pitcher that goes once too often to the well Is proverbial. Cholera Appears in Prussia. Berlin.--It was officially gazetted here Monday that two cases of Asiatic cholera had developed at Spandau, and precautionary notices to the pub- lit were Issued. Highwaymen Kill Woman. Cleveland, O.--Mrs. Walter Rayner was shot and instantly killed by high waymen on a dark country road just jutside of Cleveland Saturday. Mrs. Rayner was riding home from market with her husband and daughter. Cotton Mills Close; 15,000 Idle. Manchester, N. H.--Fifteen thou sand employes of the Amoskeag Cot ton Manufacturing company were thrown out of work Friday, when the 17 mills of the plant closed for 15 days. Arrest Halts Oleo Swindle. Denver, Col.--Internal revenue In spectors say they have broken up a widespread swindle whereby oleo margarine has been sold In many states as fine creamery butter in the arrest of John B. Daly here Thursday. i-V- Girl Kills a Man. New Orleans.--Katie Freitsch, nine teen years old and employed in a local department store, Thursday shot and killed Frank Michlor, aged twenty- seven. a bollermaker. She said Michlor had wronged her. Lead Magnate Dies Abroad. New York.---News of the death of Elliott Cole, president of the Na tional Lead company, at Carlsbad, Bohemia, was received Friday. Mr. Cole sailed from New York in Jul/ in hopes of recovering his health. Deserted by Wife; Kills Self. Vandalia, 111.--Because his wife re fused to live with him and said she loved another. William Eakles, aged twenty-five, declared life was not worth living and Saturday committed suicide by taking strychnine. Find Editor Dead In Chair. Washington.--When a contributor walked Into the office of the Washing ton Journal, a German weekly pub lished here, Saturday, he found the editor, Emmanuel Waldecker, dead in his chair. ^ U. 8. Women at Danish Meeting. Copenhagen.--Ten American dele gates are attending the congress of women Socialists here. Mrs. Clara Twinning of Colorado opened the die cusslon of woman suffrage Satur day. Found Guilty of Two Murders. Canton, O.--Cletus Willaman was found guilty of murder in the first de gree Saturday for the killing of Mr. and Mrs. E. Koons, Mrs. Willaman'i parents. The verdict carried with tt the death penalty. _i i i Cannon to Invade Sooth. Knoxville, Tenn.--It is announced that Speaker Cannon will visit the Ninth Virginia district to assist Con- contest against Henry Stuart, the Democratic nominee. Two Die In Auto Wreck. Forney, Tex.--Frank B. Grice, son of the late Col. Frank Grice, owner of the Express of San Antonio, and Jatnfcs Phelps of Kaufman, Tex^ were killed Friday in an automobile accident. . . There Are Reasons Why so many people have ready-at-hand a package of Post Toasties The DISTINCTIVE FLAVOUR delights the palate. The quick, easy serving right from the package- requiring only the addition of cream or good milk is an important consideration when<- breakfast must be ready "on tims," The sweet, crisp food is universally liked hy child ren, and is a great help to Mothers who must give to the youngsters something wholesome that they relish. The economical feature appeals to everyone---par ticularly those who wish to keep living expenses within a limit. Post Toasties are espe cially pleasing served with fresh sliced peaches. "The Memory Lingers*9 VMtum Cereal Co., Ltd, Battle Creek, Mich. - V- . ,