ri BELIEVE
PE-RU-NA SAVED
^^^MYLIFE."
Mrs. Charles Anspaugh, R. R. 1,
Klmmell, Noble Co., Indiana, writes:
"Peruna hae been a godsend to mo.
I can feel safe in saving that it saved
my life, as I wau ail run down and was
)unt miserable when I commenced taking
your Peruna, but am on the road
to recovery now. 1 cannot thank you
too much."
Those who object to liquid medicines
can now procure Peruna Tablets.
Ask Your Druggist tor Free Peruna
Lucky Dnv Almanac for 1914.
IN. 1I?U
Neuralgia
ufferfcrs find instant relief in
Sloan's Liniment. It penetrates
to the painful part ?
soothes and quiets the nerves.
No rubbing?merely lay it on.
SLOANS
LINIMENT
Kills Pain
For Neuralgia
"I would not be without your liniment
mtut prime it to nil who Buffer
with nriirnlKUt or rlieuinatmir or pain of
any kind."?Alr?- Umnry ISuAuji, ISmUna.
JUutouru
Pain All Con*
"I miffrrnl with quite nwvorf nmrakgic
hciulache for I month* without
any relief. 1 u-?rd your Liniment for
two or Uiree niolit* nnd I hnven'tnuffere'l
with my lie.nl since-" ? Mr. J. H.
3*e?nfrrr, ixmin'iUa, Kk
Treatment* fftff.lJ .-J r
I 'My littla ifirl. twr|?e ye.irn old I
.-might n severe cold. and I gave hrr M
three dropaof Sloan'-. Liniment on augur H
on gninR to tied, and ?he got up in ttia
S morning with noaifrn* of a cold. A lit- I
tie tioy next door had croup and I Rive
the mother the Liniment. She Rave him H
three drops on RoinR to tied, and he Rot
H up without the croup in the tnoruinir." H
? Mr. IT. II. Strung*. < hu ngo, IU.
I At all Dealers. Price 25c.. 50c. a ad 11.00 I
Sloan'a Bo?U on Horace eant free. S
I DR. EARL S. SLOAN, Inc. Boston, Mass. I
The T ype writer
for the Rural
Business Man
aLj?2594, Whether you are a
small town merchant
or a fanner, you need
If you are writing
Long Wearing your letters and bills
by hand, you are not getting full
efficiency.
It doesn't require an expert operator
to run the L. C. Smith & Bros,
typewriter. It is simple, compact,
complete, durable.
Semi in the attached coupon and
we will give especial attention to
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I Hyraoun*, N.Y. :
; Plfaw ?end me your free book about
! typewriter#. ;
; Natnv ;
: p. o :
j State ;
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver it
right the stomach and bowels are right
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
jently but firmly
pel a lazy liver to^HHHp A DTP DC
do its duty.
atipation, In* I IVER
digestion, J^PbU^S.
Headache,
and Diatreaa After Elating.
MALI. PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuirie must bear Signature
irr'TIThf A. Cheer np. fen<1 fnr FIIHH
K.V/?rC?rirhHAMl>LK"Ut;i('ll"It(>nras.
Snrrcaiol Cheuitoaal Co. O't'n., I'hlla., fa.
^jL.
MftlrKiHW : WLhKtll I\fli
HVFRTA'S POWER
r _ A*r
tASI oKUMBLINb
No Peace in Mexico Until Dictator
Is Eliminated, Says
President's Message.
MONEY BILL HELPS FARMER
Need of Legislation That Will Facilitate
Getting of Capital for Agricultural
Purposes ? Would Choose
Presidential Candidates by Primary
? Declares Himself for Philippine
Independence?Should Let AntiTrust
Law Stand.
Washington, Doc. 2.?President Wilson
appeared before the joint session
of tlie two houses of congress toduv
and delivered his annual message us
follows:
In pursuance of my constitutional
duty to "give to the congress information
of the state of the Union," I tako
the liberty of addressing you on several
matters which ought, as it seems
to tne, particularly to engage the attention
of your honorable bodies, as
of all who study the welfare of the
nation.
Departs From Custom.
1 shnll ask your indulgence if I venture
to depart in some degree from
tne usual custom of setting before vou !
in formal review the many mutters
which have engaged the attention and
called for the action of the several
departments of the government or
which look to them for early treatment
in the future, because the list
is long, very long, and would suffer
in the abbreviation to which 1 should
have to subject it. I shall submit to
you the reports of the heads of the
several departments, in which these
subjects are set forth in careful detail,
and beg that they may receive the
thoughtful atteutlon of your committees
and of all members of the congress
who may have the leisure to
study them. Their obvious importance,
as constituting the very substunce of
the business of the government, makes
comment and emphasis on my part unnecessary.
The country, 1 am thankful to say,
is at peace with all the world, and
many happy manifestations multiply
about us of a growing cordiality and I
sense of community of interest among
the nations, foreshadowing an age of
settled peace and good will. More and
more readily ea? li decade do the nu j
wwiib iiiiiiiiicKi ineir willingness to
bind themselves by solemn treaty to
the frorosscs of pence. the processes
of frankness and fair concession. So
far the United States iias stood at the
front of such negotiations. She will,
I earnestly hope and confidently believe.
give fresh proof of her sincere
adherence to the cause of international
friendship by ratifying the several
treaties of arbitration awaiting
renewal by the senate. In addition to
these, it has been the privilege of the
department of state to gain the assent,
in principle, of no less than 111
nations, representing four tilths of
the population of the world, to the negotiations
of treaties by which It shall
he agreed that whenever differences
of interest or of policy arise which
cannot he resolved by the ordinary
processes of diplomacy they shall he
publicly analyzed, discussed, and re !
ported upon by a tribunal chosen by 1
the parties before either nation detertnin
s its course of action.
There is only one possible standard
by which to determine controversies
between the United States and other
nations, and that is compounded of
these two elements: Our own honor
and our obligations to the peace of
the world. A test so compounded
ought easily to be made to govern both
the establishment of new treaty obligations
and the interpretation of those |
already assumed.
Mexico Has No Government.
There is but one cloud upon our ho- i
rizon. That has shown itself to the 1
south of us, and hangs over Mexico.
There can be no certain prospect of
peace in America until General Huerta
has surrendered bis usurged authority
In Mexico: until it is understood on
^11 V. - i ?
an mi huh, mueea, mat such pretended
governments will not be countenanced I
or dealt with by the government of
the United States. We are the \
friends of constitutional government
in America; we are more than its ;
friends, we are its champions; because |
in no other way can our neighbors, to 1
whom we would wish in every way to
make proof of our friendship, work ,
out their own development in peace ;
and liberty. Mexico has no government.
The attempt to maintain one
at the City of Mexico has broken
down, and a mere military despotism
has been s*?t up which has hardly more
than the semblance of national authority.
It originated in the usurpation
of Victorlano Huerta. who. after a
brief attempt to play the part of constitutional
president, has at last cast
Sabbath Reading. i
"Louise, 1 really cannot permit you |
to read novels on Sunday."
"Hut grandmamma, this novel is all '
right; it tellH about a girl who was |
engaged to three Kpiscopnl clergymen. 1
all at once."?Life.
Where Found.
"I notice that you quote the classics '
quite often."
"Yes. I don't know what I would do
If it were not for the back part of |
my dlctionery."
f M-ifcir ^
m
aside even the pretense of legal right
and declared himself dictator. As a
consequence, a condition of affairs
now exists in Mexico which has made
It doubtful whether even the most
elementary and fundamental rights
either of her own people or of the
citizens of other countries resident
within her territory can long be successfully
safeguarded, and which
mn-uifiiM, u long ronnnuca, to imperil
the interests of peace, order and
tolerable life in the lands immediately
to the south of us. Even if the
usurper had succeeded In his purposes,
in despite of the constitution of the
republic and the rights of its people,
he would have set up nothing hut a
precarious and hateful power, which
could have lasted but a little while,
and whose eventful downfall would
have left the country In a more do
plorahle condition than ever. But he
has not succeeded. Ho has forfeited
the respect and the moral support
even of those who were at one time
w illing to see him succeed. Idttle by
little he has hnen completely isolated.
Ity a little every day his power and
prestige are crumbling and the collapse
is not far away. We shall not.
1 bhlleve, he obliged to alter our pnliry
of watchful waiting. And then,
when the end comes, we shall hope to
see constitutional order restored In
distressed Mexico by the concert and
energy of such of her leaders as prefer
the liberty of their people to their
own ambitions.
Rush Currency Bill.
I turn to matters of domestic roncerfl.
You already have under con"'sideration
a bill for the reform of our
system of hairlting and currency, for
which the country waits with Impatience,
as for something fundamental
to its whole business life and necessary
to set credit free from arbitrary
and artificial restraints. I need not say
hqw earnestly 1 hope for Its early enactment
into law. 1 take leave to beg
that the whole energy and attention
nf tlll? Kimttfo 1?U ........ I
till tli*? matter is successfully disposed
of. And yet I feel that the request is
not needed?that the members of that
great house need no tiring in this
serviee to the country.
1 present to you, in addition, the
urgent necessity that special provision
he made, also for facilitating the credits
needed by the farmers of the country.
The pending currency bill does
the farmers a great service. It puts
them upon an equnl footing with other
business men and masters of enterprise,
as it should; and upon its
passage they will Had themselves quit
of many of the difficulties which now
hamper them in the field of credit.
The farmers, of* course, ask and
should be given no special privilege,
such as extending to them the credit
of the government itself. What they
need and should obtain is legislation
which will make their own abundant
and substantial credit resources available
as a foundation for Joint, concerted
local action in their own behalf
in getting the capital they must
use. It is to this we should now address
ourselves.
It has, singularly enough, come to
pass that we have allowed the industry
of our farms to lag behind the
other activities of the country in its
development. 1 need not stop to tell
you how fundamental to the life of
the Nation is the production of its
food. Our thoughts may ordinarily
be concentrated upon the cities and
the hives of industry, upon the cries
of the crowded market place and the
clangor of the factory, but it is from
the quiet interspaces of the onen vnl
leys and the fr???* hillsides that we
draw the sources of life and of prosperity,
from the farm and the ranch,
from the forest and the mine. With
out these every street would be silent.
every office deserted, every factory
fallen Into disrepair And yet
the farmer does not stand upon the
same footing with the forester and the
miner in the market of credit. He is
the servant of tho seasons. Nature
determines how long he must wait for
his crops, and will not be hurried in
her processes, lie may give his note
but the reason of its maturity depends
upon the season when his crop matures.
lies at the gates of the market
where his products are sold. And the
security he gives is of a character not
known In the broker's office or as familiarly
ns It might be on the counter
of the banker.
The Farming Intere s.
The agricultural department of the |
government Is seeking to assist as
never before to make fanning an efficient
business, of wide co-operative effort.
In quick touch with the markets
for foodstuffs. The farmers and the
government will henceforth work together
as real partners In this field,
where we now begin to see our way
very clearly and where many intelligent
plans are already being put into
execution. Tho treasury of the United
States has, by a timely and well
luuoiiKiru hum I million UI UH deposits,
facilitated the moving of the crops
in the present season and prevented
the scarcity of available funds too often
experienced at such times. Hut
we must not allow ourselves to depend
upon extraordinary expedients.
We must add the means by which the
farmer may make his credit constantThe
Cause.
"I am afraid the young doctor who
is courting our duughter may send
in a bill about It."
"How can he?"
"For visits connected with a heart
affection."
The Diffsrence.
"What is the difference between a
political gathering and one of a hunt
club?"
"I knorv One Is a mass meeting
and the other is a meet massing."
mmtit -hi: T- ? ?
\
ly and easily available and command
when he will the capital by which to
suppo;. rnd expand his business. We
lag behind many other great countries
of the modern world in attempting to
do this. Systems of rural credit have
been studied and developed on the
other side of the water while we left
our farmers to shift for themselves in
the ordinary- money market. You
have but to look about yoi> in any
rural district to see the result, the
handicap and embarrassment which
have been put upon those who produce
our food.
Conscious of this backwardness and
neglect on our part, the congress recently
authorized the creation of a
special commission to study lite various
systems of rural credit which
have been put into operation in Europe.
and this commission is already
prepared to report. Its report ought
to make it easier for us to determine
what methods will hn best stilted to
our own farmers. 1 hope and believe
that the committees of the senate and
house will addr?ss themselves to thiniatter
with the most fruitful results,
and 1 believe that the studies and recently
formed plans of the department
of agriculture may be made to
serve them very greatly in their work
of framing appropriate and adequate
legislation. It would be itoliscreet
and presumptuous in anyone to dogmatize
upon so great and many-sided
a question, but I feel conHdent that
common counsel will produce the results
we must all desire.
Stop Private Monopoly.
Turn from the farm to the world of
business which centres in the city and
in the factory, and 1 think tha* a'l
thoughtful observers will agree that
the immediate servic? we owe . the
business communities of the country
is to prevent private monopoly more
effectually than it has yet been prevented.
I think it will be easily agreed
that we should let the Sherman antitrust
law stand, unaltered, as it is,
hut that we should as much as possible
reduce the area of that debatable
ground by further and more explicit
legislation; and should also supplement
that great act by leglsla'ion
which will not only clarify it but also
facilitate its administration make
it fairer to all con :erned. No doubt
we shall all wish, and the country will
expect, this to be the central subject
of our deliberations during the nres
ont session; but It Is a subject so
many-sided and so deserving of careful
and discriminating discussion tliat
I shall take the liberty of addressing
you upon it in a special message at a
later dnte than this. It is of capital
importance that the business men of
this country should be relieved of all
uncertainties of law with regard to
their enterprises and investments and
a clear path indicated which they can
travel without anxiety. It is as important
that thev should be relieved
of embarrassment and set free to
prosper as that private' monopoly
should be destroyed. The ways of
action should b" thrown wide open.
1 turn tp a subject which I hope
can be handled promptly and without
serious controversy of any kind.
I mean the method of selecting noini- i
noes for the presidency of the 1'nited
States I feel confident that 1
do not misinterpret the wishes
or the expectations of the i
country when I urge the prompt j
enactment of legislation which will
provide for primary elections throughout
the country at which the voters of
the several parties may choose their
nominees for the presidency without
the intervention of nominating conventions.
I venture the suggestion 1
that this legislation should provide
for the retention of party conventions,
but only for the purpose of declaring
and accepting the verdict of the primaries
and formulating the platforms
of the parties; and I suggest that
these conventions should consist not
of delegates chosen for the single purpose.
hut of the nominees for con|
gross, the nominees for vacant seats
| in the senate of the United States, the
] senators whose terms have not yet .
closed. the national committees, j
I and the candidates for the presidency j
' themselves, in order that platforms
| may he framed by those responsible !
I to the people for carrying them Into
j effect.
Obligations to Territories.
These are all matters of vital domestic
concern, and besides them, outside
the charmed circle of our own
national life in which our affections
I command us. as well as our con|
sciences, there stand out our obliga:
tions toward our territories over sea.
I Here we are trustees. Porto Rico,
Hawaii, the Philippines, are ours, once
j regarded as mere possessions, are no j
i longer to be selfishly exploited; they
are part of the domaiu of public con- i
! science and of serviceable and enlightened
statesmanship. We must admln|
ister them for the people who live in
them and with the same sense of re- i
sponsibility to them as toward our
own people in our domestic affairs. No J
doubt we shall successfully enough '
J bind Porto Rico and the Hawaiian is- '
lands to ourselves by ties of justice
I and affection, but the performance of j
our dntv ?<>vvi>r<l ?tw> in,114^ 4c ..
v . . ia a
' more difficult and debatable matter,
i We can satisfy the obligations of genHe
Explains.
; "Is this milk pasteurized?" asked
the city lady.
"From the start," said the old farmI
er. "Instead of grazing our cows in i
a meadow, as many do, we graze them
in a pasture."
Sensible Girl.
"How about being an oid man's darling?'
"There's no necessity for it. I've
found a young man with the price of
| a bungalow."
m
? *
erotJH luetic? toward tho people of
Porto Rico by Riving tLern the amplo
and familiar rights and privileges accorded
our own citizens in our own
territory and our oblicationo toward
the people of Hawaii by perfecting the
provisions cf self-government already
granted tin to, but in the Philippines
we must go further. We must hold
steadily in view their ultimate independ(
nee. and we must move toward
the time of that independence as
steadily as the way can be cleared
and the foundations thoughtfully and
| permanently laid.
Acting under the authority conferred
11 ; ??:! the president by congress.
! I have already accorded the people of
| the islands a majority In both houses
of their legislative body by appointing
tlve inst<?ad of four native citizens to
the membership of the commission. I
believe that in this way we shall
make proof of their capacity in counsel
and their sense of the responsibility
in the exercise of political power,
and that the success of this step will
be sure to clear our view for the steps
which are to follow. S'ep l?y step
we should extend and perfect the system
of self-government in the l.-lnnds.
making test of them and modifying
them as experience discloses their
successes and their failures; that we
should more and more put under the
control of the native citizens of the
archipelago the essential instruments
of their life, their local instrumentalities
of government, their schools, all
the common interests of '.heir communities.
and so by counsel anil experience
set up a government which ail
th," world will see to be suitable to a
people whose affairs are under their
own* control.
Territorial Rights for Alaska.
A duty faces us with regard to Alaska
which seems to mo very pressing
and very imperative; perhaps I should
say a double duty, for it concerns both
the political and the material development-of
the territory. The people of
Alaska should be given the full territorial
form of government, and Alaska,
as a storehouse, should be unlocked.
One key to it is a system of
railways. These the government
should itself build and administer, and
the ports and terminals it should Itself
control in the Interest of all who Aish
to use them for the service and development
of the country and its people.
Hut the construction of railways is
only the first step; is only thrusting
in the key to the storehouse and
throwing back the lock and opening
the door. How the tomntine reumir<*i??
ot' th" country are Jo be exploited is
another matter, to which I shall take
the liberty of from time to time callins
your attention, for it is a policy
which must be worked out by wellconsidered
states, not upon theory,
but upon lines of practical expediency.
It is part of our general problem of
conservation. We have a freer hand
in working out the problem in Alaska
than in the states of the Union; and
yet the prli ciple and object ,\ro tho
same, wherever we touch it. We must
use the res usees of the country, not
lock tlsem up. There need be no contlift
or Jeah'i'sN as between state and
federal authorities, for there can bq.
no essential difference of purpose between
theni. The resources in question
must be us< (1. but not destroyed
or wasted; used, but not monopolized
upon any narrow idea of individual
rights as against the abiding interests
of comniunities. That a policy can be
worked out by conference and concession
which will release these resources
and yet net jeopard or dissipate
them I for one have no doubt: and it
can be done on lines of regulation
which n? be 110 less acceptable to
the people and governments of the
states concerned than to the people
and government of the nation at large,
who-- > heritage these resources are.
We must bend our counsels to this
end. A common purpose ought tomake
agreement easy.
Three or four matters of special importance
and significance 1 beg that
you will permit me to mention in clos ?
ing.N
Our bureau of mines ought to be
equipped and empowered to render
even more effectual service than it
renders now in improving the conditions
of mine labor and making the
mines more economically productive
as well as more safe. This Is an allImportant
part ol tho work of con- j
servation; and the conservation cf
human life and energy lies even nearer
to our Interest than the preservation
from waste of our material resources.
Employers' Liability.
We owe it. in mere justice to the
railway employes of the country, to
provide for them a fair and effective
employers' liability act; and a law
that we can stand by in this matter
will be no less to the advantage of
those who administer the railroads '>*
the country than to the advantage of
those whom they employ
\Ve ought to devote ourselves to
meeting pressing demands of plain
Justice like this as earnestly as to
the accomplishment of political and
economic reforms. Social justice
comes firs' Law is the machinery for
its realization and is vital only as it
expresses and embodies it.
An In^cnuoiiB Answer.
Clergyman?l>o you remember me.
my dear?
Little Ci 1 rl?1 don't member your
name, but you're the gen'leinan mother
makes ine stay awaUe an' listen to in
churc&.?Life.
Wearisome.
"Hotts tells me he took a long trip
this morning."
"Whero'd he go?"
"He rode two blocks on a street car |
with BiCfels."
m
f . m
j ** 2'x* *'." * j
A
Backache Warns
Backache is one o? Nature's
weakness. Kidney
thousands every year.
Don't If
lame? to stoop
of
If
dizziness and are
f u
Use Dam's Kidney Pills^|HH|H^^H|^^^^^H
cdy for bad backs and weak kumeroni^
A Maine Case
Bpnt&s
Fountain
St.. Gardiner. Mi-..
In months ^^^^B
with kidney trouble.
"\My bark frit
ok thouzli wna
brok-n. My body
blunted
could hardly
Five doctors failed
to help mr. Wh- i
had given up ^^^^B
hope. I b. frnn tnk- ^^^B|
Inc Damn's Kidney
Fills. wna cured ^^^^B
and now t -welsh
'I .. * much more and
\\ nm strong and ^^^B
Get Doan's at Any "tor?, SOt c Box
D Q A N' S "ViTiV
FOSTER-M1LBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
!W. L.DOUGLAS I
SHOES //^Ek fl
Men'sU!&tiftXV/t:\:r IN
Women'sii.S1-* iif Bf%t
Missus, Boys. Children I I. . ST ] /
Si .no b i -^.vsa "''j^^
JO. \U in ail
uB^ ,*i(M oihI iWdiAn.
"\ iH W. L. Douglas ft bow are (anoua
r~k i ..n i 11 I it Tiiin Why not give them a
I ;rt:" * Tbr value you will receive
a r *rt^\'jr your money will astonish you.
-> ' a* ' \lf you woulil visit our factory,
r rV - > ft* larceat lu the world uodar
it .f1 oue iW. and m how carefully
?7L. ^lw\ W. L. Douglas shoes are made,
a, ? you would understand why they are
k)v\U \ warranted to look better, flt bailor,
IIV \V \ bold thi-lrnbapeand wear looker than
If, oihaa tnakoa for the price.
./ TmK% Your dealer should supply you wfth
BW' <??>. ihotn.Uou t lakeasubeUtute.Nooe
X~\: n?w_, o^Ngeuulne without W. L. Douglas
/\ name stampol on bottom. Shoes
?i-.\ la asnt everywhere, direct from fkelory,
by Parrel Poet, postage free. Now
^v.'VB Is the time to beglu to save money on
Tirl ?Sk 7?VT footwear. Write today for lllusV^?\
tratad Catalog ah owing how to order
bI "VU W. U DOUOLA8,
*10 Spark St., Brockton, itaaa.
The Slash'. ~
I'aifl I'oiret. the French dressmaker,
was asked by p. New York reporter If
he thought woman's present mode of
dress made for morality.
"I do not deal in morality," M.
Poirct replied "L deal it: beauty^- * ^
"Theu. apropos of the slasliA skirt,
he told a story. I 1
"A young lady in a whitw dinner/
gown." he said, "stood undes a blaz-7
ins electrolier, and, swingitK roundf
before her fiance, she asked! /
"How does my new drfss ahoy*
UP? 1 I
"'Up almost to the knee,'Ihe you^K
man replied. Those white Iti 1K sto/kings
with gold clocks are it'autifuj.'
r I
Why Japs Are Undersized, J
Evert one is eager to add to/his
fund of information concerning/
Japanese and there are not manyJ 'ay*
men who can tell why the Japr aro
undersized. Japanese surgeons /have
made measurements of their /army,
which show that the sniallness fa}
Mature ih tlue entirely to the legs; 'This
is no doubt due to the fact that from '
child1.:- d the Japanese practices an
unnatural wa> of sitiing upon the legs.
Win n a Japanese child is old enough
to sit u:s< t: the l!oor his legs are bent
unci' i him This in time dwarfs the
growth of the limbs. Actual deformity
is less common among the peasants
than among students, merchants
and others of sedentary habits. There
is no doubt the coming Japanese, who
are rapidly acquiring Occidental customs.
will change this habit of sitting
upon the feet.
? W!F? WON
Husband Finally Convinced.
Some people are wise enough to try
new foods and beverages and then
generous enough to give others the
benefit of their experience. A wife
w rites:
"No slave In chains, it seemed to
me, was more helpless than I. a coffee
captive. Yet there wore innumerable
warnings?waking from a troubled
sleep with a feeling of suffocation, at
times dizzy and out of breath, attacks
of palpitation of the heart that fright*
ened me.
(Tea is just as injurious as coffee
because it contains caffeine, the same
drug found in coffee.)
"At last my nervous system was so
disarranged that my physician ordered
no more coffee.' I capitulated.
"DeJorinined to give Postum a fair
trial. I prepared it according to directions
on the pkg., obtaining a dark
brown liquid with a rich snappy flavour
similar to coffee. When cream
and sugar were added, it u-na nn*
w ? *# mvv v/a*jr
good but delicious.
' Noting its beneficial effeets in me
the rest of the family adopted it?all
etfcopt my husband, who would not admit
that coffee hurt him. Several
weeks elapsed during which I drank
Postum two or three times a day,
when, to my surprise, my husband
said: '1 have decided to drink Postum.
Your improvement is so apparent?
you have such fine color?that I pro*
pose to give credit where credit is
due.' And now we are cofTee-slaves no
longer."
Name given by Postum Co., Battls
Creek. Mich. Read "The Road to Well*
ville." in pkgs.
Postum now comes in two forma:
Regular Postum?must be boiled,
instant Postum is a soluble powder.
A teasfoonful dissolves quickly In a
cup of hot \\^ter and, with cream and
sugaiT makes a delicious beverage
lifitantly. Grocers sell both kinds.
"There's a Reasou" for Postum.