f 7 ?f
I 1 !!
r VHN WINDS IIS
Oil 11/ Tft I nrriinr
<?' j?ai iu a ntruut
^KuERTA'S beaten soldiers are
^lARCHING TO FORT BLISS,
TEXAS
FOOTSORE AND RAGGED
Wom^n Proved Be?t Marchers ? Six
?. fruerta Generals in Unique
< Procession.
-.^iByrfa, Texas.?Footsore, fagg d, almo?t
.famished from tlioir thn _ days'
qfiHSKir on foot of 67 miles ove* a wind*
SW^pe mountain road, the :< >00 Mexl~'
, j|? ydoral soldiers and ge erals routOjiuaga,
Mexico by the rebulSf
with 1,667 women .nd about :?00
children and infant0 arrived at Marfa,
whence the*' arere to be transported
bv * ..a to Fort Hliss at El
The ragged remnant of the Huerta
army, which sought asylum in this
country rather than face possible extermination
bv the rehnl? will lie fnf
mally interned at Fort Bliss, ns wards
of the government. They will be held
there indefinitely on footing of prisoners
of war.
^ None of those in the unique caravan
> * which, with its disarmed Mexican soldiers.
women, children, horses, burros
and dogs, struggled for miles along the
PlBy*;.>" road, was more visibly affected on
coming within sight of Marfa than
' Gen. Salavador Mercado, Huerta's rorfmer
military chief, who ordered tflc
evacuation of OJinuga in face of the
rebel fire. General Mercado, riding on
a horse, his uniform covered with
dust, was confessedly humiliated, not
only at the defeat of his army and
the necessity for his flight, but also
because of a report from Mexico City
that he would be courtmartialcd if
he returned to his native country.
The picturesque mnrch afoot
through American terlrtory of so many
foreign soldiers and women with their
baggage, abounded with incident. The
birth of a child, the death of several
wounded soldiers, the search for water
In the desert, the constunt straggling
away from the line of march and the
rounding up again of scores of the
refugees were some of the difficulties
with which the United States cavnirymen
had to contend. The Mexicans
outnumbered the escorting American
soldiers, ten to one.
Viewed from a hilltop, the oncoming
army as it zigzagged through the
mountain passes and reached backward
into the dusty distance ten miles
away, was a picture of exhaustion, although
the prospect of soon reaching
their destination seemed to revive
fresh courage.
BIRDMAN DASHES TO DEATH
Arthur E. Perry Drowned at Tampa
While Making Flight.
Tampa, Flu.?Arthur E. Ferry, rormerly
a member of the army aviation
corps, and known In army circles as
Captain Hick, fell into the Hllsbor-1
ough river here, after making a parachute
leap of 1,000 feet nnd was
drowned, lie was an expert swimmer,
but became entangled in the ropes of
his parachute and could not swim
out.
Ferry was accompanied on the flight
and parachute jump by Manuel Perez,
leaving an amusement part at four
o'clock. Two parachutes were used i
and Perez made a successful lauding
about fifty feet from where Perry landed
in the water.
Perez called to a party In a motor
boat nearby, efforts at once being (
made to rescue Perry, but the river
current was swift and the spot where
Perry fell was lilled with debris from i
a fallen tree in which the ropes of the
parachute became entangled.
i
Safety for Ocean Travelers.
London.?Tho work of the revision <
committee of the International Con- <
gross of Safety at Sea has ended. The
American wireless systems were i
agreed to by the European delegates.
I m1 _ -
Ii ins Rivun cuuiroi ui apparatus and
supervision over operations of em- i
ployees to the American government,
notwithstanding the nationality of the
ships, whenever they are in American
waters. The agreement preserves in- i
tact private code signals of any coun- i
try reserved for war. (
Men of Navy Respond to Order.
Washington.?Secretary Daniels expressed
g&rtiflcation oyer the hearty i
response of enlisted men of the navy
\ to the recent order putting academical i
and technical courses of instruction i
into operation on battleships. Of 9fi
1 first-enlistment men on the battleship
Ji, i, Florida, 93 asked for special instrucjytion.
On board the Arkansas, 499 i
fflfjjj^rex pressed a desire Vo pursue stud- <
Knsign Falgo started a class in i
^Kahanlcal and marine engineering on i
the Utah with fifty pupils, and within i
-JS^jveeks the class had grown to 85. 1
nnjfrfay* Ar? Costly to France.
' HHfe- France.?State management
of uB|lo national railway systems
HHh, and 88 per cent, of the <
r^HHHMpoctlvely, according to the <
tor ^ust issu8<i
TtosN^HNkef the first Bystem?the 1
k. SouW lag' amounted to 68,639,783
|V fran<8 Kt cost of management
was ^^^^^Ktfrancs. The revenue
of thew^^^^^Rtem?the Western? 1
amonnw^HBW*03,19L francs and the <
cost toTHpl,818 franca. Net profI
Its of bdSBflfstems hsve decreased '
sUsdlly^^^^
1
EMPEROR OF ABYSSINIA
' ]
There teems to be tome doubt of the ]
correctness of the lateit report of the <
death of Menelik of Abyttlnia, but If ]
he la dejd, he has been succeeded by ,
his nephew, 61 Jassu, whose portrait ?
is here presented. ,
ARE UNDER BAYONEI RULE !
GOVERNMENT MEETS GENERAL 1
STRIKE ORDER BY DECLAR- 1
ING MARTIAL LAW. 1
Feeling Is Very Bitter Throughout the
Country?Naiives Are
Feared.
Cape Town, Union of South Africa.? '
A general strike throughout South Africa
was proclaimed by the Trades 1
Federation, and the Rand miners, by 3
a two-thirds majority, voted to join
in the movement. Governmental retaliation
was swift in the form of the 1
proclamation of martial law.
This was the only ster the authorl- 1
ties believed adequate to meet the sit- 1
nation, for the strike of the miners
means not only the turning loose of
the most turbulent spirits in the Rand. '
but raises the whole question of the r
position of the native workers. If the 1
miners actually obey the strike order, 1
the government will immediately take
steps to send the nutives, under es- '
cort, back to their kraals. c
This means that ahout two hundred s
thousand natives must bo marched '
back by road to their hcn.cs enor- '
mous cost. It will be most difficult. 1
after the end of the strike, to recruit '
them again. In brief, such a step v
would mean disaster for the Rand for '
many years.
Although official imports from the 1
city of Johannesburg show Improve- ''
ment in the train service, reports from
other districts are less encouraging. f
In Natal the situation is one of great 1
tension, nnd it is feared that the loy- *
alty of the trainmen will not stand the ^
strain much longer. An instance of
the men's temper is shown by the ac- '
tion of an engine driver who quit his 11
train on the Veldt and left the passengers
stranded. [
Practically no information is at hand
as to conditions in the Orange Free ^
States, but improvement there is not
considered probable.
HUERTA DEFAULTS ON DEBT *
o
Dictator Announces No Interest Will e
Be Paid on Debts. e
Mexico City.?After a nieeteing of C
the cabinet, which lasted all night, the p
Mexican foreign minister, Querido Me- \
lieno, announced that the Mexican gov- h
ernment will default in tho payment h
of all interest on tho bonds of the h
internal and external debts, which now ii
remains unpaid or which falls due with- o
in the next six months. A heavy pay- Ii
ment of interest on the foreign debt ti
becomes duo in April. tl
It has been the practice of the gov- b
ernment to mnke weekly remittances a
to New York, London and Paris to ap- h
ply on its interest obligations, in or- t]
der that when the interest payment
periods arrived the money would be N
in hand. Those weekly remittances
now have been suspended, the explana- ti
tlon being that the government re- o
quires all available funds for paclfi- o
cation purposes. s
o
Connecticut Folks Are Money Savers, o
Hartford, Conn.?More than half the ti
oeoDle who live In fiiwnnu?M?.i? ??-? -
deposits in the savings bunks, accord- lj
ing to the annual report of the state n
bank commissioners. The 622,000 do- f<
positors have $307,600,000 to their p
credit, an Increase of 16,000 depositors p
and $9,000,000 over 1912. The estimat- q
ed population of the state is 1,176,000. S
John Skelton Williams Comptroller.
Washington. ?President Wilson has
nominated John Skelton WilUamR of 1<
Virginia, assistant secretary of the vs
treasury, for comptroller of the cur- a
rency and ex-offlcio member of the w
federal reserve board which will ad- r<
minister* the affairs of the new cur- g
renc# system. Mr. Williams is now d
nssistant secretury of the treasury in s
charge of the fiscal bureaus nnd Sec- a
retary McAdoo's first assistant in mat- tl
ters of government finance. The of- ri
HCB ui yyinpiiunt:r oi mo currency has a
been vacant several months. e
Big Fire in Atlanta.
Atlanta.?The most spectacular and
lisastrous conflagration since the Ter- n
minal district Are raged for hours, oc- n
curred when the modern plant of the ti
Cotton States Betting and Supply cim- \
>any was completely destroyed and the 0
warehouse of the B. F. Avery & Son;, j
tlrm was damaged, together with a b
number of smaller buildings at White- o
ball street and Stewart avenue. The e
pin tire fire department excepting a ?
small array of emergency apparatus |a
was summoned. For two UhMflsy ?
battled to uufcdue the n
'HE FORT MILL TIMES, FOR
NOTED SOUTHERN
JOURNALIST DEAD
SOLONEL PENDLETON FORMERLY
STATE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
CHAIRMAN, DIES
hone from Gov. John M. Slaton, exlov.
Joseph M. Brown, Col. W. S.
Vent of Valdostn, Clark Howell of
itlunta; Labor Commissioner H. M.
itanley and A. H. Ulm, the governor's
Tivate secretary.
IANDIT ROBS PULLMAN CAR
1a8ked Man Strips Four Passengers of
Money and Jewelry.
Atlanta.?Wearing a blue liandkerhief,
covering his face up to his eyes,
/1th a cup pulled down to the bridge
f his nose and his coat collar turnd
up, a well-dressed lone bandit boardd
the Nashville-Atlanta, Nashville,
'hattanooga and St. Louis southbound
assonger train, as it slowed down at
pinlngs station, eleven miles from Atinta
at night, and with a blue-steel,
irgo caliber revolver In his left-hand,
eld up the eleven passengers riding
i the parlor car, "Nyssa," forcing four
f the millo nnttsenirnre In irlwn nn ?OUA
:i cash. The robber made no effort
o molest two women passengers on
ltd car. Fifteen minutes later, the
audit fought a tierce gun battle with
Fulton county police officer, who
appened to be on the train, aided by
lie negro train porter, and escaped.
lillionaires Flocking to Jekyl Island.
llrunswick, Ga.?Some of the counry's
best known millionaires are now
n Jekyl island, where they are either
cmipying their winter cottages or
topping at the mammoth clubhouse
porated on the island for the benefit
f the guests. Practicaly every cot?go
on the island is now occupied
nd additional parties are arriving dair.
Prominent among the millionaires
ow on the island are William Rockefeller,
who, with his family, is occuylng
his cottage, and Mrs. J. Pieront
Morgan, who is occupying the
uarters of the late financier at the
ans SoucL
Urge* Anti-Trust Bill.
Washington.?Representative Stnnjy
of Kentucky, after a conference
rllh President WIIkoii i n f r rvH nnn/1 on
mendment to the Sherman law, which
ould make illegal monopolization or
Bstrain of trado "in any degree,"
triklng at tho "rule of reason," laid
own by tho Supreme court in tlio
tandard Oil case. The amendment
lso would invest the circuit courts of
in United States with jurisdiction to
estrain and prevent violations of tho
ct, irrespective of the attorney genral
Submarine. Fails to Come Up Again.
Plymouth, Eng.?Two officers and
ipe men comprising the crew of the
Iritish submarine "A-7" are trapped
i their craft beneath the waters of
Wiltesand bay, five miles southwest
f Plymouth. Whether the men are
ead or alive has not been established,
ut nary officials here expressed the
pinion that all had perished. The
xact spot where the little vessel sank
ould not be definitely fixed. The "A-7"
i company with the "A-S" and "A-9,"
tade a plunge about while engaged In
laneuvera.
WELL KNOWN IN THE SOUTH
Leader of Georgia Delegation to Last
Democratic National Convention
in Baltimore.
Macon. Ga.?Charles Rlttenhouse
Pendleton, for sixteen years editor and
part owner of the Macon Telegraph,
lied after an Illness of five weeks,
[lis condition did not become critical
jntil a week ago, when it was discovered
that he had Bright's disease. He
was 611 years of age.
Colonel Pendleton, as he was generally
called, came to Macon from Valiosta,
where he edited a paper for
nany years. He served one term in
:he legislature from Lowndes county,
jut ever atferwards avoided holding
political office, though he was a leader
n the Democratic party in Georgia.
Colonel Pendleton was sent to the
Democratic National convention as a
ielegate from Georgia, the last one
)elng the Baltimore convention, which
10 ultniwln/1 no ?? *
V Mvbvuucvt no vuau 1X1U.11 UL II1C Vit'Ul"
;ia delegation, instructed for Oscar
Underwood. He was a member of a
lumber of state conventions, and four
rears ago was chairman of the state
Democratic executive committee.
In politics Colonel Pendleton gencri]ly
was classed with the conservaives,
although he never failed to supjort
the nominee of his party, heartily
ind enthusiastically.
Mr. Pendleton was born in Efflngrnm
county, Georgia. June 26, 1850, the
iftli child of Philip C. Pendleton. His
nother's maiden name was Catherine
rebeau, of the family which gave Teicauville
its name.
Immediately upon his father's death
Jr. Pendleton took charge of the Vallosta
Times for the family, a heavy reiponsibility
for so young a man for
here were several to support with the
ncome from this source, lie made
he Valdosta Times one of the most
niliientinl papers in south and southrest
Georgia and at one time enjoyed
he county printing of several counties.
In 1879 he married Sallie Patterson
'copies of Valdosta, who survives
dm.
Among the telegrnms received by the
amllv of tlln illllut pinna o'lltnr ?.??"
p.- < *\.. . 'as ..V: ir
'" <- -> zi! *"
*: V * " *
T MILL, SOUTH CAROLINA
MRS. WILLIAM A. CULLOP
Mr?. Cullop, wife of Representative
Culiop of Indiana and recently elected
president of the Women's National
Democratic league, emphatically denies
the story that there have been
big defections from the league because
It did not declare in favor of
equal suffrage.
ine DFDCAM ADF DFWIKn
1UU ILI10U11 HllL ULOUULL/
RESCUE SHIPS REACH WRECKED
STEAMER COBEQUID AND
TAKE OFF PASSENGERS.
Rescue One of Most Notable Ever Accomplished
on the Atlantic
Coast.
Yarmouth, N. S.?Snatched from
what seemed almost certain death, the
108 passengers and crew of the Itoyal
Mall Packet Cobequid are safe In Yarmouth
harbor.
Wireless appeals for assistance,
which she had first made thirty-six
hours tyefore, were answered as the
doomed steamer was being racked to
pieces on Trinity Rock, six miles off
Port Maitland. The rescue will go
down in shipping annals as one of the
most notable ever accomplished on tho
Atlantic coast.
The Cobequid had begun to break
up under the cannoning of the terrific
seas that had been merciless from
the time the vessel struck. Quantities
of cargo covered the waters as the
lifeboats ranged alongside. The coastal
steamers Westport and John L.
Cann were first to get their small
boats into the water and they wero
followed soon by boats of the government
steamer 1-ansdowne and the
steamer Rappahannock. As the work
of rescue "progressed the seas subsided
and no mishap marred the triumph
over the waves.
AN AGREEMENT IS REACHED
Secretary Garrison and Representatives
of National Guard Agree.
Washington. ? Secretary Garlrson
and adjutants general representing
National Guard organizations of more
than thirty states agreed on terms
of the proposed militia pay bill, under
which the federal government
would provide for militiamen, who, in
turn, would enlist as "federal reservsist"
subject to the call of the president
to duty either within the United
States or abroad.
It is proposed that the militia bill
shall provide nn annual appropriation
of $14,500,000. Of this $4,000,000 would
be for encampment and maneuver
purposes, ^8,000,000 for home service
pay and $2,500,000 for armament and
equipment.
The committee that conferred with
Secretary Garrison comprised Brlgudier
General Martin, Texas; Hrigadier
General Stewart, Pennsylvania; Brigadier
General Sadley, New Jersey, and
Brigadier General Young, Illinois. Brigadier
General Crowder, judge advocate
general of the army, and Brigadier
General Mills, chief of the division of
militia affairs, were present.
Kills Wife; Wounds Chauffeur.
Augusta, Ga.?Recently released
from confinement for mental derangement,
Sam J. Morris shot and killed
his wife and probably mortally wounded
William Dennis, 17 years old, a
chauffeur, who was at the Morris home
preparatory to take Mrs. Norris for a
ride. After shooting the two, Norris
attempted and would have shot Felix
Gunter, the first person to come luto
the room. He was covered by a revolver
in the hands of Pollctf Surgeon
Jennings, who disarmed and arrested
him.
No Eugenics in South Carolina.
Columbia, S. C.?The state senate
killed the so-called "eugenics bill,"
which was endorsed by the South Carolina
Medical Association, by a# vote
of 22 to 17. The bill required the
production of medical certificates of
freedom from disease on the part of
male applicants before the issuance of
marriage licenses. Senator Carlisle of
8partanburg moved that the bill be
indefinitely postponed, saying that ft
was too much ahead of the times and
that Wisconsin, with a similar measure
in force, was having trouble.
VIGOROUS
AHAGK
ON ALASKA R. R.
GTEP TOWARD I^EaLM OF SOCIALISTIC
QOVEHNMENT SAYS
McfcUM3ER.
WILL CAST FINAL VOTE SOON
Assault on Whole Theory of Government
Ownership.?Will Cost Government
More to Operate Than
Private Concern.
Washington.?The till proposing
the building of a Government railway
in Alaska encountered its first vigorous
opposition in ihe Senate when
Senator McCuniber attacked it as the
first step toward "the realm of pa- j
ternalistic and socialistic govern- |
ment." Until the North Dakota Senator
spoke, Senator Williams was the
only member who hau directly stated
his purpose of opposing the measure
on which there is an agreement for
a final vote soon.
Amendments adopted soon by the
Committee or Territories would provide
for the taking over by the Government
of any existing lines necessary.
by purchnse or "ondeninatinn
I An amendment providing for a Gov- i
eminent steamship lino from the
coast terminal of tno road to ports 1
on the Pacific coast was rejected. |
Senator McCumber attacked the i
whole theory of Government ownership.
He said experience had shown
that it cost the Government twice as
much as a private concern to operate
any enterprise.
Arguments presented for agricultural
development in A n.ska, he said,
were without merit, the fact being
that the great majority of the products
named in statistic.', come from
districts accessible by sea or which
it was not proposed to tap with the
projected railroad.
During the discussion of Alaska's
coal resources Senator Clark of Wyoming
declared that wlitle chemical
tests had "shown Bering district coal
to be better than the West Virginia
product? actual naval tests aboard
ship proved that "the Bering field
absolutely falls down" in supplying
coal the Navy could use.
Senator James replied that he had
a letter from a former member of
Congress saying that the coal used in
the naval tests aboaid the cruiser
Maryland did not furnish a fair sample
of the product of the field.
Strike on D. & H Railroad.
Albany, N. Y.?Dispute over the discharge
of two employes by the Delaware
and Hudson railway led to a
atrllro xm* 1*4!??? a i ? J '
, .u.nv nillbU WIS IICU Up I lie CIlOTe
operating end of the system. About
5,000 men, it is estimated, are out.
Only shop workers and office employes
remain on duty.
Reinstatement of the discharged employes,
with full back pay, is the only
union demand.
K. W. P. Hanger, of the federal
board of mediation and conciliation,
and Commissioner James M. Lynch, of
the state labor department, are en
route here to offer their services in an
effort to effect a settlement. No violence
was reported from any point.
Mails are paralyzed in many sections,
the Delaware and Hudson being the
only road to numerous northern
points.
Volcano Victims Needy.
Kagoshima, Japan.?Fresh eruptions
of Sakura-Jima, which recently caused
such wide-spread devastation, have
occurred here. They were accompanied
by earthquakes and violent subterannean
noises.
The governor of Hokkaido estimates
that about 30,000 people on the island
at Kiushiu will need relief.
7,500 Banks Apply.
Washington.?More than the 7,600
national hanks in the United States
have made legal application for membership
in the new federal reserve
system according to the treasury department.
National banks must enter
me system by February 22nd or forfeit
their charter and go out of business
within one yeas^^
Must Have Steel Cars.
Washington.?Hearings were begun
on the bill of Representative Esch
providing for the replacement of all
wooden railroad cars by steel cars
within four years. George A. Tots,
president of the Railway Business Association.
recommended that the interstate
commerce commission be authorized
to determine how much timo
should be allowed tlio railroads to
make the change. Mr. Post declared
that the cost of replacing the wooden
cars now in operation with steel cars
would aggregate about $282,000,000.
Wins Libel Suit.
Washington.?The Commercial Appeal
Publishing Company, a Tennessee
corporation won the libel Bult for $20,000
brought against it by W. J. Cain,
of Mississippi. Cain sued in Mississippi
for an alleged libel published in
the Commercial Appeal. The suit
was removed from the state to the federal
court and there dismissed because
the company had no agent to be
served in Mississippi. Cain appealed
to the supreme court on the ground
that after the removal the company
could not ques'lon the service.
DIZZY, HEADACHY,
SICHtASCARETS"
Gently cleanse your liver and
sluggish bowels white
you sleep. v
Get a 10-cent box.
Sick headache, biliousness. dluft*
i ncss, coated tongue, (oul taste and foul'
| breath?always trace them to torpid
I liver; delayed, fermenting food in the;
bowels or sour, gassy stomach.
Poisonous matter clogged in the lnj
testines, instead of being cast out
of the system is re-abBorbed into thej
blood. When this poison reaches th?
, delicate brain tissue it causes con*
geetion and that dull, throbbing, sickening
headache.
Cascarets Immediately cleanse thestomach,
remove the sour, undigested
food and foul gases, take the excess
bile from the liver and carry out all
the constipated waste matter and?
poisons in the bowels.
A Cascaret to-night will surely
straighten you out by morning. They
work while you eleep?a 10-cent box.
from your druggiBt means your head,
clear, stomach sweet and your liver
and bowels regular for months^ -Adv.
KNEW WAY OF THE WORLD
oKepticai Jamie wu Not to Be Flettered,
at Least at That Particular
Moment
"In some respects," said a New York
lawyer, "Harry Thaw Is as naive as a
child. Although his money commands
the country's finest legal talent, ho always
insists that It is he who direct?
his cases. He is skeptical, too, of all
who approach him."
The lawyer laughed.
"That," he continued, "is as skeptical
nB Jamie. Jamie, a village celebrity
somewhat lacking in intellect,
s^t on the racecourse fence the day
of the local races, munching away at a.
leg of mutton which he had somohovr
procured and of which ho was veryproud.
"A wealthy steel magnate, whose
country house was near the village,
rode by in his fifty-horse power racing
car and, seeing Jamie on the fencew
said:
" 'Ah, Jamie, are you here already?*
" 'Oh,' retorted Jamie, with a dignified
and important air, looking Big\
niflcantly at the mutton bone, 'oh.
yes; ye all know a body when he's
got anything.' "
Early Suffragette.
Militant minded women were known
I in England beforo the suffragettes,
one of whom lies in Henry VII.'s chap<*1?Vnrnnrnf
1 ?1 *
Y. n>.i v>y, wuiulu; ui 7ni:niiiuiiU,
its builder's mother, with her brass
effigy by Torrigiano. She hated th?
Turk, and she made, as Camden reports,
a sporting offer to tho chivalrous
of her day: "On the condition
that princes of Christendom would
combine themselves and march against
1 the common enemy, the Turk, she
would most willingly attend them and
he their laundress in camp." That
position of laundress to the crusaders
would have been an easy ono, for It
was the fashion to make vows to
change no underclothing until the holy
sepulcher was regained.
Best of All Gifts.
A little boy in a big metropolitan
Sunday school listened eagerly while
the superintendent talking of missions
urged every one present to contributo
to tho cause.
"Oive what you can, not what yon
want," he concluded his exhortation.
"Give generously and of your best."
I-dttle Joseph, taking the exhortatloo
literally and being penniless, wrot?
on the slip passed out for depositing
In the pledge box:
"Please, sir, 1 give myself."
WONDERED WHY. *
Found tho Answer Was "Coffee.*
Many pale, sickly persons wonder
for years why they have to suffer so,
and eventually discover that the dqiff
?caffeine?in coffee is the mai^Caus?
of the trouble.
"1 was always very fond of coffee
fllld rtrnnU It owomi How T ?
? .. V.V.J UWJ . A UC?CI UMI
much flesh and often wondered why I
was always so pale, thin and weak.
"About five years ago my healtb
completely broke down and I was confined
to my bed. My stomach was in
such condition that I could hardly take
sufficient nourishment to sustain Uf*
"During this time I was drinking
coffee, didn't think I could do without
It.
"After awhile I came to the conclusion
that coffee was hurting me, and
decided to give it up and try Postom.
When it was made right?-dark and
rich?I soon became very fond of it"In
one week I began to feel better.
I could cat more and Bleep better. My
tick headaches were less frequent, and
within flvo months I looked and felt
like a new being, headache spells entirely
gono.
"My health continued to improva
and today I am well and strong, weigh
148 lbs. I attribute my present health Jfl
to tho life-giving qualities of Postum.1"
Name given by Postum Co., Rattle
Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to WellTllle,"
in pk?s. !
Postum now comes in two forms:
Regular Postum ?must be well
boiled.
Instant Postum?is a soluble powder.
A traspoonful dissolves quickly
in a cup of hot water and, with cream
and sugar, makes a delicious beversjpe fl
Instantly. Grocers sell both kinds*
"There's a Reason" for Postum