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THE SANDERSVILLE HERALD.
K
Run of the Fields.
On ihe farm the poultry should be
gi\en the run of the fields as must
as possible in the summer when in
sects abound, that they may avail
themselves of this very important class
of food to the largest possible extent.
—Farmer’s Home Journal.
Remedy for Lice.
A good way to rid a chicken coop
of lice is to take a large piece of
woolen cloth, wrap it around the end
of a broom stick with a piece of wire,
saturate with kerosene oil, light and
piss It around under all the roosts and
cracks of the house and in all the nests
after you have removed all straw.
This will roast out the mites and not
set fire to the coop. The woolen will
not burn and drop off like paper or
other cloth. A good time to do this
is right after a rain.—Mrs. J. More-
head.
Too Many Young Bulls.
A deplorable condition that prevails
Is breeding so much.from the young
and Immature bulls, it Is the custom
with some dairymen to not think of
keeping a bull after lie is two or three
years old at the most.
By that age he is just beginning to
get old enough to show whether or not
he has any value as a breeder or not.
Nothing can be told of a bull's breeding
powers until the first crop of calves
nre matured. It is regrettable that n
good bull has to go oftentimes when
ills usefulness is just beginning while
so many yearlings and two-year-olds
that ought to have gone, when they
were at the age of skinners are allowed
to do duty.
A good bull one that shows his pre
potency and ills ability to get calves
that become good cows, should only
lie killed when his power as a breeder
Is at an end. If you cannot keep him
yourself on accqunt of ip-breeding in
your herd see that somebody else has
him. If a young bull Is worth a cer
tain sum before he is tried he certain
ly is worth more after he Is tried. A
bull’s calves will tell a truer story of
him than any man can tell.—Prof. P.
A. Campbell, Agricultural College, Or-
ono, Me.
down is a gieat and permanent loss
that no amount of after ( are and food
can replace. A something lost for
ever. When we neg'lest to keep these
young things thriving not only Is the
food wasted, hut a waste of time Is
also involved.
.It should he the aim of all feeders to
build up a good, vigorous constitution
and a strong, healthy frame during the
first year of the calf's life, for unless
this is being done he is doing preejse-
the opimslte. There is no yiftfdlo
court or stand still course in growing
a calf. At the end of two years of
proper and progressive feeding and
management the feeder will be re
warded with an animal possessing a
strong, healthy appearance, with a
well developed frame, its bones will
be covered with an abundance of flesh
and fat, and its : kin and hair soft
and mellow.
Imagine a condition exactly the op
posite and you will see the result of
exactly the opposite line of care r^d
feeding. When the calves are play
ful it may be taken as a sure indt-
ntion that they are healthy and thriv
ing and whan they api>ear lifeless it
may be taken as a sure indication that
something is wrong with them.—Epit-
omist.
hausted hlmseir and sank upon the
ground. In this condition he was
covered with meshes of a strong net
ting and rolled into a heavy, iron-
bound temporary cage.’’--'New York
Times. , , —
Starting Alfalfa.
There are different ways of
laying
’ HIS BATTLE.
The soldier's greatest victory is not
always on the field. Nor are the ene
mies In Ills most terrible contests al
ways his fellow man. One such con
test is described in L. E. Chittenden's
“An Unknown Heroine.” During the
Civil War Lieutenant Bedell was shot
in the thigh. The bright red gush of
arterial blood told him where the im
mediate danger lay. In virln he tried
to check the stream. Then he called
for aid.
‘‘Cord it, boys,” he said. ‘‘Take
a hnndkerchief or anything, only he
quick! Try a sash and bayonet,” he
added, seeing their futile endeavors.
At last the flow was stopped. The
officer was carried in a stretcher to
the temporary field-hospital. Ampu
tation of the leg must take place at
once, and the patient might die under
the knife. Bedell heard the diag
nosis.
“Is not this wound certain to be
fatal if you do not operate?”
“Yes.”
“Then do not lose a moment's
time.”
They laid him on the table. His
native vigor was in his favor, but his
great size was against him. Sixty-
four inches of flesh were laid bare be
fore the operation was over. The
down a plot or a field of alfalfa, and , | K ht hand wnB crushed, but the sur
geons dared not touch it until it was
we would suggest the following meth- |
od as one which is likely to give
very excellent results. Select land !
having a clean, mellow, fertile surface j
soil overlying a deeply drained sub
soil having no acidity. Use large,
plump seed, free from impurities and
strong in germinating power. Inocu
late the seed with the proper kind of
bacteria, providing alfalfa has not
been grown successfully on the laud
in recent years.
As early in the spring as the land is
seen whether the patient would rally
from the amputation.
That evening the camp had to
I move, and the jolting journey was an
I awful ordeal for the wounded man.
| At last, expecting his death at any
moment, the doctors had him carried
to a farmhouse by the way. In the
morning he had gained a little
strength.
| “You doctors think I have my fatal
wound,” he said. “I know perfectly
well the chances are against me. But
dry and warm enough to be worked to ,
• a 3 • *. '• at „ n.iitni.in I have wife and children who want
good advantage, make a suitable seed- i _ . ......
t won tv me - 1 am soins to make the hardest
Oats as a Poultry Food.
A good many farmers consider oats
a dangerous feed for chickens, believ
ing that the sharp, pointed hulls will
damage or even pierce the fowl’s craw
This Is usually a mistake although, .oc
casionally where very stiff or hard
pointed oats are used trouble may be
caused. Fowls should not be allowed
to gorge themselves exclusively on
oats, but a liberal quantity of oats may
satisfy and profitably he fed to fowls, as
oats are one of the best balanced grains
for feeding to poultry there Is. A
plentiful supply of grit will go a long
way toward preventing any troubles
arising from the use of oats. Also see
that the fowls have hn abundance of
fresh water at all times. The grit
grinds the food while the water soft
ens the hull and renders it less hard
and stiff. Where oats are fed in large
quantities on large poultry farms, they
are often thoroughly cooked in water
before feeding; the fowls relish the
oats more when treated in this way,
the grains increase in size and a like
amount will go further, and there is
absolutely no danger of bad results
from feeding soaked oats. Don’t be
stingy in the use of oats; they are a
bone and muscle making food and an
egg producer.—Epltomlst.
bed and immediately sow about twenty
pounds of alfalfa seed per acre from
the grass seed box placed In front of | n ,\°
the grain drill, and about one bushel
of spring wheat or of barley per acre
from the tubes of the drill. Smooth the
land with a light harrow or with a
weeder, and if tt la very loose and
•ather dry, also roll it and again go
over it with the harrow or the weeder.
As soon as ripe, cut the grain and
avoid leaving it on the land longer
than necessary. Give the alfalfa plants
every opportunity to get a good start
in the autumn in preparation for the
winter.
If for hay cut each crop of alfalfa
in the following year as soon as it
starts to bloom. In curing try to re
tain as many leaves on the stems as
possible, and to protect the crop from
rain. Never cut or pasture alfalfa suf
ficiently close to the ground to re
move the crowns of the roots and thus
injure or possibly kill the plants. If
these directions are followed, the al
falfa may be expected to produce large
and valuable crops for a number of
years without reseeding— C. A. Zavltz,
Ontario Experiment Station.
fight of which I am capable. Will
A consultation was held. Only one
young surgeon thought there wns the
slightest hope of life. In his care
Lieutenant Bedell put himself.
“My life is not my own property,”
said he. “For a year it belongs to
the United States; after that to my
family. 1 shall not throw away one
chance to save it. Doctor, I am
ready.”
Again he was laid on the operating
table. He did not wish to take an an
esthetic, but he submitted when the
doctor said:
“The operation on the hand and
the dressing of the wound will be very
painful, and therefore exhausting.
You must husband every particle of
strength.”
On a hard bed of straw, his only
covering an old army blanket, the
wounded man with Ills young doctor
fought the fight for life. And they
won.
A TICKLISH TRICK.
The feat known as the bag and
spear trick has been considered one of
the greatest of the Hindu magician’s
art. In this trick, says a writer in
the New York Press, the Hindu fakir
has his assistant get into a sack, the
mouth of which he firmly seeftres,
and then unceremoniously hurls his
helpless victim to the ground. With
out a sign of warning, the fakir drives
his spear through the centre of the
bag.
After withdrawing his weapon,
upon tlie point of which no blood
stain appears, the fakir stands and
gazes dreamily over the heads of the
spectators. The body within the bag
flounders about as if in mortal agony.
At last, when the opponent is appar
ently dead, the fakir again plunges
his spear into the motionless body.
The same antics are repeated. Then
the fakir releases his attendant from
the hag, and he steps out without a
scratch upon his body.
Although the trick is performed
with all the carelessness imaginable,
it calls for more patience, skill and
exactness than any of the so-called
black-urt achievements. From the
time the attendant enters the bag,
both fakir and assistant count every
breath they take. When a stated
number of breaths have been taken,
the fakir makes his thrust, and the
occupant of the hag is prepared to
avoid it. Then the count begins
again, and at the proper time the
spear is driven through the bag a
second time. In order to evade the
spear and make It appear to pass
through Ills body, the assistant dou
bles up in as small a form as possible.
Hi3 legs are drawn up close, with the
chin resting upon the knees and the
arms folded round the lower limbs
across the shins. When in this posi- 1
tion, at the fiftieth breath, the spear
passes under the attendant’s arms be
tween the abdomen and the thighs.
The slightest miscalculation by 1
either the fakir or his assistant would
mean a serious if not a mortal wound
for one and an unheard-of disgrace
for the other.
That fakir and assistant are able
so to train themselves to breathe in
perfect unison while giving one of
these performances, when the slight
est variation in time by either would
be fatal, is certainly wonderful.
SUCH IS LIFE.
Yon“o*c your coin,
It comes to past*,
And go to join
_ The lobster class.
“A fool," they say in accents tart,
“Must quickly from his money part.”
You toil and.sweat
In sturdy style;
Together get
Another pile.
Then do they roses '«t you chuck ?
Oh, no. They say, “A fool for luck."
—Louisville Fourier-Journal
COMFORTING.
’Will my husband live, doctor?”
"Well, madam, if he doesn’t he’ll
come mighty close to it."—Judge.
EVIDENCE OF EXPERIENCE.
‘‘Does that promoter know any
thing of the mining business?”
‘‘He starts in as if he were an ex
perienced hand. I never saw' prettier
stationery.”—Washington Star.
How Butter Takes Salt.
Tf one were to get up before an au
dience and tell those facing him that
butter, the real butter fat, does not
take salt, most of them would think he
did not know what he was talking
about; but he would be speaking the
truth. Salt can be pressed into a mass
of butter, but the real butter, the but
ter fat, will not dissolve salt so that
the salt becomes intermingled with It
The moisture, Ihe water, that is in the
butter must dissolve the salt. It is
clear then, that to get a ball of but
ter salted in all its parts equally it
is necessary to gei the moisture, the
carrier of the salt, distributed equal
ly in all parts of the butter. If the
moisture, the carrier of the salt, is
present in the butter in little pockets,
the butter fat near the pockets will be
salted more heavily than the butter
fat farther away.
Before the salting is done let the
butter drain well after washing it. Dif
ferent individual tastes will vary as
to how much butter should be salted
and there may be some variation in
the requirements of different markets.
Since salt Is cheaper than butter fat,
it would seem good business to salt the
butter fully as heavily as the taste of
the purchaser likes. As a general rule,
butter that is medium soft after being
worked should receive as many ounces
of salt as there are pounds of butter
rs a maximum, and from that down
to three-fourths as many ounces of salt
as there are pounds of butter,—Pro
gressive Farmer.
Raising and Feeding Calves.
It should be our aim from the mo
ment the calf Is born until it is a full
grown animal to keep it in a thriving
and growing condition. This w r e be
lieve is the only real secret in grow
ing and developing thrifty and profit- |
able dairy animals. Letting an animal
Notes of the Farm.
The profit of poultry Is in the egg
basket, not in the dressed chicken.
The draft horse breeds lead the
horsebreeding industry of this country,
both because of the wide demand and
sale at good prices. The large cities
must have these big draft horses to
handle the heavy hauling.
The hull should be fed good, nour
ishing food, but not of a fattening na-
tuie. There should be some of rough
ing along with the corn, oats or bran
he gets. He should be thrifty, but not
fat; active, but not sluggish.
I>»t the little pigs have plenty of
room to exercise and grow, but don’t
allow them to run over the entire
place. It teaches them bad habits,
and, moreover, they are liable to be
run over and hurt. A crippled pig is
poor property.
A good dusting of the sitting hen 1
with pyrethrum will save the little
chicks from onslaughts of lice or mites, j
This powder should also he mixed in
the dusting bath of the fowls for then
the birds themselves will apply the
powder unconsciously.
Yellow dock Is causing serious
trouble In mowing lands, but the act
ual number of the plants is not so
great as might be supposed, and a
few hours’ work pulling them out by
hand when the ground is soft after a
rain will free a large field of the pest.
It is impossible to say just how soon
in her life a heifer should be bred. The
distinctive, specialized dairy breeds
may be bred earlier than the lurger
strains. Some heifers at 16 months
are as fully developed as others at 24.
Therefore the experienced breeder will
breed according to development.
Johnny's Sarcophagus.
Johnny came mighty near choking
to death the other day,” said Mrs.
Lapsling. “He was eating popcorn,
and he got a grain of it fast in his
windpipe. At least that’s where I
thought it was, but when the doctor
came he said it wasn't his windpipe
at all The popcorn had lodged in
his sarcophagus.”—Chicago Tribune.
The trole will starve to death in a
day.
CAPTURED A BIG TIGER.
Probably the most difficult of all
wild animal trapping is that of a
well-developed Bengal tiger. There
is with the Barnum & Bailey Show,
a trapper who recently returned from
Calcutta with a consignment of
Asiatic animals. He Is a walking
library of animal stories. Hi3 ex
periences in capturing tigers make an
interesting story.
“I recall capturing an unusually
fine specimen of the Royal Bengal
with the use of bird lime,” said the
trapper. With my shikari assistants,
we hung a quarter of fresh venison
from the limb of a tree, just higli
enough to make it impossible to
reach. The ground beneath we cov
ered with leaves and bird lime. Then
we concealed ourselves In a banyan
tree.
“After several hours’ waiting we
heard a loud purr-r-r booming
through the jungle, arwl we saw a
tiger coming out of the underbrush,
his broad, whitish throat and beauti
ful coat shining In the sunlight, He
was crouching, after the manner of
the house cat when making her
approach to some unwary bird. His
eyes appeared to flash fire as he bent
them on the tempting venison, hang
ing just above his reach.
“He seemed nonplussed that he
could not get at the meat. After a
moment’s pause he gathered up his
long back and sprang high into ths
air, but without success. Uttering an
angry growl of disappointment, he
made another attempt. All at once
the great brute realized that some
thing unusual had happened to his
feet and legs. He raised his paws
and saw a lot of leaves sticking to
them.
“Showing signs of annoyance, he
tried to rub the leaves away by pass
ing his paws over his head and
against his cheeks. He succeeded in
getting most of the leaves off his
foot, but they adhered to his head
ears and jaws. These he attempte
to remove by using his paw3, but he
only added more, by this time cover
ing his eyes. Then he tried rubbin*
his head along the ground, tempo
rarily blinding himself.
“By this time he had lost all pa-
I tlence, and thought only of freeing
i himself. Springing into the air, dash-
! ing himself against the trees, scrap-
I ing with his huge paws, growling,
I howling and screaming, he finally ex-
A SUPERSTITIOUS ARMY.
Some time ago a number of Swazi
chiefs came from their South African
country to lay their grievances before
King Edward. If the political super
stitions of the people are as vivid and
effectual as those of their military de
partment, many difficulties must be
encountered in dealing with the na
tion. Mr. Dudley Kidd, in his book,
"The Essential Kaffir,” describes the
Swazi army and the easy check which
can be put on its action.
1 saw the Swazi irnpi, or army, on
parade, and during a sham fight
The sight was impressive.
The men were dressed in special
colors, the shields of the regiments
being made from hide, in one cose of
lirown cattle, in another of black,
and in still another of black and
white. The warriors wore rings of
hide of the same color over their
shoulders.
The masses of men raced over the
ground with earth-shaking tread,
chanting their war-song. They came
like a whirlwind, dancing up in the
air at parts of the chant. Now and
then they stopped to spear an imag
nary foe which they had trodden
down, every man plunging his assagai
into the ground with a great whir.
They speared the foe again and
again. It was not a case of “thri
he slew the slain;” he did it a dozen
times, bragging loudly of his prowess
and bravery. Whir—whir—went the
assagais, accompanied by a similar
sound from one thousand deep-throat
ed voices. Then all would jump and
yell and stab the fallen foe again.
Having finished, they resumed their
inarch, and their tramping ranks
sounded like “some deep multitudin
ous murmur that swells from the soul
of seas.” The impression was that of
overwhelming, irresistible force,
sweeping over the veld, and tramping
every living thing on its surface.
It seemed as if nothing could with
stand that whirlwind of fury. Yet if
a rabbit or a calf had run out in
front of that huge force the whole
array would have lied with fear at the
bad omen, and would have refused to
fight that day.
ALL OTHERS KNOWN.
Lawyer Hawk—“Do you know the
nature of an oath, sir?”
Mr. Parrot (ironically)—“Aw. say,
what do you take me for—a bird of
paradise or the dove of peace?"—-
Puck.
SMOOTHING THE ROAD.
"What did Barker do when lie dis
covered that his wife and chauffeur
had planned to elope in his car?"
“He oiled it thoroughly and put it
in first-class shape.” — Brooklyn
Eagle.
One of the
Essentials
of the happy homes of to-,lay ; s a
fund of information as to the bo St
of promoting health and hnppj nPs , ,
right living and knowledge of the Wor i,!
best products. 3
Products of actual excellence an ,
reasonable claims truthfully , )tV30n . i
and which have attained to worid-wid-
acceptance through the approval of tu
Well-Informed of the World; not of ini 6
viduals only, but of the many who have
the happy faculty of selecting and obtain-
ing the best the world affords.
One of tho products of that class, 0 f
known component parts, an Eth’j ca |
remedy, approved by physicians and com
mended by tho Well-Informed of the
World as a valuable and wholesome family
laxative is tho well-known Syrup of Til
nnd Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial
effects always buy tho genuine, manu
factured by tho California Fig Syrup Co
\nly, and for sale by all leading druggists!
Says the Atlanta Constitution: Reef
Is now so high that even a million-
airo’s appetite hesitates to reach It.
Capudlne Cures Indigestion Pah,,
Belching 8our Stomach and H etI ,burn
from whatever cause. It's Liquid, K,r..,u
immediately. Doctors prescribe it
23c., and 50c., at drug stores.
10c,
THE NEW CHORUS.
“I have hit upon something new to
take the place of the merry villagers."
“What is it?”
“A chorus of baseball fans, hear
ing soda pop bottles."—Birmingham
Age-Herald.
GROUCHY
ray!
Mrs.
Mrs. Grouch—“My,
Snooks has a new baby!”
Grouch—"Did ye think she had
an old one?”—New York Telegram.
The Washington Herald tells of a
man who felled a horse with one blow
of hia fist. But he couldn't got harit
the money ho had lost on the brute.
ECZEMA CURED.
J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says: "I
■uCferod agony with a severe case of <><<ze-
nia. Tried six different remedies and was
in despair, when a neighbor told me to trv
Hhuntrlne’s tetthbinr. After using
worth of your tettkrixr uinl soap I am
completely cured, I cannot say too muoU
in Its praise." Tkttkiuxk at druggists or
by mall 50c. Soap 25c. J. T, Uuuctbine,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
OLDEST CHURCH ORGAN.
IN BOSTON.
Burglar—"If you move you're a
dead man.”
Bostonian—“On tho contrary, my
good sir, if I move it is inconstable
evidence that I am alive."—Boston
Transcript.
“THE GENUINE.”
Customer—“Is there as much
genuine Vermont maple sugar on the
market this spring as last? ’
Dealer—“Just as much, but under
the new food law we have to put a
different label on it."—Browning's
Magazine.
CLOSE QUARTERS WITH SHARK.
Captain Charles Adams, pilot and
master pearl diver from Tapeete, Ta
hiti, in the Pacific, while at work
off the island of Aphki, of the Pomotu
group, scouring the bottom of the
sea in search of shells, was suddenly
confronted by a shoal of sharks. With
the knowledge of an old diver, Adam^
opened his jacket, letting loose a
flurry of bubbles. The ruse was suc
cessful, for all but one shark fled.
To Adams' horror that one proved to
be a monster. At every turn it came
closer, its jaws gaping and Its tiny
eyes snapping viciously at him. Ad
ams cast, loose his diving suit in an
effort to escape. With the speed of a
bullet he shot toward the surface and
clambered in the waiting boat. At
that very moment the shark had swal
lowed the diving suit. The life Hue*
were cut.—Answers.
The conditions of the Arctic atmos
phere are so favorable for the trans
mission of sound that it is possible
for two persons to converse through
a mile of space.
WOULD THEY HOLD ON?
“I tell you,” said the promoter,
•that mine can be made to give up
money.”
"I suppose it can,” said the small
stockholder. “How about the officers
of the company?"—Washington Star.
Found on island of Gothland and in
Excellent State of Preservation.
In the Baltic Sea, forty miles from
tho mainland, lie* the Swedish Island
Gothland, a Mecca for students of
early Gothic architecture. In \V1s-
by alone, the chief town of the Island,
with its .population of 8,000 souls,
may be studied what remains of no
less than ten churches, some of which
date from the eleventh and twelfth
centuries. The oldest of them Is the
Church of the Holy Ghost, completed
about 1046.
Prof. Hennerberg, director In a Ger
man music Bchool, and especially in
terested in the study of mediaeval
organs, visited fifty-nine churches in
Gothland, and in a little village called
Sundre came upon the remnant of
what Is unquestionably the oldest
known organ In existence. The case
alone has survived the fret of seven
centuries, the holes for pedals and
manuals are placed as In modern in
struments, nnd inside one can see
•the chamber for the bellows and Judge
of their action; the exterior Is adorn
ed with paintings dating from about
1240.
When this ancient instrument could
no longer serve Its original purpose
It was used as a sacristy and for the
.safeguard of holy vessels and vest
ments was kept in careful repair,
•hence Its excellent preservation w
oar day.—Youth’s Companion,
DROPPED COFFEE.
Doctor Gains 20 Pounds on Postum.
NOTHING IN VAIN.
The poet died without knowing
what he had been created for. “To
starve!” was his one best guess.
Of course he was in error. Could
he have looked forward only a hun
dred years or so, and beheld the
cheap skates who should then be
making a fat living writing about
him, he must have understood bet
ter. Almost nothing is created in
vain.—Piick.
A PROPHETIN HISOWN COUNTRY
“I don’t believe,” remarked good
old Aunt Loeezy, "that Llge Potter is
doin’ very well in Chicago.”
“Oh, I don’t know,” replied Uncle
Liphalet, “Llge uster be a purty
sharp chap before he went there."
“Yes, but we’ve been takin' this
Chicago paper four years now, and
it’s never once mentioned his name,
even when the hull Potter family
went there ter visit him!”—Puck.
POOR POLICY.
Mrs. Skinner—“Well, how wuz tha
circus, Jason?”
Mr. Skinner—“Rotten! An’ the
feller at the door made me pay full
price fer little Hiram.”
Mrs. Skinner—"Well, lie’s a good
deal more’n twelve, you know',”
Mr. Skinner—“Course he is, but
fer the sake uv a year or two I don’t
see why them graspin’ circus interests
should antagernize the farmin' com
munity.”—Brooklyn Life.
A physician of Wash., D. C., says of
his coffee experience:
“For years I suffered with period
ical headaches which grew more fre
quent until they became almost con
stant. So severe were they that some
times I was almost frantic. I was
sallow, constipated, irritable, sleep
less; my memory was poor.l trembled
and my thoughts were often confused.
“My wife, in her wisdom, believed
coffee was responsible for these ill®
and urged me to drop it. I tried
many times to do so, but was it®
slave.
“Finally wifo bought a package of
Postum and persuaded me to try it,
but she made it same as ordinar)
coffee and I was disgusted with the
taste. (I make this emphatic be
cause I fear many others have had the
same experience.) She was distressed
ut her failure and wo carefully read
the directions, made it right, boiled l f
full 15 minutes after boiling conl ‘
menced, and with good cream and
sugar, I liked it—it invigorated and
seemed to nourish me.
“That was about a year ago. Now
I have no headaches, am not sallow,
sleeplessness and irritability are gone,
my brain clear and my hand stead),
I have gained 20 lbs. and feel 1 am a
new man.
“I do not hesitate to give P° sta ™
due credit. Of course dropping coffee
was tho main thing.but I had dropp®
it before, using chocolate, cocoa an*
other things to no purpose.
“Postum not only seemed to act as
an lnvlgorant, but as an article 0
nourishment, giving me the neede
phosphates and albumens. This is n °
Imaginary tale. It can be substantia -
ed by my wife and her sicter, w o
both changed to Postum and ar
hearty women of about 70.
“I write this for the Information
and encouragement of others, an
with a feeling of gratitude to the t
ventor of Postum.” ...
Name given by Postum Co., Ba
Croek, Mich. Read “The R° al
Wellville,” in pkgs. “There's a * c ‘
son."
Ever read the above letter’.' A ,,e *
one appears from time to time. "
are genuine, true, and full
interest.