2 CAMERON COUIITY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Kvory Thnr.utay. TERMS 01' SUBSCRIPTION. f'T mi 1 12: 2 If paid in advance 1 ™ ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements nre | i >:i-.lte<l at the rate ot cue d< i.iir per square fv>rone 111-* 1 -Ption unit lift J rents | er square f<ir*'iieii subsequent insertion Rates liy the veur. or fii.--.iJt or th'ee months, »re I'iw and unilorm, a:.d will be furnished on upi Heat.on. and Official AdvertlslnK per v.juari three time or le>s. each subsequent itisoi • tion t8 cent! pcrHjuarc. Local notices Id cents per line for one insei ieriinii: 5 cents per line tor each subsequent consecutive insertion. t it.it nary notices over live lines. 10 cents t «*r line, simple announcement* of births, bum • riajies ..nd deaths will lie inserted free Business cards. live lines or loss. -.5 per year, over live lint s. at the regular rales of adver tising. No local inserted tor less than 7.> cents pe< issue. JOB PIUN'VINO. The job deportment or the Paws is complete •nd sift. i.ls fae.iit>s for doina the best class ot W. rU. 1 'l:i 1. I l.Att ATItN I ION I'AIUTO LAW PBINTt.N i No p.>.) r will bi discontinued until arrear s' s ar I aid, exci pt at the option of the pub- Usher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. Old-World Influences. The Japanese in the Hawaiian islands celebrated in many picturesque ways (he victories of their fellow countrymen over Russia, notably the fall ot' Port Arthur. On one occasion a Portuguese band, playing American patriotic airs, headed a procession of Japanese parad ing under an American flag in honor of an Asiatic triumph, while sympathetic Chinese onlookers lined the streets. It is hard to exaggerate, says Youth's Com panion, the influence on the politics of the modern world of various colonies of ■people whose industrial interests re quire them to live in a land other than their own, but whose hearts beat warm ly in oversea sympathies. The Russians were at a disadvantage in enlisting American sympathy in their recent war, because most Russian subjects residing nere belonged to the revolutionary ele ment of their own country, and were op posed to the government of the czar. During the recent war in South Africa, Hollanders, and a great many of their near kinsmen, the Germans, expressed their sympathy with the Boers so open ly and defiantly, even in such distant British colonies as Hong-Kong, that the manifestation of anti-British sentiment more than once threatened serious dis turbance of the peace. American-poli tics and opinions are constantly influ enced by the views of the expatriated sons of other nations. The recent dis ruption of the dual kingdom of Norway and Sweden'made it necessary for some public men in the northwestern states to take special efforts to prevent a division of the Scandinavian vote. The Irish vote and its influence in politics are matters too well known to require more than a mention. Inasmuch as many public questions in this country are those which are contested abroad, it is not si range that opinions acquired across the seas should have influence in determining American results. There is room, moreover, for this country to profit by the experience of other lands, if it is brought into our affairs in the right spirit. Rut this is no place for working out. Old World grudges. The primary obligation of all comers here is to be Americans, and help form, from the composite of American opinion, a national policy of the republic and for the republic. Probably no other part of the Unit ed States except in East Liverpool, 0., is there a baseball diamond from which it is possible to bat a ball Into any one of three states. Such a con dition actually exists at the grounds which have just been leased for the Klondike club there. The diamond is laid out on a lot. which Is known as the"state line corner." If a batsman makes a hit over third base the ball will be sent into West Virginia. .Should a foul tip result the catcher would have to chase the ball in Penn sylvania. If a straight drive or bunt is made the ball will bowl into the state of Ohio. Taking advantage of this freak of nature, the Klondike club is going to advertise the fact that its club will play ball in three states si multaneously. inat a universal language may be constructed is easily possible, but that it will meet with universal acceptance must be doubted, says the Kansas City Journal. Ksperanto is a pleasant the ory upon which to speculate, but it is hard to conceive of a Frenchman or an Englishman or a German or any others of the list giving up the cherished language of his fatherland for that to which no sentiment at taches anil which is represented by no flag, no country and no literature. as stated by Prof. Whitney, "One uni versal language, like one universal community, is not an absurdity or theoretic Impossibility but only a Utopian or millennial dream." The removal of hats by women in churches is under discussion in lironk lyn owing to the request by Kov. W. il. Wi: ii.i i ih Arlington Avenue Pres'jyterlun chun It that hereafter the w-iinen of his congregation takeoff ih**lr hats ii f> '.v minute before tin i i ;iiinlug of *t!ie service. Mr. Wil m explained that male parishioners ii.nl called his atu-of i >ti to the fact that tlicy could not n-e hl u while lie was *| caking. They bciicwii that if 11:«* women should re move thHr lint* ihe.'r viuiojj would nut Imi so much obstructed. SIX KILLED. Horrible Find in a Min neapolis house. BODIES MUTILATED No Clew as to Ihc Cause of the Deed Other Occupants of House Have Disappeared. Minneapolis, Minn. —Six murdered Bulgarian laborers were found Wednesday in an old house in this city, and the police are uncertain how or when the murders were com mitted, although the evidence thus far secured indicates that the men were killed during a fight among 12 llulgarians who had rented the house. The six others have disappeared. The police are convinced that rob bery was not the cause of all the mur ders, 4 as considerable money was found on the bodies. They also scout the itlea of any secret society with motives of revenge. Four of the bodies, horribly cut and slashed with knives, were found in a room on the second floor, while in the cellar were two others with their throats cut. Near the bodies were found five large bowie knives and a hatchet. The two bodies in the basement, ac cording to Coroner Kistler, had been dead nearly two days. The bodies in the upper rooms appeared to have been killed more recently. The police say that the men found in the basement may have been mur dered for-their money and that a fight followed upstairs over a division of the spoils. The bodies found upstairs were slashed all over, especially about the faces and the throats. One man had fallen against a hot stove anil the right side of his face was burned off. Near the bodies found upstairs were two money belts containing SSOG in gold. On one of the bodies was found a watch that, was still going. Some of the bodies had been stripped. FIRST ARREST. Grand Larceny Charge Against George W. Perkins, former Vice President of New York Life, in Campaign Contribution Case. New York. —On a charge that his connection with the contri bution of $18,702.50 from the funds of the New York Life Insurance Co. to Cornelius N. Bliss, treasurer of the republican national committee in the campaign of 1901, constituted grand larceny in the first degree, George W. Perkins, a member of the firm of J. P. Morgan & Co., and until recently first vice president of the New York Life Insurance Co., was arrested Wed nesday on a warrant issued by Magis trate Moss. When a detective went to serve the warrant upon Mr. Perkins he found that a writ of habeas corpus had al ready been obtained from Justice Greenbaum, of the slate supreme court, antl the matter was immedi ately taken out of the magistrate's hands. Mr. Perkins appeared before Justice Greenbaum and at the request of his counsel the hearing in the case was adjourned until Friday. Mr. Perkins was paroled in the custody of his attorney. Mr. Perkins' counsel admitted to .Tusfice Greenbaum that Mr. Perkins had advanced the sum named to Mr. Bliss upon the request of the late John A. McCall, president of the New York Life. He was afterward reim bursed through the action of the com pany's finance committee. It was contended that Mr. McCall had execu tive authority to order the payment, and that if any crime was committed it was participated in by e\ery mem ber of the finance committee present when the matter was acted upon. Congressional. Washington.—Mr. Knox, of Penn sylvania, addressed the senate on the railroad rate question on the 2Sth. He expressed the opinion that. Mr. Bai ley's amendment depriving the United States circuit courts of the power to grant injunctions would not stand the test of the courts. The remainder of the day was devoted to the bill regu lating the affairs of the five civilized tribes of intlians. The house passed a rule prohibiting limitless points of or der in discussion of the legislative, executive and judicial appropriation bill. Some progress was made on the bill. Dam Washed Away. Casper, Wyo.—'The great dam at Alcova, erected at a cost of SIOO,OOO by the government reclama tion service, was washed away Tues day by flood water in the North Plate river. The steel bridge built by the government six miles below the dam at Pathfinder was also carried away. Cabins, barns and property of all de scriptions are floating down on tfio swollen stream. Death of a Scientist. Philadelphia, Pa. J. Vaughn Mer rlek, an eaglßeerißg expert and scientist, died Wednesday ai his homo lit this city, aged 7x years. Mr. Mer rick had chili} • of the d<'signing of machinery and marine etmiin s used In government vessels during the civil war. Struck n Floating Mine. Toklo, Japan A fishing liont struck a floating mine on March i'ti, off the coast or ihe province of Ki hl r.en, Japan, and was Mown up. He.cn ot b r crew of ten men are missing CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 5, u;c6. COALAFFAIRS Joint Seal Committee Ad journs Sine Die. COULD NOT AGR[f. Anthracite Miners' Scale Committee Orders a Suspension of Work, Beginning April 2. Indianapolis, Ind.—Without agree ment on a wage scale, the con ferences of bituminous coal operators and miners of the central competi tive district adjourned sine die Thurs day, leaving affairs in such a condi tion that a strike of 275,000 miners steins probable at. the expiration of the present scale Saturday, March 31. ! The disagreement came after a struggle lasting ten days and disrupts the inter-state agreement which has existed since IX9B between operators and miners, through which wage scales and other differences have been adjusted. The final vote in the central con ference competitive field, on which other districts base their settlement, was on a motion offered by President Mitchell, of the United Mine Work ers, to restore for two years thi' wage scale of 1903, which would have been an increase in wages of 5.55 per cent. The operators of Illinois, Indiana and Ohio voted against the proposal and defeated it. The disruption of the conference followed. Operators of western Pennsylvania and the miners of four states voted for the proposal. F. L. Robbins and other operators, representing about one-third of the coal production of western Pennsyl vania, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, of fered to pay the advance and urged the miners to accept this advance and continue work in their mines, even though the other mines in the four states should be idle. The convention of miners Friday will decide whether to permit this or not. or demand that all miners sus pend work until all have been paid the advance, i The anthracite miners' scale com mittee Thursday night issued orders for a total suspension of mining in the three anthracite districts begin ning Monday Morning, April 2. The ] committee informed President Baer that the miners' scale committee will meet the operators' scale committee j in New York City on Tuesday, April 3. The coal* operators of Illinois, In- | diana and Ohio and those of western ; Pennsylvania who have opposed the payment, of an increase in wages to the bituminous coal miners, adopted ! the following resolutions in executive j session: "Resolved, that we, coal operators of! the states of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio I and western Pennsylvania, represent ing 80 per cent, of the tonnage in the I territory involved, who have felt and i still feel unable to pay any advance in wages at this time, do hereby propose j that the president of the United State-; appoint a committee to investi gate all matters which, in the judg ment of such commission, have an important bearing upon or relation to the scale of wages which should be paid all classes of labor in and about the coal mines of the territory herein involved, and other conditions now j imposed and insisted on by the United j Mine Workers of America, such com- ! mission to report to the president of ; tile United States its findings of facts, I together with its recommendations. "Be it further resolved that such J commission have power to administer | oaths and compel attendance of wit- j nesses." The resolutions in full were tele graphed to President Roosevelt. Successors are Chosen. Washington, D. C. —At a meet- Ing of the republican members of the Wisconsin delegation in congress j ! Thursday Representative J. H. David- I son, of the Eighth district, was chosen ! to represent the state on the repub lican congressional campaign eom \ mittee as successor of Representative Babcock. Representative Landis has 1 been selected by the Indiana delega- ! tion to succeed Representative Over- j street on the committee. _ Congressional. In the senate on the 29th several < speeches were made on the railroad j rate bill. All the senators who spoke on the bill indicated a purpose to sup- j port it. A bill to reorganize the medical department of the army by the appointment of officers to take J the place of contract surgeons was ! passed. The house spent the day in ! discussing the legislative, executive and judicial appropriation hill. Conductors and jtorrr.en Strike. Winnepeg.—Conductors and mo. i tormen of the Winnepeg street railway went on strike Thursday for \ higher wages. Scenes of violence fol | lowed attempts to run the cars. A \ howling mob of sympathizers gather \ ed and showered bricks, stones and ' mud on every car. Detective Got One Year. Detroit, Mich.— Ex City Ketec tiva Pihu was HBtaaeid Thursday by United St'ites JimU'« Swan to one year in the Detroit house of corn e tion for aiding in the procurement of fruudulent iiiinirali/at ion papers f»r residents of the Italian colony in De 1 troit. Antonio Orlando, foi the same oflfen it*, not one year, or flir\ Named for Collector of Customs. Washington, l>. ('. -The presi dent Thursday sent to i In■ reitute the uaiue of Benjamin I). Brown for col lector of customs at Erie, |>a. I JUBES CONSTIPATION I _ ]<• lief tliatcom* from theu • > I H pills other catharti< sin bitter I lA than suffering from the results of I I constipation, but relief and cure I ■ combined may be had at the same K ■ priee and more promptly, for I Lane's Family I Medicine I I is a cure for constipation, and the I I headache, backache, sideache and S jg general debility that come from ■ p constipation stop when the bowels lg P do their proper work. Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. If SICK HEADACHE ~— s —Positively enred by these Little l'ills. Unit! L l\o Tliey also relieve Dls tress from Dyspepsia, la -$3 ITTLE digestion and Too Hearty tH I\l I=" R Eating. A perfect rern edy for Dizziness. Nausea. II FSLLS. I Drowsiness, Bad Taste Kg «M in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain In the Side, po»»jMißmaia I TORPID LIVER. TUey regulate tbo dowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. pXqTcp'c| Genuine Must Bear KgJiTTf Fac-Simils Signature _ [REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. $250 Prize Puzzle'V®.- WIOO Ist. ».*>« 2nd. ::r<i. 4th to Bth 95each, uii't *1 each to next "J>. Price HJe. Agents Wanted. AuilK MFG.CO., 1111 Faii-mount Ave., Philadelphia. OLD-WORLD ODDITIES. Mnthew Faulds, a weaver of Kllmar-1 nock, Scotland, has been at his loom 80 years, and he is more than 90 years of age. At the recent funeral of King Noro dom of Cambodia the official mourner? at the funeral gave voice to their grief through megaphones, with much ef fect. William Reitz, of Duesseklorf, Ger- i many, has lost the sight of his eye i from injuries - caused by a grain of rice which was thrown into it on the day ! he was married. An Edgbaston (England) woman, who was summoned for annoying neighbors by blowing a whistle, said she had been hypnotized, and blew it \ to call attention to the fact. Says a Tokio newspaper: "On ac count of advnaced ago, Count Taka yuki Sasaki (79) and Viscount Tom oyuki Hayashi (84) have obtained the privilege of carrying sticks in the im perial palace." A Bristol (England) police sergeant the other day proved the serving of a summons on himself for allowing a chimney at Stoke Bishop to be on fire. He was witness and defendant, and was fined 2s (id. A London druggist had to pay $lB. including cost of litigation, for selling water that was dirty and full of moldy growths to a man who had asked for distilled water. The drug gist's defense was that ho thought the j man wanted the water for the pur poses of photography. Tli© Coffee Belbale* The published statements of a number of coffee importers and roasters indicate a " waspy" feeling towards us, for daring to say that coffee is harmful to a percent age of the people. A frank public discussion of the sub ject is quite agreeable to 11s and can cer tainly do no harm; on the contrary, when all thefacts 011 both sides of any question are spread before the people they can thereupon decide and act intelligently. Give the people plain facts and they will take care of themselves. We demand facts in this coffee discus sion and propose to see that th.e iacts are brought clearly before the people. A number of coffee importers and roastershave joinedamovementto boom coffee and stop the use of Postum Food Coffeeand in their newspaper statements undertake to deceive by false assertions. Their first is that coffee is not harmful. We assert that one in every three coffee users has some form of incipient or chronic disease; realize for one moment what a terrible menace to a nation of civ ilized people when one kind of beverage cripples the energies and health of one-third the people who use it. We make the assertion advisedly and suggest that the reader secure his own proof by personal inquiry among coffee users. Ask your coffee drinking friends if they keep free from uny sort of aches and ails. You will ho startle lat the per centage and will very naturally >eek to place tln cause of disorder on something aside from coffee, whether food, inherit ed tendencle or something el «. Go dec per In your tcnrch for facts. If your friend adults occasional neu ralgia, rheumatism, heart weaknc stomach or bowel trouble, kidney com plaint. weak eye j, or upprouchlng nerv ous proamnion Induce him or her to makethe experiment of leavlnc off coffee for 10 day and n h in;• I'lmtuni Food Cof- Jeo.andobi.crve the 11 nit. It will startle 70U uud give your fiiend something to. $16.00 an Acre IMJU.UIPI.jbI.'Ey 1 WESTERN CANADA i MrSsWr F&amount man % latin fg ri'H will realize from iU iMr w * ieai c, °p The land that this was R»*«»WII oncost many of | the fanners absolutely nothing. whilethosr who j wished tu add to th»* K»o acres the Government Krauts, can buy laml adjoining at from fo to $lO ! an acre. Climate splendid, school onveuient, railways j close at hand, taxes low. ! Send for pamphlet "20th Centtirv Canada" and full particulars regarding rate, etc., to Superintknuknt op Immigration, Ottawa, Canada,or tothe following authorized Canadian Government Agents : 11. M. Wil I.IAMB, Law Building, Toledo, O. | Mention t hit p*iper, THE 510N Of IHE fiSM -VSWKRy n] / 1 v p. r j" "wbsm® ■f £ has stood for the &EST durinj seventy .years of increasing sales. Remember this when /ou want water proof oiled coats, suits, hats, or horse floods for all Kinds of wet work. WE GUARANTEE EVERY GARMENT, 415 A J TOWMCO..&OSTON.MASS U S A TOWER CANADIAN CO.. Lwtfif TOtONTO CAN. INVENTIVE INGENUITY. A steel of special hardness, patented 'ln Germany by F. Munster, resul's j from subjecting the molten metal to a blast of nitrogen. The human tatty puller has at last succumbed to inventive genius and his work can now he done by automatic machinery. In the Wisconsin zinc field there are 13 magnetic separation plants in opera tion and it is said that this use of elec tro-magnetism is greatly increasing the yield of zinc in that district. A new steel for tools is being place 1 on the market; it can be hardened i>y simply heating to a high temperatuie and allowing it to cool in the air. Tools made out of this steel do not. become ' soft through growing hot while being ! worked. A Munich professor has invented a i remarkable sick room clock. When a button is pressed an electric lamp be- ! hind the dial throws the shadow of tin 1 hours and hands, magnified, upon the | ceiling, so that an invalid can see it j from his bed without craning his neck, i A novel means of propelling boats has been devised in Europe by A. Far- J cot of the Buchet factory. It consists of a framework of steel tubing, sup porting a Buchet vertical motor o! ( 3V1.-horse power, with electric ignition, ■ the motor driving two paddle wheels with vertical blades, he paddle wheeia and motor are fixed at the stern of tha boat. They are mounted on a pivo\ making it practicable to steer the' boat in any direction and giving facili- I ties for getting at the machinery for oiliug and repairs. think of. Of course, if the person is one of the weak ones and says"l can't quit" you will have discovered one of tho slaves of the coffee importer. Treat such kindly, for they seem absolutely power less to stop the gradual but sure destruc tion of body and health. Nature has a way of destroying a part of the people to make room for the stronger. It is the old law of"the sur vival of the fittest" at work, and the victims are many. We repeat the assertion that coffee does harm many people, not all, but an army large enough to appal the investi gator and searcher for facts. The next prevarication of the coffee importers and roasters is theirstatement that Postum Food Coffee is made of roasted peas, beans or corn, and mixed with a low grade of coffee and that it contains no nourishment. We have previously offered to wager $100,000.00-with them that their state ments are absolutely false. They have not accepted our wager and they, will not. We will gladly make a present of $25,000.00 to any roaster or importer of old-fashioned coffee who will accept that wager. Free inspection of our factories and methods is made by thousands of people each month and the coffee importers themselves are cordially invited. Both Postum and Grape-Nuts are absolutely pure and made exactly as stated. The formula of Postum and the an alysis made by one of the foremost chemists of Boston has been printed on every package for many years and is ab solutely accurate. Now as to the food value of Postum. It contains the parts of the wheat berry which carry the elemental salts such as lime. Iron, potash, silica, etc., etc., used by the life forces to rebuild the cellular tissue. and this is particularly true of the phosphate of potash, also found in Grape-Nuts, which combines In the hu man body will albumen and this com bination, togeth<*r with water, rebuilds the worn out gray matter In the delicate nerve centers all over the body, and throuehout the brain and solar plexus. Ordinary coffee stimulates In an un natural way, but with many people it slowly and surely de- troys and does not rtbaMd 1 ii ! - ■ * ittb tarn* ae TftMtj Important to the well being of evc.w human belnsr. The ie are eternal facts, proven, we'l juthentl' a ted and kuowu to every prop- Sprains, Strains Culs, Bruises & Burns At all Orup*£jsts Ife' Price 25?50 }! &?/ OO Spalding's Encyclopedia of Base Osll. 0 No. 'JM. How to Flat No. How to IMs.y the Outfield No. vj:». How to IMay Flnf I.'j. trjfi. How to i'Ui.\ s-o ~v*~Pu JiT* N '' " t ~ " <nv lo 1 "*y Third I -I No. ::iiS How to l'iji• Shortst-p f&Klak. \o. &JO. How to Pitch IPmP\ N ?" W | fo ' J' 11,1 • tf> i W "rtfsnl/c a Leatrur' J jL No. SCtt. How to Run the I . •«< ioalding's Official Base Ball Guide for 1935. ! The authority consulted on all disputed points.« '. us | the new jyofi rules and pictures of all thclem i players and photo<nipns o." hun ireds of team Pri"- lo out*, by Mail. Send your name and address for Bp<»ldl.itf's < of all Athletic Sports—it's free. A. G. SPALDINQ & BROS. I2f Nassau St.. New York 147 Wabash Ave., Chicago. WHOOPING COUGH DIMIA M'H Sl»i:< lilt Shorter, and 1.,. : :.v the Disca.-e. \\ arranted t<» < uro. I'«ed In tin-Cli v i.ind orphan Asylums. Endorsed by Phvshdam. s-.i.. - v uruirtrists or mailed, ft ox. bottle r»Oc., I.•« /. i.o* 1, *i # ; Lickes Drug Co., Mfrs., CLEVELAND, O. MEDICAL MENTION. i ; An English journal notes the curi | ously even sex distribution of mea.sijs in 20 years at Aberdeen. There weio 20,287 males and 20,087 females. Medical authorities in France hava ' discovered that a fairly good sub.sti ! tute for quinine, for use in cases of marsh fever, or other malarial disease, i can be concocted from the gentian Peasants in Auvergne have long used a j sort of brandy made from that plant 112» ' combat such diseases. The noted German scientist. Prof. Emil von Behring, who believes that he has discovered an effective remedy for tuberculosis, persists in his deter mination not to make it public before next fall. He desires to be as sure of his ground as a year of tests and ex periments can make him before plac ing his method oi treatment in oth-jr hands. For the purpose of studying tha causes of mountain sickness, two French medical authorities, Drs. Gtiil lemark and Moog, during last July made a stay at (he Mont Blanc observ atory. According to the results of their investigations, which have now been published, "the diminished ten sion of the t>xygen of the atmosphere clogs the process of oxidation and this sets up an elaboration of toxic s-.iti etances, the retention of which causes eymptoms of autointoxication." '"lf you were in my shoes what i 3 the first thing you would do?" "Get a shine." —Houston Post. erly educated physician, chemist and food expert. Please remember we never say ordi nary coffee hurts everyone. Some people use it regularly and seem strong enough to withstand its attacks, but there is misery and disease in store for the man or woman who persists in its use when nature protests, by heart weakness, stomach and bowel troubles, kidney disease, weak eyes, or general nervous prostration. The remedy is ob vious. The drug caffeine, contained in all ordinary coffee, must be discontinued absolutely or the disease will continue in spite of any medicine and will grow worse. It is easy to leave off the old-fashioned coffee by adopting Postum Food Coffee, for in it one finds a pleasing hot break fast or dinner beverage that has the deep seal brown color, changing to a rich golden brown when good cream is added. When boiled long enough (!~> minutes) the flavor is not that of rank Uio coffee but very like the mildtfr, smooth and hi«h grade Java, but entirely lacking, the drug effect of ordinary coffee. Anyone suffering from disorders set up by coffee drinking (and there is an extensive variety) can absolutely depend upon some measure of relief by quitting coffee and using Postum Food Coffee. If the disease has not become too strongly rooted, one can with good rea son expect it to disappear entirely in a reasonable time after the active cause of the trouble is removed and the cel lular tissue has time to naturally re build with the elements furnished by Postum and good food. It's only just plain old common sense. Now, with tin- exact facts before the reader, be or she can decide the wise course, looking to health and the power to do things. If you have any doubt as to the cans® of any ache or ail you may have, remem ber tiic far-reaching telegrams of a hurt nervous system travel from heel to head, and it may be well worth your while to make the experiment of leaving off cof fee entirely for 10 days and using Postum In Its place. You will probably gather some pood solid facts, worth more than a gold niln \ for health can invito gold and slckne«n lose It. Heslili •• there's nil the fun, for lt'« like a oontlnuotu Intern*! frolic to be perfectly well. There's a season for POSTUM Voatuui« ft** «l Ltd., liuUU* ("reek, Mich*
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