AN OPTIMIST. The inner side of every cloud Is bright and shining: I, therefore, turn my clouds about, And always wear them inside out, To show their lining. Selected by LZdward W. Foster. ToT ITOTOICIOD o >> The Biddles. ETAT ET OT IDO ><> Jane and I are not naturally in- quisitive. Far from it. 3ut. at the same time we take a healthy interest in our neighbors. Nothing nosy, you understand. On the contrary. all the same, when anything is go- ing on we like to be aware of it. As Jane once said, we like to be in the “KDOW. So when the Biddles door Ja I were—well, But, moved next not ex- mw ine and actly inquisitive—but curious. wag one piece of furniture, I remem- ber, that stirred Jane to her dejths. I humored her. Sometimes thought it was a folding bed. again we thought it was a Jane simply couldn't fathom it. “It ‘looked old and worn,” Jane: “hardly like a piano.” “They may be musical,’ ‘and use it a lot.” “But there it is again, they don't look musical.’ *1,00ks,”’:1 remarked, ' ing.” - “Oh, dear,” Jane watched re piano. said I said, 4 sald Jane, said Jane. 5 from the windows From one of our windows we can _see into :theparlor. next door, and Jane spent much of her tinre kneel- ing at this window trying to solve the mystery. I hardly liked that. we | Then ! are deceiv- I My eyes are much better than Jane's. | “Poesn’t seem .to..be in there,’ said Jane. Let me leok,” “And yet,” said Something that might “Let me look,” “Listen,” said finger up. U Huteiakable smote the air. “There,” said Jane. “I knew it. It was I who had known it. 1 said. Jane, be He Jane, melody sounds of ’ “there's | (which I bought special). We had made our call long before — but | the call had only whetted Jane's ap- | petite for further information, a every night before she went to sleep | Jane lay and wondered. “I wonder,” said Jane one night, “whether she does study art or if that art magazine was just a bluff.” “Ah,” I reraarked, ‘I wander.” “I wonder,” said Jane, “why they left the place where they used to live and why the postman dcesn’t bring them any letters.” “Ah,” I remarked “I wonder.” “I wonder,” said Jane, ‘‘if she is older than him and if that hair of hers is her own.” Adding: “Prat: that contrary kid!” That was on Saturday night. The next morning, getting up late, I heard voic-s downstairs. Tiptoeing to the head of the stairs I heard enough, and 1 was downstairs before you could say Jack Robinson. Jane must have had the kid in for ome time, for the fruit shop was out of stock and the consumption of can- was strong and steady. I gave J vita the Teddy bear to play with, ked the jumping jack, spun the humming top and set the doll's thin for breakfast. n we ted. 1y bear,’ said Jane. y ‘bear Z0€s to the fitmer.”” wise, but was nds WGI sta 22 ;:anita looked stricken with silence. a the sand,” said: Jane, “and plays in it, and sees all the water.” We both looked encouragingly at the owlish child made no remark. . “That's what the Teddy hear does, oy said Jane, “and®so’ ao IT.” Silence from the child. “And so do I,” I made remark. Silence from the child. “Do you?’ asked Jane. This was brutal, but Jane was ex- asperated. : +] want to go home,” said Juanita. “Do you like apples?” asked Jane. “Yes,” said" Juanita. : “Do vou like oranges?” “Yes.’) “Do you like candy?” SN aE “PDo-you like fo go and play on the {sand ?’”’ Jane-i had always said that it was a felding i bed. But 1 said What's the use? *“L.ook,”’ Biddle. cal.” Jane's grammar Tuns away her at times, but I never correct her any more. Sum! nothing. said: Jane; ‘there's Mr. said Jane, still through the shutters. Jane has a way of putting volumes into an “Um!” and this time she put so much renewed curiosity, interest and absorption into that simple ejac- peeping ulation that I couldn't stand it any | longer, but went -upstairs two steps at a time to have a look through one of our bedroom windows I had no more than got settled when Jane rapped on the wall three times. This meant *‘Do you see?’ I rapped back “Yes.” Mr. and Mrs. Biddle were both sitting in their par- lor near the window, and yet the piano kept right on playing. At first I thought it must be Miss Biddle, aged two and one-half years, but that was hardly reasonable. The solution must have struck Jane and me at the same time, for 1 started down- stairs to tell her at the same mo- ment that she started up. We met on the landing. “An automatic piano player! cried in concert. So that was settled and we ate ou dinner in peace. “They must said Jane. “I wonder what he does,” said Jane, ‘and where they came from.” “We must call on them,” 1 said. “1 wonder how much he gets,” said Jane, “and if they keep a girl.” “We must certainly call.on them,” I said. “TI wonder why they moved here,” said Jane, ‘‘and whether away for the summer.” Adding reflectively: we be pretty well off,” “lI want to go home, I jumped that jumping-jack, spun | the top and put real sugar and cream ‘in the doll’s tea set. It must bé him who is musi- | ; ita. | | with | | have— “Do you like to play?” asKed Jane. “Yes,” said Juanita. “Do you love your papa?” “Yes.” : “Do you love your “Yes.” “What does your papa ao in the city?’ “I want to mamma?’ go home,” said Juan- Where did moved listen to me. from before you “Juanita, you come here?”’ “A million miles.” “Now, ‘Juanita; that Where did you come from? Pompton?” “1 want to go home.” “\Vas it Peapack?” “1 want to go home.” “Does your mamma paint, Juan- ita? Does she have little brushes and paint?’ 7 Silence from the .child. “Did you have a girl to cook and wash, Juanita?” “I want to go home.” “Listen, Juanita. Have you got a gran’'ma?’ “Yes. “What's her name?” “I forget.” “Now think. 1 isn’t nice. Was it Think and you shall Jane's eye wandered for something suitable. “The Teddy bear?’ cried the child. “Yes,” said Jane, and she gave me a 400k that said, “Once get her start- ed and she'll tell everything, and it was only a dollar ninety-eight, any- way.” “Yes.” said Jane. ‘“What was her { name?” they go “I'd iike to get hold of that kid of ! theirs for a few minutes.” Jane's thcughts run idioms at times, but I never it to her any more. I've seen the time when I would have said Kid,” Jane! Kid!” But now I simply ¢ *Why?. What for? What that do you?” “Oh, wouldn't I pump Jane in a sort of ecstasy. 1 just!” That was how for the kid. I had nothing fact, I rather because Jane was prety the trick while I we sides I'm not Jane makes it’s no use her into her!’’ “*“Wouldn’t we siarted to lay to do with frowned on it. In the idea, sure to do S$ away. Be- inquisitive. But when up her mind, 1 So, although I frowned | on the idea in secret, 1 openly en- couraged her. : : Jane started in by on the window could sec them. Afterward she tried apples and I brought home a box of dates. Began to look like a fruit shop. On the sly, Jane stood in the win- dow ond ate candy in a sort of open way so that the kid could see her, and one day; Jaue opened the window (I learned this later), and asked Juanita (the kid's name) if she wanted a candy. The kid made a face and ran away. No getting a civil word out of Jane that night. Once she sniifed ‘Juanita What a name!’ Adding (Janc loves to add): “Just you wait tiil I get hold of her!’ Dolls we tried, ju: sacks, humming {fops, a doli's tea set {things that Jane played with when she was that age), and a Teddy bear putting oranges the mention |... er mind to shake cried | kid; finger said, | E good would | Juanita candy in her arose, put an extra large mouth, hugged. the Ted- dy bear and went to the front door, which was open an inch or two. “Wait, Juanita,” said Jane. “You haven’t told me yet.” They exchanged glances; these two ladies. One glance said, ‘I’ve a good vou,” and the other “You .dare to lay as much as a on-me and I'll scream to wake the dead.” Jane turned all honey. “What's your gran’ma’s name?” “Pudden an ‘tame,’ replied the “ask me again and I'll tell you said, {the same.” 1 hat i New know | | out she went. and went out, York And I put on my too, for a walk.— Evening Sun. eee Flying as Well as Fleeing. The old policeman was tellihg of” his early experience on the force. When he first got a beat it seemed that he had been called upon for as- sistance by a brother officer who was pursuing an escaping lawbreaker and sill whe 2 id i i here the kid ipaq in an effort to halt him fired sev- eral shots in the air. ‘I also fired at the man,” said the old policeman, ‘but as he got away 1 made no report of the affair. + Next day the lieutenant asked why I had not mentioned the affair, and I re- plied that 1 had only fired into the air and thought nothing more of it. ‘Fired in the air?’ continued the lieu- tenant. ‘That's what the other man says Did you both think the man was flying?’ Since then I have al- ways made reports of what happened on my. beat Philadelphia Record. The feature of one of the San Francisco theatre programs is mov- ing pictures of the city's streets and other public places before the fire. ne I. his peti + whim , but the owlish child; said Juanita. kind FOUNDING THE NATION History of- tke Early Deys of the |v Jamestown Settlers. By FREDERIC J. RASKIN. How m ciate the Americans appre- ¢f the com- settling ‘of -James- exposition at in. which the great nati ny youl full significance memoration of the town, celebrated by the Norfolk? The: manner cornerstone of th in the -Virgi cf the m sti record of man’s the Susan Cc the Discovery sixteen week were 105 laid ost adventures. nstant, the G which were hdttered Yor between wind and wéye, soldiers of fortune, with not a woman or child among them. They turbule: stless crowd, that ateiy lice and © prayed, - and than cuce three 1 to throw Master Hunt over} because 3 could not st that sore 1 them. {from the C continent ol wars, had seen ki1 of .a leader, 1 of one of the Were a altern more good 1ed oard op the storr Ere where they » and fall at the grew suspic number, Captain John Smith, aad had--him imprison- ‘ed under the AT fe f planning. to murder the othe 2 make himself’ king. Had they not heard a of Tio in L.cndon, as they sat over their tankards of ale at the— Mermaid, or between when ¢hey went to Black Friars’ The atre to hear Master William Shakespeare in his own tragedies? Had they not heard how he left England an orphan youth, unknown and nie to become a sol- dier in Flander how with distincticn un 3 Bathori in the war a how he trav celled in Russia, Spain and Morocco, land in 1664 a man at the age of felt: they must needs fear and.powerful a man. ~3When: the sails of their storm ship finally beat their betw two sheltering ATES of Ionig one morning and passed a where the winds and to them, they Point’ Comfort, ‘and it is pamed. Oiie evening, some days later, they swung forty miles up a strange river and dropped: anchor by a long lat island that lay. mid-stream. A few adventurous souls rang ashore to see the wonderland, whose breath of spring flowers ‘was: wafted to them through the evening fows. ‘and whose green trees they could see crowding close to the river bank. The men feasted their sea weary eyes cn the gorgeous spring blossoms along the shore. The dogwood, honeysuckle and Judas trees were in bloem. It was ‘‘the Moon cof Strawberries’ and the hungry adventurers found the luscious wild fruit clustered thick on the river bank. Captain Smith, in a glow of joyous en- thusiasm, exclaimed: “Heaven and earth have never agreed better in mak- ing a place for man’s habitation.” The orizinal landing place was about fifteen hundred feet to the west of the present wharf and was swept awa by the lapping waters of the river years ago. The rest of the island lies today very much as it did then. Ac cording to Ralph Hamor, an early sec- retary of the colony, it was two and three-fourths mil long and three hundred yards to cne and one- fourth miles wide. A neck of land’ at first connected it with the mainland, but this was washed away in the suc- ceeding years and left ‘the island of James Citie” as we now see it. They were religious—these e and one of their was to stretch an tree and give thanks to Ged that they had at last reached this paradise of their dreams. The company included “fifty-four gentlemen, four carpenters and twelve laborers.” assed icus acts ved, he served Ger: ) to return to knight twenty-five? way the called sha¢ av old ded on the island, May how to work, nor required that all Govern- for Vv hen they lan 13, 1607, few knew cared to, until Smith who ate must earn their food. ment was at first a difficult mat King James, with ever a love of 1 tery, had put the names of the council! lors in a sealed box, which was net to be opened until the new was reached. All those named proved fail- except en the work of this maou a ! iv of the tle Indian princess, cornerstone of this be safely said to have » A trianzalar he approach rom the 1 feet ter, land ures Smith, and and the ¢ fort was the 1d a ali over 1land, a church Gver on ss factory w 1608. That and came ing Forrest teen-year-cld maid, men were glorious 1 less, wifeless men, and immediate John Laydon, proposed little Anne. The log church w riage service next year service Laydon. of cultivating tobacco from the India and sold his first crop in Léndon $2.50 a pound. Shortly afterward it became a form oi currency in the cel- ony, and before the century was out the women went trading, fcliowed by a cart of green tobacco in charge of their servants. As the colony pro over, einss t ly one rrp in the i Plscar] mar- in the id. The the firs gaid over ittle John Rolfe adonted the idea Was ered better houses were built. A large church foilowed the first one, and when my Lord Dela ware came over in 1610 governorship he came to church in reat state, attended by a red-ccated i Pog: i leaders { Harry {qi tory I of negro slaves. a0 { The price of each was | attractive, | the stern governor |smore than -one suitor at a time. | the women came the love of home. The is—said ecoutred in fresh i law I-6 to 10 twice SO cap: ble 1 d ! No one can tell whether | be many : from | | through | imprints | through { to plant the colony { returned | a promoter i ‘he it wilde | conspicuous instances, to take the | TE ce guard of honor, and sat on a velvet chair, with a velvet cushion to kneel upon. He had pews, pulpit-and win dows of cedar, and”every day fresh Sowers were placed on the altar. ‘as here that Pocahontas was married o John Rolfe, a proceeding that caused King James some alarm, for as the heiress of King Powhe itan she and her children might inherit the kingdom of Virginia, and so jeopardize the Eng- lish king's interests there. Perhaps he was a far-seeing ° monarch, for among the Randolphs, descendants of hontas, the new naticn found good in after years. One- of this American princess’ descendants is St. George Tucker, president « of the Jamestown exposition. In 1619 came those two great contra- influences into America, the general assembly, by which the people could ‘be represented and introduction In the same year, al- came the shipload of maidens, who were ‘sent wives for- the settlers. 120 pounds of which was equivalent to $80. as tobacco, | For awhile the good minister was kept { busy with the marriage maids we ceremonies, be- re honorable and and were quickly chosen. rls. ca over after this, and had to make a law should be engaged to With cause More gi me that no maiden any: acres of goon the were allowed so m for honresteading, and men land colony spread out across the river into. | the forests and plains beyond. Times were. so prosperous for awhile that it the town cowkeeper was ‘‘ac- flaming silk.” Dale's required each. man to labor from in the morning, from 2 to 4 in afterncon, and to attend church ou early colonists had much All the while the king and Sen Company cemplained be- cause greater returns were not com- the | ing in from the new dominions. Once, i-while { mined a the settlers of yellow sand and 1d; but they were ypointment, for it was sJasthe. spring of 1610 eame ing Time. Of the five hundred September had scen on the island, r found only sixty felt. Hunger and r had taken heavy toll, the Indians given trouble, tt of the crops wasted, shiplo: it to E oomed to sent 3 and the | colonists had stolen a ship and turned | buccaneers. Tram left ate all the animals, nd ‘even the skins of the horses. The HA rom England was long overdue. = How could they know that it had gone ashore on the Ber- nudas and that the survivors were building other vessels from the wreck and still trying to reach them? When they had eaten their last ra- tion the white ils of these two roughly made ships showed in the riv- er, and the starving people crawled to the landing to welcome them. But on sa { board the Patience and the Deliverance | there were only pr -ovisions enough to last fourteen days so it was azreed that they all leave for England by way of Newfoundland and the fishing fields. these things coincidence or Providence, but as the four ships with the disheartened colonists left the abandoned settlement and sailed down the river, they met the vessels of Lord de la Ware coming upstream and returning to “James Cittie’ they disembarked and offered id a service of thanksgiving in the little | log church. And thus our nation was saved. The governors who came and went the little town left varying on history. There was the Dale, who thrust bodkins the tongues of the. profane and set a poor devil to starve because he had stolen a small bowl of oatmeal. Captain John Smith stayed -five years , and then at thirty where he lived lord Delaware was 1terpry and it was iceroyal court in the steri twenty-two years. of er who set up ay ises CSS, 1676 Ba st the 2nd his people arose great tyranny of the governor, foreshadowing the Revolution by one Rundred years. It was Bacon who fired the town and de- ‘ed almost all the buildings, in- the church. After that the met in the taverns for ten until a new state house was After various vicissitudes the capttal was moved to the Middle -Plant- Williamsburg, and Jamestown decline. Decay fell upon the the village, the settlers irted to and 10¢ niles river here is brick 1 a with its poz tholes, “dead, the foundations and — oid a mulberry to show where Smith and his soldiers of fortune three hundred amid much danger and loneliness, { cornerstone of the nation.—From the New York Trib- une. In Con toc years Fao Lualit, ation, or ‘ent into of ally Today the '¢ MISES, pear Tees years ago, Pitiful Sight. most pitiful in le of thousands cf . humming birds, par terns, kingfishers, finches, crown-pigeons, tanigers cardinals, golden oricles and other bright tropical creatures besides hun. packages of the long, loose, “gzpreyv” plumes taken frorh the backs of various species of small white herons and egrets. last year, in Londcn alone, to give only twa the feathers of egrets were sold of paradise.— sights of is One the IL.endon birds of rots, owls, lows, dreds of waving 150,600 herons and and over 40.000 birds New Haven Register. New A big music store in Li ouisville, Ky. burned. At ime a dozen stre: Js Musician. one were playing on the pianos.—Denver | | Post. » It. er, _THREAT CARRIED ouT Bomb Exploded Near the House of Washington County Farmer, Who Had Been Threatened. James Kaldvor. a Marsville farm- received- from 3d Black Hand agents a letter demanding $1,000 on vain- of his life and property. Later another letter was received saving: “We. wonld like for you to leave. $1,600 at that sveamore tree at the ircn bridge, and you will find a little iron box in there. We are called the Black Hand. mean- business. If you try to catch us Awe will ‘put ‘a bomb in yeur houge. Kefover's neighbors volunteered guard: his hous while he, with a allege to two letectives, placed the money in the ppointed place and hid. Shortly ter dark, Ke¢fover a guard. were thrown lent explosion.” showed that a huge hole house. 1t i uried about An. inve: a glvcerin bomb had torn in the ground near the helieved that the missile at the residence, but fell ROOSEVELT 1S SCORED Undesirakle Citizens Letter demned by Socialists. The Socialist party bf Penns; held its convention Lat burg and nominated Samuel: Cl Philadelphia for state treasns: Resolutions dencuncing Roosevelt for hi Moyer, Haywood undesirable citizens John H. Maurer of Readihg, re-elected state chairman, We ed to send a telegram of sympat Haywood. The convention was delegates representing Robert B. Ringler of Rea elected y.of.the state tee. stawe attended was seeretar commit- Sensation at Harrisburg. On the- of June 12, former State Treasurer W. L. Mathues was discovered in the treasury depart- ment at night examining e of the books. He was with a clerk who had: served him and was retained by Berry. Mathues explains { just looking at the new style © rake) - ing. 1t is charged tam pering with. the records. As a result of the vigit,: Treasurer B 4 suspended Clerk George tveburg, who tock Mat Watchman Benjamin for permitting either ter. night uncer Vetoed Pension Bill. Governor Stuart vetoed pensioning soldiers of the who served © in: Pennsyiv ments and are now residents State. The chief reasons for veto- ing the hill are that it crude in form and bears evidence of having been passed without mature delibera- tion. and if it were to become a law it would be necessary to reduce the appropriations to the State’s public and private charities. Mestas Buy Electric Plant. James McCullough, Jr.. F. A. Mes- ta," John A. Fox. C. Mesta and H. J. Mesta have purchased the plant of the Kittanning Electric Light Co. $25,000. These men virtually the Kittanning & Ford Street Co.. and ‘by the terms of chase secure rights of way for an ex- tension of their road to Mosgrove, five miles north of Kittanni ing. Brass Thieves Own Uo. The first conviction in the round-up of thieves who have taken thousands of dollars’ worth of brass from the Bessemer and Baltimore & Ohio railroads recently, ‘obtained at 3utler, when David eaded guilty. All railre heavy losers, but the the rob- hers fo cover. are im- plicated. the bill Civil War ania regi- of the is OWT Th tne was Cypher pl been ran Junk dealers Reser Fires Into Crowd ot Miners. At the & Meadow! tino; during a fit is alleged to re of his assailar struck in the groin, City hospital, Wash was nat hand. ands Coal Co ht with shot Benlo Fer and is 1 miners, crowd ather into a der. was do The | great of Red Men Lancaster. advance amount United State reward of the or as a half National Guard Rifle Range. b athwest Tenth on al i slidng SC the ting 1 Klin a ine 1 oliment of 220 students was The endo went fund now i bat last year were excess of At me Tr rc 3 exnenses receipts. I ———————————— Former Governor Pennypacker and all others who figure in the new cap- itol scandal will be afforded an oppor- tunity by the probers to tell their story before its report is filed with Governor Stuart. The Democratic for the nomination of St to succeed Wm. H. Berry, eld at Harrisburg ) date was fixed by the state commit tee at a meeting Harrisburg. Secretary of Internal Affzirs Houck appeinted C. H. Hertzog of Merts- town, Berks county, a clerk department. convention Treasurer will * be on June 27. The state at _ Dr. H. R Kline, Ld. 31 ~ableness: for | Railway | pur- | | ago Arden mines of the Pittsburg | Alonzo Mari- | | Queen in his RS EXCELSIOR BRAND Oiled Clothing and Slickers Indispensable to the miner. Best water- proof garment made. Don’t accept.an oiled coatorslicker unless itbearsour trade magk. If your dea vier cannot J] ‘show the'' Sawyer’ line Vv of coats and slickers, write for catalog giv- ing styles and prices. K. M, SAWYER & SON East Camerinat, Mass. Tobacco for Soldiers. In all Lord Wolseley's campaigns he made it a rule, where possible, to allow each soldier one pound of to- bacco-a month, which he considered a fair allowance. In Italy the mil- itary authorities recognize the weed as one of the comforts essential to the troops, and cigars are a. out to them with their daily rations. 25 FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance: Nervous Diseases per- , manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve - Restorer. #2 trial bottle and treatise free. 231 Arch St.. Phila., Pa. Divorces in Stats tics - relating Engl and and Wa published a few days ago, are very inte rest; chiefly because. they show the sweet reason- of ‘fhe English. and Welsh people in-respeet to the dirvoce habit as compared with. American Only 752 petitigms for digpree were filed in 905, against 720 in 19G4 and S89 ang 824 in 1902 and 1903" respectively. the 1905 petitions. were presen nted by Three hud: ed and ree wives. wives in 261 cg 362 cases. = SUFFERED ® England.- =t0 divorce in TORTURE Racked With Day aad Night; For Ycars. Wm. H. Walter, worth, Ills., writ Pain, hi 1d torturing in the side hack the urine vas k and full iment. 1 was ) with pain, e A ~ day -and night, could not: sleep or eat Sn and finally hecame crippied and bent over with rheumatism. Doan’s Kidney Piils brought quick relief, and, in time, cured me. Though I lost 40 pounds, I now weigh 200, more than ever before.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. YX. and RATS AND THE FARMERS Many Millions the Cost of the Pests’ Depredations. The Agricultural Department has issued a statement that the brown rat is the worst mammalian pest in existence. If,” the statement says, “for each cow, horse, sheep and dog on the farms the farmers support one rat on grain, the loss would be $100,000,000 a year. . “Their prolificness is the chief ob- stacle- to their - extermination. If three litters of 10 each are produced every year, a single pair, breeding without check and without losses by death, in three years would be rep- resented by 10 generations and would number 20,155,382 individuals. The eleventh generaticn, due the be- ginning of the fourth ould number over 100,000,000. High Cost of “Sable Furs. Extraordinary stories are being told about the increasing scarcity and value of sables, which, a london pa- per says, Det » beginning to pass down heirl their descen- dants. A ‘sable coat ich two years would have 20,000 would now be valued at as $450 is at present being for a single skin. The two costly sable coats in the world are worn by the Empress of Russia and her cousin, Maud of Norway. The coat in the possession of the Empress is made of the finest sables which could be obtained in Europe, and is worth about © $250,600, while that which Queen Maud ® ore when she went with King Haakon to the famous Giuldhall a the early part of the winter probably - worth $150,000. at year, I'v as $3 asked most in is WENT TO TEA And It Wound Her Bobbin. frequently affects people as badly as coffee. A lady in Salisbury, Md., says that was compelled to abandon the use of cof- fee a many years ago, because it threatened to ruin her health and that she went over to tea drinking but finally she had dyspepsia so bad that she had lost twenty-five pounds and no food seemed to agree with her. She further says: ‘‘At this time I was induced to take up the famous food drink, Postum, and was so auch pleased with the results that I have never been without it since. I com- menced to improve at once, -egained my twenty-five pounds of flesh and went some beyond my usual weight. “I know Postum to be good, pure and healthful, and there never was an article, and never will be, IT be- lieve, that does surely take the place of cnffee as Postum Food Cof- fee. The beauty of it all is that it is satisfying and wonderfully nourish- ing. I feel as if I could not sing its praises too loud. Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. “There's a Reason.” Tea drinking she good £0
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers