TUB SPINNER, The spinner twisted her slender thread As she ant and spun. "The earth and the heavens are mint,' he said, "And '.he moon and aim; 1 Into my wen the sunlight goes, I And the breath of May, 'And the crimson life of the new-blown rose t Ttat was' born to-day." The spinner sang in the hush of noon, And her morning song was low: "All, morning, you pass away too soon, Yon are swift to go. My heart o'erllows like a brimming cup With its hopes and fours. Lore, come and drink the sweetness ; Ere it turns to tenrs." The spinner looked fit the fulling sun, Is it time to rest? My hands are weary, my work is done, I hnve wrought my bent. I have spun and woven with patient eyes And with lingers fleet. Lo! where the toil of n lifetime lies In a winding Blieet!" Mary Ainge de Vere. i IHE GOLDEN BLUE-JAY. By M. r. SAVAGE. One blustering March night, In 1852, three men wore playing cards In a cabin near the Manzanltn Dig gings. Billy Price and Dick' Ilertle, In whose cabin the game was pro gressing, were miners. Foxy Smith made up the trio. He kept a little supply store, where hardtack biscuits and dried fruits, gum boots and over alls were jumbled together. The door opened and In walked a wan, bold and free. He hardly looked at the other men, but went directly to the fire, took a pack from bis back and began busying himself With It. "Where the devil did you cor-e from?" nsked Dick, throwing his cards upon the table and staring at the irnn. "Th devil probably knows. Ask him," answered the stranger. "My dear and no doubt Illustrious young man," began Billy, winking at Dick, "I'm sure you'll eicuse our showing some degree of curiosity concerning you. May we not have the exquisite pleasure of learning your name? Will you not give us Borne Information regarding your last place of residence, et cetera? You have no Idea how we would treasure any little " "Get out!" squeaked a sharp, high pitched voice, breaking Into Billy's harangue. Billy turned on the stranger he was not the man to stand nonsense of that sort from anybody. "If yon want satisfaction, my high flown friend," said the stranger, "here's your provocator." The man stooped over and a blue Jay hopped up on his shoulder. The bird first Bred off a volley of shrieks and then began to laugh. "Haw, haw, haw!" laughed the jay, and "Haw, haw, haw!" they answered him till the cabin shook. When they had quieted down the stranger turned to them and said: "Now I'll tell you as much of my history as I think necessary. My name Is Jim Carter. I've been In this confounded country more than a year,, and I haven't made a blasted cent. My money Is very near gone, but as long a I stay nmong you I'll pay my way. One thing certain: I'll never go back East unless I make my pile, and-I've got to make it pretty soon or I'll " "What'U.yoti do?" nSfced Dick. "My bird and I'll take something lo eat If we can get It," answered Carter. The men set out some cold bacon and beans, hardtack and dried apple sauce. Carter ate ravenously. In the meantime Foxy Smith had been attending to the feeding of th? Jay. Sometimes he would hold a piece of biscuit up and make the bird talk for It, and sometimes he would point to a cord, or stick, or something else, and make the bird bring it to him before he would give him a bit of the food. The Jay showed quick Intelligence, and it was not long be fore he had caught the Idea. After Carter had finished eating he Joined In the game, and they played until midnight. Foxy arose to go. "Bring your Jay down to the store, Carter," he said. "He's a fine bird. I'd like to teach him." Foxy left. Carter spread his blan kets on the floor; Dick and Billy crawled into their bunks; the blue Jay perched upon a rafter. So Carter and bis bird became domiciled at Camp Manzanita. As the days went by the men be came attached to the bird. He had a pert, lively way that they liked. He would cock his eyes at them and laugh In the most knowing manner. Then he sang a song or two in a queer, rasping little voice, that made him fine company, and he liked to go to the diggings with the men; It was wonderful the way ho made the dirt fly Imitating them. But, smart though he was, the men toon discovered that he had one fault he stole, stole like a pirate; there was nothing that be would not ap propriate If he got his claws on.it. They looked high and low for the sto len articles, but could find them no where, v "What does he do with them, I wonder?" asked Dick, one evening, lifter hunting vainly for something be had lost . . "I'll tell you what I think he does With 'em,' said Billy. "I believe be takes them down to Foxy's store and trades them off for grub. You know Carter doesn't pay much attention to him, and he probably gets hungry. It would be Just like Foxy to encour age him In such tricks." ';. "Pooh I fh Jay isn't as smart as V-.... ,..... .-....'.-- all that. He hides them In a hole somewhere. I'll wring the little beast's neck for him If he don't stop It!" Dick said. But he would not have done IL Not one of the miners would have pulled a feather out of the sleek little body. They conclud ed that the only thing to be done was to shut up everything portable that had been left. By this time the Jny was perfectly at home, going anywhere he chose and having a fine time of It down at Foiy Smith's store, in and out of all the cabins, down at the mines, up In the trees, over the bills every where, and always laughing and singing and chattering. The men liked the bird and let him Impose on them dreadfully, but they were not so friendly to the man; he was too quiet, and had a half-hearted way that Irritated them.' "Hang the fellow," said Dick. "He doesn't seem to have any heart in anything. It's bad luck to have that kind around." And It did seem that he cast a damper on the men's spirits, though not lipon their luck, for, all but Car ter himself, they were doing well in the mines. When the weather grew warmer the men saw less of Carter. He spent nearly all of his time wandering off by himself, but the jay stayed where the men were picking nnd panning he was fond of company. One fine day In May, after the trees were In leaf, Carter went out and sat In the shade near the miners. The bird was hopping about on a rulsed bit of ground, and keeping an eye on everything. He would claw In the earth, take a look around, and then stick his beak In the hole he had made. "I'm It! I'm It!" he yelled. "Are you, my boy? Wish I could say the same," drawled his master. Day by day the bird worked on that piece of ground, till the men got to calling it his "diggings." Ills mas ter, having nothing better to do, idly watched him. "The jay Is twice the man that Carter Is," said Dick one time. "See him dig in." It is a fact that he worked as hard as any of them, though he would fly off every once In a whilo and stay for a quarter of an hour or so. And that kept going on day after day, and week after week. One evening, in August, Foxy Smith came Into the cabin elaborately dressed. He wore a white top-hat, a long-tailed, bottlegreen coat, a pair of light tan breeches, and a blue vel vet waistcoat covered with circular red figures. After the men had ex pressed their not altogether compli mentary surprise, he said: "Well, boys, I Just dropped In to tell you that I'm thinking of enlarg ing my store." "That so?" "Yes. And I shouldn't wonder if I'd take a trip back East this fall." "Business must be looking up," said Billy. "Y-e-s," drawled Foxy, then added glibly, "it is." , "See here,'' Foxy "began Billy, but Foxy Interrupted him with: "I can't stay any longer I must be off." He threw a handful of dried cherries at the jay (he never forgot to bring him something), and started out. "Came in to show off," scld Dick, disgustedly. "Where do you suppose he got his boodle?" "I have an idea." said Ellly, "but yet I don't know." "Well what Is it?" "Well, I told you once about the Jay, you know." "Nonsense!" said Dick. For some time the men had no ticed that something ailed the jay, and as the days passed his trouble seemed to increase; he lost his fine spirits; he did not talk as much as formerly; he did not fly about as lightly ns ho had once done he would make a feeble croak and go off, slowly, but would come back more used up than ever. "Is he getting very old?" Billy asked. "Not more than four years," said Carter. "I don't know what alls him." The poor little chap grew more and more feeble (though he seemed fat ter than ever), till one day he hopped to his diggings, jerked out a few words of "Never a care " and then lay down and died. When Carter picked up the Jay he found a big gold nugget clutched in one of the claws. He put his hand In one of the holes that the bird had dug, and there he found a "pocket" of nuggets the largest pocket, filled with the biggest nuggets, that had ever been found in the rpglon. Billy took the Jay in his hand; he found the bird surprisingly heavy and his crop greatly expanded. "This accounts for it," said Billy; "the wealth of Foxy, and all. Poor little fellow, his greed, and Foxy's, have finished him." Carter called his mine the "Golden Blue-Jay," and out of that mine he took his millions. Argonaut. Heaven Is nere. Heaven is yours; you have but to enter In and take possession; and heaven means supreme happiness, perfect blessedness; it leaves nothing to be grieved over. It is complete satisfaction now and In this world. It Is within you, and If you do not know this, it Is because you persist In turning the back of your soul upon It. . Turn around and you shall be hold It. To transmute everything Into happiness and -Joy, this Is su premely the work and duty of heavenly-minded men. James Lane Al len. ,. ' i '"- Adventures of a John Olsen, a noted Boston diver, was caught on the sharp hook of a chain cable, while at work recently raising the wrecked remains of the steamer Birmingham from the bottom of Boston harbor. The veteran diver was In the act of fastening a cable about a heavy steel plate of the wrecked steamer preparatory to Its being hoisted to the surface, when a big ocean liner, outward bound, sailed close to the spot where he was at work fifty feet below. The swiftly revolving propeller of the liner churning the water set It In such active motion as to cause a violent lurching of that portion of the wreck to which the steel plate was hanging. The chain suddenly slipped, and the hook, flying up, came very near catching the rubber hose through which the life-sustaining air supply is sent down to the diver, and tearing it away from Its connection with the protecting helmet covering his head. ' Had this happened it would have left Captain Olsen, weighted as he was to the harbor bottom by his heavy diving suit, without air, to meet death by drowning, no doubt, before he could have been drawn up out of the water by bis assistants in the boat above. Fortunately the hook just missed the air hose, but Its sharp point caught the thumb of bis left hand as he threw up his arm, ripping It wide open the whole length of the Inner side, and causing an extremely pain ful injury. Since then he has been nursing a very bad thumb. Captain Olsen is Just entering upon his thirty-seventh year as a diver, and he hopes to make his already un rivaled record forty years. For .thlr-ty-slx years now he has been raising wrecked ships, repairing others while lying many fathoms deep in the water, bringing up valuable cargoes, recovering the bodies of drowned peo ple and lost treasures that have gone down beneath the waves and blasting away sunken rocks and ledges that were a menace to navigation and threatened destruction to sailing craft. A plain, simple man, modest and unassuming, Is this descendant of the hardy Norseman, for Norway Is the land of his birth. He Is clear eyed, stocklly built, still sturdy as ever and capable of much endurance in his hazardo"s calling at the age of sixty. He took to the sea while yet a boy, and had just reached manli od when ho was one of .the crew of a foreign square rigger that put into Phila delphia. He left the vessel there, and after a couple of years' service as a sailor on coasting schooners settled himself In Boston and became a diver, giving up a life on the ocean wave for one below the wave. That was In 1872, and ever since then he has lived and moved and had his being at the bot tom of the sea for the greater part of the time. It was in Bangor, Me., that Cap tain Olsen made his first professional dive on a blasting Job. "I stayed down an hour or two on that first try of mine, and I was just a little bit scared," he said, when asked what his sensations were on the flrnt dive. "When I 'started down and saw the immense wall of water gradually closing over me I thought it was go ing to overwhelm and drewn me, for getting that I was looking through the thick glass window of the helmet before my face that was keeping mo safe. "I felt as If I was being smothered, and wanted to coma right up again; but I didn't care to be laughed at and called a coward by my mates, so my pluck kept me down. The second day I stayed down longer, and by the end of a week I could hold my own with the best of them." The first Important work as a diver done by Captain Olsen was performed by him thirty-four years ago In the raising of the Reading Company's coal steamer Leopard, that was wrecked on a ledge off Thatcher's Island while coming to Boston with a cargo of coal. Not long after this a schooner loaded with water pipe to be laid In Newton was wrecked near Highland light, off Cape Cod, during a fierce storm. Captain Olsen was engaged to raise the cargo and the vessel. While exploring the sunken craft he stumbled over the body of a lone drowned sailor, one of the un fortunate crew, lying on the floor of the cabin. Raising the body in his arms, he gave the signal on the life line, and diver and corpse were hauled up to the surface of the sea, the uncanny spectacle greatly startling some people who were with his assistants In their boat. No one knew who the drowned sailor was, so the body was taken to Provincetown and there given Chris tian burial. But Captain Olsen's work has not been confined to local waters. His diving operations have extended along the whole Atlantic coast, from the shores of Newfoundland to the Florida keys, and many are the wrecked vessels as well as valuable cargoes that he has brought up from the bed of the sea at different points on that stretch of coast. He is the oldest and best known diver In the country and has the reputation of be ing the most expert one, too. Two years ago he was selected by the National Government from among all the divera of the United States as an inspector to oversee the laying of a large main trunk sewer for the city of Washington, that was run for some distance under the Potomac Biter, and he supervised the opera Deep Sea Diver. tions of three different gangs of divers that were engaged on that Im portant work for seven months. When the memorable wreck of the steamer City of Columbus occurred In a .terrible storm off Gay Head, about a quarter of a century ago, and 200 or more lives were lost, he was the first diver to go down to the foundered steamer, being engaged to make an examination of her. With a few brief respites he was under water for twenty-four hours on thnt work without sleep. "Sharks have never troubled me but once," said Captain Olsen, when asked If he had had any adven tures with these marine beasts of prey. "It was off the South Carolina coast several years ago that I was forced to hide In the cabin of a sunken ship on which I was at work to escape one. He was of the man eating kind, and he kept me a pris oner in the cabin for a couple of hours before I managed lo get out and be hauled up. "With the exception of lobsters, 1 have found the Inhabitants of the deep very well behaved things. Lob sters, though, are oftentimes very troublesome when they get to crawl lng over me and become fastened In my diving suit, when I have hard work to shake them off. "I don't use any searchlight under water," continued the captain, "be' cause a searchlight Is no good down there. Some wuter that I go into is pretty clear, and I can distinguish objects fairly well, but most of the water at the bottom of the sea Is densely black. It's like entering a dark cavern to dive into it. "You can see nothing, so the hands must do the work of the eyes, for It Is through the sense of touch rather than sight that divers Identify objects at the bottom of the sea. I feel for everything, from a ship to a trunk, just like a blind man, measure it with my outstretched hands, nnd work away from there in the darkness with out seeing a thing. "Three or four hours is the aver age time-that a diver can stay "under water without coming to tho surface. Frequently, however, 1 have worked seven hours under twenty-live or thirty feet of water without being hauled up. "Twenty fathoms" Is nbout the limit of the depth of water a diver can work In. That Is 120 feet, and he can't go any deeper than that, for the pressure of the water Is too great. He couldn't possibly stand It. Even at 120 feet tho pressure of the mighty body of water above and about you Is something so tremendous that a diver can't stay down that depth any great length of time without coming to the surface. "Yes, I frequently do down In the winter, but the water Is pretty cold then nt the bottom of the sea. I al ways dr.ss In heavy flannels before I put on my diving suit, and wear heavy rubber gloves to keep my hands from freezing. In fact, I'm always ready to go down at any hour, day or night In storm or calm, winter or summer "A diver's life is such that he can't always choose the time to take a plunge to the bottom of the sea. When tho steamer Portland disap pear i:i that November storm of 1S98, and has never been heard of since, I put In fifteen days of pretty cold weather searching the ocean bed off the tip of Capo Cod for some trace of her. We never know at tho hot ton when thre is a storm on top, for the water remains unruffled down there." Captain Olpen has a comfortable land homo at 14 Fairmount avenue, West SoniervillP, where he lives with his wife and three children when out of the water, which Is only about halt the year. He says that during the thirty-six years that he has been div ing he ha3 easily averaged sis months of every year under water. Inter Ocean. The Safest Plncr. A British railway train Is the safest place on earth, as only one passenger In every 70,000,000 13 killed, and one In every 2,300,000 injured. This de duction is bused upon a careful sur vey of the board of trade report on railway accidents during the year 1907. Railway Magazine. WINNER OF A VALUABLE BOAR He Did Not Pursue the Investigation After Notification of the Prize's Death. B. F. Yoakum, at the convention of the Farmers' Union at Shawnee, said of a swindler of farmers: "He swindled. Then he covered up bis swindle with some piece of tremendous audacity that silenced his dupe. He was like the two pig raf fle rs of Plymouth. "Two Plymouth loafers, being hard up, decided on a pig raffle. So they had a pig poster printed. It said: " 'To be raffled, a fine Berkshire boar, recently Imported with the Gold stock. Drawings, twenty-five cents each. v "'SMALL AND GREENWOOD.' The raffle went well. The two loafers made a lot of money. Then came the day when the result was to ' be announced. "The loafers read over their list of victims and selected the man they thought the most gullible and meek. To him they wrote: 'Sir: We are happy to Inform you that the raffle of the magnificent 2 Berkshire boar was held last evening, . ' ,- , ....... .Ju.-. ... : Animals Extraordinary. : The' hare Is said to be one year a male and another a female, but in credulity Is quelled by the comment by the author, "Praise be to Him who Is capable of performing all things! " The viper, on attaining the age of a thousand years, invariably goes blind, but promptly finds Its way to the nearest fennel plant "with which it rubs Its eyes, when Its sight is re stored by the permission of God." ' The eagle also goes blind with age, when Its dutiful young carry It on their backs to "a clear spring In India, on the top of a mountain, into which they dip it," whereupon it regains both Its sight and its youth. The phoenix takes a pleasure In fire and in remaining in it. When Its skin becomes dirty, it cannot be washed but by means of flru. Sashes are woven of Its soft hair, and when they become dirty, they are thrown Into fire, upon which they become clean without being burnt. The abu-salras (there Is no English equivalent) Is a certain animal found in thickets and having In Its nasal cavity twelve perfect holes.. When it breathes there is heard coming from its nose a sound like the sound of flutes, and the other animals gather round It to hear that sound; or If any of them happens to become con founded with the sound, It seizes that animal and eats It, but It It does not And It practicable to seize any of them, It gives a terrible scream, upon which the other animals separate and flee away from It. Collated from Al-Damlrl's "HayatatHamayan," Jay akar Translation for the Loudon Out look, Her Usiml Lino of Talk. A certain Louisville social leader, whom we will call Mrs. Fayette Coun ty, to avoid Identifying her, was told by her husband over the telephone that he would bring a number of guests homo to dinner. The party was altogether unexpected, and In all the house, which has become noted for the generous and sumptuous din ners spread In It, there was not enough food. Mrs. County got busy at once and Instructed her cook to order certain supplies while she planned the rest of the dinner. A little later Mrs. County happened In the room where the telephone was and was horrified to hear the cook talking ferociously Into the telephone, something as fol lows: "An Ah want six dlzen sot' shell crabs an ef yo' doan get dem up here mighty quick Ah'll skin every one ot yo', ye low down Who Is dis? DIs Is Mrs. Fayette County, dat's who dls Is, and. Ah means ebery word Ah says." "Mandy," cried the mistress, "what do you mean7 You must not." "Lnw'sy," returned the cook, "that's all right, Miss Fay, Ah talks to 'um like dat for yo' all de time." Louisville Times. Tho Unexpected Truth. The minister was' spending .the afternoon at the home of one of his members. The father told his little son to bring some apples from the cellar. The child obeyed, and In the kitchen found an especially large red one which had been brought up the day before, so placed It on the dish with the others. When they were passed this was the apple the minister took, and feel ing it so warm, remarked to his host that the cellar mast bo very warm. "Did you not bring these apples from the cellar, Ned?" "Yes, father, all but the one pastor has; It was In the kitchen." "Why did you not tell me?" asked the pastor. "Well," with childish frankness, "I didn't think you would take the blgsest one on the dish!" Delinea tor. Origin of Blanket. Bristol, during- the reign of Ed ward III., had three merchants living In the town whose name was Blanket. They were woolen weavers, and the first people to make the material which ever since has been called by their name. It was first used for making peasants' clothing. Home Notes. and you are the fortunate winner. We hold the animal at your disposal and shall be pleased to forward same on receipt of your notification so to do. We beg to congratulate you on the acquisition of this valuable boar. " 'SMALL AND GREENWOOD "But the winner had hardly re ceived this letter and the first thrill of Joy had hardly warmed his breast before he received another missive: " 'Sir: We regret to inform you that the Berkshire boar died very suddenly last night at 11.30 o'clock. We do not know the exact cause ot death, but Judging from the symp toms would Impute same to hog chol era now so prevalent. Owing to the existing sanitary arrangements, the animal had to be burled without de lay. We shall be glad to receive your check for $5.60, being amount of interment expenses incurred. "SMALL AND GREENWOOD.' "The winner. It is true, did not remit his check for 15.60, but he thought It unsafe to Investigate the loss of the boar." Louisville Times. raoF. mukion's philaitthbopt Giving to the Katfoa a Prtae Thai Money Cannot Buy. " would rather pretertt the kUJk nation than to be itt ruler." JUunyon. This motto, written by Prof. alnnyoa about sixteen yeara ago, was the real cor nerstone of his medicine business. Ha felt that the people of the nation were neglect- I ing their health swing to lack of money. With the one thought in view of helping; humanity, he started in the medicine busi ness, payuig Brge mmt moat. to emi. nent specialists for known and tried for mulae that were known to have been suc cessful in curing diseasea. After carefully compounding these formulas and putting them up m a marketable condition, he offered them to tbe public fotK few pen nies, easily within the reach of tbe poorest lamily. He hired eminent specialist as large salaries and offered their services ab solutely free to the public to diagnose their cases and advise them what remedies to take. After giving the public all these benefits he was still unsatisfied and offered further to those who were not in reach of the olhces which lie established throughout the country; he advertised, asking them to -write to his specialists for free medical ex amination, and to-day Prof. Munvon is still following out this policy, and whenever he bears of a new drug or a new formula that is more effective than those that he is at the time compounding, be purchase! them regardless of cost. Prof. Munyon puts up a separate care for almost every ill. and these remedies can be had at all druggist, mostly 25 cents bot tie. Jn taking these remedies, you are tak ing what might be called a sure thing, for he guarantees I hem to produce satisfactory results or he will refund our money This is a remarkable man and a remarkable in stitution, manifestly fuir to all, and a firm well recommended. Prof. Munyon's address is S3rd and Jef ferson Sta., Philadelphia, Pa. Decay of Ancient Virtues. In an effete and unmoral age, soured by pessimism and staled by sophisti cation, the simple virtues of other times lose their hold upon the human heart We are acid. We are cynical. We laugh the maxims of the copy books to scorn. A man In these de generate days wlio loves his wife and proves It by bringing up the coal for her, drying the rtlshe3 for Iter and act Ing as her maid when Celeste Is on holiday that man we reward with nnl:kers behind the hand, as a scarce ly credible milksop. To take sulphur and molasses In tho spring an act es teemed highly by our grandfathers la now to risk ribald ridicule. To quote the Scriptures In one's dally discourse Is to have expert accountants put upon one's books. To weep with Ca mllle is to be exiled from society. The age, as we have said, Is acid and cyni cal. It not only regards the ancient virtues as clumsy cloaks for felony, but It al:io Insists upon treating them as obnoxious In themselves. Baltlr more Sun. - 61 The Mecca of the Fat. Marienbad is a place of special In terest to English people, for King Ed ward has now deserted Homburg, where for so many yenrs he did his summer cure, and every August sees him Installed In the Church Square at Marienbad and prepared to follow out the somewhat severe regime of the place. Twenty years ago this famous watering place was scarcely known to foreign people, although It is nearly a century since it was vlsl- ted by so great a man as Goethe. The springs are owned by the Abbey of Tepl, a large monastery some miles away, and the place remained practi cally unknown outside German speak ing countries until recent times. But doctors began to find out how useful Its waters were to the man who loved his dinner and to the lady whose fig ure had lost Its lines, and nowadays It has become tho Mecca of the fat. Wide World Magazine. Ostrich Culture. The first attempt to raise ostriches In Australia was made by a Mr. Mal com, who In 1880 brought 100 young birds from South Africa to South Aus tralia. In the following year the par liament of South Australia enacted a law which granted to the first per son who should exhibit 250 ostriches more than one year old about 2.400 acres of land suitable for ostrich farm ing. The conditions were satisfied by the South Australian Ostrich Com pany, which was founded In 1886 with a capital of $75,000. The company received land near Port Augusta on Spencer Bay, but in spite of this as sistance the company has never paid a dividend, although it now possesses 1,100 ostriches, all of which were im ported from South Africa. Scientific AmerlcaL. HABIT'S CHAIN ' Certain Habits Unconsciously Formed and Hard to Break. An Ingenious philosopher estimates that the amount of will power neces sary to break a lifelong habit would, If it could be transformed, lift a weight of many tons. It sometimes requires a higher de gree of heroism to break the chain of a pernicious habit than to lead a forlorn hope In a bloody battle. A lady writes from an Indiana town: "from my earliest childhood I was a lover of coffee. Before t was out of my teens I was a miserable dyspep tic suffering terrmiy at times wun j my Komaca. "I was convinced that It was coffee that was causing the trouble and yet I could not deny myself a cup for breakfast. At tbe age ef SI I was In very poor health, Indeed, My sister told me I was In danger of becoming a coffee drunkard. "But I never could give up drink ing coffee for breakfaat, although It kept me constantly 111 until t tried Poetum. - I learned to make It prop erly according to directions, and now we ean hardly do without Poetum for breakfast, and care nothing at all for ooffee. r "1 am no longer troubled with dys pepsia, do not have spells of suffer ing with my stomach that used to trouble me so when I drank coffee." Look In pkgs. tor the little book, -The Road to WellvHW.'l "Tbere'i a Reason. " Bra read Use above totter? A axw oat sweat Una They at geaolne, true, and toll i A