Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 February 1910 — CLEAR-HEADED. [ARTICLE]
CLEAR-HEADED.
Head Bookkeeper Moat Be Reliable. The chief bookkeeper In a large business house In one of our great Western cities speakß of the harm coffee diid for him; “My wife and I drank our first cup of Postum a little over two years ago, and we have used it ever since, to the entire exclusion of tea and coffee. It happened in this way: “About three and a half years ago I had an attack of pneumonia, which left a memento in the shape of dyspepsia, or rather, to speak more correctly, neuralgia of the stomach. My ‘cup of cheer’ had always been coffee or tea, but I became convinced, after a time,' that they aggravated my stomach trouble. I happened to mention the matter to my grocer one day and he suggested that I give Postum a trial. * “Next day It came, but the cook made the mistake of not boiling it sufficiently, and we did not like it much. This was, however, soon remedied, and now we like it so much that we will never change back. Postum, being a food beverage instead of a drug, has been the means of curing my stomach trouble, I verily believe, for I am a well man to-day and have used no other remedy. “iiy work as chief bookkeeper in our Co.’s branch house here is of a very confining nature. During my coffee-drinking days I was Bubject to nervousness and ‘the blues’ in addition to my sick spells. These have left me since I began using Postum and I can conscientiously recommend it to those whose work confines them to long hours of severe mental exertion.” “There’s a-Reason." Look ih pkgs. for the little book, “The Road to Wellville.” Ever rend the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full as human interest.
