Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 38, Ligonier, Noble County, 9 December 1909 — Page 9
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was Rl neinl SR Rehital an frbrite it drin Atiam Ehemiie a3y : e - e eHE mdrines went (o thelr Work at Novaleta in tim%vfi,w;i }d&dizfin %'?4%‘%?’“‘-“,*3 mwm:‘zmfi the fact that GER A i’ 4 danger the magnitude of Which was absolutely - v":;-';‘-f:z,;-%{%*!’*”f* thelr Buovaney. e : ~ gkt EEE D U sbt They worg B HEM fark, left flapk SS he Seavher kind of firing and fhe sharpost kind of t“%mflm SHemy Was a muititnde and & well armid mal e I T riahed and won & vieleße Wr sheur force ot Gone R cuinEß The losn wes coIRERNOIy heavy. but nofe R for 1t enabind ane force of W ERY fo foru A Junc. o with the trenns of (¢ Rk ; SRS ; T Hta’; Gien, Schwann, hod this waB 88 Gf (he things deM ;‘@**“Wfim Just after this fght the sun did for Mujor EHEE BER & bullct had been unadle to do. A Bubstroke dropped w,@fi*gm‘;wfl*fk 21 marives and 29 saflors, made a SRS B B ntiuo tfi_h?i“fl f B Kfii%fi" oy ’
arder (0 protest the Amaerican consualate and missionsries sl that place during the war bhetwéen China and Janan. CALathat time Elilott was a lieutenant at tached ta the U 8. S Baltimore. News came to the ship that the Korgans were ralsing the cry “Korea for the K¢ i* and were about to massicre all the {orelgners at the Korean capital. Admiral MeNair ordered Ellott and his httle commund to take up “double time” across the country and save the missionaries. it is probable that few military bodies were ever asked to engage in such a trip as that turned out to be, It was so hot that the marines, turning the tables, told the. sailors that their belt buckles melted in the sun. Nearly thé whole line of the march was. through the’ submerged rice fields, the men heing up to their knees fn water half the time, their footsteps clogged by plant toots and stems. Under these conditions they made pace af the rate of five miles an hour and they reached their destination in time to perform the service for which the call for the march had heen issued .Gen. Elliott has seen service in all sortg of climatic conditions. He was assigned to the Alllance for her “cruise to the Arctic years ago and on the vovage the ship's ¢rew reached the northern point of 80 degrees and 10 minutes, the record up to that time. It was immediately upon his return from the Arctic that Elliott was ‘ordered to the tropics and he saw fighting in Panama, which was then In the hands of the revolutionary forces. - During this Panama service the revolutionists made an attempt to blow Elliott and his command off the face of the isthmus with dynamite. Elliott and a private of the marines caught the man hired to explode the stuff sust as he was about to light the fuse. It was perhaps _& parrower escape than any which the general has ever had and his parrow escapes besprinkle -plentifully his record. : : : - : ‘When Brig. Gen. John Curtis Gilmore wears his uniform an inconspicuous bronze medal pendant from an inch of ribbon is his only decoration. It is enough. It is probable that all but one person out of a thousand think that the bronze bit is a corps badge or perchance a sharpshooter's emblem. The general never will volunteer an explanation of the meaning of his medal, but this is what it means: “Medal of honor for distinguished conduct in the battle of Salem Heights, Va.,, May 3. 1863, in seizing the colors of his regiment and gallantly rallving his men under a very severe fire of the enemy while ‘serving as major, Sixteenth New York infantry.” When in order to hold his men to a work which it seemed past their power to accomplish Major Gilmore took the colors from the hand of the sergeant and led ‘his command into a furnace of fire, he was serving under Gen. Brooke, who was in command of the Sixth army corps. Brooke that day had given his following
GREAT VALUE OF GIBRALTAR
e 2 Ceuta in Exchange with Spain Might Be Good Bargain for Great | , Britain. “For over 200 years, down to a very recent period,” said Irving S. Seymour of Liverpool, at the New Willard recently, according to the Washington Herald, “the rock of Gibraltar has been the synonym for impregnability, and its possession has been thought
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an example of herolsm that was sufficient to keep every officer 1o the stern line of his duty. Brooke had been wounded. As one of his aides said: "His whole face was shot away” But the general refused even first aid to the Injured and remained at his post of command inspiring and directing ; o Malor Gilmore, becsuse of his comparatively {nfertor rank was but one small unit in a whole foree of fighting units up to the time that need and apportunity came hand in hand seross the red field. Major Gilmore met them. The confederates were assailing the whole front of the Union line at Salem Helghts. This was on one part of the field of Chancellorsville, where the southern soldiers greatly outnumbered the northern foe. It was in a sense an isolated fight. The confederate attack was at its fiercest on the left flank, which was held by A New York regiment, the One hundred and twenty-first, composed in the main part of recruits. The green ones held their own for a time. but finally were sent back hurtling by the dash and the weight of the enemy. - There. was danger that the confederates would turn the flank of the northerners, get a position which prac: tically meant the annihilation of the Unifon forte and would make of that day something more than a mere day of victory. _ : S : , It came the turn of the Sixteenth New York to go to the attack and to the rescue.’ The officers of Gilmore's regiment thought that they had estimated properly the numerical strength of the enemy. So they had of that part of the enemy which they had seen, but a road running between two low hills held a force of confederates of which the northerners had taken no account, and from the road the southerners sprang, re-enforced their brethren already in action and attacked, fresh as they were, with an absolute fury. » Gilmore's regiment began to waver. The men had not expected to go against anything like odds so terrific. - The sight of three men to one bearing down upon them in addition to the force with which they were actually engaged was enuvugh to make the retreat of the troops more than semi-excusable. . Gilmore, the major in command of one of the batallions, turned things over to his ranking captain and ‘went down the line toward the colors, getting a terrific cross fire all the way. Somehow he escaped the bullets. The color sergeant was standing to his duties and to his flag, but one of the little rules in army regulations makes it incumbent upon a commissioned officer to expose himself to danger at a critical moment for the - purpose of rallying and inspiring his men. - Gilmore was a marked man among his soldiers. They liked him and they knew his mettle. He took the colors from the hand of the sergeant and with the “noncom.” at his side he ads!‘lqed in front of the regiment,
|to invest Great Britain with an’ ab- | solute contror over the entrance to the Mediterranean. *‘lt dominates one of the most frequented waters in the world,” continued Mr. Seymour, who is interested ;in the export trade. “From every | quarter of the horizon which is visible from its summit the steamship tracks converge. Those coming from the east, fium the ports of the Mediter-
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franean-. from China, India, Australia 'and the far Pacific, cross those which arrive there from England and the United States, from France and Germany, from South America and western Africa, and every day throughout the year nearly 200 vessels defile between the columns of Hercules and pass in sight of the gigantic fortress which stands there on guard. “Such being the case,” added Mr. Seymour, “it is no wonder that Great Britain, with its vast commerce. to protect and its distant colonies and
they were surrounded. It ‘was a case . where sx;rr-.wndvr_ seomod to be the ‘.fl}i)' WAY out of a bfld situation, but Gilmore and Curtis made up their minds that they would fight their way out, These two officers were close friends. Of duty they were invariably together and the attachment beétween them was. so strong that the men called them “the brother captains” Selecting the p(fiint which seemed to be of the least resistance, the two companies, with Gilmore and Curtis at their heads, broke at the encircling host. . Within 100 feet of the starting point of the charge for liberty Capt. Curtis went down with a ball through his left breast. Gilmore was shot twice, but he paid no attention to his wounds, and with his men followlng he went farward at “double time” By sheer force of ‘dash and solidity of impact the two companies went through the confederate line and surrender was behind them. At the next roll call of those two companies about one-third of the men answered to their names After the war between the states, Gilmore's record won for him an appointment as second leutenant of regulars. - He joiped the Twelfth infantry and saw loog and continuous service on the frontier. In 1880 he was assigned to duty on the staff of the adjutant general and at the outbreak of the Spanish war he was made a brigadier general of volunteers. In addition to his medal of honor for conspicuous per sonal gallantry in rallying his men at Salem Heights, Gen. Gilmore has three brevet commissions to his credit for gallantry in action. He was breveted major for “gallant and meritorious services in the battle of Antietam, Maryland;” lietitenant colomel for “gallant and meritorious services in the battle of Fredericksburg, Va,” and colonel for “gallant and meritorious services throughout. the war.” : ROMAN RELICS IN BRITAIN London.—Excavators are at work all over the old world digging up the buried history of peoples and cities whose very existence had long remained only a myth. It is natural, perhaps. that general interest should be more fascinated by the unveiling of secrets hidden for thousands of years than in discoveries of more recent days made at home. Yet year by year enthusiastic bands of workers are bringing to light the buried history of Roman Britain and the resuits of their labors should be of interest to all who trace their origin to this country. Roman forts, fortresses, towns and amphitheaters are being worked upon in various places. In Yorkshire an interesting discovery has been made in the last year on the site known as Burwen castle. Here are the scanty remains of & Roman fort covering about five and a half
‘dependencies to guard, should these §last two centuries have held on to { the place with such a tenacious grip, or that it should have. spared nothing in its efforts to improve to the uttermost the natural advantages of the position and to make Gibraltar, in very fact, the key to the inland sea at whose entrance it is situated. The control of the Mediterranean was never so important to Great Britain | as it is to-day, when the road to India {and of the east, which used. to lie -laround the Cape af Good Hope, has
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acres. Witkin the larger enclosure have Beep found 150 welldefined remaing of a smaller and earller fort, evi dently eonstructed fn the Brst century i At Uaersus. in Montgomervshire, the detalls of a Roman fort covering nearly eight screa have hbeen brought to Heht-headguarters bullding treasary cham ber, granary. wells ~pHe, vven the seltioment outaide the ramiparts. A good deal of pollers found there s übicom mon and of (“;'H':-.,\‘ date, bul pno inseriptions have yet besn found, except s tile stamp, reading U 1 O F, which s still a puzzle to excavaturs of Roman forts At Gellygaer, in Glamorgansbire the bhulldings ol side the fort have been uncovered, and at fast & dale can be asgigned to the station for an iascription hess been {ound of the time of Trajas's Bth cousuiale, be tween 108 and 112 A D ; Interesting work has been done on the great foriress of the second legion at Cserleon, In Monmouthshire Ounly threse leglonary fortresses sre kunowp in Britain and this is the only one from which much definite infor mation as to plan and structire can be jooked for. Tha detaiin of those at York and Chestér are probably lost farever. : ) Work this year on the southerns angle of the Casrleon fortress. where the rampart still stands 15 Tl Bigh, bas disclosed the angle turret in pocd preseryation, with the poltting of the wall pleked out in red ' Excavation on the apparently unigue Roman station At Holt, pesr Wrexham, =tili leavés it doubtful as to what the station was. But the sile has yielded one of the most remarkable collections of potiery and tiles in Britain. A Beavy stone ranipart has béen iraced forv 100 vards, a centurial stone bas been Bken from it and long rows of buildiogs have been found - In addition 8 striking collection of Samian avd other wares, o ante fixes of the twentieth leglon hiave been. discovered in excellent preservation For years the excavations on the site of the Roman town of Corstopitum, at Silchester, bave added to the knowledge of Roman Britain. This year a bullding has heen found: of which the mascary I 8 finer and more solid than that of any Roman buaiiding in Britain, Sach a buillding, it {8 believed, could only have bheen erected by the state. The discovery here of pottery which must belong to the first century may materislly modify the theories as 1o the date of the Watling street Perhaps the most interesting discover of the year has been the excavation of an amphitheater st Cacrlean Up to the spring of 180% none supposed this amph!‘!ha ater, marked by a circular hollew and known locally as King Arthur's Round Table, to be anything more than a bank of earth. The firgt cuts into the bhank revealed an outer wall 534 feet thick, still standing six and seven feet high in places, and strengthened with buttresses within and without at intervals of 10 feet. ) . Three entrances have been uncovered, one nine feet wide, leading down to the arens by a vauited passage. Already one centurial stone has been taken from the wall, showing that the amphitheater was built by the troops themselves, It iz estimaled that the bullding would accommodate at least 5000 spectators, or the number of the garrison of the fortress. : \ . THE POWERFUL 14INCH GUN. ) ~ Regarding the new l4&inch coast-defense gun which has just béen completed for the United States government at the Watertown (N. Y.} argenal the Army and Navy Journal says: “This new gun marks a progressive step in coast-defense ordnance. The powder chamber is even smaller than that of the 12-inch gun, yet while the latter carries a 1,000-pound projectile and has a muzzle velocity of 2550 feet a second, the new gun carries a 1,600 pound projectile, with a muzzle velocity of 2,150 feet a second. The projectile for the 15-inch gun will curry & much heavier charge of high explosive and will therefore deliver a blow of greater force. ; . “The relative power of theaklow delivered by the two guns is practically as 65 to 74, or it may be gaid that the 14-inch gun hits about 15 per cent. harder than the 12Jdnch gun. This power is gained somewhat at the expense of accuracy, as the 14-inch gun will require a higher trajectory. The projectile, traveling less-rapidly than that of the 12-inch gun and being heavier, less subject to the resistance of the air. \E ~“It. is probably not extravagant to predict that a single engagement would wear out any of the 12-inch guns we now have. It is calculated that the new 14-inch gun may be fired from 230 to 280 times before any de gree of impairment from erosion will appear, whereas 80 shots at the muzzle velocity prescribed would mark the life of our 12-inch guns.”. ,
letting the flag float free, aud, enliineg so that his yolre was heard above the noige of the firfng. told his men to - hold straight op ~— and hold straight on they &l 5 The Jeft fank was not tarned The enemy WwWas driven back and the position which it was supposed to° hold was held and the ‘hour of defeat was the hour of yictory. When Gilmore was a captain in command of P company he was badly wounded at the bhattie of West Point: F company under Capt. Glimare and O company under Capt. Curtis becamé isolated from the rest ol the command and in less than 10 midutes - AT S A T S S
been diverted to the Suez canal and the Red sea, and to make sure of that control, against whatever opposition may be encountered has been, aad is, the constant solicitude of the British {1 government. Everything that is possible has been done, not only to render Gibraltar impregnable, but to develop its full utility as a naval base. Yet a grave doubt has been raised as to Gibraltar's strength, and there are those who declare that the trust which is placed in Gibraltar as a naval base, might, if put to the test
|be disappointed. Ceuta would be of imuch greater value to England than Gibraltar, and so good an authority as Sir Charles Dilke has argued that if Spain could be induced to exchange Ceuta for Gibraltar it would be » good bargain fér Great Britain. She Expected as Much, ' “l never thought she would do me such a mean turn,” sald Mrs. Jeffer. son Judd, “but then it was just exact ly what I expected”—Kansas City Times. :
PAUL’S LAST | - WORDS - Senday Scheel Lossss Tor Dec 12, 1909 B Soesialy Arrarged for Thus Pager - - LERSON TEXTY 5 Tine € LIB Mednos Terges £.9 i GO PENR TEXY o b 4 AR - B B (it and o Bl W gsin - Buggestion ang Practical Thought Paagls lattiefeids victorics - and croan e | i A Pletares of One of Pasls Banle Relds -Va 14 The advices which }7';’. §1 | Grges npon the younger Timotds was eepsel he himasi! bad often scied ipa. He knew §t was goost for Be had tried it S 0 thar i the seils and AiMcliles which Pacl knew were oomn fromting Timothy, we may see ohe mion wihleh Payl bad been tompelied 16 pnowd Apd In by " weaspons and trethedls of warfare a P ehasged Tir nihy o Lee we o wiears by wiich Pagl galned 'Re victory The Three Kinds of Fnemies ) Past ke other tmon, bad 1o Bght éhe ey within Riroget? Chen We ssd x Finsd 0 We are apt 'n think thz! he Bas naturs guallttes of goodnoss s favosing cirripatsnces that make ™ wany for 810 to be gred - et ) 2 Faud had sy ot ward eherntis and ABeatiies witk WAz RMERILRE v spaihd of this Garkncay ;._'- xt The in the | §ir e ¥ .w Bt % BT : i’, sl e fam Wit 1 the Bany of discinles wd % gkt ! For the Yime will - sosw . when $ 5y - v rh ats ooy va S o . swsid which Pagl bad preachead. and gl ¢ k LRt iog ey ERIY T Ov s ¢ perstition and Gentlie philvaon bringing along w4B them many false noticns and degrading practices which’ should Baye bess a 8 "« Bigd < F Ri 4 They shall ¢ hoaw thedy fave frives the irytl B 4 ars WwWall .o capes Kok Fhe Aniy abbat of A trothock™ Nad piaced a bell over ihis rock. 8 osuch a 8 way that i was rung i How Pasl Osercams These Fue tiies 1o the Teruth Ve 3 2 Pa Bgave o Timothy -the nOWE CEsleny Barge. Using the mutiveés whish i o Before God, that s “In the s'el af 504 R s he was ,_>.x NYE W i Lim #ad “watehing ‘rn 2 a 4 duty,” watchliog not 1o Bnd Tagh, bLut 10 epsOUrage ang hell And the Laord Jescs Chrizt His Mas ter and Teacher and ¥Friend . W 1 shall fudge the quick the jiving and the dead This was are ihan the onscioushess that he Blmsel! aust be tadped arording 10 wha! Ee was gt what be did But it dddad the- even stronger mdative that (he fate ol those te whom he preached deps '* his faithiuiness ; ) ; The coming again of Ohrist At his appearing and hisz Eingdam Christ s glerious second coming pomsihi sny time, should spur Tidothy to he a | faithful stewnrd, and be shosld do his work well because {0 would helip o exiabiish (Heist's rule on earth his kingdom of peasce and righteousness Preach, prociaim like a herald, the word, the gospel message, the Ward of God, embodied in the Hiv and teach ings of the Word who was made flesh Be instant argent Loportanate, | prossing on agalnst sl obstacies. In teason, o the regular course of work when the opportunity is faverable, and people wish to hear the gospel - ! L Paule_Victory in thé Confiicr — Ve £ 7.8 “Foril am pnow ready to be affered™ R, V's margin,. 7l am already being poured out as a drink offering” His life was wogring away (in & foul dungeon, the Infirmities of age after a e of great toll and exposure were upon hitn, and at any time the sword of Nero might end his life by & martyr's death But this was merely death. his dylng was a iibation in honor of God, a wliliog sacrifice of sweet savor, holy and acceptable It was the giving o God the cholcest and most precious, of all i his possession it was the fitting close of a life which had "been for ‘years a lving sacrifice. Paul's very death was a victory. . { IV, Paul's Crown.—V¥V. 8§ -~“Henceforth” Paul's life ‘struggles were | over: there remalned only to recefve !the reward. “There is lald up for | me.” “Deposited, reserved, put by In | store_out of the reach of all enemles |and sorrows.“—Bishop Wilson. A iR V. "the” “ecrown of righteousness.” | The leaf garland of the Greclan games, ‘taken by Paul as a symbol of his ‘eternal reward in heaven. Of righti eousness is the name of the race for . which the crown isawarded, just as ' Pindar wrote: “Pytheas, broad-shoul- ' dered son of Lampo, ‘won the crown | of the double contest (wrestling and i boxing) at the Nemean games.” It ils a crown that “marks the wearer | ag righteous before God” (Hervey). It liu a crown that a righteous God be- | stows on one who has become worthy | of it e i A crown is a symbol, a sign, an emi blem. Men seek a crown not for its | value in gold and jewels, but for the i things for which it stands. [t means }wofihlnes to wear it, {t ‘means sue- | cnss in winning the race, it stands ; for kinship, the character, the man- | iness, the powes, the wealth, the | authority to guide and defend one's | country. The iran cross of Germany, | the Victorian cross of England, the Jclrclet of ivy in the Greclan games, have no value In themselves, but only Ith,e great deeds by which they are won. The Christian seeks heaven, not ! chiefly for its outward glories, but {um he may reach his ideal of enaracter. . : A © We find what we look for in the world. 1 have always been locking for the nobler qualities in human beings, and I have always found them. There | are great souls all along the highway of life; and there are great-qualities even in the people who seem common {and weak to us ordinarily—Ella
Ti;ceptt'onal v - Equipment of the Califomis Fig Syrup Co and e weentibo altaincachts of 11 cheenists have et red T iwe the ppaductian oo ‘j‘fl]’ of Figs and Fhaer of Senoa, i el of Re exsedenoe. by obdsiming the pate pwclior © il pesneipios of plants known 1o act mosl e foczally and comboung them moel Tskdliclr in the nghl peoprations with T wholrsorme and refreshing Syrup of Undifornim Fige - As there s only one periine Syrup of Feips and Thivr of Seova and as tie peoit 1 manifaetiapmsd by &5 _»naufl marthodd ksown o the Calilorna Fig Syrup i iy 3% ?a,:’:&.,,\"‘“--tn,.“_fl f>!;«"th fraune 9 pet Ha beneiicaal efecta A krevmbedge of the shove fasts enables oto de peprmst i pses a 7 1o retarn thel # Gpon viewing the paciagy . the full name of Ihe Ualiforna Fig Syrap O not foiad prinied oo the front thereof. BENEFIT OF HOME TRAINING Probability Yhat Fatrer “improved” L oen Anything W e Hag Heard n the Street T . Wie 1 § Tatbs +«7 harme 1O # ¥y wAs A 5 ! salr al the tu : ; arits in bed ™ The 3 > with 1 ful proecision s Rl Nt osick; 3>% % i § ‘ it griey e 1 17, Hobert that tnss r o 5 besn heard & £ :;T‘:vc‘ gttt ! Leard hing™ L g 7 Reett’ 11 teach him ! ¥& T Apd e started putaire o ¢ Sdark Half way vy be stumbled $ i down with his chin on the V hasr LRy atnamthere ¢leared & Hb Ttie Willlks mather wa ying sweeliy ¢ Lhis that will do, ¥aos bave given bim snough for A MAN OF RESCURCE. > # = o ! ;(wg, Yt oW | '\)L.w i { Ly : 1 )\ :‘( g 'L{// ; ] -7 EeSly ) {4 i ; ol * I Gzl %fi =l | A f T company b Can Faui give e ten Rl on - £ I 1t 2t gt 8 shave I Lave besn 3 ng Hamist (o four -daym and 1 eard 1% beginning 10 grow ) Mianaper A E £ 5 xRy rene dled Well putl an Othelln SchHools for Tubercuious Childrem = ‘ p {or 1 ereiitons ehilk iren % Giw. ey estahlished 1D 3 videtos tun. N YVork, Roches ter, Washingten, Han {. Cann, Chl - TRE nd Pittstiurg York has thiree sehool giton, D C, ot 1 ; rdd ol e tinn of New York 1y Iw. 3 ; g to establish ek ygug ; ey an:d i inatitations are being plaaned in Detradl, Buflalo, P ieiphia Cincinnal and Newark, N 2 in ¢ittes ke Providonce, Doston and New York, whes Honld have beon sonducted for tao yoars -the re sults oltaiged fram the treatment of children in speelal tubé ti apen air schools geem to show ihe great ad=vantlage of Ihi in of institubions This, coupled with the expegionce of epet ®ir schoonls in Germany and England, proves that childeen can be curéd of tuberculosis and keop up with-their gchol work, without any danger to feltow pupils : Special Note from Atchison. The engagement of Mr, Hiram Har Aewyy and Miss Suzette Snariey Is ane ‘pounced. It eccurred the other even“ing at 9:45 on the red sofa in Miss Snarley’s parior. The young lady was "dressed in black, and wore no orna_ments. She did not look unusually pretty, and what caused the young man’'s mental aberration is not known. Neither one could remember exactly what was saild, and both admitted It was not the first time he kissed her. We print the details for the romantie young things who are always curious - to knos how an engagement is brought about —Atchison Globe. i SECRET WORKERS The Plan Upon Which Coffee Operates. Coffee i{s such a secret worker that ° it is not suspected as the cause of sickness or discase, but there is a very : sure way to find out the truth. © A lady in Memphis gives an inter- ' esting experience her husband had - with coffee. It seems that he had been i using it for some time and was an ' fnvalid. ; ! The physician in charge shrewdly . suspected that coffee was the “Worm at the root of the tree,” and ordered it discontinued with instructions to | use Postum regularly in its place. i The wife says: “We found that was the true remedy for his stomach and heart trouble and we would have gladi¥ paid a hundred times the amount of the doctor's charge when we found - how- wise his judgment was. ; ' “The use of Postum instead of cot fee was begun about a year ago, and it has made my husband a strong, well ' man. He has gained thirty-five pounds - in that time and his stomach and heart troubles have all disappeared. - : “The first time I prepared it I did " not boil it long enough and he said there was something wrong with it | Sure enough it did taste very flat, but | the next morning I followed directions : carefully, boiling it for fifteen minutes, ! and he remarked ‘this is better than { any.of the old coffee’ ‘ . “We use Postum regularly and never | tire of telling our friends of the bene- . fit we have received from leaving off | .coffee.” | 'Look for the little book, “The Road to i Wellville,” in pkgs. “There's a Reason.” oR R AT
