Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Oct 1921, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

5MfiN^AfiES a snossr cr w mway mhmmct SIEVINGBACHEIXEB. cra/^yjr. •T /JSVTAx- CHAPTER XVI--Continued. --16-- "fie has not yet accomplished much In the legislature. I don't think that be will until some big issue comes along. 'I'm not much of a hand at hunting squirrels,' he said to me the other day. 'Wait till I see a bear.' The people of Vandalia and Springfield have never seen him yet. They don't know him as I do. But they all respect him--just for his good-fellowship, honesty and decency. I guess that every fellow with a foul mouth hates himself for It and envies the man who Isn't like him. They begin to see bis skill as a politician, which has shown itself in the passage of a bill removing the capital to Springfield. Abe Lincoln was the man who put it through. But lie has not yet uncovered his best talents. Mark my word, some day Lincoln will be a big man. "The death of his sweetheart has aged and sobered him. When we are together he often sits looking down with a sad face. For a while not a word out of him. Suddenly he will begin saying things, the effect of which will go with me to my grave, although I cannot call back the words and place them as be did. He is what I would call a great captain of words. 8eems as if 1 heard the band playing while they marched by me as well dressed and stepping as proud and regular as the Boston Guards. In some great battle between Right and Wrong yon will hear from; him. I hope It may be the battle between Slavery and Freedom, although at present he thinks they mftst avoid oomlng to a clinch. In my opinion it cannot be done. I expect to live to> •00 the fight and to take part in it." Late in the session of 1836-1837 the prophetic truth of these words began t# reveal itself. A bill was being put through the legislature denouncing the growth of abolition sentiment and its activity In organized societies and upholding the right of property in slaves. Suddenly Lincoln had come to a fork In the road. Popularity, the urge of many friends, the counsel of wealth and power, and public opinion, the call of good politics pointed in one direction and the crowd went that way. It was a stampede. Lincoln stood alone at the corner. The crowd beckoned. Irat in vain. One man came back and Joined him. It was Dan Stone, whb was not a candidate for re-election. His political career was ended. There .were three words on the sign-board pointing toward the perilous and loneij' road that Lincoln proposed to follow. They were the words Justice and Human Rights. Lincoln and Dan Stone took that road in a protest; declaring that they "believed the institution of slavery was founded upon injustice and bad policy." Lincoln had followed his conscience, instead of the crowd. At twenty-eight years of age be bad safely passed the great danger point la his career. The declaration at Decs tur, the speeches against Douglas, the miracle of turning 4,000,000 beasts Into 4,000,000 men, the sublime utterance at Gettysburg, the wise parables, the second Inaugural, the innumerable acts of mercy, all of which lifted him Into undying fame, were now possible. Henceforth he was to go forward with the grpwing approval of his own spirit and the favor of God. M: of^85. It was spreading through the state. Imaginary cities were laid out oh the lonely prairies and all the corner lots sold to eager buyers and paid for with promises. Millions of conversational, promissory dollars, based upon the gold at the foot of the rainbow, were changing hands day by day. The legislature, with an empty treasury behind it, voted twelve millions for river improvements and imaginary railroads and canals, for which neither surveys nor estimates had been made, to serve the dream-built cities of the speculator. If Mr. Lincoln had had more experience in the getting and use of dollars and more acquaintance with the shrinking timidity of large sums, he would have tried to dissipute these illusions of grandeur. But he went with the crowd, every member of which had a like inexperience. In the midst of tbe ses&on Samson Tray lor arrived in Vandalia on his visit to Mr. Lincoln. "I have sold my farm," said Samson to his old friend the evening of his arrival. ,. "Did yon get a good price?" Mr. Lincoln asked. "All that my conscience would allow me to take," said Samson. "The man offered me three dollsfrs an acre in cash and ten dollars In notes. We compromise^ on seven dollars, all cash." "What are you going to do now that you have sold out?" "I was thinking of going up to Tazewell county." "Why don't you go to the growing and prosperous town of Springfield?" Mr: Lincoln asked. "The capitol will be there, and so will I. It is going to be a big city. Men who are to make history will live in Springfield. You must come and help. I shall need your friendship, your wisdom and your sympathy. I Shall want to sit often by your fireside^ You'll find a good school there for the children. If you'll think of It seriously I'll try to get you into the public service." "We need you plenty," Samson answered. "We kind o' think o' you as one o' the family. I'll talk it over with Sarah and see. Never mind the Job. If I keep you behavln' yourself, it'll be Job enough. Anyway, I guess we can manage to get along." "I've had a talk with Stuart and have some good news for Harry and Bim," said young Mr. Lincoln. "Stuart thinks she can get a divorce tinder the law of 1827. I suppose they are still Interested in each other?" "He's like most of the Yankees. Once he gets set, it's hard to change him. The Kelsos have moved to Chicago, and I don't know how Bim stands. If Harry knows, he hasn't said a word to us about it." *Tm interested in that little romance," said the legislator. "It's our duty to do what we can to secure the happiness of these young lovers. Tell Harry to come over here. I want tQ talk wttt him." CHAPTER In Which Mr. Lincoln, Samson Mid Harry Take a Long Ride Together and the Latter Visit the Flourishing Little City of Chicago. f BOOK THREE CHAPTER XVII. ft" .Wherein Young Mr. Lincoln Betrays Ignorance of Two Highly Important Subject*. There were two subjects of which Mr. Lincoln had little understanding. They were women and flnqn««». Until they had rightly appraised the value of his friendship, women had been iwont to regard him with a riant curiosity. He had been aware of this, and for years bad avoided women, save those of old acquaintance. When he lived at the tavern in the village, often he had gone without a meal rather than expose himself to the eyes of strange women. The reason for this was well understood by those who knew him. The young man was an exceedingly sensitive human being. No doubt he had suffered more than any one knew from ill-concealed ridicule, but he had been able to bear It with composure in his callow youth. Later nothing roused his anger like an attempt to ridicule him. Two women he had regarded with peat tenderness--his foster mother, the second wife of Thomas Lincoln, and Ann Rutledge. Others had been «.o him, mostly, delightful but Inscrutable beings. The company of women and of dollars had been equally unfamiliar to him. He had said more than once in his young manhood that he felt embarrassed In the presence of either, and knew not quUe how to behave himself--an exaggeration In which there was no small amount of truth. In 1836 the middle frontier had entared upon a singular phase of its de- ; Tflopment Emigrants from the East ibd South and from overseas had been pouring into it The summer before the lake and river steamers had been crowded with them, and their wagons fcad come in long processions out of the Easrt. Chicago had begun Its phenomenal growth. A frenzied speculation In town lots bad been under way that community slace the ai^WR^. •' 'A1'."-- Mr. Lincoln had brought the papers which Harry was to take to Bim, and made haste to deliver them. The boy was eager to be off on his mission. The fields were sown. The new buyer was coming to take possession in two weeks. Samson and Harry had finished their work in- New Salem. "Walt till tomorrow and maybe I'll go with ye," said Samson. "I'm anxious to take a look at that little mushroom city of Chicago." "And buy a few corner lots?" Abe asked, with a smile. "No; I'll wait till next year. They'll be cheaper then. I believe in Chicago. It's placed right--on the waterway to the north and east, with good country on three sides and transportation on the other. It can go Into partnership with Steam Power right away and begin to do business. Your grain and pork can go straight from there to Albany and New York and Boston and Baltimore without belhg rehandled. When railroads come--If they ever do --Steam Power will be shoving grain and meat and passengers into Chicago from every point of the compass." Abe Lincoln turned to Sarah and said: "This Is a growing country. You ought to see the cities springing up there in the legislature. I was looking with great satisfaction at the crop when Samson came along one day and fell on It. He was like a frost in mid summer." "The seed was sown too early," Sam son rejoined. "Ton and I may live to see all the dreams of, Vandalia come true." "And all the nightmares, too," said the young statesman. "Yes, we're going to wake up and find a cold morning and not much to eat In the house and the wolf at the door, but we'll live through it." Then the^roung statesman proposed : '.'If you arelgoing with Harry, I'll go along and see what they've done on the Illinois and Michigan canal. Some contractors who worked on the Erie canal will start from Chicago Monday to look the ground over and bid on the construction of the southern end of It. I want to talk with them when they come alone down the line." "I guess a few days In the aald air and oratory and The prairie wind your' pessimism will straighten awHp." Hatry rode to the village that afterto get-"Colonel" and Mm Luklns to come out to the farm and stay with Bftrah while he and Samson were ray, Josi&h, now a sturdy hoy of thirteen, stood In the dooryard, holding the two saddle ponies from Nebraska which Samson had bought of a drover. Bet sey, a handsome young miss almost fifteen years old, stood beside him. Sarah, whose face had begun to show the wear of years full of loneliness and hard work, was packing the saddle- bags, now nearly filled, with extra socks and shirts and doughnuts and bread and butter. They met Abe Lincoln at the tavern, where he was waiting on a big horse which he had borrowed for the trip from James Rutledge. Without delay, the three men set out on the north road In perfect weather. From the hill's edge they could look over a wooded plain running far to the east. As they rode on, the young statesman repeated a long passage from one of the sermqns of Dr. William Ellery Channing on the "Instability of Human Affairs." I wish that I had yoqr meihory," Samson remarked. "My memory Is like a piece of metal," said the yoking legislator. "Learning Is not easy far me. It's rather slow work--like engraving with a tool. But when a thing is once printed on my memory it seems to stay there. It doesn't rub .out. When I run across a great Idea, well expressed, I like to put it on the wall of my mind where I can live with It. In this way every man can have his own little art gallery and be in the company of great men." Ttyey, forded a creek In deep water, where a bridge had been washed away. As they came out dripping on the farther, shore, Lincoln remarked: "Pva Been Clayed on House Air and Oratory and Future Greatness." "The thing, to do in fording a deep stream is to keep watch o' your horse's ears. As long as you can see em you're all right." <5 Mr.v Lincoln, I'm sorry--yoo got Into a hole," said Samson. "I don't mind that, but while we're traveling together, please don't call me Mr. Lincoln.' I don't think I've done anything to deserve such lack of respect." Samson answered: "If you're nice 1 90 us, I don't know but we'll call ye ^Abe' again, just for a few days. You can't expect us to go too far with a man who associates with judges and generals and governors and such trash. If you keep It up, you're bound to lose standing in our community." "I know I've changed," said Abe. I've grown older since Ann died-- years ago--but I don't want you fellows to throw me over. I'm on the same level thsit you are and I Intend to stay there. It's a fool notion that men go up some heavenly stairway to another plane when they begin to do things worth while. That's a kind of feudalistlc twaddle. The wise man keeps his feet on the ground and lifts his mind as high as possible. The higher he lifts It, the more respect he will have for the common folk. Have <?Ither of you seen McNamar since he got back?" I saw him the day he drove Into the village," Harry answered. "He was expecting to find Ann and make good his promise to marry her." "Poor fool! It's a sad story all around," said Abe Lincoln. "He's not a^>ad fellow, I reckon, but he broke Ann's heart? Didn't realise what a tender thing It was. I can't forgive him." In the middle of the afternoon they came In sight of the home of Henry Brlinstead. • "Here's where we stop and feed, and listen to Henry's secrets," said Samson. ' The level fields were cut Into squares outlined by wooden stakes. Brlmstead was mowing the grass in his dooryard. He dropped his scythe and came to welcome the travelers. "Say, don't yon loiow that you are standing In the center of a large and promising city?" he said to Samson. "You are standing at the corner of Grand avenue and Empire street, In the growing city of El Dorado, near the great water highway of Illinois," Brlmstead declaimed. "Where's the growln'7" Samson demanded. Brlmstead came closer and said In a confidential tone: "If you stand right where you are an' listen, you'll hear It growln'." "It sounds a good deal like a turnip growln' in a garden," Samsorf • remarked, thoughtfully. "Give It a fair chance," Brlmstead went on. "Two cellars have been dug over there \fi the pasture. One Is for the town hall and the other tor the university which the Methodists are su£¥t$fed mer. Every and paid f< notes." •• - "The brokers ha Chicago got'the cash and you got the notes?" "You've sai4 lt%PVe get a drawer full of notes." "And yoii've quit farmin't* Otiy, i 1> "511 ,vc U1C wuu uas up so It wouldn't pay. !ppi»3isy 55? I cal'ate that we're gala' logit rich this summer sellin' lots," "Wake up, man. You're dreamta'," said Samson. ^ Henry came close to Sahison and said in a confidential tone: "Say, mebbe the whole state is dreamln' an* yellln' in Its sleep 'bout canals an' schools an' factories an' mUls an' ratli roads. We're havln' a good time, any4 way." This reminded Abe Lincoln of the story: "There was a man in• Pope county who came home oneevening and-sat down in the middle of the barn floor and began to sing. His wife asked him: 'Are yob vdrurtt ererasy or a fooir" : I don't know what you'd catl It, but I know I ain't got a darn bit to spare,' he answered, with a whoop of joy." * "You're all goln' to roll out o' bed and hit the floor with ^ bijmp," said Samson. .•t Brirastead declared (<B hts usual tone of confidence: The worst part o' bein' a fool is lonesomeness. I was the only one In Flea valley. Now I shall be In the company of a governor an' dozens o' well known statesmen. You'll be the only lonesome man In Illinois." "I sometimes fear that he will enjoy the loneliness of wisdom," said Honest Abe. In some parts of the state every farmer owtis his own private, city," Samson declared. **I hope Henry Brlmstead does as well raising cities as he did raising grain. He was a very successful farmer." ,,1"• "I knew you'd make fan o* me but when you come again you'll' see the towers an' steeples," said Brlmstea<L "Put up your horses and come Into the house and see the first lady of Dorado." Mrs. Brlmstead had their dinner cooking before the horses were cared for. "Well, what do you think of Henry's plans?" she asked. "I like the farm better." "So do I," the woman declared. "Bat the men around here have gone crasy with dreams of sudden wealth." "I've only a word of advice about It. If those Chicago men sell any more of your land make them take the notes and you take, the money. Where Is Annabel?" "Teaching the school at: Hopedale." "We're going up to Chicago to see the Kelsos," said Samson. "Glad you are. Some rich feller up there by the name of Davis has fallen In love with Bim an* he don't give her, any peace. He left here last night goln' north. Owns a lot 0' land in Tazewell county an' wears a diamond in his shirt as big as your thumb nail. Blmvhas been teaching school In Chicago this winter. It must be a wonderful place. Every one has loads of money. The stores an* houses are as thick as the hair on a dog's back-- some of 'em as big as all outdoors." Abe Lincoln and Harry entered with their host and the travelers sat down to a luncheon of pudding and milk and doughnuts and pie. "How far do you call It to the sycamore woods?" Lincoln asked as they rose from the table. "About thirty mile," said Brlmstead. "We must be off If we are to get there before dark," the young statesman declared. (TO BE CONTINUED.) HA.VE KEEN SENSE OF HOME Abundant Proof That Birds Return Year After Year to 8cenes of Familiarity. ^ , • Bird lovers have believed ftoaeenturles that migratory birds return to the same home, year after year. Modern science has proved this belief to be right. Birds are caught in traps that do not hurt tbem, marked with tiny legbands of aluminum, each bearing a number, and released. Next year, the same birds are caught again in the same locality, often when occupying the same nest. Evidently, a bird's memory foif direction and location must be quite as marvelous as the older writers believed. The catbird winters as far south as Panama, yet catbirds marked in northern Ohio came back to the same neighborhood, year after year. Sometimes they move a few rods or furlongs, but the frequency with which they return to the very spot is astounding. , % Cats find their way back to the old home across a township, horses across a county or two, and dogs have been known to pass through several states in returning to a beloved master, bat birds find their way across a continent, aad sometimes over * sea ss well; .' -1 t It Was a Good One. It was our custom In English class at school to choose a certain person to read his theme aloud before the class, writes a correspondent. On this particular day the girl who eat across the table from me had let me see her paper before class started. It was a good one, so when the teacher asked whose theme we would like to hear, 1 promptly suggested that the girl across from rue read her* She arose, but Instead of reading the one I bad seen, she took another one from her book. It was a wonderful ode to the president Of the senior class, praising him to the skies and throwing oratorical bouquets at tylm. I wfs the*preslp dent. Telephone Girl Says Aged Rleh -Mate Made Her Work MHjk*-. Eat Moldy Meat ^ Poughkeepste, N. Y.--Eleanor A. Clark a seventeen-year-old telephone girl who answered an advertisement for an attractive housekeeper, and who married her wealthy employer, has found that being an "old man's darling" Isn't all that she expected It to be. Mrs. Clark, who is now suing for separation, says her beautiful dream Is "all over now," and that It never did gleam very brilliantly in the first place. In her complaint she says that her seventy-six-year-old husband, Edward H. Clark, never gave her the life of luxury and love that she expected would be hers, but since the first days of their marriage has been penurious and cruel. How she was compelled to look after Clark's big house in Metuchen, N. J., "and was not, permitted to receive any fiends or .go anywhere^ls as Penurious and Cruel. ;• one of her complaints. Thirty dollars' a month, or less than a dollar a day,;,, she says, is all Mr. Clark allowed her to run the big house. / The wife alleges that from the time of her marriage in 1916 her husband was jealous of her and locked her In her room the greater part of the time. Mrs. Clark said that her husband had Inserted advertisements in papers seeking positions and signing her name and that after the "ads" had been answered he would order her to take the positions. She declares that he feould not buy Ice, but insisted that she keep the ^iam on the cellar floor. The ham became moldy, she said, but he told her moldy ham was the best and made her scrape off the mold and cook the meat and eat It. Clark makes a general denial of the complaint and says that his wife beat, scratched and kicked him ea several occasions. Use Elderberry Wine to Extinguish Flames. '""'iMsle, Pa.--Forty barrels of fine elderberry wine proved to be the only effective fire extinguisher when a fire on the farm of Gilbert Beetem of this place destroyed a barn and outbuildings. When tenants and neighbors discovered the fire, water was promptly poured on the burning buildings, but they were destroyed. The flames started to ignite a handsome lodge on the farm and the water on the premises had run out. The thoughtful tenant remembered a large quantity of wine stored In the cellar, and within a few minutes the bucket brigade was transferring elderberry wine to the roof of the threatened building. A steady stream-J of wine was kept on the build* ing until 40 barrels were exhausted. This building, although badly scorched, was the only one on the farm saved. TO SAVE MOTHER FROM CRIME Thought the Clouds Hollow. Every child t»>day knows that the clouds are composed of tiny globules of water carried In the air and having some affinity to enable them te hold together. Formerly it wat thought that clouds were hollow like soap bubbles, for otherwise they would Operation Ordered by ^o«rt to Curs Criminal Tendencies, In Lieu of Prison. New York, N. Y.--Mrs. Fannie Lisbowlts, a convicted burglar and mother of eight children, was sent to a hospital in lieu of a year's prison sentence In the belief that further treatment with thyroid secretions from sheep might cure her of criminal tendencies. She has been under treatment for three months, by order of County Judge Bayes. A physician reported to the court that she had Improved greatly, both in health and mind, but he was unable to determine at present whether the Injections had destroyed her criminal tendencies. If further treatment proves Ineffective, she mast g® tS prison. Rats Kill Cate Guarding Chickens. Huntington, W. Va.--L. H. Bates, got five cats with rat killing reputations to protect his chicken yard. One night rats killed three cats, drove a fourth out of the yard, and ate a number of chickens. Now Bates Is looking for something more effective against the "man-eaters." Kick In Home "Hootch" Breaks Arm. Dubuque, Iowa.--When a keg of near beer he was tanplng exploded, William Tralnor received a broken arm by be toother f Zhrsa vs child loves the :truity:i taste of "California Fig Syrup" and It never falls to open the bowels. A teaspoonful today may prevent a sick child tomorrow. If constipated, bilious, feverish, fretful, hab cold, colic, or If stomach la soar, tongue coated, breath bad, remember a good cleansing of tbe little tiswels la often an that Is necessary. Ask your druggist for genuine "California Big Syrup" which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother! Yon must say "California" or yon may get as imitation fig syrup.--Advertisement. ^ Not He. "Look here, sir!" omlnonsly demanded old Festus Pester, who had been disturbed by queer noises In the nlgbt. "Do you play tl>e saxophone?" "No," removing his hat and exposing a very bald bead, replied the man who had recently moved In next door. "I lost my hair In the natural course of events.' -- Kansas City Star* People who denounce the stage should remember that tbe minstrel Is never as black 9s he Is painted. Mi«fc^When miT j Jyhy s^ss^s^o^a^y^^ aM, ha to drops of Dr. nm«l fl»h> Medical JMssorerr svsty tno ov thvee hoars. Up to retain his tMU The Diseoverr broaght hlm.aa* of this condition without further doctoring and ha has had no stomach trouble since. He la at the present time a strong, .hardy youngster, seven years old?* ---Mrs. Linda Bordstta, 1010 N. Rose St. Health Is your most valuable asset. It does not pay to neglect it. Go at once to your neighbor* Ihood drug store and get the "Golden Medical Discovery" In' tablets or liquid. Write Dr. I Pierce's laY&llds' Hotel in Buffalo* Jj^_Yg_torJtree medical ftdrice. m An Enthusiast. , 4- "^1 "You are wasting a lot of film. Why don't you Stop shooting when I hand out the word?" "1 get excited," explained the new ^3 cameraman. "I operated a machine gtm I during the late war."--Louisville Cour- fe ^ ler-JourpaL * ; Unfilled good intentions, like debts, become worthless with time: » •• /'v For Cleaning Tile, Bathtubs, Kitchen Sinks, and Marblef < Use SAPOLIO. Quickly removes the stains and makes everything look like new. % See that the name SAPOLIO is on every package. ENOCH MORGAN'S SONS CO. Solm Manufacturer* Hew York US. A. Use SAPOLIO Sh/nlng-up Dmym Arm Henm STOVE POLISH ttm Shtno fs Wander/kit § k&M BLOW THAT SHOCKED DADDY Did Gentleman Now Naturally Fears He Has Lost the Confldenee of His Neighbors. was having her first beau. S' foungster who drove a truck. And sften when be came to Susan's home at night, since he lived in the other part of town, he came In the truck, rhe family continually twitted her about it, saying such things ss "I suppose the neighbors will think we're having our coal hauled at night," or "our flour" or some other commodity. But one evening even father was horrified When one of the ten-year-old boys in the neighborhood said innorently: "My pa said that your pa would get. pinched some night If he didn't quit having so much boose hauled here after dark.'" Investigation disclosed the fact that the truck that stood at their door one evening each week was an old brewy truck.--Indianapolis News. : . Cats Sleep on Cows' Baetck In a stable In Hants county, N.'; S„ two cows and two cats are kept Going In the stable any winter night you will find a cat, colled up cosy as can be on each cow's back. The Good and Other^V '" tibwht--The good die youngj. Sanwln--The others get married and wish they had! ANYTHING TO KEEP THE HELP j? Evidently Farmer, These Days, Must Eiqaeet to Make Them Some Slight Conceeetona, "I see you are keeping your hired man all right now, Esra." "Yep, keeping him all right." "He seems satisfied, too. iteiPd you do it?" "Did... everything he asked me to. Let him work only eight boors and eat with the family. He got to complaintag of dull evenings, so every night I give him the use of a car of his own, and the money to spend, to go to the movies in town." "That ought to satisfy him." "It didn't, though. He complained of his room, and so I coaxed my sen to trade rooms with him. Then ha seemed more settled like." "I notice you've cut off your whiskers, Ezrs." "Yeah. Some sMNra of thSt hired Satan's notions.* ' ' """How's that?" "He complained they tickled him every time I kissed him good night," ' V I A Concentrated Linguist << "You say your wife is a great linguist? How many languages does she speak?" "Oh, It's alJ^ in^ ona language."--Life. t.' ri Tgnorance Is the Inspiration lif all argument. I y.i; i^ ipjjiiiiHi^iii irii^ v" K : You remember the story of the PUcher^^i;^^if : It made a good many trip* to the wall and it back in good order. **I can take care of myself," it said--"they !^>j||atft need to talk about risks to zna." But it went once too often. Alter that it was only part off I pitcher. And 1 ihsy didn't need to talk to it about risks--it knew. A lot of people won't believe coffee can harm until it does harm them. "Nonsenser they say, "it never disturbs me." When it does disturb them, then they know. ^ Often the disturbance which they then recog- Size is the result of irritations to nerves and digestion which have been going on for a long timet If you have to lie awake at night and count ^#e clock tides, after an evening cup of coffee, then ,. ~|jjou know that it's better to he safe than sorry. V 4 The risk of coffee's harm is gone when the Iheal-time drink is Postum. • v, Here's a delightful and satisfying table bev- "-•ibge, with charm for the taste and without harm lor nerves or digestion. You know you're on the T r light roau with Postum; there's never the portability that youll go once too often. Postom cootM in two forms: Inatant PMtum(in tins) •>ade instantly in tiw cup by the addition of boiling water. Postum Cereal (in packages of larger bulk, for those who prefer to make the drink while the meal ia being prepared) .-Spade by boiling tor 20 minutes. , . There's a. Reasoo" for Postum 1 Careal Company, lac^ Battle Craek. Mich. rv •< ,SW ^ Mad* by • aSafcS

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy