A Fedhig of SopBity HMDr * I fiMt. fad MDI wlm yn ISal-ths imdiuis* you are about to take ia atwhtriy pan and contain* m harmful or habit producing drags. 6ncb * me SIcine ia Dr. Kilmer'a Swamp- Xoot. kidney, liver and bladder remedy. The same standard of purity, strength and excellence ia maintained ia kittle of Sfeatfip-Root. Jt ia scientifically compound*! fax» vegetable herbs. |t ia not a stimulant and is *»^--» iik tsaspoonful doses. It is not recommended for everything. * It ia nature's great helper in relieving aad overcoming kidney, liver and bladdsr troubles. A sworn statement of purity b with •wry bottle of Dr. Kilmer'a Swamp- Root. If you need a medicine, you should have the best. On sale at all drug stores fa bottles of two sues, medium and large. However, if you wish first to try this Eit preparation send ten cents to Dr. mer A. Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sampfo bottle. When writing bo son aad •ntiin this paper.--Adv. Not as Yet • •'Oh, what fun It Is to ridfctirai ooe- Imm open shay." ' nobody has written a carol «|out the. one-long automobile."-- Louisville Courier-Journal. '• • mwm TRASSPORT COVINGTON SINKBHT *N 3* i ..* y*. » -» & .. jy--- Sumner Shaw Tells of Hit Dcft&t kv ijf Insomnia. " Catarrhal Detfaesi Cannot Bt Gored by local appiloations m they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There la only one way to cure Catarrha: Deafness, Ud that is by a constitutional remedy. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE acts . th* B'ioorI on the Mucous Surfaces the System. Catarrhal Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition' of the mucous lininr of the Eustachian Tube. When thia tube Is Inflamed you have a rumbling- sound or Imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafness Is the result. Unless the inflammation can be reduced and this tube restored to lta normal condition, hearing may be destroyed forever. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which Is an inflamed condition of the Mucous Surfaces. ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any ease of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot to cured by HALL'S CATARRH Bbdicins. All Druggists 75c. Circulars free . W. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ohio. f Some Recommendation. "Is he honest?" "To the minatest item of hi* taeome MX statement." -Torpedoed by a Hun submarine July 2, while she was^boat 100 luii.^ .<ir Bum hound for the United States. the transport Covington immediately began to sink. This onusual pbotograph, taken the next day, showa the Covington listing heavily, a short time before the end came. HORATIUS HAD m. Tony Held Mountain Pass When Austrian Hordes Ati- u tacked lt.| .y' BODIES IN HEAPS ABOUT HIM Ml Alone Working Sputtering Machine Gun Until Italian Army Arrived--Another Chicago Italian Wina Medal for Valof. York. -- Out on Sixty-third Mftet, Chlcafo.'Tony Bruno used to wrap hot towels about men's faces and soliloquize about the benefits of a hair singe. That was four years ago, writes C. V. Julian in the Chicago Tribune. When Austrian hordes were beaticg against a certain mountain pass in the Treutlno on the holding of which depended the fate of an Italian battalioa, there stood, all alone in the pass, working a sputtering Italian machine gun, Tony Bruno, barber on Sixty- third street, Chicago. Tony wondered whether the Italian army was ever coming up to help,him, and If it didn't--well, Tony wonitered who was going to buy macaroni and cheese for the four little Brnqoe at 528 West Twenty-eighth street. Hia Mind Relieved;"-~ Four hours later when Austrian bodies lay in heaps about Tony his mind was relieved. The Italian army arrived. Aad now he's on his way home. "Why, you're a regular Horatius," said some one on the pier, who had learned the stdfjp of TOtty * tiM the mountain pass. , *. - TWELVE-FINGERED CROOK Garfield _ Tea is Nature's laxative and Mpod purifier; it overcomes constipation SBd its many attendant ailments.--Adv. Active Enough. , MI bear that he is full of business activity these days." . • "Yea; dodging creditors, mostly;* Still Net Knowing. ?'iHe--Answer me in one word. Will ffu tell me if you rejected my rival t 8he--No. f *w donMomaiftmnm; Dksfondbmct coins Jot SlCCiBBOOIBsHlAlT '4 / ^rras Wbaxkess coiacs Strength^ hj -• ITns* tAh Ite J* spring w•• I Vh» AeBnk yTW on«ul^'Tr>e ~^ aH Mi"--fagged out--blood thin, If Won will turn to Nature's remedy, 5 tonic made from wild roots and •barks, which has stood fifty years Us the best spring tonic--you will find strength regained. No need to tell you it's Dr. Pierce's Golden >ledical Discovery, put up in tablet Or liquid form, and sold by every 4ruggist in the land. After a hard winter--shut up indoors, your blood needs a temperance tonic, a tissueiftuilder and blood-maker such as thia #Medicai Discovery" of Dr.Pierce's, fj Carhou., Iowa--"At one time I took <Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Jor a raw, sore feeling in my lungs fol- 'lowing the measles; also for torpid liver «j|nd poor appetite. The medicine helped aie wonderfully. My nerves became : auiet and I could sleep well at night. 4; "My mother took this remedy twenty ;4|ear6 ago and she was greatly benefited.- »-Mas. G. S. lvniGHT, 811 N. Crawford Street . , , ---* >*•.--, • QRAPI VINES $2.00 CURRANT BUSHES Fniit Twii H«4c* Pl--t», Shroba, Roan wior qualtr. popular Dricaa; OraMS ac« r«d. K* •ndUo^Maw*™. mMrarrn. WotSm, tte bt* lr. mirl »--inn and lau variati«; large Qharry BOHEMIAN HORSE RADISH 1001 Cultivate for Ian* profits Mi with (all imommtion, S3.00 UND OLEOMAKCAMNB : aad otMr ptodncU babMt «uSy swda for hoim use in your own homa. Avoid paring larga profits for prod, to quickly pr^dlicad at homa. lotdootf. VtluiUt iflioOMtttoiw directions^ 75a; •rook Sid* Fana p*,, *--f A, LIBERTY BONDS rS for $50 3d Liberty Bond with coupons; $47.25 for 4th bond .With 4 coupons, Send bonds by 'Registered mail. H. M. HOWE, ^ J>22 S. Western Ave., Ckicam. III. FREE!!! OIL TIMES fllvM reliable, up-to-the-minute newi of the naw famous Burkburnatt A Rancer 11 Fields in North Central Texaa, where all loveatora are now retting % ot all iflts running into over hundred miUlona ually. Send name and addreaa to OIL TIMES It CONWAY BUILDING CHICAGO, U* f '/ AND OlNTMtNr \ 4 r QUICKLY RtMOVt f-.'."'1! PimfleSu.Dandruff 'ri-i> \ mtom roo ^ tor it now. _ Flgir^tg cent*. Mr*tioStor ls_ • AiAOTO When Uenxio UiutUano was arraigned at polk* headquarters la New York for fiteaHng a v.-rist watcfe, he was found guilty and sent to have fcia linger print* made. Then it wa« discovered that tow deftness of flngera was due to the fact that lie had five perfectly formed Augers oh each ha ad, and a thumb, making six lingers on each hand. Farther investigation «bew<ed that be also hntl sir tees ea each foot. It i« the first time in the police department records that such a case has presented itself. Gem do proudly displays Ms fingers which unfortunate!}- for iiim, proved fcia uudo> t o g . / - "Aw, naw," said Tony. "I'm just a barber." Ahout the time that"there is a wondrous home-coming at the Bruno home, domestic cheer will also reign at 1028 West Polk street, where little Ulanda Heali, aged seven, will see her daddy for the first time in four years. Corporal Mike Reall came back wearing the Italian silver military medal for valor, the Italian war crow and twa wound stripes. Wine War Croea. Like Sergeant Bruno, Corporal Reali left his wife and family in Chicago and hastened to repel the Austrlans who threatened Italy In 1915. He won the war cross a year later, when, after having his right leg broken by shrapnel, he walked ten miles to deliver a message with which he had been charged. Corporal Reall captured an Austrian machine gun single-handed, after ninny of the men in his platoon had been killed, by leaping into the pit and bombing the crew with some of their own hand grenades, which ht telaed from a pile near by. Clergy Murdered - By .the Bolsheviki London.--Murders of clergymen constitute the latest feature of bolshevik terror in Russia, says Prof. Peter Strove, a distinguished Russian economist, who has escaped from Russia and arrived in England after hiding from "te bolsheviki for months In Moscow and after a long Journey on foot to reach safety In Finland. He was compelled to disguise himself to escape death at the hands of the adherents of Lenlne and Trotxky. Professor Struve was representative from Petrog.-ad In the second duma and a member of the assembly convoked by Alexander F. Kerensky. Ten Bishop* Shot. "Altogether ten bishops had been ebot and many priests murdered and the dean of Kazan cathedral and his twe eons were drowned in the Neva by the rfed soldiers," said Professor Straw. "Near Kotlas, all tke monks te one monastery were shot to death. Professor Kartashelf, minister of religion in Keren sky's government, who has escaped into Finland, says that the present persecution of the church fn Petrograd is only comparable with the persecution of the early Christians. "to Moscow all the shootings talce place at night, bat te Petrograd the victims of the bolsheviki are shot in the afternoon in the courtyard of the headquarters of the executive commission and In order to drown the noise, it is usual to start up the engines of the motorcars vd^c& are wailing in the vicinity. " v ' *. ..V". • ' -,^r "At the beginning of the bolshevik movement I publicly expressed the opinion that not even a German would hold converse* with a bolshevik. As a Russian constitutionalist It is completely inexplicable to ine how any allied government can contemplate dl®. cussion of any sort, in any circumstances or at any place, with aoywM who calls himself a botehevik. 4 Complete Tyranny. Those who imagine that there can be any pact between the forces of civilization and bolshevism have no conception of the real state of affairs In Russia. The most moderate form of restoration of order and liberty In Russia would make'the existence «f bolshevism Impossible. "Bolshevism 4s complete tyranny, which Is absolutely Incompatible with any form of ordered liberty and constitutional government. It te entirely false to say that bolshevism Is a popular form of government. If Trotzky would walk a verst through Moscow he would be killed. Xo czar lived ia grewter terror of his subjects than the •chiefs of the bolshevik „t>verament. There was more law and Justice under serfdom than under the bc?shevil^,J j Strange CoincidefM, ^ * Fort Wayne, Ind.--Born 011 the same date, married on the same date, died on the same date and burled on the same date In the same cemetery was the strange coincidence of two Fort Wavne women, wholly uiuuamj^Qled and unrelated.: I 11 - - - IN THE SAMEOLD HUN Vichy. France.--The following astonishing communication was received here by Mr. Lee Shippey. Y. M. C. A., from American prisoners who have just arrived there from the Vllllngen camp. They and other prisoners from the camp at Rastatt have little faith in the change of tone of the Germans and treat the communication as simply another insincere and treacherous piece of propaganda. It consists of a message of the commander of the prisoners' camp of Vlllingen, Baden, to the American officers oh their departure to France, on Tuesday, November 26, and is as follows: "Sooner than you expected, your day of liberation has arrived. In a short time- you will he back again with your own dear people in America. Tell them that the German people has no more grievance against them. Germany does not consider itself as conquered but as conquering, as you can see by the troops coming back from the front, because it has now its own liberty, , •'«.>?... "Now it Is your Wn *» gtoe (lie German people a just peace in the peace terms which will give them liberty, to live Justly and peacefully with the world at large. "We hope that you will reach yevr home safely and And everyone In good health. "I again request you not to part from Germany with hatred against as and to influence your people to look upon Germany as It is now. not as it has been judged, perhaps Justly, up to the present time. a? "The new Germany has the desire to live In perfect peace with its recent 30 enemies, but in the same manner dalms an honorable peace which will give her the possibility to live as promised by President Wilson. "Again hagy returns home." OIL ENRICHES WOUNDED YANK The stars that may be seen by th^ naked eye In both hemispheres number about 6,000. Curtis Boyle Returns From Fraaee to Find Gushing Well en His Farm. Junction City, Kan.--Unfitted by wounds to follow his pre-war pursuit of farming. Curtis Boyle, a soldier in two armies, returned front France to find that during his absence an oil well has been drilled on his farm near Peabody, Kan., yielding 600 barrels a day. Boyle purchased the land *e** eral years ago f<». $2 nnN^re. The soldier oil-magnate\who is now in the Fort Riley Reconstruction hospltnl. sustained 28 bullet ahd shrapnel wounds during his military service, In addition to being gassed and burned by liquid lire. He enlisted in the Third Canadian Infantry late in 1914 and was transferred to the American forces last year, serving with the Thirty-fifth and Seventy-seventh divisions. Boyle has silver plates In his arm, leg and collarbone and Is minus his ribs and lung on the right side. Hie legitimate quota of wound stripes runs from wrist to shoulder. EAT FISH WHILE ON WING Eyewitness Claims That One Rapatdouft Seagull Swaiiwwed--Fifteen--• in an Ho|r. I Portland, Oregon--Seagulls never Tlslt the Cowlits and Lewis rivers except when the smelt are running. Local fishermen know when the fish are at hand by seeing the big wh^ birds in the air, wheeling and divinJFwhen the sharp eye of a gull sees a smelt he plunges for it, submerges his bill and head and brings it up squirm-; lng. The bird swallows his prey In full flight, seldom or never perching to dispose of It. An eyewitness at Kelso, on the Cowr! Iltz, selected a gull which he could Identify and watched it for an hour to count the smelt it caught a,nd swallowed. The number was surprisingly large--fifteen. %%%%%^%%%%%%«%«%| # r War Losses of France \ i Put at $24iXK)^QCL00a ; $ Paris.--The budget committee of the chamber of deputies has drawn up a report fixing the damages caused/by the war in France, the total reaching $24.- 000.000,000. Of this amount $20,000,000,000 Is entailed by direct damages and, $4,000,000,000 by Indirect damage through loss of income or the Impossibility of carrying on work. movement for the adoption of the "towny" style, which, if less picturesque, makes for the preservation --ef-woraaa's -cfetef glory. This fact, coupled with the total disappearance from the market of Chinese hair, from which the cheaper grades of "switches" and "tails" used to be made, renders false hair extremely expensive in France. "There are no more so-called hair fairs held in France nowadays," says a prominent hair specialist, "and natural blonde plaits are worth at least $20 an ounce. Clowns Form Union. New York.--A "league of Joeys," or clowns' union, has been formed by white-faced performers at the Hippodrome. GIRLS DROP OLD HEADGEAR French Peasants Discard Native Style 4tr City Fashions to &•**• ' ' Thin Hair. ^ Paris.--Peasant giris of France are more than ever abandoning the closefitting native headgear, to wear which they had to have their tresses cut. In raral France there is a widespread In a Safe Places Shoals, Ind.--John Bates did not want to lose a slip of paper on which was written the combination to his safe, so he locked It in the vault. Ex- P£rts haven't, succeeded In it ' ' • ' 1 Polleeman Is Shocked. ' New . York.--"Beer shocked, probably," was the comment of Magistrate Corrigan when informed that a policeman was shocked to find liquor belnf sold te women in a tearoom here. Fo«MMy TNffe Are Others Wh» W«pld Jfi*p More Peacefully if The* Squared Up With Consolenca, as He Did. <> The schoolmaster, who with others was whiling away fin hopr in Squire Marr's office, complained that he had not been sleeping well lately. He dignified his trouble by calling ;it insomnia. As might have been expected, the squire had a specific. "The thing to do," he said, "is to make your mind as near a blank as possible. When I find that my mind Is disposed to work overtime. I resort to the old nursery Jingle: 'The House That Jack Built.' I repeat It rather slowly from beginning to end, and go over It again and again. To me the rhythm Is very soothing, ind the pict tures that the words call up are conj stantly changing. Just as in dreamsj Presently I begin to get a little tan gled up, so' that perhaps It will be the priest all shaven and shorn th^l milks the cow with the crumpled horn. It Is not long aft.-r that before I drop Into real slumber that lasts until I am awakened, may be, by the cock that crows In the morn." "Did you ever try reckoning Interest as a means of Inducing sleep?" asked Sumner Shaw, the carriage maker. "At a rule, I'm not much subject to Insomnia," he went on. "But I got an Inkling of what It Is like when I was staying overnight at my nephew's in the city, four years ago, or so. They make long evenings, and It must have been close on to ten before I got off to bed. " Hemember that you don't have to get up at some unseemly hour, Uncle Summer,' says Susie. 'We dbn't have breakfast until eight.' "Well, I dropped right off to sleep, same as usual; but when I woke up and turned on the electric light at the head of the bed, I found It was only three o'clock. " 'Now, then,' says I to myself, Til have to get another nap.' "tyit that was easier said than done. The harder I tried the wider awake I was. I guess it was Insomnia, fast enough. Finally I got to thinking over my past life. Well, probably I'd done worse things in my life, but what I seemed to fasten on was a little business transaction with the Widow Wlg- I sold her a sleigh at my own ce; and the very next day I sold one Just like it to Cap'n Gray, and he beat me down five dollars, and I made something at that. In the circumstances I felt as If it would be no more than fair to go to Mrs. Wiggin and make her the 'same discount. But you are apt to let such things go, and pretty soon she took sick and died. She had no Immediate family, and the property went to distant connections out of the state. So I kind of let the thing slide, as being of no great consequence, anyway. "But It loomed up big there In the dark, and at last I had to promise myself that If I lived to get home I'd get clear of that five dollars somehow. At that time a Belgian relief fund was being raised, and I concluded that It would please-her as much as anything, if she could know It, So put down a subscription in memory of Mrs. Maria Wlggln. "Having settled that.'I felt easier, hut not real sleepy, as It still seemed a long ways ahead to breakfast time. Then it occured to me that about eighteen years' Interest ought to go with that five dollars, and I fell to considering how much that would be. I am pretty good at figuring In my head, and I could have worked out the simple interest easily; but compound Interest is another matter. However, I began casting it up, and I got as far as the fifth year. Then the next thing I knew Susie was singing out: •Breakfast, Uncle Sumner!' "So you see, reckoning Interest got the better of insomnia that time. Mebbe, though, purging my conscience had something to do with It. You are welcome to both of these remedies, Mr. Jenkins," he added with a frtendly wink, "in case the squire's (Joesyp't work."--Youth's Companion. .. "payer Tablets of For Paul Neuraigi* Earache Toothache Colds Grippe Rheumatism Lame Back Neuritis Bayer Cross" oulablets. DOSE! Adults can take one or two genuine ^Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" with water. If necessary, repeat dose three times jft day, after meals. "Proved Safe By Mill ftuy ohly the original "Bayer 20 cent package--also larger Bayer packages. JAsfc for and Insist Upon Only Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspiring Owned by Americans Entirely, . inhfa U aaA of Bayer lhaaftttaw ot Md--c«Me>cldwte» »tfigutra«K i The Card Clifo. "Are you going to the cardjpluh tills afternoon?" V ( "No, it's my turn to stay «od be talked about." . % * r*yboIt««tvr Qulrkly HrllrTF* ' and heals burning, itching and torturing •kin diseases. It instantly stops the paln: Of burns. Heals without scars. 25c and 50c. Ask your druggist, or send 25c to The WU Col6 Co., Rockford, ill., for a' pkg.AdV, A man may be ignorant of the'fnw, but the ignorance of his lawyer Is »!•« ways inexcusable. Paradoxical: "What's ail that noise in tke tains?" . . ' ' : -Hush! It's a still." Dr. Ptawt Pleasant Pellets Met aad bllloaa beadachem. Ma aad Indlcastloa. "Ctoaa A lady advises girls never to many a man who talks (bud--that advice Ml certainly sound. And many a bird fell asleep on Ids laurels. Aockl IMesiem is as h Western Canada Grain Growing b a profit 1 Sheep and Hogs brings certain succcm. It's ea*y to prosper WM>) Can raieeZO to 45 bu. of wheat to the acre and Land at $15 to $30 Per Aoee --Qood Grazing Land at Much Lata Ralltwwaajrr efoadd Land Companieeoffle> nnn--al In Jin aeaewH tm I eeefcera to settle t > f tdfmw WMMNMJ 1 In Weetevn Canada and enjoy her prosperity. for the purchase of stock or other farming requirementa can be had at The Governments of the Dominion and Prorincea of Manitoba*, wi»g» antj Alhrtm Mttend every now wwtnt tothi far--r IM You can obtain excellent land at krw prices on for your (rain, cattle, sheep aadI hoaa-iow ttsee<oooeon improvements), good markets and snipping ficilihn free schools, churches, splendid climate and sure crops. For flliatxated lltarataN. at }ua» tcr mlf In Manitoba, ' Bwkatetwwu u>d Albirts. ndnew) railroad rataa, «U.. apply t» nvaluliiiiliiil at laiaivatiae. Ottawa,Csaada. «r Ci. Bteathtoa. ReeM 4U. lit W. Adaaa street. CUsasa.BLt M. V. Madaaas, »7« Jsffersoa A«a* Detroit, Mick. Canadian Government Agents THEMES FOR THE NOVELIST HAD AIMED A LI1 Good Material Might Be Foynd in the Personal "Ads" Inserted In 'London Times. For the unique In advertising' tltt columns of the London Times are almost unrivaled. What pictures might be conjured up by the following ad: "It is hoped that the Irate colonel who, metaphorically speaking, sat on 13 unoffending subaltern In a West en£ tube train a day or two ago, has now discovered his mistake and makes peace with the third party." And what possibilities for » prestnt- dny Dickens are contained In this: "Bank of England note received. We thank unknown friend, whose gift relieves much anxiety." In lighter vein, but of serious pur- [ose is the following: "Notice--If the pet goat left with roe October last by Mrs. H. L. is not claimed within seven dnys, it will be sold to defray expenses." And here Is something that E. Phillips Oppenheim ought to look into: "Will the officer whose champagne giass was overturned at Cafe Royal Wednesday evening, January 22, communicate at Savoy hotel wlt|i gentleman whose dtrd be has?" V •. A Rare Bird. The white-headed stork, one of tbe most Interesting and valuable possessions of the London Zoological society, is dead. It was a native of the Upper or White Nile, and sd far as Is known the only livjpg specimen of this remarkable bird In Europe. A» long ago as 1860 the then British vice consul at Khartoum--Mr. Petherlck, himself an indefatigable naturalist-- brought two specimens to London, and these were the first ever Sseen alive in Britain. After an Interval of many years the present sirdar--Sir Reginald Wlngate--presented to the society the specimen which has just died, and which was a familiar object in the vicinity of his palace at Khartoum. Visitors to the garden in Regent's park will recall the rather melancholylooking bird in the aviary adjoining the southern entrance. For long periods It remained almost motionless, save ^or the twlnkie of mn exlrs roo^ bile eye. Not tho Right Tun* A certain man was angry and began to swear in the presence of his wife. The latter, thinking she might shame him into quitting, deelded to Imitate him and swore fervidly, using the same oaths that hs did. He looked at her in amazement for a few minutes and then remarked. "Well, you have the same words bat you haven't got the right tune."-? Exchange. Glasses for Appearance Sake. "Hiss Bessie, if you are going t* town today. I wish you would buy sister, who lives In the north, a pair of glasses." "Why, Annie," replied the young lady addressed, "I contd not get your sister s pair of glasses. She must bnve hei slgbt tested so that the glasses may be suitable." "Oh," said Annie reassuringly, "she wrote me that what fits wjr nose fits her nose 1" "Don't cry over spilt milk P* h» good tfftvice, but "Don't spill tbe milk in the first placet" Is better. Don't start anything you. fan't finish, and don't quit anything yon can't leave alone. Gunner's Error Probably the (My Thing That Saved Flock of Blacfe. blrds From Annihilation. A party of gentlemen *t wore telling stories one night of famous shots and how quails, partridges, ducks and birds bad been killed at a single discharge. After listening to what seemed a willful exaggeration by different narrators, a stranger who was PNifret. i volunteered his experience of "Ms only use of the fatal double-battOoi gun as follows: ^ "I went into the field one day to try gunning. The only game discovered was an Immense flock of blackbirds. I should say there were 10.000 (ft the flock. Slowly I crawled up to them, and when not more than four rods away the birds arose in a solid mass. I fired both barrels, and bow away 49 you think I killed?" Different guesses were made by tho l-srty, ranging from 20 to 100. "Not one," said the stranger, iMt I went out with my brother to look for the results, and picked up fbv bushels of legs. I had shot a little » der." ' Where there's a will there's m argument. Sometimes getting worth the alimony., > married Hit The best and surest way to crets is to keep out of their way.- No Table DrinK Has Ever Taken The Place Of THe Original P0STUM CEREAL BoO just Iik» coffee--15 minntee altar boiling begins. Its de&ckxis flavor, rich seal brown color and fine aroma make it ^•ucb a satisfying cup that Postum is tbe fri--1 drink with meals for both children • and grown people. •; • ^y>5 Used in place of cpiwlies & ra^l' health drink. Contains no drugs, no caffem as does coffee; doesa't make JTOU alecpless or fcretfuL "There's a Reason At Giocers^two sizes 15c & 25c. a^vwvvwwvwww^^ """ -*1 J.--? mm