Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / Jan. 19, 1912, edition 1 / Page 6
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i j 'V n i 7 -i-l Mf: ,4 ' .1 . - . 1 i: ;; -Mm mm weak After recovering from a severe lpll of rlckoem come time ago, I tu 11 run down and suffering from poor blood. I would bare paint In my back and blpa and my kidneys bothered ma all the time. I atarted taking 8wamp Koot upon the recommendation of a friend and found It was Just wbat 1 needed. My blood became all right and after taking a few bottles, I waa surprised at the effect It had on my kidneys. They were entirety cured and I bare much to be thankful for 'bat your great remedy did for me. Tours very truly, W. O. BLACKMON, Phenix City, Ala. Sworn to and subscribed before me, this the 14th day or July, 108. V. J. BIB8, JueMce of the Peace. K K timer & Oft. , T. Prove Wbat Swamp-Root Will Do For Yoe Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also re ceive a booklet of valuable Informa tion, telling all about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores. m iWfiii MM- MOSm OTP, MEANS ECONOMY IN FOOD. . .uc hot Bra Eager to See. "1 have a poem here entitled 'Alone with Nature,' " Bald the sallow young man with the long hair and the frayed trousers. "It is a personal Impres sion." "Is It?" replied the editor of the Chicago Record-Herald, as he hastily glanced at the opening lines. "Have yon ever been alone with nuture?" "I have, and, oh, It is glorious glo rious!" "Here's a dime. Get on a trolley car and ride as far as you can. Oo back to nature and spend another hour or two alone with her. You say you plucked the hazel blossoms by the stream. If you are able to find any place where you can do that let me know. I want to watch you while 'ou do it." IN AGONY WITH ITCHING "About four years ago I broke out with sores on my arms like boils. Af ter two months they were all over my body, some coming, and some going away. In about six months the bolls quit, but my arms, neck and body broke out with an itching, burning rash. It would burn and itch, and come out in pimples like grains of wheat I was in a terrible condition; I could not sleep or rest. Parts of my flesh were raw, and I could scarcely bear my clothes on. I could not lie In bed in any position and rest In abont a year the sores extended down to my feet. Then I suffered agony witn tee burning, itching sores. could hardly walk and for a long time l could not put on socks. "All this time I was trying every thing I could hear of, and bad the skill af three doctors. They said it waa ecxema. I got no benefit from all this. I waa nearly worn out, and bad (Iven up in despair of ever being cured when I was advised by a friend to try Lutlcura Remedies. I purchased Cutl ;ura Soap, Ointment, and Resolvent, ind used exactly as directed. I used he Cuticura Remedies constantly for Tour months, and nothlrg else, and was penectiy cured. It Is now a year, and 4 have not had the least bit since. 1 im ready to praire the Cuticura Rem idies at any time. (Signed) E. U. Cate, Exile, Ky., Nov. 10, 1910. Although Cuticura; Soap and Oint ment are sold by druggists and dealers jverywhere, a sample of each, with 32- page book, will be mailed free on application to "Cuticura," Dept. L, Joston. By Martha MeCulloeh Williams. Economy, which Is now the cry In ill things, from postage to politics, las no more valiant helper than M. 3oyer's system of paper bag cooking. Roasts which have a knack of ihrlnklng horribly in the pan coma rat of paper bags almost the size which they came from the butcher, ind possessed of their full food value. They will have been cooked in vapors it their own essence the best Dart 3t them will not have run out, to dry 3a the pan bottom, and smell most ippetlztngly, but be In large measure tost to the palate. There will be rravy in the bag, to be sure gravy Ht for a king. In case of fish, the results are even better. Pan-cooking waste a fifth fourth, sometimes even a third of i fish. Vegetables also taste better, and are better, for bag cooking. Bat cooking preserves in them their es lentlal salts, which bollinc t.Wo. away. Here Is a way of using up cold din ner, meat that hearty children will relish, and even the man of the house not disdain. Cut the meat In slices. aeunef too thick nor too thla. and as broad as possible, butter them, sprin kle them well with salted flour, and very little pepper. Lay In a well greased bag, side by side, then place jpon each a tomato, peeled, hollowed 3ut, dusted lnilde with sugar, salt and pepper, then stuffed. Boiled rice is a good stuffing, so Is cooked maca roni or spaghetti cut small. Bread crumbs fried brown are likewise tasty. Season the stuffing well and mix through it all the snippets and trimmings of the meat. Use either butter, bacon, or cold boiled pork, well minced, to enrich the stuffing. Scatter between the tomatoes the scoopn. iiom thel; lu -. . in bag,' seal. It. and cook In oven about twelve minutes. Quick Potatoes. Take a large white potatoe for each person to be fed. Peel, slice thin, drop In cold water for five minutes, then drain, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and pack com pactly in a well-greased bag, adding a tableepoonful of stock or milk and water, for each two potatoes. Seal, and cook twenty minutes. Boiled po tatoes can be used, and take only half aa long. . t Baked Apples. Wash well, but do not peel, cut out specks and bruises, core, fill the bottom of the core-space with a lump of butter, over which pile sugar, and add a bit of cinnamon. A clove stuck In the side may take the place of the cinnamon. Seal In side a well greased bag, and bake eighteen to twenty minutes in a fairly hot oven. Serve with sugar and cream or a hard sauce. ELIMINATES MANY TROUBLES. William Shakespeare, It had not cooking In mind, set his witches chanting: KITCHEN may be. when he "Double double toll and trouble! Fire burn and caldron bubble." Nevertheless, the fact remains thai the burning Ore, the bubbling caldron are sources of double troublb to womenklnd. Therefore, they should rise up and call blessed M. Soyer's system of paper bag cooking, . hlch has come newly to their help saves the bubbllngs of the caldron, and thereby the troubllngs of the cook. This in many, many ways. Perhaps the most instantly apparent one Is the fact that there is no caldron to be washed or scoured when the flesh Is weariest. So, also, are the roasting pans and those for frying, likewise the broiler, Paper bags can do the worl. better and be thrown away when they have served tbelr turn. Beef or Veal Loaf. To each pound of raw minced lean meat, add an ounce of finely minced suet, half small minced onion, a dust of pepper, a pinch of salt mixed through a scant spoonful of flour, and a light sprinkle of powdered herbs. Mix the seasoning well through the meat, shape It into a flat, round cake, rub butter plentl fully on the outside, put Into greased paper bag, seal and bake In a hot oven, allowing flfteeD minutes to the pound. A few slices of tomato put In the bag helps to make tasty gravy. A spoonful of tomato catsur may be used Instead. Reconciliation to Gbd By Rev. James M Cray, D. D, Dean of Moody Bible Institute, Chicago PUTNAM .FADELESS DYES 5TI!S 'ii'.??''! ,nd f"CT' ! "V ether re. .One 10c Deck, colon 11 firr. TWrfjib) coM wererhrtterthin .nv other dm Yoana eye any g.rrnrnt without ripping apart. Write for tree book In How to ly, Bleach end Mil qJoraA MONROE DBUO COWMNT, Qelacy, Ilk Paper Bag Cooked Bridge Luncheon Dissatisfaction. "So you were given an Interest 1. your employer's business?" "Yes," replied the industrious youth; "but I made a mistake In ac cepting It. I had less worry as a reg ular employee than as a minority tfockholder." A Father's Protection. Father, It is as essential for you tt provide a safeguard r gainst that night fiend to your children, croup, as to their hunger. Taylor's Cherokee Rem edy of Sweet Gum and Mullein will cure cough, croup, colds. Whooping Cough, etc. At druggists, 25c, 50c. and $1.00 a bottle. Man and Meter Both Unique. A Kansas City man notified the gai company that his meter was running slow. Greater honesty hath no man than this.- rODBIVE OUT MALARIA AND BUILD UP THE SYSTEM PiT kiS gtarn OROVKH T-tSTKUiSS CllliX TONIC. You know wbat too ere takinir Tha formula Is plainly primed on erury bout lbowind it is simply Quinine end Iron in a tasteless form, and the most effectual form. J'ur crows By Nicholas 8oyer, Chef Broiled Chicken. Mushrooms. Asparagus. Dllves. Radishes. Celery. Pudding a la Mayence. Black Coffee. Crackers. Cheese. Broiled Chicken. Split the chicken lown the middle of the back, spread Bat, and put a skewer In each side to prevent it from curling. Beat up a very fresh egg. with a pinch of salt, lack pepper to taste, an ounce of nelted butter, a teaspoonful of Worcestershire sauce or aomethlng ilmilar, and a teaspoonful of made mustard.' Mix well. With a brush glaze the chicken with the mixture. Place in a greased bag with bread crumbs around and over It. Be care ful that the skewers do not tear the Dag. Seal up tight and cook thirty 5ve to forty minutes in a very hot jven. Mushrooms. Peal and wash the mushrooms, brush them lightly over with melted butter, dust with salt ind pepper, and put Into a buttered Dag with a lump of butter, a little water, and a spoonful of lemon juice )r port or sherry wine. Seal tight ind cook In a hot oven twelve to twenty minutes. Asparagus. Trim and scrape as tor boiling, wash very clean. Tie In randies and put into a buttered bag, with a little salt and half a gill of water. Seal and cook thlrty-flve to forty minutes In a hot oven. Pudding a la Mayence. Rub half a pint of breadcrumbs through a fine wire sieve, add to them a tumblerful of wine and water, half and half, the rind of a small lemon, washed, dried and grated, three heaped tablespoon- fuls of powdered sugar, and an ounce of butter. Mix well, pour into a but tered souffle dish, add the beaten yolks of two eggs, and the strained juice of the lemon. Beat the whites of the eggs to a very stiff froth, add powdered sugar to taste, and a pinch of salt. Color with a few drops of green spinach coloring, or pale pink with a little carmine or cochineal. pile on top, place in bag, put In a very moderate oven, and bake till the meringue is firmly set Looking Upward. (In 1999) "Marie, bring out the aeroambulator, and take baby up for an airing. Judge. Tor COLDS and GRIP Hicks' Cafusihi le the best remedv re. Neres the aching- and fereiishnees cures the Cold and restores normal conditions. It's liquid freote immediately. 10c., aftc., and 60c. At drug etoree. - Tbe fellow who Is out for the dust doesn't always clean up a fortune. The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. v Purely vegetable act surely and tently on the liver. . Cure RllirMlsnMHL Head.' , iche, Disxi- Bess, and Indigestion. They do their duty. UALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Gcrr-iir.s must bear Signature CATERS! ITTLE IVER FILLS. - J ' - -H YJ th.st PAPER BAG COOKED BREAKFAST DISHES. ? Eggs an Tomatoes. Butter a bag thickly, put into it half pint o. to mato catsup and butter the size of a walnut Cook lr hot oven ten min or Brooks' Club, London. utes. Cut a square from the center of the bag, break Into tt, on 3 at a time, four eggs. Cook foi three or four minutes. Dish up. Cut away an the top of tho bag and serve. Kippered Mackerel with Fine Herbs. Cut salt mackerel Into fil lets, lay them In a deep earthen dish, and cover with boiling water. Leave In water half a minute. Take out wipe dry, dust with coarse black pep per, and put on top of each fillet half a teaspoonful of minced parsley, and chives of onion, and a bit of butter tbe size of a small walnut Orease a bag well, put in the fillets, seal, and cook for twenty minutes in a hot oven. Serve hot, with brown bread Marechal of Lobster and Eggs. Take the white and ?law meat of a lobster, chop It small and set aside. Rub tbe brown meat smooth In a ba sin with a bit or butter and a good dust of white pepper. Add gradually halt a bottle of tomato catsup. Work all well together. Put info a bag four slices of bacon. Do not seal the bag. Cook the bacon four minutes, then take out and put in the lobster and tomato mixture, seal and cook for eight minutes. Cut open the bag on top, put in the white meat, and make hot for four or five minutes. Lower the gas very much for this last cook ingthe white meat must only get very hot as cooking toughens it. Serve In a very hot dish, garnished with tbe slices of bacon. Eggs on Strassburg Croutons. Cut the crust from four even-sized squares of stale bread, butter tbem thinly, dust lightly with pepper, and spread with a layer of fole gras. Cook for five minutes Inside a well-greased Dag, then cut open the bag and break an egg on each rquare of bread. Dust tbe eggs on top with pepper and a very little salt and cook for another four minutes. Serve immediately on a very not dish. Eggs a la Bechamel. Cut four hard-boiled eggs in halves lengthwise, put them Into - thickly greeted bag with a gill of cream, salt and nepper to taste, and a tiny dust of powdered mace. Cook five minutes In a mod erate oven, and serve hr on squares of lightly buttered toast. (Copyright, 1911. by bturgis ft Wal ton Company.) TICXT.-And you. that were eometlme alienated and enemlee In your mind by wtcaea woraet yet now bath he reconciled. In the body of His (leah through death, to present you holy and uublameable and unproveabJe In His sight: If ye continue In the faith grounded and Battled, and be not moved away from the nope or me goepei. which ye have beard. voiosuant 1: IJ-ZJ. Tbe apostle Paul Is here speaking of Jesus Christ aa the one In whom all the fullness of tbe Godhead dwells and by whom It pleased the father to re c o n c 1 1 e all things unto him self. By "all things," however, be does not mean all things unlver sally or absolute ly, for tbat would include not only the souls of tbe condemned, but the demons In hell and even satan himself. But he means all tbe things which It has pleased tbe rather from the beginning thus to reconcile. Tbe definite article In the Greek suggests this as tbe thought, which Is made clear by the other teachings of tbe Bible on the same subject Among tbose things which It pleased the rather to reconcile to him self are the believers on Jesus Christ and It Is of their reconciliation espe cially tbat Paul here speaks. l. First he shows our need of fey A Colorado woman found a diamond In a turkey. They cost enough to be stuffed with precious stones. . Got His Christmas Cigars Colonel Green Knew When He Waa Cornered and the Officer Did Not Have to Buy "Smokes." . Even tbe busiest or men slip on the tomlc mask now and then, says the New York correspondent of the Cin cinnati Times-Star. The other day a big, black auto hummed down Fifth avenue. Col. Edward H. R. Green, Hetty's son. practically filled the ton neau. Now and then he spoke to the chauffeur, and the latter let out an other link. At the Thirty-fourth street crossing the magnificent grenadier of traffic held him up. Colonel Green thrust hla head out "Hey, 8m," aaid he to the officer. "Lemme through. I'm in s hurry." "' ; ' - "Hoddadoo, colonel," said the police man, waving a white gloved hand. Then he walked over to stand by the front wheels. He addressed himself to the chauffeur. "Hear anything kbout Christmas cigars. Beau?" be Kot vet." said the chauffeur. "Gee." said the officer, "there's a turrlble congestion of traffic around here, huh?" Tor a block either way the wide avenue waa Jammed with hooting can. Hansom drivers also hooted from their lofty perches. Nifty young wom en light opened through tbe mud of tbe crossing. The Jolting Fifth ave nue stages moaned for a right of way. "This." said the officer. "Ig IUre a tough Job. Turrlble tough," He winked broadly at the chauffeur and laughed openly at Colonel Green. Tbat gentleman's wide face broke Into crinkles. "My hands are up. Bill," said he, grinning. "Light or dark?" "Dark, colonel," aaid Bill, with a gurgle of laughter. And then his hand fell and the pcnt-In procession swept on. - . ;- . reconciliation, by telling us that we were "sometime alienated and enemies In our mind by wicked works. Sometime" covers the whole period of our lives from physical birth to our new birth by the holy spirit. All that time the natural man Is alienated from God. And not only alienated but hostile to God, an enemy, as tbe text says. What Are Wicked Works? mis enmity need not show Itself necessarily In giving way to the lower and baser appetites of the bodv There are cultivated men and women who are able to control these anDe- tltes, but who are at tbe same time enemies to God In their mind 1. e. In their modes of thought and feeling. wnich an contrary to his revealed win. And this enmity must in tbe very nature of tbe case, show Itself In "wicked works." All works indeed. nowever moral In the eyes of men. are, wicked works In God's sight if wrought outside of Christ, because they are part of that system of world- liness and sin which Is inimical to mm. II. Second, he shows the source of our reconciliation, which Is God him. self. "Yet now hath he reconciled The very one from whom we were alienated and against whom we wen enemies Is the one who reconciles us. "He who might tne vantage best have iook Found out the remedy." This is grace, especially when we understand that It does not mean pri marily that we became reconciled to God, but that God became reconciled to us. This be did by taking that sin out of the way which was tbe barrier to bs reconciliation. III. This leads Paul to speak In tha third place of tbe means of our reconciliation which was the work nt Christ for us on the cross aa our sub stitute Saviour, "In the bodv of hi. flesh through death." Why sav "th body of bis flesh?" Why not say "his oouy , wunoui adding "flesh?" Be cause there was a heretical sect In that day which denied the materiality ui jurists ooay. iney believed In spiritual, but not a material, mediator snip. But Christ had a real body and real flesh and real blood which he offend In propitiation for our sin, he passed through real suffering and died a real death. Such Is the teaching of this verse.-. IV. And this brings us to the fourth point, which Is the result of our reconciliation, presented "holy and without blemish and uncharged In God s sight" This Is true Immediate ly or every believer the moment he accepts cnnsi oy ralth aa bis Saviour. " everyrjoay in this sln-curarl tin-wearied world only knew and be- iieveu mat: ir tney would only pause mo ruau or inings and listen to In Explorer Led en of Norway has learned to live on raw meat That la nothing. Some Chlcagoans have learn ed to subsist oa chile con earae and chop soey. . - . .' It for a single moment! Of course, it does not mean that this is experienced by the believer the instant he so believes, but that It be- mee true or mm in a Judicial sense "uu m uwi instant The Battle of Concern r.u.. At the battle of Concord bridge, at "6'uumB ui iue revolution, when John Buttrick gave tbe command to Are It was to British subjects he gave it but It waa obeyed by American citizens. In other words. In that In atapt their condition became changed though the experience or that chant was a thing of growth. So tbe Instant te Christ aa hla Saviour be stands before God frea fm- gnilt of atn. without blemi.t. ! without charge. And this U grace! ' "' point in tne lesson la the proof of our reconciliation, which Is that we "continue In tbe faith, rooted and grounded and not moved away from the hope of tbe gospel." p,ul speaking not to the raise teacher who went out of the church, but to the true believer who stayed la. Tbose who an true to the "faith delivered once for all to the saints" have the witness In themselves that they are reconciled to God. Honey Mad. Do not marry 1 young lady, whose mother holds her for sale to the high est bidder. She wishes to marry a fortune, not a husband. Rev. E. N. Aakey, Methodist, Sharon. Pa, ' " Why He Couldn't Sit Down. Harry, aged six. Is an orphan; but an Indulgent grandmother and kind maiden aunt have taken care of him. The first pair or knickerbockers wen secured recently, and It was a proud moment for the boy when his 'aunt put them on him on Sunday morning and be was permitted to go to church with bia grandmother. Naturally maiden aunts know very little about tne arrangement of knickerbockers, and then was a suspicioua fullness In front and an equally mystifying tight ness In the back to be observed, as tne little chap trudged happily along. In church Harry sat down, but did not appear comfortable and stood up. "Harry, sit down," whispered his grandmother. He obediently climbed back on the seat, but soon slipped off again. "Harry, you must sit down. "Grandma, I can't. My pants Is chok lng me." She looked more closely than her dim sight had before permit- ted, and discovered the new little knickerbockers wen on hind side be fore. Harry stood up during tbe re mainder of the service. When the Fruit Grows. Michael Casey, a politician in San Francisco, who has been In office and on the city payroll for many years, was addressing meeting of his fellow-citizens. It'was a lrtbor meeting. "You men must know," spouted Casey, "that you are the great body politic In this city. You are the roots and trunks of our great municipal tree, while we who represent you In office, are merely the branches on that magnificent tree." 'True for you, Mike," piped a man In the back of tbe hall, "but did ye ever notice all the fruit grows on the branches? 'Saturday Evening Post. IN LESS STRENUOUS TIMES Explanation of the Differences Be tween Domestlo Standards Now and Those of Long Ago. In tbe Woman's Home Companion there Is an Interesting presentation of the difference that exists between the domestlo standard of young married women of today and those of, tbe past generation. How did the women of tbe middle class or a generation or two ago manage when they could not keep help? Following la the answer quoted from a Companion editorial: "They lived according to their means; they did not set up Impossible standards, and they, knew much less sbout tbe science of bringing up chil dren. Tbey had no special style to keep up; gave the children a weekly bath; kept tbe table aet between meals; did not serve tbelr meals In courses, but put all the food on the table at once; confined their social affairs to evening calls and parties. and church suppers, at which they wore tbe same black silk dress for at least two seasons; In short, every woman did only wbat she could, and her friends made It easier for ber by doing likewise." No Jury. "Didn't you give that man a Jury trial?" "Look here," said Broncho Bob, then aln-'t a big lot o' men In thia settlement. We couldn't possibly git 12 of 'em together without startln' a fatal argument about aometbin' tbat had nothln' whatever to do with the case." Tbe social whirl has made many a girl giddy. RECOGNIZED THE ACTION. E35 JPP Little Nell-Vl didn't know that they played "I 8py' In church, mamma. Mamma WLat do you mean, any child? Little Nell Why, the preacher aaid "Left Play." and. everybody held their hands up to their faces. 8elf-Evldent Louis N. Parker, the playwright' has a ready wit, as was demonstrated at a supper party the otber night Parker's neighbor, a tamoua actress, nodded toward a pretty girl at the next table and said: "Don't you think she's awfully young to wear such a decollete gown?" "Well," said Hr. Parker, "she certainly Is a stripling." You will notice that the man whe Js always talking about bow bard he bad to work when be was young Is usually behind with bis work now. An Oppressive Trust. Before the Coffee Roasters' Association, in tea. ton at Chicago on Thursday, Thomas J. Webb, : of Chicago, charged that there is in existence a coffee combine which is "the most monstrous im poeition in the history of human commerce." There it very alight exaggeration about this statement It cornea very close to being literally true. There ia a coffee combine in Brazil, from which country cornea the bulk of the coffee used in the United States, which is backed by the gov ernment of Brazil and financed by it, which com-, pels American consumers, as Mr. Webb aaid, "to pay famine prices for coffee when no famine exists." The worst thing about this is that the eonsum era of the United States have been compelled to put up the money through which this combine, to further cinch them, has been made effective. There wen formerly revenue duties imposed upon all coffee entering the United States. Those taxes wen denounced as an imposition upon the people; as taxing the poor man's breakfast table, and the like. The taxes were removed. Immediately thereafter Brazil imposed an export duty upon, coffee up to the full amount of the former customs taxes in this country. The revenue which for merly went into the treasury of the United States was diverted to the treasury of Brazil The poor man's breakfast coffee continued to cost him the same old price. .i Bat this waa only the commencement The "valorization" plan was evolved in Brazil. Through this plan the government using the rev enues derived from the export duties for the pur poses, takes all of the surplus crop in a season of large yields and holds it off the market thus keeping the supply down to the demands of the market and permitting the planters to receive a much higher price than they would otherwise have done. The United States consumes more Brazilian cof fee than does the rest of the world. We are the best customers of Brazil, and Brazil buys little from us. Mow Brazil is promoting, financing and maintaining a trust designed, and working effect ively for the purpose, to compel American con aumers to pay an exorbitant price for the coffee they use. What is the remedy? SmUU Pott-I-iUigeirt. 19, 1911. 1 M aastw J r, isties of f in sale two years of over two hundred million pounds. Authenticated reports from the Postum factories in this city show a " a Standard statistics of the coffee trade enow a tailing off in sales durinx tbe last tremendous increase in the sale of Post am in a iik-e penoa of time. While the sales of Postum invariably ahow marked increase year over year, the extraordinary demand for that well known breakfast beverage during 1911 is very likely due to a publio awakening to tbe oppression of the coffee trust Such an awakening naturally disposes the multitude who suffer from the ill effects of coffee drinking to, be more re ceptive to knowledge of harm which so often comes as a result of the use of the drug-beverage, coffee.-. BatOt Crttk Evening NMHJkc. 19,1311. IP' T is a pure food-drinK made of the field grains, with a pleasing flavour not unlihe high grade Java. A Big' Package About lbs. Costs 25 cts. At Grocers 'M Economy to one's purse is not the main reason for using Postum It is absolutely free from any harmful substance such as "caffeine" (the drug in coffee), to which so much of the nervousness, biliousness and indiges tion of today are due. , Thousands of former coffee drinKers now use Postum because they Know from experience the harm that coffee ctrinhing causes. Boil it according to directions (that's easy) and it will become clear to yoii.why-- ' "There's a. Reason" Postum Cereal Company, limited. Battle CreeK, Michigan.
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 19, 1912, edition 1
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