The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, June 10, 1913, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    1
I
THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE
LRA L. BARE, Publlahor.
TERMS, $1.25 IN ADVANCE.
NORTH PLATTE,
. NEBRASKA
INCREASING THE CROPS.
Vast as are our American crops, (ho
Immense bulk gathorcd from their ex
tension can bo almost indefinitely en
larged by careful selection of tho
seeds. Despite tho fact that figures
estimating the annual yield cannot bo
properly realized, wo aro but Just be
ginning to understand tho Intensive
and residual forco stored up in the
material bandied. In former times,
boyond common prudenco and a gen
eral survey, llttlo attention was paid
to the condition of tbo seed. Rough-and-ready
methods were sufficient
Today, with nicest exactitude, this
material is being examined, car by
car, and tho fittest only selected.
Cross-fertilization and seed selection
hnvo becomo factors of great moment
in tbo modern agriculturist's vocation,
and applied science Is working won
ders with cereals and other food crops,
adding moro bushels to tho acre, more
load on the harvest cart and millions
of dollars to tho market. Wheat, for
Instance, can be cultivated to meet
local conditions of soil and climate,
and it has been estimated that follow
ing out this "selective" hint, our an
nual yield might bo twlco tho amount
now quoted. A serlos of tests made
by tho United States department of
agriculture resulted In tho statement
that rejecting tho gralnB of low vi
tality when sorting out seed means
b guln of 14 per cent, on tho crop. On
tho 'basis of last year's total grain
production this means 437,000,000
more bushels, or moro than $200,000,
000 valuation on tho farms.
All tho outdoor sports so dear to
Americans nro now In full swing. Wet
lays are giving placo to sunshlno ones,
Increasing tho enjoyment for tho
young and old who delight in being
in tho open air. Tho athlotlcally in
clined who have been exercising in
gymnasiums all winter nro now ablo
to got tho needed practico In tho open
air. Gymnasium work la excellent,
but nil instructors aro pleased when
they can send their charges outdoors
to got Into real action In Borne fas
cinnting sport. Tho nthleto in nover
Ir tho best poBBjblo condition until
be has outdoor training. Tho puro
fresh air is also Invigorating for thoso
who do not indulgo In physical stunts.
Tho Indoor worker should try to got
all tho fresh air ho can at some period
of the day. , Then ho will bo nblo to
maintain his physical strength at nor
mal nnd can enjoy llfo.
The secretary of the navy has abol
ished "port" and "starboard" as naval
terms for plain land lubbory "right"
nnd "left." 13ut if tho ruler of tho
land's uaveo thinks that ho can got
tho salt-crusted Gloucester fishermen
to abandon tho sen-going tormB of
their anccstory on his say-so, be hns
several other thinks duo him.
A womnn physician saya that bru
nettes as a rulo nro steady. "They
chnngo loss ofton and becomo special
ist!;. They stick to ono thing rather
then the varioty," Howovor, tho bru
nette who becomes a blond shows In
an unmistakable manner a tendoncy
to Beck variety.
A man who fell In lovo with a Chi
cago widow on account of hor foot,
Is now being sued by her for breach
of promise. Probably sho had rofusod
to servo as n uubstltuto for tho roller
ho uses on his lawn.
After his epouso had hit him In
numorablo times with n frying pan,
broken his arm, poured hot water on
him, scratched his face, pullod his hair
and left him coven tlmeB, a Georgia
man has como to tho conclusion that
she does not lovo him any moro. Quick
perception, certnlnly.
A Philadelphia suggestion that tho
navy department further amend that
substitution of right nnd loft for star
board nnd port by making It "haw"
nnd "geo" would make It oven moro
familiar to naval "rookies" from tho
.agricultural belt.
There Is some consolation for thoso
people In Chicago whoso servant girls
nro demanding Uio uso of tho parlor
at least ono evening a week. Tho
gas bill will bo cut down.
Tho meanest way yet suggested of
raising rovonuo comos from a French
municipality, whore thoy havo boon
trying to collect n tax on baby car
rlngcB. Grafting Is now traced back to tho
tlmo of tho early EgyptlauB. It 1b
moro thnn likely that tho social phllos
ophers afnbug tho early Egyptians
found.it quite an ancient practico In
their tlmo.
Crossing tho ocean in a day Is now
being considered. A tolerant smile
would one day hnvo boon tho only
answer to this mad suggestion, but
in these times tho quick reply is
"Why not?"
mstm
vSIDBill
...-. ..
r " '. iiinif.irv;iri7wriKfii
mJ2mj.rmnn&?z:,
mmmMmswaBaEaa
MMmOTMMMBHMiBMMaatefeMRaaMMimMMMaAaMM'IWMMWaaKMXinMSarni
Department "Where They
WASHINGTON --"That Is tho place
whero they send out seeds."
This Is tho fnmlllar formula which
many Washington guides use in de
scribing to tourists tho wonders of
tho department of agriculture. This
Information was given through a meg
aphone by tho conductor of the rubber
neck wagon to his patronB as they
pass In front of the old red brick ad
ministration building. oniclals and
clerks within hearing of this brief de
scription throw down thnlr pens (or,
for the sake of pleasantry, should It
bo their newspapers?) nnd take on a
look of disgust and Injured pride. For
so many thousand of strangers to bo
given tho Information or to get tllo
Impression that tho feature of work
for which the great department of Ag
riculture has made itself famous or
notorious In the sending out of seeds
is monstrous. One of tho humiliating
features of the whole business Is that
tho tourists appear to Hko It. They
look with tho proper awe-stricken
Btaro and seem to bo greatly Im
v wwvvw
Rep. Johnson "Nearly" Had
REPRESENTATIVE Albert Johnson,
tho handsome nnd vociferous mem
bor from Oregon, nearly had a lino
speech printed in a faraway coast
paper for which llnrry Brown is the
Washington correspondent.
Johnson used to be a newspaper
man In thlH city. Ho wus night editor
and copy editor and reporter and all
tho regular things which nre supposed
to glvo newspaper men that broad and
ij'm pathetic view of largo affaire.
Johnson mndo n speech during tho
goneral debato on tho tariff bill a few
days ago. It was his first speech
In the House. It was a good speech,
taking it by and largo, but tho air wnn
Jammed full of speeches about that
tlmo nnd tho only nowspapor that was
publishing them ' was tho Congres
sional Record.
Howovor, Mr. Johnson did not wnnt
Portland to go unfed with crumbs
from his table, so tho evening fol
lowing tho groat event of his speech
ho started out to find Harry Hrown
and toll htm all nbout It. Ho couldn't
find Mr. Hrown until tho next day.
"Say, Harry," ho remarked, "I tried
to find you Inst night, but I couldn't.
I inado a speech yesterday."
That did not Impress Mr. Hrown to
any great extent, so Mr. Johnson con-
AmMvk
Rflore Americans Go to
EIGHTY-FIVE American men and
women teachers have Just Bet out
for tho Philippines. This number was
selected from a largo eligible list cer
tified by tho United States civil serv
ice commission as having tho neces
sary education nnd experience nnd
having passed tho required examina
tion for tho Phlllpplno teaching serv
ice Thoy enmo from nearly every
stato In the union, representing some
of tho best universities, colleges and
normal bcIiooIb la this country. Most
of them aro college graduates, somo
havo dono graduato work In tho uni
versities and others hnvo pursued
Ttwimimi fi i cJiiiciiiiTifVvirifvrij'jvjv1
Animal Statues As Lawn
A NlMALt statuoB ns outside decora-:
fl tlons for houses scorn to multiply
when you look for them, nnd thoy al
ways seem to bo coming Into vlow In
places whoro you had hitherto over
looked thorn.
In front of tho big four-story yollow
brick houHo ut tho northwest corner
of lGth and P streets, next door south
of Foundry Church, aro two white
lions. Apparently thoy hnvo Just left
tho covered porch nnd nro strolling
down tho walk which IcuiUt from tho
front door to tho sldowulk that Is,
thoy nppoar to bo walking becauso
each lion hrut hla right foroleg lifted.
Thoy nro nlso kooplng step. Tho pal
lor, or tho whiteness, of tho benstB in
dicate that thoy aro young lions and
havo not long boon uxposod to the
wuar and tear and dust incidental to
guarding a doorway on n much trav
eled Btrcot.
They appoar to bo twins. Each 1b
tho same size and the attltudo of each
Is tho ennui; each has his head turned
to tho southeast as though looking
down tho avenue of tho presidents.
They may hnvo heard somo one ap-
CaDN CITY
MIS
LOrnri
WBOm
Send Out the Seeds"
pressed with tho department "where
they send out seeds "
"I wish you would writo a piece for
the paper," said a high functionary of
tho department, "and correct the alto
gether too prevalent notion that tho
main objects and tho main usefulness
of this department nro concerned with
sending out seed.
"I havo talked to some of these rub
berneck conductors. I havo urged
them to enlighten the pilgrims for
whoso instruction they aro responsi
ble, upon the vast work of this depart
ment In relation to meteorology, ani
mal industry, animal husbandry, plant
Industry, forestry, chemistry, soils, en
tomology, biology, publications, statis
tics, public roads nnd the like.
"I have recommended these guides
to acquaint their patrons with somo
of tho valuable work being douo by
the bic-chcmlc, pathological and zoo
logical divisions, by the plant patholo
gists and physiologists nnd tho porno
legists, by tho soil bacteriologists, the
dendrologies, the mlcrochcmlcal ex
perts, the sharps In etiological chemis
try, by tho ngrostologlsts, tho work
ers in solar radiation, agricultural
technology, sllvlcs, synthetic prod
nets, pharmacological work, lnsectl
cldes, fungicides and nil that.
"However, when (ho rubberneck
wagon goes by on Its next trip tho
conductor bellows through tho mega
phone: 'TIiIb 1b whore thoy send out
seeds.' "
His Speech Printed
I FILED
AC-OUT
600
WOUDS
WITH7H
TCUefiArfl
cortPAny
s
tlucd to further explain:
"And ns I thought your paper would
want It, I filed nbout 800 words of U
with tho telegraph company."
Hrown winced. His paper had been
advising him to cut down tho tnrlfl
r.tuft to tho bone, ns most of It was
the sort of soft pap that goes well In
tho country districts, but hasn't much
circulation In a well regulated news
paper. Furthermore, Brown Investi
gated nnd found that Representative
Johnson had really filed 1,500 words
and tho telegraph tolls to Oregon nre
enormous! He had visions of being
"llred" by wireless, but ho discovered
to hlB great rellof that his paper had
chopped the speech In two before It
was entirely relayed to Portland from
Chicago, thus saving a lot of timo and
troublo and costing Ropresentntlva
Johnson a wholo lot of money for hal
a speech to Chicago.
AAAW
Teach in the Philippines
technical courses preparing them to
tako chargo of agricultural work,
manual training nnd trade school
work nnd domestic science
A fnct not genorally known Is that
tho avcragfe term of servlco of Amer
ican teachers In tho Philippines it
nearly six years, almost a year longer
than tho averago service of teachers
in this country. Thoso leaving at this
tlmo go to tho Philippines under a
two-yenr contract. This provision is
made to enable the government to
ascertain whether or not tho teacher
will succeed In the new field nnd also
to glvo tho teacher a chanco to find
out whether or not thoro Is a suffi
cient futuro to tho service to warrant
him In remaining. That there are
only elghty-fivo vacancies this year
out of nenrly seven hundred positions
for American tonchcrs In tho service,
Indicates, so tho Insular bureau offi
cials say, that thoso already on the
ground hnvo 4ho greatest faith In the
futuro of tho educational work In th
islands.
Decorations In Favor
proachlng from that direction. Thoy
aro walking with a stealthy tread and
if thoy wero not cold marblo llona ona
might thing that thoughts of ovll wero
in tholr minds.
Tho path thoy follow loads ncrons n
green lawn at the stroet edgo of which
Is a row of tulip trees, sometimes
culled yellow poplnra. A row of hard
maple Is In tho parking between the
sidewalk nnd tho curb. It Is green
and shady thore. but, ns every ono
knows, a much fraquonted part of tho
city and thoso t lions If so inclined
could count UiouinmlB of automobiles
passing in the courso of a day and
nbout no man in tho course of an
evening.
wfcrcair"JW72
0
J v d P"
fcS222isai
i it,-. w-im JS5.
PREPARING FOR WHEAT
Much Depends on Method to Be
Used and on Season.
Under Irrigation Plowing 3hould Pref
erably Be Done In Fell, Followed
by Disk and Harrow to Con-
serve Molcture.
Tho best preparation of land for
wheat depends upon wliether spring
wheat or winter wheat is to be grown
nnd whether "Dry Farming" or Irriga
tion, Bays tho Colorado Farmer. Some
thing will nlso depend upon season
nnd tho forwardness of tho work.
For Spring Wheat. Under irriga
tion the plowing should preferably be
done In tho fnll, except oil lands sub
ject to plowing. Following tho plow
Bhould come tho disk and harrow.
This treatment may look unnecessary,
but the better soil and soil moisture
conditions resulting from such treat
ment pay. The soil so treated Is com
puct and moist below nnd loose at tho
surface, while the soil left as tho
plow turns It over Is more often dry
nnd Huffy as deep as the furrow slice.
In tho first Instance there Is pioisture
enough present to start the crop and
usually keep It growing some time.
In tho second plnce, the seed must bo
irrigated up or lie and wait for a
favorable rain. Fall plowing may bo
deeper, If properly managed, than
spring plowing. Deep plowing follow
ed by proper treatment gives higher
yields. Deep" plowing to be most suc
cessful must be dono sometime before
planting In order to allow some weath
ering. Plowing which for any reason,
Is done Immediately before planting
should bo shallow, not over rive inches.
Under this condition, it will give high
er yields than deep plowing.
Tho land need not be plowed follow
ing such crops as sugar beets or pota
toes. In this case, the land Is bP3t
disked and harrowed after the crop
is harvested, as the harvesting pro
cess works the soil deeply. The only
further spring treatment needed will
bo disking, harrowing nnd leveling.
Spring wheat should be planted early.
Winter Wheat Under Irrigation.
Greater yields aro produced the earl
ier tho plowing. Tho essential differ
ence In preparing the seed bed for
winter from that of spring wheat, is
that plowing for winter wheat, espe
cially If it follows another grain, must
be early. If plowing for winter wheat,
which is to be planted after grain or
alfalfa, can bo done in July or early
In August so much tho better.
Both winter and spring wheat do
best on a well compacted seed bed.
This Is due to the fact that heavy
lands are better natural wheat lands
thnn sandy ones. There Is, also, an
advantage In having a well compacted,
well fined furrow slice. A soil in such
condition presents a much better feed
ing area for crop roots. The small
or feeding roots are neither bothered
by clods or open air spaces, thus they
may como In intimate contact with
tho soil particles, tho most favorable
conditions for crop feeding and
growth.
Litter for Little Chicks.
Tho question of litter for pie llttlo
chicks is easily solved, Short cut al
falfa or clover make tho best of Ut
ter. One of the greatest mistakes in
providing litter tor fowls Is that the
poultryman falls to provide litter that
Is euBlly digestible, Bhould the fowls
chanco to swallow parts of It. Straw
and chaff make a good litter for
chicks and fowls, but they are not
easily digested, and therefore, should
not be used, especially in the case of
tho little chicks.
Breeding Disease.
Do not allow droppings and filth to
accumulate, nbr Jot drinking vessels
becomo coated with slime. Unless
great care 1b exercised thoro is dan
ger in having tho poultry plant lo
catod In tho same place year afttr
year, for to do bo Is to Increase dan
ger from disease.
Drained Orchards.
Tho drained orchard stands a far
better chanco to bo profitable than tho
undralned ono. Now Is the time to
figure on tiling.
A feed of oatB occasionally will be
relished by tho brood sow.
A ration rich in protein is tho only
ration lit for thb brood sow.
Protection from Inclement weather
will make the feed go farther.
The best money evor made is what
1b saved by avoiding mistakes.
A sow Bhould never bo In market
ablo condition when bhe 1b bred.
Tho shorter the fattening period
tho greater tho profit from the pen.
Tho first litter Is not always nn In
dex of tho brood sow's profitableness.
Sheep nro not found on enough
farms; nnd the wonder 1b why they
nro not.
A hog cannot sleep comfortably In
a, draft or In wind. lie catches cold
vory oaslly.
Tho Tamsworths aro good ruEtlers,
vory prolific, and tho meat 1b of the
highest quality.
Koep tho snlt in a Fheltored box In
tho shoop pasture. Spasmodic salting
Is very dnngerous. .
Hogs are the cleanost animals on
tho farm to bed and the onsloBt if
given half n chanco.
When lambs are grown rapidly the
quality of (he meat Is far nnd nway
ahead of that grown slowly
uvc $roqtfi
KADS
WHAT IMPROVED ROADS'MEAN
Bpcllo Prosperity and Happiness to
Every Community Which Has
Forethought to See Blccslngs.
(By It. E. CLDS.)
Good roads aro conducive to better
jchools, live rural churches, pleasant
rides, good markets, Boclal advance
ment, a closer bond of sympathy nnd
co-operation between tho farmer and
his city counin who works at the forge,
(ho lathe or tho spindle. It spells
prosperity and happiness to every com
munity which has the means and
business forccight to see the manifold
blessings which a scientific system of
good roads secures for Its people. Mud
roads spell an enormous mud tax be
side which our tariff is like a pygmy
to an elephant.
Again, good roads annihilate dis
tances and rob farming of tho dread
nnd drudgery of rural seclusion, this
fact being notably apparent where a
farmer is the wire and happy owner
of a highquallty, dependable nnd eco
nomical motor car. Mud roads bring
social llfo on tho farm to low ebb,
empty tho rural churches, make many
little red school houses but a mem
ory and populato tho country with
floating tonants who caro very little
for the growth and perpetuation of
the institutions which are the bulwark
of our national greatness.
Then good roads save tlmo, save
horces and wngons, automobiles and
gasoline. They enable the farmer to
market, at minimum cost, In rain or
shine, his perlshablo produce such ub
fruits, vegetables, milk, butter, eggs
nnd meat. Mud roads compel tho
farmer to leavo such produce either
go to waste or deterioration, or what
Is near to either, deter him from pro
ducing any of these prC&lbfarlng com
modities because he has no dependable
and convenient avenue for marketing
them
In cases of acute illness good roads
enable the physician to brirj? Bpeedy
relief to tho oleic annually and save
the lives of hundreds of our men, wom
en and children, a fact which more
than trebly compensates any amount
of money which wo may spend ns a
nation, stnto, county, city or town,
flood roads spell humanity, relief, mer
cy, life, growth and prosperity, where
as mud roads too often spell poverty,
weakness, decay, sickness, suffering
nnd death.
As road Improvement is of nation
wide interest it should bo supported
by our national, Btate nnd county gov
ernments. This Is notably true with
interstate highways, for it is manifest
ly unjust to tax all the improvement
to (ho abutting land, to tho county or
oven to the state. Why should uo our
national government promote inter
state commerce through good country
roads ns well ns through river and har
bor Improvements?
Good and patriotic men Ecem to bo
at variance as to what Is tho best sys
tem of building roads. Some advocato
three or 'more crosE-continant trunk
highways to bo built and maintained
equally by the federal government and
by the various states through which
tho trunk highways go. Others favor
tho Improvement of these roads first
which run to tho county seat, pro
vided It Is a good railroad market
town, and If not, to the most acces
sible large railroad town In the county.
They believe that these roads should
be properly ditched, graded, rolled and
dragged. Culverts should bo built
where the water is Inclined to flow
aerobe tho road during heavy rains.
Grades should bo raised In low plnces,
hills materially dug down nnd good
bridges built over creeks and streams
of nil kinds.
Tho citizens of a given county
could by this plan easily determine
on the first ton miles of good roads
to be built and maintained. Then
the next five or ten and so on fur
ther away from tho principal town or
towns Sn tho county until every foot
of dirt road In the county is put in
first-class condition.
The good leavpn is working In tho
minds, hearts and consciences of the
American people. Good roads, to,
them, now means moro than ever be
fore, tho avenues which leads to na
tional strength; prosperity and hap
piness to which every good citizen
Bhould bo glad to give his duo meas
uro of enthusiastic support.
Kernel of Problem.
Water will change tho best of earth
roads Into a streak of mud In a very
short tlmo and right hero Is tho ker
nel of our road problem. How shall
w-o keep tho water from soaking luto
tho travolod part of our roads? Thoro
aro many who soerh to be willing to
tell us how, but very few are ablo to
"show us." Tilling and dragging "aro
(ho only good things that have "de
livered tho goods" to date.
Kansas Rock Road.
The first milo of rock-road in Kan
sas, running wost of Garnott, whon
completed, cost $1,415, and much of
tho work on it was done by the farm
ers themselves. The county contrib
uted $200, a city club $100, and tho
residents of the town $G5.
Small Farms Best.
Some men think It a fine thing to
own big farms, nnd so It Is, provided
one knows how to mannge them to
advantage, but a little farm kept
well in hand fattens the bank ac
count moro than a big one negleoted.
Entertaining Literature.
"I wish I had a fairy talo to rctd."
"Here a the sead eatnloguo."
Don't buv wntcr for bluing. Liquid blue
in nlmo't nil water. Buv Ucd Cross Doll
Hue, tho blue tbat'h all blue. Adr.
Ups nnd Downs.
"I think the office force has bes
doing some shaking down."
"Yes, It dooB need a shaklni; ap."
A Nervous Wreck.
"How did you happen to contract
St. Vitus' dance, my good wan?"
"Thoso Balkans names did it I
was a compositor on a ocal" papor
when tho war broke out."
HAIR CAME OUT IN BUNCHES
813 E. Second St, Muncio, Ind. "My
little girl had a bad breaking out on
tho scalp. It was llttlo white- lumps.
Tho pimples would break out aa largo
as a common plnhend nil ovor hor
head. They would break and run yol
low matter. Sho Buffered nearly a year
with itching and burning. It was soro
and Itched all tho tlmo. Tho matter
that ran from her head waa very thick.
I did not comb her hair very often, her
head was too soro to comb it, and
when I did comb, it came out In
bunches. Somo nights her heaH itched
60 bad sho could not sleep.
"I tried several different soap3 anb
ointments, also patent medicine, but
nothing could I get to stop it. I began
using Cuticura Soap and Cuticura
Ointment this summer after I sent for
the. freo samples. I used them and
thoy did co much good I bought a cako
of Cuticura Soap and some Cuticura
Ointment. I washed her head with
Cuticura Soap and rubbed tho Cuticura
Ointment in tho scalp every two
weeks. A week after I had washed her
head three times you could not tell she
ever had a breaking out on her head.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment also made
the hair grow beautifully." (Signed),
Mrs. Emma Patterson, Dec. 22, 1911.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address
post-card "Cuticura, DopL U Boaton."
Adv.
Cannon of Solid Rock.
When the island of Malta was under
the rule of the Knights of St. John
they defended their fortifications with
cannon bored in the living rock. Each
one of these strange weapons con
tained an entire barrel of powder, and
as it was not possible to vory the aim
of these cannon 50 wore made ready,
facing various directions from whlcb
the enemy might approach.
When the fame of these arms of de
!enso became known to tho world the
Idea was taken up of transporting
rocks to summits to servo the same
purpose, but it was soon recognized to
bo Impracticable, and tho cannon ol
Malta, bored in solid rock, 'have
passed into history as tho sole wea
pons of Uio kind ever known. Hap
per'o Weekely.
Changes of Climate.
A scientist who recently Investigated
tho causes of secular variations in tem
perature at tho earth's surface thinks
that they are moro probably duo to
changes In the amount of carbonlo
acid In tho atmosphere than to varia- .
tlons In the heat of tho sun. If the
amount of carbonic ncid that tho air
now contains was diminished a little
moro than half, the mean tomperaturo
all over the earth would, It is stated,
drop about eight degrees, which would
bo sufficient to bring on another gla
cial period. On the other hand, an in
crease of carbonic ncid to between two
and three times Hb present amount
would raise tho mean temperature 15
degrees and renew the hot tlmeB of
tho Eocene epoch.
Ready Thrift.
KIrby Stone I hate to mention It,
dear, but I must tell you that business
has been awfully poor lately. If you
could economize a llttlo in dresses
wear something plainer.
Mrs. Stone Certainly, dear. I shall
ardor some plainer drosses tomorrow.
Puck.
MEfylORY IMPROVED.
Since Leaving Off Coffee.
Many personB suffer from poor
memory who nover suspect coffee haa
anything to do with it.
Tho drug caffclms in coffee, acta
Injuriously on tbo nerves and heart,
causing imperfect circulation, too
much blood in the brain at ono timo,
too llttlQ in another part. This ofton
causes a dullness which makes a good
memory nearly impossible.
"I am nearly seventy years old and
did not know that coffee was tho
causo of tho stomach and heart trou
blo I suffered from for many years,
until about four years ago," writes a
Kansas woman.
"A kind neighbor induced mo to
quit coffeo and try Postum. I had
been suffering severely and was
greatly reduced In flesh. After using
Postum a llttlo while I found myself
Improving. My heart beats became
regular and now I seldom evor no
tice any symptoms of my old stom
ach troublo at all. My nerves are
steady and my memory decidedly
better than while I was using coffeo.
"I like (ho tasto of Postum fully aa
woll as coffee."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Write for booklet, "The
Itoad to Wellvllle."
Postum comes In two form3.
Regular (must be boiled).
Instant Postum doesn't roqulro
boiling but la prepared instantly by
Btlrring a level teasroonful in an or
dinary cup of hot water, which raaken
it right for moot persona.
A big cup requires more and some
pcoplo who like strong things put in
a heaping spoonful and temper it with
a largo supply of cream.
Experiment until you know tha
nmount that pleases your palate and
hnvo It served thnt way in tho luture,
"There's a Reason" for Postum.