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The Kind of Coffee When Postum is Well Made.

"Three great coffee drinkers were my old school friend and her two daughters.

They are always complaining and taking medicine. I determined to give them Postum Food Coffee instead of coffee when they visited me, so without saying anything to them about it, I made a big pot of Postum the first morning, using four heaping teaspoons to the pint of water and let it boil twenty minutes, stirring down occasionally.

Before the meal was half over, each one passed up the cup to be refilled, remarking how fine the coffee was. The mother asked for a third cup and inquired as to the brand of coffee I used. I didn't answer her question just then, for I had heard her say a while before that she didn't like Postum Food Coffee unless it was more than half old-fashioned coffee.

After breakfast I told her that the coffee she liked so well at breakfast was pure Postum Food Coffee, and the reason she liked it was because it was properly made, that is, it was boiled long enough to bring out the flavor. I have been brought up from a nervous, wretched invalid, to a fine condition of physical health by leaving off coffee and using Postum Food Coffee. I am doing all I can to help the world out of coffee slavery, to Postum freedom, and have earned the gratitude of many, many friends." Myra J. Tuller, 1023 Troost Ave., Kansas City, Mo.

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A WEEKLY COMPENDIUM OF THE CONTEMPORANEOUS THOUGHT OF THE WORLD. NEW YORK, AUGUST 10, 1901.

Vol. XXIII., No. 6. Whole No. 590.}

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FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY, PUBLISHERS, 30 LAFAYETTE PLACE, N. Y.

Helps for Effective Public Speaking

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The Drill Book in Vocal Culture Bell's Standard Elocutionist

A comprehensive study of the fundamental constituents of effective, graceful speaking. Heartily commended by the highest authorities. The book contains several illustrative diagrams. It is the result of wide reading, careful study, and practical experience. By EDWARD P. THWING, M.D., PH.D., Author of "A Handbook of Illustrations," "Outdoor Life in Europe," etc. 16mo, Paper. 25 cents.

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Principles and exercises, followed by a copious selection of extracts in prose and poetry, classified and adapted for reading and recitations, from ancient and modern eloquence. For senior and junior pupils and students. Revised edition, 188th thousand. By Prof. CHAS. BELL and ALEXANDER M. BELL, F.E.L.S., Late Lecturer in University College, London. 12mo, Cloth. $1.50.

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The favorite book of Quotations among the leading Writers, Speakers, Editors, Lawyers, and other Professional Men

(NOTE THE Distinguished names BELOW)

"The cyclopedia is so absolutely indispensable. We rejoice in it."-SPRINGFIELD REPUBLICAN.

“There is a place for it in every school, home, and public library, and it should fill that place at once."-EDUCATION, Boston. "The wisdom of the wise and the experience of ages may be preserved in a quotation"

Cyclopedia of Practical Quotations

Compiled by J. K. HOYT

Over thirty thousand choice quotations, embracing a comprehensive list of subjects, with eighty-six thousand lines of concordance; also an Appendix containing quotations from the modern foreign languages, Latin law terms, etc. Every quotation is selected with discrimination as to its pertinence to the subject of which it treats, the prominence and authority of its author, and its probable usefulness to the user. The wide popularity of the cyclopedia among literary and professional men and the emphatic commendations from high authorities have abundantly attested the value of the work to writers, speakers, lawyers, ministers, teachers, and others who have occasion to strengthen or beautify their written or spoken words by apt quotations. SOME OF ITS EMINENT USERS AND THEIR EMPHATIC OPINIONS AS TO ITS WORTH

Hon. Horace Porter, U. S. Ambassador to France

"A work which will commend itself to all scholars. No library will be complete without it."

Hon. Joseph H. Choate, U. S. Minister to England

"I have always found this cyclopedia the most complete and useful book of the kind ever published.' Gen. Stewart L. Woodford

"It has been to me a practical help." Noah Porter, D.D., LL.D., ex-Pres. of Yale University

"It is a help and pleasure to many.

Ex-Pres. Benjamin Harrison

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"It is an extraordinary rich thesaurus of choice quotations, selected from a vast range of literature." Judge Albert Haight, Court of Appeals, State of New York

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In making an inventory at the close of our recent Introductory Distribution, we find in stock a few sets of Criterion Library (in cloth only) of, which the bindings are slightly rubbed-not enough to impair their real value, but sufficient to prevent their shipment as perfect stock at our regular price of $36 a set. There being only a limited number of these sets, we shall not go to the trouble of rebinding them, but have decided to let them go on easy payments of $1 down and $1.25 per month until paid for-less than half regular price. BY PROMPT ACTION NOW, therefore, a number of ambitious and deserving readers who desire 48 charming and instructive volumes, containing 17,000 pages of the best writings of the world, may now secure these special sets at about cost of making. WHILE THEY LAST They are yours for a lifetime this easy way:

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European-Anti-American League," is now out with a proposition that Austria, Russia, and the United States start a tariff war against Germany. It might also be added that this new tariff measure has not yet come before the German parliament, which will meet in the fall, and that it is not impossible that it may be radically amended, altho the European cabinets, whose tenure of office depends on parliamentary approval, try to frame such measures as will meet the wishes of the majority.

The New York Journal of Commerce says of the new German tariff measure:

"The position of Germany is as remarkable as anything ever presented in the history of national economy. As England began to realize the possibilities of the factory system she took the taxes off food, bought it where she could buy it cheapest, provided sustenance for the industrial population, and let the agricultural population take care of itself. France has developed as a manufacturing nation not as a producer of great staples, but as the producer of specialties involving taste and high skill. The United States had cheap food and resorted to the protective tariff to force the manufacturers into a more rapid growth than they might otherwise have enjoyed.

"But Germany is undertaking to make food dear when the great national development has been in the line of manufacturing; when all the gain in population for twenty or thirty years has been in the towns; when great efforts are being made to get foreign business for the manufacturers, and the latest and most radical increase in the taxation of food is made at a moment when the industries of the country are prostrated, when wages have been reduced and great numbers of persons have been thrown out of employment, and manufacturing corporations that paid 30 per cent. dividends last year are passing their dividends this year. It would have been impossible to take action, which in its character and its inopportuneness would be a greater blow to the industrial, and in general the urban, population of Germany. . . .

"These increases will do our trade no good, but Germany has got to get food from somewhere, and she will not get much grain this year from Russia or Argentina unless all signs fail. The German urban population is already beginning to make itself heard."

Ambassador White, our representative at Berlin, tells the interesting fact, in a report to the State Department in Washington, that in ten years the United States has risen from fourth to first place in Germany's import trade. He says:

"In 1891, the United States occupied fourth place in the import trade of Germany, with a total of $108,528,000, being preceded

by Great Britain, with $160,888,000; Austria-Hungary, with $142,324,000; and Russia, with $138,040,000. In 1895, the imports into Germany from the United States rose to $121,618,000, and after that year increased rapidly until in 1900, when they reached the sum of $266,750, 400. The United States thus stands far above any other country in this trade, being followed by Great Britain, with $199.920,000; Russia, with $173,740,000; Austria, with $172, 312.000; and France, with $72,590 000. During this period, American imports info Germany have increased more than those of the last-named four countries together."

E

WILL THE INSULAR DECISION BE REVERSED? X-GOVERNOR GEORGE S. BOUTWELL, of Massachusetts, who was Secretary of the Treasury under President Grant, a leader of his party for twenty-five years in the Senate, and who was appointed by President Hayes to codify and edit the statutes at large, has been studying the decisions handed down by the justices of the Supreme Court in the De Lima and Downes cases, and has arrived at the interesting conclusion that if another similar case shall come up when Porto Rico and the Philippines are fully established in the territorial form of government, the court will rule that the Constitution does "follow the flag" to cover such territories. It might be added that such an event will not be out of accord with the views of Mr. Boutwell, who is president of the New England Anti-Imperialist League. His argument, which is set forth in The North American Review, is, in part, as follows:

"In this [the Downes] case, Mr. Justice Brown, for himself alone, as appears from the record, assumed and maintained by argument the position that the Constitution of the United States was framed by the thirteen States, and that its scope and authority were limited to the thirteen States and to such States as from time to time might be added thereto; further than this, that the Constitution did not, by its own force, extend to the possessions of the United States, whether created into Territories with a regular form of government, or whether they were outlying, unorganized possessions. His position is easily understood. It is not without some support from the men who framed the Constitution. Its weakness is in the fact that the political history of the country and the records of the Supreme Court, with singular unanimity, maintain contrary doctrines, so far as this assuredly -that the Territories, when organized, are, by the fact of organization, brought within the scope of the Constitution. These authorities assume that a territorial organization constitutes a

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NEPTUNE: "That makes 1 of 'em I've seen go across, only to return with knots in their tails." -The Boston Herald.

CERVERA: "Well, I was there at the time, and it didn't impress me that way." -The Chicago Record-Herald. INTERNATIONAL SEA CONTESTS IN CARTOON.

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