Front:
COPYRIGHT, 1892,BY
ARBUCKLE BROS,
N.Y.
RHODE ISLAND
Back:
GRIND YOUR
No. 10.
RHODE ISLAND.
COFFEE
‘HE best informed students of the subject believe that the Norse-
men landed in Rhode Island, and that the mysterious stone
AT HOME. tower at Newport was built by the Norwegian colonists. It was
there when the English settlers came, and the Indians had no
knowledge of its origin.
It will pay you well to keep a small cof- Roger Williams was the founder of Rhode Island. He emi-
fee-mill in your kitchen and grind your grated to Salem in 1631, and suffered banishment thrice for “his
coffee just as you use it--one mess at a
new and dangerous opinions against the authority of magistrates.
time. Coffee should not be ground untii The island of Aquidneck
was settled by exiles from Massachusetts,
the coffee-pot is ready
to receive it. Cof- at Portsmouth, in 1638, Newport in 1639, and in 1642 Samuel Gor-
fee will lose more of its strength and ton went into 'he wilderness and founded Shawomet (Warwick).
aroma in one hour after being ground
The colonists sent Roger Williams as an ambassador to England,
than in six months before being ground. where he partly supported himself by reading to John Milton,
So long as Ariosa remains in the whole and finally secured a wise colonial charter from the Earl of War-
berry, our glazing, composed of choice wick.
eggs and pure confectioners' A sugar,
When the American Revolution broke out, Rhode Island took up
closes the pores of the coffee, and there-
arms with patriotic enthusiasm, and this little commonwealth had
by all the original strength and aroma
at one time more than 3,000 disciplined troops in the Continental
are retained. Ariosa Coffee has, during
line.
25 years, set the standard for all other Rhode Island finds its main feature in Narragansett Bay, a beau-
roasted coffees. So true is this. that tiful and navigable arm of the sea, thirty miles long, and branch-
other manufacturers in recommending ing into ten harbors, along which, with its bold bluffs and head-
their goods, have known no higher praise lands, islands, coves and beaches, there are many famous summer
than to say: "It's just as good as Ar-resorts.
buckles'."
ILLUSTRATIONS.
ARBUCKLE BROS.,
Stone Mill at Newport, Roger Williams settling Rhode
Island, 1636.
NEW YORK CITY.
THIS 18 ONE OF A SERIES OF FIFTY (80) CARDS GIVING A PICTORIAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES AND TEARITORIES,
DONALO SON BROTHERS, N.Y.