MOHAN AFTER LIGHTWEIGHT CROWN :-y.r Y- ft X Ovven Moran, English Champion. A tribute to I'.nttllng Nelson, a defl to Ad Wolgiist and a few words to trie wine were the sum and substance of the visit of Owen Moran In Chicago the other day. The clever Hrlton, tie man who scored the first and only real knockout over the one-tltne dur able Dane, tarried between trains en route for New York and fresh from his decisive triumphs on the coast. Despite his sudden leap to fame and fortune, Moran lacked the supreme confidence which usually follows In the wake of unlooked-for victories. Moran had nothing but praiHe for Nelson and cited a case to show the indomltuhle courage of the veteran lightweight. During the fight, when Nelson began to weaken, Moran claims he saw the final downfall of the Buttler, and in the eleventh round, when the Dane was on his knees more than half the time, Moran Implored him to quit, but the former champion came back for more. "Ho would not Blay down," said Moran in his own inimitable way, "and Just before the count I merely punhed him over. It was not even a weak punch, but his strength was NOTED ATHLETES AT CHICAGO Martin Sheridan, Matt McGrath, Mel . vin Sheppard, Flanagan and Oth er at Windy City. Chlmgoans will have an opportunity to see Martin Sheridan, Matt Mc Grath, Melvln Sheppard, Flanagan and other athletes of New York and many M if) X mAMM gone and he lay there on the mat face down with his fighting spirit finally broken." Moran gives a good part of the glory of his victory to his trainer, Jeff Per ry, who vies with nilly Delaney fur successive victories. Perry's latest score was In Moran's corner during, the Nelson engagement, and he claims his next will be when he Is advising the little Englishman when Wolgast Is the other man. Perry trained Nelson for both fights when he whipped Cans and broke the fighting spirit of tho now deceased old master. He then went to Wolgast and was In the cor ner of the Michigan wildcat when Nel son received his defeat at Point Rich mond last Febraury. Moran Is now looking longingly toward the lightweight crown, and un til the opportunity to grasp It arrives ha will shy clear of the fight game. A battle with Wolgast Is the only thing that Moran will consider now, and he will camp on the trail of the title-holder until his wants are grant ed. Time can raise no barriers to the aspirations of tbe clever boxer, jind if necessary lie will wait a year" until the champion's arm heals. best athletes for the competition. In New Orleans the cause of athletics was given a big boost by the cham pionships of the A. A. U. recently held there. The committee expects sev eral of these southern athletes to ap pear as the southerners remember that the Chicago athletes that com peted there practically "made" their meet. Tho manner In which the Irish Americans among the leaders being A. J. Sheridan, John T. Cahill and J. J. Mahouey, have assumed control of athhletlcs the last season has done a great deal to boom the cause la tbe middle west. RICHIE NOT YET 'STARTED LAWN TENNIS RANKING LIST Martin Sheridan. famous athletes of the country at the big Indoor meet of tbe Chicago Irish American Athletic club to be held Jan uary 14 at tbe Seventh regiment ar mory. Club officials secured tbe building the otber day and immediately Res ident Sheridan of the C. I.-A. A. C. left for New York, where be will make arrangements to have his broth er Martin and tbe otber point winners of tbe east enter tbe first indoor meet to be held by tbls club in Chicago. Among tbe entrants also are the best athletics of tbe west and the outb. It baa been tbe object of tbe l.-A. A. C. to build up an athletic team that can successfully compete with tbe men of Manhattan. many good uieo from the south and wen.' have entered, fit. LouU and New rU.o are expected to send their Committee Issues Blank to Players With View to Systematize Sport In All Its Branches. Seeking to obtain tho fullest lawn tennis Information possible upon which to establish the national rank ing list for the season of 1910, the commliteo recently issued blanks to the players. As one of the officials state. I. "The sport is now to be sys tematized in all Its brunches." In Its compreh nslve scope, tho document Issued is the work of tho committee, Edwin F. Torrey, Jr., chairman, of Clinton, N. Y.; Miles H. Charlock, sec retary, of the Crescent Athletic club, and Henry Torreuce, Jr., of the Engle wood Field club. There is much more Important and fur-reachlug action con tained in the obvious request for the player's record In tournament und championship than the tabululed form reveals. The buff-colored sheet of pa per is nothing uhort of the herald of the new era in American' lawn tonnls, of which tho first signs were discern ible during the playing of tbe national championship tournament on the courts of tbe Newport Casino last Au gust. Bubbling Water 8ets New Mark. Bubbling Water, in winning the Sombrero handicap at Oakland, Cal established a new world's record for a mile and seventy yards, running the distance in 1 : 42 1-6. The previous mark of 1:42 2-5 was held by Kings Daughter. Oanla, Ida May and Tony Donero, the first two over the Fort Erie track and the latter two at I-a-tonls. Bubbling Water carried 121 pounds and after suffering Interfer ence beat Chester Krum a head. One of Hardest Working and Most Deceptive Pitchers In National League Has Hopes. By LOU RICHIE. The mortgage was due. Mttle Loole hnd to save the old homestead. He hnd tried to make an honest living, but at the tender age of fifteen he threw down his trusty hoe, picked up a baseball and determined to become a white slave of tho national commis sion. Every one refused to take him earn estly, even himself. He saw that there was no chance for him as a baseball tragedian, they were so numerous, so ho Jumped into the comedy line. Every one said: "He's a good entertainer even If he can't pitch." And every bntter who ever thought be could hit .300 (which Includes all of them) grabbed hats and hurried to welcome little I.ou. He started In eastern Pennsylvania, but after a time the league asked him to quit because the batters were knocking down the felines. Finally little Ixioln grew desperate. The mortgage was about duo and his dog was starving. He went back and tried the hoe again, but he had lost control. Pesldes every time the hoe accidentally Jerked a spud out of the ground Looie, practiced throwi-g Lou Richie. curves with It. He threw all his em ployer's crop Into a neighbor's yard, and Just for that he was fired. The mortgage was overdue. One day little Looie picked up a large round spud. It was the turning point. He shied it at a cat and as the spud flew through the air it curved suddenly and hit the cruel monster who owned the mort gage. Anxious to perfect this great curve little I-oole kept hooking curve potatoes at tbe cruel financier until he resembled a potato pancake. The next day be took his curve to Philadel phia and was signed to pitch for the Phillies, and cbeer up gloomy athletes who wanted to leap Into the Delaware river becauso their batting averages were not .437. For this they paid him enough salary to support himself in the style to which he had not been ac customed and to pay the mortgage. The manager told him he couldn't pitch for sour apples. They said he was a comedian, both on and off the slab. Tbut broke his tender heart. Then tho peerless leader of the Chi cago Cubs purchased him and per mitted him to warm up almost every day and occasionally pitch a game. The peerless leader was tender heart ed. He didn't care how many hits they made, he let poor Lou stay. And Lou has stayed this long and expects to be champion of the world. As for getting my start I haven't got it yet. JPobA G&ssiM Highlander at Richmond, The New York Highlander will do their training In Jtlchmoud, Va., next season. It I said. The Highlanders will play three game early In April in Cincinnati with the Reds, under tbe watchful eye of the chairman of tbe supreme court of baseball. Abe Attell 1 one of tbe gamest fighters who ever drew on a glove. Hugo Kelly has agreed, It is said, to box Sam Langford out in Los An geles. Now the umpire have started to organize. They certainly need pro tection. Joe Tinker say he was only fooling when he said be wanted to play third base, says a report. One eastern baseball writer picks the Chicago White Sox and the Cleve land Naps to show the greatest Im provement In 1911. Willie Hoppe look to be the most unbeatable thing we have in the world outsldo of the big and little champions of pugilism. Some amateur wrestlers are clamor ing for hammerlocks and pin falls. They are treading grouud dangerously close to professionalism. What matters it bow much Ad Wol gast wauta to box Moran? Wolgast cannot box for several months, 'o what' the use of talking? Lieutenant Nelly, bead coach of tbe Army football team, want tbe game between the Cadet and the Middle played at New York next year. E. R. Bradley, a Chicago turfman, purchased a Kentucky farm the otber day from Mlsse Sallie C. and Bessie price, securing 385 acre for iWJ.Zbu. Addle Joss, leading pitcher of the Cleveland Nap, I In a hospital in that city recovering from an opera tion. Addle say hi bread and-meat arm 1 a good a ever It wa. Hugh Duffy, the manager of tbe White Sox, recently came out of bis winter shell long enough to make tbe statement that tbe South Side aggre gation would be the one that Connie Mack would have to fight next year. Catcher "BUI" Carrlgan of the Bos ton Red Sot Is to be decapitated along with several of his' team-mate. This doesn't mean that be will pot have another lease ot life In stroJige uniform. BUI ought to bring some thing real valuable In the way of a swap. ' English Women Smoke Pipe. The latest fancy of the woman moker Is a pipe not the tiny affair that suffices for the Japanese, but a good-sized brier or a neat meer schaum. The pipe Is boldly carried along with a gold card cuse and chain purse. For some, time now the cig arette has given place to a cigar, small In size and mild In quality. Women said they were tired of the cigarette, and wanted a bigger smoke. London Mall. Cripple Rides Bicycle. Ceorge Anstey, aged 12, a cripple, of Ielcester, Englnnd, Is one of the most remarkable cyclists in the coun try. Both' his legs are withered and useless, but the Ielcester Cripples' Gulid has provided him with a two wheeled pedalless machine, with a padded tube covering the ax'e bar. Across tills he lies face foremost, and with wooden clogs strapped to his hands he propels himself along the streets and roads In a marvelously rapid manner. He has complete con trol of the machine, his hands acting as peduls, steering gear, and brake combined. Too Ardent a Lover. Reorgotto Fontnnn, an embroiderer who lives In the Uue Sevres In Paris, has found herself condemned to a month's Imprisonment for what seeniB to her a hnrniless act. She was going home from a concert t few evenings ago when she decided ue would like to see her fiance. As to happens to be a fireman whose tatlon Is in her own neighborhood it occurred to her it would bo very easy to summon him to her side by break ing the gluss cf tho fire alarm and sounding a call. She did so anr In a few moments fire engines came from several direc tions, all laden with firemen, of course. but alas! her fiance was not among them, and more than that all the fire men were angry, and before she know what had happened she was taken to a magistrate, who proceeded to make the course of truo love run unsmoothly by sending her to prison for a month in spite of her tears and protests that she thought it would bo a simple way of bringing her fiance to her Bide. NEW SAWS BADLY NEEDED The Old-Fashloned Ones 8omehow Don't Seem to Fit Into Mod ern Situations. "You know all the copybook, Mc Guffey's reader line of talk about ta king the advice of one's elders?" be gan be sad-eyed, undersized little man on the car. "Sure you do. Now let me tell you something. See that big apartment house over there on the right? And that little business block right next to it? "Well, there weren't any apartment houses or business blocks on it when I first clapped eyes on It. It waa a howling wilderness. In fact, and you could almost chase rabbits up here. That was about eighteen years ago. I had a hunch then and I was only eighteen years old at that time that this .land would some day Jump in value by leaps and bounds. When I was twenty year old I came into a bunch of $15,000. I went to my gutr dlan, an old man, pretty prominent In estate management and wisdom ajt that time, and I told him I wanted to soak the whole 115,000 in this block of ground I pointed out to you. The block was then on the market for exactly $15,000. The old gentleman pooh-poohed me. " 'Go away, boy,' he said to me, with a patronizing smile. 'You don't know what you want. It's my duty to save you from such wild notions as this one you've got into your head. They'll be shooting rabbits and squirrels out there cn that plot 50 years from now. G'way.' "I argued it with him, and he sat down on me. Then he went and in vested my $15,000 at three per cent. "Three years ago the man who bought that same block of ground for $18,000 sold it for about $200,000 cash, and be' now cruising over in the Mediterranean or some place or other, while I'm taking my wife out for nickel car rldea and wondering where my $15,000 went. "There got to be a new set of wise saw Invented for twentieth cen tury consumption. The McGuffey' reader kind are moth eaten." Lightning Change. - The Manager Can you make quick chnngea and double In a few parts? The Actor Can I? Say, you know the scene In "Love and Lobsters," where the hero and the villain are fighting, and a friend rushes in- and separate 'em? Well, I played all three part one night when the other two fellow were 111. Holiday In the States. Washington' birthday is a holiday in all states. Decoration day In all states but Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas, labor day Is observed everywhere. Virtu ally every state has legal holidays having to do with Its own special af fairs battle of New Orleans In Louis iana, Texan Independence and battle of San Jacinto In Texas, Admission dny in California, and so on. Missis sippi Is like the federal government In lack of statutory holidays, but by common consent Independence day. Thanksgiving and Christmas are ob served. A new one is Columbus day in a few of tbe states. Planting Wedding Oak. Princess August Wllhelm, wife of the kaiser' fourth son, has set herself the task of reviving one of Germany's oldest customs, that according to which newly wedded couples Immediately af ter the marriage ceremony plant a cou ple of oak saplings side by side in a park or by tbe roadside of tbelr na tive town. The town of Mulchausen, in Thurin gla, Is the first to respond to the prin cess' appeal. A municipal official ap pears at the church door after every wedding and invites the bride and bridegroom to drive with him In a car riage to a new road near the town and there plant oak saplings. The tree planting idea waa started by a former elector of Brandenburg with the object of repairing the rav ages caused by the 30 years' war. The elector forbade young persons to mar ry until they had planted a number of fruit trees. Two Very Old Ladl?3. We have heard a great deal lately about long lived people, but It is prob able that the oldest two people in the world today are Frau Dutklevitz and another old lady named Babavaslika. The former lives at Posem, In Prus sian Poland, and was born on Febru ary 21, 1785. She is therefore one hundred and twenty-five years old. The latter, however, Is nine months her senior, having ben born in May, 1784. She is still a fairly hale old woman, and for nearly one hundred years worked In the fields. Her descendants number close on 100, and these now make her a Joint allowance. She lives at the village of Bavelsko, whose neighborhood she has never quitted during the whole of her long life. She remembers events which happened at the beginning of last century much more clearly than those of the last 40 years. Dundee Advertiser. An Alaskan Luncheon. Runners of woven Indian basketry, with white drawnwork dollies at each of the 12 covers, were used on an oval mahogany table. The doilies were made at Sitka. In the middle of the table a mirror held a tall central vase of frosted glass, surrounded by four smaller vases, all filled with white spring blossoms. The edge of the mirror was banked with the same flowers. Four totem poles were placed on dollies In the angles made by the runners. Place cards were water colors of Alaskan scenery. Abalone shells held salted nuts, and tiny Indian baskets held bonbons. Tbe soup spoon were of horn, several of the dishes UBed were made by Alaskan Indians, and the cakes were served on baskets. The menu was as follows: Polsson a la Bering Sea (halibut chowder), Yukon climber (broiled salmon, po tatoes Julienne), snowbirds avec auroraborealls (roast duck with Jelly), Shungnak river turnips, Tanana beets, Skagway hash (salad), Fair bank nugget (ripe strawberries ar ranged on individual diBhes around a central mound of powdered augar), arctic slices (brick ice cream), Circle City delights (small cakes), Klondike nuggets (yellow cheese in round balls on crackers), Nome firewater (coffee). Woman' Home Companion. Largest of Whales. The largest whale of it type of which there Is scientific record wns captured recently off Port Arthur, Tex. He measured alxty-three feet In length, and was estimated to be about three hundred year old. Cap tain Cob Plummer. mate of a United States pilot boat, sighted tbe monster In the shoals off the Jetties, and the crew of his vessel captured the mam mal. The huge body was towed ashore, exhibited and much photographed be fore being cut up. . Banker and Bank Note. Four men, three of whom were con nected with brokerage concern In the Wall street district, were discussing United State paper currency and the disappearance of counterfeits. "We are so sure nowadays," said one of the party, "as to the genuineness of bills that little attention Is paid to them in handling, except as to de nomination." To prove his assertion he took a $10 yellowback from his pocket, and, holding it up, asked who could tell whose portrait it bore. No one knew, and by way of coaching the broker paid it was the first treas urer of the United States. Again no one knew the name. "Why, It's Michael Hlllegas," said the man proudly. "But In confidence, I'll tell you, I didn't know It five minutes aco." New York Tribune. An Unnecessary Confession. A hearty laugh was occasioned at the Birmingham police court by a pris oner who gave himself away In a very delightful manner. The man was the first on the list, and the charge against him was merely one of being drunk and disorderly. He stepped into the dock, however, Just at the moment when the dock officer was reading out a few of the cases which were to come before the court that morning, and a guilty conscience apparently led him to mistake these items fcr a list of his previous convictions. He stood passive enough while the officer read out about a dozen drunk and disorderlies, but when he came to one "shopbreaking" the prisoner ex claimed excitedly, "That was eight years ago, your honor," Everyone be gan to laugh, and the prisoner, realiz ing the blunder he had made, at first looked very black Indeed, but finally saw the humorous side of the matter, and a broad smile spread over his face. His blunder did not cost anything. Birmingham Mall. DIFFERENCE IN THE RACES Mexican in the Main Unjust In Blaming American for Lack of Politeness. All the Mexican correspondents who have written on the subject of why Americans are not better liked by Mexicans agree that it Is largely a question of a lack of politeness on the part of the foreigner here, and In some cases an ill-concealed contempt. The latter Is Inexcusable, and certain ly must emanate only from Inconsid erate or poorly educated persons, from which no nation Is free. Politeness, however, Is largely a matter of form and training. It Is undeniable that the Anglo-Saxon salutations, methods of expressing thanks and apprecia tion, etc., are simpler and shorter than the Latin forms. To mt.ny who have all their lives been accustomed to the briefer Saxon ways, an attempt of the more elaborate Latin politeness seems, for them, nothing short of af fectation, and they simply cannot do It. There are exceptions among Amer icans and Englishmen who . readily adopt the courteous phrases of the Mexicans and use them naturally, but they are the exceptions." And it Is difficult to see how this can readily be changed. Our Mexican friends should understand, on tbe other hand, that if Anglo-Saxons do not, as a rule, go through as many social formalities as the usages of the land prescribe, they mean no offense thereby. They are accustomed to taking a good many things for granted that their Latin cousins give verbal assurance of.. Naturally, It I the duty of the outlander to conform a nearly as be can to the way of his adopted coun try, hut human nature and settled habits are pretty hard to make over, particularly unless you catch them while they're young. Mexican Herald. Take Himself 8rlously. Nicola Tesla, dining by himself in a hotel's great dining room, takes a table where he can be seen. Through out his meal he wears a deeply Btu dlous, a completely absorbed, attitude. He may bring to the table a portfolio filled with papers. These he may scan with prolonged solemnity. In any event, he sit an eloquent tableau of profundity. New York Press. Rat Bounty Excite Merriment. Seattle, fearing tbe introduction of bubonic plague by rata, ha offered bounty of ten cent a rat. This move Tacoma, safe from infection from the tea, to raucous laughter, and the Led ger say that the bounty, "though not intended for rodent of Tacoma, Everett, Belllngham and other popu lous and busy centers, has been find Ing its way Into tho pocket of non residents of Seattlo for non-resident rata. But the Joke would be on us It It were found that our rat popula tion had found It way Into the Seat tle census." Pretty Good Definition. We hear some funny things in Fleet street sometimes, and the following definition of the height of aggravation, by a gentleman In rather shaky boots, whom we encountered In a well-known hostelry the other day, struck us aa being particularly choice. "The 'eight of haggravatlon, gentle men," said this pothouse humorist, set ting hi pewter on the counter and looking round proudly, with the air ot one about to let off a good thing, "the 'eight of haggravatlon why, trying to ketch a flea out o' yer ear with a pair of boxln' gloves." London Tltr Bits. Before Day of Free Press. Many of the restrictions that hamp ered the ' influence of the press re mained in force until the close ot the eighteenth century in England. It wa not till that period that newspaper obtained the right to criticise the pol icy ot ministers and of the king. Mr. Walter, the first editor of the London Times, was prosecuted for censuring the duke of York. He was sentenced to pay a fine of $250, stand in the pillory for an hour, be Imprisoned for a year and give security for his good behavior for seven years. The order with regard to the pillory was can celed, but be had to serve his term In jail. French Official Etiquet. The wives of the new French minis ters share in the honors conferred on their husbands, the degree of defer ence due to them being minutely es tablished by the "protocole." When the wife of a minister enter a room, if any deputies' or senator' wives are present, they are supposed to rise and remain standing until she Is seat ed. Other ministers' wives may rest in their chairs, but should the prima minister's wife arise they also must stand to attention. And even Mm. Eriand (if there were such a person), would have to show similar deference to the wife of the president of the chamber. With her, according to the protocole, 'Vest la representation na tionale qui entre, le suffrage univer se! la France." London Chronicle. Vivid at Leaat. Dr. Hiram C. Cortlandt, the well known theologian of Dos Moines, said In a recent address: ."Thomas A. Edison tell ua that he thinks the soul is not immortal; but, after all, what does this great wizard know about souls? His forte Is elec tricity and macuinery, and when he talks of souls he remind me Irresist ibly of the young lady who visited the Baldwin locomotive works and then told how a locomotive ia made. " 'You pour,' she said, 'a lot of sand into a lot ot boxes, and you throw old stove lids and things into a furnace, and they you empty the molten stream into a bole In the sand, and everybody yells and swears. Then you pour It out and let It cool and pound it, and then you put it In a thing that bores holes In It. Then you screw It to gether, and paint It, and put steam In it, and it goes splendidly; and they take it to a drafting room and make a bluep rlnt ot It. Eut one thing I for got they have to make a boiler. On man gets Inside and one gets outside, and they pound frightfully; and then they tie It to the other thing, and you ought to see it go!' " That 'Suit for ILibel Against the Postum A disagreement about advertising arose with a "weekly" Journal. Following it, an attack on us appeared in their editorial columns; sneering at the claims we made particularly regarding Appendicitis. We replied through the regular papers and the "weekly" thought we hit back rather too bard and thereupon sued for libel. The advertisement the "weekly" attacked ua about claimed that in many cases of appen dicitis an operation could be avoided 'by dis continuing indigestible food, washing out tbe bowela and taking a predlgested food Grape Nuts. Observe we said MANY cases not all. Wouldn't that knowledge be a comfort to those who fear a surgeon' knife as they fear death? The "weekly" writer said that wa a lie. We replied that he waa Ignorant of the fact. He wa put on the stand and compelled to admit he waa not a Dr. and bad no medical knowledge of appendlcitl and never investi gated to find out if tbe testlmonal letters to our Co. were genuine. A famous aurgeon testified that when an operation was required Grape-Nuts would not obviate It. True. We never claimed that when an operation wa required Grape-Nuts would prevent it. The aurgeon testified bacteria germs belp ed to bring on an attack and bacteria wa grown by undigested food frequently. Wa claimed and proved by otber famous expert that undigested ' food wa largely responsible for appendicitis. W showed by expert testimony that many case are. healed without a knife, but by stop ping th use of food which did not digest, and when food was required again It was helpful to use a predlgested food which did not over tax tbe weakened organ ot digestion. Wben a pain in the right side appear It I not always' necessary to ba rushed oft to a Cereal Co., Ltd., Gave to Bring Out Facts hospital and at the risk of death be cut. Plain common sense ahowa the better way Is to stop food that evidently ba not been digested. Then, when food 1 required, use an easily digested food. Grape-Nut or any other if you know it tp be predlgested (partly digested before taking). We brought to Court analytical chemist from New York, Chlcngo and Mlsbawaka, Ind., who (wore to tbe analysis of Orape-Nut and that part of tbe starchy part of tbe wheat and barley bad been transformed Into sugar, the kind of sugar produced In the human body by digesting starch (the large part of food). Some of the State chemists brought on by the "weekly" said Grape-Nut . could not be called a "predlgested" food because not all of It wa digested outside the body. Tbe other chemists said any food which had been partly or half digested outside the body wa commonly known a "predlgested." Splitting hair about the meaning ot a word. It is sufficient that if. only one-half ot the food 1 "predlgested." It la easier on weakened stomach and bowel than food In which no part I predlgested. To show the fact we Introduce Dr. Tho. Darlington, former chief of th N. Y. Board ot Health. Dr. Ralph W. Webster, chief of the Chicago laboratories, and Dr. B. Sachs, N. Y. If we were a little sever In our denuncia tion of a writer, self-confessed Ignorant about appendicitis and Ua cause. It is possible the public will excuse us, In view ot th fact that our bead, Mr. C. W. Post, ha made a lifetime study of food, food digestion and effect, and th conclusion ar indorsed by many ot tha beBt medical authorltlea of th day. Ia It possible that we' are at fault for suggesting, as a Father and Mother might, to on of the family who announced a pain In tb Ida: "Stop using the food, greasy meats, gravies, mine pie, cheese, too much starchy a Splendid Chance food, etc., etc., which ha not been digested, then when again ready for food use Grape Nuts because It 1 easy of digestion?" Or should tbe child be at once carted off to a hospital and cut? W have known of many cases wherein the approaching sign of appendicitis have dis appeared by the suggestion being followed. No one better appreciate the value of a skilful physician when a person Is In the awful throes of acute appendicitis, but "an ounce of prevention I worth a pound of cure." Just plain old common sense 1 helpful even nowaday. Thl trial demonstrated Grape-Nut food 1 pure beyond question. It Is partly predlgested. Appendicitis generally ha rls from undl gested food. It 1 not always necessary to operate. It is best to stop all food. When ready to begfn-feeding use a predl- gested foodT It la palatable and strong In Nourishment. . 1 It will pay fine return In health to quit th heavy breakfasts and lunches and use lei food but select food certainly known to con tain the elements nature require to lustaln the body. May w be permitted to suggest a breakfast of fruit, Grape-Nut and cream, two soft boiled eggs, and aoin hot -toast and cocoa, milk or Postum? Tb question of whether Grape-Nuts doe or doc not contain the element which nature require tor th nourishment of th brain, also of it purity, will be treated In later news paper article. , Good food 1 Important and It effect on the body' Is also Important.'' "ThaV m Kftion" Postum Cereal Co.. Ltd., Bam . Mich.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers