A Modern Parable. ‘A dreamer and a man of action loved a woman, The dreamer said: #I shall write verses in her praise; they will touch her vanity, and she will love me for them.” But the man of action said: ‘‘How old fash- foned! I shall corner the stock mar- ket, and that will bring her.” So the dreamer wrote verses, and he in- ‘duced a friend of his who ran a mag- azine to print them. And the man of action cornered something or oth- er, and became a billionaire. In the meantime the girl married a man who inherited his money, and they lived happy ever after. But the dreamer was .so proud of his verses that he didn’t care; and the man of action was so busy that he didn’t care. The only one to suffer was the man she married.—Scottish American. Seasonable Waists. Waist forms all demand trininess at the waist itself and fulness of trimming above the waist line, even ‘where the material is not actually full. The new models are conspicu- ous for showing the complete disap- péarance of the puffed out corsage which has battled royally, in some instances, for an extension of life, The definition of round waist line is positive. All the new waists have fitted gir- dles or belts, draped or plain; but a concession is made to those to whom the long front is really becoming by the introduction of long vests, of plastrons of lace, of bands of lace and silk, or of long jabots which descend from the collar to the waist line and ornament the front of the corsage without bulgy trimming.—From the special fashion number of Harper's Bazar. the ii The Will of a Gentle Patriot. Dying in New York, where she had been a teacher of French to three generations, Mlle. Louise Henriette Leclere has left the larger share of her fortune to institutions of her na- tive land. Her object, she explains, ig ‘“‘to raise France from her present low moral state, and thus prevent her from doing so much harm to this country, in which she exerts so po- tent an influence.” The humor of this bequest is ap- parent. Long before this writng the comedian of statistics .will have figured out the per capita moral pow- er of $40,000 left to a nation of-40,- 000,000 people. The brave little mademoiselle and her last will and testament afforded last night beyond doubt many a good dinner table jest. But how many people saw the pa- thos of that modest bequest to a motherland? How many read be- tween lines the story of a woman's loyalty, divided yet all one? It is not likely that France is so wicked as this devisor has feared. It {s not probable that the French exam- ple has been potently pernicious. These apprehensions, as expressed in the will, are not theimportant things. It is the devoted thought that is be- hind the deed that is vital. Mlle. Leclere has enrolled herself among the gentle patriots of two re- publics.—Editorial in the New York World. 3 Woman’s Versatility. In view of the versatility of wom- ankind in general, it seems strange that her ingenuity should not have sought an outlet in the inventive field. It is a fact, proven by the statistics by the patent offices of all countries, that not only a’ very small percentage of either applications or patents are made or issued in the name of women. It seems strange when it is re- called that woman armed with a hair pin can perform mechanical marvels. Picking locks with a piece of jap- anned wire is a mere trifle to the Rverage woman; to button shoes with the same instrument is her second nature; and when it comes to draw- ing a tape through a skirtband half the size of the tape, not even an Edi- son or a Bell, or any other man, could accomplish what uninventive ~woman does. It is all the more re- markable, for woman is highly imag- inative as is shown by her success in that portion of literature known as fiction. She can invent characters and plots and even excuses, but she seems utterly devoid of the mechani- cal sense so common in the sterner Sex. : Still, it will not do for men to crow too soon, for Mme. Currie, the discov- erer of radium, has demonstrated that in scientific research woman is every bit as thorough and as reason- ing as man. And when woman does start to invent, she will invent things that will probably be of greater bene- fit to humanity than the Gatling gun or the submarine boat.—The Ameri- tan Inventor. Nightcaps in Vogue Again. Fashionable women have revived the use of the nightcap, writes the London correspondent of the New York Sun. It was discarded at least half a century ago, except by grand- mothers and elderly spinsters, but now, according to the Drapers’ Re- cord, it has again become an indis- pensable part of woman’s outfit and is included in all trousseaux. The nightcap of 1907 is a dainty combination of canibriec, lace and frills, beautified by colored ribbon ro- settes. The revival is partly ascribed to the doctors. Their incessant ad- vocacy of well ventilated bedrooms has, in the absence of over door tran- soms in English houses, resulted in bedroom windows being opened at night, and women who are not robust found the wintry draughts too try- ing. Another and more distressing cause is alleged by hairdressers. These say that elaborate coiffures are being de- sired. These are helped by stylish transformations, which are detached at night. To facilitate this arrange- ment it is said that many ladies have their hair cropped, rendering a night- cap necessary. Their grandmothers practiced the same folly. Moreover, the new fnanner of dressing the hair, which introduces an exceptionally careful process of undulation and is submitted to by many women three times a week, calls for.the use of the protecting! messages convince. nightcap to preserve the freshness of the coiffure. meee A Man’s Mother. An Tllinois friend says that Abra- ham Lincoln was ‘‘all Hanks’ and “inherited all that was useful or characteristic from her.” TI. am of the opinion that much the same thing could be said of many young men to-day—whose fathers point to them with pride as “a chip of the old block.” Mother shaped the chip and gave it the character which makes it superior to other chips. Lincoln knew what he owed to his mother. Two portraits in this little book “Nancy Hanks'’ show in a striking manner how much Lincoln resem- bled the Hanks family. It is said that the first letter that Lincoln ever wrote was, when a boy of ten, he asked Parson David Elkins to come and “preach a memorial service for my mother.” In after years he said: “All that I am or hope to be I owe to my angel mother. Blessings on her memory!’ I will venture to say that you never knew a man who | amounted to anything who had what we call an inferior mother. By ‘‘in- ferior” I mean lacking in strong, moral character. Unless the child can obtain his early ideals from his mother, or in the event of her death or absence, from some woman that he loves, such ideals will never humanely true. high compliment to men to say that a pound of their precept or example is worth less for character building than an ounce of real mother. love. We work for the home and are will- ing to fight for the country, and yet, after all, the future is really ‘made by the hopeful women who, in home and in schoolrocm, reach our chil- dren as we never can. I have stopped be t is not perhaps a : | hy The Pulm L7he a A SERMON * oY THE REV~ [RAW FENDERS? Subject: The Man Jesus. Brooklyn, N. Y.—Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church on the theme, “The Man Jesus,” the pastor, the Rev. Ira Wemmell Hen- derson, took as his text John 12:21, “Sir, we would see Jesus.” He said: Let us go with these certain Greeks of whom John bears us record and see Jesus. Down the long perspect- ive of the ages let us look at Christ, the man. A study of the career of the Sa- vior will indicate two central and crucial elements in His character as a man. Jesus was a man of parts; He was also a man of power. The | Lord was not a negative being. He ! had definite ability and the energy to put His gifts ments. The Christ was a man of parts. As a philosopher He is peerless; as a into direct achieve- i teacher He can teach us all the way to teach; a preacher to mankind His His ministry is a present and a constant joy to the ! weary and a sweet remembrance to heart and soul alike. { ness in my little notes on the West to try | to bring these things out. 1 do not wish to brag about what New Eng- land people have done, but in a way the northeastern part of this country is the mother of the great West, giv- ing to it the best and noblest that the old world could furnish. We shall see, I think, how this spirit has influenced and is still influenc- ing the West, If Western men can show that they have improved both the spirit and the body we shall be glad of it.—Rural New Yorker. The fashionable homespuns gray in color. There is to be no more fashionable color than tan. For runabout wear toques are very smart. The jumper suits are finding their place, which is properly for morning wear. Even the pond lily buds and blos- soms are imitated for millinery pur- poses. Long shoulders and large armholes may be fashionable but they are not always becoming. : . The yoke and sleeves of a charm- ing crepe de chine negligee are of Irish crochet lace. The China silks have enough body this season to make them as desir- able as foulards. The dark brown shoes that are be- ing shown with the tans are quiet and refined looking. Even the skirt of crepe de chine must fit the figure closely about the hips and lie very full about the feet. There are a good many ‘Tam’ crowns seen on the new straw hats, and a few silk ones which are very soft and effective in the browns. - The poke shaped hat with brim narrowest at the front and rising high at the back where all the trim- ming is placed, is decidedly Frenchy. The fashion for light colored suits is going to make a heavy demand on the pocketbook, for there must be lots of light gloves and hats to ac- company. . A fan-like section of the dress ma- terial, with the V at the arm’s-eye, connects the sleeve cap with the body of the waist. It is quite a novel idea. When the arm is at the side it is not noticeable, but when the arm is lifted it appears as a pretty feature, are the airship . side the king's highway. Jesus was a man of power. His spirituality is - unsurpassed. His goodness is the godly kind that we admire. His sincerity makes the heart sure; His commanding positive- is refreshing. His constancy was sublime. Jesus was a man of parts. In His clear and comprehensive statements of eternal truths He stamped Himself a philosopher without an equal. To Him God was the first great cause— the personal, spiritual giver and ruler of all life. For Him union with the will of God in a holy, godly life is the highest good for men and for society. In the mind of Christ sin is disobedience to the will of the Father and its wages is deliberate separation from Him—that is to say, death. The things that are spiritual are the only things that last unto eternity, and it was to the attainment of eter- nal graces as the end of human exist- ence that Christ turned the attention of mankind. A glance into the depths and ranges and reaches of human thought and experience many messages touch will convince any man, however skeptical he may be, of His predominant position among this world’s philosophers. Jesus is markedly a teacher as He unfolds and explains the mysteries of divine verities. With the simplest language and the most charming par- ables Jesus sent home changeless truths. Does He desire to show the uselessness of trust in riches He piec- tures to us the rich man with his barns and his bank and the wreck thereof. Under His touch the leaven in the loaf reveals to us the men and the women we should be. He lights a candle for us, and we strive to spread His truth throughout the globe. The supper of the mighty lord sends us out into the highways and the byways to bid men lay fast hold upon salvation, free, rich, suffi- cient. As a teacher Christ is master- ful. He takes a mustard seed and we see the coming of the kingdom. A man hides a talent in a napkin and stands forever as a danger signal be- The foolish virgins are a lesson to us to be ready for the coming of the Master. These and the rest of the parables of Jesus are full of suggestion and of implica- | tion, weighty with concentrated prin- ciple. Jesus taught spiritual and moral principles. He was not foolish enough to endeavor to give to us a set of rules which should be for us a sort of guide book or directory. He gave no set of statutes. Realizing that we are men and not automatons our Lord suggests the principles and then leaves the individual to work out for himself under the guidance of the Spirit of God the application of the principle of his own life. Christ didn’t worry about the geographical situation of Judea or over the ques- tion as to whether the world is flat or round. Those points at issue were quite beyond His province. His mis- sion was to teach spiritual and moral truth, and He had neither time nor taste for anything else. Why should He worry over secondary and tran- sient matters when the souls of men were in dire need of that primal truth which is necessary unto eternal life? Jesus also taught with authority. He knew that the truth was in Him and He let no man contradict Him with success. He spake, and to those men—be- lieving and unbelieving—it came as the voice of God. The honest heart- ed helieved unto salvation; those who didn’t want to accept His truth sent Him away in scorn and crucified Him at the last. The Jews sent Jesus to His death not because they did not realize the force of His words but very largely because He spake too much truth to suit them. Some one has said that there is no more hazardous task than that of carrying the torch of truth into those hidden recesses where the light has never shown. Jesus found this to be true. Christ’s application of His theories to the needs of every day and His positive insistance upon the legiti- macy of the demands of godliness and ultimate truth upon the lives of all men are the secrets of His mar- velous power are a preacher. He not only preached abstract theory but also showed how these ideas could become factors for uplift in the busy lives of men. The duty to love God and to serve the truth was not with Him a mental problem, but a fact of life. Christ never minced words. He knew that which He was after, and He never failed to make His hearers see what He meant. Vivid, direct, without a waver, Christ sent home the iruth. And it was this that gained Him both friends and enemies, as it will any man who dares to state the truth men either cannot see or will not hear. What a pro- phet He was and oh, what a need there is to-day for men who can see and feel, for men with insight and prevision, men who dare to probe the present and the past and to pre- . dict the future, fearlessly, inspiring- that His- ‘| ly, with God-given wisdom and divine geal. How sick we all are of that popular preaching of the day, which is aimed nowhere and hits nothing— whose main and prevailing character- istic is that it is inconsequential and flabby, effeminate and devoid of the power men should show. The winsomeness of the ministry of Jesus is a fact that merits our at- tention. The love that flowed from His heart, the tenderness of His voice, the sympathy that rushed with- out ceasing from His soul, the heal- ing virtue of His hand, all these stamp Him as a minister who can teach us how to aid men best. The Lord was a man of power. Power is to ability what electricity is to a dynamo. A man of parts must become a man of action before he is of much use. The world is full of geniuses who are impotent. They cut no figure in the life of their day simply because they lack energy and force. Jesus was a man of many powers. ; His spirituality is unsurpassed. He had a right basis for His philoso- phy and His life. He had the right point of view, and thus of necessity saw things in their right relations. His spiritual philosophy colored all His mission, messages and ministry, and gave individuality and peculiar meaning to His words and deeds. Christ began right. He put God at the centre of His system of life and of course all went well with Him, The insight of Christ and His spirit- ual sense are our need. Jesus was a good man, and good- ness is greatness and power. Christ was no sickly sentimentalist, but a good man in the best sense of the word; that is to say, He was a godly man. He was a clean minded, pure hearted, noble acting man, and no matter what may be the mental-or material abilities of any man, if he be not good he cannot hope to be most of use. Godliness must be a characteristic of any man who would mold a lasting and revered memory. Christ was not mawkish. You know how He dealt with the problems of the shew bread, the ears of corn, the man who waited to be healed. He was straightforward and more than conscientious. He was constructive- ly, progressively, cumulatively right- eous. He moved ahead. He was kind, true, pure, noble — that is to say, good. Meanness was beneath Him. The truth was His glory. Cleanness of life was the sign of His inward grace. He was a gentleman, a true nobleman. He was an aristo- cratic democrat, who showed His birth and His breeding in His man- ner. Jesus was sincere. He was not a patch work, but a whole pattern. He leveled to any plumb. He met speci- fications to the letter. There were no weak spots, no faulty places in His life glazed over with pretended char- acter. Jesus was a whole, whole- some, well rounded man, without de- fect whatsoever. His sincerity in- spired trust, for He lived the sort of life He asked other men to enter. Every one knew and knows just where Jesus stood—with the right always. Jesus was positive. He didn’t suppose or guess or just think. He knew and was sure. His knowledge was from. personal experience and it was power. Because Christ is dead certain of what Ile speaks about we hail Him Lord. Aud do we wish to lead other men to Him we must also speak with conviction out of personal knowledge. But constancy was not the least of the Savior’s powers. Jesus was no quitter. He was not a prey to dis- couragement. He had faith-—and to last. He stood squarely with the is- sue and the cause He represented at all times and in all seasons, through thick and through thin, through sood and evil report. Christianity needs more of such Christlike con- stancy. Constancy means pluck, en- durance; courage against and in the face of odds. Inconstancy is the child of lack of faith and it breeds failure. Jesus was a man of parts and of power. His facility for various work needed a man of power. Jesus was a genius and a hard laborer. He had inherent ability and a fund of force- fulness. The world is full of gen- iuses without power. The list of un. known saviors is large. Jesus ha talent and the real, vital spiritua; power that could make talents pro ductive. He had the right kind o energy and enough of it. He got Hi dynamic from God. That is where we should apply for ours. Little Sins. The little faults, the little sins, so- called, which may seem so inconse- quential, may, nevertheless, hide from us the vision of the Eternal. You need not break the glasses of a telescope, or coat them over with paint, in order to prevent you from seeing through them. Just breathe upon them, and the dew of your breath will shut out all the stars. So it does not require great crimes to hide the light of God’s countenance. Little faults can do it just as well. Take a shield and cast a spear upon it, and it will leave on it one great dent. Prick it all over with a million little needle shafts and they will take thé polish from it more than the piercing of the spear. So it is not so much the great sins which take the freshness from our conscience, as the numberless petty faults which we are all the time committing. The Only True Religion. Men talk much about ‘practical re- ligion,” but differ greatly as to what it comprises. Many limit it to benev- olent gifts and kindly ministries, or to public religious services. But it is more. It includes a personal faith in Christ, holy communion with God and a pure life. There can be no real and abiding practice of Christianity without a renovated nature and a sanctified heart.—Presbyterian. True Peace. To know that God is near, to feel that you are acting toward Him as a reverential and affectionate child, and that He is feeling toward you as a gracious and compassionate Father — this, this is peace.—Hamilton. No Danger There. “Put your whole soul into the Christian life. No® one ever was guilty of backsliding who was press- ing with all his might toward Jesus.” —Philadelphia Methodist. . Grady KEYSTORE STATE COLLINGS LOBBYISTS SHUT OUT Representative of .Anti-Vaccination League Makes Himself Too Of- ficious on Floor of House. The House took summary action in driving lobbyists from the floor. It adopted a resolution offered by Mr. Martin, of Mercer, declaring that lobbyists were attempting to con: trol legislation and directing that they be notified to leave. The ac- tion was aimed directly at Porter F. Cope, of Philadelphia, Secretary oft Fhe Antyvaccination league. The sergeant-at-arms started towards Mr. Cope, but the latter did not wait to be thrown out. The Pfaff anti-vaccination bill was finally defeated on second reading. The House defeated the McAdoo bill requiring persons coming into the State to be vaccinated within one month after their arrival, and the vaccination of all children before they reach the age of 4 years. A some- what similar bill by Weddell of Westmoreland was also defeated. Governor - Stuart vetoed the House bill regulating charges by cab driv- ers in cities of the first, second and third classes. The bill libel unanimously. repealing the law passed the Salus- Senate COL. BARNETT QUITS GUARD. Officer of the Tenth Regiment For- wards His Resignation General Stewart. James E. Barnett, of Washington, resigned his commission as Colonel of the Tenth Regiment, N. G. P. He forwarded his resignation to Adjutant General Stewart. Colonel Barnett has has 23 years’ continous service in the State militia. In the Morewood coke strike in 1888 he served as First Lieu- tenant of Company - H —and in the Homestead strike in 1892 as Captain in that company. Shortly after he was elected Major and in 1896 Lieu- tenant Colonel. In the latter capac- ity he served with the regiment in the Philippines campaign = and suc- ceeded Colonel A. L. Hawkins as commander of the regiment on the latter's death on the journey home. He was elected Colonel in 1900. to Depositors Get 50 Per Cent. David Jameson, Cashier of the Cit- izens National Bank: Samuel Foltz, Cashier of the First National Bank, and Attorney E. N. Baer, a director of the l.awrence Savings and Trust Company , have been appointed praisers of the closed New Castle Savings and Trust Company. le- ceiver Painter expects to make a 50 per cent distribution to depositors within a short time. Organizing Against Black Hand. To protect themselves and their families from the Black Hand society. prominent Italians of New Castle met at St. Vitus’ Italian Catholic Church and took preliminary steps toward forming an organization to fight the society. This will be followed by another meeting next Sunday after- noon, when officers will be elected and the campaign begun. Ex-Judge Stevenson Badly Hurt. Former Judge Maxwell Stevenson was held up, robbed and brutally beat- en by two colored men in front of his home, 23514 Spruce street, Phila- delphia. IHe was cut about the head and face and left lying on the pave- ment by the highwaymen, who rifled his pockets, taking a gold watch and a sum of money. His condition is said to be serious. Good Roards Require $20,000,000. A meeting of road supervisors of Western Pennsylvania was held at Warren. State Highway Commissioner Joseph W. Hunter made an address. He said it will require $20,000,000 to build the roads asked for. A com- mittee for the advancement of good roads was appointed. William Wallace Brown, of Penn- sylvania, recently appointed Assist- ant Attorney General, will be assign- ed to defend suits before the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission, succeed- ing Assistant Attorney General Ful- ler who has resigned. Mr. Brown formerly was Auditor for the Navy Department, to which position Ralph W. Tyler, a negro of Columbus, was appointed. Bank Examiner James M. Cover, who was temporary receiver of the New Castle Savings & Trust Com- pany, was arrested upon a charge of divulging information of the state banking department, without author- ity. Edward F. Connelly, a real es- tate man, made the information be- fore Alderman Ranney. Tipped the Scales at 310 Pounds. Charles Edmonds, the heaviest man in Fayette county, died at Uniontown. He was a colored chef, 42 years old, and when in good health weighed 365 pounds. He was below the average fn stature, and his height was three inches less than the measurement around his waist. Civil Service Examinations. Civil = Service examinations for clerks and carriers will be held at Vandergrift, Punxsutawney and Johns- town on April 20 to fill vacancies in- the postoffices at these places. Two Run Down by Train. Otto Silverman, totally blind, and his 5-year-old son were struck by a train on the Erie Railroad at Mead- ville. cut off bruised. and the father painfully The Superior Court refused the ap- peal of William S. Walker, of Pitts- burg, convicted of enticing Margaret Kim, a 14-year-old girl, and who was sentenced a year to jail. Unless an- other appeal is taken to the Supreme Court and allowed by the latter Walk- er will have to serve his sentence. One of the child's legs was The Evolution of Household Remedies. The modern patent medicine bush ness is the natural outgrowth of the old-time household remedies. In the early history of this country EVERY FAMILY HAD ITS HOME. MADE MEDICINES. Herb teas, bite ters, laxatives and tonics, were to be found in almost every house, come pounded by the housewife, sometimes assisted by the apothecary or the fam. ily doctor. Such remedies as picra, which was aloes. and quassia, dis- solved in apple brandy. Sometimes a hop tonic, made of whiskey, hops and bitter barks. A score or more of pop- ular, home-made rcmedies were thus compounded, the formuiae for which were passed along from house te house, sometimes written, sometimes verbally communicated. The patent medicine business is a natural outgrowth from this whole- some, old-time custom. In the begin= ning some enterprising doctor, ime pressed by the usefulness of one of these home - made remedies, would take it up, improve it in many ways, manufacture it on a large scale, ad- vertise it mainly through almanacs for the home, and thus it would be- come used over a large area. EAT- TERLY THE HOUSEHOLD REMEDY BUSINESS TOOK A MORE EXACT AND SCIENTIFIC FORM. Peruna was originally one of these old-time remedies. It was used by the Mennonites, of Pennsylvania, be- fore it was offered to. the public for sale. Dr. Hartman, THE ORIGINAL COMPOUNDER OF PERUNA, is of Mennonite origin. First, he pre- scribed it for his necighbors and his patients. The sale of it increased, and at last he established a manufae- tory and furnished it to the general drug trade. Peruna is useful in a great many climatic ailments, such as coughs, colds, sore throat, bronchitis and ca- tarrhal diseases generally. THOU- SANDS OF FAMILIES HAVE LEARNED THE USE OF PERUNA and its value in thetreatment of these ailments. They have learned to trust and believe in Dr. Hartman's judg- ment, and to rely on his remedy, Pe- runa. George Compere has returned from China with a = parasite that will speedily destroy the red scale that has been such a pest to the citrus groves of California. FITS, St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases pers manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free, Dr. H. R. Kline, L.d.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. City Names on Stamps. The idea of impressing the names of cities on the postage stamps, as wiil soon be done in this country, is not a new one, for it has been fol- lowed in Mexico and other countries, but it has never been done to the ex- tent to which it is proposed by the United States government. It - will involve considerable additional work in the printing and i ing of the stamps, but will be a safeguard which will result in an enormous saving and, in a great measure, prevent thieving. Six thousand cities of this country will be supplied with these special stamps. Twenty-six of these cities will be honored to the extent of hav- ing their respective names woven in- to the design of thes tamp, while in the other instances the mame will be printed across the face of the stamp in ink. is Frog With Habits. South America has a frog of pe- culiar habits. Dwelling in the virgin forest, at the tops of the highest trees, it chooses as the site of its nursery some hollow stump and then proceeds to line it with rosin procured from trees in the neighborhood, says the New York “Tribune.” This lining serves to catch and hold the rain-water with which it quickly becomes filled. As soon as this takes place the eggs are laid therein, and here they under- go development into tadpoles. How the rosin is collected is a mystery, nor is it yet known how the separate pieces become welded to form the watertight basin necessary to insure the safety of the treasures deposited therein. APPENBICITIS Not at all Necessary to Operate in Many Cases. Automobiles and Appendicitis scare some people before they are hit. _ Appendicitis is often caused by too much starch, in the bowels. Starch is hard to digest and clogs up the di- gestive machinery—also tends to form cakes in the cecum. (That's the blind- pouch at entrance to the ap- pendix). A N. H. girl had appendicitis, but lived on mil» forawhile—then Grape- Nuts and got well without an opera- tion. She says: ‘Five years ago while at school, I suffered terribly with constipation and indigestion.” (Too much starch, white bread, potatoes, etc., which she did not digest.) “Soon after I left school I had an attack of appendicitis and for thirteen weeks lived on milk and water. When I recovered enough to eat solid food there was nothing that would agree with me, until a friend recom- mended Grape-Nuts. “When I began to eat Grape-Nuts I weighed 98 1bs., but I soon grew to 115 lbs. The distress after eating left me entirely and now I am like a new person.” (A little Grape-Nuts dissolved in hot water or milk would have been much better for this case than milk alone, for th~ starchy part of the wheat and barley is changed into a form of digestible sugar in making Grape-Nuts.) Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, “The Road to Wellville,” -in pkgs. “There's a reason.”