LIVING THEM OVER. In spite of late events and songs With which our lives are crowded, ‘Where is the man who e’er forgets The stunt the nimble cow did, The tale of which he listened to When just a little shaver, And did repeat in childish tone With happy thrill and quaver? They're more to us, those old songs are We listened to while sweeping Adown the stream of Rockaby Into the land of Sleepihg, Than any newer, later songs The sons of Genius bring us, Than any songs of any thing The grandest singers sing us. We who have wandered far afield With sweet Bo Peep a-hunting, We who have gathered rabbit skins To wrap up Baby Bunting, ave sacred chambers in our souls For the malt house Jack builded, And wander there along old ways The suns of childhood gilded. Where Jack the Giant Killer did His mighty deeds of daring At bedtime we drop off our years And often go a-faring, And we are gladder in those ways By gnomes and giants haunted Than we have been in all the years Since we were disenchanted. We watch the beggars come to town, And hark the dog a-barking, The tunes of Tom the Piper's Son Full oft reward our harking, With Mistress Mary quite contrary We watch cowslips growing, And the cow with the crumpled horn Across the fields comes lowing. Jack climbs the beanstalk as of old Soon as his bean is planted, And chases giants as of old Through vasty halls enchanted; We ride adown the paths of night The steed of Mother Goose's— Ah, they are fancies sweet and old That sleepy-time unlooses! Ah, heroes of our baby days! And tales of what befell them! We. take our babies on our knees And sing to them, and tel them : ‘The sweet old tales, to them all new, The sweet. songs all new to them, And, hand in hand with them, seek paths We knew and ramble through them. =—Judd Mortimer Lewis in Houston Post. = Billy's Report ‘When Billy’s report for the month was handed to him he thrust it into his pocket without a glance, being satis- fied from past experience that there was that upon it which would give him a bad quarter of an hour. Rapidly through his mind went the possibilities of what his punishment at home would be this time. Of one thing he was certain—he would not be kept in on Saturday. I suppose his mother had said the last time that she | didn’t see why she should also be pun- ished for his bad reports. at school. Suddenly a cold fear seized him. If the array of red “poors” was unusually large his father might make him give up his beloved bull pup. If he could only defer the showing of the card un- til he had taught Spotty to stand on his hind legs without being held up all the time the sight of so much tal- ent might save the pup. He thought of losing the card for a day or two, but remembering the un- happy fate of Johnny Hughes, who tried that plan only to have his father dragged from work to be told more emphatically of his deficiencies than the card would have told, he concluded not to do so. Such was his desperation that he almost resolved to learn his lessons thenceforth. ‘When he reached home that even- ing his sister Victoria’s card, bearing one “excellent” to which she ostenta- tiously called the attention of the fam- ily several times, had been signed and delivered and her 5 cents reward had been carefully tied up in her handker- chief. ! “Walk up, kid, and get it over with,” said Jack, the 16-year-old brother, with a grin. “Don’t pretend that you can't find it,” as Billy fumbled in his pock- et, “because it won't go. ‘Lizabeth told Vicky all about it. What did she say, Vicky ?”? “Said she’s be ashamed if her broth- er had a card full of red ‘poors,” and that you were a stupid,” announced Victoria. Billy, too miserable to say anything, put the card on the table as far from his father as possible, and was com- manded to pick it up and hand it over like a gentleman. With an air of knowing ..only too well what it con- tained his' father opened the envel- ope, looked at the card, looked at it again, scrutinized the name at the top, and then—was the day of miracles conie back —smiled. ee i “Well, son; you were trying to fool us were you? Just look, mother! Full of nepente let me see how many —six, if you please. Ill be bankrupt with ‘two such” smart children. Will you give me- six for a quarter, Billy?” “Sure,” ‘said Billy, wondering when he would wake up. 2 “Well, 1 guess no; I think I'll pay my ‘excellent’ debts if I have to do without cigars.’ iGee!” said ‘Jack, examining the card. “I never got a report like that and I wasn’t so worse. You must have sprained your brain, kid. I'll tell you what we’ll do to celebrate; we'll go and get one of the sweater vests that you are so wild about.” “I'd rather have a collar for Spotty,” said Billy, eagerly. “One of the kind full of nails that makes him look like a fighter.” “Pll see to the collar,” said his mother, beaming with pride. For the first time in his short life Billy began to study his history lesson without any proddings from his moth- er or threats from his father. With a very much injured air he wanted to know “how a kid could learn his les- sons and get ‘E's’ when Vicky and Spot were making so much noise.” “I'd give a good deal to know what has made that young imp of a William turn into such an angel child,” said Billy's teacher to her neighbor at school. “I didn’t know it was in him. Sometimes he seems 80 modest and retiring and smiles at me in such a secret way that I have the feeling that plot.” At the end cf the month when she took up Billy's card and saw the full | array of “excellents’ she had an illum- | ination. “I hate to do it,” she said to her : neighbor, sitting with eraser poised over the card, “I really think these marks have been the making of him. My eye must have slipped last month.” ‘I'm glad I haven't got to solve the problem,” said the other teacher laughing. - Billy's card went home unchanged, with a small footnote to the effect that a blunder had been made last month, but that Billy was everything that could he desired this month and the teacher was proud of him.—Chicago News. WHERE WE LOSE BUSINESS. Foreigners Like American Goods, but Not Smashed. It is an old story that = American merchants are losing annually hun- dreds of thousands of dollars worth of trade with foreign countries because sthey pack their goods so carelessly. But the complaints seem to have little effect. At any rate they keep on com- ing. An American occupying an import- ant post on a railroad in Colombia writes to American Industries: “I have seen lantern globes packed in a barrel with iron bolts and panes of glass 26 by 30 inch sent without sufficient layers of straw to prevent breakage. As an example we received 120 car window glass (panes) of which but six reached us intact, and this from the United States. : “Six steam gauges (indicators) pack- ed with iron bolts in one end of the box reached us utterly jammed - to pieces. Pianos are rolled over and on to steamboats and up steep banks on to steamboats and up steep manks in unloading, and not even a shotgun would prevent the wild Indian steve- dore here from throwing from his shoulders to the ground a box of costly chinaware or glass vases. “To reach Bogota, the capital, some 700 miles from the coast, goods after their 300 miles of ocean journey have to pass over a railway at the coast, then by a steamboat, then by another short railway, another steamboat in the upper, Magdalena river, then an- other railway, and finally upon pack animals for a two or three days jour- ney and then by another railway. You may say this would break irom. ' It does. 5 “The European merchant or manu- facturer besides granting long time credit also packs very securely in his effort to secure trade in South Ameri- ca, and so gains much trade, even though American goods are considered greatly superior in most cases.” Queer Use for Old Hats. : “Oh, yes, I am always in the market for second hand derbies and silk hats. They sell better than anything else.” The old clothes dealer pointed to a room filled with shocking hats. “There’s not half enough there to meet my demand,” he said. “If you was to bring me a carload of old hats this morning I'd take ’em all.” “You bet there’s a demand. Espe- cially among old maids and widows that live alone. They buy these hats and hang a couple on the hall rack. Then, when a beggar or tramp gets too rambunctious at the door, they turn and say: .°% oi “ ‘George is home. That’s his hat. George! Oh, George! Will you come down here and "turn this rascal away? * > “Then the tramp sneaks, thinking there’s a man in the house, “Restaurants, when they open up new stands, generally lay in 25 or 80 hats. They hang them in the lobby to make people think business ig brisk.” —Philadelphia Bulletin. Absent-Minded at Barber's. “You see a lot of absent minded men around a barbershop,” remarked the barber with the bristly hair, as he shoved one more little gob of later in- to the customer’s mouth. “You'd be surprised at the number of people who come in here and make preparations to go to bed,” he continued, “No, they don’t take this place for a hotel. It. ain’t that. Here’s how it happens: A man will come in and take off his coat and collar and necktie preparatory to getting shaved or having his hair cut. Then when he sees himself in the glass he looks so much like a man about to retire for the night that about half the time he will go ahead and wind his watch.' A few of the more absent-mind- ed ones may start to undo their sus- penders before they are reminded that they aren’t going to bed at all. But scores of them wind their watches, just as they do at night. That much of it is a common occurrence.”—New York Press. i ‘Home Work. There are strong pros and cons so far as home werk for women is con- : \ we are fellow conspirators in the same | jand patent law. ‘crime waves. COLLEGE TO PATENT OFFICE. Commissioner Says the Latter Is a Post-Graduate School. College men by the score finish up their education in the patent office at Washington, according to the commis sioner of patents. In an article in American Industries the commission- er calls his department a post-gradu- ate school. “The examiners in the patent of- fice,” says the commissioner, “are all graduate of colleges, and 90 percent of them have been graduated in general With office experi- ence they become invaluable in the service, but after almost three years of experience in the patent office, when they are most valuable ‘in its work, they resign and accept outside positions. © Thus this office has be- come a post-graduate school for the technical and legal education of young college men who enter its ser- vice. “The General Electric company has in its patent department at least twelve men formerly examiners in this office, and other corporations have taken hundreds. Out of a corps of 300 examiners 135 have resigned from the Patent Office within a period of less than five years. It is only necessary to remark that the salaries paid principal examiners in this ser- vice are the same today as when they were fixed in 1848. “Patents in the craft of telegraphy were scrutinized by three examiners, whose progress in their task was inter- rupted by their successive resignations ; 50 that the net result was that $3200 was paid for the acquirement of the knowledge of this art, only to have that knowledge lost to this “office through resignations because of insuf- ficient salaries. The same thing is oc- curring to a greater or less extent in all of the forty-one examining divis- lons.” LR a Assassination Wave. Portugal, Servia, Sweden—where next will attack upon the lives of rulers be made? The quick succes- sion of these several attempts. to murder the heads of nations, one of which was successful, seems to point to the prevalance of an assassination wave. It is a bad symptom. Nor is there anything in common in the countries where the outbreak’ of an- archistic or crazy violence has ap- peared to indicate a basis for griev- ance against government. . The apparently insane man who made an attack upon the palace of Sweden’s monarch, sending a fusilade of bulletts through the windows of the edifice, from which the royal oc- cupants happened to be absent, may or may not have been fed upon the pabulum that makes anarchists. But it is safe to assert that about every other person who commits such deeds is unbalanced, whether or not he be a member of an assassination order. The psychologists say that sugges- tion accounts for the various kinds of The same rule should hold good for their correction. The execution of every person making an. attempt upon the life of a ruler would furnish a powerful suggestion to dis- ordering persons of the danger of gratifying their ill-balanced propensi- ty and tend to discourage such acts. —Baltimore News. Chief Causes of Coal-mine Disasters. A French expert, M. Taffanel, who recently investigated for his govern- ment the conditions under which coal is mined in this country, says in his report that the most elementary ap- paratus for, safeguarding life were unknown in the Monongah mine in Pennsylvania, where about 400 min- ers were killed by an explosion, and that in general the precautions taken in American coal mines are far infer- ior to those adopted in France. He condemns especially the unprotected miner’s lamp; the primitive methods of blasting (filling drilled holes in the coal with black powder, charging them with cartridges made by the miners themselves, and then setting off the charge); the failure to sprinkle the coal dust to lessen the danger of its explosion; and the careless hand- ling of dynamite, which the miners carry in.their pockets. He believes that the Monogah disaster was caused by a short-circuit, or .by a miner’s lamp igniting the dust-laden air.— Leslie’s. Canadian Pacific's Coal Mines, The Canadian Pacific railway com- pany is spending between $10,000,000 and $20,000,000 in sinking shafts and erecting machinery at Hosmer on the Crow’s Nest pass line through - the Rocky mountains, to develop its great coal property there. The first mine to be opened will start next January, with a production of 3000 tons a day, most of which the company will use, according to the engineer who is sup- erintending the work. The company is erecting cottages for its miners, and the town will probably have = about 2000 population by this time next year. Education and the Drama. cerned. If it can be conclusively proved that such employment is against the interests of both individual and ‘general health, then, although such a course may be a hardship to many, it should be done away with. But before any radical steps are taken the whole matter should be far more closely: investigated than it has been investigated up to the present time.— Sanitary Record. Street Care in Shanghai. There is no fear that drama will “go under.” It is one of the. peren- nial interests of mankind, and will remain so to the end. Education, for great masses of the people, is still in a transition state. Drama has every- thing to gain from its spread.—Lon- don Stage. Up in a Balloon. Floating softly up into the blue ocean of air, watching the earth sink slowly away beneath us and fade and Street car service has at last been | inaugurated in Shanghai against the | sition of the natives in behalf of | ksha men. ! i change quietly to an immense map SPT before our wondering eyes— h are the first impr loon voyagers.—Century. Bon PENNSYLVANIA STATE NEWS CEMMISSICN TO DECIDE Governor Stuart Refers Canal] Qués- tion to Railroad Body. Harrisburg.—Governor Edwin SS. Stuart referred to the state railroad commission the resolution passed by the last legislature for a commission to ‘inquire into the abandonment of the canals of the state and the aban- donment of the construction of com- peting railroads by corporations and to recommend legislation on the sub- ject. The resolution carried an ap- propriation of $2,500, which Governor Stuart vetoed, stating that he with- held his approval for the reason that the work can be done and report properly made by the railroad com- mission. The commission is to report to the governor it’s recommendations and ways and means to restore the aban- doned canals and to establish new canal companies to the realm of transportation. The resolution also empowers the attorney general to take such steps as will secure the charters of abandoned railroads, as well 4s to act on franchises. MOVEMENT OF TROOPS Three Brigades of the National > Guard to Go to- Gettysburg on Separate Days. Harrisburg.—By means of a plan adopted by Adjutant General Stewart, the movement of troops to and from the division encampment of the Na- tional Guard at Gettysburg next sum- mer is to be greatly facilitated. Each of the three brigades is to be moved on a separate day, the Third on July 16, the Second July 17, and the First July 18. All will go by train, except the Governor's troop, which will ride from Harrisburg. The same order will be preserved in breaking camp. The Third brigade wil] move July 24, the Second and First following on the 25th and 26th. All the brigades will be together in camp. POISON ROOT KILLS TWO Boys Eat of Deadly Plant and Die in Field. Kittanning.—Two boys are dead and a third narrowly escaped a similar fate, as a result of eating a plait with a pleasant taste which they found in a field. ; : Two sons of Jacob Garver and one son of William Garver of Hawthorn, Clarion county, just over the Arm- strong county line, crossed a creek near their home in search of flowers. Shortly after finding and eating the root all became desperately ill and two dled in the field before help could be obtained. One son of Jacob Garver was saved by the prompt use of antidotes. The dead boys were aged 10 and 13 years, respectively. FLAMES DESTROY PLANT Lumber Yard at West Newton Burns With $50,000 Damage. West Newton.—Fire at 1 o’clock in the morning destroyed the planing mills and lumber yard of Finley & Campbell, causing a loss of $50,000 with but slight insurance. The blaze, which started near the middle of the plant, is believed to have been of incendiary origin. It had gained such headway when dis- ‘covered that the loca] fire department was powerless, and the flames spread through the entire establishment. R. B. Campbell and George T. Finley compose the firm. : FOREST FIRE CAUSES LOSS — yr — Hundreds of Acres Denuded and Oil Rigs Menaced. Butler—A forest fire which started from a locomotive spark along the Bessemer & Lake Erie Railroad, in the “pine traet,” near Oneida, north of here, destroyed timber on hundreds of acres and endangered a score of oil rigs. Farmers from miles around turned out to fight the blaze, which was checked by plowing furrows in its path. William Young was overcome by heat in the woods and was rescued by friends in time to prevent death in the flames. Buys Coking Coal Tract. Uniontown.—It is reported here that the Pittsburg Steel Company, whose big finishing mills are located at Mo- nessen and Glassport, have purchased a 400-acre tract of Connellsville cok- Ing coal from the Sherrick’s and will develop it, making coke to use at its large open hearth furnaces at Mones- sen. Poplars Must Go. Kittanning.—The share trees com- mission of Wickboro has decided that all the poplar trees in the boroughs streets must be cut down by next fall and give place to maple trees. This action is taken because roots of poplars force their way through walls and sewers and cause much damage. Woman Indicted for Murder. Sharon.—The Mercer county grand jury returned a true bill against Mrs. Ann Dahringer of Sharon, accused of murdering her husband last Septem- ber. Gabor Molmar, charged with having killed Charles Copax here last December, was discharged at it was shown he shot in self-defense. More Mines Resume. | Coa] mines in the vicinity of Avella, | on the Wabash Pittsburg Terminal Railroad, will resume operations after a protracted shutdown. It is esti- mated 1,500 men will go back to work. The mines of the Meadow- lands Coal Company at Meadowlands, Washington county, will reopen, giv- ing employment to 600 men. Greensburg. — Despondent, Isaac Williams, a furnace man, drank two ounces of laudanum at Scottdale and died in a few hours. GOES INSANE IN PULPIT Pastor Resigns, Then Collapses and Forgets About It. Philadelphia.—The Rev. S. G. Wil- son pastor of the Baptist church at North Wales, Bucks county, became suddenly insane in his pulpit during the Easter services, though at the moment his congregation did not real- ize it. Tendering his resignation ,as pastor, he immediately retired to a room in rear of the pulpit, where he was found by some members of the church in a condition of complete nervous col- lapse, having no recollection of having resigned, nor of his sermon. He was placed under medical care and his wife conducted the service in the evening. Mr. Wilson is one of the most elo quent and popular preachers in the vicinity. LICENSE IS REFUSED Judge Ingraham Hands Down Deci- sions in Greene County. Waynesburg.—Judge James Ingra- ham handed down four decisions in the five license applications in Greene county. Licenses were refused for South's distillery and the Bald Hill and Lippincott’s distillery at Lippin- cott. The former plant has not been operated for several years. It is in close proximity to a schoolhouse. Remonstrances were presented against both concerns. The application of Patrick Reilly for a retail license at Rice's Landing was refused upon remonstrances. It is 30 years since the last retail li- cense ‘was granted in Greene county. A distiller’s license was granted to R. W. Higginbotham at Gray’s Land- ing. No decision was made in the Waynesburg brewery application. PENSIONED BY CARNEGIE Philadelphia Librarian Granted $50 a Month for Life. Philadelphia.—Fifty dollars a month from Andrew Carnegie is the pension John Edmands, librarian emeritus of the Mercantile library will receive for life. He is 88 years of age and resides in this city. Mr. Edmands became connected with the Mercan- tile in 1856 and was. librarian for many years. He has been librarian emeritus and assistant treasurer for the last six years. * Find Body of Suicide. Oil, City.—The body of Mrs. Lavina Samms, who jumped into the Alle- gheny river March 28 was found floating 30 miles south of Oil City. The woman committed suicide the day following the burial of her hus- band. The leap from the bridge was witnessed by several hundred per- song powerless to prevent it. State Flag Over Capitol. Harrisburg.—The state flag was raised on the new capitol at noon on the 21st in accordance with the reso- lution passed by the legislature on February 26, last, and approved by Governor Edwin S$. Stuart March 4. The flags are erected on the wings, the main building being occupied with the national flag. Boy Attacked by Wolf. Washington.—John Hathaway, §- year-old son of Mrs. Mary Hathaway of Carmichaels, Greene county, was attacked by a prairie wolf chained in a stable at the rear of the Hathaway home and but for the timely assist ance of James Cure, a neighbor, the lad would have been devoured. The child’s body was terribly lacerated. Old * Custer Scout Dead. Pottsville—Benjamin Miller, a United States soldier, who was with Custer in many Indian fights, died here today. He was a scout under Custer at the time of the historic massacre, but was in the hospital at the time, and so was saved from the fate that befell his comrades. Means Work for 200 Men. Washington.—A haulage system, completed at the Meadowlands Coal Company’s mines ‘at Arden station, will, it is estimated, increase the daily output 3,000 tons. Two hundred ad- | ditional men will be employed. The | plant cost $40,000. : Tobacco and Liquor Barred, = New Castle—Men using liquor or tobacco, who apply for “bread line” aid here, are now being refused. Men in the line who were smoking or whose appearance indicated they had been drinking were asked to drop out. Bullet Strikes Mother. Waynesburg.—Glen Funk, while cleaning a rifle at his home, 10 miles west of here, accidentally discharged it. The bullet entered his mother’s | face below the right eye and the wound may prove fatal. Robbers Loot Stores. Bellefonte.—Robbers broke into the store of Montgomery & Company, clothiers, and Heller's drug store, both near police headquarters. In the first store they carried off clothing |and almost ruined a $1,000 cash reg- | ister. Ford City Boy Drowned. | Ford City.—The 5-year-old son of | Mr. and Mrs. Smith Klingensmith of | Rosston, was drowned in the Alle- | gheny river. Samuel R. Shipley Dies. | Philadelphia.—Samuel R. Shipley, formerly president of the Provident | Life & Trust Company of this city, land a well known financier, died at {his home here, after a long illness. | He was 80 years old. | Butler.—That a vicious dog is a | public nuisance, and the owner must { slay the animal and pay doctor bills of persons bitten, was decided by Jus- tice Joseph Crisswell of Lyndora in the case of Lucus Davon, whose dog | bit Frank Allis. The dog is dead. One of the Essentials of the happy homes of to-day is a vast fund of information as to the best methods of promoting health and happiness and right living and knowledge of the world’s best products. Products of actual excellence and reasonable claims truthfully presented and which have attained to world-wide acceptance through the approval of the Well-Informed of the World; not of indi- viduals only, but of the many who have the happy faculty of selecting and obtain- ing the best the world affords. One of the products of that class, of known component parts, an Ethical remedy, approved by physicians and com- mended by the Well-Informed of the World as a valuable and wholesome family laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manu- factured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. Berlin’s Shade Trees. Three hundred Berlin streets are planted with 44,000 trees, which are said to represent a value of nearly $200,000. About a thousand garden- ers and assistants are employed to take care of thom, . Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children thing, softens thegums, reducesinflamma- on, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle Esperanto State Proposed. Prof. Roy, the French Esperantist, is urging the establishment of an in- dependent Esperanto state in Europe. The site he has selected for this ex- periment is on a meutral strip of ter- ritory which lies on che frontier be- tween Germany, Belgium and Hol- land, some five miles from Aix-la- Chapelle. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis- ease that science has been able to cure in alt its stages, and thatisCatarrh. Hall’sCatarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con- stitutional disease, requires a constitutional ° treatment. Hall’sCatarrh Cureistaken inter- nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu-: cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy- ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con- stitution and assisting nature In doling its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CuenNey & Co., Toledo, O. Sold bv Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. 18 Supreme Court Changes. ? The president of the United States may be an uncrowned king, but there is a power even greater than his, and that is the power of the Supreme Court of the United States. Within the term of the next presidency there will in all probability be four vacancies in the supreme court which will be filled by appointment by the president, and these appoint- aents will in a large measure deter- mine the future bias of the highest judicial body in the country. There are nine members of the supreme court and their average age is 64, four of them being 70 years and over. The youngest member, Judge Moody, who was appointed in 1906, is 55. Three of these members have been appointed by Roosevelt during the last six years, but owing to the great age of several of the members of the court it seems likely that within the next presidential term: the rather unusual number of four vacancies will occur. Therefore, the next presidential election will de- termine not only who shall fill -the highest executive office in the land, but will also determine the political and economic bent of the supreme court.—Wall Stree Journal. > Frest on the Moon. Changes on the moon's surface, especially near the crater Linnaeus, are now recognized by Pickering, Barnard and others. - It is concluded that the diminution’ of a“ white patch must be a melting of hoar frost at sunrise and that the deposition and melting of frost must be taking place in other parts of the moon. Li Cam rie BUILT RIGHT Brain and Nerves Restored by Grape- Nuts Food. The number of persons whose ail- : ments were such that no other food could be retained at all, is large and reports are on the increase. “For twelve years I suffered from dyspepsia, finding no food that did not distress me,” writes a Wisconsin lady. “I was reduced from 145 to 90 1Ibs., gradually growing weaker until I could leave my bed only a short while at a time, and became un- able to speak aloud. . “Three years ago I was attracted by an article on Grape-Nuts and de- cided to try it. “My stomach was so weak I could not take cream, but I used Grape- Nuts with milk and lime water. It helped me from the first, building up my system in a manner most aston- ishing to the friends who had thought my recovery impossible. : “Soon I was able to take Grape- Nuts and cream for breakfast, and lunch at night, with an egg and Grape-Nuts for dinner. “I am now able to eat fruit, meat and nearly all vegetables for dinner but fondly continue Grape-Nuts for breakfast and supper. “At the time of beginning Grape- Nuts I could scarcely speak a sentence without changing words around or ‘talking crooked’ in some way, but my brain and nerves have become so strengthened that I no longer have that trouble.” “There's a Reason.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, N 1. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers