The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, April 25, 1906, Image 7

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The " Rexall " Remedies are successful and this is why.
' They were placed on the market three years ago. They have
scored already the record of the greatest success ever known in the
history of the drug business.
jl "Come and go " popularity may arise from any number of causes
(hullabaloo advertising among them) and may or may not be founded
on real worthiness. But the man, the pk;i, the idea, or the article that
truly succeeds, dees to because he or it deserves to succeed, and
for no other reason.
v The succecs of the " Rexall " Remedies is therefore the first evidence
of their real merit They sell because they cure, and they cure be
cause each one of them is the best remedy known to medical science
for the particular ailment it is made to relieve.
There are nearly 200 remedies sold under the " Rexall " name,
each for one disease or one purpose. Each of these has been selected
by a committee of experts from among all other remedies of its
class, for manufacture and sale by The United Drug Company, a co
operative association cf leading American druggists.
Wherever you see the name "Rexall," you may know that it
stands for a formula scientifically correct and proved efficient in actual,
long extended practice. We know these formulas and are glad to
answer all inquiries regarding them, giving full information as to the
ingredients.
Here are three famous members of the " Rexall " family:
FOB CATARRH MUCU-TOHE
The chief ingredients of
: Mucu-Tone are Gentian, Cu
bebs, Cascara Sagrada, Glycer
ine, and Sarsaparilla.
Gentian is recognized in med
icine as o n e of the greatest
tonics ever discovered. It is
the foundation on which Mucu
Tone is built. Gentian com
bines in high degree the tonic
j powers of all the known "bit
! ters," with none of the disad
vantages applying to them.
Cubebs have long been rec
cgnized as a specific in the treat
ment of all catarrhal conditions.
Its action is prompt and its
benefit almost invariable. In
whatever part of the body the
inflamed or diseased con 'on
of the mucous membrane t.
the use of Cubebs has been
recommended by the best phy
sicians for many generations.
Cascara Sagrada is espe
cially introduced for its neces
sary laxative properties.
The combination of these
with Glycerine and Sarsaparilla
makes Mucu-Tone a remedy
that attacks catarrh from every
point, gradually restores and re
builds the diseased tissues to
their former health and strength,
promotes digestion and creates
a normal appetite, liottle, 50c.
' This "Kfixall" Guarantee Appears on
" This preparation is guaranteed to give satisfaction.
come back and get your money. It belongs to you
' to have it"
Stoke & Feicht Drug Co.,
The ffiatl Store
NEWS! PERSONALS.
Justice Jefferson Tnlly, of the Mis
sissippl Supreme Court, lias announced
his candidacy for Governor.
The grandchildren of Joseph For
king, for many years a trustee of Adel
bert College, have given the institution
$150,000.
John Simmond, of ncnIcy-on-Thamcs,
England, who has just retired on a pen
sion, has walked 1S0.000 miles per
forming his duties as postman.
Lincoln Steffens. speaking before a
class of Yale students, declared that
New York and Chicago were the least
corrupt cities in the united States.
John H. Schrahel, the American con
sular agent at Bremerhaven, has Just
celebrated the fifteenth anniversary
of his entrance into the consular serv
ice. George Croal, ninety-five years old.
is Edinburgh's oldest musician, and
enjoys the distinction of having been
present at the dinner at which Scott
vowed the authorshl: of his rovels.
Jesse Jones, of Pulaski, Tenn.. is
dearly 110 years old. having been born
of a Portuguese father i.nd ft Choctaw
Indian mother in Raleigh, N. C, June
10, 1796. He has fought :n four wars.
Major H. S. Hersey, director of the
United States Weather Bureau at Mil
waukee, has been ordered no report to
Washington to accompany Walter
Wellman's airship expedition to . the
North Pole.
Professor C. W. Pritchett, after
thirty years' service in the directorship
f the Morrison Observatory at Glas
gow, Mo.-, has retired. He is succeeded
by H. B. Morgan, formerly of the Uni
ted States Naval Observatory.
Henri Allorge, a young French poet,
written a volume of poetry, called
(he "Spirit of Geometry." He sings
the charms of the parallelopipedou,
(he asymptole and the rhomboid, and
rides Ibe pons asinorum on Pegasus'
back.
M. Lockroy, former Minister of tha
Marine of France, - admonishes his
country to increase la naval program
or it will be outstripped by Germany.
Germany has decided to build Blx
more armored cruisers and Increase
the slza of the projected battleships
to J8.000 tons because England has
just launched a ship of that size. Eng
land is determined lo Keep a neei
bigger than those of any two pos
sible enemlhes, and we are building
, A more war vessels than any other coun
i try excaot JBngland. 1
Straight Talks on
Patent Medicines
REXALL DYSPEPSIA TABLETS
The -remarkable success of
Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets is
largely due to the new and suc
cessful method of manufacture,
whereby the well known prop
erties of Bismuth- Subnitratc
and Pepsin have been combined
with carminitives and other
agents.
Bismuth Subnitratc and rep
sin are recognized by the entire
medical profession as specifics
for acute indigestion or chronic
dyspepsia.
The pepsin used is manufac
tured under a new process
which develops its greatest ef
ficiency. Pepsin not only sup
plies to the digestive machinery
one of the most important ele
ments of the digestive fluid, but
vseemsto exert a tonic influ
ence upon all the glands which
supply all the other element;;.
The carminitives add prop
erties which promptly relieve
pains caused by undigested food.
The combination of the
whole makes a remedy abso
lutely invaluable to any man or
woman suffering from Dyspep
sia and not only a remedy but
a cure which works gradually
rebuilding and stimulating the
glands w hich perform the diges
tive functions. Package, 23c.
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
Count Witte has a weak heart
Ex-Senator David B. Hill says lie is
content to be a looker-on in politics.
Senator Ilepew has declined to be ft
candidate for re-election to the Yale
Corporation.
Bishop Benjamin AVistar Norris, of
the Fotestant Episcopal Church for the
Diocese of Oregon, is dead.
Justice Harlan, of the United Stntp
Supreme Court. 1ms denied that be Is
about to retire from the bench.
Count Henri de ia Vnuls, the cele
brated French aeronaut, says that the
United States is by nature the best
ballooning 601111117 in the world.
One of the most elaborate receptions
ever held in the National capital is be
ing arranged in honor of Speaker Can
non, who will be seventy years old on
May 7. '
On the authority of his physician.
Dr. Tearce Bailey, it is announced that
Senator Depew will not be able to re
sume his seat in the Senate during the
present session.
"Coin" Harvey, whose name was
familiar in the first Bryan campaign,
has given up writing books on finance
and is now running a summer resort
in the Ozark Mountains.
Colonel Thomas Johnson, noted as a
Confederate soldier, is dead at his
home in Montgomery County, Ufcr. He
was ninety-three. years old. He was
for maiiy years a member of the State
Legislature.
The Pope objects to a profile portrait
9f himself. To an artist who wished to
paint him in that position he said: "I
want to look straight out from the
canvas. I always like to look people
straight in the face, not sideways."
Finnish Honesty.
Russians all over Russia are glad
tx employ Finnish servants, because
"they never steal and nothing has to
be locked up." I remember how once,
when I went to the captain of a
steamer which was carrying me to
Stockholm to find out yhen I could
telegraph to Helsingfci for a valu
able gold buckle I had left in a hotel,
he replied: "There is no occasion to
telegraph; write to the hotel manager
when you get to Stockholm and he
will send the buckle on to you. No
one ver steals in'Finland." I wrote
as he directed, and the buckle follow
ed me to England, where I received
It soon after my arrival. From Mrs.
Meakin's (Russia.
FOR NERVES
AMERICANITIS ELIXIR
The Rexall Americauitis Elix
ir is a tonic nerve food composed
chiefly of free Phosphorus,
Glycophosphates, Iron Pyro
phosphate and Calisaya.
The wonderful results of this
remedy are due to the fact that
it supplies Phosphorus to the
nerve cells in a condition in
which it can be immediately and
easily taken up by them. It is
the only known preparation in
which free Phosphorus that is.
Phosphorus which remains in
definitely unoxidized is used.
The Glycophosphates, actual
nerve-tissue builders, are one of
the most recent and valuable
additions to the field of this
branch of medicine and unques
tionably a more efficient rem
edy than the well -known
1 lypop'.iosphites.
The Iron Pyrophosphates is
the most easily assimilated form
cf iron which gives tone and
color, and the combined alka
loids of Calisaya liark have a
tonic effect on almost all the
functions of the body.
In compounding these vari
ous elements, the vcrv highest
degree of pharmaceutical skill
has been employed. 75c. and
1.50 a bottle.
each package:
If it does not,
and we want you
Druggists
NEWSPAPER LAW.
1. Subscribers who do not give ex
press notice to the contrary are con
sidered as wishing to continue sub
scriptions. 2. If subscribers order the discon
tinuance of their periodicals, the pub
lisher may continue to send them un
til all arrearages are paid.
3. If subscribers neglect or refuse
to take their periodicals from post
office to which they are directed they
are responsible until they have settl
ed their bills and ordered them dis
continued. 4. If the subscriber moves to an
other place without Informing the
publishers, and the papers are sent to
the former directions, they are held
responsible.
6. The courts have decided that
the refusing to take periodicals from
postoffice, or removing and leaving
them uncalled for, is prima facie evi
dence of international fraud.
6. If subscribers pay in advance
they are bound to rive notice to the
publishers, at the end of their time,
If they do not wish to continue it,
otherwise the publisher is authorized
to send it, the subscriber wUl be held
responsible, until an express notice
with payment or arrearages, is sent
to the publisher.
7. The latest postal laws are such
that newspaper publishers can arrest
an? one for fraud who takes a paper
and refuses to pay for It Under this
law the man who allows his subscrip
tion to run along for some time, un
paid, and then order the postmaster
to mark it, "refuse," and has a card
sent notifying the publishers, lays
himself liable to arrest and fine, the
same as for theft, etc. ,
Lecturing before a London audi
ence on the importance of house
Cleaning, an English scientist assert
ed that as much dust as can be placed
on a pin point yields no fewer than
3,000 colonies of living germs. The
majority of these germs are represen
tative of disease.
Farm Topics i
SEED CORN.
When selecting your, seed corn al
ways bear in mind that the plants from
kernels with the largest germs gener
ally withstand drouth much better than
would otherwise be the case, because
of the simple fact that they are nour
ished the best.
A SEED POINTER.
The time for purchasing seed lo be
ttscd for this year's crops has about ar
rived, and probably we could give no
better advice than to say that seed of
the best quality is Invariably the cheap
est iu the end. Poof seed is cosily at
any price, and should not be used by
any one tinder any circumstances.
PLOW DEEPLY FOR CORN.
The cutworm often destroys whole
fields of corn, compelling replanting,
which makes the crop late and less
able to stand dry weather. The corn
land should he plowed deep and left
rough, so as to permit the frost to en
ter. When cutworms are exposed to
alteruate thawing and freezing weather
many will be destroyed, though cold
without dampness may not injure them.
SHEEP GREAT FORAGERS.
It is claimed that a farmer can keep
one sheep for every cow without feel
ing the additional expense, ns sheep
consume much that other stock will
not eat. The use of sheep is most ap
preciated by the fact that they are
great foragers, and destroy a large
number of weeds. A flock of sheep
confined to a limited area will also
add considerable fertility to the land.
USELESS AS MANURE.
There Is always a huge amount of
course mnterial in the barnyard that
has little or no plant food In it, es
pecially if it has been exposed. Such
manure is not worth taking to the
fields, and If turned under it will make
the soil dryer in summer. Such ma
terial should be made the foundation
for a new heap, so ns to rot It down to
less bulk, and also to use it as ab
sorbent material for fresh manure.
GOOD SEED POTATOES NEEDED.
Good seed potatoes are necessary if
a large crop is expected. Never at
tempt to economize 011 seed. Get the
best, as nny mistake made will last
into the harvest. Use whole seed, if
possible, and give more room in the
rows. While the sprouts from single
eyes are breaking the ground the tops
of whole potatoes will be large enough
to plow. Many fanners have lost
money by cutting the seed potatoes in
to small pieces in order to reduce the
cost, but for every dollar thus saved
they lose much more In the crop.
DESTROY POTATO BEETLES.
In the potato the most important
constituent is starch. Thousands of
bushels of potaoes are used iu the
starch industry, which assists in main
taining prices. Bakers also use pota
toes in the making of bread, and pota
toes are also used largely for food in
various ways. It is through the agency
of the loaves that the starch Is elabor
ated In the" tubers, hence It Is nccessory
that potato beetles he destroyed before
they damage the vines, instead of al
lowing them to consume a large portion
of the growth. The best potatoes are
produced early when the vine growth
is vigorous.
BETTER WAIT.
When the weather becomes warm
there is n temptation to plant early,
and especially the garden seeds. It is
a mistake to do so, however, as there is
liability of frost at any time. If the
ground is not well warmed the seeds
may never germinate, and plants that
are tender, and which come up early,
may be so checked in growth on a coo
night as to seriously interfere with
their progress during the seAion. It
has often been noticed that late plants
which come up from seeds innke more
rapid headway than some grown in
hotbeds and then transplanted. This
is due to the fact that they got abund
ant warmth at the start, and are not
checked at any stage of growth. It is
well to get the plants out ns early as
the weather will permit, but it is better
to wait a week or two rather than In
cur the risk of loss from late frosts, as
time thus lost cannot be regained.
REMEDY FOR TICKS.
I find a good many of my lnmbs are
badly infested with ticks since the
sheep were sheared. The sheep are
quite clear of them. What can I do
for the lambs?
The American Sheep Breeder an
swers this question as follows:
The best thing that can be done is to
dip the lambs in aiy good dip wblcb
Is used for the scab. There is only one
sure remedy against this and the scab
Insect as well, which Is to dip properly
the whole flock vice every year, once
in the spring I fore shearing when
the fleeces will e much Improved in
appearance by it-, and the ether in the
,fall before the evld weather arrives.
This will be found not nearly so trou
blesome as one dipping only in the
year, and in fact will pay the whole
ixpen:e of it in the improvement of the
ieece, and again in the clearing of the
lambs and the nbeep as well from all
jklnds of parasites such as these ticks
and fleas, as, well as thai most trouble
some disease the sheep scab. If the
'flock is once freed completely from all
these parasites there will be no future
(trouble, nnd these regular dippings will
be a very easy matter, costing only a
trifle to then insure complete comfort
to the sheep as well as to their owner,
and a great economy will result.
Wanted the Insurance.
Applying for relief to the poor
guardians of a London parish, an old
woman said she had a daughter who
did not allow her anything, but kept
up the payments on her Insurance
policy.
Music for the Poor.
Quertn Wilhelmlna of Holland Is
bearing the cost of concerts given
by well-known singers in the slum
quarters of The Hague. Only the
poorest people are allowed to attend.
Rise Liars,
And Salute Your Queen
Ho, All Ye Faithful Followers of Ananias
GIVE ' EAR!
A Young Girl said to a
One Statement as
This burst of true American girl in
dignation was caused by the teacher
saying that Grnpe-Nuts, the popular
pre-dlgestod food, was made of stale
bread shipped in and sweetened.
The teacher colored tip and changed
the subject.
There is quite an assortment of trav
eling and stay-at-home members of the
tribe of Ananias who tell their false
hoods for a variety of reasons.
In the spring It Is the custom on a
cattle ranch to have a "round-up," and
brand the cattle, so we are going to
have a "round-up," and brand these
cattle and place them In their proper
pastures.-
FIRST PASTURE.
Cooking school teachers this In
cludes "teachers'' who have applied
to us for a weekly pay If they would
say "something nice" about Grape
Nuts and Postum, and when we
have declined to hire them to do
this they get waspy and show their
true colors.
This also Includes "demonstra
tors" and "lecturers'' sent out by a
certain Sanitarium to sell foods
made there, and these people in
structed by the small-bo-wliiskered-doctor
the bead of the Institution
to tell these prevarications (you
can speak the stronger word if you
like). This same liftle doctor con
ducts a small magazine in which
there Is a department of "answers
to correspondents," many of the
questions as well as the answers
being written by the aforesaid doc
tor. In this column some time ago ap
peared the statement: "No. we can
not recommend the use of Grape
Nuts, for it is nothing but bread
with glucose poured over it." Right
then be showed his badge as a mem
ber of the tribe of Anunlas. He
may have been a member for some
time before, and so lie has caused
these "lecturers" to descend into
the ways of the tribe wherever they
go.
When the young lady in New
York put the "Iron on" to this
"teacher" and branded her right we
sent $10.00 to the girl for her pluck
and bravery.
SECOND PASTURE.
Editors of "Trade" papers known
as grocers' papers.
Remember, we don't put the brand
on all, by any means. Only those
that require it. These members of
the tribe have demanded that we
carry advertising In their papers
and when we do not consider It ad
visable they institute a campaign
of vituperation and slander, printing
from time to time manufactured
slurs on Postum or Grape-Nuts.
When they go far enough we set
our legal force at work and hale
them td the Judge to answer. If
the pace has been hot enough to
throw some of these "cattle" over on
their backs, feet tied and "bellow
ing," do yon think we should be
blamed? They gambol around with
tails held high and jump stiff leg
ged with a very "cocky" air while
they have full range, but when the
rope Is thrown over them "it's dif
ferent." Should we untie them because
they bleat soft and low? Or should
we put the Iron on, so that people
will know the brand?
Let's keep them in this pasture,
anyhow.
"There's a Reason" for
Grape-Nuts Postum
Uncle Sam's Library.
The Library of Congress now con
tains l,;t44,tns books, 410,31" 2 pieces
of music, 1811,724 prints and 82,741
maps and charts, according to the
annual reportl of the Librarian,
Herbert Putnam, Just presented to
Congress. The library gained C8,9jl
books and about 60,000 pictures nnd
pieces of music during the last. year.
There were bought 22,998 hooks,
16,348 were received by gift, 11,763 by
copyright and 6,474 gained by ex
change with foreign governments.
Cooking School Teacher in New York : "If You
False as That, All You have said a lout Foods
is Absolutely Unreliable."
THIRD PASTURE.
Now we come to a frisky lot, the
"Labor Union" editors. You know
down in Texas a weed called "Loco"
Is sometimes eaten by a steer and
produces a derangement of the
brain that makes the steer "batty"
or crazy. Many of theso editors
are "Locoed" from hate of anyone
who will not instantly obey the
"demands" of a labor union, and it
is the universal habit of such writ
ers to go straight Into a system of
personal vilification, manufacturing
any sort of falsehood through which
to vent their spleen. We assert that
the common citizen has a right to
live and breathe air without asking
permission of the labor trust, and
this has brought down on us the
bate of these editors. When they
go far enough with their libels, Is it
harsh for us to get judgment against
them and have our lawyers watch
for a chance to attach money due
them from others? (For they are
usually irresponsible).
Keep your eye out for the "Lo
coed" editor.
Now let all these choice specimens
take notice:
We will deposit one thousand, or
fifty thousand dollars to be covered bv
I a like amount from them, or any one of
mem, aim 11 lucre was ever one ounce
of old bread or any other Ingredient
different than our selected wheat and
barley with a little salt and yeast used
In the making of Grape-Nuts, we will
lose the money.
Our pure food factories are open at
all times to visitors, and thousands
pass through each month. Inspecting
every department and every process,
Our factories ore so clean that one
could, with good relish, eat a meal
from the floors.
The work people, both men and wo
men, are of fhe highest grade in the
State of, Michigan, and according to the
State labor reports, are the highest paid
in the State for similar work.
Let ns toll you exactly what you will
see when you Inspect the manufacture
of Grape-Nuts. You will find tremen
dous elevators containing the choicest
wheat and barley possible to buy.
These grains are carried through long
conveyers to grinding mills, and there
converted into flour. Then the ma
chines make selection of the proper
quantities of this flour in the proper
proportion and these parts are blended
into a general flour which passes over
to the big dough mixing machines, there
water, salt and a little yeast are added
and the dough kneaded the proper
length of time.
Remember that previous to the bar
ley having been ground it was passed
through about one hundred hours of
soaking in water, then placed on warm
floors and slightly sprouted, developing
the diastase in the barley, which
changes the starch in the grain Into a
form of sugar.
Now after we have passed it into
dough and it has been kneaded long
enough, it is moulded by machinery
into loaves about 18 Inches long and 3
or C inches in diameter. It is put into
this shape for convenience in second
cooking.
These great loaves are sliced by ma
chinery and the slices placed on wire
trays, these trays, in turn, placed on
great steel trncks, and rolled into the
secondary ovens, each perhaps 75 or 80
feet long. There the food is subjected
to a long, low heat and the starch
which has not been heretofore trans
formed, is turned into a form of sugar
generally known as Tost Sugar. It can
be seen glistening on the granules of
Grape-Nuts if held toward the light,
and this sugar is not poured over or
put on the food as these prevaricators
Ignorantly assert. On the contrary the
sugar exudes from the interior of each
little granule during the process of
manufacture, and reminds one of the
little white particles of sugar that come
out on the end of a .hickory log after
it has been sawed off and allowed to
stand for a length of time.
This Post Sugar Is the most digest!
ble food known for human use. it is
so perfect in its adaptability that moth
ers with very young infants will pour
a little warm milk over two or three
spoonfuls of Grape-Nuts, thus washing
the Bngar off from the granules and
carrying it with the milk to the bottom
Wild Oats.
The seed of the wild oats seems to
be endued with a sort of life of it
own. . Wild oats, when held In th
hand, will move about In a manner
Ihnt strongly suggests the motions of
larvae of certain insects.
Romans Ate Oysters.
The ancient Romans ate oysters as
the first course at banquets because
of their quality of stimulating the
appetite. Pliny recommends oil ana
onions as condiments.
make
of the dish. Then this milk chargea
with Post SngRr is fed to the infants,
producing the most satisfactory results,
for the baby has food that it can digest
quickly and will go off to sleep well fed
and contented.
When baby gets two or three months
old it is the custoiu of some mothers to
allow the Grape-Nuts to soak in the
milk a little longer and become mushy,
whereupon a little of the food can be
fed in addition to the milk containing
the washed off sugar.
It Is by no means manufactured for a
baby food, but these facts are stated as
an illustration of n perfectly digestible
food.
It furnishes the energy nnd strength
for the great athletes. is in common
use by physicians in their own families
and among their patients, and can be
seen on the table of every first-class
college in the land.
We quote from the London Lancet
analysis as follows:
"The basis of nomenclature of this
preparation is evidently an American
pleasantry, since 'Grape-Nuts' x. Is de
rived solely from cereals. The prepara
tory process undoubtedly convert3-be
rnnri rnnstmients inrn a mucn more 01-
gestible condition than in the raw
cereal. This Is evident from the re
markable solubility of the preparation.
110 less than one-half of it being soluble
in cold water. The soluble part con
tains chiefly dextrin and no starch. In
appearance Crape-Nuts resembles'
fried bread-crumbs. The grains are
brown and crisp, with a pleasant taste
not unlike slightly burnt malt. Accord
ing to our analysis the following is the
composition of 'Grape-Nuts:' Moist
ure. (1.02 per cent.; mineral matter, 2.01
per cent.; fat, l.(0 per cent.; proteids, ,
15.00 per cent.; soluble carbohydrates,
etc.. 4!).-f0 per cent.; and unaltered
carbohydrates '(insoluble). 25.97 per.
cent. The features worthy of note Id
this analysis are the excellent propor
tion of proteid, mineral matters, and
soluble carbohydrates per cent. The
mineral matter was rich in phosphoric
acid. 'Grape-Nuts' is described as a
brain and nerve food, whatever that ,
may be. Our analysis, at any rats,
shows that It is a mitrltive of a high
order, since It contains the constituents
of a complete food In very satisfactory
and rich proportion and In an easily as
similable state."
An analysis made by the "nnadinn
Government some time ago shows that
Grape-Nuts contains nearly ten times
the digestible elements contained in or
dinary cereals, and foods, and nearly
twice the amount contained in any
other food analyzed.
The analysis Is familiar to practically
every successful physician in America
and London.
We print this statement In order that
the public may know the exact facts
niton which we stake our honor and
will back it with any amount of money
that any person or corporation wllJ
put up.
We propose to follow some of these
choice specimens of the tribe of Ana.
inns.
When you hear a cooking sehoo
teacher or any other person assert thai
either Postum or Grape-Nuts are mad
of any other Ingredients than thosj
printed on the packages and as w
say they are made, send us the name
and address, also name of two or three
witnesses, and if the evidence is clear
enough to get a judgment we will right
that wrong quickly..
Our business has always been con
ducted on as high a grade of human In
telligence as we are capable of, and w
rropose to clear the deek of these pre
varicators and liars whenever and
wherever they can be found.
Attention is again called to the cren
eral and broad Invitation to visitors to
go through our works, where they will
lie shown the most minute process and
device in order that they may under
stand now pure and clean, and. whole
some Grape-Nuts and Postum are.
Ihere ic an old savins among bus!.
ness men that there is some chance to
train a fool, but there Is no room for a
liar, for you never can tell where von
are, and we hereby serve notice on all
tne members of this ancient tribe of
Ananias that they may follow their
calling in other lines, but when they
put forth their lies about Grape-Nuts
and Postum, we propose to give them
an opportunity to answer to the proper
authorities.
The New York girl wisely said that
if a person would lie about one item, It
brands the whole discourse as absolute
ly unreliable.
Keep your iron ready and brand these
"mavericks" whenever you lind them
running loose.
Y