—] | LINES oon the pments he past | great trolley . The artford 0 miles nnecti- 'e large various , began , but it 1! other he set- uch ex- of con- allel to urpose atened d to re- passen- ith the nt pur- y and 25 per ; a par tep to- electric Buffalo t great several course, lerable steam is con- ration, apital- is to lel to to Cor- restall m line be the in un- n elec- tracks On its den) to s, the stitute will be re, for ken to lectrie use of | parts r New . d that de for o lines 0 New » from elphia) ed and arts of ng the ed, of solene ks. A on its nd St. he Al- e sub- n sev- ventral w and here,” 1cott’s. ts can wake 1d her if she on a e win- shout- rang. h one irs. d her 1errily ine by 1tfully d the e than 15t of lently, or cat stern. 8 she th to 3 of a d her a fel- 1e rat at old e roof looked » Mrs. to its ulling jolate- uch,” hate blue- andy- oking hrist- e: cols ill be to the The teh in nick- * and ather rtable down 1 cap, t top, ver to users recon deck bs of MODERN GAVE DWELLERS IN ASIA MINOR CITY Natives of Cappadocia Are Still, to All Intents and Purposes, Troglodytes. ————— WONDERFUL CONE DWELLINGS There Are at Least 50,000, Says a Traveler, and Some Have Nine Stories, —— ms J. R. Stillington Sterrett has written an instructive article for the Illus- trated Londou News on the cave dwellers of Cappadocia. From an American standpoint the article is in- teresting because of the fact that there is an organization in this country known as the Colorado Clift Dwellings + Assoclation, whose object is to protect and preserve the historical cliff dwell ings in Colorado, It is in Cappadocia, Asia Minor, Mr. Sterrett says, that th® real twentieth century Troglodytes (cave dwellers) are to be found. The whole cave dwelling region of Cappadocia, he says, is of volcanic formation, com- posed of a deep layer of pumice stone, tufa or peperine, overlaid in some places by rugged lava fields. The pum- ice or tufa is of incredible thickness, but the overlaid layer of lava is com- paratively thin, and so soft that it can be dug away with the thumb nail. The caves are formed in cones, ex- tending in height from fifty to 300 feet. The tallest cones usually stand in the centre of an eroded valley, Mr. Sterrett says. Many of them are in process of disintegration, and in some the exter- ior walls have been worn away to such an extent that the inner chambers are visible from the outside. Such exposed chambers, if they lie fairly toward the sun, are used for drying grapes and other fruits. Mr. Sterrett says there are easily 50,- 000 of these cone caves in Cappadocia. The caves were bored out with com- paratively little trouble. One chamber, twenty - five feet long, thirteen feet broad and ten feet high, was exca- vated by a single workman in the short space of thirty days. The cave dwellers of Cappadocia have gone to some pains, Mr. Sterrett says, to ornament and give an ecrchi- tectural and decorative effect to the caves which they make their abode. Especially have they given free play to their architectural imagination in the laying out of their churches, chap- els and temples. Some elaborate ef- fects have been produced. Mr. Sterrett gives an entertaining de- scription of the manner in which the abodes of the cave dwellers of Cappa- docia have been laid out. On entering the doorway of any of these cone dwellings, he says, the visitor finds himself within a spacious chamber, about the walls of which shelves and niches for the storage of small house- hold effects have been cut into the stone. The stairways leading to the upper stories are like wells or rounded chimneys and the ascent from the " lower to tb upper stories is made by means of inéider holes cut into the rock. The floors between the stories are usually thick enough to sustain any weight that might be put upon them, but occasionally the excavators mis- calculated the thickness of a stone floor, with the result that they had to cut out one .ofty chamber where they bad intended to make two. As many as nine stories are to be found in a single cone, Mr. Sterrett says, but the usual number is two, three or four stories. The number of stories can always be indicated by the windows. The cave dwellers utilize their windows as dove cotes for pigeons, hosts of which flock to the places provided for them. The natives «eat the eggs and flesh of the birds. Mr. Ste:rett contributes this com- ment on the habits of life of these modern cave dwellers: “The natives of this region are still, to all intents and purposes, Troglo- dytes, but if we leave out of considera- tion the fact that their Cwellings are at least partially under ground, they differ in habits and customs in no whit from the ordinary Turkish villas avith ordinary humdrum surroundings.” Myr, Sterrett gives this description of some of the modern cave dwellings: “Sometimes the front of the house is built of blocks of pumice stone, while all the rest of the abode is subterran- ean, the cone of cliff being used as an annex, but in most cases a modern dwelling is excavated, not in a cone, but in the face of the bluff, and thus becomes a cliff dwelling, properly so called. This is true of the business street of the town of Urgub, where the front or facade opening on the street is the only room in the dwelling into which the light comes. The other rooms are in midnight darkness all the year round. The owner of such an abode can extend his dwelling indefi- nitely into the bowels of the earth and no one need know aught of his en- larged residence, a feature which is not without its advantages in a land where the wise man conceals the fact that he is wealthy. The interior cham- bers are used chiefly for granaries and storage. Even their chaff, which is made to take the place of our hay, is safely stowed away in these dry and dark chambers. In passing along the main street of Urgub the superficial observer will not detect the slightest indication that he is in the presence of Troglodyte dwellings, though he may quickly convince himself that such is the fact, The upland or plateau level of this region abounds in humwmocks, hills and lofty pinnacles and they are all used in the background against which modern dwellings are built. It may even happen, as in the case of the palace or castle of Ud), that the house of the owner of a vineyard is actually beneath the vineyard Itself.” The soll of the Troglodyte region is fertile and produces in abundance veg- etables and fruit. Apricots of superb quality are grown there. Mr. Sterrett says it has been asserted by one of the old travelers that the Troglodyte re- gion is the original home of the apricot, “Garden and desert,” says Mr, Ster- rett, “are often close neighbors, for the reason that the garden flourishes wherever the stone has rotted | ciently, whereas the adjacent, but naked and unrotted stone is the most | barren of deserts.” Many of the cones inhabited by the Troglodytes, . Mr. Sterrett says, are | mere shells honeycombed with cham- | bers. There is one ancient castle that is filled from the base to the pinnacle | with chambers, Mr. Sterrett contributes an interest- ing word or two about the piaces of | worship of the modern cave dwellers of Cappadocia. In the chapels, he says, are still many paintings of Greek saints named in the inscriptions, In the floors of some of the chapels graves are cut and in some of them human skeletons still may be seen. In fact, graves have been found frequent- ly in the dwellings, and there are evi- dences that the cave dwellers lived in the same rooms with their pigeons and their dead. The date rf the origin of the cave dwellings of Cappadocia is in doubt. They are ancient enough for Cicero to have made mention of them, and it has been asscrted that the cone cnves of Cappadocia were inhabited as early as 1900 B. C.—Brooklyn Eagle. Highest Railroad Bridge. A notable engineering work is now being executed in France, and involves the construction of a viaduct crossing the Sioule Valley near Vauriat, This structure, known as the Fades Via- duct, when completed will be the high- est railway bridge in the world, the level of the rails being 434 feet 7 Inches above the bed of the stream. There are two granite masonry tower piers that are founded on solid rock and rise to a height of 303 feet. These piers, standing alone, have the appearance of large chimneys, but, says Harper's Weekly, their function is to support the three steel spans which have the un- usual lengths of 472 feet 5 inches for the cenire span and 378 feet for each of the flanking spans. The latter con- nect with masonry approach spans formed by circular arches, This bridge differs from other structures in the use of masonry instead of steel for the cen tre towers, and tae use of lattice girder deck spans instead of the arch con- struction of either masonry or steel, a favorite method of crossing such a valley. Ought to Have Known the Rules. Marshall P. Wilder says that the small son of a friend in Brooklyn came home one day with a badly disfigured face. The “old man” took him aside for the usual heart-to-heart talk. “What have you been up to now?” asked he. “Fightin’,” answered the lad sullenly. “And after all I've said to you about fighting!” “He smashed me on the cheek.” “How often have I told you that the Good Book bids us turn the other cheek 2?” “I did, dad—honest; but he smashed me on the nose. I call that a foul; so pitched in and licked the stuffin’ out of him. Dad, he’s been to Sunday-school just as much as I have, and he ought | to have known the rules!”—Philadel- phia Record. Couldn’t Think of His First Name. In the grammar department of one of our public schools the teacher, after talking with her class on the subject of mythology, read to them as follows: “Vulcan, smith, architect and charoit | builder for the gods of Mt. Olympus, | built their houses, constructed their furniture,” etc. The following day the | subject of the preceding day was given as a language lesson, and, as no men- tion was made of Vulcan, the teacher asked the class who built the houses | for the gods of Mt. Olympus. For a while the children seemed to be lost in | deep thought, when suddenly a gleam ! of intelligence illuminated the face of one little girl, and she replied: “I can’t think of his first name, but his name is.Smith.”—Magazine of Fun, Is a Tooth Property? It is well known: jhat a corpse is not property, but what about an extracted tooth? So far as we know the point has nct arisen in the courts of this, country, At Gera, in G-rmany, how- ever, it has just been decided that the tooth still belongs to the man after it has left his jaw. The dentist contended that a tcotn evicted from occupancy ! with the full consent of its landlord became ownerless and derelict, and as the particular tcoth ‘n question was curiously shaped he proposed to keep it. But the patient also wished to have it. And the patient won.—Pall Mall Gaz:tte. The Unkindest Ct. Brooklyn has had a good many hard things said about it in the past, but the saddest blow of all fell last week, when a young man who lives in that | borough invited a girl to go to dinner with him in Manhattan. After they had settled on the other details of the time and place of dining she asked him where they should meet. “At the American end of the bridge,” he replied. —New York Press. In England, where fads and fashions change slowly and the roads are good, bicycle manufacturers are still doing a, good business. ousehold «Matters To Air the Room. To properly air a room, open the win- dow at the top and bottom, The reason for this is to allow impure air, which always rises, to escape at the top, while the cool, fresh air will come in at the bottom from outside. Tobacco Smells. The unpleasant smell of tobacco clinging to curtains and furniture may be dispelled by sprinkling ground cof- fee on a shovel, setting it alight, and carrying the latter about the “oom. Coffee fumes are, in all cases, admira- ble as disinfectants, About Egg Bolling. Many people boil eggs to their liking by placing the eggs in cold water, which is allowed to come to the boiling point. One housekeeper at least uses the same method for poached eggs, taking them from the almost boiling water perfectly cooked, On Removing Slains, Every housekeeper should remember that soap is an alkali and sets vege- table and other stains. Therefore, all stains shouid be removed before the articles are put in a washtub. The sooner the stain is treated the more readily it will yield to the treatment. Pour boiling water through fruit stains. Where obstinate, soak in a solution of oxalic acid. Wash vaseline stains in alcohol; paint in turpentine, kerosene or alcohol; varnish, in alcohol; grass or other green vegetable stains in ai- cohol, kerosene or molasses. For stains from blood, meat juice and white of egg use cold water. In the case of milk, cream, sugar or sirup stains soak in cold water and wash with soap and water. Tar, wheel grease or machine oil stains should be rubbed with lard and allowed to stand a few minutes. Then they should be washed with soap and cold water. Tea, coffee or cocoa stains should be re- moved with boiling water; if obstinate, with a weak solution of oxalic acid. Use oxalic acid for iron rust spots, and for ink stains use lemon juice and salt; then hang in the sun. If the ink does not disappear at first, repeat the opera- tion until it does. When oxalic acid is used care must be taken that the arti- cle is thoroughly rinsed to remove every particle of acid. When boiling water is used, stretch the stained parts over the bowl and pour absolutely boil- ing water from a hight until the stain disappears. Be careful that the boiling water does not touch any silk embroid- delicate ery or other colors.—New Haven Register. Myrtle Soup—Fry three chopped onions in a little beef dripping until they are a golden brown; stir in one- fourth of a pound of ground oatmeal; fry that brown; add one quart of water, a half dozen potatoes cut in thin slices; salt and pepper and boil until the potatoes are soft, then strain, set on the stove again to boil for five minutes and serve. Plain Marlboro Pie—Into two cups of sifted apple sauce, stir while hot two tablespoonfuls of butter. Beat the yolks of two eggs; add one cup sugar; one-half of the grated rind and all the juice of one lemon. Mix this with the apple. Cover plate with a rich crust; turn in the mixture and bake about half an hour in a moderate oven. Cover with meringue or whipped cream, or put a top crust on. Half Moons—Four eggs, of powdered sugar, one cupful of rice flour, one teaspoonful of vanilla and the juice and rind of one lemon. Beat the butter to a cream, then add the sugar gradually, beating all the while. then add the whites beaten to a stiff froth, and, gradually, the rice flour. Flavor, beat until fine and light, and pour into small patty pans, which have been well buttered. Bake in a mod- erate oven for twenty minutes. Baked Squash-—-Baked squash one cupful ! A MOUSE IN A TRAP A Question of Intereét Regarding th Relations of Rodents, A mouse began to make a disturb. ance in the paper back of my desk the other night just as my wife and I set- | tled down after supper to read, He was a new arrival from some neigh boring barn. They have found a way into my study up through the sheath. ing of the sliding door, Mrs, A, is very tender hearted with all living things except such small deer as in. terfere with her housekeeping, These she persecutes relentlessly. Her mousetrap was forthcoming at once, and, baitpd with a little cheese, was slid under the desk, It is one of these diabolical contrivances which smash a wire loop down on the victim, * It was only a few wminctes till we Jeard its vicious click. Immediately afterward I heard distinctly a series of rapid aspirated squeaks which made me hustle the trap out in haste to re- lieve the sufferer. Knowing how deadly the trap is, I wos surprised at hearing any sound, I was even more so when I saw that the little victim had been caught by tke descending striker square across the back on the lungs, Its heart was still fluttering, but it seemed to me impossible for it to have drawn breath enough to make any sound whatever. Then I remem- bered that the squeaks were more like barks of fright than screams of pain. Somewhat wonderingly, therefore, I set the trap again, to see if there was a companion. Within five minutes it nailed another. There was no sound this time except that of the trap. Both were immature females. What I wish ‘0 know is, did No, 2 bark when No. 1 was caught? Do mice ever ex- hibit fright and surprise by whistling or barking ?—Correspondcnce in Forest and Stream. WORDS OF WISDOM. O what a power hath white simplic- ity.—John Keats. The right-of-way does not always mean the way that is oppressive. Man looketh on the outward appear- ance, but the Lord looketh on the heart. —Bible. Michael Angelo once said: Bring me that fragment of marble; I see an angel imprisoned ‘in it.” Some flowers and herbs that grow very low are of a very fragrant smell and healthful use.—Robert Leighton. The only ambition worthy of an im- poortal soul is the ambition to realize the purpose of God concerning us.— Howard A. Johnston. Do not despise any opportunity be- cause it seems small. The way to make an opportunity grow is to take hold of it and use it.—Bacon. For the man to whom our natural in- telligence is equal to the soul's neces- sity for finding God there is no lack of revelation. The universe is full of visions and of voices.—~Tohn White Chadwick. We cannot educate our grandmother, we say; but there are grandmothers whom we can educate. The children of to-day are the grandmothers of the future; we can educate them.—Alice Wellington Rollins. He that loveth a book will never want a faithful friend, a wholesome counsellor, a cheerful companion, an in- tellectual comforter. By study, by reading, by thinking, one may inno- cently divert and pleasantly entertain himself, as in all weathers, so in all fortunes.—Isaac Barrow. To feel the eternal in the passing mo- ment, to catch the rustle of God's gar- ment now, not to be burdened with a vain regret, not to be peering forward through the curtain; all that, with the open eye and feeling heart, is to be childike. And of such is the kingdom of Heaven.—G. H. Morrison. A Matter of Titles. A story is going the rounds of legal circles at the expense of the late Gen- eral W. H. L. Barnes, and it is receiv- ing considerable impetus in its travels through the efforts of William 8S. Barnes, who considers it one of the le. | pest that was ever told at the expense ‘Add the yolks of the eggs, beat again, is ai homely vegetable, but since most peo- | ple are fond of sweet potatoes, of | which - favorite baked squash has all the virtues and several others, the old time recipe for preparing it per- fectly is revived. Choose hard Hub- of his distinguished sire. General Barnes was trying a civil suit, and persisted in referring to the opposing counsel at “Judge.” The op- posing counsel was an elderly and dig- nified Southern gentleman, who dis- liked to be characterized by a title he did not possess, and rising to his feet, he said: “If the Court please, I am not a Judge, have ‘never: been a Judge, and have no aspiration to become a Judge, and I hope counsel will refrain from | referring to me as ‘Judge. bard squashes and cut or saw them | in large pieces of uniform size. Take out the seeds and bake in a moderately hot oven unti! a fork can easily pene- trate the pulp. Serve in the shell with salt and butter. Apple Meringue—Peel, core and slice ten or twelve good-sized apples. Cook them with three ounces of sugar, two ounces of butter and the grated rind of a lemon. ‘Cook as dry as possible, then beat them till smooth and form in a loaf shape. Cover with a meringue | made with the whites of two eggs | beaten till stiff, with two tablespoon- fuls of sugar added to the egg just be- fore using. Bake in a moderate oven till a nice golden brown. a boiled custard sauce. Cream of Celery Soup—Wash twelve stalks of celery in small pieces. Put over the fire three cups of water and as soon as it boils add the celery with a blade of mace and half an onion, and let it boil for half an hour. Then put through a puree sieve and add a pint of milk, salt and white pepper and a thickening made by stirring a table- spoonful of flour with a generous table- spoonful of melted butter. Let the mixture boil up once, add a cup of : cream and serve with croutons. Serve with @ * ou | tains iridium, associated with it in the ore. » 9 General Barnes persisted in the use of the title, however, and again he po- litely protested. Once more Barnes caused a chuckle to go around by re- ferring to the opposing counsel as “Judge,” and for a third time the latter rose to protest. “If the Court please,” he said, “for the third and last time I desire to in- form counsel that the title of ‘Judge’ is one that I have never carned and do not possess, and if counsel persists in giving me the title, I shall be prompted to retort by referring to him as ‘Gen- eral’ "—San Francisco Chronicle. Iridium and Platinum, Nearly all commercial platinum con- as the latter metal is It is an expensive operation to remove it com- pletely, and as iridium is cheaper than platinum, it is customary to leave as much in the platinum as possitle. An alloy of one part of iridium and nine parts of platinum is extremely hard, as elastic as steel, and capable of taking a high polish.—PhiladelpLia Record. l tution was rejected by rolina, Dela- Whales from 300 to 400 years old are sometimes met with, The age Is ascer- tained by the size and number of lay- ers of the whalebone, which increase yearly, A celebrated aeronaut asserts, after a patient investigation, that the ninth day of the moon is the most rainy of the whole twenty-eight, and 4 o'clock in the afternoon the rainiest hour of the day. Swiss steamboat companies, to avoid disputes as to the age of children, have established measurement rules, Une der two, feet in height go free; children under four feet four inches and dogs pay half fare. Many curious instances of old laws ay still be found in England. In Chester the man who fails to raise his hat when a funeral is passing becomes liable by an old law to be taken before a magistrate and imprisoned. A new record in Dervish whirling is believed to have been established at Madison Gardens, New York, by the performance of Marie Bayrooty, from Beirut, who kept herself awhirl spin- ning like a human top for thirty-two minutes, This is from a tombstone in an Eng- lish churchyard. It robs death of its sting and the grave of its victory: “Sa- ered to the memory of Nathaniel God- bold, Esq., Inventor and Proprietor of that excellent medicine The Vegetable Balsam, for the Cure of Consumptions and Asthmas.” At the hospice of the Great St. Ber- nard a dog who had spent his life, if not in nursing, at least in succoring the sick, died “on duty.” This was “Barry,” one of the oldest and most useful of the noble canine hand which seeks out the lost traveler on the Alps, “Barry's” fame was world-wide, and letters of sympathy have been received by the Prior from all countries, A MODEL WITNESS Avoiding the Issue the Main Object of the Man on the Stand. The opposing counsel: “What is your name?” The witness, appealing to the Judge: “Am I obliged to answer this?” The Judge: “You are.” The witness: “My name is Todgers. “First name?” “I decline to answer.” “On what ground?” “It would be construed into a reflec tion on the good taste of my parents.” “Where were you born" “I decline to answer.” “Why” “Because all my information on the subject is of the hearsay character.” “But you were there at the time?” “I decline to admit it.” “What is your age?” “Before answering I desire to consult vith my attorneys.” “What is your ostensible business?” “I do not remember.” “Are you in any way connected with the Ramrod Trust?” “I do not remember.” “What is its capitalization” “I do not remember.” “What is your salary?” “I do not remember.” “Are you married?’ “I do not remember.” The Judge: “The hearing will now be adjourned until 10 o'clock to-morrow morning. And I want to congratulate the opposing counsel on the marked progress they have made in advancing the case. —C lev eland Plain Dealer, The Judge’s First Client. Judge J. J. Banks, the well-known Denver lawyer, is a native of the South, says the Denver Post. It was in Birmingham, Ala., that he hung out his first shingle. One day an old negro woman entered his office: “Well, sah,” said the old woman, “Ah wants ter ax yo’ advice. Now, yo’ see, Ah owes rent on ma house. Ah kain’t pay hit, en de lan’lord say he gwine put me out nex’ week.” Judge Banks told the old woman the landlord could be compelled to give her a month’s notice. “Well, now, young man,’ she said, “Ah’s mighty much erbliged ter you. Yo’ sultinly es smaht. Good mornin'!” “But,” said Judge Banks, “my fee is $5. You must pay me for that ad- vice.” The old negress hesitated. took hold of the doorknob. “)Mistah,” she said, “Ah doan’ want you’ ole advice. Keep hit. Dat rent ain’t but foah dollars.” And out she went, Then she eh i eiotemmr Suicide and Women “Women as they become more highly educated tend more to commit sui- cide,” said the president of a girl's college. “In the past they only killed themselves .or love, “But now, being educ:ted, they live like men. Like men they write, paint, build, run groceries, drug stores, bro- kerages, And like men they commit guicide. “They committed suicide in the past from love alone, but now from disap- pointed ambition, from loss of money, from a book’s failure, from a fall in stocks, from a rise in drugs. “But the higher duecation of woman Is a good thing, even if it does cause ber now and then to Lill herself.”— Minneapolis Journal. The XVth ieced by Oy the Consti- ware, Kentucky, MarylaRd, New Jer sey and Oregons Every year Americans consume ‘ seventy-five pounds of sugar per capita, ’ EX-MAYOR CRUMBO RECOMMENDS PE-R } “My endorsement of Pe-ru-na is Based On Its Merits.” ---Ed. Crumbo. D. CRUMBO, ex-Mayor of New Al- bany, Ind., writes from 51. KE. Oak street: “My endorsement of Peruna is based on its merits, ’ “If a man is sick he looks anxio for something which will cure and Peruna will do the work. “I know that it will cure catarrh of the head or stomach, headache and any weary or sick its : “It is bound to help anyone, if used according to directions. “I also know dozens of men who in the highest terms of Peruna yet to hear of any one being disap) mn it.” Mr. Crumbo, in a later letter, dat 25, 1904, says: Aug. 4 My health is good, at present, but i should have to take any more will fall back on Peruna.” Quito ‘Among 1g the Peaks. There are no fewer than 20 lofty volcanic peaks clustered about city of Quito, the capital of Beu One of these, Catopaxi, is thé highes active volcano in the world. How’s This ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward 14 any case of Catarrh that cannot be cared J hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cuexey & Co,, Toledo, We, the undersigned, have known Cheney for the last 15 years, and beli reriectly honorable in all business tions and financially able to carry ©) obligations made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Drugg ledo, O WaLpisg, KixNax & Marviy, W Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cureis taken intern jhe dive ctlyuponthe blood and mue: s of the system, Testimonials 75¢. Rr bottle. Sold by all D e Hall's Family Pills for con Creek’s Medicine Man \ The medicine man of thi eeks will not eat anything scorched Inf cooking; in treating a gun lor arro shot wound he as well as the patient will fast four days, only drinking little gruel. He will not allow a woman to 10 at is patient until he is well or de If hig patient dies, the medicine 1 takes a lot of medicine himself, order to cleanse himself of the f or odor of the dead. The pall-i ers, as we might call those assi in the burial, also take the cleansing process. ) And again, when an mitted murder, even in s@ he went to the medicine “IH took the cleansing remedy, ¢ the remedy appeased the crim the trouble to his mind. The cine man has a horror of keeping out of their company ag as possible. At the full o moon it was the sustom of th to drink medicine made by cine man to cleanse their § camp the Indian killed no was not eatable.—Indian Wages and Cost of L' The bureau of labor has ¥ESHe bulletin on the cost of living of w ingmen’s families, showige 2,567 families in 33 satel, whom data was obtdined income per family was ¥ age expenditure for all purpos $768.54; average expenditure family for food, $326.90, and the ald age size of family 6.31 persons, A BOY'S BREAKFAST There's a Natural Food That Makes A Own Way, There's a boy up in Hoosick Fal Y., who is growing into sturdy hood on Grape-Nuts breakfasts, might have been different ivith him his mother explains: “My eleven-year-old boy §s large, § developed and active, gid has made so by his fondn@s for G Nuts food. At five yearsfle was a nervous child and was ibjeet quent attacks of ice used to rob him of Lis Strengf were very troublesome ‘to deal He never seemed to care for ap for his breakfast until I tried Nuts, and I have never had to from that. He makes his entire fast of Grape-Nuts food. It is relished by him and he says satisfies him better than the o kind of a meal. “Better than all he is no troubled with indigestion or ness, and has got to be a § developed fellow since he be irape-Nuts food.” Name Postum Co., Battle Creel There's a reason, book, “The Road to Wel
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers