Newspaper Page Text
In a Hurry.
Magistrate—What is the charge
against this* old man?
officer—Stealing some brimstone,
I'Mir honor. He was caught In the
act.
agistrate (to prisoner)—My aged
friend, couldn’t you have waited a
I few years longer?
STRENGTHEN THE NERVES
Tak* Horsford’* Acid Pho»ph«it*
A tefcfpoonfal to a (?>as* <rf colil wafer make* an |
V'Ofcoratln*, refreahiiis^lfelit’luui beverage. ’ Ad?
Character in
Clothes
^ KLIN DA is the dearest girl,"
|) said the chatty woman. "She
told me one day that sh«*
looked back with regret to the time
when the purchase of a spring suit I
was merely a matter of saving and
skimping, and when she could buy,
wear and be merry without a thought
of the scruples of to-morrow. Hut
now Belinda has to pay for being a!
conscientious, progressive and new
movement working woman with all
soits of moral questionings. So the;
purchase of her spring suit is an or
deal beset with many dangers.
"First, as a self-respecting girl she
must not squander too much on her
Clothes, and the dress she wants is
always a little beyond her limit. Next,
she is committed to the purchase of
only such garments as have a safe
hygienic origin, and often the most
becoming of the suits spread before
her do not answer these require
ments.
“Of course, Belinda belongs to an
art class, and she Ls hound to see
that her garments reveal ‘good lines 1
and are not Inharmonious, either in j
form or color. Nor must her suit be
out of tune with the other articles of
•her wardrobe that are to be worn
with it. She must see that the new
gown is not on a higher plane than her
shoes, or below her hat in style and
quality.
"If her hat is a kind of lady-of-
letsnre hat and her shoes of a work
aday style, why, they will harmonize
neither with the suit nor with each
other. Belinda likes to have the con
sciousness that there is perfect unity i
among the different articles of her
attire
S> ‘.YILLIAM F. KIRK.
P A & Ma & me went to a studio j
dinner the other nite & It was so
funny the way Pa got the worst
•>f It that I have tried to write about it
It fsent the first time that Pa ever got i
shown up but it was the worst that 1 i
ever seen him git the worst of it.
Thare was a gentleman nalmed El-
vood Black Junior that used to go to j
skcoi with Pa & he has a lot of munny I
& fine studio, so he. asked Pa to bring *
the fambly to the studio dinner. P;i t
' ept telling Ma all the way to Mister
>" ck Junior's place what a swell time
" • was g<»ing to have. That is one of
• advantages of having good friends.
I‘a sed. Anybody can herd with mutts,
hut I number among my Trends some of j
! o grates: men in the l\ S.
<>h. yes. I know, sed Ma. I haye 1
met sum of them. You have brought |
quite a few' of them up to'the house in |
the past. You remember the mining 1
can that-cuddent talk about anything
excep quartz & the brakeman that you j
brought beam a other time that ouddent |
talk about anything except what a hard
run he had on the O. & W., & the ball
player you asked up here that said the
library tabel was a kind of bush leeg
table, & a few of yure other grate i
friends?
Newer mind about them, sed Pa; this !
gentelman. Mister Black Junl-or, is a
perfeck gentelman & rolling in welth.
Ind you ever notls anything about a
man that has Junior after his naim?
said Pa.
He is usually kind of yung. sed Ma;
hut outside of that I never notised
much differens in them or any other
men. But I suppoas we will have a
good time, deer
Pa Made Fun.
Two Pegs Each.
Milady’s Coiffure
Advice to the
Lovelorn
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The studio dinner was fine & every
thing wud have been luvly If Pa hadent
beegan to maik fun of the Japanese
valet that works for Mister Black. He
was a littel bit of a fellow, not much
bigger than 1 am. & he was very quiet
seven wen Pa beegan kidding him.
Well, Admiral Toga, sed Pa. how are
all the rest of the littel slant-eyes? I
was reading a editorial the other day
that sed Japan was expecting a lot of
rights from Unkel Sam. The very idee
of Japan trying to tell this grate country
whare to git off. It is amusing, sed Pa.
We wud sail in & thare wud be abdut
one blow.
Ma was kicking Pa under the tabel.
She knew that Pa wasent doing right to
talk that way to the servant & I knew
it, too, but I guess eevry time Ma kicked
Pa he thought she was kicking him to
say inoar. Anyhow, he kept right on
saying meen things to the littel Japanee 1 -
valet. The vary idee, he sed, of a race
of servants trying to fight a rae'e of
free men.
The Japs are not a race of servants,
deer, sed Ma. They are reemarkebel
peepil. The only serving thay ewer did
was wen thay served Russia a mess of
wallops that the Zarr hasent forgotten
yet. I cud se that Ma was speeking
nice to maik the littel Jap feel better,
but the moar Ma sed the moar Pa kep
talking about w'hat a grate country this
was & about the fiteing spirit of ’76 &
how we showed our courage in the dark
days of the Rebelyun. Pa talked jest
as if he was a fiery flter in the days
of ’76 & a general in the days of the Re
belyun. Me & Ma know jest how Pa is,
but dident know him so well, & I guess
both of them felt a littel mad. One good
Anglo Saxon like me. Pa sed. cud go
into a room with twenty like you, hesed
to the valet. & cum out. What wud
you do in a room with me? he sed.
has been telling us for a long time
past.
For my part I declare myself a be
liever in the good effects of the om
nivorousness of man. If he had re
mained in his original trees, feeding
on fruits and nuts, he would never
have developed his brain until it put
him at the head of the animal crea
tion. When he got down and learned
to throw he took the first step in a
wonderful advance, and he took a
second in the same direction when he
began to eat the most digestible and
nourishing of all foods, meat. In do
ing that he did what every successful
creature has always done—he took
advantage of the work of others.
Meat is ready-made food. It presents
the “physical basis of life." proto
plasm, or protein, in the most quick
ly and surely assimilable form. How
ever we may sentimentally shrink
from animal food on account of the
way in which we obtain it, w'e must
acknowledge, I believe, that no ex
clusively vegetarian race could have
accomplished what man has done on
the earth.
But the whole story is not yet told.
When man became a carnivorous ani
mal he did not cease to be frugivor-
ous. On the contrary he used his
growing intelligence to develop still
further his ability to derive body-
power and brain-power from vege
table food. One of the most striking
statements made by Dr. Hutchinson
is. in substance, that meat eating
stimulates both the appetite and the
"Yes, Belinda h-as to ‘feel right’ in
her clothes or else they might as well
hang on their pegs forever. And
even when they are hanging on their
pegs—she always devotee two pegs to I
each garment—she likes to be con
scious of a friendly, intimate feeling j
toward them, to believe, when she'
looks at them, that she is gazing at a j
part of herself
"This looks as if Belinda was a |
very fussy person, which she is not, [
being only very conscientious. Real- I
ly. if you could see her In a costume
that has passe*.’ muster, one that har
monizes both with her eyes and her
income, that reveals no insanitary
stitches and ha# no germs lurking in
the seams, that show's graceful lines
and pleasing color—in short, a cos
tume that is true to its wearer’s ideals
—you would see a pretty girl who in
the best sense of the term and ac
cording to her own conviction is truly
well dressed.
"Far be it from me." went on the
chatty woman, "to quarrel with Be
linda for being conscientious. I only
wish that more of my friends were
like her. Still there are compensa
tions when people express themselves
freely in their clothes, particularly in
their hats.
"Not length of intimacy with your
woman friend, nor any deliberate psy
chological study of her nature, will
reveal her to you as surely and as
thoroughly as will one glimpse of her
spring Rat. She may hide herself
from your mental analysis, she may
irfek you by a hundred intellectual
and spiritual disguises, but when she
chooses her hat her hidden nature
reveals itself, and she stands before
you with all her qualities ^confessed.
A Constant Surprise.
“VVhat a constant surprise these
millinery revelations are! There is
Emily, whom I thought the soul of
sobriety and demureness: yet had she
really possessed these qualities, would
she have chosen for her spring hat a
purple bowl decorated with yellow
green feathers? And how can I
reconcile the quiet modesty, the
shrinking timidity of my friend Phyl
lis with the screaming audacity of a
burnt orange bow on a cherry-col
ored turban? Then there Is my ar
tist friend, Miss Dower, whose water
color sketches show delicate Quaker
ish tints, yet in her hat she turns her
hack on such ideals and dares to ap
pear in a perfect riot of reds and pur
ples.
“My neighbor, Mrs. Stern, is by her
own Confession superior to clothes
and entertain? a noble contempt for
personal adornment. Still If she were
really .sincere In these sentiments,
would she be seen In a, red straw
decorated with a cream-colored
feather duster? Another neighbor.
Miss Linsome, Is too much occupied
with putting things into her head to
(are about what goes on it, and yet
who but herself is responsible for
those huge loops of watermelon pink
ribbon that grace her spring hat?
“It’s all a great mystery, and I am
not sure whether these seemingly
contradictory bits of headgear arc
expressions of hidden depths in the
natures of my friends, or whether
they are but a kind of millinery
measles, a breaking out of some un
important mental disease that has
nothing to do with the real nature of
the victim.” •
The Terrible Test
' Darling," cried the young man, as
he sank at the maiden’s feet, "I would
do anything to prove my love fer
you! ”
"That's what every man says when
he wants to win a girl," answered the
young lady harshly.
• "Can’t I move you?” panted the
desperate Romeo. “Prove me! Put
me to the test! Test me, I pray you!”
wonder!” whispered the lady
softly to herself, while a blush man
tled her pale cheeks. Then suddenly
bending over the almost swooning
youth who crouched at her feet, she
exclaimed: “1 will put you to the
test! ’’
“Ah!” The youth sprang to his
feet, exultant, triumphant, and cried
aloud to the maiden at his side:
"Your test? Yo\jr test?”
“ ’Tis to marry some other girl,”
murmured the sweet young thing, as
she glided backward through the vel
vet curtains into the ball room.
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
HELP TO KEEP HIM GOOD.
FA EAR MISS FAIRFAX:
I am a young girl, ahd am in
love with • a lad about my own
age. He is bashful and does not
pay much attention to girls. He
is liked by every one and re
spected. We met several times,
and every time we meet be seems
to have bis eyes turned in my di
rection. I never have any words
with him. as I was never Intro
duced to him. But 1 think he
cares for me, or he would not
watch me so closely. Do you
think he cares for me. and what
do you think of him, for I think
he is a very good boy?
MABEL.
Bashfulness is a good trait,
| and greatly ’ in his favor. You
| are both so young that the best way
to keep him good is to keep him bash
ful, and you can do that by making
no efforts to get acquainted with him.
j Love is all the sweeter if giveh a
chance to develop slowly.
THREE PRETTY GOWNS
’MiE coat of this khaki tailor-
made is cut long and is
belted at the waist. Vhe
skirt opens a little at the front
seam and is slightly draped.
Large pockets and many rows of
machine stitching trim the coat:
the collar is of brown velvet. The
evening gown illustrated is car
ried out In peach-colored char-
meuse. The tunic and corsage are
veiled In rich lace, which falls
very simply and gracefully. The
skirt is caught up in front with
a bunch of silk roses in a vieux-
blue shade. The third gown,
which is for afternoon wear, is
What He Would Do.
I wud break the honorable gentel-
jnan’s neck, sed the Jap. Much dis
tress I wud cause him with the ans-
hun ju jitsu of the Samuray.
After the dinner was oaver. Pa sed
to the little Jap here, feel nf this mitev
arm. So the littel Jap felt Qf Pa’s arm
& Pa gaiv a awful howl & then fell on
his back.
1 He has broken my arm, sed Pa.
The honorabel arm is not broken, sed
the valet, it is just that your arm par
takes of much pain, soon it will dis
appear, the pain.
I. guess if we had a war with the
Japs Pa wuddent be much of a heero,
but he wudent go anyway.
Proof Positive.
Fortune Teller: “You may, in time,
make a good income, but you will
never be rich.”
Young Man: “Eh? Why not?”
"You are not saving. You are
wasteful.”
"My! my! I’m afraid that is true.
You have a. wanderful gift. How did
you know r I was wasteful?”
“You have just wasted a dollar get
ting your fortune, told.”
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Like It
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Blend Coffee has es
tablished this brand
as pre-eminent in
cup quality.
A»k yoar grorrr for it.
Cheek-Neal Collce Co.,
Nashville, Politico, JacVsnoville.
By GARRETT P. SERVISS.
W HEN the earliest ancestors, of
man got down out of their
trees and began to walk about
the earth with upright spines and
flattened feet, one of the first arts
that they acquired was that of
throwing stones.
A monkey can hurl a cocoanut from
a tree, but he cannot hit anything.
A 1 hub that is half leg and half arm
cannot be effectively employed for
throwing Accurate throwing is one
of the minor fine arts, and it could
only be invented by a creature stand-
lag on end, surely and yet delicately
balanced upon a pair of agile legs,
and provided with two arms amaz-
■ ingly cunning and perfect in their
mechanism. If you will watch a.base
ball pitcher you will see that he
needs BOTH his arms and BOTH his
legs.
As soon as the original ape-man,
having descended permanently to the
ground, found that h e could be a
marksman, he began to kill birds
and small animals with stones. While
he Inhabited his trees be had been
a "frugivorous” animal—that ls, a
fruit eater like most of the apes
and monkeys to-day. But when he
got among the "carnivorous,” or
flesh-eating, animals of the w'orld be
low the branches, he quickly learned
to live, like them, by devouring the
animals that he killed, and. because
he was the only one that could throw
—first stones, and then sharpened
sticks, or javelins—he excelled all
the others in the art of taking life.
Thus man. starting as a vegeta
rian, while he lived in tree tops,
i became a hunter and a meat-eater
after he ^descended to the ground
and began to walk upright. But he
did not abandon his fruit-eating,
and so he became an “omnivorous”
animal, that is, an eater of both ani
mal and vegetable food. I am not
sure but that he may have been the
first typical animal of this class, for
while some of the lower animals can
be taught, or driven, to eat both
kinds of food, yet as a whole, they
confine themselves to one or the
other.
T am led to draw this ideal pic
ture of early man by a perusal of
a most interesting article, in the
May Good Housekeeping Maga
zine. by Dr. Woods Hutchin
son. in which he puts, in attractive
form, some, of the latest conclusions
of medical and hygienic science con
cerning the perpetually important
j question of what we ought to eat.
In that article Dr. Hutchinson
i seems to explode maw of the modern
J fads about eating. It is best to let
him speak for himself on that sub
ject. and so I shall rot repeat what
he says, only remarking that some
, of his statements will probably sur-
1 prise many <»f his readers, and open
the eyes of all. Compare, for’ in
stance, his averments about rheuma
tism with w;hat .the “family doctor'’
O N the left is shown a marcelled coiffure, parted at the left
with a knot at the back hiding the ears. It carries an or
nament of white heads and aigrettes. The one on the right is
made up loosely and full, with bangs and a low knot.
MOST DECIDEDLY NO.
D ear miss Fairfax:
I am a young girl seventeen
years old deeply in lov*. with a
young man of eighteen years,
whom my parents forbid me going
with on account of his religion.
Do you think It would be proper
for me to meet him on the quiet,
as I know that he likes me?
P. B.
As you value your security and
happiness, do as your parents
wish. The man does not love you in
the light way. If he did, he would
not seek to undermine your parents’
I authority.
fashioned of light blue char-
meuse, the skirt being draped
over a foundation of similar ma
terial. The bodice, which is fin
ished with a row' of button# on
one side and buttonholes on the
other, reveals a chemisette of
lawn and lace. A collar of black
net gives a charmingly chic
touch.
I —1 HOMESICK I
BY HELEN WASHER.
A LL day the wind has whispered tales about the old home range.
And I, a lonely maverick, am crying for a change.
Shall we pull up our picket pins, and coil the cantle rope.
Then nit the trail and follow it adown the western slope?
This city life may be all right for those whose eyes are blind.
Or those who never see beyond the daily, dulling grind.
Rut herding round a snubbing post from eight till half past five.
Has never kept the outdoor heart of vagabonds alive.
Here every man is for himself, the devil for them all;
And few have pity for the weak who by the wayside fall.
They’re branded with the city’s iron, in body, heart and soul;
On every hand I see them strive, with money for their goal.
But outward where the sun goes down is room for you and me.
And there the men are what their God intended they should be.
This old corral is far tog small for my six feet of brawn,
So I shall take frhe Western trail before another dawn.
And all I ask of future years is that my feet may stray
Along somo sun-kissed range until the final roundup day.
Will Man Ever Cease To Be a Meat Eater?
digestive power for vegetable foods.
Now, in view' of that statement,
look at what early man did. As he
acquired more perfect control over
his arms, which originally had served
him merely for climbing, he learned
to cultivate the soil. He invented
cereals. He cultivated fruits, and
practically created our modern fruit
trees. Away back in the Neolithic
Age he grew barley and wheat, and
raised peas, lentils, beans, strawber
ries, raspberries and blackberries.
Remains of all these have been found
among the ancient Swiss lake-dwell
ings. But he never abandoned his
newfly acquired habit of meat-eating.
Some unconscious instinct may have
informed him thkt to do so would be
to throw away a large part of the
advantage which he had derived from
his descent out of the trees. He bad
come down into the world to be its
master, and the inhabitants of that
world, less cunning and less complete
ly equipped than he was had to yield
everything to his necessities, even
their lives.
This seems a hard rule—but is it
not what we find everywhere in na
ture? Cain w T as a tiller of the soil
and Abel a keeper of sheep. When
Cain brought his offering of the
‘Ifruits of the ground” and Abel his
Offerings of “the firstlings of his flock
and of the fat thereof,” the Lord “had
respect unto Abel and to his offerings,
but unto Cain and his offering He had
not respect.”
:. Cleek of the Forty Faces
By T. W. HANSHAW.
Copyright by Doubleday, Page & Co.
TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT.
At any time the interior of that
huge, stone-walled, steel-lined tube
must have been unlovely and depress
ing to all but the man who labored in
it; but to-night, with that man sit
ting dead In It, with his face to the
open window, a lamp beside him and
stiff hands resting on the pages of a
book that lay open on the desk’s fiat
top, it was doubly so; for. added to
its other unpleasant qualities, there
was now a disagreeable odor and a
curious, eye-smarting, throat-rough
ening heaviness in the atmosphere
which w'as like to nothing so much as
the fumes thrown off by burnt chem
icals.
Cleek gave one or two sniffs at the
air as he entered, glanced at Mr.
Norkom, then walked straightway to
the desk and looked into the dead
man’s face. Under the marks of the
scratches and cut# upon it—marks
w'hich would seem to carry out the
idea of an animal’s attack—the fea
tures were distorted and discolored
and the hair of beard and mustache
was curiously crinkled and discolored
Cleek stopped dead short, as he saw
that fare, and his swaggering, flip
pant, cocksure air of a minute before
dropped from him like a discarded
mantle.
Man Had Been Shot.
“Hullo! This doesn’t look quite so
promising for the animal theory as it
did!” he flung out sharply. “This
man has been shot—shot with a shell
filled with his own soundless and an
nihilating devil’s invention, lithamite
—and bomb-throwing is a trick of
beasts of a lower order than the ani
mal tribe! Look here, Mr. Narkom
—see! The. lock of the desk has been
broken. Srfut the door there, Nip
pers. Let nobody leav# the room.
There has been murder and robbery
here; and the thing that climbed that
tree was not an animal nor yet a
bird. It was a cutthroat and a thief!”
Naturally enough, this statement pro
duced something in the nature of a
panic—Miss Renfrew indeed appearing
to be on the verge of fainting, and It
is not at all unlikely that she would
have s ipped to the floor but for the
close proximity of Mrs. Armroyd.
"That's right, madame. Get a chair.
Put her into It. She will need all her
strength presently. I promise you. Wait
a bit. Better have a doctor, 1 fancy,
and an Inquiry into the whereabouts of
Mr. Charles Drummond. Mr. Narkom,
cut out will you, and wire this message
to that young man’s employer.” Pens
and paper were on the dead man's
desk. He bent over, scratched off some
hurried lines and passed them to the
superintendent. "Sharp’s the word,
please: we’ve got ugly business on hand
and we must know about that Drum
mond chap without delay. Miss Ren
frew lias not been telling the truth
to-night. Look at this man. Rigor mor
tis pronounced. Feel him—muscles like
lion, flesh like ice! She says that he
spoke to her at a quarter to eight. I
tell you that at a quarter to eight this
man had been dead upward of an hour!”
“Good Ood!” exclaimed Mr. Narkom;
hut his cry was cut Into by a wilder
one from Miss Rrenfrew.
Ran Out of the Grounds.
“Oh, no!” she protested, starting up
from her seat only to drop back into
It, Btrengthless, shaking, ghastly pale.
"It could not be—it could not be. I have
told the truth—nothing but the truth.
He did speak to me at a quarter to
eight-—he did. he did! Constable Gor
ham was there—ho heard him; he will
tell you the same.”
"Yes, yes, I know you said so, but—
will he? He looks a sturdy, straight
going honest sort of chap who couldn’t
be coaxed or bribed Into backing up a
lie; so—send him in a# you go out, Mr.
Narkom; we’ll see what he has to say.”
What he had to say when he came in
a few moments later was what Miss
Renfrew had declared—an exact corrob
oration of her statement. He had seen
a man whom he fancied was Sir Ralph
Droger run out of the grounds and he
had suggested to Miss Renfrew that
they had better look into the Round
House and see if all was right with
Mr. Nosworth. They had looked in as
she had said; and Mr. Nosworth had
ealled out and asked her what the devil
she was coming Iri and disturbing him
for, and It was a quarter to eight ex
actly. k
“Sure about that are you?” questioned
"Yes. sir; sure as I’m telling you
this minute."
"How do you fix the exact time?”
"As we come out of the covered
passage Miss Renfrew looked at her
wrist watch and says, impatient like,
'There, I've lost another two minutes
and am that much later for nothin’, fire!
it's a quarter to eight. Good night.’
Then she cuts off over the grounds and
leaves me.”
"La! la!" exclaimed Mrs Armroyd ap
provingly. “There’s the brave heart, to
come to mademoiselle's rescue so great
ly. But yes, 1 make you the cake of
plums for that, mon cher. Monsieur of
the Yard of Scotland, he can no more
torture the poor stricken child after
that—not he."
Up-to-Date Jokes
A Subterfuge.
But Cleek appeared to be less «asy,
to convince that she had hoped, for he*
pursued the subject still; questioning
Gorham to needless length It seemed;
trying his best to trip him up, to shake
his statement, but always failing, and
indeed, going over the same ground to
such length that one might have
bought he was endeavoring to gain
time. If he was, he certainly succeeded;
for it was quite fifteen minutes later
when Mr. Narkom returned to the
Round House arid he was at it still; and
indeed only concluded to give it up as
a bad job when the superintendent
came.
“Get It off all right, did you. Mr. Nar
kom?" he asked, glancing around as he
heard him enter.
"Quite all right, old chap. Right as
rain—In every particular.”
To Be Continued To-morrow.
“Where have you been. Mary Ann?”
“I’ve been to the Girls’ Improvement
Class, ma’am,” was the maid’# reply.
“Well, and what did the curate say
to you? Did you tell him who your
mistress was?” . .
“Please, ma’am, he laid I wasn’t to
give notice, as I intended, but that I
was to consider you as my burden—
and bear it.”
* * *
She—Harry, you said some tiling
last evening that made me feel so
bad.
He—What w’as it, dearest?
She—You said I was one <*f tho
sweetest girls in all the world.
He—And aren’t you. darling?
She—You said "one of tho sweet
est.” Oh, Harry, to think I should
have to share your love with an
other.
* * *
"Hist!” whispered the villain,
creeping stealthily away.
“i expected you would be," re*
joined the stage manager, with curi
lug
Mother'* Temper.
The »>mall girl had been **easp*?» -
a ting all day, and at last he. mother
lost patience and administered cor
poral punishment. The child had
scarcely recovered from her sobs,
when she looked up and said:
"Mother, you must try and contr; 1
that temper of yours.”
First Aid to Injured.
Pedestrian—Madam, a hoy who I
am told is your son has just thrown
a stone at me. causing a wound that
is very painful. What are you going
to do about It?
Moaher—I don’t know; have you
tried arnica?
FOOD"" MUSCLES, BONES«FLESH
Now’s the time to make sure that your children get
all the food necessary to build up their muscles and
bones and put on flesh. Their physical fu
ture depends largely on what they eat now.
There’s more real nutrition in a 10c
package of Faust Spaghetti than in 4 lbs.
of beef—prove it by your doctor.
is extremely rich in gluten, being
made from Durum wheat, the
cereal that ranks high in protein.
Very easily digested is Faust
Spaghetti. Savory, too —
write for free recipe hook
and see how many differ
ent ways this strength
building food can be
served.
At all grocers,—
5c and 10c packages
MAULL
BROS.
ST. LOUIS.
.JO.
Little Bobbie’s
Pa
Gowns for the Stylish Girl