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" JIY FRIEND, MY BROTHER.
My friend, my brother, whoso'er thftu be,
Cait down by suffering, still keep heart of
grace!
Though wrong and falsehood lord it far
and free
Across the tear-drenched lands,
Though guiltless blood be shed, and from
•thesr place
Our fair ideals \)y sacrilegious hands
Are rent, oh j et believe that Baal shall be
hurled
From off his thrcne, and Love renew the
world!
But not in fetters comes he, crowned with
thorn,
The victim's cross upon his shoulders
borne,
But girt with power and with glorv dight,
The torch of joy in outstretched, hands
alight!
And then shall be no tears on earth, no
hate.
No gibbets and no tortures more, no
slaves,
No livid want, implacable as fate,
No swords, no crossless graves!
O friend, and this is not a dream! ’Tis no
Delusive hope! For look around thee,
mark
And answer me—can evil fiercer grow,
The night more dark?
Earth, slaked with streams of blood,
enough has aeen
Of senseless wars that fill her ears with
cries,
And now to Love, the gentle and serene,
She lifts imploring eyes!
—-Simon Yakovlevich Nadson.
The Kidnaping of
Araminta Amelia.
By EFPIB 3TEVEK3. '/
Patty walked slowly down the front
walk with Araminta Amelia, carefully
wrapped up in grandma’s gray knit
shawl, in her arms.
Araminta Amelia was just recover
ing from an attack of the measles,
and one could not be too careful,
Patty thought.
Usually Araminta Amelia indulged
In the mumps—the measles were
something new in her somewhat
varied experience of diseases.
When Patty reached the big maple
tree next to the street, she placed
Araminta Amelia upon the bench that
w.as built around its trunk.
“The sun is considered good for
sick people,” Patty said to herself,
unconsciously imitating Aunt Kate’s
decided tones.
Then Patty ran over to the other
side of the yard to see how r her flower
garden was growing. Alas! it was
not growing very well. Patty was
such a little girl that she often for
got to take proper care of it. While
she was mourning, the minister came
along. He lived near by, and was
Patty’s very good friend.
“Hello! Who is this young lady?”
he cried, picking Araminta Amelia
up.
Patty came running to the spot.
VOh, you mustn’t!” she exclaimed,
“That's Araminta
Amelia, and she's got the measles.
You might catch them.”
The minister laid Araminta Amelia
<iown upon the bench very suddenly,
and pretended to look very much
alarmed. The minister was splendid
at make-believes, almost as good as
Patty herself. That was one reason
why they were such good friends.
( “Why didn’t you tell me before?”
he asked. “I haven’t had the measles
since I was two years, three months,
and two weeks, to say nothing of
days, hours, minutes and seconds,
younger than you are, Miss Patty,
and sometimes people do have the
measles twice, you know.”
Patty nodded her head wisely. She
knew all about it.
“Araminta Amelia has had the
measles four times since laat Friday,”
she remarked, gravely. Friday was
the day on which Patty had learned
that there was sueh a disease as the
measles.
“You don’t say so!” cried the min
ister in well simulated astonishment.
“Well, if you leave her out here all
alone I am afraid some one may kid
nap her.”
' Then the minister hurried away,
and Patty sat down beside Araminta
Amelia with a perplexed frown upon
her chubby face.
Patty was just beginning to dis
cover how many new things, especial
ly words, a very little girl has to
learn about.
She puckered up her tiny brows
and pursed her rosy lips, as she had
seen grandma do when she was in
doubt about anything, but it did not
help her to understand the meaning
of the funny word.
“Kid-nap,” she said slowly to her
self. “Kid-nap. I know what a nap
is. Araminta and I take a nap every
afternoon. But kid —kid—”
“Mamma wears kid gloves,” she re
membered after a moment. “Gloves
and going to sleep. Oh, dear, that
doesn’t mean anything at all! This is
a bad something that might happen
to Araminta Ameria. I’ll run and
ask mamma.”
So the little girl, forgetful of the
possible danger that might befall her
beloved doliy, left her on the bench
alone, and ran Into the house.
“O mamma!” Patty cried, “what is
a kid?”
Mamma was busy, but she stopped
a minute to answer her little daugh
ter’s question.
“What is it about a kid?” she
asked, wonderingly.
“What is a kid?” Patty repeated
eagerly, an idea coming to her sud
denly. “What animal is a kid?”
“Oh,” replied mamma, “a kid is a
baby goat. We saw one in the park a
while ago, you know.”
“I remember,” replied Patty, her
face fairly beaming with smiles.
“Thank you, mamma,” and away she
trotted.
“I suppose the minister meant that
a kid might come and trouble Ara
minta Amelia while she was taking a
nap,” she mused, “though why he
didn’t say so I can’t see.”
When Patty reached the bench, she
stopped and stared and stared.
Araminta Amelia was gone!
Patty looked on the ground; she
looked up and down the street; she
even looked up into the branches of
the tree above her, although, of
course, she knew better than to think
Araminta Amelia had walked off or
climbed a tree by herself; but no
Araminta Amelia could she And.
Patty began to cry as if her heart
would break.
Just then her big brother Tom
came along.
“Why, what's the matter here?” he
asked, picking his small sister up in
his strong arms.
“A—a—kid’s carried off Araminta
Amelia,” Patty sobbed despairingly.
“Who was it?” inquired Tom,
fiercely. “I’ll attend to any young
ster who troubles my little sister.”
“You’re my dearest brother!” Pat
ty cried, hugging him ecstatically.
“But it wasn’t any youngster, it was
just a kid—a baby goat.”
At that moment Rover, the dog,
came running to meet them with
something long and gray dragging
behind him.
“Why—why! ” said Patty in amaze
ment, “that’s Araminta Amelia’s
shawl.”
“It looks very much like grandma’s
shawl,” observed Tom, dryly, setting
Patty down and unfastening the
shawl, which had caught upon Rov
er’s collar.
“I borrowed it,” replied Patty.
“Grandma said I might.”
“All right,” said Tom.
“Rover, old fellow,” addressing the
puppy coaxingly, and showing him
the shawl, “where did you get it?
Show us, that’s a good dog.”
But Rover only wagged his tail
and barked joyously, as though he
thought he had done something very
smart indeed.
By tills time the entire family, with
the exception of papa and the baby,
had arrived upon the scene.
Finally, Rover, evidently tired of
keeping his great secret to himself,
ran into the vegetable garden, behind
the house, and began digging down
into the soft earth. The others fol
lowed.
All at once a bit of pink silk ap
peared above ground. Patty did not
wait any longer. She dropped down
upon her knees beside Rover and be
gan digging as hard as she could.
Between them both it did not take
very long to unearth poor, abused
Araminta Amelia.
“I guess your kid was only a puppy
after all,” said Tom laughing.
“Y r es,” replied Patty in a puzzled
way, “the minister said a kid would
do something bad to her while she
was taking a nap if I didn’t take care.
And I—-I—ran off and forgot her.
I’ll never do it again. But I guess he
meant Rover, thougn ft was funny
for him to call a dog a kid.”
Every one looked puzzled What
could Patty mean?
“Just what did the minister say,
dearie? Tell mother,” said mamma,
putting her arms around Patty, who
was beginning to cry once more.
“He didn’t say exactly those
words,” sobbed Patty; “but he meant
them. He said kid and nap, anyway.”
Tom laughed. “Kidnap,” he shout
ed, as soon as he could speak.
At that the others laughed, too,
and even Patty smiled through her
tears, though she did not know what
they were laughing about.
Mamma, seeing her puzzled face,
explained softly that, when the min
ister said some one might kidnap Ara
minta Amelia, he only meant that
some one might carry her off.
“And Rover did kidnap Araminta
Amelia,” returned Patty. Thus Patty
learned anew word.—The Congrega
tionalism
Lawsuit Over 22 Cents.
In Judge Eberhard’s court in Chi
cago on Tuesday a jury, two lawyers
and half a dozen witnesses spent three
hours on a case involving the sum of
twenty-two cents. Court adjourned
before the charge of the judge was
given to the jury. William Hindley
went to a department store to make
a purchase for his wife. The article
wanted was not in stock, but the clerk
gave him something “Just as good,”
for twenty-two cents, with the agree
ment, he says, that it could be re
turned if not satisfactory. He re
turned with the goods and demanded
his money, which in his complaint
he says was refused, but that is a dis
puted point. Before the trial was
cosaQienced the manager of the store
offered twenty-five cents in settle
ment, but Mr. Hindley is a lawyer,
and three cents’ premium is no in
ducement for him to give up the
chances for a bill of costs. —Utiea
Press.
“Orders by Pigeon Post.”
Sir—“ Orders by pigeon post” is
nothing new. Sixty 3’ears ago my
father, a Lincolnshire clergyman, had
a brother living in our market town
of Boston (six miles from our parish)
who kept a few carrier pigeons, and
it was my father’s habit when he
drove into town on market day to
bring back a pair of pigeons.
My mother being an invalid, the
doctor w r as often wanted very quickly,
and my father used to fasten his or
ders to a bird, liberate it, and away
it would go straight home, my fath
er’s brother executing the instruc
tions at once. All special wants were
for years dispatched to town in this
w r ay until my uncle died, when we
lost our useful little messengers, who
had saved us many a long, cold drive
to our market town. —London Daily
Mail.
The chance of one finger mark be
ing exactly like another is one in
64,000.000,000.
Statistics and Comparisons
of Nations of the World
* * i _ * 1 ;• '*> • ’ ‘ " . . , _ . • , ‘ .- t • -V
By P. B. VAN SYCKEL.
From the Irvington (N.. Y.) Gazette.
There are comparatives found,
along certain lines, in studying differ
ent nations of the world, which, to
say the least, are interesting to pon
der over.
We are wont to claim that the
United States surpasses all nations of
the world in development and pro
gress. While the United States is the
youngest nation with which I propose
to make certain comparisons, she has,
by no means, therefore, followed her
seniors in the examples they have
set her along the lines which I shall
pote. In some of tnese comparisons
we should blush, in others the blush
is on their side.
The present population of the
United States is between 85,000,000
and 95,000,000 people. The popula
tion of England is 36,998,178. The
population of Germany is 56,367,178.
The population of Russia is 106,204,-
176. The population of Austria is
20,150,597. The population of Italy
is 32,449,754. The population of
Spain is 18,089,500. The population
of France i5.38,641,333.
The present wealth cf the United
States is about $132,000,000,000. The
wealth of the United States in 1897
was given as $1,750,000,000. The
wealth of England at the same time
was $59,030,000,000. The wealth of
France at the same time was $47,-
950,000,000. The wealth of Ger
many at the same time was $40,000,-
000,000. The wealth of Russia at
the same time was $32,000,000,000.
The wealth of Austria at the same
time was $22,560,000,000. The
wealth of Italy at the same time was
$15,000,000,000. The wealth of
Spain at the same time was $11,900,-
000,000.
The salary of the President of the
United States is $50,000. The salary
of the President of Mexico, unless re
cently changed, is $50,000. The sal
ary of the Governor-General of Can-
THE PART WATER PLAYS
ON THE DESERT.
It Is difficult to comprehend the
part that water, or rather the lack of
water, plays in shaping the life of
the desert. Mice and other small
rodents, native to arid regions, have
been known to live on hard seeds
without green food for periods of
several months or even as long as
two or three years, and nothing in
their behavior indicated that they
ever took liquid in any form. I have
hunted deer and peccary in Sonora
in regions in which the only source
of water was to be found in the cac
ti; even bands of domestic sheep
reared in the arid regions, acquire a
capacity for going without water for
many weeks.
Man, however, Is poorly armed
against the rigors of the desert. A
horseman may go from morning of
one day until some hour of the next,
in midsummer, and neither he nor
his horse may incur serious danger,
and experiences of this kind are nu
merous. If the traveler is afoot, ab
stinence from water from sunrise to
sunset is a serious inconvenience to
him, and if he continues his journey,
the following morning his sufferings
may so disturb his mental balance
that he may be unable to follow a
trail, and by evening of that day, if
he has not come to something drink
able, he may not recognize the
friendly stream in his way, and In
stances are not unknown in which
sufferers from thirst, have forded
streams waist deep to wander out on
the dry plain to a grisly death.
Some estimate may be made of the
actual amount necessary from the
fact that the writer during the course
of an ordinary day in May at Tueson,
consumed sixteen pints of water. A
walk of three or four miles was tak
en, but no especial muscular effort
beyond this was involved. A march
across the desert in fnidsummer
would Rouble this quantity. Under
such circumstances, a canteen of less
capacity than a gallo%.As a toy, and
one of real usefulness,*" should con
tain at least twice that amount. The
most notable example of endurance
of thirst is that of a Mexican pros
pector, hunting for a “lost mine”
near the old Camino del Diablo, or
trail from Altar to Yuma, who made
camp safely after being out for eight
days with a supply sufficient for one.
This experience is not likely to be
duplicated soon, although It is re
ported that Indians often go as long
as four days.without water. —From
“A Voyage Below Sea Level,” by Dr.
D. T. MacDougal, in The Outing Mag
azine.
Imaginary Holidays.
I know a man who can not afford
to travel, and yet has a delightful way
of deceiving himself. He learn3 about
the cost of traveling, the proper cloth
ing to be worn, gets a time table and
arranges excursions for himself to
various places, and then reads about
them in hooks of travel. To the man
with imagination it is a captivating
occupation.—Hearth and Home.
Although the population of Lon
don’s metropolitan district is 2,000,-
000 larger than that of New York,
the latter city does a restaurant busi
ness one-fifth greater than the for
mer.
ada i3 $50,000. The salary of the
King of Greece is $200,000. The sal
ary of the President of France is
$240,000. The salary of the King
of England is $1,925,000. The sal
ary of the Emperor of Germany is
$3,852,370. The salary of the Czar
of Russia is $12,000,000.
The salaries of the Vice-President
of the United States, the members of
the Cabinet, ambassadors and minis
ters abroad are not sufficient to pay
their rent and living; in some cases
not enough by one-half, leaving noth
ing for their services.
Judges of the Supreme Court in
the County of New York receive a
salary of $17,500, or S7OOO more
than the Chief Justice of the United
States.
To make the briefest possible com
ment on the above statistics, point
ing to one particular only, allow me
to compare the salaries paid to the
executive heads of the six or eight
leading nations of tho world here
mentioned.
While the population of the United
States is greater than that of either
of the above named nations, except
Russia, and the wealth of the United
States is far greater than that of any
other, four times greater than the
wealth of Russia, yet the salary paid
to the executive head of the United
States is less than that paid to the
executive head of any of the other
nations mentioned, except Mexico and
Canada.
The salary paid to the President
of the United States is 240 times less
than that paid to the Czar of Russia,
nearly eighty-five times less than that
paid to the Emperor of Germany,
and nearly forty times less than that
paid to the King of England.
It is obvious that a man’s wage
does not always compare equably
with what he represents.
Transplanted English j
If language is a true measure of
conquest, as has been contended,
then Anglo-Saxon speech is rapidly
conquering the European continent.
It is a matter of interest to many
to observe the increasing number of
Englisl words incorporated into col
loquial French. This new but mild
and pacific form of English invasion
has led to the publication in Paris of
a list of words that have become
more than ‘‘acclimated”, and natural
ized by general use in France. Many
refer to sports and sporting, and in
of words adopted fiom the
Englreh into French are turf, trot
ting, Tattersall, racer, maiden, mi
lord, carriage and gentleman rider.
English drinks have no great vogue
in France, but the French have
adopted several of the English words
that distinguish them: gin, punch
and grog.
They have also taken the following
English words:
Lightweight, lawn tennis, Irish
stew, home, handicap, ale, ‘‘all
right,” cocktail (which the French
define as American, not English),
bridge and bridge whist, bullfinch,
block system, ballast, blackleg, event,
dining car, destroyer, drag (mail
coach), dandy, covert coat, commo
dore, full hand (poker), flyer, feath
erweight, 5 o’clock, fashion, hunter,
jockey club, keepsake, knickerbock
ers, lunch, macadam, mutton chop,
outlaw, outrider, paefdoek, pedigree,
pickles, porter, pudding, quick be
ginner, race horse, raglan (overcoat),
rocking chair, roast beef, sandwich,
self-made man, shocking, sleep car,
snob, team, tipster, toast, top weight,
tramway, trolley, truck, tunnel, tub,
walkover wharf, waterproof and
whisky.
In Italy, too, may be seen the in
fluence o fthe English tongue. ' High
life,” pronounced “hig leef,” ha3 long
been in use in that country. ‘‘Lo
sport” and “il yacht” are everyday
matters in the Italian kingdom: the
press talk casually of “il globe trot
ter,” and “11 reporter,” and “meet
ings” has usurped the place of all
Latin synonyms, and in Italy gets its
plural regularly—“meetingai,” like
any other good Italian noun. An en
terprising shop, calling itself “The
Handy Things Company,” advertises
an ice cream freezer, “The Easy.”—
Harper’s Weekly.
No Railroad There.
There is but one county without
railroad connection in the State of
Colorado. Heretofore it has been
considered quite a distinction out
there to be outside the railroad belt,
and Grand, Rio Blanco, Baca and
Routt counties were in the list of
exclusives; but one after the other
has been annexed, so to speak, to the
outside world. Routt being the lat
est, until now little Baca County,
away down in the southeast corner of
the State, is left to enjoy the honor
all by itself. In 1868 there wasn’t
a foot of railroad track in the then
territory.
Those Long Earrings.
According to the fashion hints,
women will wear earrings this season
so large they will have to be support
ed on rollers on the ground.—Atchi
son Globe.
A cord of wood ordinarily yields
about one ton of mechanical pulp or
about one-half ton of chemical pulp.
A shellfish in the Mediterranean
spins a silk as fine as any from a co
coon. The fish is the prima nobilis.
The River Polk flows into a cave in
the side of a mountain and completely
disappears at Adelsberg, near Trieste.
The electric furnace is capable of
attaining a heat of 7200 degrees. This
is a fearful temperature, and will
melt almost everything solid known
to man. In comparison with this heat
a redhot iron bar would be called
cold.
Experiments conducted abroad
have demonstrated that balloons trav
eling at a height of from 600 to 2000
yards could be hit only once out of
six shots, while they were absolutely
safe at a height of 3000 yards. Even
when struck, the damage to the gas
bag was so small that the balloon
was able to continue its journey for
hours before the escaping gas made a
landing necessary.
The Argentine ant, which has
worked great devastation among the
sugar plantations of Louisiana, has
made its appearance on the Pacific
Coast, and active steps are being tak
en to exterminate it. This insect is
so pugnacious that it quickly drives
out the cattle ant, which has some
considerable economic value and
which is not replaced by the intruder
from Argentine. The latter is not
only destructive in itself, but it pro
tects stale growth and plant lice. The
Argentine ant is regarded as one of
the most injurious pests which was
even brought into the United States.
The forcing of wheat and other
crops by electricity has been carried
on at Bevington, England, for three
years, under the direction of a son of
Sir Oliver Lodge. A plot of nineteen
and a half acres is covered by a net
work formed of a number of lines of
stout telegraph wire with thin galvan
ized iron cross wires, the whole sup
ported on twenty-two larch poles
fifteen feet high, and a two horse
power oil engine drives a dynamo
generating current that is trans
formed to about 100,000 volts, and
is connected by the negative pole to
earth and by the positive to the over
head wires. A speciment crop is thir
ty-five and a half bushels per acre of
Canadian wheat from the electrified
area and only twenty-five and a half
from neighboring land—an increased
yield of forty per cent, from the new
methods
CALIFORNIA BROWN PELICAN.
Its Method of Fishing Attracts Atten
tion at Southern Seaside Resorts.
The pelican, familiar to the visitor
at the seaside resorts of Southern
California, is known as the California
brown pelican. His length is from
four to five feet, and his wings and
tail are of silver gray, streaked w T ith
seal brown.
The breeding range of these inter
esting birds is off the coast of M€;xico
and Lower California. May and June
are the nesting months. Occasionally
they build their nests in low trees,
but ordinarily it is on the ground.
It is a loosely constructed affair,
built of weed stalks and sticks and
lined with grass.
At the seaside the pelicans are
seen lazily flying through the air. It
is their fashion to fly one behind the
other. Each following the signal
from the leader, gives five or six
strokes, and then all soar in unison.
At feeding time their wont is to drive
the fish by a noisy beating of the
wings to a point close in shore, when
the birds will dive from considerable
heights. This performance is quite
spectacular, as with closely folded
wings the bird drops as a ball head
foremost into the water. Under the
water they evidently turn a somer
sault, as the bird invariably emerges
head first.
The pouch or game bag of the pel
ican will hold ten or fifteen pounds of
fish, and as the bird is provided with
no means of defense, he is the victim
off sure thing operators and confidence
workers in the form of the predatory
gulls. Too lazy to dive for them
selves, these thieves will pursue and
attack the pelican, causing him to
dive as a matter of self-protection.
So closely are the pelicans pursued
by their more agile enemies that final
ly, half exhausted, they give up the
trophies of their chase. This they do
with a cynical smile as they see their
hard earned gain gobbled by the
gulls.—Los Angeles Times.
The Office Boy’s Big Pay.
A certain prominent lawyer of To
ronto is in the habit of lecturing his
office staff, from the junior partner
down, and Tommy, the office boy,
comes in for his full share of the ad
monition. That his words were ap
preciated was made evident to the
lawyer by a conversation between
Tommy and another office boy on the
same floor which he recently over
heard.
“Wotcher wages?” asked the other
boy.
“Ten thousand a year,” replied
Tommy.
“Aw, g’wan!”
“Sure,” insisted Tommy, una
bashed. “Four dollars a week in
cash, an’ de rest in legal advice.”—
Everybody's.
N °‘ Wn ßl Ate
Agreed With
MRS. LINORA BODENHAMep
i^ nora Bodenhamer. uTn
J suffered with stomach troatiu
indigestion for some time nA
that I ate agreed mtbm ? d "S
nervous and experienced I B " Ttr ?
feeling ot uneasiness and fear i
Died to no from the doctor, but it rid*
no zood. ' 1 Ck! at
“I found in one of your I'en.m book,
description of my svmptoms IT 1
wrote to Dr. Hartman for advice [i 91
I had catarrh of the stomach, |
I’eruna and Alanaliu and folloxveu hk 4
reetiona and can now sav that if >
well . 1 ever did. > ,nal 1 W,
“■ top* that all who are atHirted „
the same symptoms will take Peruna
has certainly cured me.”
The above is only one of hundreds,
have written similar letters to Dr and!
roan. Just one such case as this em u
Peruna to the candid consideration of
one similarly afflicted. If this Utm j
the testimony of one person what ouebt J
be the testimony of hundreds, yes tW
sands, of honest, sincere people? \VeU
in our files a great many other tea!
monials.
(<gLABBn^
cme fo
iJAMPLE TREATMENT of uTdWS
0 and Fistula Cure and l>ook explaining
pent free- REA CO..Pont..R-l.Minneapolis
Faith may move mountains, but It
won’t always do away with a bluff,
Hicks’ Capudine Cures Nervousness,
Whether tired out, worried, overworked,or
what not. It refreshes the brain tni
nerves. It's Liquid and pleasant to tiii
10c., 25c., and 5Gc., at drug stores.
ANTS THAT GROW MUSHROOMS,
Insects Make Excellent Gardentrt
In South America.
Professor J. R. Ainsworth Dan
gives latest proofs of the ant's right
to our applause. He &ay3: In tro>
leal America the traveler in their
native region often sees thousand!
cf ants marching In coiumn of route,
each holding in its powerful laws j
piece of green leaf about the she
of a sixpence. These they take to
their nests. The material Is used
as an elaborate sort of mushroom
culture, requiring much more sMI
and intelligence than that in
human beings engage. The mush
room flower sets spawn in the Wl
be prepares, but the ant does w*
need to do this. The desired
soon makes its appearance in
chewed leaf. But in its natural s
it is inedible, and must udW
careful treatment before it yields t
mushroom which the ant desires,
necessary work is done by a
caste if gardener ants. These *
out obnoxious germs, etc., and P
ing off the tips of the threads,
vent them from growing irwo -
and producing useless toadstool*. -
a result of this the threads
into innumerable little rounded
thickenings, each of which is
one-fiftieth of an inch across. _
the which arc the m
These curious bodies oonat 1 t
sole food of the ant—or, at
the chief food.
EAGER TO WORK
Health Regained by Right Food.
The average healthy man or
an is usually eager to be busy
some useful task or employ me E
But let dyspepsia or lDu §
get hold of one, and all endear
comes a burden. , rc3
“A year ago, after recover ng
an operation,” writes a Mic •
“my stomach and nerves bet,
give me much trouble.
”At times my appetite was
clous, but when indulged, ln
followed. Other times Iha -j
petite whatever. The food 1
not nourish me and I S IBW
than ever, . . s! l
“I lost Interest in everyth o *
wanted to be alone. I ha
had good nerves, but now t * |
trifle would upset me and - 1
violent headache. Walking
the room was an effort an . P 1 *
exercise was out of the Q uesl
“I had seen Grape-Nut? a ..j
but did not believe what
the time. At last when it # ' v
if I were literally starving,
ea* Grape-Nuts. for*
“I had not been able to wo „
year, but now after two - 1 ‘ ffD f;
Grape-Nuts lam eager to ) tr**
again. My stomach gives m $
ble now, my nerves are
ever, and interest in and 8 .
tion have come back v
to health.”
“There’s a Reason. ” 0
Name given by Post ( u ™ Road f
Creek, Mich. Read iDO
Wellville,” in pkgs. * I
Ever read the abov f t 0
newrone appears from . full 1
They are genuine, true,
human interest.