Newspaper Page Text
It weakens
you and dis¬
gusts your It
friends.
offers a prepared ground
for dangerous diseases.
It will not get well by
itself, but many thous¬
ands of just such cases
have yielded to
PERUNA
which for forty-five years
has been the household’s
standby in catarrh and
debility during conval¬
escence from grip.
Experience has taught
a great number that Peruna is
a reliable tonic that aids the
membranes in recovering from
inflammatory conditions, regu¬
lates the appetite and clears away
the waste. At your druggists.
THE PERUNA COMPANY
Columbus, Ohio
Have -you
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago or Gout?
Take ItllECMAC'IDK to remove tfce cause
amt drive the poison fro m the system.
“HIIKI lUCIDK ON TIM IRHlftR
Pt!r« UHKtiftATIHJf OH THE 01178191 ’*
At All Dragffilti
Jm. Baily & Son, Wholesale Distributors
Baltimore, Md.
FOUR BALES PER
The record of Vandiver's HEAVY
ER COTTON. Forty bolls make pound.
Forty-six per cent lint. 1V4 inch staple.
BOLT. WEEVILS. Free from all diseases.
Resist drouth and winds. Earliest big boll.
Tire cotton that BEATS the boll
All seed ginned and culled on private
chinery. We originated this wonderful
ten. Write us for facts and proofs
your own state. Special prices on seed
earlv delivery.
VANDIVER SEED CO., LAVONIA,
I! Clear Your Skin
Save Your Hair
With Cuticura
Soap 25c
OtntiMnt25and5Qc
Frost Proof Cabbage
Early Jersey and Charleston Wakefield,
eesulon and Flat Dutch. By express, 500,
1,000,12.00; 6,000 at |1.75; 10,000 up at $1.50. F.
B. HERB. Delivered parcel post 100, 36c;
$2.50. Satisfaction guaranteed.
D. F. JAMISON, SUMMERVILLE, S.
^ MM "wWl tV va TREATMENT. swelling Glvesqulelc and
■r goon re moron
breath. N«*r»r hoard of it* equal for
v* *jBiTry it. Trial treatment eent FREE, by mail.
Write to DU. THOMAS E. GREEN
mJUr Saak Bids,, Boa 20. GHATS WORTH.
.................. .... ' ......1...............1
Camouflage.
“7 didn’t much cape about the
■" Josh’s clothes looked down to
commented Funner Corntossel.
“Hasn't lie ids regular uniform?”
“Not yet. if they’re going to
him dressed that way In hopes of
ceiving the enemy into thinking
just an obscure peasant or
tolmt 1 sny In that it’s carrying this
kermoofllng idea too far!”
BOSCHEE’S GERMAN SYRUP
swill quiet your cough, soothe the
flammation of a sore throat and
stop .irritation in the bronchial
Insuring a good night’s rest, free
coughing and with easy
in the morning. Made and sold
America for fifty-two years. A
derful prescription, assisting Nature
building lip your general health
throwing oft the disease.
useful in lung trouble, asthma,
bronchitis, etc. For sale in all
ized countries.—Adv.
Sure Enough Poetry.
“Of course, you've read
speare?”
“Yes," replied Farmer Corntossel.
read him a little once in a while.
somehow I've lost my taste for
and such since my boy went to
war. A page or two in Josh’s
handwriting somehow beats all
Hamlet's soliloquy and Mare
orations that was ever written.”
RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR.
To half pint of water add i oz.
Rum. a small box of Barbo
and oz, of glycerine. Any druggist
put this up or you can mix it at home
very little cost. Full directions for
ing and use come in each box of
Compound. It will gradually
streaked, faded gray hair, and make it
and glossy. It will not color the scalp, is
sticky or greasy, and does not rub off.
There are times when it is
ble tr. keep your door closed that
t' your dome of thought.
This is the age of youth.
You will look ten years younger if
darken your ugly, grizzly, gray hairs
using “La Creole” Hair
Rectitude of conduct is man's
good.
When Your Eyes Need Care
Try Murine Eye Remedy
Fo Smarting — Jnst Eye Comfort. 60 cent*
Brogglst* or mail. Writ* for Free Bye
MURINE EYE REMEDY CO..
THE WEEK’S EVENTS
IMPORTANT NEWS OF STATE, NA¬
TION AND THE WORLD
BRIEFLY TOLD
ROUND ABOUMHE WORLD
A Condensed Record Of Happenings
Of Interest From All Points
Of The World
Domestic.
Taking over of packing plants will
be urged upon the president by a dele¬
gation representing every craft in the
industry and headed by John Fitzpat¬
rick, president of the Chicago Federa¬
tion of labor, which is in Washington.
A mob of several hundred citizens of
Hazelhurst, Miss., took Sim Edwards,
a negro, from the county jail and burn¬
ed him near the place where he had
murdered Miss Vera Wiliys.
Between a dozen and twenty men,
most of them negro laborers, were
drowned in the Estuary channel at
Tampa, Fla., when two skiffs upset
in the middle of the narrow channel.
The money taken from the army
bank at Camp Funston, Kan. by Capt.
Lewis Whistier, after he had killed
four employees and injured a fifth,
said to have been more than $62,000,
has been found.
The discovery of the money taken
by Captain Whistler from the army
hank at Camp Funston, Kan,, probably
closes the case, as far as the theory
that Whistler had an accomplice is
concerned.
Six men were killed and three injur¬
ed on the United States battleship
Michigan when the ship was caught
in a heavy gale at sea, it has been
officially announced in Washington.
The men were killed and injured by
the falling of a cage mast, the first
accident of its kind in the navy.
A bomb addressed to Governor Wil¬
liam D. Stephens’ mansion at Sacra¬
mento, Cai., has been intercepted at
the Ferry postoffice in San Francisco.
This is the second attempt to assassi¬
nate the California governor in three
months.
A San Francisco dispatch says that
Germany’s latest, attempt to destroy
the wheat crop of California and oth¬
er states has taken the form of ship¬
ment to this country of powerful poi¬
sonous pollen to be distributed by
German agents in the western states
in such a manner as to kill the entire
wheat output of that section.
Washington
The Red Cross has on a campaign
for the enlistment of 30,000 more wom¬
en in the military prospective needs of
the Ameican government, according
to announcement from Washington,
In the campaign to enlist 30,000
more women for nurses the American
Red Cross has modified somewhat its
former requirements for enrollment.
The age limit has been lowered to 21
years and in special cases nurses over
40 may be accepted.
About 120,000 food retailers have
signed the conservation pledge of the
food administration. The campaign
will continue until 350,000 are enroll¬
ed, according to announcement from
Washington.
Application of the new psychologic¬
al test to all enlisted men and newly
appointed officers of the army has
been ordered by the war department.
A price of $75.50 a ton, f. o. b. sea¬
board for the nitrate fertilizer, which
the department of agriculture has pur¬
chased in Chile, was announced by
Secretary Houston.
In buying nitrate fertilizer, the
farmers must pay the freight charges
from ports and the state tax fees and
payments must be in cash, but the
ships will be directed to the most con¬
venient ports.
The South should help win the war
by raising its own foodstuffs and elimi¬
nating the necessity of transporting
food from other sections of the coun¬
try, said Director General MeAdoo.
Secretary MeAdoo said the South,
without reducing cotton production,
farmers ought to produce more milk,
butter, eggs, poultry, fruit and vege¬
tables.
Says Food Administrator Garfield;
‘‘This is war! Whatever the cost, we
must pay, so that in the face of the
enemy there can never be the re¬
proach that we held back from doing
our full share. Those ships laden
with our Supplies of food for men and
food for guns must have coal and put
to sea.”
America’s manufacturing enterpris¬
es, with but few exceptions, in all
states east of the Mississippi river,
were ordered by the government to
suspend operations for 5 days begin¬
ning January 18, as h drastic measure
for relieving the coal famine.
Director General MeAdoo stated that
if the South can feed itself it will
release from unnecessary service in
the South a vast number of freight
cars and engines, and will help win
the war.
An exception is made in the coai
order, in the case of shipbuilding
plant because of the great need for
vessels to move supplies already ready
for shipment over seas.
According to reports from Washing¬
ton, most of the plants engaged on
war contracts were exempted from the
fuel order’s operation, but few of them
learned of it in time and most of them
closed down with the other factories.
The government has ordered that all
normal activities that require heated
buildings, observe a holiday on Mon¬
day for the next ten weeks. This in¬
cludes industry and business generally
CLEVELAND COURIER. CLEVELAND. GEORGIA
According to Mr. MeAdoo, one of
great tasks confronting the
people, is that of improving
making thoroughly efficient their
transportation system.
Fuel Administrator Garfield, ex¬
the drastic fuel order, says;
most urgent thing to be done is
send to the American forces abroad
to the allies the food and war
which they vitally need. War
food manufactured arti¬
of every description, lying in At¬
ports in tens of thousands of
where literally hundreds of ships
with war goods for our men
the allies cannot take the seas
their hunkers are empty of
The coal to send them on their
is waiting behind the congested
that has jammed all termi¬
Manufacturers in the 28 states east
the Mississippi river have virtually
in obedience to the govern¬
order forbidding the use of
Millions of person were made idle
a result of the order.
The new order in the coal situation
decided upon hurriedly by the
and government heads as a
remedy for the fuel crisis
the transportation tangle in the
states.
Inclusion of war industries among
those to which fuel will be denied
caused some surprise, but fuel offi¬
cials explained that war plants have
produced more material than trans¬
portation systems could handle.
While the government order for
business suspension does not mention
ship yards, it is known that they will
be permitted to continue operations as
usual, although munitions plants will
be closed.
While even munitions plants are not
excepted from the closing down order,
a preferential list of consumers in
whose interest it was drawn is pre¬
scribed.
Senator McCumber of North Dakota
gave the senate a very gloomy picture
of the position of the United States
and her allies in emphasizing his plea
for radical speeding up of the ship¬
building program.
According to Senator Mct’umber of
North Dakota, the United States must
send 5,000,000 soldiers to balance the
manpower of the central powers, and
7,060,000 would be needed to makf
tbe Germans retreat.
According to Director General Me¬
Adoo, all state railway laws and regu¬
lations will remain in full effect, under
government operation of the railroads.
The recent ruling of Director Gener¬
al MeAdoo in the railroad situation,
disposes of the contention that under
government operations the railroads
were not subject to either intrastate
rates or other state regulations.
European.
The latest German reports through
Amsterdam flatly assert that the mili¬
tary party has gained the victory in
the territorial policy of Germany and
show what face that country proposes
to put on annexations in the east.
The Russian constituent assembly
was short-lived, being dissolved by the
Bolshevik! after a vote had shown
conclusively that the government
headed by Lenine and Trotzky was
greatly in the minority.
A general strike is on throughout
Austria, 100,060 men quitting work in
Vienna and Neustadt, closing down ali
the war factories. The strikers are
openly anti-German.
In a naval action between British
and Turkish forces the Turkish cruiser
Midullu, formerly the German Breslau,
was sunk and the Sultan Yawuz Selim,
formerly the German Goeben, was
beached.
According to reports from Petrograd
a Japanese cruiser was put ashore at
Vladivostok and that the Japanese
consul declared the Japanese soldiers
were there to protect Japanese citi¬
zens.
The report of the London admiral¬
ty for the week of Jan. 9, reported tho
loss by mine or submarine of 18 mer¬
chantmen of 1,600 tons or over and
three merchantmen under tha tonnage,
and four fishing vessels.
A Rome, Italy, dispatch, carries the
gratifying news to the allied capitals
that the Austrians have received a
sanguinary repulse on the lower
Piave in the sector nearest Venice.
The Italians captured 150 prisoners
and a large quantity of guns and war
material.
Of all Bristlsh vessels damaged by
enemy action between January and
October, 1917, it has been found im¬
possible to solve four only, according
to Thomas J. McNamara, financial
secretary of the admiralty in the
house of commons of London.
According to reports from London,
another marked decrease in the sink¬
ings of British merchantmen by mine
or submarine in the week ending Jan¬
uary 16, is noted in the report of the
admiralty.
An automobile carrying Xakolai Le¬
nine, the Bolsheviki premier, was fired
upon when he was driving to a meet¬
ing of the council of people’s commis¬
saries, in Petrograd, but he was not
hurt.
The delegates to the peace confer¬
ence at Brest-Litovsk again are at six¬
es and sevens and the pour parlers
have ended, the stumbling block be¬
ing the German demands.
in the week ending January 16, only
six merchanment of 1.600 tons or over
were sunk by mine or submarine, and,
two merchantmen under 1,600" tons
and two fishing vessels, according to
London admiralty reports,
A mutiny among submarine crews
the German naval base of Kiel on
uary 7 is reported in a dispatch
Geneva, in which it is stated
eight officers were killed.
THOUSANDS OBEY
GABFIEUI ORDER
FOOD DEALERS REMAIN OPEN
UNTIL 5 O’CLOCK, BUT RETAIL
MERCHANTS CLOSE
HOLIDAY THROUGHOUT STATE
Dr. Hardman Calls Meeting To Expe¬
dite Delivery Of Coal To Pre¬
ferred Customers
Atlanta.—
Retail and wholesale grocers, butch¬
ers, bakeries and milk dealers stayed
open Monday until 5 o’clock in the af¬
ternoon, under the exemption granted
in a ruling by Dr. A. M. Soule, state
food administrator, and concurred in
by Dr. L. G. Hardman, state fuel ad¬
ministrator.
This was for the purpose of preserv¬
ing and protecting the even flow of
food commodities under the policy of
the food administration, encouraging
purchases of food supplies in small
quantities and eliminating hoarding
or over-stocking. This was the plan
adopted Sunday by leading dealers.
The ruling requires that such dealers
close their doors promptly at 5 o’clock.
Ail other retail and wholesale mer¬
cantile establishments, with the ex¬
ception of drug stores; automobile
and automobile accessory dealers; of¬
fice buildings, with the exception of
the offices of doctors and dentists,
banks and trust companies; ail barber
shops and business concerns of ail
sorts were required to refrain from
the use of fuel of any sort Monday,
and practically all such establish¬
ments made formal announcements
that they would close for the day.
Theaters remained open, the “fuel¬
less” day for theaters having been
changed to Tuesday.
Manufacturing and industrial con¬
cerns will continue their closing hours,
as on Friday and Saturday, in compli¬
ance with the fuel administration’s
five-day closing order.
Upon appeal from Augusta for relief
made to Governor Hugh M. Dorsey, by
the Augusta waterworks, the Augusta
Gas company and the Georgia and
Florida railway, at Augusta, the gover¬
nor, upon authority from the state fuel
administrator, ordered the diversion
of ten cars of steam coal from Atlanta
industrial concerns, not needed here
for domestic purposes, to Augusta for
the relief of the situation there.
Dr. Hardman stated that the fuel
situation all over the state is much
easier than it has been in the last ten
days. Reports coming to him show
that sneering has been reduced and
that demands, lessened, are being
more easily met.
Dr. Hardman also stated that the ob¬
servance of the five-day closing order
of the federal fuel administrator was
being carried out in cheerful fashion
on a state-wide scale.
Seizure Of Coal Plan Is Protested
Gov. Hugh M. Dorsey is in receipt
of protests from J. L. Jessup, fuel
committeeman of Macon, and from
other points, against the seizure of
coal in Atlanta, consigned to other
Georgia cities.
These protests have evidently grown
out of misconstruction of advice given
by the governor several days ago as
to the use of coai delayed in transit
for relief of distresses local to points
where the coal might happen to be
delayed.
Governor Dorsey stand that it was
not his original proposition nor has it
ever been his idea that coal destined
for the relief of suffering anywhere
should be confiscated, except coal con¬
signed for manufacturing or industrial
purposes, but which might be delayed
and be without prospect of immedi¬
ate delivery.
Doctor Hardman Makes Fuel Ruling
Doctor Hardman's ruling anent the
fuel situation was conveyed in the fol¬
lowing telegram:
“It is hereby ordered and directed
that al factories, industries, plants
and other manufactories, operated by
electric current water power, are au¬
thorized to operate on January 18, 19,
20, 21 and 22 and Mondays thereafter,
including Monday, March 25, provid¬
ed that such electric current is not
produced by steam plants; provided,
j further, that no coal is used for heat¬
ing said factories, industrial plants or
other manufactories, except the heat
necessary to avoid serious injury
sprinkler system and other
and for maintaining the pressure
stea mas required by contracts of
insurance regulated by the
ern Underwriters’ association.”
Wholesale Haul Of Liquor Is
A wholesale haul of liquor was
when detectives raided the
room of the Union depot and
about 75 gallons of booze which
contained in five big trunks and
suit cases.
Boy Scouts Become Dispatch
Five hundred and two Atlanta
Scouts have begun service as
ment dispatch bearers. The initial
vice is the distribution of ten
sand copies of the president's
able Flag day address. The task
the Boy Scout is to find
persons who will make wise use of
publication. It is not the task of
Boy Scout to single out persons
it is thought may need conversion
' the support of the country. Every
of the 289,S59 scouts and 77,782
officials have been summoned.
CROPS OF THIS STATE
BREAK ALL RECORDS
Georgia Crop Production For The
Year Of 1917 Shows An Amaz¬
ing Total
Atlanta—
The statistics on Georgia’s crop pro¬
duction for the past year have been
completed, and they show an amazing
total when all are combined. Never be¬
fore in the history of the state has any
crop approached the wonderful record
of the past year and the prospect for
the coming season is also most flatter¬
ing.
The figures which have been compil¬
ed are given on a most conservative
basis and if anything they should be
considerably enlarged, especially in
the case of the cotton crop, which is
now easily within a few thousand
bales of the two million mark. The
recapitulation shows the following:
Cotton, exclusive of sea island, 1,-
700,000 bales at an average farm price
of $125 per bale; total $212,500,000.
Cotton, sea island, 60,000 bales, at |
$375 per bale, about $20,000,000.
Cotton seed, 850,000 tons, at $70 per
ton, $59,500,000.
Corn 71,700.000 bushels, at $1.71 per
bushel, $122,607,000.
Velvet beans, 937,000 tons, at $25 per
ton, $23,437,500.
Peanuts, 15,000,000 bushels, at $1.50
per bushel, $22,500,000.
Oats, 10,320,000 bushels, at $1.21 per
bushel, $12,487,200.
Cowpeas, 6.000,000 bushels, at $2 per
bushel, $12,000,000.
Sweet potatoes, 11,000,000 bushels,
at 85 cents per bushel, $9,350,000.
Peaches, 4,716,000 bushels, at $1.75
per bushel, $8,253,000.
Hay, 382,000 tons, at $18 per ton,
$6,876,000.
Wheat, 2,074,000 bushels at $2.79 per
bushel, $5,786,460.
Irish potatoes, 1,600,000 bushels, at
$2.50 per bushel, $4,<*10,000.
Apples, 585,000 barrels at $3.52 per
barrel, $2,059,200.
Miscellaneous crops, $17,921.33.
Animals, $49,366,666,
This makes a grand total for the
agricultural wealth production for the
year 1917 of $588,644,359 for Georgia.
Figuring the population of the state of
Georgia at 2,500,000 people from the
farm and field alone every citizen of
the state has garnered upwards of
$200 each.
The figures which have been rolled
up by Georgia easily puts the state in i
second place in the matter of agricul¬
tural wealth production, Texas alone, |
on account of its great cotton crop, ;
exceeding Georgia for the year 1917.
To Secure Daily Data From Mines
While the end of the coal shortage
is not yet, and probably will not be j
cntil spring weather comes along and I
turns the trick, the fuel situation, both j
locally and statewide, have cleared up
very materially.
Dr. L. G. Hardman, after being in
conference in Atlanta with members
cf his state advisory board, announc¬
ed that he has called upon Federal
Fuel Administrator H. A. Garfield to
require the mines supplying Georgia
to furnish him with the number, time
of movement and the name and ad¬
dress of the consignees of all cars of
coal leaving the mines for Georgia
destinations. Doctor Hardman stated
also that he is calling upon railroad
representatives throughout the state
for reports which will show the exact
progress being made by cars of coal
moving to Georgia destinations. He
expects that shortly all of this data
will be at his disposal, thus furnish¬
ing him with accurate information as
to the actual supply of coal in the
state, where it is available, to whom
consigned and what further supply
may be expected and when. With
this information, said Doctor Hard¬
man, it will be possible to arrive at
an intelligent distribution of fuel to
relieve suffering ali over the state.
Uncle Sam May Euild Railroad
There is considerable speculation as
to just what the war department pro¬
poses doing with Camp Wheeler, a
number of moves indicating that some¬
thing is on foot that bids well for the
future of the big camp at Holly Bluff.
Recently 1,500 additional acres of
land between the cam)) and the re¬
mount station were condemned and
taken into the reservation. This is
understood to have been leased for the
purpose of enlarging the camp by
thinning out the number of men to the
tent, the present drill ground being
utilized for additional tents as well
as a portion of the 1,500 acres just
added and a new drill ground con¬
structed on the new plot.
Now comes a force of engineers who
are making a survey of the old Macon
Augusta railroad right-of-way, which
passes through a portion of the re¬
cently condemned land. While the of
ficials at the camp are silent on the
matter, it is reported that the gov¬
ernment plans to rebuild this road
through the camp, thereby giving a
much more convenient means of com¬
ing to and from the camp than exists
at present. If this is done, it will be
necessary to build a new bridge
across the Oemulgee river.
Much Lower Food Prices Predicted
Cheering news from the office of the
Georgia food administrator is an an¬
nouncement to the effect that prices
are expected to drop a little soon.
This information Mr. McClatchey
gives out after a study of the situa¬
tion during his trip to Washington and
his observation of affairs touching the
food question since his return home.
“The decrease will not be great ;
the administration does not desire to
see the prices very low. as the desire
is to keep up production and the pro
ducer must have an incentive.”
HUSBAND SAVES WIFE
From Suffering by Getting
Her Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound.
Pittsburgh, Pa.—“ For many months
I was not able to do my work owing which to
______ a weakness
caused backache
and headaches. A
friend called m y
attention to one of
your advertisements newspaper and
husband immediately bought my
three bottles of
Lydia vegetable E. Pinkham’s Com¬
T S t ; pound After for me.
■ 'it bottles taking two
I felt fine
and my troubles caused by that weak¬
ness are a thing of the past All women
who suffer as I did should try Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Jas. Rohrberg, Vegetable 620 Compound.”— St,
Mrs. Knapp
N. S., Pittsburgh, suffer Pa.
Women who from any form of
weakness, as indicated by displacements,
inflammation, ulceration, irregularities,
backache, headaches, nervousness or
“the blues,” should accept Mrs. Rohr
berg’s suggestion and give Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a
thorough For trial. forty
over years it has been
correcting such ailments. If you have
mysterious ~Lydi Lydia complications E. Pinkham write for
ce to Medicine
Co., Lynn, Mass.
Watch Your Calves
At the first indication of scours or
cholera give them
I>r. David Kc.aerts*
Calf Cholera Remedy quSo
For sconrs > in cattle, — “-tjv horses&ndhogs horses and h
sed and recomt lOuended by thou
nds of dairymen l and I stockowners. stockowners.
Read the Practical Home Veterinariaa
Send for fr*« b«o!dft oh i bortion In Cow*
—• If no dealer in your town, write
Or. Oaxid HoMris’ V«t. Co„ 100 Grind Atcn.it, Waukesha, Wls.
CHANGED TO TEARS OF JOY
Jews Need No Longer Weep Bitter¬
ness at the Wall of Wailing
in Jerusalem.
Strange sights must have been wit¬
nessed within the last few days at
the vail of wailing in Jerusalem, the
place of lamentation where for gen¬
erations Jews have congregated to be
wail the sorrows of their race.
Tears of joy that Jerusalem is at
last freed from the Mohammedan
clutch must have fallen upon stones
that have been so often wet with tears
of grief.
Many visitors from America have
threaded their way through dark and
dirty alleys to the small paved area
where the Jews of Jerusalem have la
naeuted their heritage. The wall is
said to be the ancient retaining wall
of Solomon’s temple, the nearest place
to the Holy of Holies that the Mohain
mndan masters allowed the Jews to
approach.
Here every day, and especially on
Fridays, the mourners leaned against
tlie great stones of the wall, wept
ami chanted their litanies. Their sin
eerity was unquestionable. The stones
were literally wet with tears and there
was no mistaking the sorrow that
shook their voices as they repeated the
seventy-ninth psalm, with its somber
opening.
“O God, the heathen are come into
Thine inheritance; Thy Holy Temple
have they defiled; they have laid Je¬
rusalem in heaps.”—Boston Post.
Contrasting Merits.
“I have a very intelligent dog who
has been taught to say his prayers,
and he’ll always run up to a minis¬
ter.”
"That’s nothing. I have an intel¬
ligent dog, too, and any time a tin
can is (ied to his tail, he runs to a
saloon.”
Any true American is bound to get
I a move on himself if it's only for the
I purpose of chasing a delusion.
! or more healthful
food for children
than
■ GrapeNuts
Its natural sweet¬
ness appeases the
child's appetite for
added sugar, and
thequanityof needed milk
or cream
is about half that
required ordinary for cereal. the
GRAPE NUTS IS AN
L_a_J ECONOMICAL FOOD