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' ? " ' " 's-> r ' k|< # maammmmtmmmmmmammmammmmmmmmmmmmmmtm " OPTIMISTIC SECRETARY ( '/ ' * rli ? r?rz=^. ma, ' ' --=^r ?Cartoon 1; 61 111 OF TiOER 16 DEAD ?% Panic in Tents When Enraged Animal Charged on Crowd and AttankfirJ Pnnifis. !Twin Falls, Idaho.?Four-year-old Ruth Rfczell, who was attacked by a Royal Bengal tiger which escaped } from its cage at the performance of the Sells-Floto circus here, has died from her injuries. Mrs. Rozeli, the' mother?of the child, who was knocked ' down and badly shaken by the tiger, te overcome with grief and the shock Of her experience. Thus far no criminal action has been brought against ihe circus management, and. while the panic following the breaking of 7the animal from its cage and the enjsuing tragedy are the sole topic of conversation, there has been no demonstration made against the circus by citizens because of the unfortunate "occurrence. The tiger charged into the crowd, killing the little girl and a Shetland ^pony, and mauled several other spectators and nonies before it was shot and killed by a man in the audience. For a few moments there was a panic In the menagerie and women screamed and fainied. The elephants tugged at'their chains and trumpeted wildly, and there was great commotion until the tiger rolled over dead in front of the main entrance. Hundreds were in the menagerie tent- at the afternoon performance when the time came for feeding the animals. _Markel. the tiger, and his 'jnate, Agnes, had been restless for 'some time. At the sight of the meat ridarkel beat furiously with his paws <on thje door of the cage. The door &ure way, and fhe tiger sprang from %is cage to the neck of a Shetland ' pony fifteen feet away. k The tiger's keeper seized a bar and i struck the animal between the eyes, i Markel released his grip on the pony's j neck and leaped upon the back of an- j ^ other pony. Again the keeper felled p; 'lltija: vffth the iron, and he relinquished ||v. his hold of the second pony only to If seize a tnira. Anotner sun uiuw irmu j Jt^e iron drove the tiger from his i prey and he leaped "into the crowd. t- The tent was well filled, and the ; s people fled Jn every direction, most ! of th em crowding out under the can- i >as. One woman scrambled to the ! top Qf an animal cage and refused to ! come down until long after the tiger ! .was killed. , .} Shrill cries from the frightened ele- : phants aroused the keepers to further activity. The guns kept by the keepers'for emergencies were seven- j ,ty-five feet away, and had they been J GIRL ALONE ALL 'VyynV NIGHT IN JUNGLE Daughter of Mr. aud Mrs. C. J. Bell Loses Way in Indian Wilderness. Washington, D. C. ? Miss Helen Bell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. J. Bell, has just returned from an i?" eventful winter in India, the most thrilling episode of which was a night j alone in?the jungle. V Miss Bell left here early in the |fcv winter to spend several months in4n4ia with English friends, Mr. aud ;>' v Mrs. Arthur F. Hopkins. Part of the ttime Mr. and Mrs. Hopkins and their party, including Miss Bell, were camp v ing near Hyderabad and hunting biggame. ^he men of the party started out | on a hunt one morning, and toward ; night Miss Bell rode out from camp i to meet them. She missed the trail I . ?after a few miles and soon found her- j self getting further into the heart of ; *3* thie jungle and unable lo get her bear- j $:< ings. Darkness came on, and with it i a xiea\ > iam. Alone with only her horse and a j few dogs, Miss Bell l'aced a night in j J* that lonely wilderness known for its j ,;v." % venomous snakes. The niglu wore ' on and no help came, and, unable to"! I TERRIFIC WESTERN SNOWSTORM | , ? Six Inches of Snow at Many Places in Michigan, j Detroit. Mich.?Michigan felt the " grasp of the worst May storm ever j known in the State. After violent I rain and light iug storms, the -.veath- j ,v er turned coid and in many parts of j the State heavy snow fell. At Sauk Ste. Marie there is six inches of snow. I At Mackinaw the snow was driven ! ? by a forty mile gale. Reports from j the fruit belt are very^iscourag."-:, j ftejr. . . . . \ j >y Berryman, in the Washing! ->n Stnr. available they could not have been used on account of the danger to spectators. Women seized their children and dragged them from the path of the maddened tiger, and hundreds of little children clung to the skirts of their terrified mothers and scrambled to get away. Markel headed for the main entrance, forty feet away. In his rush he struck several people with his shoulders, knocking them down. Mrs. S. E. Rozell, of Twin Fails, and her little daughter Ruth could not escape the tiger's rush, and were borne to the ground. The tiger held Mrs. Rozell with his paws while his fangs hank into the neck of the child. J. W. Bell, a Twin Falls blacksmith, was standing beside Mrs. Rozell when she was attacked. His wife and children, too. were with him and at the mercy of the beast. Thrusting his family aside Bell drew a revolver and opened fire on the tiger at a distance of three feet. wnen tn.e nrst nuiiei strucK MarKei behind the shoulders he winced and opened his jaws, growling viciously and lashing his tail against the wall of spectators. The second bullet caused him to release Mrs. Rozell and her daughter from the grasp of his paws, and the third to put him on the run. Bell followed, firing three more bullets into the fleeing tiger, as it ran outside the tent. Markel was sorely hit. but he managed to crawl some distance before he collapsed. Recovering his strength for an instaut the tiger turned and started back toward the stampeding spectators. Bell was waiting for the attack with his revolver reloaded, but the big beast bad enough, rolled over, snarling and biting at his wounds, and expired in a few moments. Meanwhile the news that the tiger had escaped had spread, and specta-* tors continued to flee from the tents. Many of them fell or were knocked down in the confusion, but none sustained serious injuries. Mrs. Rozell and her daughter were taken to the office of a physician, where everything possible was done for the child. It was found that the teeth of the tiger had frightfully lacerated the neck and breast of the little one, and much blood was lost before the wounds could be closed. The little girl died, and Mrs. Rozell was removed to her home. Markel was reputed to be one of the largest and best proportioned tigers on exhibition, and w^s the pride of the manager. He had shown no previous signs of ill temper, an? the management of the circus was astonished at his behavior. Many persons thought that the door of the tiger's cage might have been more secure. The keepers were helpless on account of the confusion, and had it not been Doll'i! nrocor^o r>f mind nnd 1U1 O piVOVUVV V*. JbMMAXA %A^V? prompt action in risking an encounter with the angry tiger more lives might have been sacrificed. find her way in daylight, she was still more helpless in the thick darkness. In the distance she heard the roaring of panthers and other wild animals. Her horse and dogs heard the sounds and became almost unmanageable in their fright. The rain, which poured down steadily, was a blessing in disguise, though she knew it not at the time. Her friends told her later it was undoubtedly the rain that prevented her being surrounded by reptiles. It kept them under cover and she was unmolested. Miss Bell's friends sent out several hundred coolies to beat the brush. They failed to find her, but at daybreak she found her way'to a clearing, and meeting a native who could speak some English was directed to the camp. Miss Bell returned to the United States by way of Japan. The vessel on which she took passage had oust left Yokohama when it ran aground on a reef. It was safely floated, and started on its voyage, but a few days later smallpox appeared on board, and for fourteen days the passengers were quarantined on the Pacific coast. Miss Bell finally reached her home safely, Avith a stock of exciting stories for her relatives and friends. She is now with her parents at their country place, Twin Oaks. i i WIFE AND SOX SLAY OPPRESSOR j So It is Charged When They Surrender to Authorities. Parkersburg, W. Ya.?Asleep in bed, Harvey Yohe, a prosperous farmer, near McFarlan, Ritchie County, was shot and killed, it is alleged, by his wife and son. The murder took place after a bitter quarrel, in which Yohe unmercifully beat his wife and their boy, about seventeen 'Mrs. Yohe and the boy, John, surI rendered themselves to the poiica -? .v'iJ'C '..At 'iK_ < / 7"eighteen murders Confessed by Orchard on Completion of Gory Narrative?Ended With Steunenberg Assassination. Harry Orchard crowned his admissions of grave crimes on the witness stand at Boise Thursday when, continuing his case against William D. Haywood, he made an explicitly detailed confession of the murder of I Frank Steunenberg by an infernal machine that directly opens the way for his own.conviction and execution for j the offense. He swore that the assassination of Steunenberg was first suggested by Haywood, was joindy plotted by Haywood, Moyer, Pettibone and himself, was financed by Haywood and was executed by himself, after the failure of an attempt in which Jack Simpkins had participated. Orchard lifted the total of his own murdered victims to eighteen, detailed the circumstances under which he tried to murder former Governor Pea body, Judge Goodard, Judge Gabbert, Gen. Sherman Beli, D. H. Moffat and Frank Heme. Incidentally he confessed to a plan to kidnap the child of one of his former associates. Then, under cross-exam'nation by the defense, Orchard confessed guilt of the sordid social crimes of deserting his young wife and chill in Ontario, fleeing to British Columbia with Haitie Simpson, the wife of another man, and committing bigamy by marrying a third woman at Cripple Creek. Through the shocking details of murder plots, stories of secret bomb- 1 making and details of man hunts, with sawed-off shotguns and infernal ma- : chines as weapons, the witness went j on in the same quiet, off-hand manner . ihat marked his demeanor on the ' stand Wednesday. His voice dropped to a lower key as the pitiful story of the long h^mt for Stsunenberg narrowed down to the last day, and he told of the race j from the hotel to the Steunenberg j home to beat his victim,with the death ! I trap, and the meeting in the evening ! gloom, as the victim walked uncon- ; sciousiy to his doom. Through it all, | he winced but once, and that was j when the defense made him name his ! six sisters and his one brother, and j give their residences in Onravio and New York. The defense fought the story with a multiplicity of objections and succeeded in heading off an attempt to tell the story- of the murder of Ar* : thur Collins, at Telluride, and tempo- j rarily shutting out the contents of a telegram received and telegram sent ! by Orchard after his arrest. But for j the rest, the state managed to get in . its story intact. . j In an interview at Walla Walla, Washington, Mrs. Steunenberg, widow i of the former governor of Idaho, says ' she hopes Harry Orchard will be giv- J en an opportunity to lead a good and honest life. GEORGIA WEEKLY EDITORS . i Hold Forth at Sandersville In Twenty- ! Fifth Annual Convention. Th? twenty-fifth annual convention of the Georgia Weekly Press Association was called to order in SandersI ville Thursday morning by President Coleman of Cedartown. An address of welcome on behalr of Sandersville was delivered by Hon. I T. W. Hardwick. j President Coleman made a most ap- j propriate response. Mr. Coleman dwelt I upon the Jamestown trip of the edit- j ors. He regretted that the railroads refused to offer any special inducements, being hampered, so they claim,* by the provision of the new federal rate law. In spite of this fact, however, he said many of the edi;ors were ! going to make the trip. Business occupied the balance of the morning session. At night an elegant banquet was given at the Hotel Julida. There was a suspension of the regular order of business at the afternoon session to settle the question of the j place of meeting next year. Gainesville and Douglas entered tne j contest. Mrs. Longstrcet represented j Gainesville and won. Sentiment is fa- j vorable to Douglas for 1909. VERDICT OF TWENTY-FIVE CENTS ' Bluejacket Barred from Dance Hall Gets Only Price of Ticket. A verdict for 25 cents, the price of his ticket, was returned by a jury, by direction of Justice Sweetland, at Newport, R. 1., Thursday, in the case of Chief Yeoman Frad Buenzie, of the United States naval training station, who was excluded from a dancing pavilion last summer because he wore the navy uniform. FIRST OF GEORGIA PEACHES. Car of Luscious Fruit is Shipped from | Fort Valley to Quaker City. The first car of the season of Geor- J gia peaches was shipped from Fort on,) TTfo><N tn vaiiuy r iiua>, anu. " uo -_ William Weinert & Co., Philadelphia. The peaches were of the Greensboro variety, and showed to be fine stock. Heavy shipments will begin to move in about ten days. 'GEORGIA DAY GREAT ! :Event Virtually Marks Openi ing of Jamestown Show. I ROOSEVELT IS HONORED" Strenuous, Interesting and Enthusiastic Program Carried Out Without a Hitch ? Many Thousands Throng the Grounds. The Jamestown exposition managempnt has rlpfprminpH tn lnnlr nnon Monday, June 10, the occasion of President Roosevelt's second visit as the i real opening of the exposition. The president lost no opportunity to voice his approval of tne showing made 1 since the backward opening of the exposition on April 26, and with this j high endorsement, the management i ' ( feels that it is in position to adver(tise an attraction for which apologies need not be made. This was Georgia ; Day and the opening of Bulloch hall, j a replica of the early home of Pres- j ident Roosevelt's mother at Roswell, | | Ga., erected as the Georgia state build- j iDg, was the feature that drew the I ! . president to the exposition for a sec- j ond visit. j From the moment the president, | Mrs. Roosevelt and their distinguished : guests were landed at the government j 1 pier at 10:50 o'clock a. m. until their j depar;ure at 4:37 o'clock in the after- j noon, every minute was occupied. The president spoke in the Georgia ; ceremonies from the reviewing stand, and during the afternoon addressed the convention of the National Editorial Association in the exposition au- J ditpriuni. On both occasions he was giv en an nthusiastic welcome. He visited . the Georgia building, the New Yorit building and the negro exhibit, and , in his drives over the grounds thou- j sands of people lined the streets and j gave him a continuous ovation. President Roosevelt admired the at- j tractive exhibic arranged by negroes j and was much interested in a remark- j able collection of Abraham Lincoln I relics, including a log cabin repre- J senting the humble birthplace of Lin-'} coin. An interesting feature of the day occurred in ihe Georgia state building, where Governor Terrell, on behalf of his state, presented a silver service, costing $10,000, to the battleship Geor- j gia, the service being accepted by ! the officers of the new vessel. The reception by the ladies of the Georgia commission in honor of President and Mrs. Roosevelt followed. Admission was by card to Georgians only and to army and navy officers in uniform. After this a luncheon was given in the building to the president and his party and Rear Admiral Evans. The schedule arranged in advance was followed to the letter and an unusually strenuous day was closed withou: an unpleasant incident of note having occurred. The police arrangements for the handling of the great crowd were so excellent as to call forth favorable comment on every side. The naval review of men-of-war in Hampton Roads and the reception of the commanders of American and foreign vessels which preceded the president's arrhal at the grounds, and the miiltary re\%?w on Lee parade, following the pnesident's forenoon address, were the same as on the opening day, with the exception of some slight difference in the personnel of the participants. It was a distinguished party that reviewed the assembled vessels from the Mayflower. Immediately upon the arrival of that vessel the party of Secretary of the Navy Metcalf was transferred from the DolplAn. The others to join the president were Governor Joseph M. Terrell of Georgia and W. X. Mitchell of the Georgia state commission. Passing over the same course as when he visited the exposition on the opening day, the pres!dent reviewed the fleets of seven nations, six in addition to the United States. The sea-fighters were in gala attire, the flags of the different countries represented making a striking picture. As the Mayflower steamed down the long column of vessels, each in turn greeted. the president, who occupied the bridge of his trim yacht, witn a sarnie of twenty-one guns. The foreign vessels had the positions of honor in a line nearest and parallel to the exposition grounds and were reached first by the Mayflower, so that their guns were the first to be heard in sounding their salutations. HORROR OF THE OCEAN. 1 French Schooner Sinks, Carrying I Down Twenty-Eight Souls. Twenty-eight passengers, including 12 women and children, were drowned by the sinking of the French schooner LaJaliuse, from Cayenne for St. Lucia. The schooner sank off Barbadoes last Friday night. Her captain and 21 men reached Barbadoes Sunday with the news. U' 'r.-. * - r v V ; f, . .' ; / / , .v PRESIDENT'S SPEECH ! -2 ; In Accepting Silver Service for the Battleship Georgia?Dotes on the j ! Fact That He is Half Southern. i In accepting the silver service pre- ' | sented the United States battleship j . Georgia from the state after which it ! j 1 is was named, during the Georgia Day j 1 exercises at Jamestown, President ! I j : Roosevelt, in part, spoke as follows: "I cannot express how deeply touch- j I ea I am at the action of the state j ! of Georgia, my mother's state, the j state from which I draw half the blood I in my veins, in erecting as the Geor| gia state house at the Jamestown exposition a replica of my grandfather's house at Roswell, Ga.; the house in which my mother passed her youth j ana wnere sue was tuarnea 10 ray i j father It is an act of gracious courI tesy and consideration which I very deeply appreciate; and through the governor and other representatives of i Georgia I desire from my heart to thank all her citizens. Georgia's history U unique, for she alone among the original thirteen colonies and the subsequent new states added thereto, was bounded with a consciously benevolent purpose, with the deliberate intent to benefit mankind by upbuilding a commonwealth along carefully planned lines of social, political and religious liberty and justice. "Oglethorpe, the founder of Georgia, was a -rue apostle of philanthropy and of equality of opportunity for all. His set purpose was to found a state the gates '-f which should be open to tho I oppressed of every land and creed, and dosed to every form of political, religious or industrial bondage or persecution. His colony welcomed alike those who fled from political or social, tyranny, and those, whe;her Christian or Jew, who sought liberty for conscience's sake. It wa3 a high and honorable beginning; and I am proud indeed of my Georgian anqestry, and of the fact that my grandfather's grandfather, Archibald Bulloch, was the first governor, or as the title then went, president of the new state when the continental congress, of which he was also a member, declared that the thirteen states had become a new and independent nation. Since then Georgi^ lias grown at a rate even more astounding than the rate of growth of the nation as a whole; her sons have stood high in every field of activity, intellectual or physical; and rapid though bar progress has been in the past, it bids fair to be even greater in the wonderful new j century which has now fairly opened. !. "Perhaps the very fact that I am J half sotuhern and half northern in I blc-od, and that for many years 1 j was brought into peculiarly close association with the life of the great west, makes it natural for me to feel with intensity the strong sense of kinship with; every portion of our great commor country, which should be the birthrigat of every true American. Since I have been president I have j visited every state and territory with- ! in the borders of the union, save such as can only be reached by sea. I have traveled from the Atlantic to fee Pacific, from the great lakes to the gulf. I have spoken at country fairs, to colleges, to commercial and business organisation, to associations of pro- j fessional men, to labor organizations, to men of every creed and parentage. The thing that has struck me most has been the essential unity of our people." WILSON ON WITNtw dianu. Secretary of Agricultura IDepartment Testifies in "Cotton Leak" Case. Secretary Wilson of the agricultural department was the principal witness before the supreme court of the District of Columbia at Washington Monday in the trial of erstwhile Associate Statistician Holmes, on the charge of prematurely divulging cotton crop reports, Holmes' attorney made an unsuccessful effort to show that the secretary was prejudiced in his statements. FAMOUS HOTEL IN ASHES. The Princess Annie, at Virginia Beach Totally Destroyed. The famous Princess Anne hotel a> I Virginia Beach, Va., built twenty-fm. years ago and one of the handsomes? j summer resort ho;els along the middle j Atlantic seaboard, was destroyed Mon. day by fire, which had its origin i> the kitchen, supposedly from a defective flue. . The loss on the building is $185,uOi), with only $S3,000 insurance. . i i TWELVE THOUSAND PER CENT j i i Charged by Shylocks of Augusta to , Negro Borrowers. There is quite a war on in Augusta,! Ga., against money lending companies j which charge usurious interest to ne- j groes who borrow small sums. For-1 ruer Congressman Fleming cahmpion- ; ed the cause of the negroes and has i conducted several cases in the courts j successfully. Mr. Fleming, in one of his suits, proved that his client had j paid over 12,000 per cent. > SULPHUR BRINGS HEALTH., Purifies the glood and Clears Up the Completion. Everybody needs to take Sulphur at 9 this season. Nothing like it to purify the blood, clear up the complexion and remove "that tired feeling." But the only way to take it is in liquid form. Hancock's Liquid Sulphur taken internally is the best Spring tonic. Applied externally Hancock's Liquid Sulphur quickly cures Eczema, Tetter, and all Skin Diseases. Hancock's, the only Liquid Sulphur Ointment, removes Pimples, Blackheads and Sores, and gives a beautiful soft, velvety skin. Your druggist sslls it. It cured Edward D. Herring, of Frederick, Md., of a bad case of Eczema, and be writes: "My face is as smooth as an infant's." AU-about-Sulphur Booklet free, if you write Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore. Most men think heaven Is a place where their neighbors are not going. What Do They Cure? The above question is often asked concern! pg Dr. Pierce's two leading medicines, "'Golden Medical Discovery" and' "Favorite Prescription." V The answer is that "Golden MedicalDiscovery " is a most potent alterative or blood-purifier, and tonic or invigorator and acts especially favorably in a curative way upon all "the mucous lining suiV faces, as of the nasal passages, throav, bronchial tubes, stomach, bowels andi bladde&vcuring a large per cent of catarrhal cases whether-the disease affects the nasal passages, the Whgoat larynx, bronchia, stomacoNfas catarNtal dyspepsia), bowels (as mu^ous>?r!hqmfeaJ. bladder, uterus or other pelvic orgSteSk Even in the fir AJ lhM? affections. it is often successful in affectDtion " is advliedfor tne cure nf_one < lass of rii&gas*s? peculiar we^nf^seS. Any is a powerful yet gentTy acting invfgorat- .- % ing tonic and nervine. For weak/wornout over-worked women?no matter what has caused the break-down, "Favorite f Prescription " will be found most effective in building up the strength, regulating the womanly functions, subduing pain and bringing about a healthy, vigorous condition of the whole system. A book of particulars wraps each bottlo giving the formulae of both medicines andi quoting what scores of eminent medical authors, whoso works are consulted! . by physicians of all the schools of practice^ - as guides in prescribing, say of each ingredient entering into these medicines^ The words of praise bestowed on tha several* ingredients entering into Doctor > Pierce's medicines by such writers should" have more weight than any amount oC '- {% ?An . nwifaaclnnal tACtimnniilU hfWillliW such men are writing for the guidance of! thefr medical brethren and know whereof! ?? they speak. Both medicines are non-alcoholic, non-[ 1 .4 secret, and contain no harmful habits : f ormi ng drugs, being com posed of glycericr, extracts of tne roots of native. Americaaj*: medicinal forest plauts They are both; ?- :$ sold by dealers in medicine. Too- canti aiford to accept as a substitute for one off these medicines of known composition*] c <! anV secrot nostnim. . Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugar-coated,: v| easy to take as candy, regnlate and In- % vigorate stomach, liver ana bowels. . ^ The only thing a woman cannot do ^ is keep her hands from her back-hair. "4 _ xM Try one can of Argo Red Salmon, .; | and you will use no other. Hat That Wade Butler Good Looking. J Did you ever know that Gen. BenJarain F. Butler considered himself .;4 a handsome man? Well, he did, says y" the Boston Herald, and there is a letter in his own handwriting pasted *|j on a Washington street store-window to prove it. Ben wrote it in July;. ,, i 1879, and thanked a firm of hattera for the gift of a "skypieceH in these ; words: . -/v "I take pleasure in acknowledging . 'M the receipt of your hat, with thanks for your kindness. 'The proof of chs . : ; pudding is in eating the bag,' saiti .5t the proverb, .anl I have worn your :j hat both ashore and afloat and* do say it is one of the best if not the, best hat I ever wore. Besides, I have .. i; been complimented for iuv good lool:3 with it on. With thanks for your kindness, I am very truly yours, q "BENJAMIN F. BUTLER." Butte Now Beautiful. "The city of Butte is no longer plagued as it wss seme years ago by the fumes of suipnur rnai arose irom the copper plants, destructive alike to all forms of vegetation and obnox- r { lous to the olfactories of the people." '? . said Dr. John M. Scanland of that town to the Washington Herald. "All - ; the smelters, save one owned by Senator Clark, are now at Anaconda, and the local plant has a smokestack of such tremendous height that the injurious vapors are . carried off. Now we are beginning to have green lawns and leaves on our trees at last." AX. OLD EDITOR r? Found $2000 Worth of Food. The editor of a paper .out in Okla. ' ^ said: "Yes, it is true when I got hold of Grape-Nuts food it was worth more'than a $2000 doctor bill to me. for it made me a well man. I have v i gained 25 pounds in weight, my strength has returned tenfold, my lKitvor Imc hppTi erivan hark tn Ui aiix ?? vi o- ?? ? ? w?. ww me, and that is an absolute essential, for I am an editor and have been for 35 years. "My pen shall always be ready to speak a good word for this powerful nutritive food. I had of course often read the advertisements regarding Grape-Nuts, but never thought to apply the food to my own use, until, in my extremity and sickness the thought came to me that it might fit my case. The statements in regard to the food are absolutely correct, as I have proven in my own case. One % very fortunate thing about the food Is that while it is ?he most scientific- . ^ ally made and highly nourishing, concentrated food I have ever known, it has so delicious a taste that it wins and holds friends." "There's a Reason." Read "The Road to Wellville," ; -