University of South Carolina Libraries
EDGEFIELD ADVERTISER. Oldest Pap-sr fu South Carolina. Edgefleid, S. C. Circumstances and lawyers alter eases. Anyway, tba unwritten law seems to have a lot written about lt. We are a good deal happier because of a lot of things we don't know. Without the shedding of blood there leems to be no way of conquering the air. Brag about a girl to her female friends if you would discover her faults. The Seine seems to have acqu.ed the Ohio r*ver habit In getting over banks. If you can't get what you want why Son't you quit wanting lt? It Is merely i state of mind. When the doctor tells a man to diet, Ihe- patient proceeds to refuse all the things he dislikes. A regular feature of the Monday morning papers ls the list of dead and Injured among Sunday autolsts. Laura Jean Libbey, who advocates the Useless courtship, ls pushing the most unpopular propaganda on record. It Is alleged as proof of a New York nan's Insanity that he was no good at bridge whist This ls very Gotham asque. Our Idea of a strong minded woman ls one who Insists that she would rather! have her clothes comfortable than fashionable. A new card game popular In Eng land is called "Dabbit." It should be explained that many Englishmen have mronic colds. A boy committed suicide because he (vas compelled to give up school. It Is not feared that there will be many :ases of this sort Don't blame the faithful hen for rots, spots, leaks or specks. Her part of the work was all right The storage companies did the rest A scientist who recently tried to hypnotize a dog was bitten by the raixnal. He should have begun by making the dog believe lt had no .eeth., Doctor Wiley advises against cold storage turkey. That ls very well, but he should first break that hand some bird of Indulging In the cold storage habit An English peer is to marry. an East Indian princess. This precedent ance established, may introduce dan gerous competition In the matrimonial title market for American heiresses. A Chicago woman refuses to pay for photographs which she recently had ..alien, because she thinks they make ber look too old. The photographer should hasten to get a new retoucher. A tree trimmer who had to look up ?l the time in his work has gone in sane. That ought to be a warning to those enthusiastic persons who spend most of their time on the aviation oeld. With a string of aviators touring the oountry like .a circus, possibly it won't be long before we see the sky fenced off. with canvas and young hopefuls climbing m under the clouds to see che show. A man says that he ls going to start a paper In New York that will be free from the faults of the other jour nals there. It ought not to be hard to start one. but keeping it going is apt to be uphill work. People ought to clean house oft ener. Now here's a New York maa bad an old trunk kicking about the bouse for five years before he opened lt and found that somebody had care lessly left a dead person in lt English lords who object to the use of American dollars tn the British ?ampaign will have the full sympathy af French counts and German baron 3, who think American dollars should be devoted to the securing of personal pleasure only. News from different portions of the aleutian region indicates that there nave been great volcanic activity and ?arthquake shocks In that quarter. The disturbances continued for four lays. This information affords fresh ; vj Jen ce that the scientists are cor rect In regarding the neighborhood of alaska as a center of remarkable seismic activity. A big mackerel jumped aboard a schooner in Massachusetts waters and provided a good breakfast for the crew. The rivalry of the Ananias Club has apparently not hurt the vi tality of the familiar fish-story tellers. The suggestion is made that a good way to oonserve the forests would be to use cement and steel to build wiim Instead of lumber. This might con serve the forests, but it would not conserve either the Iron ore and coal supplies or the builders* bank ac counts. The dispatches explain that Presi dent Taft went all over the Gatun dam and then add: "His visit has dis. pelied any fears as to the stability of the dam base." Thus we see the value of having a chief executive of some real weight. A woman in Cincinnati is suing a car company for damages because an Injury to her shoulder in one of the company's cars has disabled her from arranging ber puffs and her pompa dour. And yet what mere damages could pay .-for suffering like this? k Oldest Newspaper Ju South Carolina. VOL. 75. EDGEFIELD, S. C., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 21,1910 NO. 35. VITAL PALMETTO EVENTS Condensed News Items of General Interest Gathered Within the State Boundary Linea. SOUTH CAROLINA MASONS. Annual Communication at Charleston -Work Done. The grand lodge of Masons of South Carolina held their 134th annual com munication at Charleston, r A resolution was passed i that the next communication be heidi in Char leston. O. F. Hart, of Columbia, was elected grand secretary. The other; elective officers were elected without opposi tion. The appointive officers named were as follows: Senior grand deacons, J. P. Duckett of Anderson and J. P., Kinney of Bennettsville. Junior grand deacons: j A. H. Schade of Greenville and \ C. K. Chreitzberg of Rock Hill, j Grand stewards: S. T. D.] Lancas ter of Pauline and L. I. Parrott of Sumter. Grand marshal: John Kennerly of Edgefield county. Grand pursuivant: J. E. Cogswell of Charleston. Grand tyler: W. A. Winkler ? of Charleston. District deputy grand masters: First, W. G. Mazyck; second, S. B Rodgers, Beaufort; third, Butler "Ha good, Barnwell; fourth, W. ?. Giles ?raniteville; fifth, - B. E. Nicholson, Edgefield; sixth, Kenneth Baker, Greenwood; seventh, J. B. Douthit Pendleton; eighth, O. R. Doyle, Clem son; ninth, A. S. Rowell, Piedmont; tenth, W. B Patton, Cross Anchor; eleventh, Van Smith, Newberry; twelfth, E. C. Secrest, Lancaster; thirteenth, Joseph Lindsay, Chester; fourteenth, J. B. Wallace, Camden; fifteenth, Ira S. Jones, Georgetown; sixteenth, W. E. James, Darlington; seventeenth, J. C. Sellers, Sellers; eighteenth, W_ L. Glaze, Orangpburg. The trustees of the Masonic; -home made their report, showing that the fund for this institution, whic|h has been accumulating for four years, had now reached the sum of abou^t $47, 000, an increase of more than $13, OOO during the past year. The trus tees reported that they were not yet prepared to recommend the establish ment of the home, as it was deemed wiser to allow the fund to accumu late to large proportions that r.he in stitution might begin its good worh unhampered with debt and upon a firm foundation. The question of amending the con stitution in defining the "perfect" man failed again of the required two thirds majority vote. A happy feature of the night session was the presentation of a handsome gold watch to Past Grand Master J. L. Michie of Darlington. FLORENCE CORN AND COTTON. Prizes Awarded for Best Records on One Acre. E. Willis, the director of the gov ernment farm demonstration work in Florence county, has announced his prizes for corn and cotton. The. first prize for the most cotton cn ?^.niacre, $25" in gold, offered by the First Na tional bank, and a handsome saddle and bridle, offered by S. H. Saunders, was awarded to C. H. Jones, of iTim monsville, whose yield was 12,042 pounds. The second prize wen( to Howard P. Cole, of Ebenezer, Whoso yield was 2,324 pounds. The third went to Thomas I Burch, for 2,20t pounds. The largest yield of corn, Which drew first prize, was made by G. W. Revel, of Florence, who gathered in, as vouched for, 94 1-10 bushels. The second prize went to J. W. Hoffmey ers, of Florence, who vouched for a yield of 88 bushels. That Tariff on Potash. Representative Lever has taken up with the State department the im portant potash question that is now agitating the people of the South. He called to see Secretary Knox about the matter and as a result of this visit it is understood that it will be laid be fore President Taft with a requesl that it be handled diplomatically witt the representatives of the German Government. Lawyer Kills Merchant at Branchville J. J. Jones, a Jawyer, shot and kill ed Abe Pearlstine, a merchant, al Branchville. Jones went to Orange burg and gave himself up. An old grudge existed between the two men. who are prominent Branchville resi dents. They met in front of the Branchville postoffice and angrj words brought on a fight. Jones claims Pearlstine was beating him with brass knucks and that he fired in self-defense. Pearlstine died in 15 minutes. Hope Not Gone For Edisto. Congressman A. F. Lever has ar ranged for a hearing before the board of engineers_of the war department on January 3 in the matter of the im provement of the Edisto river and construction of a canal connecting that river with the Ashley, under the general scheme of bringing Charleston and Orangeburg closely together by river transportation, and it is by np means certain that the project will not yet be carried successfully through, as recommended by Capt. E. M. Adams, U. S. A. The Seminole Receivers Meet. : The Seminole receivers' meeting at Columbia, discussed several Norfjh Carolina actions including the one against the Southern Life for $22,5QC and against C. J. Hebert on a disput ed difference in settlement. Theife has been collected recently by th* South Carolina receivers of the Semi nole Securties Co., $4,000 in attacll ments in North Carolina. f . It will be recalled that in the crim inal action agalnit C. J. Herbert tl* Governor of Tennesee- refused it honer Governor Ang6l,,' requisition. \ English Women Smoke Pipes. The latest fancy of the woman smoker ls a pipe-not the tiny affair that suffices for the Japanese, but a good-sized brier or a neat meer schaum. The pipe is boldly carried along with a gold card case and eba; purse. For some time now tbr ? arette has given place to r ..ar, small in size and mild f: Jity. Women said they were ti! of the cigarette, and wanted ? bl smoke. -London Mail. Cripple Rides Bicycle. George Anstey, aged 12, a cripple, of Leicester, England, is one of the most remarkable cyclists in the coun try. Both his legs are withered and useless, but the Leicester Cripples' Guild has provided him with a two wheeled pedalless machine, with a gadded tube covering the axle bar. Across this he lies face foremost, and with wooden clogs strapped to his hands he propels himself along the streets and roads in a marvelously rapid manner. He has complete con trol of the machine, his hands acting as pedals, steering gear, and brake combined. Too Ardent a Lover. Georgotto Fontano, an embroiderer who lives in the Rue Sevres in Paris, has found herself condemned to a month's imprisonment for what seems to her a harmless act. She was going home from a concert i few evenings ago when she decided she would like to see her flanee. As he happens to be a fireman whose ?tatton is in her own neighborhood it occurred to her it would be very easy to summon him to her side by break ing the glass of the fire alarm and sounding a call. She did so anr in a few moments fire engines came from several direc tions, all laden with firemen, of course, but alas! her fiance was not among them, and more than that all the fire men were angry, and before she knew what had happened she was taken to a magistrate, who proceeded to make the course of true love' run unsmoothly by sending her to prison for a month in spite of her tears and protests that she thought it would be a simple way of bringing her fiance to her side. NEW SAWS BADLY NEEDED The Old-Fa8hIoned Ones Somehow Don't Seem to Fit Into Mod ern Situations. "You know all the copybook, Mc Guffey's reader line of talk about ta king the advice of one's elders?" be gan the sad-eyed, undersized little man on the car. "Sure you do. Now let me tell you something. See that big apartment house over there on the right? And that little business block right next to it? "Well, there weren't any apartment houses or business blocks on it when I first (Happed eyes on it. It was a howling wilderness, in fact, and you could almost chase rabbits up here. That was about eighteen years ago. I had a hunch then-and 1 was only eighteen years old at that time-that this land would some day jump in value by leaps and bounds. When I was twenty years old I came into a bunch of $15,000. I went to my guar dian, an old man, pretty prominent in estate management and wisdom at that time, and I told him I wanted to soak the whole $15,000 in this block of ground I pointed out to you.; The block was then on the market for exactly $15,000. The old gentleman pooh-poohed me. " 'Go away, boy,' he said to me, with a patronizing smile. 'You don't know what you want. It's my duty to save you from such wild notions as this one you've got into your head. They'll be shooting rabbits and squirrels out there on that plot 50 years from now. G'way.' "I argus* it with him, and he sat down on me. Then he went and in vested my $15,000 at three per cent. "Three years ago the man who bought that same block of ground for $18,000 sold it for about $200,000 cash, and he's now cruising over in the Mediterranean or some place or other, while I'm taking my wife out for nickel car rides and wondering where my $15,000 went. "There's got to be a new set of wise saws invented for twentieth cen tury consumption. The McGuffey's reader kind are moth eaten." ~ Tl Against the Po A disagreement about advert with a "weekly" Journal. Following it, an attack on us their editorial columns; sneering we made particularly regarding We replied through the r?gulai the "weekly" thought we hit bac hard and thereupon sued for libe The advertisement the "week us about claimed that in many cai dicitis an operation could be ave continuing indigestible food, was: bowels and taking a predigested Nuts. Observe we said MANY cases Wouldn't that knowledge be a those who fear a surgeon's knife death? The "weekly" writer said that We replied thal; he was ignoran He was put on the stand and admit he was not a Dr. and had knowledge of appendicitis and n gated to find out if the testimon our Co. were genuine. A famous surgeon testified th operation was required Grape-Nul obviate it. True. We never claimed that when ? was required Grape-Nuts would p The surgeon testified bacteria [ ed to bring on an attack and 1 grown by undigested food freque: We claimed and proved by o experts that undigested food responsible for appendicitis. We showed by expert testimon cases are healed without a knife, ping the use of food which did no when food was required again it to use ? predigested food which i tax the weakened organs of dige When a pain in the right side not always necessary to be rusl Lightning Chango. The Manager-Can you make quick changes and double In a few parts? The Actor-Can PT Say, you know the scene In "Love and Lobsters," where the hero and the villain are fighting, and a friend rushes In and separates 'emT Well, I played all three parts one night when the other two fellows were ill. Holidays In the States. Washington's birthday is a holiday In all states. Decoration day in all states but Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas. Labor day is observed everywhere. Virtu ally every state has legal holidays having to do with its own special af fairs-battle of New Orleans In Louis iana, Texan Independence and battle of San Jacinto in Texas, Admission day in California, and so on. Missis sippi is like the federal government in lack of statutory holidays, but by common consent independence day, Thanksgiving and Christmas are ob served. A new one is Columbus day in a few of the states. Planting Wedding Oaks. Princess August Wilhelm, wife of the kaiser's fourth son, has sat herself the task of reviving one of Germany's oldest customs, that according to which newly wedded couples immediately af ter the marriage ceremony plant a cou ple of oak saplings side by side in a park or by the roadside of their na tive town. The town of Mulshausen, in Thurln gia, Is the first to respond to the prin cess' appeal. A municipal official ap pears at the church door after every wedding and invites the bride and bridegroom to drive with him in a car riage to a new road near the town and there plant oak saplings. The tree planting idea was started by a former elector of Brandenburg with the object of repairing the rav ages caused by the 30 years' war. The elector forbade young persons to mar ry until they had planted a number of fruit trees. Two Very Old Ladl?s. We have heard a great deal lately about long-lived people, but lt is prob able that the oldest two people In the world today are Frau Dutkievitz and another old lady named Babavaslika, The former lives at Posem, in Prus sian Poland, and was born on Febru ary 21, 1785. She ls therefore one hundred and twenty-five years old. The latter, however, is nine months her senior, having been born in May, 1784. She ls still a fairly hale old woman, and for nearly one hundred years worked in the fields. Her descendants number close on 100, and these now make her a joint allowance. She lives at the village of Bavelsko, whose neighborhood she has never quitted during the whole of her long life. She remembers events which happened at the beginning of last century much more clearly than those of the last 40 years.-Dundee Advertiser. An Alaskan Luncheon. Runners of woven Indian basketry, with white drawnwork dollies at each of the 12 covers, were used on an oval mahogany table. The doilies were made at Sitka. In the middle of the table a mirror held a tall central vase of froste?l glass, surrounded by four smaller vases, all filled with white spring blossoms. The edge of the mirror was banked with the same flowers. Four totem poles were placed on doilies' in the angles made by the runners. Place cards were water colors of Alaskan scenery. Abalone shells held salted nuts, and tiny Indian baskets held bonbons. The soup spoons were of horn, several of the dishes used were made by Alaskan Indians, and the cakes were served on baskets. The menu was as follows: Poisson a la Bering Sea (halibut chowder), Yukon climbers (broiled salmon, po tatoes Julienne), snowbirds avec auroraborealis (roast duck with jelly), Shungnak river turnips, Tanana beets, Skagway hash (salad), Fair banks nuggets (ripe strawberries ar ranged on individual dishes around a central mound of powdered sugar), arctic slices (brick ice cream), Circle City delights (small cakes), Klondike nuggets (yellow cheese in round balls on crackers), Nome firewater (coffee). -Woman's Home Companion. "kat stum Cereal Co., to Bring i Ising arose appeared lp at the claims Appendicitis. . papers and k rather too 1. ly" attacked ?es of appen ded by dis hing out the food Grape not all. i comfort to as they fear was a He. t of the facts, compelled to I no medical ever investl ial letters to at when an ts would not an operation r?vent it. germs] help jacteria was atly. ther famous was largely y that many but by stop t digest, and waB helpful aid not over stion. appears it is led off to a hospital and at the risk Plain common sense is to stop food that cv digested. Then, when food is re digested food. Grape-!1 you know it to be predlj before taking). We brought to Cour from New York, Chlcagc who swore to the analy that part of the starchy barley had been transfi kind of. sugar produced digesting starch (the lal Some of the State ch the "weekly" said Ora; called a "predigested" f< it was digested outside The other chemists sa been partly or half dige was commonly known a? Splitting hairs about t It is sufficient that ll food is "predigested," it stomach and bowels th part is predigested. To show the facts w? Darlington, former ebie of Health, Dr. Ralph W. Chicago Laboratories, ai If we were a little se tion of a writer, self-cor appendicitis and its cat public will excuse us, in ovr head, Mr. C. W. Pos study of food, food dlgc the conclusions are indi best medical authorities ' Is it possible that suggesting, as a Father one of the family who ar side: "Stop using the gravies, mince pie, chee Largest of Whales. The largest whale of. Its type of which there is scientific record was captured recently off Port Arthur, Tex. He measured sixty-three feet In length, and was estimated to be about three hundred years old.' Cap tain Cob Plummer, mate of a United States pilot boat, sighted the monster in the shoals off the jetties, and the crew of his vessel captured the mam mal. The huge body was towed ashore, exhibited and much photographed be fore being cut up. Bankers and Bank Notes. Four men, three of whom were con nected with brokerage concerns in the Wall street district, were discussing United States paper currency and the disappearance of counterfeits. "We are so sure nowadays," said one of the party, "as to the genuineness of bills that little attention is paid to them In handling, except as to de nomination." To prove his assertion he took a $10 yellowback from his pocket, and, holding St up, asked who could tell whose portrait it bore. No one knew, and by way of coaching the broker said lt was the first treas urer of the United States. Again no one knew the name. "Why, It's Michael Hlilegas," said the man proudly. "But In confidence, I'll tell you, I didn't know it five minutes ago."-New York Tribune. An Unnecessary Confession. A hearty laugh was occasioned at the Birmingham police court by a pris oner who gave himself away in a very delightful manner. The man was the first on the list, and the charge against him was merely one of being drunk and disorderly. He stepped into the dock, however, just at the moment when the dock officer was reading out a few of the cases which were to come before the court that morning, and a guilty conscience apparently led him to mistake these items fer a list of his previous convictions. He stood passive enough while the officer read out about a dozen drunk and disorderlies, but when he came to one "shopbreaking" the prisoner ex claimed excitedly, "That was eight years ago, your honor," Everyone be gan to laugh, and the prisoner, realiz ing the blunder he had made, at first looked very black indeed, but finally saw the humorous side of the matter, and a broad smile spread over his face. His blunder did not cost anything. Birmingham Mall. DIFFERENCE IN THE RACES Mexicans In the Main Unjust In Blaming Americans for Lack of Politeness. All the Mexican correspondents who have written on the subject of why Americans are not better liked by Mexicans agree that it ls largely a question of a lack of politeness on the part of the foreigner here, aad in some cases an ill-concealed contempt. The latter is inexcusable, and certain ly must emanate only from inconsid erate or poorly educated persons, from which no nation ls free. Politeness, however, is largely a matter of form and training. It is undeniable that the Anglo-Saxon salutations, methods of expressing thanks and apprecia tion, etc., are simpler and shorter than the Latin forms. To many who have all their lives been eccustomed to the briefer Saxon ways, an attempt of the .more elaborate Latin politeness seems, for them, nothing short of af fectation, and they simply cannot do it. There are exceptions among Amer icans and Englishmen who readily adopt the courteous phrrses of the Mexicans and use them naturally, but they are the exceptions. And it ls difficult to see how this can readily be changed. Our Mexican friends should understand, on the other hand, that if Anglo-Saxons do not, as a rule, go through as many social formalities as tho usages of the land prescribe, they mean no offense thereby. They are accustomed to taking a good many things for granted that their Latin cousins give verbal assurance of. Naturally, lt is the duty of the outlander to conform as nearly as he can to the ways of his adopted coun try, but human nature and settled habits are pretty hard to make over, particularly unless, you catch them while theare young.-Mexican Her ald. for Lit? Ltd., Gave a Spic Dut Facts of death be cut. Bhows the better way ldently has not been ?quired, use an easily Juts or any other if jested (partly digested t analytical chemists i and Mlshawaka, Ind., sis of Grape-Nuts and part of the wheat and }rmed into sugar, the In the human body by .ge part of food), emists brought on by pe-Nuts could not be 3od because not all of the body. id any food which had isted outside the body j "predigested." he meaning of a word. ! only one-naif of the ls easier on weakened an food in which no o introduce Dr. Thos. f of the N. Y. Board Webster, chief of the id Dr. B. Sachs, N. Y. ?vere in our denuncia ifessed Ignorant about ise, it ls possible the view of the fact that t, has made a lifetime stion and effects, and srsed by many of the of the day. we are at fault for and Mother might, to inounced a pain In the food, greasy meats, ;se, too much starchy i'ood, etc., etc hen when ag Nuts because Or should tl n hospital am We have kn approaching i appeared by t No one bet skilful physic!) throes of acu of prevention Just plain ol nowadays. This trial Is pure beyon it ls partly Appendicitis gested food. It ls not ah lt ls best to When ready gested food. It is palatab It will pay f heavy breakft food but selec tain the elem the body. Ma breakfast of two soft bolle cocoa, milk oi The questioi does not cont requires for tb of its purity, paper articles, Good food h body ls also i "Th Postum Ba Takes Himself Seriously. Nicola Tesla, dining by himself in a hotel's great dining room, 'takes a table where he can be seen.' Through out his meal he wears a deeply stu dious, a completely a. , ;rbed, attitude. He may bring to the table a portfolio filled with papers. These he may scan with prolonged solemnity. In any event, he sits an eloquent tableau of profundity.-New York Press. Rat Bounty Excites Merriment. Seattle, fearing the introduction of bubonic plague by rats, has offered a bounty of ten cents a rat. This moves Tacoma, safe from infection from the sea, to raucous laughter, and the Led ger says that the bounty, "though not intended for rodents of Tacoma, Everett, Bellingham and other popu lous and busy centers, has been find ing its way into the pockets of non residents of Seattle for non-resident rats. But the joke would, jog on us if it were found that our rat popula? tion had found its way Into the Seat* tie census." - . Pretty Good Definition. We' hear some funny things in Fleet street sometimes, and the following definition of the height of aggravation, by a gentleman in rather shaky boots, whom we encountered in a well-known hostelry the other day, struck us as being particularly choice. "The 'eight of haggravation, gentle men," said this pothouse humorist, set ting his pewter on the counter and - looking round proudly, with the air of one about to let off a good thing, "the 'eight of haggravation-why, try tag to ketch a flea out o' yer ear with a pair of boxin' gloves."-London Tit* Bits. Before Days of Free Press. Many of the restrictions that' hamp ered the influence of the.press re^ mained in force until the close of the eighteenth century in England. It was not till that period that newspapers obtained the right to criticise the pol icy of ministers and of the king. Mr. Walter, the first editor of the London Times, was prosecuted for censuring the duke of York. He was sentenced to pay a fine of $250, stand in the pillory for an hour, be imprisoned for a year and give security for his good behavior for seven years. The order with regard to the pillory was can celed, but he had to serve his term in Jail. .j. French Official Etlquet. The wives of the new French minis ters share in the honors conferred on their husbands, the degree of defer ence due to them being minutely es tablished by the "protocole." When '?he wife of a minister enters a, room, if any deputies' or senators' wives are present, they are supposed to rise and remain standing until she is seat ed. Other ministers' wives may rest in their chairs, but should the prime minister's wife arise they also must stand to attention. And even Mme. Brland (If there were such a person), would have to show similar deference to the wife of the president of the chamber. With her, according to the protocole, "e'est la representation na tionale qui entre, le suffrage univer sel la France."-London Chronicle. Vivid at Least. Dr. Hiram C. Cortlandt, the well known theologian of Des Moines, said in a recent address: . . "Thomas A. Edison tells us that^he thinks the soul is not immortal; but, after all, what does this great wizard know about souls? His forte is elec tricity and macnlnery, and when he talks of souls he reminds me irresist ibly of the young lady who visited the Baldwin locomotive works and then told how a locomotive ls made. " 'You pour,' she said, 'a lot of sand Into a lot of boxes, and you throw old stove lids and things Into a furnace, and they you empty the molten stream Into a hole in the sand, and everybody yells and swears. Then you pour it out and let it cool and pound it, and then you put it in a thing that bores holes in it. Then you screw it to gether, and paint it, and put steam in lt, and lt goes splendidly; and they take lt to a drafting room and make a bluep rlnt of lt. But one thing I for got-they have to make a boiler. One man gets Inside and one gets outside, and they pound frightfully; and then they tie li. to the other thing, and you ought to see it go!'" el ?ndid Chance ., which has not been digested. ;ain ready for food use Grape it is easy of digestion'?" ie child be at once carted off to i cut? own of many cases wherein the dgns of appendicitis have (lis he suggestion being followed, ter appreciates the value of a ? an when a person is in the awful, te appendicitis, hut "an ounce is worth a pound of cure." ld common sense ls helpful even demonstrated Grape-Nuts food d question, predigested. generally has rise from undi rays necessary to operate, stop all iood. to begin feeding use a pr?di te and strong in Nourishment, lne returns in health to quit the ists and lunches and use less it food certainly known to cons ents nature requires to sustain y we be permitted to suggest a fruit', Grape-Nuts and cream, d eggs, and some hot toast and : Postum? 1 of whether Grape-Nuts does or aln the elements which nature ? te nourishment of the brain, alto will he treated in liter news- . i Important and its effect on the Important. cro'u a Reason** Cereal Co.. Ltd.. ttl? Croak, Mich.