University of South Carolina Libraries
GOVERNOR DOUOL BOYS HO! "Stick to Your Last,' tive of the Bay Your Ami FROM a place at the cobbler's bei has risen to the highest posi and has made himself a millh man" in business and politics, and second nomination for Governor, whi His rules and precepts of succ ton Snnday American. They are ru which have elevated him to the liig rates which have won for him an en< The Governor is interested in bo: for the benefit of boys. Here they ar By Williai GOVERNOR OF What are the secrets of success? I think they are? Recently, iu talki told them that they should, in orde masim, "Stick to your last." If you don't you'll find that old oa way every now and then, and you'l success. Fortune, you knows, favors the b Brave man is the one with courage e tarly rebuffs and temporary reverses able to laugh at trouble and to get ch What would you think of a shoec we last, became dissatisfied, and sta bag up this method until he had fina Bottling but a lot of half-finished sho< it> But it's no more foolish than for *ess every little while until he grows KEEP AMBITIO Every thing in nature is fitted t Bfe doing it. You never hear of the *or of the bee building ant-hills for the world and sticks to it, and that eosnplish great things. Of course, boys are somewhat ha ants. You see, boys are not often bo last they're best fitted to peg away < WdpiU t 5 au itpuiuuc LUl OULLlClJLllilg, the process of selecting a last is simp And remember always to keep y wer yon do, try to do it better, than t :? stand at the head of your class; a Imnp the farthest or throw the strai; iis matter of getting ahead will bee DO WHAT Y< Now I want to give yon another p and preparing to win fame and fo Don't try to do T^hat you like?do wh; lor "stick to your last."' Don't let tt lore you away from the thing you d whose- father made pickles, and who decided that he'd like to go into th didn't know anything about it. but he fce great fun to make it and sell it. S ess. The result was disastrous. I didn't know how to make it properl Finally he went back to the pickle bu tainly did know how to make good p Do what you-can and stick to it. sentence I remember is this one, -n Carlyle: ''The king is the man who sense contained in those seven one-sj are there set forth and the whole se from that simple sentence?"The king J EVERY BOY It is posssible for all you boys to jeme one thing better than others do evere. You can't inherit kingships competition with the world. As to 1 to work out the problem for himself, capabilities of any boy, and the meth material into a successful business in to the next parcel. Boys in their di: resemblance to toads. Did you ever then you know that you can never jump until after they have been pokei know what a boy can do until after 1 thing, and that is this: If a boy cho< sticks to it through thick and thin, h< Death of Glenffarry'a Danehter. It seems wonderful to read of t] ieath of a daughter of the Highlai Chief who was the original of Ferg Maclvor in "Waverley." Mrs. Forb< mother of Sir William Forbes, of Pii Ego, who l^s just died at the age eighty-four, was a daughter of Alexa 4et MacDonell, the sixteenth chief Glengarry, who was an intimate friei of Scott; and there are many ref< ooces to him in Lockhart's delightt biography of his father-in-law. "Gle garry" was the last highland chiefta -who kept up the ancient feudal ci tocos as far as possible, and he alwa traveled in befitting state with a "ta; ?f clansmen in attendance. He died in 1828, leaving his immen froperty heavily encumbered. His s sod successor emigrated to Austral and the estates of Glengarry and Gh quoich were sold in 1840 for ?120,0 to the late Lord Dudley (then Lo Ward), from whom they were afti 'ward purchased by Mr. Edward Elli ftbe Bear"), and they now belong his daughter-in-law. Scott describ Glengarry as "savage and picturesqu< -.London xrutn. Japanese Radish. Picture to yourself a pure "wliite te fch the size of a baseball or larger, fii and solid. Such is the Japanese radii Cut it, and you find It has the cc slstency of a Baldwin apple, firm a Hue grain: taste, and it proves to away ahead of the most delicate spri radish that ever passed your lips. WW thrive at any season during t growing year; it may be transplant r left alone; it is as good to eat wh in bloom as in its younger days, a ?oe radish will provide bulk enou for three or four people or more.?G. icn Magazine. Whers Ignorance Is Bliss. A well-known physician has observ Ikxt the best thing that can happen a man with diabetes is not to find at, and the same might be said w seme justice of a number of diseases Hospital. AS TELLS jf TO WIN SUCCESS ' Says the Chief ExecuStaie, 'and Keep )itions High." sell at a more pittance, William L. Douglas * r? 1 ^r / 1 nt',\rnar tlOIl ILL 15s in.41. V*. u^/tviuvi? >iiaire. He is to-day the ideal "successful L has just had the honor of declining a cli was practically assured to hiru. ess are given by him through the Bos!es that he has tried and tested: the rules best position in the gift of his State; the urinous fortune. rs. He declares that these rules are given I si L. Douglas, MASSACHUSETTS. Will I tell the boys of Massachusetts what [ ng to a delegation of bright-faced ,boys, I j r to make the most of life, obey the old j re. called trouble, bobbing up in your path- , 1 never get to be on speaking terms with I rave. Well, in the battle of life the really j 'though to "stick to his last" in the face of j i. He's the fellow who will eventually be ' ummy with success. aaker who. after making part of a shoe on i rted another shoe on a different last, keep- i Ily spent all his money for stock and had ?s to show for it? Foolish way to do. isn't a young man to tackle a new line of busitoo old to learn any business thoroughly. N AT TOP NOTCH. Xt_ ?'fff TT? . j (lO one tiling wen ;iua aptjnus hj> ?, ant going into the honey-making business; i a change. Each one knows its place in is what boys must do if they would acmdicapped as compared with the bees and rn with a knowledge of just what kind of >n. But nearly every boy at an early age and if that aptitude is properly developed j lified. I our ambition up to the top notch. Whathe other fellow. At school make it a point ! nd at play don't be satisfied until you can ghtest. Then when you enter business life ome a habit. K.J >U CAN DO BEST. thing to think about while you're growing Ttune in the commercial world. It is this: it you can. That's a good companion-piece j le attraction of something you don't know j o know. Once upon a time a young man J bad learned the pickle business from A to e business of making molasses candy. He j liked molasses candy and thought it would ' lo lie proceeded to try his hand at the bnsi- j lis candy wasn't good candy, because he i y, and, therefore, nobody wanted to buy. j siness and made a fortune, because he cer- i tickles, and everybody bought them. That's wisdom. About the most striking rritten by the great philosopher, Thomas ; can." There's a whole volume of sound dlable words. All the elements of success cret of greatness sticks out conspicuously i : is the man who can." MAY BE A KING. be kings, provided each fits himself to do : it. But you must work and study and per- i from your fathers; you must win them in low to go about this, every boy will have There is no fixed rule for determining the I 4* Trill rv Knnfll a Af linmort 5 vuo ixia.i ? 111 winai viir vUAIVAIW ut jauiaii4.ii an may prove a total failure when applied spositions and possibilities bear a striking poke a toad to make it .iump'i If you did, tell what direction or how far toads will I. And it's the same with Jaovs. We never lie has been tested. But we're sure of one oses his last in the light of his ability, and }'!1 win out in the end. A Correction. be Senator Dubois, of Idaho, tells of the 1 1(* case of a miner in that State who had i us been reported as dead by a number of -s? the Idaho newspapers. ts" It would appear that the miner had a keen sense of humor, for with refern" ence to an obituary of himself which appeared in a Boise City paper the al-; U(* leged dead man addressed the editor ;r" with a view to correcting certain misu* statements in the said obituary. !P" "My dear sir," wrote he, "relative to in the obituary of myseif appearing in 1S* your issue of the 22d ultimo, I beg i leave to call yoirt*attention to several1 ^ errors therein. In the first place, I; was born in Massachusetts, not in se Rhode Island; secondly, the cause of Pn my death was not heart disease."ia Collier's. ;n 00 Musical Instruments. r?* "I see that a committee from the Al- j ?r* bany Musicians' Union has called on CQ the United Traction Company," said a t? young father to me this morning, "to ask permission to carry on the cars their base viols and bass drums. If that concession is made I shall insist on being allowed to take my baby carriage on Doard. They both come under l<*" the head of music and are both public "m necessities. Theirs is instrumental music while mine is vocal."?Albany >n" Journal. nd Sleeping Sickness. ng To the present science ha? proved It powerless to cope with that strange he malady, the sleeping sickness. The :ed ablest physicians, not only of Belgium, en but of England, France and Germany, nd have studied the disease exhaustively. gh Though much valuable data relating to ir- its cause and effect have been collected, the discovery of irs antidote seems to be as far off to-day as ever.?From "The Story of the Congo Free State," ea by Henry Wellington Wack. to ? it United States Consul Covert, ol ith Lyons, France, reports that the Eui.? ropean orange croo is almost a com. plete failure PERIL IN RATE LEGISLATION. ?? I (From the New York Evening Post.) I Reference has hitherto been made, in the London cable published in this section, to the London Economist's view of the crash om the New York stock exchange. The article in full is now at hand, and deserves larger I citation, as reflecting a conservative foreign view. The Economist says: "It is by no means surprising that | American railway stocks should have experienced a sharp reaction from the high prices that were recently reached. The powerful support that was for a protracted period accorded to the market by the important financial | interests that had large blocks of undigested securities to work off no longer exists, and liquidation on a large scale by pools that loaded them selves up with stock in the belief that the public could be induced to buy at greatly enhanced quotations has absolutely demoralized the market for j the time. There are, moreover, grave apprehensions of coming contests bei tween groups of powerful financiers for the control of various railway systems. The much vaunted 'community of interesrs' idea, which was to bring about industrial peace, has been entirely exploded, and there appears to be only too good reason to fear that the defeat of the Harriman party in lhe Northern Pacific case may lead to fresh feuds and fresh conflicts, which must inevitably have a serious ' effect on the prices of railway securities. "Another factor which is attracting widespread attention in the United States is the determined attitude of Mr. Roosevelt in regard to legislation for the fixing of railway rates. In February last the Townsend bill, empowering the interstate commerce commission to fix rates, was passed by the house of representatives, but received a check in the senate, and at the present moment a senate committee is taking evidence as to "the effect * * - * - ' Jt -i xl V111 I mat would oe produced u me dui passed into law. Mr. Roosevelt is an | ardent supporter of the proposal to fix rates Moreover, a mass of testimony directed against the proposal to fix rates has been laid before j the senate committee, the contention being that a law embodying such a project would have a disastrous effect on the railways of the 'country. We think, indeed, that there is great force in tl|e argument of the railways that the endowment of the interstate eommerce commission with power to fix rates would lead to unsatisfactory results. The task is obviously one which it would be almost impossible for any tribunal efficiently and effectually to perform, consid- i ering the multiplicity of interests Involved and the enormous extent of territory served by the railways of the United States. And, after all, it j is not so much high rates as the practice of giving rebates that constitutes a serious grievance against American railways. The rates, as a rule, are low, and they have been j brought down to the present level, not by interference on the part of the state, but by the pressure of competition. On the other hand, the special advantages afforded to the wealthy corporations that own private cars, and to the proprietors of terminal tracks, constitute in effect sub- j stantial rebates, and form a gross abuse. It is contended, and appar- j ently with reason, that the law as It i stands is adequate to deal witht this and other abuses, but that plea has i in no wise diminished the determi- J nation of Mr. Roosevelt to carry, if he i can, legislation of a more stringent j type He may discover that j he has overestimated the forces behind the agitation for the fixing of railway ra*es by a state tribunal, but the disturbance that must inevitably supervene while a struggle is in progress cannot fail to have an j adverse effect on the market for rail- j way securities. "General industrial conditions in | the United States appear to be favor- i able, though indications point to the | iron and steel boom having reached j i its highest point for the present. It j has to be remembered, however, that | the quotations of stocks are already high, and though it is generally a hopeless task to forecast the imme- j diate future of the American railway 1 market, investors will do well to ! appreciate the factors to which we ! have drawn attention. They will ! probably, indeed, be well advised in i ! leaving American railway stocks alone j | until the outlook becomes clearer, j j Alld 0?cu IUO oi/crjui?L\Ji vtuu uoiran/ I finds his opportunity in fluctuating | markets is on dangerous ground [ here, since the American market is . subject to sudden and violent spasms, i the result of wire-pulling behind the scenes, of which the outside public j have no means of obtaining the slightest knowledge beforehand." CHINA SEEKS TO BUTT IN. I i Wants to Be Represented at Russo J Jap Peace Conference. i China's request to be representee j j In the Washington conference on tin j ground that she is vitally iDterestec j ' in its proceedings, has been receivec by the president and informally trans mitted to the belligerents. Whethei the president has received the for ! mal replies cannot be learned, but i can be stated that while Russia is inclined to favor the suggestion, Ja pan will not consent to it. Fertility in Cottonseed. Cottonseed meal is used quite extensively in some sections of the country as a fertilizer. A good grade meal will carry about G.8 per cent, nitrogen, 2.9 per cent, phosphoric acid and 1.8 per cent, potash. Based upon the valuations that will be used by New England experiment stations in 1905 for eomniitinor tTio volna Af Mmmoppinl fV?rtili7 ers, .1 meal analyzing as above will be worth about $20 a ton as a fertilizer. Notwithstanding ifs high value when used directly in this way it will usually be found.more economical to use it as a food for stock and to apply the resulting manure to the land. When used thus, from eighty to ninety-five per cent, of the nitrogen and phosphoric acid and practically all the potash will be contained in the manure. ?J. M. Bartlett. Experiment Station, Tenobscot County, Me. ????JTothonse Bean". | String beans are not a very common crop for forcing under glass, but fairly successful results were obtained with them at the Wisconsin Station. Starting them in pots was found to be a waste of time, since better results were obtained when beans were planted in hills about one foot apart each way. Later they were thinned to stand eighteen inches ap.wt. The yield of beajis was increased about three times by the use of complete commercial I fertilizers. Neplnsultra and Golden Eyed Wax were the most productive. It was found that fumigation with tobacco injured the plants, but the white fly was readily controlled with hydrocyanic gas. using ten ounces of potassium cyanide for six million cubic feet of space. The best temperature was concluded to be about fifty to sixty degrees at night and seventy degrees in daytime.?American Cultivator. I I Sh?ep Good Property. | A Wisconsin man interested in the : sheep and wool business says that the reduction irv sheep in this country in the past few years make the sheep jnt dustry a good safe business. He estimates that it will require from five to i seven years to breed up and regain this loss. The present high price of sheep I will induce every sheep owner to sell : off just as closely as possible, and that is bound to keep the number down. He j says that many years ago there was used more wool to the person in the j United States than there is to-day. since cotton has come into such general use, but a quarter of a century ago there was very little demand for mutton. To-day the demand is great, and it is on the increase right along. Tin's, ! with the shortage in the number of sheep and the high price of wool, is bound to make sheep raising and feeding profitable for several years to come. I ? Indiana Farmer. Helps Handling Hogs. For a catching yard or pen, instead of having regular rectangular shape, have at one corner a sharp triangular extension, as shown in the cut. Into this extension the hogs will rush, when they may be easily caught, j For loailMg hogs, back the wagon, ' with cage on, up to the pen-fence, dig under the hind wheels,a few inches to bring the rear end and upper side of | the wagon bed even with some plank | or rail of the pen fence. Cut out this plank or rail, leaving a space large S enough for your largest hog to pass ; through, riace an inclined floor of plank from the ground of the pen to the lower side of the wagon opening. : as shown by the cut. up which to drive the hogs. Then scatter a little corn on the floor of the incline and also on the floor of the wagon, start the hogs | and they will go up and in. No fuss, . * YALD FOR LOADING HOCS. , no torn or soiled clothes and a lot of quiet hogs.?H. T. Yose. in Farm and Home. Making Money by Keducing the Cost. Hoard's Dairyman mentions a Mr. Ross, of Washington State, who has a herd of sixty-one Jersey cows giving milk, and who by reading and studying his business of feeding and management, has reduced his expenses in keeping them till they are making him thirty-three per cent, more profits. The Dairyman with its strong and sensible putting of things comments on this matter as follows: "But when you talk with farmers about increasing their profits through a reductiou of the cost of production, and all through a better study and understanding of their business, they lose all interest in the subject. That is an end of the question that they take no stock in whatever. Yet, strange as it seems, it is the only end that they Lave any control over. "Mr. Ross found that he did not really know enough about his business. So he went to work to read and think. It struck him. no doubt, that there were many other men who knew more than he did; whose methods, consequently, were more perfect and profitable. He could not travel and see all these men, but he could read of what they were doing, and, lo! and behold, thirty-three per cent, was added to his profits. "It is the same result everywhere. Where we find a reading, thinking mau, he is the <|Re to whom the best profits go. And yet. plain as is the .way, there are hundreds of thousands of farmers who really believe that the less they read, the less they know, the more profitable the farm will be to them."?Indiana Farmer. Don't Overfeed the Calve*. As much harm comes from overfeeding calves as from feeding too little; this the writer has proved by experience. Having a fine, pure-bred Ayrshire heifer calf, which I was particularly anxious to do well, I let her suck the cow till she had a good start and was looking very fine. I then taught her to drink and she proved a good feeder and continued to grow. After a little I began giving hei sweet skimmed milk, which she drank with a relish for some time, bavins the amount increased gradually, but nit* iiiuicuae >ni5 mui^i a muc far. and one day the calf refused her rations. No amount of coaxing -would induce her to drink for several meals and began to look very thin. After a little she began to sip a little newwarm milk, and now after a week she will drink about a quart to a feed, but no more, and is very lank. As the calf is two months old this is a very small ration. The calf has not scoured badly but sinrply seemed to have sickened of milk. I can attribute the trouble to no other cause than overfeeding.?E. M. Tike, in Massachusetts Ploughman Part Pasture For VTorkinj; Horses. 1 have been known to be short or even out of hay in working season, and depended on grass for the horses. I gathered it for them with the scythe and pitchfork. Though the grass diet made them sweat more, in the grass large enough to mow there was substance enough so that they stood the work well and carried their flesh as well as usual. But to make the grass diet more satisfactory the graiu must be fed in proper form, either ground or soaked. Dry corn, the usual feed, and grass make a poor combination and do not digest well together. When first eating grass the teeth may be a little tender, the dry corn is not masticated well, and with the wide variation between the two substances one can readily see that the best result will not be obtained in that way. I use two parts oats and one part corn, ground fine, for horse feed, and nlonfr aP fliAn fliAra la na nnacfmn i Vi XT , lutu LUtlC AO iiv 4 UtOUVU I about the horse not standing the work well on a grass diet. I do not allow the horses to miss a feed of grain during the working season. but when running in the pasture am not particular if they do miss a noon feed; but they must have grain j twice a day whether working or not. j It is a common practice with some to turn their horses out Saturday night and leave them till Monday morning, and these people are usually the ones that say their horses do not stand the work well. The horse that has its liberty part of the time and takes voluntary exercise is a far more docile animal for man's use.?Cyrus Greeny in American Cultivator. .Caring For Cream. To begin with, will say that we prefer Jerseys to cows of auy other breed for dairying, which, with good care and feed and other things taken in consideration, will furnish the basis for profitable business. We have had experience with crocks, cans and tanks, but are now using a cream separator, with which we are well pleased. By this method our milk is not ruined, as with a water dilution separator, and our cream and milk are ready for use any time we need them without disturbing the whole setting by dipping into it before the mass is fairly raised. Then, here is another great advantage in that the milk can be taken direct from the separator to the caives and pigs while yet warm. We would not lias a 'dilution" (delusion) separator on the place. Had rather go back to the use of crocks than spoil our milk by pouring water in, and not getting all the cr?am either. A good centrifugal separator gets all the cream. Eack skimming should be kept to itself until cool, when it can be put in ' the cream jar. When enough is ready for churning, warm to seventy-eight or eighty degrees, pour in some buttermilk and set by fire until thickened, but do not keep too long or allow it to* .become sour. We churn our cream from fifty-eight to sixty degrees, as there is a difference in cream. One can tell by a few churnings the proper temperature. We^liave a swing churn which we prefer to any other. Our butter is washed in the churn after the buttermilk is drawn off, as it is easier and better to wash the milk out than to work all the grain out of the butter with the buttermilk. We make our butter to suit our customers. Some take their butter unsalted, while others prefer salt. Then some prefer it colored, and others do not. Our butter is molded in onepound prints in winter and wrapped in parchment paper. In summer it is packed in one and two-pound crocks for each customer. Now, here is another nice thing about having a separator. The buttermilk is not spoiled with water, can be taken in buckets or cans to our customers, and the ones j who wisli cream ger ic uxrecc irom iue i separator llie day it is milked and separated. To sum up the necessities of a good dairy: Good cows, good care and feed, regular milking, separator, proper churning, cleanliness from stable to customer in each and every detail. Be ready to learn. Do not think you -know it all." Do not say, "My butter is as good as anybody's," but try to improve and do all to make better bat ter each time.?Farmer's Guide. :1; : * -- -v ;r . : >:^S? ' ' >"? Four Facts For Sick Women To Considez Lydia E. Pinkhaa's Vegeiabi* Compound Has an Unequalled Record of Cures? Mrs. 'Pinkfyrm's Advice Is Confute* tial, Free, and ahcays Helpful First.?That almost every operation in our hospitals performed upon women becomes necessary through neglect of such symptoms as backache, irregular and painful menstruation, leucorrhoea, displacements of the uterus, pain in the side, burning sensation in the stomach, bearing-down pains, nervousness, dizziness and aleeplessress. Second.?The medicine that holds the record for the largest number of absolute cures of female ills is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It regulates, strengthens and cures diseases of the female organism as nothing else can. For thirty years it has been helping women to be -strong, curing backache, nervousness, kidney troubles, all uterine and ovarian inflammation, weakness and displacements, regulating menstruation perfectly and overcoming its pains. It has also proved itself invaluable in preparing for childbirth and the change of life. - I Third.?The great volnme of unsolicited and grateful testimonials on file at the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., many of which are from time to time published by permission, give absolute evidence of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Mrs. Pinkham's advice. . Fourth.?Every ailing woman in the United States is asked to accept the following invitation. It is free, will bring you health and may save yonr life. Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women.?Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by women only. From symptoms given, . your trouble may be located and the, quickest and surest way of recovery, advised. Out of the vast volume of experience in treating female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably has the very knowledge that will help your case. Surely, any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if she does not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. , J FOR THE LIVER AND BOWELS I Nothing can equal MOZLE Y'S LEMON I ELIXIR. It promptly cures con*tipatlonj biliousness, indigestion, sour stomach, and all derangements of the stomach and-l bowels 50c a bottle at all drug stores. Jg m ATE EVIDENCE AGAINST HIM M A ?? . ?]& Prisoner Stops Trial by Chewing and ( Swallowing a Forged Check. * The Kings county court was thrown Into disorder and dismay, says a Seat tie special to the St. Louis Post-Dls patch, when the prisoner at the bar, H. R. McTavish, ate all the evidence \ in the case on trial. McTavish was being tried on a charge of forging a $15 check. The check lay on the trial "i table, marked "exhibit A." McTavish sat beside his counsel, who-was engaged in cross-examining a witness for the prosecution. The case was going against McTavish when his eye fell on the check, which was about to be introduced in evidence. Like a half-starved man and with a look of hunger in his eye, the prisoner pounced upon "exhibit A" and chewed it to pulp. With soulful satisfaction he gulped It down. The prosecution was in consternation, for its main piece of evidence was gone, and demanded that a stomach pump be used forthwith. While the lawyers argued pro end con, the prisoner calmly picked his teeth with a whittled match, plainly the master of the situation. The defense . argued that the ball of paper id the defendant's stomach could in no wise be construed as documentary eri- ^ dence, and that a dismissal was proper. ... - -? TIT.nVlnaL The case or toe state 01 ^ ton against H. R. McTavish la now in statu quo pending the untangling of the legal question involved from the defendant's impromptu luncheon. ' WANTED TO SLEEP. Carious That a Tired Preacher Should Hare Such Desire. A minister speaks of the curious effect of Grape-Nuts food on him and how it has relieved him. "You will doubtless understand how the suffering with indigestion with which I used to be troubled made my work an almost unendurable burden, and why it was that after my Sabbath duties had been performed, sleep was a stranger to my pillow till nearly daylight "I had to be very careful as to what I ate, and even with all my care I experienced poignant physical distress after meals, and my food never satisfled me. "Six months have elapsed since I be- . gan to use Grape-Nuts food, and the benefits I hare derived from it are very definite. I no longer suffer from indigestion, anJTTbegan to improve from the time Grape-Nuts appeared on our table. I find that by eating a dish of it after my Sabbath work is done (and I always do so now) my nerves are quieted and rest and refreshing sleep are insured me. I feel that I could not possibly do without Grape-Nuts food, now that I know its value. It is invariably on our table?we fee! that we need it to complete the meal?and our children will eat Grape-Nuts when they cannot be persuaded to touch anything else/' Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Bead the famous little book, "Tha Boad to Wellville/' in each pkg. -J Sr. J