The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, November 23, 1905, Image 2
HOSPITALS CROWDED
MAJORITY OF PATIENTS WOMEN
V lira. Pinkham's Advice Saves Many
From this Sad and Costly Experience
yfr/i;Ltrd/aA&mspatients lying
white beds are women and girls who
are awaiting or recovering from opera..
tions made necessary by neglect.
Every one of these patients had
plenty of warning in that bearing down
feeling, pain at the left or right of the
womb, nervous exhaustion, pain in the
small of the back, leucorrhoea, dizziness,
flatulency, displacements of the
womb or irregularities. All of these
symptoms are indications of an unhealthy
condition of the ovaries or
womb, and if not heeded the trouble
will make headway until the penalty
has to be paid by a dangerous operation,
and a lifetime of impaired usefulness
at best, while in many cases the
results are fatal. '
The following letter should bring
hope to suffering women. Miss Luella
Adams, of the Colonnade Hotel, Seattle,
Wash., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:?
" About two years ago I was a great sufferer
from a severe female trouble, pains and
headaches. The doctor prescribed for me and
Anally told me that I had a tumor on the
womb and must undergo an operation if I
wanted to get well. I wit that this was my
death warrant, but I spent hundreds of dollars
for medical help, but the tumor kept
growing. Fortunately I corresponded with
an aunt in the New England States, and she
advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, as it was said to cure tumors.
I did so and immediately began to
improve in health, and I was entirely cui*ed,
Ihe tumor disappearing entirely, without an
operation. I wish every suffering woman I
Would try tins great preparation.
Just as surely as Miss Adams was !
cured of the troubles enumerated in
her letter, just so surely will Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cure
every woman in the land who suffers
v from womb troubles, inflammation of
the ovaries, kidney troubles, nervous
? excitability and nervous prostration.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all youngwomen
who are ill to write her for free
advice. Address, Lynn, Mass.
For fifteen yeais no suicide of a j
Jew was recorded in the seven great j
& districts that comprise the most pop- j
pious part of central London.
W. L. Douclas
*3= SHOES Sen !
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Line j
^ cannot be equalled atany price. |
W.L.DOURLA9MAKES AMD SELLS
MORE MEM'S $3.SO SHOES THAN
AMY OTHER MAMUrACTURER.
tin nnn REWARD to anyone who can
; * $IUjUUU disprove this statsmsnt.
'' W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their excellent
style, easy fitting, and superior wearing
qualities, achieved the largest sale of any 53.50
shoe in the world. They are lust as good as
those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 ? the only
dlferance Is the price. If 1 could take you into
my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest in
the world under ooe roof making men's fine
shoes, and show you the care with which every
?, pair of Douglas shoes Is made, you would realize
why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best shoes
produced in the world.
If 1 could show you the difference between the
shoes made in my factory and those of other
makes, you would understand why Douglas
$3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold
their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of
P greater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50
shoe on the market to-day.
IK. L Doagiaa Strong Made Moss for
Mors. $2. BO, $2,00. Boy a* School A
.DromeShooa,$2.BO,$2,$1.7B,*1.BO
CAUTION.?Insist upon having W.L.Doug(Us
shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine
.rlthout his name and price stamped on bottom.
WANTED. A shoe dealer in every town where
(W.L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. "Full line of
> samples sent free for inspection upon request.
\fost Color Eyelets used; they wilt not wear brassy.
V* \yfxito for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles.
W. L DOUGLAS, Brockton. Mass*
(At d7-'Q5f
I
OOD, big "
can not be
"j
^.
out a liberal amc
in the fertilizer ten
per cent. It
form of Sulphat<
highest quality.
"Plant Food" and "Truck
books which tell of the successf
o*her garden truck?sent free 1
Address, QERMAI
. New York?93 Nassau Street, or
PRICE,,f=^25 Ct? a HI
^ A ii
in one day . mln"
tmmmmw
^iasnoCal1 for *oar
Shrewd Cats.
Chief Clerk Samuel Hoop, of tlia
Bureau of Police, who is a close student
of animal life, relates an incident
coming under his personal observation
which goes far to prove the reasoning
power of the feline tribe. "For
several years," said Mr. Roop recently,
"a black cat grew sleek and fat in
a snug berth at a grocery store, near
Twenty-first and Parrish streets. This
cat undoubtedly was envied by all
the cats in the neighborhood. 1 make
this assprtion confidently, because
when poor puss was killed by an automobile
the other night, a dozen cats
suddenly appeared in the vicinity of
the grocery store berth. YoU can be|
lieve it or not, as you like, but every
! cne of those cats was black, and I can
| only assume that each expected tc
[ impersonate the dead feline and step
j into his shoes, metaphorically speak'
ing, unchallenged. One fellow, a dead
ringer for the unfortunate tabby,
thrashed all the others, and actually
palmed himself off on the storekeeper,
who knew nothing about the accident,
as the real pet. The grocery
man didn't have the heart to fire him
out when he learned the truth, and
the new cat is waxing as sleek as his
predecessor."?Philadelphia Record.
- ? t A
Kitten in a man oacK.
One of the queerest packages that
a mall clerk ever tcok In off a mail
crane, says the Wheeling Intelligencer,
was that received by the clerk
on the train on the Ohio River Division
of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad,
which leaves Wheeling about 1
o'clock in the morning. }
At a little station callrd Vienna,
where a mail sack is taken from a
crane, as the train does not stop, the
mail clerks the other morning m ide
the regular grab for the mail pouch,
and after opening it found that a live
kitten had e'ther been put in it ty
someone or had gotten in accidentally
and had been delivered with the mail
in that rough way to the car.
An examination of the kitten
showed that one of its legs was slightly
bruised, otherwise it did not appear
to be injured. S'nce then it
has been making the regular trips in
the mail car and the clerks are very
much attached to it.
I$l,000ToBeGive?forfi
Reliable Information!
We will give One Dollar for a Postal I
Card riving the first reliable newt of |
a chance to sell a horizontal steam I
engine of our styles, within our range I
of sizes. We do not want inquiries at H
this time for vertical, traction or gas H
engines. I
ATXAM
ENGINES AND BOILERS I
htve for years been tbe standard for all steam E
plants. Best of material and workmanship. W
Our big output enables us to sell on small prof
its. An Atlas, tbe best in tbe world, costs no I
more then the other kind.
I Writ* today for oar special offer. I
ATLAS ENGINE WORKS 1
Selling sgsneiei in ail citiM INDIANAPOLIS I
Corliss Engines Highspeed Engines WsterTab* Boiler* H
four Valve Engine* Compound Engin** Tubular Bollar* H
Automatic Engines Throttling Engines PortableBolltrr H
Atlas Engines in terrlce 3,000,000 H. P. E
Atlaa Boiler* In Mrrica *,000,000 H. P.
/i&kCut Your Work
*n ^w0
^ Atkins Saws cut
\ not on-y w??d, i1"011
j and other materials
/ JyK. ^^better than any
other, but they cut
#That is because they
are made of the best steel
in the world by men tliat
know how.
Atkins Saws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor
Scrapers, etc., are sold by all good hardware
dealers. Catalogue on request.
E. C. ATlilNS ?L CO. Inc.
Largest Saw Manufacturers in the World
Factory and Executive Offices, Indianapolis
Branches?New York, Chicago, Minneapolis
Portland (Oregon), Seattle, San Francisco
Memphis, Atlanta and Toronto (Canada)
Accept no subitltuts?Insist on thsAtkln* Brand
n SOLD BY GOOD DEALERS EVERYvVttPE7^
mealy" potatoes
produced with>unt
of Potash
? not less than
must be in the
2 of Potash of
; Farming" are two practical
ul growing of potatoes and the
:o those who write us for them.
^ KALI WORKS.
Atlanta. Ga.?22)? So. Brood Street.
TI-GREPINE
GUARANTEED TO CURE
COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA.
itl-Grlplne to a dealer who won't Guarantee It
MONEY BACK IF IT BOESX'T CUBE.
ter, 21.D.. Manufacturer, Springfield, Mn
jA MUTINY IN'ARMY
Is Report From Manchuria
That Worries Nicholas.
YIANY SOLDIES ARE SLAIN
Workmen Issue Proclamation to SoJdier6
and Sailors Expressing Sym
pathy and Aid in the Strug.
1
gle for Freedom.
i
A mutiny in the Manchurian army
Is the latest sensational rumor in St.
Petersburg.
According to the report, the emperor
has received a dispatch from
General Linevitch, telling him of a
j revolt among the troops, which was
j suppressed only after a regular fight,
i in which many soldiers were killed
i or wounded.
j Forty-two officers are reported to
j have been shot for participation in
i the conspiracy. No confirmation of the
l
rumor is obtainable from the officials
of the war office.
Troops have taken possession of
the Moscow railroad station and the
road will be reopened by means of
* 11 " ml... ?
I raiiroaa Datiaiious. me i?um^uu>4 i
of traffic on this road insured sup- |
plies for the capital. 1 |
! The workmen's organization Friday !
!
' addressed the following appeal to the j
! soldiers and sailors:
I "Comrades and Brothers: For a
1 long time we have misunderstood each j
J other. Your officers taught you to re- j
! gard us as enemies of the fatherland j
| and as criminals whom you should j
shoot, beat with your whips and j
butcher with your bayonets. Our J
struggle for the people's freedom and j
the people's well being has been de- j
picted to you as a revolution against j
the fatherland, which you are obliged j
to suppress.
"Many of you, believing this, have j
shot your own brothers, filling thoi I
streets of our towns with blood. The i
i
case is now altered. The eyes of
many of the soldiers and sailors have
been opened. They understand that
all of us are brothers, and that we
are sons of the same nation whose
common enemies are your command
ers and those in power. They un- !
derstand that the liberty of the peo- j
pie is their own liberty and the good
of the people their own good.
"The men of the Black sea fleet at
Kronsadt stood against their con?manders
and signified that they wanted
to lead the lives of men, that
they wanted liberty and they associated
themselves with the cause of the
people. A hundred sailors at Kronstadt
have been handed over to a
court martial and today or tomorrow j
may be executed. Knowing this, we J
workmen of St. Petersburg struck, 1
demanding the release of our soldier j
and sailor brothers and the abolition j
of court martials and the death pen- J
alty.
"Is it possible that you, soldiers
and sailors, will not arise and help
your brothers at Kronstadt? Is it possible
that you will remain hand in
hand with the murderers of . your
brothers at Krc.istadt? <
"We workmen say: 'The cause of
the soldier and the sailor is our !
cause,' and so we have gone out on i
strike. You must say everywhere'the j
cause of the workmen is our cause :
and the struggle of the workmen is i
our struggle,' and you must associate
yourselves with the struggling people. !
You must strike and refuse to per- i
form the duties imposed on you. Do i
not listen to the word of command !
calling you to put down the work- <
men's movements. Bet not one shot i
be fired by you against the people
"Down with your bloodthirsty com- I
manders! Long live a free govern- j
ment and a free people!"
WILL ACCEPT ANY TERMS.
I
People of Arizona Want Immediate j
Admission to Statehood.
A number of leading business and I
profession citizens of Tucson, Arizona,
held a meeting Thursday night to
organize a campaign in the interest
of the immediate statehood for Arizona.
The meeting adopted the following
resolution:
"Resolved, That we favor the admission
of Arizona as a state on such
terms as congress may grant, even accepting
annexation of New Mexico
. rather than remain any longer in a
territorial condition."
FIRE TAKES THIRTY-NINE LIVES.
Most Deadly and Disastrous Blaze
Visits Glasgow, Scotland.
The most terrible fire that has occurred
in Great Britain for many
years broke out in Glasgow, Sunday,
in a cheap lodging house for men,
and resulted in the loss of thirty-nine
lives, and the severe injury of many
others.
GIFTS WERE OVERRATED, j
Plunder Brought from the Orient by !
President's Daughter is Not J
Worth So Very Much.
A Washington dispatch says: The
i
examination and appraisement of the |
presents received by Miss Alice Roosevelt
during her visit to the Orient
has begun. The officials at the Georgetown
custom house have begun to
open up the twenty-seven boxes in
which the presents were shipped and
nthor souvenirs of the visit which re
suited in a social conquest of the Far
East by the president's daughter. The
custom officials say the task is anything
but an easy one, owing to the
necessity laid on them to appraise the
goods on their foreign commercial
value. Only about one-third of the
boxes have so far been opened and
iCollector Nyman and his staff are
said to be somewhat surprised as the
valuation of their contents will exceed
scarcely a few thousand dollars.
Although the presents have laid in
the strong room in the department
of the Georgetown postoffice building
in which the customs house is located
for three weeks, guarded day
and night, there is no effort to get
rid of them quickly. When the pres
ident instructed that no special hurry
was desired and that they should take
the regular course, the officials devoted
their attention to appraising the
large amount of merchandise that already
had arrived. They were unusually
busy, owing to the importation
of Christmas goods.
As the work of appraising Miss
Roosevelt's presents is being done
along with the other work of the office,
it s doubtful if the last box will
have been examined and the valuation
fixed for some days. Miss Roosevelt,
who is on a visit to relatives
in Massachusetts, will probably be
home in time to receive them at the
white house. Some of the presents
she has not yet seen.
HEARST SPENT SMALL FORTUNE.
Makes Affidavit That His Election
Expenses Were $65,343.
William Randolph Hearst, candidate
for mayor of New York city on
the municipal ownership ticket, certified
to the secretary of state at Albany,
Friday, that his total campaign
expenses were $65,643. This breads
the record for sucn expenses, 'winea
was formerly neld by uovernor Higgins,
who spent during tne last state
campaign ?32,000.
Mx: Hearst says he contributed all
but $17,488 of the $aU,20U> which was
spent by the finance committee oi
the Municipal Ownership .League for
the benefit of ail the candidates on
the ticket and expended $4,125 per
sonally for buttons and lithographs.
Some of the large items were:
Law department, $3,597; printing,
$8,609; music, $7,898; carriage hire,
$2,810; rental of halls, decoration and
riuminations, $12,012; watchers for
election, $19,580; investigation of registration,
$3,206.
Mr. Hearst declared that $80,206
was expended equally for the benefit
of all the candidates on the ticket.
Herman A. Metz, candidate for comptroller
of New York, on the democratic
ticket, spent $15,000.
James G. Phelps Stokes, municipal
ownership candidate for president of
the New York board of aldermen,
spent $317.
HOWELL'S ANNOUNCEMENT.
Makes Declaration of Candidacy for
Governorship of Georgia.
Clark Howell of Atlanta, and editor
oi the Atlanta Constitution, makes
formal announcement of his candidacy
for the governorship of Georgia m
a concise platform wherein he states
that he is against "disfranchisement"
because he believes it to be dangerous
to best interests of state; shows why;
favors strict railroad regulation; is
against free passes, and believes in
"building up," not tearing down.
ALMOST EXTERMINATED FAMILY
Dayton, Oh:o, Man Kills Father, Mother
and a Brother.
At Dayton, O., Saturday, Coronei
Walter L. Kline, rendered a verdict
of guilty in the case of Dr. Oliver
Crook Haugh, charged with the murder
of bis father, his mother and his
brother, Jesse. The coroner said, in
reference to the verdict:
"I believe the officials of Montgomery
county have to deal with a criminal
whose cunning and fiendish
desires have seldom been equaled
in this country."
FEVER FIGHT IS NOW OVER.
Last District Headquarters in New
Orleans is Ordered Closed.
The last district headquarters maintained
by the federal authorities at
New Orleans has been ordered to be
closed. Past Assistant Surgeon Blue,
who was in charge, has been ordered
to his regular post. Only Dr. White's
main office now remains. There has
not been a case of yellow fever for
over a week.
? ' V-.
A SEA LEVEL CANAL
Decided Upon By Commission
After Long Study.
VOTE WAS EIGHT TO FIVE
Plan Selected Will Call for More
Money and Longer Time for
Construction, But Benefits
Will Be Greater.
A Washington special says: Tho
board of consulting engineers of the
isthmian canal commission at Satur*
day's meeting, by a vote of eight to
five, declared itself in favor of a sea
level canal.
The conclusion was reached after a
long and careful study of the project.
Since the beginning of September the
board had held meetings and in special
sub-committees had studied the
plans for a sea level and a lock canai
with the greatest care. A trip to the
isthmus was made to enable the members
to form a better idea of the me
- horf tn ntf
cnanicai aimcuiuea nuau uau w ?? |
considered.
The members of the board are men
of the greatest reputation in their line
of work. France, Germany and Hoiland
sent their most eminent specialists
at the request of tne American
government.
From the beginning it was evident
that a majority of the members were
in favor of the sea level canal. Their
point of view "was that, even if it cost
more than a lock canal and would
take longer in the building, it would
ultimately be of greater use, as it
will enable ships to make a mucn
shorter trip than if they were obligeg
to go through three or four locks.
On the other hand, there was a
minority which wanted to see the
canal built in as short a time as
possible, and with the least cost, declaring
that a few hours longer for
the trip through the isthmus made
little or no difference.
One of the members gave this explanation
for his way of voting: "It
may be that several of us will not
see the sea level canal finished in our
life time, as it will take consiaeraDiy
longer than ten years. But if we
have the satisfaction to know that for
all the generations to follow we have
made the shortest and most practical
way of communication between the
Pacific and the Atlantic and as long
as-we had to decide one question for
all eternity, we do not think that a
few years more or less would make
a very important difference. That is
the way our party thought about it
and whatever we may have said in
favor or against it, we have, after
the most careful consideration, given
an opinion as we saw our way. to do
it"
No official statement will be given
out before the report of the commission
reaches President Roosevelt,
which will be about January.
The decision was reached at noon
Saturday and thereby the board practically
concluded its labors. There
will be a few more meetings simply
to deal with small details and to put
into permanent fcrms tne results of
the board's protracted meetings. The
foreign delegates desire to leave to*
their homes by the 27th instant..
However, there are two more important
steps, at either of which there
may be great changes proposed, for
the commission must pass the plans
and its own recommendations to the
president, who, in turn, must stamp
them at his own approval or disapproval,
and forward them to congress,
whlqh, after all, will be the court of
last resort as between the sea level
and lock canal projects; simply
tnrougn me iaci mar aauiuunai legislation
will be necessary if a sea
level canal is to be built will cost
from $75,000,000 to $100,000,000 more
than the cheapest practical lock canal,
and will consume from five to
seven years more in the construction.
OUTSIDE VOTER IN THE TOIL*
Utica Citizen Was Paid Ten Collars
to Cast Ballot in New York.
Albert Farrar, accused of illegal
voting in New York's contested mayoralty
election, confessed in court
Friday that he came to vote fromUtica,
N. Y.
He said that he was brought to
New York city to vote the republican
ticket and that a republican district
leader introduced him in political circles
as his son. Farrar said he was
paid $10 for his vote,
paid $10 for his vote. He was ro>
manded to prison for sentence.
HEIR TO THE THRONE DEAD.
Brother of King Leopold of Belgium
Joins Silent Majority.
The Count of Flanders, brother of
King Leopold and heir to the throne,
died in Brussels Friday morning.
Death was due to inflammation of the
respiratory organs. The count was
born in 1S37.
The new heir to the throne ol Belgium
is Prince Albert of Flanders.
TO GET ACQUAINTED. I
The Bcarder?Is this Harriet Simp- JH
kins really as pretty as people say
she is?
Farmer Stubble?You'd think so if 1
you knew how many of the city fellers
alius manage to have' their ottos
break down right smack in fropt o'
the Simpkin's house an* go in an' ... J
borrow monkey wrenches an* things. ; f
?Detroit Tribune.
WASTED TO A SHADOW; '
But Fonnd a Cure After Fifteen Titn
of SafferlDf. v '. {
A. H. Stotts, messenger at the .; <
State Capitol, Columbus, O., says:.. >
. . , "For fifteen yeare
\ I bad kidney tromy^
bles? and thoT,*& * y
headaches and terriJm
r9l^lil sensible on the-aidewalk,
and then .-3j|?j
wasted away in bed for ten week*.
After being given up, I began using *_
Doan's Kidney Pills. In a couple of
months I regained my old health,
and now weigh, 188 pounds. Twelvo
boxes did it, and I have been watt V^lligjj
two -years."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box,
Foster-Miiburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y, -^1|>
The porters of the market pla?e In
Paris rarrv. strapped on their backs, -
great baskets full of garden produce..
ITCHING SCALP HUMOR 5
Lad 7 Suffered Tort are* Until Cured, by "
Cuticura?Scratched Day end Klfbt* ' -Jaj ".
"My scalp was covered with little pirn- ^ .
pies and I suffered tortures from the
ing. I was scratching all day and night,
and I could get no rest. I washed my v
head with hot water and Cuticura Soap j
and then applied the Cuticura Ointment a* ' t. '
a dressing. One box of the ointment
one cake of Cuticura Soap cured me. Now
my head is entirely clear and my hair if. '.}'?jK?.
growing splendidly. I have used CaticaM'^&gS
Soap ever since and shall never be without ; kAVii
it. (Signed) Ada C. Smith, 309 Grand St., :
Jersey City, X. J."
Paris will soon have a Mohammedan
His High Miaaion.
"Ladies and gentlemen," said the {
lecturer at the dime museum, "I call _ M
your particular attention to'the cadayerous
specimen of the httman family
now on the platform before you^ This,. .'J*
ladies and gentlemen, is no ordhiai^ggg /j
living skele'on. He is not a Ireik in 1 .j
any sense cf the term. He is a vie*
tim, if I may use the te-m, to a bt8&V^S?|
and noble purpose. Animated bv a
sincere desire to benefit his fellcw , C ; ^
beings, this manvwhose name is Ira
Grettus Tate is undertaking to
for forty days, and is now in #tha
thirty-second day of his self-imposed * - . ^ H
task. He is not doing this to
onstrate that it can be done. It j;
has been -done before. Neither is r,
he doing it for roto-Iety or paltry - *
gain. It was with extreme reluctance
that he consented to place himself ch ^ |
exhibition. He is underfoing this ; J
voluntary fast, ladies and gen'lemen, . f
solely for the purpose of doing ah
that one man can do to break up the ^
infamous combinations, from the beef ?
trust down to the breakfast food trust, J
that are enriching 'hrmselves at the . J
expense of the people. Pausing a mo*
ment in order that those Who wish to
purchase his portrait for the purpose
of helping along a good cause may
have an opportunity of doing
. . . We will pass on to the next platform
which is occupied by Mme.
Addle Peaux, the fattest woman
earth."?Chicago Tribune.
PASSING OF PORRtDCc. :
Make* Way Kor ?h? FooU of* j
* Bettor Day* . . j
"Porridge is no longer used for ' ' (.
breakfast in my home." writes a loyal ' -b-g
Brilon from Huntsville. Ont. Tliis was
an admission of no small sigrnlflcirnce ' /i^
to one "brought up" on the t!me-hou--:^'.|^^
ored*stand-by.
"Orie month ago." she continues. "I Vm
bought a package of Grape-Nuts food / v |l
for my husband, who had been an invalid
for over a year. He had passed
through a severe attack of pneumonia ;
and la grippe combined, and was-left
in a very had condition0 v^hen they
passed away. "I
tried everything for hts benefit0 iStll
but nothing seemed to do hto any. --0
good. Month followed month ,-aiyl "be
still remained as weak as ever., J irai dknflnrapert
alinnt him y X4
got the Grape-Nuts. J)nt the result h?8
compensated me for my anxiety. ' 'M
"In the one month that lie lias eaten
Grnpe-Xufci he has gained 10 pounds , ?
In weight, his strength is rapidlyr re- ' ?
turning to him. and he feels like a new ,
man. ' Now we all eat Grape-Nuts food $
and are the better for it. Gor little 5y
ear-old boy, who used to suffer from
pains in the stomach after eatiug the \ v
old-fashioned porridge, has no more ; ^
trouble since he began to use Grape- ^
Nuts, and I bare no more doctor's bills : - .1
to pay for him.
"We use Grape-Nuts with only sweet
cream, and find it the most tasty dish v
tn our bill of fare. ]
"Last Monday I ate 4 ten spoonfuls of
Grape-Nuts and cream for breakfast,
nothing Hse. then set to work andjgot ^
mv nmvnlnn's u*nrk (lone 1)V 9 o'clock. " m
and felt less tired, much stronger, than
if I had made my breakfast on meat
potatoes, etc.. as I used to. I wouldn't kjfe
be without Grape-Xuts in the bouse
for any money." Xnme given by Posturn
Co.. Battle Creekv Mich. There's >jMga
reason.
Bead the little book "The Road to
Wellville" in pkgs. j