The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, April 25, 1907, Image 6
- .
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She Evolution of
I. Household Remedies.
[
The modern pateut medicine busimess
is the natural outgrowth of the
old-time household remedies.
? v In the early history of this country,
M BVERY FAMILY HAD ITS HOME||*|
MADE MEDICINES. Herb teas, bitters,
laxatives and tonics, were to be
^ found in almost every house, com*
pounded by the housewife, sometimes
tassisted by the apothecary or the fainay
doctor. Such remedies as piera,
\ which was aloes and quassia, dis
ootveu in appie oranay. sometimes a
bop tonic, made of whiskey, hops and
bitter barks. A score or more of pop^
Clar, home-made remedies were thus
V compounded, the formulae for which
were passed along from house to
boose, sometimes written, sometimes
verbally communicated,
v The patent medicine business is a |
J" natural outgrowth from this wholejfjr
some, old-time custom. In the begin- i
ning some enterprising doctor, im- |
*$$ pressed by the usefulness of one of i
these home - made remedies, would j
ggptake it up, improve it in many ways, !
manufacture it on a large scale, ad- j
E&* vertise it mainly through almanacs
for the home, and thus it would be- 1
if*"-* come osed over a large area. LATWBRLY
THE HOUSEHOLD REMEDY j
BUSINESS TOOK A MORE EXACT !
SCIENTIFIC FORM.
Peruna was originally one of these i
eld-time remedies. It was used by i
^;the Mennonites, of Pennsylvania, be- j
p - fore it was offered to the public for
jp>-tBde. Dr. Hartman, THE ORIGINAL j
^COMPOUNDER OF PERUNA, is of !
Mennonite origin. First, he pre^
jimhpd if. fnr hi? npitrhhors and his !
^ jpatients. The sale of it increased,
at last he established a manufac- ;
tory and furnished it to the general
l|fe, Peruna is useful in a great many
jdimatic ailments, such as coughs, j
colds, sore throat, bronchitis and catarrhal
diseases generally. THOU- j
SANDS OP FAMILIES HAVE
USARXED THE USE OF PERUNA
Its value in the treatment of these
WBilments. They have learned to trust j
?iV?nd believe in Dr. Hartmau's judgand
to rely on his remedy, Pe- j
|Mica Axle Grease, i
jfi ft lengthens the life of the /?/
b A "wagon?saves horse- m
jsT power, time and tea- ftjgl j
per. Best lubricant in ftjij
world?contains ffljj1
||iR hard coating on axle, end ftjl //^|
v reduces friction. ftftf' j |
^ If yon want your outfit ft/(Iff J g
to to* and earn money [ftft / " |
while it lasts?greaSe KIjj E
^ yPtte axles with Mica \{SI E
vt JP Axle Grease. Wj I
Ijfr UMBARB OH GOMPAHT I
W Protective Paint
Pure White Lead Paint protects
?l property against repairs, replacement
^ . and deterioration. It makes buildings
??-. : look better, wear better?and sell betPv'
ter. Use only Pure Linseed Oil and <
Pore White Lead made by the
Old Dutch Process, which is sold in
I? kegs with this Dutch Boy trade mark
Sjfe on the side.
i This trade mark protects you
against fraudu1
l$at White Lead .< "-v.
adulterations and /\\ \
substitutes. / \^S)gL \
SEND FOR I j
?> (tree raluabie infor atton
on the paint
abject. Sent frea All lead packed in
Pk-Lm ../fab
B Q90A reqLutMt. > ???? *
national lead company .
RSV
fin "whichever of the foUov>~
ing cities is nearest you:
?, Hew York. Boston. Buffalo. Cleveland.
Cincinnati. Chicago. St. Louis. Philadelphia
[John T. Lewi* & Bros. Co.] Pittsburgh
J" (Katloaal Lead A Oil Co. J
?
- I Lemon Elixir. I ]
B Is a sure cure for all B J
B Liver Troubles B
B and a preventive of B
B and other fevers. B j
|p ^Grandparent 9j
B ;
JM Ask Your Neighbor ^
flj 50c. and $1.00 per bottle Ijfj
BULL KILLS A MATADOR.
First Death of the Kind in Mexico?
H'3 Unlucky Day.
Bui] fighting in Mexico has had its i
first death; that i3. the first death of
a human being. The superstitious will
nod sagelv when they learn that the
fatal fight occurred on the 13th of
January.
! According to Modern Mexico It was
j a great day. Antonio Montes, a favorite
matador, had had trouble get|
ting one bull, a native Mexican proI
duct, into a good position for the
j final thrust. When he did so. after
! much maneouvring. he himself was
I backed up against the wooden fence
j which surrounds the ring,
j He killed the bull "beautifully." but
in the animal's dying rage the bull I
i raito-ht and threw the matador three I
limes, inflicting the fatal injuries.
After preparing the body for shipment
back to Spain, where all good
' bull fighters come from and where
they are always buried, it was placed
in the chapel of the Spanish cemetery
in this city where, through the
carelessness o? the guard, the candle
was allowed to fall over and set fire
to the draperies, burning down the
chapel and cremating the body.
Aside from the natural interest in
such an event and the dramatic features
of the fight, death and qremation,
it was one of the most interesting
sights to see the crowd of Mexicans
of all classes, from the highest
to the lowest, which hung about the
house where the dying favorite lay.
This crowd was never less than
200 and often greater than 2,000, a
most interesting commentary on the
statement, often heard, that bull fighting
as a sport is on the wane in popularity
here. However, some little
agitation, backed by well known people,
ha3 been begun looking toward a
permanent closing of the bull rhigs.
What the result of this talk and the
petitions will be* cannot be forecast,
but the fact that this was tried once
before and was a signal failure, and
also that, a new steel ring has just
been built and will be ready for occupancy
next year, point to a probable
failure of the agitation.
YOUR GRANDMOTHER USED IT.
I
Bat Site Never Had Sulphur in Such
Couvenient Form as This.
Your grandmother used Sulphur as her
favorite household remedv, and so did her
v* ' e
grandmother. Sulphur has been curing skin
and blood diseases for a hundred years.
But in the old days they had to take
powdered sulphur. Now Hancock's Liquid
Sulphur gives it to you in the best possible
form and ydu get the full benefit. *
Hancock's Liquid Sulphur and Ointment
quickly cure Eczema, Tetter, Salt Rheum
and all Skin Diseases. It cured an ugly
ulcer for Mrs. Ann W. Willett, of Washington,
D. C., in three days.
Taken internally, it purifies the blood
and clears the complexion. Your druggist
sells it.
Sulphur Booklet free, if you write Hancock
Liquid Sulphur Company,. Baltimore.
A COINCIDENCE.
"My husband is very fond of cabbage."
?
"Yes, I know. My husband made
the same remark when he smoked one
of your husband's cigars."?Philadelphia
Press.
WHY HE KNEW IT.
"Do you deny that this is your wife a
signature on the back of this check?"
'Let me see it. No, that i?n't her
wilting, sne never wim^ uujrcuius
yet without adding a postscript."?'
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
??*.
" SKIN SOREJTJRJIGHT YEARS
Spent Woo on Doctors and Remedies
But Got No Belief?Cuticura ?
Cures in a Week.
"Upon the limbs and between the toes
my skin was rough and sore, and also sore
under the arms. I had to stay at home
several times because o&this affection. Up
to a week or so ago I had tried many other
remedies and several doctors, and spent
about three hundred dollars, without any
success, but this is to-da;- the seventh day
that I have been using the Cuticura
Remedies (costing a dollar and a half),
which have cured me completely, so that
I can again attend to my business. 1 went
to work again to-night. 1 had been suffering
for eight years and have now been cured
by the Cuticura Remedies within a week.
Fritz Hirschlaff, 24.Columbus Ave., New
York, X. Y., March 29 and April 6, 1906."
A BOON DESIRED.
Knicker?1 see the Chicago SubTreasury
has been robbed.
Bocker?Ah, if some one would only
come 'along and swipe the tablet off
ours.?New York Sun.
A MISSOURI WOMAN
Tells a Story of Awful Suffering and I
nr...^.pn| Unliuf
Iiuuurnui AW.UH.
Mrs. J. D. Johnson, of 603 West
Hickman St., Columbia, Mo., says:
"Following an operation two years
fago, dropsy set in,
' and my left side was
so swollen the doctor
said he would have to
tap out the water.
There was constant
pain and a gurgling
sensation around my
heart, and I could not
raise my arm above
my head. The kid
ney action was disordered
and passages of the secretions
too frequent. On the advice of my
husband I began using Doan's Kidney
Pills. Since using two boxes my
trouble has not reappeared. This is
wonderful, after suffering two years."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. k.
>f>X-W% ' ; V - r
. ' ;1 r- J ; -, NO
WONDER THEY ?
- .
?By '
MEAT AND DAIRY EXPORTS.
Total Value 5250,000,000 Last Year, a Growth of
Forty-five Per Cent, in Decade.
"Washington. D. C.?The total exportation'
of meats, dairy- products
and food animals from the United
States last year aggregated over
5230,000,000 in value, according to
a statement issued by the Bureau of
Statistics of the Department of Commerce
and Labor. This represents
an increase of $70,000,000, or fortyfive
per cent, during the decade 1S9G
to 190G. More than sictv per cent,
of last year's exports went to the
United Kingdom. Even this large
percentage. However, is jess man mat i
of a decade ago. when Great "Britain j
took over seventy per cent, of American
exports.
Of the $250,000,000 worth of
meats, dairy products and food animals
passing out of the United
Slates last year. $40,000,000 was in
live animals, $58,000,000 in lard,
$30,000,000 in bacon. $25,000,000 in !
fresh beef. $21,000,000 in hams, j
$18,000,000 in oleomargarine. 514,-1
000,000 in pork other than bacon and
hams, $4,500,000 in butter and $2,-;
500,900 in cheese.
The farmers of America are en- j
joying their full share of the general !
prosperity of the country. The report
of the Government recently made
public announces that the value of
farms increased thirty-three per cent,
in five years, from 1900 to 190C.
This increase extends to every Statein
the Union in greater or less degree.
Oklahoma shows the largest
increase, forty-three per cent, but
even Xew England, which does not
lay claim to much of a farming country.
shows a gain of eighteen per
cent.
This great increase in otfr farm
wealth is,'of course, due to the remarkable
advance in the value of
farm products, which is estimated to
be about forty per cent. Increased
earnings have come with better
knowledge of conditions and better
methods of farming, and as these
methods are constantly improving,
our continued prosperity seems as
J
syieu.
COST OF LIV.NG LESS.
Commodity Prices Fail, Partly Because the Hen
is Busy.
New York City. ? A decline of
nearly two per cent, in commodity
prices is attributed by Dun's Index
Number in large measure to tlie
spring activities of the American hen
and the consequent decline in the
price of eggs of ten and a half cents
a dozen, which resulted in a heavy
increase in the per capita consumption.
It is usual at this time of year for
the prices of dairy and garden products
to recede, but last month the
decline was exceptional. Commenting
on the causes of the decline, outside
of the influence of the break in
eggs, Dun's mentions the relief to
railway freight blockades, that made
it possible to move grain and many
other products more freely to market,
and the feeling of conservatism
in some industries, which restricted
purchases of raw materials.
A BILLION PAID FOR AUTOS.
>
French Statistician Says TSiat America Nov;'
Leads the World.
Washington, D. C.?M. Faroux, a
French statistician, according to a i
report received by the Bureau of .
Monnfontnroe that al)OUt I
Auauuiaccut ww,
550,000 motor cars have been manufactured
in the nine years since the
experiment of self-propelled road vehicles
first succeeded. These ma- I
chines sold for more than a bHlion J
dollars.
Until a year ago France, the pio- j
neer, led the world in the production J
of the motor vehicle. Now the United ;
Slates has taken the lead. According
to M. Faroux, the United States
built 60,000 automobiles in 190C,
France 55,000, England 2S,000, Germany
22,000, Italy 19,000 and Bel-j
gium 3 2.000. In 1901 the united j
States built only 21-1 cars, and that;
same year France built 22,711.
Resolution Indorses President.
Representative Hitchcock intro-!
duced a resolution in the Pennsylva-1
nia House, Harrisburg, indorsing the 1
stand which President Roosevelt has i
taken in regard to corporations and j
giving him a vote of confidence. It j
was unanimously adopted.
]>r. Ha ugh Respited.
Governor Harris has respited Dr. j
Oliver Haugli, who was to have been j
electrocuted at Columbus, Ohio, an |
insanity plea having been decided :
upon.
\v S j. -i* v' . , ? ? . -V ; . .
; Vv/:V--&&&<
:OME TO AMERICA!
"Scar," in the New York Globe. OUR
GROWING FOREIGN TRADE.
Incrsase of $223,629,301 Duing the Past
Eight Months.
Washington, D. C.?The foreign
trade of the United States increased
$223,629,301 during the eight
months ended February 28, notwithstanding
a falling off of $23.000,000
in the etports of foodstuffs.
The increase was made.up of $132,779,306
in the volume of imports
and $90.S4S,095 in the value of exports?the
most notable in any one
ciass being the exports of crude meterials
to be used in manufactures,
which reached a total of $447,073,527,
against $372,051,901 in the
same period of the previous year.
The imports of like materials also
showed a large increase?$44,821,164.
The totals for the several
classes and the comparative increases
are:
IMPORTS.
MQA. -v:l ff! *11 ftOOOft.".
j'ijuuai UAir. juv
( rude materials 307,397.965 Trie 44.W1.164
Partly manufactured. 179.222.<>6"? Inc .'SS.7fl9.670
Finished man'factures 2W.103.i48:; Inc 36.572,585
Miscellaneous 7.651,227 Inc 975.982
Totals $932,736,826 lac $132,779,306
EXPORTS.
Foodstuffs $443,486.50! Dec $23.254.125
Crude materials 447.073.527 In.; 73.0l8.6aK
Partly manufactured. 1(58.388.442 Inc 25.587.043
Finished man'factures :J99.978.3S4 Inc 14.HW.575
Miscellaneous 20.303.524 lno 896.876
Totals $1.298,2407176 Lie $90,848,995
In exports 1906 gave us compared
with 190") $21,000:000 more for less
cotton, $32,000,000 more for'wheat,
$9,000,000 more for wheat?flbur, $1,800,000
more for automobiles, $2,400,000
more for railroad cars, nearly
$2,000,000 more for chemicals,
54,000,000 more for copper. $2,600,000
more for hops,* $4,000,000 more
for scientific instruments and apparatus,
$1,200,000 more for
steel sheets, $1,700,000 more for
wire, $1,SOO,000 more for builders'
hardware, $2,300,000 more for metal
working machinery, $1,400,000 more
for sewing machines, $2,000,000
more for locomotives. $5,000,000
more for upper leathers, $1,000,000
more for boots and shoes, $1,900,000
more for tallow, $7,600,000 more for
bacon, $2,000,000 more for pork, $3,000,000
more for lard, $2,2 00,000 more
for oleo. $1,700,000 more for butter,
$1,700,000 more for cheese, $2,
100,000 more for naval stores, $2.600,000
more for oil cake and meal,
$1,700,000 more for crude oil, $4,500,000
more for refined oil, $1,600,000
more for paper and manufactures
thereof, $11,000,000 more for
seeds, $5,300,000 more for leaf tobacco,
$5,600,000 more for timber,
$9,000,000 more for lumber and planing
mill products, besides a hose of
minor increases, with very few decreases.
EXPORTS OF MANUFACTURES.
Exceed $700,900,009 a Year?Have Doubled
in Value in Ten Years.
Washington, D. C. ? The United
States now ranks third among the
world's exporters of manufactures,
according to a monograph on "'exports
of manufactures from the United
States and their distribution," issued
by the Bureau of Statistics of the Department
,of Commer and Labor.
It is shown that not only do the
exports of manufactures now exceed
$700,000,000 per annum, and have
doubled in value in a single decade,
but the share which products of the
factory form of the total exports is
steadily increasing. A comparison
shows that in 1880 manufactures
formed only fifteen per cent, of the
total exports of domestic products,
while in 1906 they formed forty per
cent.
In the decade ending with 1905
exports of manufactures increased
19S per cent., while those from Germany
increased seventy-five per
cent.; from the United Kingdom,
forty per cent., and from France,
iwontv-five ner cent.
~ .t- - "" I
Customs Raceipts Heavisr.
New York City.?Customs receipts
are running $70,605 a day
heavier than last year. So far
this fiscal year they have averaged
$749,579 a day. as against $678,973
during the fiscal year 1905-6. Treasury
officials predict the highest annual
record the country has ever
known on July 1.
Indorse Third Term.
The Minnesota House of Representatives
at St. Paul with a rising
vote which the Speaker announced
was '"nearly unanimous" passed concurrent
resolutions indorsing President
Roosevelt*for a third term.
Jap Embassy at Constantinople.
Advices .from London say that a
Japanese Embassy at Consrantiuople
is assured, and it is pointed out that
its establishment will put an end to
ideas of the partition of the Ottoman
Empire.
HUSBAND WAS TIED
I
While Wife and Daughter Were Assaulted
by Masked Men?Crimes
in Tennessee and Alabama.
At Kingsport, Tenn., in Hie presence
of her husband and 14-year-old
daughter, Mrs. Frank Belcher was
assaulted at an early hour Thursday
morning by two masked white men.
With drawn weapons the men entered
the Belcher home and compelled
Belcher to get out of bed and be
tied. One man then assaulted Mrs.
Belcher, while the other made an
attempt on the girl. The latter went
into convulsions from terror and was
abandoned by the assailant, who turn
ed his attention to the older woman,
just released by her first captor.
Belcher's 1'rantic eorts to get at
the men were stopped by a blow on
the head which renderd him unconscious,
and Mrs. Blcher was badly
beaten and choked. Her condition is
critical, that of th? girl being also
^serious. The men, after making
threats, left, and the crime was not
discovered until daylight. Citizens are
wildly excited over the outrage, and
there is open talk of lynching the
. guilty ones if they can be captured.
Mrs. Belcher says she could' identify
them. Posses are scouring the country,
and several suspects have been
taken into custody, but in each instance
have established their innocence.
Montgomery Cirl Assaulted. '
Miss Tura Ogletree, aged 19 years,
cashier at a moving picture show,
was knocked down and robbed of 55,
all the money she had, on a well
lighted street, within three blocks of
the old state capitol in Montgomery,
Ala., at 10 o'clock Thursday night,
and lay on th? ground for an hour
before recovering consciousness.
She was within 15 feet of her boarding
house door while in this state,
inside of which sat half a dozen persons,
knowing nothing of the crime
until the girl walked in so dazed by
the effect of chioroiorm wnicn naa
been administered that she stagered
to the floor and fell. She was also
criminally assaulted.
In addition to striking Miss Ogle-1
tree twice, the assailant chloroformed
her and left her for dead on tne j
ground.
In the struggle that ensued, the j
young woman made a valiant fight before
losing consciousness, her clothes
being almost torn from her body,
and she was seriously injured by the
rough handling she received. The
man who struck her was concealed in
a milk wagon, jumping out and following
her after she passed the vehicle
on her way to her residence.
BRONZE STATUE OF DAVIS
Hauled Through Richmond Streets by j
Three Thousand Children.
The bronze statue of Jefferson Davis
for the elaborate monument to Mr.
Davis to be unveiled in Richmond,
Va., June 3, was drawn through the
streets of the city to the monument
site Thursday by some twenty-five
hundred or three thousand children,
who did the hauling by means of a
double rope some two or three squares
long.
The children were led by L*? and
Picket camps of the Confederate Veterans,
and these in turn were headed >'
by a handsomely uniformed boy fife
and drum corps. Many of the girls
I among the children were dressed in
white, and a large proportion of the
youthful enthusiasts in the "lost
| cause" carried small confederate battle
flags, which they waved indus '
t-ha marrh
i triously inrouguwut tUV/ AMWThe
scene was especially inspiring, |
and was witnessed by thousands of
people. The rope used in hauling the
statue was, after the ceremony, cut
into many thousands of pieces for
souvenirs.
KILLED FOR NOT STRIKING.
Car Cleaner Assaulted and Murdered
in Chicago by Three Men.
Because he refused to go on strike
three weeks ago, Edward F. Fago,
a car cleaner, employed by the Chicago
and Northwestern railroad, was
hit on the head with a brick at Chicago
Wednesday night and then jumped
on and kicked by three men. He
'died later. *
_______________ i
SOLONS WAR ON CIGARETTES. i
f
Illinois House Passes Prohibitive Bill
Which Goes to the Senate.
The Illinois house of representatives
at Springfield, Thursday, passed
the Young anti-cigarette byi, making
it unlawful to sell cigarettes or
cigarette papers in Illinois. The
bill now goes to the senate.
MULTI-MURDERER G0E6 HENCE.
Notorious Dr. Haugh Electrocuted at |
Dayton, Ohio.
Dr. Oliver Crook Haugh, convicted
of the murder of his father, mother
and brother at Dayton, Ohio, on the
night of November 4, 1905, was electrocuted
in the annex at the OJio
penitentiary at Columbus a few minutes
after midnight Thursday night,
I RHEUMATISM I
X AND 4
| NEURALGIA f
I ST? i
JACOBS
1 OIL
z y * 2
The Proved Remedy $
X For Over 30 Years. X'
^ Price 2Sc and 50c < >
&' O
> O
I |WET WEATHERWORK
v Ai ;.-. WAUHrtlL
- JvhCyfr'S ' AND'
' WOT/ PLEASANT
/ / ] Mr? (i ir you weak ?
'Pi '/r Ir ^ta^-'
^W/(/ r p / &
-Mf t WATERPROOF
, ,/ 1 OILED CLOTHING
/I / .J* / IP Di-ACK OH YELLOW
J't i iK, Perfect Protection
/Ll L^h? Longest Service
Jr-4 6?x Low in Price
4^1 SjF^ Sold Everywhere
? , TOo-t* CO -Wt'O. u >?.
i?l HTOW ,
(HI CAPUDINE
X 7W 1 IKMR>lAm.T CVMI.,
^JH^^headaches *
Early-Rising Hotel Guests.
"Hotel guests, as a rule, are early
risers," said Bob Johnson, clerk at the
Griswold, the other evening, "and to
prove it I can show you the call sheet.
You will notice that there are more
7 and 7:30 calls than any other. .Be- 3
ginning at 4 o'clock, which is seldom ,
used, the call sheet is ruled down to
10. About 5:30 the sheet shows a ;
few room .numbers,'and from that
time until 7 o'clock the increase Is * \
rapid. After 7 the number decreases
until in the last column or two there ? '
is hardly even & mark. When a man
leaves a call for any hour later than J
9:30? we always send a pitcher of Ice
j water along as a matter of coarse, and
if the guest asks to be allowed to
sleep until 11, it is usually safe p>
have the boy take up a 'bracer' also."
?Detroit Free Press. i-i
. :v. V
Unpeeled Fowls. N
A Philadelphia settlement worker.
tells of xtwo fresh air fund children
who gazed in some wonder at a nam- '* >
her of live chickens running about the
place in the country to which the
youngsters were taken.
"Haven't you ever seen chickens
before?" asked the kind woman in
charge of the expedition.
"Oh, yes, mum," answered the eld- $gj
est child knowingly, "we seen lots
r\t 'om nnlr if wnc sifter thfiv was
peeled."?Harper's Weekly.'
"
, NIAGARA.
r
. . _ y
"
Where Niagara's foaming torrent '
Rushes down its rocky bed, '
There is power'enough to warrant '
Many factories, it is said.
When the stream to drip has dwind- ' *
led ' m
And the towering, walls are bare,
Enterprise by zeal enkindled.
Will paint pill and soap ads Were.
?Philadelphia Public Ledger.
' v- Vr
v APPENDICITIS 1
, 9 'j
Not at all Necessary to Operate in
Many Cases.
,
Automobiles and Appendicitis ecaro
some people before they are hit.
Appendicitis is often caused by too
much starch in the bowels. Starch
is hard to digest and clogs up the di- \ S
gestive machinery?also tends to
form cakes in the cecum. (That's the ^
blind pouch at entrance to the appendix
). , -. ?;
A N. H. girl had appendicitis, but ' f
lived on millc forawhile?then GrapeNuts
and got well without an opera?
tion.
LM- ' '
She says: "Jt-ive years ago wmw
at school, I suffered terrib^' with
constipation and indigestion." (Too
much starch, white bread, potatoes, '
etc., which she did not digest.)
"Soon after 1 left school I had an
attack of appendicitis and for thirteen
weeks lived on milk and water.
When I recovered enough to eat solid
food there was nothing that would
agree with me, until a friend recom- "v
mended Grape-Nuts.
"When I began to eat Grape-Nuts
I weighed 98 lbs., but I soon grew to
115 lbs. The distress after eating
left me entirely and now I am like a.
new person." ^ .LJ?
(A little Grape-Nuts dissolved in '
hot water or milk would have been
- - - - ?
much better for this case tnan miiK
alone, for tho starchy part ot the
wheat and barley is changed into a
form of digestible sugar in making* '
Grape-Nuts.) Name given by Postum
Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the
little book, "The Road to WeUvUle/'