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i > ; CLIMAXTO SCANDAL Steel Magnate Corey Weds "Butterfly" Actress. A PUBLIC MORALS SHOCKED Faithful Wife of His Youth,' Who neipea mm in nis ruse to rur* tur.e, Was Discarded Through Handy Divorce Court. A New York special says: In order to escape the unlucky thirteenth of the month, William Eliis Corey, president of the United States Steel j Corporation, and Mabelle Gilman, the former actress, were not married until after midnight Tuesday morning. j The ceremony took place in the royal , suite at the Hotel Gotham, Fifth are- j nue and Fifty-5fth street, in the pres- ! ence cf a small party of friends of the contracting couple. j There was 110 music during the even- j ing, and there were 110 bridesmaids, Miss Gilman being attended only by Miss Frances Erskine Shaw of London. Mr. Corey was unattended. ~ j After the nuptials the pair took an automobile and were whirled away to Hobojien, where they boarded the steamer Kaiser Wilhelm II, which sailed at 7:30 o'clock Tuesday morning. i Mr. and Mrs. Corey will proceed to Paris and will then go to the Chateau Genis, 25 miles from Paris,where the honeymoon wiil be passed. They expect to remain there until they reiuitn to America, about the middle of J 91 y. j The wedding of W. E. Corey and Mabelle Gilman is the culmination of a scandal <hat has filled the newspapers for many months. In order to prepare to marry the actress Corey deserted his wife and forced her to get divorce from him. . 1 Corey married his first wife when he was a struggling day laborer in the steel mills at Pittsburg. She bore him children and they^ iived happily ! . rfnrins Corey's rise to wealth and power until he saw Mabelle Oilman on the stage. | Then Corey discovered that the wife of his youth was not suited to him I and began that ardent pursuit of the shapely actress which resulted in the , \ divorce of his wife and his wedding / Miss Oilman. Corey's conduct was bitterly denounced by bis mother, father sisters and uncles. Two days ago the j uncle for whom Corey is named said j that the wedding of Corey and Ma- , belle Gilman would bring its own punishment. It is estimated that Corey has spent $4,000,000 in acquiring Mabelle Gilman. About $3,000,000 of this sum went to his wife an;! children. He has recently settled'a fine estate on I his aged parents in the hope that it would lessen their opposition to his i ; .'wedding the actress. Although Mabelle Gilman has de clared tnat u. n. unman, nviug m | San Francisco, is not her father, he : sent the following telegram to her: ! "Accept a father's blessing for hap- ' piness and a long married life. Live up to Christian Science." i The message was addressed to W. E. Corey and Mabelle Gilman, Hotel . Gotham, N#w York. :7 1 YOUNG GIRL IS DEAD . / > ? i ?x As Result of Assault by Negro Ed Johnson of Chattanooga. j Miss Xavada Taylor, the Chatta- i * nooga, girl who was criminally as- J saulted by Ed Johnson, a negro, on j January 28, 1906, and for which crime j the negro was lynched by a mob, died Sunday night at her childhood home in Find lay Ohio, of nervous trouble, superinduced by the awful crime. ' The case has become celebrated , since the supreme court of the Unit- j ed States now has Sheriff Shipp, s'ev- J x era! deputies and alleged members of the mob under the charge or contempt as a> result of the lynching. ? < | MIDDIES REBUKE OFFICER I ___ And Are, in Return for Insult, Vir- ' ! tually Made Prisoners. The whole membership of the First battalion cf the brigade of midship- ' men at Annapolis has been restricted j for an indefinite period to the con- \ fines of the institution, as a result j of its members having "given the ' silence" to Lieutenant Commander j McVay, Jr., one of the discipline offi- j cers. The members had taken excep- j lion to McVay's mode of investigating ; their actions and determined to ad- ! minister this form of rebuke to him. j FIRST COLONISTS HONORED. j Virginians Celebrate 300th Anniver- . sary of Landing at Jamestown, I The celebration Monday on James- j town island, forty miles up the river, j of the three hundredth anniversary of j the landing there of the first perma- j nent English settlers under Sir ChrisI topher Newport, John Smith and oth- ! ers, were held under fair skies and 1 condition in every way auspicious. } . V f V;* ', ' ' '' ' * GEORGIA WINS VICTORY. Big Copper Plants at Ducktown, Tenn., I j Ceclared to Be Nuisances in De- j cision by U. S. Supreme Court. i j Georgia has won iis case against ; the Tennessee Copper company and j i j the Ducktown Sulphur, Copper and j j Iron company in the Tnited States j supreme court. I Dispatches from Washington :\Icnj day morning announced a decision in i the famous litigation, which lias been ! rliti rmirts sineir 1902. J The opinion was handed down by J Justice Beckham, who declared thai it Georgia pressed the case against I , the copper manutacturers an injunei tion would be issued against the dej fendant. For over three years Attorney General John C. Mart, assisted by Attorney Ligon Johnson, who has i been associated with him in all the Intricate litigation, has rought the case for the state of Georgia, i The big copper roasting plants are j at Isabella and Ducktown, Tenn.Just across the line front Georgia. They began smelting in 1901 and by 1902 local evidences of destruction to vegetation from the sulphur fumes appeared. In 1903 the area of damage had ; spread across the Tennessee line and had appeared in the upper tier oi Georgia counties. Complaints began coming to the stale authorities, and the legislature of that year was pe titioned to afford relief. ) A legislative committee was ap- j pointed to investigate, and if dam- I ages were found as sot forth tne gov- j ernor was authorized to institute pro- j ceedings to abate a nuisance. The re- ! port of the committee more than sustained the allegations in the petition, and an appeal was made to the Ten- j ncssee governor to estop the nuisance. On refusal, legal proceedings were instituted. At that-time the ore was roasted in the open and on the promise to abandan this method, legai action was dismissed. The abatement of the trouble was not permanent, however, and further complaints came from a wider area of destruction. Since then the case has been fought in the courts until now Georgia wins finally, being given power to completely suppress the nuisance. s * ' Nearly 100 miles of northern Georgia has been almost completely denuded of vegetation, and many farmers have had to practically abandon farming. This decision is expected to have far-reaching effect as a precedent, as other cases have awaited the j outcome of the Georgia litigation. Coniiug to the proof in the case, Justice Holmes said: "Without any attempt to go into details, immaterial to the suit, it is proper to add that we are satisfied by a preponderance of evidence that the sulphurous fumes caused and threatened * damage on so considerable a scale, to the forest and vegetable life, if not to humau health. . within the plaintiff's state as to make a case within the requirement of the case of Missouri vs. Illinois. If the state adheres to its determination, there is no alternative to issuing an injunction after allowing a reasonable time to the defendant to complete the structures that they are now building, and the efforts that they are making to stop the fumes. The plaintiff may submit a form of decree on the convening of this court in October, next." v ~ PAT CALHOUN RADICAL. i President of Frisco Trolley Roads Draws Line at Union Labor. One hundred cars, manned and guarded by \ 350 non-union strikebreakers, were operated in San Francisco Monday. President Calhoun of the United Railways made the following statement: "I ska,ll .not take back any striking motorman or conductor, unless he firs: surrenders his union card, and sign> a contract to remain a non-union man so long as he remains in the com pany's employment. If any non-union men are attacked and police nvot"c ' tion is not aforded, I shall exercise a constitutional right and arm rhI shall not stand by and see my crews beaten up." UNION PACIFIC "WATER" TAKTN. i Full Amount of Bond Issue of $75,000,- , 000 is Subscribed. It was announced by Kuhn. Loeb & Co. at Now York Monday that the full amount of the issue of $75,000,- , 000 of bonds proposed to be made by , the Union Pacific railway company has been subscribed by the members of a syndicate formed for the purpose of underwriting the issue. The syndicate will receive such portion J as is not taken by the stockholders. BODY THROWN TO HOGS. Gruesome Double Murder Perpetrated * Near Rosealie, Neb. Walter F. Copple and his wife were I murdered Sunday night near Rosealie. ' , Neb. The body of Mrs. Copple was j thrown in a hog pen after the murder. r where her head was devoured by the | j animals. Copple was a well-to-do far- ( mer. Bert Phillips, who has been in ( Copple's employ, is missing. Copple ?. is said to have had $1,000 in the house. V * LOVE WRONG SIDED Startling Development in Bush Case at Atlanta. I BOMB SENDER IS JAILED Instead of Being Jilted Lover, Bush 1?' I I \ t / \ 1 / I \AI vt c;s ucdi'JUb ui vvurricifi rvnu vros Engaged to Marry His Business Partner. Charged with sending a bomb to .Miss McCarthy, at 447 East Georgia avenue, to murder the young lady, hecause she was about to wed Charlie Dolittle, with whom he was infatuated, the bomb nearly hilling the girl's mother, Fred Bush was arraigned in the recorder's court at Atlanta Friday afternoon, and held in a $10,000 bond for assault with intent to murder. Chariie Doolittle was also arraigned, but the case against him was dismissed. % The,case was one of the most sensationai that has ever been heard in any court in the city. The man who was held under such a heavy bond stood charged with attempting to annihilate a whole family and especially a young woman, because a young man visited the house for ? * * 1 7 J ~ wnoni ne naa ior many years ueiu a deep, and what was believed to be an unnatural affection. It was brought out at the trial that act of Bush was that of a jilteu lover, but. the evidence in the case, which was investigated by the recorder brought out the fact that Fred Bush was so deeply attached to Charlie Doolittie that he tried to wreck a home and murder a household, rather''than become separated from a youth, who was his partner in business and for whom his affection was almost a mania. In one part of the investigation the city attorney asked Doolittie if' Bush ever hugged and kissed him, and Doolittie laughed slightly and replied that he did several years ago. Charlie Doolittie stood near Bush during the trial, and it was noted by more than one in the court room that Bush never took his eyes from the pale-faced youth by his side. Doolittie told nothing criminating against his business partner and warm l'riend. As the recorder remarked, he did all he could to shield Bush from the arm of the law. Itw as brought out at the trial that Doolittie is now, or was when the murder was attempted, Miss McCarthy's sweetheart. They were engaged to be married. Mrs. Julia McCarthy, the mother of the girl for whom*the infernal machine was indeed intended, and who was seriousjv injured, was not-' able to appear in court. The negro messenger boy, the only person who saw the man who^Sent idle box to*the McCarthy home, pointed Bush 'out in court as the man whom he had met on the night of the explosion. Miss McCarthy was on the stand and told about her love affairs with Doolittle and about how queerly he acted at times. Bush made a statement. His manner was cool, collected and suave. His reasons for everything was "business." It was business that made him object to Charlie Doolittle visiting young ladies; it was business that made him bring Charlie back to Atlanta from Florida; it was business that made him go to see Mrs. McCarthy; it was business that made him take such a deep interest in Charlie's affairs and act as his guardian and master. STRIKERS ADD TO DEMANDS. They Also Want the Abolition of the Fine System.1 A special from Oriziba, Mexico, says that the 12,000 textile operatives \ylio are out on strike have added to their demands for the abolition of the fine system. Suffering and destitution are becoming evident among the strikers, but they are defiant and obi stinate. RiOER MEETS HIS MATCH. Assaulted Hot Springs Doctor and Ts Fatally Stabbed. Dr. Thomas B. Rider, who has gained notoriety by suing former Secretary of the Interior Hitchcock for 5100,00u in connection with a prolonged fight against the ethical doc tors of Hot Springs, whom he claims were in a conspiracy to ruin him. was probably fatally stabbed late Friday afternoon by Dr. A. U. Williams, ane of the, wealthiest and most' promi-j uent physicians of Hot Springs. The j stabbing followed an assault on Wii- i Liams by Rider. DEATH ENDED THE RACE. Two Women in Automobile Attempt to Beat Out a Fast Train. While racing with a Jersey Central ailro'ad train between Point Pleasant md Asburv Park, N. J., Wednesday, in automobile in which Mrs. George 3. Boyce and Miss A. Wilda Mass, if Point Pleasant, were riding, was ivorturned and Miss Mass was initantly killed. / ' vtv"'; . x . HAYWOOD ON TRIAL 1 First of Trio of Alleged Murderers of j Governor Steunenberg Arraigned in Court at Boise, Ida. i i i | William D. Haywood, first of tha i alleged narticinants in the conspira- i cv by which it is averred the assas- j sination of Frank Steunenberg was ! plotted and executed, was placed upon i trial for his life at Boise, Idaho, j Thursday morning. Counsel for the state and the pris- j oner entered at once in a business- ; like way upon the examination of j prospective jurors and kept steadily at the task for five hours. Xo juror ; was finally accepted, but substantial j progress was made. The opening of ! the trial went through to its conclu- j sion in quiet harmony unmarked by j unusual incidents. Its striking fea- j ture was the entire absence of crowds ! or demonstration in any form. At no time, morning or afternoon, was the court room more than half filled, ! and the streets forming the court [ house square contained not a single J .loiterer. The case was halted shortly be- j lore 5 o'clock by the exhaustion of ' ' * 1 tt'OO I tQO JUry pautJl Iiuu aujuuiumcm, hum | taken until Monday. The eleven men j under examination, but not finally ac- j cepted or rejected, were locked up j and and will be closely guarded. Haywood was brought to the court ! room at 10 in the morning. He found j his invalid wife and liis two daugii- j ters in a line of chairs to the right of his seat, and in l'ront were all of his ! counsel. He took practically no part j in the selection of jurors and seems content to leave the matter entirely in the hands of his lawyers. Haywood gave no sign of any feeling or emotion, but sat quietly throughout tKe day. Mrs. Haywood and the older daughter stood the or- \ deal apparently well, but the younger child cried after the examination or | talesmen began. Mrs. Haywood and \ her childreii did not attend the afternoon session. The questioning of the defense i took a much wider range than that j of the state and its most striking fea- [ ture - dealt with the possible effect i upon the minds and attitudes of jur- i ors by the letter of President Roose- j velt in calling Haywood and his as- j sociates "undesirable citizens, tue j speeches in Idaho of Secretary Taft,! the message or uovernor uooumg iu the legislature ' of Idaho, the speech iu l^isc of Senator Heyburn and the action of the Idaho legislature in pass-> ing a resolution appropriating money \ for -the prosecution of the three J prisoners. Attorney Richardson, who conducted the examination of the talesmen, ! was also particular to ascertain their j attitude toward socialists and mem- j bers of labor organizations and whether they could give them a fair trial. He was also anxious to know if they had professional, personal, fraternal, religious or political affiliations, with any of the counsel for the state, any connection with detective agencies, and experience in the pursuit or prosecution of criminals, or were mem- i bers of the Mine Owners' Association. Richardson also asked if they had contributed to any fund for.the prosecution of the prisoners, if they were ; members of the citizens' alliance, if they remembered the old labor troubles in Idaho and if they had taken sides in the labor troubles at any time. A remarkable feature of this exam ination was that all of the talesmen questioned by the defense swore that they had not been influenced by the letter of President Roosevelt, the speeches of other officials of the national or state governments, and a majority said they were Republicans. The chief concern of the counsel for the state in the examination of talesmen as indicated by their questions was their attitude toward circumstantial evidence. WATER SCARES INVESTORS. I Harriman to Increase Capital Stock of Union and Southern Pacific Roads. { New capital issues aggregating $13 0,000,000, which were announced in New York Thursday by the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific Company , created something of a sensation in financial circles and resulted in a sharp decline in prices on the stock exchange. When the announce ruent was made that the directors of the two companies will ask their stockholders to authorize such issues quotations of Union Pacific on the exchange dropped a total of $S.25 pel share from the previous high figure ; of the day. HIS VOTE SAVED JOHNSON. Edmund Rcss, Who Turned Tide in Impeachment Case, Passes Away. A special from lopeka, Kans., says: Edmund C. Ross, formerly United States senator, from Kansas, whose vote saved President Andrew Johnson from impeachment, died at Albuquerque, New Mexico, Wednesday. After his retirement from the senate he was governor of New Mexico. GEORGIA MASONS Lay the Cornerstone of Their New Temple in Atlanta. I I MAGNIFICENT STRUCTURE ! i i I Imposing Ceremonies Were Witnessed by Thousands?Exercises Were I Conducted by Grand Mas ter Max Meyerhardt. i With all the impressive ritual of the j Masonic ceremonies, the cornerstone J oi' the handsome $20o,ouu ' Masonic J temple, which is being built at the corner of Peachtree and Cain streets, Atlanta, was laid Wednesday" afternoon at 4 o'clock, attended by hun- i dreds of Blue Lodge Masons and Knights Templar from all over Georgia and the south. Notwithstanding the threatening aspect of the hovering clouds several thousand men and women gathered upon and about the raised platform to witness the dedicatory exercises. The scene was an impressive and inspiring one. Grand Master Max Meyerhardt, of the grand lodge of Georgia, assisted Jay several other prominent members of the order in the state, conducted the dedication exercises, the regular Masonic ritual for such occasions being employed. The stone was tested with the compass and the square, and piaster with the names of the officers of the several local lodges engraved, were nlnr>c>rl irt tho rprpnftjpIp nf fhp along with a copy of The Masonic ! Herald, The Fraternal News, the Atlanta Constitution, The Atlanta Journal and The Atlanta Georgian, and the journal of the minutes of the Atlanta lodge at its recent semi-centennial anniversary. Atlanta's new Masonic temple will . have, two cornerstones, a distinction j enjoyed by very few such edifices throughout the world. The cornerstone of the first temple begun in Atlanta fifty years ago was laid side by side with the new, unopened, and Past Grand Master Norris, of Iowa, alluded very feelingly to the zeal that animated this pioneer Masonic body in the Gate City of the south a half century ago. The Iowa past grand master also j spoke impressively of the fact that j Georgia, the Empire State of the : south, from its infancy as a colony, j had been greatly imbued with# the j Masonic spirit, as the first Masonic charter- granted the young j colony in 1763 bore the signature of j the grand master of England, who was a high dignitary under the^ British j crown in that period of England's his- j torj*. From this small band, the order had j flourished in the state both in char- ; ?r.?. -> n zl until n nri' if mi tv?J i Cl 11U ilUUIUCIO LA LI L A A AiUH It UU1U" : bers nearly 3j),00Q members. The j prosperity, too. cf which Georgia is j now but enjoying the springtide, in j the great output or its factories, ! mines and marts, is shared alike, too, ' by the Masons, he said, as exempli- i fied in the magnificent structure here i to be erected. These features of the Icwa past grand master's address were received with a' great degree of pleasure and j int.rest by the vast throng of Masons ! and their friends present on this aus- j picious occasion. The exercises proper, preceding the j principal address, were under the immediate direction of Grand Master Max Meyerhardt, of Rome. CROOKED DEAL IN COAL \ Charged Against Member of Atlanta i Board'of Water Commissioners. Because of certain reports connect- : ing the name of Commissioner Thorn- | as F. Stocks, who is also a coal i dealer, with being interested in a pe- j cuniary way with the purchase of ! coal by the city, the Atlanta water ! board, it is said, has started an investigation and has notified the com- j missioner, so he may be reatfy^witli j any defense he may wish to make. It is said that Stocks wHl be charg- j ed with having been pecuniarily inter- j ested with the Ragland Coal Com- j pany, of Ragland, Ala., from which I the water works department purchas- ! ed its supply of coal. / It is said that the water board has I received information to the effect that the persident of the Ragland Coal Company, W. P. Brown, had charged that Commissioner Stocks received payments from the company on the coal purchased by the department. It is understood that the board will invite President Brown to appear in ! Atlanta and make good his charges, if j he has made such statements as have been credited to him. MADE BOAST AND FELL DEAD. Witness Declared He Was Good For 85 Years and Then Expired. "I am Go, but sound as a dollar and good for at least S5," but the sound of his voice still lingering on his lips, James Hadiield, a pioneer of Polk county, III., testifying as a witness In a civil action at Des Moines, gave a sudden gasp, slipped forward on the chair and dropped to the floor, dead. ^ He Knew. Jgj The pretty teacher was trying to explain the difference between good conduct and bad. "Good actions." she r. explained, "are th? lovely flowers. . r-< Bad ones are the weeds. Now, can any little boy or girl tell me the differ- 4 ence (between flowers and weeds? What are flowers? What are weeds?" M "Weeds,'' said Walter, who had been struggling with the sorrel in his mother's garden, "are the plants that want ^ to grow, and flowers are the ones ^ that don't."?Youth's Companion. If You Read This It will be to learn that the leading medlcal writers and teachers of all the several schools of practice recommend, in the strongest terms possible, each and every ' '?]? ingredient entering into the composition ; J| of Dr# Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery for the cure of weak stomach, dyspepsia, ? v. ctnmo^'Vi "liver cnmnlain't " Ud on I I II \jl JIVUU?VU, *? ? . -,-torpid liver, or biliousness, chronic bowel affections, and all catarrhal diseases of ' whatever region, name or nature. It is als? specific remedy for all such chronic <aa| or long standing cases of catarrhal affec- -,?Sj tions and their resultants, as bronchia!, r&m throat and lung disease (except consumption) accompanied with severe coughs. It _ is not so good for acute colds and coughs, but for lingering, or chronic cases it is especially efficacious in producing per- .;*S| feet cures. It contains Black Cherrybark, Golden Seal root, Bloodroot; Stone, rook \"-%a Mandrake root and Queen's root?all or . JS| which are highly praised as remedies for 'iJH all the above mentioned affections by such eminent medical writers and teacners as Prof. Bartholow, of 7Jefferson Med. Colt lege; Prof. Harden the Univ. of Pa.; jg| Prof. Finley-^Hfngwood, M. D., of Bennett Med. Ijpllege, Chicago; Prof. John King, M. IQ of Cincinnati; Prof. John , J3 M. Scuddei?M. D., of Cincinnati; Prof. Edwin hlJRate. M. D.t of Hahnemann ' Med. Cpflegd, Chicago, and scores of , -33 othera/eotfally eminent in their several schtt^a-'of practice. v.gS .The "Golden Medical Discovery "is the /taM on V nvniicn.y nnf. imTor sale through W drbggists for like dp r pop. thaTias any M sucn nrmcmsvmai epdorspmpjiir-wortft more than anv numberlnf ordinary testiroo'nifl.'Is. Open publicity of its formula ' is the best possible guaranty of its merits. - *|H A glance at this published formula will -qSHB show that "Golden Medical Discovery?v contains no poisonous, harmful or habit- "jgW forming drugs and no alcohol?chemically pure, triple-refined glycerine oemg usea ,y instead. Glycerine is entirely unobjee- 'faH tionableand besides is a most useful agent 3! in the cure of all stomach as well as bron- . chial, throat and lung affections. Them v3 is the highest medical authority for its *&Jj use in all such eases. The "Discovery VhH a concentrated^lyceric extract of native, y-'Sjf medicinal roots and is safe and reliable. 3JH A booklet of extracts from eminent, medical authorities, endorsing its ingredients mailed free on request. Address-" Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. . :t? BOY GOT NO SYMPATHY. f ?? / v . a -. V Posed as Victim of a Bold Highway:*M ' ^ Robbery. ;[i A little, grimy urchin with a soli- ,.3| tary newspaper under Ills arm walked along Riverside Drive* asserting loudly that he had all the latest tions of the afternoon newspapers. That lie was a tyro at hawking wan ijffl -| evident from his garbling of the of the papers. Nevertheless he at- -3 tracted the attention of a yirang riufcffM J tronwho -was sitting on a bench try- :M || ing -to figure out where the fresh air'.Cjj began and the soft coal smoke of the starch factories of Weehawken left off. She beckoned to the boy^ who 'Ju/m darted across the path and held out | his lone paper, all wrinkled and badly ^ ~,J folded, and evidently the product of "yjjaj a forage along the drive. ' . gj| "Is that the only paper you have?" asked the young matron. s "Yessum.' "You must be lucky to have sold vgM out so early,", opening, as she spoke,' a purse which was well filled, with change. The boy's eyes glistened and his face underwent a transformation. From somewhere abdut his anatomy, he produced a half-choked sob. / "No, mum, I wasn't lucky," he said 'jaB whimperingly. "Jus' as I wuz sellin* me paper a big bt>y came along an* -/:|W took 'em from me?an'?an'?he toolr V|M all me money, too. I had fifteen cents < M in me pocket," making a rapid mental calculation as he surveyed the nest J| of dimes and nickels which the young matron was turning over, looking for , a penny. "That's too bad," said the young * matron. "Yessum. An'x he said he'd kill me .'-^B if I didn't give 'em all up. He?he?" "Why didn't you punch him?" asked , the young woman, her eyes twickllng . ;J1 at the apparent prevarication. "If I were you I would have knocked hi? -aB head off. You're not half a boy." And she handed the youngster a penny, to. his evident disgust.?New York Press ; Js Everything in the way of trouble comes to those who mate. CHANGE IN FOOD ' J Works Wonders in Health. It is worth knowing that a change in food can cure dyspepsia. "I deem .J8 it my duty to let you know how Grape-Nuts food has cured me of in- -*a| digestion. - . "I had been troubled with it for years, until last year my doctor rec ommended Grape-Nuts food to be used every morning. I followed in- | structions and now I am entirely welL :!|S "The whole family like GrapeNuts, we use four packages a week. |3 orfl n'olrnmp tn use thi8 test!- yfl JLVSU aiV/ n VAW^V - - monial as you see fit." The reason this lady was helped by the use of Grape-Nuts food, is that it is predigested by natural processes iVv3 and therefore does not tax the stomach as the food she had been using; it also contains tflie elements required > Ja for building up the nervous system. If that part of the human body is in perfect working order, there can be /-$ no dyspepsia, for nervous energy rep- '-js resents the steam that drives the engine. When the nervous*system is run down, the machinery of the body y. works badly. Grape-Nuts food can ;3j be used by small children as well as adults. It is perfectly cooked and ;; ready for instant use. Read, "The Road to Wellville," in pkfis. ? There's a Reason."