Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 101, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 April 1910 — MISCHIEF MAKER. [ARTICLE]
MISCHIEF MAKER.
A Surprise in Brooklyn. An adult’s food that can savo a baby proves itself to be nourishing and easily digested and good for big and little folks. A Brooklyn man says: “When baby was about eleven months old he began to grow thin and pale. This was, at first, attributed to the heat and the fact that his teeth were coming, but, in reality, the poor little thing was starving, his mother’s milk not being sufficient nourishment. “One day after he had cried bitterly for an hour, I suggested that my wife try him on Grape-Nuts. She soaked two teaspoonfuls in a saucer with a little sugar and warm milk. This baby ate so ravenously that she fixed a second which he likewise finished. "It was not many days before he forgot all about being nursed, aud has since lived almost exclusively on Grape-Nuts. To-day the boy is strong and robust, and as cute a mischiefmaker as a thirteen months old baby is expected to be. ‘We have put before him other foods, but he will have none of them, evidently preferring to stick to that which did him so much good—his old friend, Grape-Nuts. “Use this letter any way you wish, for my wife and I can never praise Grape-Nuts enough after the brightness It has brought to our household." Grape-Nuts is hot, made for a baby food, but experience with thousands of babies shows it to be among the best, if not entirely the best in use. Being a scientific preparation of Nature’s Crains, it is equally effective as a body and bralh builder for grown-ups., v Read the little book, “The Road to 'Wellville” in pkgß. “There’s a Reason" Ever read the above letter? A *»e appear* from time to time. They are genuine, true, amd fall of human iatcrest. <
