Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 228, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 September 1913 — THE DOCTOR’S GIFT Food Worth Its Weight In Gold. [ARTICLE]
THE DOCTOR’S GIFT Food Worth Its Weight In Gold.
We usually expect the doctor to put as on some kind of penance and give us bitter medicines. A Penn, doctor brought a patient something entirely different and the results are truly interesting. “Two years ago,” writes this parent, “I was a frequent victim of acute indigestion and biliousness, being allowed to eat very few things. One day our family doctor brought ma a small package, saying Ae had found something for me to eat. “He said it was a food called GrapeNuts and even as its golden color might suggest it was worth its weight in gold. 1 was sick and tired, trying one thing after another to no avail, but consented to try this new food. “Well! It surpassed my doctor’s fondest anticipation and every day since then I have blessed the gbed doctor and th© inventor of GrapeNuts "I noticed improvement at once and In a month’s time my former spellsof indigestion had disappeared. In two months 1 felt like a new man. My mind was much clearer and keener, my body took on the vitality of youth, and this condition has continued.” "There’s a Reason.” Name given by Poatum Co., Rattle Creek, Mich. Read •‘The Road tq Wellville,” in pkgs Ever read the above Irlterf A/nevt one npprnre from <lme to time. 'They are aenulae,. true, end fall of burnaa talereet.
