Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 38, Number 83, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 July 1906 — Page 2
WEEKLY REPUBLICAN. OEO. E. MARSHALL, Publisher. RENSSELAER, / - INDIANA.
HEARST OUT OF RACE.
ANNOUNCES-HEt NOT A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE. ;- u-0,., - . . - ———— Pnhllaher in Interview Sny* He Will Not Seel. Dwinocrnllc Xominntlon And .Praise* Bryan and Folk— JaTrTEreaTenV-KawwaT-Mw^TTt-^ — T William R. Hearst, b> not a oand+tDr*’■ Tor the lk>mocr;ilic notnlmilibn of the prosidetrvy in I'.'us. Bwwdiwg :<> hi- <>\> 11 statement mode in an mmrx icw xxi.h a rt-poriet for tin" San Fraucis.-o I—hron Mr. Hears;, in ilisclaiiuing bi-' iin-'nibm of sivk'iug the li.nn.i. p.iid high tributes, to William .1. B->HU ..nJ troy; Folk ofifidLnot ox vrfoek -ah-o'ppWJ-tunity to rap S mimr Bailey or 'l'exas. who recently wily mentioned by Mr. Brian as one of the presidential .possibffifios.' at»4 wlm ha> engaged in a con TswrO »-jili' Mr. (HoaEit in risen M 1.0 statements printed in the Lifter's magp-:. zine. "I would like to state very ]*isitiveiy that 1 am not a candidate for t !,«• llemocratie pivniilriH nil nomifitytmii Til IiMIX." Mr. Hearst is quoted as saying. "Mr. Bryan said the pt Iter day in ImmLm that t-here were -others besides himself who had claims 'bn The nomination Through services rendered Democracy, rind mentioned pleasantly Mr. Folk. Mr. Bailey and tnysblf. While appreciating Mr. Bryttn-'s eompijment, I -must decline to be considered a candidate. Let the list stand, if Mr. Bryan pleases. Bryan or Folk or Ba.ley. For tny part 1 would substitute Stevenson for Bailey."
ON THE nIA Moximgftr— Prog-reaa of t'lnbn In Hncr for B»»r / Hall -Tennants. RATIONAL Lt. AO I E. W. J.. W. L. .Cititsago .. . .51'* 23 Cincinnati ..36 41 New York ..45 25 St. Ikmis.. . .29 47 Pittsburg ...45 2(i Brooklyn . . .2'l 4.3 Fliil'delphii MS 35 Boston .... . 2(> 47 AMERICAN LEAGUE. W. L. W. L. Pliil'<k4|>liia 43 •27 1 h-troit 3.7 34 New Y0rk..42 27 St. L»ui5....35 .3(5 Cleveland . .42 28 Washington. 25 45 Chicago ....:si .31 Boston 18 53 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. W. L W. L. Columbus .. 4S .3.3 Minneapolis. 351 40 Milwtiuk-e. 44 32 Kansas City .37 40 Toted" ... .44 3 ;> st p Art |. ==2S 49 Louisville ..43 ,‘54 Indianapolis 27 WESTERN LEAGUE. W. 1.. W. T_ Des Moines.4s '✓ Sioux City..3o 34 Omaha .... ..34 3(1 Lincoln .... .27 35) Deliver .....415 32 Pueblo 24 41
JAIL LIFE MENACES MAYOR. Kiana. City. Kan.. Eaecutive la Fined SI,OOO for Contempt. 'Hip Kansas State Supreme Court has hand'd down a decision holding Mayor M . W. Rose of Kansas City, Kan., in contempt for having assnmed the office of Mayor after vh>‘ court had ousted him for the non-eirformnent of the prohibit ion law and the law against gambling. In the order Mayor Rose is ordered to relinquish the other and is fined sl.lkMi for contempt. The court further orders, if Mayor Rose Tails to pay the fine within twenty days. -he--shall-he eommitt«sL4o jail until such time as it is paid. Mayor Rose's attorneys immediately filed a writ of error. If this is not granted the ease will be applied to the t*n?ted States Supreme Court. After being ousted last January Rose was re-elected at a sjiecial election. -- . .
LOSE TO WIRE TAPPERS. Race Results Are Chnnired and Whole Country Swindled. A gang of wire tappers cut in On the ± _\Vind-'u’ (On - .' race track wire Thursday and. intenvpi-tT and .cTiangetFjtK'' re—sub of tlr» “•'•■ond race. Confederates in Cincinnati. Chicago. Ivouisville .and other cities sll over the.--ountry won large sums of money .m the horse .sent~o\’7-r 'the as e: 'ic r.> >■. An attempt to mnke another haul on the third r.cwas frUsir. I !>v the operator at the nice tra k*. *wfto •drsmvrretpTtrnT some one had tampered with the wire. GIVEN 1,080 Illis. H.V.250 FI\E.
Orvir<**> l.nnd Gt-nfi«*r Ge<« Extreme Senli'iicf iu Federal < ourt. Henry MeMrum. fanner United States surveyor general for the distrx-t of Oregon, was sentenc'd, to piy a fine of $5.250 and to serve I.oßo,days in the federal penitentiary at M<-Neil's Island. Wash., for conspiracy to defraud the government in connection w.th land deals in Oregon. ' *>!>><inr and Gustemala Ont. Dum-an Bankhirt. consul general of Salvador in’tW City of Mexico. says that all ’relations between Salvador and mala have eeeeed. ■ lie says Salvadoreans are to a man in favor of the Guafwjiian revolution. The trouble results from the military attache of tt.ilvador At Guatemala •City being instilled and put out of President Cabrera's bouse. Rrwrte* Dramn. * Five naval iw»tw* wer»* drowned in Ihe Chicago lake front ba-in through the capsizing of a boat iTr—which -they were engaged in rowing practice; and two others of rhe party wtv s-isyiL Vellww Fes er Iherraseii, At New Ofiearis ifi.-o-ctng stonmers <syntinue tn report caws of yellow fever at Centra! Aim-rnan and W---t Indian |»orts. PrteM Forbid* i*erk-M-B<M» Walnt. Women who wear short sleeved. low necked, or ojs-nwork waists will not be permitted 1 at tiir communion rail of St. Ign.atiuk C-aiiiolif church At Kingston, I*s t acrftnling |<> the directions o£ the ftev. M. E. Lynott, pant or of the church, who ha* told the women of hi a- congregation that be thinks such waists art
FOURTH MORE SANE.
IMPROVEMENT NOTED IN DAY’S OBSERVANCE. ■ i ~ ~' ;■' " ~ ” Deadly Sinnerhter Is Less Frluhtful IhHn In Pre. ion. lenrn, but 8S Are Head n„«l Hurt— ITecord of —Pn t rl<»1 Hua." x? 1 Dead .. \. i;....... .... .:3ft By fireworks, ,j\ —KfwSntmTlTr.-. 1 By tilearms 11. By i x plusivcs 7 : Bv toy pisltds.:. .CP; , .1. . >rr-4 lit. imici e .i\.l. By drowning .. 5 Injured 2.75!t Bx fireworks .. .' /. ,1,09!) By cannon 201 By firearms 292 By explosives . . (>97 By toy pistols, i ;;o| By ruuu wax s ........ 25 Fire- loss.. >'<.•>. I."a' Jj The immediate Fourth of July death ’roll Is sma Her tpjs yetir tlum that of a year ago. bitt unfortunately the thirtyeight slain by tireworks will be but an ill f it] it ■ ima I |i >• t <>f t lh>se wln > .will Irw- timirdi vi’w bvrrtttsir of ;thv rrrgy <d' power nn*l tmisT. —I.tist year firt’+y-txvn persons wen* killed outright, but when lockjaw and other diseases inthTi-j-d by injuries had completed their work over 4<h< lives had been sacrificed to patriotic idiocy. • 'rite number of in.itir*-*! excess of last year's figure* by 355. The agencies by which these injuries were intlietei], as compared xxith last year’s record, are as folloxxs; 1900. 1905. Fireworks ..1.099 79S (’ahnon 291 302 F i reanns ■ • ,"93 ."27 Explosixes i-...- <>97 ftftS Toy pistols lit 4 371 Runaways 35 49 It xxill be sreu that the toy pistol, is the One instrument of destruction to fall behind in its.death dealing work. The center of slaughter was. as usual, Philadelphia where 711 patriots anti in-imi-ent bystanders were victims. Chicago was the secund center of injury, two children being killed and 157 persons woundt'd more or less sevt'rely. In New York sanity ruled to a eerTain extent, t>s i nj urles being repprted, with txvo deaths.
Toledo was an example of what rig orous enforcement of law and the education of its citizens can accomplish. For days Mayor Whitlock preached sanity, and the result was that only two persons were injured, one of them being in a runaway. The'fool with a revolver, or other firearm, was the cause of the most prolific slaughter, the "stray bullet” being particularly destructive. The deadly toy pistol followed as the instrument of death, but its harvest simply was sown, and will be reaped from lockjaw. The cities where lives were taken are as follows : Chicago 2 Grand Falls, N. D.l Cincinnati 1 Jersey' City 1 Catskill. N. Y;. ..4-N'd«r York .2 Elkhart. Ind 1 Negaunee. Mich... 2 Fall River. Mass'.'.T Niagara Falls 1 Kenosha 1 Pittsburg 1 Memphis . 1 Souih Byud .» . - 1 Newton. lowa ... 1 Wanamie. New Bedford. Mass.l Springfield. Mass, . 1 Oswego. N. Y 1 Fond du Lac, Wis.l Cleveland ........ 1 New Albany. Ind. . 1 Clarks* .He. Ore. Steveils I’Tit. Wtstl Fulton, N. Y ..... 1 Vineeuues, 1nd....l The publication of the lists.of jM'rsons in.htnd by the u<e of powder in various forms has proved an effective force toward ultimately gaining the object desired, the elimination of the useless waste of life and limb. The figures presented merely are a suggestion of the total of such accidents. In every community a small proportion reach publicity.- especially in eases which tit first appear of minor Importance. injuries from the use of toy pistols. These are the most prolific cause of subseqhent tetanus which yearly 4UO or more lives.
The array, small as it Is by comparison with the real total, is a sad one when it is ouisidered that each death or injury has liven useless and born of itn almost criminal license granted to a mistaken exhibition of patriotism. , It becomes more startling, however, when a month later the returns of dead begin t<T»swell> amT The* cxtefii of the slaughter becomes apparent. ,
Curved Spines and Eyestrain.
During the discussion on lieadaches. iLnild-of Philadelphia aired his theory that nine-tenths of all headache* are attributable,to eye Strain. Besides this, he thquchtlhateyc strain caused many gastric disturbances and asserted that about persons in this country, or one-fifth of the population. are suffering Trom lateral cTfK-Attir?—rrf-the spine, due to the same cause. The obvious and only remedy, in his opinion, te a properly fitted pair of glasses. '
Outline* Object of Trip to Chicn*o —Hl< Tor Packer*.' . Secretary TVilson has arranged To co ■artTOUT of packing ct^ntera, with n view to the pno]>er enforccnjent of meat mspec-
sf.cketahy xviisoN.up to the new law., "A iniftTher of derferr have reachetl him from jm< kersj all .-xpyessing willingm-ss ‘TtTTTTItKit'I eitli liitiT ftfi'l uphold h's hands in meat imtpevtion adipinist ration. Dr. A. I>. M.-ltju, chief of the/buWu of animal industry, will accQßhpany Seer. r<"tary Wilson. A, w> k or nmfe xxill le" ]>as.-.-.l iu <’hicago locking over th» plans ami conferring with the jtackers. Co-op-eration Is-t.wci'i) the government and the jiackcrs, S*‘cr*‘fary W ilson said, xvas. to |m> t|i» ,x ;i 1 i-iixx m'd tn carrying out the inspection law. Tie xvill mb Hotthe packers that the tin U-is UL±ajld for..the greatest >ampaign evi l-’ma le f>r th'" ptonjofion ami exploitation of die American meat basin.-sx. Tlioroiigh ~gore-nrmrnt inspeetion. Secrbtary W’ilsdn will tell the packers they T’ntrTWMjHer-t4i« -wOFld’s'niarkeXs mon 1 fully than ever liefore ami have little“in fenr-trtnti A nsi ralia w Argent ilia. The Secretary propones so use all the powers of his department to.push the sale -crf-AnuTican meaty abroad aml President Roosevelt xxil| back- hHft He is confident an Era of mrpr dented pii>s|>erii.v is dawning for lite Anierii an meat business. With the healthiest cat tie, finished on i.sirn ami Ihoroughly ins]H>ctefl, American packers, Mr.. Wilson says, can overcome nearly all competition. In having an adequate corn supply to fatten cattle and other stock the Se.-r.-iary sa vs America has an .invaluable asset which other nations ha ... ~ec—---
French Uck (Ind.) Hotels Are Raided hy Sheriff. ---- America's. alleged Monte Carlo, the French Lick Springs (Ind.) hotel, a sumptuous resort, in which women as well as children are said to have "been permitted to play for high .stakes, was raided by ■ Sheriff- Mu ris -of—Orange eoun! y Tuesday, while Deputy Sheriff Jones led another raiding force on the West Baden hotel, another elaborate place. When the officers, armed )vith search warrants, swooped down upon the two
ENGINES OF DESTRUCTION AND NUMBER OF THEIR VICTIMS.
health resorts many women in fashionable attire Were at play\ while the children were courting the goddess of chance at the slot maidlines, ■ One guest jumped through a second-story window, but was captured by the deputy sheriffs who surrounded the buildings. None but the attendants wefe~arreste<l, but the gamblmg machinery, valued"nr thousands of dollars, was confisi'ated. While the raids were in progress, the State of Indiana, througit the Attorney General and on instructions from Gov. llanly. filed quo warranto proceedings in the Orange County Circnit Court against the French Lick-Springs Company, asking that their charters as corporations be revoked, that they be enjoined from permitting gambling on their property, that receivers Be apir'itrual, andTfifffTi®nm r istration of. the assets be made among the defendants ami their creditors. The suits antTTfie raids are the result of a long standing errmpttrgn of the women of Indiana.
SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
The schools of Bloomington. 111., take great pride in their flower culture. In Sweden the school children, led by their teachers, plant GOO.UOO trees annually. Of thirty-seven county superintendents in the State of Washington, teu are women. ' .- ■ • The New York City schools use yearly -I.dOO.MJO pounds of pads, blank books and paper. Emerson G. Taylor, nn instructor at Yale, has resigned to devote himself to literary work. The teachers of New York City will give a per cent of their salaries in aid of those in San Francisco. A fully equipped Teachers' College of high profcsawnul grade yvi.ll be opened at the Ohio State University, probably in 1907. Many Georgia school districts and counties have voted to supplement the State school fund by local taxation. This is done under the local taxation law passed iast~y?rfrr- —— __ ’ The “reptlris of the Republic of Cuba show for the month of December last, 3,600 teachers, of whom were women and 1.404 men; jl.4tj2 were white and 208 colored. To'wa cditßty miperlntynderitA must here after hold certificates to teach. Their salary has been raised $240 a year and they are required to visit all tM schools of their counties. J. Pierpont Morgan is an alumnus of -the old t'heiliiru u.lmol —in—Hartford. Conn., which has trained many a Wall street man since the financier was graduated With the- class of 1850.
WILSON TALKS INSPECTION.
tion, laxv. In CM-i-agci, where be will go first, he has plans iha.de to con- . vf-.uc the managers of packing i>lantx,. heads * 4 iwttvrns and their immediate ' executive subordinates and give them a lecture on living -
WAR ON GAMBLING.
BRYAN FOR OPPRESSED.
Outline* Duty of Nation* ,tj* Loados ;. .j . WiTlTam Jennings Bryan, fresh his tour of the Orient, was the oratbr at tlie Independence, day dinner of the American society at the Hotel Cecil in London amt expressed his conviction that on the United States and England devolves the mission of diffusing education ami lolitieai freedom throughput the benighted lands. He took Kipling's poein',' "The White Man's Burden,” as his text ami dwlared that now, as never before, the Christian nations are working to spread civilization and uplift others, rather than to exploit their weaker bn-thfeu. " X'early 590 mi-mixers and guests snrrmnidmTTTiih Si iifiPlTts board and cheeredpatriotic sentiments vvith the peculiar zest Isirii of exile. Ambassador Whitelaw Rbid and Mr. Bryan engaged in
WILLIAM J. BRYAN.
some sharp but good-humored banter over political differences, the crowd evincing its enjoyment of the sport with cheers and shouts of laughter. Mr. Reid, in responding to Sir W. B. Richmond's graceful proposal of his health, said with reference to Mr. Bryan : "As the official representative of the American people, without distinction as to party. I am glad to welcome him here as a typical American, whose whole- life has been lived in the daylight and one whom such a great host of my emmtrymen have long trusted andTroimred.” In discussing “the white man’s burden” Mr. Bryan declared the chief duty ■if the Christian states is fivefold—to carry-fe-tlie remainder of the world ed-
ucation, knowledge of the science of government, arbitration as a substitute for war, appreciation of tbe dignity of labor and a high conception of life. He styled as false that conception of international polities which made the prosperity of one nation depend upon the exploitation of another. President Roosevelt and King Edwgrd were praised by Mr. Bryan for their infinenee in behalf of peace and the caused of arbitration. Mr. Bryan declared the odium which rests upon the work of the hand has exerted a baneful influence on tbe world and this theory, he said, was largely responsible for the creation of an almost Impassable gulf between the leisure classes and those who support them. ■ a —-—'■
Consumption a Social Problem.
Writing of the campaign against con-snmpt-ron in the Jnne -Everybody's Magazine. Eugene Wood says that there is nothing particularly new in the medical or scientific side of the problem to report, pending the outcome of Von Behring’s ekpetimept with tuberctriosls. a substance separated from the growth of the tuberculosis bacillus, lie thinks it quite generally accepted now that people with light hair and blue eyes should not live out of doors where it is always bright and sunny, because they lack the pigmanetation to absorb the light rays, which become a source of irritation and fidgets. A cloudier flimate is better for blondes, and there is nothing dangerous in a damp climate: The statement is also made that "those who don't care for meat are very likely to die of tuberculosis." Referring to the effort of the consumption fighters to enlist the American Federation of Labor, Mr. Wood says that the disease is essentially a social problem, and he concludes that something is wrong with the way we live now. We kuow its causes and how to stop the spread, but, nevertheless, a great majority of the people in homes and factories are so living as to be unable to resist fubereulosis, and the social gulf between the people and the better classes is not wide enough to separate us from the disease that decimates. He believes that when this fact is squarely- faced the people will find a social remedy. • . .
The Earth a Self-Heater.
Prof. Charles Thwing announce*, as a To*nit of his researches at -die Western Pe-j-rve. university, tluic rhe rothmOn metals and rock* of which the earth is constituted -haye the internal temperature due to radio-activity." He estimates that the heat thus constantly generated will maintain th* earth at its present temperature for many millions of, years..and he conclndes UMf At ÜBilt H pan Of lb# BUU“W heat is due to the same principle within itself.
PRESIDENT ON TRUSTS.
In Fourth of July Address Ho Bo« .. »po«k» a Suuare Deal. President Roosevelt delivered a notable Fourth of July address at Oyster Bay, in which he discussed trusts and the attitude of the administration toward them. He advocated a square deal Tor the corporations, as well as for the people. His hearers were his friends and Neighbors’of Oyster -Bay and surrounding country. During the delivery of the address, which was in the open air, a heavy rain fell aud the President was drenched. When the shoxver came umbrellas in the crowd were raised. The President remarked good-naturedly: “I am sorry for yod ladles, but luffiamed of you men. Localise you are afraid you will melt.” In his address the Presnleht Said: “This year in Congress our task has been to parry the government forward along the course which I think it must follow consistently for a number of years tqcome—that is, in of_seefe.: ing on behalf of the people as a whole, through the national government which represents the people as a whole, to «x----ercise a measure Of supervision, control and restraint over the individuals and especially over the corporations of great
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT.
wealth, in so far as the business use of that wealth brings it within the reach of the federal government. "We have accomplished a fair amount and the reason that we have done so has been, in the first place, because we have not tried to do too much, and, in the next place, because we have approached the task absolutely free from any spirit of rancor or hatred. “In any such movement a man will find that he Iras allies whom he does not like. "You cannot protect property without finding that you are protecting the property of some people who are not straight. You cairnot war against the abuses of property without finding that there are some people warring beside you whose motives you would frankly repudiate. But in each case be sure that you your own motives and your own conduct straight. “When it becomes necessary to curb a great corporation, curb it. I will do my best to help you do it. But I will do it in no spirit of anger or hatred to the men who own or control that corporation ; and if any seek in their turn to do wrong to the men of means, to do wrong to the men who own those corporations. I win turn around and fight for them in defense of their rights just as hard as I fight against them when I think they are doing wrong.” The President then added a few warnings, as follows: “Distrust as a demagogue the man who talks only of the wrong done by the men of wealth. , “Distrust as a demagogue the man who measures iniquity by the purse. .Measure iniquity by the heart, whether a man’s purse be full or empty, partly full or partly empty. “If the man is a decent man, whether well off or not well off, stand by him: if he is not a decent man stand against him, whether he be rich or poor. “Stand against him it no spirit of vengeance, but only with tbe resolute purpose to make him act as decent Citizens must act if this republic is to be.” On other evils in general that menace the country, tbe President said: “War with the evils, but show no spirit of malignity toward the man who may lie responsible for the evil. Put it out of his power to do wrong; if necessary, punish him where he has done wrong, but do not let this nation ever get into the frame of mind which under infinitely greater provocation Abraham Lincoln strove to prevent its falling into'at the time of the Civil War.”
POLITICS and POLITICIANS
Judge A. W. Benson, the new Kansas Senator, has taught a Bible class for twenty-six years. Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman has twice been within an nee of becoming Speaker of the House of Commons. The appointment of William Pinkney Whyte by Gov. Warfield of Maryland to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Senator Gorman has pleased the independent, or anti-Gorman, faction of the Ilemocratic party in that State. Whyte is' a former Governor of Maryland and former United States Senator, who Is frequently referred to as Maryland's "Grand Old Man,” being now 82 years old. He was also unanimously elected Mayor of Baltimore in 18S2, after having finished a term in the Senate. Hon. William Pinckney Whyte of Maryland, who recently became United States Senator for the third time, is the only man living who was a memlier of that body and voted against negro suffrage when the fifteenth amendment to the constitution was passed by it. The Republican State convention of Minnesota resulted in the nomination of A. L. Cole for Governor. He had been regarded as one of th<w>vaker candidates. The iilatform anurovtn Pure food legislation, direct vote for Senators, 2-cent railroad fares, abolition of passes and readjustment of freight rates.
CHAS. L SAUER, GRAND SCRIBE
PE-RU-NA STRENGTHENS THE ENTIRE SYSTEM
Mr. Chas. L. 'Sauer, Grand Scribe, Grand Encampment 1. O. O. F. of Texas, arid Assistant City Auditor, writes from the City Hall, San Antonio, Texas r “Nearly txvo years ago I accepted a position as secretary and treasurer with one of the leading dry goods establishments of Galx-eston. Texas. “The sudden change from a high and dry altitude to sea level proved too much for me and I became" afflicted with catarrh and cold in the heart, and general debility to such an extent as to almost incapacitate me for attending to my duties. “1 was induced to try Peruna, and after taking several bottles in small doses I am pleased to say that 1 was entirely restored to my ftormal condition and have ever since recommended the use of Peruna to my friends.”
Napoleon’s Birthplace.
Historically. Ajaccio. Corsica, is of the utmost importance, for here it was that, on the fifteenth of August, 17t»E>, Napoleon Bonaparte was born, and here”. it was that the future emperor spent bis youth, enlightened by an intelligent and lovely mother. The "Casa Napoleon” Is one of the—or I should say—the principal building in Ajaccio. It Is 1 solid three-story building, with gray stucco walls and a number of large windows. Situated in the old part of the town, one would scarcely find it were it not for the boys who tender their services to guide the stranger to the place. Although plundered in 1793 by the partisans of Paoli, the heroic Corsican fighter for liberty, the house still contains a few reminiscences of the great warrior. Besides a number of ordinary rooms, each containing some furniture, one finds the bedroom where Napoleon was born, as wefl as Napoleon’s sleeping and study roonLjvftli his bed and table; his father’s study, still beaurtf-J fully furnished, and the drawing-room in which are his mother’s piano and her sedan chair.—-Four-Track News.
Value of Rain Water.
The purest water met with under ordinary circumstances is rain water, which is certainly a great luxury to those In towns or cities for washing. If It were fully appreciateTidw walua ble rain water really is, the dwellers in large towns would see that it was not always lost.
All Depends.
“ ‘Willful waste makes woeful want,’” quoted the lady inomlizer. “Oh, I don’t know,” rejoined the gentleman demoralizer. “Most, women waste words in their conversation, but they never*seem to want for more.”
DOCTOR’S SHIFT.
Now Gets Along; Without It. A physician says: “Until last fall I used to eat meat for my breakfast and suffered with Indigestion tho meat had passed from the stomach. k “Last fall I began the use of GrapeNuts for breakfast and very aoon found I could do without meat, for my body got all the nourishment necessary from the Grape-Nuts, and since then I have not had any indigestion and am feeling better and have increased In weight “Since finding the benefit I derived from Grape-Nuts I have prescribed ths food for all of my patients suffering I from indigestion or over-feeding and I also for those recovering from disease where I want a food easy to take and certain to ‘digest, and which will not overtax the stomach. “I always find the results I look for when I prescribe Grape-Nuts. For ethical reasons please omit my name.” Name given by mall by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. The reason for the wonderful amount of nutriment and the easy digestion of Grape-Nuts is not hard to find. In the first place, the starchy part of the wheat and barley goes through I various processes of cooking, to perfectly change the starch into Dextrose or Post Sugar, in which state It Is • ready to be easily absorbed by the blood. The parts In the wheat and Parley which Nature can make use of for rebuilding 'brain and nerve eentere are retained In this remarkable food, and thus the human body Is supplied with the powerful strength producer* so easily noticed after one has eate* Grape-Nuts each day for a week or ten Hays. "TBere’s a reason?’’ Get the little book, “The Road to Wellvlll*,” in pkg*.
