DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD; DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. WESTERN CANADA AND wKUPPi-MiiBBWBMt IMBBHHM MMmiJHI HMBWMTWI fcu. ju. iiwiiu. iii '"" laitSfr-frj-frfr MMIQMMftMIIM fr4-frfr-fr-frfrt-frgl0 fr frfrC"0-frKH-t MmawKHMMRmwnMSHMiWii THE LAND-HUNGRY It Is Essentially an Agricultural Country. Woftcrn Canada Is tho Mecca ot tho Iruirt-hhugry man who wishes to earn i row living fioin the soil and save up money 10 take euro of lilm Iti his old jifco without paying a fancy price for thu privilege. Western Canada Is tho groat wheat producing faction of tho North Amor lean continent, with an uvcrago pro duction of more than 30 bushels to tho acre as compared with nn uvcrago of 17 bushels to the acre In tho btutes. Wheat raising enn hardly bo made profitable on land that costs from $0 nn acre up unless such land will pro duce n much higher than a 17 bushel average, or unless the price of the (,'urctil reaches an excessive figure. The Initial Investment of 550 an acre 1s more than tho average innii can af ford to make If he expects to rnlsn wheat and to make a success of It. A good homestead of 100 acres can tlll bo secured free In Western Can ada and additional land admirably milted to the raising of wheat can bo secured at so low a coHt per acre that It can be mado extremely profitable. No other part of tho world oilers Mich tremendous opportunities at tho present tlino to the ambitious young farmer as the three great provinces of Western Canndu. It Is worth tho whllo of the land hungry man to cease his depressing search for local cheap land or for land that Is not entirely worked out by ' long cropping and to look outside his own district. Western Canada Is a country that should receive the con Mdemtlon of all such men. The West ern Provinces of Manitoba, Saskatche wan and Alberta are essentially agri cultural territory. (Jut of -178 million acres thfto are ISO million acres of first-class agricul tural land actually available for de velopment n block throe and a half KliMRS as large nn the total laud area of .Mlmic-ROtct, and equal to the combined triad aieas of .Minnesota, Iowa. Wis consin. Illinois and Indlaun. Milt Whereas the population of the live states mentioned Is liftmen million people, (he population of Western CniiiKla Is only about one and thrco- tUi(rter millions. It has been said that the average ylfoW pur acre of wheat In tho United iilntes last year was 17 bushels. This invuwgB does not, of course, represent tho '(Boloney which may have been -nftU'hcd 'jy Individual fannpis or by Individual states. , Ilowover, place ughlust this figure the fact that tin 11)1,1 Wehtern Canadian average the uvcrago from nearly twelve million acres -was over .'10 bushels. In the case of the Provlneo of Alberta, the uvcrago reached .'12.S1 bushels per ncre. There are already a largo number of -AniBl'lcan farmers In Western Canada. -so that the newcomer could never overlooking the fact that the same Hnnguago Is spokenfeel himself In an wllen country. Thero hcems, In fact, ii tendency to establish llttlo colonics ' composed of those coining from the hanie sectluns. The characteristics of tho country, and 'the cllmato and Kcnson, nro very much the same as In' Minnesota or North Dakota. Social conditions bear a family resemblance. Kducatlon Is free, and Is good; Its cost tinliit? ilofrnvcd on r LI v bv taxation. partly by grants from tho Canadian Government, from the sales of school lands, of which, when tho country was rllrst surveyed, two sections In every township were allocated. Taxation In overy rural district, In many towns and cltles. Mi based practically on land values alone, Improvements of all kinds "TTelng exempted. Advertisement. I Hal The City of Numbered Days By FRANCIS LYNDE tar biand of righteousness backed by tho needful lnaldo Information. You go ahead and do your part and wo'll do tho rest." TO Copyright by Charles Scribnet'a Sons w ggU CHAPTER XIX m The Man on the Bank fc-frV-Mt$9rt--frflM' 8YNOP8I8. 12 nroulllard, chief engineer of the Nlrruoln. IrrlBntlon dam, meets J. Wesley Cort wrlght nnd explains tho reclamation work to him. CortwrlKht organizes a company and obtains government contracts to fur nish power and material. Stove Massln tralo threaten to start a cold rush If liroutllard doeii not use his Influence to brlns a railroad branch to tho place, thus oponlns an easy market for tho "Little Husan'r mine oro. Broulllard tells Amy Masalngalo of his need for money to pay off his dead father's Uobts. Sho tells htm to bo truo to himself. He decides for the oxtonslon. Mlrapolls, tho city of num bered days, booms. Cortwrlqht porsuodes Ilroulllard to become consulting onBlneor of tho power company In return for $100, IW1 utnrk. Htonnn.cn of work on the rail road threatens a panic, nroulllard spreads the MasHlngulo story of placer gold In tho river bed and starts u gold rush, which promises to stop the reclamation project. Amy tells Hroulllard that her fnthor Is In CortwrlKht'n nnanclal clutches. Ho tolls her ho lias made J100, 000 ur.l doclarcs Ills love. Slio loves him, but pIiowh him that he lias become demor alized. A real Bold find Is made. Broull lard sells his Block but does not pay his fitthcr'n debts. CortwrlRht's son shoots Stfvo MasslnRalo. Hroulllard threatens Cortwrlght with exposure If he pushes Mfisslngalo to tho wall. Tho magnate promises to glvo tho old man a froo field. Htorles of the dam's abandonment revive rornolosuro on tho "I.lttlo Susan" Is lm- fianufng' und nroulllard loans Davo Mas slngalo his $100,000 to cloar him. MaBsln galo gambles away tho ontlro amount. H-"XMXXX'X4 X 2 Onco more Broulllard Is X 5 tempted by Cortwrlght. If ho X accepts Cortwrlght'o offer he X 5 can mako money and etand o A chance of defeating the crooked X v capitalist's purposes In tho long v .A run. If ho refuses, ho loses not X v only his Job but phis savings. Y What would you do consider- X ' Ing that acceptanco Is wrong? x XX-XXX-' CHAPTER XVIII Continued. t Flfty-Flfty Deal. A number of politicians woro attend ing a convention In Chicago a shmt tlino ago when one of tho number was approached by an old acquaintance who wan plainly down In his luck jyidjng up to the politician ho said; "May. .lack, lend uio'ton, will youl Vin xhurt.". The big fellow went down Into his .luicfeor. Hashed out n big roll und Iinntl- $kl a tlve-dollar bill to tho down-and- Oilier. f '"$uy. .lack," said ho of tho "touch," "l said ten." "I know you did," replied the poli tician, "but I think this way Is fairer, 'You lose live und I lose five." ' Important to Ntothora Examlno curofully ovory bottlo ot CASTORIA, a Bafo and euro remedy for Infants and children, and boo that It Deara tho 'Signature In Uso for Over 30 Years. .-Children Cry for riotchcr'a Caatoria What the Tea Levea Tell. Do you know how to tell fortunes iAu n teacup? It furnishes a great deal of entertainment at a party. This Chinese rhyme explains itt: '.'Om- leaf, alone you'll bo; 1'wo together, the priest you'll see. Three together, your wish will guln; IKour. a letter from loving swain. 4 H''lve,,good news tho letter will bring; VKIx lii a row, a song you'll blng. Seven together, good fortune awaits, tKo say to you the teacups' fates. Tun leaves large and tea letives tall (Tni-lug you company, great and small. H'oa leaves many und scattered lino "Mw of bad luck the surest sign Wm !fvuH tow und near tho rim, ?)ur cup of Joy o'crflowB tho brim." For tho bettor part of a fortnight tho tidal waves of prosperity, ns evinced by Increasing spoculutlvo values, kopt on rolling in, each ono apparently a llt tlo higher than Its lmraodlato prede cessor. Then tho flood began to sub sldo, though ho slowly that at first It was only by a careful comparison of tho dally transfers that tho recession could bo measured. Cauaca and conscquoncea extraneous to tho city Itself contributed to tho .al most lmpcrcoptlblo reactionary ten dency. For ono, tho Buckskin Mining and Milling company reluctantly aban doned Us pastime of plowing barren furrows on Jack's mountain, and a llt tlo later wont Into liquidation, as tho phraso ran, though tho eastern bond holders probably called it bankruptcy. About tho Bamo tlmo tho great ccmont plant, deprived of tho govornmont market by tho Blackonlng of tho work on tho dum, roduced lta output to less than ono-fourth of Its full capacity. Most portentous of all, perhaps, was tho rumor that tho placors at Quad Jonal woro boglnnlng to show signs of exhaustion. It wub oven whlsporod about that tho two hugo gold dredges roccntly Installed woro not paying tho oxpousos ot oporatiug thorn. Quito naturally, tho pulso of tho Wondor city beat sonsltlvo to all thoso doprcBslvo rumors and lncldonts, re sponding olowly at first but a llttlo lator In nccoloratod throbblngB which could no longor bo Ignored by tho most optimistic blddor at tho "curb" exchanges. Still thoro was no, panic. As tho ac tivities in local sales foil off and tho Mtrapolltans thomsolves woro no long er crowding tho curbs or standing In lino at tho real outato olllcos for tholn turn at tho listings, tho prudent ones, with Mr. Cortwrlght and his chooon associates far in advanco ot tho flold, were placing Mlrnpolla holdings tempt ingly on vlow in distant markots; plac Inu thorn and soiling them with blazonry ot advertising worthy of tho onvy of thoso who havo called thom solves tho suburb bulldors of Greater Now York. It was after thlB invasion of tho dis tant market was fully in train that Cortwrlght onco more sont for Hroull lard, rocolvlng tho onginoor this tlmo In tho newest ofllcoo of tho poWor com pany, on tho many-tlmos-bought-and-old corner opposite Uongraa'. "Hollo, Broulllard l" said tho mag nate Jocosely, indicating a chair and tho covor-absont opon box of cigars in tho Bamo gesture. "You'ro getting to 'bo as much of a strannor as a man might wish his worst onomy to bo." "You Bent for mo?" Broulllard broko In torsoly. More and more ho was coming to cknowlodgo a dull rago vhon ho 'joard tho call ot his master. "Ycb. What about tho dam? Ib your work going to start up again? Or 1b it going off for good?" Broulllard bit his lip to koop back tho exclamation ot astoundmont that tho blunt inquiry throatouod to ovoko. To assumo that Mr. Cortwrlght did not know all thoro wub to bo known was to credit tho incredible "I told you a good whllo ago that I was only tho government's hlrod man," ao repllod. "You doubtless havo much better information than any 1 can glvo you." "You can tell mo what your ordors are that't" what I want to know." Tho young chief of construction frowned first, then ho laughed. that you own mo, Mr. Cprtwrlght? I havo often wondored." "Well, I might say that I havo mado you what you aro, and " "That's truo; tho truest thing you ovor said," snapped Broulllard. "And, I was going to add, I can un mako you Just as easily. But I don't want to ho savago with you. All I'm asking is a llttlo Information first, and a llttlo Judicious holp afterward. What are your ordors from tho department?" Broulllard got up and Btood over tho stocky man In tho odlco chair, with tho black oyes blazing. "Mr. Cortwrlght, I said a moment ago that you havo mado mo what I am, and you havo. I am infinitely n worso man than you aro, becauso I know bet ter and you don't. It is no oxcuso for mo that I havo had a motlvo which I haven't explained to you, because, as I onco told you, you couldn't undorstand it in a thousand years. Tho ovil has boon dono and tho consequences, to you, to mo, and to ovcryono In this cursed vnlloy nro certain. Facing them as I am obliged to faco thorn, I am toll ing you but what's tho uso? You can't mako a tool ot mo any longer that's all. You must cook your meat over your own fire. I'm out of It." "I can omaBh you," said tho man in tho chair, quito without heat. "No, vou can't ovon do that," wag tho equally cool retort. "No man's fato is in another man's hands." He was moving toward tho door, but Cortwrlght stopped him. "Ono more word before you go, Broulllard. It Is to bo war between U3 from this on?" "I don't say that. It would bo awk ward for us both now. Let is bo armed neutrality if you like. Don't in terfere with mo and I won't interfere with you." "Ah I" said tho millionaire. "Now you havo brought it around to tho point I was trying to reach. You don't want to havo anything moro to do with mo, but you aro not quito ready to cash in and pull out of tho garno. How much money havo you got?" Tho cool lmpudcnco of tho question brought a dull flush to tho young man's faco, but ho would glvo tho onomy no advnntago in tho matter ot superior self-control. "That Is 8carccly a fair question ovon botwoen armed neutrals," ho ob jected. "Why do you want to know?" "I'm asking bocauso you havo Just proposed tho noa,lntorforonco policy, and I'd Uko to know how fairly you mean to' llvo up to it. A llttlo whllo back you Intorforcd in a small bus!- &&EK$m fib W V rjM i n ' Broulllard Got Up rind Stood Over the Stocky Man In tho Office Chair. "What has glvwi you tho Impression ncss matter of mino vory pointedly. What bocamo of tho ono hundred thou sand dollara you gavo old David Mas slnualo?" "How do you know I gavo him a hundred thousand dollara?" "That's dead easy," laughed tho man in tho pivot chair, onco moro tho gonial buccaneer. "You drew a check for that amount and cashed It, and a few min utes lator Masslngalo, whoso account had boon drawn down to nothing, bobs up at Schormorhorn'B window with ex actly tho same amount in looso cash. What did ho do with it garablo it?" "That Ib his own affair," Broulllard countorcd briefly. "Well, tho future noxt month's fu tureis my affair. If you'vo got money enough to interfere again don't. You'll loso it, tho samo as you did bo fore. And perhaps I sha'n't tako tho socond Interference as good-naturedly as I did tho first." "Is that all you havo to Bay?" Brou lllard asked impatiently. "Not quito. I don't boliovo you woro altogether in earnest a minuto ago whon you expressed your dosiro to call it all otf. You don't want tho Mlrapo lls woll to go dry right now, not ono bit moro than I do." "1 havo been trying pretty hard to mako you understand that it is a-mat-tor of utter Indifference to mo." "But you haven't succooded vory woll; it isn't at all a matter of indiffer ence to you," tho magnato insisted per suasively. "As things aro shaping thomsolves up at tho present speaking, you stand to lose, not only tho hun dred thousand you squandered on old David, but all you'vo mado besides. I keep In touch it's my business to keep in touch. You'vo been buying bargains and you aro holding them for tho Blmplo reason that with tho present Blowing-down tendency in tho saddlo you can't soil and mako any money." "Well?" "I'vo got a proposition to mako that ought to look good to you. What wo need Just now in thlB town is a llttlo moro activity somothlng doing. You can rcllovo tho oltuatlon if you fool llko it." "How?" "If I tell you, you mustn't go and uso it against mo. That would bo a low down wclchor's trick. But you won't. Sco hero, your bureau at Washington is protty well scared up ovor tho pros pect here. It is known in tho capital that whon congress convenes thoro is going to bo a dead-open-and-shut fight to kill this Buckskin reclamation pro Joct. Very well; tho way for you fel lows to win out iB to hurry finish your dam and finish it quick, before congress or anybody elso can get action." For a single Instant Broulllard was puzzled. Then ho began to under stand. "Go on," ho said. "What I was going to suggest Is this: You prod your people at Wash ington with a hot wire; toll 'em now'a tho tlmo to strike and strlko hard. They'll sco tho point, and if you ask ' for an increaso of a thousand men you'll 'get It. Mako It two thousand, just for tho dramatic effect. We'll work right along with you and mako things hum ngaln. Wo'll start up tho cement plant, and I don't know but what wo might glvo tho Buckskin M. & M. folks a small hypodermic that would keep 'em alivo while wo aro taking a few snap-shot pictures of. Mlrapolia on tho Jump again." "Let mo get it straight," said Broull lard, putting his back against tho door. "You fully believe you've got us down; that eventually,, and before tho water is turned on, congress will pass a bill killing tho Niquola project. But in tho mcnntlmo, to mako things lively, you'd llko to havo tho reclamation servlco go nhcad and spend another million or so in wages that can bo turned looso in Mlrapolls. Is that It?" "You'vo surrounded it vory neatly," laughed tho promoter. "Onco, somo llttlo tlmo ago, I might havo felt tho necessity of convincing your ccruples, but you'vo cut away all that foolish ness. lt'B a llttlo tough on our good old Unclo Samuol. I'll admit, but it'll bo only a pln-prlck or so in comparison to tho monoy that is thrown away ovory tlmo congress passes an appro- piratlon bill. And, putting It upon tho dead practical basis, Broulllard, its your own and only salvation person ally, I mean. You'vo got to unload or go broko, and you can't unload on a falling market. You think a,bout it and then got quick action with tho wire. Thoro is no timo to loso." Broulllard was looking past Cort wrlght and out through tho plato glass window which commanded a viow of tho great dam and its network of forms and stagings. "It is a gambler's bet and a rather dospernto one," ho said slowly. "You stand to win all or to loso all in mak ing it, Mr. Cortwrlght. Tho town is balancing on tho knlfe-edgo of a panic at this moment. Would It go up, or I down, with a sudden resumption of work on tho dam?" "Tho careless thinker would say ( that it would yell 'Flro!' and go up In-1 to tho air so far that it could nover i climb down," was tho prompt roply. "But wo'll havo tho medicine dropper handy. In tho first placo, ovorybody can afford to stay and boost whllo Unclo Sam Is spending his million or so right horo In tho mlddlo of things. Nobody will want to pull out aud leave that cow unmllkcd. In tho socond placo, wo'vo got a mighty good antl doto to uso In any sure-enough caso ot hydrophobia your quick dam build ing may start." "You could let it leak out that, in splto of all tho hurrah and rush on tho dam, congress Is really going to in terforo before wo aro ready to turn tho water on," 'said Broulllard musing ly and as if It wero only his thought slipping into unconscious speech. "Precisely. Wo could make that prop hold it you wero actually putting tho top courso on your wall and making preparations to drop th stop-gato In your spillway." "I see," was tho rejoinder, and It waB mado in tho samo half-absout monotone "But whllo w aro still on tho knlfo-blado odgo ... a llttlo push . . . Mr. Cortwrlght, if there woro ono solitary righteous man loft In Mlrapolls" "Thoro Isn't," chuckled tho promoter, turning back to his dosk whllo tho on ginoor wa3 groping for tho door knob "at least, nobody with that partlcu- Broulllard, WAlklng out of Mr. Cort wright'B now offices with his thoughts afar, wondored If it wero by pure coin cidence that ho found Cnstnor appar ently waiting for him on tho sidewalk. "Once more you oro Just tho man I havo boon wanting to see," tho young missionary began, promptly making uso of tho chance meeting. "May I break in with a bit of bad nows?" "Thoro is no such thing as good news in thio God-forsaken valloy, Cast nor. What's your griot?" "Thero iB troublo threatening for tho Cortwrights. Stephen Masslngalo Is out and about again, and I was told this morning that ho was filling him self up with bad whisky and looking for tho man who shot him." Broulllard nodded unsympathetic ally. "You will And that thero is always likely to bo a second chapter In a book DRUGGIST PRAISES POPULAR KIDNEY MEDICINE I have been selling Dr. Kilmer'ik, Swamp-Koot for fifteen years and durmi that time have heard nothing but praise from my customers for the benefits re ceived from its use. Without exception, it is the most popular kidney remedy os the market and one of the best. Very truly yours, CIIAS. A. FRASEIt, Ex. Member Okla. Board Pharmacy. Dec. 8th, 1915. Red Rock, Okla, Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Yoi Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton. N. Y., for a sample size bot tle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet ex valuable infor mation, telling about the kidneys and blad der. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one dollar size bottles for sale at all drug tores. Adv. The Saving Syllable. "You must take care not to lot your position seem pathetic." "Never fear,' replied the man whose hat had been picked out of the ring. "I'll mako It sufficiently cplthetlc to prevent It from seeming merely pa-'Jietlc." ALWAYS LOOK YOUR BEST y'Ssllft?- SessiaSZ UjL 1 As to Your Hair and Skin by Using Cutlcura. Trial Free. Tho Soap to cleanse and purify, tho Ointment to sootho and heal. These fragrant, aupor-creamy emollients pre oorvo tho natural purity and beauty of tho skin undor conditions which, It neglected, tend to produce a stato of Irritation and disfigurement. Freo sample each by mail with Book. Address postcaid, Cutlcura, Dopt. L, Boston. Sold ovorywhero. Adv. Immediate Problem. "Where are tho snows of yester- A day?" Inquired tho man who quotes poetry. "Never mind about tlint," rejoined his wife. "The Important question Is, "Where is tho ice that was due to ar rive this morning?' " IP YOU OR ANY FRIEND BufTer with lUieuraatlsm or Neuritis, acute ot chronic, wilto for my FREE BOOK on Itlieumiv tlsm Its Cause and Cure. Most wonderful book ever -written, It's absolutely FREE. JcBse A. Cauc, Dept. O. W., llrockton, Masa. Ailr. JOKES THAT ARE HISTORIC "There Is No Such Thing as Good News In This God-Forsaken Valley, Castner." of that sort If tho first ono isn't con clusive." "But thero mustn't bo this tlmo," Castner Insisted warmly. "Wo must stop it; it is our business to stop it." "Your business, maybo; it falls right in your lino, doesn't It?" "No more in mino than in vours," was tho quick retort. "Am I my brother's keeper?" said tho engineer pointedly, catching step with tho long-legged strldo of tho ath letic young shepherd of souls. "Not if you claim kinship with Cain, who was tho originator of that very badly outworn query,"- camd the an swer shotltko. Then: "What has come ovor you lately, Broulllard? You aro a friend of tho Masstngales; I've had good proof of that. Why don't you care?" "Great heavens, Castnor, I do care! But If you had a cut finger you wouldn't go to a man in hell to got it tied up, would you?" "You mean that I have brought my cut finger to you?" ' "Yes, I meant that, and tho rest ol it, too. I'm no fit company for a do cent man today, Castner. You'd better edgo off and leavo moalono." Castnor did not take tho blunt Inti mation. For the little dlstanco inter vening botween the power company'a now offices and tho Niquola building ho tramped btsldo tho young onalneor in silonco. But at tho entrance to tho Niquola ho would havo gouo his way if Broulllard'had not said abruptly: "I gavo you fair warning; I'm not looking for a chance to play the Good Samaritan to anybody not oven to Stephen Masslngalo, much lees Vnri Bruco Cortwrlght. Tho reason Is be causo I havo a protty decent backload of my own to carry. Como up to my rooms If you can sparo a few minutes. I want to talk to a man who hasn't parted with his soul for a, money oqulvalont if there is such a man loft in this bottomless pit of a town." Castner accepted tho Implied chal lenge soberly, and together they as cended to Broulllard's offices. Onco be hind tho closed door, Broulllard struck out viciously. "You follows claim to hold tho koyn to tho conscience shop; nupposo you opon up and dole out a llttlo of tho precious commodity to mo, Castner. Is it over Justifiable to do evil that good may como?" "No." Thoro wns no hesitation In tho denial. Broulllard's laugh was harshly do- risivo. "1 thought you'd say that. No qualifi cations askod for, no Judicial wolghing of tho pros and cons tho ovil of tho evil, or tho goodness' of tho good Just a plain, bigoted 'No.' " Tho young missionary loft his chair and began to walk back and forth on his side ot tho office dosk. xxx-x$-xx Will the clean-minded young ? missionary persuade the engl- neer to refuse Cortwrlght's of- fer, or will he see the ultimate x possibility of Broulllard's win- x nlng and counsel him to accept? X '-kx'K"X"X'tvK-X":x- ao be co:-rri: rj&D.) Shop Witticisms Inflicted on Every Newcomer That Joins the Ranks of the Real Workers. You have no doubt all heard of the "left-hand monkey wrench" which ev ety new apprentice in a wagon worka Is sent after, and of the "Italic thin space" which the printer's dovll usual ly Is sent to get, but William S. Coy, county superintendent of bchools, bit hard on one not quite so well known when he nssumed his duties as a book keeper in u plumbing shop during one of the vacations of his high school days.- Thero was grumbling among the hands because of something that n neighboring plumber had borrowed and which he had failed to return. The bookkeeper finally decided to help out and offered to go to the borrower and secure the needed article. Ills offer wus quickly accepted. "What Is It?" he inquired. "We want our pipe stretcher," an swered one of the hands. The bookkeeper went to the other shop nnd to several others looking for this particular article before It joc curred to him that It would be a pe culiar kind of a tool, indeed, that could stretch an Iron pipe Columbus Dispatch. Wedding Presents. "I want to get something suitable for a wedding present." "Yes, mn'nm. Miss Brown, plense show the lady something for about $11 that will look as though It might have cost $10." The Fme W nr. the delicate taste of malted barley blended with the sweets of whole wheat is sufficient, reason in itself for the wonderful popular ity of Grape-Nuts FOOD But it is more than de licious it is the finest kind of toncentrated nour ishment to thoroughly sus tain body and brain tissue a food that benefits users remarkably. A short trial proves "There's a Reason" Sold by Grocers everywhere. People who do not believe all they hear are fond of repenting It. I mi i,