- . The very great change which has taken place In recent years in the na tionalities -which predominate in immi gration to this country is well shown in some figures recently compiled by the Department of Commerce and Labor. It appears , thatin the period between 1821 and 1902 Germany and the United States sent us 12,170,727 immigrants , while Italy , Austria-Hun gary and Russia contributed only r,781,873. In the fiscal year 1903 , on the other hand , the first group of coun tries sent us but 101,605 immigrants , .while the second group sent 572,726. Making the comparison by percentages between the total immigration from 3821 to 1903 and that for 1903 alone , we find that in the first case the Ger- any-United Kingdom group contrib uted 56 per cent of the immigration and the Austrian-Italian-Russian group 21 per cent , while in the second case 1903 alone the first group furnished but 12 per cent and the second 68 per cent There are few facts about the America of to-day more significant for the future of the country than these. _ . * * President Roosevelt has selected Judge Beakman Winthrop of the Court of First Instance , Philippine Islands , to succeed "Will iam Hunt as gov ernor of Porto Rico. Judge Win throp is from New York. He is a member of one of the oldest families of New York , a graduate of Har vard , and a per sonal friend of President Rnose- JUDGE W THEOP. yolt Hewentto the Philippines as the assistant executive secretary to the Philippine'commission. He made a record for efficiency , and during the temporary absence of Mr. Ferguson acted for several months as secretary of tke commission. Judge Winthrop will not assume office in Porto Riao until the beginning of the next fiscal year , July 1 , it having been decided Governor Hunt shall continue In the office until then. ' The United States , with $680,000,000 In silver on hand a mass of metal that would fill 500 cars , and which it costs $100,000 to recount now deliber ately proposes to forever store this enormous mass and to add to the amount With the good business condi tions now prevailing , it would seem to be the wisest course to followtheadvice of the Secretary of the Treasury and the director of the mint and gradually change over the dollars which will not circulate into a form of money which' not only will circulate , but which will remain absorbed in the currency of the \ country. On July 1 next the bullion of 1S90 will be exhausted aud we shall have on hand 580,000,000 silver dollars. 54,000.000 of which are in circulation. The highest amount ever in circulation was 79,000,000 in 1902. It is manifest , therefore , that $500,000,000 can only be circulated through means of certifi- cates. Austria , Russia , Germany , France and Japan have within the last ten years recoined into subsidiary coin age more than $194,000,000 of full ten * der silver instead of buying bullion. . - * The Navy Department has ordered that when the colors are raised in the niorning and when they are lowered .at night the band shall play "The Star- Spangled Banner. " Probably most Americans regard it as their best na tional song. The only objection to it is that it is hard to sing. "America" can be sung , and would no doubt take prec edence over all the rest if Great Brit ain would consent to stop using the tune as its own national hymn. There are several stirring military songs , but their Civil War origin makes them un available. The Navy Department is right. Even if most of us cannot sing 'The Star-Spangled Banner , " the band -can play it , and we can think of the .words. " * "Clean money , " free from microbes and the filth gathered from constant circulation , is in sight if the currency bill reported to the house from the Committee on Banking and Currency by Congressman Fowler Is adopted. The bill provides for the removal of the limitation of the issue of small bills and for a greater amount of small coins. It is proposed to recoin the 578,002,099 silver dollars now in the treasury into fractional currency. The Department of Agriculture has prepared a bulletin on weeds used in medicine. It suggests that although the price of crude drugs from this source will not be large enough to pay .any one to gather them as a business , it may be handy to know , in ridding a farm of its pest , that it has some com mercial use. President Roosevelt has always be lieved that it was useless to have guns on the ships of the navy unless the gunners could shoot and hit the mark. As he remarked in one of his messages to Congress , "The shot that hits is the only one that counts. " Accordingly he lias had presented to the navy a gold trophy , for which the various ships are to compete each year. The ship that makes the best score in its class at the annual target practice will hold the trophy for the succeeding year. THE GILLESPIE MURDER TRIAL. Remarkablc Indiana Tragedy Being Thrauhed Out. No murder triarin. southern Indiana ir. recent years has attracted more atten tion than the one which is now on in Rising Sun , and in which the authorities are striving to bring to justice the mur derers of Miss Elizabeth Gillespie. Thn prominence and wealth of the accused and the singular circumstances surround ing the tragedy , make it a most remarka ble and unusual case. Miss Gillespie was shot while stamling in the parlor of her home on the evening of Dec. 8 , 1903. One of the most popu lar and prominent society women of Rising Sun , a member of one of the old est and wealthiest families of southern Indiana , the murder of Miss Gillespie created a sensation throughout the entire country. This was increased when the murdered woman's twin brother , James Gillespie , was placed under arrest charg ed with the crime. Held with him as accessories are his sister , Mrs. Belle Seward , and Myron V. Barbour and his wife , Mrs. Carrie Barbour. Behind the murder of Miss Gillospie is the story of a family skeleton and that story the officers of the law have not been able to bring out. Noted throughout Indiana for their pride and haughtiness , the members of the Gilles pie family have lived up to their repu tation since the tragedy. Those impli cated in the murder treat the authori ties with disdain , while the other rela tives maintain a forbidding silence. It has developed , however , that although James Gillespie entertained a deep affec tion for his sister at one time , he had during the last three or four years of her life hated her fiercely. Miss Gillespie , it is known , had severely criticised the conduct of Mrs. Carrie Barbour and this led to a violent quarrel between her and her brother , James , who , thereupon , went to live with the Barbours , opposite his own home. The fact that the moth er , Mrs. Gillespie , had left her daugh ter the bulk of her property intensified the family feud. The most tangible evidence against James Gillespie is that he is one of the two men in Rising Sun who own a dou ble-barreled shotgun of 12 caliber. The bullet taken from Miss Gillespie's tem ple was a No. 4 bird shot , the kind used in her brother's gun , a supply of which ' 1 been given the latter a few days previous to the tragedy by Myron IJ ar bour. Onthe night of the murder two men were approaching the Gilespie home from opposite directions. Both saw the flash of the gun and heard the report , but no one passed them while they ran to the spot. They heard the click of an iron gate in. the darkness. The only iron gateway in that vicinity is in front of the Barbour residence. Lined up on both sides in the case are the most brilliant criminal lawyers in Indiana and the trial bids fair to be a great legal battle. JUDGE ALTON B. PARKER , Indorsed for tbe Presidential Nomina tion by New York Democrats. Alton Brooks Parker , the New York candidate for the Democratic nomina tion for President , is one of the best known jurists of the Empire State , hav ing occupied a high position on the bench since 1SS5 , when he became a member of the State Supreme Court. He was born at Cortland , N. Y. , in 1852 and was JUDGE ALTON B. PARKER. educated in the public schools of his na tive town and in the Cortlatd academy and Cortland Normal school. From the normal school he went to the Albany law school , and after his admission to the bar practiced for several years at Kings ton. He was surrogate of Ulster County from 1877 to 1SS5 , when he became a justice- the Supreme Court. In 1SS9 he became a. member of the Court of Appeals and since Jan. 1 , 1898 , has been chief judge of that court. Judge Parker has always been influential in the politics of his State. He was a delegate to the convention that nominated Grover Cleve land for President in 1SS4 and in the following year was tendered an appoint ment as First Assistant Postmaster General. In 1SS5 he was chosen chair man of the State Democratic executive committee. Strikes in Various Cities. City , occupation , and cause. Number. Philadelphia , building trades. wages 5,000 Buffalo , N. Y. , grain handlers , lockout 200 Cleveland , O. , metal and tin work ers , wages 200 Indianapolis , Ind. , plumbers , wages 100 Quincy , 111. , plumbers , hours 50 Jackson , Mich. , building trades time 300 Newark , N. J. , carriage makers , open shop 500 Oil City , Pa. , building workers , open shop * L'OO Waterbury , Conn. , carpenters , wages 400 Waterbury , Conn. , hodcarriers , hours , wages r 300 * Schenectady , . N. Y. , tinsmiths , wages 150 Schenectady , N. Y. , coal handlers , c wages 150 Holyoke , Mass. , carpenters , wages. oOO E Handled Large Sum Without Error. t Major George W. Evans , disbursing officer and chief of the division of finance I in the Interior Department , has just v reached the fortieth year of his service in the department , during which time he t handled more than $1,000,000,000 with.i out an error. . . t BUSSIANS IJS A TfiAf. PORT ARTHUR IS INVESTED BY TWO JAP ARMIES. Cut Off from the World , Russians Ex pect to Hold City for Year Mikado's GO.OOO Men Land from Sixty Trans ports and Seize Railroad. The Russians secrn to have abandon ed Port Arthur "to its fate , and Gen. Stoessel and his men must either sur render or die. The Japanese invading armies swarm at will over the narrow neck of the Liao-Tung peninsula. They have cut the wires and blockaded the railpad back of the doomed fortress. Alexieff and the wounded were hurried ly shipped north , just before the way of escape was closed. Admiral Togo has reduced Port Arthur's fleet fo a. nullity. Two big Japanese armies , believed to number not less than 00,000 men , have landed on the Liao-Tung peninsula north of Port Arthur , seized the railroad and put the Russian fortress in a state of siege. One army landed on the west , the other on the east , coast of the pe ninsula. It is reported that one army will march north and attack New- chwang. Port Arthur has been isolated and left to its own resources , and yet all this the Russians seem to accept with great stoicism. These events have been expected since the outbreak of the war and the authorities appear to be re lieved now that the blow has fallen. They assert that the fortress of Port Arthur is impregnable and amply pro visioned to stiind a siege for a year and that it can hold out until the time comes to relieve it. While the landing was proceeding on Thursday , the Japanese ships , consisting of the battleships Mikasa , Hatsuse , Shi- kashima , Yashima and Fuji , and the cruisers Iwate , Idsumo and Asama , made a demonstration ofE Port Arthur k > prevent the possible egress of Russian torpedo boats. A number of Japanese BATTLE WAS BLOODY. Nearly 4,000 Men Are Said to Hire Fallen in Yalu Fitfht. The official reports of Gen. Kuropat- kin and Gen. Zassalitch on the battle of the Yalu have been received by the Czar and made public , The reports show that from 3,000 to 4,000 men were killed and that the artillery fire on both sides was fierce in the extreme. It is now plain that no more than 8,000 Russians were actually engaged in the fighting at the Yalu against the Jap anese army , of a. total strength of be tween 30,000 and 40,000. The losses on both sides , which are expected to reach 1,000 and possibly 1.200 in the Russian force and twice that number for the Japanese , make it one of the bloodiest fights in history. At the river crossing the Japanese dead lay piled up literally in heaps and Gen. Kuroki's success was purchased at such a heavy cost that the Russians are disposed to regard it as rather a defeat than a victory for him. A story is circulated in St. Petersburg of a striking episode during the fighting on the Yalu river and the desperate bravery of a Russian regiment which without artillery attacked two and one- half divisions of Japanese. The Rus sians , headed by a chaplain bearing a cross , fought like lions , but were crush ed and almost annihilated by overwhelm ing numbers , Ihe scene after the tight resembling a shambles. " " * Gen. Kuropatkin's dispatch shows that the Russians fought with such bull dog tenacity and bravery against the overwhelming superiority of the enemy that the nominal victory of the Japanese was eclipsed by the prowess of the Czar's soldiers. Gen. ivuropatkin's re port also served to restore Gen. Zassa litch to public favor. The Russian people are especially im pressed with the desperate bayonet charge of the Eleventh regiment The mtntal picture of the regiment advanc ing against the enemy with bands and bugles blaring and tlie priest with cross aloft at the head appealed to the dra matic sense of the Russian population as nothing else could. The survivors of this PORT OF NEWCHWANG , WHERE JAPS LANDED. torpedo boats were observed off Miado Island , in Pigeon bay. Upon the mountainous banks of the Yalu , Kuropatkin fears that the victori ous Japanese will turn his flank and the stage is cleared for one of the great est sieges and assaults of modern war fare. Land at Two Points. According to official information t. lauding of troops from sixty transports began simultaneously at Pitscwo and Cape Terminal on the morning of May 5. It is also reported that troops are being landed nr Kinchow , but this is not credited , as the Russians are known lo have fortifications there , and it is not believed that the .lapanese had the dur ing to land immediately under an in- trenched position , from which the Rus sians could inflict severe injury on them. Complete details of the landing are lacking owing to the interruption of com munication. No resistance was made , the few Cossacks who observed the movement retiring when the warships shelled the shore preparatory to disem barkation. Ten thousand men were put ashore Thursday , and the disembarka tion was proceeding at the time that communication 'ceased. It 'is believed that there are over 20,000 now on laud preparing for a forward movement. Two Japanese regiments were hurried westward to cut the railroad and tele graph communication. One of these fired on a train conveying the wounded from Port Arthur. It was because he was convinced that Port Arthur was about to be cut off that Viceroy Alexieff , accompanied by his staff and Grand Duke Boris , left hastily. On Thursday several train loads of sick and wounded and other ineffectives were dispatched northward. Wants No Mediation. In the most categorical terms Russia has officially notified the world that she will not accept mediation to terminate the war with Japan. The official notifi cation declares : "Everything within the limits of possibility was done by Russia , to solve the complications which had arisen in the far East in a peaceful man ner , but after the treacherous surprise on the part of the Japanese which forced Russia to take up arms obviously no friendly mediation can have any suc cess. Similarly the imperial government will not admit the intervention of any power whatsoever in the direct negotia tions which will occur betwwm Russia and Japan after the termination of hos tile operations in order to determine the conditions of peace. " The State Department has received a cablegram from United States Minister Griscom at Tokio 'confirming the press reports of the landing of the Japanese In the Liao-Tung peninsula , about forty miles above Port Arthur. The location as given in the Japanese dispatch is Kiu- chau. Humorous News Notes. What Russia needs is a Gen. Wood to clean up its camps in Manchuria. Alexieff's plight should assure him the sympathy of Gen. Buller , at all events. Perhaps Kuropatkin. intends that his masterly retreat shall go down in his tory. Nobody need be surprised if Manchuria proves to be the graveyard of other rep utations besides that of Alexieff. Alexieff is not the first man to discover the unpleasant consequences of occupy ing a job that is several sizes too large to be a fit. heroic regJment which cut its way out declare that the position was surround- ea by more than 1,000 dead Japanese. The loss of the guns which , according to the best information obtainable , con sisted of twenty-two field pieces and eight machine guns , is considered par ticularly unfortunate , even though they will be of no service to the enemy on account of the removal of their breech locks. Blows tliat Have Staggered Russia. The naval losses of Russia since the outbreak of the war in battleships , "ruis- cvs and torpedo craft destroyed ur Ovm- aged are as follows : Czarewitch , battleship , torpedoed jmd beached at Port Arthur , Feb. 7 ; 13,110 tons. lletvizan , torpedoed and beached at Port Arthur , Feb. 8. Repaired and used as a floating fort ; 12,700 tons. Pallada , cruiser , torpedoed at Port Ar thur and Ueached , Feb. 8 ; repaired ; 3,200 tons. Boyarin. cruiser , disabled by Japanese at Port Arthur and beached , Feb. S ; sunk on Feb. 14 ; 3,200 tons. Askold , cruiser , disabled by Japanese- at Port Arthur ; hole below water line ; Feb. 9 ; repaired ; 3.100 tons. Diana , cruiser , disabled by Japanese at Port Arthur ; hole below water line ; Feb. 9 ; repaired ; G.G30 tons. Variag , cruiser , destroyed by Japanese at Chemulpo , Feb. 9 ; 6,300 tons. Poltava , battleship , disabled by Japan ese at Port Arthur ; hole below water line ; Feb. 9 ; 10,900 tons. Petropavlovsk , battleship , blown up by mine at Port Arthur , April 13 ; 10,960 tens. tens.Pobieda Pobieda , battleship , damaged by mine at Port Arthur , April 13 ; 12,674 tons. Torpedo boats and gunboats : Korieta , destroyed by Japanese at Chemulpo , Feb. 9. Manjii. said to have been seized by Japanese at Nagasaki , Feb. 9. Yeuesei , torpedo destroyer , blown up by Russian mine , Feb. 11. . Skori , torpedo boat , sunk by Russian mine , March 16. Bez Shumi , torpedo destroyer , sunk by Japanese , April 13. / Bezstraslmi , torpedo'- destroyer , sunk by Japanese , April 53. WAR NEWS IN BRIEF. L The attitude oC the Manchurians and Chinese toward the advance of the Jap anese forces is one of welcome. It is. rumored that the Japanese cap tured Fengwangcheng May 4 , and that the losses on both sides were heavy. In the battle of the Yalu on Saturday and Sunday the Japanese had a thou sand casualties. Many Russian prison ers are held at Autung. It is stated that Gen. Oku has landed three Japanese divisions , or 75,000 men , on the Yalu river for the purpose of ad vancing against the Russian main force * According to a telegram received from Chefoo the garrison at Port Arthur has been reduced to 4,000 men , and all the important documents , money and field guns have been removed1 to Mukden. There is no exaggeration in the state ments that the Czar is taking the war terribly to heart. His appearance has undergoue a great change. He looks pincliea and plainly is painfully wor ried. THE WEEKLY One Hundred Years Ago. The Connecticut valley was devas tated by a flood. Many persons were drowned and hundreds driven from their homes. President Jefferson pardoned all de serters who had taken refuge in Louis iana prior to Dec. 20 , 1803. The legislature of Ohio appropriated $17,000 for the building of public roads. State courts in Ohio seriously dis cussed whether they were bound by United States laws. Dutch Guiana , in South America , was taken by the British with 2,000 prisoners , 282 cannon , and several ships. After having been closed many months on account of the plague the port of Malaga was opened to com merce. Seventy-five .Years Ago. The export of opium from Bengal , under British auspices , amounted to $5,000,000 annually. The first Roman Catholic peers took their seats in tliG English House of Lords. An incendiary fire occurred in West minster Abbey. The new Pope restored to the Jew ish and Christian dissenters in Rome all the privileges of which they had been deprived by his predecessor. The Duke of Norfolk and seven other Roman Catholic peers took their seats in the House of Lords. An exploring party left Sydney , Aus tralia , for the interior to discover the source of several large rivers. Fifty Years Ago. The United States ship Saratoga ar rived at Honolulu , twenty-five days out from Japan. The Sultan of Turkey ga.ve a grand banquet in honor of Napoleon. The great mill operatives' strike at Preston , England , ended. The government of the United States announced its neutrality in the Crim ean War. Santa Ana's squadron abandoned the blockade of Acapulco , Mexico. Smallpox broke out on the ships of the English Baltic fleet. Forty Years Ago. St. Louis , Mo. , journeyman tailors , then on strike , accused their employ ers with manufacturing Confederate army uniforms. Negro sergeants and private soldiers in the United States army received only $7 a month , while whites with the same rank received $13. The trotting stallion George M. Patchen , famous sire of harness hors es , died at New York. Congressman James A. Garfield , afterward President , asked for the ap pointment of a committee to investi gate Frank Blair's charges against Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase. The Chicago Board of Trade voted $2.50 weekly to families of men em ployed by its members who would en list in the army for 100 days. The House of Representatives , after three minutes' debate , appropriated $25,000,000 for equipping 100,000 more troops. Thirty Years Ago. Carl Schurz delivered his famous eulogy on Charles Sumner at Boston , among his auditors being Ralph Waldo Emerson , Henry W. Longfellow , Oliver Wendell Holmes , John G. Whittier , Cyrus W. Field , and Phillips Brooks. The first agreement to fix railroad rates in the East was made at New York , officials of the Atlantic and Great Western , New York , Boston and Montreal , United States Rolling Stock Company , the Erie and Pennsylvania attending the conference. Polish priests were imprisoned by the Russian government for refusing to recognize the Russo-Greek church. Chicago's street railway problem was reported solved by the construc tion of an inclosed steam locomotive , designed to haul cars at a rapid rate , electricity and the cable being practic ally unknown. The inhabitants of , Bilbao , Spain , who had been on the verge of starva tion during the siege of the city , were publicly fed by Marshal Serrano. The Citizens' Mutual Reform Asso ciation of Philadelphia , Pa. , finished its investigation of the famous "gas ring' ' in that city. Twenty Years Ago. ' Sir Michael Hicks-Beach offered a resolution of censure in the British Commons because of the government's dilatory policy in the Soudan. _ Bayard declared in the United States Senate that socialism was rapidly get- tine control of the government Itlight Huvc Been Worse. At a prayer meeting at the Cove , re ports the Buffalo Commercial , ono man , a money lender , not loved by the people whose collateral he held , spoke of him self and the others present as "miserable sinners , " and took rather too abject an attitude to please a free-spoken neigh bor. "Some people , " the latter said , "don't mean nothin' when they perfeus to be miserable sinners , but I will do Elder Cossey the justice to say that we all believe him to be just as blame mean as he perfesses to be. " It must have been Elder Cossey at wb se funeral the hard- pressed parson is reported as saying : "It is true , my hearers , that our depart ed brother was mean in some things but we must in all chnrity remember thai he was meaner in others. " A Sure Protection. Barton , N. D. , May 9. Many cases are being published of how diseases have been cured and lives saved by Dodd's Kidney Pills , but there is a family in this place who use this rem edy as a protection against the coming on of diseases and with excellent re sults. sults.Mr. Mr. W. A. Moffet says : "We have no very serious illness or complaint , for we always use Dodd's Kidney Pills the very moment we feel the least symptom of sickness and they soon nut us right. If we have a touch of lame back or think the kidneys are not right , we take a few Dodd's Kidney Pills and the symptoms are soon all gone. "My brother had Diabetes and the doctor told him he could not live until spring. I got some Dodd's Kidney Pills for him , and although that was se\eral years ago , he has lived through all the winters and springs since and is still living. Dodd's'Kidney Pills nr < a wonderful medicine. " Overheard in the Jungle. "Are you aware , " asked the learned monkey of the elephant , "that , accord ing to the Latin , you have an imped * iment in your speech ? " "How so ? " asked the elephant , as he deftly mashed a fly with his righ ? ear. ear."In "In Latin impedimenta means bag gage , and you have a trunk " "I wish " began the elephant , as he reached with determination for a convenient sapling. But the monkej was already In the top of a high tree Doafnos * Cannot He Cured by local applications , as they cannot reach tha diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness , and that Is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness Ls caused by an In flamed condition of the mucous lining of the 'Iiistachlan Tube. When this tube pets inflamed vou have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hear- Inp , and when It Is entirely closcu Deafness la the result , and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condition , hearing will be destroyed forever ; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh , which is nothing but an Inflamed condition oi the mucous simaces. We will Rive One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness ( caused by catarrh ) thai cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for cir culars , free. F. J. CHENEY & CO. , Toledo , O. Sold by DrupRlsts. 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. IT REVEALS INCONSISTENCIES. Absurdities in Dress Made Most Ap parent by the Camera. "If women would but remember/ remarked the photographic artist , "that the gown when composed ol more than one material should loob like one garment worn over the other , they would save themselves from some grievous artistic errors in dress. Take the case of the double sleeve novv so popular. The idea is that of a comparatively heavy outer sleeve , cut away to show the lighter and gener ally prettier arm covering , and a wom an with anj- artistic feeling always preserves that effect , even though she may not act on any definite principle. "But artistic feeling is a rare thing ; therefore , the double sleeve is the occa sion of many artistic atrocities. One actually sees such sleeves cut in two at- the elbow in order that the puff of silk may be inserted , thus leaving the lower half without any apparent con nection with the shoulder , and nothing to prevent it , so far as the eye can see , from sliding oft the arm. The sleeve may with perfect propriety be slashed at the elbow to show a-.silk lining , but to cut it in two for the purpose of inserting another material Is merely making patchwork of it. An other custom is to put the material with which the sleeve terminates over , instead of under , , the predominating material , thus destroying the idea of an undersleeve entirely , and leaving the construction without any show of reason for its existence. IN AN OLD TRUNK Baby Finds a Bottle of Carbolic Acid and Drinks It. While the mother was unpacking an nld trunk a little IS-months-old baby : ; ot hold of a bottle of carbolic acid while playing on the floor , and his stomach was so badly burned it was feared he would not live , for he could not eat ordinary foods. The mother says in telling of the case : "It was all two doctors could do to- save him , as it burnt his throat and stomach so bad that for two months after he took the poison nothing would lay on his stomach. Finally I took him into the country and tried new milk , and that was no better for him. His grandma finally suggested Grape-Nuts r.nd I am thankful I adopted the food , , for he commenced to get better right.- away and would not eat anything else.1 lie commenced to get fleshy and his cheeks like red roses and now he is entirely well. ; "I took him to Matamoras on a visit , and every place we went to stay tp eat' he called for Grape-Nuts and I would have to explain how he came to call for it , as it was his main food. "The names of the physicians who attended the baby are Dr. Eddy , of this town , and Dr. Geo. Gale , of New port. Qhio , and anyone can write to me or to them and learn what Grape- Nuts food will do for children arid grown-ups , too. ' ? * Name given by Postum Co. , Battle Creek , Mich. Look in each pkg. for the famous ' little book , "The Road to Wellville. "