- ' - . . . . . . . = _ . - = - , - . . . - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - _ _ . _ _ - - - , : ; . . . . . - = = -r = _ _ _ - = - - U ( { t ' ' J' _ _ . . . _ _ . ' . . ' , - . - " . "Well-Built .Instrument. . , Wlien the concert : : was over , and the pianist was driving along the snowy road to. the Burnham Inn , where he ' . was to spend tl/c night , he ventured to ° ask his host of the evening if he had . , i 'enjoyed the playing. : "You did first- -rate , " Mr. Burnham told him. "That's I ' I . ; my opinion. " I : : "Yes , " he went on , after a minute , ( - "you - certainly did first-rate. You showed power and strength beyond any- thing I ever expected to listen to , and lyon \ was lightning quick into the bar- I 1 ' 'gain. I -r. . "Anybody , that heard you could tell you'd worked hard and long and steady , to get your trade. But I tell ye who r 'else had ought to have some credit- . 'that's the man that made the piano I . ; you played on. * ' "Tain't every instrument that . d , would stand the strain 'ou' put on it , . not by a good deal. j ' "I should call it the praise ought to . f ' ? be divided .pretty : even betwixt ye. " j 1 . Self-Abnegation. ' Photographer ( exhibiting plate ) - Yoi -moved your head a little , m 'am. Wi , , shall have to try again. . : ' Sitter ( with lap dog ) - Not at all. 1 moved my head on purpose. I want Fidi to bo the wliolp tbinc in this picture. " . _ . , . . MOTHERS 1 I WHO IIAVE S t 1 DAUfiHTERS 1f f ' Find Kelp in Lydia E. Pink = ham's Vegetable Compound Winchester , Ind. - "Four doctors told me that they could never make ; . . me regular , and w : N : : that would event 1 r. . . ? ; ually have dropsy. . r t it . I would bloat , and ' : . .1 sufferfrombearing- ' down pains , cramps " and chills , and I . . , . , . . . . . could not sleep v. . . J' , . , - : " ' ' : : ' ; : _ d" J : x , , , nights. My mother .tt ) . 'J.iwrotetoMrs.Pink , : . . - I - . . , , : : , ; t , . / : ) : : ) . f , * > ( : : , r-t.t " ; : : . + - - ham for adviceand , J . > ; : : . : . , . ' . ' , _ : . . . : _ < . : . : . ; ; . . . , _ : ; : : : { : 'r I began . . to take I > ' , . . - _ ' ' : ; < , . , : . : : ; : ' , . : : r : ' ' : ' : " : ; ' ' : " ' : : : ' , f" " > ; ' : ' : - ' < ' : : " ' : > : : : , : : LydiaE.Pinkham's . M : ' : ' ' \ : ' : ' - : f" ; ; ; : - : ' " Vegetable Com- 1 pound. After taking one and one- half bottles of the Compound , I am all " right again , and I recommend it to I every suffering woman. " - MBS. MAY I DEAL , Winchester , Ind. Hundreds of such letters from girls ind mothers expressing their gratitude , , for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- I table Compound has accomplished for : them have been received by The Lydia E. PinkhamMedicine Company , Lynn , I Mass. ' I Girls who are troubled with painful or irregular periods , backache , head- , ache , dragging-down sensations , faint- Ing spells or indigestion , should take ' Immediate action to ward off the seri- . DUs consequences and be restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound. Thousands have been t restored to health by its use. I ' . " " If youTvould like special advice _ ! \ . . abont ! 3'our case write a confiden I tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham , at I Lynn , "Mass. Her advice is free , and always helpful. i I SICK HEADAGHE' Positively cured by fA DT ) ) these little Fills. C as - t\ fI I [ \ They also relieve Dis ! I . ' tress from Dyspepsia , In- . 0. . I BTT LE digestion and Too Hearty I ii ! V R Eating. A perfect remI I I . , y edy lor Dizziness. Nausea 1 ( Pi IisSo Drowsiness , Bad Taste . in tho Mouth : , Coated Tongue , Pain In the Side , TORPID LIVER. They i regulate tlie Bowels. Purely : Vegetable. / ! I SHALL PILL SMALL 4 DOSE SHALL PRICE } CARTERS Genuine . Must Bear i i /'a Fac-Simile Signature I 1 I TLE IVER I = I PILLS.REFUSE ' : I , REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. iI 8 I ; ' ft s45i5O . - . -.f' J1 I Bushels of yJ , . , i. GJ ! t Wheat per Acre " .I . i . have been grown on Farm Lands in I ' . . " ' ' WESTERN ) . CANADA I , Much : less would be satisfactory. ! The general average is above 20 bushels , "All arc loud in their praises of tha v . great : crops and that wonderful country. " " Extract : from correspondence National Editorial Association of August ; igoS. . I , . ' I" It is now possible to secure a Homestead ol ; 160 acres iree and another 160 acres at $3.00 pc acre. f\ \ Hundreds have paid the cost of therr farms lit ( ' . /purchased ) and then had a balance of from , $ io.oa j . to $ i.oo : per acre from one crop. ! , 1vreat.Barley. : Oats , Flax - all do well. ) ) Mixed ' .JFarmin is a great success and Dairying is highly < . " .s profitable. ; "v Evccllent Climate , splendid Schools and f , Churches , .Railways bring most every district , within easy : reach of market. . : Railway ) and Land Companies have lands fot ' tJate ai low prices and on easy terms. , "Last Dcsl West" Pamphlets I ' : and maps sent free. For these and information as to how to secure lowest Railway Rates apply to . W. D. Scott , Superintendent of Immigration , ! < Ottawa. Canada , or E T. Holmes. 31 ; Jackson ' ' St. St. Paul , Minn , and J. M. MacLachlan , Box * 216 \Vatertovm , . So. Dakota. Authorized Govern- aaem Agents. Plecsa sar where J'Qllsaw this sdTsrtisecnsnt. I . r0 w ! . q' p. > > placed anywhera R ft. . p/ B I o I S ; yLY ! ! i KILLED attracts nil n es . and Neat killa I clean.ornamental , u conventent . cheap. : , \ . . . . . . . . . . - : J , ' : J' I tall..awo.Can. 1'j not spill or tip . . . Z # over. trill not sol ) f' r . / : . r orlnjureanytUlnc. : Guaranteed eCe ' " ejZec- . / - . tiro. Otalide/Ten , - --e. , ' . - prllcntprtprudlo1' " We. lI.rotdl Cllllrr. , - 1. : K L ' _ - l ; O IV Calb Atrnnf , Brooklyn. Xtn Tort. . . HalHiciedwith f IJifil 1 t S0re Eyes , use IHOMPSON'S I fYf WHlfR . . . : . - _ - : : . = = ' - : : : : : : : - = ; : - - - ; : : : : ; : . ) - - - , , - , . - - -SENATOR i BAILEY IN FIST FIGHT m- I a" Texas Statesman and a Correspond- ent Have Mix-Up : at Capitol Senator Joseph W. Bailey of Texas and W. Sinker Manning , Washington I correspondent . of the New York Times , had a fist fight in the Senate corridor Thursday afternoon. Bailey used Manning's umbrella to wallop the scribe. Neither antagonist suffered any serious injury. The only damage was to the umbrella. The clash grew out of an article in the Times under a Washington date line which said that Senator Aldrich , ' Republican leader in the tariff debate , had a number o'f followers among Democrats "who may faithfully be set down under the classification of 'Al- drich men' , " and that "they are head- ed by that distinguished'son of Texas , Joseph Weldon Bailey. " Bailey read this story on the floor of the Senate and then denied the allegations. In making his denial he launched into a denunciation of newspapers in general and of the Times correspondent in particular , whom he specifically called a liar , a whelp and a coward. When Manning later met Bailey and started to explain that he did not write the article the mix-up came. REVOLT IN PERU IS QUELLED. President Captured and Freed , De- ' feats the Rebel Forces. The palace President Leguia in Lima , Peru , was attacked by revolu tionary forces and the loyalty of the troops was all that saved the chief ex ecutive from being deposed from of fice. The revolutionists , after hard fighting , succeeded in entering the pal- ace and making the President prisoner , tmt : the loyal soldiers , after recovering from the panic into which the unex pected attack threw them , advanced upon' the rebels and rescued Leguia unharmed. The President , restored to power , immediately took charge ) of put- ling down the disorder. The fighting i lasted for some time , but resulted in I the complete routing of the revolution- , ary forces. Later Leguia rode through , the streets , which were closely guard ed by cavalry , and assured the towns- I people and tradesmen the danger was I passed. , KANSAS NOW A LIQUOR SAHARA. Bucket Shops Kicked , Streams Puri- fied , Danny Dreamer Barred. Kansas is as dry as laws can make it now. The new prohibitory law. that stops the sale of liquors by druggists went into effect at midnight Saturday. The Kansas statute book appeared Sat- urday morning , and the acts ci tae ! Legislature become effective on its publication. All bucket shops \n the State will have to close. The new la- bor law bars child actors from the theaters and all boys under ' 14 years of agp from the messenger service. Inter- urban cars must be equipped with ad- ditional conveniences. Cities will be required to preserve the purity of \the \ waters of the streams in their vicin- ity. Railroads will be required to , erect hog tight fences along the right of way where farmers require It. Fruit tree agents will go to jail if they mis- represent the brand of fruit trees they sell. HOOSIER BANKER ENDS HIS LIFE Jesse Fletcher of a Well-Known Family Kills Himself. Jesse Fletcher , a wealthy business man of Indianapolis , Ind. , committed suicide at Turtle Lake , near Alpena , . Mich. , where there is a widely known fishing and hunting club. Mr. Fletcher belonged to one of the most prominent of the old Indiana families. For many years it has been important in the financial development of the State , and the Fletchers were among the first bankers to co-operate in the beginning of business in the Middle West. Jesse Fletcher was a capitalist and interest- ed financially in many directions. The amount of his fortune is not known , but it is not believed that it was loss . of money that led to his suicide. He was a man of middle age , unmarried and of retiring disposition. m An ice skating rink is to be installed in the Plaza -Hotel , New York : , for the use of patrons in hot weather. I Fire at Barnet , B. C. , wiped out .the buildings of the North Pacific lumber Company. The loss is $350,000. Two men were arrested in Brooklyn , N. Y. , on ssupicion of having killed An- tonio Malfetti , 7 years old , and thrown his body into the East River. \ The name of La Baca , the Pacific terminal of the Panama Canal , will be changed to Balboa , in honor of Vasco Nunez Balboa , who discovered the Pa cific Ocean. C. S. Jordan was found guilty o ! the murder of his wife at Somerville Mass. The woman's dismembered body was found in a trunk which Jordan had shipped to Boston. ' Natives of China are rapidly for- saking the worship of idols , according to the Rev. T. D. Holmes , a Baptist missionary who has just arrived at San Francisco. The Supreme Court of Colorado' ' held that clubs in prohibition towns have no right to dispense liquor even to their own members. The case involved primarily the Elks' ! lodge of Canyou City , who sought to make a test. = < to : : ; ; . : _ _ . . . ; ; : _ - : . . : : : : : : : tt--- : : ; : = = : = = : : : : - : ; ' : : : : " ' : : : : : : - : - : : . - . : : : - : . . . : : ; . : : - - - . : - - - - - = - : : -7 - : = - - ; : . : : _ _ : : : : _ ' ; : " 1- : : : - : : : : ; . . . , . ' ' I . - . . . . - - - - - - . - ' - - - ' . _ - . - . . . USES OP THE WIRELESS TELEPHONE. , r. . I = - - f " " " ( 61lL ! IL"1 I 1 OUT OF . - BAIT ! I . - - - - - 1 ? A \ h i 3\ i 1 i I - 1l ll /llrr A ' ' - . iLLi ) ! IIi r- : HELLO ETREL ! . . . . 'SAY-I ' WAS PINCHEt LAST Nl&HT FOR CLIH81NG A LAMP 1 POVT TO LICXHT % % , ] I A CIGAR-SEND. \ , I IJ TEN OR COME _ - . W ) D AT ONCE. ; I - = ! H\\ . I I'lUmf ' { , I VI I , , ! , . ' h _ _ _ r. COD ! T ! , NINTH HOLt f S\\ . \iii1 \ : ; u ' ; . 1 I t. Chicago Journal. SENTENCED FOR MINING FRAUDS " ' 1'0 Queens" Promoters Get Prison Term in lUio > souri. Frank H. Horn , S. H. Snyder and Raymond P. May were sentenced to serve a year and a day in the United States prison at Leavenworth , Kan. , and to pay a fine of $500 each , and John E. Horn was fined $500 in the Federal court in Kansas City for fraud in promoting the "Two Queens" mine in Arizona. E. S. Horn , the other de fendant , who collapsed when the ver- dict was returned on May \ 18 , was still too ill to appear for sentence. He will be sentenced later. The United States District Attorney made a plea to the , court for leniency on behalf of John E. Horn , who is only 22 years old , saying his youtbxshould be considered as an extenuating condition. The judge accepted this suggestion and said the young man's punishment should be only a fine and costs , pro- vided the fine was paid at once. 7/70S&0VDS OF t D a William Sherring , the winner of the Marathon at Athens in 1906 , has turn- ed professional. At Topeka , Kan. , Dr. B. F. Roller of Seattle defeated Hjalraer Lundin in two straight falls. . Tommy Murphy has added another slick trotter to his string in Ethel Mack , by Steel Arch. Minnesota-Wisconsin : ! League opened its first season with good games and large crowds. Manager Kelley of St. Paul has I finally landed Orville Kilroy , the for- mer St. Paul and Minneapolis pitcher. Pitcher Nagle of the Toledo Ameri- can Association baseball team , has been leased to the Lincoln , Neb. , team , of the Western League. The 100-mile record for a horse was made by Conqueror , Nov. 12 , 1853. The distance was covered in S hours , 53 minutes and 55 seconds. Sunol , 2 : OS 1-4 , former queen of the trotting turf , died the other day at Newtown Square , Pa. , where she was being kept ; : for breeding purposes. i I A single bet of $50,000 to $5,000 has been laid against the American colt Sir Martin in the English Derby. It is one of the largest bets made for many years. John Evers , the star second.baseman of the Chicago Nationals , was. suspend ed by the national commission for. his failure to report to his " team at the opening of the season. Premier honors were Von by the sophomores in the annual interclass track meet at Hamiine university held on Norton field , L . . . . e second' year men I chalking up a total of 67 points. Paull , the sophomore distance run- ner of the University of Pennsylvania on Franklin : Field , broke the collegiate _ and inter-collegiate record for the two- mile run , his time being 9 minutes and 28 seconds. Young Corbett has received a tele gram from Promoter James Coffroth of San Francisco offering him a $5,000 I purse for a twenty-five-round bout I with Jimmie Britt some time in the near future at Colma , Cai. I r . . . . . . . )1r ' : . t5 ( 1 l 1 r ! - ' ; . . U 1 p % . * / r ' . sAHD 4. f 'will ha0 . , 5 .r .rrr J _ _ _ u. _ c ; i LABOR LEADERS CONVICTED. Madden , Pouchot and Boyle Found Guilty of Conspiracy. A compromise verdict , inflicting a penalty of $500 each on Martin B. Madden , Fred A. Pouchot and M. J. Boyle , the labor leaders found guilty of conspiracy to extort money from the Joseph Klicka company , was Saturday returned by the Chicago jury in whose hands thefate of the three defendants had rested since Thursday afternoon. Before entering the courtroom to an- nounce their verdict to the court the jurors had agreed among themselves not to talk for publication. Despite this it was authoritatively learned that the verdict was a compromise , growing out of a deadlock ballot which stood 7 to 5 for conviction of the three , men. Forty ballots were taken by the panel. On the principle that he has "scotched" the snake of graft "but not killed it" in securing the verdict of I "guilty , " State's Attorney Wayman has braided fresh quirts for the castiga- tion of Madden : and his lieutenants. As soon as it was announced that after forty-six hours of battle in the jury room of Judge McSurely's court the jury had established a record in labor cases in Chicago by finding a verdict of guilty , albeit by virtue of a com- promise eliminating the penitentiary from the punishment , Mr. Wayman or- dered Madden \ rushed to trial on an- other of the indictments standing against him and carrying a peniten- tiary sentence in the event of ultimate conviction. Furthermore , it was an- nounced at the state's attorney's office that evidence will be presented to the Cook county grand jury with the ob- ject of securing the indictment of cer- tain witnesses for the defense in the trial just closed on charges of per- jury. FIGHT FOR THE PEKTITANTS. , Standing- Clubs In tliG Principal Ba.se Ball Licagruea. NATIONAL LEAGUE. W. L. W. r. . Pittsburg .27 12 : : Cincinnati .19 22 Chicago . . .25 16 Brooklyn . .16 19 New York .18 17 St. Louis . .17 23 I Ph'd'lphia .17 17 Boston . . . .12 25 . AMERICAN LEAGUE. . W. L. \V. L. Detroit . . .25 13 St. Louis . .17 20 Ph'd'lphia .23 15 Cleveland . .36 22 New York .20 Chicago . . . .15 22 Boston . . . .21 Wash'gton .11 : ! 25 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. " W. L. W. L Milw'kee . .29 16 Columbus . .22 24 Louisville .25 21 Toledo , . . . .20 25 Minn'polis .22 21 Kan. City .18 24 Ind'polis . .24 23 , St. Paul . . .17 23 . FLOOD DAMAGE IS $ 500OGO. I Fourteen Inc-lie.s of Rain Falls in the Blade : : llill.s ; , Tying : Uu Ilailroads. For the first time in several days : Deadwood , S. D. , has a telegraphic communicationwith the outside world. A conservative estimate of the flood less in the Black Hills is $500,000. Both the Northwestern and the Bur lington roads have sustained very heavy losses. Neither road is.is had : a train into Deadwood three days and will be obliged to bring' ' in mails I by team for several days. Fourteen inches of rain has fallen in the Black Hills , breaking all records. .Many mines have been forced to suspen . t . BR'HG. ' NE six IRON VA5HERS AHD A BOTTLE ' 7' L OF 8EN2LINE. - t ca CNlIS fly ilrr q M ICE S . . . J. 0 , f i - ' . \ \ - J / LOOK , OUT ! ! Tv o SACKS 1 OF BAL'-AS . ( HOW ' ON THE WA ; t , HELLO- POUCE. 5TATIOM I ? I'M LOST IN THE / Si tOKE ON THE , LAKE FROKT - THWa I RECOGNIZED \ WAS THE LOG.AN STATUE - GE.T OUT A SEARCH LICIT ! .r - PITTSBTJRG MILLS RUSHED. Rim Full Turn for First Time In - Two Decades. For the first time in two decades the mills of the Pittsburg district were run full turn Monday. The Car- negie steel mills and the American Steel & Wire Company , as well as oth- er large concerns , did not permit mills in the Pittsburg district to cool Me morial day , and the attendance at pic nics was visibly decreased. An offi cial of the American Steel & Wire Company admitted that there had not been a time in years when the store- rooms of the company were so nearly empty. The Carnegie Company also reports no stock in the warehouses. One concern in Pittsburg has orders for 100,000 kegs of nails for hurried delivery and has _ less than 10,000 kegs in stock. stock.JCHOOL $ U. LIL B St. Thomas again defeated South Dakota University baseball , 6 to 5 , winning the game in the , ninth inning. Berea college industri school .for negroes will be established at Shelby- ville , Ky. Andrew Carnegie gave the school $200,000 ; Mrs. Russell Sage , New York , $25,000 ; Mrs. Henry Pick- ' ering , Boston , $25,000. It was announced at Princeton Wed nesday that W. C. Procter of the class of 1883 , now of the firm of Procter & Gamble , soapmakers , has offered the university $500,000 if a like sum is raised for the erection of the new graduate school building on certain conditions. At Charlottesville , Va. , President Remsen spoke to the Virginia alumni of Johns Hopkins of the deplorable tendency- exalt the material equip ment of our colleges. The-rivalry be- tween colleges for such elaborate equip : ment had evolved \ the begging college president , who was to be pitied. Charles W. Eliot left the presidency of Harvard University finally and was succeeded next day by President Ab - I bott L. Lowell. That evening the stu ' ! dents assembled in front of Dr. Eliot's i house and presented him with a clock i in a mahogany case. After a short ! address the former head of the univer- ' ; sity for forty years led the students in a cheer for his successor. A retire- ment fund of $150,000 is being raised for Dr. Eliot by the Harvard alumni. The latest attack upon alleged rad- ical and revolutionary teaching in American colleges and universities is a series of reports now appearing in the Cosmopolitan Magazine by : Harold Bolce , who made a secret itinerary of the principal institutions of learning , sometimes entering as a special stu- dent and at other places attending lec tures. He asserts that in many class- rooms it is being taughtthat the Decalogue is no more sacred than the syllabus ; that the home as an insti tution is doomed ; that there are no absolute evils ; 'that democracy is a failure and tha Declaration of Inde pendence only spectacular rhetoric ; that the change from one religion to another is like getting a new hat ; . that to social climbers children are incumbrances. Such is , in substance , the analysis of the writer's conclu- sions , given by the editor of the maG" I azine. V . , ( ' 0 . : ; ; ; : ; ; : : - . . ; : - : : : - - _ . . . : : ' : _ : : : : - ; : " : : - ' ! : ' " - - 4 ' " . _ _ _ _ . _ _ - . . . . . _ 11 _ _ J. _ . . i S To Enjoy : .t , " the full confidence of the Well-Informed of the World and the Commendation of the most eminent physicians it was essen- | tial that the component parts of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna should be known to and approved by them ; there fore , the California Fig Syrup Co. pub ! . lishes a full statement with every package. The perfect purity and uniformity of pro1- duct , which they demand in a laxative remedy of an ethical character : , are assured by the Company's original method of man- ' ufacture known to the Company only. The figs of California are used in the production of Svrup of Figs and Elixir of , Senna to promote the pleasant taste , but the medicinal principles are obtained from plants known to act most beneficially. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine-manufactured . by the Cali- - " fornia Fig Syrup Co. only , and for sale by all leading druggists. MUSIC SOOTHES IIE SICK. Hospital Patients Orently HeneJlted by a Ivlml-lleartetl : Player. . The gifts that some of us possess : ; for doing good to others was strikingly shown a few days ago in an uptown _ " hospital. A student who was an ex- , < pert mandolin player had called on a friend who was a patient in the Insti- tution , and at the sick : man's request he had brought his instrument. The patient's room was one of many that opened off a reception room. Among the patients on the same floor was a suf fere from the morphine habit , who at frequent ( } intervals had to be given a potion to quiet his nerves. As the time approached for him to receive this he would become so nervous that he . would almost rave. Not far away was a young woman suffering from a ner- vous breakdown. She was rarely at rest. Suddenly the first notes of Mendels sohn's "Spring Song" broke the quiet of the hospital. Mellowed by distance , the music of the mandolin , played by a master hand , sounded like that of a violin. The effect on the patients was noticeable at once. The morphine user who had been begging for his potion. paused to listen and forgot the craving for the drug. It was the same with the young woman. Instead of picking at the counterpane she lay perfectly still , fearful of missing a note from the sweet melody that floated in through her open door. Then came "Home , Sweet Home , " and as some of the patients lay with closed eyes from -under many a lid there stole a tear as the sufferers thought of the homes to which some of them might never return. Again and again did the musician favor his eager audience with selections. classical or popular. Even the nurses and physi- . clans felt soothed and benefited as the result of the efforts of the obliging stu- dent. The thanks of his score of hear- ers shone from their eyes as the young man left the room of his friend and to\k the elevator for the first floor. "That did our patients more good than lots of the medicine they take , " remarked ; ; : one of the physicians. "It is a pity that some rich man does not provide enough money so that the sick and injured in our hospitals could be soothed at frequent intervals by as good music as that which we have . just heard. " - Philadelphia Press. . More LIght on the Incident. ? taudIuller sang as she raked the - hay."With "With a little traimng. . " she sighed. "I believe I'd make a fairly good grasshop- pera singer. " 0 Just then the judge happened along - . and the rest is history. - Chicago Trib- une. . , ' MAKING SUNSHINE. . . It Is Often Found In Pare Food. The improper selection of food drives many a healthy person into the depths of despairing illness. Indeed , , most sickness comes from wrong food and just so purely as that is the case right food will make the sun shine once more. An old veteran of Newburyport , Mass. says : "In October'I was taken sick and went to bed , losing 47 pounds in about 60 days. I had doctor after 1 doctor , food hurt me and I had to live almost entirely on magnesia and soda. All solid food distressed me so that water would run out of my mouth in little stream ; "I had terrible night sweats and my doctor Snaiiy : said 'had consumption and must die.Iy good wife gave up all hope. We were at Old Orchard Me. , at that time and my wife saw Grape-Nuts in a grocery there. She i bought some and persuaded : me to try . it. it."I "I had no faith in it but took it to i ' please her. To my surprise it did not I distress me as all other food had done' ' r and before I had taken the fifth pack- age I was well on the mend. The pains left my head , my mind became clearer s and I gained weight rapidly. , "I went back to my work again and now after six weeks' use of the food I i am better and stronger than ever be- fore in my life. Grape-Nuts surely ' 4 I saved my life and made me a strong hearty man , 15 pounds heavier than before I was taken sick. . "Both my good wife and I are will- J t ing to make affidavit to the truth ok- this " , . . t Read "The < < Road to Wellville in E pkgs. "There's < < a Reason. " Ever read the above : ' letter ? A new one appears : from time to time. ' They are genuine , true , and full oJL l " human interest. " " . .