POSSIBILITIES OF COUNTRY NEWSPAPERS ILLUSTRATED Iti Close Relation to the People ol the' Village tad fue Countryside Makes It a Medium For Merchants. Every town of any pretensions Whatever has at least one country paper, published at home and dealing with homo affairs. Is that paper worthy of patronage? Should you placo advertisements in it? Will it benefit you to secure its favor through advertisements on its pages? These are questions which many a country merchant has asked him self when approached by the solici tor, usually the editor and proprie tor, with an advertising proposition. Let us consider. When spread out beside the great city daily which comes on the train from the metro polis it looks small and of no ac count. It is dwarfed and insignifi cant. The pages are smaller and there are not so many of them; the wording of the reading may not be equal to that of the city paper; the . typographical work may be deficient; its erro-s will seem more glaring when you compare the two. If Theodore Roosevelt wrote you a letter, saying that he had taken his stand against wrong because he believed it was the proper thing to do, and if at the same time, while you were reading the letter, your little son should come in and tell you that ho had broken a window pane and was sorry for it, to which would you pay the most instant attention, the letter or the boy? We imagine that you would look on your son and heir with pride that he had the cour age and manhood to tell you what he had done. The letter from the President would interest and please you, too, perhaps, but little Johnny is your boy and he is a little fel low, and he is right beside you, doing what you would have him do. Johnny is not possessed of the stature and years of the President; he has not the physical energy or the teeth of our chief executive. He may never be" as well known or great. The fact that he broke a window is reprehensible, and the mere fact that he carne and told you was but proper and creditable nothing wonderful In it at all. But Johnny is bone of your bone and fipsh of your flesh.. In your heart, Johnny is of more inter est to you than even the President of this nation. So with the country paper and the city publication. The people may take both. They peruse columns on columns of reading, skipping from page to pase with interest. They like to know what is going on in the great world. But the little pr.per holds for them a nearer interest. In "It are chronicled the little homely -details of their neighbors and them selves. It may not be so powerful, so large, so important to the world; : it may not b? so wise, so skilled in argumentation. But it is a chronicle of things at Aome and it holds a closer relation to the people of the village and countryside than the big city paper can ever obtain. ' This being the case, it behooves "the country merchant to recognize 'the possibilities of the country paper. 0u9 man may differ from his grocer's tipinion of the President, and still come to the store for groceries. But If one man smites the merchant's son carelessly, he and the merchant are not as a general thing on ami cable terms. The boy and hi3 welfare are of vital interest to the parents. As to the President, there is always room for argument in a calm and dispassionate way. Your opinion of the city paper may not e the same as that of your best customer, but you do not find fault with one an other about that; but the country paper i3 right with you, and when one espouses its cause it becomes more of a personal matter. It is a part of the town family. Now, what is the attitude of the little paper on your business? How does it stand on the matter of the parcels post, the catalogue house trade and similar matters of impor tance to you? Have you ever talked it over with the man at the head? Perhaps he does not understand the matter clearly. Possibly his back bone is weak. Once in a while he may get an advertisement from out of town while you do not patronize his columns. We believe that advertising is vi tal and that the merchant should use the means and instruments within his reach for his own benefit. The advertisement in your home paper serves a double purpose it gives you the support of the paper in a busi ness way and it brings jour business to the attention of the people who may be customers of yours. Too many merchants consider only the first of these two purposes, and the result i3 that their advertise ments are poorly displayed and poor ly written, too. .-.-.."Ob. put in 'John Smith, Fancy Groceries,' and let it go at that," some merchants are apt to say. You hare bought space not for advertis ing purposes, but to "support the paper" and keep it loyal to you. The first thing for such a merchant to do is to consider the worth of ad vertising. It is unquestioned by those who know. If real advertising Is of value, why not put some of it In that barren space you have pur chased? The publisher will be glad to have it pay you, for it helps him to have his advertisers realize some-vjn.-r frnm thir spaces. advertisements properly. This Is not so difficult as it may seem. A little effort and time and thought and you may produce a very creditable line of advertising. The main thing Is to remember that you wish to talk to possible customers. A plain, homely conversation in advertising space at tracts attention. Your store has some particular things in it which the public would like to have tell them. You have some special bar gains which should move tell them You have added some new feature to the store, ask them to come in and see it. Get them coming your way The country paper is worthy of patronage. We have no interest in any country paper, but we have a vital interest in the prosperity of the merchant, and we believe that we are justified in urging him to ad vertise in his home publication. Most merchants do, you may say, and that is true in a way. Look through the country papers as we do week after week, and we get quite a bunch of them, and you will realize how few merchants, comparatively speaking, advertise with any vim or earnest ness. They pay for two things and only take one of them. The pub lisher is willing that you should have both why not take them, then? Oregon Tradesman. The Family Quarrel. Ey JOHN H. McXEELY. The telephone bell jingled joyously. Mr. and Mrs. Newlove were seated at the pretty mahogany table, reading. "Nellie, dear, will you answer the 'phone?" warbled the benedict. "Now, Charlie, you know I never like to answer," she replied. "But it's some member of your family. They generally begin tele phoning about this time every even ing." "It is not so." "Probably your mother." "No, it isn't, Charlie. ' "Or your father." "No, not father." "Maybe your brother, Willie." "The truth about the matter is that some member of youi family is call iug. " "How absurd. They never call." "I suppose they want to tell you how to crush my spirits." "Rather, it is your mother with soma instructions on how to work ma for my money." "It is untrue." '"Well, the 'phone : ussage isn't for me." "It isn't for me, cither." "But yom family are always call ing up here." "They never do." ,"Are you going to answei." "What's the use when it's your mother or father trying to tell us how to manage our affairs." "I will say the same thing about your family." "Nellie, f want you to distinctly understand that you cannot abuse my mother and father to my face." "And, Charley, I want you to un derstand that you cannot abuse my mother and father to my face." "Aud Charley, I want you to under stand that you cannot talk about my family to my face, eituer." "Well, I'll end this by answering the 'phone. Of course, 1 will have to call you, but what's the difference as long as we have peace. . . "Hello! ... "No. This is not B 1S4. You have the wrong number." ITroix. Judge. The Case of a Drunkard. The decision of the Appellate Court upholding a verdict of $3000 against a saloonkeeper proved to have sold liquor to a drunkard is not a "blow" at the saloon interests, but, rightly interpreted, a timely and most valu able bit of advice to this elass of the community. It was proved in the lower courts that the owner of a barroom had sold liquor to a man ad dicted to intemperance, and the lat ter's sister sued for damages on the ground that she had been deprived of her brother's support. The jury in the trial court awarded her $3000, and this verdict has been upheld by the Court of Appeals. The law is clear. It expressly pro hibits the sale of liquor to drunkafds, and the saloon man who violates this prohibition should be punished in the way he will feel most by reducing his bank account. Nothing can be more horrible than deliberately pan dering to the cravings of a man whose will has been weakened by protracted indulgence in alcohol. Such an individual i3 no longer a free agent, he requires to be watched over and guarded from the results of his own weakness, even as the in sane. The law seeks to proect him, and those who thwart the law's ef forts deserve the penalty. Chicago Evening Post. Ages of Cabinet Ministers. A calculating Canadian has been reckoning up the age3 of Cabinet ministers in his own country and in ours. He arrives at the conclusion that Mr. Asquith's government is con siderably the more juvenile of the two. The average ate of the British Cabinet is fifty-two, whereas that of the Canadian is sixty-one. There are ten British ministers under fifty and only three Canadian. No Canadian minister is under forty, whereas we have two in the thirties Mr. Church ill and Mr. Runciman. The youngest Canadian minister Mr. Lemieux is forty-two. He recently went on a mission to the government of the Mikado to negotiate an agreement in reference to future Japanese immi gration into Western Canada. Dun- '.ILr'i.1 i -' - VThe fu(k A SERMON AY TAE RB- "Why call ye Me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say?" Luke CJ:40. Jesus i3 either a force or a fraud. His word is truth or it is nonsense. His gospel is either the supreme phi losophy of life or the quintessence of silliness. He is either to be fol lowed or not to be followed. If He is to lead we must do His will. He is a Captain whose commands are commendable and practicable or an untrustworthy leader to obey whom is the sheerest senselessness. There is no middle ground. Christ is a wise man the eternal wisdom of God or a fool; a visioned statesman or a visionary; a religious leader beyond compare, or the most illogical and fantastic enthusiast who ever lived. The church of the living Christ through near 2 000 years has pro claimed Him the incarnate mind of God, the glorious embodiment of the eternal wisdom, the supernal leader, the only true guide, the mentor of the mind as the Saviour of the soul of man. Saints have sung of His beauty, philosophers, have yielded homage to the purity and profundity of His thought, sages have reveled in His wisdom, martyr3 have died for Him. We have declared Him Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the ultimate both as to Inception and finality. Arfd yet we fail to practice His truth, to apply His principles, to oDey His mandates, to trust His word, to live tha life that He counsels as the only life that eternally is worth the while. We elevate Him upon a pedestal of dominating prom inence, and then we laugh at Him. We join His church, and then we misrepresent Him. We swear fealty under His control, and then we de sert Him in every hour of the tast. And" then wa wonder why men of the world have no use for eccleciastl cism, though they cheer the Christ. We are amazed at the paltriness of the church's grip as an organized in stitution upon humanity compared with what it ought to be; w7hile the sweep of the influence of Jesus is be coming universal. We are astounded that in an age when the Lord of Life receives greater homage than ever in the reach of years, the church of the Lord- the organized body that bears Kis name is being weighed in the balance of intelligent criticism and declared wanting. But it is not strange. Too long have you cried, "Lord, Lord." The world demands performance as well as protestations. It tires of the pla titudinous. It expects men who pro fess to love the good to be something more than pious. For the piousness of the day is almost synnoymous with the' most dangerous" impious ness. Bad men have a suspicion that bad men will be bad. They expect good men to be good. They detest pious talk and a pious mien that get3.no further than words and Ico is. And they are right. Laodicean Christianity is as trait orous as it is inefficient. It denies that in which it professes to believe. It betrays its Lord with a kiss. The world has no use for it and we ought to have none, A world that-could contemplate It with equanimity wouldn't be worth saving. What shall we say of a church which too largely practices it? Too much have we cried, "Lord, Lord." Jesus says, "Ye are My friends if ye do whatsoever I com mand you." Have we done His will? Jesus says: "Love your enemies; bless them that ciirse you; him that taketh away thy cloak forbid not to take thy coat also." And .Tesun prac ticed His proclamations. He was the friand of God. He did the will of the Father. They crucified Him. He be sought forgiveness for His persecu tors. And yet in a land blessed as is ours with the heritage of twenty cen turies of Christian teaching, cultured and controlled under the gospel of Jesus, th.3 best theory of peace that we can practice is that which bids us to be prepared for war. The very church which sings the praises of the prince of peaca is strangely silent be fore the militarism of our age. Pre paredness for war ha3 yet to be pro ven a guarantei of peace. Indeed it has been quite otherwise. It 13 neither effective nor necessary. It Is purely expedient and never final in theory or in practice. Jesus' wray is a better way. If ail the armaments of the world were wrecked there would be a surer guarantee of peace than there is to-day and greater pros perity. Jesus' theories have never had an honest opportunity to prove their worth. Those that have been tried, however little, have revealed the wis dom of the Lord. Where nations have ceased to war and have brought their difficulties to the bar of divine ly guided counsel there have they found the besc results. The individ ual who follows in the footsteps of his Saviour and forgets injury, for gives injustice, requites good for evil, may saem impractical, but he is the happiest as the most honored among the sons of men. The man who sub mits to persecution while his trust remains in God may lose his head; ha will not lose his soul. External forces cannot steal away that life eternal which is the gift of God. The church must either follow Christ or it must cease to be. The rea.on for its existence is resident in its recognition of His authority. The secret of its ancient power lay in its willingness to do Hi3 will. And a3 the guiding spirit in a larger era gives her visions of wider m'inistry and Impulse to a sarvica the like of which she has never known she must movfl on with fidelity and fervor or be discredited and disowned. The church is not the kingdom save as the church labor3 for the consummation of the kingdom. It is not an end in itself. It is a means to the attainment of divine conclusions. The trouble has been and i3 that we have mistaken theology for Chris tianity, the organization for the life, the membership roll for the tesc of membership. Quite otherwise is tho mind of Christ. The test of member ship Is not bow warm we make seats or how loud we sing, or how vehe mently we pray. The final testing Is the testing of service. Do you work as you pray? Do you warm hearts as well as benches? Do you make souls to rejoice? Do you regard yourself not as your brother's keeper so much as your brother's brother? Are you true to Christ? Have you keenness to serve the King? "Why call ye Me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say?' The question is as timely and applicable p.3 it was when it was propounded. For there never has bean a time when the church more largely was cogniz ant of the ineffectualness of lip serv ice and convinced of the need for re sultful and helpful labor than she Is to-day. The Protestant church 13 in danger of becoming priest-ridden the worst that can befal the organization of the church; ridden with a priesthood shorn of compulsory authority and in whom the authority of the Christ is too precariously admitted to re side. The laity of Protestanlsm are too largely guilty of hiring men to do their work for them at salaries on the average that are an insult to the Lord whose work they send their employes to do rather than of call ing leaders whos9 business it shall be to direct the energies, rebuke the sins, vitalize the virtues, clarify the thought, inspire the minds, intensify the spiritual conceptions and percep tions of the sons of God who are members of the church of Christ. The church of Christ is full of men and women who have their names upon Its rolls for no better reason than that it is politic or proper or polite or profitable socially and com mercially so to be enlisted. And the consequence is that enthusiasm has gone out of the most of the meetings of the church, the gatherings for prayer are generally so dry and cold and uninteresting that they are a distress to earnest pastor3 and a re flection not only upon the intelligence and spiritual experience, but also upon the gratitude of the church. The reason for this is not far to seek. Tho laity, and not infrequent ly the clergy, have been so busy seek ing material success that they have had no time to serve the Lord after the manner of the Master. The dol lar has supplied so many wants that men have caassd to feel the pressing need for spiritual supplies. It ha3 been declared impossible for a nation to believe Christ, disarm and be pre served against the rapacious agres sions of the armed. Business men have declared it impossible to follow Christ and succeed. The best we have done, till very lately, in the management of criminals has been to jail or execute them. The spirit of the lex talionis the lowest law of Judaism is rampant in the settle ment of disputes between nations and rations, society and its members, in dividuals and their fellows. We have forgotten the God of life in the ex cellency of our livings. We have prayed for reforms that we have neither advanced, expected or de sired. We have thanked God for the j might of His cower while fearful to trust His sufficiency against the on-" slaught of Satan. We hare talked brotherhood and practiced an indi vidualism that hag brought sorrow where there is no need for aught but joy, and strife where co-operation would more thoroughly fulfil the plans of God, by and with the con sent tacit or active of the church. The situation cannot endure. The church must reform or relinquish her claim to primacy and to the privil eges of leadership. Saying "Lord, Lord," will make her acceptable neither to coming generations nor to her bridegroom. Vain repetitions are valueless to produce results. Ac tion only is qualified to transmute ideas into achievements. To do Hi3 work wenust do His will. Jesus gives us a picture of-the end of the Institution or the man guilty of lip-service or of lukewarm adher ence to the propagation of the truth. "Not every one that saith unto Me, Lord. Lord, shall enter into the king dom of heaven, but he that doeth the will of My Father." He forecasts i the fate of those Insincere and paltry j Christians who stand before Jehovah" ; at the great assize. i? It is to be hoped that Je3us' pic-; ture will not prove a photograph of us. It is not necessary that it should. We shall be recreant and without ex-i cusa If it shall so prove to be. No '. man and no church need call upon the Lord in vain. He who hath called us . and upon whom we call is both will- ! ing and able to perform through us effective service for the welfare and ; the salvation of individuals and the race. God summons us in Christ to supreme labor. He provides contem poraneously the power necessary to succeed. He energizes and verifies and inspires and enthusc3 every soul and every society that with high de sire and dedicated purpose calls upon His name. Not "Lord, Lord," but "Lord, here am' I, send me." ;What wilt Thou have me to do?" Brooklyn, N. Y. r Emotion is the Bud.. . Emotion has no value in the Chris tian system save as it stands con nected with right conduct as the cause of It. Emotion is the bud, not the flower, and never is it of value until it expands into a flower. Every re ligious sentiment, every act of devo tion which does not produce a corre sponding elevation of life, is worso than useless; it is absolutely per nicious, because it ministers to self deception and tends to lower the line of personal morals. W. II. II. Mur ray. The Work of the Spirit. The great work of the Holy Spirit, what ig it? To make Christ present with us. Look at the disciples; they loved Him, but they were under the power of the flesh. The rule of the flesh hsd not been broken, and Christ could not get a lodgment in their J hearts; but He said, the Holy Spirit wm coma, and I will come again to you (in the Spirit) and the Father and I will taka up Our abode with you. Tha Spirit'3 work is revealing God and Christ in our very hearts. Andrew Murrav. He is All in AH. God is all to thee; if thou be hun gry, He is bread; if thirsty. He is water; if in darkness. Hp is Up-m? MS 1 ff T T . I ii udn.eu, iie is a roba of imiuortal . itJ. St. Angus tin s. 'in mi i in i . ii L, m.u,m man Sunbat-&cftoof INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM MENTS FOR OCTOBER 1. Subject: David Brings the Ark to ,Te- rusnlein, 2 Sam. 6 Golden Text, Vs. 100:4i-Conmiit Verse 12 Read 1 Chron. Chapters 13, 15, 1G. TIME. 1045 B. C. PLACE. Kirjath-jearlm. EXPOSITION. 1. Bringing Up God's Ark in Man's Way, 1-5. This is one of the most solemn and searching passages in the entire Bible. It teache3 a lesson needeu to be learned in our day. It shows us how neces sary it is to serve God in God s way David's desire to bring up the ark of God's presence into hisown city, the very centre of the national life, was most commendable; but he should have inquired from God's own book the proper way in which to bring it up. It was declared there with per fect plainness (Nu. 4:5-12; 7:9). His neglect to consult and obey the Word of God got David and others as well into great trouble. Neglect of God's Word has gotten many a well meaning man into great trouble, and his friends also. The ark was the symbol of Jehovah's own holy and glorious presence. Men must be taught to treat it with the reverence due to His great and holy Name. It was "the ark of God which is called by the Name, even the name of the Lord of hosts." The ark was also a remarkable type of Christ. Christ is Immanuel, God with us, and the ark was the symbol of God's presence with His people. Moreover, in the ark the law of' God was perfectly kept, and in Christ tho law of God is perfectly kept. Further still, over the perfectly kept law was the blood sprinkled mercy seat where God met His people ( Ex. 2 5 : 1 8-2 2 ) . In Christ we have our blood-sprinkled mercy seat where God meets and communes with us. David had no intention of not conferring due honor on tho ark of God. He made great and costly preparations. He "gathered together all the chosen men of Israel, thirty thousand." It is often said that it does not make any difference what a man believes or does if he is only sin cere. David was perfectly sincere, but he was wrong-- and it made a great deal of difference both to him and to Uzzah. David was to blame for his ignorance. He had the means of enlightenment. If men to-day are ignorant of what is In the Word of God and suffer for it, It is their own fault. They cannot blame God for it, though they would often like to. The ark had bean in Kirjath-jearim twen ty years (1 Sam. 7:1). Men always get into trouble 'when they try to im prove on God's way. God had given exnlicit command that the sons of Kohath bear the ark upon their shoul ders (Nu. 4:4-12; 7:9), and a new cart under the circumstances was no tetter than an old cart. David had reallv learned this "improved plan" from the heathen (cf. 1 Sam. 6:7, 8). That is where all improvements upon God's way come from. II. God's Judgment on Disobcdi rnce and Irreverence, C-!). David's folly was soon made manifest. He had sown the seed of disobedience and soon reaped a -harvest of greater disobadienceand death. A cart drawn by oxen, even though it was a new cart, was no place for the ark; and trouble soon comes: "the oxen stum bled." Of course they did, but what had oxen to do with drawing God's ark? The place for that was upon the shoulders of fit men. It was quite natural for Uzzah to put forth his hand to steady the ark, but it was al together wrong. It was an act of ex plicit disobedience to God, and of gross irreverence. Even the sons of Kohath, who were divinely appointed to bear the ark, were not permitted to touch the ark, or even to look at it for a moment (Nu. 4:15. 19, 20, R. V.). Those are very solemn words with which the 7th verse opens. Ir reverence towards God and His holy name is an awful sin. and God In Hii great mercy often deals very sternly with it in order that we may know how He regards it (cf. Lev. 24:11-16; 10:1-3; 1 Sam. 6:19). Even in the Christian dispensation men are cut off when they approach the table that set3 forth the solemn truth about Christ's atoning death in a thought less way (1 Ccr. 11:27-30). We do not need to suppose that Uzzah was eternally lost. He simply suffered tempoial punishment for his sin. even unto death (cf. 1 Cor. 11:30-32; 6 5). David was displeased at God'a judgment; he might much better have been displeased with hi3 own folly that made that judgment necessary. WThen he had taken time to think it ever he put the blame where it be longed, on himself (1 Chron. 15:11 13). We are often tempted to be disnleased at God's judgments when a little honest reflection would show us that we are to blame ourselves, and that Gcd's judgment is only a merciful way of bringing us to our eenses. III. Gcd Blesses the Home in Which He Dwells, 10-12. We have just seen Gjd dealing In judgment, and now we see Him dealing in mer cy. A moment ago all was death, now all i3 blessing. Obed-edom was only a heathen by descent, a Gittite (;-.f. ch. 15:19), tut he welcomed the presence of God in his home, and Gud "blessed Obed,edom and all his housahold." Nothing else brings such blessing to a house a3 the pres ence of God in it. That ark in his home was the symbol of Christ in our homes. Where He is there is bless in? for all (cf. Acts 16:31). IN THE SANCTUM. First Reporter "And to miake a long story short, the Old Man just blue penciled my stuff to beat the band." Seecnd Reporter "Why, to make a long story short, of course." Toledc Blade. More than four hundred language: are used today to give the Word ol God to the heathen world. ernia Cleanses tho System Effect- uaiiv;JLispeis mhcis nnaiicaa- Alt acnes duo 10 uorvsupauon; Mcls naturally, acis truly as lily a uaxaiivc. Bpstoi'MenWrnen and Lhua ren-Voiing and Old. lo j3jet its Beneficial Effects Always buy the Genuine vhich has ihe full nume of the Com- CALIFORNIA T5o Syrup Co. fey whom it is manufactured , printed on the front of every pnckn$ct SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGIST one size only, regular price 50peiboHle. Handsome is that handsome does. Goldsmith. So. 39-'03. Hicks Capudine Cures Women's Monthly Pains, Uackache, Nervousness, and Headache. It's Liquid. Effects imme diately. Prescribed by physicians with best results. 10c 25c, and 50c. at drug stores. TABASCO. After a woman a musician comes nearest to being a man. New York Press. , A man rarely knows anything worth tolling until he gets old enough to keep his mouth shut. Dallas News. The Salome dance can never be a success until it has obtained Hous ton's approval, and it will have to shuffle in pretty fancy style to get an indorsement here. Houston Post. When some horses 'go into a mere trotting race nowadays they look as if they had been outfitted for a game of football between two colleges that believe in a liberal interpretation of the rules. Indianapolis News. Fortified. "I could tell a tale that would mako your hair stand on end." "Very thrilling, is it?" "It is. Shall I. tell it?" "No; I haven't time to listen to it. Wait a few minutes. My uncle will be in, and you can tell it to him. He is baldheaded." Modern Maternity. A little girl's mother attended a number of card parties, leaving the child at home with the nurse. On one such occasion the child's attention was attracted by the plaintive eriea of a young calf. Running to the win dow she exclaimed, "Poor little calf ey! has your mama gone to the card party and left you, too?" October Delineator. A Natural Buzzer. Laux-a was playing on the porch with her dolls, but Avas greatly dis tressed by the song of a locust in a tree near by. Running to the tree she called, impatiently, "Ring off, bird!" October Delineator. AFKAID TO EAT Girl Starving on Ill-Selected Food. "Several years ago I was actually starving," writes a Me. girl, "yet dared not eat for fear of the conse quences. "I had suffered from indigestion from overwork, irregular meals and improper food, until at last my stomach became so weak I could eat scarcely any food without great dis tress. "Many kinds of food were tried, all with the same discouraging ef fects. I steadily lost health and strength until I was but a wreck of my former self. - "Having heard of Grape-Nuts and Its great merits, I purchased a pack age, but with little hope that it would help me I was so discouraged. "I found it not only appetizing but that I could oat it as I liked and that it satisfied the craving for food with out causing distress, and if I may use the expression, 'it filled the bill. "For months Grape-Nuts was my principal article of diet. I felt from the very first that I had found the right way to health and happiness, and my anticipations were fully realized. "With its continued use I regained my usual health and strength. To day I am well and can eat anything I like, yet Grape-Nuts food forms a part of my bill of fare." "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Weil-mie," ilTpk3. Ever read the aiive letter? A new one appears from p -to time. They are genuine, t-y '. - full of huwsa interest "'" THE DUTCH STANDS FOR fPMNTQUALlTYgm 1 I ITIS FOUND ONLYOKy? J PUREWKITE LEAD &W-J MADE BY M OLD DUTCH jy S L PROCESS. WS -4 i