8"
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, FEBRUARY
2, .1905.
GREAT INTEREST
IN POLISH BILL
Von Buelow's Measure Expro
priating Landowners Would
Lead to Disaffection.
MEANS LOSS TO PRUSSIA
Iiudical Legislation Against Poles
at This Time Regarded as Inop
portune and Its Passage by
Diet Is Very Doubtful.
BBRL.IN. Feb. 1. (Special.) Strong op
position is developing to Prince Von Bue
low's bill expropriating- the Polish land-
! '
A i l-JL 'ill :r
1 - ' I L fpHrSf?' .
' n ' r- 1 1 Tf-h i - j
I I I flf : if i 't
EAST S1DK MASONIC TEMPLE IS NOW FIVISHKH.
The new East Side Alasonic Temple, on the corner of East Burnside and East Eighth "streets, is finished
throughout, and is being occupied by the various Masonic lodges that have been meeting in the Burkhard Hall
for the past 12 years. It was erected by the Washington Building Association ai a cost of $2."., 300. It is
three stories.- 63x100, with four stores on the first floor, and the two upper floors are occupied by the lodge
room, banquet apartment, and other rooms used by the lodges. ..White brick were used for the outside facing
of the walls, and the building is one of the most attractive on the East Side All the lodges are moving
into and meeting in the new hall as fast as their meeting night arrives. "
owners, and its passage in the Prussian
Diet is problematical. A Polish states
man of profnincnee. In giving Ilia views
of the measufe "this week, said:
"The fact that Prince Von Buelow has
proposed to the Prussian Diet a measure
so extraordinary as the eonipulwory ex
propriation of Polish landowners is. proof
of the great importanco attached by
Prussian statesmen to the Polish ques
tion. The Introduction of a bill contrary
to the received principles of modern legis
lation and creating a precedent for the
arbitrary violation of the rights of prop
ertya precedent which may in future
be most welcome to the Social Democrats,
the bitterest enemies of the Prussian
state cannot be explained by any real
Internal contingencies. Yet even if it is
the object of the Prussian Government
to divert the attention of the people from
constitutional and social questions by ex
citing an unhealthy hatred of their Polish
fellow-subjects, it was by no means
necessary to go to such lengths as have
been reached by the expropriation bill.
It is absolutely incredible that the most
powerful state of continental Europe
should in reality be afraid of 4.000,000
Poles who have not given cause for the
slightest suspicion of active disloyalty
for 60 years, who have hitherto offered
effectual resistance to all Socialist agita
tion, and who would be' mad if they
wished to exchange Prussian for Russian
domination at least, as long as they are
allowed peacefully to cultivate their lan
guage and to develop their nationality
under Hohenzollern sway.
"Wide Influence of Poles..
The motives of Prussian statesmen .are
to be sought not in-their home policy, but
in, their views of foreign affairs. Both in
Russia and in Austria the Importance of
the Poles is out of . proportion to their
number. They represent almost every
thing that is tradition, education and civ
ilizing influence over nearly the whole
area of the ancient Independent Polish
state, which is larger than Gernjany and
includes the whole of Galicia and of
Western. Russia., ..In these. -lands their
influence is so great that though the
speech of . the peasants differs as much
from Polish, as from. Russian, Polish lit
erature has-brought fortli its 'best fruits
there. Galicia has beeifnecessarily gov
erned by Poles ever since Austria became
sincerely constitutional; Western Russia
took part In the Polish insurrections of
General O. O. Howard's National Service
Tribute to a Distinguished Soldier and Civilian Well Known in the "Oregon Territory." "
To the Editor of the Boston Transcript:
The President's toast to Admiral Dewey
as "the man who has done more for and
reflected greater glory on America than
any other man now living" invites com
parison. I would not in the least detract
from 'the just fame of Admiral Dewey,
for I have personally and favorably
known him and his late father and
brothers from my early manhood, but the
form of the President's eulogy affords
opportunity to call attention to the great
services of a man now living who has in
some quarters not been adequately appre
ciated. I. refer to Major-General Oliver
Otis Howard.
Raised on a Maine farm, graduated -at
Bowdoln and at West Point, commander
of a brigade in the Irst battle of Bull
Run: losing his. right arm at Fair Oaks
but soon returning to the service, com
mander of the Eleventh Army Corps, the
Fourth Army Corps, the Army of the
Tennessee after the death of McPherson
at Atlanta, commander of the right wing
of Sherman's army in the great marches
from Atlanta to the sea, and from Savan
nah to the surrender, all before he was
'M years of age. thanked by Congress for
selecting the ground on which the battle
of Gettysburg was fought, organizer and
chief of the Bureau of Freedmen, Refu
gees and Abandoned Lands, of which a
committee of Congress said: "Its opera
tions extended over 500,000 square miles
of territory devastated by the greatest
war of modern times, more than 4.000,000
of its people sunk to the lowest depths of
1S30 and 1863, and the Russian government
has extended all the exceptional measures
taken against Poland'to the western prov
inces, where, indeed, those measures have
been much more severely applied than In
Poland proper.
In so far as the peasantry of these re
gions is not under the social and political
influence of Polish leaders, it either sub
mits passively to the biddings of the
Government or It follows demagogues
whose radicalism inclines even more
towards anarchism than towards social
ism, for the Ukrainian and Lithuanian
national movements have not yet found a
path leading to moderate and practical
ends. The Poles have rendered the mpst
essential services to constitutional Aus
tria. Polish statesmen, in particular,
brought the formerly dilapidated finances
of the Hapsburg Kmptre Into their present
flourishing condition. The Poles would
render analogous, perhaps even more im
portant, services to Russia in helping the
really liberal non-revolutionary elements
of Russian society in the work of reform
that is so urgent; they would prove indis
pensable in the western provinces, the
richest and most advanced of the whole
Russian Empire, as the Poles are the only
element that can effectually oppose the
ever-rising tide of uncouth, revolutionary
radicalism, ready to destroy tout unable to
reconstruct.
Policy in Russia.
The Russian Poles have long been will
ing to do this work on condition of en
Joying general liberty and respect for
their racial'- and religious rights. This
condition has been refused by the auto
cratic bureaucracy, which, in the oppres
sion of one-third of the Empire, has cre-
ated for Russian officials a school of ar
bitrary despotism in which were trained
the men who have oppressed and exhaust
ed Russia herself and led her to disaster
In the Far East.
It is notorious that the oppression
of the Poles, both in Prussia and in
Russia, has been a strong link be
tween the two powers and the pledge
of a friendship which is a lasting and
potent factor in the changing flow of
diplomatic combinations, a facor in
comparison with which the Triple and
Dual Alliances have been mere shams.
The maintenance of arbitrary rule and
of oppression in the Empire of the
Czar provided Germany policy with a
double prop; it not only doubled the
Influence of Prussia In the councils of
Europe, but was also so potent and so
effectual a drawback to Russian de
velopment that, despite its immense
size, the real power of the Russian
empire could never be compared to
that of Germany.
Change During Japanese War.
The first change in the Polish policy
of the Russian government occurred
before the Japanese war. was over and
before Russia had a Parliament. Re
ligious liberty was granted to iloman
Catholics, and the - Poles were again
allowed to buy land in the western
governments. They have since mate
rially profited by the freedom of the
press and have obtained the right to
found private schools. In the, first
two Dumas, Poles represented not only
the electors of Poland proper, but also
those of a great part of Lithunania and
Volhynla.
The reactionary tendencies prevalent in
Russia of late have been unfavorable to
the Poles, who, not only know , that no
further consessions are to be expected
from the present government, but have
themselves been almost nullified as a
political factor in the state. Public opin
ion at Warsaw, as at St. Petersburg,
ascribes tills hostility towards the Poles,
in great part to Prussian influences ac
tuated 'by the same motives as have pre
vailed at Berlin for more than 40 years.
Nevertheless, the Poles in Russia are
certainly better off now than before the
war.' ' " ' '
Vnless the future Russia be one of con
tinuous progress towards liberty and Jus
tice, the empire will be convulsed bya
series of revolutionary outbreaks and re-
ignorance by two centuries of slavery and
suddenly set free amid the fierce animos
ities of war free, but poor, helpless and
starving. Here, truly, was a most appal
ling condition of things. Not only the
destiny of the liberated race, but the life
of the nation itself depends up6n the cor
rect solution of this intricate problem."
During six most trying years General
Howard solved it and in a way, as de
scribed by Sydney Andrews in Old and
New Magazine, "set idlers at work, aided
in the reorganization of society, carried
the light of the North into dark places
of the South, steadied the negro in his
struggle with novel ideas, inculcated
kindly feeling, checked the passion of
whites and blacks, opened the blind eyes
?f judges and jurors, taught the gospel of
brbearance,' encouraged human sympa
thy, distributed the generous charities of
the benevolent, upheld loyalty, assisted In
creating a sentiment of nationality" all
this so successfully that the congressional
committee further reported that "the
world can point to -nothing like it in all
the history of emancipation," that "no
thirteen millions- of dollars was ever more
wisely spent" and that General Howard
"Is deserving of the gratitude of the
American people."
Incident to this work and following it
was his great part in founding 128 colleges
and other institutions for fitting teach
ers, and 131 public schools, among them
being the Hampton Institute (the parent
of Tuskegee), Fisk University and How
ard University, which have been immeas
urably more successful than were either
actlonary suppressions which must lead
to something approaching chaotic an
archy. Even in this case it would be
fortunate, not only for the people of what
is now Western Russia, but for the cause
of civilization in general, if the catastro
phe should find the Poles in a state of
mind so reasonable as to permit them to
unite their efforts with the efforts 6f all
those who would then have.'to save civili
sation and' society. ,
It is in these circumstances that Prince
von Bulow has thought fit to bring in a
bill empowering government officials fn
western prlvinces . of Prussia arbitrarily
to expropriate any citizen they choose.
If, contrary to the expectations of those
who believe jn the conscience of the great
German people, this bill, should be passed,
everything might be feared from a gov
ernment so heedless of the common law
of civilized nations. Assuredly, Polish
disaffection will not be decreased by this
new move, executed by the Prussian Gov
ernment at the very moment when a
conservative party, in process of for
mation among the Prussian Poles, Intend
ed to attempt the work of pacification.
Fermentation among the Jrussian Poles
cannot but influence their brethren elsewhere.
IRVING'S DRESS IN DISPUTE
Opposition to Representing Dead
Actor as Hamlet.
LONDON'.' 'Feb. 1. (Special.) A burn
ing topic among the leaders of the theat
rical profession in London is the dress in
wliich Thomas Brock, the sculptor of
the Irving memorial Katue. is to repre
sent the great actor. In the statuo by
Onslow Ford, which stands in the Guild
hall, 1 Sir Henry Irving is presented as
Hamlet, but objection has been taken to
the same idea being utilized by Mr.
Brook, on the- ground that the statue is
to be a memorial to Irving, not to Ham
lev ' . '
The view was strenuously put forward
in some qaurters that modern dress is
not 'at all so tigly as most people have
been led to believe, and that the sculp
tor might do worse than show the dead
actor in ordinary walking attire. When,
however, the controversy got to this
stage it appears to have strui-k somebody
that Mr. Block himself might like to
have sometiiing to say in the matter",
and ultimately u was decided to leave
the question entirely in his hands. The
statue is to lie erected in Charing Cross
road, at the back of the Natior.il Gal
lery, and, with the plinth, -will stand 22
feet high.
Sir John Hare, pi sh i nt and treasurer
of the' fund, and Cecil Raleigh, the
chairman, state that the subscription list
will close March 1. by which date it Is
hoped that all outstanding promises will
be redeemed, and that those actors and
actresses who have not yet joined in
contributing towards this tribute to the
memory of. their illustrious leader and
friend, will have contributed.
Cannot "Carry On' Their Babjv
' Ry promising to keep, their baby
daughter off the. staffe during their
stay in Oregon. J. H. Watson and wife,
two melodrama actors appearing at
the Empire this week, were permitted
by the Juvenile Court yesterday to re.
tain possession of the child, which Is
barely 6 years old. They pleaded
ignorance of the law In extenuation of
their conduct in letting the baby ap
pear at the Empire. .
Faithful Sunday School Attendance.
ASTORIA, Or., Feb. 1. (Special.) Mtsw
Edna-W cotton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Wootton, of this city, lias prob
ably the best record of anyone in Astoria
as to continued attendance at Sunday
school, she not having missed a Sunday
for over three years. Miss Wootton at
tends the First Methodist Sunday school.
Harvard or Tale or Dartmouth in the
first century of their existence. After all
these services. General Howard was sent
"by President Grn on a successful mis
sion of peace to the warring Apaches, and
later he commanded the departments of
the . Columbia, the Platte, the East and
the Military Academy, and he gave his
eldest son to the country, whose life was
lost in the Philippines. In addition to all
this. General Howard's services to sur
viving comrades and to moral and reli
gious causes have been unremitting. In
fact, his services since the Civil War
have been so illustrious that many have
almost forgotten' that he led the way un
der fire across the pontoons at Freder
icksburg, that he helped Hooker to fight
the battle above the clouds on Look
out Mountain, supported Corse at
Allatoona, based upon which one of his
staff officers. Major D. W. Whittle, wrote
the stirring hymn, "Hold the Fort," cap
tured Fort McAllister near Savannah, and
made harder marches and fought greater
battles in the Carolinas than those which
form such brilliant chapters in our Revo
lutionary history. Surely it can reflect
upon no man, living or dead, to allude to
these features in General Howard's won
derful career and it is gratifying to know
that he- is enjoying a. preen old age at
his beautiful home In Burlington, Vt., in
the society of the wife of his youth, and
that he is surrounded by troops of friends
wherever he goes in this country which
he has done so much to save, to pacify,
to, regenerate and to make glorious,
ALBERT CLARKE.
IS CHATTEL
Englishman Comments on the
American Wives.
HAPPIEST ON THE EARTH
Have Solved Problem of Domestic
Life, but Position Is Lotr Than.
That of Certain Class
of French Women.
.'LONDON',. Jan. 23. Lucas Cleeve, who
lived several years in America, has
written an article upon "The American
Woman," in which he declaijjJ the
American woman is still regarded as a
beautiful, rare chattel. -
"While it is true," says Cleeve. "that
American women have solved the prob
lem of domestic happiness to the com
plete satisfaction of their own ambitions,
and that they can claim, without any
fear of contradiction, to be the happiest
women on- earth, except when their
minds go title gathering in Europe the
question remains: Are the ambitions of
the American women as high a those
of European women, and in particular
of French and English women?
"Those who have studied the question
will appreciate that one should mention
French women before English women,
for in France, ' notwithstanding the
French novel, the women of the bour
geoisie, especially of the 'haute bour
geoisie.' hold a position which is un
equaled by any women on earth, and it
is a position attained and maintained in
spite of socially adverse conditions,
which is due entirely to their own men
tal superiority and to the finesse of their
intellect.
"In England and .it is England which
forms the most interesting contrast with
American women, because , the shades
and degrees of difference are more grad
WOMAN
No Food Commissio'ner of any State has ever attacked the
absolute purity of
Every analysis undertaken shows this food to be made strictly of Wheat and Barley,
treated by our processes to partially transform the starch parts into a form of Sugar,
and therefore much easier to digest.
Our claim that it is a "Food for Brain and Nerve Centers' is based upon the
fact that certain parts of Wheat and Barley (which we use) contain Nature's brain, and
nerve-building: ingredients, viz.. Phosphate of Potash, and the way we prepare the
food makes it easy to digest and assimilate. '
Dr. Geo. W. Carey in his book on "The Biochemic System of Medicine" says:
"When the medical profession fully understands the nature and range of the phosphate of po
tassium, insane asylums will no longer be needed. . '
'' "The gray matter of the brain is controlled entirely by the inorganic cell-salt potassium ,
phosphate.
"This salt' unites with albumen, and by the addition of oxygen creates nerve-fluid, or the gray;
matter of the brain. .. ..
"Of course, there is a trace of other salts and other organic matter in nerve-fluid, but potassium
;- - phosphate- is the chief factor and has the power within itself to attract, by -its own law of affinity,
all things needed to manufacture the elixir of life. Therefore, 'when nervous symptoms arise, due to
the fact that the nerve-fluid has been exhausted from any cause, the phosphate of potassium is the only
true remedy, because nothing else can possibly supply the deficiency.
. . The ills arising from too rapidly consuming the gray matter of the brain cannot be overesti
mated.
- "Phosphate of Potash is, to my mind, the most wonderful curative agent ever discovered by
man, and the blessings it has' already conferred oii the race are many. But 'what shall the harvest be
when physicians everywhere fully understand the part this wonderful salt plays in the processes of
life? It will do as much as can be done through physiology to make a heaven on cfarth.
"Let the overworked business man take it and go home good-tempered. Let the weary wife,
nerves unstrung from attending to sick children or entertaining company, take it and note how quickly
the equilibrium will be restored and calm and reason assert her throne. No 'provings' are required
here. We find this potassium salt largely predominates in nerve-fluid, and that a deficiency produces
' well-defined symptoms. The beginning and end of the matter is' to supply the lacking principle, and in
molecular form, exactly as nature furnishes it in vegetables, fruits and grain. To supply deficiencies
this is the only law of cure." v
BRAIN POWER
Increased by Proper Feeding;.
A lady writer who not only has done
good literary work, but reared a fam
ily, found in Grape-Nuts the ideal food
for brain work and to develop healthy
children. She writes:
"I am an enthusiastic proclaimer of
Srape-Nuts as a regular diet. 1
formerly had no appetite in the morn
ing and for 8 years while nursing my
four children, had Insufficient nour
ishment for them. . . ,
"Unable to eat breakfast I felt faint
later, and would go to the pantry and
eat lold chops, sausage, cookies,
doughnuts or anything I happened to
find. Being a writer, at times my
head felt heavy and my brain asleep.
"When I fead of Grape-Nuts I be
gan eating it every morning, also gave
Ft to the children, including my 10
months' old baby, who soon gTew as
fat as ft little pig, good natured and
contented.
"I wrote evenings and feeling the
need of sustained brain power, began .
eating a small saucer or Grape-Nuts
with milk, instead of my usual indi
gestible hot pudding, pie or cake for
dessert at night.
"I grew plump, nerves strong, and
when I wrote my brain was active and
clear; indeed, the dull head pain
never returned."
uated and difficult to discern, detect or
define than those between the American
women and the women of any other
country there is the similarity of the
difference, which might well be ' said to
resemble the likeness of cousins to each
other, brought up by different parents
under different surroundings.
. American Husband Kow Tows.
"The difference lies in the women
themselves. In their ideals and their am
bitions more than In conditions. In
America the law has been on the side
of the woman, and the husband has
been, or seemed, subservient. In Eng.
land . the law is less favorable to
women, and the husband is, outwardly
at least, the ruler, and the difference
lies In the following facts The
woman of America is content with the
law and content with her husband's
worship, while she does not claim to
be the companion of his brain nor his
soul.
"The English woman despises sub
servience in the man, and, while in
sisting on his greatness, aspires to be
the companion of his soul, his hand,
and his pursuits. The obvious conclu
sion that one must come to is that the
American woman is content with a
position which, from a certain point of
view, is a baser one, and the dem
onstration of it is clearly observable
from the fact that American women
take but a lukewarm interest in the
vote question and have spared the
world the humiliating spectacle of
'suffragist riots.'
Lawmakers Always Gallant.
"That the .American woman is con
tent to let polities and business alone
is probably the result of the luxurious
confidence in which she is steeped, that
she can always count on the chivalry
and protection of the lawmakers of
America, a luxurious confidence which
is extremely becoming to her personal
appearance, and which prevents one
meeting in America, at least among
the well. to-do cla.sse3, so many of the
harassed,, furrow-lined, intense faces
that one does among the women of
Great Britain, while in Justice to the
men of the United State3 one must
concede that so far women have had
no reason to regret the confidence they
J have placed in them, while sincerity
compels one to comess tnai a certain
doubt transcends when one for a
moment contemplates what the posi
tion "of women .In England would be If
they did not now and then ' make a
dash for liberty.
"The women of America will tell you
that the reason they do not help their
husbands and brothers in their political
career is because politics hto too corrupt.
Please observe that Phosphate of
Potash is not properly of the drugshop
variety Dut is best prepared by "Old
Mother Nature" and stored in the
grains ready for. use by mankind.
Those who have been helped to better
health by the use of Grape-Nuts are
Legion.
"There's a Reason"
Postum Cereal Co., Ltd.,
while the idea of assisting in their puri
fication does not seem to have occurred,
to them; and the men will tell you, even
in the present day, that the woman who
mixes in politics is a 'lobbyist,' which is
tantamount to being an adventuress,
while they look on with amused toler
ance and treat with mock deference the
clubs of women 'and that newly added
horror to the world, the clubwoman.
Still Treated as a Child.
"Whether the American women have
realized that to enter the field of politics
is to soil their hands,- or whether the
men realize that they could not reveal
the secrets of 'graft' without soiling
their women's minds, is also too large a
question to deal with at once: but the
fact remains that while worshiped, pet
ted, admired and spoiled, the American
woman is treated by the American man
as a child and a chattel a beautiful,
rare chattel, which is never to be al
lowed to know that it is a chattel, but a
chattel nevertheless.
"The American man does not want her
to mix In his politics or his business;
she is the companion of his leisure
hours, and he lets her have everything
on earth that she desires and do every
thing under the sun that she wants to
do in order that ebe should not interfere
with his business.' That he occasionally
resents this position was illutrated lately
by a doctor suing for separation because
his wife insisted on coming into the consulting-room
during the visits of women
patients." Our , American sisters seem
content with their lot, which our Enslifeh
ones do not."
RUSSIA BUYS BIG CRUISER
Rurik Is Giant or Her Class, Resem
bling Battleship.
LONDON". Feb. 1. (Special.) Russia is
going ahead with the construction of
her new navy, and hap just obtained one
of the most formidable cruisers afloat
from Vickers' Sons & Maxim's yard at
Barrow. The name of the new warship
is the Rurik. and for a cruiser she is a
monster. With three huge funnels ' and
one mast abaft, the funnels towering to
a great height and painted dull gray,
she more than resembles in appearance a
battles-hip.
Of course neither her guns nor her ar
mored -protection is of battleship heavi
ness. No other cruiser, apart from the
ships in the British and Japanese fleets,
possesses such deadly weapons. She has
on board a full crew of Russian offlcerp
ood.
Battle Creek, Mich.
and men, and is now ready to sail for
Libau.
The Rurik is of 13.000 tons displacement,
lf.700 norsepowei , speed 21 knots and
length over all -190 feet She carries four
10-inch and eight S-inch guns. Her ar
mor belt is six Inches thick and her
decks are covered with shot-resisting
cement.
SEES ONLY MEDIOCRITIES
London's Lord Mayor Bewails De
generacy of Kngiish.
LONDON. Feb. 1. (Special.) Sir Mar
cus Samuel, the former Lord Mayor of
London, has a very poor opinion of the
latter-day Englishman. He lias just an
nounced his retirement from business and
In connection therewith says:
"I should never have retired if I could
have found among contemporary states
men any man of the caliber of Lord Bea
consfield. who placed a government rep
resentative on the board of the Suez
Canal Company, and who would have
taken-similar action in the all-imporlant
matter of retaining under British con
trol and guidance the greatest oil field
for liquid fuel in the world (that of Bor
neo). But we have fallen on degenerate
days, and the men at the head of affair
however high-sounding their names, art
mediocrities, never looking beyond tomor
row, afraid of responsibility, and utterly
lacking in business experience. Sir John
Fisher is the only man 1 have found witii
any backbone. Although 1 have realized
a large fortune and some fame, I am a
disappointed man."
President Approves Priest.
RENO. New, Feb. 1. Presidential ap
proval of the sermon delivered in the
Catholic Church here Sunday, January
19, has been received by the author of
the opinions. Rev. Father Tubman. A
letter from Theodore Roosevelt tells
of his indorsement of the priests' re
marks, and the assertions that "cell.
bacy is false to God, false to country
and false to self are essentially up
held. The President applauded the state
ment that racfc suicide, affinities and
"other outgrowths of modern marriages
and divorces" deserve more than con
demnation from the clergy.
The priest's utterances created a sen
sation at the time because he said he:
desired no unmarried men or women
to remain in his parish.
Perfect fitting glasses $1 abMctzger's.
WISE CLERK
Sandwiches and Coffee far
Lunch.
Qulln
The noon-day lunch for the Depart
ment clerks at Washington, is often a
most serious question.
"For fifteen years," writes one of
these clerks. "I have been working in
one of the Gov't Departments. About
two years ago I found myself every
afternoon, with a very tired feeliiiK
In my head, trying to get the day's
work off my lesk.
"I had heard of Grape-Nuts as a
food for brain and nerve centers, so I
began to eat it Instead of my usual
heavy breakfast, then for my lunch in
stead of sandwiches and coffee.
"In a very short time the tired feel
ing in the head left me, and ever since
then the afternoon's work has been
done with as much ease and pleasure
as the morning's work.
"Grape-Nuts for two meals a day
has worked, in my case, Just as ad
vertised, producing that reserve force
and supply, of energy that does not
permit one to tire easily -so essential
to the successful prosecution of one's
life work.'" "There's a reason."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read the "Road to Well
vllle," in pkgs.