FT, ATI nx. i 'i He win very tender and sympathetic. . When he had left them Blm raid to fher mother: "Our old friends do not seem to care what becomes of us. I have no thought now save for you and the baby. Til do whatever you thlr.S best for you two. I dea't care for myself. My heart th aa dead as Harry's. :'MAN AfiFS \FORmB4 A STORY GF THE RJILMBSy DEHOCfifiCT ^fpviMft RAfWI T FP W " ',4. SvJhapt** X& -;v ti*: V CHAPTER XIX--Continued. --18 • Like many who had no experience with such phenomena tbey underestimated the seriousness of the panic. They thought that. In a week or so. Its effect would pass and that Illinois •wotild then resume Its triumphal march toward Its high destiny. Not even Samson Tmylor had a correct notion of the slowness of Tlnie. The effect of the panic paralyzed the city. Men whose "red-dog money" was In every one's pocket closed their shops and ran away. The wild adventurers cleared out. Their character may be judged by the words of one of them reported by the editor of the Democrat: f. "I failed for a hundred thousand dollars and could have failed -for a million. If Jackson had kept his hands ©It- Hard times hung like a cloud over the £ity. Its population suffered some dlmlnishment In the next two years. In spite of its position on the main high way of trade. Dream cities, cnnals end railroads built without hands became part of the poetry of American commerce. That autumn, men and women who had come to Mrs. Kinzie's party In jewels and In purple «nd fine linen had left or turned their hands to hard labor. The Kelsos suffered real distress, the schools being closed and the head of the house having taken to his bed with illness. Blm went to work at a seamstress, and with the help of Mrs. Kinzie and Mrs. Hubbard was able to keep the family from want. The nursing and the care of the baby *oon broke the health of Mrs. Kelso, never a strong woman. Bim came borne from her work one evening and Sound her mother 111. "Cheer up. my daughter," said Jack. "An old friend of ours has returned to the city. He Is a rich man--an ioasis In the desert of poverty. He has loaned me a hundred dollars In good coin." "Who has done this?" Blm asked. ' "Mr. Lionel Davis." "We must not take his nwoei," said "I had a long talk with him." Kelso iwent on. "He has explained that un- ; fortunate Incident of the horse. It iwas a bit of offhand folly born..of an Anxious moment." « "But the man wants to n irry me." if ^He said nothing of such a pur- • •••• freee." "He will be In no hfcrry about that," fcf. bald Bim. "He Is a shrewd operator. "Every one hates him. They say that . !he knew what was coming when he Mold out." That evening Blm wrote a long let- Iter to Samson Traylor, telling him lof the evil days which had come to ithem. This letter, now In possession tof a great grandson of Samson and fiarah Traylor, had a singular history. |Xt reached the man to whom It was {addressed in the summer of 1844. It s "was found with many others that sumjmer In Tazewell county under a barn •which Its owner was removing. It 'brought to mind the robbery of the Stage from Chicago, south of the sycamore woods, in the autumn of '37, by , ;a man who had ridden with the driver ifrom Chicago and who, It was thought, Jaad been in collusion with him. A j Carious feature of the robbery had Ibeen revealed by the discovery of the ' jaaall sack. It was unopened. Its con £['- -tents undisturbed, its . rusty padlock Is Mill in place. The perpetrator of the £ v> Crime had not soiled his person with : • --iany visible evidence of guilt and so fcras never apprehended. |H • Then for a time Bim entered upon v jgreat trials. Jack Kelso weakened. v " 'Burning with fever, his mind wan- ,;J tftered in the pleasant paths he loved ' *nd saw In Its fancy the deeds of / A)ax and Achilles and the topless tow- 1^.:^ •rs of Illium and came not back again s* ' to the vulgar and prosaic details of Jlfe. The girl knew not what to do. A funeral was a costly thing. She )»ad no money. The Kinzies had gone ks. «n a hunting trip In Wisconsin. Mrs. - Hubbard was ill and the Kelsos aJready much In her debt Mr. Lionel - Davis came. He was a good-looking young man »t twenty-nine, those days, rather ^* ? stout and of middle stature, with dark U hair and eyes. He was dressed in the i| height of fashion. He used to boast ||Y that he had only one vice--diamonds. 3But he had ceased to display th«>m on pf1?. Ills shirt-front or his fingers. He car- Tied them In his pockets and showed v them by the glittering handful to his *•-* ;frlends. They had come to him * through trading In land where they were the accepted symbol of sue ce.is ^ ' and money was none too plentiful »> • • He had melted their settings and I t turned them into coin. The stones he ** kept as a kind of surplus--a half hld- * den evidence of wealth and of superl- ^4 orlty to the temptation of vulgar dlsplay. Mr. Davis was a calculating, i+ 'i ' masterful, keen-minded man, with a "Let me lend you a thousand," he urged. "I can do it without a bit of Inconvenience." "I think that five hundred will be enough," she said. It carried her through that trouble and Into others, of which her woman's heart had found abundant signs In the attitude of Mr. Davis. He gave the most assiduous attention to the comfort of Blm and her mother. He had had a celebrated physician corue down from Milwaukee to see Mrs. Kelso and had paid the bill in advance. "I cannot let you be doing these things for us," Bim said one evening when he had called to see them. "And I cannot help loving you and doing the little I can to express it." he answered. "I would like to make every dollar I have tell you in some way that I love you. That's how I feel and you might as well know it." "But I do not love you, Mr. Davis." "Let me try to make you love me," he pleaded. "Is there any reason why I shouldn't?" "Yes. If there were no other reason, I love a young soldier who iff fighting In the Seminole war in Florida under Col. Taylor." "Well, at least, you can let me take the place of your father and shield you from trouble when I can." "You are a most generous and kindly man !"* Blm exclaimed with tears In her eyes. So he seemed to be, but be was one of those men who weave a spell like that of an able actor. He excited temporary convictions that begafl to change as soon as the curtain fell. He was no reckless villain of romance. If he instigated the robbery of the south-bound mail wagon, of which the writer pf this little history has no shadoW'of doubt, he was so careful about It that no evidence which would satisfy a Jury has been discovered to this day. On account of the continued illness of her mother Bim was unable to resume her work in the academy. She took what sewing she could do at home and earned enough to solve the problems of each day. But the pay ment coming due on the house in December loomed ahead of them. It was natural, in the circumstances that Mrs. Kelso should like Mr. Davis and favor his alms. Mrs. Kelso's health bad improved slowly so that she was able then to spend most of each day In her chair. One evening when Davis sat alone Which Tells of the Settling of W&a Lincoln and the Traylor* in the Village of Springfield and of Samson's Second Visit to Chioago. Blm'8 Judgment of her old friends was ill founded. It was a slow time In which she lived. The foot of the horse, traveling and often mired In a rough muddy highway, was Its swiftest courier. Letters carried by horses or slow steamboats were the only media of communication between people separated by wide distances. So It Is easy to understand that many who had traveled far were as the dead, in a measure, to the friends they had left behind them and that those separated by only a hundred miles had to be very enterprising to keep acquainted. In March Abe Lincoln had got his license to practice law. On his return from the North he had ridden to Springfield to begin his work aS a lawyer in the office of John T. Stuart. His plan was to hire and furnish a room and get his meals at the home of his friend, Mr. William Butler. He went to the store of Joshua Speed to buy a bed and some bedding. He found that they would cost seventeen dollars. "The question is whether yon would trust a man owing a national debt and without an asset but good Intentions and a license to practice law, for so much money," said Holiest Abe. "I don't know when I could pay you." Speed had heard of the tall representative from Sangamon county. "I have a plan which will give yon a bed for nothing If you would care to share my room above the store and sleep with me," he answered. 'I'm much obliged, but for you it's quite a contract." "You're rather long," Speed laughed. "Yes, I could lick salt off the top of your hat. I'm about a man and a half but by long practice I've learned how to keep the half out of the way of other people." 'I'm sure we shall get along well enough together," said Speed. Mr. Lincoln hurried away for his saddle-bags and returned shortly "There are all my earthly possessions," he said as, h.e threw the bags on the floor. So his new life began 19 the village of Springfield. Early In the autumn Samson arrived fcnd bought a small house and two acres of land on the edge of the village and returned to New Salem to move his family and furniture. When they drove along the top of Salem *hlll al, number of the houses were empty an and set oat early next moi with his son, Jostah. bound for new city. The boor III Mmd t» go and both Samson mi BaAA tiMSght it would be good far him to tak« a better look at Illinois than his geography afforded. f M«t«1 K|{> fefhfifi gp» An m IMM dear morning In February. They to Brimstead's In time for dinner. Henry put his hand on Samson'* pommel and said Id a confident tones «TO Dorado was one of the wickedest cities Ih history. It was like Tyre and Babylon. It robbad me. Look at that pile of stakes." Samson saw a long cord of stakes along the road In the edge of the. meadow. "They are the teeth of my city," said Brimstead In a low voice. "I've drawed 'em out. r They ain't goin' to bite me no more." "They are the towers and steeples of El Dorado," Samson laughed. "Have any of the notes been paid?* "Not one and I can't get a word from my broker about the men ./Who drew the notes--who they are or where they are." "I'm going to Chicago and If yon wish I'll try to find him and see what he says." "That's Jnst what I wish," said Brimstead. "His name 1* Lionel Da- * -i awn I > .16* . v * ' -1 * .V'-' f Me*#*' -- XfcttlU "Ttwiw Are All My Earthly Peases eions," He Said. v|s. His address Is 14 South Water street. I sold him all the land I had on the river shore and he gave me hia note for It." "If you'll let me Hake the note m see what can be done to get the money," Samson answered. Say, I'll tell ye," Brimstead went on. "It's for five thousand dollars Verted, their I and I don't suppose it's worth the pa- Every Twelve Years Sfnoe Spanish Invasion Body Mur- ^ tiered Priast Appears." WONT STAY INTERRED Spaniard Killed by Indiana In N«w Mexico Who Feased lie WaiHd . Betray Them to 8panish Invaders. Isleta, I*; ML--Here repoees at pren-^ ent the oldest and most persistent ghost in America. This might be inscribed in the little adobe church here. Long ago, at the time of the first Spanish invasions of southwestern America, a Spanish friar was cap* tured by the Indians. Although kept as a prisoner for a time, he later worfe their confidence and as years went by was admitted to their peculiar re* liglous and political circles. ' At last the rumor reached the trlb® of the advance of Coronado in search of treasure. The Indians feared treachery on the part of their Spanish friend and one night he was stabbed to death bygone of the more skeptical members of the tribe. The medicine men were horrified at the crime, for not only had they come to respect the Spaniard's Christian teachings, but had made him a participator in their own religion. And above all, they knew what might be expected of enraged Spaniards If they should discover the crime. Buried Near Altar. The priest's body was hastily wrapped in a sheet and without any prayer or ceremony buried deep in front of the altar In the little Christian church In Isleta. Corouado's men never learned of the crime, but a few years later a peculiar mound appeared In front of the altar in the little church. The horrified natives observed the mound was exactly the length and width of a man's body. Soou the hard earth floor cracked and one morning, just 12 years after the burial of the priest, his body was discovered lying face upward above the spot where he had been burled. 7 On examination It was found (bat the body was soft, as though the Mi? N e v e r w t t t i m i t s a y i n g " B a y e r . - 1 "WARNING! Unless you see name "Bayer" on tablet^ you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed bf ^physicians over 21 years and proved safe by millions fat Colds •••> Headache Rheumatism ^ : ,* Toothachl Neuralgia Neuritis 'X*"/ Earache ?Lumbago" Pain, Pain •' ' » ."'•ft.. *?• Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper direction®r \ ^ J Handy tin boxqp of IS tablets--Bottles of 24 and 100--All droggiat*, Jfaftrla U tto tnd* n*rk at Ban* MKmEteetm «jf toimmwdtolM «# S«JXi7|lliMNR ,-r! A Real Yachtsman. Commodore--What kind of a yachta- ^ - man is our new member? Fleet Captain--The kind that sjeta|J " his absent pennant when to dtvaa.*-- overboard for a swim. "• WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND* SWAMP (TO BE CONTINUED^ -V SHE ALSO KNEW TENNYSON ^ r rather heavy Jaw. In his presence, ^ if Blm was afraid of her soul that night. 2 He was gentle and sympathetic. He offered to lend her any amount f she T ^ needed. She made no anuwer, but sat .r trying to think what she would best I do. The Traylors had paid no attentlon to her letter, although a month .had passed since it was written. In a moment she rose and gave him Iter hand. "It Is very kind of yon,M said she. ^ ""If you can spare me five hundred dollars fo» «a Indefinite tinft;|1«lll take It* "Let Me Lend You a Thousand," He Urged. with her, she told him the atory of Bim and Harry Needles--a bit of knowledge he was glad to have. Their talk was interrupted by the return of Bim. She was in a cheerful mood. When Mr. Davis had gone she said to her mother: "I think our luck has turned. Here's letter from John T. Stuart. The divorce has been granted. I am going to write to Harry and tell him to hurry home and marry me If he wants to. Don't say a word about the dl vorce to our friend Davis. I want to make him k9ep his distance. It Is hard enough now." Before she went to bed that night she wrote a long letter to Harry and one to Abe Lincoln, thanking him for his part in the matter and telling him of her father's de^th, of the payment due and of the hard times they were suffering. Two weeks passed and brought no answer from Mr. Lincoln The day before the payment came due In December, a historic letter from.Tampa, Fla., was published In the Democrat, It was signed "Robert Deming, private. Tenth cavalry." It gave many details of the campaign tn the Everglades In which the famous scout, Harry Needles, and seven of his comrades had been surrounded and slain. When Mr. Davis called at the little home In La Salle street that evening he fonnd Bim In great distress. "I throw up my hands," she said. "t cannot stand any mota. We shall be homeless tomorrow." "No, not that--so long as r ilve," he answered. "I have bought "the" claim! Yon can nay me when yon get ready." owners having moved i&f ay. Two of I per It was wrote on. You take It and the stores were closed. Only ten famlr If you find It's no good yon lose it just lies remained. They stopped at Rut- as careful as you can. I don't want ledge's tavern, whose entertainment | to aee It again. was little sought those days. People from the near houses came to bid them good-by. Pete and Colonel, invigorated by their long rest, but whitened by age and with drooping heads, drew the wagon. Sambo and the small boy rode between Sarah and Samson. Betsey and .Toslah walked ahead of the wagon, the latter leading a cow. That evening they were comfortably settled In their new home. When the beds were set up and ready for the night Sarah ipade some tea to go with the cold victuals she had brought. Mr. Lincoln ate with them and told of his new work. Betsey was growing tall and slim. She had the blond hair and fair skin of Samson and the dark eyes of her mother. Josiah had grown to be a bronzed, sturdy, good-looking lad. very shy and sensitive. "There's a likely boy!" said Sam son as he clapped the shoulder of his eldest son. "He's got a good heart in him." "* "You'll- spoil him with praise," Sarah protested and then asked as she turned to the young statesman, Have you heard from Blm or any of the Kelsos?" Not a word. I often think of them." There's been a letter in the candle every night for a* week or so, but we haven't heard a word from Harry or from them," said Sarah. "I wonder how they're getting along in these hard times."1 I told Jack to tet me know If I Poetic Business Man Got 8omethHng of a "Jolt" When He Tackled Little Waitress. The man with the superior air was a poetic business man. He generally patronized a small lunchroom near his office. When he was not selling eggs at wholesale or something, he liked to read verse. His 'favorite was Tennyson's "Idylls of the King." And because he felt that he knew so much about It he thought he would have a little fun with the lunchroom waitresses, in a superior sort of Way. It began by naming the girls after the heroines In the poem. His regular waitress was a tall, gaunt person, but somewhat queenly as she bore down on him with a plate of hash. Her real name was Sadie. "Sadie," he announced one night, hereafter I'm going to call, you Guinevere. Mind?" 1 should worry," said the waitress, shifting her gum, "but who's she?" "The bride of King Arthur," waa the reply. "Awri, but I hope she's respectable I ain't seen that flllum." So It went. All the girls were properly renamed. And then one day a new waitress was on the job. She was small and dark. Exceedingly pretty, he thought. Sleeping Sickness Thief. The case of a boy who became a thief after an attack of encephalitis lethargla (sleeping sickness) Is described In the Lancet, (London England.) When eleven years old he remained In a state of stupor and lethargy for five weeks. He had been a normal, intelligent, and docile child. 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AFTER THE FOOTBALL GAMES "Pot many years druggists liave watclie<!f - with much interest the remarkable record? maintained by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Itoot,/; the great kidiney, liver and bladder cine. It is a physician's prescription. r'Vj Swamp-Root is a strengthening medi^ cine. It helps the kidneys, liver and der do the work nature intended they - should do. Swamp-Root has stood the test of years,* It is sold by all druggists on its meriS; and it should help you. No other kidney- ^ medicine has so many friends. Be sure to get Swamp-Root and start, treatment at once. ; However, if you wish first to test thit " great preparation send ten cents to Dr* Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a, «,•> sample bottle. When writing be sure and^. - • ' * mention this paper.-- AdvertlBemenL . V HERE'S GENUINE NEWYORKEil; His Body Waa Dleeovarp. I haven't named you yet," he told could do anything to help,' Samson fa, after a couple of n1ghts. priest had been dead but a few daya, and the wound In his back was clotted with fresh blood. There seemed to be nothing to do but to bury him again. This they did and were careful to press the earth down very firmly. It waa no use. The crack reappeared and widened and at the end of another 12 years they found him lying there again. And as before the body showed no sign of decomposltion. Ghost Appeared. Thia went on every J2 years until 1912. Then when, according to habit, the ghost appeared, the old men called a council. The governor was sent for, as well as the priest of the parish and the archbishop of Santa Fe and a visiting cardinal from Rome. They all came and a paper was signed to the effect that they bad seen the body. Again It was burled, but this time In heavy oak casket, and over the Man Who Had Been There Knew s There Would Be Only One Dl* , tinctive College Color. • They were talking of their absent sons, and. the fact that each of the fathers bad a boy In a different college did not prevent them from amicably discussing their prospects. "It won't be long," said one of the fathers, "before the athletic season opens, and then I think we'll hear something from the Orange and Blue." "Yes," said another, "and there'll be some shouting done by the Blue and Gray." "Of course/* said the third father, "and as my boy has gone to Princeton, I'll have to put In a word for the Black and Orange; but It doesn't make such a great deal of difference. The boys are bound to come under the same colors In the end." t "No," said one. k J"Can't be arranged/* said the other. ' **Oh, yes. It can I" • - "To which colors do yon refer?" "Black and Blue."--Philadelphia Ledger. You Can Always Tell Him--He Knowf Hla Home City Like the Prover- r bial Book. ' The man who was born In New York and had lived there all his days gavO a satisfied chuckle. "Yes, 1 know thtfr!t *>ld town as few know It. It's goingto be a great pleasure for roe to takfc you around, old man. This, of coursefV Is Grant's tomb. Ha, hal" The westerner looked his surprise. ^ "I laugh because It's so common^; place--so shopworn, so to speak. Bufc while you're my guest you shall mist" nothing from the usual to the most uncommon ... by George." »» "What Is Itr *4 "Look--that big purple machine* with all the people. Looka like a del**, egation of visiting Elks . . . of^ . . . what In the name of time ea%' such a big, clumsy--" w "New York city sightseeing bus!*w yelled the man with the ballyhoo, "Takes you anywhere you want to gf to see the sights."--Judge. % No Poser. "How long have vyou been Indiaposed, my poor fellow?" asked a fair visitor at a hospital of a big negro who was strapped up in bed with an Injured back. "Dls ain't no poee tall, miss," answered the patient In tones of disgust. "Dls am merely de careless manner In which dem forgetful doctora went away and lef me yestiddy." Childish sports may satisfy the children, but annoy the nelghbora. Other People's Propertyi^ ' ^ , "The charge is burglary," remarkefl^ the judge. i ; - "Your honor," said the hard-face^^f, • s ^ . prisoner, "I'm a 'human fly* an' whejp^t" de cops nabbed me I wus Just praO^* tlcin* me profession." "Dm. What's a 'human fl7r" "Dat's a fellow what climbs up dfe sides of bulldln's without any ropes « ladders, Just usln' his hands an' feet|f "I see, but even If you are a 'humajl ' fly,' you.are not expected to carry off' anything valuable you hapi>en to fiPB^ after you get above the ground flwMr.* --Birmingham Age-Herald. > *1 Natural Query. ^ Crabshaw--We can't afford a car. Mrs. Crabshaw--Why, the hoo^l Isn't mortgaged, Is It? assured them. Late In November Mr. Lincoln went out on the circuit with the dlstln gulshed John T. Stuart, who had taken him Into partnership. Blm's letter to him bears an indorsement on its envelope as follows: This letter was forwarded from grave, and even over the whole floor Then he explained his little Indoer I 0f the church, was laid and nailed a sport. "I'll let you be Elaine," he said. "How ridiculous," she answered. 1 can't be Elaine." "Why not?" "Tennyson says aba <waa fair. o a brunette. Elaine the fair. Elaine the Vanda'ila the week I went out on the | beautiful. Elaine the lily maid of Asto lat.' Evidently you don't remember how the lines went.'N The superior bookworm called tor ^a check.--New York Sun. ' Advertisers at First Shy."' .V !t took several years after frawtabllshment of newspapers in America for advertising to become popular. John Campbell, the postmaster of Boston. who, in 1704. started the Bostou News Letter, the first real newspaper In this country, had great difficulty In persuuding his townspeople to adver tise their wares or their wants. William Bradford and Peter Zenger in New York were hardly more fortunate at first, and even Benjamin Franklin, for many years after he began the publication of- the Penrisyl vania Gazette, found his advertising columns very meager. After 18fi0. however, the reluctance to advertise circuit and remained unopened in our office until my return six weeks later. --A. Lincoln." The day of his return* he went to Sarah and Samson with the letter. "I'il get a horse and start for Chicago tomorrow morning," said Samson. "They have had a doable blow Did you read that Harry had been killed?" Harry killed f* Mr. Lincoln exclaimed. "You don't jnean to tell me that Hairy has been killed?" "The Chicago Democrat says so, but we don't believe It," said Samson. "Here's the article. Read It and then I'll tell you why I don't think It's so. Abe Lincoln read the article. "You see It was dated In Tampa November the fifth," said Samson. "Before we had read that article we had received a letter from Harry dated November the seventh. In the letter he says he Is all right and I calculate that be ought to know aa much about It as anyone." "Thank God! Then It's a mistake," said Lincoln. "We can't afford to loee Harry. I feel rather poor with Jack Kelso gone. It will comfort me to do what I can for his wife and daughter, ril give you every dollar I can spare to take to them." Sameou hired horeea far tba Jo«rheavy plank floor. Plank floors are not common In little adobe churches In this region, and this Is the explanation of the most truthful man In Isleta. But now, plainly visible, there is a bulge In the planking the size of a inan's body and the nails In the floor protrude I Apparently the ghost Is trying to come again to Isli ta, and the townspeople are looking forward apprehensively to 1824. v Release Wounded Ba||p > - , Huntington, Pa.--An eagle, wounded seven weeks ago near here, has Just been released from the highest peak of the Allegheny mountains. The cost of Its food was the reason for giving It its liberty, the bird eating three pounds of beefsteak dally. The bird, since It was hurt, has been kept In a cage and cared for by game wardens. The eagle was wounded by a fanner who waa "tired of Ing It hanging around his farm." Hero's Grave Marker Stolen. Palmyra, N. J.--Veterans of the W6rld war of Palmyra, N. J., think M»me one has stolen the marker off died away and all the' leading papers I dm grave of a hero, Frederick M. Rod showed that they were well sop- gers, for whom the post of the Amerl ported. | can Legion In that city Is named. They have given the suspected person one week in which to return the stone. Dies While Making Home Run. Baltimore, Md.--While in the act of scoring a home run in a baseball game, George Bendftr Ml dead at heart disease. a Entirely Too Much. » "It Is terrible what I spent dnttag the entertainments for charity," reel a red Mrs. Newrlch. "Two thousand for my dre*s and five hundred for raj coat, besides the twenty for my charlt) contributions. It la too much." fes*-. ill Are you stepping on the brake or the accelerator? ^Tbe food yoo eat does make a dHTerentffc ( Heavy, atarchy foods often do alow down " feody and mind--often steal the energy that bt* )i* 'yjonga to the day's work. Grape-Nuta is a glH ^ food. It containa the perfected nourishment *ta( Nature'a bast grains. If Includes all thefrs ^elements needed to Aouriah body and brain. It ^1 ^ \ia easy to digest It gives sasrgy whlwwt taking •" "".-xienergy. How about four brsak&st or lunch doj>» : > ghra. or take? 5 9Lmm --• ; ', Grape-Nuts is awaat, crisp, delightful t» the taste, and is an id^jkinun» of ^wecvior « 'r<^ !Ibwusmy aannidl idUiffffiicnuilltt ddaawy.. V '* V <»• "Thcrrt a Reason* for CRAPE-NUTS -V- ' - ;j' • : f *