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5S5533n CHAPTER X. (Continued.) Jvsf- then he happened to noticed 'stream at light from a window at the -lodge. Then his mind a Quickly moving toward this, -her'"brought out the penknife and op ened the blade. Both blade and han dle were covered with blood there was a* shadow of doubt on the subject. suddenly there flashed across the possibility that perhaps name might be engraved on the bangle. Instantly he was searching for that name. "Not. a, name—but initials!", he gaaped. Bagerly his eyes deciphered those initials. "G.jB." he meatally exclaimed, turn ing oMd to the finger tips. "*(jL E.' stands for Guy Erskine! Heavens, it can't he*. It can't be! He can't have played the scoundrel to such a hideous degree. But these initials are his! Perhaps this is the reason why he is so Changed and vows he will never mar ry! Aad bangs about, tlie house like a man who is brooding over some dark, unnerving secret? But it can't be that one of the best fellows who ever lived .has turned murderer! Yet, why has he changed so suddenly and great ly? have asked myself that question dQHctis of times 'Since I came down here the other day. The whole thing is a mystery, a ghastly mystery! But I'm deucedly glad I didn't rush off with it to the police. If I bad, I But thgnk Heaven, I didn't Thank Heaven I was mercifully saved from acting as my brother's denouncer. But it can't he the case. It's absolute madness on my part to suspect Guy. There are other men In the world whose initials are *G. E.' For instance, Elliugham's Christian name is George. But he has other Christian names. "However, it is clear as daylight what. I ought to do, and that is go straight to Guy and show him this pen-' knife. No need for me to ask him whose It is I shall see the fact written on fats face If it is his, or not. If it is his—I pray that it is not—I shall know it only too soon. Then But Audrey? 5How can I act with regard to her? What a fool I am to let my thoughts rush on like this! It's a spe cies of insanity to invent one's own ml$©ry, and that is what 1 -am doing now. Its a good thing It has ceased to snow I can get home in half the time that it would take me if it had continued. In an hour's time, When Guy and I have talked the matter over, I sxpect that I shall feel mad with myself for ever having suspected him. I don't believe I do suspect him really. 'JWS it all, I can't diagnose my feel logs, and there's no necessity that I should.. The only thing that I need is to get,borne with all possible speed." Already be had gone some distance. Half on hour more and he strode up the atepavof Arlington Towels. Oar voice. "'We was at home, sitting in the llbnur, and in the briefest of time Boggle was standing opposite to him In Wa snow-covered clothes. "HaAloa! Back again! And what's exclaimed Quy, in Audrey and Veiling me will halve the bitterness of It. Has she—sher—said 'no?' "Do yea refer to Audrey ^'Yes." are engaged." "Bngaged!. That is the best news have heard^ for ages! You have abase*! excellently, and I wish you all the happiness imaginable. As ybu have jbeen accepted, "why in the name of goodness do yon look so glum, old nanf|' Quy layghed as lie asked that quesUoa. "V&, a Very Simple reason," replied ReggH}, trying to speak in a matter-of fact tfolce. "Something has happened happened to some one else." "That 1b not an uncommon occur ence.- There's not a man in the world who would experiences not be glad to cut a few out of years, too. In many ihem over after (®, it llres that the.bright side. fltfW and •*& is® Airs. E. Bagot Harte. a were surprised caught in the snowstorm, I," was the immediate re- ply. ... ""Oh! £o you went skating with tier?" "And—" Guy waited for a moment, ^hen continued more quickly, "you •:. may as well tell me what has happen ||i«d to make you look so desperately ill. his life, arid a few cases, and Hand bodily to someone else. But, Is the dafk shadows in our show up the brightness of My ill-luck will berie- A,udrey In the end, and I'm .happened to me. with re- fWfl to finding something Inconnec tkm with the murder In the wood. Oh ty-the-bye, jtqu served, on the jwry at .ttfei Inquest Were ybu not the fore- -C*ires-1? wa*," WMmmM J&VJ %*ooght out a cigar and gazed the end.- Were walking through, ithe observed Reggie, ^proceeding cautiously, as lie studied Guy's d* -mttou* ji&i einklng heart, 'Jand to ojp my skates weiAhort, old man, and •A- penknife gie, bringing out the handing it to Guy. White as a sheet was the latter's face as he grasped it eagerly but not a word escaped his lips. He stood up Immediately and held' it close to the electric- light at the side of the fire place. With his back to Reggie he opened the knife and looked carefully at it. "Well?" queried Reggie, hoarsely. "Yes, it must be the knife that was used," was the reply. As he said the last words Guy turn ed round sharply and faced the fire. Another moment and the penknife was thrown into the center of the flames. "You—" Reggie began excitedly. "It is better there!" retorted Guy. "The initials on It were 'G. E.,'" cried Reggie, with flashing eyes. "Well, what of that?" retorted Guy, with equally flashing eyes. "What of that?" he repeated, in a thundering voice. "Only that they are your initials," flung back Reggie. It was not the Reggie of hitherto that was speaking now. Good-natured cheerfulness had gone from him in a second. 'So you think I am the murderer? Your knowledge of my disposition leads you to believe that I am capable ol' killing a fellow creature! You are superbly complimentary! I neveir felt more flattered!" "Why did you throw the penknife into the fire. You know it was a most important piece of evidence," cried Reggie. "There is one thing that I have nev er tolerated from you, and tliatis crit icism of my conduct and I won't tol erate it now!" "Hang it all, I don't care if you al low it or not—I shall certainly do it. Being your brother, if you fall I fall. With my fall Audrey's happiness and my happiness are dashed to atoms. This morning it would not have mat tered, and— Hang it,, though I only waste my breath talking of it! That action of yours—throwing the penknife into the fire—speaks volumes. 1 don't want to hear another word on the sub ject." He strode toward the door as he /poke. "I don't want ever to see your face again, or to hear of you or from you. If it had affected only myself"— now he was standing with his hand on the door, his white, excited face turn ed toward his brother—"only myself," he repeated, in a trembling voice, "it would have been quite a different thing, but to have to break the heart of the dearest and sweetest girl in the world makes me feel as if I, your brother, would like' to put a bullet through your head." "I wish you would," was the slowly spoken reply. It was an unexpected reply it Tetag gered Reggie took from him the power to heap scorn on his brother's head. He looked at the tall, strongly-built man leaning impassively with his back to the mantelpiece—looked at his strangely fearless eyes and air of per fect unresistance. "Why—why did you do It?" he asked, in a different voice. "Again I tell you that you flatter me by your belief in my villainy." "As that is all you say,. I will leave this house in half an hour. To-morrow I shall break off my engagement with Audrey." .Then you will be a foo}. In the end you will regret it." "To remain engaged to her would be scandalous conduct on my part since I, like you, cannot marry, now that our name is crime-stained. Would that I had known it this morning! Let me tell you, Guy, that I am utterly sur prised at my own powers of restraint at this moment, and I despise myself for them. Once more I say that I hope we shall never meet again," The door closed. Forever the broth ers had parted. Of the two, the elder was the more broken-hearted. He staggered forward and flung himself into a chair then he burled his face in his hands. "Hilda lost! Reggie lost! My own unhappy existence alone left to me!" he murmured, in a quivering voice. "Oh, God, how long must it go On? How long can I stand it? If I were to go away there would be no one to keep Ellinghajri curbed in. No, I must stay, live or die, for Hilda. It is the only thing worth doing that I have got .left me on earth to do. I have had my fling at dissipation, and most unsatis factory I found it! By Jove! I little knew that It was in Reggie to act as he has to-night But love for a girl changes a nran's disposition makes him act like a tiger when otherwise he would be a lamb. "But I can't do anything. I must be true to my part and live or die for the WOmah I love. I know what Reggie would do If he knew all—go straight to the police. He would not screen that black-scoundrel heart, and can't be cut and pared down to suit the requirewep^ of liw ind society. Thank heiaveri, the leanings ojt our hearts are our own secrets! And my secret will remain forever mine. "Ah! If won't only Reggte would— No, I blame the boyK. have been a row In this bouse if It wai he who had thrown that evidence about the murder into the -fire and I had been in his position. I'll not blame him. Financially he shall not suffer." CHAPTER XI. Reggie's chambers in the Inner Tem ple looked depressingly cold, cheerless and uninviting as he entered them at a few minutes past midnight. The train from Arlington had arrived late at Waterloo, and a dense yellow fog had caused his drive through the snowy streets to he an unpleasant one. But at last he had arrived at Iris rooms, which looked aggressively un prepared for his reception. He struck a match and lighted the fire. He was cold and also hungry, but. the latter he did not heed. "The last eight hours might h^ive been eight years, so much has btten concentrated into them!" he said to himself, with heart-sick bitterness. I little thought when I parted from Au drey this afternoon that I was kiss ing her for the last time. Fortunate ly I did not know it. I should have made a fool of myself if I had. To think that she is all the world to me, and I am all the world to her, and yet we must never see each other again! Never again will her loving amis twine round my neck and her face be raised to mine, looking so invitingly sweet. How stunningly pretty she is! Such a divinely bewitching little mouth, and eyes so loving and true! "But. to let my mind dwell on her lovability will only render me many degrees more frantically unhappy, and the writing of the letter to break off our engagement, a thousand times more cruelly difficult. How miserable these rooms look! So depressingly cheerless in comparison to a home presided over by Audrey. I shall cut London now—in fact, England shall be closed to me and the sooner I put miles between it and myself the bet ter. Hard work lies before me now to build up a position in another Country and to steer clear of all help from Guy. Oh, but this letter .to Audrey must be written." "Instantly he sat down at the writ ing table and leisurely took out some note paper. He was in no hurry to pen those words that would cut him adrift, unloved and lonely. Twice he assay ed to reduce his act of renunciation to prosaic English, and twice he tore the half-written letters to atoms and flung them into the fire. "I don't want to break her dear lit tle heart, and yet I want it to rea^ as an emphatically earnest break off," he thought, with a sigh. "There is no good in prolonging agonies. The soon er that we both bravely face the inevi table the better for ourself and each other. I am afraid that she will be awfully upset! I fervently hope that she will not cry much. It would break my heart, transform me into a wild state of fiendish anger against Guy, if I were to see tears in her dear eyes. But of course she'll cry. She would not be a woman if she did not. It's a pity women cannot control their bitter feelings as men do. A few days in the 'blues' in private. Oh, hang it, why do my thoughts keep flying off at a tan gent? The truth is that I am a cow ard at heart about everything that concerns Audrey. The letter must be written, though. The poor little wom an must be told the cruel truth. Of course Ellingham won't let her remain short of cash. He can easily allow her a couple of hundred. I'll make a third shot at writing to her, and it must be successful." Again he took up his pen, and slow ly and deliberately wttote the letter that would bring agony of mind to the receiver of it. Most carefully he re not once, but several times. (To Be Continued.) read it- ,? Beer for a Coss«t Lamb. Millais' little maid with the rabbit, "Orphanes," is a general favorite at the picture exhibitions in the London slums. "I do love that child,4 ingman "she just talks to me as if she was my own." Another picture with the same title by Waterlow rep resents lambs being brought up by hand in a blossoming orchard. Mr. Keir Hardie, M. P., the well-known la bor leader, was taking some children round the exhibition. "Now, children," he said, after tell ing them about the country in the spring, "what do you think she is giv ing the little lambs to drink out of that bottle?" "Beer!" shouted every one, with con .yiction.—World To-Day. M1 Ellingham. After all, whysfcould-hs? B-at I must, bsctulael still love Hilda. It is very immoral to do it, of course. But a heart is a fThere ifP? would a saidawork- A Compromise. William H. Ellis, the New York broker, who returned from Abysinia with the dukedom of Harrar to show as a mark of Menelik's favor, was ask ed the other day if he was glad to get back home. "I any glad to get home,""'said Mr. Ellis, laying down his newspaper. "Even the personal column of the daily press pleases me wi£h i^s homelike look.- -2 "I read the pGfsonils of this paper here. It was amusing. One^ of, the items ran v-Kf* Alonzo—Return at OmfeF tft yottr Matilda. The piano has been sold/.". —r—. rills: Pearl—They say. that marriage ie tween Miss Oldc and Reggy s&pp was love at first sight.. Ruby—-Yes, she didn't give him time to resort to "second sight'' be fore siie made him marry her. tie was going to a mediuin to find cjit her £ge.—Chicago NewB. v«Most men are made by their mleB and marred by, themselves. ILACK OF ADVERTISING. North Dakota's Population Shows Big Gain Over South Dakota. When the two Dakotas were admit ted to statehood, in 1889, South Dako ta had fully a third more population than did the north state. At the present time the population of the two states Is practically the same, as shown by the census of this year. Ever since the admission, North Dakota has been working to secure new population. Its state land depart, ment is supplied with a sufficient fund for advertising purposes to send out illustrated circulars and a largo amount of printed matter, in which not only the state lands alone are ad vertised, but the section in which they 3 located is shown up to the best advantage. During the same time the Great Northern road has kept in existence an immigration bureau of its own and lias -done a great deal towards secur ing settlers for that state. For the same time every effort to securc any thing in the way of an appropriation from the legislature of South Dakota for advertising the state or keeping an immigration bureau in existence has met with a cold turn-down. Nothing has been done outside of private efforts of different land compa nies. The result of the different poli cies followed by the two states is shown in the figures which give North Dakota a gain of 170,000 in population since 1890, and South Dakota a gain of but 50,000. The question of action is being gen erally discussed over the state, and it is hoped that if the next legislature will do nothing more, it will supply an additional clerk in the state land de partment for that purpose and provide him with a sufficient fund for printing to be able to answer the many inquir ies which come to that department, but which cannot be answered for the reason of lack of opportunity and the necessary information. AFTER SHARE OF INSURANCE TAX Ninety-One Cities and Towns File Re ports With State Auditor. Last year several towns were left out of the distribution of the percent age of insurance tax which goes to the fire companies because they failed to make the required reports to the state. Among the principal towns left out were Huron and Dead wood. The state auditor called attention to the necessi ty of filing such reports if there was a desire to secure a share of the funds and as a result 91 towns have tiled re ports this year against 62 which made filing last year. The list, whnh lias been certified to the insurance com missioner is composed of the following towns: Aberdeen, Alexandria, Alpena, Armour, Artesian, Belle Fourche, Ber esford, Bowdle, Bridgewater, Bristol, Britton, Brookings, Canova, Canton. Carthage, Castlewood Centerville, Cen tral City, Chamberlain, Clark, Clear Lake, Colman, Deadwood, Dell Rapids, Delmont, DeSmet, Elk Point., Elkton, Emery, Eureka, Flandreau, Gary, Gar retson, Geddes, Gettysburg, Groton, Hartford, Howard, Hudson, Huron, Hurley, Irene, Java, Jefferson, Lead, Lennox, Lesterville, Letcher, Madison, Menno, Milbank, Miller, Mitchell, Montrose, Mt. Vernon, Oldham, Park er, Parkston, Pierre, Plankinton, Platte, Ramona, Rapid City, Spring field, Sturgis, Tabor, Terry, Tripp, Tyndayy, Valley. Springs, Vermillion, Viborg, Vienna, Volga, Watertown, Waubay, Webster, Wentworth, White Rock, Whitewood, Wilmot, Woonsock et, Worthin and Yankton. The distribution of this fund will be made next spring, and the amount to each town depends entirely on the amount of premiums paid by the town, the fire companies getting 2 per cent of such premiums, in their home town alone. SCHOOL FUNDS IN DEMAND. Counties to Get No Money Jan. 1 for Investment. Land Commissioner Bach is sending out letters to the county officers over the state announcing that he has no funds to disburse on Jan. 1 to the dif ferent counties from the permanent school fund for their investment. There is only $17.92 of the fund lying idle in the state treasury, and this would make an iapportionment so small that it would be of no use to any coun ty. The balance of the fund, amount ing to $4,670,499, is invested and draw ing interest. For the past year the permanent fund at no time has amounted to more than a few hundred dollars, all of it being kept out. The money coming in is all placed long be fore it reaches the treasury, and is sent to places waiting for it as fast as it accumulates. The commissioner congratulates the different county offi cers on their efforts in keeping the funds invested. SCARE WOMEN,TO OPEN 'jjMt.. PWt to Get Sheriff's Wife to Call Him From Post Falls. An attempt at jail delivery again was made at Yankton, when outside friends of one of the prisoners in the county jail, awaiting trial, tried to in timidate Mrs. Harry Wright, hoping thereby to compel her to telephone her husband, on duty as jailer, to come home to her assistance. The visitors, a man and woman, badly scared Mrs. Wright by trying doors and peeping Into windows for three hours, when they were frightened away. Mrs., Wright wis alone, and as the tele phone was not working she was un iw t&ned that another person In the plot was hid near the jail door while the operatlqjos on s?ere home i. atfc the Wright FIGHT THE MISSOURI. Course of the River Being Changed al Oacoma, South Dakota. The Milwaukee Railroad companj has a gang of men at work placing willows, dirt and other material undei the west end of the pile bridge across the main channel of the Missouri rivei at Oacoma, where the railroad made crossing for its extension from Cham berlain and Oacoma to the BlacP Hills. The company expects to thus I fill about 100 feet for the purpose o: protecting the pile bridge and prevent ing its being washed out or damagec should the water in the river rise sc high next spring as to overflow th erection which has been made on thf east side of American island behind the rick dike that was built out'last year to cause this. Work also has commenced on thfl big dam across the side channels ol the Missouri between American island and Lyman county on the west side of the river. The main channel of the Missouri is next to the Brule county shore at the point where the railroad bridge has been constructed across the irver. About a third of the work done on the dam last spring was washed out by the July freshet. But the remain der held firm and bo reduces the vol ume of water on the west side, be tween American island and the Lymai! county shore, that the stream now flowing there is much smaller and much more shallow than before. It will be much easier to construct the dam than it was last spring, and the probability is that the dam during the winter can be made of sufficient strength to resist the strong pressure of water when the river gets on its customary rampage next spring Should the dam stand the pressure al! the water in the river will be forced into the main channel between Amer ican island and the Brule county shore, along which, in that immediate vicinity, teh town of Chamberlain ex tends, Oacoma being situated on the west side of the river. ELROD MAKES PROCLAMATION. South Dakotans Called on to Observe Thanksgiving. Gov. Elrod has issued the following Thanksgiving proclamation: "All the people of the commonwealth have great reason to be thankful foi bountiful crops, for employment, for health, for happy homes, for blessings unequaled ,and for all the necessaries and many of the comforts of life. "In conformity with the proclama tion of President Roosevelt, I, Samuel H. Elrod, governor of the State ol South Dakota ,do set apart Thursday, November 30, 1905, as a day of thanks giving. "All citizens are earnestly urged to cease from their labors at least a part of the day ,and to meet in houses ol worship or in homes and give thanks unto God. Where there is sickness and sorrow let friends fail not to dc and say things which will cause the hearts of such unfortunate ones tc be thankful. "Brother ought to learn from broth er. Recently there was a fast day sa cred to foreigners. Every foreigner in our great country sacredly kept the fast day of his native land. Possibly some of them did it through fear. Be that as it may, there is a lesson in it for us. We ought to keep Thanksgiv ing day for love of home and country and in the acknowledgement of divine blessings. "Let each citizen of South Dakota observe the day as his best thoughts direct, and. as the day grows old let every citizen of the commonwealth si lently petition the Great Father to continue his goodness to us." BUILDING GROWS ACTIVE. Immense Warehouse and Factories Be ing Erected at Watertown. The International Harvester com pany is making arrangements to build a mammoth division warehouse and general office building at Watertown. It lvas leased the site on the North western tracks and will begin immedi ately to erect a structure 125x200 feet. It will be of fire-proof material, prob ably of biick, but that detail has not yet been decided. The first floor will contain storage rooms and sample floors, and the offices will occupy the second story. By the side of this building the Ore gon ^Feeder company is making ar rangements to build a factory. The company will put up a structure 80x 100 in which to manufacture self-feed ers for threshing machines. It will employ from sixteen to forty-five men all the time. These two buildings, to gether with the large brick warehouse being built by the J. I. Case Threshing Machine company on tile same street, give that quarter a busy and prosper ous aspect. GOLD OUTPUT IS N^AST. Black Hills Have Recorded $140,000, 009, in 29 Years. The Black Hills have produced in the last twenty-nine years about $140, 000,000 in gold. These are figures made from a recent estimate by one of the principal mining men of Lead. This output is from the mills and from the placer mines and is based on ac tnal returns. Just what the Black Hills, has produced outside this record no person ev^r could estimate. Thou sands of dollars were mined'and sen opt In-private ways which never hav been recorded. Prom now oh th .Black Hills will increase each year output, owing to a large number new mills that ate soon to go In commission. These new plants will have a daily capacity of from 200 to 1800 tons each. A HOSPITALS CROWDED •uoimr wo»i of pwiekts lira. Pinkham's Advice Saves Many From this Sad and Ooatly Experience. It is a sad but true fact that a in a in crease in the number of opera tions performed upon women in our hospitals. More than three fourths of the patients lying on those snow ami white beds are women and girls who are awaiting or recovering from opera tions made necessary by neglect. Every one of these patients had plenty of warning1in that bearing down feeling, pain at the left or right Of the womb, nervous exhaustion, pain in the small of the back, leucorrhoea, dizzi ness, flatulency, displacements of the womb or irregularities. All of these symptoms are indications of an un healthy condition of the ovaries or womb, and if not heeded the trouble will make*headway until the penalty has to be paid by a dangerous opera tion, and a lifetime of impaired useful ness at best, while In many cases the results are fatal. The following letter should bring hope to suffering women Miss Luella Adams,of the Colonnade Hotel, Seattle, Wash., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— About two years ago I was a great suf ferer from a severe female trouble, pains and headaches. The doctor prescribed for me and finally told me thai I hp»l a tumor on the womb and must undergo an operation if I wanted to get well. I felt that this was my death warrant, but I spent hundreds of dol lars for medical help, but the tumor kept growing. Fortunately I corresponded with an aunt in the New England States, and she advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound, as it was said to cure tu mors. I did so and immediately began to improve in health, and I was entirely cured, the tumor disappearing entirely, without an operation. I wish every suffering woman would try this great preparation." Just as surely as Miss Adams was cured of the troubles enumerated in her letter, just so surely will Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cure every woman in the laud who suffers from womb troubles, inflammation of the ovaries, kidney troubles, nervous excitability and nervous prostration. Mrs. Pinkham invites all young women who are ill to write her for free advice. Address, Lynn, Mass. Not Dangerous. "An' how's yer woife, Pat?" "Sure, she do be awful sick." "Is ut dangerous she is?" "No, she's too weak t' be dangerous anny more." A Mistake. Fair Visitor—Here, my poor man, are some roses for you. What can I do to make you comfortable? Prisoner—Guess you're making a mistake, lady. Fair Visitor—Mistake—how? Prisoner—I'm only here for porch climbin'. Yer'll find the guy that kill ed his wife in th' nex' cell. The Meanest Man. A well-to-do Chicago real estate own er came into a hardware store in that city and asked the proprietor for a pound of nails. The small package was made up and the price ,a nickel, handed to the merchant, when the customer asked if the purchase could he sent to his house, which was in a distant part of the city. The merchant assented, and calling a boy, handed him the parcel with a dime and said: "Here, Johnny, take this parcel out to Mr. Blank's house." "What!" said the customer, "are you going to give the boy a dime to take the parcel out?" "Why, certainly," said the merchant "I wouldn't think of asking him to go so far for nothing." "Well," said the meanest man in Chicago, "If you would just as soon give me my nickel I will take it out myself and you'll save fiv« cents." PASSING OF PORRIDGE Makes Way for the Better Food of a Better Day. "Porridge is no longer used for breakfast in my home," writes a loyal Britain from Huntsville, Ont. This was an admission of no small signifi cance to one "brought up" on the time honored stand-by. "One month ago," she continues, "I bought a' package of Grape-Nuts food for my husband, who had been an in valid for over a year. He had passed through a severe attack of pneumonia and la grippe combined, and was left In a very bad condition when they passed away. "I tried everything for his benefit, hut nothing seemed to do him any good. Month followed month and he still remained as weak as ever. I was almost discouraged about him when I got the Grape-Nuts, but the result has compensated me for my anxiety- "In the one month that he has eaten Grape-Nuts he has gained 10 pounds in weight, his strength is rap idly returning to him and he feels like a new man. Now we all eat Grape-Nuts food, and are the better for it. Our little 5 year old boy, who used to suffer from pains in the stom ach after eating the old-fashioned por ridge, has no more trouble since he began to use Grape-Nuts, and I have no more doctor's bills to pay for him. "We use Grape-Nuts with only sweet cream, and find? It the most tasty dish in our hill of fare. "Last Monday I ate 4 teaspoonfuls of Grape-Nuts and cream for break fast, nothing else can set" to work got my morning's work done by 9 o'clock, and felt less tired, much stronger, than if I Had .made my break fast on meat, potatoes, etc., as I used to. I wouldn't be without Grope-Nnta In the house for any money." Name given by Postura Co., Battle Creesk, Mich, There's a reason. Read the little book, "The Road to WelMlle," In pkgs.