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Sorw::: Gullstiy and Qoufiet 125 YEARS OLD Sutscription price 1 & Wesly S8 & mestk; $5.00 » g, . i Sotersd o4 e Posiofies 4 Norwih, Ome. CIRCULATON WEEK ENDING JULY 30th, 1921 11,230 VACATIONS AND RAILROADS. Summer has always been the goldem tima for revenue on the railroads through passenger traffic which has al- ways been expected to reach iy high- point under the stimulus of the va- ation period. But the automobile now shares with the railroads and steamboat lines the respomsibility of transporting people to vacation resorts and to their mmer hemes, ‘while further inrcads en railroad passenger reaeipts are made by fairly long itineraries by machine which once could only be accempished by rail. addition to this at the present time railroad travel so fAr this summer !s e reflected the géneral busi- on. July has mot been the month that it once was, but it Is hoped that the summer travel movement may reach such a volume as to compensate in part at least for what the s were short in July. the increase in passenger certain that railroad reve- 1 have been less this July than st year, and even with the !n- creased rates there Is still a good pros- pect that July revenue may not equal year. There has been a large amount of long distance travel which n- riuded the transportation of thousands of boys and girls to summer camps, and the movement of many adults attending summer schools, conferences and eanven- tions, byt even this may not make up for a lewsened general average of July t At one important station in Massachusetts it is reported that the passenger receipts of one raflread for tha first three weeks of the menth wers about $18,000 less than a year ago. , Crowded trains, however, began to be seen with the arrival of the last Satur- day in July ahd as Amgust is the big vacation month' the railroad men are hopeful that this is an indieation of & €o0d perfod for them. is last ness. A REPORT OF PROGRESS, Leaving all partisanship out of the record, it may be said that the Harding ,administration has good grounds for the note of pride in the _recent report of Progress on the steps taken to promote business and prosperity in America. Not that all has been dome, but enough to make a fairly good showing when the muddie that existed in March {s taken W@to consideration, There has been progress. For one thing, there has been a good deal done towards agricultural credits, which the farmers need more than anything else. Reduction of disecounts has been carried out and the rall situation is in a falr way of being cleared up. Certain gov- srnmental “business” ventures have been headed off, and there has been defer- ment on the bonus bill that would have scooped anywhere from $1.500,000 to $5,- 000,000 out of the treasury. The tarift revision and taxation revision have been arted, not moving as fast g we would like perhaps, but al least g, start has been made and both are on the way. In five months it can be said that much happened, although some will say, doubtless. that we had a right to expect more. But it is something to have made a start, 4 In ons way or another, the White House has had a hand In most of what has been done, and a fairly actlve hand. It may have been with reluctance that President Harding has followed the pre- cedent of his immediate predecessor in the presidential chair in asking, urging pressing for action, but at times there ‘seemed no other way. Mutter- about “autocracy” were to be ex- pected and may be expected to be heard Bgain, But, ltke the administration, the pub- lic will feel that what has been done ifies an optimistic outlook. —— s PUTTING VALUES INTO FARMS. While the farmer Is sometimes dis- vosed to inveigh against the swarms of motor cars that invade the rural dis- tricts every pleasant Sunday, and in a T degree on week-days, to disturb » repose and quiet of the country, make the highways ‘umsafe for livestock xnd fill the air with dust that adds to Mo housekeeping burdens of the far- mer’s wife, has he stopped to think of Je actual market value put into his Jarm by the road improvements made Jor the benefit of these same automobile users? One of the big changes that has Seen made In thousands of farms, In- treasing their desirability as homes and hvestments has been wrought by ‘money laken from taxpayers who are not far- mers or farm owners, and spent In road tmprovement, The actual market value built into the tarms of the United States by the im- srovement of highways, at the cost of the national government and the states, 10 less than by the localities most bene- Ated, can be reckoned ir billions of dol- ars. It has added enormously to the srice of well located farm property, It 1as transformed uncomnted thousands of ‘arms, which were formarly held at rery low fizures, into valuable invest- ments. Special taxes on autowtobiles mve repaid the farmers of America vany fold, in the upkeep of the high- vays they use, for all of the losses and be harm they can charge to city-owned gotor vehicles. And millions of fagmers have antomo- Hles of thelr own, as they well deserve. fhey profit personally by the enjoyment ¢ the roads built, in great part, by the soney of ecity taxpayers, while the conomic changes wrought by the im- rovement of the highways which auto- wbiles need are adding enormously to be wealth of rural Americs , and SOME STRIKE COSTS. The costs of strikes is generally esti- mated as the loss of wagep suffered by striking employes and profits lost by the employer agaipst whom the strike is di- rected. It is now shown In the report of Abraham (1. Shiplacoff, recognized in New York as the leader of the several unions of clothing workers, that other losses m‘r. In a speech malie in con- fidence to union leaders in New York, and which was taken in full by a stemo- grapher in the employ of the district at- torney, the union leader said that the elothing workers' defensé fund of $3,- ,000 was spent and that they owed $200,000 to unions in other cities, prin- i Chicago. ’pl;-n:llll of the expenditure show that whfle much of the money went for re- Hef, the cost of defending pickets ac- eunsed of assaulting strikebreakers and of overzealous strikers who wete accused of destroying the stocks of thelr former employers and of blowing up ene plant, was a heavy burden. The minor union officlals were reported as extremely dis- satisfled with the manner in Which thelr strike fund was disbursed, and on the point of refusing to raise another strike fund of $3,600,000 for use in 1922. In this tase, the strikers were opposs. ing a wage cut based upon economic conditions over which neither they nor thelr employers eould expect to exercise any appreciable degree of control. STANDARD FOOD PACKAGES, To obviate in a measure some of the complications in food distribution meth- ods because of the variety of packages used for fruits and vegetables, an In- dlana Jegfslator has introduced a bill to provide for five standard packages and setting tho number of cubic inches each shall contain. In a general way it may be said that different sec- tions of the country have adopted pack- ‘ages of different sizes and forms. As these go to the same large market they occasion a confusion of*prices anfl in- crease the difficulty of handling. ‘It such a measure as is proposed in Indlana, which already has committee approval, were adopted, both the mar- keting of products and the manufacture of packages should be simplified and therefore cheapened. Furthermore, the consumer would know how much he was getting for his money, whereas now he may get a basket or a box of fruits or vegetables that may contatn any amount the packer finds convenient to put fn it. The advocate of the new plan “also proposes to standardize pack- ages for mill products, such as flour, meal, ete. The generally accented flour barrel contalns 196 pounds, and in ‘Some states this is the legal requirement. But many millers pack what passes for an eighth ‘of a barrel of flour in a sack that. holds twenty-four pounds, so that in buring eight of these sacks the con- sumer gets four nounds less than a bar- rel—a quantity sufficient to keep a small family in bread for some davs. AJ of these thingd may seem to be rather small things, but they belong to that in- finite number and varfety of small things that add to the difficulties of distribu~ tion and efficient marketing, and also to the cost of living to the final buyers. EDITORIAL NOTES.' Bank wrecking is not an approved to get rieh quick. The whitewash brush has been applied to the black \Yhita Sox. It certainly is some relief not to read every day of new outrages in Ireland. President Harding is seeking to inoc- ulate the business world with optimism. It all the people ever get all they want politically what dull day® we will fali- on. WIIl our domestic bootleggers ask for a protective tariff against these foreign { rum-runners? president until after his vacation. Mean- while Debs' vacation will continue. ‘Willlam Hohenzollern has decided to pay his Holland taxes under protest. Bill has some human feelings after all. Goernor’ Allen declares the Kansas la- bor court is a suceess but Alex Howatt asks leave to file a dissenting opinion. The man on the corner says: The man who keeps his home garden in shape hasn't time to show symptoms of pel- lagra, The prospect of another famine China means that those who are anx- ious to serve suffering humanity will not be out of a job. ‘When other railroads say it iIs im- possible to reduce rates, Henry Ford simply goes ahead and does ft. That man is incorrigible. This s about the time that the hay fevar victims begin fo hike towards a zone where the rag-weed and the gol- den rod troublé not. Chicago has a new claim to distine- tion. THe census figures show it is the second Polish city in the world, having 137,611 of that natlonality. — Overworked lawn - sprinklérs ghould send up a prayer of thankfulness to the weatherman for the relief he has given them in the last few days. We haven't heard much lately on the progress that “Big Bill' Haywood 15 making in his return to this country and his visit to Leavenworth prison. ~Stmt fiying” by army planes \over civilian crowds is rightly prohibited by the war department. Human life is too precious to run such risks with. it. Governor Len Small of Tilinols con- tinues to act as if he would be looking longingly towards either Canada or Mexico the minute his term of office ex- pires, While we are complaining of tax bur- dens, consider the case of Bradford, England, which simply cannot pay the 91 per cent. tax on realty holdings de- manded by the government. Opportunity has arrived at the doors of the Lancaster, N. H., hotels, where the rate went up from $2.50 to $6 a day as soon as it was known that President Harding Wwag to visit Secretary Weeks there, A leather firm In New York has been fined $10,000 for not turning over te the government the luxury tax which it col< lected from the people. It is said the government is defrauded of $5.000,000 per month through s methods. As some experts seg it, naval strategy consists in building a $23,000,000 bat- tle ship that will render ohsolete the $32,000,000 battle ship of & rival nation and compel anothe. «ival country to build ‘at once a $34,000,006 battle ship JOYS AND SORROWS OF JAIL “T say!" cried the man who had just|time he Pieks up & drm:l“ the m . “That must | John Jones i as dead m have been. tough! 've just modenm;;mom!;;u:::uqtm ‘a man who has been ia a year for a | liaj ompson, 0 assassina H #,9 Hiis whole family. 1In tmis rapid age you murder dian’t cornm. '-w.n.“:nu would you do if you were | get only ‘ome shot at publicity and if The Debs report will not reach the|- arrested for, murdering y you hadn't murdered?” demanded the man ‘who collected beetles ard kept statistics about anything - that ecamé handy. “That's a new fleld of investigation!” “My wife's mother would never in the .world speak to me sgain If I were in that sitwstion,” confided the man who was always having trouble with his rel- atives, “Throughout the period of my ircarceration 'would have a fine time telling everybody that she knew it all the while and that anybody could have told I was that kind of a man by the expression of my left ear. Then my ejection from jail would utterly ruin the situation for her and she would never forgive mel Better for me to stay in i “."n must have been perfectly terrible and my heart just aches for the poer man!" broke in the young weman Who Wwas mot so younmg but had her eve, on one or two bachelors. . e “Maybe he got into the pickle on pur- pose,” suggested the man who always wnated to be contrary.. “Probably he never spent a more contented, quiet year in his life and no doubt he has emerged with the complete manuscript of some great work he never before had time to write. And anyhow, he got free board during these remarkably high prices!” “Yes,” agreed the man with the news- paper, “but conmsider his state of mind! Why, in that eitua;fllgn one easily could lose his sanity reflecting about what people were thinking of him! I should—" “No, you shouldn't” confidently ar-.| gued the man who kept statistics. “Why bother about what people think? Most of them dom't, anyway. If you really stirred up their brains you would be a benefactor to humanity, but you cam't convince me that the populace gives a cahoot ahout what the rest of us are do- ing! Juft as Smith notes the headlines Which say that his old friend John Jones has just been dragged to prison for rob- bing widows and orphans, somebody tells him the laundry pipe has burst and flooded his wine cellar or else the steak you haag on in the limelight a day ex- tra you are a wonder! No, you don't need to bother at all about the social impression you are making when you get caught.” : “This Telief s truly wonderful,” agreed the man who was always having troubles with his reiatives. “You make it 8o clear and comforting. Anmyhow, if they tried ta cast me into a dungeon for removing somebody I hadn't re- moved, I should simply remam calm and explain that I had not .done it at ail Still, there was old Billinger back home, who had’ an awful ‘temper and always fighting with people, and when the sher- ift took him into custedy for murdering a grocer with whom he had a difference wer the price of a bushel of potatoes, he protested violently, calmly, furiously, beseechingly that they: were mistaken and he hadn't done jt and he neyer left off insisting upon 3t until\the trap feil” “I think that was perfectly dreadful” cried the young lady +with her eye on & bacheler or so. "Why @id they dare hang him when he said he didn't de it?” “Oh, there were three witnesses who were present when he shot the grocer,™ explained the man with the troublous relatives, genially. “So you see my plan wouldn't be much good after all!” “Well, but,” ipsisted the pest who kept statistics, “suppose you really were ar- rested for the crime of murder and you were innbcent~although every sipgle bit of evidence showed that you were guilty and there was absolutely no way of clearing yourself—just what would you do, T'd like to kmow?" Nothing. like that ever could happen to me,” insisted the man who liked being contrary. “My noble bearing and clear, boyish eve would convince the most ag- tive policeman that I was imnocent ! “Well,” said the man with the trou- blous relatives, expect if I were in such a situation I'd fold my hands and g0 to jail as this chap did. Somettmes T'd just love the peace and seclusion of u jail, anyhow!” “T think you men are said the Just interested young lady. awfull” “Any- for dihner is overdone. His personal | how, if you ever have to go to prison grievance completely abolishes John [like that I'll bring you jelly and books Jones and his troubles. And by the|and things!"—Chicago News. 2 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Hopes For Fashion Changes. Mr. Editor: If there Is one thing that I do hope for more than another to come to pass it is that the women both old and young, will before many months have passed cease appearing on the streets and elsewhere in dresses much too short for them. by wearing low neck waists, skirts that are too short and thickly powdered and painted faces, to gain the admiration,of the opposite sex, in this they are great- Iy mistaken.’ It has from the beginning of the fad or fashion been & mystery to me how any woman who pretends to be a gentlewoman can feel- comfortable attired in such a’ manner. The nose gets the most powder and one of the cheeks the most paint that gives them more of the appearance of a clown than a good clean face wholesome woman or girls as they are usually called these days. It is seldom that we see a woman, young or old, who is dressed modestly and becomingly with the dress slightly abeve the instep—dommon Sense heels—and a waist that leaves the throat only uncovered. While the style is no business of mine, but as this country ig considered to be a free one I have the same privi- lege to express my opiinons and views as others have on this and ether sub- jects, especlally that now the war Is ended. Respeectfully, MRS. F. S. W. ODD INCIDENTS IN AMERICAN HISTORY THE CONNECTICUT BLUE LAWS. There has been an unusual amount of | controversy regarding the rigid laws of the early Connecticut colony Which have come to be known as the “blue laws. This colony no doubt had the most rigid ideas as to the government of its people, and especially a8 to their manners and morals, To our present thinking, ! the laws that were enacted there were un- usually monsensical; but investigation has shown that many laws credited to that community were never placed on the statute books, but instead seem to have been conceived by ome Rev. Samuel Peters. At the meeting of the Connecticut gen- eral court in April, 1644, it was ordered that “the judicial laws of God, as they were delivered by Moses,” should be con- sidered as binding on all offenders, and | should be a rule to all the courts of the Jjurisdiction “till they be branched out into particulars hereafter.” These are probably the provisions | which have done most to develop the cur- rent notions ef the criminal eode of New Haven. The Peters forgeries appeared about the same time and were explained by their author as follows: The lawgivers soon discovered that the precepts-in the Old and New Testaments ‘were insufficient to support them in their arbitrary and blogdy undertakings. They, therefore,ggave themselves up te their own inventions in making others, wherein in some instances they betrayed such an extreme degree of wanton cruelty and op- pression that even the rigid fanaties of Boston and the mad zealots of Hartford were put to blush, christening them the blue laws. Among sonie of these blue laws, as set down bg Dr. Peters in his history, are the following: 1. No one shall cross a river but with an authorized ferryman. 2. No one shall run on the Sabbath day, or walk in the garden or elsewhere, except reverently to and from meeting. 3. No woman shall kiss her child on the ‘Sabbath or fasting day. ! 4. Whoever wears clothes trimmed with gold, silver or bone lace above two shillings by the yard shall be presemted before the grand jurors and the selectmen ghall tax the offenders. 5. No ome shall read common prayer, keep Christmas or saints’ days, make mince pies, dance, play cards or play on any instrument of music, exeept the If the women think| drum, trumpet and jewsharp. 6. Married persons must live together or be imprisofied. 7. Every male shall have his hair cut round according to a cap. There were 45 in all of these laws, and Peters says in his history: “Of such sort were the lJaws made by the people of New Haven ° ‘When Peters’ history appeared contam- e blue laws he was asked for his and his reply was: “The laws malle by this independent dominion and dominated blue laws by the neighboring colonies were never suffered to be prin " There is no evidence obtainable of the printing of any such laws in the colonies’ *records. A writer of the his of Connecticut, while he admits that e laws of the colony were most stringent, yet says: “A general reference to the Mosaic code of New Haven has usually been held suffi- cient rebutter to any attempt to argue against the blue laws myth of Peters. Nor is the reason far to seek. It is not a violent assumption that the phrase, ‘the. judicial laws of God, as they were deliv- ered by Moses,’ has not. to the average erader or hearer of the present time, that clear-cut' significance which ¥ had to those Who first used it, or which the death statutes of a mofern state have to the criminal lawyer.” This same author, however, conceded that the New Haven general statutes made some 15 offenses capital crimes, in- cluding kidnapping, adultery, blasphemy, witchcraft, “presumptuous” Sabbath breaking, the third conviction for burg- lary on the Lord's day, and rebellion against parents. This was a formidable eatalogue, but it is hardly fair to eredit even the rigid Connecticut lawmakers with having placed upon their statute books many of | the “blue laws” as claimed by Dr. Peters. (Tomorrow: The Irish-American Feni- ans.) . READ YOUR CHARACTER Copyrighted 1921 ROUND FACES The science of character reading elassi- fies faces, viewed from the fromt, into three general divisions, One of these has been described as the “dome head,” the head of the thinker. The ‘“dome head,” the head of the thinker. "The “dome head” is broadest above the ears and tapers down'to a pointed chin. / The round face is another type. /At broadest point is at the height of the cars or thereabouts. It's the truly oval- shaped face. 2 . Can you think of force without en- ergy, power combined with placidity, keen vitality that makes for constitution- al strength without either muscutar strength or nervous energy predominat- ing? If you can, you've grasped the key- note of the character both mental and physical, indicated py the found face. It's the face of the person who weorks for résults more than for_the sheer joy of working. In other words it denotes prac- ticality in the affairs of life. Round-faced people are bound to be people of good judgient, provided other things are equal in their mental make- up. Among men if you 4on‘'t find them heavily represented in the ranks of the bankers and the merchandisers Their abillty to balanee values accuratey fits them peculiarly for these walks of life, Id the legal profession, for Instanee, you're. more likely to find the Yound face on the bench rather than as a vig- orous cross-questioner browbeating a wit- ness. Positively "the inclinatien is that way, though force of circumstanees may balk its fulfillment. The round face ia also the face of the executive. ‘Tomorrow—Round-faced Women — Bristol.—Formal orders have been ig- sued to Bristol police that they will be dismissed from the force if they are no- ticed flirting while in uniform., . Franklin Square CHELSEA VACATION CLUB Start now and save for NEXT YEAR'S VACATION. : Join the Chelsea Vacation Club " Weekly Payments 25, 50 Cents; 1, 2, 5 Dollars. THE CHELSEA SAVINGS BANK ' ' Norwich, Conn. Monlynmterdlhmth Don’t wait until pains and aches become incurable diseases. Avoid Now is the time to put in your winter . transportation. We have a complete stéck of Btories That Hard White Ash Free White Ash Recall Others “Is your mamma r of little 5 o, but she w ute, er. Little Alice was quet of beautiful eral days. A few hand and said: away now, melted.” Alaska’ the United States, vital questio: Ala®ka?” count Grey, Bri may come latgr. | | | | Knew Her Mother. was the reply. “How do you know?” inquired the call- “'Cause she said about an hour ago éhe was just going to run over to a neighbor's for a minute.” ahswered Lela. The Flowers Melted. told her to put them in a vase filled with water and they would keep frésh for sev- veared with the wilted flowers mamma, Arrested Development. When a blight saps the life blood of an empire large enough to cover one-fifth of men to go to work. Harding administration at Washington is trying patiently to find an answer to the i What is he matter with Executive and congressional inquiries have just about found an answer to this fundamental question. But having learn- ed what ails the patient, it is now up to Viscount Grey ™ KEVETONE VIEW_CO. NEW_YORK According to latest reports Vis- State for Foreign Affairs when the war began, may head Great Brit- ain’s’ delegates to the disarmament conference at Washington. stated that Premier Lloyd George Many children out of .the‘fvery_ food they need daily at home?” asked a' ar old Lela. I be home in a min- Pennsylvania Coal Co’ Pittston < Egg — Stove and Nut $12.75 Per Ton °:f 2000 Lbs, Screened Coal 50c Extra If Baskets Are Used Ry ek ! Guaranteed THE E Central Wharf presonted with a bou- flowers. Her mother days later Alice ap- in her frow ‘em ‘cause they is all 1 dess I'l it is up to our states- That is why the coal before bad weather interferes with Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal Co's MW Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Co’s Careful attention given telephone orders DWARD CHAPPELL (0. Telephone 24 them to find a remelly. ‘That is a more difficult task. If a remefly is not found, the diagnosis will accomplish nothing to- ward curing the disease. So vital to the administration is the re- suscitation of Alaskan prosperity that President Harding has taken the question into his own hands. Many remedies have been discussed, and the lommittee on territories of the house of representa- tives has held elaborate hearings on the subject. Until Seeretary of the Intérior 1 Fall, or his representative, can refurn from Alaska with a comprehensive legis- lative program it is doubtful whether anything will be done. If ever a proud territory was in a hos- pital it is Alaska. The doctors who con- sult learnedly about the bhedside offer a variety of remedies—with large promises, but little definite hope. "To make mat- ters more difficult for the poor patient the doctors, can’t agree—and until they do it is doubtful whether anything worth whife will be done. ARd if the patient dies? Well, then we will have another demonstration of the effectiveness of government solution of economic problems. For above everything else this problem of Alaskan development is economic. Polities will play a large part in its solution, yet chiefly by way of hindering an effective remedy rather than accelerating it. But Alaska is mot. going to die. A country &o vast and resourceful as Alas- ka, o illimitable in its potential wealth, cannot be destroyed. Left to the mercy of unprincipled exploiters, it may be Goldfish have been sixty years, royalty keep diaries, Earth, mixed with eaten by the natives Giraffes are found South Africa, chiefly would hold a million the_earth. when on tour. erts, always points York city Geishas, of Japan, versation. The first trip on Warsaw air service compared with siaty ney by train. immersed it water. Do You Know That— known to live for Nearly all the members of European articles of food, is of Borneo. only in Central and in desert regions. The sun, if it were a hollow sphere, globes as large as Stage people regard it’ as unlucky to leave soap behind in their dressing room One variety of cactus, found in des- to the south, thus forming a natural compass, Attached to the Aquarium in New s a hospital where fish are treated for thelr ailments. the professional entertaimers are taught mausle, singing, and the. art of amusing con- daneing, the new Parls-to- took_ten hours, as heurs for the jour- A snail which has been glued to a card in a museum for several yearg has been known to ecome to life when it was Many a woman who loos like an an- gel forgets to act like one. robbed of great values. Parhlyzed by hyper-conservation, it may lie stagnant, locked to all attempts to develop it. So far our develonment ofsAlaska has Been the same kind of asvelopment that is applied to a lemon in making demon- ade. Just now Alaska has passed from an | era of ruthless exploitation to an era of conservation that seems to have stopped development. At the worst, this only means that Alaska must lie fallow until future generations reveal in it the empire that lies concealed there—Oswald F. Schuette in Leslie's. itish Secretary of It is In oaly a few cities of western Siberis are there two-story houses. Baths in houses are very rare, public baths being used. innocently cheated Everycne knows that health is the most valuable asset of life. Frombh'flitg;mahxity‘mthe“mfluc&npefiod." A robust and healthy child will usually develop into a vigor- ous man or woman. But malnutrition will invariably hamper normal growth and when the child reaches maturity he or she is anemic, poorly nourished and liable to disease, . Many children today are innocently cheated out of the very foods they need. - Some parents, either through lack of knowledge, or carelessness, do not provide those foods which strengthen and It is the duty of parents-to-think-for the child in these matters, ; \ Grape-Nuts, the wen-h;w’:};dm of whole wheat flour and malted barley, served with milk or cream, is one of the most nutritious foods in the worid. It provides the elements necessary to nutrition and is a balanced food. G Quite aside from its superiod nutritive valoe, ks s delicions appetite appeal. [Especially attractive with fresh fruits or m Gfape-Nutsgservedmflsoklevmm—hh-finghouh and restaurants; at lunch counters; in every good grocery store in every city, town or village in the United States. Where you can’t find 9rape-Nuis—you won'’t find people, Grape -Nuts—the Body Builder “There’s a Reason” years in use. Send 15 c. for Trial Stze FERD. 'l‘."l'o'?.ltl‘lx;& SON aud’s Oriental Cream