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BIE ‘was performed beneath a canopy Sve THE WORLD: THURSDAY “MSS HAVEMEYER WEDSW.R.WILCOX Twenty-five, Hundred Members of Society Invited to Witness the Ceremony at Fifth Ave- nue Presbyterian Church. COSTLY GIFTS FROM PROMINENT FRIENDS. Bridal Pair Will Spend Their Honeymoon in Canada and Will Then Return to This City to Live. Two thousand, five hundred invita- tions were issued for the marriage of Martha Havemeyer to William R. Wil- cox this afternoon and soclety thronged to the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church at 4 o'clock and later to the ome of Wiliam F. Havemeyer, No. 10 ast Fifty-seventh street, ‘The church was decorated with lilles of the valley and roses, The ceremony ot To#es and lilies before the pulpit, Rev. George Alexa: pastor.of the Univer- ity Place Presbyterian Churc! Rev. Dr: Abbott H. Kittredge, pastor of No. 462 Sixth street, they live, prefers the family’s absence to the rent, and to-day the insurance agent réfused to carry the risk any TINY FIREBUG IS MERELY A JOKER en eee OG1-G4-48-4 2644009 Eight-Year-Old Evelyn Devin.) Whose Stepmother Is in|: - Tears Because of Her Pranks, Starts Fires for Fun. BUT NOW HER FAMILY IS FORCED TO MOVE. Child’s Big town Eyes Won|¢ Her Freedom in Court, but] < “ONLY A TIN“ - BOTS OO the Stony-Hearted Landlord TEENY Fears for His Property. LITTLE FIRE! HONEST ! In ttle eight-year-old Evelyn Devin's character there is @ study that would interest any person who has a hobby for closely observing human nature, be- caune, while not a pyromantac, she hasa mischievous nature that has recently developed into a penchant for starting fires in her mother's home, the re- sult of Which was that the landlord of Brooklyn, where : . 2 : the Madison Avenue Reformed Church, oMiclating. “The wedding was a white and yel-| resi one, Miss Havemeyer's gown being | fear of their lives, and the neighbors white ratty, with yoke and sleeves of |are wondering what is going to happen ¢ he same old lace which|next—all on account of little Evelyn, her mother's wedding | with her big brown eyes, her flowing black hair that comes halt way down her back and her general independent manner. point face, Was used on @ress covering the skirt. ¢ dowels Worn by the Bride. “The only Jewels the bride wore were & large diamond horseshoe, the gift of the bridegroom, and a rope of pearls, her fathers gift. _ The gowns of the bridesmaids were of Yellow chiffon over satin, with large icture hats trimmed in yellow plumes. Brey carried, as did the matron of honor amd the maid of honor, ermine muffs, ‘The maid of honor's gown was of white satin ard white chiffon, trimmed in @uchess lace, Her picture hat was of pure white. The matron of honor's hat is trimmed in white plumes. ‘The bride's bouquet was of orchids and Piles of the valley and her vell of point ace. Everywhere in the church and ellow and white decorative e carried out he gifts which Miss Havemeyer has reveived are numerous and costly, Among those which she prizes espe- cially isa huge chest of silver from the bridegrocm's mother and a silver pitcher an trey from An Carnegie. Handsome gifts fecelved, from Senator and Mrs. Dep and Mrs. Gernelus Bliss, Mrs, On Havemayer And Mrs. Julia Havemeyer, of Hartford, The honeymovn will he spent in Can- ada, whefe the young couple will make ‘extended tour, After theif return will reside at the Havemeyer Seite, Biota eae zsh yiee te 10 Bast Fifty-seventh street. WORKMEN SCALDED IN MILL EXPLOSION Three Killed and Nine Injured in Crash of Walls at Cambria Steel Works Following Burst- ing of Flywheel. ee rubce longer. but she melted the cold steel of the {nstead of being in the care of the out of her home to-day swinging her she said, “and explain why I was away sald, fibbed about those fires you started.” “Tt doesn’ an Tho stepmother is in tears; the other of the flat-house ara in deadly oOeeooberesoseserreeoeed se EVENING, JANUARY 21, 1904. LITTLE EVELYN DEVIN, WHO SETS FIRE TO HER HOME JUST FOR FUN AND THEN WINS THE BEARTS OF JUDGES AND POLICE. (Sketched by Mortimer for The Evening World.) £049-0-49644098444 46600006644 SOPdOereese Ooo 9>0OFsFeOoe OVP OrTNes #450 1 Dont SARE ([" * WHATS Hey’ DIFFERENCE! StSstseve _ MOTHER DEFEND (Continued from First Page.) She knows that by starting seven fires in the house she has been a wicked little girl, but what does thet matter, she asks, while the brown eyes look up to the ingulrer with surprise, just aa they | in bed. He would spit into his cuspidor until he fell asleep. When he fell did when she faced Justice Robert J.| asleep the tobacco juice often ran out of his ‘mouth on the pillow slips aud Wilkin in the Children's Court. Thor! neq sheets, ther free, The big-hearted Jus- tee Ih a ‘pashelor, aad when Evelyn Mr. Schaadt produced the pillow slips and bed sheets. rolled the big brown orbs at him and @. Are these from Tom's bed? A, Yes. confessed to only one fire @he went) and washed them hundreds of time. Here Mrs, Bechtel broke down and wept bitterly. scot free, although the Court Lord declaring that in avast lneopens (otyche ater siz 1. “They are from poor Tom's bed. The marks aren't blood. not blood.” she was innocent of the other six. TOM DID NOT KILL HER Won the Big Policeman, Since starting, the fires Evelyn has been Interviewed and cross-examined by Police Capt. Réynolds and his do- tion, tectlyes in the Fifth avenue station, Nel alwmatlan batwaekly: policemen with those brown eyes, and Tom strike her that Sunday night? Children's Society she went to schoot)™y daughter Mabel. to-day, ‘The child—juat elght years ol4—came] dramatic effect. schoolbooks by a strap, As she got to the atreet she turned and called to her stepmother, who has been married to lyn's father two years and a half. ‘Better give me a note to teacher,” ning, and that he heard voices in the kitchen. Is that true? Dot true, Q. Who arose first on Monday morning? MABEL AROSE LAST. Q. Who was in your bed at that time? my bed and Tom was in his bed. I prepared vreakfast, and all ate at o'clock except Mabel. The other children then left for their work. Q. When did Mabel get up? A. About 8.30 o'clock. Q Whet did she wear? A. I did, about 3.30 o'clock. | the use? the stepmother “Your teacher knows what @ bad girl you'ye been and how you hawe well, all right,” Evelyn repited. matter. I can stand it if “Oh, you can.” Toe for The Evening World] ox nipited bere at the trial. She also wore shoes, but [didn't notice which } velyn “L didn't atart the other atx fires. | Deir. ; Cross my heart and hope I may dle if Q. What did she call these clothes? A. They weren't her best clothes, ‘The one I started, and that was was a little, wee, tiny, I ata. accident, bit of @ one and didn't do no They were respectable clothes, however, fit to go anywhere. t Q. What did Mabel say? A. She said, I saw them thousands of umes Between her sobs she No, A. As God ts my judge, and as T have to gain my eternal reward In heaven, my som Tom did hot kill This was said in positive tones, qujetly, but without any attempt at Q. Mrs, Bechtel, your next-door neighbor, Mr. Hartzell, testified that at 8 o'clock that night there was a light in your kitchen, the water was run- A, That is A. Mabel and Martha were in A. She wore the gray skirt and pink walst/ ‘Mother, I thought you would S “TOM” BECHTEL: Wasn't uhfriéndly. Her story of one incident in particular was quite af- tecting. Tom Bechtel had lately started catéchetical lectures. Tom said to Eckstein on thet critical night that he would soon be confirmen and bs a better man. According to Mrs. Beohtel’s story, Eckstein answered: “That's right, Tom." ; The District-Attorney ‘dppéared in an emteroom end insisted on going into court to object to Mrs. Bechtel's testimony. The Judge sent word that if the District-Altorney didn’t conduct himself properly he would bé sent to jail for contempt of court. “Eckstein sald he called,” Mrs. Bechtel continued, “becauee’ Mabel had told him he should and that she would give him a final answer in regard to their engagement. In view of my statement that she had gone driving ‘with Wiesenberg he said he didn’t think it worth while waiting for her and I said T was afraid not soon after he left. HOPED SHE’D WED ECKSTEIN. Q. Did you favor Eckstein as her suitor? A. I hoped she would marry him and I prayed that a mim and wife they would live more peaceably than as lovers. Q. Did they quarrel? A. Nearly every time he came to the house. Once they founght violently.” Q. Did they just quarrel or did he beat her with violence? they had a’very strong quarrel. Mabel ran away from Eckstein. tollowed her upstairs and choked her before my own eyes: Mrs. BJeehtel told about the family going to Bed Monday sifpht, alr go> {ing early except Mabel, who wasn't at home. One of Tom's dogs, she said, was penned up im the cellar another was in bed with him. The other dogs 1 were in the kennel at the end of the back yard. 5) stains in the house the defense claims the dogs caused them. SAW THE MYSTERIOUS CARRIAGE. i “About 12.30," said Mrs. Beohtel, “the dogs in the back yard barked 80 viodently that I got out of bed. In the alley back of our yard wre a car- fage. Coming,up the back ylard of Miller's home next door Wére two men carrying a burden. : I thought they were Millér and a friend carfy.ng a eg of apples or potatoes. When they got near the house I lost sight of thém. S6on after I heard an alley door scheech. 1 didu't know marie, it wag Miller's on A. Once Bokatein harm ‘t all, It's my atepmother that}wesh this morning.’ I replied that 4t was so cold and windy that I de- makes all the troubie, Papa's all r mine, but I thought it was Millers. It appeared that Muller JOHNSTOWN, Pa., Jan. 2—Aa the] Tene cided to wait until next day. She washed her face at the hydrant, then should have been in the country and haem hack ? Pet te that result of the breaking of a governor belt, allowing an immense flywheel to run away and burst in the Cambria Com- pany’s No. 2 rail mill early to-day three men agro déad, three fatally injured and six more or less severely hurt. ‘The dead are: Haward Cablosky, fifty-six years old, caught and held by a heavy fron girder while he was acrifed to death. Louis Szanbovaki was found fifty feet away from the scene of the explosion and Frank Tyak near the boller, Tyak had been scalded to death and his flesh was hanging from his body in shreds, Martin Hoffman, a water boy, Is missing, but as all’ the debris has teen away it is thought he must be ‘The pereily Pe) are Jacob Updyk, severely bul and scalded; Sevac Emeri, skull ‘probably. fractured, some es broken, and Covac Sewowitch, badly burned and scalded. ——— FOUND DEAD ON STEAMER. (Special to The Evening World.) BORDENTOWN, N, J., Jan, 21—Jonn Rat! . of Bordentown, employed rs fireman on the steamer Springfeld was found dead on the boat here to-day Deak ig supposed to have been caused fas from @ stove. i SIX KILLED IN CAVE-IN. WALSENBURG, Col., Jan, 21.—In a enverin at the Midway Coal Mine, at House, twelve miles from this city, to- six miners lost their lives, ‘The coroner and physicians have gone to the scene, SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY, Sun rives. 7.20)Sun 5,04| Soon mets, 9.02 THE TIDES, Water. ow Water PM. PM Andy Hoos. Aw 410 445 5.42 O13 PORT OF NEW YORK. ARRIVED. if | + Brunswick Bristol |xend Mamte to some Inatitution, And What's the Differencet ‘drank a cup of coffee and ate an apple. “But, anyway, what's the difference? They say I lle and do things—well, whut of it? Now I got to see teacher and got some lecturing. “Did 1 ever,do other wicked things? No, not one, Honest. Don't belteve; ask on “Te brown eyes rolled with an in- jured tnnocence. “Must go to school now and learn to read and write and ‘rithmetic—-I mean, you know, add up sums and thin; No amount of cross-examining could make the child tell why she had started the fires, but it was plain that she does not love her stepmother or her six- teen-months-old half sister, She trotted off to school, where her conduct hag not been the best, with as light a heart as though nothing bad ever happened, She is ebsolutely fearless, but it whe she was gotyg driving. 1 asked, “With Wiesenberg?” es," and began to cry. haps it will be your turn to cry soon." Q. You didn’t querrel? A. Lord, no. LAS? TIME SHE SAW HER‘ ALIVE. Q. What did she do then? about upstairs, I didn’t see her when she went ont of the house. A. That T can’t tell. ‘ Q@ Did she generally wear a corset? but she generally went about without one. corset. Her habit was not to wear has a brother twelve years old, but ha Js just a boy. He doemn't try to worry his stepfnother the way Evelyn does, Still he sticks up for his sister. . her,” Mrs. Devin | “Isa very impudent child, She lies ‘about everything and 1 am wor- ried to death about her, All the matohes are hidden. At night we put chara spout her bed and wet cloths on the floor: “The child ts a wieked Uttle girl 1 said to her mie, if you set one fire you set them all,’ but sho persists In declaring that she only set one. She Never Whipped 1 on the policies I held on my children’s lives, Q. How much Insurance did you get when Mabel died? dred and fifty dollars. Q. Who came home at noon? lunch together. A. My daughter Martha. man called, There was also a messenger boy—William Michael—with uote for Mabel. HAD A MESSAGE FOR MABEL. “I told the boy,” said Mrs, Bechtel, asked him if I could complete his errand. “{ never whipped her in my though I think 1 ought to. My mother sald, ‘If I were you T'd beat the truta into’ her.” She awked me why 1 end Mamie to her, Wish Thad, Tt her father that for our safety he must i think fe. ate telling Mabel to go to work at a new ilk mill.” it 18 best “She was impudent to me this morn- Ing. “She doesn't seem to care about anything, She is always taking things that don't belong to her and then Mh- Ding about tt. the boy always tells the ruth he does anything wrong he will liektiowleane it | Mrs, Devin is Kood looking. Her six Nenrcold GIA Is the picties of and with the care of the Meth over Evelyn's ept bum: and admitted she gossiped with the neighbors. the house, she said, she didn’t lock the front door At this point the Judge granted a short recesa. for an alring Mrs, Bechtel, tee health one and the anxiety chievous spirit she had undergone, and wept without restraint she was an object of pity. to comfort her. Resuming her testimony, family for supper—all except Mabel, HER ABSENCE NOV STRANGI, ‘Evers fire that has started in the flat pate Nas discovered and told her ateprnochan She evidently liked to annoy Mrs, Devin and at the same time enjoy the exelte ment. Her father Is In the dry goody business. hing ever happens when he os ———— To Cure a Cold in One Day Tigre ya Bromo, Quinine Tablets. At the m Mg he money 1 it verys ympathetlc, Q. What then? A. asked Mabel why she didn't go to work, She repited and she answered, I asked her why she cried, and she replied, ‘“Per- Q. So you can't tell how she was dressed when she left the house’ A. Two bun- She and | ate] was destroyedgand many lives endan- Mrs, Bechtel stated also that.a man named Goldiman and er coffee) 11.6 city age hooded and Dwire Statlen | “that Mabel had gone driving, and ———— He said no, I shouldn't have] BRIDGES SWEPT AWAY asked him any questions whatever, but thought be might have a message The only other caller, Mrs, Bechtél said, was the baker. During the day she sewed and went to the store for provisions and to the meat market] wabash River has risen aixteen féet When she was avay from As the jurymen got up who had heretofore stood up on the witness stand, sank down in the chair, breaking under the strain of the ordeal she Her strong frame shook, and Her daughter Martha left the defendant's table Mrs. Bechtel told about the assembling of her who tiad not returned from her drive, Directly in front of-her was her daughter Martha, and the questions of Mr, Schaadt, if Rot consoling, were pox ticess | ‘FHS tome Of Mrs. Bechtel’s testimony when she spoke about Eckstein my suspicions were not aroused and | didn't awaken Se tt Q. How many horses were hitched to the carriage you saw in the alley? A. Two horées, Q. Where was Tom at this time? A. ‘In his bed. or any of yo? A. As God ts thy witness shé was not. Mrs. Bechtel sald that the alleged blood-stained aprons, pillow cases and A. She did up her hatr, went upstairs (| other articles were in the wash basket tte evening before. Gress, and that was the last I saw her alive, although I heard her walk! FLOOD PERILS IN omnes) THE MIDDLE WESTE fi ut in some Institution, as is th Hi ot ther stepmother, her ‘spirit mas, he Q. Then you were left alone? A. Yes. broken. e loved her own mother, and Q. What did you do then? A. I performed my housework as usual. ar Taba oF when sh# died she couldn't bear of see- . from The some one else take her place. she| During the morning my insurance man came. To him I paid the premiums (Continued from Fin Firet Page.) under water; Denver, nine miles north of Peru, \p flooded by the Eel River, which is out of {ts banks, and twélve feet of water tx reported in the south acotion of Amboy. Much einck has been | @rowned. The Wabash im sti! of one foot an hour, are living in dread of a recurrence of the flood in the spring of 1898, when thousands of dollars’ worth of property gered. Sections of the Miami Valley gouth of ising at the Fate a} is under water, dug to the breag or the canal” bank.” Gare. on. the aan hal, Dayton and ‘Toledo, Traiction Une —+—_ three, seit Sap” reed Ager. in. the | | HIG WATERS IN OHIO; Streets of the village of Lrohwood, Ff LAY 7 HREATEN Eb. FINDLAY, 0., Jan. 21.—This aay! is thr@atened with a dangerous fi he Blanchard River is within two tof | the floor of tHe gnain street bridge and the water .5 sweeping everyth is in itapath, INDIANAPOLI®, Ind., Jan. 21.—The White River t# out of its banks, The “Washington street bridge here Is in danger. At manta u Scaaees have pig George Fran- to the fami has clon ue in ee ee ist oe Site se BY INDIANA FLOODS. LA FAYETTE, In@., Jan, 2%.—The since midnight. All boats, including @ pleasure dteamer, have been destroyed by the ice. The water has overflowed all the lowlands and fs in the houses along the ba At Peru the Indianapolis Northern Traction Company's bridge is expected | compan: to go. Elmwood, a suburb, is four fest “CITIZEN” TRAIN BURIED. —— Musical Service Meta with Only In- ‘3 of na union ereptien gone and other carried away. le as an tn~ around. —— . oty te Friesds Present. = — Q. Did you"think it strauge because Mabel didn’t return? A. Not at| asigr e mustet service in an unger: {© eta ay cok i * a ALOT SE POUE: all. Often she didn’t return and we thought nothing of her absence that | taking establishment this aftern BON hi s P, as 4 a ‘The heay 1 night the body Of “Citizen” George Frantis lin ciecies Hadad ll sala seria) caLa BAT el ial rare ; Dein was buried’ in Gieenweos Uni, . THREG kg @V TRA. eu ore from (Hegraphte” commun nuon Site ; after supper—about 8 o'clock. Shel tory, Only the most intimate friends. oF Fr itched Pa. Jap, 2.—Hatry with the pt i 11 {denied Evketein’s story that his reception wag not so cordial as usual and/Mr.. Train were admitted, e Pa: hie chad many noe ran wi Mien ere that Tom eyed ‘him with suspicion. During this critical time Mrg. Bechtel ip A tae 4 Ratios Sects a bith weather 1s) ralld, voice faltered, but she bore up bravely. ‘@nery ‘ Paine aah tat eg “Pray convey my deepest condolences LMI Fie SOOO SMOT 99090098 095-0694 9-H HOSS EHS F4 FSEH OOH If. there were any blood bee a Q. During Monday night or Tuesday morning was Mabel killed by Tom 1a, DYNAMITE WN LODGER'S ROOM ‘Proprietor of a Boarding-House , in Eleventh Avenue Found Enough Explosive to Blow Hie Plage to Atoms. TEN STICKS WEIGHING | | | HALF A POUND APIECE. ‘Police Captured the Dynamite and Are Waiting at the House to Arrest the Lodger When He Gets Home. Joseph Levy, proprietor of the lodg- ing-house at No, 64 Eleventh avenue, the majority of whose hoarders are ‘Auntrians, reported to the West For- ty-seventh street station to-day that he had found enougi dynamite in the rooms of one of his tenants to blow up three buildings, Policeman Frank J. Lynch returned to the house with Mr. Levy and found {1 alleged was occupied by a man who re- cently came from San Franalsco a bax containing five pounds of dynamite. Levy told Lynch that originally the bag had been filled with the explosive, left, though that was sufficient to ‘otal- ly wreck the buflding if set off. ‘The policeman took the dynamite to the Bureau of Combustibles at Fire Headquarters, and later reported the eae to the West Side Court, where a warrant was issued for the man in whose room the explosive had been found. ‘The police will await at the house until the return of the man and then place him under arrest. Though, ac- cording to Levy, he has only been in the city a short time the polite belleve he may have some connection with those men who recently placed dynu- mite In several bulldings in course of ferection. : lia NO’ NEW POLICE STATION. MeAdeo Vetoes Scheme of Gen. Greene to Divide Tenderloin. Until to-day Police Commissioner Mo- Adoo has faithfully followed In the foot- stops of his predecessor in the police of aay he took a side atep. Commissionera Murphy, Partridge and Greene had all favored the establish- ment of a new precinct, to be composed East Thirty-Afth street preeinots. Gen. Greene induced the Board ot Estimate and Apportionment to issue 370,000 worth of bonds for the purchase of a site at No, 220 Bast Twenty-ninth street, to be used as a stetiog: house for the new precinct, and to-day Deputy Comptroller Stephenson notified Com- missioner McAdoo that the bends had yn sold and that the $70,000 wes avall- je. To the surprise of all Commissioner McAdoo wrote back to the Comptroller that he did not want the money, that he had no {dea of establishing fey preckst and asked the fiscal ts of the city to discontinue any act Ite) for the purchase of a new station-house. MEAT’S PLACE Not Nested by Alt. A Beverly, ‘Mas, family experi- enced a curious change by leaving off meat and using Grape-Nuts. aeons 9 or 10 years my husband had poor health, ly doctoring, end a times would lay out $10 and $12 once or twice with Dr. of Boston, and once or twice with Dr. of Boston, two famous special- The antount above § have men- tioned was just for one treatment. He was treated for heart trouble and ‘at another time for dy fa and anothey, time for catarrh of the stom- ach. The treatment would help him for the timed but hé would lapse back | wei into the same condition. alg told that flesh foods were a for him nor me. We felt Ringe ef lye up the meat, but ot urBe 1 aeded romething to take its & room which the lodging-house keeper | | FREE! Bxsnccialsts FREES Special for This Weeds Only! $ & Eyeglasses for ® ] yeglasses, including my Spe- ervices, cannot be had gen- a.m “but my only rk is tonal Opportunity is made my stores. L want all eyes trouble them to take ge of this limited ofte weralr of these glasses 1 guaran- be nbsolutely correct. mber, this chance to buy, 85.00 feat ML.00 in for this week Only, ‘Aoi Mecmds Scientific and Manufactaring TICTAN, 24 E, 125th St.. New York. Hetween Fifth and Madison Aver. 136 Main St, Paterson, N. J. Open Evenings. Bring tis advertisement with you. —a | DEVELOPS running the Police Department, but to-|{ of parts of the present Tenderloin and | Sonia." THE BUST. The greatest at- tractiveness of a woman's figure is a finely. rounded Bust, and in no direction {8 @ lack of woman charms so ettik- ing’as in a deficiency in this particu- lar. Dr. Charles Flesh Foed is positively the only preparation known to medical science thet will develop the immatured buet or re- store the natural beayty of a breast Jost trove Burning, It makes the flesh firm and healthy. ON BALE AT DEPARTMENT STORER ANT SPECIAL OFFER. The rexulur price of Dr: Charles Flesh Food Is $1 Ve jel Bor but to introduce it into Gant send wy, homes we have decided. to aes ‘All who answer thie adve "All packages are tae brepald. x—Just nh oul of the areal merit ah Food: Li fill be went free for We seats, whieh pays for gost of mailing. We you our Cinatvated bop, “Ast ot Maasene,’” which tains All the ‘proper movements for, mus: eck and arms, and full ry Birections Ror devclovine the bust DR, CHARLES CO, 7°04, vigee CAN DY 4 aici epeyesy FOR SURREY oe ck Mw einut Ne Enocointe Lf aig . 15¢ 54 BARCLAY ST. cor otal brit 160 Re DOWN, $ Balance Week- ly or Monthly Payments. COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE, DISC OR CYLINDER. 25,000 Columbia, Gold Moulted Records, 250 each, ecords In stock. EHRICH ‘BRO! HERS, a OTH AV. AND 25D 8T. meueary Wants—Female. ar tl 1 Years Apoly Pilertm nae DAK HWerlenced folders, , Mutual Ste Bias ‘shakers ano n Tnuncey e. | bought a package of Grape- | C oo hi el of the nourls ent the Hane vertised to contain, so we - Lad iy the meat, ahd ff Its place bad Grape-Nuts on our twble and for feat ouths tiged the Grape-Nits Mra. EL. eral the samie ng I used flesh foods before, ng With my vegetables, fruits and ottier foods. ap by day the change showed ru unit ut a few montis my husband new wan, a heart tronble, fh atid stoinsct trouble wrt eit he hia’ not patd owt one doe- tora TIM since, even his disposttion chat Bed , We all changed. chil- ie ane al our very hottie was toe Mae where irritwbjerets =, happiness has come and | ie I hdve to give credit to the food has mote than filled the place i neat of my table, amd every dey you call find Grape*Nuts a part of our ditt. “We have three perfectly healthy children who bave never had any of the children's diseasas but whooping cough and meastes. While other dis- énges have beed. around them their cogstitutions seemed to be above them, and it’s all owji'g to what their ie oY beda, st Atl ich Grape-Nuts note bod & nated i! E TS reotip healthy ldoking atc now, while 3 years ago v looked like the fone he adi widow of George A. Fuller, icoa will be held in rie P.M, WORLD WANTS SAVE WALKING. ADVTS. IN TO-DAY'S WORLD. ALL SORTS OF THINGS FOR ALL SORTS OF PEOPL ‘Amunéments ... Wanted to Pu chase ..., Auction Salee Financial . Pianos .. Instruction Medical . Horees and Situations— Female... Male . & rlages®... 8 Miscel!Aveous 83 ce tal 3 Eo so Found... :| ‘Total ...... rev fuminer Resorts, 0 ot|GUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY MORNING WON@RAS, | Ts |