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Show GAS FROM PASTE When Used as a Food Is Bound to Make Trouble. The average cereal food as frequently prepared, forms a pasty, gas-generating mass In the stomach, which gives the digestive apparatus considerable trouble trou-ble and frequently puts It out of business. busi-ness. A young man writes from Trenton, Tren-ton, N. J., to tell what it did for him: "I lived in a boarding-house for three years before I was married," he says, "and every blessed morning there was supplied me some sort of cereal breakfast break-fast food, which I ate simply because I had been trained to eat what was set before me not because I particularly relished any of it. It used to lie heavy on my stomach and within an hour All me full of gas, making me very uncomfortable. un-comfortable. At last this sort of tiling brought on a serious disturbance of my digestive apparatus, with loss of appetite, appe-tite, and in time I had to go under the doctor's care. "He put me op a diet of milk and .toast, which In a week or two lost me 13 pounds In weight. I had a package of Grape-Nuts food in my room, which I had bought as a matter of curiosity, but had never opened. When I finally tired of milk and toast I thought T would try the Grape-Nuts, without any expectation that I would like it. thinking think-ing that it was probably similar to all the rest of the prepared foodUj "I liked It with cream from the Btart, however, finding it entirely different from anything else I had ever eaten, and indulged in It freely. In one week (L say it on my honor) I regained nine pounds in weight and the Grape-Nuts gave me the power to digest other kinds of food. It put me on my feel In a few days and now Is and always will be a regular food Item In our house. My only trouble Is to keen my wife from eating loo much of it, Bhe likes it so well." Name given by Postum Co.. Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Head the little book. "The Road to WoUvlllc," in each pkc --r |