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Show If you bout m, want a reference MINES AND MINING ask anybody any roaponalbla parson in tha atato, . . . Wa aall tha boat Jowolry, Watohaa and Olamonda to bo had at vary raaaonablo pticaa. Our guarantaat ara absolute. IN THE SOUTH ,MAIN170St SALT LAKE CITY, UTAIi Ancient "Public Penanca. One of a number of ancient manu-aerlpwhich bare Just come to light at Taunton, In England, bearing the date 1424. refers to "orders of public penance," Irapoasd on persons behaving badly lu church, calling each other names, and other offenses. The offender bad to stand in the middle alsla of the church during tha whole service and sermon, generally wearing a whits sheet and holding a white warn). After the sermon a full confession had to be made and pardon asked before the whole congregation. One Instance of this form of punishment occurred at Rklilgate In 1703, when Jane Webber made a confession of quarreling and fighting with another woman la church during service. Canning and Packing Interests Form Huge Combination With Capital of Ten Million Dollars. In the Production of Its Specials the Company Will Operate a Fleet of Fifty Boata and Employ One Thousand Hands. New York. Announcement Is made that an Important deal Involving the combination or merger of some large southern pueking and canning Interests has Just been completed through George A. Young and associates. The deal Involves the acquisition by the Mcllhenny company of the tobasco sauce business of E. Mcllliennys 8ons, and the packing and canning business of the Mcllhenny Canning & Manufacturing company, which Is said to opeN MUSICAL NEWS ITEM. ate one of the largest modern cannerNymphs o the Mist" Is the title ies In the United States. The capitalof a new Instrumental piano piece just ization of the new company will be Issued from th press of the Tolbert (10.000,000. E. A. Mcllhenny will be president R. Ingram Music company of Denver, 4olorado. It Is an ocean characteris- and Frederick Kopf vice president. tic and gives promise of becoming one Mr. Kopf, in speaking of the enterof the big musical hits of the season, prise, said: "When the company finally acquires possessing all of that weird charm, both in rhymth and melody that the other factories, of which a number oceau Induces. Those who have beard will be taken over, some prominent U say that it la one of the most origjobbers and wholesale grocers will be inal numbers published In a long elected to the board. The companys lands and factories time, are situated on Avery Island, LouisiHiawatha, Anoi.a and .other Indian musical numbers have ana, and it has offices in New York, Francisco, Portland, had the public attention for several Chicago, San years, but the ocean which offers so Montreal and London. In the producmuch for musical and poetic imagina- tion of Its specialties, the company tion, has, for some unaccountable rea- will operate a fleet of fifty boats and son, been slighted. Nymphs o' the upwards, and will employ over one Mist Is the forerunner of the best thousand hands." of the popular, In this class and its CANT HANDLE THE BUSINESS. It Is popularity lp already assured. said to be an excellent number, both Railroads Not Keeping Pace With Defor parlor and teaching purposes. If your dealer Is out of It, ask him velopment of the West. to onler It, or It will be sent direct Chicago. That It will be useless to by the publisher on receipt of 2i attempt to develop the west with In.cents. adequate railroad facilities was the assertion of transportation officers at a The Love Note in Fiction. meeting In Chicago on Thursday. The ' There Is something Irritating and conference was of general passenger t the same time fascinating in the of western railroads, and the agents dominance of the note of love in westfor consideration was low ern novels. I'ew have not felt at some question homeseekers rates during the coming time In their lives the responsive che - their own natures even to the winter and spring. It had been pro posed that for the sake of developing crudest love story; passion In some de- the country the usual gree Is universal; we are all Involved low round trip fares should be authorand there is no escape; hence the ized, which rates have had the effect novel, no matter of what materials it of helping to settle the great district is built up, pays tribute to the primary the past few years. during law of man's nature by giving preceAfter a thorough discussion It was dence in finality to love. Farsi, Bom the consensus of opinion that It would bay. bo useless to go ahead with low rates and attempt to populate the western The Lion's Share. when transportation companies states A new novel by Octave Thanet, the author of "The Man of the Hour, are entirely Inadequate to handle the business. has just been published by the present It was a frank confession on the . Bobbs-Merrll- l of Indlanup-oilscompany, of the railroad men of the deThe title of the new novel is part condition of transportation plorable The Lion's Share. and It is an atthat, while the west showing lines, tack upon the rutblessness of our needs people,, the railroads are not In modern captains of finance, empha- a position to handle the traffic. sising the families made homeless, the women reduced to starvation or Sultan is Getting the Best of His worse, and the men driven to suicide Brother. through the slelght-o- f hand manipulaPrivate but authentic Washington. of stocks tion by the great captains of finance. A case of kidnaping, a reports received in this city from Motrain robbery and the San Francisco rocco indicate an early collapse of the earthquake disaster are among the rebellion against the sultan, headed occurrences chronicled in the action by his brother, the pretender. These of the story, and the plot is an Intri- advices say that the tribes that first cate one, keeping the reader guess- rallied under the latters banner are ing until the final chapter. It is an falling sway so that he now has little interesting story of the present time support, and that the sultan has been of real every-dapeople, and Is well making a triumphant campaign into the southern provinces, which wer( worth the reading. (so-calle- trans-Missou- y . Tin Mines In Malaya. A correspondent from the Malay peninsula states that the projected railway front Hongkong will be likely to traverse the rich mineral regions of Siamese Malaya. Lang Suan has tin supply that cannot be exhausted in a hundred years to come, while the same may be said cf Renang. There are 70 mines In the region of Lang Suan, most of which are worked by no fives, but the European concession! in the latter place, as well as In Re nans, are exceptionally encouraging and already are giving excellent re turns. There Is no lack of capital even the natives making themselves bitter acquainted with modern tna chlnery and bringing It Into use. In the Marriage Ceremony. Somewhere before the benediction of the marriage ceremony might be well Inserted Amtel's beautifully words to women facing th.elr great life work: "Never to tire, never to grow olil; to be patient, .yrnpa tbetlc, tender; to look for the budding flower and the opening heart; to hope always; like Rod, to love always this Is duty." Anna A. Rogers, in the At lantlc Monthly. Canadas Chief Industry. the largest number of wage earners are engaged In log products. They total neatly 65,000, and their wages In 1905 amounted to ovut (21.000,001). The total number ol that year was 391. 4S7. In Canada wage-earner- s wages averaged (1,832, an crease of 31 per cent since 1900. whose In- Fever. The desire of. many of our young men and more especially of our young women to "go on the stage" almost amounts to mania, London Km Stag the pretenders own districts. Blackmailer Makes Confession. Denver. Kemp V. Bigelow, th young clerk from Farmer. O., who mailed dynamite packages last Monday to Governor Henry A. Buchtel and several other prominent citizens of Denver, confessed on Thursday that he was also the author of letters mailed on August 29 Inst to the Hup llngion railroad, the Moffat road, the Adams Express comprny, the Daniels & Fisher Stores company, the May Shoe & Clothing company and to PostPaul master Sours, demanding amounts varying from (lit (inn to (50,-)nand aggregating (190,000. o Panic-Stricke- Crowd Pushes In Front of Train. People Warsaw, Ind. Westbound Pennsylvania fast train No. 19 plowed Into a crowd of people at Bourbon station Friday night, killing Tom Sloan, a Warsaw saloonkeeper, and Injuring A thousand several other persons. persons were standing on the platform awaiting a westbound passenger train. Somebody yelled "Here she comes," and the mass of humanity surged toward the track, several persona being thrown In front of the locomotive. Bulky Transcript In 8chmitz Caee. Sun Francisco, Attorney Charles Fatrall has received from the printers copies of the transcript of the testimony taken at the trial of Eugene E. with the Schmitz, which, together brief, will be filed with the clerk of the court of appeals, The transcript la a bulky volume containing many pages, and la aupplcmented with a brief almost as voluminous. It la the purpose of Attorney Fatrall to aak for an Immediate henrlng. It la anticipated that several .days will be epeut tu the arguments. The organization of a stock company at Welser, Idaho, Is In progress,' It being the lntentloll to bore for oil in that vicinity. The rumor from Park City to the effect that the Daly Judge company would close Its mine down within a few days has no foundation in fact. The Nevada Dredge companys dredge and property at Orovllle, Cal,, was burned last week, causing a loss of (1,000,000. The fire started in the transformer. If the United States Is to produce enough nickel, cobalt, and tin for Its own consumption, new deposits must be discovered, for those now known, while Individually rich, cannot supply the entire demand. During the past month the two mills of the Utah Copper company reduced approximately 100,000 tons of ore to a concentrate, and there Is every probability that that figure will be eclipsed during the present month. The output of the mines and leases of the Goldfield district for the week ending October 12 was 38774 tons, having an estimated value of (382,350. This is something like 100 tons more than the output for the preceding week. Vanadium, one of the rare metals, Is used principally for hardening steel, especially in connection with chromium. This rare metal Is to be found In small quantities in Utah and Colorado, as well as In some of the southhigh-grad- e western states. Four Utah mines posted dividends last week that will call for the checking out of (94,500. They were; Colorado, (60,000; Beck Tunnel Con., (20,-00Grand Central, (12,500, and Utah, of Fish Springs, (3,000. Rich returns were received last week from assays of rock sent from the Keystone mine, a property almost within the city limits of Welser, Idaho. A Baker City assayer found that the rock carried (174 to the ton, and the Boise assayer found (108. The average cost of copper production from Butte mines under the restricted output is today not less than 12 cents per pound. At Lake Superior the cost will probably average close to 10 cents. The cost of Calumet h Arizona is only 5.71 cents. Considerable excitement was developed in Logan, Utah, mining circles last week by reports concerning a recent find in Blacksmith Fork canyon, by Captain Sllvey and H. J. Smith, two Ogden prospectors. The discovery is said to be an extremely rich one. Two of the largest np to date and modern quartz mills in the state, with a dally capacity of reducing 250 tons of ore are now In course of completion for the big mines of the Monarch and Bagdad Chase Mining companies, in the Atlanta district of Idaho. The Record of Helena, Mont, publishes a story to the effect that numerous Montana and Washington Investors have been mulcted to the extent of more than a third of a million dollars through the discovery that certain placer mines near Landers, Wyo, had been Baited and that the property In question Is worthless. ft Is learned that during the next few days there will be a number n experts In Utah who represent great operators who tackle the fields of the world In competition with the Standard Oil company, but who hav not become very aggressive In American as yet. Their coming looks good (or the Utah oil fields. George W. Boggs, one of the lessees and general manager of the Old Peacock mine In the Seven Devils dismen trict, states he has twenty-onemployed at the mine, is taking or from the new strike and has a number of teams hauling ore from the dump to Council, where It Is shipped to the Sumpter smelter. T. N. Barnsdale of Pittsburg, the owner of the Monarch group of mines at Atlanta, Idaho, has expended nearly a million dollars in developing and blocking out the ore bodies of the Monarch mine alone before even placing a mill on the property. This alone assures us of his confidence of the great possibilities of the camp. There are millions of tons of ore of commercial value blocked out In the mines of the Atlanta district, Idaho, and the future of the camp has alwava been dependent on the successful working of these ores, which In th. past has been a failure on account of lhe great loss enused by not having the proper process to treat the ores. Through a compromise reached out of court, civil actions Involving (.inn,. pending In the courts of Los Boston, Duluth,. Tucson and Tombathne, Arlz, have been ended, the actions Involved large amounts ot stock In rich copper properties, not,v hly the (vnnnoa (ntral Mines com. pany and the Greene Cananea Copper company. The Minerva mine, In the Atlanta district. Idaho, for the past two years has been prodaelng steadily and has inexhaustlve bodies of ore In reserve. It Is stated the compnnv will enlarge the present 10 stamp mill, which Is not of sufficient size to reduce the vast bodies of ore In sight. From (15.000, to (20.000 has been pounded mu monthly by the present 10 etamp mill. The stockholders of the Blue Rock Mining company, at a meeting held In Nampa. Idaho, last week, decided to Increase the cnpllal stock of that Inn from (300,000 to (2,000,000 and made arrangement for pushing the work at the mlno stronger than ever. A day and night shift are now n ployed at the Mint mine In the Tearl district of Idaho, and the tunnel a now In 1.050 feet. According to measurements tho vein should bo reached at 1,088 feet. The vein I twenty foot wide on lb and Is a true e ", cor-por- su-fa- ce i Rachel, aged 12. wrote an compowhich she sition on wild (lowers 'In piajsod the arbutus, the liverwort, and the spring beauty, the blood root, and dell of blossoms all of the other sides dal. But she wrote on lx.h she when and of paper, of her sheet asked her father, who was aa editor, to publish her article, he called her attention to that fact. "You've written on both sides of your paper." said he. "Well," was the reply, "and don t of yours? you print on both sides Invalid's Meal Evidently Had Not creased Good Humor. In- For many weeks the liri table merchant hail been riveted to his bed by convatyphoid fever. Now he was for He something clamored lescing. to cat, declaring that lie was starving. 'Tomorrow you may have something to eat, promised the doctor. realized that there The merchant weald bo a restraint to Ills appetite, yet he saw'. In vision, a modest, steaming meal placed at his bedside. "Here is your dinner." said the nurse next day. as she gave the glowering patient a spoonful of tapioca pudding, "and the doctor emphasizes that everything else you do must he in the same propot t ion. Two hours later the nurse heard a frantic call from the bed chamber. "Nurse," breathed the man heaplly, "1 want to do some reading, bring me a postage stamp. HAVE CRAZE FOR The Way 0f A small FORMULA. Smokers Follow Fashions in the Use of Tobacco. "Make me up a package of tobacco according to the formula used by Edwin Booth, said the man with a southern accent. "That is the third man who has asked for that kind of It tobacco said the dealer. Is strange that people from remote parts of the country as well as New Yorkers make a fad of buying the same brand of tobacco that Booth smoked. And It isn't always the Booth mixture that they want. I have filed away the formulas for mixing the favorite tobacco of many famous persons. Smokers the country over have heard of this collection of recipes and one feature of every mans trip to New York is to try a pipeful of some big mans favorite tobacco. In most cases this special mixture is so strong that the nerves of the average smoker canuot stand it. He has to give up after a few pipefuls and go back to a popular mixture, but be has the satisfaction of having had the experience." The New York Sun. boy r t- - . wh(J H passed his filth birthday in nnr Mb were asked the custom. "How old is the boj,? . et t.0d.the;C?rr,',t .KVw!ter require a fare, Uia comm 7 Ct0r on to the next person The boy sat quite 8lill lng over some question J concluding that full fo;.ma not been given, called i0u5' conductor, then a, the Jh the car: JAnd mother', jj,!. A Definition Held Up. IN PROPORTION. ALL THINGS The "Mound City. St. Louis rejoices In the sobriquet of Mound City from the fact' that tbe many .original settlers found there elevations which It Is supposed were relies of that strange people who valdwelt lu tho Ohio and Mississippi modern times to known are ami leys No adeonly as the Mound Builders. been found has yet explanation quate of their strange mode of leaving The memorials of their existence. of a which part on bluffs limestone St. Louis stands furnish a solid foundation for the business buildings. of Succe.-Ho- w have the hypothetic "Stop!" shouted the man on the tlsts and the exponents a up warning holding road, country of, " hL hand. Muttering something about benefited themselves large by sowing the seed! of1" rural cops, the automoblllst obeyed. "Turn around and come back to broadcast In the world town witb me, said the stranger. entlsts do not fall n this cal? "You weie going at least 35 miles an they are believer, in the the word; they know too ms? hour. have seen too many I Bald "Youre a constable, suppose," mysterton, testations of .the Divine creatl the automohllist. with a covert sneer, er. Now, those who have di9Dos w hen they had reached the village. "Me?" replied the passenger. "No, the Bible and all evidence tion, have written a great many Im a farmer ami had to come Into and some or them have won wh town when all the teams was busy. world at large lightly calls tml Good-by- . Thanks. weather? Nice growing cording to the ordinary measure, are in such cases, the Ensuing comment Is puritosely omit- been applied extremely successful, ted. Philadelphia Public Ledger. success means the benefit oth Rat. a Ity In some form or other. f Belling benefits can or heard read be shown as the resi You have probably that the best way to rid a house of their labors, their success Is not rats Is to catch cue and fasten a bell to that achieved by the direst about its neck. A boy In Delaware and tbe deepest Ignorance tried the experiment two months ago. Chandler, in Uncle Remus' Mag He was badly bitten In making the WHEN A HUNCH HELD GO bell fast, but he turned the rat loose and expected the tinkling of that bell would have great results. It did have. Chinese Laundry Ticket 8uaae, Bet on "Wing Ting In the first place, the rat who wore It was constantly on the move all night, Kay Spence, a aud the tinkling bell kept the family horn awake, and In tbe next the sounds of Mexico, Mo., won fl.ooo brought scores of new rats to the Louisville. Ky race meeting house. Instead of being afraid of the time ago as the result of a hul Mr. Spence has a large bre bell, they were charmed with the music. Had the boy tied a harmonica stable of "runners" near Mexico, to another rats tall, the rodents would attends all the big racing even' tho country. Not long since he have had a dance every night In Louisville and entered the bet She Was Willing. ring to see what odds were belu Yes. says the husband, "I havt tered on the various entries, consented to accept tbe nomination. found that Joaquin was the hi "I an so glad the party is begin at even money, and pulled hii ning to recognize your merit," beams from bis pocket, intending to fc the wife. that horse. His attention waa "Now my dear, the husband con traded by something that fell tlnues, "you know that political af- his wallet to the ground, and her fairs are not love feasts, by any ed and picked It up. It was t means. Yon must expect to see me nese laundry ticket. He lookei vilified and attacked in a scandalous the "books" again and found thatt manner. No doubt the opposition will was an entry with a Chinese o; try to dig up sensational rumors about Wing Ting, at ten to one. Thai me, and all that sort of thing, but you tied it. for he considered he had must not ceived a "hunch" that could not "Well," she Interrupts, "I am really overlooked. Wing Ting won hat You have always been Needless to say, those who backed glad of it. strangely silent about whether or not favorite considered Spence the you ever were engaged to anyone be- enth son of the seventh son. Kai fore you met me. City Star J J well-know- n Bid lit. Tt Sp Mt, BQO-HO- O Shouts a SpanRed Baby. a A Doctor of Divinity, now Editor of ods, has not made Itself more ridicuReligious paper, has lous than any. comment of ours could well-know- written regaiding the between Collier's Weeklycontroveisy and the Religious 1resg of the Country and others, Inelmling ourselves. Also regarding suits for libel brought by Collier's against us for commenting uion its methods. These are his sentiments, with some very emphatic words left out. "The religious Press owes you a debt of gratitude for jour courage in showing up Collier's Weekly as the hell-OMan." Would you care to use the InclostHl article on the "Boo Hoo Baby" as the "Yell-OMan's successor? "A contemporary remarks that Collier's has finally run ugainst a solid hickory Iost" ami been damaged In Its own estimation to the tune of (750.omi.00 "Here Is a publication which 1ms, In Utmost disregard of the facts, broadcast damaging statements spread about the Religious Press und others and has suffered those false statements to go uncontradicted until, not satisfied after finding the Religious Press too quiet, and peaceful, to resent the insults. it makes the mistake of wandering Into fresh field and butts tu bead against this Post and all the World laughs. Even Christians smile as the Pom suddenly turns und gives it buck a dost of its "It Is a mistake to say all the World laughs. No cheery laugh comes from Collier's, Imt It cries and beo lusts like a spanked baby ami wants $750 Out) im to soothe Its tender, l.lreratod feelings." "Thank Heaven It has at last struck A man with "hack hone" enough to call a spado a "spade" mid who bellows In the whole trmh without fear or telling favor. Pet Imps Collier's wH, its disregard for the facts," nmv sav no such letter exists. Nevertheless it on file tn our office and Is onlv of a muss of rotters and other dma one now-.- , paper comments, etc., denouncing yellow methods of Collier's Tins volume Is so large that a man not well go thru It under hair a dr's stea.lv work. The lett.-rcome non, various purts of America. Usually a prlatu eontroversv is not Interesting to the puhlle. but lids Is imbllc controvmy. Collier's hus been using the methods to attract sttontbrn toyellow" Nl!r but. Jumping In the air. ctneklng together and jelling k m ,,! mt-tie- K "l., Hotier Than Tlmu" uttl,ck on the Re. llglotis I ress and on medicine. We leave It to the public now', as we Od when we first resented Collier's a tacks, to say whether. n a for sensation ami circulation, craving Its at tack do not amount to a systematic mercenary hounding. likewise leave It to the public to r Colliers, by Its own policy ami tti.'th make it. Dot's Colliers expect to regain any self inflicted loss of prestige by demonstrating thru suits for damages, that it can be more artful In evading liability for libels than the humble hut resentful victims of Its or does it hope for starting defamation, a of libel suits to silence the campaign popular indignation, reproach and resentment which It has aroused. Collier's ran not dodge this public controversy by private law suits. It can not isistpnne the public judgment against it. That great Jury, the Iub-Uwill hardly blame us for not wait-lnuntil w get a pe tit jury in a court room, before denouncing this prodigal detractor of institutions founded and fostered either by Individuals or by the imbllc, Itself. No announcements during mr enllre business career weie ever made claiming "medicinal effects" for Piu,er lostum or Grape-Nuts- . Medicinal efI , ts are results obtained from the use of e medicines. f cnTb-?u:,"tI- 'isl,ors thru our ko euch month and see for Nuts contains unsoiiitel) nothing but wheat burlev - t of New Orleans Molars. rite it of piopmlng . sm.,je 1; Ilt".ic ,uanm'r obtain Pe b.- et t value and flavor, re- . i , w.k ami experience to ; V Sb ?r u ''""'iicHi. It ilmootr,,? wmSa',1, ,,Xhlbl,Ion !, ! ,'iV '! ! " ' Jr ' 11 15 reM1;;.,1,;,;'!i,'m "h.woiogi(ai clmr.i.te, tll. inlnmi,,,, mtrdlng the f'Mt 1,11(1 iMVe'no ' wbi( h '! ' 1,1 nZ, mav'm,ri, ,r iMmy !' "'l'llb!,We K""1 such as white bread, potatoes, i partly cooked cereals and such. Starchy food is not digested !i upper stomach but passes on Into duodenum, .or lower stomach aid testines, wlieie, in a healthy Ini' uul, the transformation of the tu Into a form of sugar is completed then the food absorbed by the b!oc But If the powers of digestloi weakened, a part of the starchy w 111 lie In the warmth and moisten the body and decay, generating p and Irritating the mucous surfaces til under such conditions the f! lower part of the alimeutary canal eluding the colon and the Involved. Disease sets and at times takes the form know appendicitis. When the symptoms of the tow make their appearance, would It be good, practical, common en. discontinue the starchy food able! causing the trouble and take itok In which tho starch has been formed Into a form ot sugar In process of manufacture? This Is Identically the same font augur found In the human body' starch has been perfectly digested Now, human food Is made up ' lurgoly of starch and Is required tbe body for energy nnd sun" Naturally, therefore, its use should rout Ititied, If possible, and for the r eons given above It Is made poss: In tho manufacture of Grupe-Not- i In connection with this change food to bring relief from physical turbances. we have suggested sj3' out the Intestines to get rid of mediate cause of the disturbance. where Naturally, there are eases dlscuse hus lain dormant nd utilise continued too long, tin1 purently only the knife will avail. fact Afflon It Is a best physicians who are zrq'W with the details above recited." preventative measures ste fur away the best. Are we to be condemned lng a way to prevent dlscuse W for lowing natural methods andn . feeling a food tliut contains cine" nnd produces no "n,c, feels" but which has guided m thousand of persons from sFkn ., henlth? We have loclved dun"I years past upwards of ka.OOO e from people who have been J helped or made entirely tn lowing onr suggestions, and simple. M ,rj If coffee disagrees sad of the ailment common ,0blLui fee user quit It nnd take n Jr ,, y If white bread, potatoes, other starch food make tr0h,V fisia and use Grape-Nu- t lutgcly predlgestcd nnd 11! nourish and strengthen, win P u Jllt form, of; food ilo not jt'l old common ene. "Thors, a Reason for i",uim 5IVIN Time fflli to ( fr, 1 iJ4 atilt Mrs. i tie ltho twit her Ud ( nli u 'airs, i, k iied, dm Tt k ;i or ;e lidi i, you', -- Tout Hi C li ia Put treat bile er k - 8o t ( hit to Hu liy tluinge? lng. Ill till" plllpnhlv iyimrant attack on lu Coin, H uppearr-t his state- , merit,'"tin,. wlit..l.. , ,mrH cr.tph labors In ,,e, . hV Grape Nuts w ' "tslty ,vl!l,e u" in .ln M,l",ndl'HI. This is 'h'K and potentially badly lying "'t "' - N hii t' 't ho'non!; nun.iVihH T" !,r"w'11 am Co vs; '"I dlls result, U bailee murlly In the t,y m. n " a- append!. 11. caused "'by fid, Grape-Nut- . po.tum Fen ':! C lli Shou Hie vir |