like job —that opens the shell ten times more 
scientifically than any other device or plan 
in existence. 
And fool proof, too, only requiring the 
nut to be easily wedged into the jaws—and 
then squeezed. 
Hammer and flat-iron can mash Hickory nuts and 
your fingers, but they can’t deliver whole meats 
Millions of families have been patiently 
waiting for just this emancipation, for until the 
Great Grip invention only nut crack apolo- 
gies existed, from cheap cast iron to eight- 
dollar Tiffany and Gorham masterpieces, all 
based on the one common principle that has 
neither sense, strength nor science. 
Think of the possibilities of this perfect 
table necessity that enables you to halve the 
tough old ‘‘Shellbark’’or ‘‘Shagback”’ Hickory 
and drop the two meats into your hand with- 
out injury to finger or nut ! 
Think of stripping the shell from that ugly 
shaped old sinner, the Brazil, and dropping 
the solid meat in a jiffy ! 
And the plump, delicious Pecan—think of 
breaking the shell so the whole meats will 
Page Three ( Continued on page six) 
