The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, October 12, 1916, Image 9

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    When You Speak of
Preparedness
REMEMBER,
HOSTETTER’S
Stomach Bitters
stands out very ef
fectively as a bulwark 1
against liver or diges- j
tive troubles, general
weakness and malaria
An Eye to Busines.
“This play is the worst ever. I am
going to demand my money back.”
“Wait until after the next act, old
man. Ten years elapse between acts
1 and 3, and you can demand interest
on your money for that length of
time.”
What the Doctor Knows
KIDNEYS MUST BE RIGHT TO
INSURE HEALTH.
Few people realize to what extent their
health depends upon the condition of the
kidneys.
The physician in nearly all cases of
serious illness, makes a chemical analy
sis of the patient's urine. He knows that
unless the kidneys are doing their work
properly, the other organs cannot readily
be brought back to health and strength.
When the kidneys are neglected or
abused in any way, serious results are
sure to follow. According to health sta
tistics. Bright’s Disease, which is really
an advanced form of kidney trouble,
caused nearly ten thousand deaths in one
year, in the State of New York alone.
Therefore, it is particularly necessary to
pay more attention to the health of these
important organs.
An ideal herbal compound that has had
remarkable success as a kidney remedy
is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great
kidney, liver and bladder remedy.
The mild and healing influence of this
preparation, _ in most cases, is soon real
ized, according to sworn statements and
verified testimony of those who have used
the remedy.
When your kidneys require attention,
get Swamp-Root at once from any phar
macy. It is sold by every druggist in
bottles of two sizes—50c and $1.00.
However, if you wish first to test'this
gjeat preparation send ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., tor a
sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper. Adv.
Didn’t Want Much.
One Saturday night a lady who pos
sessed a fruit and vegetable shop hur
ried to serve her last customer, a very
red-faced woman.
She asked for a pennies worth of
vegetables, and wanted a piece of ev- |
erything.
When she had been giver what she j
desired, she politely asked if they j
could be wrapped in a piece of paper ,
and tied with a string.
The shopkeeper turned to her, quite |
.aim, and said: i
“Wait a minute, and I will run
across to the butcher's for a hone, .
and I think that will complete your j
Sunday’s dinner.”
Returned It, All Right.
Over he garden fence the conversa
tion had suddenly turned acrimonious.
“An’ if yore boy, 'Erbert, ties any
more cans to our pore dog's tail,” was
Mrs. Moggins’ stern ultimatum, “ ’ell
ear about it, that’s alL Oh, an’ per
'aps you've done wiv that saucepan
wot you borrowed last Monday.”
“ ’Erbert,” asked Mrs. Grubb shrilly;
‘wot ’ave you bin doin’ to Mrs. Mog
gins’ dog?”
“Nothin’ ma!” replidi the small boy
unblushingly.
"There!” said his mother triumph
antly. “An’ you returned 'er sauce
pan yesterday, didn’t you, dearie?”
“Sent it back by ’er dog!” said ’Er
bert calmly.
John Rebow of Wilkes-Barre. Pa.,
has adopted 20 orphans. He has seven
children of liis own.
"Another Article
Against Coffee”—
In spite of broad publicity,
many people do not realize
the harm the 21 grains of
caffeine in the average cup
of coffee does to many
users, until they try a 10
days* change to
POSTUM
Postum satisfies the de
sire for a hot table drink,
and its users generally sleep
better, feel better, smile
oftener and enjoy life more.
A fair trial-—off coffee
®»d on Postum—shows
“There's a Reason**
*~“‘T iiiimiiii mu inniimmm.fTnw
I Paying the Price
gwMiiiiiii.n’THM.un.mnnnnKHittw
af® always paying the price for the
things we lose or gain.
Out of this life of the mingled gift of glad
ness and of pain;
A.nd whether we pay for pleasure or
whether we pay for sin.
It is always paying the price for life, no
matter where we begin.
V\ e say we have had a lot. we’ve en
joyed and we’ve shared in the best;
v'e sit sometimes with a little dream of
old content in the breast;
And then when we look away and think of
the things that were nice.
It all comes over us. lucky or sad, that
we’ve had to pay the price.
The magnate pays for his. as the pauper
pays it, too;
And the saint pays just as the sinner does
and the unsaved have to do;
In all that we have and hold, or in all that
we’ve thrown away.
It is sure in the end to come to this that
there was a price to pay.
W ® it for love and peace, for cheer
and comfort and song;
V\ e pay for sinning and going astray, we
pay it for doing wrong;
In all that we are or seem, in gladness or
grief or pain,
W e are always paying the pfice for the
things that we lose or gain.
—Folger MeKinsey, in the Baltimore
Sun.
Passing of French Dowry
Boon to the Country, But
Blow to Fiction Writers
The French custom of providing
marriageable daughters with a dowry
has been a social Gibraltar in that
land. Y\ ithout it the plots of novels
and plays would have been crippled.
It is a staple of French literature.
Now it appears that this is only one
more of the social landmarks which
are being swept away in the war
flood.
Young people who hesitate to marry
because of lack of property once they
lose everything proceed instantly to
marry. The one bright spot in the
South at the close of the Civil war
was the wholesale marrying of young
people who had not a red cent. After
the San Francisco disaster in H.K>4
weddings were a leading industry
among young men and women who
had hesitated in the time of plenty.
The new custom in France is a vast
improvement on the old. It is grati
fying for the young folk, but it is hard
m the liction writers.—Boston Globe.
Deplores “American Voice;”
Doctor Suggests a Remedy
Dr. Charles Prevost Grayson of Phil
adelphia reproved American doctors at
the annual meeting of the Laryngolog
ical, Ithinological and Otological asso
ciation because they had done nothing
whatever to correct the “American
voice,” in which, he averred, “no
amount or depth of patriotism can so
HOW MUCH IS HUBBY WORTH TO YOU?
By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY.
There's na' luck about th' boose.
There is na' luck ava.
There is no' luck about the boose.
When our guile man's away'.
A paragraph has been going the
rounds of the papers from one end of
tne country to iiic
other concerning
the disappearance
of a husband. The
deserted wife in
an advertisement
offered four dol
lars for informa
tion which would
lea£ to his where
abouts. She add
ed pitifully that
she was very poor
and could not af
ford to pay a
larger amount as
it had taken the
last dollar she
had saved to pay
the debts lie had
left.
reader-hearted wives with fiekle
husbands were sorry for her. Inde
pendent spinsters, who put men in the
places they belong, expressed surprise
at her extravagance in her willingness
to pay that sum for a wortldess hoot.
The question now arises—Imjw much is
tiie average husband worth to his wife?'
It seems to me that there is so much
figuring to be done on the subject that
it would lead one into such an entan
gling labyrinth that it would be hard
to discover where one is actually at.
There :ire mighty good husbands to
be fount} the world over—men who pro
vide liberally or the best they can for
the women who loved them well enough
to trust their future happiness to them.
The poor-bargain husbands are few and
far between. A husband is wortli to a
wife all the world if he Is faithful,
striving to lo the best he can and giv«
ing her full measure of love for love.
The husband who is companionable,
but is unfortunate in securing work
and holding a job down, many a wife
finds worthy of supporting, hoping on, !
Micawberlike, for better days to come. ;
Tiie husband who openly rebels at do
ing anything to provide for his wife,
gives lier no pleasure, is not solicitous
as to whether she is well or ill, in fact
who lias not her Interest or love for
her at heart, is not wortli a sou uiarkee |
or one thought.
A husband should not be measured !
by bis wealth. Many who are fitted to
accomplish great tilings are laid down j
by the iron band of circumstance. They !
are worth encouraging, helping and j
loiiiig. They are pure gold among the
world of human dross. When most i
wives sum up how much their lius- j
bands are worth to them they will find
that though lie may have his faults he
is sure to have redeeming qualities
which far overbalance them.
Every man lias failures, as well as
successes. A wife should not be daunt
ed because of them. A husband's worth
is far above price to the wife who
loves him for himself alone.
(Coby right, 1316.)
anesthetize our ears that they will
find anything musical.”
Doctor Grayson did not suggest sur
gical treatment, but merely that the
education of children in proper articu
lation be compulsory. He blamed in
difference and lack of proper training
for the habit of slurring and clipping
and muddling our syllables, and urged
that no teachers be appointed who
have not clear voices and do not enun
ciate distinctly.
The Sleep of Fishes.
It has often been asserted that fish
never sleep, a sufficiently amazing
story that anything can do violence to
Ihe laws of nature. Brelim used to
contend that fish slept soundly, assum
ing during that time peculiar atti
tudes which could not lie construed
otherwise than sleep. Experiments
go far to confirm this theory. He paid
particular attention to the leach,
which, he found, assumed an attitude
of repose, during which its functions
were less active and the keenness of
its sensorial faculties diminished. It
sleeps at any hour of the day or night,
and in doing so it rests on its caudal
A PEW JOKES
Genius Rebuffed.
"If you'll cut
some wood I'll give
you your break
fast.”
“Madam,” re
plied the tattered
wanderer, “during
my last term in
a prison which
shall be nameless,
I was a celebrated
intramural poet.
I’ll write you a
sonnet for ray
breakfast.”
“No, you won’t
either. I might be
able to start a fire
with your sonnet,
but It wouldn’t
keep a fire going.”
Not a Dry Speech.
Mrs. Flatbush—You say the dinner
was given in the open air?
Mr. Flatbush—Yes, it was.
‘Go off all right?
“Well, It rained.”
“Really? It must have spoiled ev
erything.” <
“No; It prevented the speakers from
being dry.”
A Trite Observation.
"You hear so many people say: This
jnx is a horrible thing,’ that the ex
pression becomes monotonous.”
“So it does. I saw a deaf-and-dumb
man meet another deaf-and-dumb man
on the street the other day and I won
dered if that was what he was saying
on his fingers.”
Division.
Willie—Why is a wife called her
husband’s better half, dad?
Crabshaw—I suppose it’s because
she isn’t satisfied with splitting his sal
ary fifty-fifty.
fl
The Direct Method.
“What is a strikebreaker?” asked
Mr?. Dubwaite, who was glancing over
the morning paper.
“A strikebreaker, my dear,” an
swered Mr. Dubwaite, “is a husky in
dividual who helps to settle economic
problems with his fists.”
Income and Outgo.
“How much do you suppose it costs
Gadspur to live?”
“What’s his income?”
“As Gadspur is the average type of
well-to-do citizen. I should say it costs
him between §7,500 and §10,000 a year
to live.”
Prehistoric Mollycoddle.
“What’s Scribson so upset about?”
"He wrote a story in which the hero
was a cave man.”
“Yes?”
“The artist who illustrated It gave
the cave man a shaggy coat of hair
and then finished him off with careful
ly manicured nails.”
Its Paradoxical Quality.
“There is one thing queer about
dry humor.”
“What is that?”
“It generally whets one's desire for
more.”
Heartless Man.
“Henrysai'J
Mrs. F l,a t s o in e
“there’s an agent
at the door selling
a device to keep '
children from fall-1
ing downstairs.” (
“Well?” replied
Mr. Flatstone. *
“He wants to
demonstrate it.”
“I’m willing If
you’ll borrow the
baby across the.\
hall.” *
fins, the body being slightly bent,
while the head sometimes leans up
against the sides of the aquarium or
an aquatic plant. Respiration is
weak at these times. Sometimes it
slips on its buck and remains in this
position absolutely motionless for
hours.
War Makes New Economies.
War is producing some queer econo
mies. The Italians, who are fighting
above the snowline find wood scarce
and fires a rarity. Their difficulties
have aroused the scouts to action.
They visit every house, collect the
waste paper, and then hand it over to
the girls collected in a central sta
tion. These girls, working under the
eye of a teacher, spread the sheets
tint and feed them into a machine
which rolls them tightly into a roil of
about an inch In diameter. But they
are too long for use, so a chopping
machine worked by hand produces as a
final result, little tight rolls about two
inches long. These can be dropped ,
into a knapsack, and when a fire is
wanted three or four are taken out,
placed on the ground, lit, and enough
heat is generated to warm thoroughly
a mugful of soup.—Loudon Chronicle.
Hand-Painted Bodice Latest.
Hand-painted undergarments are I
making a bid for favor in the lineup j
of fall apparel!
Hand painting has appeared so far j
only on bodices of georgette crepe i
designed for wear under dainty trans- j
parent evening gowns, but one of the j
prettiest novelties imaginable is thus !
developed. The daintiest of floral pat
ents is properly selected, and the
puinting must be done with an' ex
quisite fineness of touch to produce
the desired result.
Au underbodice may be decorated
with hand painting over its entire
surface, or a mere border about the
neck may be choseu in preference.
Stenciled designs are also approved
as a decoration for next season eve
ning underbodices, and here, as in the !
case of the hand-painted garments,
very dainty floral patterns should be
selected. Georgette crepe is the prime
choice of fabrics to be so adorned.
England’s First Scientist.
The first great English scientist was
Roger Bacon, who died 621 years ago.
The exact date of his birth Is un
known. but it is believed that this year
marks the 700th anniversary. He was
persecuted and condemned and much
of his work destroyed, so that the ex
tent of his discoveries cannot be def
initely known. It is certain that he
was centuries ahead of his ignorant
and credulous times in chemistry,
mathematics and mechanics. Branded
as a magician, he was thrown into
prison. From 1277 until a short time
before his death Bacon was immured
in a filthy cell. He Is said to have in
vented the camera obscura.
Animal Isles.
There is the Isle of Dogs and Whale
island, Pewit island, in Essex, and
Crane and Gulf islands, off the coast
of Cornwall. Near Lundy island are
Rat island and the Hen and Chickens.
A few off the coast of Wales are Puffin
island, Sheep island and the Cow and
Calf island, in Pembroke.—London
Chronicle.
Wise and Otherwise.
If a man is a liar why does he get
mad If he’s called one?
Perhaps no man appreciates a legacy
more than a man without legs.
If the shoe fits it’s a sure sign »
woman will ask for a smaller size.
And one good turn is usually follow
ed by two bad ones—in a variety show.
Even when a man knows a woman’s
lge she never thinks he thinks she
ooks it.
Jgbt.
♦-)(.<! to buy his way
t?heamven mav dfs'ver later that he
fve up money'to an unauthorized rep
•sentative.
rhe truth about some men is never
-ST, after UOT
ments—and then It may not be found
thereon.
When a mac jets short of money
lots of his so-called friends get short
of sympathy.
Some men are born great, some
achieve greatness, but the majority do
not seem to worry themselves very
much about it.
Next! Golden Stockings!
“This is to be one of the strongest
seasons for hosiery to match the
gowns that we have had for some
time,” says a woman hosiery buyer
for a large house.
“Fancy colored shoes are about run
out, I think, and we shall have gray,
black and white slippers, with stock
ings to match the colors, and with
them silver and gold and bronze. The
latter in silk will match slippers in
those colors and the gold and silver
cloths and laces to be seen in the win
ter’s frocks.
“We will also have inserts of metal
laces, silver and gold set into the hos
iery. Real lace Inserts of white will
always have to go with gowns upon
which much lace is used.
“Prices in silk stockings have in
creased 10 per cent, but they will be
worn by practically everyone, as they
have been now for some years. The
number of silk stockings worn prob
ably has trebled In the last five or sis
years.”
Purpose of the Menhaden.
The most numerous fish of economic
importance on the east coast of the
United States is the menhaden, v^ich
is known also by a large number of
other names, some of them inappropri
ate and misleading. It is a member
of the herring family, goe* in great
schools in the ocean, bays and sounds,
and supports a fishery from Maine to
Florida.
Gilded Hopes.
“I understand Paris is going In for
municipal reform.”
“Good! If Paris can set a good ex
ample as successfully as it sets most
of the fashions, the result will be won
derful.”
Nearly Always, Willie.
“Pn, I know wliich is the most war- I
like nation.”
“Well, my son, which Is it?”
“Vacci nation, pa. ’Cause it's al-!
ways in arms, isn’t it?”
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
The Usual Way.
Browning—I understand you were j
at the races yesterday?
Greening—Y-yes, hut I happen to j
pick one before lie was ripe.
CLEAR RED PIMPLY FACES
Red Hands, Red Scalp With Cuticura
Soap and Ointment. Trial Free.
The soap to cleanse and purify, the
Ointment to soothe and heal. Nothing
better, quicker, safer, surer at any
price for skin troubles of young or
old that itch, burn, crust, scale, tor
ture *or disfigure. Besides, they meet
every want in toilet preparations.
Free sample each by mail with Book, j
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, :
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv. ‘
Real Fighting Began Later.
“l'ou were married before the war
started, weren’t you?”
“Well, yes; though we did have one
iirief engagement previous to the cere
mony.”
A GRATEFUL ACKNOWLEDGMENT.
v «k>
Mr. F. C. Case of Welcome Lake,
Pa., writes: "I suffered with Back- !
ache and Kidney Trouble. My head
ached, my sleep was broken and un- j
Mr. F. C. Case.
reiresning. i reil i
heavy and sleepy
after meals, was
always nervous
and tired, had a
bitter taste in my
mouth, was dizzy,
had floating
specks before my
eyes, was always
thirsty, had a
dragging sensation across my loins,
difficulty in collecting my thoughts
and was troubled with short
ness of breath. Dodds Kidney Pills
have cured me of these complaints.
You are at liberty to publish this let
ter for the benefit of any sufferer who
doubts the merit of Dodds Kidney
Pills.”
,Dodds Kidney Pills, 50c. per box at
your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co.,
Buffalo, N. Y. Dodds Dyspepsia Tab
lets lor Indigestion have been proved.
50c. per box.—Adv. „
Chile has heavily increased tariff du
ties.
W. L. DOUGLAS
“ THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE "
$3,00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 & $5.00
C_ Tir_•__ ur « _«_
shoes. For sale by over9000 shoe dealers.
The Best Known Shoes in the World. W
W. L. Douglas name and there cad price is stamped on the bot
tom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and
the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. The
retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San
Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the
price paid for them.
Th«lquality ot W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more
A than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smart
styles are the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America.
They are made in a well-equipped factory at Brockton, Mass.,
by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and
supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest
determination to make the best shoes for the price that money
can buy. *
Ask yonr shoe dealer for W. t. Donglas shoes. If he ran- I4,
not suptdy yon with the kind you want, take no other /l b
make. Write for interesting booklet explaining how to f taS
get shoesof the highest standard of quality for the price.
*oiuiu uiaw, iruo*
LOOK FOR W. L. Douglas
name and the retail price
stamped on the bottom.
M Kite:
$3.00 $2.50 & S2.00
W. L. PoiiglaH Shoe (!»,, Brockton, Mas*.
WMWfSTm
^i;i!i!i!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!i!iiiiiiiiiHiiini[iiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiinnintiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii[j
“Leader** and “Repeater**
Shot Shells
For the high flyers, or the low flyers, “Leader” and
“Repeater’ shells have the reach, spread and penetra
tion. Their great sale is due to these qualities, which
insure a full bag. Made in many gauges and loads.
BE SURE TO ASK FOR THE W BRAND
stop To £u Distemper
CURES THE SICK
And prevents others having' the disease no matter hot*,
exposed. SO cent* and *1 a bottle, *3 and *10 a dome*
bottles. All good druggists and turf goods houses.
SPOHX MEDICAL CO.,
Chemists and Bacteriologists. Gosben, lad., C. S. A.
Constant Reader.
“Bliggins is a pessimist, isn't he?”
‘•res. He's so fond of bad news that
he goes down cellar every morning to
read the gas and electric meters.”
Opals, when first taken from the
mine, are so soft they can be picked
to pieces by the fingernails.
Where Are the Boys?
The Mindeu Magazine, the.organ of
the Lancashire Fusiliers, observes in.
a recent issue: “We are not, of
i course, allowed to say where we are,
hut we may venture to say that wa
are not where we were, but where wrt
were before we left here to go t«f
where we have just come from."
pw Nuxated Iron helped
fine to whip Frank Moran
lF« WII I ADR TELLS SECRET OF HIS EASY VICTORY.
TT ILLHIW ALSQ REVEALS HITHERTO UHTOLD SECRET OF HIS
^GREAT TRIUMPH OVER JACK JOHNSON:SAYS IRON IS GREATEST OF
> ALL STRENGTH BUILDERS *_ n
Ordinary Nuxated Iron will often*
Increase the strength and endurance
of delicate, nervous folks 200 per cent
in two weeks' time.
SPECIAL NOTE —Dr. E. Sauer, a well
known physician who has etudied widely
in both this country and Europe, has been
specially employed to make a thorough
Investigation into the real secret of the
great strength, power and endurance of
Jess Willard, and the marvelous value of
nuxated iron as a strength builder.
NEW YORK.—Upon being inter
viewed at his apartment in the Colon
ial Hotel, Mr. Willard said: “Yes, I
have a chemist with me to study the
value of different foods and products
as to their power to produce great
strength and endurance, both of which
are so necessary in the prize ring. On
his recommendation I have often tak
en nuxated iron and I have particular
ly advocated the free use of iron by
all those who wish to obtain great
physical and mental, power. Without
it I am sure that I should never have
been able to whip Jack Johnson so
completely and easily as I did, and
while training for my fight with Frank
Moran I regularly took nuxated iron,
and I am certain that it was a most
Important factor in my winning the
fight so easily.” Continuing, Dr. Sauer
said: “Mr. Willard’s case is only one
of hundreds which I could cite from
my own personal experience which
proves conclusively the astonishing
power*-of nuxated iron to restore
strength and vitality even in most com
plicated chronic conditions.”
Not long ago a man came to me who
was nearly half a century old, and
asked me to give him a preliminary
examination for life insurance. I was
astonished to fiad him with the blood
pressure of a boy of 20 and as full of
vigor, vim and vitality as a young man
—in fact, a young man he really was,
notwithstanding his age. The secret
he said was taking Iron—nuxated iron
had filled him with renewed life. At
30 he was in bad health; at 46 care
worn and nearly all in. Now at 50 a
miracle of vitality and his face beam
ing with the buoyancy of youth. As I
have said a hundred times over iron
is the greatest of all strength builders.
If people would only throw away pat
ent medicines and nauseous concoc
tions and take simple nuxated iron, I
am convinced that the lives of thous
ands of persons might be saved who
now die every year from pneumonia,
grippe, consumption, kidney, liver and
heart trouble, etc. The real and true
cause which started their diseases was
nothing more or less than a weakened
condition brought on by lack of iron
In the blood. Iron is absolutely neces
sary to enable your blood to change
food Into living tissue. Without it, no
matter how much or what you eat,
your food merely passes through yon
without doing you any good. You
don’t get the strength out of it, and as
Among all the prominent figure* of the prize ring, probably none it to de
voted to family life a* Jet* Willard. After each engagement the champion
hurries to hit wife and children and remains at their side until public de
mand forces him to leave for new encounters. Everything is done to brine
up the “little Willards” with strong healthy bodies. Mr. Willard accounts for
his own success by saying:—
e consequence you become weak, pale
and sickly looking, just like a plant
trying to grow in soil deficient in Iron.
If you are not strong or well, you owe
it to yourself to make the following
test: See how long you can work, or
how far you can walk without becom
ing tired. Next take two five-grain
tablets of ordinary nuxated iron three
times per day after meals for two
weeks. Then test your strength again
and sec fqp yourself how much you
have gained. I have seen dozens of
nervous, run-down people who were
ailing all the while, double their
strength and endurance and entirely
get rid of all symptoms of dyspepsia,
liver and other troubles in from ten to
fourteen days’ time simply by taking
Iron in the proper form. And this af
ter they had in some cases been doc
toring for months without obtaining
any benefit. But don’t take the old
forms of reduced Iron, Iron acetate or
tincture of iron simply to save a few
cents. You must take Iron in a form
that can be easily absorbed and as
similated like nuxated Iron if you want
It to do you any good, otherwise It
may prove worse than useless.
Many an athlete or prize fighter has
won the day simply because he knew
- t'luc vr
iron in my blood it the
Secret of my gnat strength,
power and endurance. ”
tha secret of great strength ami en
durance and lilled his blood with iron
before he went into the affray, while
many another lias gone to inglorious
defeat simply for the lack of iron.
—E. Sauer, M. D.
.NOTE—Nuxated Iron, recommended
above by Dr. Sauer, is not a patent medi
cine nor secret remedy, but one which is
well known to druggists and whose iron
constituents are widely prescribed by emi
nent physicians everywhere. Unlike the
older inorganic iron products, it is easily
assimilated, does not injure the teeth,
make them black, nor upset the stomach
on the contrary, it is a most potent rem
edy in nearly all forms of indigestion as
well as for nervous, rundown conditions.
The manufacturers have such great con
Qdence m Nuxated Iron that they oiler to
forfeit *100.00 to any charitable institution
if they cannot take any man or woman
under 60 who lacks iron and increase their
strength 200 per cent or over in four
weeks’ time, provided they have no se
rious organic trouble. They also offer to
refund your money if if does not at least
double your strength and endurance in
°"je. K Is dispensed by most
?E25F!!ti»«5LyouI or general
store is without a supply ask them to gat
It for vou-Adv.