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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 26, 1916)
YOUNG WOMEN MAY AVOID PAIN ________ i Need Only Trust to Lydia E. I Pink ham’s Vegetable Com pound, says Mrs. Kurtzweg3 , Buffalo, N.Y.—“ My daughter, whose I picture is herewith, was much troubled with pains in her j jback and Bides every month and they j would sometimes be so bad that it would seem like acute in flammation of some organ. She read your advertisement in the newspapers and tried Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound. £>ne praises it highly as she has been ! relieved of all these pains by its use. All mothers should know of this remedy, j and all young girls who suffer should try it. Mrs. Matilda Kcrtzweg, 52S 1 High St., Buffalo, N. Y. Young women who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, headache, dragging-down sensations, fainting spells or indigestion, should take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Thousands have been re stored to health by this root and herb remedy. 'If you know of any young wo man who is sick and needs help ful advice, ask her to write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Only women will receive her letter, and it will be I held in strictest confidence. is do more necemry than Smallpox. Kxmy experience has demonstrate* the almost miraculous cTfL Cftcy, and harmlessness, of Antityphoid Vaccination. Be vaccinated NOW by your physician, you and yoor family. It is more vital than boose Insurance Ask your physician, druggist, or send for ilar* you had Typhoid?’* telling of Typhoid Vaccine* results from use, and danger from Typhoid Carriers. Pr*duein« Vaccine* and Serums under U. S. Lie*ns* Tk* Cotter Lakeraxary, Berkeley, Cal.. Chicai*. IIL — _| -- - - A Juvenile Tyrant. “Why do you let the boy play with those costly ornaments? He's bound to break a vase or two?” “I can’t do nnythiug with him,” wailed the distracted mother. “I have to let him have his own way. He threatens to go out and catch the whooping cough if I don’t.”—Louis ville Courier-Journal. STOP ITCHING INSTANTLY With Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Nothing Better. Trial Free. — * Bathe the affected part with Cuticura Soap and apply the Ointment. For ec zemas, rashes, irritations, pimples, dan druff and sore hands Cuticura Soap and Ointment are supreme. Nothing better, cleaner or purer than these super-creamy emollients at any price. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept- L, Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adr. r Another Favorite Topic. “I dare say those two women en gaged in a mysterious parley are talk ing about some other woman.” “Don’t jump to conclusions.” “No?” “Sometimes the theme of a conver sation like that is husbands.” Cause Not Cure. Wayward Son—But dad. you should make allowance for the follies of youth. Father—Huh! If it wasn't for the allowance you get there'd be less folly. A Bargain Hunter. “Dubwaite has a handsome tiger akin.” "Yes. He bagged it himself.” “Surely not in the jungle?” “No. At an auction sale.” More than $2,f>00,000,000 are invest ed in United States film concerns, etc. Worries Bring Aches Life today brings many worries and worrying brings on kidney troubles, so the doctors say. Kidney weakness re veals itself in backache, pains when stooping or liftirig, dizzy headaches and urinary disorders. Be cheerful. Stop worrying. And, to strengthen weak kidneys, uss Doan’s Kidney Pills, thy kidney remedy that is used and recom mended the world over. An Iowa Case Mrs- Bae h e 1 'btrrPUmw Carr, 810 EL Sev- tikaStorr' enth Ave., Oska- - * loosa, Iowa, says: “A spell of grippe weakened my kid neys and I began to suffer dread fully from sore ness and lame ness across my back. I couldn't rest well and could hardly walk. My sight blurred and the kid ney " secretions became unnatural. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me as soon as I took them and continued use fixed me up in good shape.” Get Doss'* at Any Straw. SOc a Box DOAN’S VS5V FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N- Y. Your Liver Is Clogged Up That’s Why You’re Tired—Out ef Sorts —Have No Appetite. CARTER S LITTLE. LIVER PILLS will put you rights in a few days. d They d< their duty. CureCon-l" gtipation, . i Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature “lOUBHonlUTS”^^^^ W. t U.. OMAHA, NO. 43-1#li“ ' — - To train a woman away from a woman’s home is to stunt her finest possibility. American home life may spare to science or the school a Maria Mitchell or a Mary Lyon, but the home Itself is the greatest school for the greatest manhood >iid womanhood.— F. W. Gunsaulus. Food for the Children. Gingerbread in various forms is good, wholesome cake not too rich for the little people. The following is a pleasant change from the ordinary kind : Chocolate Gingerbread. Place in a mixing bowl half a cup ful of molasses, one tablespoonful each of melted lard and butter, half a cup ful of brown sugar, half a teaspoonful of ground cinnamon, a quarter of a teaspoonful of nutmeg, a teaspoonful of ginger, and two tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate mixed to a paste with a little water; blend the ingredients thoroughly, the*' stir in one teaspoon ful of soda, dissolved in a cupful of sour cream, add flour to make a thin batter and bake 20 minutes in a mod erate oven. Cover with boiled frost ing, into which two tablespooufuls of cocoa have been added. Sunshine Cake. Beat six egg whites until stiff. Boil together a cupful of sugar and a quar ter of a cupful of water until it hairs, pour over the whites, beat well and cool. Then beat the yolks of the eggs, add to the whites and a cupful of pastry flour sifted with a teaspoonful of cream of tartar and a pinch of FAVORITE OF FILMDOM Adele Kelly. Popular movie actress, who is one of the feminine stars in “The Scarlet Runner,” a new release. -1 salt flavor and bake slowly for 40 to 00 minutes. Cover with frosting when cool. Marmalade Parfait. Put half a cupful of sugar and three-quarters of a cupful of cold wa ter in a saucepan and stir over a mod erate fire until the sugar is dissolved; then let it cook slowly without stir ring until a little dropped In cold wa ter will form a ball. Remove im mediately from the tire and pour slow ly upon the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs, beating constantly until cold, then fold in a pint of whipped cream and three tablespoonfuls of marmalade. Do not pour in any of the milk left in the bottom of the whipped cream dish. Pour at once into a tight mold and bury in ice and salt for three hours before serving. Date and Tapioca Pudding. Stir a half cupful of quick tapioca into a pint of boiling water salted with a half teaspoonful of salt, cook until the tapioca is transparent, add a fourth of a cupful of sugar, the juice of a lemon and a half pound of dates cut in quarters. Fold in two beaten eggs and cook until the egg is set. Serve hot or cold with cream. Aviators Do Not Drop Bombs; “Lay Eggs,” in Trench Slang. German slang is being enriched by a number of interesting expressions which have come into use at the front. The aviators, for instance, do not drop bombs—they “lay eggs.” Soldiers no longer talk of the aviator observer and of the pilot. The former is always called Franz and the latter either Hein rich or Emil. From the observer's name a verb has been formed, “frunzen,-' meaning to ob serve or spy out. From this the deri vative “verfranzen” has been formed, meaning to observe falsely or poorly. Thus, “eine Sache verfranzen" signi fies the rendering futile of a movement by poor observation. The projectiles of the artillery, both of the German and hostile armies, bear a number of pet names. The German missiles are called “gifts,” “iron gifts" or “old gentlemen.” Hostile projectiles are termed from | their development of smoke, “black sows” or “woolly bears;” from the manner in which they land, “chained dogs” or “blind skippersfrom their noise, “rowdy Henry” or “trailer wag ons," and those that scatter their mis siles effectively rejoice in the name of “sprinkling cans.” His After-Dinner Speech. “Has your father any favorite after dinner speech?” “Yes. He usually says: "Now that’s over, what are we going to have for breakfast?”—Detroit Free Press. The last word in children’s bonnets are the 1860 styles. In Football or the Game of Life It Is Hearts, Not Hands or Feet That Count By FIELDJNG H. YOST Veteran Coaeh of University of Michigan Football Team. In the game of football or of life it isn’t the hands or the feet which succeed. It’s the heart! If you want to judge a man, put him in a football game. I read men by football. It is my work and my pleasure. A youth on a football field is just like a hero in a motion picture, whose every movement forms the basis of a drama. When I take candidates for a football team and coach them, I am preparing them for the gridiron and for life. Real character surges through the artificial cloaks with which they are hidden when men find themselves on the football field. I can watch a boy on the gridiron three years and tell you what kind of a man he will make. Ty Cobb would have been just as great a football player. The desire and ability to be great—the grit, determination, physical and moral cour age—would have carried him through just the same. Any of our great men would have succeeded on the football field. I have seen heart dramas enacted on the ribboned field of play which would have been considered masterpieces of fiction. I have seen comedies, tragedies and the thing between. I have seen men find themselves on the football field. I have seen weaklings suddenly grow strong—have seen boastful men lose their airs of bravado and become cowards in a twinkling—their real character com ing to the front. No matter how great an actor a man is, he cannot conceal his real character all the time. Sham and hypocrisy are absent from the football field. When you see a man in a game you see him just as he is—strong or weak, noble or ignoble. It’s a great thing—this football! Little Bit of Everything A rifle ball covers 1,200 yards In two seconds. London's Inhabitants include 471,000 flat dwellers. In Japan devilfish weighing up to 200 pounds are sometimes caught. Pearls are steadily increasing in value. They are now worth three times as much as they were ten years ago. The banana takes the place of cereals among the Indians of South America, In the East Indies and In parts of Africa. Chile will send an official commis sion to the United States to make a thorough study of agricultural and in dustrial hydraulics. The United States Is now exporting $75,000,000 worth of sugar yearly. Be fore the war the yearly export was valued at about $5,000,000. Owing to the presence of a new powder factory Barksdale township. Wisconsin, will have " $118,000 tax money to spend the coming year, where hitherto the entire expenses of running the township government. rood building and all, have not ex ceeded $8,000. A horse which served In the Burling ton (Vt) fire department for IS years, but had not been used there for a year and a half, was put back in the service a few days ago, and at the first clang of the bell was out of his stall and in his place under the har ness. What's a Straight Line? It will be news to most readers no doubt to be told that there is more than one kind of a straight line. And yet a little thought will show how this can be. In the first place, the earth is, in a general way, round. If we are to understand a “straight line” as “the shortest distance between two points,” as the geometers tell us, then a straight line from the Colorado river to Lake Tahoe would be the chord of nn arc and would have to follow a tunnel under the mountains between the two points; and It would f>enetrate six miles under the surface at the deepest place. Soapsuds Has Same Effect As Oil on Troubled Waters. It may eventually be in order to vary the phrase, “pouring oil on the trou bled waters,” by substituting the word “soapsuds” for oil. It appears that ex periments have shown that soapsuds will reduce a sea almost as well as oil. The trial was made on a vessel in a storm on the Atlantic. A large quan tity of soap and water was discharged over the bow, and its effect was nearly instantaneous, the height of the waves being so diminished that the vessel could be managed without difficulty. The steamer Senegal, struck by a squall in the Atlantic, used soap and water with the same result Six pounds of soap were dissolved in two barrels of water. This solution, when dripped over the bow, made a quiet space about ten yards wide, preventing the waves from breaking over the vessel to any great extent Only the most extreme coats are made on fitted lines. " Tjj! A Few Smiles | Usually the Way. “Dubwaite is a handy man about j the house.” “Yes?” “He can repair a burst pipe almost as well as a plumber, mends lights, does a little painting now and then, ; and never has to hire a carpenter.” “1 thought Dubwaite must be that ; sort of fellow.” “Why so?” “He makes such a mess of his busi- . ness.” Disagreeable Task. “Does the fallinsy of leaves in au- ' tumn make you sad?” “It used to,” answered the success- j ful business man. “You were more sentimental then?” | "Not at all. I was a boy then and had to rake them up as they fell.” 1 Quite a Difference. “Think of a moving picture come dian .being paid a larger salary than the president of the United States!” “Tut, tut! The motion picture come dian provides entertainment for the passes, while the president merely looks after the welfare of the coun try.” A Stunning Figure. “Well, what did you think of the play last night?" “I thought the leading lady for got her lines once or twice.” “I don't agree with you. In fact, everything she wore seemed to emphasize her lines.” _ " >4t Bid for Assistance. •Do you realize, young man, that in marrying my daughter you will as sume great responsibilities?” asked her father. “Yes, sir,” answered the up-to-date young man. “In fact, I've been so deeply impressed by the weight of my future responsibilities that I thought perhaps your—er-parental so licitude would prompt you to make some arrangement which would insure your daughter’s being supported in the style to which she has been accus tomed.” Not Worth Trying. "Via you nave to do a little song and dance for your wife when you got home late last night r “No,” answered Mr. F 1 i b s o n. “When I got a glimpse of her face I decided It was no time for for vaudeville.” Another Delusion. “Is there such a thing as being mentally alert and physically indol ent?” “I guess so. At least, most of the lazy people you meet have an idea that their minds work with amazing rapid ity.” • Honest Toil. “This dancer has a great variety of beads.” “Yes, and some of them indicate that she is earning her salary.” “What do you mean?” “By looking through my glasses I can see beads of perspiration on her forehead.” Wise and Otherwise. Never lend yourself to the borrowing of trouble. Our idea of a plucky man is one who refuses to be plucked. You'll never find much cause foj gratitude unless you make some. It goes without saying that the less said about some things the better. Few men are able to keep within hailing distance of their good inten tions. But it sometimes happens that the light of truth casts the shadow of sus picion. Our idea of a modest man is one who can keep his opinion of himself to himself. Many a woman trusts her husband because she doesn’t know as much as she might. There's at least one redeeming fea ture about air castles; we don't have to pay taxes on them. Many a man is in the bachelor class today because the girl In the case had been taught to say “No.” . The easiest task a business man Is ever called upon to perform Is to in duce an employee to accept an Increase in salary. POINTS ON KITCHEN ECONOMY ! — Little Suggestion That Will Be Found of Value in Every Home. Wash a potato, wipe dry and put it j in your breadpan. It will beep the ! bread fresh for days. If eggs you are about to boil are | cracked, add a little vinegar to the water, and they can be boiled as sat isfactorily as undamaged ones. Take great care of the milk; unless you have a very cool place to keep it. boil it as soon as it arrives. Keep it covered with a clean muslin cloth. Tomatoes should always he skinned before being using for salad. To do this easily, place the fruit in a basin and pour boiling water over it. Let stand a minute, and then drain. You will fmd that the skin can then be removed without the slightest trouble. Remember beef loses only three ounces to the pound in baking, four ounces in boiling, and five ounces in roasting. Thus roasted meat should be avoided when butchers’ prices are high. If the boiler immediately after use, and while still warm, is rubbed all over with any good household soap it will prevent rust, and will help to make the suds when the boiler is filled for tlie next washing day. To clean a black dress take a dozen ivy leaves and steep them in boiling water. Leave till cold, then rub well over the stained parts. This liquid will remove ail stains and make the cloth look almost as fresh as when uew. Don't throw hones that have been boiled for soup into the dustbin. Put them at the back of the fire, hank up with w'ell-dumped small coal and they w-iii burn for hours. Mincing machines are not easy to take to pieces for the purpose of cleaning, as there is much difficulty in properly replacing the parts. The best plan, and one which leaves the machine quite dry, is to take a piece of very stale bread, or, if this is not obtainable, a piece of toast, and grind it through. This will he found to col lect all the grease, fat and skin whiclt adheres to the knives. Repeat until the crumbs come out quite clean and (Iry, and then carefully wipe the ma chine with a clean, dry cloth. KITCHEN MAY BE ATTRACTIVE Simple Decorative Schemes Add to the Comfort of the Cook, Whether Housewife or Servant. So many people are in the habit ot regarding the kitchen as a necessary evil that the idea of applying any decorative treatment to it and making It a really attractive place never seems to occur to them. The cook, whether she be the housewife or a domestic, has to spend most of her time there, and if for no other purpose than to make her comfortable and happy—in cidentally thereby a better servant— the place should be made as agree able to the eye as possible. The de signers of really well-planned houses now take account of this considera tion and adopt simple but well-recog nized decorative schemes. We have something yet to learn in this respect from old Dutch and German kitchens and also from the kitchen of old New England farmhouses.—Dallas News. Rice and Sausages. Chop an onion, and fry it with a tablespoonful of dripping until it is of a nice golden color. Wash a tea spoonful of whole rice, put it on with cold water, and after bringing it to the boil, drain and stir it in among the onion. Add two breakfastcupfuls of stock (or water with gravy) and two sliced tomatoes, and allow to sim mer until the rice is tender and absorbs the liquid. When ready stir in two tablespoonfuls of grated cheese, with sufficient salt and pepper to season. Pile in the center of a hot dish. Have some small sausages nicely browned. Place the sausages neatly around. This dish is quite complete without potatoes. Raisin Cookies. Cream half cupful sugar with quar ter cupful butter. Add one egg and cream again. Then add quarter cup sweet milk, half teaspoonful vanilla extract and one cupful flour sifted with one and n half tenspoonfuls bak ing powder and a pinch of salt. Add more sifted flour to make a soft dough and roll out thin on a floured board. Cut into rounds with a cooky cutter. Spread a layer of chopped raisins be tween two cookies, press the filled cookies lightly with the rolling pin, and bake in greased pans in a hot oven until nicely browned. Oven Frying. The best way to fry ham, sausage, bacon and fresh or salt pork is in the oveh. Use a frying pan or a tin or granite pan which is lighter to handle and much more easily washed. The meat browns nbove as well as below, does not spatter the stove with grease, and needs much less watching, also the extracted fa* is whiter and has a better flavor than when the frying is done on the top of the stove. Apricot Roll. Sift 1 pint of flour with 3 teaspoons baking powder, a little salt and 1 tablespoon sugar. Mix 2 tablespoons each of butter and any shortening and about % cup of milk to make a soft dough. Roll out lightly and spread with a cup of apricots (or any dried fruit) which have been cleaned and stewed. Roll up and place in bak ing tin, with half a cup of juice drained from the fruit and baste with this during the cooking. Serve hot with sweet liquid sauce. Lunch Muffins. Five tablespoonfuls condensed milk, three-fourths cupful water, two cup fuls flour, three ounces butter, two tea spoonfuls baking powder, two eggs, pinch of salt. Mix flour, salt and bak ing powder and sift twice. Beat eggs, without separating, until light and add the milk diluted with water. Add this mixture and the butter which has been melted to the flour. Beat well and bate in greased muffin tins for about 5® to 30 minutes.—rictorial Review. “Cabinet Timber.” With a single exception, every mem ber of President Wilson's cabinet be gan life as a boy in some small coun try town. Making the best use of early opportunities, they developed their tal ents by study, steadily working their way through school, and in most cases through college toward that broader experience in the affairs of life which ultimately fitted them to become “cabi net timber.” Their example should be an inspiration to those who. being born and raised in the small country town, are likely to consider their surround ings as unfavorable. If a youth has ambition and energy, he will surely find tlie gate of opportunity open. In no part of the world have there been finer illustrations of the development of self-reliance, prudence, concentra tion. and those oU»r traits of charac ter than in; the country town or vil lage.—Christian Herald. Nothing Doing. Miss Pfippe—A penny for your thoughts! Professor Hardfax—You'll find them all collected in four volumes, hut the price is a dollar and a quarter a vol ume. THERE'S AN Individuality About HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters ti that makes it espe cially appealing to those who need a \ safe tonic, or who I suffer from any stomach liver or bowel trouble {5*^ For^fents^andJCMldren. p Mothers Know That j Hn| Genuine Castoria 'tSjB ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT ^ t**. A Vegetable PrcpamlionforAs- PoCFPC! +T»a jjxiHL, similaf ingtbt: Food andRegula- oJCuilo LLLO 7»r ting the Stomachs and Bowels of :«o3 ====== - = 1_ ;0-*C - ..— Promotes Digestion.Qieerful v e ness and Rest.Contains neitlier Ji. OpiiuaMorphinc norMiiieraL !u|j2 Not Narcotic. jr» AapttfQidDr.sHvCL FIKHCR Pumphm&ud- . ■ Air S*nna - \ m I mm PE \ •Hi Pmpnurmini V ■ ■■ :•« Bt-CarbonmUSodm^ f IW®** Worm Sm*J I mm !<•; II qp tif A per&ct Remedy for Consfipa- wOU ;?»iP tion. SourStoinackOiarrhoea. Worms. Feverishness and rAM n,.AM *6§ LossofSieep. - fQf yver •iqoO fhc-Simile Signature Cf % S Thirty Years ^ggdCflSTOMfl Exact Copy of Wrapper ths centaur company, ncw york city. Fall Run of Distemper MAY BE WHOLLY AVOIDED BY USING ®*CDfllVlVQ99 A *Tna11 outlay cf money brings very great jrvilll J results. It is a sure cure and a preventive If you use it as per directions. Simple, safe and sure. The $1 six* is twice the quantity and an ounce more than the frOc. fixe. Get your horses in best conditon for late fall and winter. All drug gists. harness dealers or manufacturers. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. DOCTORS OF ANIMALS, GOSHEN, IND. Valuable Wolfram Deposits. Wolfram deposits of a promising ! character, both in quantity and qual ity, are now being worked experiment ally near the banks of the Miramichi river in New Brunswick. The Ameri can consulate has been informed by the owner of the property that pre liminary operations have resulted in the discovery of three veins, and that one of these, 26 inches thick, is now findergoing active development. The Explainer. “How do you account for the fact that people who heard yon speak voted the other way?” “It’s all due to the Innate suspicion of human nature,” answered the spell binder. “My eloquence is so overpow ering that they became fearful of be ing hypnotized and fofsook me.” Often Happens. “What’s the matter with that in fant industry?" “Got infantile paralysis.” Paraguay has a new meat-packing establishment. . FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE Dissolved in water for douches stops pelvic catarrh, ulceration and natron. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinkhsm Bled. Co. for ted yeans A healing wander for nasal catarrh, sore throat and sora eyes. Economical. teWSaffiBSeaEcJ B A TCIITC Watson B. Coleman, rfl I Eli I ■% Patent lawyer, Washington. ! ■ » D.C. Advice and books free. Bates reasonable. Hlgbeit references. Beataervicea. Take Iron, Says Doctor, if You Want Plenty of *€Stay There" Strength Like an Athlete! Ordinary Nuxated Iron Will Make Deli cate, Nervous, Rundown People 200 Per Cent Stronger in Two Weeka’ Time, in Many Cases. New York, N. Y.—Most people fool ishly seem to think they are going to get renewed health and strength from some stimulating medicine, secret nos trum or narcotic drug, said Dr. Sauer, a specialist of this city, when, as a matter of fact, real and true strength can only come from the food you eat. Bat people often fail to get the strength out of their food because they haven’t enough iron in their blood to enable it to change food Into living matter. From their weakened, nerv ous condition they know something is wrong, but they can’t tell what, so they generally commence doctoring for stomach, liver or kidney trouble or symptoms of some other ailment caused by the lack of iron in the blood. This thing may go on for years, while the patient suffers untold agony. 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 becoming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of or dinary nuxated iron three times per day after mpals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see for yourself how much you have gained. I have seen dozens of nervous, run-down I people who were ailing all the while, double and even triple 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 after they had in some cases been doctoring for months without obtaining auy benefit, i But don’t take the old forms of reduced I iron, iron acetate or tincture of iron i simply to save n few cents. You must take iron in a form that can be easily absorbed and assimlliated like nuxated | iron if you want it to do you any good, ! otherwise it may prove worse than use less. Many an athlete or prize-fighter has won the day simply because he knew the secret of great strength and endurance and filled his blood with iron before he went into the affray, while many another has gone down to inglori ous defeat simply for the lack of Iron. NOTE—Nuxated Iron recommended above by Dr. Sauer, is one of the newer organic iron compounds. Unlike the older Inorganic iron products, it is easily assim ilated. does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach; on the contrary it is a most potent remedy in nearly all forms of indigestion, as well as for nervous, run-down conditions. The Manufacturers have such great confidence in Nuxated Iron that they offer to forfeit $100.00 to any charitable Institution if they cannot take any man or woman under sixty, who lacks iron and increase tlielr strength 200 per cent or over In four weeks’ time, provided they have no seri ous organic trouble. They also offer to refund your money if It does not at least double your strength and endurance in ten days’ time. It is dispensed by most druggists. If your druggist or general store is without * supply, ask them to get tt for you.—Adv.