LODGE ROOM NEWS OF GREATER OMAHA Post A of Traveling Men'i Fro tective Asiociation Plant for Big Convention. CALL ANNUAL MEETING The call is out for the annual meet ing of Post A, Traveling Men's Pro tective association. It is to be held in the Commercial club rooms at 2:30 o'clock next Saturday afternoon and a; that time delegates will be elected to the state convention, to be held in Grand Island April 20-21 and also delegates to the national convention that is scheduled for Savanah, Ga.( June 11-16. Besides electing delegates, the mem bers of the Omaha post will hold the annual election and select the gov erning board for the next year. But the election is by no means the im portant feature of the Saturday aft ernodn gathering. The members fig ure that the business will keep them busy until well into the night and consequently they are going to have supper in the club rooms. It will be more than an ordinary supper, for everything on the menu will bear the Omaha and Nebraska brand. In other words, not a thing will be eaten that if not produced either in this city or state. The feast will be spread at 6:30 o'clock in the evening. Woodmen of the World. Omaha Seymour guards will give a dance in Crounse hall Tuesday even ing. Schiller camp No. 304 will furnish special entertainment to its members' and friends Thursday evening in the German Home. Nebraska Lipa No. 183 will meet Thursday evening in Bohemian Turner hall, Thirteenth and Dorcas streets, Sobieski camp No. 75 will meet to day noon in Woodmen of the World hall, Twenty-ninth and Walnut streets. Cedar Wood camp No. 19 will meet : next Saturday in Woodmen of the World hall, Twenty-first and U streets. Vac Opocensky has been ac tive in the camp interest by securing a number of new members. South Omaha tamp No. 211 will meet Wednesday evening in Wood men of the World hall, opposite the postoffice, for its regular business ses sion, i Alpha camp No. 1 is meeting tem porarily in Baright's hall, Nineteenth and Farnam streets. It regular meet ing will be held Tuesday evening. Many desirable locations are being considered by the special committee as the future home of Alpha camp. Woodmen Circle. A large gathering greeted the of ficers of W. A. Fraser grove No. 1 at its special meeting last Friday evening. Many speeches were made on the "Good of the Order." The Dora Alexander guards did several special drill stunts. Aloha grove No. 2 will give a card nariv TtieaHav cveninor in lvrie halt. I with refreshments. Tribe of Ben Hur. Mecca court No. 13 will give an open meeting -Thursday-evening to members and friends. J. J. lassidy, state manager, will present the banner which was won by Mecca court for the largest increase in membership during lvib. ' Order of St. George. St. Mary lodge No. 219, Order of it. George, will hold a business meet. ing and initiation Wednesday evening at 8 o clock in the Lyric building. ; Modern Woodmen. Magnolia camp, No. 1833, Modern Woodmen of America, is rilling stomachs these days. It started March 13. with an "Oyster Stew" night. On March 13 members will gather to a fruit banquet. A genuine Mullmn stew is the offering for March 20. Upen meeting night will be held March 27. KniaHts of Pythias. Regular meeting of Nebraska Lodge, No. 1, will be held Monday evening at Crounse hall at H p. m sharp. There will be work in the second rank. Refreshments wilt be served at the close of the ceremonies. Every knight in Omaha should be there. , - The Pythian Sisters are. reorganiz ing and becoming active again in lodge work. Nebraska Lodge, No. 1 has granted them the use of its re ception room on the second and fourth Mondays of the month. Two auto loads of knights jour' nryed to Bdlevue last Thursday and surprised Brother John O. Goss. It was his 90th birthday and it was with a joyful expression that he received their congratulations and token of es- teeem from his many friends. The D. O. K. K.a of Council Bluffs will hold a dance and card party Tuesday evening, March 13. for the knights and their relatives. An invi tation has been extended to Omaha knights. Zem Zem will flow. There is something of importance under the fifteen and one-half order of business for every knight. It will pay to investigate. Odd Fellows. Tuesday evening about fifty Odd Fellows from Omaha went to Platts mouth where the first degree staff of Omaha Lodge, No. 2, conferred the first degree on several candidates for Platte Lodge, No. 7. Members from Louisville and other surrounding towns were in full force. Grand Mas ter Hoagland from North Platte was also present. Friday evening Omaha Lodge, No. 2, conferred the first degree on sev eral candidates, A delegation from Elk City was present to witness the degree work. Next Friday the sec ond degree will be conferred, Hesperian Encampment, No. 2, will confer the Golden Rule degree next Thursday on a class of about twenty- ive. some ot K.e new robes will be used for the first time and a large attendance is expected. Canton Ezra Millard, No. 1, met Thursday evening. About twenty pe titions were received, most ot them being Patria-chs fiom Falls City, who expect to muster a Canton of their own in the near future. Arrange ments are being made to confer the a - & U ' ' s f Omaha is doing its full share toward manning Uncle Sam's battle ships. During the last two months, recruiting for the navy has been more vigorous and successful throughout the country than at any previous time since Admiral Dewey and his fighters made lasting names- for themselves and brought Old Glory to the front rank in the apanisn-American war. In thit recruiting, which has been so keenly stimulated by the tense in ternational situation, territory covered by the Omaha recruiting corps has kept up with the pace set jy the au thorities. ' During February more men were recruited by Lieutenant W. W. Waddell s.nd his assistants tnan Patriarchs Militant degree March 28. The committee in charge will make a report at the next regular meeting, which will be March 11. The Rebekah branch - of the order is showing a renewed interest. The attendance is increasing and there is degree work at tvery meeting. Degree of Honor. The past chiefs of Washington Lodee. No. 27. Degree of Honor, met at the home of their president, Mrs. Mayme Peterson, 1 hursday. ut ficers were elected as follows: President, Mrs. Kate O Brien; vice president, Mrs. Mayme Peterson; secretary treasurer, Mrs. Catherine Beveridge. The next meeting will be held at the home ot Mrs, Laura Miller, Monday. , . ' ' Order of Stags. The meeting of Omaha Drove, No. 135, March 2, was largely attended and a large numberof new faces were added to the membership roll. The next meeting will be held at the Swedish Auditorium next day with an oyster supper for the members and their friends. Murderer Gets' twenty Years at . ,Hard Labor in Pen "Twentv vears at hard labor" was the sentence pronounced upon Julian Lopez, alias Julian Gonzales, one of the trio of Mexicans charged with the slaying of Special Agent' Cross of the Milwaukee on the night of Jan uary 21. He pleaded guilty before Judge Sears of the district court to a charge of second degree murder. Lopez,, together with two of his countrymen, Marcario Peres Romers and Minguel Aguirre, were in the act of robbing a freight car in the rail road yards when they were surprised by the detective. Cross, mortally wounded by the bullet-fired by one of the Mexicans, kept pumping lead inio Ilie darkness irom wucrc wic shot came until his strength gave out. Romers, said by the police to have been the man who fired the shot that killed Cross, wilt be tried on a charge of first degree murder, as will the other member of the trio, Aguirre, who was wounded by the dying of ficer, McFarland Says Conley is ' ' u To Blame for Mishap William Conley, 560 South Twenty eighth street, who was injured at Twenty-eighth - and Farnam streets when he bumped into an automobile, was injured largely through !,is own fault, according to W. R, McFaland, who was driving the automobile. - Conley is in his home with a con cussion c' the brain and a probable fracture, according to police surgeons. "I 'was driving along Farnam street," said McFarland, "and I saw this fellow coming across the street from the saloon, staggering a little. swerved tho car to some extent to avoid him, as I saw lie was unsteady. I was just about past him and had missed him all right, but just be fore the car passed him he made a grab at the 'ear fender. His finger prints are sti'l on that fender. He clutched the fender so hard that he was jerked off his feet and he felt im mediately behind my car, probably with his head on the street car track. "I drove over to the curb then and s.opped. When I went back I saw other fellows had picked him up and he was walking away, so I assumed h had only been shaken up a little. Del F. Lough, Mail Clerk And Guardsman, is Dead Del F. Lough, well known in Ne braska National Gw.rd and postoffice circlet, died in a local hospital, fol lowing an illness of one week. The funeral services will be hek! Sunday afternoon at Z:M) under the ausnices of Nebraska lodge No. 1 of Masons. Burial will be at Forest Lawn. Mr. Lough was in the postoffice service here eighteen years, r. carrier and mail clerk. He was captain of tne gun company ot the Umaha bat talion of the Nebraska National Guards, and returned from the Mexi can border on December 31. He was 45 years of ace and is survived bv Mrs. Lough. His father icsides at Woodbine, la. He resided at 2(507 Teniplcton ave nue. He was a Thirty-second de t;ree Mas1. f Omaha Lads Join Uncle Sam's Naval Forces during any other month since he took charge here. This group of twenty likely "rookies" were enlisted through the Omaha station and its branches dur ing thirty days, ending February 8. The picture was taken at Lake Bluff, III., where the would-be seamen are bring trained to man the ships in the nation's fleets. Of the score s.ven lived in Omaha and two in Council Bluffs at the timj of their enlistment. The others were from nearby communities recruitcJ through the branch stations at Lin- fDln, Des Moines, Sioux City and ioux Falls. Omaha lads in the picture are: Merritt A. Sharp, 515 North Seven MUMMY AT LIBRARY CAUSMUSING5 Groh Can Now See the Beau tiful Princess olTnirty Centuries Ago. SAYS SHE WAS BEAUTIFUL By A. R. GROH. , I like to go over to the museum in the public library building and look at the mummies. One of them par ticularly interests me. It is that of a woman, a dainty, little woman. Her spirit took its flight from that body 3,000 years ago. When Roitae Was founded her body had already tain, wrapped in its linen swathings, fev more than three centuries. While Christ was on earth, while Alexan der, Caesar, Charlemagpe, Napoleon had their careers, when Magna Charta was signed, when America was dis covered her body lay just as it lie today. She was a beautiful woman. Of that I am sure from the form of the mummy and the outlines of the face under the linen windings. No doubt she was of royal blood, f can see her, a child, growing up in the palace on the banks of the Nile, a palace where many slaves waited upon her and hastened to do her Uighte'st bidding. Perhaps ahe watched the toilers building the pyr amids. Of Surpassing Beauty. She was a laughing, happy girl, this girl whose soul once inhabited that mummy in our museum. She learned to dance and to sing. And as she grew to young womanhood she bloomed into surpassing beauty, a black-eyed, black-haired maiden. She was robed in the richest cloth ing and wore a jeweled necklace. She loved the splendid feasts it her father's palace, .where there were also skilled musicians and jugglers and wonderful dancers. It was at one of these feasts that she met a young prince, a handsome, dashing young fellow and a warrior, distinguished in spite of his youth. It seemed they were intended for each other from the first. She had eyes for none but him and he was charmed and fascinated by the beauty of this slim, young princess. But, alas, her father had other plans. He commanded her to marry another, by which match he hoped to strengthen his power. The lovers managed to meet in secret in the pal ace gardens. There, in the soft Egyp tian moonlight, the prince pressed to his breast that beautiful form which is now only a mummy and kissed those warm lips which have been dust for thirty centuries. Happy Pair Separated. And then, one night they were sur- ARE YOUR KIDNEYS WEAK? Thousands of Men and Women Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It. Nature warns you when the track of health is not clear. Kidnejr and bladder troubles- cause many annoy ing symptoms and great inconveni ence both day and night. Unhealthy kidneys may cause lum bago, rheumatism, catarrh of the bladder, pain or dull ache in the back, joints or muscles, at times have head ache or indigestion, as time passes you may have a sallow complexion, putty or dark circles under the eyes, some times feel as though you had heart trouble, may have1 plenty of ambition, but no strength, get weak and lose flesh. If such conditions are permitted to continue, serious results may be ex pected; Kidney Trouble in its very worst form may steal upon you. frevalency of Kidney Unease. Most people do not realire the alarming increase and remarkable prevalency of kidney disease. While SPECIAL NOTE You may obtain a sample site bottle of Swamp-Root by enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. This gives you the opportunity to prove the remarkable merit of this medicine. They will also send vou a book of valuable information, containing many of the thousands of grateful letters received from men and women v,ho say they found Swamo-Root to be iust the remedv needed in kidney, liver and bladder troubles. The value and success of Swamp-Root are so well known that our readers are advised to send for a sample site bottle. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton. N. Y. Be sure to say that you read this offer in the Umaha bunday flee. THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH teenth street; Peter L. Christenscn, rural route No. 2; Edward' M. I. Schmidt, 4619 North Twenty-ninth street; Welden P. Darland, 1716 North Twenty-eighth street; Harold G. Cof fey, 1701 Manderson street; Lawrence M. Landon, 2005 St. Mary's avenue; James 'F. Webster, 1001 Park avenue. The Council Bluffs recruits are: Fred erick A. Ross, 534 West Broadway, and Henry Schafer. Over 100 youths applied to join the navy through the Omaha district recruiting station during the thirty days these twenty were accepted. These oassed the various examina tions, the majority of the others fail ing to meet the physical requirements. which are strict. prised by the princess' father with a guard of soldiers, who overpowered the prince, bound him and sent him back to his own kingdom. The princess' grief was pitiful In midsummer she died. The body was embalmed with the finest spices and was laid in the curious coffin of wood and stucco, painted with hieroglyphics and pictures that you can still see upon it. Then it was laid away in the roval senulcher. The prince was killed in a battle with those who kept him from the princess, and his ooay, too, was em balmed in a manner befitting his sta tion. Perchance that is his body in the very next case in the museum. Who knows? The sun knows. Every day he shines upon them through the south windows of the museum. He saw them while they were throbbing to all the emotions of life. He shone on the prince and princess 3,000 years ago, back m old fcgypt. He smiled upon their joy. He witnessed their death and their burial. He knows. Walters Finds the Car , Shortage Not So Acute General Manager Walters of the Northwestern is back from Chicago and while there met a number of the officials of eastern and western lines. He asserts that the opinion is gen eral that there has been considerable of an easing up in-the freight car congestion and, that the worst has passed. Mr. Walters asserts that railroad men are of the opinion that consign ees are using their best efforts in has tening the unloading of cars and that these efforts are being attended vith good results. However, he says that none of the roads have any surplus of empty cars, adding that they will not so long as present high prices for grain maintain and there is grain to sell. Pape, Who Beat His Wife's Visitor, Wins Freedom Frank Pape. 1803 South Fifty-sev enth, street, recently was arrested for giving Jeff Banks, Thirty-sixth and Bedford avenue, an all-round beating up. Pape declared he had found Banks in the Pape, home when he went there unexpectedly. However, Banks failed to appear in police court to prosecute the case when it was called, so Judge Fitzgerald discharged Pape Saturday. Blotchy Skin Manjrfc titm yon have looked Into the air-' ror And wished that your kin would bo lika other pople that you know.'Vtthout a blem ish." Tlin with can be yourt tor th asking. Wash D. D. D. tho lotion of healing oili, over your pimple: or blotches tonight and wake up in the moraine to find them tone! JEXuZX). SHERMAN McCONNELL DRUG CO., kidney disorders are among the most common diseases that prevail, they are almost the last recognized by pa tients, who usually content them selves with doctoring the effects, while the original disease may con stantly undermine the system. If you feel that your kidneys are the cause of . your sickness or run down condition, try taking Dr. Kil mer's Swamp-Root, the famous kid ney, liver and bladder remedy, be cause as soon as your kidneys im prove, they will help the other organs to health. If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need, you can purchase the regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles at all drug stores. Don't make any mistake but remember the name, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Bing hamtoit, N. Y hich you will find on every bottle, 11, 1917. HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS IN POLICE COURT Six Winsome Hisses Inspect the Omaha's House of Scandals. SEE LIFE'S SEAMY SIDE After watching police court procedure for a while Saturday morn ing, six junior civics classes girls of Central High school became dis gusted and went out doors to avoid the disagreeable surroundings and atmosphere. It was their first visit to the city's moral clearing house. When asked what she thought 'of police court, one of the girls. Miss Tolliver Dinneen, replied, Wot much. She is the daughter of W. T. Din neen, chief special agent of the North western railroad, who attended court with the six girl students. They were there to. get first hand know'edee of police court procedure and of the habitues and surroundings ot the place. This they will use in connec tion with their study of government in their Central High school course. Miss Autumn Davies of the school faculty plans to attend the court with her entire class of twenty-five girls and boys a week from Monday. The girls present in court with Miss Din neen and her father Saturday were Catherine and Maybelle North, Blanche Johnson, Ruth Holmes and Marie Huntzinger. For about an hour the girls sat to gether in the front row of spectators' seats in the dingy old court room. All around them were Third ward characters, inmates of resorts arrested and out o.i bond, awaiting trial, burly negroes, dirty boxcar thieves, "shy ster" lawyers, as well as more respec table persons, whose business or curiosity had led them to the court. Scarlet women were also in the room. Their gaudy dress and typical features were interesting subjects for the gaze of the school girls, who took keen interest in all that went on. However, the air in the crowded room became stifling, and long before court adjourned the school girls had seen, heard and breathed more than Why Ples?. A Free Trial of Pyramid Pile Treat" i ment Will Answer the Question Emphatically. qieUol Send lie Bax ot rjramlaV Tour case la tto worse than were the cases of many who did try this remarkable Pyramid Pile Treatment and who have alnce written us let ters bubbling- over with joy and thankfulness. Test it at our expense by mailing the below coupon, or not a 600 box from your druggist sow. Take no substitute. FREE SAMPLE COUPON. PYRAMID DRTO COMPANY. CM Pyramid Building., Marshall, Mich. -Ktndly eend me a Free sample of Pyramid Pile Treatment, in plain wrapper. Kama .......... .................. Street CUT gtt Nuxated Iron Should be Used In Every Hospital and Prescribed by Every Physician . Says Dr. Howard James, lale of the United States Public Health Service It quickly enriches the blood, strengthen the nerves and puts most astonishing youthful power and vigor into the veins of both men and women. It often increases the strength and endur ance of delicate, nervous, run-down folks 200 per cent in two weeks time. Opinions of Dr. Ferdinand King, New York Medical Author, Dr. T. Alphonsus Wallace and other physicians who In a very Interesting and tnitruettve discourse on the sreit value of plenty of Iron In the blood. Dr. Howard James, late of the United Slatee Public Health Service, eald: "A patient of mine remarked to me (after having been on a six weeks' course of Nuxsterl Iron). u'8r. Doctor, that there staff Is like magic' "Previous to using Nuxated Iron, T hud been prescribing the various mineral salts of Iron for years, only to meet complaints of discolored teeth, dls. turbed digestion, tied up, hardened se cretlone, etc., and I had about reached the conclusion that tne only way 10 supply Iron wss to get the patient to cat very large quantities or epinacn, carrots, and lentils, when I came across Nuxated Iron. an elegant. Ingenious preparation containing organlo iron, which hss no destructive action on tne teem , no corrosive effect on the stomach, and which is readily assimilated into the blood and quickly makes its presence felt by Increased vigor, snap and staying power. "Iron Is absolutely necesssry to enable your blond to change food Into living tissue. Without It. no matter how much or what you eat, your food merely passes through you without doing you any good. Tou don't get the strength out of It. and as a consequence you be come weak, pale and sickly looking. Just like a plant trying to grow In a soil de ficient in Iron. "Aa I have ssld a hundred times over, and over, organlo Iron Is the greatest of ail strength builders. If people would only throw away habit-forming drugs and nauseous connections . and take simple Nuxated Iron. I am convinced thft the lives of thousands of persons might be saved who now die aver year from pneumonia, grippe, consumption, kidneya, liver and heart troublea, etc. The real and true cause which started their die eases was nothing more nor less than lack of Iron In the blood. "Thousands of people suffer from Iron deficiency and do not know It. "If you are not strong or well, you owe tt to yourself to make the following flee how Ions' vou can work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two live-grain taoieis of Nuxatsd Iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see how much you have gained. From my own expe rience with Nuxated Iron I feel It Is such a valuable remedy that It should be kept In every nospitai ana prescrioea by every physician In this country." Dr. E- Bauer, a Boston physician, who has studied both In this country and great European medical Institutions, was asked what ha thought of Dr. Jamea remarks. In reply., he said: "I fully agree with Pr. James. People need mora Iron. There can be no strong, vigorous Iron men and beautiful, healthy women without Iron. Not long enough of the sordid place. They left their seats, and for a while waited outside to watch proceedings in sur roundings equally interesting, but physically more wholesome. Then they went home, perhaps sadder, but wiser as to the ways of the under layer of society. London Bars News Posters, To Conserve Paper London, March 10. Beginning to day street news vendors will no long er display posters to indicate t': con tents of the newspapers which they are selling. With the object of con serving the Sur pi the government has issued an order prohibiting .he use of the "contents bills" as they are called, which have been- so famil iar on the s'reets of London. rjionoaoaoaoaonoDoa&Doaoaoooaoaonoaoij Little Ladies Are Wearing Suits 3 rpi O Ihis beason ShOrf (For Girh From Age 10 Up) SILVER LEAF PlllO Vllfl have met with instant sue cess. It is now possible to dress girls at hard-to - c 1 o t h e ages in the most becoming apparel ever created for feminine wear the natty tailored suit. "Silverleaf" suits S nile in every detail. 5 economical, they have I proached by any of f or girls. Won't you bring ... .1 1-J.1 a ana lei ner try un a new ouvenecu. emi. BEDDEO'S 1417 DOUGLAS STREET "Credit That' on the Square" , SonoBononononoPonpoononoPOHonononoiS have tested jNiixaiea iron in . mn oVn to ma who was nearly halt a century old and asked me to I wu uton f l n d him blood pra boy of twen fult ot viror, tollty M m man: In fact, -man ha lth- Dr. Howard Jamts, lat$ United Stattp Public Health Service, UlU pkyskitm ha hiievet tkst mft Ntuf mted In should be prescribed ft meet the fret problem if irom deficiency, with its ottendent symptoms of weak nets, nervousness, lack of vitality, pott uessoud tenorolly rundown conditions tkm AGAINST USE OF 0RBDMKT RET .AUC WON n CMMtly Ukct fcj mmt popl. utandlna; hla aa. Th eacret, ha aid. wa taklnf Iroo Nuxated Iron had 111.4 kim with rnwed life. I At 0 h wu In bad health; at 4 ha wm careworn and nearly alt to -now at 10. after taking Nuxated Iron, a miracle of vitality and hla faca beaming with the buoyancy oi youth." Dr. A. J. Newman, formerly Houae Sur geon, Jefferaon Park Hospital, Chicago, In' commenting on tha value of Nuxated "This remedy hi proven through my own teat oi it to exce. any piriwiii have aver used for creating red blood, building up the nervee, etrengthenlng tha i.. ,. ganrrstoilnar dlreatlvtt disorder. The manufacture are to be congratulated In having given to tha public a long felt want, a true tonic aupplylng iron in an I n urance. 1b h ed to w f7 with tht f 4 4 1 ur of a 1 'VjLa ty. and aa -5Cj vim and vi i Jf young 3 V - jS' a young: C a really was X n Jail Bird On Jury? That is Charged By Melcher Folks Allegations that cue of the men ben cf tht jury which returned a $4,750 verdict in the case of Beatrice Melcher, girl-wife of Rueben Melcher, who sued her father-in-law md mother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Melcher, for $25,000 damages for alienation of Ur husband's ejections, had served a sentence in a peniten tiary are made by the plaintiffs in an affidavit filed in district co-irt in sup port of a motion for a new trial. The elder Melchers assert that this would disqualify the juror, thereby providing a legal loophole for a new trial. V D Suits 0 D o a o a o D 0 a 0 D r D o D o D 0 D 0 D o a o are essentially juve- In addition to feeing a charm that is unap- the usual garments jj D o your little daughter in g nan., e ,,i9 M mvic own pnvaie yiav. easily digested and assimilated form, true health builder in every aense of tha word." Dr. T. Atphonsui Wallace, a physician of many years' experience In this country and who haa been given many honorary titles In England, was next asked to give an opinion on Nuxated Iron. Dr. Wallace aald: "I do not make a practice of recom mending advertised medicinal products, but I have found Nuxated Iron so po tent In nervous, rundown conditions, that I believe all nhouid know of It. The men and women of today need , mora Iron In their blood than -was tho case twenty or thirty years ago. This because of the de mineralized diet which now Is served dally In thousands of homes and also because of the demand for greater resistance necessary to off set tha greater number of health haz ards to be met at every turn." Tha next to be consulted was Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York physician and author, who aald: "I heartily concur In all that Dr. .Tames has said, orfly In some respect I would go further. Dr. Jamea forgot to mention how foods lose their Iron value by Improper methods of .cookery. In the most common foods of America the starches, sugars, table syrups, can dles, polished rice, white bread, soda crackers, biscuits, macaroni, spaghetti, tapioca, sago, farina, degermlnated corn meal, no longer Is Iron to be found. Refining procp&ses have removed tho Iron of Mother Earth from these Im poverished foods and silly methods of home cookery, by throwing down tho waste-pips the water in which our vege tables are cooked la responsible for an other grave Iron loss. Therefore. If you wish to preserve your youthful vim and vigor to a ripe age. you must supply tha Iron deficiency In your fo6d by using soma form of organic Iron Nuxated Iron. Just as you would use aalt when you.' food has not enough salt. - NOTE Nuxated Jron, which it prescribed and recommended above by physicians In such a great variety of cases. Is not a pa tent medicine nor secret remedy, but ona which la well known to druggists and whose Iron constituents ara widely prescribed by eminent physicians everywhere. Unlike tha older tnortranic iron products. It is easily aatlmltated, does not Injure the teeth, make them black nor upset the stomach; on tha contrary it la a most potent remedy In nearly all forms of indigestion, hs Well as for nervous, run-down conditions. Tha manufacturers have such gr?at confidence In Nuxated Iron that they offer to forfeit 1100.00 .to any charitable Institution It they cannot take sny'man or woman under 60 who lacks iron and increase their strength S00 per cent or over In four weeks' time provided they have no serious organlo trouble. They also offer to refund your money It it does not at least double your strength and endurance In ten days time. It Is dispensed In this city by Sherman McConntH Drug Stores and all good drug gists. Advertisement, ' " "I