Newspaper Page Text
National Patriotic Song Contest Closes December 21
HIS is the last month of the patriotic song contest being conducted by the 'Hearst newspapers throughout the country.
T No manuseript will be considered which is' mailed after midnight, December 31st.
Five thousand dollars in prizes are offered for the best patriotic song written by our readers. The first prize is
$2,000; second, $1,000; third, $500; fourth, $300; fifth, S2OO, and ten prizes of SIOO each.
Thousands of manuseripts have been already received from known and unknown authors. Everybody is invited to par
tic'pate in the contest. The object is to get a song that will express the patriotic sentiment of the nation and stir the pulse
of posterity. J
The rules of the contest follow: .
Songs will be judged by a national committee of famous song writers and composers.
o« Atlanta will have its Metropolitan
grand opera next spring, with the usual
seven performances, beginning April 1,
.. The guarantee this year must be, $95,-
4000, or $15,060 more than two years ago,
« the Metropolitan management showing
that traveling expense alone has in
creased by sl2 000
The directors of the Music Festival
Association Monday afternoon voted
unanimously in favor of the opera sea
son, Colonel W. L. Peel having brought
from New York the news tHat Otto
Kahn, president of the Metropolitan, and
other officials were willing to send the
, big company to Atlanta, Letters will be
. sent out soon to subscribers to former
guarantee funds, inviting them to under-
Fur-Trimmed Satin Hats
of Great Smartness
They have just arrived—fresh, modish,
delightful. ‘
All the colors and black are shown and
the trimmings are of fur, seal, moline, nu
tria.
Nothing is smarter just now than the
well-designed fur-trimmed Satin Hat.
These new arrivals are thoroughly correct.
See them while they are at their very best.
Special Turkey Dinner—Orchestra Music—in the Tea
Room Wednesday—l2:3o to 3:30.
Chamberlin-]ohnson-Dußosc Co.
Spats and Spat pumps
Are Very MOdlSh
We have a beauiful Spat Pump in patent
leather—which you’ll find extremely smart with
white or colored spats. Also in black dull kid and
in brown calf and kid. French or military heels.
Fine Values at $7.50.
Spats to match or blend with any color. These
are perfectly made and of the most graceful lines
—just as fetching as can be.
Prices, $3.00 to $5.00.
Cosy Christmas Slippcrs
Felt Comfy Slippers for little folks and big.
We have all colors, shades and sizes. Fur-trim
med, ribbon-rosetted, plain or pinked edges. Buy
them while the lines are full and while you ean get
exactly what you want.
Children’s Comfy Slippers—sl.2s to $1.50.
Women'’s Sizes—s2.oo to $2.50. .
A daimty gift will be a pair of fancy mules in
pink and gold—just right to match the dainty neg
ligee—with or without heels. $2.25 to $6.00.
—~Sorosis Shop—Main Floor.
Special Turkey Dinner—Orchestra Music—in the Tea
Room Wednesday—l2:3o to 3:30.
Chambcrlin-]ol\nson-Dußose CO.
/ . .
This Is the POpular-prlcc
' Corset for Stout Flgurel
It is the Rengo Belt Reducing Corset with its four great exclusive
features, namely:
lirst—The Rengo Belt feature which will straighten the abdominal
line readily and comfortably.
Second—The unusual strength provided. The Rengo will ably stand
any strain a stout woman may demand of a corset under any conditions.
Third—The extra strong elastic webbing which is supplied in exaetly
the right places,
Fourth—the shape-holding qualities of the Rengo are famous. It is
made to retain its original lines—built specifically for the service of the
woman who is stout. :
Kvery model in the Rengo Belt Reducing Corset is lined with double
watch-spring boning that is positively guaranteed not to rust.
[t is a corset that will give the utmost satisfaction and it“is sold at a
very modest price. This week we off er
Special Values from $2.50 to $6.00
—Corset Shop, Second Floor,
Special Turkey Dinner—Orchestra Music—in the Tea Room Wednesday-—12:30 to 3:30.
Chamberlln-Johnson-Dußose~Company
T ATT ANTA GVORGIAN
write the expenses of the season. It is
expected the guarantee fund will be
raised, as in the past, without difflculty.
Colonel Peel said Tuesday that the di
rectors of the association will have the
privilege this season of choosing what
ever operas they may desire from tho
repertoire of the Metrupomidn, as well
as the principal singers. It is possible
that Atlanta may be given several works
never heard here before, %rnvided they
prove successful in New York.
Among the revivals of old favorites
being presented by the Metropolitan this
veare are: Verdi's “The Force of Des
tiny,”” with Caruso and de Luca, old
favorites, and Rosa Ponselle and Alice
Gentle two American girls, whose debut
was made this season with the Metro:
aohmn; Donizetti’'s “Daughter of the
eglmom." with Frieda Hempel Scott)
and D'Angelo; Massenet's “Thais,” with
Farrar in the title role.
Somothlnf of new interest is offered on
the social side this season in the ex&ec
tation that Enrico Caruso will bring Mrs.
Caruso with him, His marriage to a
prominent American girl in New York
was announced several weeks ago.
Continued From Preceding Page.
EARBON, Bamuel .............New York
LEVERS, Fred J......,..Elizabeth, N, J
LONGINOTTI, Theodore
West Hohoken, N. J
LOSAPIO, Domenico... Piedmont, W. Va
LYNCH, David E...,.....Ne1f0r, W. Va
McCUOWN, Harvey A..........Teck, Texn
McDONALD, William ............Chicago
McLAUGHLIN, Edward R..... Derry, Pa
McLAUGHLIN, John William
New Britain, Conn
McMULLEN, Martin J.......Philadelphi.
MARLOW, Alfred ...........Globe, Ariz
MARCINIACK, Andrew... New Kinsingto
MARTIN, Fred L............8rice, Texa
MAI{TI{. FORI .s oo 6000060 o 2o oAARIOR, OR)
MARTIN, Louls ..........5 . Pittaburs
MONKOE, Hurry E.. Grand Rapids, Mich
MONRUE, John H.........C0nc0rd, N, (.
MOONEY, Frederick H.
Grand Rapids, Mich,
MORTENSEN, Bofus ...........New York
MULLEN, William T....Densmore, Kans
MU_I(PIIY‘ William Henry.. Horton, Kans
NICHCIN, Arvil ..........Monette, Ark.
OLSON, Jacob ..........Pollock, 8. Dak
ORR, Roy Everette .. Junction City, Kans
OSTRANDER, Guy William
Breckenridge, Mich
PAYNE, George W. ............Dante, Va.
PALLACK, Adam ........ s Detroit
SROTE: Jobß R, ... .Midd!etown, Pa
PONTZAR, Otto William,
North Minneapolis
POWELL, BEernard ..Wheeling, W. Va
PRENTICE, Ralph ... Huntsville, Ala
PRESBRY, Harold 8. ......Altoona, Pa
PRZYCZKOWSKI, Joseph J., Milwaukee
RASH, Street Cominto, Ark
READ, Noah ......s......Placentia, Cal
wBIR, Peter ..........Bt. Joseph, Minn
REED, Charles E. ..........Moffitt, Tex.
RERD, Gurpey L. -.....:....Venica, Cal
ROACH, Jeremiah F. ~..........8r00k1yn
tEYNOLDS, Orgsen J. ....St. Albans, Vt
ROBERTS, Wiley C. ... Hillsboro, Tenn.
SOCKLIN, Abram ......Cleveland, Ohio
ROGERS, Austin_....Church Hill, Tenn.
ROGERS, Lewis G. ...... Dallas, Tex.
GODGERS, William B. ..Muskogee, Okla.
RONEY, Dwight N. ........Newark, Ohio
RUMBOUGH, George H. . Lynchburg. Va.
SANDERS, Verdin M. . . Archer City, Tex.
SCHOLEN, Albert J. ....St. Cloud, Minn.
SCOTT, Walter F. ............Los Angeles
SMARTT, Roy A. ..........Rossville, Ga.
(Raymond Smartt, 4903 Avenue M.)
SMITH, Max W. . .Cambridge Springs, Pa
SOLON, Richard W. L .Chicago
SOPHIA, Julius C. .. ™. Port Huron, Mich
SPIEGEL, Henry J. ....Cleveland, Ohio
STREET, Alfoncer . Johnson City, Tenn.
TAYLOR, Deuglas M. .. Bav Minette, Ala.
TIREY, Dee B. ......Carben Hill, Ala.
FROWNSELL, Charles 8.,
Manistisque, Mich
TURNER, Philip ..........Richmond, Va.
VELARDE, Julio T. ..... Los Angeles
VETTER, George H. ........Nlles, Mich,
VEAVER, Frank A. ........Benore, Pa.
WITTOWSKY, Gustav ....Perryman, Md
WORL, John T. ............Munice, Ind.
ZIERK, Willlam A. ..........Racine, Wis
Clark Howell, Jr., and
. .
Warren Moise are Majors
Captain Clark Howell, Jr., and Captain
Warren Moise, of Atlanta, have received
promtions to be majors, according to in
formation sent to Atlanta by Colonel J. C
McArthur, commanding the 326th In
fantry Regiment, of the Eighty-second
Division, who reached New York Sun
day with the first troops to return from
France Major Howell is now on a con
valescent leave at Nice, France.
Major Howell commanded Company I,
326th Infantry, Eighty-second Division
which was trained at Camp Gordon He
led his troops during the bloody fight
ing at Argonne Forest, going into action
on October 6. s = <
Every other officer in his company
was either killed or wounded, and only 32
of the 250 men came through alive. The
mess kit on Major Howell's back is re
ported to have been shot~fu'! of holes,
and three men were killed within 5 feet
of him On October 17, when the Ger
mans had been driven into the open and
were being pushed back by cold steel,
the fragment of a shell which exploded
over his head, struck his helmet, and
knocked him unconscious,
.
Negro Burglar Treed in
Case Had 13,000 Smokes
Policeman 8. H. Gresham before dawn
Tuesday was confronted with the prob
lem of reaching the inside of the New
York Case, No. 24 West Hunter street,
without smashing a door. He knew a
negro burglar was treed inside, but
couldn't get to him, as everything was
‘ocked.
Finally he found a small ventilator
window high in the wall, and being a
mall policeman, he crawled through that.
He found the burglar hiding in the
closet and haled him forth. Thirteen
thousand cigarettes had bheen packed
up by the burglar, ready for transpor
tation. The negro, who said he was
John Gray, of Carroliton, was held for
the State Court after a hearing before
Recorder Johnson.
THE BEST GIFT OF ALL is a Loftis ‘‘Per
fection” Diamond Ring. Lowest prices and easy
credit terms loftls Bres, & Co., 5 8. Broad
Bt. Open Evenings. —Adv
Lhadhlls et AL R ———
FOR CITY MARSHAL |
A Cleon Newenarver for Southern Fomes
3 {
; Atlantan Returns
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' From Rervice With
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¢t Canadian Forces
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| REER SRR o 0 sAR S PR I 5w
J. W. BURKE.
The end of the fighting in Europe
brought an end likewise to the hopes
of J. W. Burke, an old employee of The
Atlanta Georgian, ‘to see the fun in
Europe. In order to get across as soon
as possible, Burke enlisted in the
Eighty-sixth Battalion of the Canadian
contingent someihing more than a year
ago, and hoped for a auick trip.
But Halifax was as far east as he
got. Going there to training camp, he
remained in daily hope of getting over
until the armistice came to dz\sh/ll
hope, Discharged with the general/de
mobilization of Canadian home forces,
he returned to Atlanta and to The Geor.
gian, which he left three years ago,
Burke is a member of the force of the
mechanical department.
McCormack to Sound
.
War Note in Trenches
“Dear Old Pal of Mine,” a war bal
lad written in the trenches, and “The
Americans Come,” an episode in
France, will sound the note of war
in the program to be sung by John
McCormack, the famous Irish tenor
at the Auditorium Thursday night.
Mr. McCo mack will onen his recital
with a group of old French, Italian
and English songs, and another group
will be made of the Irish ballads he
sings so charmingly. But admirers
of the big Irish lad are looking for
ward to hLis encores with even more
ihterest than to his program, for Mc-
Cormack is always liberal, and sings
almost everything his audience asks.
Winston Wilkinson, a talented
voung violinist, will play two num
bers, and the piano accompanist will
be Edwin Schneider, who has been
with Mr. ,McCormack for several
vears and who shares with him the
avnplause at every concert. The sale
of seats for the MecCormack concert,
as well as those for Josef Hofmann's
piano recital rext Mondav night are
now on £lle at the Cable Piano Com
pany's store,
e i . . - et————
Insurance Company lo
,
Feast Its War Workers
A ‘“territorial dinner,” given by the
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
to its district managers, who have led in
the sale of war savings stamps in the
last year, will be given at the Hotel
Ansley December 10, it was announced |
Tuesday by George H. Phillips, super
intendent of the Piedmont District, who
has charge of the arangements. Sev
eral officers from the home office in
New York will be among the speakers,
and a number of prominent Atlantanl'
will be guests,
The Metropolitan company has heen
especially active in pushing the sale
of na\'lnfn gtamps ever since this form
of security was issued by the (}ovorn-1
ment, using its national agency force
in this work. The loeal office force took
charge of the pledge-redemption head
quarters in Atlanta, at the Walton
street entrance of the Henley building,
and has sold trousands of dollars’ wnr&
of stamps in the last six weeks, Offi
cials of =ix Southern States will attend
the dinner, which will be preceded by 11
business meeting.
LEMON JUICE
WHITENS SKIN
Girls! Make beauty lotion
at home for few cents
Squeeze the Julce of two lemons
into a bottle containing three ounces
of Orchard White, shake well, and
vou have a quarter pint of the best
pleach'ng and skin whitening lotion,
anl como ex'‘on beautifier, at very,
vey smali cost,
Y ur grocer hns the lemons and any
I#ug “te ¢ or tolle ccunter will sup
ly three ounces of Orchard White for
a few cents. Massage tnis sweetly
racrar lotion Into the face, neck,
arms “nd hands each day and see
how tan, redne«s sallowness, unburn
and windburn da* Noear 21 how
clear, soft and rosy-white the skin
becomes Yes! It {8 larmles Aly
Vote for Walter E.
Harwell for City Mar
shal; Steve C. Glass,
Chief Deputy.—Adv.
Fifteen will be selected which will be published in the Hearst papers. From this number our readers will be asked to se.
lect the prize winners by popular vote. _ ;
All copyright and other privileges are to belong to the authors, the Hearst papers reserving the right of first pubdication,
All songs must be complete in words and musie. -
No song will be considered which has been published or sung prior to submission in the contest. '
‘ Marches, hymns, anthems, ballads and rollicking songs will be considered, so long as they express the patriotic spirit ‘of
the time, . s :
Address contributions to Song Editor of this newspaper and watch its columns for news of the contest. No entry blank
or fee is required. ! ;
New Orleans Sugar
When the sugar card restrictions
were called off December 1 it was
generally believed that there would
be plenty of fine, white sugar in
Atlanta for the holiday cakes and
candy-—always observing the Gov
ernment request that the four
pounds-to-the - person -a - month
limit be adhered to. Now it turns
out that there Is practically no
white refined sugar in!At'anta and
will not be until the end of Decem
ber.
There is plenty of sugar, how
ever—the ‘“white sea" sugar, it is
called; New Orleans sugar that
has the same food and sweetening
value as the finest white sugar, but
it is not so pretty to look at. The
dealers trust that the housewives
will be reaconable about this mat
ter—it's all the sugar they can get,
and it really will do just as well
as the other for practically every
purpose.
The cause of the shortage in re-
i
N S p—
NN .
(/\' . \ k":;\
| G\
e X \ — =
. ine arati de i
E':\:(m:;l sflm:m:"n;m:l:k‘ g&?fl’t;flhg{:&'
" t uty m .
A;’l?n:l!q:l‘. :.nd pure, Y -
On sale at all leading drug stores and toilet counters.
BUT BEWARE of worthless imitations. Note well
the name *“LASHBROW "—nething mere, ner less.
Two kinds, *Natural”” and “‘Dark” Growths,
Twe5ize5...................50c and §I.OO
il bri s id, the wonderful
T ring, Lot RORTES CAI DO Tor
flcml{ct the booklet free with a jar of
SHBROW.
Handled by jobbers everywhere,
LASHBROW is made only by the
LASHBROW LABORATORIES CO.
1714 Preston Place = St. Louis, Mo.
For City Marshal,
TOM M. POOLE.
Vote Wednesday.
The Best Cough Syrup
Is Home-made
I e
you ever tried.
" You've probably heard of this well
[ known plan of making cough syrup at
home. But have you ever used it?
When you do, you will understand
why thousands of families, the world
‘owr. feel that they could hardly kees
house without it. It's simple an
cheap, but the way it takes hold of
& cough will quickly earn it a per
~manent place in your home,
Into a pint bottie, pour 2% ounces
~of Pinex; then add plain granulated
sugar syrup to fill \:ip the pint, Or, if
desired, use clarified molasses, honey,
or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup.
Either way, it tastes ;tgnod, mever
spoils, and gives you a full pint of
better cough remedy than you could
buy' ready-made for three times its
cost,
1t is really wonderful how quickly
this home-made remedy mque" @
cough—usually in 24 hours or less. It
scems to penetrate through every air
passage, loosens a dry, hoarse or tight
cough, lifts the phlegm, heals the mem
branes, and %ives almost immediate
relief. Splendid for throat tickle,
hoarseness, croup, bronchitis and bron
chial asthma.
Pinex is a highly concentrated com
pound of genuine Norway pine extract,
and has been used for gencrations for
throat and chest ailments.
To avoid dinnwmmtment ask your
druggist for “234 ounces of Pinex”
vitfi directions, and don’t accept any
thing else. Guaranteed to give abso
lute satisfaction or moneyi refunded,
The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Pape’s Diapepsin at once ends
sourness, gases, acidity,
indigestion.
Lumps of undigested food causineg
pain, When your stomach (8 acid,
gassy, sour or you have heartburn,
flatuence, headache or dyspepsia, here
is instant relief--No waiting!
\ 1)
| \\\\\‘,“) }
: > 3
I e et
| \&}‘
Don't stay upset! Eat a tablet of
Pape's Diapepsin and instantly your
stomach feels fine. All the Indigestion
pain, gases, acidity and misery in the
stomach ends
Pape's Diapepgin tablets cost little
at any drug Ms“-, but there Is no
surer or quicker tomach rellef
knuwn.wAdwru.‘emunt.
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1918.
fined sugar is the Government's re
cent purchase of 42,000,000 pounds
of it from available markets for
the use of the army, v
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g i eTR TR %*‘ : Re P pgor T e T
’mfl:' I’." m'“%huf"‘ ."!fl gh‘ -II L & 5‘05 g*’" $ el ,;‘Mfl]]am " ‘Lfl(fi‘ 'v:p!: }!Q I‘“‘ m'i ghg;w: "'2 !it ':!z;;}[;;"
*
e from the White Meat of Coconut
Made from the White Meat of Coconuts
Here is the final solution of the butter problem—offered you in TROCO— the
new-day product. It tastes like fine ¢reamery butter. Butit is made from
the white meat of the COCONUT, churned with pasteurized milk.
This new product, with its delicacy and flavor,
appeals especially to butter users who rebel at the
present price.
It is nutritious and easily digested. Like butter,
it supplies fuel for the body, to keep up energy.
An Appealing Food
While old laws compel us to label TROCO as
oleomargarine, the two products have no relation.
TROCO contains no beef or hog fats. The white
meat of coconut, churned with fresh pasteurized
milk, are the appetizing ingredients.
A Big Saving in Price
We want you to judge TROCO entirely on a
quality basis, and not from the standpoint of price.
oS 7 Y
. rE X g R g
e S‘_’ap: . WA
ITe rrovision Lo. it T
PR Y i . e e
Atlanta, G &
3 I bt o RN
A v O Mo L iR T P
anta, Ga. o R
# 0 AR O B
NOTICE~—Under the law, all butter substitutes must be branded Oleomar- (¢ : oe ‘
garine. That law was passed hefore TROCO was invented. So the Troco = Y g ;{f:"b'#fl:"
vuv:nfit; l:l brnn«'l"-d"'";)loo"mrurin»." though there is no oleo in it. AW e ol 4
butter substitutes musi also pay an extra tax if colored. So the col R %
for TROCO comes in a capsule, Ad(r it yourself, as you do with olumusrl.o:. < 550{'\ o R 4
" £t
e T A " PTy . R " S e
Ty ST
WAI f I it T e e O T RPR R ey
cuties e TS R i S
siourbioo arving ror V antoi lron!
Modern Methods of Cooking and Living Have Made an Alarming Increase
. . o . .
in Iron Deficiency in Blood of American Men and Women
Why Nuxated Iron 8o Quickly Builds Up Weak, Nervous, Run- T —
Down Folks—Over 3,000,000 People Annually Taking It in o —
This Country Alone to Increase Their Strength, Power, Energy Al G
and Endurance, ~! e B
, . S “{’z )
| “Is your blood starving for want of iron? If you were to go without ISO 7 R ~
' eating until you became weak, thin and emaciated, you could not do a more BT o —«*fi}, ._"7,,
serious harm to yourself than when you let your blood literally starve for \ (A 4: |
want of iron ~fron that gjves it strength and power . T~ :»‘_‘s-,,;,11‘;, J
to change food into living tissue,” says Dr. James it gy A iR e
' Francis Sullivan, formerly physician of Bellevue 7 '.ég ?:‘ b
' Hospital (Outdoor Dept.), New York, and the West- g" ! R’ 8 ;,zf'
| chester County Hospital, el ) h % o
| «‘Modern methods of cooking and the rapid pace ? ( 3 W e
‘at which people of this country live has made such 5 s e o &
an alarming increase in iron deficiency in the blood o B : s '
of American men and women that I have often s b, o i ';, 3 .y f"’ .
marveled at the large number of people who lack -;;’ E ‘,él. § - ,;‘ o !
iron in the blood, and who never suspect the cause i A iy &\ . 4
of their weak, nervous, run-down state. Lack of < ] #, e J
fron in the blood not only makes a man a physical RN """!\ P 4 Y »o} ari |
and mental weakling, nervous, firritable, easily sI e - =‘\
fatigued, but it utterly robs him of that virile force, % g
that stamina and strength of will which are so b F s
necessary to success and power in every walk of Which \ L k 0 i
life. It may also transform a beautiful sweet- kind of man ’l‘
tempered woman into one who is cross, nervous and re 9 b
ou? Lt
frritable. e > F 3 . N %,,
“I have strongly emphasized the great
necessity of physicians making blood ex
aminations of their wenk, anaemie, run
down patients. Thousands of persons go
an year after year suffering from physical
woakness and a highly nervous condition
due to lack of sufficient iron In thelr red
blood corpuscles without ever realizing the
roal and true cause of their trouble. With«
out Iron In your blood your fobd merely
passes through the body, something like
corn through an old mill with rollers so
wide apart that the mill ean't grind
“For want of iron you may be an old
man at thirty, dull of intellect, poor In
memory, nervous, Irritable amd all ‘run
down,' while at 5@ or 60 with plenty of
fron in your blood you may still be young
in feeling, full of life, your whole being
brimming over with vim and energy
“An proof of this take the case of former
United States Senator and Viee Presiden
tial Nominee Charles A. Towne, who at
past 68 is still a veritable mountain of
tireloss energy. Senator Towne says: ‘I
have found Nuxated Iron of the greatest
benefit as o tonic and regulative, Hence
forth I shall not be without it. lam in a
r«mon to uum{ for the benefit of others
o the remarkable and immediate helpful
ness of this rcmu!{. and 1 unhulutr ly
recommend Nuxated Iron to those 'houf.oql
the need of rencwed energy and the reg
ularity of bodily functions
“Put in my opinion you ean't make
strong, keen, foreeful men and healthy,
ru{-chukod women lay feeding them on
metallic iron. The old forms of metallic
fron must go through a digestive process
to transform them into organic fron—Nux.
ated Iron--before they are reidy to be
taken up and assimilated by the humaen
system. Notwithstanding all that has been
| EASTMAN BANK CHARTERED.
The Secretary of State has granted a
charter to the Bank of Mastman, which
is capitalized at $60,000. The incorpo
Compare it with the very best butter that you
can buy. Let flavor be the sole snd only judge
Forgct that it saves you 20 to 30 cents a pound. .
TROCO, used as shortening, goes farther than
butter. This will appeal to economical cooks who
want results without
waste. .
Get your first pound to- T B
day and give it an all- R
round trial. A capsule of T S S Y
vegetable coloring sup- i TSS g
plied on request by your ' &.}, '
dealer. 7 i
Write Troco Co.,
Milwaukee, U.S. A.,
for Free Cookißook. m
sald and written on this
subject lc( well-known phy
siclans, thousands of people
still insist in dosing themse
selves with metallie iron
simply, 1 suppose, because 3
it costs a foew ocents less, [
strongly advise readers In &y M
all cases to get a physi- .
einn's preseription for ors voot
ganic fron--Nuxated Iron-—
or if you don't want to go . o ‘
to this trouble, then pur- -
chase on®y Nuxated Iron in
fts original packoages and see that this
particular naome (Nuxated Iron) appears
on the package. llf you have taken prep
arations such as Nux and Iron and other
similar iron rlmlur"! and falled to get re
sults, remember that such products are an
entirely different thing from Nuxated
fron"
In commenting upon the value of Nux
ated Iron ns o means for ('rnntmg red
blood, stroength and endurance, Dr, Ferdi
nand King. a New York physician and
medienl author, says:
“Hearcely n day goes by that 1 see wom
en whose careworn faces, dragging steps
and generally wealk, tired appearance show
unmistakable signs of that anaemie, runs
down condition usunlly brought on by lack
of iron In the blood
‘“There ean be no strong, healthy, hou“
tiful women without iron and, inasmuc
as refining processes and modern rooklng
methods remove the iron of Mother Eart
from so many of our most common foods,
this fron deficlency should be supplied by
using some form of organic iron just as
we tge salt when our food has got enough
aalt
“Iron 18 absolutely necessary gto enable
your blood to change food lntnjlvlnl tis
sue. Without it no matter how much or
rators are Leßoy Pharr, J. B. Holme:
J. D. Herrman and others.
The Bank of Quitman, which w
chartered in 1888, has petitioned for
renewal, which will be granted.
AN v“‘
£ Y i}&é"i
ko e 0 42" iy -"k{{‘*‘
by T ot ES S
E 00 i
|
N Ve ) 4
A Which
: b kind of woman
"R e are you?
what you ent your food merely passes
through you without doing yau good, and
uM A consequence you becomo weak, pale
and sickly-looking fust like a plant trylng
to grow in a soll defictent in tron. Pallop
means anaqmin, The skin of an anasmio
woman s pale, the flesh flabby. The
memory fails, and often they become weak,
nervous, irritable, despondent and melans
choly Give such a woman a short courss
of Nuxated Iron and she often quickly bes
comes an entirely different individuslss
strong, healthy and rosvecheeked 1 have
used Nuxated Iron widely in my own pPrags
tice In most severs, aggravated conditions
with unfalling results I have induced
many other physicians to give it & trial,
nll of whom have given me most surpriss
ing, reports in regard to its great power
as a health and strength bullder,™
MANUFACTURERS' NOTE: Nuxated Iron which
8 used by Dr Rulllvan and others with such suss
prising results, and which s preseribed snd s
ommended above by physicians s gt & W
remedy, but one whieh is well known (o dnma
everywhere Uniike the clder inorganic irom prods
vets, 1t s eastly assimilated, does ot insure the
teeth, make them black, nor upset | slomach,
The manufacturers guarantee succopssf anil el
tirely satisfactory restilte o every ol ARer
they whil refuld your wpouey i 5 e :
this cty by Jacobs’ Dharmacy and §ol othee
druggists. »Auma-mvm.
7