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HOTELS AND RESORTS.
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Palm Beach Hotel """'«“%,*fmoo hotel.
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Bo Tl T ours: Bov GO resttul. gay.
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Write for Booklet ‘
66 ) 99 |
Facts About Diamonds ‘
|
We have a carefully written 20-page booklet
which contains many interesting and valuable facts
that will be helpful to intending diamond buyers.
This booklet contains facts which are not gen
erally known; and gives you the benefit of the
knowledge gained by more than a quarter of a cen
tury’s experience in the diamond business,
The subjects covered are Reasons for Owning
Diamonds, Exchange Privileges, Monthly Payments,
Diamonds as an Investment, Simplified Grading,
Approval Shipments and other important items of
interest.
Net prices are quoted on all weights and grades.
You can tell from the illustrations the size stone a
certain amount will buy. o
Call or write for this booklet, and-for our 144-
page general catalogue.
=% Maier & Berkele, Inc.
‘l«].\ ‘*‘( Diamond ‘Merchants
\‘*u 31 Whitehall St.
o Established 1887
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Mother, Your Child needs
a Harmless Laxative.
If Tongue is Coated, Stomach Sick, or the Child
is Cross, Feverish, Constipated, dive
“California Syrup of Fige.”
Don’t scold your fretful, peevish,
child. See if the tongue is coated;
this i 8 a sure sign that the little
stomach, liver and bowels are clogged
with bile ana Imperfectly digested
ood.
When listless, pale, feverish, with
tainted breath, a cold, or a sore
throat; If the child does not eat,
sleep or act naturally, or has stom
ach-ache, indigestion or diarrhea,
s‘lve", tanspoonful of “California
Byrup’ of Figs,” and in a few hours
all the waste matter, bile and fer
menting food will pass out of the
| 2 Read every line of this advertisement.
Ladies, Aitenllon!Compare the price with those from the
other stores—then follow the crowds Monday tothe DI X I E SALE.
@-“- WE MUST BRING YOU [Sea Island
v Y 2
TO THE $30,000 SALE | Sheeting
d. \
We are determined that you must come to this Mg:,]l;fy l7lc
Absolute Clearance Sale Advertising &§ D yg,
A little cash will do wonders. Only 15 Yards to a
Special bargains that will pack Customer.
this store all day long.
't Miss It--Tell Your Friends—Come Earl
Don’t Miss It--Tell Your Friends—Come Early!
SHOE | For Monday only, Dress Ladies’ House Dresses; nice
ginghams, stripes and plaids patterns; ginghams 9 5
SPECIALS values 26 ¢to 3bc¢, at -;“EB?’_‘"”"’EL;;_-._(_:_
LADIES' swors §L..._2le¥d | ——_—— e
Sizes 31 to 5 Ladies’ Bilk Hose; all colors; Ladies’ Middy Blouses, val.
:’"::.;o“" 950 good seconds: l - 582'00' i °
25c¢ a Pair pecial $1.4
Dark and High Tan g i a
W, $3.95 CHILDREN'S DRESSES, Ladios' Untrimmed Hats;
eo || 5100 Valne: e G| | plonaia vt shaes; e
o i 2.00 Value; special .. $1.45 all, ¢ i
Values .. B $2.50 Value, ehestal A§l.7§ up to $3.00; special ... 480 |
M——.___—
Ladies’ and Children’s | | Y,ofk and Dress Shirts| | mpoihe Decatur
Sweaters. Weare lioy pumity ehioviot 958 Street or Sol
-0o vawes | args | Lotk et s 2 *YYY | | diers’ Home Car
$3.00 values :;;: . and get off at
000 valuss ... 4108 DIX I E Bell Street. It's
$7.50 values ......3545 :
SIO.OO :.!:u 000 4896,16 tsh: 0 .It?leg chgfi’elli
i vilie " ‘Gse[| DRY GOO DS STORE |gave money.
up to §2.50...... 304-306 Decatur Street
COAL-SHOVELING RECORD,
JOHNSTOWN, PA., Jan. 25.—Two
hourg after maklnf a record in loading
32 cars of coal, which constitutes a f(ood
day’s work for two men, Felix Weizkais
died of heart failure brought on by over
exertion.
i ————————————— e it
bowels, and you have a healt'y.‘
playful child again. Chil@ren Idye
this harmless “fruit laxative,’ and
10thers can rest cagy after giving it,
because it never fails to make their
Ilt{(le “insides” gweet and wholesome.
eep it handy, Mother! A littl
given today saves a sick child to
‘morrow, but get the genulne. Ask
your druggist for a bottle of genuine
“California Syrup of Figs and Elixir
of SennA,” made by the California
Fig Syrup Co., wnich has directions
for bables, children of all ages, and
for grown-ups plainly on the bottle
—Advertisement.
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, JANUARY 26, 1919.
0. 8. C. MEN MAY
KK ARMY JOBS
By A. F. JOYNER.
CAMP GORDON, Jan. 25.—Modifi
cation of the order issued last No
vember, which put an end to the com
missioning of graduates from the
central officers’ training schools and
directing them to be placed on the
reserve list is indicated in a new or
der just issued from camp headquar
ters, \
New instructions received from the
office of the adjutant general of the
army directs that graduates from
these schools who desire appoint
ments in the regular army make ap
plication on the prescribed forms,
and that these applications be acted
upon by the school commanders by
making recommendations.
The adjutant general's order, as
contained in an official memorandum
Jjust published here, follows:
“1. It has come to the attention of
this office that enlisted men graduat
ing from officers’ training schools, on
or subsequent to November 11, the
date upon which appointments in the
United States army, for the period of
the existing emergency, were
stopped, desire to mafie application
for appointment in the regular army.
“2. Such men would have been
commissioned in the army for the pe
riod of the existing emergency had it
not been for the order stopping ap
pointment, and would have been given
the opportunity of expressing their
desire for appointment in the regu-
Jar army. In this connection, they
would have indicated such desire on
Forms 150 and 151, CPB-GS.
“3. Enlisted men who successfully
complete the course of instruction at
officers’ training schools, and who are
not discharged as officérs, but are
discharged as enlisted men, being ap
pointed to commissioned grade in the
officers’ reserve corps, inactive status,
may make sich application on Form
151 CPB-GS. Their immedite com
manding officers, or the school com
manders will complete the first in
dorsement on Form 151 CPB-GS, and
will modify the sentence, ‘I do (do
not) recommend this officer for exam
ination for appointment to the regular
army,' to suit conditions. A suitable
notation would be to add after the
word ‘recommend’ the words ‘this dis
charged soldier, commissioned in the
offiters’ reserve corps, inactive status,
ete.
“4. These instructions will be pub
lished to all concerned in officers’
training schools for the line and staff
corps or departments of the army.”
The policy of the War Department
with reference to trials of men who
deserted from organizations en route
overseas has been announced at Camp
Gordon, as follows:
Immediately upon apprehension of
such deserters efforts will be made,
by cable if necessary, to secure the
date of the alleged desertion, and
upon receipt of such information a
charge of desertion will be preferred.
Trials will be held in this . country,
with the least possible delay, for the
men whose organizations have re
turned to this country or whose or
ganizations may be long delayed in
returning. For thgse whose organi
zations have been designated for
prompt return to the United States
trials will be held as soon as possible
after their arrival,
Lieutenant William M. Mahoney,
casual officers’ detachment, has lost
| such a great variety of things that he
! was given prominent space on Fri
‘day’s camp general orders. Two com
mercial blankets, one service hat and
one regulation army locker are among
the articles listed.
Supercargoes for the Government
owned vessels under the United
States shipping board are being re
| cruited at Camp Gordon. The jobs
pay $1756 per month and subsistance
and these officers will wear a dis
tinctive uniform and eat at the cap
tain's table. The supercargo of a ves«
sel bears the same relation to the
caplain as the controller of a corpo
ration does to its general manager.
el s et
!
e, DIRBETES
« DQ Can be CURED.
FREE. informa
tion telling of a
4,®v for"Dlabetes
77 it t drugs
% 'NtRP’mXi.R:‘; i
i, W today for hook
] ” let.
lADO--MINERAL €O., 48 Grand Theater Bidg., Columbus, 0
B T ===
Fairview Farms," Atlanta’s
Model Dairy Houses, Are
Some Wonder Workers
The Falrview Farms, Inc., have
started their milk deliveries in At
lanta, anad I understand that for the
first week of their career they
achieved the unique record of dou
bling the amount delivered on each
successive day. This, however, deals
with the business end of the con
cern, and 1 never cared very much
bor business. Rather, I wanted to see
the wheels go 'round. So when Corn
Licker Charley told me there was a
00w out there that produced more |
than seven tons of milk a year and a
bull that was worth better than :15,.‘
000 and a lot of little new Georgia
Cracker cows, or cowlets, just able to
toddle around on their long and un-‘
stable legs and bulge their eyes out
at you, why, I said lead me to it.
Sunset lmm-h;i-l.
Corn Licker Charley ‘is C. L, C.
Thomas. The alias is derived from
the odd progression of his initials and
not from any predilection for moon
shine. He looks like the late Kyrle
Bellew, who was a shoekingly hand-
Someé man, and he can drive a motor
car with anybody in the State. We
went rolling out to the Fairview
Farms the other afternoon, a mile
and a’half south of Hapeville, and ar
rived just as the sun went down.
Sunset makes no difference at the
Fairview Farms, which are electrical
ly lighted. Judging by the milk pro
duction of some of the cows, I jumped
at the conclusion that they were
fooled into working overtime, but it
was explained that this was not so.
They work substantially the same
hours as scrub cows on a farm, but
with different results in the way of
output. o
Getting Ready for Year.
The Fairview Farms have been
buflding and getting ready since last
summer, and they are now built, and
ready and producing the cow-juice
They are milking 62 cows of 150 gal
lons a day now. In a month said
Raymond 1. Pike, the manager, they
will be milking 100ows for 225 gal
lons. The ultimate aim is at least 300
Cows and upward of 1,000 gallons of
milk a day.
~ While more interested in the hu
man—that is, the bovine—element of
the big new dairy farm, I couldnt
help admirin® the mechanical set
tings. There is a dairy house or
creamery, where the milk is received,
in covered vessels, and starts into a
lengthy and involved machine that
pasteurizes the milk, cools it to 34 de
grees, bottles it and caps the beuttles
automatically at the rate of 48 to the
minute, and.turns the product over to
& guy who is someéwhat busier than
a one-armed billposter in a high wird,
Just taking care of what the machine
turns out. The milk then is stored
in a room refrigerated to 38 degreces,
at which temperature it is kept until,
packed in ice, it is delivered, never
once having been exposed to human
contact, or having reached a high
enough temperature for any bacterial
multiplication,
And a Mechanical Milker.
They are installing a mechanical
milker, too. Gosh—what must the
‘kind-faced cows ‘hlnk of it all?
Mechanical st 'ls, too. White iron
stanchions that inclose the fawn
colored necks and turn and swing so
easily that the cow doegn’t realize she
is retained until she starts away
from there. And cement floors, and
shaving bedding, and everything. No
wonder the cows have kind faces.
Not all the stalls are of the iron
bed type. Mr. Pike took us into an
other apartment of the bovine hotel
and turned on the lights. These wera
box stalls, like the ones they keep
race horses in-—big, roomy affairs,
with running water—that is, the wa
ter runs when the occupant sticks her
nose in the little metal basin. |
If you ever saw a champion dairy
Jersey cow, you will understand that
the similarity to a race horse does not
stop with the “test” atall—the stalls
where cows are kept who are getting
their chance at record-making; where
every scrap of food s weigehed and
every ounce of milk, |
A Cow Is Wonderful,
A high-bred Jersey cow is a won
derful creature, whose function is to
convert food and water into rich milk.
She does thin in a degree almost pass
ing belief. Victoria of Fairview Farms
~the top-notcher of the herd—has a
2-year-old record of 12,542 1-2 pounds
of milk in that year, and 7221-2
pounds of butter. That record won
her the silver medal for the United
States. Now in her third year she is
on her way to more than 15,000
roundn of milk-—that is, 1,760 gal
ons. The year ends February 7, and
she already is ahead of the State rec
ord for 3-year-olds—far ahead. Keet
-Ba, who holds the Fairview herd rec
ord for one day, set that mark at 62.5
pounds of milk in 24 hours—7.4 gal
lons. She also holds the herd record
for one month--1,640.7 pounds of milk,
an average of 6.6 gallons a day.
Wonderful creatures! One of these
cows will weigh about 900 pounds;
not an ounce of superfluous flegh—
fine and trim and hard as a derby
racer; built and bred to convert hay
into milk, and performing with the
same classic’ ability and steadiness
of Lee Axworthy on the track; day
in and day out, for 15 years or more
of usefulness.
Genealogly Carefully Kept,
Then there is Toa Queen, who at 2
years old produced 11,239 pounds of
milk and became the world's cham
plon senior 3-year-old in Class AA:
mother of Etablilizer and lEqualizer,
two of the four herd bulls; and Lip
sa, for whom $3,000 recently was
‘turned down cold, whose engaging
and intelligent countenance adorns
the letterheads of the farms; and her
full slster, Mascal, winner of the
bronze medal for the United States
In her elass as a 3-year-old.
They get one pound of food for
every three of milk they produce-—
and how they do it I will leave you
to figure out for yourself.
Then we visited a pen with about
30 calves-~little Georgia Crackers, My,
Pike called ‘them. because they were
born at Fairview. And then we
went to oall on the sires,
“Gentlemen” Not So Mild.
The gentlemen of the herd occupled
a row of large private apartments,
four of them, and we viewed them
through ®iiding windows 8o ag not to
be mauled. They did not have kind
faces, like the cows. They wore flerce
and hlupty expressions and looked
trueulent in the extreme, One of
them grumbled hoarsely at us and 1
mada sure the wall was substantial,
They weigh from 1,300 to 1,800
pounds, the biggest ones being 8-
‘ur-olda-— Lass 64th's Son, and Lou's
orono. The former had a sister, Bo
phle’'s Agnes, that sold for $10,009;
and he is a $15,000 honuty, More than
60 of his brother ! sisters sold
for an average * than SI,OOO
aplece, |
These bhovine aristocrats certainly
are prolific, '
Mr. Pike, vice president and gen
oral manager of the farms, came
from Geneva, Ohio, where he was
munuger of the Fairview rarms. He
is a finished dairy farmer, or what
ever it should be called, and he
brought with him R%y L. Johnson,
who, he says, is probably the best
cow-man in ‘he world, |
Can Beat a N%]nchinc.
Also he is one of the two men at
Fairview Farms who can outmilk a
mechanical milker, He is a New
Englander by birth, and is devoted to
the work, which occupies him from
3.456 a. m. until 9 p. m., with no aft
ernoons off. During a year test of
cne cow he was grooming for a cham-‘
pionship, he established the uniqué
record of milking that cow every sin
gle time she was milked for 865 days,
His interest In these performances is
exactly the same as that of a famous
horse trainer caring for a great racer
during a hard season. Devotion goes
no farther than that.
The Fairview Farms were orgau
ized by Henry K, Watkins, of the
Empire Cotton Oil Company: Thomas
C Law, George W, Brine, R. 8. Park
er, L. L. Shivers, H. B. Darling and
C. L. C. Thomas—with Ms. Pike, of
ccurse. The plant is called “a model
and scientific dairy for Atlanta.” It
includes a chemical laboratory, where
tn addition to the regular pasteurized
milk for household use, “nursery milk"”
and “modified milk” is put up, the
latter according to physicians’ pre
scriptions.
Extetpally the buildings are situ
ated in an oak grove, on a site ag
gregating 276 acres. It is on the
Dixje Highway, and appears destined
to pbecome a famous show place as
well as a great Georgla dairy farm.
FIFTEEN HUNTERS KILLED.
BLOOMINGTON, ILL., Jan. 25.—The
death of Charles Johnson, a farmer liy
ing near Woodfimli, caused by a gunshot
wound, brought ‘r'xe number of fatalities
in hunting accidMnts this season in Cen
tral Illinois up to fifteen.
S ——— e ——————i—
A Well-Known Actress Tells How to
Darken Gray Hair With a Simple
Home-Made Mixture,
Joicey Willlams, the well-known
American actress, who was recently
playing at the Imperial Theater in St.
Louis, Mo., made the following state
ment about gray hair and how to
darken it:
“Anyone can prepare a simple mix
ture at home, at very little cost, that
will darken gray, streaked or faded
nair, and make it soft and glossy.
To a half pint of water add 1 ounce
of bay rum, a small box of Barbo
Compound, and quarter ounce of
glycerine. These ingredients can be
bought at any drug store at very lit
tle cost, or any druggist can put it up
for you. Apply to the hair twice a
week until the desired shade is ob
tained, This will make a gray-haired
person look 20 years younger. This
is not a dye, it does not color the
most delicate sealp, is not sticky or
greasy, and does not rub off ——Adv,
LEMON JUICE
WHITENS SKIN
Girts! Make beauty lotion
at home for few cents
Squeeze the Jjuice of two lemom
Into a bottle containing three ounces
of Orchard White, shake well, and
u have a quarter pint of the hest
:oluu:hlnl and skin whitening lotion,
and complexion beautifier, at very,
v -mgfl cost.
.?onr grocer has the lemons and any
@rug store or tollet counter will sup
ply three ounces of Orchard White for
A sow cents. Massage this sweetly
frogrant lotion into the face, neck,
arms and hends each day and see
how tan, redness, sallowness, sunburn
and windburn disappear and how
clear, soft and rosy-white the skin
hocomes. Yaa! Tt is harmless.—Adv.
JUST USE SLOAN’S
Then You'll Understand Why It's
the World’s Greatest
Pain Relief.
Sloan's Liniment does exactly what
Is clalmed for it—relleves quickly,
without rubbing. It penetrates. Use
ful in relleving external pains, sore
ness and stiffness, such as follow ex
posure, over-exercise or unusual exe
ertion,
A big pottle kept handy will last
long and pay for {itself in comfort
able relief the first application. Clean,
convenient, economical, Can be
bought at any drug store, Get It
today. 20c, 60c, $1.20.
¥ . " %
Sloan’s
OIS PR aB b asX ) L
R R TD S
CREAM FOR CATARRH
OPENS UP NOSTRILS
Tells How To Giet o*uk Reliof
from Head-Colds. It §Bplendid
In one minute your clogged nostrils
will open, the alr passages of your
head will clear and you can breathe
freely, No more hawking, snuffling,
blowing, headache, dryness, No utruf—
gling for breath at night, your cold
or catarrh will be gone.
Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream
Balm from your druggist now. Apply
a little of this fragrant, antiseptic,
healing eream in your nostrily, 1t pen
etrates through every alr passage of
the head, spothes the Inflamed or
swollen mucous membrane and rellef
comes instantly.
It's just fine, Don't stay stuffed-up
with a cold or nasty catarrh—Rellef
comes 8o quickly.-~Advertisement,
Sanitary Facilities in l
~ All Homes Here Ordered
Declaring that lack of sanitary con
dittons In many Atlanta homes causes
the high rate of typhold cases here, the !
United States Public Health Service has |
urged that all homes not connected with |
a sewerage system be provided with san
flary facllities at once, in cnmpglnni
with an erdinance passed by City Coun. I
cil last year. An n‘mroved type of sani
tary fixture is on display at the office 01l
the United States Public Health Serv
ice, No. 405 Rhodes Building, and at
the City Hall.
.
Negro Mass Meetling ‘
To Be Held Sunday '
A mass meeting will be held by the!
negroes of the cn‘y Sunday afternoon at
3 o'clock at the Odd Fellows' Building, |
when John H. Shillady, of New York,
will address them on some of the von—l
ditions growing out of the war. (. A.|
Towns, of Atlanta University, will {M’F-'
slde, Mr, Shillady is national sccretary |
of the N. A. A, C. P, in America Musle |
will be furnished by a number of the
glee clubs of the colleges of the eity.
If we want to
: There are about twenty mil
lion owners of’ Lil)erty Boncls
in this country, and we
: haven't read of anybody starv
ing to death, in saving up to
buy them'——have you?
Which goes to prove that
most of us really can save—if
we want to. You are not .
, going to- drop back into the
‘ rut of careless spcnding--are
youl | . :
Your money will earn 3%%
interest in a Savings A ccount
at the
Tlurd Natlonal Banlc
Broad and Marietta Sts.
"OFFICERS:
FRANK HAWK1N5\........... President
THOS. C. ERWIN ..........Vice President
W. W. BANKS ............ Vice President
JOMN W, GRANT .. ......Vice President
J. N. GODDARD .....,......Vice President
A. M. BERQSTROM ......,.....,..Cashier
Is Your Blood Starving for Want of Iron?
Modern Methods of Cooking and Living Have Made an Alarming Increase
in Iron Deficiency in Blood of American Men and Women
Why Nuxated Iron 8o Quickly Builds Up Weak, Nervous, Run
down Folks—Over 3,000,000 People Annually Taking It in
This Country Alone to Increase Their Btrength, Power, En
ergy and Eudurance.
“Is your blood starving for want of iron? If you were to go without
eating until you beeame wenk, thin and emaciated, you could not do a
more serfous harig to yourself than when you let your blood literally starve
for want of {ron-—iron that gives it strength and
power to change food Into living tissue,” says Dr.
James Francis Sullivan, formerly physician of Belle
vue Hospital (Outdoor Dept), New York, and the
Westchester County Hospital.
“Modern methods of cooking and the rapid pace
at which people of this country live has made such
an alarming inerease tn iron deficieney in the blood
of American men and women that I have often mar
veled at the large number of people who lack iron
in the blood, and who never suspect the cause of
their weak, nervous, run-down state. Lack of tan
in the blood not only makes a man a physical and
mental weakling, nervous, irritable, easily fatigued,
but it utterly robs him of that virile force, that stam
ina and strength of will which are so necessary to
success and power in every walk of life. It may also
transform a beautiful, sweettempered woman into
one who 1s cross, nervous and irritable,
“I have strongly emphasized the great
necersity of physiciaps making hlood exam
inations of their weak, anaemic, run-down
pationts. Thousands of persons go on yoear
after year suffering from physical weakness
and a highly nervous condition due to lack
of sufficient (ron in their red blood corpus
clos without ever realizing the real and teue
cause of their trouble. Without iron in
your bled your food merely passes through
the body, something Wke corn through an
01l mill with rollers so wide apart that the
mill ean't xrlm},
“For want o m{u you may be an old
man at thirty, dull of intellect, poor ih
memory, nervous, frritable pnd all ‘run
down,' while at 650 or 60 with plenty of
iron in your blood you may still be young
in feeling, full of life, your whole being
hrnkmml over with vim and -m-r,y
“An proof of this take the l'nl;‘: Former
United Btates Senutor and Vico-Presidentinl
nominee Charfes A. Towne, who at past 68
I still a veritable mountain of tireless en
crgy. Senator Townoe says: ‘I have found
Nuxated Iron of the greatest bhonerit wse
tonie and regulative. Henceforth T shall
not be without l\.‘ I am (n & position to
tentify for the behefit of others to the re
markable and (immedinte helpfulness of this
remedy, and 1 unhrnllnlm’ly rocominend
Nuxated Iron to those who foel the need of
renewed energy ahd the regularity of bodily
functions.”
‘gut in my urlmau you can't make stro
“Rut (i my opinten you ean't make strong
kobn.lnni’om} men nyl healthy rusy-ohoeled
women by feoding them on metallic iron.
The old forms of metallic lran must go
!hroufih i digestive process to transform
them into organic Jron——Nuntm P T
fore troa‘nu rondy to be taken up and
assimilated by the human system. Notwith-
=B9 and COLEMAN #g7a
@) AT FIVE POINTS EE 1
. OVER LIGGETT'S :
$5.00
PAINLESS ™. CROWN and
EXTRACTION ety BRIDGE
OF TEETH QTP SPECIALISTS
WE MAKE ZND DELIVER PLATES SAME DAY
W. B, SYMMERS .........,..Asst. Cashier
A. J. HANSELL .............Asst. Cashier
W. V. CROWLEY ......,......Asst. Cashier
do B WALLAGE '...voiviaiic.es, iAULItOF
R. C. HACKMAN .......Mgr. Savings Dept.
3
Lok
7 4
\4 y : 4
\..' oy
Which ©
kind of man
are you?
standing all that has been
snld and written on this
subject by well-known
physicians, thousands of
people still insist in dos-
Inf themselves with me
tallie iron simply, I sup-~
pose, boecause It costs &
few eonts less, | strongly
advise readers In all casos
to get a rhyuh-lnn'l rrn
seription for organic iron
=Nuxated Iron--or if you
«‘hm'!‘wl‘l{t to go to this
Houble, then purchase only Nuxated Iron
In its original packagoes and see that this
particulnr nu% (Nuxnted lron) appears
on the package. 1f you have taken preps
arations such as Nux and Iron and other
similar fron products and failed to Rot ro
sults, remember that such products are an
nx-ntlrnly different thing from Nuxated
ron”
In commenting upon the value of Nuxe
ated Iron ns o moesny for creating red
blood, strength and endurance, Dr, Fers
dinand King, a New York Physician and
Medical Auther, suys:
“Searcely a dhy goes by but that I see
women whoso caroworn fueos, deagging
stops and generally weak, tired appearance
#show unmistalkable signs of that annemie,
run-down condition usually brought on by
the iack of iron in the blood,
“There can be no strong, healthy, beaus
tiful women without tron and inasmuch as
rosining processes and mmlarx‘. uuokhlf
methods remove the (ron of Mether Barth
from so many of our most eommom foods
this fron Mrlvwm-g should be supplled by
uping some form of organic fron just as we
use walt when our fuod has not eneough
salt,
“Iron s absolutely necessary to enable
your hieod to chn“. food into lving tis
sue. Without it no. matter how much or
% p
*
', }
Z;f s “I' .t
iy
(S”,
i \.;t. \‘
’,’a "»;&» "
” . 3
&5 ®
- |
A »o . ‘v
SRy Which
oy kind of woman
e are you?
what you eat your food merely
through you wlt{wut doing you lom
U 5 A cousegquence you become weak,
and slckly-looking just like a plant
to grow in a soll doficient m iron.
enns anaemia, The skin of an
woman s pale, the flesh flabby,
memory fulls, and often they i.oz
Woak, nervous, irritable, despondent
malanelioly. Olve wuch a woman a lm
course of Nuxated Iron and she o
rlunhl,v becomes an fnuroly different 1
dividual—strong, 'fi' thy and rosy-c| -
ed, 1 have used Nuxated fron widely in
my own practioe In most severe, m
vated conditions with unfailing
I have induced many other physicians to
#ive It a rrinl, all of whom have given
most surprising reportd in regard to
great power as a health and strengt
builder.*
Manufacturers' Note: Nuxated fron,
by Dr. Sullivan and others with such
sudts and which is prescreibed and
by physiclans, 1a not & secret remedy, but one
well known to 4lmfinn|~ everywhers, Ulitike a
thorganie fron products, it lumf Asnimilal !
not injure the teeth, wake them black, nor M R
somach, The umnu?mum Eurlnh!
and entirely satisfactory remtlls (o every’ or
they ’wllfimuulflmr vnmq“l:“n.wmm E
city by W' Pharmacy .
A«fwnlumm. ¢
9A