Newspaper Page Text
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Time Draws Near for Parceling
§
. i
Out Vast Hun Colonies ‘
in Africa.
; s ?
By JAY JEROME WILLIAMS, |
Universal Service Staff Cor‘rfi‘pon—i-m!
PARIS, ‘March 22.—With the time |
near for the league of nations to ap- l
point mandatories for.the vast Afri
an possessions and other colonies nfl
the former German Empire comes the
bitter realizationion the part of Ger '
many's imperlalists that their dream
of & great ‘empire —rivaling the do |
minions of Great Britain—has crum i
bled_to ‘dust as quickly as did their!
once formidable military machine. ’
For Gemuny huas lost her “place in |
thefsun."” dn Africa alone; and along |
the sequatorr-where the sun shines |
brightest— Germany has lost territo
rles which in the Aggregate are a
third as large as the area of the Unit
#d_States and flve times the size of
termany itself as it existed in the
geydiy of William 11. These wealthy
lands, the soil of which is capable of
‘,‘eniuu many a bloody tale of Prussian
olonization. consisted of more than
1,000,000, square miles at the outbreak
of the war, divided as follows
Square miles,
German Fast Africa .. .. .. 384,000
RERRGEmerons .. .. ~ .. .. .".m‘mml
Togoland Fi e i tarviee. AIDG
Southwest Africa ... ~, .. ::.52.4‘,uf
A .. . 1,030,150
In addition are the Pucific posses
stons of the oid “blood and iron” re
gime —stepping stones in the process
offcaptiring not only a place in the
sun, but in obtaining all the lighted
space in the radius of that orbit
They are
Square miles.
#saiser Wilhelmsland (German
ENsw. Cifnea) . ..., ... .‘tl,mml
The Bismarck Archipelaro L. 20,000
The German Solomon Islands 55858
German Samoa N 1,000
The Caroline Isinnds ... ... w6O
The Marianne or Ladrone Is
alands ... ... s 250
The Marshall Islands ... ... 150
Of all these possessions, however,
German Fast Africa ranks first It
was the diadem in the crown of the
NewW empire. It was to have heen the
keystone of a “New Germany.” mod
eled on the lines of Britain's colonial
possessions in America, South Africa
and Australasiae® German Kast Afri
¢a has a native populiation of from
seven to ten million persons-—mostly
natives —and in 1913 it could boast of
a total trade of $22.000,000 a year,
more than half of which incidentally
tinkled its metallurgical ‘way into the
voffers of the fatherland.
. Big Initial Emigration. ‘
" The aftermath of the Congress of
Vienna-—-an aftermath that all nf‘
Hurope has learned to regret—saw the
Infant German Empire, molded by the
able hands of Rismarck, in its initial
attempts at expansion. Emigration
was the cause. From 1878 to 1881
‘there was a tremendous stream of
emigration out of the empire. In the
fil“ mentioned year 46,371 persons
parted. ip 1881 the number had
soared enormously, and the surging
outward tide was deeme® calamitous
by those who foresaw the dawn of the
day of kuitur and militarism P‘m-‘
most of the emlgranis seitled in Kng. |
lish-speuking countries, and soon werp,
& part and parcel of their adopted
nations. |
- It also was.dn this period that Ger- |
many began to feel the wonders of
‘her future industrial greatness. She
wanted markets for her wares and
storehouses from which to draw ma
teriais. Mo Bismarck, at first doubt
ful of the policy of e*p:unninn. finully
5 , and great stretches of the
? Kk Continent” shortly began to get
glimpses of their new taskmaster,
A Hard Taskmaster.
Germany, it is admitted. ‘was a hard
taskmaster and a poor ope. She at
ff&a<od to copy of the English meth.
4of conciliution and assistance, but
4he fatled miserably, and upon failure
‘#he resorted to the lash and other
Warms of cruelty. Through all the
wears of her long leases on alien soil
%:e has never r.\pm‘h‘nt‘od success,
t she has hred hhitred and anger. in
the hearts of those she ruled. The
Story in Africa is the same as thut in
dhe Pacific—kultur simply did not
; . It made no difference whather
dhe subject of kultur was an ebony
skinned savage, who wore only a
W ile, or a farmer in the occupied re.
‘gions of France and Belgitm. Some-
SUUTHERN PHUTU MATERIAL C 0
SEVENTY-TWO NORTH BRUAD
“ "
Gets-It” Peels
Any Corn or Callus COmes Off Peace.
fully, Painlessiy Never Falls
It's almost u picy t get rid of a
eor oallus the “Gets-lt way You
Bpend 2 or 3 seconds putting on 2 or 3
dropa of ‘“Gets-|t abont a mple as
Use “Gets-It,” peel off corn this way
putting on “your hat Ghete- ) does
away forever witl ‘contr tior
wrappy plasters Ereasy Mntme .
that rub off, blood-letting knive
scissors that nip into the *“‘quiuk
“Gete- 11" eases pain Your *“Jumpy
eorn shrinks, dies, loosens from the to
You pecl the corn painlessly from your
toe In one complete place » That
whbre the picnic comes In you peel
Ooff as you would a banana peel Noth
ing eise but Gets. 1t can do 1t Cie
aol OMLINOY nse ‘‘Gets-lt
"'lvf“"' ", he guaranteed noney
ek corn-remover. the onl BUre way
osts but a tritle at any drug store
Mra b E sLawrence & Co Chicago
. ik ~~Advertisement
.
Society Women
Of London Have
(iambling Mania
ONDON, March 22.-Gam-
L bling among society wom
eén is greatly on the in
crease, says Reynold’'s newspaper,
and the wife of a prominent fin
ancier is r?pur:ml to have lost
conslderably over $15,000 at
chernin de fer a few nights ago,
while another lady--a peeress—
oßt 80 heavily that she even ob
tained a loan on a string of pearls
she was wearing from one of the
players.. Luckily her luck changed
and before leaving she was able
to redeem them
how or other he could not imbibe the
doctrines which lately have proved to
be the downfal! of a nation of more
than 70,000,000 people, |
To return, however, to the colonles
proper and some of their vicissiludes
under the iron rule of Prussian doml
nation:
Scuthwest Africa, on which India
has longing eyes, was the ‘‘white
man’'s country” of tne intended eni
pire. lts native popuation is small,
its pogsibilities are large.
Although it suffers from a lack of
rainfall, its hills and broad valleys are
well fitted for grazing and the conse.
quent business of meatspacking. In
addition, there are valuable copper
mines in the northern section, rich
dinmond mines along the South coast
and other advantages wnich under
careful exploitation will yield large
returns,
* Togoland~-in the heart of the trop
fes—~wids one of the most successful
colonies, In 1914 1t did a buginess of
$5,000,000 in trade, in gpite of¥its com
paratively gmall area and small num
‘ber of inhabitants. For some reason
or other Germany found less difm
culty with the natives of Togoland
than in any other of her African pos
sessions.
Natives Rebelled,*
Then comes the Cameroons, where
troubje, trouble, trßuble was the or
der of the day, chiefly because the
natives rebelled at the Teutonic sys
tem of exploitation, and failed te ap
preciate the benefits of occupying a
place in the stin alongside of thelr
would-be instructor in the ‘arts of the
twentieth gentury, The exports in
1913, though, totaled about $7,250,000,
mostly rubber, palm 011, palm kernels
and cocoa,
German New Guinea leads in the
Pacific colonies for it is rich in copra,
producing cheoanuts, rubber, fine
woods, tropical fruits, coffee and
ecotton, In 1914 an Australian ex
peditionary force took the island
over, Next is the Bismarck Archi
pelago «with the chief two islands
of New Britain and New Ireland, and
many smaller ones—which also suc
cwmmnbed in 1914 to an Australian ex
pedition. There ate the German
Solomon Islands, whose dense trop
fcal forests pansmm considerable
wealth; German Samoa, whose r‘axl
door neighbors are islands owned by
the United States and Great Britain,
the Caroline Isklands, whose only value
pernaps is thete strategic importance
and over which Japan has exerecised
o ket o S i i
DANDRUFF MAKES
! ‘ \
|
jA Small Bottle of “Danderine”|
| Keeps Hair Thick, Strong, ’
| Beautiful. * ,
' |
| sy ;
| Girls! Try This. Doubles Beauty
| of Your Hair in a Few '
i Moments. ;
| x
B e '
A i
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AR 8
| (i » W £N |
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e - SR
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within ten minutes after ‘an ag
phication of Danderthe you can not
find a single trace of dandruff or
flllllnf’ halr and your scalp will not
iteh, but what will please you most
will be after a few weeks' use, when
you see new hair, fine and downy at
first—yes-—but really new halr—
growing all over the sealp,
A little Danderine immediately
oubles the beauty of your hair, No
differédnce how dull, faded, brittle
and seraggy, just moisten a eloth
with Danderine and carefully draw
it through your huir, taking one
small #trand at a time. The ef
fect is amazing--your hair will be
Hght, Auffy and wavy, and have an
appearance of abundance, an incom
parable lustre, softness and luxu
riance, -~ |
Get a 4 small bottle of Knowlton's
Danderine for a few cents at any
drug storq or tollet counter, and
prove that your halr is as pretly
and soft as any —that 1t has bden
neglected or injured by careless
treatment that's sl you . surely
onn have beantiful hair and lots of it
Mo vou will fnat try a little Dander.
| ne. - Advertisement. :
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, MARCH 23, 1919,
a protectorate for four years: the
Marlanne or Ladrone Islands, of
which Gaum, owned by the United
States, Is one of the group—the oth
ers of which are in the temporary
possession of Japan-—and lastly the
Marshall Islands, also in the hands
of Japan. 'Thelr chief value is strat
egic. 1t might be borne in mind that
all of the islandé north of the Equa
tor—and held by Japan-—are strategic
in fmportance, and of little actual
value, "
Boche Wrecked Empire. |
For the destryction of the empire
two typieally Teutonie concepts are
responsible, both of which are mis
taken and injurious to development.
But having sprupg from minds re
sponsible. for the great war, there is
Jittle cause to wonder at their fallure.
One of the German concepts, as
sald before, was to create a “New
Germany”™ in Africa, and the other‘
was to free the fatherland from de
pendence on foreign nations for co
lonial wares by producing them with
in her own African domain. Failure
greeted the practice of these ideals,
however, for the year M 123 saw but|
18,262 Germans in the *'New Ger
many.” and of this number only 10,000
were actual settlers, The German,
the world has learned, does not relish
any assumption of the white man's
burden. Furthermore, the attempts
to Prussianize the natives were igno
minious failures. It apparently rwas
as difficult to make an ordinary Afri
can native roar “"Hock der Kaiser” as
it was to make him don clothes for
Sunday morning services-—providing,
of course, there were such services.
The chief disappointment, though,
was measured in dellars and cents,
for the vast African lands supplied
only 3 per cent of Germanyv's total
colonial imports, And this is one of
the reasons why the peace conference
believes that Germ=eg's economic m\
ture is in no way contingent on the
return of these colonies,
All In all, however, the poor native
wads the chief sufferer, because the
Spring Rains Bring Grippe
This sort of weather brings
Colds and Grippe e
as If s just
. /275 cold people
A T 'y')gsay, “there’s
z(flr & \,?g.\, no danger in
L },O _. that!”’ But
J ) 4 many a futal
“ gickness be
gins with a cold—with vitality
weakened —the system is ready
for the Influenza germs. Begin
early to ward off the attack.
Purge the system of the toxins
(poisons) by taking castor oil, or
a vegetable laxative made of
Mayapple, leaves of aloe, and
jalap, rolled into sugar-coated
pills and to be had at all drug
stores as Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant
Pellets.
If the cold starts with a cough,
and it persists, then some loecal
treatment for this eondition
should be taken® A well known
alterative extract which has been
on the market for a great many
vears, is Dr. Pierce's Golden Med
ical Discovery. [t is composed of
roots and herbs, without aleohol,
und has a soothing effect upon
the mucous membrane, allays the
irritation and at the same time
works at the seat of the trouble—
the stagnated or poisoned blood.
1 Advertisement
Eat Less Meat:
If Back Hurts
Take a glass of Salts to flush Kidneys if bladder
bothers you
fating meat regularly evantually
produces Kidney trouble in some form
or other, says a well-known author
ity, because the uric acid in meat'ex
cites the Kidneys, they become over
worked: get sluggish, clog up and
cause all sorts of distress« particu
larly backache and misery in the kid
ney region; rheumape twinges, se
vere backaches, acld stomach, con
stipation, torpid liver, Nln‘;tlt'smu-an,‘
bladder and urinary irritation, |
The moment your back hurts or
Kidneys aren't acting right, or if blad
der bothers you, get about four ounces
of Jad Salts from any good pharma
cy, take a tablespoonful i a gluss Qf
A \ 3 ) i B 0
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TR, ‘ Sea R, e B
1 o o i
A WAR-TIME ILL THAT'S SPREADING ,
i 3 HUNT'S SALVE CURES IT! |
) BRRI') in the war trenches of Europe, a wave of ordi
| nary I'TCH s spreading over the country, This skin
disease, history shows, has always prevailed, following
4 wars and the concentration of armies. It was eommon
during the Civil War and foliowing that confliet. There
was an epidemic of the Itch after the Spanish- American
War. Now history is repeating itself after the great
. l".uro‘{:u -tnu‘le. =)
- turned soldiers and those with whom they eome in
¥ contact will find a recognized remedy for the lteh in
N A Hunt's Salve, e'OMmonlv“nuwn as "éunx'l Itch Cure.”
// i lhn‘v a veteran of the late '9o's will testify to its merits.
| p i || f directions are followed HUNT'S SALVE willl
| Sl 'H prove a never fpl\in’ cure for all forms of the Itch, ggd
| AN Yo druggist will tell you . He sells HUNT'S SALVE
! 3"” w/ under a sinet guarantee to refund the purchase price to
2 LU any dissatisfied user |
A Medford, Oklahoma man, among thousands whe
praise HUNT'S SALVE, says
“Some people dislike to call it the Itch, but candor compels me to admit
I had it badly. Your Hunt's ‘Salve, however, cured me after many other
Fermedies had tolally falied. One box completed the cure--the first application
nm»v;)'m ‘.'"g"';"".'. relief My advice to those who have to .euu‘%. is to
Lune unt's Rlive
Hunt's Balve is especially compounded for the treatment of Tteh, Eczema,
Ungworm, Tetter and other Ilvh\nf skin diseases and ia sold on our guarantee
¥ all relinble drug stores, or it will he sent direct by mall f wour local druggist
l annot suprly. Price e per box
R RICHARDS NMETOINE (OMPANY. INC SHERMAN. TEXAS
l ~ Sold Locally by Coursey & Munn, .
German colonial governments re
garded their subjects as serfs and
treated them accordingly, Forced la
bor was one ideal of the German co
lonial system; scorn of the native was
anpther and severe and cruel punish
ment was the prder of the day wnen
aver the authorities believed the na
tives were not performing to the ut
most of their physical strength.
Sanitary conditions have been
termed “execrable;” disease of the
most viclous type was rampant, and
the relation of employer to employee
wag that of master and slave, Flog
gings were administered on lz‘he
slightest pretext and West Africa iind
part of the Cameroons bore the grew
some nickname of “ThHe land of the
twenty-five,” because=of the fact that
this was the regular number of lashes
dealt by the Simon Legrees of “New
Germany.”
Every one knows how Armistice
Day was celebrated in the- United
States and other parts of the allied
world, but few Know what took place
in Africa. HReports just received in
Paris, however, tell stories of uni
versal rejolcings, for even the black
man when he learned the truth,
sensed that his ray of deliverance
wae ot hand.
The best evidence of German colon
izatlon, though, has lately been ex
hibited by KEngiish newspapers. It
is a photograph of more than twénty
negroes, strung \pv ligé criminals by
the Germans in Congea, Fast Africa,
and it is a picture which the Germans
tried, with all of their powers, to sup-
N Y I R P
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Usi Tob
{ Perhaps you've trfed to stop using tobacco only
| to find that the habil has such a hold on you that
| you gave up trying.
I You know, better than anyone else that you ought
| to stop because, sooper or later, it is bound to un
i dermine your health Heart trouble, indigestion,
| dyspepsia, nervousness, insomnia, poor eye-sight
[ these and many other disorders, can often be traced
directly to the use of tobacco Besides, it is an
\unnfln. utterly useless habit.
i In 48 to 72 Hours
! No malter how firm a grip tobacco has on yon
| no matter whether you've bwen smoking cigars, pipe
or cigarettes or chewing plug or dne cut for a month
| or 50 years Tobacco Redeemer will positively re
;Hm\l' all craving for tobacco in any form in from
|4B tag 72 hours. It does Ha work so guickly that all
! tobaceo “hunger” is gone almast before you know
| it Your desire for u atoke or a chew begins to
| decrouse aftor the very first dose
Tobaeeo Redeamer contains no habit-forming drugs
o any kind- it Is in ne-senfp a tobacco substitute
It does not cause the slightest shock to the nervous
| system i the contrary, it quiets the unerves and
|muhw you feel betler in every way
| ~ P
,SENDrCoupon for/ )
ietour free book let. 80 T
| PI‘OOf Tells you ll?:.i»ut iy ?,"f“( N
| the deadly effcets of tohseco 03730 oy
| and how eary it 18 now toquit. “;‘: UB
| We will alzosend you copies Tl
10{ letters from confirmed ),
users telling how this |\
| simple, home-treatment 1’ ‘
| freed them sbsoiutely \ y }’
‘lmrr the habit. J:l:lt o) G
| r s .
|G/ G g
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! NEWELL PHARMACAL CG
| Dopt. 538 M. Louis, Mo.
| Send. without obligatton to me in any way, pr *
[ hat Tobacco Redeemer will positively free me from
the Tobacce Habit
Name SR MLE RbweTLo es s sens ins 0o
BUOMAAIE NG .. cocrpssranintserinesssosansoncess
Town treraerssngerenies State SR
water before oreakfast for a tew .1
and yvour kidneys will then act fine.
This famouns salts s made from the
acid of grapes-and lemon juice, com
bined with lithia, and has been used
for generations to flush clogged kid
neys and stimuiate them to hormal
activity; also to neutralize the acids
in the urine se it nd longer irritates,
thus ending bladder disorders.
Jad Salts can not injure anyone;
makes a delightful effervescent lithia . i
water drink which millions of meng
und women take now and then to!
keep the Kidneys and urinary nrglum”
clean, thus avolding serious kulm-)g:
lu’h«msu Advertisement, i
. -
Ohio Town Celebrates
Return of Lone Hero
(By International News Service.)
LORAIN, QHTO, Mch. 22.—Lorain's first
native son to return from overseas, Frank
Bean rrived alone, but that did mot dim
the enthusiasm of the city He was met
aft the station by a drum corps and a band
and hundreds of his old rr):-nr. escorted
about the buliness section at £he lg-nd of
a noigy, shouting, singing parade and ban
quetgd. The laundry at which he had
been employed before going into service
shut down its plant for the day, and gave
the use of ite trucks and other automo
biles to emplovees, ;who met Beam at the
station and paraded with him.
'
“Cure Your
Rupture Lik
| Cured Mine”
A
Old Sea Captain Cured His Own
Rupture After Doctors Said
‘‘Operate or Death.”*’
His Remedy and Book Sent Free,
Laptain Collings sailed the .geas for
many years; then he sustained a bad
double rupture that soon forced him to
not only remain ashore, buat kept him
bedridden for syears He tried doctor
after doctor ‘h%mes after truss. No
resite! Finall¥y he was assured that
he must either submit to a dangerous
and abhorrent operation or die. He did
neither! He cured himself instead.
2 ¥ ot
. =l
v ‘ B et *'s,
. v/ oo 1‘ ?',', 7 ~
pray) W
Lo 4!
-F» b [N L ”i q ) 1‘
/ ) A Y 0 LAI |
/ e ey IR :
& / "_)-1 Q\’;'l i |
Y ) AR ‘
(’/ v l 3 e 1
£Y gy 7)) Nt ) b A
oy //". 4’:1,/.1 it
o /_._w“ SETR Y !
‘.'\‘m" i ‘\\‘l" R N
11 L O A o Y VPR
3 TRy ;
7, e iR . X
RN
A SONEST G SPR SN
eAI TR 5 i
" -‘4"];“*&’ RIS "'"J' ‘/r ".4‘ 2 -
Te / o
e e “‘"" i Y 6
’ /i “U, ’
“Fellow Men and Women, You Don't Have
,To Be Cut Up, and You Don’t Have
Tade Torturcd By Trosses.””
Captalin Collings made a study of him
self, of his condition—and at last he
was rewarded by the finding of the
method that 80 quickly made him s well,
strong, vigorous and happy man,
Anyone can use the same method;. it's
simple, easy, safe and inexpensive.
Every ruptured person in the world
' should have the Captain Collings book,
\u-llinx all. aboat how he cured himself,
and how anyone may follow the same
| treatment in their own home without
any trouble. The book and medicine are
FREE., They will be sent prepaid to
any rupture sufferer who will fill out the
below coupon. But send it right away—
now-—before you put down this paper.
FREE.RUPTURE BOOK AND
REMEDY COUPON
Capt. W. A Collings (Inc)
Box 37C, Watertown, N. Y.
Please send me your FREE Rup
ture Remedy and Book without any
obligation on my part whatever.
B S civi it ey e
D R O TR e
W hiCh 00 ay IS thC Cat |
LSRG A NN SO 5 (AU, RN, STR S B SR .MR it ORt BT WA NI 1 IO 5
it m |
J RR 1
‘
Are the farmers of the South going to receive higher prices for their erops? Or
will the present prices gradually drop?
Will the farmers of the North, East and West join hands with the farmers of
the SOUTH, and maintain living prices in the years to come? Or will the South
have to go it alone? ;
* Will the cotton farmers actually reduce their acreage 30 per cent this year (as
they should), and thereby receive a good price for their erop and. make the entire
South prosperous? Or will mgny of them dodge the issue, and put in the usual
acreage?
What crop, aside from cotton, will bring the greatest returns? Have YOU
satistied yourself what the answer to this important question should be? Or have
you ignored it? \
Answers to all of these questions—and scores of others—will be found in-The
Georgian from time to time. The market page ('nnt:fms intelligently written arti
cles on subjects of vital interest to the farmers, and 'a carveful perusal daily will
bring large returns. 3
No one knows just WHICH WAY THE CAT IS GOING TO JUMP—in the
months and years to come—but the forecasts made by The Georgian will be-found
reliable, and the news features—and “TTPS”"—now are appreciated by thousands
of suceessful farmers of the South. Are YOU on the subseription list?
\ The regular subscription rates~of The Daily Georgian (six times a week) are 70 cents }»(-r.nunnh, $2.00 for
three months, $4.00 for six montlfs, and $7.50 for one year. The subseription price, with The Sunday Ameriearf
included, is only 90 cents a month, or $9.50 a year: You ean not afford to be without this information. Place your
subscription with your local agent or mail it today to .
\- " 2
DAREY— SSW lr oS- U A Y
SR NI Rt Tl A= T
CGEORGIANSWECAMERICAN -
A e 1A "“‘1 &TS < = -
grys SO PIRY SRR T oy Ry
20 and 22 East Alabama Street ;
’ .~
Atlanta, Ga.
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F POSITIVELY REMOVED
by
Venus de Milo Freckie Cream
A teoilet requisite beyond compare,
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Astonished theWorld
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Rebuilding Poland - 1 \
Takes Nuxated Iron for Strength gome
Energy and Endurance ( . *»? H;: Lgr; - A
Dr. Kenneth K. Mas Alpine, for 16 Years Adjunct Professor [ T 8 il »’4*“/‘l‘3;',%&»
New York Post Graduate Medical School and Hospital, Says £ RAT T _U_;!f,\'«i
That in His Opinion Nuxated Iron Is TR ;?T- o **‘l ?
The Most Valuable Tonic, Strength and Blood - tga qnr ey "
Builder Any Physician Can Prescribe AETTE s RETRN S {_;,\»;}«fw:v
When Ignace Jan Paderewski, Master Pianist and
National Maker, turned his back to the plaudits of the
admiring thousands and deserted music to give his
whole energy that Poland might becomé a free nation,
he little reaiized the tremendous strain which would
be imposed upon his health and strength. After two
years of such strenuous work and intense mental
effort as would have worn down the constitution of
many men, Paderewski had recourse to the sustain
ing tonic benefits of Nuxated Iron to help rebuild his
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wasted forces and restore -his old-time health and g i RN ) ? foree, that stamina a
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figures of today’s international life, should : g os ™ cess and power in mz
come out frankly and publicly endorse R R R kB walk of life. Thousan
i B | of men and women are
a product which he has personally % X 8 \ o impairing their constitus
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must arouse the inter- o aeE el e - health, simply because
f hinkine g RT SR ‘fi*» A - their blood i thinning og
est of every thinking Re T e y G and possibly starving throu
person im Nuxated T “’“a ST 4 tack of iron. Iron is absolutoly
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Iron, which is today
being used by over
three million people
annually to help cre
‘ate red blood, power
and endurance,
Commenting upon the
use of Nuxated Iron by
Paderewski and ather
widely known people) Dr,
Kenneth K. MacAilpine, a
prominent New-York Sur
geon and former Adjunct
Professor of the New
York Post-Graduate Med
ical School and Hospital,
Says:
“During sixteen years
| as Lecturer and Adjungt
‘ l‘rnfesso'LnlA Special Sur-
gery (Proctology) Im the New York
Post-Graduate Medical-Schoo! and Hos
pital, T never had recourse to so valuable
a remedy for building up the health and
strength of debilitated, convalescent pa
tients as Nuxated Iron. Severg tests re
cently made with Nuxated Iron have ab
solutely convinced me that it is a prepa
ration of most extraordinary merit.
“If people would only realize that iron is
Just as indinpens:ble to the hlood as is
air to the lungs, dand be just as particular
about keeping up a sufficient supply at
all times, thesa would, in my opinion, be
far less disease resulting from anaemic,
weakened conditions. For years it was a
problem with physicians thow to admin
ister iron in a form that could he taken
1p by the system and increase the red
bloed corpuscles without upsetting the
stomach, blackening the teeth_or produc
ing other disorders alnost as serious as
the lack of iron itself. But the intro
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duction of Nuxated Iron has done awdy
with all objectionable features of tire old
mineral salts of iron and gives to every
careful thinking physician a tried and
valuable prescription which he can rec
ommend nearly every day with benefit
to his weakened amd rundown patients.
Nuxatéd Iron by enriching the blood and
creating new blood eells strengthens the
nerves, rebuilds the weakened tissues and
helps to instill renewed egergy an'?, en
durance into the whole s‘\&te'n. wHether
the patient be young or old. . In my
opinion Nuxdted Iron is the mast valua
bie tonie, strength and blood builder any
physician can prescribe.”
Dr. James Franejs Sullivan, fermerly
physician of Bellev: Hospital (Outdoor
Dept.), New York, and the Westchester
County Hospital, says: “Lack of iron in the
blood net only makes a man atph_vsim\l and
mental wenkllnx, nervous, irritable, easily
fatigued, but it utterly robs him of the virile
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essential to enable your blood to transform
the food you eat into muscular tissue and
brain. Without iron there is ng strengthy
vitality and endurance to combat obstas
cles or withstand severe strains.” To help
make strong, sturdy men of blood and irom
there is nothing better than organie irons=-
Nuxated Iron.”” Mr. Paderewski says: ¥
'gm using Nuxated Iron very frequently
nd consider it as an excellent tonic.” 3
Dr. George H. Baker, formerly physician
and surgeon, Monmouth Memorial Hoss
pital of New Jersey, says: "‘The fact that
Nuxated Iron is today being used by over
three million peopie annually as a touie
strength and blood-builder, is in itself
evidence of tremendous public confide
and 1 am convinced that if others shoul
take Nuxated Iron when they feel weak
and rundown, it.would help m?e a nation
ofuwstronger, healthie® men an® womem”
If you are not strong or well you owe
to yourself to make the following test:
Qe how long vou oan wark \aor how s
Sege_how long you can work “er lmw'a
you can walk without becoming ti
Next take two five-grain tablets of ord
nary Nuxated llron three times per day
after meals for two weeks. Then test your
strength again and see how much you
hav. gained. Numbers of nervous, run
down people who were ailing all the while
‘have most astonishingly increased theis
strength and endurance simply by taking
fron in the proper form. And this after
they had, in some eases, been doctoring
for months without obtaining any benefit.
Manufacturers’ Note: Nuxated Iron, recommended
above, I 8 not a secret remedy, but one which is well
known to druggisis everywhere. Unlikes the older ine
organic dwon products, it is easily assimilated, does
not injurk the teeth, make them black, nor upset the
stomach. The manufacturers guarantee wn::ld
and entirely satisfactory results to every o
they will refund your money. It is dispensea iR
this ety by Jacobs’ Pharmacy and all other deagy
gists.—Advertisement.