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Time Draws Near for Parceling
Out Vast Hun Colonies
in Africa,
By JAY JEROME WILLIAMS. I
Universal Service Staff Corre.ponde
PARIS, March 22-—With the time
near for the league of nations to ap
point mandatories for the vast Afri
fan possessions and other colonies of
the former German Empire comes the
bitter realization on the part of Ger
many's imperialists that their dream
of a great empire—rivaling the do
minions of Great Britain—has crum
bled to dust as quickly as did their
onee formidable military machine. I
For Germany has lost her “place in
the sun.” In Africa alone, and along
the equator—where the sun shines
brightest—Germany has lost territo
ries which in the aggregate are a
third os large as the area of the Unit.
ed States and five times the size of
dermany itself as it existed in the
heyday of Willlamn 1. These weallhy
lands, the soil of which is capable of
telling many a bloody tale of Prussian
wolonization, consisted of more than
1,000,000 square miles at the outbreak
of the war, divided as follows:
Square miles,
German Kast Afriea .. .. .. 284,000
The Camerons .. .. .. ~ .. 290000
BRI ... i . sieees. SB.TOO
Southwest Africa ... ..., .. 322450
B L . 1,030,150
In addition are the Pacific Posses
sions of the old “blood and iron” re
gime—stepping stones In the process
of capturing not only a place in the
#un, but in obtaining all the lighted
space in the radius of that orbit.
They are
Square miles
Kalser Wilhelmsland (Germun
New Quinea) . ..... ... ..70,000
The Bismarck Archipelago .. ..20 000
The German Solomon Islands .. $3833
Slerman Bamoa ... ... ... .. 1.000
The Caroline Istands ... ... .. 560
The Marianne or Ladrone Is-
I & i v s s s 2
The Marshall Isiands .., ... 150
Of all these possessions, however,
German East Africa ranks first. It
. Was the diadem in the crown of the
new empire. It was to have been the
Kkeaystone of a “New Germany.” mod
@led on the lines of Britain's’ colonial
- possessions in America, Bouth Africa
#and Australasia. German ast Afri
oa has a native population of from
- Seven to ten million persons - most'y
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
- coffers of the fatheriand
: Big Initial Emigration. ‘
~_ The aftermath of the Congress of |
- ¥ienna-—an aftermath that all nlt
Europe has learned to regret—saw the |
infant German Empire, molded by "“'i
#ble hends of Blsmarck, in its initial |
atlempts at expansion Emigration
wWas the cause From 1878 lo !\“(]!
there was 4 tremendous stream of |
" emigration ont of the empire. In thw
tirst mentioned year 46,171 persons
ed. In 1881 the number hn-l'
Fm enormously, and the surging|
“outward tide was dgemed calamitous
" By those who foresaw the dawn of (h.-{
" day of kultur and militarism Por |
L MoKt of the emigranis settled in Kng- |
sfl‘h-nlmukmu countries, and soon were |
=8 part and parcel f their u(]upl.“”
nations. |
L It also was in this period that Ger. |
" ANy began to feel the wonders of
_her fature industrial greatness. She |
¥ wanted markets for her wares mm‘
storehouses from which to draw ma
_ terlais. So Bismairck, at first dunht-‘
~ ful of the policy of expansion, finally |
._w. and great stretenes of the
;. Continent” shortly began to gul(
- glimpsds of their new taskmaster,
: . A Hard Taskmaster, ‘
Qfinfiun,\'. it is admitted, was a hard
_ taskmaster and a poor one. She at
tempted to copy of the Knglish meth
-od of conciliation and assistance, but
_whe failed miserably, and upon failure
_#he resorted to the lash and other
Cforms of cruelty. Through all the
% of her long leases on alien soil
has never experienced success,
she has bred hatred and anger in
Fthe hearts of those she ruled. The
- Story in Africa is the same as that in
the Pacifio—kultur simply did not
take, It made no difference whether
-the subject of kultur was an ebony
?xed savuige, who wore only a
: , Or a farmer in the occupled re.
_Blons of France and Belgium. Some
s ———————————————— —
KSVUTNERN PHUTO MATERIAL CO
SWVENTY-TWO NORTH BRUAD
b "
ets- eels
Any Corn or Catlus Comes Off Peace.
fully, Painlessly Never Falla
It's almost & picn i « ' of a
corn or callus ' Wy You
spend 2 or 3 seconds pu X on 2 or 8
drops of “Gets Wb le &
Use “Gets It™ peel off corn this way
PULLILE on your hat “Gete- it doe
CAWAY forever with ‘vontraptic
wrapp)y plasters Eroasy ointments
that rub off, b 1-letting knives, ar
suissors that snip int the “‘gquick
SOete- It eases pain Your g
SOrn shrinks, dies from the tos
b'ou rw-l the corn painlessly (v\. ¥y Our
toe In one complets plece ha
wheres the picnic comes in-—you pes
off a 8 you would a banana pes N
Ing else but “Gets-It" ca i G
praceful, commo © Line
“Gets -1t the guarantecd noney
back corn-remover, the only A
rg cul A trifle at ar K we
‘'d hy E Lawrence & o i
Ol Advertisement
Society W 7
)
Society Women
{
: {
- Of London Have
-+ (iambling Mani
ambling Mania
;? ONDON, March 22-—-Oam- §
) I bling among soclety wome §
¢ en is greatly on the in- §
? crease, says Reynold's newspaper, ;
{ and the wife of a 4 prominent fin- |
. ancler is reported to have lost ¢
? considerably over $15,000 at ;
§ chemin de fer a few nights ago, $
! while another lady—a peeresn—»«'b
{ lost 8o 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. z
)
how or other he could not imbibe the
doctrines which lately have proved to
be the downfall ¢f a nation of more
than 70,000,000 people,
To return, however, to the eolonfes
proper and some of their vicissitudes
under the iron rule of Prussian domi
nation: -
Scuthwest Africa, on which India
has longing eyes, was the ‘“white
man’s country” of the intended em
pire. Itg native population is small,
its possibilities are large,
Although Jjt suffers from a lack of
rainfall, its hills and broad valleys are
well fitted for grazing and the conse.
quent husiness of meat packing, In
addition, there are valuable copper
mines in the northern section, rich
dlamond mincs along the South coast
and other advamtuges which under
careful exploitation will yield large
returns, |
Togoland-—in the heart of the trop
fes—was one of the most successful
colonies, In 1913 it did a business of
$6,000,000 in trade, in spite of its com
paratively small area and small num
ber of inhabitants, For some resu*
or other Germany found less diffi
culty with the natives of Togoland
than in any other of her Afriean pos
sessions, i
Natives Rebelled,
Then comes the Cameroons, where
trouble, trouble, trouble was the or
der of the day, chiefly because the
natives rebelled at the Teutonic sys
tem of exploitation, and failed to ap
preciate the benefits of occupying a
place in the sun alongside of their
wonld-be instructor in the arts of the
twentieth century. The exports in
1913, though, totaled about $7,250,000,
mostly rubber, palm 011, palm kernels
and cocoa. i
German New Guinea leads in the
Pacifie colonies for it is rich in copra,
producing cocoanuts, rubber, fine
woods, tropical fruits, coffee and
cotton, In 1914 an Australian ex
peditionary force took the island
over. Next is the Bismarck Archi
pelago-with the chief two islands
of New DBritain and New Ireland, and
many smalier ones-—which also suc
cumbed in 1914 to an Australian ex
pedition. There are the German
Holomon Islands, whose dense trop
leal forests possess considerable
wealth; German Samoa, whose next
door nelghbors are islands owned by
the Unitad States and Great Britain;
the Caroline Islands, whose only value
pernaps ls thelr strategic importance
and over which Japan has exercised
| r |
| |
A|B L R
A Small Bottle of “Danderine
Keeps Hair Thick, Strong,
Beautiful.
Girls! Try This. Doubles Beauty
| of Your Hair in a Few
|
Moments.
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‘ wilnin ten minutes after an ap
phieatio of Danderine you can not
find & single trace of dandruff or
*r Hing hair and your seanlp will not
! tet but what will please vou most
{Will be after a few weeks' use, when
YOou see new hair, fine and downy at
first -ye but really new hair
prowing aill over the calp
A little Danderine mmediately
doubles the beauty of your halr. No
IHfferen how dull, faded, brittle
and SCruggy ust moisten a cloth
‘\ ith Danderine and carefully draw
{it thr your hal taking one
fma rand at a time Thees i
l’ « imasing - your hair will be
b un Wy wnd Ve »n‘
| Al ndar ‘ ain ! om |
!
para 1 ne and ixu
fanocs '
el a 4 small bottle of Knowlton's
Danderine + few cents at any]
Iru t r tolle counter and
prove thaut our halr ix as pretty
nd soft ) vl t A hoen
treatment . i ¢‘i
can have el h ot f ity
it vou W ) i L little I r-|
ne Advertisement !
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN —— A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, MARCH 23, 19
'.a protectorate for four years the
{,‘\l,n lanne or lLadrone Islands, of
'whivh Gaum, owned by the United
|2~'!.Hv‘n‘ i# one of the group—the oth
lers of which are in the temporary
|;n.~-wmn of Japan--and lastly the
Mirshall Islands, algo in the hands
lul’ Japan. Their chief value is strat
| epric It might be borne in mind that
lall of the islands north of the Equa
i tor—and held by Japan-are strategic
|ln importance, and of little actual
I value
1 Boche Wrecked Empire.
' For the destruction of the empire
| two typieally Teutonie concepts are
responsible, both of which are mis
lt:nwn and injurious to development
{ But having sprung from minds re
#ponsible for the great war, there is
| little cause to wonder at their failure
! One of the German concepts, as
| sald before, was to create a “New
{ Germany” in Africa, and the other
wag to free the fatherland from de
ll"‘nl‘]!‘"("' on toreign nations for co
lonial wares by producing them with
‘m her own African domain. Failure
greeted the practice of these ideals
l),n\\.\'.-v for the year 1913 saw but
'1‘3“."::2 Germans in the “New Ger
many,” and of this number only 10,000
'vu-w 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 fajlures It apparently was
as difMicult to make an ordinary Afri
oan native roar “Hock der Kaiser” as
It was to make him don clothes for
Sunday morning services-—providing,
1 of course, there were such services,
| The chief disappointment, though
‘wu-v measured in dollars and cents
for the vast African lands supplied
only 8 prer cent of Germany's total
colonial imports. And this is one of
the reasons why the peace conference
belleves that Germ=say's economic fu
lluru is in no way contingent on the
return of these colonies
All In all, however, the poor native
’wns the chief sufferer, because tho-‘
. . . .
‘Spring Rains Bring Grippe
This sort of weather brings
Colds and Grippe
; AT it’e %
oey 1 it's just
o (hii- g
_e""‘ 3/ wd}"‘ A common
oST 50 cold people
i Y
;if y ‘ say, “there’s
| Y " 3
e Y Ano danger in
DRSNS that!” But
f ) -} many a fatgl
! i .
| sickness be
|gins with a eold—with vitality
iweakened ~the system is ready
[for the Influenza germs. Begin
)
!early to ward off the attack.
| Purge the system of the toxins
‘(poimnn) by taking castor oil, or
'u vegetable laxative made of
| Mayapple, leaves of aloe, and
|jn|ap, 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 eough,
and it persists, then some local
treatment for this eondition
should be taken. A well known
alterative extract which has been
|on the market for a great many
years, is Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med
ical Discovery. 1t is composed of
| roots and herbs, without aleohol,
land has a soothing effeet upon
’ the mucous membrane, allays the
irritation and at the same time
works at the seat of the trouble—
| the stagnated or poisoned blood
l ~ Advertisement
Eat Less Meat
If Back Hurts
Take a glass of Salts to flush Kidneys if bladder
bothers you
Kuting meat regularly eventually
produces kidney trouble in some form
or other, says a well-known uun‘#ar
ity, because the urie acid in meat'ex
cites the kidneys, they become over
worked; get sluggish, clog up and
cause all sorts of distress, particu
larly baekache and misery in the kid
ney region; rheumatic twinges, se
vere backaches, acld stomach, con
stipation, torpid liver, sleeplessness,
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 in a gluss of
|4 ITCH!
£ A WAR-TIME ILL THAT'S SPREADING I
o HUNT’S SALVE CURES IT! %
- RED in the war trenches of Europe, 8 wave of ordi
nary I'TCH s spreading over the country, This skin
isease, history shows, has wlways prevailed, following
wars and the econcentration of armies. It was eommon
during the Civil War and following that eonflict. There
¥as an epidemie of the Itch after the Spanish American
War. Now history s repesting itself after the great
P Ill’ml “Nni't !
| . rned soldiers and those with whom they eome in
econtact will find & recognized remedy for the Iteh n
U 4 ’ ! Hunt's Salve, common) ‘Tno'n . "éunt‘- Tteh Cure.”
/iy Many & veteran of the fate Po's will testify to its merita
: el "| ff directions are followed HUNT'S SALVE will
. “i ' prove & never hnha cure for all forme of the Itch, and
[ i‘) ' your dnfl will you sm. He sells HUNT'S BALVE|
',‘ 1 ] under o 't guarantes Lo refund the purchase price to
'.'g' T 4, [ hv’dulfi'd u—er ohi
’ A % Oklahoma man, among thousands
& praise HUN SALVE, says
Some people dslike to call it the ltch, but eandor compels me to admit |
:'n:‘ams: hb::'t’ fu'l'":u{::l.‘&mm luwov‘o.rd f;und me After mnym:':::
m o g comp cure- | first
"’"';‘«"’.,-'“'i‘?""»‘,”"" My n::- w '\.b-nt:ho huch.lo ur:m i to
e u » aive
Hunt's Salve s sspecially compounded for the treatment of Tich, Eezema,
Ungworm Tetier and other Mehing shin disenses and is sold on our Arantee
by all peliabie nru, slores, or Wt fl“ be sent direct by mall If your Imflr"'l'"
ARRAY supsls Price Tt per box
B RICHARDE MENICIN® COMPANY, INC. SHERMAN, TEXAS
l Sold Locally by Coursey & Munn,
German colonial governments re
garded their subjects as sgerfs and
treated them nmrordlnxly.am la
hor was one ideal of the co
lonial gystem; scorn of thie native was
another and severe and eruel punish
ment was the order of the day when
ever 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
was that of master and slave, FKFlog
gings were administered on the
slightest pretext and West Africa and
part of the (C‘ameroons bore the grew
some nickname of “Thg 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. Reports just received in
Parig, however, tell stories of uni
versal rejolcings, for even the black
man when he Jearned the _truth,
sensed that his ray of deliverance
was at hand. g ¥
The best evidence of German colon
ization, though, has lately been ex
hibited by English newspapers. Tt
is a photograph of more than twenty
negroes, strung up lige eriminals by
the Germans in Congea, ast Africa,
and it is a picture which the Germans
tried, with all of their powers, to sup
press.
P T ...‘.-'---. i
L 4 e
y oA
L A
¥ 4 N W “:’» Ly
b, § T rLO
g“ ’g g e
ST
g 4 £
. Lo 4 L “;’ 4 :
.
e |
Using Tobacco
Perhaps you've irie! to stop using tobacco only
so find that the habit has such a bold on you that
you gave up trying
You know, better than anyone else that you ought
to stop because, sooner or later, it = bound to un
dermine your health Heart trouble, indigestion,
dyspepsia, nervousness, insomnia, poor eye-sight
these and many ogher disorders, can often be traced
directly to the use of tobacco Besides, it is an
oxpensive, utterly useless habit
In 48 to 72 Hours
No matter how firm a grip tobacen hag on you
no matter whether you've been smoking cigars, pipe
or cigarettes ar chewing plug or fine cut for a month
or 50 years Tobacco Redeemer will positively re
move all craving for tobacco in _any form in from
48 to 72 hours. U does Hs work so quickly that all
tobaeco “"hunger”” I 8 gone almost before you know
it Your desire for a smoke or a chew begins to
decrease after the very first dose.
Tobacco Redecmer containg no habit-furming drugs
of any Maod--it is in no sense a tobacco substitute
It does not cause the slightest shock to the nervous
system; on the contrary, it quiets the perves and
makes you feel better in every way
-
SEND CouPon for / =~ ¢\.
Getour fyee booklet, PN S
Proof 7. you e ebout LTS
the dendly effects of tobacco CaR
and how easy it is now toguit, . }\ R
We will alsosend you eopies 8} it
of letters from econfirmed b
users telling how this 1
sirple, home-treatment 4
freed them absolutely | S |
from the habit, Just ‘ >/
mail coupon-—or a postal (\\ T
wiil do, SO
—— —— f -
NEWELL PHARMACAL CO.
Dept. 538 St. Louis, Mo,
Nend, without abligation o me In any way, proof
} Tobaeco Redeomer will positively free me from
he Tobaceo Habit
.
N aime o CERA L IMI SRR RO b3yae s
WHireel ad Ne. serebesensiei s resiesinrnrens
Town savesnsesnsasswvess Blate s A
water before breakfast for a few ..
and your kidneys will then act fine.
This famous salts Is 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 stimulate them to normal
activity; also to neutralize the acids
in the urine so it no longer irritates,
thus ending bladder disorders,
Jad Salts can not u}Jure anyone,
malkes a delightful effervescent lithia.
water drink which millions of meni‘
and women take now and then to
keep the kidneys and urinary organs
clean, thus avoiding gerious Kkidney
disease, — Advertisement,
Ohio Town Celebrates
»
I Iteturn of Lone Hero
(I3y International News Service.)
’ LORAIN, OHIO, Mch. 22.-—Lorain’'s first
mative «on to return from overseas, Frank
Beam r « alone, but that did not dim
the entt m of the city He was met
at the n by a drum corps and a band
and hun of hig old friends, escorted
about the ! ness mection at the head of
a noisy, shouting, singing parade and ban
queted The wgndry at which he had
been employed before going into service
shut down its plant for the day, and gave
the use of its trucks and otHer automo
biles to employees, who met Beam at the
station and paraded with him
e e e et et
“Cure Your
Rupture Lik
| Cured Mine”
Old Sea Captain Cured His Own
Rupture After Doctors Said
‘‘Operate or Death.’”’
His Remedy and Book Sent Free,
Captain Collings sailed the seas for
many years, then he sustained a bad
double rupture that soon forced him to
not only remaln ashore, but kept him
bedridden for years. He tried doctor
after doctor and truss after truss. No
results! Finally, he was assured that
he must either submit to u dangeron
and \hhoyfigut operation or die. He did
neither! He cured himself instead.
o y 14
) S N
(A 12d \ USRI
z> / =3 ' ,'{l |
Pt N (Y
iy b if ; |
2 ,::_‘_t\—:. {,, lur’ |
(22 PR o
- l » A -‘.j,‘* i :
) s he
Ty & eWL
(MR 2 l( _\s :‘ \
et 7l 7 AR |
TR N
:/”«}nl W ‘l";‘&\ Y y .
G ; AR, TR ‘
4”-” ' ’."{y‘:" KOG |
“{, " LT bl:\
LT ,v{‘]_‘«’ 2 e J
N T 10 o .
T R ey -G’MA" '
| :l; ~'q )
“Fellow Men and Women, You Don't Have
To Be Cut Up, and You Don't Have |
To Be Tortured By Trosces ™
Captain Collings made a study of him
self, of his condition—and at last he
was rewarded by the finding of the
method that so quickly made him a 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,
telling all about 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 l
REMEDY COUPON
Capt. W. A, Collings (Inc.)
Box 87C, Watertown, N. Y.
Please send me your FREE Rup
ture Remedy and Book without any
bligation on my part whatever.
WEWR st en vy .
PUDOTIID & i vk i b e il
7 RSP BRS N MY AL 7 RO AT | SRR Wl oW, Y S NI oe e RSN IRV ASR LSS 4T
W e MG
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 ecome? Or will the South
have to go it alone? ;
Will the eotton farmers actually reduce their acreage 30 per cent this year (as
they should), and thereby receive a good price for their crop and make the entire
South prosperous? Or will many of them dodge the issue, and put in the usual
acreage?
What crop, aside from cotton, will bring the greatest returns? Have YOU
satisfied yourself what the answer to this important question should be? Or have
vou ignored it?
Answers to all of these questions—and seores of others—will be found in The
Georgian from time to time. The market page eontains intelligently written arti
cles on subjects of vital interest to the furmm'z, and a careful perusal daily will
bring large returns. ;
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 successtul farmers of the South. Are YOU on the subseription list?
The regular subseription rates of The Dafly Georgian (six times a week) are 70 cents per month, $2.00 for
three months, $4.00 for six months, and $7.50 for one year. The subseription price, with The Sunday American
meluded, is only 90 cents a month, or $9.50 a year. You ecan not afford to be without this information. Place your
subseription with yonr local agent or mail it today to &l
%“—* 27 =
D 7ek SRS~ =S NS A Y
GEORGIAN MIYAMERICA
= b S ‘LA“L’“ ':‘tr"’/ \'..?i:. = » —
Ces ,flt‘.t‘:‘» R PNY ~ t".ft:]:.'h gr,
20 and 22 East Alabama Street
Atlanta, Ga.
l ) Gk aks
E“=RECKLES
! POSITIVELY REMOVED
W
| Vesus de Milo Freckle Cream
A toilet requistte bepond compare,
Wets as a skin tomle, assurtng beau-
Harmmiom «iosont sud ‘Bigy. oo
g Sutisinction cul u
Casex. Al Tollet Counters, or by makl
65e postpaid
MILO LABORATORIES
SAN ANTONIO, TEX.
it AU KA RVS R VTS GGV
PADEREWSKI-The Man Who
@
Astonished theWorld
First As a Musical Genius—Now As a Nation-Maker 7
Rebuilding Poland . -)&
Takes Nuxated Iron for Strength S )
Energy and Endurance f’fii’ A
Dr. Kenneth K. Mas Alpine, for 16 Years Adjunct Professor [ \ {4 4| -el
New York Post Graduate Medical School and Hospital, Says Wifi”n‘fi&
That in His Opinion Nuxated Iron Is bt S
o . el ONC TB AR
The Most Valuable Tonic, Strength and Blood RRS e e Y
- . _e e gWS 2 .3 N o
Builder Any Physician Can Prescribe vl *fl 5g2 R
2 & e g g LR S
_When Ignace Jan Paderewski, Master Pianist and e g Wi 5, ”%{ veru L <
National Maker, turned his back to the plaudits of the 5, #ag?,f b e bRy J":f*"'" aiss D
admiring thousands and deserted music to give his o i o T \%Q
whole energy that Poland might becomne a free nation L o TR »3%: I‘é G o
. oli » - " f gl Ty R T s
he little realized Ltge tremendous strain which would .TR sgf f o f’ i
be imposed upon his health and strength. After two : ‘!fim B eAR
years of «such strenuous work and intense mental € Ly g e
effort as would have worn down the constitution of e 8 cn: il F
many men, Paderewski had recourse to the sustain- i %&;fi “T ) B
i ie e % HEE g e
ing tonic benefits of Nuxated Iron to help rebuild his L s PR
wasted forces apd restore his old-time health and i Y P g
strength. Th s g force, that stavma anfd
strength. at one of the foremost and most foreful 3T b L strength of will whiolf
figures of :oday s international life, should ohas WO | TR are so kecesaa.ry to sucs
come out < e e gl cess and power In e
g rankly and publicly endorse iy # : T walk of life. Tboumz
a produet which he has persounlly - xé" 3 B el of men and women amg
found valuable for building up e T T T b li'gfifl;"‘,"‘m";"{,,°"“".“‘,:
i e T i ay emse
the health and strength o T e g : z open to iliness and litesw
must arouse the inter- A R "-é;a.;;?:e-: . fifii}fu'xom‘unmxw A
oB TS R . ealth, s
est of every thinking , f;@wu%, e A their blood is thinming a
person in Nuxated ‘;hwm"’" e / ol Y
2 - eIR R e K ack of iron. ron absolute
Iron, which is today in 55 - e s essential to enable your blood to transform
being used by over b oy = i Pty e tl’txr“foo‘l‘\ryoyt: va.tiimo muscularwusxue and
% W AR R T eiG i S rain. ithout iron there is strengt.
three million people o, 8 1/;* N *x\_h(;‘,‘.‘;: vitality and endurance to combat obst:
annually to help ecre- Gl oA e, A ] )/5{2 S glon qutwnhst::‘ddsevere stnum To tl:eia
. e AT e o ) make strong, rdy men of bl and irom
flle red blood, power o &y i‘ae;yg A & there is nothing better than organic iron—
and endurance, Tniag { . Sa ot WE AR Nuxated Iron.” Mr. Paderewski says:
Commenting upen the P B A am using Nuxated Iron very freq
y . 2 e =y . o s 8 onsider i 8 DR
use of Nuxated Iron by EE g:‘:’;va» ;w‘,"" 4‘4’*" Lnl")r“'fx‘.\::ul‘;;l;' xl’l a?laalg:ire‘f‘::rllth?:l;owlc'fld.
Paderewsk | a ther o I L e ] : > 1 ou Ot
an; other R v e A “"_g' 2 and surgeon, Monmouth Memorial Homs
widely known people, Dr. v |ST (- o pital of New Jersey, says: “The that
Kenneth K Mac Alpine, a GTe 3¢ X U Nuxated Iron bi.lo-*iay hre.imz usnd‘g oves
prominent New York Sur- SE. _» M A s = three million peopile annually as a tonie,
geon up.! former Adjunct i G b strength and blondi‘uilder, is in itself am
Professor ?r the New es/ 3 I} - 5 evidence of tremendous public confidence,
York Post-Graduate Med- e 4 57 and I am convineced that if others shouid
ical Bchool and Hospital, Y N 4‘\\» take Nuxated Iron when they feel weak
says: R ,j;: 5 and rundown, it would help make a natiom
“During sixteen years & <o of stronger, healthier men and women.*
as Lecturer and Adjunct T If you are not strong or well you owe #
Professor of Special Sur- Ln y"v,mrfl‘l‘( to make the f‘ollovn!Llg test:
gery (Proctology) in the WNew York
Post-Graduate Medical School and Hos
pital, I never haa recourse to so valuable
a remedy for buflding up the health and
strength of debilitated, convalescent pa
tients as Nuxated Iron. Severe tests re
cently made with Nuxated Iron have ab
solugely convinced me that it is a prepa
ration of most extraordinary merit.
“1f people would onty realize that fron is
just as indispensable to the blood as is
air to the lungs, and 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 physiciang how to admin=
ister iron in a fomn that could be taken
ap by the system and increase the red®
biood corpuscies without upsetting the
stomach, blackening the teeth or produe
ing other disorders almost as serious as
the lack of irom itself. But the intro
’ fllfls iVELflPEfl
SUUTHERN PHYTY MATERIAL €O,
SEVENTY-TW NORTH BROAD
RUPTURE
i "wrrrm'“‘:c{?‘ EXPERT
rite for watormation
I’ JARRELL’S TRUSS STORE
duction of Nuxated Iron has done away
with all objectionable features of the old
mineral salts of iron and gives to every
careful thinking physician a tried gnd
valnable prescription which he can rec
ommend nearly every day with benefit
to his weakened and r'?pdown patients,
Nuxated Iron by enriching the bicod and
creating new blood ecells strengthens the
nerves, rebuilds the weakened tissues and
helps to instill renewed energy and en
durance into the whole system, whether
the patient be young or old. In my
opinion Nuxated Iron is th# most valua
ble tonie, strength and blood builder any
physician can preseribe.”
Dr. James Francis Sullivan, formerly
'thsician of Bellevue Hospital (Outdoor
Dept.), New York, and the Westchester
County Hospital, says: “Lack of iron in the
blood not only makes a man a physical and
mental weakling, nervous, irritable, easily
fatigued, but it utterly robs him of the virile
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i
See how long you can work or how f
you can walk without becoming unz
Next take two five-grain tablets of ordk
nary Nuxated Iron three times per day
after meals for two weeks. Then test your
strength again and see how much yow
have gained. Numbers of nervous, run
down people who were ailing all the while
have most astonishingly increased theiy
strength and endurance simply by ta.kh:
iron in the proper form. And this aft
they had, in some ecases, been doctoring
for months without obtaining any benefit
Manufacturers’ Note: Nuxated Iron, recommended
above, is not a secret vemedy, but one which is wel
known to druggists everywhere, Unlike the older ins
organic iron produets, it is easlly assimilated, does
not gnjure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the
stomach. The manufacturers guarantee successful
and entirely satisfactors”results to every purchaser et
they will refund your money. It is dispensed *iy
this city by Jacobs’ Pharmacy and afl other druge
gists.— Advertisement,