Newspaper Page Text
EIGHT
Mothers Why Don't 1
You Take Nuxated Irot
Knd Be Strong and Well and Have Nice Rosy Cheek* instead of being Nervous and Irritable Al
The Time and Looking so Haggard and Old?—The Doctor Gave Some to Susie Smith’s
Mother and She Was Worse Off than You are and Now She Looks Just Fine.
Nuxated Iron Will Increase the Strength and Endurance of Weak, Nervous, Careworn, Hag
gard Locking Women in Two Weeks’ Time in Many Instances.
THE CHILD’S APPEAL
“There can be no Beautiful
Healthy Rosy Cheeked
women without Iron.”
F. KING, M. D.
“Tbfcrr run hv no h'-.'lfhy, beautiful,
ro*y rhrrk'fl women without Iron,” May#
I>r Ferdinand Kin*, a New York I’hyai
rian und Medbal Author. have MtronK
ly empha«ls*‘d the fart that doctora
■hould prrarrJh l more organic iron nux
mted Iron for thalr nrrvouit, rundown,
w«*ak. haunard- looking women pat lent*
Tailor mrann anaemia.
The nkln of the urn*#-
*m!c woman Ik pale,
he fleah flabby. The
mttacle* lack tone,
brain fa**. and the
memory fall*. and of
ten they heron>«• \J< ak.
itrvoua. Irritable. d«-
ypondeni and melan
choly. When the Iron
roee front th<* blood
>f women, t li<
jo front their eheeka.
“In th»* mom common food*
>f America. th< h*. j , mu pr
im, tnbk nyrupf'. » untile**, jk»l
- ric<\ whft<’ for* ;hlk, *ocb»
Tack#!**. bfou-uitK. macaroni,
•paicheitl, tapioca, hhhto, farina.
l«»Kermlnat**<l cornmeal. no
<onic»*r 1* Iron to foe found H<*-
flnlntr procran»*M hav<- t* inovi*d
th** Iron of Mother Barth from
thme Impoverished food*. and
•lily methods of horn* <*ookery,
lii throwing down 1
pipe the water In which our
vegetables are rooked are r«
(poniiblc for another j raw iron
loss
"Therefore, you should supply the iron
deficiency in your food by twiriAc Home
form of organic iron, just as you would
us*- salt when your food has not enough
salt
"I have used Nuxated Iron widely In
my own practice In i.mst severe aggra
vated conditions with unfailing f aults.
“ta order to thoroughly
satisfy the needs of the
body, diet must be varied.”
- #£st> *
It
Wj MABt rAH? uS e
SCMLIT* -
s its liJ mm
Made Milwaukee Famous
I have Induced many other phyaleiana
to fflve It a trial, all of whom have Riven
me moat aurprlaln* repona In regard to
itn frr«-at power an a health and atrengtn
builder" „ . ...
I>r Schuyler C. Jacque*. formerly Vm-
ItlnK Surgeon of St Elizab*th’a Hospital,
New York City. aald: "I have never be
fore given out anv medical Information
or advice for publication aa I ordinarily
do not believe In it Hut In the case of
Nuxated Iron I feel I would remit**
In my duty not to mention It I have
taker. i» myself and given It to my pa
tient a with most surprising and satisfac
tory results And those who wish quick
ly to Increase their strength, power and
endurance will find It a most remarkable
and wonderfully effective remedy.*
If people would only take Nuxated
Iron when they feel weak or run-down.
Instead of dosing themselves with habit
forming drugs, stimulants and alcoholic
beverages there are probably thousands
who might readily build up their red
blood • orpuscles, Increase their physical
energy and get themselves Into a con
dition to ward off the millions of dis
ease germs that are almost continually
around us.
It Ih surprising how many people suf
fer from Iron deficiency and do not
know It.
Iron Ik absolutely necessary to enable
vour blood to change food Into living tin*
sue Without It. no matter how much or
what vou eat. your food merely passes
through you without doing you good. You
don’t get the strength out of it, and as a
consequence you become weak, pale and
sickly 'ooking. Just like a plant trying to
grow In a
nt In iron.
for- If you are
jfih i not at rone
'"My) or yon
f*. v Mpr* - A owe It to
JfLmifaS if youraelf to
/f j make the
Mk.
1 Ji T 'lrlit W. " tiTttfcWt .Ms
.M s, .Nz,; j I
i{ . * V' ? v
Dr. Ferdinand King, N*w York Physician and
Madlcal Author, «ays that Physician* should
nrascrlbe more organic Iron —Nuxated Iron—•
for their patients—Anaemia—lron deficiency It
Ihe greatest curse to the health, strength, vi-
tality and beauty of the mod
•rn American Women—Bounds
•earning against use of metal-
It Iron, which may Injure the
teeth, corrode the stomach, and
in many cases do more harm
than good; advises use of only
Nuxated Iron.
‘ln other words, it appears that with a
mixed diet, the same person will digest
a larger proportion of nutrients than
with a diet composed of a single food
compound."
Schlitz Famo is drink and food, com
posed of protein, carbohydrates, water,
and mineral matter; each in itself essen
tial to food.
Drink
FAMO
It is readily digested imparts the factors that
Nature utilizes in maintaining life in the body,
and in addition the hop aroma induces appetite
exciting the flow of gastric secretions.
Schlitz Famo is drink and food, a worth-while
cereal beverage, non-intoxicating, refreshing
and satisfying.
On sale wherever soft drinks
are sold. Order a case front
Audley Hill Company
6JO Mclntosh Street
Triangular Block
Augusta, Georgia
Bell Phones 8&J-864
~ IH
- **- V'W’f*
You can tell the women with plenty
of iron in their blood—beautiful
healthy roay cheeked women full of
Life, Vim and Vitality.
following tret: See how long you ran
work or how far you ran walk without
becoming tired. Next take two flve-graln
tablet* of ordinary nuxated Iron three
time* per day after meals for two weeks.
Then test your strength again and see
how much you have gained Numbers of
nervous, run-down people who were ail
ing all the while have most astonishingly
Increased thetr strength and endurance
simply by taking Iron in the proper form,
and this, after they had in some rases
b-en going on for months without get
ting benefit from anything Hut don’t
aikr* the old forms of reduced
iron, iron acetate, or tincture
r >f iron simply to save a few
cpntH. The Iron demanded by
Mother Nature for the red col
oring matter in the blood of her
children, is alas' not that kind
of iron You must take Iron
in a form that can b* easily
absorbed and assimilated to do
you any good, otherwise it may
prove worse than useless
Many an athlete and prize
fighter has won the day simply
because lie knew the secret of
great strength and endurance
which comes from having plenty
of iron In the blood; while
many another haH gone down in
inglorious defeat simply for the
lack of Iron.
MANtTFACTI HKKN’ NOTH: Vunted Iron, which
t* prevrlt**l and reonmmrndod al*om by physician* n
not a secret mmedy, hut one whlrh Is well known to
(Inigglai* Unlike tho older Inorganic Iron products It
Is easily asaimilatcd. tine* not injure the teeth, make
them Mark, nor upset the stomarh The manufactur
ers guarantee successful and entirely saUafact/rry re
aulU to every purchaser or they will refund your mo»»
»y It la dispensed In this city by Howard's lirug
Btore and all other druggist*
THE AUGUSTA HERALO
u
fCc
l
JIC
'UI
tr
INGLE WIGGILY
AND BUNTY'S BUG
opyright, 1919, by McClure Newspaper
Syndicate.)
(By HOWARD R. GAR IS.)
Lncle WiggUy, will you please come
id take a walk with me," said Baby
unty early one evening to Mr. Long
lrs - the rabbit gentleman, as he was
rolling up and down in front of bis hoi- j
r stump bungalow.
'\ hei ! e do > ou u 'ant to walk. Bunty?”
led Uncle WiggUy of the little rabbit |
• w ho was found in a hollow tree in
woods.
Su j.. , x. ....
just over the fields and a little
.. in the forest,” replied Baby Bunty.
a L haven't had muon exercise today,
,t* m afraid you’ll be getting old and
kjy, Aluan’t have that happen, you
IxjfP ' No, Its'pose not,” agreed Mr.
Vis "But mind you. Baby Bunty!
me »ke a walk with ,you, no making
thlnt sc you ’ or Playing tag, or any-
that!"
easy w . e l 1 -l UHt wa lk along nice and
laiigf‘ d look for an adventure like,"
h<"r t ihe little baby rabbit, shaking
mobih r,b l>on like a flag on an auto-
toeethY* 11 ’ sald Mr ’ Longears. So
the Ur and Baby Bunty went over
cle WL and trough the woods. Un
like a * y ' s plnk noSft was twinkling
he didn‘ lllelu on a 6 "l’' s bicycle, hut
more t,7' llnd that. It mad him feel
All (° ni Kay-
Jump an *”' !d, ’ n Baby Bunty gave a
in the a bop and a s P rln K to one side
somethin!:,J lr ‘ d Mhe ,nadu * grub at
one Paw.
and * Hom,-K oodn< ' H 8 mc . sakes alive
Wlgellv hotn powder!” cried Uncle
Bunty’' ' lVhat arfi you doing. Baby
game?” that a new kind of a tag
would' t)”fU"h«d Miss Bunty, as she
just saw af 1 when she grew up. "1
to grab U ” lIUK whizz Past and 1 tried I
world “for’”’ 1,1 , a ,. bu! ? ? , 1 . W1 7?t in the
"Just lit «i'‘ d Unrl< ' 'tiggily.
Hwcr. "You cou 1 rl, was the an
spry to cater 1° pi !f t V r uuick and
see if i was an <i I wanted to
wald™ kno^ ha i, r ' ~F nc,e w ‘«»»y
"No. if 1 w " a hut ’
Baby Burny a| ’7u, e^ 'tough, laughed
Stiffness, Unci» e eood for y° ur
genUemin ank V ” ch uckled the rabbit
fanhe? n an® a all <! ty n walks d r ? n . a “Hie
ty gave another onceness. Baby Bun
the grass ' to one side, over in
UnrlV’wigg h hy’ 8 'patter now?" asked
4‘swasvaf= •<
he let th- IltUe rabbit Birl ”
be of Vm awfiS aione! There’ll
the* bugs alone! say ' h^ ( ” er ' Ltd
past his'pink, nvinkl'"^ n^ hi . zz .t lßbt
WiggUy stopped tal k i sudden that
tongue. h ‘ 3 WOrds *he end y of his
suddenly rrlrfd" Bahy F h'* ! 1 see lt! "
Once more she gave V „ , .
Jtimp made a grab wilu P l n k j£ a ? n S
then she cried: iler paW8 ’ and
Ur.cle ha wi e giK ' Wai?“ U tha bi s b “K;
hit;, in a liftie empty
Baby Bunty opened a » A rnlmH hnv
and Into it she popped thc.„ round bo)! |
Bing! Bang ’ Bung!” ti* ~h b ,
bug about In the box Ipea lnt D ‘ s
wSIv oe, 'r!™ e ‘ n Ha hl Uncle
wigguy. < llve him air,» abv Rlintv
W hat sort of a bug is it?” aDy Aiunty
. .I 1 7 p ! n ’t know," answered „ iu M „ rnh
l>(t girl But when she hiL ‘J' e ™ b ;
air holes in the top „f the a w
'X ” and
"Why, that’s only a dear o t un p hu „i
They won't hurl you, Bunty. wn v did
you want to catch a June be
”<>h. just for fun!” she ans. rPd m
wont hurt him. I like to' him
bump around in the box. a
while I’ll let him go ” ttl
Bing! Bang! Bung!" humiH *i.p Kip
bug aliout In the box ,be ° k
"P*”!' 1 f , u “ so," laughed Bat Runty
111 soon let you go, nice Mr. J,' Kur'
I guess so many of them flew a„ m ]
because they thought your pink
« street light,” she said to Un" Wig!
"I bupß* »o ” spoke the hunnv. a v,t,i,
He and Haby ltimty were thiting „f
turning about ami starting back twhere
Nurse Jane Fuzzy VVuzzv was iiii n ir
for them in the hollow stump huTaimy
when, all of a midden, Just as thcVurn’
ed the corner by a sassafras bus out
hopped a bad old fox. ouc
"Jia-zlmm! Bd-xlmm! Ba-zoom!” , r k
ed the f,,x. “I want some souse
what is more, 1 want whatever youVve
In than box, Baby Bunty!"
"Oh, do you?" sweetly asked the Ul.
rabbit plrl "Well, suppose you take , at
first. Then she opened the round,in
box. out buzzed the hip, bumpy jL"
bus and he banßed and bounced ritthtin
the end of the soft and tender nose,f
the fox. '
"Whizz-banc” went the June buc
’Oh. wow!” howled the had fox. al
he tumbled In a peppersiult over bad
ward and then he ran away, and he die
«» Ke* any souse that nittht. So Und
" ißßuy and Baby Bunty were savet
all on account of a June bus. And I
you catch any be sure to let them bo
But if the potato masher doesn’t step 1
the marmalade and stay so lons that I
hasn’t time to take the eBK beater to th
nlcnle. I’ll dell you next nbout Und
Wtgslly and th lichtnlns bug
3,046 CONVICTS IN
GEORGIA, SAYS REPORT
Atlanta. Ga.—There are 3.046 men.
women and children serving sentences
for crime In Georgia* which ranee all
the way from murder to having whis
key on the breath. The oldest of these
unfortunate persons Is 84 and the young
est 10. The majority of them, however,
are between the ages of 17 and 31. The
crimes for w'hich they were sentenced
are murder. 965: burglary. 551; man
slaughter, 408; attempt to murder, 213;
larceny. 190; making whiskey, 19, and
bigamy, 13.
These are some of the Interesting sta
tistics given In the annual report of the
Georgia Prison Commission to Governor
Dorsey just made public.
Several Important recommendatlorfs
for amendment to existing statutes are
placed before the governor, among them
being an Indeterminate sentence law
for the state better provision for the
care and treatment of drug addicts, and
the vocational training of youthful of
fenders at the state reformatory
It Is pointed out that men are serv
ing different lengths of time for the
same offense committed in different
sections of the state, and that with an
Indeterminate sentence nuthorixatlon, an
ennallxation process could he Inaugurat
ed.
Drug addicts, the report declares are
more to he pitied than censured and that
a separate Inatltutlon should be pro
vided for them and their treatment with
the puriKsse of curing them of the habit
The most unfortunate condition of all.
It Is declared. Is the deplorahe lack of
vocational training among the boys and
girls at the reformatory during theig
sentences of probation. Kvery Effort
should he made to train the wayward
youths in useful occupations so that
when released thev will he fitted for the
duties of cltlsenshlp instead of having
aitiulred a tendency to drift back to law
lessness
FRUIT MEN ON TOUR
OF STATE ORCHARDS
Atlanta. Qa.—Twanly-elght growers
and railroad men of the Southwestern
peach belt on a tour of the peace orch
ards of Georgia passed through Atlanta
yesterday, conferring with railroad au
thorities of the Federal Administration
offlre here, and leaving Immediately for
Fort Valley and Houaton County.
Thev plan to study cultivation, pack
ing. shipping, and marketing of the
Georgia peact.ee first tn South Georgia,
then the middle section of the state,
and finally In North Georgia Pros
pects for a bumper crop In the South
west are good they report.
THE GREATEST DAILY FICTION FEATURE EVER
OFFERED
One Hundred Greatest
Novels
Condensed at a Cost of
Over $15,000.00
to J’ 50 ? Words eac h by a Specially Selected Staff
of the Greatest Writers on the Day—a Feature to Appear
at an early date in The Augusta Herald.
Some of the Great Novels in this remarkable series that
have been condensed by famous writers with such
masterly skill that the spirit and thrill of the
complete story are retained.
PARTIAL LIST OF NOVELS:
David Copperfield, by Charles Dickens.
Les Miserables, by Victor Hugo.
Pendennis, by Wm. Makepeace Thackeray.
Count of Monte Cristo, by Dumas.
The Heart of Midlothian, by Sir Walter Scott.
Don Quixote, by Cervantes.
The Pilgrim’s Progress, by John Bunyan.
Hypatia, by Charles Kingsley.
Treasure Island, by Robert Louis Stevenson.
Last Days of Pompeii, by Bulwer-Lytton.
Romola, by George Eliot.
Captains Courageous, by Rudyard Kipling.
The Crisis, by Winston Churchill.
Ben Hur, by Lew Wallace.
The Arabian Nights, by the Persian Scheherazada.
Sir Nigel, by Conan Doyle.
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, by Washington Irving.
Quo Vadis, by Sienkiewicz.
War of the Worlds, by H. G. Wells.
The Marble Faun, by Julian Hawthorne.
The Choir Invisible, by James Lane Allen.
The Beloved Vagabond, by William Locke.
Trilby, by Du Maurier.
The Right of Way, by Sir Gilbert Parker.
Tonv Jones, by Fielding.
Vicar of Wakefield, by Oliver Goldsmith.
Far From the Madding Crowd, by Thomas Hardy.
John Hilifax, Gentleman, by Miss Mulock.
The Awakening of Helena Ritchie, by Margaret Deland.
File 113, by Gaboriau.
The Sea Wolf, by Jack London.
Prisoner of Zenda, by Anthony Hope.
To Have and To Hold, by Mary Johnson.
Mr. Isaacs, by Marion Crawford.
Turmoil, by Booth Tarkington.
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, by Robert Louis Stevenson.
Pudd’nhead Wilson, by Mark Twain.
Little Women, by Louisa Alcott. *
Twfenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, by Jules Verne.
Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Bronte.
Anna Karenina, by Leo Tolstoi.
Loma Doone, by Blackmore.
The Little Minister, by Sir James Barrie.
The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, by Biasco Ibanez.
The Lady of Aroostook, by Wm. Dean Howells.
The Shuttle, by Frances Hodgson Burnett.
East Lynne, by Mrs. Henry Woods.
Woman in White, by Wilkie Collins.
Last of the Mohicans, by James Fenimore Cooper.
A Few of the many Notable Authors who have condensed
these Novels—Eighty of the condensations being by
specially assigned writers and twenty selected
by prize competition.
WILLIAM H. TAFT, ex-President of the United States.
SAMUEL W. McCALL and DAVID I. WALSH, ex-Govern
ors of Massachusetts.
LIBRARIAN BOLTON of the Boston Athenaeum.
LIBRARIAN BELDEN of the Boston Public Library
PROF. WILLIAM FENWICK HARRIS of Cambridge.
T. L. HOOD and CAPT. ANDRE MORIZE of Harvard
RICHARD H. DANA.
MRS. LARZ ANDERSON, Author of “The Spell of Japan ”
“Odd Corners,” etc.
ELLERY SEDGWICK, Editor of The Atlantic Monthly.
CAROLYN W’ELLS, Author of “Eight Girls and a Dog,”
“The Rubaiyat of a Motor Car,” etc.
JAMES B. CONNOLLY, Author of “The Crested Seas,”
“Head Winds,” e£c.
REV. PAUL REVERE FROTHINGHAM.
CLARENCE W. BARRON. Editor of the Wall Street Journal
MABEL HERBERT URNER, Author of Journal of a Neg
lected Wife, The Price Inevitable, etc.
BASIL KING, Author of “The Inner Shrine,” “The Street
Called Straight,” etc.
JOHN LUTHER LONG, Author of “Madame Butterfly "
“The Darling of the Gods,”*etc.
JOHN KENDRICK BANGS, Author, Poet and Lecturer
REV. DR. R. PERRY BUSH.
DR. CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY, Author of “The Island
of Regeneration,” “By the World Forgot,” etc.
A Great Popular, Entertaining and Educational Feature
with a family and individual appeal that will instantly
be recognized by all Augusta Herald readers,
both young and old.
A NOVEL A DAY, BEGINNING JUNE 23.
9
THE AVGUSTA HERALD
AUGUSTA, GA.
THURSDAY, JUNE 5