10 118 MILLION AT h ONE MAN'S FEET [ -Sunday Schools This Week Begin Six Months' Study of Jesus' Life r Eighteen million persons, In North America alone, begin this wook a six months' course of study In John's Biography of Jesus. This is an edu cational project of Immense propor tions unl Importance, and yet, bo cause it Is not new, it excites little remark. Doubtless, the Sunday school is a more potent lorce in shup- I Ing a people's Ideals than all the universities of the land. With char acteristic ucuteness of Judgment,; President Wilson once wrote, "Thel Sunday school of to-day is the code 1 of morals of to-morrow." One day I stood rftnld the ruins of | ancient Ephesus, In the very theater | wl.ere Paul was mobbod, and con templated the many claims to dlstinc- j tlon of that great city and Its glories. First among theso —despite the tu mult about "Diana of the Kphesians" —ls the fact that out of Ephesus came ' I four of the live books written by the I aged John, the best friend that Jesus; had on earth. Just as, all unnoted by Broadway, | there are streams of light and beauty | and helpfulness going forth from ] New York city to the remotest parts I of the earth, so from this 'sensual, j pleasure-loving, materialistic and ] decadent old city of Kphesus there Issued theso inspired words concern- j Ing life's greatost realities and llfo's; greatest person. The little company j Of devout disciples, whom even the! corruption-laden air of a great heathen capital could not enervate, I little dreamed, when they besought j 'their aged pastor and spiritual father j to write down his personal memories j and interpretation of Jesus Christ, that ! the biography penned by John would l ono day be studied In Ave hundred' languages, or all the tongues spoken! iby mankind, and that it would become J :tho text of special study for millions! !of persons In continents then un-1 1 dreamed of. Every book partakes of the char- j ißcter of its author. John's emblem, in ancient ecclesiastical heraldry, is I , the eagle, because of his soaring and j j penetrating vision. He was the sort lof friend who understands. When! 1 they companled together for three! j years in Palestine, it. was John who walked closest to Jesus, and who (Seemed to give Him the greatest com ' tort. He was a comprehending com rade. Dike all fine and sensitive! spirits, he had a high quality of j courage, and he was the most stead fast of the disciples at the Crucifix-j ilon. Naturally, it was to John, .Standing by the cross, that the dying Frlond committed His mother, Mary, for protection and comfort. And it Was this same seer of the eagle per- j ception who peered farthest into thei mysteries of the hereafter and wrote them down in the Book of the Revela- ' tlon. The Fourth Gospel dlffnrsJrom ! the three earlier Lives of in that it is primarily a spiritual inter pretation of the divine nature of Jesus. A Great Book for the Times • Every writer's real reward is In the influence of his words. Even these lessons, vAiich penetrate into all the temotc and unexpected places which a dally newspaper reaches, have brought me letters from prisoners in penitentiaries; from men and women in asylums for the insane; from re mote mountain cabins and prairie sod houses: from famous business men and public officials; from alert teach ers and from modest, home-keeping mothers. If such is the outreach and HS fg aXgjppyayT'i jgj You can't raise rats and chicken* on< the same farm. Kill the rati with AAf CORN Trd. Mark U. 5 Pt. O/l, M Deadly to rats and jßmv'; mice but harmless /\ Have You Ever Prayed for the End of a Miserable Day? Perhaps You Have Prayed for the End of a Sleepless tonic, Cadomene Tablets. Do not hesitate to partake Night? Cadomene Tablets Bring Strength ' of the benefits, for hundreds of thousands have found and Rest! in Cadomene Tablets the real strength and health which Physical and Mental Exhaustion comes from starved, ' hungry Nerves, resulting from ovetwork, grief, sick- ' '/' o / ness, worry excesses, malnutrition and dissipation. 1 Cadomene Tablets bring food-energy to the starved, 1 v V • ■''/ >'/ / hungry nerves, thus restoring the nervous system to a ||V"r i ~ /• normal state, thereby overcoming the cause of physical f/A and mental exhaustion. The power in these tablets pro- '/WnL ' duce physical strength, mental activity and consequent Am(Jff will-power and personal magnetism—thp gloom disap- Jn ymVv'A. pears and sunshine beams from the countenance. /ffl V^jrlwygltSiMf When a man or woman has symptoms of failing - "7 physical and mental power, weakened vitality and loss / ' fllh ' of normal vigor, characterized by dizziness, hideous dreams, trembling weakness, pains in spine, cold ex- / tremities, headache, melancholia, # fear without cause, // / timidity and an unnatural feeling'of discomfort and self- / ' ■ consciousness, when the recreations of life lose their / '' ' pleasureablencss and everythitjg seems going to the \/7y u(( 1/ / J bow-wows and you feel like a too old, "down and out," A|| If f / / it's time to start the use of Cadomene Tablets to brace ' \l|J/ and build you up and add force and vigor to the bodily y wf / yln / To the nervous, irritable, half-sick, worried, non- / I \ if / efficient man or woman, Cadomene Tablets bring N w |Bg / / strength, poise, comfort, chter and all the joys of living Bf in health. they sought, and the proprietors offer your money back The convalescent, the dyspeptic, the neuristhenic—all you are not fully benefited in every way. find help, strength, energy and vitality in the perfect Sold by all wide-awake druggists everywhere. I^roJ^VENINGr x Pompeian Massag* Cream. 25c tm ill I Th a" o cut o pr?cef ty I Special Sale Saturday j The s p°~™ e eyAU 1 Specials on * 25c Hood's Liver Pills 15c VP A. VP W A Mtm i Cft I*d SI.OO Sloan's Liniment 570 Dorln's Rouse, No. 18 19c H A \Jlk(lli9 ?2 C If Blache Face Powder. . .320 Dorln's Brunetto Rou*o 1249. ,39c M SB A H ■ W Bland s Iron Pills, 5-*r. 100.... 140 Havana Tucks 250 50c Mary Garden Talcum :tflc r . ls .. an , Tl , lHn ■ ■ WW Asafetlda Pills, 2-gr. 100 190 wavanaTucKs zoo am :isc Fletcher Castorla lc lablcts, 5-gr. 100 180 Hl# m Migraine Tablets 100 •„ 7 Even Steven Cigars 250 ■ 10c Partridge Liq. Court Plaster, 5c 250 Colgate Tooth Paste 20c ■ ■ IjM |\ . • 16^J~r n Houblgnnt s Ideal Ext., bot 25c 60c Odorono 320 J I I H A ■ "° corll Salve ....... 8o ? g Clear* 25c l'to lwfi b ° t " ifln "c IW S .Teething I.otion •c VWAA A% A A 15° Mennen's Talcum tlo 7 General Hartranft Cigars!! I 250 iiSSSSf iSKS:::: it •■= ™ m. Hair 5.., 80= - £ *™ ,h j IK 50c Otiar Tropical loco IWd., :lc 100 Maleaa Salve 60 A I>. . * m 1. . c T- w k ~ t 7La Tafton BOc King's New Discovery 2tfc 11.00 Ca.lo.neuo Tab 580 ( Iff.,lf-}#-a Potonf MofllVinn \i Ayn( , IBe Weber Tea o 7 ct'unlellor CiSSJ 25c 25c Bacon Celery King Tea. .. .150 260 Carter Liver Pills 12c Vftll IYaLC 1 dlClll l'lcQlClllC OIOTCS 25c Sanltol Tooth Powder...l2c 6 Clnco Clears 'sc Wjcth's Sage and Sulphur, 28c 35c Neuralglne Tablets 12c __ _ _ BOc Sal Henatica 2!le 'c. A' i H 25c Llsterine 15c SBo Rcslnol Soap' ... :uc 1300 Market Street v 306 Broad Street .00 Sal Hepatlca 670 I —l—_ 60c Disunited Magnesia 270 10c ilc.Neil Cold Tablets 6c XTr .. . . .. Allen Foot Ease 15c .. H t-wiir::: We reserve the right to limit quantities. ■ *. c0„ P .....0 iU:":: £ I 171.00 Milks Emulsion 67c 31.25 Persian Ivory Hair 5V C P^' S Cr#a 8a1m... 20c 07c Persian Ivory Combs .48c Wa AII A J a* J D * BOc Paimollve Face Powder... 250 25c Omega Oil 150 Uoi-S.Tfji!,"wiiv:S?S lv ™'" , " jr <>—■..* " e Meet All Advertised Prices Auwck-. P „rou. pi„ t ,...i00 i!:SS Mc T . w ... w.h. dw. g i.! from 7 a. m. io p. m„ 1 60c Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin...27c 100 Haarlem Oil 5c and wl " now open at BA. M. and close at 10 P. M. in our ———I————— S3c Limestone Pliospiiutc lc H 26c Pape's^Cold'comp"!?? '.' "c 25c SferTla Talcum 7.:" V.'. \l° Saturda y s ' BA -M.tolo P. M. Sulpho Sage Hair Tonic 500 RWni,i9 Tablet *' 6trC "* tl '' I(^ c 15c Paimollve Soap 6. Doc Plnex 280 Open BA. M. and close BP.M. at Broad Street. Satur- P °° Comb -5c Calomel aihl Soda Tab, 'A-gr. lotn M 2oc Daggett and Kamsdell Cold UOc Antlphloglstlne 5c days, BA.M.to 11 P M v __ 10c H| rn Cr f a,n ''."i. 150 BOc DJer Kiss Face Powder. ... 36c ' * Knnoinl .. „ 2Be Barker's Liniment 150 NS BOc Ingram a Milkweed Cream.2oo 16u PinauU Face 39c special haturaay, .9c 50c i3 ar Ke r 'B Liniment 29c gy| 10c Jergen's Glycerine Soap 6c 26c Woodbury Face Powder... 15c " BOc Mulsitled Cocoanut Oil.. .. 29c 200 Woodbury donp 15c 26c Sussalola 15c RAT ft ITO (111 Ofln BOc Sloan's Liniment 28c 25c Gets-It 15c B JBc J' oley Honey and Tar 15c 26c Sanitoi Face Cream ISc UlColldiiL V/U • • • • uOCt TjCi ~ . BOc Damschinsky Hair Dye ...29c fflj 2Bc komlon s Catarrh Jelly 15c uOc btuaris Dvsneosia Tab auc ' Azuren lace I owd 750 S1 00 NnxatAd Iron fiin H 60c Mary Garden Cold Cream..3Bc BOc.Swamp Root 30c —^. 26c Squlbb's Talcum 130 BOc Kodol Dyspepsia Tub 29c H 76c Mary Garden Greaseless Cream 25cCutlcura Soap 18c f A -v ■> . Mary Garden Extract; hot. "5c 50c Black Caps 25c gM D ~ „ ~ , „ 02c SI.OO Oil liorein Capsules 57c d /%k I B / l)ier Kiss F*traet hot •>„ *1 Pierce's Golden Med. Disc. 57c fiJl 25c Ponds Vanishing Crenm... 15c Joc James HeaUacno Powder..sc fey V / \ I I ■ ijcr Hiss H-xtract, bot _so S1 00 Pierce ' s irav . presc 57c 25c Satin Skin Cold Cream 15c 25c Sal liepaticu 15c il, X. m M Aznrea Extract, bot 25c BOc Father John's Med 40c 08 I'oc Satin Skin Greaseless Cream lto Williams' Shaving Soap .... 5c Mary Garden Sachet, bot 10c Jl-00 S. S. S. 55c |§m 15c 26c Palmer's Skin Success Soap, 120 - . .. DJer Kiss Sachet, bot. 10c Chlorlile Lime, 12 ozs 9c ||9 ____________ L A/.urea Sachet, bot 10c Horlicks Malted Milk. .$2.75 Kf _ Chocolate OO Bu r&\'-i'liV\ 26c Pierce Pellets 120 25c McNeil's Kidney Pills; 2 for 25c B?3I Fountain Syringes and Hot Water Bottles cherries .. <3*s C I Epsom Salts, b 5c I 25c Ottar Tropical Talc, 17c B8 Ssc Gem Glades 25c 1 Pint Witch Hazel and b0t....170 M WONPEACE, No. 33. $2.25 value. A i a Milk Chocolate ™|E* j 25c Atwood Bitters He I 1 Pint Denatured Alcohol for burn- Red rubber; 2-qt.; rapid flow; 3 hard rubber pipes, Brazil QQ \ . j'LOO D" for"Eczema."s9° 1 Pint Bay'mini, imported'.3B° H WONPFAfP Mo 1A tl tn ,„l„. A.— . XI . -1H f* JP iVAii'^'i^V'i l ' l ' 1 ] 'iff V SIOO Wampole Cod Liver OH, 55c Quaker Herb Kxtract 67c H . 2 - 50 valu - <£l Q A Nuts mchloride Lime, 5 OZ s .. 50 neipiddo 59c ■ Ked rubber; 2-qt.; rapid flow; 3 hard rubber pipes, tP J, ••JT" T> 75c Hall's Catarrh Cure 4ic Kolynos Tooth Paste 14c H BF G No 41 4? w val,,. A Bassanios; QQ W/liMmfm/WmmWmmmmftEM sl - 00 Sargol Tablets 55c Swansdown Face Powder 9c 1-.* , * value. CT O/I (nllVßliitnißlKiamßllWllHt' Hn until BOc Creme de Meridor 28c BOc Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur. .29c H Red rubber; 2-qt.; rapid flow; 3 hard rubber pipes wX 0 jT cnoice .... 50c Formamint Tablets 2c 26c Mum 15c Ira HHIPTT A T o, cn T-> j . . 7 80 Mercolized Wax 48e SI.OO Margo Tablets 59c B "t- 1 , Wo. 30. $3.50 value. A Preparedness—Assorted Chocolates OA M a i ena Pills "12c 25c Peroxide Tooth Paste 19c HI Red rubber; 2-qt.; rapid flow; 3 hard rubber pipes, It/ 60 ° Da ßsett and Ramsdeii Cold —————————————— H W Cream SIo 1 9 TV * 9 FOUNTAIN SYRINGES Old-Fashioned Chocolate Drops qq inhafe > rs PiM * S Dl'llg WONPEACE, No. 29. $1.25 value. o BOc Baume Analgeslque BanweiMc r<u i , , _ _ . , 5* y- 10c National Corn Remover ... 5c I. jIIID I jOITPP Chocolate rubber; 2-qt.; 2 hard rubber pipes UOC Lady Evelyn Assorted Chocolates r\r\ 26c Sloan's Liniment 15c HOSPITAL, No. 36. $3.00 value. /M r ll'oo othme* 1 * fl3c ave made a host of Red rubber; 2-qt.; 3 hard rubber pipes q) ieU / 60c Doan s Kidney Piiis !'.!.*!! fronds with this delicious cof- YANKEE—Red rubber; 2-qt.; 3 hard rubber pipes; /? O 25c Creme (le Meridor lie $2.00 Eckman's Ait $1 19 ?5c Amonized r'o'r'na ee regular customers who $1.25 value .....DOC 5c y H SoI KANTLEEK Fountain Syringe and Water Bottle; O QfV 7 c Beef. Iron and Wine '.'#Bc SI.OO HorMcks'Malted'Miik!!! ,67c 60c -e bl \A/ S th " r , fn ® nd . s w ! l b 2-nt •S3 SO viltte SM 10(5 Ra y mon Soft P 50c Borden's Malted Milk S2c Eoo llsoHna Oil . them. We COuldn tdo it With |l| kant'l^ek fountain syringe; T oq - :::::JS r inferi r coff "' ' 20r • $1.98 tt BSas?SSJK-.;:-.:vSS sS=:Effi p ° u l™.t -5 pound" 0 effect of one series of simple, present day articles, what is the power of a masterpiece like John's Gospel, when universally translated and dis tributed? All the pi elates and po tentates of earth combined have less Influence than this one book. There chances to lie on my desk at the moment a small, brown-bound copy of this Gospel, distributed bv the million to British soldiers on ac tive services by the Scrip* 'ire Gift Mission, of London. Thoi.s ids of men in the trenches have gone forth to death with the words penned in old -Ephesus on their lips. Peep into any mature Christian's copy of the Bible and it will be found to open most naturally at the four teenth chaper of John's Gospel, where the best-thumbed passages will be seen to be those beginning, "Let not your heart-"be troubled." Beyond :i doubt, this old book, which springs like r white lily of spirit uality out of the black mud of Ephe sian heathendom, is the most popu lar and the most helpful bit of writ ing to be found in all the world. Myriads and millions of persons, of all sorts and conditions, have found it a veritable book of life. So the six months of study upon wljch the Sunday schools of the world aro now entering is no experiment. Kipling's wolf-child, Mowgli, hail to learn the master words of the jungle. Now that the overturning of a thousand stabilities by the world war has made life more of a tangled jungle than ever, we are all seeking for master woids. .Night and day countless men anjj women, most of them entirely unsuspected by their closest neighbors, are pondering, puzzling and suffering over the pres ent pligl.t of civilization. More per sons are interested in these essen tially spiritual questionings than in the latest plays or books or news or fashions or food prices. The strug gle to find out God, and to know His will, is still—yes, even more than ever—the supreme interest of all peopla. The world is hungry for a clear word about God. And that is the fundamental need of our time which this book meets. It. speaks the master words. A Famous Fragment As the rare air and sublime view on a mountain-top freshen the spirit, so the majestic opening of John's Gospel lifts one's spirit above petti ness and triviality, into a contem plation of the supreme concerns that the mind of mortal may grasp. Start ing, like the book of Genesis, with the words "Jn the beginning," it projects the readers into the far reaches of eternity. Here is no soci ety chatter, no sporting page gossip, no comic strip triviality. Challenged by the very first, words, the reader las to exercise the highest faculties that he possesses to grasp at all this teaching. Merely to add the interest of vari ety, and to throw new light upon the familiar phraseology of the King James Version, I quote the fragment of the book that is to-day's lesson from Dr. Moffatt's "New Translation of the New Testament." His use of the Greek "Logos" for the English "Word" will be especially remarked: The Logos existed in the very beginning, The Logos was with God, The Logos was divine. He was with God in the very beginning; through Him all existence came into being, no existence came into being apart from Him. In Him lay life, and this life was the Light for men; amid the darkness the Light shone, but the darkness did not master it. A man appeared, sent by God, whose name was John: he came for the purpose of witnessing, to bear testimony to the Light, so that all men might believe by means of him. He was not. the Light; it was to bear testimony to the Light that he ap peared. The real Light, which en lightens every man, was coining then into the world: He entered the world— the world did not recognize Him; He came to what was His own, yet His own folk did not welcome Him. On those who have accepted Him, however. He has conferred the right of being children of God, that is, on those who believe in His name, who owe this birth of theirs to God, not to human blood, nor to any impulse of the flesh or of man. So the Logos became flesh and tarried among us; we have seen his glory—glory such as an only son enjoys from his father —seen it to be full of grace and real ity. Making Over the World God's method of making over the world is to send a man. Truth tri umphs when incarnated in a life. "So tile Logos become flesh." Only when the divine Word, the expression of the character of the Father, becomes incorporated in a man or woman does it to change society. Reverent ly we say that it seems as if the only truth that God can employ for His conquests is that which has been made a part of the character of His servants. A man may be a message, a "word" of God even as Jesus was. As voice is the most distinctive ex pression of personality, surviving the mutations of the years, so Jesus was uniquely the Word of God, the very incorporation of the Supreme Will and Character. For verse-by-verse 'exegesis of the lesson passage there is not space here. There are seven cardinal points, however, in the text that may be tersely restated without amplifica tion. 1. It is a far-founded faith that John propounds. Overleaping all barriers of time it goes back to the ultimate beginning, when the Word was present in the councils of the Creator, before ever time began, (v. 1, 2.) 2. As an essential agent and ex pression of God, as a co-worker with the Father, Christ was present and participating in creation. John does not leave standing room for those who see in Jesus only a beauti ful character and a sublime teacher, (v. 3.) 3. Life, with all that it means of largeness and power and joy and severity, ia "In Him." This auda cious chronicler affirms that there is no real life except spiritual life, and that is derived from Christ its Source. (v. 4.) As Tennyson de clared: "Our little systems have their dav, They have their day and cease to be They are but broken lights of Thee, And Thou, O Lord, art more than they." 4. That Life is Light. Wherever Christ goes, light accompanies; so that a myriad treatises have shown Him to be "the Light of the World." In our own dark time Christ is our only light; and there is no hope for a readjustment of civilization, except as we see things in the light of ■Topiis. • Wrapped up in the truth of Christ as the light is all the mission ary experience of the church. For however great the darkness, it has not hastened the Light, (v. 4, 5, S, 9.) 6. Saddest of all the words of human. speech is the sentence "He came unto His own, and His own re ceived Him not." Because He was "despised and rejected of men," the suffering Saviour Is the sympathetic comforter of all who walk a solitary way, and drink life's bitter cup. Had he come in pride and power and prosperity, Jesus would not. have been able to meet most of us on our own level, (v. 10, 11.) 6. This first Son of God became the best brother of man. He opened the way into sonship for all the rest of us. We have our place in God's household of faith because our brother sought us wandering and brought us home. We may recognizo all sons of God by the family like ness. (v. 12, 13.) 7. Here is a man telling what he knows. This is the testimony of an eye-witness, for John wrote, "we be held His glory." All these majestic declarations of the Prologue of John's Gospel are the testimony of one who had personal experience of his subject. Back of all our creeds, lies the simple fact of the historical Christ, (v. 14.) ARRKST BOYS Charged with shooting a revolver and creating a disturbance In the vi cinity of Maclay street, four boys were arrested last evenlnjr by Policeman Ross. DUEL IX GRAVFYARI) Chester Policeman and Nejfro Thief Use Pistols; Man Escapes Chester, Pa., Jan. s.—With bullets Mother Why Do You Take Nuxated Iron And Be Strong and Well and Have Nice Rosy Cheeks Instead of Being Nervous and Irritable All The Lime and Looking So Haggard and Old? The Doctor Gave Some to Susie Smith's Mother and She \\ as \\ orsc Off lhan \ou are and Now She Looks Just Fine. S™ I^R^^";f; T l^ T C A REASE THE STRENGTH AND ENDURANCE OF WEAK, NERVOUS, CAREWORN, HAGGARD LOOKING WOMEN 200 PER CENT 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. "There can be no healthy, beautiful, rosy cheeked women without iron," says Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York physician and author. "In my recent talks to physicians on the grave and serious consequences of iron deficiency in the the blood of American women. I have strongly emphasized the fact that doctors should prescribe more or ganic iron nuxated iron for their Dr. Ferdinand King, New York physician and author, tells physicians that they should prescribe more organic iron—Nuxated Iron— for their patients—Says anaemia—iron de ficiency—is the greatest curse to the health, strength, vitality and beauty of the modern limerican Woman.—Sounds warning against use of metallic iron which may injure the teeth, cor rode the stomach and do far more harm than good; advises use of only nux ated iron. nervous, run - down, weak, haggard looking women patients. Pal lor means anaemia. The skin of the anae-, mic woman is pale, the i flesh flabby. The mns-| cles lack tone, the brain fags and the memory fails, and often they become weak, nervous, irrit able, despondent and melancholy. \V hen the Iron goes from the blood of women, the roses go from their cheeks." . . . "In the most common foods of America, the starches, sugars, table syrups, candles, polished rice, white bread soda crackers, biscuits, macaroni, spaghetti, tapioca, sago, farifia, degermin ated cormeal, no longer is iron t< be found. Refining processes have removed the iron of Mothei Karth from those Impoverished foods, and silly methods of hom< cookery, by throwing down th< waste pipe the water In which our vegetables are cookfd are re sponsible for another grave lost of iron. "Therefore, if you wish to pre. serve your youthful vim and vlg or to a ripe old age, you mus supply the Iron deficiency in your food by using some form of organic Iron, Just as you would use salt when your food has not enough salt." "As 1 have said a hundred times over, organic iron is the greatest of all strength builders. If people would only throw away patent medicines and nause ous concoctions "and take simple nuxated Iron, I am convinced that the lives oi thousands of people might be saved, whi now die every year from pneumonia flying thick and fast, McKlnney, a nue, yesterday. McKinney was after Chester policeman, and William Wise, Wise, who, the police say, was caught a negro, engaged in a lively pistol duel in the actfot rifling the cash register in in the burying grounds of the Chester Gallagher Brothers' garage. Wise es- Friends' Meeting, on Edgemont ave- caped. grippe. consumption. kidney, liver, heart trouble, etc. The real and true cause which started their disease was nothing more nor less than a weaken ed condition brought on by lack of iron in the blood. On account of the peculiar nature of woman, and the great drain placed upon her at certain periods, she re quires Iron much more than man to help make up for the loss. Iron is absolutely necessary to en able your blood to change food into living tissue. Without it. no matter how much or what you eat, your food merely passes through you without do ing you any good. You don't get the strength out of it, and as a consequence you become weak, pale and sickly look ing. just like a plant trying to grow in a soil deficient In Iron. If you are not strong or well you owe It to yourself to make the following test: See how long you can work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of ordinary nux ated iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength, again and see how much you have gained. I have seen dozens of nervous, run-down people who were ailing all the while double their strength and endurance and entirely rid themselves of all symptoms of dys pepsia, liver and other troubles, in from ten to fourteen days' time simply by taking iron in the proper form. And this, after they had in some cases been doctoring for months without obtaining any benefit. But don't take the old forms of reduced iron. Iron acetate or tincture of iron simply to save a few cents. The Iron demanded by Mother Nature for the red coloring matter in the blood of her children, is alas' not that kind of iron. You must take iron You can tell the women with plenty of iron in their blood beautiful healthy rosy cheeked women full of Life, Vim and Vitality good, .otherwise it may prove worn* than useless. I have used Ntixatcd Iron widely in my own practice In most se vere aggravated conditions with unfail ing results. 1 have induced many oth er physicians to give it a trial all of whom Irave given me most surprising reports in regard to its great power as a health and strength builder. Many an athlete and prize fighter haa won the tjay simply because he knew the secret* of great strength and en durance and filled his blood with iron before he wetnt into the affray; while many another has gone down in in glorious defeat simply for the lack of iron." Dr. Schuyler C. .Taques, Visiting Sur geon of St. Elizabeth's Hospital of New York City said. "I have never be fore given out any medical Information or advice for publication, as I ordin arily do not believe In it. But so many American women suffer from iron de ficiency with its attendant ills—physi cal weakness, nervous irritability, mel ancholy, indigestion, flabby, .sag-King in a form t hat can be easily ab sorbed and assimil ated to do you any muscles, etc., and In consequence of their weakened run-down condi tion they are so liable to contract serious and even fatal diseases that' I deem It my duty to advise all such to take Nuxated Iron. I have taken it myself and given it to my patients with most surprising: and satisfactory results. And those who I wish quickly to Increase their [strength power and endurance will | find it a most remarkable and won derfully effective remedy." NOTE Nuxated Iron, which as prescribed and recommended above by physicians in such a great va riety of cases, is not a patent medi cine or secret remedy, but one which is well known to druggists and whose Iron constituents art widely prescribed by eminent physician's both In Europe and America. Un like the older inorganic iron prod ucts it Is easily assimilated, does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach; on tho contrary, It Is a most potent rem- edy in nearly all forms of indigestion as well s for nervous, run down conditions. The man ufacturers have such great confidence in nux ated Iron, that they offer to forfeit SIOO.OO to any charitable institution if thev cannot take any man or woman under 60 who lacks iron, •ind incre.ase their strength 200 per cent, or >Ver in four weeks' time, provided they have .10 serious organic trouble. They also offer to refund your money If it does not at double your strength and endurance In ten days' time. It Is d4bcnsed In this city by Oroll Keller, G. A. Gorgaa, J. Nelson Clark and all rnn<) riruurß-ifita. <
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