Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, April 03, 1917, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
Young Man's Thumb Blown
Off Trying to Kill Fox
Waynesboro, Pa., April 3.—Chester
Hahn, of Lewistown, Md., who Is vis
iting his aunt here, is suffering from
a gunshot wound in his right hand. For
several weeks the premises of his
mother, Mrs. Sallie Hahn, was visited
by a fox that was preying
chickens and seldom a day passed that
reynard did not carry oft some of the
fowls.
Young Hahn, growing tired of these
depredations, took his shotgun with
the intention of killing the animal. He
had spied it in a nearby woods, and
while he was crawling through a fence
with the gun, a twig of a bush became
tangled in the trigger and caused the
firearm to be discharged. The contents
of the gun blew the young man's thumb
off. He was taken to the Frederick
hospital for treatment.
MORE RHEUMATISM
THAN EVER BEFORE
Clergymen, Lawyers, Brokers, Me
chanics and Merchants Stricken
Our old friend Bheumatiz is having
his inning this year, and a few words
of caution from one who knows all
about it may not be amiss.
Wear rubbers in damp weather;
keep your feet dry; drink plenty of
lemonade, and avoid Btrong alcoholic
drinks.
If rheumatism gets you, or sciatica,
and you have sharp twinges, gnawing
pain or swollen joints or muscles, you
can get rid of all agony in just a few
days by taking one-half teaspoont'ul of
Rheuma once a day.
All druggists know about Rheuma;
it's harmless, yet powerful; cheap, yet
sure, and a 50-cent bottle will last a
long time. Ask H. C. Kennedy, or any
druggist.—adv.
EDUCATION A),
School oi Commerce
Troup Building 15 So. Mnrket 9*.
Day & Night School
BoukkreplU. Shorthand, Stenotypc,
Typewriting and Penmanship
Bell 4Vk Cumberland 248-Y
Harrisburg Business College
A Reliable School, 31st Year
Market St. Harrlsbnr*, Pa.
The cigar with a personality
KING OSCAR
5c CIGAR
I <1 ? i
has 4 been making new friends and hold
ing the old ones for more than a quar
ter of a century by being "always the
same" and always good.
JOHN C. HERMAN & CO.
T lakers
Absolutely No Pain
wi "y lateat Improved appll ~
Vtl >ncm, Inclu Jla* n■ oxeycea
bed air apparatus, make* >
extracting and all deatal J#' \V b
work positively pallr /*IV
In frttlT harm- V 9
Um. (iff toy
examination S
free XAVk S r.W.J'RS
———— #V\ T Hay
■ ■alnfii 11 A. Gold crown* aad
krldia work B,HM
T.11.l - 4A T OMea apea dally 81M
*K *®ld erowa.. .>5.09
X 1\ r • p. a*. i Man, Wed
%/ aad Cat., till • p. a-t Su.
dart. 1* a. m. to 1 . at.
wn rapaii wn-a __
if f east Tcnm o
Jr PATMWSKTI
*v/ 329 Market St. <ppff
(Orer ha Hah)
S Harrltburg, Pa. „ <,, i k.n •wt
Phone Us Your Order For
GOOD COAL
It is satisfactory coal in point of quality,
f* aMBI service and delivery.
I*' a ' trou ' s ' es van ' when our coal is
l et u prove thin.
J. B. MONTGOMERY
.nfifiSfl; I THIRD AND CHESTNUT STS.
Bell Phone 600 C. V. 4321
THORLEY'S DRUG STORE
IS NOW LOCATED AT
404 BROAD STREET
i,-u_: .. 'l' - .. I.i |.'q u. /
TUESDAY EVENING,
WATER QUESTION
IS NOW SETTLED
W'ormleysburg Council Passes
Ordinance to Pay Riverton
Co. For Fire Plugs
W'ormleysburg, Pa., April 3.—An or
dinance bridging con
troversy between the borough and the
Riverton Consolidated Water Company
in regurd to payment for fireplugs
now in the borough and the installa
tion of additional ones, was passed
finally by borough council lasf night.
Since the town was incorporated into
a borough there has been a continual
argument between council and the
water company about payment for the
plugs. It is said that the company in
stalled five plugs in the borough under
the impression that propertyholders
would pay the rental. When the town
became a borough the company came
to council and asked for the rental
and threatened to cut off the water.
On several occasions ordinances were
drawn up to adjust this matter but
no action was taken.
The new ordinance provides for pay
ment for these five plugs in the future
and several additional ones. The ordi
nance also provides that better hy
drants should replace the ,flve already
installed.
An ordinance requiring the number
ing of houses and lots in Second ami
Third streets was introduced, but not
passed on first reading. The houses
will be numbered north and south with
Ferry street us the center.
Burgess J. Fred Hummel vetoed the
ordinance requiring the Valley Rail
ways Company to pay a certain sum
each year for cars running through the
borough. The re'ason for his veto, the
burgess said, was that the tax was
entirely too low and that the ordinance
does not place any tax on the poles.
The matter was referred to the ordi
nance committee and a new one will
be drawn up and presented at the next
meeting. The ordinance was passed at
the last meeting and provided ttiat the
company should pay 1110 yearly tax
on the cars.
On account of no applicants for town
constable and a position as councilman
these positions remained vacant.
THIS WILL INTEREST MOTHERS.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powder* for Children, a
Certain relief for Feverishness, Headache, Bad
Stomach, Teething Disorders, move and regulate
the Bowels and destroy Worms. They frequency
break ap Colds In 84 hours. They are so pleasant
to the taste Children like them. Over 10,000 testi
monials. I'sedbyMothersfoi SOyears. Thttmtrer
/ail. Sold l>y all Druggists, Jse. Sample mailed
i'KKE. Address, Mother Gray Co., Le Roj, M. Y.
WHY BATTERIES
WELL WEAR OUT
Local Expert Explains Electro
chemical Process That Gov
erns Life of Battery
"The storage battery," says D. J.
Moran, local Willard representative. In
charge of the Harrisburg Storage Bat
tery Company, "is just as liable to
wear out as tires and like the tire, it
must be given careful attention by the
owner If the longest possible life is to
be obtained from it.
"A storage battery is a chemical ap
paratus consisting of positive and neg
ative lead plates immersed in electro
lyte, a solution of sulphuric acid. When
the starting motor is used or the lights
or ignition system put on the circuit,
a certain electro-chemical action takes
place between the positive and nega
tive plates in the presence of the elec
trolyte, and electricity flows through
the wires.
"As this chemical action continues
the character of the plates change and
the current will, ultimately, cease to
llow and the batery will be dead. This
condition, however, 1s forestalled by
the generator, causing the currept to
flow in the opposite direction, or to
'charge' tile battery.
"Charging the battery does not mean
that electricity is being stored up by
the battery, but that by mean* of elec
tricity the plates are being restored to
the condition in which they were be
fore the discharge began.
"Because it Is a chemical appara
tus. then, and not mechanical like a
machine of iron and steel, the storage
battery cannot be subjected to wear
and tear of service without gradually
deteriorating. Even when the battery
Is at rest, some action is going on,
and discharge is slowly taking place.
"In time the plates lose their capac
ity for reacting to the electrical charg
ing. The insulation is all the time
graduaHy wearing out and finally that
gives way. Even with the best of care
and with the best possible material,
this is going to happen with any stor
age battery.
"But the battery does not always re
ceive the best attention. It is the one
accessory on the car which the aver
age car owner seems to neglect. The
car owner, however, should get his full
money's worth from u good battery if
he gives it care, although, as we have
pointed out. he should expect to buy
a new battery some day. This is just
as reasonable an expense as buying a
new tire.
"From the foregoing it is perfectly
obvious that batteries myst be made
of the best quality possible to begin
with and then, if they are to be kept
in efficient condition they must have
good treatment at the hands'of the
owners. It Is impossible to prescribe
any definite term of life for a storage
battery for its period of efficiency may
vary greatly, according to the two fac
tors just mentioned, as well as in ac
cordance with the quality and aondi
tion of the starting jnotor and gen
erator.
PAY ATTENTION
TO THAT LITTLE
BALD SPOT
Here's good news at last for men
and women -whose hair is falling, who
are getting bald, or prematurely gray
and whose scalps are covered with
dandruff that nothing seems to keep
away and whose heads itch like mad.
H. C. Kennedy has secured thf local
agency for Parisian Sage, a simple,
harmless hair treatment that Is so cer
tain in its tonic action on the hair and
scalp and so sure of giving the limit of
satisfaction, that they sell it with offer
of money refunded, if it does not abolish
dandruff, stop itching head, and not
only check excessive loss of hair but
stimulate a new growth.
Parisian Sage is a delicately per
fumed liquid, antiseptic and scientifi
cally prepared, which when massaged
into the scalp goes right down to the
hair roots, where most hair worries
begin, and furnishes the famished
roots with the nourishment that Is lack
ing to make the hair grow better and
show more life and vitality. Parisian
Sage not only stimulates liair growth
hut beautifies it o that It Is a favor
ite dressing of women who taKe pride
In beautiful liair that can be easily ar
ranged and appear much "heavier than
it really is. A large bottle is inexpen
sive _at your favorite drug counter. —
Adv. *
Miller's Antiseptic Oil known As>
Snake Oil
Will Positively Relieve I'nln in Three
Minutes
Try It right now for Kheumatlstn
Neuralgia, Lumbago, sore, stiff and
swollen Joints, pains in the bead, back
and*limbs, corns, bunions, etc. Af
ter one application pain disappears as
if by magic."
A never failing remedy used inter
nally and externally lor Coughs, Colua,
Croup, Sore Throat, Diphtheria and
I'unsilitis.
This oil is conceded to be the most
penetrating remedy known. its
prompt and immediate effect in re
lieving pain is due to the fact that it
penetrates to the affected parts ai
once. As an Illustration, pour ten
drops on the thickest piece of sole
leather and it will penetrate this sub
stance through and through In three
minutes.
Accept no substitute. This great
oil is golden red color only. Every
bottle guaranteed; 25c, 50c and SI.OO
a bottle, or money refunded.
•Sold by OHO A. Gorgas' Drug Store,
HartialiurK. — Adv.
BUBS SILVER O.V-NOT OFF
t oa> wo eo- imp it ana t. w. o.
The Trade Supplied by
Henry Gilbert & Son
HXRHISBURO CtfSfiAf TELEGRAPH
FIRE WARDENS IN
THIS DISTRICT
Forestry Department Names
Men to Have Charge of the
Work of Fighting Fires
The State Department of Forestry
issued to-day the list of forest lire
wardens for Dauphin, Cumberland
and Perry counties. It takes account
of all changes to March 15, 1917.
The department is conducting a
strenuous campaign to reduce the
area burned over by forest lires in
Pennsylvania, and the publication of
these lists is part of the campaign.
The Department suggests that every
reader of the HARRISBURG TELE
GRAPH clip this list and post it in a
convenient place, and when he sees
a forest lire, to notify the nearest fire
warden immediately.
The wardens are as follows:
Dnuphiu County
J. S. Farver, Elizabethtown.
W. H. Ege, Dauphin.
Robert Putt, Dauphin.
J. F. Hampton, Grantville.
Thomas G. Lenta, Elizabethville.
F. M. Rltzman. Gratz.
N. C. Matter, Halifax.
Philip Parmer, Dietrich.
Daniel Rutter, Carsonville.
John M. Rutter, Carsonville.
Samuel J. Gruber, Middletown.
Jonathan Sehmeltz, Gratz.
Samuel E. Paul, Piketown.
Elmer S. Carl, Tower City.
Frank S. Ilassler.. Maclay Street
Station, Harrisburg.
Charles E. Livingston. Oberlin.
Elmer W. Dockey, Pillow.
David Keiter, Millersburg.
Harvey E. Lubold, Elffiabethville.
Joseph Miller, Waynesville.
Joseph Romberger, Halifax.
John H. Muinma, Piketown.
John E. Felker, Middletown.
Michael Knorr, Williamstown.
James Williams, Williamstown.
Dauphin county fires may also be
reported direct to the office of the
Commissioner of Forestry at the State
Capitol.
Cumberland County
J. R. Williams, Forester, Pine Grove
Furnac*.
E. S. Smith, Forester, Pine Grove
Furnace.
Oscar Barbour, Pine Grove Furnace.
John C. Farmer, Carlisle.
Hiram Sowers, Gardners.
Albert Mountz, Kerrsville.
J. W. Waggoner, Mechanicsburg.
Murray D. Stum. McCrea.
John I. Kurtz. Carlisle Springs.
John A. Hoover, Boiling Springs.
John E. Brown, Carlisle.
P. W. Davis, Newville.
X. W. Albright, Mechanicsburg.
Solomon Hancock, Shippensburg.
H. S. Mooney, Shippensburg.
David E. Marsh. Gardners.
Raymond % Whltcomb,. Boiling
Springs.
J. A. Brandt, Newville.
E. P. Hassinger, Newville.
Perry County
H. E. Bryner, Forester, New Ger
mantown.
H. A. Smith, Forester, East Water
ford.
D. W. Sheaffer, Blain.
G. B. M. Bair, Newport.
W. H. Hebel, Liverpool.
£. I. Tthoads, Montgomer.vs Ferry.
James Baxter, New Bloonifleld.
Eli D. Shoop, Shermansdale.
Jacob Myers, Newport.
J. R. Wright, Millerstown.
F. P. Sundy. McCrea.
J. A. Turnbaugh, Newport.
Henry Grubb, Millerstown.
George C. Long. Liverpool.
M. G. Hench, Landisburg.
G. Frank Mohler, Honey Grove.
George L. Mumper, Andersonburg.
Amos Reed. Andersonburg.
K. P. Smith. Ickesburg.
Charles O. Houck, 'Duncannon.
D. M. Ehrhart, Newport.
C. D. Bates. Duncannon.
S. W. Miller, Duncannon.
James E. Nickum, Duncannon.
H. A. Miller, Marysville.
A. R. White, Marysville.
Jacob F. Reisinger, Ickesburg.
Jacob A. Snyder, Elliottsburg.
E. C. Dile, Elliottsburg.
James Gloss, East Waterford.
Herman Hart, New Germantown.
Leroy .Koontz, New Germantown.
H. P. Corn man, Landisburg.
John Ziegler, East Waterford.
J. C. Hampton, Millerstown.
T. J. Kremer, Millerstown.
B. F. Lightner, Landisburg.
H. M. Lightner, Landisburg.
Allen R. Thompson, Duncannon.
Chester Burd, Duncannon.
25 Children Disprove
An Anti Story
Concerning Suffragists
As a refutation of an assertion made
by untisuffrage workers at the State
Capitol t the effect that members
of the board of the Pennsylvania
Woman Suffrage Association have no
children, a poll was taken at the last
meeting of suffrage executives.
This revealed that of the 13 mem
bers of the board, two of whom are
not married, 10 are mothers, having
In all 25 childrep. The youngest of
the suffrage children is Roberta Bed
ford, daughter of Mrs. J. Claude Bed
ford. of Media, who is just eight
old, and who is one of four
daughters in the Bedford family.
It was revealed that one member
of the board, Mrs. Edwin Linton, of
Washington, Pa., is a grandmother.
Other members are mothers of mar
ried daughters or sons already making
their way in the business or profes
sional world.
The mothers among (he suffrage ex
ecutives are: Mrs. George B. Orlady,
of Huntingdon, president, three chil
dren: vloe-j>residents, Mrs. J. O. Mil
ler, of Pittsburgh, two; Mrs. George
A. Dunning, of Philadelphia, five;
Mrs. Lawrence Smith, of Straf
ford, three; Mrs. E. E. Kiernan, of
Somerset,, two: Mrs. James P. Kogers,
of Warren, two: Mrs. Edwin Linton
of Washington, two: ruditors, Mrs. H.
Wilforil DuPuy, of Pittsburgh, one;
Mrs. Gifford Pinchot, of Milford, one,
and chairman of finance committee,
Mrs. J.' Claude Bedford, of Media,
four Ojiildren.
Other members of the board are
Miss M. Carey Thomas, of Bryn Mawr,
vice-president of the suffrage organ
ization'and president of Bryn Mawr
College; Miss Helen C.-Clark, of Ilar
risbtirg, secretary, and Mrs. Robert
Mills Beach, of Bellefonte, treasurer.
Tn addition, MI-B. Antoinette funk
of the legislative" committee of the
Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage Asso
ciation. who has been active in the
capital, is the mother of two chil
dren.
Antisuffrage workers also spread
the report, according to members of
the House of Representatives, that
members of the executive board re
ceive salaries. No official of the board,
it Is stated, ever has received remun
eration for her services.
F.XTFADIXG CAMP UROIXU
Mt. Gretna, Pa., April 3.—Fifty men
were put at work this morning to
clear an additional forty acres of wood
land in the southwestern section of
the State Camp Reservation. In award
ing the contract the Adjutant Gener
al*s Department dispensed with Its al
most Invariable custom of Inviting bld
and gave the work to Bennett & Ran
dall. of Lebanon, with instructions to
ruh it to early completion.
9PAHKS I'lH l: STABLE
Halifax, Pa., April 3.—Sparky from
a bonfire set fire to Q. W. Westfall's
•stable. In this place, on Saturday after
noon, and It burned to tlie ground.
The F&lifax Fire Company No. 1 re
HS Does the Housewife care E
it costs 2y 2 cents or 48 cents? pi
HE does! Investigation of a thousand stores show
3 that package delivery costs range from cents E
JMj to 48 cents a package. |jeEr
With leagues and clubs and investigating
committees probing the cost of living—the housewife
is at last getting at these long-hidden facts.
3 . Her trade is going to the alert merchant with the
- The day of horse delivery is past. It limits a merchant's y '■
volume. A horse can't cover enough territory to keep BEE
down the cost per package.
Then along comes the storekeeper who uses a converted fcgr
pleasure car, which burns up gasoline and tires and eats its
head off with repair bills. He iayi motor delivery doesn't Err.
pay—when his only trouble is that he has picked the wrong ML
He ought to wake up to his opportunities—install a VIM t— : '
-—J Delivery Truck, which is designed for package delivery and fc
package delivery only. There isn't a pleasure car part in the
'j| VIM truck It will work twenty-four hours a day if necessary fc —j
j—Tf and work without balking.
=j§ Easy on tires, economical in gas consumption, built to fc—!
stand the stress and strain of all sorts of roads and delivery
£5 conditions—that's the VIM Delivery Truck. P* '
S And it is the easiest delivery unit on the market to buy—
=3 through our Deferred Payment Plan. Bp:
|3 20,000 progressive American merchants are paying for
E5 their VIM trucks out of their delivery savings. F""
"=5 Full information about the VIM Deferred Payment Plan pi—
Thoroughly equipped VIM Truck Sales and Service
Station here in this city for the benefit of VIM owners.
Andrew Redmond E
j|j Third and Boyd Sts. Harrisburg, Pa.
1 mjF-B DELIVERY
i wsiPi CAR hf
■■ -* The Chassis tells for $663. Complete y, ,
mt with Open Express body, $715; with /y \
Closed Pauel body, $745. Ten other L
standard types of body. All prices
City Physicians Explain V/hy
They Prescribe Nuxated Iron
t
To Make Beautiful, Healthy W omen and Strong Vigorous Men
NOW BEING USED BY OVER THREE MILLION PEOPLE ANNUALLY
Quickly transforms the flabby flesh, toneless tissues, ami pallid cheeks of weak, anaemic men and women into a per
fect glow of health and beauty—Often increases the strength of delicate nervous, run
down folks 100 per cent, in two weeks' time.
New York. N. Y. —It is conserva
tively estimated that over three mil
lion people annually in this country
alone are taking Nuxated Iron. Such
astonishing results have been reported
from its use both by doctors and lay
men, that a number of physicians in
various parts of the country have been
asked to explain why tliey prescribe
it so extensively, and wny it appar
ently produces so much better results
than were obtained from the old forms
of inorganic iron.
Extracts from some of the letters
received are given below.
D r. Ferdi
nand King, a
New York
Physician und
Medical A u - jW jSOk
thor s a y ~
"There can be
n I> \
iron m e r W Q|^Rs
without Iron
means anae-
An aem i a y f
means iron
deftc i c n c y.
The skin of /V P wino. ~Tfw i I
anaemic men/ 1 M.D. H, I
and women
is pole; the
flesh -dabby. The muscles lack tone,
the brain fags and the memory Tails
and they often become weak, nervous,
irritable, despondent and melancholy.
When 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, candies, polished rice, white
bread, soda crackers, biscuits, maca
roni, spaghetti, tapioca, sago, farina,
degerminated commeal, no longer is
Iron to be found, ltetlning processes
have removed the iron of Mother
Earth from these impoverished foods,
and sillv methods of home cookery, by
throwing down the waste-pipe the
water in which our vegetables are
cooked is responsible for another
grave iron loss.
Therefore, if you wish to preserve
your youthful vim and vigor to a ripe
old age. you
Iron de
flciency
your food by
using some
form of or- : In
ganic I r o n , B1
just as y° u pHI
would U S \ Bl
n
your food has 1 ; AMI
enough
Al- mmSut
f honsus Wai
many
years experl- WH
ence In this
who"'has been
given* many 1 Mf -- ™
titles In Eng
land says, "Nuxated Iron gives the
weak and run down that great vim,
energy and endurance so envied by
the weakling. Its x widespread use
should brlnt about the most startling
results everywhere. The pale, anae
mic, nervous people now seen at every
turn shuffling lifelessly along the
Btreets should become sturdy alert
men and women of snappy stride
hrimmistr wiHi vim and vitAlltv."
APRIL' 3, 1917
•ponded to the Are alarm and saved
several nearby buildings froiu destruc
tion.
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
Lemoyne, Pa., April 3.—The newly-
Dr. E. Sauer a Boston physician who
has studied both in this country and
In great European Medical Institu
tions says: "As I have said a hun
dred times over organic iron is the
greatest of all strength builders. If
people would only take Nuxated Iron
when they feel weak or rundown, in
stead of dosing themselves with habit
forming drugs, stimulants and alco
holic beverages I am convinced that
in this way they could ward olf dis
ease. preventing it becoming organic
in thousands of cases and thereby the
lives of thousands might be saved
who now die every year from pneu
monia, grippe, kidney, liver, heart
trouble and other dangerous maladies.
The real and true cause which started
their diseases was nothing more nor
less than a weakened condition
brought on by lack of iron in the
blood.
Not long ago a man came to me
who was nearly half a century old and
asked me to give him a preliminary
examination for life Insurance. 1 was
astonished to find him with the blood
pressure of a boy of 20 and as full of
vigor, vim and vitality as a young
man; in fact a young man he really
was notwithstanding his age. The se
cret, he said, was taking iron—nux
ated iron had filled him with renewed
life. At 30 he was in Dad health;
at 46 he was careworn and nearly ni
in—now ut 50 after taking Nuxated
Iron a miracle of vitality and his face
beaming with the buoyancy of youth.
Iron is absolutely necessary to en
able your blood to change food into
living tissue. Without it, no matter
how much or what you cat, your food
merely passes through you without
doing you any good. You don't get
the strength out of it, and as a con
sequence you become weak, pale and
sickly-looking, just like a plant try
ing to grow in a soil deficient in iron.
Tf you are
strong
well you owe
it to yoursei,
to the
fo 1 1 o w i n g
test: See how
long you <:< n B
work or how SI ■
far you can S
walk without % 9
becoming
tired. Next
take two Ave
h
<> ordinary jr.-
nuxated iron
times
p., (lav after
again and* s e M. D."^%
have gained. I lj"
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 dyspepsia, 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 re
duced 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
in a form that can be easily absorbed
and assimilated to do you any good,
otherwise it ui*v Drove woim U>j
organized West Shore Building an<t
Loan Association opened business at *
meeting In the Ltmoyna Trust Com.
pany Building last night. Agencies
will be opened In each West Shore town
In a few days.
useless. Many an athlete and prize
fighter has won the day simply be
cause he knew the secret of great
strength and endurance and lllled his
blood with
New Y* or k
City said: "I r
have never be- jS. Jaques, M.D. j
fore given out J
any medical information or advice for
publication as 1 ordinarily do not be
lieve in it. But in the case of Nux
ated Iron I feel I would be remiss in
mv duty not to mention it. 1 have
tnken it myself and given it to my pa
tients with most surprising and satis
factory results. And those who wish
quickly to increase their strength,
power and endurance will And it a
most remarkable and wonderfully ef
fective remedy."
Dr. Howard James, formerly Resi
dent Physician of New York City Hos
pital and As-.jtSptfHHIHHBMHipiP
nt, fIHNHEt,
protracted fe
suffering from
ii long-stand- \
Ing case of k\ VBfci fii
anaemia, a 1 I■■ lHn MM •••:
such people, in
my opinion. James, M.D. f #)
need iron. Of , .J /
late, there has 5/
been brought
to my attention, Nuxated Iron. In
practice, I have found this an ideal
restorative and unbuilding agent in
these cases above mentioned."
NOTK—Nuxated Iron, which is pre
scribed and recommended above by
physicians in such a great variety of
cases, is not a patent medicine nor
secret remedy, but one which is well
known to druggists and whose iron
constituents are widely prescribed by
eminent physicians both in Europe and
America. Unlike the older Inorganic
iron products it is easily assimilated,
does not injure the teeth, make them
black, nor upset the itomach; on the
contrary, It is a most potent remedy*
In nearly all forms of indigestion as
well as for nervoua. run-down con
ditions. The manufacturers have such
great confidence in nuxated iron, tnai
they offer to forfeit J10%.00 to any
charitable institution if they cannot
tal*e any man or woman under 60 who
lacks iron, and increase their strength
100 per cent or over in Jour weeks'
time, provided they have no serious
organic trouble. They also offer to
refund your money If It does not at
least double your strength and endur
ance in ten days' time. It is dis
pensed In this city by Crpll Keller, Q.
A. Qorgas and J. Nelson Clark, all good
druffffinU.