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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1917)
12 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAXD, JULY 8, 1917. GERMAN GOIII SAID TO ABET ANARCHY Government Is Preparing Stamp Out Treasona ble Organization. to DEATH PENALTY PROVIDED ITnited States Attorney Reames De clares Evidence Is Ample For eign Funds Propagate Cam paign of Sabotage. Official announcement that the TJnitedi States Government Is deter mined to stamp out the Industrial "Workers of the "World, commonly known as the I. W". W., was made yes terday by Clarence 1 Reames, United States Attorney for Oregon. Mr. Reames referred to the I. W. "W. as "the greatest menace In the country today." The Government, he said, is In possession of evidence tending- to show that its propaganda of anarchy and sabotage is being financed by Ger many. He gave warning that the activities of the I. W. "W. in stirring up strikes, threatening to burn wheatfields and other actual or threatened outrages have reached a point where they are considered by the Government to con stitute treason, and will be proceeded against as such. Death Punishes Treason. Under the espionage bill, which be came law on June 15, the death pen alty is provided for treasonable activ ities. In addition, there are other pen alties providing for long terms of im prisonment. Shortly after making the announce ment of the Government's attitude to ward the activities of the I. "W. W Mr. Reames left Portland on a. trip that will take him to Marshfield and other Coos Bay points, where I. W. W. agi tators are stirring up trouble in the lumber industry. Stern measures will be taken to curb any acts of violence that -may be planned by the I. W. "W.s there. For several weeks, Mr. Reames makes known. Government agents and special investigators have been work ing to procure evidence of the motives behind the I. "W. W. activities. The investigations have reached a point where sharp action may be expected in the very near future all over the country. "The I. "W. "W. is a Nation-wide or ganization, largely financed at present by an unseen foreign power," said Mr. Reames. "Facts in the possession of the Government point directly to Ger many and German interest as the source of much of the money being used to stir up dissension in America. "As these funds are disbursed by a small coterie of men, probably the ordinary I. W. W. agitator is ignorant of their real source. The leaders of this dangerous organization are men of the very shrewdest type, and many of them have taken courses in criminal law to enable them to come as close as possible to committing crimes without actually being criminally liable. Persecution Is "Welcomed. "These men will do everything pos sible to cause local authorities to com mit acts that will place them and their organizers in the list of persecuted vic tims. Nothing pleases them more than to be run out of a town, with accom panying publicity throughout the country, and being put in jail for the cause of free speech. "During times of peace the Govern ment -state, federal and local has overlooked these activities. But now members of the I. W. W. are engaged in treasonable activities and propa ganda. In a time of war the I. "W. V. organization has become one of the worst menaces to society and to the Government. "The I. W. "W.a stand on the middle ground between legitimate organized labor and redhanded anarchists. Dis closures at I. "W. "W. trials and the lit erature of the organization show the I. "W. "W. to be clearly anarchistic, and bending its efforts toward the de struction of society and of government. Organized Labor Injured. "The I. W. "W.s work on the line be tween the redhanded anarchist and or ganized labor. The organization is de nounced by patriotic men in organized labor. Its membership is composed largely of the wanderers, the "floaters" and the vicious and ignorant element. I am sure that organized labor itself will lend every aid in the campaign to crush out this, blot on labor. '"Investigation of the membership of the I. W. W. has disclosed that a- large proportion of its members are aliens, including men of German birth, who have never applied for American citi zenship. "In the timber districts, in the wheat growing districts, in the munitions plants and elsewhere, the I. "W. W.s. through the preaching of sabotage and anarchy, have created a most serious and dangerous situation that must be stamped out with great severity." MUGHTRAVELEXPEGTED TOURIST AGENT LAl'DS COLUMBIA RIVER HIGHWAY. Manager of "Vosemite Park: Trans portation System Says Portland Should Advertise Great Road. That, the war will not seriously affect Western travel, and that in the Colum bia River Highway Portland possesses the greatest scenic asset of any city In America, were statements made by William R. McStay, registered at the Renson, traffic manager of the Des mond Park Service Company of 1'osemite National Park, which oper ates nine resorts and the transporta tion in California's wonderland. Mr. McStay is here to observe the National Kducation Association convention and gauge the possibilities of travel from the Northwest to Yosemite. "Without doubt." said Mr. McStay last night, "there is no city In America which at its very door has a play ground such as the Columbia River Highway. That road will bring more fame to Portland than the now noted Rose Festival, which Has become as . much a part of this city's life as has the Mardi Gras to New Orleans. To visit Portland without having toured the highway is evidence that your Bojourn was woefully incomplete. "Before the outside world appreciates the beauties of the highway, let Port land citizens themselves realize the wonderful supernatural gift which has "been made accessible by the brain of a clever engineer and the toil of many laborers. "I believe a few years will find your Columbia Highway one of the best known scenic attractions of the coun try, if you keep in mind the fate which befell the violet. Lot your publicity be constant." ' BERKELEY, CAL., BELLE AND PRESIDENT OF PORTLAND REALTY BOARD ARE TO BE MARRIED TONIGHT. I "' ' jh ' " r""""- It t ? i 4 4 ' f i - ' : I MISS HAZEL A1LEX.AXD FRANK L. M'GUIRE. The many Portland friends and business associates of Frank L. McGuIre, the popular president of the Portland Realty Board, will perhaps be surprised to learn that Mr. McGuire is to be married tonight in Berkeley, Cal.. the bride being Miss Hazel Allen, an attractive belle of the California city, whom Mr. McGuire met in Portland about two years ago while Miss Allen was visiting friends in this city. Following the wedding Mr. and Mrs. McGuire will tour California and then go East, visiting the larger cities and attending the annual convention of the National Association of Real Estate Boards to be held in Milwaukee July 24-27. They will return to Portland over the Canadian Pacific route and ex pect to be at home to their friends in Portland after August 1 at the old McGuire home, 487 East Pine street. Mr. McGuire, who is 30 years old, is the son of Mrs. Hollister McGuire and a brother of Dr. Stuart McGuire and Mrs. C. E. Stolte, of Portland. BIG CONVENTION ON Addresses Are Patriotic and American Throughout. FOOD PROBLEM DISCUSSED Two Sessions of National Council of Education Held and Foremost Members of Profession Have Place on Programme. (Continued Prom First Page.) ing train, came new companies of dele gates, many of them of wide promi nence, and all in the van of educational progress. It is not expected, however, that the attendance will reach high tide until tomorrow or Tuesday, when the real work of the convention be gins. The National Council of Education. at its first session yesterday afternoon at the Hotel Multnomah, presented several speakers of note. With pos sibly one exception, their views on the present-day duties of educators were marked by strong similarity. Behind each theme stood the "mailed bulk of Mars, a menace that must be met by the combined effort of all. C. G. Pearse Presides. Presiding at the sessions was Presi dent Carroll G. Pearse, chairman of the board of trustees and president of the State Normal School, Milwaukee, Wis., who delivered the opening -ad dress and strongly urged the value and importance of physical education. "I am not sure but that we are charged with as heavy responsibility as those who have marched away to bear arms and the brunt of battle," de clared the speaker. "As a nursery of democracy the American school never had an equal. As a training for the actual duties of life it might do a great deal better. We must give our young people a great deal better quality of physical educa tion. It i3 our shame that half the young men examined for the Army and Navy are rejected because of physical defects. Many- Duties Declared Neglected. "We have left much to be desired in our training for the duties of citizen ship. Ten millions of our young men enrolled for military service on a PORTLAND GIRL STARTS TO MORROW OVER PANTAGES CIRCUIT. Photo by BushnelL T Miss Roslka Reingold. Lured by an offer from Alex- 1 ander Pantages. Miss Rozika I Reingold. a dance soloist well known in Portland, will appear 4 on a new bill opening at Pan- tages Theater in Seattle tomor- row. In the act with Miss Reingold is Master Louis Kauffman, boy violinist, also of Portland, who appeared at the Orpheum Theater the past season. t Rozika Reingold came to Port- J land from New York and estab- J lished herself as a teacher ot 4 Russian ballet dancing. Several of her pupils appeared at Red Cross benefits with marked sue- cess. Miss Reingold herself has f a wide acquaintance in Portland. .'. ' JAXi JA' J-I.U J JJU.4 i?::;-:N5::x : '::::::-:; h c , liiiill i' y ' t . . i sVczzS 4Scsx designated day. Our people respond to great emergencies. They have not been so taught as to be ready and to have the habit of responding to the small daily calls for service. They do not go to the polls on primary election days, or on the day o' general election." President Pearse declared that the duty of the association and the schools was to strive for a higher type of physical fitness, and for a realization of the humdrum tasks of citizenship. The most significant address of the afternoon session was an Impromptu talk made by Charles R. Van Hise, president of the University of Wiscon sin, and representative of Herbert C. Hoover, food controller of the United States, who responded to the request for "a few words" with a ringing ar raignment of the combines which seek to profit by the Nation's need and peril. Regulated Co-operation Urged. At one time, said President Van Hlae, his views of regfclated co-operation and the fallacy of supply and demand as an economic principle, had not been popular, "For it has been a fetish in this country," he continued, "to hold that supply and demand are all that have to do with prices. As an adequate regu lation of prices it has completely broken down." He was positive in his assertion that regulated co-operation provides the only remedy for the rocketing of food and commodity prices at "a time in the world when the demand for every commodity is greater than the supply." The cycle is endless, he declared, and it had been his observation that in creased bread prices did not bring about a wage increase in ratio, while all wage increases, in turn, again ani- maiea nigner prices. In this manner, he declared, prices had increased from one to four-fold within the nast vr and a half. "Brimstone Goes Up." "Why, brimstone itself has gone up in price from S22 to S50 a inn , laughed, "so that even his satanic ma jesty is compelled to be careful of his expenditures." Asserting that it no loneer contended that the law of supply and demand is adequate, and that organi zation under regulation must ensue, he branded as "robbery" the combinations that make higher prices. "While that may not be precisely the scientific term." he qualified, "it closely approaches it, and certainly the term 'extortion' is appropriate." As Instances in point he named the ex cess profits of various large commodity corporations. The wage raises are not commen surate." declared President Van Hise, and thus the conditions of the salaried man has become worse and worse, and the case is still worse for the working man, who has an actual struggle for the necessities of life. The American workingmen are paying more for bread from American wheat than English workingmen are paying for bread made from that same wheat. Dealers' Agreement Noted. "I do not know about Pnt-tianii .,, I'll guarantee that it costs you ex actly the same price from whichever dealer you buy your coal and for ice, its exact antithesis. Now, is that co incidence, a dispensation of providence ui jt ii an agreement to control the market? Competition has nracticaiiv ceased to exist and each organization exacts from its customers all that it possibly can extract. "If you legalize co-operation you must have adequate concrol, in order that the co-operation may be beneficial to the public." Such had been the ir resistible force of rising prices, ho con tinued, that a bill covering the system of food control had been introduced by Senator Chamberlain, of Oregon, and is now pending, giving complete power for the public protection. President Van Hise charged many boards of trade with collusion in de ciding upon higher prices, and declared that, even with the high price of wheat, the Nation had been paying too much for its bread. He was spir ited in his assertion that food prices were manipulated to tho point of rob bery and extortion. Regulation 7ot Socialism. Such regulated co-operation as is proposed is not Socialism, he advised, but is the surest way to balk the ad vance of that doctrine, which is gain ing converts every day through the exorbitant demands of the combine. He urged the educators to write and telegraph at once to their Senators and Representatives, asking for the support of the food control measure. Homer J. Seerley. of Cedar Falls, la., delivered a paper upon the obligations and opportunities of the schools during the war. "Amid such conditions as must arise in National life and unity, the teacher's loyalty and sincerity should occupy peculiar prominence and distinction in times of National stress and suffering." he declared. "The philosophy of manliness and righteousness taught in the American public school is now to be tried out on the field of battle in Europe," he asserted, "with no ambition for more authority over other races and with no other purpose except the ameliora tion of mankind and the betterment of civilization." Need of History Emphasised. That both teachers and pupils must have a thorough understanding and appreciation of American history and its ever recurrent theme of striving for liberty, was the declaration of John F. Sims, president of the Stevens Point Normal School, of Wisconsin. "All of our history shows a struggle for the greater democracy," said Presi dent Sims, "the Revolution for free dom, the Civil War for the emancipa tion of the slaves,, the liberation of the Cubans and Filipinos and today the emancipation of mankind. In our pres sent crisis, so far as the public schools are concerned, the teacher must be a student of American history. The stu dents must appreciate the history we have gone through. They must believe in patriotism." In vindication of the character of college and university students, who have been sneered at as "mollycoddles." Mrs. O. Shepard Barnum. vice-president of the' California State Board of Edu cation, triumphantly drew attention to the fact that, among the first to en list, were those same boys. Mollycoddles" First to Enlist. "They have said that we were train ing up a generation of mollycoddles; they have said that we had too many women teachers in our schools, and that the youths were trending toward feminization, whatever that may be, but the first to enlist came from our schools and colleges," declared the speaker. Mrs. Barnum told of toe work In California schools, of the "adoption of French and Belgian war orphans, of the school, gardens and the conserva tion plans, and drew applause when she announced that the children work ing in cotton mills would contribute more to the Nation and to their own welfpere by simple gardening. "The duty of the school officials and of the schools is precisely what Presi dent Wilson termed it," said Mrs. Barnum, "they are the last line of de fense." An unusual plea for conservation, but one that appeared to meet with approval, was the proposal of President Kerr, of Oregon Agricultural College, that midsummer school vacations be shortened to four weeks. Longer School Urged. Idle 25 per cent of the time, our public schools exhibited a shameful waste In efficiency, he declared, and asserted that the question of whether we are making the most of our invest ment is pertinent. In cities, more par ticularly, he observed, students spent their vacations in unprofitable idleness and were prone to debasing influences. He proposed 48 weeks of school as a remedy for this, and for the advan tageous use of the school investment.- "Think of what an asset it would be." he urged. "Think of what we could ac complish in a de-ade by the addition of that eight or nine weeks of study!" The chief duty of teachers, from now on, is so to aafl themselves of their position in training children that no repetition of the existing war can occur. said Katherlne Devereaux BlaKe, 01 the Lillie Devereaux Blake School, New York City. Further, she asserted, that the existing war proved to her that she and other teachers had failed as men tors. "It is our duty so to study and avail ourselves of our opportunity that such a condition can never come again," said the speaker. "It lies in our power. We control the children." Teacher's Ideal Dram. Lack of imagination lay behind the great war, asserted the speaker, a lack that blinded rulers to the conditions of the battlefield. All the glory of air plane conflict, with the fight in the clouds, had been stressed, she said, while only imagination could summon the picture of the plunge and its sequel. "It's the 'put yourself in his place' attitude that we teachers must foster," the speaker declared, "and if we don't do that we shall have failed." President Aley spoke briefly on the work that lies before the convention, and of the importance of its deci sions. He was succeeded by Dr. Mar garet McNaught, Commissioner of Elementary Schools of California, who read a paper upon advanced methods and their results in the grades. From North Dakota, with a message about wheat production on the bonanza scale, came Neil C. McDonald, Superin tendent of Public Instruction of that state, whose wittily pertinent remarks were greeted by much hand clapping and laughter. Superintendent McDonald told of the agreement reached in North Dakota to delay school opening until October 1, at the earliest, in order that older stu dents, 10,000 of them, might aid in the harvesting of the estimated crop of 260,000.000 bushels of grain. "They will work on the eight-hour schedule," he commented, "eight hours In the forenoon and eight hours in the afternoon." FEARFUL HUSBAND SUES HELCHOIR GIEZEK SAYS WIFE IS GOOD KNIFE THROWER, Stella Morris Declares Sponse "Would Not Bathe Oftener Thaa Once In Six Months. Anna Giezelc is a better knife throw er than she is a wife, alleges Melcholr in a suit for divorce filed in the Cir cuit Court yesterday, in which he avers that she attacked him a few months ago with three knives and succeeded in cutting his hand badly- as well as stab bing him in the bead. He is afraid to live longer with her and wants a di vorce on grounds of cruelty. If Ralph Morris would take baths oftener their married life might have been happier, avers Stella Morris in her divorce complaint. She alleges that her husband would not take baths oftener than once in six months and for that reason seeks to rid herself from her spouse. She asks for the restoration of her maiden name, Stella Bronson. Vesta Holllngsworth alleges that aft- SEWLV ELECTED VICE-PRES- 4 IDEXT OF WOMAN'S RE- LIEF CORPS. io- y . . ' Mrs. Delia Eley. Mrs. Delia Eley, 115 East Seventy-second street North, has - been elected junior vice-president of the Woman's Relief Corps of the Department of Oregon. She is a daughter of Jerry Worlek, a veteran of the Fifth Wisconsin Battalion. Mrs. Eley was elected at the ForeRt Grove encampment. t f A mmrn er her husband took their two children and went to The Dalles she was forced to sell their household furniture in or der to live. Her husband, she avers, is an undertaker at The Dalles and earns $200 a month. She asks for the custody of the children and $76 in monthly ali mony. She alleges both cruelty and desertion. H. S. Rohu and his wife, Ellnnora, were simply a mlsmated couple, ac cording to the husband's divorce com plaint on grounds of desertion. They were married in 1910 and separated in 1916. Abble Katzdobler avers that Joseph Nuxated Iron to Make New Age of Beautiful Women and Say Physicians Quickly Puts Roses Into the Cheeks of Women and Most Astonishing Youthful Vitality Into the Veins of Men It Often Increases the Strength and Endurance of Delicate, Nervous, "Run-Down" Folks 100 Per Cent in Two Weeks' Time. Opinions of Dr. Schuyler C. Jaques, Visiting Surgeon of St. Elizabeth's Hospital, New York City; Dr. Howard James, Late of the Manhattan State Hospital, of New York, and Formerly Assistant Physician Brooklyn State . Hospital, and Wm. R. Kerr, Former Health Commissioner, City of Chicago. NEW TORK, N. T. Since the re markable discovery of organic iron; Nuxated Iron or "Fer Nuxate," aa the French call it. has taken the country by storm. It Is conservatively esti mated that over three million people annually are taking it in this country alone. Most astonishing results are re ported from its use by both physicians and laymen. So much so that doctors predict that we shall soon have a new age of far more beautiful, rosy-cheeked women and vigorous iron men. Dr. Ferdinand King, a New Tork Physician and Medical Author, when Interviewed on this subject, said: "There can be no vigorous iron men without Iron. Pallor means anaemia. Anaemia means iron deficiency. The skin of anaemic men and women Is pale: tho flesh flabby. The muscles lack tone; the brain fags and the mem ory falls and often they become weak, nervous, irritable, despondent and mel ancholy. When the iron goes from the blood of women, the roses go from their ChIn the most common foods of Amer ica, tho starches, sugars, table syrups, candles, polished rice, white bread, soda crackers, biscuits, macaroni, spaghetti, tapioca, sago, farina, degerminated cornmeal. no longer is iron to be found. Refining processes have removed the Iron of Mother Earth from these lm- Eoverished foods, and silly methods of ome cookery, by throwing down the waste pipe the water in which our veg etables are cooked, are responsible for another grave Iron loss. "Therefore, if you wish to preserve your youthful vim and vigor to a ripe old age, you must supply the iron defi ciency in your food by using some form of organic iron, just as you would use salt when your food has not enough salt." Former Health Commissioner Wm. R. Kerr, of the City of Chicago, says: "I have taken Nuxated Iron myself and experienced its health - giving strength-building effect and in the in terest of public welfare. I feel it my duty to make known the results of its use. I am well past three-score years and want to say that I believe my own great physical activity is largely due today to my personal use of Nuxated Iron. From my own experience with Nuxated Iron, I feel it is such a valu able remedy that it ought to be used in every hospital and prescribed by every physician in this country." Dr. E. Sauer. a Boston physician who has sutdied both in this country and in great European medical institutions, said: "As I have said a hundred times over, organic iron is the greatest of all strength builders." "Not long ago a man came to me who was nearly half a century old and asked me to give him a preliminary examin ation for life insurance. I was as tonished to find him with the blood pressure of a boy of twenty 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 bad health; at 46 he was careworn and nearly all in. Now at 60. after taking Nuxated Iron, a miracle of vitality and his face beam ing with the buoyancy of youth. Iron is absolutely necessary to enable your blood to change food into living tissue. KHIS hotel, for over a quarter UL f a century famed among the great hotels of the world, offers its conveniences alike to the visitor and to the home citizen. Enjoy the vine-clad courtyard; the broad balconies and sun par lors; the cool lobbies, parlors and writing room; the superior service in dining-room and grill. Club Breakfasts 40c, 150c, 60c, 75c or Breakfast a la Carte, 6:30 to 11:30 Noon Luncheon 50c ; 12 to 2 Afternoon Tea 3 :30 to 6 Table d'Hote Dinner $1 ; 5 :30 to 8 or Dinner a la Carte Weekday Dinner Dance 6:15 to 8:15 Sunday Dinner $1. Special Music Unlike Any Other Hotel in America" has treated her in an extremely cruel manner and wants a divorce. They were married in 1912. Dinner for Mission Planned. The Belgian war mission, which is to visit Portland July 10, will be enter tained by the business men of the community at a dinner at the Benson Hotel at 6:30. Reservations are being made already at the Chamber of Com merce. Secretary W. D. B. Dodson sent out a letter yesterday announcing the dinner, setting forth the purposes of the visit of the .mission to Portland Vigorous Iron Men r . 41' - s i ' Hfc ft' 1 1 1 All II EM "ft-'i - Vn- n-iW. V-l ThTf " ""i- .Thviv.. -wvft. AY. .v . 1 JM. .-.-j sm-Wxv i Aos .was Without it, no matter how much or what you eat, your food merely passes through you without doing- you any grood. You don't get the strengrth out of it, and as a consequence you become weak, pale and sickly looking-, 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 obtain ing any benefit. Ir. Schuiyer C. Jaques, Visiting Sur geon of St- Klizabeth's Hospital, New York City, said: "I have never before given out any medical information or advice for publication as I ordinarily do not believe in it. But in the case of Nuxated Iron I feel I would be re miss in my duty not to mention it. I have taken it myself and given it to my patients with most surprising and satisfactory ' results. And those who wiPh to increase their strength, power and endurance will find it a most re markable and wonderfully effective remedy." Dr. Howard James, late of the Man hattan State Hospital of New York, and formerly Assistant Physician Brooklyn State Hospital, said: "Nuxated Iron is a XLkomL urprittin& .remedy, a patient of If ' If! WW' and urging all business men of the community to arrange to be repre sented at the dinner. Amnesty Granted Czech Leaders. AMSTERDAM. July 7. According to a telegram to Dutch newspapers from Vienna, steps have been taken to grant a complete amnesty to Dr. Karl Ka ma rz and Dr. Aloysius Raschin, leaders of the Czech party in the Hungarian Parliament, who have been serving sen tences for treason. Read The Oregonian classified ads. mine remarked to me (after bavins' been on a six weeks course of it) 'SAY DOCTOR. THAT THERE STUFF 13 LIKE MAGIC Previous to using Nux ated Iron I had been prescribing tho various mineral salts of iron for years, only to meet complaints of discolored teeth, disturbed digestion, tied-up hard ened secretions, etc., when I came across Nuxated Iron, an elegant in genious preparation containing organic iron, which has no destructive action, on the teeth no corrosive effect on, the stomach, and which is readily as similated into the blood and quickly makes its presence felt in increased vigor, snap and staying power. It en riches the blood, brings roses to the cheeks of women and is an unfailing source of renewed vitality, endurance and power to men who burn up too rapidly their nervous energy in the strenuous strain of the great business competition of the day." Note: Nuxated Iron, which is prescribed and recommended above by phytaLcians in such a. great variety of cases, is not a patent medicine nor secret remedy, but ohe which is well known to druggists and whose iron, constituent are widely prescribed by eminent physicians both in Europe and America. Un like the older Inorganic iron product a. It Is easily assimilated, does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach ; on the contrary, it is a most potent remedy In nearly all forms of Indigestion as well as for nervous, run-down conditions. The man ufacturers have Burn, great confidence In nuxated iron that they offer to forfeit $100.00 to any charitable institution If they cannot take any man or woman under 60 who lacks iron, and increase their strength 100 per rent or over In four weeks' time, provided they have no serious organic trouble. They also offer to refund your money if it does not at least double your Btrength and endurance in 10 days' time. It is dispensed in thla city by Owl lrug Co. aud ail good, drufifilata, Adv.