The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, August 19, 1917, Section One, Page 17, Image 17

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    IT
J. E. YOUNG MAY GO
PRIZE-WINNING POSTER FOR MANUFACTURERS' AND
PRODUCTS SHOW. AND ITS DESIGNER.
LAND
THE SUNDAY OREGONIAIf, PORTLAND, AUGUST 19, 1917.
New Man Slated to Act as
Fire Marsha!.
RESULT OF TEST AWAITED
Commissioner Bigelow Says Action
Is Not Vet Taken, as Examina
tion for Itattalion Chief Has .
Not Taken Place.
Indications at the City Hall point to
the elimination of John E. Young, bat
talion chief in the Bureau of Fire for
many years, now temporarily serving
as Kfcond Assistant Chief and Fire
Marshal, and the naming of some new
man to fjll hit present position. C. A.
Bigelow, Commissioner of Public Af
fairs, who has charge of this work, has
made no open move as yet toward the
permanent designation, although he
has been at tile head of this bureau for
neerly two months.
There is a persistent rumor at the
City Hall that Mr. Bigelow is favor
able to Edward Urenfell, at present a
captain, formerly a temporary battal
ion chief and one of the main leaders
In the recent effort of the firemen to
obtain the passage by the people of a
two-platoon (two shift) system dur
ing the last city campaign. However,
Sir. Bigelow is making no statement as
to his attitude, except to ,say that he
Is fctudying the situation and wants to
liave the very beet man possible for
the place when he makes the final ap
pointment. .
, Change la Indicated.
' That Mr. Bigelow intends to name
pome other member of the Bureau of
iFire to the position is said to be
Btrongly indicated by his recent re
quest of the Civil .Service Board to
hold an examination for battalion chief
nd his declination meantime to make
permanent the appointment of Mr.
Venn:?. To this, Mr. Bigelow replies
that he is simply waiting to see what
liappens at this examination as to who
passes.
' There is no reason why Mr. Bigelow
eoma not make the permanent appoint
ment of Chief Young as Fire Marshal,
did he desire to do so, as the position
in vacant. Jay Stevens, who was first
appointed Fire Marshal by H. R. Albee,
tiien Mayor and Commissioner of Pub
lic Safety, is now in San Francisco
sis chief of the Coast bureau of fire
prevention of the underwriters, and
his resignation as fire marshal was ac
cepted before Mr. Albee left office; as
a. chief, he is on leave of absence for
a. year from June 30, 1917.
Chief Young; la Fire Marshal.
Meanwhile, Chief Youngr is acting as
Fire Marshal, but with the original
Xorce, with but one exception missing.
"Walter S. Creech, who was clerk in the
fire prevention division when Jay Stev
ens organized that work and made a
remarkable showing in reducing fires
in Portland, is now with the North
western Mutual Life Insurance Com
pany as its cashier here, and former
Captain Groce, who, with Captain' Rob
erts, formed the arson squad, is doing
special investigation work for the un
derwriters out of San Francisco.
SALARIES ARE AT ISSUE
till ,.uri,Ul,S ALL UbSlUULS U
GETTING MURK MO.BV.
Commissioner Blgelovr Will Not Be
Ready to Consider Increases for
t at Least Ten Days Longer.
'According: to C. A. Bigelow, Commis
sioner of Public Affairs, he will not be
ready to proceed with the consideration
of salary increases in his own bureaus
sjor at least 10 days. The principal de
inanda made through his office are
those of the firemen, who have asked
for a rise of 25 per cent and one day
off in three, as against one in six, as
now.
Salary increases are being sought by
virtually every employe on the city
payrolls, and never a day passes but
one or more applications are filed with
the various Commissioners. They are
piling up rapidly and are being held
on the Council table until such lime
as all of them are in and they can be
considered as a whole.
Mayor Baker has ordered the prep
aration of a complete list of the city
employes and their salary ratings for
lis when he calls a special session of
the Council for the consideration of
petitions for increases. It will be a
very serious problem for the Commis
eoners to solve, for they are facing
Crave, difficulties, the chief of which
are loss of competent help and lack
of funds.
Many of the best employes in the
service of the city have left or are
threatening to leave unless prompt ac
tion is taken in granting them more
pay. Better salaries are now being
paid by private firms all over the city
than are being allowed by the city,
and offers of more money have been
made to many of the municipal servants.
RESTAURANTS TO BE RATED
Campaign. Against Dirty Eating
Houscs Started by Health. Officer.
City Health Officer Parrish is plan
ning a campaign against filthy res
taurants and has issued instructions to
the inspectors of his bureau to check
closely all eating-houses and to sup
press bad practices in them. Many
complaints have been lodged with him
within the past few days regarding this
subject.
Dr. Parrish has visited a number of
restaurants himself in the past few
days and has observed things which
he has ordered discontinued. He says
that he will have all such places in
spected and cards issued with their
ratings for posting in conspicuous
place and for publication in the news
papers if necessary to obtain results.
Concert to Be at Mount Tabor Park.
This programme will be played by
Campbell's American Band, at Mount
Tabor Park this afternoon at 3 o'clock:
March. "Tinnha iu,r." rpnueu .'WaKnprl :
overture "Zmpa" i Harold i; sextette. '-I.u-
fla. ' request fuonlzetu); suite. Atlantic.
"Nocturne anil Morning Hymn of Praise."
"A Court Function." Love Thee." "The
litruction of Atlantis" ttfafranek. Inter-
miKBion. Selection, After the Uirl." request
IKuiienn; Hawaiian patrol, "KHauea"
i Stewart : descriptive fantasia, "In the
'lock Store. request lOrthl; "Southern
Melodies". (Lampc); "Star-Spangled Ban
ner.'
MAN U FACTE EEES
Tk?, ana ' M -
PORJLAHD.OftfGON
New Aud itorj um
- NOV. 3rd. TO 24th
" :i?gf is 3 ' if
i
070,000.00 :
REDjc'to Fases
on all Railroads -
and Steamship Lines";
POSTER WlflS $100
Charles Lebengood, of Port
land, Is Successful Artist.
LAND SHOW IS ADVERTISED
Recital Committee Named.
James A. Bam ford, W. R. Boone, F
V. Goodrich, K. K. Coursen and J.
Hutchinson have been named by Mayor
Baker as a committee to arrange pro
grammes for recitals appropriate to the
dedication of the Auditorium organ, to
be held early In September. There will
Je two of these, free to the public,
Exhibition This Year Will Be Held
In New Municipal Auditorium
Which Will Give Every Facllity
for Attractive Displays.
The Manufacturers' and Land Prod
ucts Show, Portland, has Just closed a
competition for a poster design which
brought forward a choice collection of
art work by men and women of Oregon
and Washington. Of 24 designs sub
mitted, the judges awarded the prize of
1100 to Charles Lebensrod of Portland
The poster is to be printed in 'three
cotors ana will be sent to all parts of
the United States for advertising at
county fairs. The judges were Will
iam McMurray, general passenger
agent O.-W. R. & N., A. D. Charlton,
assistant . general passenger agent
Northern Pacific, and W. D. Skinner,
traffic manager Spokane & Seattle
Railroad.
The primary object of the exposition
is to introduce more fully to the people
of the Northwest the ultimate con
sumers the products of the farms, the
orchards and the dairies of Oregon, and
the industrial . plants, shops and fac
tories of the state. The presentation
is to be made in a manner that will ap
peal to the thrifty, the economical
minded, the searcher after the beauti
ful, and to the practical man and wom
an who are seeking a permanent home
location in a favorable place for the
exercise of their best endeavors.
Being educational in its purpose, the
show will aim to teach the consumers
of the Northwest that home industry
stands for all that is best In quality,
for all that is truly thrifty, for all that
is conducive to the development of
latent resources, both human and ma
terial. The show will be held at the new
Municipal Auditorium, giving every
facility for making displays attractive
and for handling large, crowds. A
large stagre will offer facilities for
public meetings, lectures and moving
picture displays. Two floors will be oc
cupied by the show, the industrial dis
plays and the soil products being on
the main floor. The manufacturing
pavilion will be in the basement. The
Auditorium is near the business center,
with ample streetcar service to care
for the largest crowds in the evenings.
without delays.
The management of the show is in
the hands of David M. Dunne, presi
dent; A. K. Gantenbein, vice-president;
C. D. Minton, secretary; A. O. Jones,
treasurer; A. H. Harris, superinten
dent of soil product division.
On the board of directors are a num
ber of well-known men, among them
three or four eminently successful
farmers. The board consists of:
David AT. Dunne, manufacturer paints and
oils, Portland; A. E. Gantenbein, Independ
ent Cracker Company, Portland; C. L. Mln
ton. Pacific Homestead, Portland; A. O.
Jones. First National Sank. Portland; Mrs.
Winnie Braden, secretary Dallas Commer
cial Club. Dallas; H. M. Davltsalon. Oregon
Chair Manufacturing Company. Portland;
D. M. Lowe, agriculturist. Ashland; Janes
Twohy. Twohy Bros., car manufacturers.
Portland: P. Feldmtn. Mt. HoM Soap .i.m
pany, Portland: J. W. Bcrwr, aat-r tiy
The Dalles Commercial Cljo, Th Dalits;
Roy Bishop. PendLron W le-i M;:Ik, Pen
dleton: J. Ross L,eJ!e. ar'c.tlturisc. Joseph;
Carl Schalling-er. Hazelwood Cream Com
pany. Portland; R. D. Fontana. Oregon
Packing Company. Portland K L. Scht-
agriculturist. Prin--ille; A. 1. Clsrk. ir.n
ager Columbia Steel CoruDtmy, Portia. tv;
A. It. Harris, writer and ore usit dint, Port
land. COMMISSIONS WON BY MANY
fContlnued From Page 16.
miUtary people. He is the son of C. W.
Gillard, 915 East Thirty-ninth street.
He was the truant officer of the Juvenile
Court before leaving for the camp.
He la 2t years old and was born In
Ijiverpool. He came to this country 10
years ago. He went to the schools here
and later studied law In the University
of Oregon. He is married, Mrs. Gillard
at present living with his parents. -
Hia father also tried to enlist, but
was Just a few years too old to be ad
mitted. He was a member of the
Naval Militia and was all packed to go
when they refused to accept him.
Another son. Frank R. Gillard, was
with the Portland Railway, Light &
Power Company, and left there to Join
the Navy and is now at sea.
Thomas Walter Gillard won a com
mission as Second Lieutenant in the
cavalry section.
Joseph W. Kehoe is a lawyer and
formerly, was a well-known athlete la
.: "J
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local inter-scholastics. He is the eon
of Airs. Josephine Kehoe, of 305 Pacific
street.
He attended Columbia University and
later studied law. He is 27 years old
and married, Mrs. Kehoe at present
is living with her parents, Mr and Mrs.
F. E. Southard, 235 Broadway. Mr.
Kehoe won a commission as Second
Lieutenant In the field artillery.
-
P. Ij. Menefee Is the son of u B.
Menefee. 524 Myrtle street. He has had
considerable experience and has been
much Interested in soldiering, though
only 22 years old.
He attended Portland Academy and
then went to Culver Military Academy.
He then entered the University of
Illinois, where he continued his work
with military organizations. Mr. Mene
fee signed his application in the Kast
but, like others, was assigned to the
Western eamps and passed through
Portland three months ago. He la a
Second Lieutenant.
Harold H. Hilton is a .graduate of the
University of California, which Is one
of the especial military universities es
tablished several years ago. He won
a Second-Lieutenancy and lives with
his parents at 387 Kast Fifty-second
street North.
He was interested in the Oregon
Naval Militia and had taken the full
course of military training at the Uni
versity of California.
Albert M. Closterman is another
young banker who is made a Second
Lieutenant. He its in the infantry. He
was a member of the Third Oregon
machine gun company. He lives at 488
East (Sherman street. He is a Portland
boy and attended the local schools.
Walter B. Gleason is commissioned a
Second Lieutenant with instructions to
appear at once. He was first dismissed
on account of eye trouble and had
given up any idea of getting a commis
sion. The other day he received a tele
gram stating that he had been accepted
and should make ready to report at
once. He .is a Portland boy who tor
meriy attended Hill Military Academy,
which training helped him at the
camp. His father was prominent in
governmental affairs of the state for
many years.
Harold H. Barbur is the son of Com
missioner Barbur and is connected with
the Northwestern Electric Company.
He is 29 years old. He graduated from
Oregon Agricultural College, where he
took an active interest in the cadet
corps. He is unmarried and lives with
hia parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. 1a. Barbur.
784 Kast Flanders. He is a. Second
Lieutenant in the infantry.
Arthur L. Fish, who is a Second Lieu
tenant in the cavalry of the National
Army, is advertising manager of the
Oregon Journal.
He was one of the first to sign up
for the previous military encampments
and had spent a month the year before
at Honterey with other Portland men.
Walter H. Keck won a Second-Lieutenancy.
He is remembered as the hero
of many a football battle, starring
first with the Oregon Agricultural Col
lege and. later with the Multnomah
Club.
Mr. Keck was one of the men from
the First National Bank, where he has
been connected for some years. Mrs.
Keck lives at 1548 Maryland avenue,
where they have made their home for
several years.
Fred ' L. Grace won a commission
as Second Lieutenant. He had had
some military experience before and
before going to the Officers' Reserve
camps was a sergeant in Company E. of
the Oregon National Guard.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Grace and went to school in Portland,
graduating from the Lincoln High
SchooL lie was with the guard when
it went to the border last year.
Howard Charlton, the son of A. T.
Charlton, also won a commission as
Second Lieutenant In the field artillery.
He waa a jjartner In the May Hard
ware Company, of which he owns a half
interest.
He Is 26 years old and has spent a
great deal of hia time in Portland. He
attended Hill Military Academy and
then went to Stanford University, He
russian Intrigue
Against America
as revealed by
James W. Gerard,' ,
Ex-Ambassador to Germany
The progress of "My Four Years in Ger
many," Ambassador Gerard's own story of
the hitherto hidden trail of Prussian diplo
matic, deceit, now appearing in the daily and
Sunday issues of The Oregonian, has awak
ened thousands to the magnitude of Ger
many's merciless ambition for world dominion.
The Inside Facts of a
Stupendous Plot
Those who were privileged to witness the
duplicity of Kaiserism were few, and of these
few none save Ambassador Gerard-has won
free to give the world the real facts. Through
the columns of this engrossing story moves
the Kaiser, lordly, absolute and intolerant,
with his ruthless retainers and councillors.
Before the reader is spread the German
jealousy and hatred of all things American,
and the complete weave of the plot to insult
and embroil America.
J& -
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ST- r ' 8 Z ' :
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JAMES W. GERARD,
Now Appearing in Daily and Sunday Issues of
jThe Morning Oregonian
PORTLAND, OREGON
It Is Not Too Late to Start the Series The Gerard letters will appear in The Oregonian for several
weeks to come. Each is a complete chapter in itself. Tell your carrier or phone Main 7070 or
A 6095 to deliver The Oregonian to you regularly.
also attended Oregon Agricultural Col
lege. He also is an expert horseman and
was Interested in the field artillery of
the Oregon National Guard.. He is a
member of the Hunt Club, the Uni
versity Club, the Waverley Club, the
Multnomah Club and the Portland Row
ing Club.
' .
Ernest A. "Wyld, Jr., is another mem
ber of the First National Bank staff
who won a commission as Second Lieu
tenant. He Is the son of E. A. Wyld,
an officer of the First National Bank.
He has been here since 1901 and is
well known in the clubs. He Is an
excellent oarsman. He went to the
University of Victoria and also at Ot
tawa, Alexander Adair is assigned to the
regular Army as Second Lieutenant. He
was born in Astoria and has lived in
Oregon most of his life. He is 25 years
of age and was connected with Balfour,
Guthrie & Co.
He attended the Washington High
I WANT YOU TO
TRY MY CATARRH
REMEDY 15 DAYS
OH IY GUARANTEE
There is Clo Apparatus. Inhalers,
Salves. Lotions, Harmful Drugs.
Smoke or Electricity
It is a new way. It
is something abso
lutely different. No
lotions, sprays or
sickly smelling
salves or creams.
No atomizer, or any
apparatus of any kind. Noth
ing to smoke or inhale. No
steaming or rubbing or in
jections. No electricity or
Vibration or massage. No
powder; no plasters;
no keeping in the
rt-f4 house. rotning or
that kind at all.
:i Y ivj.-tj' sometnins new ana
..'tmv.'jt different, something
- dtlightful and
VfuL You do not
cave to wait,
and linger and
pay out a lot
f money. Tou
can stop it over
night and I
will gladly tell
iy o u how
FREE. I am
not a doctor
and this is not
.a so-called doc
tor's prescrip
ts tion but I am
j cured and my
jfrienda are
a. .Vii. curea ana you
can be cured. Tour oiiffering will stop
at once uko magic
Guarantee is Gont1 15 Day a
My catarrh was filthy and loathsome
It made me ill. It dulled my mind. It
undermined my health and was weak
ening my will. The hawking, cough
ing, spittinsjr made me obnoxious to all.
and my foul breath and disgusting
habits made even my loved ones avoid
me secretly. My delight in life was
dulled and my faculties Impaired. X
knew that in time It would bring me
to an untimely grave, because every
moment of the day and night It waa
slowly yet surely sapping my vitality.
But I found a cure, and I am ready
to tell vou about it FREE, and I a.m
ready to let you try It for fifteen days.
on my guarantee, xes i n guarantee
It. and if-you are not satisfied it won't
cost you one cent. Write me promptly.
RSSH JUST ONE CENT
Send no money. Just your name and
address on a, postal card. Say: "Dear
Sam Katz: Please tell me how you
cured your catarrh and all about your
It-day guarantee." That's all you need
to say. I will understand, and I will
write to you with complete informa
tion, FRETDt at once. Do not delay.
Bend postal card or write me a letter
today. Don't think of turning this
page until you have asked for this
wonderful treatment that can do for
you what it has done for me.
S.M KATZ. Room 11. M. 210.
Indiana Ave, Chicago, 111.
V
V
School and has had some military ex
perience drilling with local organiza
tions. He is the son of the late S. D.
Adair and a brother of Henry Adair,
late Lieutenant In the Tenth Cavalry,
who lost his life in Mexico in the battle
of Carrizal. '
W. J. Casselberry, who is a Second
Lieutenant in the quartermaster's de
partment of the United States Army,
makes his home at 705 Everett street.
He is married.
-He worked for a local lumber com
pany as bookkeeper and stenographer.
He has seen service In the Philippines
as a non-commissioned officer.
...
Leland S. Smith is the son of Mr.
and Airs. Walter V. Smith, and is 30
years old. He is in the bond and In
surance business, with Dooley & Co.
He went to Portland Academy and
Stanford University. He Is unmarried.
He is Second Lieutenant in the quar
termaster's department.
.
William E. Graham, who is a Second
Lieutenant in the cavalry, is a foot
ball hero of some renown in local lnter
schoiastic circles. He played with Hill
Military Academy when that school
was the terror of them all.
...
Francis M. Phelps Is an attorney. He
lives at 900 East Main street and is
married. He went to Monmouth and
later took law at the University of
Oregon. He was born In Tillamook and
did his early schooling there. He is a
Second Lieutenant in the infantry,
O. R. C.
William M. Burgard is a son of John
H. Burgard, 25 years of age. He went
to Portland Academy and later to the
University of Oregon, ile had no pre
vious military training. He is a Sec
ond Lieutenant.
C. Jerrold Owen, who won a com
mission as Second Lieutenant, is an
other, member of The Oregonian staff.
He was Courthouse reporter for moro
than two years. His father is also a
well-known newspaper man, having
been on the Telegram and San Fran
cisco papers for some time and is now
part owner of the Pendleton. Owen Is
28 years old and not married.
Doctor Says Crying Need
Of The Woman Of Today
Is More Iron In Her Blood
TO PUT STRENGTH IN HER NERVES AND COLOR IN HER
CHEEKS.
Any Woman Who Tires Easily, Is Nervous or Irritable, or . Looks Pale, Haggard and Worn
Should Have Her Blood Examined for Iron Deficiency.
Administration of Nuxated Iron in Clinical Tests Gives Most Astonishing Youthful
Strength and Makes Women Look Years Younger.
"There cart be no healthy, beautiful,
rosy-cheeked women without iron,"
says Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York
Physician and Medical Author. "In my
recent talks to physicians on the grave
and serious consequences of iron de
ficiency in the blood of American
women. I have strongly emphasized
the fact that doctors should prescribe
more organic iron nuxated iron for
their nervous, run-down, weak, haggard-looking
women patients. Pallor
means anaemia. The skin of the
anaemic woman is pale, the flesh flab
by. The muscles lack tone, the brain
fags and the memory fails, and often
they become weak, nervous, irritable,
despondent and melancholy. When the
iron goes from the biood of women, the
roses go from their cheeks.
la the most common foods of Amer
ica, the starches, sugars, table syrups,
candies, polished rice, white bread,
soda crackers, biscuits, macaroni,
spaghetti, tapioca, sago, farina, de
germi n a t e d corn- . .
meal no longer is
iron to be found.
Refining processes
have removed the
iron of Mother Earth
from these impover
ished foods, and silly
methods of home
cookery, by throw
ing down the waste
pipe the water ir.
which our vegetables
are cooked are re
sponsible for another
grave iron loss.
"Therefore, if you
wish to' preserve your
v n it t h f ii 1 vim and
vigor to a ripe old age. you must
supply the iron deficiency In
your blood by using some form
of organic iron. Just as you
would use salt when your -food
has not enough salt.
"As T have said a hundred
times over, organic iron is the
greatest of all strength build
ers. If people would only take
Nuxated Iron when they feel
weak or rundown, instead of
dosing themselves with habit
forming drugs, stimulants and
alcoholic beverages I am con
vinced that in this way they
could ward off disease, pre
venting it becoming organic
in thousands of cases and
thereby the lives of thousands
might be saved who now die
every year from pneumonia,
grippe, kidney, liver, heart
trouble and other dangerous maladies.
The real and true cause which started
their disease was nothing more nor less
than a weakened 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 system at certain periods, she re
quires iron much more than man to help
make up for the loss, . . .
"Iron is also absolutely necessary to And this after they had in some cased
enable your blood to change food into been doctoring for months without ob-
living tisue. Without it, no matter taining any benefit. But don't take
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 conse
quence you become weak, pale and
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.
sickly looking. Just like a plant trying alas! not that kind of iron. You must
to grow in a soil deficient in iron. If take iron in a form that can be easily
you are not strong or well, you owe it absorbed and assimilated to do you
to yourself to make the following test: any good, otherwise it may prove
See how long you can work or how far worse than useless.
you can walk without becoming tired. "I have used Nuxated Iron widely in
Next take two five-grain tablets of my own practice in most severe ag-
Nuxated Iron three times per day after gravated conditions with unfailing
meals tor two weeks, then test your results. I have induced many other
strength again and see how much you physicians to give it a trial, all of
have gained. I 'have seen dozens of whom have given me most surprising
nervous, run-down people who were reports in regard to its great power as
ailing all the while double their a health and strength builder,
strength and endurance and entirely "Manv an athlete and nrlzefighter has
rid themselves of all symptoms of dvs"
pepsia, liver and other troubles in
from ten to
taking Iron
in the prop
er form.
I. . j.-y;.,. V., .! 3
Dr. Ferdinand King, Ne-ar York Physician
and Medical Author,, tellt physician thai
they should prescribe-'more, organic iron.
Nuxated Iron for their palient Scys anae
mia iron deficiency is the greatest curse to
the health, strength',, vitality' and beauty -of
the modern American Toman, Sounds learn
ing against use of metallic.
iron which may tnjure the
teeth, corrode the stomach
and -do far more harm, than
goods advises . use of only.
nuxated iron.
won the day simply because he knew
the secret or great strength and endur-
. mlA.4 Kla 1. T , ..-!,). ; Ka-
fou rteen , v ...,.., v. . re ...!..,.
oiays' i time many another has gone down in inglori-
.".'- M- ous defeat stmnlv for the lack of Iron.
Dr. Schuyler C. Jaques, Visiting Sur
geon of St. Elizabeth'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 so many Amer
ican women suffer from iron de
ficiency with Its attendant ills phys
ical weakness, nervous irritability, mel
ancholy, indigestion, flabby, sag
ging muscles, etc., etc. and in con-
sequence of their weakened, run
down condition they are so liable
to contract serious and even fatal
diseases, that I deein it mv dutv
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 wish quickly to in
crease tneir strength, power and
endurance will find it a most re
markable and wonderfully effective
remedy."
NOTE Nuxated iron, which is
prescribed and recommended above
by physicians in such a great vari
ety of cases, is not a patent medicine
nor secret remedy, but one which is
well known to druggists and whose
iron constituents are widelv pre
scribed 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 up
set the gtomach: on the contrary, it
is a most ootent remetlv In np-irlu ail
forms of indigestion as well as for
nervous, run-down -conditions. The
manufacturers have such great confidence in
nuxated iron that they offer to forfeit J100.00
to any charitable institution if thev cannot
take any man or woman under 60 who lacks
iron, and increase their strength 100 per cent
or over in four weeks' time, provided thev have
no serious organic trouble. Thev also offer t
refund your money If it does not at least dou
ble your strength and endurance in ten davs'
time. It is disnensed in this, citv by The Owl
Jrus Co., aud all sued druggists. Advt.