Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 18, 1920)
THE OREGON STATESMAN: SUNDAY, JAXVARY 18, 1020.! is f . --' ' S SJ Why Wmem Grow Old ; More McklyThaB Men Greater Percentage of Anaemia Lack of Iron in the Blood Among Women Makes Them Lose Much cf Their Youth, Beauty and Former Attractiveness, And Become Fretful, Nervous and Run-down Xlhil Women Need Is Hot Cosmetics or Stimulating Dregs But Plenty of Pare Red Blood, Rich In Iron Physician Explains How Organic Iron Nuxated Iron, Enriches Tb Blood, Strengthen The Nerves, Builds Up Physical Power ' and Often Makes Weak, Pale Careworn Women Look and Feel, Years , Younger. Look for the woman who appears younger than a man of the the tame age and you will find the exception to that vast majority upon whom anaemia lack of iron in the blood ha fastened its (hp and is gradually sapping the health, vitality and beauty which every woman so long to retain. In most cases men safeguard their (health better than women by eating coarser fooJi, being more out-of-doors and leading more "active lives, thereby keep; their blood richer in iron and their todies -in better physical condition. The very momeat a woman allows ' herself to become weak, nervous and run-down she placing a drain upon her whole system which overtaxes tne power ot tni bkod to renew wasted tissue ana keep active the nature! life forces of the body. There are thousands of women who are ageing' and breaking down at a time when they should be enjoying that perfect .loftily health which comes from plenty of ; iron in the blood, simply because they are not awake to their condition. For want of iron a woman may look and feel haggard and all run down while at 50 or 60 with good health and plenty of iron in her . blood she may still be young feeling and so full of life and ' attractiveness as. to defy ' detection of her real age. But a woman cannot -have beautiful rosy cheeks or an abundance of strength ajnd endurance without iron, -and phy sicians below have been asked to explain why they prescribe oreanic iron Nuxated Iron,, to . help supply this deficiency nd aid in building a race of stronger, healthier women. TV. Jana Franc; Sulliran. former! 3s' TttF V WW Air ' 40T3ears du.( R.n l ...i ,r. , y wwi ucncimry inu nor not iv ;;i.T:m'",,W'. .. onncel .that there woman who is loa- thousands ci rack woir-n who. tated Iron tutcbt Daniel J.' Fry and J. C. axe imply by ltwt,ftcrvw4irriubie, Uair. t4 wrjiuaeUaT iwoit phyik-ll C , -V enerry, and NIL ft themaelre f . nto a condi off the mil lions of dic tate terra that are al most continu ally around I coniid rr N'oxatad Iron one at fortmoat blood and body builders the beat ta which I ha ever had re course." Amon oth er uhyaicians asked for an opinio?) was Dr. George H. t'aker, formerly Ihvician and Surgeon Monmouth Memorial Hospital. New Jersey, who says: "What women nerd to put rosea in their cberfcs and the springtime of life into their ctrp is not cosmetics or stimu lating drugs but plenty of rich pure blood. Without it no woman can do credit to her self or to her work. Hon is tone of tho greatest of all strength and Mood-builders, and I -hare found nothing in tny experience effective fr helping to make strong. healthy, red-blooded , women as Nuxatcia Iron, , , Iiufiiiwiii1 ?mn: IniM ltn wkJrk Im rnilil a4 tw niil M ftS?H-M la Mt m r,a ttwidf Sot otwSirS wl hww t 4rcst pmj hfif. Cbk Ur tMtr IwriHtf IfM pi4ti H la .Mtf aanmilat. m a4 lajar- lb kMk. mm Ihtm wis iDMMt,! t MtiralT wMh mn 1 nr tW, will jf4 w Maty. It w (HMHiniMf r Ml mm REVELATIONS OF A WIFE The Story of a Honeymoon A Vnnlerful ltotnnnct of MarrirHl Life Voitlrfully TIJ by AUKl.K c;.HHISf) STATESMAN CLASSIFIED ADS ONE CENT A WORD CHAPTER XDVI WHY DOKS DICKV HKC'EIVK THK IM'ltlMINATINC I.KTTKU S) CALMLY? Cvor anl over axain I rrad th rontntH if Hie ruiiiiilil jawr I had pioketl up in tho hall a!lr liicky had luirii" d the pap r in hi aif ha.kfl. It wan not long hefore I had no n-l of reudinK It. for I knew It contemn. a. children would say. "Iy heart, forward and backward and upside down." I do not remember ever In m life of being o puzzled by anything as I was when trinn to decipher the rtal leaning of the fragment of a love letter which had been written In a feminine hand and then copied on the same rdieet with a few chan" by my husband. It watt so melodramatic a thing its wording fo flamboyantly extrav agant that it might have been taken bodily from an old-anhioned "len- Twenty-thirt." I could not bring myself to believe that it wan really meant for Dicky, or that it was in any manner connected with Kdith Fairfax, the Virginia art student. whose friendship for my husband had troubled me a grPut deal in the last few mouth?. She mas so delicate, ho ethereal a rreature, so much the gentlewoman, that I could not associate words so turgid, and torrid with her. And yet something told me that the feminine hand -hieh had traced the lines confronting me was that of no other. than the girl from Virginia In my years o.f high whool teaching many girls had panned through my hands, and I had an unusual oppor tunity to study all varieties of. chir s graphy. Some of my girls had come to me from southern private Kchooln. and there had always been a "something different" In their handwriting which 1 had remarked, and which now stared up at me from the fragment of a letter in my hand What Madge Did. 1 tried to look at the thing dit- v'-'t l;:'v -'-" -"-i U1-" , - ::';. ; 1 ' , f . ; lj An Enviable Reputation Already Won Hundreds of dealers who drove new Cleveland Sixes from the factory in Cleveland to their home cities have written the factory expressing their admiration and confidence in the car. What they all say is .summed up in this sentence from one of them, "I can look any man in the lace now and tell him the Cleveland is a regular tuto:obe.,, Ana mats wnac Ui c:cvianci six is- p regular automobile, an : unusual automobile. Hundreds of Clevtiihd Sixes, within the past four months, have undergone long, gruelling, cross countr" drives, with honor. They have passed over great hill drives And long moun tain climbs, plowed thn.ik'h tnud i;.d wb- outs and desert sands where other cars stall and stop. Its power and endurance have already won the Cleveland an enviable reputation. This is not surprising for skill and sincerity arc built into this car by men who have con tributed their genius to the building up of y"i. i America's finest quality cars. Five, Passenger Tourfai Car, 5IJ.fi." Tia: : Fassener Roadster, $1285 r ; tF.O.T f rfor'. . j ' OLESON MOTOR CAR CO. MO North Commercial St. Next to Oleson'i Auto Exchange Phone 665 THE CLEVELAND .V!?70tOPIT,3 COMUY; CLEVELAND; OHIO iH)HtllillHiilil)lll'lilllHiH!llliltllll)liliHHi!tlHi A V'fc? tftA V vy -:.,.,! ...mm..,, i.,i.-;r,.'-,!-: it i ft?? vT Fine Metals Have Given Maxwell its Rank THE verT substance of uhich a car is made denotes its quality;' and the use of fine and strong metals in the Maxwell has won it many, many friends. It was necessary to make the Maxwell chassis of the very best materials. For its great mission was to transport an extremely economical 'way as great a passenger load over the same road and at the same speed as the larger and heavier cars. Thus it tvas obvious that the Maxwell had to be light. And to make it light the quality metals were used. Metallurgists, the men who have made the study of metals a science, say that it compares favorably pound for pound with the highest priced cars the world has produced. But you need not be a metallurgist to discover this "inner goodness" in a Maxwell. Three months will tell; six months ill tell you more. Otherwise Maxwell in five short years would never have grown from a production of 5,000 a year to 100,000 a year. ' ' .. 300,000 Maxwells on the highways of the .world today answer most any question you can ask about this great car. C3 OSCAR B. GINGRICH MOTOR & TIRE CO. 371 Court Street SALEM, OREGON 3 M M i . i n i i i 1 1 1 n : , i i . 111 j.n ti iu nii.iu.iiiiM., n..i...i.. , n.j). jr '- " j .w -r-m -rw-.---A jl passionately, to tell myself that there must be some explanation ot the thing, no matter how bizarre it might be. Hut recollections of Dicky's frequent "engagements with art editors", his growing absorption in, this work or whatever it was In his room, his order that neither Ka tie nor I should even duot the furni ture and the elaborate air of secrecy which he had thrown around the pa pers in h'.a waste basket when h burned them all theso things point ed to some secret which my husband feared or. was ashamed to tell mo A primitive, jealous p.ncer rose in me. Impulses which I did not rec ognize, which seemed those of an other woman thronged upon me. 1 wanted to tear my hair, my clothing, to scream aloud, to summon Picky and overwhelm him with vlrao-llke. j wrath. Of course, t Hid none of these things, but, the effort to suppress them robbed me of the poise and self control which would have enabled me to ignore the Incident altogether and trust to time for its clearing up Still shaking from the emotional storm which had swept me, pkked up the plec of paper with its florid amorous protestation, and went swiftly to Dicky's door. At my knock I heard an angry exclamation, then a sharp, quirk VIio'k there?" "It Is 1. Madge." I returned, try ing vainly to make my voice steady. I could hear him rise and come o the door. He unlocked It. opened it only far enough for bint to, roue on Into the hall and tlo&ed it behind him. what was written upon It. Then he crushed it angrily in his band, opened his mouth to speak, thought better of It and turned toward hla door. The calm manner in which he ig nored the piece of paper which bad caused me so much uneasiness was like a lighted match applied to a par ticularly Inflammable piece of tinder. "Don't you think yon owe me as explanation or that very lnttrestlng. missive?" I asked. (To be contlnaed) ' "Did yon have a flae time oa yonr motor trip? "1 should say so! Fifty dollars and costs everywhere we atopped. i Baltimore American. EXTRA PANTS FREE1 WITH EVERY SUIT A Natural Question. 1 ORDERED NOW Scotch Woolen Mills Store 428 SUU Street -Well, what's the row?" he asked shortly. I saw that his eyes were blight, his hair rumpled, his fore head dewed with perspiration as they alwayR are when he is engaped in working out pome illustration. I wondered for a moment If he really were drawing as he used to do. An Instant's reflection assured me of my mistake. Dicky never shut me out from his work. Indeed, he of ten called me to look at some detail of his drawing, especially If It concerned some J:em of women's dress, and a&ked my opinion of it. I held the crumpled piece of pa per out to him. tlere I something from" your waste basket which dropped In the hall." I said, and In my endeavor to control my voice I realized that it was grim and cold. i!e started as he saw it. and Invol untarily smoothed It out and saw The Widick Common -Sense Oiler FOR FORDS An outside oiler that can be taken off in 5 minutes. Not juit an accessory, bnt an absolute necessity to every Ford motor. For sale at the VALLEY MOTOR CO. and CHERRY CITY OARAGE t J An Oregon prodnct made in Salem by C. 0. Widick, ' 650 North Winter Street f