OCR Text |
Show 9M TIIE HALT LAKE TRIBUNE, 8 UN BAY MORNING, MARCH m r X Rockliurst-on-the-Soun- d. long-lialre- iyvTliivilvivy iAnuVuuVMifciiVVi"iiii" "f t? T niurn FT f u u u vy a new line for me. III admit. Thle Shylock reel eateter act. And If hadn't already fllwered In my openin aoene I doubt it I'd had the nerve to ge on alt It It. Ton eee I tot myaetf rung In aa mortgagee here a few yearg hack by trylu' to help out a joung artist party a hod started to build himself a house down on the Point, wtihV is really the highbrow section of Nice, decent chap he was, too. Not one of the short. brlnod kind. More or lea of a rtg1 lar person, lhl picky Horton was. Really worked at It. Turned out pictures for msgssine cover, colored page ads for perfumery, flra extinguisher. breakfast foods, any thing that was ordered. Dicky had this iltlla stucco afralr of his all finished and was about to mote In when he was Jinxed seven ways. Klrst Off tha war put a crimp In the ert game so tliat alt he could find to do was Red Cross and Libertv bond posters, which he 2$, 1!20. II J By Sewell Ford A 1319 McClai by th Newspaper Syndicate) (CopTrtdht, . e lot of Verm. Ehe-s- he' ve got left Didn't think Id miss her so much But do. Nowheie to go Sunday afternoons, vou know, I can stand It through tho wevk. Business. But On Hunday well, I get lonesoma Must see V eia once more. I hear theyre not getting on wall financially. I could have told her that Any one could, after one look at that Potlle. But she's niy niece, til the eaine. Ought to look em up, suppose "I think you U find the g I used to think at ine. Ho I Just told him I had daclded not to have the room done over, after 11 y dldn t neg the tale around Rock-huron counted had Roland and he was Phkln' up any local busies Thst dldnt queered from the start. worrv me ut all until tha bank notified me that the Pottles hadn't come up with the semiannual Interest Payment on the I told 'em to send another mortgage. notice and let It slide for a month or so. Then when I found that the taxes was overdue and the Insurance wasn't being kept tip. I hraed mvself for a little business call on Ko'aihl. I drove down one Saturduy afternoon. After quite a wait between the spindly cedars. Mr. Pottle opened the dor She'e 'costumed simple In a pink smock effect with light green trimmings and I noticed for the first time that she wears her hsir boxed. My next Jolt is when I steps Into the hig studio and finds that It s almost as hare of furniture as a theater lobby. There's a rummy lookin worm-eate- n old oak table In the middle of the room an antique. I expect also coupffe of odd lookin chairs, a marble bench and a five-fo- Course, Mrs. ' to spread Boomer-Da- st If latch-strin- out 'Its d unless behind fUil-fitt- w onyx-toppe- dlso fit i ius z& iA&fc picC hollow-cheste- dead-blac- Well-know- n Man Dr. Pierce of Buffalo, N. Y, the. celebrated physician, throughout known the entire civilized universe because of his many years of successful " medical practice, once said: At this time of year most people suffer from .what we term spring fever because of a stagnant condition of the blood, because of the toxins (poisons) stored up within the body dur- - ing the long winter. We eat too much meat, with little or no green vegetables. Bloodless people, thin, anemic people, those with pale cheeks and lips, who have a poor appetite and feel that tired, wora or feverish condition in the springtime of the year, should try the refreshing tonic powers of a good alterative and blood purifier. Such a tonic as druggists have 6old for fifty years, is Doctor Pierces Golden Medical Discovery. It is a standard remedy that can be obtained in tablet or liquid form. Made without alcohol from wild roots and barks. does not hare the tablets send 10 cents for trial If your druggist Dr. to Pierces Invalids Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. package 'Ask your neighbors, they have tried itl I am glad td recommend Dr. Piereea mediMulberry. Kans. cines. My son, at the age of 10 years, was taken with pneumonia. He - measles, and last typhoid fever got better, then took chicken-pox- , all in one winter- -. It left him with a terrible cough and I feared he could not get well. I got two bottles of Golden Medical Discovery and gave it to him and it cured him entirely. I lived near Monroe City, Mo., when my son wa3 sick. No doubt many there remember the case well "MRS. Jane S. Carroll. cui sJie Tzust ab Halt aiAcr cn&. hard-heart- loud-check- ed four-legg- mean" artist." Roland Pottle. eaye I. friend of his. era you? If I am." says he. Tm his wife's uncle, though. savs I. Oh, yes Uncle Peter. Climb right in and Ill take you down there. Guess they're kind of lookin for you. "Huh! says he. They are,-erthey? Well, weU eee Ive, got thle far, anyway. f.'o fool like an old one, you know. Swore I'd never go near 'em. He's no that Pottle., What Vera earthly good, could see In him is too much for me. But !" ZY Some no'Ae brcite m. Wot fxoate dofs, OftS fff os Til be hanged &&& m c&Zla I I'll see," says she. This Is his hour of repose, but perhaps With $hat she disappears behind the screen and after seme grouchy grunts from him, followed by whlsered urgin trom her, she toad him out. He's a picturesque bird Wnen he'a first dragged from the nest, 1 say. Hes draped In a green silk kimono effect belted In loose green curtain cord, a pair of sandals on his feet, and his dead black hair failin' stringy over his pasty forehead. "Horry to pry you out of the hay, I begins, "but there's, a few Ititle business matters I'd like to take up witu yoiXow about this interest on the mortgage. save Roland yawnin. "Oh, that: Beatty bore, business I I will attend to that some time or other when I'm in the proper mood. That's sncouragln, says L Got any idea when it will strike you? Within the next week or so, eh? Really, I couldn't fix a date,1' says Rdland, Sightin' a cigaret dreamy You see, puts In Mrs. Pottle, Roland Is so temperamental. "That goes In some things," sav, 1, "but not wnen It comes to mortgages. Course, I'm no Interest hound, but this matter has been runnin on for some Mine now. Then there s the taxes and the Insurance to be met." Oh, I am sure Roland will attend t all thosething Just aa soon as he can make some money, comes in Mrs. Pot-ti- e 11 - Eh? says I. prickin up my ears. Is that right. Pottle? Does she mean . that 'Please leave this to me, Vera, says The fact Is. McCabe, Roland peevish. I havent been able to get some big contracts which I erpected to land. Business has been perfectly rotten. When It picks up I will see what I can do for jots "That's nice, sg I, but a bit vague. However,. If you could pay up a couple of hundred on account I In "Roland, Mr dear man." breaks thats utterly impossible. Two bundled dollar! No I I simply haven't got It. But Whv, Roland"' exclaims Vera. we had ever so much that Uncle Peter gave me before we 'It's cone, thouKh."' says Roand. Do vou think I bought this refectorv table and that Chlne-- e vase and those Spanish chairs for polhing? Then tnere have been our lixing expenses. I haven't dared figure up recentlv, but I know there can t be much left Then then we shall Juft have to call on Uncle Peter, sai she. 'I suppose we shall, say .he. "Listens. like a good lice, sayg 1 What about Uncle Peter?" On, he's an Impossible old Jwre, ears A very crude person, vou Roland. know. Deala In leather. Wears velvet neck scarfs and a plush hut. Perfectly about villlanoii tastes everything art, music, literature, even. to what he eat and the wav he eats It. Early , Victorian. might" You understand' In leather, though," savs L Is apt to be good.1 Oh. he has monev," sevs Roland. It's If he "his bank rating perfectly scandalous bow much he s mads ei'.ee the wra. A million, I euppose " like 'Then I should sev that In a ca tins, and I wink knowln' at Roland," 'that I'm la Peter ought to be called In "Hut vou ou don t understand. sal a Vera. "lie acted perfectly dreadful when e ho found I sr&i going to marry Roland. he. Roily, dear? And havin' got away to a flyln' start like that, of couree, they didn't atop unAt til theyd spilled the whole story. least, enough so It was no trick to patch it together. Beams Vera was an only niece and for a while there a high favorite with Uncle Peter. About his only remainin' relation, In fact. He'd looked after her and brought her up since ahe was left a double orphan at nine. Vera had been strong for Uncle Peter, too. until ahe came back from some flossv girls' boaiglln' ecnool with a new set of measurements for the male of the species. Then sha put the tape on Uncle Peter and discovered that he was a misHe was too broad In the beam fit. and too low in tba brow. Also when he hung a napkin over his velvet necktie and Inhaled his soup enthusiastic shs couldn't help feelm" shuddery along the spina. Bhe dsoovered that he still stuck to round cuffs and Dick Crocker collars, size 18. and that his Idea of keepln up on current events was to read- the Shoe and Leather Reporter from cover to cover. I gathered that It wasn't until Vera got this art bug so hard that livin on Pineapple street, Brooklyn, under the same roof with Uncle Peter gav her a case of nerves. He took It manful, though, when she announced that If she was ever to follow her career as a sculptress she'd simplv have to live her own life her own way. He went and subleased a studio for her on Washington Square, paid up a year's rent, and gave her a generous monthly allowance. Then Vera had gone to It with a whoop. Inside of threa months she had learned to tackle a 10 a m. breakfast tn k bed, light up a with her coffee, and as a final touch had acquired a Greenwich Village haircut. Then ehe had met Roland. Seems to have been a Case from the first fond glanca Anvway, I suspect Roland made no false motions after he heard how Vera liad an uncle who wrote rent checks so casual and waa particular to keep her bank balance up to a certain figure. There we one meetin' between Ro'and and Uncle Peter Just one It happened on a Sunday afternoon when Vera arnf together at the ranged to bring studio and break the ndw of the coming event. ,And never had Vera seen uncle act more like a wholesale leather dealer and loss like a gentlemen. He hsd grown red In the face, snorted, pounded the taHe had said ble, used profane language. Right perfectly awful things to Roland to his face Also he had told Vera that If the couldn't pick out a better specimen than this to marry ehe must do It all on her own. He was through. Absolutely. he had And with that as a farewoll-eh- ot marched out. treading heavy on hie heels end leaving Roland waboly In the kneea At first they didnt know what to do Roland was quite upset over the scene. I have a hunch that he waa about ready to call It all off. but thn Vera pulled the spunky stuff. Whv bother about an uncle who could re so crude as that? Let h'm Wasn't Roland a genius with go hang. career ahead of him? The a wonde-ft ene have could manage somehow. In tn bang and a whole lot of monev l.lhertv bond and war saving stamps' They d fust go right ahad wtlh kr.e wedsomeding. rent or buy a Uttlefdge where out In the sutures, and Roland Didn't cork-tipp- dope-stic- ed ul Pl-L- n vri!" two-thir- ds nt 11 An Empire of Undeveloped Resources UTAH eug-rest- s, y. A if Wet ikzt sis Metier ehoecuneet could atart right In as a decorator. And when hi fame had spread from Bar Harbor to Pasadena and he waa sought out lli wealthy and great perhape uncle Peter would be 8o they had come to Kockhurst,eorry. end well, J knew the rest. They would write to Uncle Peter et once. "Better put In all the details, I about the Interest and everything, and how the owner threatens to foreclose " My guess was that Uncle Peter would simply snort and toss the letter Into the waste basket. That Is, If he still remembered Roland But it was a good chance for me to take I didnt want to turn 'em out, and I wasn't anxious to get the place hack. I walked a week before droppln' around again and I wasn t surprised to hear that no word had comr He may be off on a business trip, If you could give us suggests Roland, a1 week or two more U right, says L Call It two." Then the next day. which was Sunday, I hapoena to be down to the station with the roadster lookin' for a friend of Sadies who must have missed her connections or something, and as I'm about to leave I gets the hall from this ruddyold party In the faced, chunky-bui- lt suit. he demands, where do the "Say, Pood'es live out here? I: Poodles?" says I don't know of , any but ones. You don t "No, no!" he breaks In. Not poodle dogs, though one of 'em is what I'd call a young puppy. Human Poodles. Young married couple Name's something like that. Or mavbe It's Bootle." "How about Pottlef" says I. "That a it! pottle," savs he. He's a lanky, shingle-chest- e freak with long hair. Let's on to be some kind of an d. fair-site- J. four-figu- re ot egg-ahe- ll say Wish I could have been in on that reunion, but all I saw of it was a glimpse of Vera aa she opens the front door and discovers Uucls Peter examinin' scornful the slim cedars Ihe affair must havi hsd a happy endin', thou mi, for bright and early Monday mornln' I get a phone csll from Roland askin' me snappy If I could stop In soon and go over a little business matter wtlh him. I made It that evenin, ami what does he greet me with but a wavy. lined blue shp with Uncle Peter's autograph on it under a amount. ' sav I through my teeth. That's whet I call some umle. Going to take over the property himself, la he "Oh. yea, says Roland. a mere tr'l to him." "And he s going to do something else for us." adds era. "He wouldn't tell me Just what, but I'm sure U will be something nice. Hes rather an old dear. Uncle Peter," , I wonder what he's planning, ssvs Roland, wrluklln his pasty though," brow. He found out a few days later when a truckload of furniture from a Brooklvn department storo backed up, and a lady began bosslni the Job of un-- c rutin' the stuff. Course. It was all over time the I got around to callin with by tha deed. X discover Roland and Vera wanderlu' dazed In the mldet of thle colof lection rockers, stuffed easy chans, d tables and ao on. Uncle Peter sure hadn't stinted hliprelf high-back- when the little wife was taken off by the flu. which left Dicky mighty discouraged and Rat broke. He wanted to out near quit and go back to the oldSo farm I writes him Peoria for a good rest. a check for what aaulty he has in the place, pas up the contractor's lien, and takes over the property. Course, It wasn't a good buy. Port of a freaky Dicky had built after his own Ideas. The ground floor was mostly studio, with no windows ex cept one whaling bjg skylight on the north side. He hsd tacked on a dinky kitchen and a couple of chambers with . a aleepln' Porch as sort of sn afterthought. But there's no butler s pantry or room for a maid, and no garage. Ho It didn't rent easy, even after the house got so bad. It stood lilel for shortage him year or eo and I wrote Dicky urgin hahds to cpme back and tsk it off my at his own terms. But Dicky had pl ked up a new Job with a Chicago firm of ad agents and was plgnnin to marry an eld girl of his In Peoria and couldn't see It at all. W hlch was a few of tha rtasona I was so easy with this young couple who finally showad up and asked for my low e.t selling price. 1 must say 1 wasn t Impressed much by either of the Roland Pottlea. That'a the name they gave. And Roland looked It. A eallow-faced gink with dead black hair that hung over hie coat collar In the back k sml a bored look In his eyes Ha had a bamboo walkin' stick hung on one arm, and wora yellow gloves, but his pants needed' pressln bad and hla collar had been to the laundry top often, but not too recent. Young Mrs. Pottle wasn't so worse. A bright-eye- d little party who perky, glanced admirin' St Roland constant and over the house. enthusiastic gushed It s simply too darling for words. Isn't Hhe asks. It. Roland dear" Oh, perhaps It might do, says Roland I can't say J fancy the outlook. a'ry. Thsre should be a vista cut through those trees so that one might have a glimpse of the water. Perhaps that could be arranged, however. Them ma Well. hardly," aaya I. plea happen to be on the Boomer-Da- y wouldn t let you chop one estate and he of em down for any money. If you want the house. I guess you'll have to pasa up the vista. Oh, please, Roland, let's take It, urges Mrs. Pottle. And after stallin' around some more Come to find out. Roland agrees. though, all he was willin' to pay down hundred. was about twenty-fiv- e Still, with the balance brtngln me in six per cent that was better than carrvln It. ao we closed the deal. And I noticed that it was the young lady who signed the check. Klrst off I thought the Pottles wss gain to show a lot of class In the neighborhood for thev had the grounds fixed up neat and then splurged on a couple of big porcelain Jars wtih tall spindly cedar trees In em set on qjther side of the front door. The effect Is quite etunnln and Chrlstmae-cardNext we hoars from Mrs. Boomer-Da- y that Roland Pottle ie a headliner tn tha business. He has Interior decoratin' simptv wonderful SoIdeas," she confides toI Mrs. McCabe. artistic, you know. am going to have him do over my music room. Such talent as he has ought to be encouraged, don t you think? But a week or eo later Mrs. Boomer-Da- v had another thought, it seema that Roland's wonderful Ideas would run Into If carried out. All he wanted monev b'g But thie la Roland's mean." eaye she. to do to the music room was to revteo the ldia of furnishing an atrium. wmdbw and wall scheme, give the In'Eli? says I, gawpin'. finish of terior woodwork an Thats the old Roman name for thle bluo nine coats rubbed Maeterlinck sort of a room," she goes on, an atrium down with oil and pumice scrap the old rose silk hangings for Imported velours, And Roland says It should be furnished cover the parquette flooring with a $S2oO as simply as ppssible. Useless chairs and you know. Chinese rug and well, a few other little tables are nitbadpettheaversion, same notion. Hs Louis Seize items that I forget. around him that have would nothing Anywav, he lost the Job, not altogether attention from him. He because he waa plannln to blow In ae might detract If wished to dominate, you know what I d much on one room as would build a Roland well, that Is his house, but chiefly on account of mean.too. And Eo she Idea. ''.and spreads out her he one down or turned cockv the way hands. i wo timid suggestions of Mrs. Boomer I. sav he's car. must Huh! says I Devs of Mr. Pott.e, rted it out. Speakin Why. he was actually rude about It. she explains to Sadie. Fairly sneered though, could I hove a talk with him?" I X all leot 1 when be did ths orderin'. If he'd measured the floor space arid then bou- -i t enough tt cover it he touldn t have load-- ' a much closer guess. He d left might Utile margin for movin about. Yes, them ,,(l was all the furniture two people posuHy live, even If they was furnUuie addicts Ae for the color scheme. I t ul Peter badn t bothered with that, lied picked a davenport npliolstercd In lriBbt blue velvet, set It off wtlh a rel laatlur arm chair and added a widow rocktr Then for good painted a vtv Id green measure ha d thrown tn a couple of or rue w'th a eprawlv flower design sol half a do ui cheerful toned oil paintings tn wide gold frame "Just look What hs" happened te our lovely atrium!" moans Vera You could almost hang out the S R O. sign, couldn t you"" aay I. I feel absolutely suffm ated among ni this rubbish, savs Ro.and "And look at thoas awful color combinations. 1 bey clash so I can hurd'v sleep." Got to keep It all. have vou? I 4 era. "t nele Peter Oh, yes, Isays plans to spdfid every Humlay with u llo meant And It'S hie house, you know wed, of course, but did you ever see nu h wretched taste?" I expect he e a good Judce of leather. save I. He looks kind of huskv, too." " though hs might last quite some time "Oh. yetr and groins Roland "Meanwhile, we ahall havs to live on with thla Before I left, tlvough, Vera wus s'rnk with a brilliant Idea. She's kind of hrix'yt In her way. And when she explains it to Roland he almost cheer nn" "That'a so! says he. "Vte could hang draperies across ths studio, about of ih way hack, and pile most of It It awav every Mmtdav morning. would le a deuce of a Job, thonen get" ting It back again everv "The exerclee might be Just what you And think need, dear, suggests Vera. of the relief to our nerves and your " "Yes, I believe It would he worth while, eays Roland "I.et'e try' It ttow And when I left he was struggling to balance the blue davenport on a onvx table and a Circassian walnut stand I bet It s the first real work lie s tackled for years. Somehow, ever slm s then. If I'm tempted to Indulge In a blue Mnnday or a sour baturday, I ran alwavs chirk up All I have to do la to think of Roland and hi biweekly movin' dav. Generally the piolure Is good for a chuckle. (Continued from Pag to make the protect a financial success, and after much tribulation, the Investors lost most of their .money. The canal were at length sold to the Utnh-IJah- o Sugar company for about J300, OuO. The an excompany improved the svstem at OuO 0Q0. pense of perhaps another f Steady development has gone on since no are that time. Within the system mines. Us prospsrlty depends upon Its and attendant Industries, as made possible by the water supplied by the canala Note, now, how Ihe failure of thirty yeare ago has been converted into success. In lstlf the assessed valuation of the land and properties vitalized by the Bear River canals Is $25,201,1X0, or of ths approximately total valuation of the etato of Utah. R the stute of Utah paid back every dollar lost by ths original investors, It would still he a tremendous gainer. Industrial development under the canals has only begun, as It weie, and will continue for ltliout tha canals the generations. land would be a sagebrush waste, capable at best of supporting a little livestock or permitting some Comment on the value of Irrigation In such a case seem quite superfluous. Certainly It is worth while for the state to give Its first and most vigorous attention to the extension of tta Irrigated area. How is all the Irrigation expansion demanded bv Utah future, to be accomplished? First of all by tlia education of ths people Into a full understanding of ths necessity end possibilities of Irrigation; followed by wise legislative action to point out the path taat the people must travel If they are to lay more broadly the Irrigation foundations of the state. Then, buslnes and professional men, who after all derive their existence from a commonwealth based essentially upon must unitedly insist, even at Irrigation, their-owtemporary sacrifice, that forward Irrigation steps be taken, and that by education arid legislation, Utah's area be Increased, even if It must be at the statea expense. It must be a community, a state affair, because the existence and future of toe state depend on It. Whenever the increase of available Irrigation water by new reaervoirs, dams and canals la discussed, the question of the final acre cost of the water Invariably arises. Naturally, when Utah was young, the most accessible streams and locations were used for Irrigation purposes, and tbe more difficult projects left for later times. 1 agrl-eultu- rs g. n One.) As the value of land bas Increased, It ha been possible, and. may continue for some time to be possible to take out water at an Increasingly greater acre cost. Nevertheless, the acre cost of water will Increase steadily a the different prelect are approached. There will tome a time when it mav cost l.mo to put water on an acre of land whioh baa a market value of only $175. As we approach that time, irrigation will become more and more the bualnee of statesmen, and lese the hu sines of those who haze been trained to look upon the affairs of life In terms of Immediate and annual return on their Investment. It may become necessary, at that time, to make the state the Irrigation unit, and to average the acre costs among the various protects undertaken bv the elate. o that a fanner slwll not be penalized for undertaking to develop a part of the state which Is more difficult of conquer! than Is another. Tbe time is near et hand when the state must make the development of irrigation projei la a state affair; and. In view of the tremendous returns in valuation. In anrlual direct income to tta citizen, and In the possible development of all manner of Industrial enterprise wherever an Irrigated community arises, the state cannot and will not hesitate to give such needed aid. The experience of the federal governConment In this matter Is of Interest gress began Its work of reclamation bv on the the that assumption irrigation, the capital Inprojects should return vested and pay a fair annual Interest from the beginning In short, that the reclamation fund would steadily grow. As the years go on, that hope la becoming more and more remote. Meanwhile, on the heclsmatlon projects are being established prosperous communities nroducing millions In crops, Industrie making possible and no one complains because a part of bv used monev the federal governthe ment for tbe reclamation of ths arid region may not be returned directly, but will be paid bark Indirectly In taxes and In the general increased prosperity of the arid section. The statesmen who ahall fill In the outline map of Utah's turg. will be obliged to make the state's Irrigation expansion one of their chief concerns, and the professional and business men of this elate will not hesitate, when the time comes to vise the state money for the development of Irrigation enterprises, to allow a part of their taxes to be used for this pdrpose. How Nuxated Iron Helps Fight the Grim Spectre of Anaemia-La- ck of Iron in the Blood Which So Often Follows in the Wake of Grippe and Influenza Will Nuxated Iron Lowering the Vitality of Its Victims and Leaving Nervous Them $Teakf and Rundown. plains Why - Physician Prova a Mighty Power in Helping to Drive Away Anemia A Elight of Modern Life? Ex- Iron Is the Red Blood Food That Aids in Rebuilding Wasted Tissues, Increasing g Physical Endurance and Health and Renewed Strength. . Qrir-in- Weakened in physical strength and power, robbed of the vim and energy thev possessed before the dread attack winch pulled them are thousands who today find themselves in that condition of being neither sick or well, vet who are nervous and broken in health simply because their power of resistance has been too .do1-tjier- e heavily drawm upon and their blood is starving for want of iron. Once the iron is supplied symptoms disappear, say physicians below, who explain why thev find Nuxated Iron of such valuable aid at the present time as a means for' building up the strengthn and endurance of their weakened trore than ever, when urh scourges a and patients. Influenza and grippe have left eo Perhaps at no time Is the necessity the in victim their many for safeguarding health and building Yip path, I believe increased strength and power brought phlnans should prescribe at every op- home more forcibly than at the present portunlty organic Ironn Nuxated Iron their weak and patients, for moment, when the whole country l seek- to the weakening and de- Iri my experience It Is one of the best ing to combat builders known to of an appalling ep- tonic and pressing after-effeDr. John J. an Horne, medical eck nee. idemic," sa Dr. T. Alphonsus Wallace, a rhvf'clan formerly Medical Inspector and Clinical Physician on the Board of Health of tbe of many v ears' experience and formerly the British Naval Medical bervtce. York. New Pale, thin, watery City of I do not make a practice of rec blood, weakened by the germs of disease. savs. have liul or no power to tend energy ommendlng advertised medicinal products, as a found Nuxated Iron so pmert the have I but end, and power through body, n condition that I result, manv a man and woman who In nervous, V run-dow- run-dow- red-blo- ct run-dow- have suffered from these dread maladies are unable to rid themselves of their nervous state simply because their blood literally serving for want of iron. Iron is the red blood food that and In- altls In restoring wasted creating the red blood corpuscle, there, the blood by enriching and fortifying against the ravages of disease. Today, 1 tie-ue- s, simply the result ei lack t,f iron in the blood. Time ami I hate prescribed Iron Nuxated Iron and surprised patients at tho rapidity wlkU the weakness and geneial debility was replaced by a renewed feeling of strength and vltalitj. I took Nuxated Iron myself to me up after a serious of nervous exhaustion. The effect were apparent after a few d,v i. and within three week It had vlrtual'v and put ma revitalized my whole ejM-In a superb physical condition If Jou are not strong or weil, you owe It to yourself to make the fohow mg te-Re how long you cart work or how fur .v.uu con walk without becoming tired, n Next take two tablets of ordt-o- f nary Nuxated Iron three time per day after meals for two week. fln.ii test your stiengtn again and eee how much ou have gained. Hot Manufacturer mated Imn which tv a oe b- l oil reeoaim-ahe- d t eerM reaiedv, bit co- - wl.tea I to drigtt everywhere I elite It e r., again h b-- ld m k five-grai- believe ail should know of it II. B. ail. formerly Phvsician in Exthe Baltimore Hosnl'al and a fe u el- - - emit, kf-- c It save Throuahout my expe- doe- - -t vot' re Ihe n aminer, anvte ti.it rience on Hopltal Eaffs ard a a Medt- - uteri Ihe The oitH ,fm lorrrt cal Examiner, 1 have been astonished at tece-ofit- ! tnk eulirelr t U Mil.- -r r, tne number of pa Mm .a who havo d a,i ue v prrcbtver or thev will r diseases when In evrj in Hit etfv hr b.uiuu J tored vainly U dltoeu state was bum, and 4 stber dru. (A reality their delicate, It prea-rtbe- d shru-t-u-- 1 Xcu-v- n ii-di- rrb w- tl-- i 1 run-dow- n ,i 0. |