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Show SECTION Cr THRKK - UESERET EVENING NEWS FRIDAY MARCH 29 1919 IS ENGLAND DYING?' For First Time in History Deaths Exceed Births Patient Work In Study of Statistics by Sir Arthur Newsholme Contains a Lesson for America Many Causes of Infant Mortality Revealed But Mother Care Seems to Be Greatest Life Save- rPure Milk An Important Factor. - 0 Written for The Saturday News by Special Foreign Correspondent idinj nit March 'Mr Reverend Mr. M<hus, who waa wo afraid of an' overcrowded earth that he thought die next beet thine to not being bora without t all might be to deocendanta. Thla rear, 111, Britain hears with consternation that the death rate of England and Wales hast the first time exceeded the birth J I COB. B4 fc. ItBltv W Uihr. ia ft. t rata - w ua Wilsti and w. Mm nvort ore' tin a I wi y ulekiy have re-- hat all lo-- g If J"n . Car- fanas- - notiro nip. t leant id the t i oa. a' - The man who a few rears ago talked of this devastating torrent of tabled has lost the public ear. Every-pn- e knows that if Britain were to gw j an, in last year's path It would soon hr. as dead, a Carthage And every-'on- e Is dhttreifced to hear that 8tr Arthur Newsholme, who has done more than anyone to keep the infant death-rat- e dropping down year after year. Is about to retire from office His office is that of medical officer j (o the local government board, and It is conceivable that he might have laved the lives of thousands of babies J just as certainly if he had never seen ne since he took that post ten years iko. For he saves their lives by brooding over and Interpreting 'the regis- j figures, by generals mortality writing reports and making recommendations based on them. He shoald be especially interesting to us Americans because we have no one like him. We will have no one like him for a - ENGLAND BABY SAVER. good many years, because we have never gathered together the kind of Sir Arthur Newsholme Whose Study material on which he works. In 102 of Statistics Has Shved Millions of the census act gave us permission to - Infant Lives. collect birth and death statistics from states the various states, but many his turn has told Sir Arthur have nothing much to collect. Not one in A high inThey say, till 1915 was the matter taken up Newsholme. death rate goes with bad santhoroughly, and it will be a long time fant or poverty, or drink, or overbefore America has a ten J ears' aver- itation, or dirt, or bad feeding." crowding, annual to steady age of vital statistics They are sure that It Is the effect of has, no country figures by. When she for mothers, of the work wtH be more eager to study them than factory of the ignorance of of Great Britain and the medical officers mothers. mothers, Or they say that It accomwho will carry on Wewsholmes work. is inseppanies a high birthtn rats ortowns. His work will go on and prosper, arable' rfom living large like die not will Carthage. for England Now the registrar generals figures exception, show Her 1918 statistics are anbreak-uhas that every one of these ideas Arp of x portent, caused by the in it. Year after year, 8ir families through military service and truth examined the thur Newsholme has training, by the loss of nearly a million figures to see which of these truths is of the flower of her manhood on the persuaded the central battle-field- s of four years, and by the truest'and has government or the local authorities or epidemic of influenxa, which, like the private persons to carry out further war, chose the young and strong, and and on Infant killed as many In two months as died experiments on them. And he has begged report to back will She six. in go fighting more and -- her- position in 181. of having one for and obtained always more figures. sf the lowest death rates in the world, their Let us begin with these In 1851-Glow a rather low birth rate and a verymor0 form. In the 10 years simplest And her infant Infant 'mortality. rate of death the infant England as smaller and smaller will gettne-itality Wales was 164 w last sixty years and It had fallen to births. In 1801-1- 0 as she finds out more and more of the 127. and London stood at 120. In that channels by which infant Uvea that period Russia's infant mortality rata hours for which brave men died by waa S27. What wss the rate for A.? We do not know, more's the pity! ea has adeem ate figures of her own In 112 Englands rate had fallen to 95 tn deal with, she too must work with London at 90. New Zealand had vital 'largely by the light of British the lowest In the world, well under 60 statistics for this century. And the She also had the lowest birth rate In is on the subject throw light they her history In 1917 - we get some due to Sir Arthur Newsholme more American figures, though not many. than anyone. New York's infant rate was 3, the How Beblee Are Killed. whole registration area gave 101, and of course, thinks he rural areas 97. Probably if the figures Everyone, , knows whai kills babies, and every- - for the whole of the states were avail- - L I work i Til sto-pidi- ty life-savi- -- nd ha rl d able they would be more favorable high mortality for the first week of than this, perhaps not much behind life. Why was this? Why wss It Great Britains. greater than In many large towns? Now this kind of comparison is in- - j Why were districts bordering large j not but very illuminating towns better than the Yorkshire moors teresting Great Britain's statistics have given ' and the Lake district? Why was so many hints and point-- , fohjshlre s record in this respect rs because they are so extraordinarily good? j, detailed. Since 1911 the figures for ceptionally Bedfordshire may have given the administrative counties have been giv- clue. one of "was the This country en individually, the rural and Urban first to have good districts nursing parts of them d'stlnguiahed In 1811 service which paid particular heed to medical the board published in Its while in contrast'' cases, officer's' report map of" counUci'i maternity of the healthy, moorland with black patches for the very high of the sort and had had triets nothing mortality districts, shading' down through grey to white as the, hut few doetbrw. Where mothers and. have in&anquate attention at mortality was Jess. Here at once'you babies see the mining districts of Durham) Virth the child oftenmes before a doc- - j and Glamorgan as black as ink Can tor can be fetched. If the mother dies we say then that mining is specially or is dangerously ill the child will fatal to children Hardly, because hardly survive These considerations when the town districts are separated enabled statisticians to class as prefrom the country, the cotton districts ventable deaths" a large part of the of Manchester are worse than mining infant mortality -- of dtstnets which have already good figures for the first areas in Nottingham and Derby Why then are textile districts bad? year The prpvlsion of mid wive, their At once we think that it is because their population lives in Urge towns training and inspection has since that But then London, the largest (own of date been continually pressed upon ail, has an infant mortality rate not local authorities as their duty. But e. since their power in these respects much more than half that of And so. comparing again and are for the most part permissive onjy, again, we find that rural districts are a large share of the work for this form much better for children than tbwnsi of Infant and matemitv welfare has and insani- been done gnd is still being done by but that large, tary villages like those in Durnare voluntary agencies Adeline Duchess are worse than any large town Min- of Bedford, the Duchess of Marlborough, the women of the Womens Coing Is bad, but other industries-whiccause a smoke-lade- n atmosphere are operative Guild and the womens. Inlittle better. And poverty is bad. bat dustrial Council are aH known as poverty in open country air, as In Ire- workers in this field, and the general land, is better than richea. Roscompublic, which for years has regarded mon this year has an Infant death-rat- e the provision of. maternity nursing of 36 Infinitely lower than New as a charity to poor mothers now sudZealand. denly recognizes it as a mere prudent attempt to safeguard the nations most Importance of Sanitation. asset. The figures available up to the end important of last century seemed to indicate that Training for Mothers. sanitation was the controlling factor Starting from the long and full re And In lowering infant mortality of Sir Arthur Newsholme on the doubtless it was responsible for much port ad of the GO years improvement. But relation between Infant. in child-birt- h pub- as more deUll appeared in the stalls- -' shed in mortality redoubled energy has 115, tics we found that good drains were clinics, not everything. It became apparent babies devoted to the babyclinics KXAFGHTER OP INNOCENTS: and welcomes, tene-- i that large, clean, al he for tho for as be agencies Improving bad ment buildings might Mop Showing Comparative Infant Death Hsus In England and Woles. babies as cottages- less clean and less health of the child by training, or benefiting the mother The Then we added overcrowd- encing lng to the above factors, and discov- - fact that the illegitimate infant death of pure milk, comparatively unlmpor- - thousand births, and Malden. Massa-tarate twice is that of children bom In ered by taking the mortality figuresto adults, is vital In the case of chusetts, with 6G of some small country towns and vil- marriage is now seen to result mainly infants who are not naturally fed. When America goes dry" the from the fact if the and that were small unmarried houses where lages is a pioneer In thl? matter, j fcct on infant life will be very marked, families large that "domestic over- - mother Is to work for the childs Australia has done her Engbut If duty, ,nd It will be of the greatest value to port she must generally pay someone land as may not matter much regards her milk supply Is i social reformers to notice whether the else to care for (or neglect) him while there is free access pf pure dust-fre- e inycrovement is most seen In the case This could not be proved until she works Sir Arthur Newsholme In still In the dark ages. air rates relatively high or relatively This fact has a bearing on American the large and small towns gave their his latest published report remarks found a very that if England is to reduce her infant vital statistics which is not irpmedi- - low A British Inquirer mortality figures separately ln ths children of difference marked j death rate to 50 obvious that Granted a! reached ately England discovered figure (a Newsholme Arthur Sir in New Zealand as. a whole and is retrograde here, and that her infant drunkards according to whether they the obvious truth that everyone else ready the parents g of in many small districts in England) de&lbEate is JrtiM tower than Ameri- - j were born before or afterwhole has overlooked, that the family wwTni8t reallxe that this end can only ca's, must not America be doing worse took to drink, but if the babies depends very much upon be lumped England In some other matters of drinking parcntajwasseemed mothers. And the figures which first of secured "by improving the welfare than to to be their physique infant life? If nott mother The main evil now made good this supposition were the to every by m r at good milk would superior to that of children of sober it saving be against guarded first the for separate mortality figures her far. above the British level people. This shows the difficulty of a or weeks oMlfe. TheseTtfenow arly separation of the mothers from lift The question Is not mainly one of devising methods of dealing with fig- available. Instead of the old ones, herThechild. tlie widely sep- urea which shall not confuseof enposition reached Is this. AH the climate, for districts not which lumped together all deaths unwith those of effects hereditary death-rat- e arated very extremely in their mortal" conditions affect the that total der one year as "infant mortality of in- of the nation, or almost an, affect ity rate compare New Bedford. Mas- - vironment. Another difficulty While they were lumped, persons of with 129 intent deaths per' fant mortality statistics is that much sachusetts, life of Housthe and welfare infants. bestill moderate Intelligence might lieve with Socrates that children are ing, sanitation, pure air. and conditions best brought up by the state In Ignor- of immediate environment are more ance of their parentage The new an- Important to them than to older perwho move about more, but not alysis of vital statistics showed at once sons much more so than they are to the that many country districts with a home-stayimotheivTb question had yet a very low infant death-rat- e ex-e- dle-yeon- g brth open-'lazil- world lone war from TO 19. a LONDON, of the ek UU lU- i OpwcUl Correepondtnos.) nt Staly-bridg- , pre-nat- well-drain- ed al Influ-sanita- - nt well-bein- I tn-vi- tal while the Earl formerly Miss Lily Elsie, was another antique and Countess of Albemarle presented theatrical celebrity of the past who an "autograph album bound in greenrhaa since become a social star, who leather, while somebody else gave a J graced the occasion. basket! I to everybodys delight sng a new papier maghe waste-papwhich noticed that Admiral Sir David and song called Thoughts of You" accomtho composer, Ivor Kovello, a are by Gifts represented Beatty Lady of Prtewd list bedding rrincem Pat fir t Marriage IWiloe and of course there were really beautiful George III silver panied,reminiscent rhapsodies concern, famous oung Composer's Farewell Party Before Soiling for salver, while Major. Gen. John Bid- many in dle's card appeared on a lamp with f America. Miss Lily Elsie took the town ails showing a quaint lutunst de. Widow, by storm. sign. I should think it likely that Princess forks, spoon, etc , for household use. (Special Correspondence ) One incident of the afternoon is Alexandra has given her pretty Pat when she sets up housekeeping is ONDON, March 15. London Is Queen niece two wonderful Indian shawls, sure to have a room which will be well worth recounting because it cona have to quite Viccerns from I came. Queen beginning that very fashionable and fambelieve, that furnished in Chinese lacquer, air about It, and toria's collection, as well as a dia- entirely spring-lik- e and orna- ous portrait painter, Mr. Ambrose decorations hihe all while pin and a big silver tea and cof- ments will be of Chinese jade and McEvoy, who has made for himself the result Is a feeling of cheerl-th- at mond fee service; while the Duke of Con- - strange oriental materials; In fact the a greater vogue ar a painter of fair almost manage, to hide naught's than did even ths present to his daughter Is a most lnteresting of the royal presents women in London In dhys gone by. touch of the labor Bond, the coal -- complete get of dozens of beautifully are nearly wares. Sargent great oil beautiful of is anything but imposing in embroidered household and table linen Princess Patricia made a capital hostohortage, and the various other na He la a tail, thin, loosely-httonal and political trouble that are that have been specially made in Ire. ess on this occasion of the review of appearance. ung Individual who dresses with land. The king of Spain sent over her presents. She stood at the en- besetting us at present bells -, hnd of U lack of interest In obvious full some very tine specimens of old Span- trance of the blue drawing room in thq most Tho air wedding It Is said that more marriages occurred ish furniture, while his consort's can- - Clarence House, b his appearance. In a wearing charming dresaed .In London during the last week in tributton is a huge fan of exquisite grey-dre- ss he Just puts on his at embroidered lheneck'rtaly He wears a scrubby rathlace wlOrttnely carved sticks and waist with jade green, and she clothes. February than hayetakgnpUce-fluro-14jtomi.- il trimmed beard t log. any week for a long whlla Byjniald stonea The Em. had a word to say to each er meagre, and badly of color. HI s hair is thin and the time youare reading hUi letter j press Eugenie sent Princess Pat a person pleasant reddish as they entered I must honand Princess Patricia marriage will be a Louis Seize armchair and a pair of but smooth, .m,-were-ebnas many distla- - anything matter ol more or less ancient history. j emall chairs of the same period, while estly confess that his hands though N are not well sm writing now everybody King Manuel and Queen Augusta Vic- and but as afternoon party on the slim who Is an body is feverishly rushing j torts weighed in with a silver guilt for. But he Is so famous an Patricias. cared off to Clarence House to view the tmdea everyone that artist regards his ecNoe centricities aa being an adjunct to his wedding presents and to have tea with two china and plated, Novello-Daviare Ivor this sailing iho rpyal bride. but week-o- n. genius. At any rate on this occasion "g?11-1the Mauretania for-N-of Madame Novello-Davieparty he lam sure it would Interest AmeriYork, and. as a sort of au revolr to arrived at the front door, carrying a cans tn see how business-lik- e and their friends, they gave a most g disreputable-lookihtn brown Tiractlcal are the arrangements for rather at beautiafternoon" their this marriage of the kings first cou-.- n to Commander the Hon. Alexander three .11 v'erustard .po hurry and, as it afterwards or great Ramsev. turtied out. was anxious to speak on On arrival fimnn w at Clarence-an- d the Princess Royal and Princess House each guest Is presented with a ( Maud are represented by two silver exceedingly telephone before goftig into the of much the music room. As soon as the servant The and an embroidered sofa- -. heavy printed list of wedding presents ash-trapopular of the day that cover IS pages Of quarto-siz- e . the door he said, "I want to pa- -j cushion! EfoguSd H e ls Tnv 25vears of opened she at once InPer. The list commences with pres-- j I must say that a good many of the Le and Is one of go to the telephone to those vouthi nts from the royal family, their ma- princesss presents strike one as being q,om nature terrupted him, half closing the door nartiCularlv cant two she as , down you go In how spoke, quite of the ordinary description, such gifts being qet ,s m?t on?y exceed mriv e m teens of silver" she sald. 'The madams has visitors These useful and as might come toahe most common- - tai.-f- ej He more ordlnarthan You must come tomorrow morning v ling gifts Include every poe-- place bride. The Duchess of Aber- .ibis kind of dish a.nd utensli. knives, corn, for Instance, bestowed a large McEvoy blinked in a puzzled lvay and usic2ower. he Tnheriu from said, "Oh, ves but I was aAked to Invited 8rxm?n, ihy Jh her dark hair tomorrow afternoon.butI wasnt I must speak morning and eyes and her vivacious and on the telephone first. But the servcharmingly expressive face. ant was obdurate. 8he thought It Almost from the beginning of the was the telephone man come to see war, young Ivor Novello has been the Instrument, and, as she aflgt- serving with the Royal Air Force, and wards explained, she "wasnt going he has proved himself an excellent to have him messing about, when and daring soldier. It was during the there waa all those grand people lisi early days of the world war that he tening to the music. the- - Song "Keep the Homs Jjj wrote Fortunately for the wretched artStomqch upset ? Belching adds. Fires Burning" that ha made hi ist. however, he was rescued from his jname-famou- s the world rither unfortunate throughout by tho gases and sour food? and which tl heard sungover a year Baroness DErlanger position who arrived and ago tn New York quite as'mhch and greeted him with an empressment that certainly aa heartilyT by soldier and at ones convinced the servant that Instant relief awaits you. " civilians .Bilks as bad previously ! probably she hnd mistaken the lden heard It sung In England. At any tlty of the shlbby gentleman with the cate, the Ivor Novello party was 'an The moment Papes Diapepsin success "Everybody" seemed , Immense ! to he present UiThe quaint flat- - with I am told that Madame Novello-- 1 7 reaches the stomach all the indigesit strange oriental draperies, and Davies-an- d her son are only stopping furniture. in tion, dyspepsia, gases, heartburn and New Ttrk for two orvthree-weeks- , Lady Cynthia Asquith came with "We are Churchill, Randolph Lady Just going for a rest, and a No waiting! sourpess vanish. Mrs. Bonham real good time. aha told me. while her sister-in-laTo Carter, arrived "at the same time aa me New York is a mental .and physi-Lad- y "Magic! Dont suffer! Mrs. Cyril Asquith cal tonic, and I am looking forward Islington. was another well known personality, to the time when Ivor will have his while Mr Hugh Walpole whose new own passenger flying machine, and ' Costs little, at 'any drugstore. book, 'The Secret City is being much w can fly across the Atlantic for a Pat favorite foods without fear. talked about Just now, was among week-en- d and see all the sights to be noted, and delightful people that gay the literary-celebritiarete be The Countess of Dudley, In a wonder- found. In what I think. Is tbe most tut sablrwrap. arrived with the lion. wonderful city the world. tL'rs 5 Mrs Maurice Brett who ufed to be LADY MARY Zena .Dare, while Mrs. Ian BulJough. (Copyright, (919. ) coal-scuttl- e, Wedding Bells Fill London Air er L with-preclo- est i "ivies egg-stan- well-shape- d, es hern; ew s" j t1,o it- - terf loot low ith imp jock Instantly! Stomach Feels, Fine! No Indigestion, Gases or Acidify , V fine, vei? BP "A8- - d7 odr. smf jatt wiO D SA & ' 1 es et? ;p&pe? Diapepsin onycKteS u 1 9 , more ...iormation Is available ss to the fat..ers than the mothers of children yet the motper Is a much mors life important factor in a childs . than ihe father A new addition to the which enable the statistician to figures calculate the chi.t crianees of life Is the age of his mother aXhr birth. The census figures of Greats Britain get somewhere near this by recording the mothers age at marriage and the number of her Children bo far the results have not furnished any very exact clue to the subject complicated as it Is by the probabilltv that very youpg mothers arc inexperlonced and much older women may have their hands so fail with elder thildren thht thev cannot pare sufficient tim for the new This is one of the subjects baby which Kir Arthur Newsholme ind'eates at worthy of discussion but has "not fully considered To return for a mcmentto the connection between a low birth rate and a low infant mortality The cases of Russia and New Zealand taken by themselves make out a very strong for the interdependence of these figures But the French figures give us pause, and the high death rate and low birth rate of Paris alone warn one of error. And comparing different districts of England and Wales we f'nd that high death rates are as prevalent In areas of low nearly birth rate as tn those that have a high birth is It true figure that the richer residential quarters of towns have both low. but that seems to be a characteristic of wealth. Extreme poverty frequently has bot h high. But poor quarters of London Tottenham and Edmonton have low death rate In spite of many births and prevail! i poverty. So has rural Ireland. Enough has been said to show t.) Importance of such calculations t Sir Arthur Newsholme has been at a to make by patiently isolating or a after another of the factors that main for life" or death of the nations ch. -dren. When one factor is isolate 1 and value another, and in time pc baps we shall find the Meal surroun -Ings for a child born ft) a town at I obliged to live In a town. That Is the crying need of the day for America t for England. We cannot all go bar c to live in the healthy country, ar I where we live our children mast Bv Which of the rural conditions t; a really important to them, and how many of them can be reproduced 1 towns? How much effort In ths w:. v of baby clinics and w 1 be needed to counteract the. town r.' mosphere? Where Is thepoJn which the mother's additional ear. -ings are lees valuable to the child i procuring food than her care in pe sonal ministration to hfm Ail tht (ir questiohs, all these are ei their way to solution. The two Eng nations should help e&c t other to solve them, for until they are settled we are both gambling with our future in the dark. E MARY GOODMAN. Copyright, 119, by Edward Marshall. Case 1 child-welfa- re -- 1 PADEREWSKI The Man --Who Astonished the W oriel First As a Musical Genius Now as a Nation-Mak- Pol&nd. ' ''' Rebuilding er Takes Nuxated lron For Strength ' ' Energy and Endurance Dr. Kenneth K. MacAlpine, for 16 Years Adjunct Professor New York Post Graduate Medical School and Hospital. Says Hiat in His Opinion Nuxated Iron is The Most Valuable Tonic, Strength and Blood Builder , Any Physidan Can Prescribe. When IgrvaceJan Paderewski. Master Pianist and Nation Maker, turned his back to the plaudit of the admiring thousands and deserted music to give his whole energy that Poland might become a free na-tlon. h little realised the Uemendoua strain which would be imposed upon his health and strength. After two years of such strenuous work and intense mental effort as would have'wortL down the constitution of many men. Paderewski hail recourse to the sustaining tonic benefits of NuxaCgd Iron to help rebuild his wasted forces and restore bis e health and strength. That one of the foremost most forceful figures of today's international and life, should come out frankly and a product which he has personally found valuable for building up -- health and strength must arouse the interest of every thinking person in Nuxated Iron, which is today being used by over three old-tim- million people annually lo help create red blood, power an- d- fi Commenting upon tbe use of Nuxated Iron by Paderewski and other widely known people, Dr Kenneth K. McAl- prominent New ?ine, aSurgeon and Professor of ths New York Medical School and Hospital, says: "During sixteeh years te as Lecturer and Adjunct thr wpjabijm - ' f and literally losing their grip on health, simply because blood Is thinning out andtheir possibly lack of starving iron. through Iron.f, a hftrBi-tcitiPe Tourolood to transform the foodaabTS you eat Into muscular tissue and brain, w ithout Iron there is no, strength, viand endurance to tality obstacles or withstand severs combat strains. To help make strong, sturdy mqn of blood xnd iron there is nothing better than organic Iron Nuxated Iron Mr. erewski says "Dam using Nuxated Padand consider it as an excellent tonic Dr George-Baker, formerly Phy. siclan Monmouth Memorial Hospital of New Jersey, The fact that 'Nuxated Iron is 'ssyst today three million Introduction of Nuxated Iron has done b n used b ax a tome, strength and sway with all objectionable features of p,e the old mineral salts of iron and give careful ,t rhimrin n nf trle public confidence and I pre-.- , notion which cn recommend nearly every day amconvinced that If others should ake with benefit to his weakened and run-iro- n Nuxated Iron when feel weak down patient Nuxated Iron It would they make"a"i. and enrton rich log Ole blood and creatingby" newof stronger, healthierhelp men and wonica ' blood cells strengthen the nerves re- If you ire mu wet! iah heips.-Ow- e Jt ,to to mifke the follow- t,"ue ndenilurto Instill .Wmk3edenergy - ing test yourk.if and bee how long you can work howr far you can walk without sixe into the whole system whether the or 01 be young or bid In patient tired Next take opin- ion Nuxated Iron la tlis most my Vron valuable grain Ubiets of ordl iiaryNuxvted . nd klond bu ilder any three dTy ,0hn,T iw . weeks Then test your strengthwragain prescribe now much you bate Kalued. physician of Beilevue Hospital i Out- - Numbers of nervous, n door De nd w,et- - who were ailing all the w htle havepeople TY most Chester Couhty Hospital, says "Lack of ,ro" ,nf the blood not oniy make a man and endurance aimpTy !ngerron in the proper form And thla. Der eakling, nerv- bad phri"k.nd sus. irritable easily fatigued' in soma omm, bepn doclorinfthey but it fn nttarly robs him of the vxriia ut)4ha- - wHhot3t-ohtainl- n g any hcnefitr er Ipprgmnlc iron products. It is easily ressful and entirely satisfactory results assimilated, does pot injure the teeth. purchaser or they will refund in this city I4n dispensed snake them black, nor upset the atomthtr drur' ach. The manufacturers guarantee sue- H of Special Surgery (Proctology) in the New Tork Sehol nd Hos "ever bad recourse to sa.valu- ' KrxTtmedy for building up tw health and strength of debilitated, con- valeacent patients Ss verOSSf-Jreent- ir made with Negated have absolutely convinced me, that miVtf Pr't,0n mOBt)I xtrOrdinary .. . , nnjLi!rn lr fnTnInPnnr , J ttv the blood as iteniL0.!!!0 Ux5iV!d b aa,t iZ prT sufficient keeping up would 0 trillion. M leas diflAlUUt rftn!tin from anaemic, fraakened condition, For year, it wtrh slciana how Iron jjhy-a form that could be taken up by ths system end Increase the red blood cor- aeh, hlaJvantnir thei'ieiif S. lng other disorders almont as as ths lack of iron Itself J&qt the Manufacturer's Note ; Nuxated Iron recommended shove In not s secret remedy butene which is well known to druggists everywhere. Unlike the old- - fr -- uecessary toauccese and power In every-wal- k of life Thousands of men and women are impairing their constitutions. 7&Ing them selves open to illness m, Jroisseor Nuigted-IagnScv-- stamina and strength of win which are so He vw 'r mrr blood-builde- r, trr eod-vahra- bte- run-do- ... I,rnth timerr n, run-dow- b'lak Sry gUta-Adi?rti- menl -- J ;I ih 3 |