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3. HORSE HAS RECORD Genealogical Tree of Equine is Shown in National Museum at Washington. DATES TO EOCENE AGE Washington, Sept. 9—No king of ihe realm, no matter how purple be s royal raiment, nor in fact any sther human being, can trace his an- as far back as that of the rs¢. This animal, so well known e world over, has the longest pedi- ree on record; one probably over (000,000 years old, dating back to vhat is known as the Eocene age, jousands of years before the coming i man. His genealogical -tree is shown in the National museum at Washington, where a series of feet md skulls depict some of his more mportant ancestors. The horse of the Ecoene, or his forebear, rather, was known as eohip- , or dawn horse. He was about size of a fox, standing a little than one foot high. Eohippus liv in North America, where he ran light-footedly over the toertiary oeks on his well developed four-toed iront feet, and three-toed hindfeet. His teeth were not like those of a modern horse, either, but were short- crowned. While scientists are unable to tell us just how long his mane vas, if he had any, or the color of his ride, they do know the facts men- tioned above, for his fossil remains have ‘been found in the rock strata known as the Lower Eocene, which is supposed to date back about 3,000,- 000 years. Development of Animal. It is a fortunate thing that little cohippus experienced the development hat he did, or became specialized, as the scientists say, for in his early form such an animal would have been of but little service to us domestically But such was the case, he de- veloped remarkably and it is claimed that, while he is not on the same plane with man mentally, of course, he is more highly specialized anat- omically. His physique developed as his needs required. He could not fight much, so had to run away; his speed developed, until today he is seen to be fleet-froted, strong,-beth for lear- ing packs and pulling loa’s, and to this end his size, feet, teeth and other parts developed with . his advagce down the ages. At his early age, when he was callec eohippus, the horse was a most insignificant creature, as compared to his contemporaries, the great hulking brutes called the uintatheres and coryphodonts. But, strange as it may seem, his posterity has outlived them all—a fine example of the survival of the fittest. The horse is one of the best examples of the survival of prehistoric animals. An exhibit illustrating the develop- ment of the horse is shown in the United States National Museum, at Washineton, D. C,, in the halls of the division of vertebrate paleon- tology, which includes all the fossil animals’ having backbones. Most of the specimiéns are complete “bones, partly turnied to stone and found im- bedded in rock in several localities in this country. "The earliest known form, the eohippus, comes:first, show- estry } the \ rd ing his four-toéd front feet and his | three-foed hind feet, as well as his teeth and’ skull of that time. As the next advanced stage, we find bones of a somewhat larger animal of the Oligocene period, known as .meso- hippus, comparatively about the, size of a sheep ‘with three toes on all its ieet, the one on the front feet having ‘,\ru\'?("l superfluous, nature saw to it that it disappeared; its teeth have so advanced a bit, to assist it in ceding, as may be seen in the exhi- bition case. Next, in the Miocene, a little later period, there lived numer- ous large horses called merychippus, neohipparion, protohippus, etc. The foot bones of these animals show three toes on each foot, but with the miiddle toe much larger that its companions; while the teeth are seen to be longer and deeper crowned. In fact, this type begins to' look more like a regular horse. In the next step, the Pliocene, are seen still more specialized forms, protohippus and pliohippus, the latter, and some other species, having but a single toe on cach foot, which soon developed a single hoof,- their adjacentor auxiliary toes having disappeared and only the splints or' stumps remain to be seen n the fossil bones, vestiges of which may also be seen in modern horses, He seems to have grown a little larger also, and more to the shape of the horse we know. He was still able to feed, in spite of his longer legs, as his neck and jaws had grown in proportion, and he could travel at a high rate of sneed on hard ground. Date of True Horse. True Horses occurred in the Pleisto- cene period, some forms very closely resembling’ the horse of today, the average of them a little smaller in stature.. "Modern horses average 14 hands-high, or about 4 feet 8 inches, showing a wonderful growth or de- velonment in height alone. Here we have in the National Museum series, followed the pedigree of the horse, or at least the general steps thereof; in a general way it is seen that this progress consisted of increase in- size, gradual enlargement of the central toe, accompanied by the wradual widening or shrinking, ~and inal loss of the side toes; the de- clopment of the single hoof on each toot, and .the increase in length and mplexity of the teeth, particularly the cheek’ teeth 3 Sufficient finds of petrified skele- or fossils have been made in ountry and Alaska to prove that the early horse was here in great uinbers in the Pleistocene time, just 4> he was in Europe, but soon there- siter he became extinct, or nearly so, _to the great ice sheet of the ial age which swept the northern i of the new world clean of nearly all animal life. Some scientists ad- mit that the Pleistocene horse might have lingered in Texas or some south- ern part of North America until the ring of the white man, but there is no proof of it, and others hold that the early Spaniards brought the horse along and thus re-established the horse on its native heath. ‘hat part is a puzzle, but we do v that from North America the horses journeyed to northern Europe across the once existing land bridge of the far north, stocking that continent well, before his kind became tons this scxtinct here—who knows that he, or 1is progeny, following the receding i the great ice sheet, may not have ciurned at an early date by the way he came, and thus have “beaten the white man to it,” so to speak. PEDIGREE OF WORLD | Another Youth Hes All the Joy! Taken Out of Life by the Rules Laid Dawn. | | 3 i “I'm oft the booze for good, judge, | I've quit smokin’ an’ I'm gonna quit {runnin’ away,” announced tiny 10-| |year-old Henry Lawry, a diminutive | South Side youngster, afflicted with | the wanderlust, when brought before { Judge Leslie in juvenile court. Hank's tribulations have been watched for | weeks by juvenile authorities. His| penchant for wandering away (r_om“ home in the morning and forgetting to return for two or three days,| sleeping in dry goods boxes and pick-| ing up anything available to eat| brought woe to his mother. On Hen-| ry's promise that he would cling to| |the home nest and renounce his bad | habits he was allowed another. chance, | “Be a good boy until Christmas and | you may expect a present from me," said Judge Leslie. All Joys of Life. All the joys of budding boyhood | were taken out of the life of Frank Wandling, a 14-year-old wanderer, to save himself from being sentenced to the state industrial school at Kear- ney. Frank has been living with his aged grandpareats at 6420 Nort) Thirty-seventh street, but, according to the old soldier's, complaint, has not obeyed his grandmother, has used harsh language and has acquired un- savory habits. Here's what he prom- ised Judge Leslie to do if he was allowed to return to the home of his grandparents: Quit smoking cizarets. Attend Sunday school regularly, Avoid using profane language Stay at horhe nights. Honor his grandparents. Study hard at school. Shun bad companions. U. 5. SOLDIERS SEE WEIRD GHOST DANCE Apache Scouts Show Pershing | Part of Their Primitive Ritual. GENERAL ENJOYS IT MUCH Field Headquarters, American Pun-lw itive Expedition, Mexico, Sept. 16— The Apache scouts attached to the| American punitive expedition came | all the way from El Valle to field| headquarters to give a ghost dance| for General J. J. Pershing, just be-| fore the commander of the expedi-| tion left on his recent inspection trip} to the border. The dance, weird and | picturesque, was witnessed by a thousand soldiers and was held only | after painstaking preparations by the| Indians. | Prior to his first inspection trip! (which took him to El Valle) the| | general had heard many times of the | | ghost dances the scouts had been giv-' |ing at their camp and before leav-| |ing for El Valle had informed Cap-| |tain James A. Shannon, who has| | directed the destinies of the Apaches, | | that he would be pleased “to have| [to the Indians, the general’s request | caused great excitement and they in- | sisted on leaving at once for field' | headquarters. \ They passed the general en route, | and it was only by the exercise of | | great diplomacy that they were pre-| | vented from debouching from their motor trucks and giving their dance on the trail. They were persuaded | to continue their trip, however, and | busied themselves during their six-| day layover at headquarters by fur- bishing their costumes and securing | a new and complete line of vivid| paints. Staged on Ground. | The dance, held the night after| General Pershing’s return from El| Valle, was stazed on a level piece of ground inside the lines near “China-| town.” Behind a circle of bales of | hay fifty yards in diameter, hundreds of khaki-clad soldiers gathered. Thel general was seated in a big cam chair on a low platform. A huge fire‘ | of logs blazed in ‘the center of the| circle, sending showers of sparks and | great sheets of flame skyward when-| ever the zealous Apache fireman| dashed gasoline into its roaring vortex. Long before the genéral was seated; the fourteen musicians, uniformed ac- | cording to regulations and seated a | short distance from the fire, began | their chant. Their soloist, Ietsuay, | would shout a stanza of perhaps {twenty words and his comrades would chant a sort chorus .in gutteral | | thythm. It was untamed, untrained | and altogether primitive. i Accompanying his chant, Ietsuay thumped on a makeshift tom tom—a galvanized iron pail with a wet deer skin stretched across its mouth. Dancers Come In. | For five minutes the prologue con- tinued, then the ranks of the onlook- ers parted to admit the .dancers. There were five of them-—costumed barbarically in trappings and head- dresses fashioned by their own hands. John Cody led the band, followed by Chow Big, Nonotolth, Saas and Es- kibende. Eskibende was the ghost| and his role partook somewhat of thc! Of the five, he wore the least clothes. | Like the other four he wore a mask | cut from a burlap sack. A small headdress, breech clout, moccasins | and a stuffed fawn which dangled against the small of his back, com-| pleted his costume. In his hands he | carried two red-tipped wands. His body was painted a ghostly gray. The others were attired most ¢lab- orately. Their headgear, carved from wood, painted in bright colors, be-| spangled with small mirrors and | tipped with {luffy white hawk feath- ers. were works of art. Brass-studded belts, bits of calico, blankets of vivid hues and a pumber of small bells that tinkled as they moved, made up | the remainder of their dancing | clothes. 1 Ghost in Rear, | Entering the arena, they filed around the circle in a dignified prom- enade, all except the ghost, who am- bled to the rear, executing grotesque dance steps to the encouraging shouts of fhe singers. ' Warmed by the applause of the spectators, the dancers soon increased tfieir exertions. Around the fire they moved, shuifling, swaying hopping. The firelight was reflected from the mirrors in their headdresses and the brass studds in their belts. Streams of sweat flowed down their naked torsos. The singers changed the motif of their ¢ ant and the ?xvr dark figures that circled the roaring flames increased their pace. Suddenly the chant ceased, the monotonous thump thump of the tom tom ended with a long roll and the dancers came to a standstill amid a burst of applause, The first act was over, Ten times this was repeated, let- suay chanting industriously, appar- ently without drawing breath. To-| ward the last the impressiveness of the spectacle was increased by vivid flashes of lightning from three storms in the surrounding mountains. Their | fantastic figures silthouetted against Pajorita mountain by the blinding | them perform for him. Communicated | 1¢gs} clown—a stiff legged, dignified clown. | bolts, the Apaches scored even more heavily than they had expected. After hour's exhibition, the dance ended, under orders. Left to themselves, the scouts would have continued for hours, even days, until they were completely exhausted. No one of .he expedition, not even their mentor, Captain Shannon, knows for what purpose the dance is given nor what is chanted. The dancers dress in secret and hide the accoutrements jealously, Certain steps occur frequently, but what they symbolize is unknown. “They seem to think it's pretty” was the only explanation Captain Shannon could give of the ceremony. ““Human Pulmoter” Saves Life of Dying Congress Passenger Marshfield, Ore., Sept. 15.—A. Ty- son, one of the passengers rescued from the liner Congress, which was | destroyed after making a race against death to Coos Bay. entrance, was re- moved to the dredge: Michie and laid on the deck unconscious and appar- ently lifeless. A physician bent over him and asked for a pulmotor to re- move the smoke and gas fumes from his lungs. No pulmotor was to be had. : “He is dying,” said the doctor hope- L E. Johnson, chief steward of the ichie, stepped forward. “Let me see what I can do,” he M | said quietly. :Bending down, he put his mouth to the mouth of the unconscious man and began drawing the poison fumes from the latter’s lungs into his own. Minute after minute he labored, mak- ing of himself a human pulmotor. Suddenly Johnson staggered back, all but overcome himself. But even as he did so Tyson sighed deeply and opened :his eyes: saved. Cutting Out Liguor in Ireland Reduces Insanity (Corvespondénce ‘of The Associated Press) Dublin, Ireland, Sept. S.—Insanity in Ireland has lately shown. a de- ¢rease, chiefly among women. This is something new, as Ireland'’s, statis- tics for insanity have .always been high. i 5 The superintendent of the asylum at Belfast, declares the reason for the decrease is due entirely to the im proved stanidard of living and to the restrictions on the liquor traffic. Mapny people who lived in poverty are now in comparative luxury. These are, he declares, solid grounds for the hope that, especially among wo men, Ireland will witness a great diminution of neurotic disorders. Lid Your Lunch Digest Properly? Try Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets After Meals and Never Fear:to Eat Anything ¥ou Like. Send for Free Trial Package. It is remarkable in effect that so small ¢ factor as a Stuart’s Dy:pep”’n Tablet tukes re of a whole meal, It plainly shows how “A Good M« of Saying “Si Tal | Well Digested” is One Way ‘s Dyspep: little is required to keep the stomach good order provided that little is exuctly what the stomach must have. There are food experts who say we msy exist on threr prines and a hard cracker for breakfast, but who cares to substitute the toothsome saus age or the appetizing bacon and eggs for a prune? Once you learn t emarkable ac'ion of Btuart's Dyspepsin Tablets in digesting food, preventing and overcoming gmssineis, heart burn, sotr risings, in your throat, gag ging, and the other es of indigestion you will eat what you want at any time without the slightest distress, Get a [0 cent box at any drug store and be safe agains’ the trials and perils of dyspepsia. Send fur & free trial prekoge as a test. The coupon below will bring it. Free Trial Coupon F. A. Stuart Co., 227 Stuart Bui'ding, shall, M rend me at once a free package Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tab- His life had been G. D. WOODWORTH CALLED BY DEATH Pioneer, Apparently in Best of Health, Dies Shortly After Seeing Daughter Wed. WITH SHERMAN TO THE SEA Charles D. Woodworth, pioneer resident of Omaha, a veteran of the civil war and one of the twelve scouts who served with General Sherman on the famous “March to the Sea” died yesterday morning at 2:30 o'clock at his home, 203 South Thir- ty-fourth street. Only Friday he at- tended the marriage of his daughter, Alice, to George A. Kiewit, and never appeared in better health. Heart dis- case is the supposed cause of his death. The deceased was well known as a stone contractor. He was born Jan- uary 30, 1846, at Aurora, I1l. He was one of the first to answer Abrahgm Lincoln’s call for volunteers in 1862 and enlisted as a drummer boy in the Fifty-second 1llinois Volunteers, Company E. He was under fire at Chickamauga, Lookout Mountain and Chattanooga, and for bravery in ac- tion was promoted to corporal, He was honorably discharged at Pulaski, Tenn., on December 29, 1863, and re- enlisted on the same day and at the same place to serve three years more under the norih's colors. The close of the war, however, brought him an honorable discharge before the three years had expired. Mr. Woodworth came to Omaha in 1865. In 1887, having started a pros- perous business career, he married Miss Kitty Kuhn, who died July 11, 1914. Their marriage was celebrated by Rev. David R. Kerr, president of Bellevue college, the same clergyman who officiated Friday at the marriage of Mrs. Kiewit. Mr. Woodworth is survived by four children, John L., Charles D., K crine and Mrs. Kiewit; one Mrs. ‘George Waldon, of Hastings, Neb. The funeral will be held Mon- day morning at 2:30 o'clock. Rev. E. H. Jenks of the First Presbyterian church and Dr. Kerr will conduct the services. The deceased was a member of U. S. Grant Post No. 110, Department of Nebraska, Grand Army of the Re- public, and of the order of Odd Fel- lows. He had served as a menber of the Omaha Board of Education and also of the city council. Mrs, Harriman Presents “Arden House"” to Her Son New York, Sept. 15.—Mrs. Edward Harriman, it became known here to- night, has transferrcd to her son, William Averell Harriman, “Arden House,” near Goshen, N. Y. The es- tate, projected by the late Edward H. Harriman, as h's ideal country home, includes 2,500 acres of forest, lake and stream. “Arden’ House” is located a mountain summit, overlooking .he Ramopo valley, and the surrounding country for many miles on the west- ern side of the Huds~n river. The estate is valued at $5,000 000. Young Harriman,. since his mar- riage a year ago, has resided ac “Ar- den House” in a ‘wing specially built for himself and wife Accept $25.00 As a Gift From Us We will glve you credit for $2.00 on every dollar ydu pay down on a PJANO in our Two For {° One % offer up to-and Including $25.00. on ~ During this offer no matter what you pay down—up to and Iincluding $25——we will credit you two for every one. —— New Pianos $225 2 | to $750--- Terms to Suit Every Purse Kranich & Bach Kimball Bush & Lane Cable-Nelson Heiderson Hospe Brambach Grand Hospe Grand Kranich & Bach Grand Apollo Player Hospe Player —And many others. Scarf-—Free Free Stool—Free Drayage. Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention, REFINISHED PIANOS Ohio Valley, walnut case “Herlich” ebony case “Bailey” mahogany ca “Schiller” walnut “Hackley” mahog. c. “Kimball” French wal 190 “Henry F. Miller” mah..§2,0 $10 takes one home. As low as $1 per week pays for it. M high grade Grand Pianos at special prices. A. HOSPE CO. 1613-15 Douglas St. The Victor Store. 40 75 er | THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER Lad Piomises to Quit All His Bad Habits; Judge to Give Him Present [ 1 1916. Mont, and Joseph Ma'mberg of Min-| neapolis Carl Malmbgeg is a clerk in the| IN RESGUE ATTEMPT.QM Exchange.National bank. | Considerable damage was done by - - v the flames before they were extin- Mrs Malmberg Believes Hus- 5xm~hml by the fire department band is in Danger and Rushes Into Flames. Persistent Advertising of -\uylhing‘ | That 1s Really Worth-While Never| | Fails ’ YOUNG SON IS IN DANGER | LS Crazed with fear for the safety of | her hasband and her home, which was | in flames, Mrs, Carl F. Malmberg, | 3047 Evans street, rushed from her!| bedroom into the smoke and fire at an early hour yesterday morning and lost her life. | === — Car! Malmberg, stepson of the dead NEW 1916 woman, was awakened by smoke at 4/ o'clock, and entering the room of his | LUSK parents, discovered that his mother Standardized was not there. He assisted his father | Universal and brother, Harry, 8 years old, to| a window and helped the boy to a| second story porch, telling his father | not to move till he returned. The| elder Malmberg became panic-strick- | en and fell from the window to the ground. Harry was taken from the | o ¥ arry 3 i y textbooks ever published th: roof by Walter C. Johnson, 3151 | faster than any person e:‘:‘xutllkl:'p:x:m Evans street, who obtained a ladder | the swiftest public speakers or become and came to the boy's rescue. Mrs. Malmberg was found by fire- | giq seyle men, but a few moments later over-| Dement, High School Class Begins Satur Saturd-y, October 7. 2:30'p. e Apeilc Beginners, Monday, 8 p. m., and received in Monday and Tuesday classes be made for private lessons day Phone Harney 5143, 400 Twice as rapid as the swif*est Pitmanic: four eourt #.enographdrs are record.ng it once, court experts and by #9095 letters in evidently wandered, confused. She died in a short time. Father is Injured. Mr. Malmberg suffered severe in- juries in his fall and was taken to the home of a neighbor, Mrs. Malmberg was 45 years old. She is survived by her husband and five children, Carl, Harry, Albin, Mrs, Ada Dudley, Twenty-eighth and Ohio streets; Mrs. Marie Clark of Billings, Turpin’s School of Dancing y, September 30, & p. m. First Children's Class Avplication should be made early. Adult Advanced, Tuerday, § p. m. or evening. | 800 words a minute easier than old style writers take 100, almost any frequently occurring phrase in the English language, two to four tim b or any Pitmanie stenographer can read | come in the basement, where she had | about shorthand are taught the swift expedients T—A Belgian Town Fined for Hoisting Belgian Tricolors (Corresnondence of The Associated Pres The Hague, Netherlands, Sept. 5.—~ The Belgian town of Lierre has been fined 50,000 marks because, on the oc- casion of the recent national fete, some of its inhabitants had hoisted a big Belgian tricolor on the top of an oak tree. In order to defend the trec against German assaults, they had ‘ed it with barbed wire, Now open Adult No more pupils after October 10th. Arrangements may 28th and Farnam Streets. WORD-A-MINUTE SHORTHAND The Swiftest System of Writing in the World MOST MARVELOUS INVENTION OF MODERN TIMES FASTER THAN ANY SPEAKER CAN ARTICULATE. » times as rapid as the swiftest non-Pitmanic. e every stenographer now to not only take letters any civil service examination held, but alse take reporters. Lu k stenographers takg 200 to A Lusk stenographer record n while . Pitman, Graham, Munson, Barnes, Marsh, it. Beginners knowing absolutely nothing used by United States Scnate Reporters, \ of the verbatim reporters of the world, and commence to take the briefest reporting style at 100 words a minute after 5 lessons. Beginners in Lusk books can write faster, after a few weeks, than graduates ean write who have fin- ished a course at schools teaching from old style text book: | for w stenographer in a few months what formerly required Correspondence and versonal courses for bath beginners a Agency for teaching Lusk method offered shorthand teachers already covered. Stenographers unaware of the wonderful | shorthand the past year by the Lusk books, #end for Demomstration Letter and speeimens. LUSK INSTITUTE 2285 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. BROOKLYN ANNEX, 322 Livingston St. NEWARK, N. J. ANNEX, 671 BROAD ST. k books will accomplis stenographers. Exelusive nd schools in territory not provements made in Pitmanic e SEE OUR LINE OF RADIANT HOME RANGES, BASE BURNERS and OAK HEATERS also BARLER AND PERFECTION OIL HEATERS and ELECTRIC ROOM HEATERS Combination Range burns gas or coal without any changes. We Show a Full Line of A-B GAS RANGES See Our Special Cabinet Stove, $25.00 No pulling out or in of heavy iron plates. You just turn on the gas and the stov ready. & SONS CO. SS - Endurance and Health and | A hitherto untold Secret of his Great Victories over Jack John- son and Frank Moran. with to obtain great physieal and mental power, | Ordinary Nuxated Iron will often increase the strength and endurance of the delicate, nerv- ous folks 200 per cent in two weeks’ time. 0 U—Dr. L. Saues, a we'l-known 10 has rtudie ) widely in both this ope, hns been special'y employed 4 thorough investigation into the real the prat stren='h power and endur. arce of Jess Willard, and the marvelous value of nuxated fron nx a strength builder. W YORK -Upon being interviewed at his r'ment in the Colonial Hotel, Mr. Willard » s I hive a chemist with me to study the value of d.fferent foods and products as to their power to duce great streng'h and en- diurance, both of wh.th are so necesnary in the prize ring. On his recommendation 1 have often t ken nuxated iron snd [ have particularly ad- vocated the free use of iron by all those who Without it I am sure that I should never been able 5 whip Jack Johnson to completely und easily ax I did, and while training for my mand forces him to leave for new fght with Veank Moran, I regularly took nuxat- up the “litle Willards” with strong ed iron, and L we certuin that it was a most his own success by saying:— important fuctor in my winning the fight so cagily.” Continuing, Dr. Sauer said: “Mr. Wil- Iard's carc s only one of hundreds which jp, jiving tissue. Without it, no mat. 1 could cite from my own personal experi- ter how much or what you eat, your food merely passes through you with- out doing you any good., You don't wet the strength out of it, and a conclusively the astonish- fug power of nuxated fron to restore streng’h ence, whirh prove und vitality, even in most complicated consequence you become weuk, D chronic conditior and sickly looking, just lik»' e pli fotlonéing o e trylng_to grow in soil deficient Not long ago a man came to me who vas {6 b0 HEQE S0 000 SEICT Sl nearly half century old, and asked me to you owe it to yourself to make the % ve him u prliminary examination for life following test: Bee how long you ean work or how_far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of ordinary nuxated iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your streng'h again and see for yourself how much you have gained. I hive seen dozens of nerv uy, run-down people who were ailing all the vhile, double their strength and en- durance and entire'y get rid of all eymptoms of dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in i urance, | was astoniched to find him with the blood pressure of of 20 and as full of vigor, a young man n he really was, rotvithotanding his age. The =ecr~t he snid wos tek'ng iron—nuxated ‘ron had filled him with renewed life. At .0 he was In bad health; at 46 careworn znd near'y all in. a b ity a vim and vit —in fact, o young r ILTON BOGERS 1515 HARNEY ss Willard lake Nuxated Iron If you want plenty of 'stay there’ Strength and Among all the prominent figures of the prize ring, probably none Is so de- voted o family life as Sess Willard, After each engagement the champlon hurries to his wife and children and remaing at their side until pi de- Now at h0 a miracle of vitality and his face beuming with the buoyancy of youth. As I hive suid & huncred t.mes over, iron is the atext of wll atrcneth builders. If people ay patent medicines ons wnd_take simple need that the Jives nuxated i of thou: Mght be suved who ) rippe, consumption, kidney, liv trouble; etc. The real and true cause which wiarted their diwenses wan nothing more o lesw than # wenkened condition brought on by lack of jron in the blood. Iron is absolutely neees- sary to enmble your blood to change food from ten to fourteen days’ time simp'y hy taking iron in the proper form. And this nfter they had in some cases been doctor.ng for months without obtaining any benefit. But don't take the old forms of reduced iron, iron acetate or tineture of iron simply to wave a few cents. You must take fron in a form that can be easily absorbed and as- similated, like nuxated iron, if you want it to do you any good, otherwise it may prove worse than useless. Many an athlete or prize fighter has won the day simply hecause he knew the secret of g strength and endurance and filled his blood with iron before he went into the Does Your Gas Range Burn Gis? The Chambers Fireless Gas Range bakes, roasts, boils and stews with the gas turned off. ? It saves one-half on your gas alf your time in kitchen. Cooks your food better and does not heat vo your house —BETTER-SEE IT. says: » muscles like mine.” oncounters. Everything is do healthy bodles "r!lh l)'llm accounts lno" “I consider that plenty of iron in my blood is the secret of my great strength, power and endurance.”’ i D ¥one to fne the lack of iron. nply for . Snuer, M. D, NOTE-~Nuxated Iron, recommend above by Dr.. 8auer, iv not a medi¢ine nor recret remedy, but one wh'ch is well known to druggists and whose iron constituents are widely preser’bed b{ eminent physicians everywhere. Unlike the older inorganie iron producty, it is easily assimilated, does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor up- set the stomach; on the contrary, it is a most potent remedy in nearly all forms of indigestion as well as for nervous, run-down conditions, The manufacturers have such great confidence in Nuxated Iron that they offer to forfeit §100.00 to any charitable institution if they cannot take any man or woman under 60 who lacks iron and increase their strength 200 per cent or over in four weeks' time, provided they have mo serious organie trouble. They also offer to refund your money if it does not at least double your strength and endurance in ten days' time. It | spensed in this city by'S) man & McConnell Drug Stores and all of drugglsty,—Advertisement.