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The Ogden standard-examiner. [volume] (Ogden, Utah) 1920-current, August 29, 1920, LAST EDITION, Image 3

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6gt taj ' SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29, 1920. THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER 3 Ev
Wt The Facts About Mexico
Ijjl By Robert H. Murray
! (Mr. Murray was for tru oars
n rCHldciif orr,.sHiiileiit in Mcx
" 1 loa Cll) for the rw York 'orhl
mid in charge of (lie Mexican w
Hon of the t . s uommlltoc on
,'j public informntlon during the
I world war. lor his latter Itrll-
5 II limit service to thJ- country anil
! the allies, he ha- bCCIl (lOOOratOtl
bj lmi ami recounnendcd lot the
I United Stated distlngulslicd Scrv-
Ice medal.)
B NEW YOKK, Aug. 25. What are
I 1 &ur commitments in Mexico? To tvhat
. ffl extent arc we responsible to our own
Jl a people and to the rest of the world
Jm "r policing tliat stretch of the cn-
- tial-South American beat? What have
fil J 1 ' 1, K undon " -Mexico th.it national
ni w' honor and dignity required should be
jjB. B clone? What otiRht we to do now?
H (irico, a loiie," tlpm ugo, I ankril l'or-
flrlo Diaz whj Mexico had not gone
into the big navy game, like Chili, the1
'lOBM Argentine. IJruzll. The old gentleman
rjW smiled a slow, sage smile and replied:
TrXH "Mexico needs no large and ex-
I pensive navy' the Monroe doctrine Is'
M i xico's navy."
tm Meaning that under the .Monroe
B dcctrlne the American navy, If emer-
Ag k- ii' y rei'jlffi would throw up ;i sti fl
sgH all around Mexico to protect her
from European aggression, which
would be fine (or Mexico, but what
- . "s li bout US ?
'V- The Monroe dOCtrlAV, If it is more
than the dusty, effete, archaic docu-
lisa runt which many persons especially
'I ilM Central and Soutji America arc
, ILjM commencing " think 11 It bears for
I'SI u responsiDllitl'.s besides those of
U I shooing kings, princes and potentates
uvvq from setting up hop on this
hemisphere It also makes us the
guarantee for the good behavior of the
'JCJC- popples to the south of us. That Is
tsS 5 'l cnn hardly be doubted ttv.it cm-
Ml pn e-bulldlng England, or the umbl-
H " llous and predatory Germany thai
Miff was, or perhaps France, would have
undertaken b. iorf. 1914 to have given
m& Mexico a sound shaking and cuffing
W find sat her down hard .f it hadn't
Y been for us and our felisli of ;i Mon-'
fE ioc doctrine. For both England and
if, f Prance have suffered as mil i if not,
more. In Mexico than the United Stales!
Wm has.
: rj ji Before we So any further on this
V f''"'lm truck, a few words on the subject of
' JS Antericans who have been murdered
' 'J In Mexico since 1310 No adequate tx-
.'iifl cuso or upolog can Lc advanced for
''r$ these outrages They should never
- jj have taken place, The score of Am-
.ijf.'j erican dead In Mexico has been ex-
p uggerated for prup-m.-mdu pur pes. h 1(
: ive could sift the facta tin lists, prpb-
'i ably would shrink by a third, perhaps
S half.
-'$g 1 find for Instance, that B general
' s; impression prevails that scores of Am-
" CS cricans were killed In Mexico City dur-
. ing the "Decehd Traglcu ' in 1913 when
Madero and the rebels were lighting
v V Exactly three Americans lost the;r
... - Uvea I um thus spci Ific, not to pal-
n, llatc these deaths, but to offer fncls
1 1 3 offset hysterii a
J In a majority of cases, too, Amort
L i ns have not been killed b use
i they were Americans Sometimes
j they h oc. but tin sc cases are ex-
ceptional. Thej were killed, In most
k Instances, because they wero forclgn-
r Jk err who happened to get In the way
rik Had the circumstances been similai
T'lBgi i hey probabl would have died had,
they been British, French, German.
I Spanish, Italian.
- . u All who have lled for any length
Bp of time In Mexico, ana who will tell
fl& the truth, will agree with me that the
jrts Mexicans do not " hate" Americans i
15 with any Irreconcilable, Intense, bloorj
hatred, such as legend has it that
't- they cherish toward us Did they, an
of us In Mexico would have hail our
fi ' ;hj tiiroats silt long ago There Is racial 1
H antagonism, like that nctwecn most
other peoples of different strains and
languagi b
.. ' If the Mexicans, the masses ri :illy
J kt dislike to an approximation of hatred
Ji M an foreigners domiciled among theni
v k It is the Spaniards, "gachuplnes," "i
!SJ " land-robbers," as thej ar,. popularly
termed there. That sentiment is u
htrltage of the Conquest,
All this, ns I said before. Is not of-
,1 fered In excuse, or extenuation, but
HV to clarify the situation and the facts
JT and get the record straight. Besides I
0j It was Taft who first virtually pro-1
claimed open season for Americans in!
Mexico bj ordering them to get out,
which was the same as saying to the'
Mexicans that we had withdrawn the
protection of the United States inun
'i.; j our nationals In Mexico. An) how, that
iiii 1C W8y '1C Mexicans rigured It. I
fL regardless of the meaning and Intent
kr of the step.
Before the revolution It used to tie
BRb loosely stated and believed that we
had more than 60,000 nationals domt
cl.ed in Mexico and above one billion
dollars Invested Wild shots, both.
J,.' When the lost Mexica census was
taken, In 1H10, when the foreign pop
ulation waa at flood, there were less
HI
ithan 2fitO0O Americans In the republic
If We had half o billion dollars In
I Mexico that was easily top figure. The
railroads, most of them, were project
ed and built by Americans. But the
bulk of the capital came
I rem England, France, Belgium and
German) From w in. nee iame iho
pl.tal Of the great banks, the Banco
Kaclonal and the Banco de f,oidres
.Mexico for example'' Principally
from I'rance.
British mining Investments are as
big .is Americana Britain probably
1 i.s as much Invested in agriculture
.developments. The great dry-goods
and Jewelry hops arc French. The
Gcimans had almost a monopoly of
the hardware trad.- The textile works
an British Frenon and Spanish. The
I powerful tramways and electrical svs
item of the Olt of Mexico are British
owned, but an American projected
and built It Amcrkan capital was
lopd Is heavily represented in mining,
.inic agriculture and, at present, It Is
deep in petroleum But the British
and tin Dutch arc not fur behind In
tnat, even
Totaled, the European score against
Mexico Is gre:iter. for gri .iter, than
ours Don't forget that, the next lime
.in Interventionist couches his argu
mentative lance at you.
But how are we to escane our re
i ponslbillties In Mexii Lmdi r 'he Men
j roe doctrine ? Don't ask nip. Ask
Some of the politicians who seelulously
wet-nurse it, and occasionally give it
:i surreptitious pinch to make it yell
when they want the voters to think
that the Uld Flag Is In danger.
What should we do? Thut Is easy.
e should proxidc ourseles with a
p llcy. Not merely with what we ha e
I loi ten ears called a policy. Saying
and maintaining ih.it wo do not warn
ti, nor will we. Intervene in Mexico,
, 1 s not a policy, an mon' than two
ifcet of catgut can be called a fiddle
I A policy without detail, plan, limits,
purpose, continuity and these words
should be printed In circus-type
jgor and constructive force has prov
1 d tu bi bad for both Mexico and us.
AikI It Is not a policy. It Is a mess.
l'robably It wouldn't be a bad no
t:"ii to set down Justly, uncrjulvoe.il
ly, fully anel In business-like terms our
Irreducible minimum of what we ex
pect from Mexico Then talk It over
w.th the new el menls In government
. here
h not get down to brass tacks?
'Give Mexico time to turn herself. With
the best disposition in the world It Is
going to take more than 15 minutes
'icr the Mexicans to prove by works
the faith we say we haVfj In them
Diaz used up a quartet of a century
i In limiting Mexico lit for polite inter
national society Whin he started In
the country wasn't half as dishevelled
es it Is now But he enjoyed the nei
vantage Of not having any hurt dol
lars, pounds, Bancs and marks yu
pln at his heels
Not long ago an esteemeel, but atra
'bilious friend of mine abandoned Mex
ico to her fate, because things down
there weren't going to suit him, -and j
Wrote :c piece about It which he called
"hi She Worth Saving?'' So hear as one I
could make out, after clawing one1
WSJ through Ihi oily smelling folds of,
crepe in which he swatned the piecw,
my friend figured that .she Is, but that
wr must llek her first
Setting aside as immaterial, per-1
haps, that In ins respectful Judgment
m." frienel's opinions were dictated by
hjj liver rather than by his heael, it
still remains certain that Mexico, so
far, doesn't require any saving What
she needs Is help. i isn't now necca-j
s ir), and probably will not become so,
that any punitive processes Should !
precede the helping. i the saving,
if It comes to thai. Or coursi , there
Is no telling what bungling will lead
up to.
It is difficult for us. In the l niterl
Sb.des.. to tell exactly how bad things'
in Mexico really are. The telling of I
tht t ile, sticking closely to the baro
facts, Is bad enough, without ling or
c xaggeratlon
The only source of information
available to the majority are the
newspapers und contact with persons
from Mexico. Much as It grieves me,,
a practical newspaper man for more j
than 1'5 years, to say this, it is unfor-
Uinately true that the Mexican notices
printed In the papers of the Fnlted
States afford about the worst possible
it.elex to what really Is the state of
affairs In the southern republic.
Peaceful Mexico did not furnish an
item a month on the average. We all
know what her news output has been
since then
EXPECTING THE WORST.
We and that Includes newspaper
men and editors have grown Into the
Iviblt of expecting th. wnrst Of Mex-
lcc We print the worst, we believe
this worst when we see it printed, with
g.isto anl Incurious credence I nr
ran easily sell a series of articles eie
scribing Mexico In revolution, with!
all the opport unities for word -Jazzing
that the subject offers Editors eat J
'em up So do readers.
i But a set of truthful, conservative
articles, telling something hopeful and
I heipful and there are plenty of
th.ings going on down there which
prov triii I Mexico Is holding her own
surprisingly well In mining, petroleum,
(agriculture, fibers and other produc
tive ways, and that general conditions
fic-n't half as discouraging ns most
persons believe about the country
and the people? One has as much
show at peddling tho.-i as one would
I have In trying to Bell William J. Br) an
a case of prime old vatted Scotch.
Constructive and conservative news
'from Mexico has no more chance In
I (he public prints here than a teardrop
would hav In a forest fire
Uhf ortunatel) revolution destrue--tion,
killing, tearing down, especially
m Mexico, Is ' news Folks like to
read those things. An eellior can get
,a snappy llrst-page head out of them
ho aside from :i haneiful. gives
a hang about Mexico rising to suprem
acy as an oil producer, that she Is hav
lng this i ir the biggest I rOPfl of corn
and other grains In her hlstbrj or that
her output of silver In ounces la
greater than it ever was before.
Il Is all Hue. But, It Isn t news.
The revolution has b-fi its mark
heavily upon Mexico. But not Inerad
liChJly Mexico today Is the richest un
di veiope'i accessible country in the
world, in developments only, the sur
face has been scratched jven not
more than two ytars of good govern
m tit, with a e o in i -c n ing order and
lot her stabilizing elements, Mexico, eco
nomically, vein be back where she was
before the revolution.
When the revolution was at its
worst, the people bf Mexico were never
'in such straits tor food m are toda)
tin wretched Inhabitants of Poland,
Austria, some of the Balkans nr sec
tions of Russia Neither had the rev
olution taken the toll of deaths In
I Mexico more than u very small fiac
l lie n of what war revolution, f amine,
break-down of governments has from
European peoples
There is work a-plenty fo' everyone
in Mexico, In the fields, the mines, the
i in lories, on the railroads. There al
v.;.)s has boen a shortage of labor
i there
Mexico today Is not producing a
tithe of what shc should, especially in
I agriculture.
The land Is there as fruitful as ever,
Ibut tools, machinery, hands, protection
from brigand i la needed before these
millions of fat acres call bo gotten
lb..ck into production. Scores of mines,
most ot them small, but some of Im
portant magnitude- cannot be worked
Dei lus of lock of protection, or of
facilities, by rail or otherwise, to get
In supplies or to ship their product
out.
Economically, the problem of rail
road transportation is the most serious
With vvhie h the country has to coje
The lines, most of which were in mag
niticent condition ten years ago, are
j.0iot to pieces.
Rehabilitation of the railways must
oc made in Mexico before there Is an)
worth-while permanent relief from!
economic pressure.
Mexico is good for every dollar she
owes, and for fifty limes as much
i onsidorlng the size of her population
and the tremendous potential value of
her resources today Mexico Is In far
belter flnunclal condition than an) of
the European countries, big or little,
that participated in ths war. she is a
b ttcr risk, too, when It comes down
to estimating her ability to pay her
debts.
Also, as I have previous! mentioned
do not let us forget the important fact
that the- bulk of what Mexico owes
in every way with the possible ex
ception of damage claims arising from
the revolution ahc owe8 to British.
French, Italians, Spaniards, Germans
und Belgians, and not to Americans
N K Ml ST I IN AM I Hl.lt
The banks will need to be encour-;i7-d
to resume operations, too, in or
der to get the business and credit ma
chinery of the republic back into ef-i-.tlve
working order. Steps to this
end are being taken. She must also
be financed Wo must do that. No
Other countr) Is In a position to loan
htr what she needs to set up in busi
ri ss again.
In short. Mexico is not half as bad
ly off financially, economically, or so
cially as one would conclude after a
ten-year course of the newspaper and
magazine Jeremiads which have been
fed out to us. Her condition Is bad.
but not so bad as that
Emphatically, she Is worth saving,
to answer m atrabilious friend's ques
tion. But it is help ond patient e fi 6m
her helpers that Is her greatest pres.
ent need. Not saving. If we do not
help, :md quickly, too. moat likely .she 1
111 require saving later on But If It I
doea comi to saving, that will be our
fault, as much as Mexico s.
"Are those new people down there
going to make it go?" That Is the
llrst epiestlon one Is asked about Mex
ico these days Frankly, I do not
know. The "those new people"
dent know themselves, probably. I
I
fSHER win- Williams
I A, HOUSE PAINT PWQ
I mm Howswp cuts painting cost a m m
0 1 6 The only way to buy paint economically is to forget gallon
pnee and figure costs by area covered and years of life.
S W P covers one-third more area than paints which are
LUgt cheaper per gallon. It lasts twice as long without repaint-
r ing, so requires half the material and costs half the labor
price (for painting and repainting).
So price per gallon meani nothing. Area covered, weather
I reiistance, and years of life are the real things that deter- WV
H mine price economy. On that basis S W P is the cheapest b9
i per-gallon outside paint you could buy. BUrifL
1 S W P has been the leading prepared house paint for haJf dfc?
a century You will find a complete line of it at our store. , xKe
. - Let us figure with you on your house-painting. yf-
Iht'pe they will 1 will go so far as to
say that I beheve they will If they
do not. It will be a case of "after
theni the deluge.' I'm afraid. As a
m:. Iter of fact, It si-cms In me that
ttiey simply have got to make It go
This is the situation, without blink
ing it Mexico has been in disorder
for a decade. She is, as 1 have said
I before, the richest undev eloped acces
sible country, on earth. The world,
not only In Its normal requirements.
but In the work of reconstruction fol
lowing the damage wrought during the
WOT, has urgent need of all that Mex-
lico can produce In the rciw metals
! petroleum, fibers, cattle limber and
!so on.
Mexico must get back Into produc
tion, and on a scale of far more Im
posing magnitude than she ever bus
j be fore attained. The needs of the
1'wbrld require it.
Mexico, being what and where she
lis, mrikcd this imperative Mei must
K I back Into produc tion. She must
lordcr her hoisc so that ahe cnn. If
'she doesn't, or if she cannot, there
liippenr.s to be onl one alternative.
That sums up the case as I see It.
boo m ) m i c qv Esnoxa
By natuic of the circumstances, the
problem of Mexico today is ns much
cn economic one as anything That
is the hinge upon which the whole
Mexican question swings- It Is the
'economic lactor which will be decisive
in ths settlement, whether the settle
ment Is bj the Mexicans, or someone
ClFC.
Whether "those new peoplo down
there will make ii go" depends partly
upon them and partly upon us, the
L'nlteel States They cannot make It
So without- our help.
As a matter of fact, there Is nothing
Iv.hlch our government is likely to tell
i Mexico that she expects to do, as the
price of our friendship and assistance,
tli.it the present provisional president,
Ser.or de la Huerta, or the constitu
tional president-presumptive, General
obregon, have not already pledged
themselves to do.
This includes settlement of the pe
troleum controversy (although this
twill not carry with it amendments of
the new constitution, which arc de
manded b) the most rabid of the m
ericah Mexico hecklers) the return of
the railways to their foreign owners,
the muklng of provision for the lay
n. ent of the foreign debt and damage
claims asserted by foreigners, that no
constitutional provisions shall he giv
en retroactive force, that adequate
piotectlon be extended to American
ond other foreign lives and property
that fining Conditions as to law and
cider be created These- are the es
se ntlals.
GIUSAT NEED EN MEXICO.
The first and current great neces
sity in Mexico Is peace and order.
Governments In Mexico rule by force
It the) eion't they don't rule. That
Is ill there is to that. De la Huerta,
ii Obregon, has got to get and keep
the country In hand bctoie anv thing
else- Is done.
Both de la Huerta and Obregon have
a long, hard row ahead of them You
nnot tear up a country us Mexico has
I I e n lorn up since 1 i 1 o and get It back
ed the tr.o k by epilttlng time on Sat
urday, merely b) holding up an ."i
n.onltory hand and enunciating, cither
.m Spanish or tngllsh. "1'cace be
Still I"
The mere fact th.et a new govern
ment, composed of rational, well-ln-
l 1 1 1 1 I inert'cMi men Set.-, up IhisI-
ncss. doesn't, by Itself, mean anvlhlng
particularly It Is what that govern
ment accomplishes, when It la given
a reasonable amount of :imo, that
knocks.
The most friendly, upward boost
that wc can give the present Mexican
government Is to recognise it, now,
rfght off the bat, providing It can pre
sent as clean a bill of health, so far
Its legality goes, and as acceptable
a program to us as I think It can
Either, the new government will fall,
or it will stick If we recognize it and
it sticks, good. If we do not recog
nize It and It falls, bad. Bad especial
ly tor us, us well as for Mexico.
If wo do not rceognizo It and It
conies to disaster, there alwu)S will be
an argument in tho I assertion, which
will be made, that If we had reeog
r.izcel It, given It that invaluublc sup
port, effective Inside of Mexico as
well as oulslde, it would have bucceed-ed.
1 will nrager that if every American
who has any Interest in Mexico, even
If it is no more than the onlv thing
which most of us tin-re have, namely,
a Job, and whose opinion on the sub
ect is worthy of consideration, was
polled, not mOro thin lift) In the
whole- republic would say aught than
"For heaven's sake, re-cognlze this
government, and do It quick'"
HUERTA TO MEET U. S. WISHES.
Un the- present aspect of the Mexi
can problem, and on many other iin
portant topics, I'd rather accept the
Judgment of a group of experienced,
hard-boiled newspaper men than that
of any other citizens, even professional
statesmen For Instance A few
weeks ago President do la Huerta got
up from a sick bed and recolved In au
dience 26 or 30 newspaper correspon
dents, representing all of the big pa
pers anel news agencies In this coun
try, and a few from England. For
nearly three hours they put him
through a stiff third degree The)
piled him Incessantly with questions
about Mexico, his program, petroleum,
tho I nited Stales, tho death of Car
ranza, debts, damage claims, murder
ed Americans everything.
He didn't dodgs a single question.
He answered them all, fairly, squarely
and at length. If there was a reportei
there I was not present at tho ses
sion but the correspondents told me
about It. enthusiastically who Wasn't
convinced that do la Huerta was tne
goods, that he wos well poised as to
hi duties, his obligations and the ne
Ct'CSltieS of the situation, that, so Tar
as he was able, Mexico and his gov
ernment would play (.hG game, he
didn't report to me
They tell me, too, that what goes,
In this regard, for de la Huerta, goes
also for his probable successor, Obre
gon There Is no flaw In the legality of
ihe de la Huerta government Tho
hi fortunate murder of Carranea clear
i il tho w:i fpr that. Ethically and
on Mexico's uccount, I am not enthu
siastic over the manner In which tho
i arranza government was disposed
0. Especially do 1 regret and depre-
..t.- the wanton killing of Cdrrahza;
Itut and this brings up a point upon
which I touched in an earlier nrll
cle, about measuring deeds and per
sonages In Mexico by our own yard
stick -it Is conditions, and not theo
ries, which confront us thero.
MORE PEACEFUL NOW.
As the situation stands now de la
Huerta already has given pledges
which should be satisfactory to our
government. So has Obregon. An
election has been called for the first
Sunday In September. Barring con
tingencies now unforeseen, Obregon
win be elected. He will take office
Bee 1 Mexico Is at present more
peaceful than it has been for years.
If we recognize the new government
promptly and Mexico does her share,
I dlsctrn clearing skies In Mexico But
we must do more than that We need
to be patient and practical. At times
we've been both slnglv, but in- r
have we had them working In double
I : 1 1 n e s s
We inuot come down heavy and hard
on Mexican plots and plotters In th
I nited States. And stop gun-running
ii ro-ss the border to Villa or any other
rebel
So far as Mexico goes, she must
make good on her promises to com
p3 with her International obligations
She must stop annoying honest and
properly conducted American business
..i.temi lues. Sho must see to it that
New Arrivals of Fall Apparel I
Daily arrivals of merchandise purchased by Mr. Lehman while I
East is making our stock complete with thrills of styles,
DRESSES
Silk, Serges, Tricolette and Tricotine, each and
everyone a work of art.
COATS
of all the newest materials with fur and cloth I
collars. Plush all of the best salts plushes. I
SUITS
Gabardine, Tricotine, Serges, Velours and all
other new materials. f
MILLINERY
All the newest conceits of styles for the chil-
dren, misses and women. All this new mer- f
chandise is priced in keeping with the Leader's '
method of reaching the masses with popular f
priced merchandise.
m
TuTts rW.S . CO ATI l00 I
4 f
protection is given to American lives
She must not only promise, but per
form. She must come to some ar
raiigement with the bankers for the
resumption of her foreign debt service-
She must proceed to the adjudication
of damage claims. She must clean
I house.
And both of us should stop making
I faces nt each other.
Your wife is probablv the best man- J
agcr you ever had and the cheapest
uu
The sunshine of life searches every !
corner but misses the misanthrope.
Is Lack of Iron in The Blood I
Making An Old Man of You? I
Many A Man Still Young in Years Is Fast Growing Old Wrinkled and Careworn,
His Vigor and Energy Leaving Him, and His Memory Failing
Simply Through Neglect to Keep His Blood Rich in Iron. ,
Work, Worry and Nerve K-3fln93BSSBKHfta
Strains of Modern Life "HBilMB
Sap the Iron From the Bfc
Blood, Says Physician
How Organic m
He may be in his thirties or he may 3
be close to sixty but no matter what
iron in
build up red blood, trenc;t.h and endurance and thereby keep a man l-nre which 1 (omul so valuable l or
from looking and feeling old before his time is explained by pltvMcians Iree Nux'sted iron."
-it-. ; It jou ire not ilronc or well Ton owe
in i ii c icuiowing micmcqis.
"Mr experience hn taught me th t
mjn a man Ij ageing loo last merely
because his bloo! it Marvin? lor want
ol iron," lava Dr Ferdinand (". King,
New orU I'liTSician and Medical Au
thor "Blood wilhout iron ii like a man
without hands The man cannot leed
l.imselt nor do his work, and timilarlf
hlood without iron cannot leed ilsrll from
lha lood passing through (he stomvh,
nor ran it carry the necessary oiygen.the
breath ol lilc, (rom the lunga to the ret
ol the bodr The red corpusclea ol Ihe
li'ood do this worVj and iron it neces
sary to kc-p them in condition.
"It a man'i red corpuscles lose their
Iron and he becomes pale weak and run
down. I urge him to build up hn utrength
with Nuxated Iron. Many a tune 1 hare
seen patlentt through Its use lose that
apfd careworn appearance and g-t a new
grip on health in only two vrri The
Catientvatops worrvmg about getting old.
clause he no longer (eels ola
Or jamrj Francis Sullivan, lormerlr
phsician of llellevue Hospital (Out
door Uept ), New York and the
Weatcheater ' ounir Hospital, raakci
this siatement- "For want of Iron voti
nior be an old man at thirty, dull ol
Intellect, poor in memory, nervous,
irritable and a'l "run down " while at
liflv or sixtv with plenty o( iron in yni.r
blood, you may still be young in feeling,
lull of life, your whole being brimming
over with vim and energy To mako
strong, keen, red blonder! men and
women there is nothing in my exper-
It to yourself (o male the IMIowing test i "H
See hoiy long von - an work cr hew (ar
you cjn walk without becoming lired.
Next take two five grain tablets of Nut
ated lion three times per djy alter meals j
for tvo weeks. Then et jour strength
again and see how mucb you have
gained.
MawurAm'srrs' Notf.- NaBSHrd Iron, whirh I
! r rrr.in. ndrd above not a ftr rcsacdy boi cni
i n svsll known lo Jra,r,giit4 everywhere. Un
like Ihe oljir ioor;jnic Hon proOucla It It ea.ilf
saiiaiiraiejel and d.-t not inuic Ihe tr.ih, mate)
(hem black, nor upnel ire elomartv Fach tablet j
of genuine ISuaalad Irnssit Hipiel aa fo0nwi'sssv
end (lie nvrdt Kuaattd I'on are stamped 'nlnPfaJ
earn b ill., to that ihe public n.ay not be led -k j
Into ej- rr-ung infercr eubadinies. The vtarufac- 1
(urcra guarantee auccrttlul aod entirely uiKlac-
lorf reiulit (o eey purtbaitr or they wilt refund II
vo-ur mon-v I( is citipented by all gov : , t ,
lo (ab!c( (orro only.
j
'JlgggV ?r8si 3SmSk iBwgwHI cfw ,'3

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