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The Seattle Star at Meattie, By mall, out of etty, one year, & By carrier, etty, 2 ercond-ciase matter per month up to ¢ mos What Will It Be—a Fancy Stock Show? A™ )UT two years ago the people of King county faced a double problem Taxes were high The poorhouse at Georgetown had become crowded. oe Seeking to solve the dilemma, The Star suggested that the county commission- ers sell part of the Georgetown property, then grown valuable for factory sites, and buy a farm near the city at a reasonable figure. Tt was suggested that the county's dependents could be given a home on the new farm, there to raise produce, and, in the performance of other light tasks, to pro- vide food for all county institutions, with a saving to taxpayers of several thou sand dollars annually The commissioners adopted the plan When the time came for them to buy their new farm, real estate dealers flocked to the courthouse in droves with offers of land, The Star urged the commissioners to have all farms thus submitted gone over by a disinterested and competent board of appraisal. The suggestion received about as much consideration from Commissioners Hamilton and Krudsen as an American cavalryman would get at a Villa massacre. They decided, WITHOUT SUCH AN APPRAISEMENT, that $113,707 was not too much to pay C. D. Stimson for The Willows farm, near Kirkland, and voted, with Commissioner Carrigan opposing, to buy it. Now, it develops, 100 acres of the farm are under water. Commissioner Hamil ton, and others who defend the farm deal, say this water will seep away and that crops will be raised on the farm this year. Perhaps they are right. The Star _ doesn’t know whether the Stimson farm was a good buy or a bad buy. That fact Hamilton and Krist Knudsen in these times of stress de- a big dairy herd of BLUE-RIBBON cattle with which to stock feels it is time, in justice to the taxpayers who must common sense, should the county buy pedigreed its farm when it can get all the good milch * A New Way to Justice ENTAL examinations of persons on trial are advocated by many re formers as the next progressive step in YNTHIA GREY'S correspondents : have been conducting a red-hot de- hate on the subject of birth control Tf you haven't been following it, we sorry, for the letters have been an sting literature on a topic which all too little discussed in print. They have come for the most part from moth- ers, of both big and little families, and "have touched on all imaginable angles the subject. In ing space to these letters Cyn- thia ees has been bringing out ideas that the Birth Control League of New "York has been trying vainly to get be- “fore its public. As one means of doing it, the league recently canvassed a carefully selected of 50 well-known New York women criminology Additional arguments for the lishment of psychopathic laboratories in courthouses come from a study of 164 delinquent girls, which was conducted by the New York probation and protective association. Only 15 of these girls had reached the mental development of adolescence. Mental deficiency is reported as the cause of waywardness. Inefficient girls who could not “keep their jobs” were recently examined by an employment bureau in an Eastern city Of the 180 cases studied, 4 per cent were found so retarded in mental development as to be considered deficient. The psychopathic laboratory has proved of such value in the Chicago courts that judges would not hear of returning to the old ways. “One great advantage of the examina- tion of youthful offenders is that it makes possible the identification of insanity be- fore it has progressed so far as to cause the victims to commit murder or other serious crimes,” says Harry Olson, chief justice of the municipal court. “Exten- sion of the laboratory idea in connection with the courts all over the country will in time enable society to recognize prac- tically all those who are suffering from mental disease, and finally to extirpate 7: estab- All were selected for their liberal indedness as well as for meeting the _ other qualifications. The idea was to obtain from that list _ the signatures of a dozen representative fomen to the following statement: 1—We approved of Mrs. San- ger’s course in publishing birth con- trol articles. 2.—We believe that such infor- mation should be readily accessible. 3.—We have imparted birth con- trol information. 4.—We have practiced birth con- trol. "Of the 50, only six women could be induced to sign the first three articles / and only three women all four of the _ articles. _ Such is the difficulty of obtaining tes- ‘timony about the private life even when it takes on a vital public significance. — COL. ROOSEVELT returns and promptly announces his discovery of a new kind of Birdie flies by night, eats nuts and is much like an owl. We gu it belo to th pattie, 9g! Ings to the species ING = However, vote for him for country THINGS THEY MissED treasurer because he's a republi- erat. Down with nenpartisanship! Jonah never saw ® U-boat, je Walton never fished phrey | postettice. ne | } OF A NICE, SOFT, EASY JOB. ~e “ee City and county officials plan t papers say. There afe some fel lows mean enough to say that it [Just where they belong. | cee The Chamber of Commerce will assist in the celebration of William Shakespeare's death. He must have been a single taxer or somethin; *- E. A. Peters, our fellow scribe, tly from Walla Walla, says be the pipe the first day in| Jealous journalists have heard to remark he still has dreams. cee A MEARTY CHUCKL Mr. Porter had recentiy, wecvine th of twine, One afternoon the mi z called to congratulate hi Well, air.” the minister, * the Lord hi led on me?” repeated Po! for a farm. It drawe away Hans Damm some of our best swimmers | see by ci 7 Glossy, Abundant, stomach develops acidit Unfor -! rie from the old favorite, the Hum- | [= CLEAN-UP WERK! tunately). Gugh a rule “aliminates and Beautiful 4 ome . | bag ing, four daye almost foods which are pleasant to the Misch a gaa | week, ditte ‘Addreem, ee ae those which are) rnin, brittle, colorless and scrag- HTS ON Ady. in the y Miner. r 5 . 4 bl PREPAREDNESS | | J a.) Me This ta the: reut: | gy hair ia mute evidence of a neg- “bug said. “You know j : tick and stomach suffer. | lected scalp; of dandruff—that A razor sharp makes me afraid o Rie ed en, Is not allowed tolrs”’ are usually so thin, emac ful seurf. Ateaia Now that the “camera” cases | Prescribe uny booze, no matter how |aua ‘lacking in that. vital energs | (uh ' + ¥ > Tribune, " hoarse a fellow may get. The|whteh can only come from a well-fed There is nothing so destructive yj o's jfell thru, a photograph of Hodge re-| courts have so decided, Hut it's a|vody. For the benefit of those sut-|to the hair ax dandruff, It robs) + John Stickemup would steal tis |ceiving the news would appear to| poor veterinary who can't skin a /{*ar® Who have been obliged to ex-| the hair of its luster, its strength mother’s knitting needles. |have interesting possibilities cat more than one way sweet of fatty food, and are trying | 2nd ite very life; eventually pro- a Begcoiaee Ne heok Unk taleorabie ax neg BK | ducing a feverishness and itching | a gluten products, I would «ent|of the scalp, which, if not reme- those blooded. cows and’ farm foc|fnet 2c¥oedgea 7 s,imnt ge enz| dled. | enuses the, “alr roots | to |plements, Probably marked down|moderate amount, taking immediate. | Shrink, loosen and die—then the from $22,732.10. ly afterward « ‘toaspoontul of bi-| alr falls out fast. A little Dan. BOR hey weve ated magnesia in a little hi derine tonight—now—any time— water, This will neutraliz will surely save your hatr. BILLINGS, Mont. April 6. |Threatening the boy watchman with the general store at Huntley, Mont. between $500 and $600 tn currency army, Paul Revere never heard about “pre- 5 never were perienced, Cancarets will liven lcci ees Trumemel acter reed ten ney (Your liver and clean your thirty iprinalntneiencerineninne read new | uy CHAUNCEY WRIGHT'S IDEA * | st sds. feet of bowels without griping. You | Set together on a prison farm, the The weight men in the state are going to meet in Seattle for three “Why, man. he |: waned out loud at me | days, beginning Thursday. Some “Indigestion and practically all men of weight who will not be|! “ten, due to acidity: jainst the county among ‘em are Dugdale, H. H eh’ muff 4, purchase of a swimming pond Kultes, Billie Bloch and Lieut (BLOW MONTANA SAFE ':'”:..:: usual fe death if he made an ‘outery, two |masked men blew open the safe tn 14 mileg east of here, and secured \NEW WAR INVENTION * °TAR—THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1916. PAGE 4 A Novel a Week A standard, hig! ment wil ' watts; @ full tnetett~ come to you every day. (Continued from our last lesue) HILE Jensen had been dress W tn Mon Toy had built a King fire of huge loge in the fireplace into a chair, Jensen dropped As he sat back musing beside | the cheerful blaze, ft struck him jwith renewed force how unltke the quarters of a desperate counter fe mp Argyle And what ible incentty: Cannonquesnt such a shady affair? The whole thing was as inex [plicable as ever, yet It seemed cer tain he was on the right track, He se to his feet to leave the cabin and shook back his broad shoulders jas he closed the door, Develop- [ments of some sort were likely to loeeur, The moon was dropping t |the horton; yet the myriad [made the scene almost as bright |ae at noonday. Over at the bunk- house the miners were holding some sort of a celebration. The bungalow was glowing with lights the windows, He strode up ard |Stephen Mallabee, and pressed an |announeing button beside the door, | In answer to Jensen's bee herself. “Welcome to Argyle House,” #! erted cordially. “And do hurry_in father has been so anxious to seo you.” " | “My dear fellow, do come tn, greeted a penetrating voice from the rear of the entrance hall, and j® tall, gaunt man of some 60 odd iyears came forward with out stretched hand “My daughter, Kerry, haa told me you are Alan Kerrison from the | States, no wo may watre the use- leas formality of Introductions.” | Jensen clasped the offered hand, murmured some words of poll | Kreeting, and found himself gazing Kerrisons, the gold mine people?” asked Stephen Mallabee, as they | passed toward the dining room. Jensen felt It would be difficult and his answer was truthful, a Kerrisons at all,” [he answered. “They, I believe, are of Scotch descent; my people are Connecticut Yankee.” | They sat three at the table. The dining room was finished in fumed oak with a beamed cofling, bigh | wood-pancled walle, and dark green | vetvet hangings at doors and win- dows. Stephen Mallabeo was anxious to hear the detatis of Springvale’s |death, and Jensen gave them as closely to troth as he might without revealing anything of his own mission into the North. From) Temarks made by both Mallabee and bis daughter he early learned that Springvale was the same young man he had known at Harvard, and this put him more at ease tn the ensuing conversation. | Finally the talk veered again to lola J. J. Kerrison and his gold GIRLS! WOMEN! TAKE CASCARETS IF CONSTIPATED They Liven Your Liver and Bowels and Clear Your Complexion | Don’t Stay Headachy, Bilious! With Breath Bad and Stomach Sour Get a 10-cent box now. Tonight sure! Take and enjoy the nicest, gent! and bowel cleaf, ‘ancarets will wake up feeling grand. Your |head will be clear, breath right, j tongue, clean, stomach sweet, eyes bright, step elastic and complexion rosy—they're wonderful. Get a 10 cent box now at any drug store. Mothers can safely give a whole Cascaret to childre y time when cross, feverish, bili ton oat ed or constipated—they are harm- less. WHAT DYSPEPTICS SHOULD. EAT A PHYSICIAN'S ADVIOR ° Fe deemek, aa ene ana Get a sent bottle of Knowl ii of sinoasivess and tuii,|ton's Danderine from any drug news, you Will find that your food| store or toilet counter, and after agrees with vou pertectiy. | wisi-|the first application your hair will li ime geprrv rs iytrw! re} take on that life, luster and luxurt or a Tt ge I a ice Which 1s #0 beautiful. Tt will on the stomach; but by neutralizing | become Wavy and fluffy and have the acidity of the food contents, and thus removing the source of the acid irritation which inflames the deli 1 it does more ibly done by any As & physician, use of [dosing right mines, a subject regarding which Mallabee appeared exceedingly well informed him in th hand. In entered note of 8 discolored the entered hi “T take tors?” The gau' again Jensen the he Stat Habes, with a awee; “A man whom your United States quite fails to appreciate. would, today, be one of the. beat developed sections of this vontinent if you had but given pid J. J. a free 4 you have kept him eribbed, cabined and confined, like an old elephant tn the zoo, until he has become & rogue.” Again that sweeping gesture. For the first time since he had took room, tephen M: in places, face, is mind, tt nt old ‘A SIREN OF THE SNOWS’ By Stanley Shaw-—Copyright, 1915, by Little, Brown & Co. NEXT WEEK—"THE WARD OF TECUMSEH” Jensen abe’ They were remarkably well shaped, bat the skin wae rough and was They were the hands of a workingman. With a peculiar thrill of having chanced upon an important dixcov- ory, Jensen glanced upward into Mallabee's with some difficulty to call to mind photographs he had seen Lord Cannonquest Could it be possible that this man was not Lord Cannonquest; Kerry Mallabee had deceived him Ho glanced her way to find her ring, the | ¢yes searching bis face, so he be- |door was opened by Kerry Malla-| an to talk of the first thing that and chuckled, and aware of that «| Uncomfortable feeling as Stephen! bornly. attempted | Mallabee’s eyes met bis. We have no visitors, those we ourselves, and we choose such care nor his dog.” he shouted Should unwelcome visitors| don't get back to your bunkhouse | | | discover us by accident, they could not return save at our pleasure.” The last sentence struck upon with the physical) mean keep das word; but who skall clared, | fully | nave Jensen's mind | shock of a dash of ley water. into a pair of penetrating gray eyen. | not your politicians. | “Are you related to the Montana! ¢nough how the latter feel toward) you know he bas guna enough tn as you call Stephen ng gesture Alanka ds, th you have few vist- ur people feel toward | “IT think that our people tn gen eral would be glad to see Ca! answered Jensen. . annexed,” meant to ask was to deceive those penetrating eyes,|C898da were willing,” he | Jarred on Jensen's ears. misconstrue my question, | whom I have ever put it of being annexed to Canada?” looked The nen’ mbent eyes with a ting and quizsing stare that | Mallabeo bad expressed revolutionary Jensen The was da it | Your people look upon the prospect | Jen. ont penetrat- idea #0 for a moment, scarcely collect his thoughts to form an answer, “1 don't think they hi considered that,” he finally “but if they should, J am cer. tain they would be against it to a w. father,” chided Kerry Mal- “let us drop politics for the remainder of the evening. continue {fn this manner, you and Alan Kerrison will unit.” Mr. ever be quarreling. Tomorrow you shall—" She cut her There had suddenly noise of many feet on the the sound of some one outside, pounding on the front and the stifled whining of a dog. Jensen glanced from father to daughter in amazement. | what this turn of affai sibly mean. “We t bee explos now? lowed him. Stephen Mallabee threw back the six feet nix of gaunt body in the center of the bolt and st hose ively jood with ra could pos thrice entrance as he shouted “What do you mean by banging on my door at this hour of the night?” Jensen could see 20 or 20 roughly dreseed mon clustered about on th One of these men w: veranda, sentence and arose from her chair with a look of sud- den fright overshadowing her face. com entra: onde damned Sweden,” declared Stephen Malla j “What the devil ean they have got {n their gizzard They've seemed boll over ever since Big Dan left.” And the master of Argyle House strode toward the door. and Kerry Mallabee arose from their seats at the table and fol- ready Jensen ‘SAVE YOUR HAIR! 25 CENT BOTTLE STOPS DANDRUFF Every Bit of Dandruff Disap- pears and Hair Stops Coming Out be after just ¥ | an inflamed and irrita it cts through the pore and re |etomach with drugs inatead of we -- ease bY ‘restoring the PARIS, April 6.—Rome dispatches! {ing rid of the wcld—-the eaune of aii are to Vegetation =0O-Cl e to normal, the results are |||today said Marconi had perfected al the trouble @ little bisurated | truly remarkable. Get ® 26° pack- Ilinew apparatus for controlling acro-|magnesia from your druggist, ont] age from any druggist: he wath what you want at your next meal, | e28 them Gives Instant Relief 114,10 "efund money to anyone |] Planes and dirigibles, It. will belie some of the bisirated magnoxa, | Producing not fully satiafied. used immediately by the Italian|as dir 4 above, and if im not the Its exhilarating and life. o hair to grow long, strong and beau. a titul, properties ‘| Try This! Your Hair pe: Wey the appearance of abundance, an incomparable gloss and but what will please you most will a few weeks’ use, when you will actually see a lot of fine, downy hatr—new hatr—grow ing all over the scalp. Danderine is to softne hair w fresh showers of rain and’ sunshine It goes right to the roots, invigorates and strength the nda nce, ring hat of in lending Peter Saint's dog by a rope. mal crow A raw-boned hulk of stepped forward from the “There's a wonderful pioneer of | and spoke new fortunes, ‘old J, J. “Das dow here,” be said, potntin, to the struggling Babe, “ban kt our bast man, Dan Larsen, at Littl Babos. op to pole for murder; but das her Pete Saint, he say we skall han him Instead,” Two gigantic fellows stepped for ward from the center of the thron, conducting Peter Saint betwe them Stephen Mallabee gave yent to bellowing roar as he dashed amon |them, striking out right and lef ual or concerted action, he wa rope and leading Peter Baint b one arm Then he turned again upon th growling pack of miners and wit a world "Get back to your every manjack of you | or Vl pu | If you ever had one sensible ide in your brains, it would overba ance your bodies so badly that yor couldn't walk.” | than off the veranda, where the: | stood talking among themselves | | spokesman stepped forward agat: and said “Ay tank we skall eo Pet .Btephen Mallabee was almost be he de | side himself with rage i bring “You can have neither the man| “If you! | within two minutes, I'll have you | strung up by the thumbs,” is, big boss, Ay tank yor | do das stringing oop?” “The mine bows, Don’ the power house to mow you al down like wheat, if you don't toe the mark?” “Yas,” droned the Swede | bee, In a roaring creacendo. |is mutiny! I'll have you all hung|ment room where he had found for it.” | himself, “Maybe ‘ stubborniy returned| There was a buge melting fur the Swede jut we ban shoot up could, | place a little, first.” Several of bis comrades stepped from be their mackinawa as they | forward, drawing guns neath cam: Stephen Mallabee appeared to be an little cowed by the miners’ dis- play of arms as he had been by thelr importunate demands. As he stepped ferward, the men wii daughter prevailed. j | house. CHAPTER VI. An Adventure in the Night to his cal still going, but the miners had cur the telephone with the power house. ten locked In the po' house in some way, Stephen Mallabee sent | the family to bed. Reing thoroly tired from the long day's travel after his period of {Il- ness, Jensen undressed at once, tipped off the lights, and got into bed. He found it difficult, how- ever, to compose his Bleep. tramp, tramp of the miners doing sentry-co around the piazza was a constantly disturbing sound. So restless did Jensen finally be. come that he arose and dressed Again in the dark, thinking he might | be more comfortable moving about than tossing and turning on his bed in the heated room, He stepped to the window and looked out. One of the miners was just striding past the window, his heavy feet clumping down upon the veranda with a hollow, ringing sound. LAstening, Jensen followed the man’s movements, He took some 20 pacea to the south, met a comrade there, turned back. passed Jensen's east room, met a comrade from the north side, and then reversed bis march again, go- ing toward the south Just after the miner had again passed his window, Jensen raised the sash softly to its full height, stepped out, closed it as softly be- hind him, and scuttled across and dropped over the outer edge of the veranda, lying close under the over- hang of the floor. Jensen slowly squirmed along beneath the shadow cast by the overhang of the veranda floor un- til he gained the north side of the bungalow, He could see the power house some distance off to the northeast. Not far from the power house, off a little to the east, was a long bunkhouse, Suddenly, as he lay there looking toward the lights of the power house and waiting for the man do- ing sentry-go on that side to turn his back, he saw three men leave the bunkhouse and come running toward the bungalow, This was a condition Jensen had not nted on, and he crouched low, ready to spring and make a fight for it the instant they came within striking distance, when suddenly he felt something give way behind him, and he was precipitated backward He had been leaning against a long, barred basement window, fastened with hinges at the top, and this window had swung tn- ward, He tried to catch at the sides of the window frame as he fell, but they slipped away from his fingers and he hurtled back ward, turning a complete somer the sault and coming down upon all fours on a cement floor. For an instant Jensen was too dazed to think, then he stood up, Ah tank we ban hang her| Before they had a chance to gather thelr dull wits into either individ. | back Inside, dragging Babe by her| corn in his voice cried bunkhouse, |you on half rations for a month. The Sweden moved no farther Swedish. Finally the shock-headed Saint or his dog,” he insisted stub- “Who?” turked Stephen Malia. inquired Mallabee, “1, bee, trying 1)rd to control himeelt | mean the ordinary run of people, and to be patient with this dull-| I know well witted man. “We) added, skall remember all das; but we got at) "Which I doubt if she ever will be." | cookie, mine boss, engineer, and Maliabee broke Into a laugh that | electrician locked up in cement nee you) power house. They say we skal! does | not hang Pete Saint, so we take all |about everybody in the States to das guns over to bunkhouse and What Ij lock up mine boss and das other How would | men.” “What!” shrilled Stephen Malla- “Tits guns took aim. Even then it is probable he would have kept on had not the sounder sense of his With a cry of “Father, are you jerazy?” she grasped his arm and) led him back, protesting, inside the Under the cireumstances it was not possible for Jensen to return The lights in Argyle House were wires connecting After futile efforts to signal the mind for For one thing the steady | q BY CRITTENDEN MARRIOTT n a | e i e e| « | | TRACT. NOW, JU RIGHT HERE i Ls | "| b a ig a y in | \r= i Nv t ot, strack it, with astonishment. Moving about as quietly as sible, Jensen struck match ai match and inspected whi milling edges, and an automatic ba). ance for adjustii smallest fraction of a grain. handfuls of the white blanks, a few of gold, coins was turned out he: somewhere else. yet bis heart sank with dismay. Kerry Mallabee’s fath head of this vastly clever counter- felting scheme. Perhaps even she Was as deep in this scheme as her parent, she whom ho could no Jong- er deny that he loved more than |Hfe tteelt. | Jensen permitted his match to |Oicker down until it burned his any one was concerned, he was in Canada; here he had no official wtand! wh And if Stephen Mallabee were really Lord Cannon- this affair was entirely a matter for diplomatic adjustment, rather than for secret service aoc- tion. Jensen knew that, knew it would cut him out of the case en- tirely. With this thought, Jensen decided that the best thing for him to do jat this moment was to regain his chamber. Having no idea how the rooms of Argyle House were laid out, and knowing that he might all over the great building without finding his chamber were he to leave the basement room from the inside, Jensen determined to re- turn by the same way he had pome. Jensen finally gained the east side of the bungalow and met a sur- prise. The patrolling miner had been joined by two comrades, They Were standing directly in front of the chamber window Jensen had re- cently left, arguing drunkenly and Nuxated Irom WHtl Increase Strength of Deticate, Nervous, Rundown People 200% Ten Daye tn Many Instances, NEW YORK, N. ¥.—Mont people foolishly seem to think they are go- ing to get renewed health and strength from some stimulating medicine, secret nostrum or ni cottc drug, said Dr, specialist of thie city, matter of fa real streneth can onty come from the food you eat. But people often fail to met the strength out of their food because they haven't enough iron tn thelr blood to enable it to change food Into living matter. From thelr weakened, nervpus condition they know something is wrong, but they can't tell what, so they erally commence doctoring for stomach, liver or kidney trouble or symptoms some other ailment caused by the lack of fron in the blood, This thing may go on for years, while the patient suffers untold agony. If you are not strong or well you owe Ii to yourself to make the following test Bee how long you can work or how y becoming t take two five grain tab- ordinary nuxated fron three who were ailing all the while, dou- ble and even triple their # form OF MY COMPANY'S CON- DoTTeD Ling —— PLEASE MAKE NOURSELF COMFORTAGLE KET CAREFULLY READ THs over! STAMPEDE MS INTO SIGNING SOMETHING BEFORG I and, taking a match from his pock- looked about, then dropped the burning match from shaky fingers and fairly gasped the base |nace, a ponderous cutting machine in which was a fillet of the white “tthite” balf run thru, and below this a box nearly full of round discs, about the size of half- eagles. There was also a die stamping machine, a machine for weights to the Strewn about on a bench were several “ithite” stamped with the design of the double eagle and milled, and a smaller number that bad niready roceived their coating It was evident to Jensen | that only the “ithite” portion of the ; the out- er covering of gold was put on The iscovery filled Jensen's mind with amazement and elation, was at the You Must Have Plenty of Iron in Your Blood to Be Strong, Says Doctor ST SIGN On THE DON'T TRY YO stretched, he eee vce ee the fellow carried loosely in’ The spparition-like form, arising teem tense bch aon oe Jensen j , them, made both men fall Clubbing ena at na brought the breech down on the larger Swede's head with all force his muscles could master. The man crumpled up like a polled ox. Jensen was turning to swing at the smaller fellow, when he felt himself grasped about the legs pair of wiry arms, and he forward. As he fell, Jensen thrust the muzzle of his gun downwatd to- ward a black head he could see squirming about his feet and the trigger. The black head appeared to burst like a bomb into thousand pieces, and Jensen felt his legs released. He could hear the feet of the patrol rapidly pound- ing his way. y As Jensen sped on, he heard the heavy feet stop. He knew the a was taking atm. Then there & terrific explosion, almost in ear, and he felt a sharp the lash of a whip across Without waiting to lift for he could hear heavy proaching from every jJensen crashed his body indow tnto the darkened room hi supposed to be the chamber he had eft a short time before. As Jensen staggered forward, a ‘piercing feminine scream smote his j eats. (Continued in Our Next Iesue) prnereite n nan | MUST PAY DAMAGES | John Slocum, who mistook F. M. | Hancock for a burglar at the home jof a neighbor at E. 80th st, and |11th ave. N, E., and shot and slight jly wounded him, must pay $250, so 8 jury decided. 4 time simply b: fron in the proper fo and this after the: deen doctoring fo: hout obtaining any = t take the old forms of , iron acetate or tincture of tron simply to few cents, | You must take tron form that fan be easily absorbed and assimi- lated like nuxated tron if you want ete do you any good, otherwise it Y prove worse than jens, Many an a won t aim Knew the secret o takin. erea: and endurance and filled with tron before he went to Affray, while. many “another: Ree gone ‘down to tnglorious simply for the lack of tron, NOTH —Nuxated tron recomm above by Dr. Sauer te not a p: an ine nor well known to dru ‘hone fron constituent ts widely prescribed by emi. nent physiclann everywhere. Unitke the on Products, it le easily not injure the teeth, The manufacturers have such great re fidence in Nuxated Iron that they offer fi (felt $200 to any charitable institu. they |times per day after meals for two] w |weeks Then test your strength | « again and see for yourself how much you have gained. T have seen dozens of nervous, rundown peopie ho serious organt They alse offer to refund your money if it does not at double your strength and en. in 10 days’ time, and endurance and entirety of all symptoms of dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in from 10 to 1¢