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The Seattle Star Butered at Reattla Wash. Postoffiog ae peoond-ciaas matter By mall, out of tty, one year, #2 per month up te @ mee experiences of others. would not be The Block System and Too Close Running of Fast Trains HE news by wire has been very brisk telling us that the blame for the ter- ible triple passenger train wreck the other day rested between the engineer ‘of the second section and the towerman in charge of the signals. Let us not be so sure that the blame The block signal system is by no means infallible. It is very much better than the old systems before it but it is by no means perfect. Get out among railroad men and talk to them confidentially and you'll hear all sorts of cases the country over where the Block didn’t work right. Sometimes the _ wires cross or break and everything goes jonally they merely No matter, the touch | is enough to cause momentary trouble. Nearly always the trouble is discovered at once and steps taken quickly to avert In the Lake Shore wreck case there was no time to do this if, in fact, | the trouble was with the block. _ We think that a railroad re; “which schedules ONE FAST MILE BEHIND OTHER, as in the case of this | trophe at Amherst, is well ni The first section | Block against it—for no reason at all, it ppears—came practically to a stop. The ond section, running only one mile A SPEED OF 50 HOUR, must have come upon the slowed down train ahead of it in a very few seconds. Fast trains should “mot follow other trains any closer than 10 minutes or 10 miles. There would | have been no catastrophe at Amherst if this had been the rule. wages merely for the sake of saving their Souls, it seems, are to be saved The one practical solution of the hous ing of women who work which has so far succeeded is found in the minimum wage laws which have been passed by some state legislatures. was on either. has such a law put any department store out of business. If passed by every state in the coun- try, such laws would make possible a better standard of living for American workingwomen. Good Taste and Economy HE was a pretty little clerk in a shoe store and she was delighted to wait on her old teacher. “Oh, you must have a pair of these lovely white buckskin “I do not think I would care to wear them,” replied the teacher, a woman of “But I would like to know what they cost.” “Ten dollars. out of gear. touch for a second. I'm going to buy a pair “You intend to pay $10 for a pair of fancy white shoes?” queried the aston- ished elder woman, recalling the poverty of the home in which the girl lived. “Why, yes,” replied the $10-a-week girl, the girls are COURSE I must have some.” The teacher went away worrying over lost opportunities. What is our school system good for, she wants to know, if it turns out our girls—thousands of them—with no more put a week's wages into a fet, worse than that is the exceedingly bad taste of wearin white shoes downtown to work at is no use economy to women, she says, unless they are taught the principles of taste in dress And this ought to be just as much a part of public school training as domestic science has become. behind BUT AT MILES AN sense than to pair of shoes? Millionaire’s Favorite Monumen NOTHER semi-charitable home for : the unmarried working girls of New York is provided for in the will of Charles ram Webster, who retired from the rtment store of R. H. Macey & Co. ‘gome years ago. A paragraph inthe will explains that the bequest was prompted by Webster's Observation of his employes’ need of at- ‘ive homes in moral surroundings. - Other philanthropists, ‘notable among them A. T. Stewart, have built institu- | tions of the same kind. Years ago the immense Stewart hotel for women proved failure. Women will not live in semi- ble homes. There is scarcely a city in the country which has not _ made the same experiment and met with the same failure. But millionaire employers refuse to the direct lesson from all these first of all. Big Men on the Border OVERNOR Mexico, ordered mines run by gov- ernment when companies threatened to shut down Cananea copper mines. Governor Hunt of Anzona, the adjoin- ing American state, refused to use militia to stop Clifton Morenci mine strike. Here are two men who have the in- terests of the entire people at heart. We need more men alon like Calles of Sonora and the border unt of Ari- If there is a bigger man in Mexico to- day than Calles, we don’t know who he 3s. EV TRUBBSAYS: in the auto show which begins to; SOME THINGS THEY Mi night at the Arena. Not haring | any Elizabeth, Dan ut Revere never rode can't figure |ney bus. amount of excitement unless they would get up a beauty watch, contest between Hi Gill and him “About the only against nonpartl- sanship are Char lotte Jones and Ralph Horr.” Cleopatra never wore an ankle Noah never joined the navy Henry VIII. wae never sued for breach of promise. Shakespeare never eaw Charile ———_____@ SERGEANT DAN QUINN’ IDEA OF A SOFT SNAP & THREAT Napoleon never heard a Brya these automobiles a. peace speech, r |» Jenny Lind jong enough & tire on somebody —T Fk.) Entgrprise. CONTINUOUS Humphrey never “Willows” before Lafe Hamiiton. “Your Honor,” said the prt | cop arrested me while I was ing at your business You're In time any time you come. 4 EDITORIALETTE Three men were killed in an auto Saturday at Corona. Some call that sport. That's what also call the bull fights in booze sales in Seattle drug “What Is your business ?* When You're Well cCLoseo STREET— CLOSE CONTEST Landon, around whom there heavyweight congression- ys he’s not much interest thing. PREPAREDNESS NOTE Loule Lang Is expecting some- Medical Association The food we put-into our bodies three times a day serves much the same functions that the coal does which is shoveled into an egnine. It furnishes the energy for the movement of the The Key to Your Home Separated from home by county or continent—standing on Broadway or "longside a water-tank—close at your hand is the key to your home. WESTERN UNION keys start your Day Letters and Night Letters on their way. Your “All’s Well” message reaches home before the mail train gets up steam. Low rates for many words. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. parts, and it fur- nishes the heat to keep the body warm. The energy of foods is measured in a unit called the calorie, calorie of heat energy would warm of water one degree One large egg contains 100 calortes so does a small medium slice of white bread The ordinary person needs about | 2,500 calories a day. Vartety of food, lamb chop or a Proteins (found fn lean meats and jother animal foods, in eggs, in len tils, peas, beans and cheese) should make up about 15 per cent of the |diet, fate (in fat meats, yolk of leges, nuts, cream and butter) and carbohydrates (in cereals, bread, p tatoes and sugar) the rest, Green vegetables and raw frutts are important elements of the diet because, altho there ts little energy in them, they supply mineral salts which the body needs, and curious os called “vitamins,” are destroyed ia cooked foods, OR, NE ed A PERT STAR—MONDAY, APRIL 10, 1916. PAGE 4. “The Ward of Tecumseh” By Crittenden Marriott—Copyright, 1914, by Crittenden Marriott NEXT WEEK—“NORTH OF CHAPTER 1, } The Message ACK tramped away tnto the J half dozen square miles of tangled woodland that lay at the k of the Telfair barony along the Tallapoosa river. Abruptly Jack halted, gun halt raised, trying to peer thru the sun soaked bushes of the molt glade. Jie had heard no sound, yet the tn stinct of one born and brought up jalmost within sight of the frontier told him that something was |watching him from the ander growth. It might be a bear or a wolf or a panther, for none of |these were rare In Alabama fn the jyear 1818 | From behind an oak an Indian |stepped out. Fastened tn bis scalp lock were thera of the white jheaded eagle, showing that he was a chief, “Necana!” he sald. “Friend!” Inatinetively Jack threw up his hand, “Necana!” he echoed. Th [tongue was that of the Shawne \Jack had not heard it since the last remnant of the Shawnee tribe | ecana,” he repeated. “What |does my brother here, far from his lown people?” ponse the sav: | k the young chief Telfatr,” he sald. “He whom the Bhawneecs of the South raised up as Tepwe; (he who speaks with « straight tongue) Knoweat thou him, brother? Jack stared In goo@ earnest. “I as Jack Telfatr,” id, haltingty, dragging the Shawnee words from his reluctant memory, “Ten years Ago the-equaw Methowaka adopted | me at the council fire of the Pan ther clan.” From his pouch the chief dre a belt of beautiful white wampum Wil my brother listen?” he asked Jack nodded “Brother! ! listen,” he answered “It is well! Many years ago a fehief of the elder branch of my brother's bourse was the friend of Tecumseh. Ten years ago the white chief traveled the long tral! to the land of his fathers, But be. fore ha died he sald to Tecumseh «Brother! men of my own house her, saying that to her belong much land and gold. If they come |from the branch of my house Itv- |ing tm Alabama, at the anctent |home of the Shawnees, let her go} jwith them. But ff they come from |the branch of my house that dwells in Engiand do not let her go. The ‘men of that branch, the branch of }t the chief Brito, are wicked. If they would undoubtedly wea all band to gain posesesion of her To you beloved of my master the prot those he #0 exe- . my very dear sir, sehe ap ge Prt: ry st wh tt ito eatled with hi Montreal a month repute the most evi Jack crumpled the letter tn his “Thank heaven Tecumseh remembered Delaroche’s warning,” “But let me tell you my |come for her, then ¢o you seek out my brothers tn the Sonth and tell them that they may take her and | protect her. If they fati you, then llet_ her live with you forever.’ have passed, and the maid has grown et: and tall in the lodge of Tecum: Now the chief Brito | has come, wearing the redooat of the Engitsh warriors. Therefore Tecumseh sends bis belt to his younger brother, and says to him: come and take her |eeo that she gets all that ts hers’ Jack took the belt erly. To fo to the lodge of Tecumseh to bring back a kinswoman to whom had descended great estates and against whom foes were plotting. t boy of 21 would not jump at the chance! And to go to Ohio—the very name was a challenge, The Ohio of 1812 was not the Ohio of today. Within 1t roved beara, deer, baf- falo, panthers, venomous snakes, renegades, murderers, Indiane—the bravest and most warlike that the land had yet known. With swelling heart Jack grasped the proffered. belt "1 will find the maid at Wapa- koneta?” he questioned, If my brother comes quickly. My brother knows that war ts fn the air. if my brother ta alow let him {nquire of Col. Johnson at Upper Piqua. The maiden is known as Alagwa (the Star), Has my brother more to ask?” Jack shook his head. The Shaw. nee bowed slightly; then he turned on his heel and melted notselessly | into the underbrush. Jack stared after him wondering. | ly. Then he stared at the belt tn his hand. So quickly the chief had come and gone that Jack needed} the sight of something material to convince himself that he bad not been dreaming. Not the least amazing part of the) chief's coming had been the mes. sage he had brought. Jack had heard of Delaroche Telfair only vaguely. When bis Huguenot fore fathers had fled from France, a century and a quarter before, one branch had stopped in England and another branch had come to America, The American branch, at least, | had not broken off all connection with the elder titled branch of the family, which had remained in| France. A hundred years had|and he took an tmpulsive step for slipped by an@ then the Terror had | ward. driven the Count Telfair and his| younger brother, Delaroche, from| Claimed, with a note éf wonder fn France. Tho count had stayed in| bis London, but Delaroche had erossed | Wouldn't guess itr of course, Iittle to America with a number of hig| forest maiden that you are, but you are a cousin of mine.” I?” Startled, Alagwa No white man ex cept her father had ever claimed kin with her, You're my cousin and, egad, you'll do the family honor! Captain Count you know, and you are the Lady Your father war Your uncle was the countrymen and had founded Gallt polis, on the banks of the Ohio, the second city in the state And now he was dead! His daughter had been brought up by the great chief Tecumseh and? was nearly grown and was the hetresa of great estates. Brito Telfair Jack vaguely recalled the name as that of the head of the branch that had stopped in England—sought to Ket possession of her. As he pondered Jack had been | pacing slowly homeward. A voice ,| startled him and he swung around to face his body servant, Cato, a negro & few years older than him- self. Cato was panting. “Massa Col- onel’s home, suh,” he gasped. “An’ he want you, suh, He's in a pow’ful hurry.” Jack stared at the boy, “Father home!” he exclaimed, half to him- self, “IT didn't expect him for hours.” Colonel Telfair was striding ox citedly up and down the wide veranda, Jack quickened his steps dida’t know you were back, father,” “I'm glad you are, sir, I've news, important news!” The elder Telfatr acowled, “News, have you, air?” ho ri instde, quick, and ‘Turning, he led |the way thru a deep hall into a we'll exchang tell your news,” he . ll warrant it's short and foolish,” “Porhapa!” Jack grinned; he and his father were excellent friends “Dd you know. man, Delaroche Telfair, was dead, leaving a daughter who {s a ward of Tecumach, the Shawnee chief?” that our kine ped. letter? No, sir; I met an “An Indian?” “Yea, A Shawnee from Ohio, a messenger from Tecumseh. roche seeme to have pledged him to call on us in caso certain things and he has sent for me to come and get the girl.” “Look—look at this, Jack!” the elder man held out an open letter “I got it at Montgomery.” Jack took the letter and unfold Then he looked at his father # from Capron, the lawyer for the Telfair estates tn France,” tn- terjected the elder man. French, of course. Translate it a6 you # what Jack read: It fe my ead Guty to Read {t aloud! My Dear Sir: now falla to the dencendant 4 to America in Among the papers of iny ao noble fust deceased, I have found | etter, dated June 10, 1900. ter incloned certificates of the mar * at Marietta, 0. ui lia War, on J & riginals appear to * oestbie eon the 4 of Count of Telfair Telfair of Eng To you I leave my, one | own lin jehiild, Care for her as you Would) your own, Perhaps tn days to come fair. may seek) she be Gecensed, Not knowing where to reach the Estelle (or other descendants che), I address you, ank tng that you convey to her my most my dear str, with- the bands of count, I appeal to hie ress fi “Bince the chief died ten years ‘Come quickly. The mata te of| rom my lodge at Wapskoneta and) Rapidly Jack recounted the cir- leumstances of the Shawnee’ and recited the message he had And so it was that Jack Telfair started on his long and dangerous CRAPTER 1 The Star Maiden ‘The «un © above the rim of the world Clone beside the river stood the row after row of! cabins, strongly built of heary logs. From the door of a cabin near the center of the town emerged a girl years of age. tures, browned by the sun and con- cenled as they were by paint, yet) platniy lacked the high cheek bones, biack eyes and broad nostrils of the In dress alone was she itke them, tho even in this the unm usual richness of her doeskin garb, belted at the hips with sfive; ed her as one of prominence, For a little the girl watched the then her eyes southward = trafl; roved across the rippling waters of ine, and rested on a cabin m the further bank.) From this cabin two men were ju One of them wore a red coat. The second was dressed in Indian cos-| He could only Girty, owner of the cabin, or his of infamous mem- more probably the latter, They crossed the river {n a canoe and came directly toward her. Hefore Alagwa could move, Girty’s voice broke the silence. “The white chief from afar would speak with the Star matden the house of brother Simon. | son Alagwa,” he declared. Alagwa looked at the man and “Lat him speak,” she said, in somewhat halting English At the sound of his own tongue the Englishman's face lighted up, speak Pinglish?” leaned forward Brito Telfair, Estelle Telfair. my kinsman, He had neglected you shame but when he died it became my duty as head of the house to come over here and fetch you back and give you everything you want Do you understand?" “T saw = Teeumseh ago,” went on Captain Brito, that he knew Delaroche’s daughter was, | but he refused to tell me anything He sald he would produce But when Te. two months her in two monthe, quirtes, and Girty bere found you A shadow fell between the two, Indiana, naked save for a FIFTY THREE” bresoh-clout and for the engle feathers rising from his plock, thrust himself between the girl jand the intruders "White men go!” he ordered, in| Shawnee. Hrito's face finshed brick-rea. He did not understand the word but he could not mistake the tone. stantly, however, Girty stepped be | tween, “Why does the Chief Wil-| wiloway {nterfere?” he demanded, |%° time to waste. | tellin’ when flerce eyes glittering into those of | * Wilwiloway leaned forward, his the renegade, Tecumseh y) bite men no speak to Alagwa White men go!” | For noment the others heat tated on Brito nodded and said something to Girty and the Inttes drew back, Brito himeelf turned to Alagwa. “Good-bye, cousin,” he called. “Bince this—-er—gentleman object I'll have to go, With your permis sion, I'll return later—when Te ourseh te back.” | Wiiwiloway watched them go Then he turned to Alagwa and his face softened. “They are bad men,” he sald, gently. “Their words are forke Teen h com mands that Alagwa shall not @poak with them.” Then be turned awdy, leaving the girl to wonder—quite as might iy if she had lived all her iife among her civilized re. low long she stood and wonder. | ed she never knew, Abruptly she| wan roused by @ sound of voices |from the direction of the southern outposts, Tecumseh was urning CHAPTER TI!. The Long Trali For nearly a month Jack Telfatr, | with black Cato at bis heels, had been riding northward thru a coun: | richest, biggest, most up-to-the 2nd city in the u. s. is that so, the other feller hollers Like all Indian pathways, the|#t him, well ! been out & give this |trail clung to the highest ground,|Plase the o. o, this A. M. urley & following the route that was driest | beleey me ite ali to the bad and what aint there is going fast you got all kinds of cay ers itving tn cellers that never see the lite of day & your hotels are the jease james stuff my self tos try recently reclaimed from the wildern: in rain, clearest of snow in winter. Beyond the Ohio ft followed the crest of the divide between Great | and Little Miam) rivers to Dayton, | Piqua and Wapakoneta. Thirty years before men had fought thelr way over every inch of that trall, dying by scores along it from the arrow, the tomahawk, jand the bullet. But that had been | 30 years before, For 20 years the traf! had been safe as far as the Ohto; for 10 it had been meas \urably safe balfway up the state, to the edge of the Indian country. But when Jack reached Dayton that town was al with the war fever, The whole state awaited ft {mn apprehension, not from fear of the British, but from terror of thetr ruth} red allies. Not @ man or woman fn af Ohio but knew what Indian warfare meant. Not one but could remem- ber the astlent midnight attack on the sleeping farm house, the blaz- saa |'ne rooftres, the stark, gashed forms that had once been men and women and Iittie children, the wiping out of the labor of years in & single hour. Ah! Yes! Ohio knew what In- dian war meant, At last Jack came to Piqua. Piqua stood close to the boundary of the Indian country, which then spread over the whole northwest ern quarter of Ohio, North of ft lay the great Black swmp, thru which roved thousands of Ind@tans, nominally peaceful, but potentially dangerous. At Piqua, too, dwelt Col, John Johnson, the United States Indian agent, whose bust ness {t was to keep them quiet. As Jack rode into the outekirts of the tiny scattered village, a mid- dle-aged man canie up to him. “Hello, stranger!’ he bawled. “What's the news?” Jack reined tn. “Sorry, but 1 n't any,” he replied. ‘Whar you from?” “From Dayton and the south.” “Bho! Ain't congress declared ‘ot that I know of. The Inst that congress was still debatin “Debatin'? And here the Injuns re fillin' up with firewater and sharpenin’ their tomahawk “What's the news from the north?” Jack broke in. “Pad, bad, mighty bad, stranger,” the man declared, “That red devil, Tecumseh, has been eling about the country but he's back now and the Injuns are getting ready to play thunder with every body. How far north {s yo aimin’ to go, stranger?” “To Wapakoneta, I think.” “Then I reckon you'll have to see Colone! Johnson.” ‘Where'll 1 find Colonel John- demanded Jack, ‘Well, now, that's mighty hard to tell. Colonel Johnson sloshes round a whole lot.” By this time a number of other white men had come up. The old hunter insisted on making Jack known to all of them. Jack heard the names of Sam Hilliard, Job Garrard, Andrew Dye, Joshua Rob- bing, Daniel Cox, and several oth ers. All of them were anxious for news in regard to the coming war, and all shook thelr heads dubiously When they heard that Jack pro posed to go further north The talk was interrupted by the appearance of a wagon drawn by mules and driven by a man who looked neither to the right nor to the left “Hey!” one of the men yelled “What's the news?” | The driver pald no attention to the call. His companion on the box, however, leaned out. “Go to h——1, you old grand-daddy-long loge,” ho yelled out The man's cheek reddened, But before he could retort a horseman appeared in the road in front of the wagon and threw up his hand “Hold on, boys,” he called, “Hold on! I want to speak to you,” The driver hesitated; then, com pelled by something in the eyes of the man, he sulkily reined in. “I'm Tom Rich, deputy of Colonel | Johnaon, the Indian agent up here,” the horseman was explaining. “Col onel Johnson's away just now and I've got to see everybody that goes north to trade with the Injuns,” “We ain't going to trade with no} Injuns,” satd the man who appeared to be the leader, “We're taking) supplies to Fort Wayne for the Gov ernment, T reckon you ain't got no call to stop us.” A Great Feature .BY BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR | “A wingle Indian murdered by white man might set the border thousands of friendly In@lans against us. understand?” Wolf shrugged bis shoulders on #0," he muttered. “Not a bit of it, boys. your papers and you can go|@ in his pockets | extracted a paper which | he passed to Rich, who scanned it he questioned, y - from the men Hin hand fell to bis sword hilt, In-|7OUr friend's name ts Hénry Wil “And where ore " he asked, smiling Rich turned away and greeted Jack, “That's right, and we ain't got |¥U bound, sir? Phere ain't 10 | am joking for Colonel Johnson, “With your permis- 1'll just tag along after our can go along if you want to, but|erusty friends in the wago the country’s dangerous returned Jack, The deputy hesitated no power to stop you,” he waid, But you'd better wait here for Col nel Johnson.” b: ‘ The matter fe urgent. loudly into the road od Injun gets in our way he won't Come, Cato! So long, boy My pluck 1# to nodded to the group around hin, shook bis bridle and cantered off brow grew stern. after the wagon. be very careful shoot and when. “If any darn oot first and question after.” he ordered, st QuRY (Continued In Our N@xt Issue.) ~oanenteiencnneatnanensasanentneatiicatianl UNI\OR OFFICE Boy from the madison st. & avenue C. line. a bunch of us fellers were in the when a big fat woman gives sine & he siows down from three miles @ hr. to @ soy ny, tridy—a it breezes into the big town the ® where do you other day & he \euys get all this dope about n. 7 |elty betng the hole cheese in the the driver the the lady pute a foot on the car| step & the conny shoves her batk/ saying to wait a minit pleese then he hollers into the car, ev- lerybody to the front, and we all | moves to the front now, lady, step rite in, we her balansed alrite Wooden power schooners to ham e if |dle lumber for coastwise and for “rope than 1 of your) aign trade will be built at a new shipyard to be established at the |Puget Sound Bridge and Dredge it, said the boss verry dignified Mke becaus he aint never lived in no other city ecksept 1 trip to chi- yere & he sleeps all what's the matter with them horsecars, the boss inkwired nothing, the fresh nut ansered, only the rest of the country has to | travel a long wa: to see them, all | to ny. in feck, but speeking about them old rattle |Frank BE. Burns, R. R. Fox, Bert trape { had a peculiar Farrar and J. this A. M. when { was in 1 on the wealthy Seattle men. Wiieramindachnmnneciepinnnanenediatiamtinn HowNuxated Iron Helped Me To Whip Frank Moran Jess Willard Tells Secret of His Easy Vic- tory. Also reveals hitherto untold secret of his great Johnson; Says IRON IS GREATEST OF ALL STRENGTH BUILDERS Chilberg, all” over Jack |Ordinary Nuxated Iron will often in¢rease the strengtti and endurance of delicate, nervous folks 200 per cent. in two weeks time. power of nuxated fron te restore nd vitality even in most complicated chronic conditions,” Not long ago a man came to me who wae nearly haif a century old, and asked me to give him a@ prelim- inary examination for life imeurance. I was astonished to find hi the blood pressure of a boy of 20 and as full of vigor, vim and vitality as man; In fact a young man was, notwithstanding his The secret he said La fron—nuxated had filled him H 46 careworn nearly all in. joyanty of youth. Have #aid @ hundred times over, fron strength butld- If people would only medicines and feous concoctions and t: nuxated fron, I am convinced that thousands of persons might be saved, who now die every year from pneumonia, @rippe, con- liver and heart 6 which started their diseases was nothing more nor less than « weakened condition brow lack of tron in plood to change food into living tis much or what you eat, your food sequence you become weak, pale an sickly looking just Iike a plant try- in @ soil deficient in If you are not strong or well elf to make the See how long you or how far you coming tired two five grain tablets of ordinary three times per day after meals for two week test your strength again the strength out of tt and as a con- a ing to grow you owe it to you the while, do! other troublea in from ten to four- time simply fron in the proper form. after they had in some cases been doctoring for months taining any benefit the old forms of reduced tron, tineture of tron simply You must take at oan be easily ab- without obe But don’t take tron in a form t forbed and assimilated like rwise it may prove worse SPECIAL NOTE | known phyntota Dr ®. Saver, a well studied widely prize fighter the seoret of great been apectaily emp before he went into the fray, any another has gone to in- efeat simply power and endur for the lack I Dr. Sauer, Is not ® patent med- viewed at hia apart 0 Willard said vemist with m > drugetete and why physiclans every where. ft ie easily assimilated. make them black, | duce great strength does not injure of which are the prize ring often taken nuxated tron partioularly advocated se of tron by all those who Physieal and Without It Iam sure hat I should never have been able tp Jack Johnson ae completely ally os T did, and while train Frank Moran. gularly took nuxated tron, ain that {t was a most impor or in my winnin in nearly all forme, 8 for nervoug The manufacture confidence in Nux- mental power charitable institution i man or womam who lacks fron and tncrease strength 200 per cent or over tm time, provided they have ne They also offer to refund your money {f It does not af least double your strength and endurance fn ten daye’ time serious organic “Mr, Willard’s case {s only one iapensed in thie of hundreda whteh 1 OWN personal experience which the astonishing ould cite from 1 rmacy and all proves conclusively