The evening world. Newspaper, October 19, 1916, Page 10

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os eee |THE LO YODDOADS! SEVENTH EPISODE THE DEVIL'S SYMPHONY by Comsntidatad Film Corporation, BYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING EPISODES ‘Tarold Stanley, cub reporter for « New York daily owned by daughter of Dr, Montrom, who has spent his life perforting « rmachine to DODDHDHHODGOVOODOOOHOONOAL DOOQWEDOIGOSS) ees es 1916.) or, th interned to the venate humanity, Stan Jeg has been working on the Crimam Atain mystery, Fourteen murders have been cvtnanitted, all iin the mame way, the vietime robbed and strangled by thin had before thia perfected ang tried hie machine on four patie Deings, Later be notiend they developed abmonmal cr and Vanya Towe, Harold's father te muntered while ls teack down La Rue plots to kill him. Vanya fells [nace cf ta Rue mirrored in ar ove, He photographs this Linage devoeti ire and broken, ants ot mipertnman power, Dr, Montrose ‘Theme prople at first became super i power, eapectally Pierre La Itue Dr, Montrose, Harold swears to the murderer, He takes over the Kixaminer ari starts a cumign to unravel the mys to @ hypnotir trance, and Stanley perceives the but it te dropped by a elumey HEN Robert Clayton dropped in for a chat with Harold Stanley at the latter’s private office in the Examiner Building « few daye later he found Stanley triumphantly seemed at first glance to be cracked mosaic. “Look!” exclaimed Harold, pointing to the photograph, inspocting something that 4@ photograph of an ancient and badly “Not @o bad, ta it—considering I had to fit eleven pieces together?” Clayton held the picture te me ight, It was the reproduction of Vanya Tosca’s eye pupil as Stanley had photographed it with a misxcroscopio lens during her trance, the pupil in which waa clearly reflected the face of Pierre La Rue. Al the pieces were thore that bore the man’s two eyes. “Good boy!" approved Clayton. “It will help identify your mah. And that’s Vanya Tosca’s oye, isn't it? Clayton frowned a little aa he asked the question. “Yes,” rep! j . “And, by the way, she'll be here in a few minutes. So if you want @chat with hor’— i “I don’t,” retorted Clayton, ‘I don't want anything more to do with her. You were right about her In the first . She's an adventuress, That's proved clearly enowgh by the way she led me on while she was flirting with Truxton Lambert, 1 saw them that day he was killed. Sh Vell, you'll have to treat her clv- My if you meet her here,” exhorted Harold. “I've sent for ber to tell me more about this man Pierre La Ru whom sho started to speak of when ashe fell into the trance. He may have some bearing on the Crimson Stain. I sent for her instead of going to her, because there's less chance of inter- ruption here than at her flat. By the way, I suppose your mother got my ed Harold, noting the acceptance?” “To the mask ball to-night?” asked Bob. “Ob, I suppose so, I'm lad you're coming. We"-— ots It to be a mask ball?” asked Stanley. “I had forgotten that. I thought It was just to be an ordip- ary dance, like"—— “Dia you ever know my mother to do anythin ‘ordinary?’ laughed Clayton, fot she. This is to be a sort of variation on the usual mask ball. The guests are not only to wear masks at the dance, but the: are to come to the house In masks so that, even in the dressing rooms, nobody can suspect who ts who. It's @ silly idea, But mother’s awfully keen on it, So don't forget to put on your mask before you get to the ouse.”” “I won't forget,” promised Btan- ley, adding, “but won't that give thieves a good chance to slip in as fruests?” “That's what I sald to mother,” re- plied Clayton, “but she just laughed at me. I mean to be on the lookout, though. There would be rare pick- ings for any crook. Apart from the guests’ jewelry, there's that diamond vecklace of mother’s, She tnststs on wearing {t tosnight. And it cost $50,000, That was before diamonds went up so high, too. It's worth a Jot more now, She"—— An office boy tapped at the door, bearing Vanya Tosca’s card. At a nod from Stanley the boy departed, to return a second later ushering the visitor into the office, Clayton nodded stiffly in response to Vanya's beaming smile and, with a word of goodby to Harold, he stalked out. ‘Vanya looked after the departing Clayton In wonder, » “He seoms almost angry with me,” she told Stanley, as the door closed behind the visitor. “I wonder why?" ‘Withcut answering, Harold picked up ,the mosaic” photograph and handed It to he “What's this?” she asked uncon cernedly, looking at the picture and then at Harold. He was watching her keenly, But her expression did not change. He could not know that her hands tn- side her gloves were clenched con- vuisively, and that her heart was hammering wildly, * With the same outward tindiffer- ence she handed the photograph back to him. As Vanya did so she det her fingers rest for a moment, as if by chance, on gis, The touch was clinging and warm. Inatinctively, Harold's eyes sought hers in inquiry. She was gazing at bim with a look akin to adoration. Startled, yet flattered, he opened his lips to speak, But his words— whatever they wére—died unspoken. Vanya took a step closer to him Her hand rested lightly on his arm, with a caress that thrill him, in spite of his istrust of the woman and his love for Florence Montrose But in another moment she had turned and was gone before he could realize it, waving him a farewell. Stanley's eye fell upon a scrap of paper lying on the rug midway be tween his desk and the hallway door. Harold stooped and picked tt up The paper contained five lines of typed lettering, The first line was ; composed of four words. ‘The rest of the lettering looked like a novice'y efforts to use a typewriter. This ty what he read: “LAYTON HOME TO.N BXNDB PDZS NDARN EXBXNDH LENX ONPDPLBAH HDXXBI FYI ND SPs MIB KZZIURBNIXX PY FIRZLDB LNERN Stanley's brow puckered in per- nT ZPLN NIN BIVBXEY! but one, a lozenge-shaped fragment plexity. not doubt, dently started to d top line was in plain An hour lat That it was a cipher he did and some one had evi- Ipber it, as the nglish. , after many failures and new starts, he had translated the message to ‘his own satisfaction and seribbled cach word under Its cipher counterpart, This Is what: he read: HALL CLAYTON, Howe 7o.NtatRT; Migs GEE CLAYTON -HINTY. THOU m@ DOL N ck; COME Tis Tm Y STAIN, o. eo. In the big low-cetled room at the back «¢ aner’s apartment Pierre a Rue had summone from its cai awaited the followers he As he waited he took Stradivarius violin— part of tho loot of a Crimson Stain robbery—and began dreamily to play, He had a wondrous touc nder the violin walle ton a devil's symphony of mel- bis hand itable ody. One by one the others entered. One by onp they went silently to seats near }he wall, fascinated and en- thralled by music, Presently the last weird strains died in silence, La Rue, with a sigh, laid down the throbbing vio- BODDOOD™ DOOEODDHODNDOSS" THE EVENI DOOOIODOS) their master’s unearthly MRS, CLAYTON RECEIVES HER MASKED DOGVOGODDOODVOSOOOOGDOIG! CRIMSON STAIN MYSTERY NG WORLD, THURSDAY, OOTOBER 19, 1916. STS WEARING THE FAMOUS $50,000 NECKLAI lin and the bow. Then ho turned to toward the front door, As he passed man he wanted. Morrison saw that his henchmen and spoke with wonted & clump of shrubbery a dark figure the time for bluffing was past. abruptness. giide forth from the shadows and Wheeling, he bolted through the “Those of you who are to operate “ccosted him, long French window, out onto the at the Clayton ball in Riverdale toe “Chief,” whispered the man, veran, ayton at his heels, Across night already have your orders. 1 ll right, so far. Kiel and Morrison the veranda he dashed and vaulted sent summons to the rest of you to have compared thelr watches, Kiel ig over the low rail into a patch of repowt here id caso of emorgency. biding in the cellar right now with his rose-bushes just. as the pursuing Tho $80,000 Clayton necklace is worth hand on the house's electric light Clayton grabbed for him. the trouble and there'll be other divi- dends besi¢ At 11 o'cloak every ght in the Glayton ho At the same second Morrison snatches the necklace, If he can make a get- the necklace to me or to Vanya. want to dispose of the Jewelry with- MUCH as possible out of ‘sight. out too much interference from young Clayton or the police. 80, when Mrs. Clayton goes to her roof afterward she is going to find a box of flowers on her bed. She will open tt. that—well, for awhile after that, her son will have other thin perilously close to eleven, 9 to think ina oarele of besides tracing lost Jewels, ner! The man he addressed slouchod forward, “You bought the orchidi Tanner left the room, retu®hing with # long florist box which he opened and. laid on the table, Rank upon rank of Tan- beautiful orchids were exposed to view, Pierre inspected the box critl- cally, then nodded apprgval Now, the—other," mmanded, Tanner, with visible reluctance, crossed the ror cautiously which he ¢ string. m to a cupboard and drew forth a black bag, rried at arm's length by a As he progressed toward the switch. Any orders?” Stanley shook bis head, motioned #trodo on, goes out, the man back Into the shrubbery and Reaching the house, Harold assumed away ho will, If he can't, he's to pasa ® timidity of manner, walking as one hours slipped by and Krew, to be there. Stanley looked at the his white waistcoat, alcove and with see began of to move throug At the same time an figure advanced with tempt at carelessness end of the ballroom to t 1 Who hopes to elude notice, keeping as The his confidence No one had questioned bis right watch he had remembered to put Into the pocket of aiae The hour was He left the ness h the groups guests toward Mrs. Clayton, other masked an equal at- from the far ho spot where Mrs. Clayton stood chatting with sev- eral masked This second masked to pass close to Robert looked at his watch, caught two reasons, In the first pl oo the “heavy gold watch chain, guests. He, out a watch and consult too, took dit, man chanced Clayton as he The action Robert's attention—and for man wor Robert kn table the bag writh that no man in his own sgf would hia grasp, = Writhed and twisted in wear a watch chain with@bventns “Hurry up, the La Rue, Clothes. Also the man was openly impatiently Doi slow, Are 100King at the witch, Guests at a vou afraid of a w » that?” dance, Robert reflected, do not thus “Yes,” said ‘Tanner, “I am. ‘The Consult the time, as they might indi- snake's little, Hut he's a fer de lance, © to their hostess thf they were And there's no antidote for his bite, @2Xl0us for the evening to end, I'm not aching to pass away just yet," ‘old Stanley was scarcely two Tanner lowered at La Rue. ‘Tho 4 away from Mrs, Clayton, Mor- latter met his henehm: glare with. Ton, on tho other side, was pausing out change of expression, But into n eighteen inches of her to brush his own eyes crept the lurid smoulder k of powder off of his cuff. Rob of the Crimson Stain ert Clayton, his eyes on Morrison, Was r hastily averted hi i not six feet behind the man he was aud turned to the scaue aa tn chine following, A dance was In full swing, dreaded adversary, Still holding the . Then—every light in the house was bag in gingerly fashion he loosed extinguished draw-s(ring. and held. it abote tke The brilliantly tt ballroom suddenty, box of orchids. became as pitch black as a ‘opp © The Out dropped a wrigelin music stopped with a crash. con snake into the blossoman Hotore the fused babel of questions, frightaned| erpent could coil itself to strike, exclamations apd hysterical laughter! anner clapped the cover on the box filled the darkg@ess, People Jostied | and ted it fast against each other, Nome one “See th it is In plgce at the ght screamed. time to-night,” sate fuer curtly, Morrison had gauged his distance] “When Mra. Clayton opens the box and his directions to a hair's breath,| she is due to forget her lost necklace Out shot his hand, His fingers fell and everything else,” lightly on the clasp of Mrs, Clayton's) Ce 6) 8 wee necklace, Lesa than a second liter} The Clayton house—like that of tho fifty-thousand-dollar :reasure was! Dr, Montrose, next door—was set well nestling in his pocket, and he was} back from ‘the street in ita own beginning to edge toward @ long) ground When Stanley's taxicab French window that ied onto the turned into the strect the ear cama veranda, t |. Wor the thoroughfare was ‘Then, at suddenly as they had gone 1 with motor cars which were at the Clmytons’, viled Stan attor be ab into a gap in wt manor chaufte uvre e taxied tho line half a block below the house. Hut no one would have recognized him s Harold Stanley, He was disguised a sult, Wik and beard such as worn hy Pierre Le He left the cab, pald his fare and struck ¢ n fo ross the grounds Out of Sorts HAT IS, something is wrong with baby, but we can’t tell is, what it is. All mothers recognize the term by the jitude, weakness, loss of appetite, inclination to sleep, heavy breathing, and lack of interest shown by baby. These are the symptoms of sickness. worms, croup, diphtheria, or scarlatina. Give the child Castoria. It may be fever, congestion, Do not lose a minute, It wilt start the digestive organs into operation, open the pores of the skin, carry off the fatid matter, and drive away the threatened sickness, 6 Genuine Casteria alwgys bears the signature of SE a )ieost within arm'a reach of the Chia all the man at the cellar s t, y to dared leave them off any longer lest an to 4 servant camg down to see what was amiss, Mor’ Fr A chatter of talk and } the room, ‘Then it was hushed by Mrs. Clayton: “My necklace json had all Inc ort autho ly “My mower" stolen, May I trouble mask—at once?” His ed room In almost at once rushed forward of guests to seize the Morrison saw him oo: his intent, and cast around him, eaw a masker whom as Pierre La Rue. Slippimg through the son brushed and deftly thrust into the diamond necklace. tinued open ich window, Clayton had forced hii the astonished guest lights blazed up again. but reached tho ch window—and safety, But only for a moment. My beautiful neck- eyes were sweeping the crowd- rch of Morrison, he discovered him nding near the window through the throng A few feet away Ughtly against his own course witch had not jaughter awept y 4 cry from Rob- you all to un- And Clayton man, ming, guessed one glance he he recognized Morri- Bob caught one of the man's flying coattails. There was a sharp rip of cloth, and Morrison was running at top speed across the lawn toward tho street, leaving his torm coat- tall In Bob's clenched hand. Clayton vauited the rail and set off as fast as his legs’ would carry him, He saw Morrison leap into a waiting | automobile and heard him shout to the chauffeur, The latter was evi- dently waiting for him, as the car's engine was going. The car swung into the highway and whiazed away northward, leaving Clayton standing hatless in the mi dle of the street and swearing with fury at the ease wherewith his enemy was escaping. A whirring nolse’close behind him caused Bob to turn, Up the street, at a speed of perhaps fifty miles an hour, @ motorcycle was whizzing, It was 'two-seated and contained but one rider, ‘On the instant Clayton threw up both hands and yelled to the cyclist to stop, As the man wonderingly slowed down Bob sprang to the seat behind him, pointing to the fast- receding automobile and panting: ‘atch that car for me! In the name of the law!" Barring accidents, Clayton's midnight chase was a fore- kone conclusion, Foot by foot the| overhauled the fleeing ‘Two miles further on it alongside. the result of yton mad flying leap that landed htm on the automobile’s run- ning board, ‘Th ked chauffeur} evidently lost his nerve. Seeing | himself overtaken, he brought the| cap to @ thudding halt, sprang from| the wheel and ran away | rms were groping for! Morrison, The latter, seeing escape | was hop met the attack, To- ACTING POORLY—TRY HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters ITIS A SPLENDID TONIC Train Your Hair as an Actress Does No class of people devotes as much time to beauty as do actresses, and naturally no class must be more careful to retain and develop their charms, In- quiry among them dqyelops the infor- mation that in hair care they find it dangerous to shampoo with any make- shift hair cleanse Instead they have studied to find the finest preparation made for shampooing and bringing out the beauty of the hair, The majority of them say that to enjoy the best hair wash and scalp stimulator that is known, get a package of canthrox from your druggist; dissolve a teaspoonful in a cup of hot water and your shampoo is ready, It costs less than three cents for this amount, After its use the hair dries throng, tanley Harold's hand Then he con- toward the way through until he was rapidly, with uniform color, Dandruff, ‘ss oil and dirt are dissolved and en- rely disappear, Your hair will be so fluffy that it will look much heay than it Its lustre and softness will also delight you, while the stimulated scalp gains the health which insures hair growth.—Advt, BOEDODIOON | biscufta, DDDHOBDODVIOOOSGOSS. gether, locked in a flerce grapple, they lurched from the running board of the car to the roadway ‘here, silent, tense, murderous, they fought. The car had halted midway on a little bridge that spanned a deep and narrow stream. Clayton's onslaught gradually drove Morrison back against the rail of this bridge. The rail was old and rotting. Morrison ran in to clinch with his foe. Clayton deliv ered an uppercut that the inrushing Morrison was just too late to block, The blow caught him flush on the point of the jaw. Backward recled Morrison, half stunned, and his full welght crashed against the decayed bridge rail, The rail snapped like a straw under the impact Still carried backward by the tm- petus of his own weight Morrison pitched over the edge, clawed help- lessly at the alr and crashed headlong into the rocky stream far below. Clayton stood staring, down Into the black abyss. He rie horrified what he had inadvertently done. Meantime, at the Clayton house, Harold Stanley suddéniy found him- self in extremely tight quarters. It dawned upon him with new intensity that his position would be awkward in the extreme if he were forced to unmask, . No, it was high time to get away and to remove his disgu! He took an impulsive step toward the hall- way, intending to slip out through the front door during the confusion of Clayton's pursuit. But as he reached the hallway he Fince the remarkable discovery of or- fanio iron, Nuxated Iron, or “Fer Nux- ate,’ as the French callgt, has taken t tlmated that over five million persona datly are taking it In this country alone. Mowt astonishing results are reported from Its use by both physicians and laymen. So much a0, that well known doctors pre dict that we shall soon have a new age of {ar more beautiful, rosy-chgeked wom- on and vigorous tron men, Dr, King, a New York physician and author, when Interviewed on the subject, said: ‘There can be no vigorous tron men without fron, Pallor means annemia, An acmia means defictency, The #kin of anaomto men and women is pale, The flesh flabby, The muscles lack tone; the brain fags and the memory falls and often vous, irritable, de spondent and melanchély. When the trow 008 from the blood of women, tho roses go from the! ie “In the most common foods of Americ the starches, sugars, table syrups, candies, polished rice, white bread, soda crackers, macaronl, spaghettl, tapioca, ago, farina, degerminated cornmeal, no longer Je iron to be found, Refining pro cesses have removed the tron of Mother arth from thetr impoverished foods, and silly methoda of home cookery, by throw tng down tho waste pipo tho wator gn which our vegetables are are re sponsible for another grave iron loss, Pherefore, if you wish to prfwerve your youthful vim and vigor to @ ripe old age, you must mupply the tron deficlency in your food by usl@s some form of organic Iron, Just as you Would use salt when your food has not enough salt.” Dr. Sauer, one of the widely known phy- siclans in this country, who has studied abroad in great European medical inatitu. tions, sald; “A® I have said a hundred times over, organic Irom ts the greatost of All strength builders, If people would throw away patent modi and nause- concoctions and take simple nuxated 1 am convi ro poked, thousands of persons mi«ht be #ived who now die y year from pneuinonta, consumption, kiddey, liver, heart he real and true cause rtod thelr disease waa nothing more nor less than a weakened condition ug on by & lack of tron In the blood ‘ot long ago a man came to me who was nearly hail nd anked me to give him @ prejiminary ination for Ite Inu . Tt wae astonished to find him with the blood pressure of a boy of twenty and as full of vigor, vim and vitwilty ® young man he reall tanding tle taking trom ted Iron had filled bin with re lite. health; at forty-six be was careworn and ‘At thirty he was in bad PDOOOQODDOAGOVDODOODHGHOHDSHAHIG at® y | that the tives of | OOBDDGOOHODOHHADH}HODOOIOH. Featuring Maurice Costello DODDOGTHHOHOIDHDOITHODGHHVDOOPTOONI and Ethel’ Grandin a Novelized by ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE . Being Presented DODODODGODOODIODHING found Mfmscit face to face with Flor- ence Montrose. The girl, after ono wildly unbelleving look at the man she lieved to be Pierre La Rue, ave a stifled ery of horror and to the floor in a dead faint. In the turmot! Harold had no chance to reach the front door as he had planned. The only way open to him led upstairs. Quickly his resolve was taken, He would go upstairs and hide in one of the rooma until the ex- citement should die down and the guests be gone, Then he could come out of concealment and explain to the Claytons, Acting on the {dea he sped unno- ticed up the broad staircase, along an upper hall and {nto the first room whose door was ajar. He entered and shut the door behind him, By the light of a single shaded elec- tric lamp Stanley saw that he was in a bedroom, At the foot of the bed lay a long flower-box. Before he had time to notice more he heard foot- steps coming toward him along the hall, He slipped into a clothes closet, and drew the door almost shut behind him. Peering through the crack, Harold aw a butler and a maid carry the nconscious Florence into ghe room and lay her gently on the bed. As they did so she opened her eyes. “It's all right, Miss Montrose,” sald the maid, soothingly, ‘Just you lie here and rest, and Dr, Montrose will be here presently. Mrs. Clayton told us to bring you here while she sent to look for him, Shall I stay till he comes?” “No—no, thank you," answered Flor- . dizzily, “I—T must have faint- ed. I'll lle here and rest till—till my father comes to take me home. tiptoed out, leaving her. Hav. old, watching through the door crack, waited only to be certain that they were gone fore coming into the room. But as he looked he saw a strange thing that held him for a mo- ment motionless The cover of the flower-box at the foot of the bed was beginning to move with queer, jerky motions, ‘Then one corner of it rose up. The snake, an- Royed by the commotion in the room, was tiring of ita resting place. Inch by inch it crawled out of the box and onto the counterpane, ‘Then, catch- ing sight of the girl, the reptile colled to atrike, At the #ame instant Harold Stan- ley flung himself forward with a cry of horror, seized the snake's neck, broke it with one convulsive squeeze and hurled the dead creature ont of the open window Florence, at sight of the supposed La Rue, screambtd in terror. “Hush, deart Hush!" begged Har. old, tearing off his mask, “Don't be afraid. Look! I have the necklace! And I've learned a lot of important things to-night. I He paus door from the hall had opene tly. Dr. Montro: stood on the threshold, (To Be Continued.) by the Consolidated Film Corporation DODODDDDOHHDHDDHHDGHODIEDHDGDQOHEDHGHHWGDHODSHOOSOSOOIMND . © The Elghth Eptsode of THE CRIMSON STAIN MYSTERY “Will Be Published Thursday, Oct. 26 THE BOYS in BLUE of ’61 were the grandfathers of 1HE BOYS in KHAKI of TO-DAY: A LET@ER from Dr. Simpson of the And at sBEINE, the time our regimens 1 cal stores, T obtained nome of RADWAY' svecean In the treatment Of Howel combatant And Soreness of the limbs, than all oth his letter wan also approved. b yton of the same regiment. tee ‘ THEN AND NOW IN KHAKI ‘or' IN BLUE ae the same atory to tell of the benefit received from the use at the front « RADWAY’S READY RELIEF used as a LINIMENT for reon Zouavem, N. ¥, (62nd Rogt.), says riers Tsland we were out of medi DY RELIEF and used tt with or ‘oleh, Reh atiam, Chills, Pains, Aches stout. Col, Thadate and Gen. Oscar Fach hi SCIATICA SPRAINS ECT rie Wace Bee es tA Re tN a, s ‘6 RWKUMATIOM Sone MUSCLES vooTHAchn Rub It On Has No Yhsagreeable Odor IT }IT WILL Nor BLIsTER Will Not Stain the Clothes Ruditin THE NEW 25e SIZE BOTTLE Will give all @ chance to buy the genuine rather than some inferior article, Reg. 0. 8 Pek OFt, America’s Finest RYE WHISKEY HAND MADE SOUR MASH STRAIGHT PURE RYE MADE IN KENTUCKY, v. Ss. A. H. B. Kirk & Co., New York, N. Y. SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY MORNING WONDE! uxated Iron to Make New Age of|. Beautiful Women and Vigorous Iron Men: | Say Well-Known Physicians—Quickly Puts Roses Into the Cheeks of Women and Most Astonishing Youthful Power Into the Veins of Men—It Often Increases the Strength and Endurance of Delicate, Nervous, “Run-Down” Folks 200 Per Cent. in Two Weeks’ Time. ms ‘v % \ latipes. Rearly all in, Now, at fifty, @ miracle of vitality and his face beaming with the buoyaney of youth, Iron ts absolutely easiry to enable your blood to change food into living tlasue, Without It matte much or what you ent food you without doing you don't get strength out of it, and ag & conseque you become weak, palo and sickly loki Just like a plant trying to grow In & @eficient in tron. Lf you not strong or well, you owe It to yourself to m following test: See how long you © or how tar you walk pout > Ing titel. Noat take tw five-grain tab lots of ordinary nuxated Jrom three tines per day after menia for two Ww Then test your strength again and #ee how much you have gained. 1 have seen dozens of hervous, run-down people who were All fall (ho While double tholr atrength and rance and entirely rid theinaelygs of all ptoms of dyspepila, Mver and other troubles in from ten to fourteen days’ time i} comene son ets semeteermy arrears oy A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY WHICH PROMISES TO MARK A NEW ERA IN MEDICAL SCIENCE. , ly by taking tron in the proper form. duty not to mention tt, T have taken tt my thle, after they had in somo caves self and given tt to my patients with mor And been doctoring for months without obtain: |surprising and watisfactory results, An ing any benefit, But don't take the old|thoso who wish quickly to increase the: forma of reduced fron, iron acetate or|swength, power and endurance will fing Uncture of tron simply to eave a few cents, |it a most remarkable and wonderfully ef ‘The tron demand by Mow Nature for | fective re the red doloring ter In the blood of Y le prescribed take iron in & form that be a Lotne any good, otherwise it may prove work than useless, Many an athlete and pi Dhywiolana bot the older in tnorganio, Assimilated. does ‘bot tn; fighter has won th jay simply bec ho know tho seeret of great utrengtn and | iis "ed trae Maree, gh endurance and filled his blood with tron | th henry Of indigestion as to before he went isto the affray, while nie, pua-dewe e TY many another has gone down to inglorious much great contkiency in putal defeat simply for tho ta Ff S,fortelt, $100.00 to any char Dr, Sehuyler ©, Jaq nor New bo woo’ lacks “iron. ant tpcnwes York phywictan, ave mover be> y 200 ber cau, oF vee fn four weeks? tore given out any med’ information of they have 90 serious organic advice for publication, ae I ordinarily do iw offer to refund your money if not ein it, But in th "dase Ulmer Teta dloponaed iy ated Irom I feel I would be druggiste,—Adr, ‘ me } eC i +) Wy

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