Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 257, 14 September 1916 — Page 7
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, SEPT. 14, 1916
PAGK SEVEN
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Read this story In the Palladium , and tee it at the Palace. " ' ' "This dropped from her throat when you tore her cape free this morning. Take that to her. Tell her you'd found tt after the left. She'll feel sorry for ' you. In fact, you're got to make her feel sorry for you. You'd better try a faint, when you're talking to her, and tell her you haven't eaten for a couple of days. "Shell fry' to 'give you money. But you must tell her that, your mothr Is. worse off than Jrou are." i; . !, ""' "But s'posin 8be wont swallow that sob 8tuff?w - ; ; . V;- . "It's up to you to make her. And the best way. to get her out here Is to persuade her to fill a basket' of food and wine and bring It back, with' her tn her own car. She knows you belong to the factory settlement here," and she won't be suspicious. You do your work right, and youll hare her here tomorrow night."'' - " The youthful eyes which life had already left hard studied the sinister figure in the moonlight.' 1 "And when I. get her out to that slulceroom, what're you goln' to do with her?" - The one-armed man laughed Quietly. "That'a something4 strictly between her and mej" was his calmly enunciated reply as he stepped slowly back and disappeared through the' shrubbery beside the O'Mara cottage. . The girl stood staring after him without moving. ' So intently did she look after that vanishing figure that she did &ot observe a second figure, ven more mysterious than the first, as it slipped out of the shadows and stepped quietly up beside her. : She turned with a start and stared vp at the stranger confronting her. And It did not add to her peace of mind to discover that this stranger wore a mask over his face. "What d you want here?" was her brusque demand. ' "I'm looking for a young girl who happens to be in trouble," was the quietly spoken reply. . "Then I guess youll have to keep on travelin'," announced Peggy as she swung up the broken steps with assumed nonchalance, strode in through the door, and shut It after her. She stood there for several minutes before venturing to move. Then she silently reopened the door and stared out, to make sure that her visitor had taken his departure. Instead of ' catching sight 'of the masked figure, however, she was a little startled to see the one-armed man push his way in through the bushes and once more creep to the door where she stood. "What did that man want?" quickly demanded the newcomer. "I didn't wait to ask him," was the girl's retort "No, I guess this isn't a time for waiting," ruminated the other aloud. "And for that reason well have to speed up that bargain of ours, and put the thing through tonight!" "Tonight?" echoed the girl In a whisper of alarm. "Do you want to save your father?" "I'll bring 'er," she announced with grim determination. "I'll bring her, even though I have to throw a string o' fits to start her on the way!" The Drums of Death. It was not until Margery Golden was seated in the suede-upholstered landaulet that she found time to question the expediency of her midnight mission. Yet as she looked at the unhappy and hollow-eyed girl at her side she felt sure that her Journey, odd as it had at first seemed to her, could not be altogether a mistake. The girl was honest, of that there could be no question, for she had Journeyed many long miles to restore a trivial bit of Jewelry to its owner. She had also refused to accept money. She had even seemed unwilling, after Margery bad packed a large motor hamper with Jelly and . milk and potted meats, to have that luxurious young lady venture so far a-fleld at such an hour of the night. But Margery felt that it was a case where the loss of time might possibly mean the loss of a life, and she .was glad, as they went humming out past the thinning lights of the city's remotest suburbs, that she had not hesitated to do what she could to repay her debt to the daughter of Dan O'Mara. "Why are we stopping at the Applewaithe works?" she asked as the car drew up beside the unllghted roadside. "Because me mother's here for the night," explained the wistful-eyed girl as she clambered down from the car, grateful for the gloom that already surrounded her. "You see, ma'am, they put us out o' the house this mornln'! So pop got the watchman here to let me motler sleep in one o' the .basement rooms." "Will your father be here?" Inquired the somewhat bewildered young woman at her heels. "I can get 'im, ma'am," explained the girl as she put down the hamper, "if you'll Just step in through that door." "But wholl take me to where your FOR THE BLOOD At All Drug stores
Author V -THE OCCAS10NArOF. FENDER.'TME WIRE TAPPERSf "GUN RUNNERS, ETC "NooeliieJfrom THE PATH E PHOTO PLAY OF THE SAME NAME
mother is?" asked Margery, gathering up bet skirts as she glanced into the dingy storeroom feebly lighted by its One dingy electric bulb. " "" " "I'll be back in a minute, ma'am, ' the girl replied, only too glad of any reasonable excuse, for disappearing. Margery, in the meantime, peered doubtfully about the somber building In which she found herself so unexpectedly a visitor.' Along one side of the room in which she stood she could make "out ''dark' masses of dye wood piled as high as her head.' Beside this she saw;: In the uncertain light, '' ah open pit filled with water. Into one side of this pit ran a cement-walled sluiceway stained almost black,' with a Watergate set in the upper part of Its 'channel. The opening -In the 'far side of the pit, which was guarded by a heavy iron grill as big as a park gate, led into -high-walled cavern across which stretched a -number of huge steel drums. ' Set in these drums were rows of knife-edged cleavers." ' The polished surfaces of these great blades of steel shone ominously in the half-light. ' ' " Margery was still staring at the great drums bristling with cleavers when with a suddenness that startjed her the electric lights were thrown on across the roof of 'the chamber. She wheeled about quickly to discover the cause for this. As she did so, ah involuntary gasp escaped from' her lips. For standing beside the' door, with his finger still on the switch, the Iron Claw himself confronted her. - "Why are you afraid of me?" he confidently purred. For the girl drew slowly away while he as slowly followed after' her, step by step. Then, with a movement that was feline In Its quickness, he flung out -an arm and seized her. "Then he turned her deliberately about until she faced the blackwalled sluiceway. But the girl shrank back. "Don't be afraid of it, my dear," he mocked as he led her forcibly; step by step, to the Up of the channel through which the mill water was curling and eddying. "In fact, I want you to look at it closely and understand 'it fully. It's 1 wonderful, wonderful for many reasons. At the end of this sluice, you see, is a log mangle. I have seen those knives shred a six-inch timber in.le33 than a minute's time." ' He turned and stared down at the white-faced girl, drinking to the full the1 dizzy wine of her terror, wringing a: voluptuous, delight out of her wordless gape of horror. Then the look on his face suddenly altered, and' he wheeled about, still clutching the girl close to his side. He stood staring at the door which he had locked but a minute before. And his face suddenly hardened as he saw the heavy iron latch of that door move. - - Margery, following his glance, also watched that door.' And when she heard the thump of a heavy timber on its panels a new hope sped through her. That hope equipped her with fresh strength. It prompted her to struggle against the Iron Claw with the utmost power of her desperate young body. But her enemy, for all her efforts, was too much for her. Foot by foot he forced her back towards the open sluiceway. Then, with a muttered gasp of finality and a sudden upward heave of his shoulders, he flung the girl headlong into the water. As he did so the door burst open. For the heavy-hearted Peggy O'Mara, after slipping guiltily away from the slulceroom where she had left her quite unsuspecting victim, awakened for the first time to the full enormity of her offense. As she stood there in the darkness, staring back at the dark mass of the factory walls, the aches of remorse lay heavy on her young heart. She was standing there, with tears of helplessness in her eyes, when a figure stepped up to her. She would have fled, incontinently, at the approach of that intruder. But the stranger held her with a gently restraining hand. And as she peered up at his face she saw that it was the man in the laughing mask. "The righting of wrongs is a part of my business in life. Can I help you?" The. girl hesitated. To Be Continued. China yearly imports $4,000,000 worth of various kinds of leather. Net f &
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"Everything is being done that can be of any use' now," the other man observed hurriedly. "Do I understand, Mr. Blaine, that Miss Lawton has definitely retained you on this case?" Blaine nodded, and Mallowe turned to Anita. fsv t : 'V.''"Really, my dear, you should have consulted me, or some other of your father's old friends, before taking such a -step! he expostulated. "It will only bring added notoriety and trouble to you. I do not mean to underestimate Mr. Blaine's marvelous ability,1 which is recognized everywhere, but even he can scarcely succeed in locating Mr. Hamilton where we, with all the resources at' 6Ur command,'' have failed: Mark(my words, i my' dear Anita; ft, Ramon Hamilton Returns, It will be. voluntarily of his own free will. Until unless he so decides, you will nev.T see him'. tt is too "bad Co have "summoned Mr. Blaine-here on a useless errand, but I am. evjre he qujte understands the' sjtuation now.." :i , ' l, ' 'I do, responded ' the detective qnietly;-"I have accepted the" ease." "But surely you will withdraw?" The older-man's voice rose eholerically. "Miss Lawton is a mere girl, a minor, -In fact " - '. ' 1 "I am over eighteen, Mr. Mallowe," Interposed Anita quietly. - "Until your proper guardian is appointed by the courts,'! Mallowe cried, ! "you are nominally under my care, mine and other-of-your father's closest associates; ' This is a delicate mat ter to djscuss now, Mr. Blaine,"' he added, in calmer tones, turning to the detective, "but since this seems to be a business interview,: we must touch upon the question of finances;' I know that the i fee - you naturally require must be a largo one, "and I am in duty bound tb! tell you: that; Miss Lawton has; absolutely no' funds at her disposal to reimburse you for- your time and trouble.'--Whatever fortune she may be possessed of, she 1 cannot touch now." -- ' "Miss Lawton has already fully reimbursed me in advance," returned Henry Blaine calmly. ; "That question need cause you no further concern, Mr: Mallowe, nor ; heed you have any doubt as to my position In this matter. I'm on this: case, and I'm on j it to stay! I'm going -to' find Ramon Hamilton!"- ' : " "Paddington's on the run!" Ross, the operative, announced to Henry Blaine the next' morning, Jubilantly. "He! left his rooms about an hour after I got back on the job, and went to Carlis' office. He only stayed a short time, and came out looking as black as a thunder-cl6ud--I guess the interviewy whatever it was, didn't go his way. He went straight from there to Rocitamore, the promoter. ' I pretended an errand with Rockamore, too. and so got into the outer office. The heavy glass door was elbsed between, and I couldn't hear anything but a muffled growling from within, but they were both angry enough, all right. Once the stenographer went in and came out again almost immediately. ; AVMn' the "doSr Operied' to admit her, I ' heard Paddlngtbhfafr'y' shout: "'It's your 'own skin you're saving, you fbol,' as well as ' mine! ' If I'm caught, you all go! Carlis thinks he can bluff it, 'and Mallowe's' a superannuated, pig-headed old goat. ' Jie'll try to stand on his reputation, and cave in like a pricked balloon when the crash comes. I know his kind;1 I've hounded too many of 'em to the finish. But you're a man of sense, Rockamore, and you know you've got to help me out of this for your own sake. I tell you, some one's ou to the whole game, and they're just sitting back and waiting for the right moment to nab us. They hot only learn every move we make they anticipate them! It's" every man for himself, now, and I warn you that if I'm cornered in this' "'Hold your tongue!' Rockamore ordered. 'Cant you see-1' r "Then the door closed, and I could'nt hear any more. The voices calmed down to a rumble, and in about twenty minutes I could hear them approaching the door. I decided I couldn't wait any longer, and got outside Just in time to give Paddington a chance to pass me. He seemed in good humor, and I guess he got what he was after money, probably, for he went to his bank and put through a check. Then he returned to his rooms, and didn't show up again until late afternoon, when he went away up Belleair Avenue, to the rectory of the Church of St. James. He didn't go In-r-just talked With the sexton in the vestibule, and when he came down the Are You Looking Old? - Old age comes quick enough without inviting it. Some look bid at forty. That is because they neglect the liver and bowels. Keep your bowels regular and your liver healthy and you will not only feel - younger, but look younger When troubled with constipation or biliousness take Chamberlain's Tablets. They are intended especially for these ailments and are excellent. Easy to take and most agreeable in effect. Obtainable everywhere. Adv. Wusbaum
7n shocs ArcFit Feminine Fancies I NOW in Stock For any time, place or occasion I RcadyfOT YOUT I there is a Dorothy Dodd designed I Inspection at I to delight the women who appre- 9 en $4 Aft date footwear of character. Trim i ? 'Jft r aa fitting styles that lend to the cos- ?Pfl I tume that finishing touch so much JJ desired by feminine hearts. Jfi
Crevice
steps he looked dazed, as it he'd received a hard jolt of some sort. He couldn't have been trying to black-mail-the minister, too, could he?" "Hardly, Ross. Go on" Blaine responded. r "What did he do next?'1 ".Nothing. Just wentgibaefc to' his rooms' and stayed there; It seemed as if he was afraid to leave not so7mucn afraid to be' found, but ! as if he might miss' something, if he lef ti r He even had1 his dinner sent from a restaurant; near there. .Knowing him;' I might have known what it was he was wait ing ; for he's always ; chasing after some girl or other." i ' 1 - 'There was a woman in it, then?" asked the detective, quietly. A ' :": :' u 'You can befthere was very much in it,' sir I" ' the operative chuckled. "She came along while -I watched a tall, slim girl, plainly dressed In dark elothes,:but with an air to h,er that would ' make you look ' at ! her twice anywhere! ;;Sh hesitated and looked uncertainly about Ver," as if she -were unfamiliar 'with the place and a. little scary of her errand; but at last she made up her mind, and plunged in the vestibule, as if she was afraid she would lose her courage if she stopped to think." ' " ; '': ' ;''"r i: '"' "''i: "For a few minutes her shadow showed on the window-shades,' beside Paddington's. They stood close together," and' from their gestures, he seemed - to be : arguing or ' pleading, while she was drawing back: and refusing, or at least, holding out against him. . At last they fell Into a regular third-act clinch it was as good as a movie! After a moment she drew herself out of -his arms and they moved away from the window In a minute or two they came out of the house together, and I. tailed , them. They' walked slowly,' with' their hekds very closeV and t1 didn't 'Jareget-near enough to try to' hear- what they were discussing so earnestly. But where do you suppose he took her? ! To the Anita Lawton Club for Working-Girls! He left her at the entrance and went back to his own rooms, and he seemed to' be in' a queer mood "all the wayhappy and up in the air one minute, and down in the dumps the next. ! "He didn't stir out again fcjt night, but early this morning he went down to the office of the Holland-American line, and purchased two tickets, firstclass to Rotterdam; oh the Btunnhilde; sailing next Saturday, so I think we have the straight dope on him now. He means to skip with the girl." ' "Saturday two days off!" mused Blaine. "I think it's safe to give him his head until then,' but ' keep a close watch on him, Ross. . The purchase of those tickets may have been just a subterfuge oh his part to throw any possible shadow off the trail.' Did you ascertain' what name ' he took them under?" " " :" 1 1' J. Padelford and wife." ' . To Be Continued. HOLD CHILD'S FUNERAL EATON, 0.rSept:"14-The body of MHdre Daily, inf antdaughter- of Mr. an d 1 Mr s, uHarv ey 'Daily , of "T win "township was ' brought to Eaton Thursday and buried in Mound Hill cemetery. TAKE UP COLLEGE WORK NEW PARIS, O., Sept. 14. Emmett Harris and Frank Hawley and Miss Helen Reid left Tuesday for Oxford, O., to take up their college-work. All are graduates of the high school 1916 class. - Byron Kuth returned to Earlham for another year's work. r No class of people devotes as much time to beauty as do actresses, and naturally rtd class must be more careful to retain and develop their charms. Inquiry aiporig them' develops the in formation that In hair care they find it dangerous to shampoo with any makeshift hair cleanser. Instead they have studied to find the finest prepa ration made for shampooing and bring ing out the beauty of the hair. The majority of them say that to enjoy the best hair wash and scalp sttmu' lator that is known, get a package of canthrox from your druggistt 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 rapidly, with uniform color. Dandruff, excess oil and dirt are dissolved and entirely disappear. Your hair will be so fluffy that it will look much heavier than' it Is.' Its lustre and softness will also delight you, while the stimulated scalp gains the health which insures hair growth. Adv. : : : 219 NORTH 11TH ST. FOR SALE I Address: The MHter-Kemper Co. W Phone 3247-4447 J;j
4 . I Train Your Hair as an Actress Does 4 : .
ENTERTAIN LOCAL PEOPLE
NEW PARIS, Sept. 14. Mr. and Mrs. John Mar rinan . entertained Sunday, Mr.: and Mrs.. William Marrinan, Springfield,- Mr. and Mrs. Albert Brown and son. John, Richmond. Miss Katherine Smith, Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. 9 Frank . Thornbrough . and . Miss Smith of Hagerstown. Ind., were afternoon callers. " With the Reel; People "Tess of the Storm Country,", at the Murrette tonight and tomorrow. Tessibel Skinner, a wild, motherless little elf, lives with her father n a rude but on the shore of Cayuga Lake.' On account of the' sudden ' and regular squals on the lake, the vicinity is called the "Storm Country," while the poor and 'ignorant fisher-folk ? thereabout are generally known as "squatters." Tess is- one of these people, and adores her uncouth father, who lives by poaching and the illegal netting of fish.' One day he is found near the body of a murdered gamekeeper, with a rifle close by containing one empty chamber. Skinner s accused of the murder and convicted oh circumstantial evidence. '' ' - - ' AN EMBATTLED FAMILY. "I'm sorry to hear that you ana four wife'6 mother have had a falllnf out. Is the break in the relationship permanent?" -; ' "I'm afraid It isn't but the break it the furniture is." ' ' Pennsylvania Will plant black cherry trees in the state reserves to provide food for birds.; HOW THIN PEOPLE CAN PUT ON FLESH Thin men and women that big, hearty, filling dinner you ate last night. What became of all the fatproducing nourishment it contained? You : haven't gained in weight one ounce.- That food passed from your body like unburned coal 'through an open grate." The material was there, but your food doesnt work and stick; and the plain truth- fs ybu hardly get enough nourishment -from' your meals to pay for the cost of cooking. This is true of thin folks the world over. Your nutritive organs, your functions of assimilation, are probably sadly out of gear and need reconstruction. ' Cut out the foolish foods and funny sawdust -diets. Cut out everything but the meals you are eating and eat with every one of those a single Sargol tablet. In two weeks note the difference. Let the scales be the judge Five to eight good' solid pounds of healthy, "stay-there" fat may be the net result. Sargol aims to charge weak, stagnant blood with millions of fresh new red blood corpuscles to give the blood the carrying power to deliver every ounce of fat-making material in your food to every part of your body. Sargol, too, mixes with your food, to prepare it for the blood in an easily assimilated form. Thin people tell how they have gained all the way from 10 to 25 pounds a month while taking Sargol and say that the new flesh stays put. Sargol tablets are a careful combination of six of the best - assimilative elements known : to chemistry. They come 40 tablets to a package, are pleasant, harmless and inexpensive, and Clem Thistlethwaites 4 stores and all other good druggists in this vicinity sell them subject to an absolute guarantee of weight increase or money back as found in every large package. Adv. COMMISSIONERS' SALE OF REAL ESTATE. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order made by the Wayne Circuit court of Wayne county, Indiana, the undersigned as commissioner 1 in the cause of Myrtle Daugherty, et al., vs. James C. Haxton, in said court, will offer at public sale on the premises, oh Wednesday, October 4, 1916, at 2 o'clock p. m., the following described real estate, in Wayne county, Indiana, to-wit: The south half of the southwest quarter of section 25, township 18, range 12 east, except 2 acres, more or less, in the northwest corner thereof, and being all of said half quarter lying west of the Hagerstown and Winchester turnpike, leaving 78 acres more or less. Also 20 acres, more or less, off of the west end of the south half of the southeast quarter of said section 25,' township and range aforesaid. Also 5 acres, more or less, being all of the southeast quarter of section 26 in said township and range aforesaid, lying east of said Hagerstown and Winchester turnpike. Containing in all three tracts 103 acres, more or less. Terms of Sale: One-third cash, onethird in one year and one-third in two years from day of sale; the deferred payments to be secured by first mortgage ; on -said real estate, with six per cent interest from date, payable semiannually, evidenced by 'J promissory notes in usual bank form. Or the purchaser may k pay ' all cash on date of execution of deed." 1 ' - The German-American Trust and Savings Bank, Commissioner. ' Benjamin F. Harris, Attorney. ' ' " "" 'Sept.'7-14-2J. a Two Corner Lots, So. 9th . Good Business Lots - For Sale, $500.00 Address The Miller-Kemper Co. Phone 3247-4447.
BRYAN TRAILS HUGHES IN WEST
CHICAGO, Sept 14. William J. Bryan and Senator James Hamilton Lewis are going out on the trail of Charles Evans Hughe3. ' Announce ment was made today from Western Democratic 'headquarters here' that Bryan and Lewis will take the stump Monday through the West, and Northwest covering much the same territory as the Republican candidate. "Senator Lewis will begin in Minn
RINGS 1EA
Many women are compelled to lie down at frequent Intervals during the day. This, of course, is due to weakness, the forerunner of ills to follow."' At first there will be a great languor, especially in the ' morning, faintness, dizziness, weakness or sinking at the stomach. The' digestion becomes impaired and appetite is gone. Then comes palpitation of the heart, shortness of breath of any slight exertion, cold hands and feet, headaches and paleness, dark circles under the eyes, a dragging pain across the hips; the memory becomes poor; the disposition irritable and nervous, the least noise or unusual occurrence upsets the nerves. . Disease quickly destroys the complexion making it yellow or greenish looking, the cheeks become sunken and spots of a brownish hue appear on the skin. All these symptoms are caused by
The New Felts In all the popular colors and shapes are here at' $1.50 to $4.00 FELT CRUSHES, for School Wear; special at 50c each. ' '
39 NORTH
mON SALE
STARR RECORDS FOR OCTOBER Clear and full of expression, overflowing with the qualities of life, October Starr Records are fully characteristic of Starr excellence and are unsurpassed for tone-strength, tone richness and clearness of reproduction. BAND NUMBERS , The Starr Military Band, conducted by John C. Weber, plays "Are You From Dixie?" and "And They Called It Dixie Land," a good fox-trot and a lively one-step. Other good band numbers are "Blue Danube Waltz" by Strauss, "Romany" by Keiser, "Aida March" by Verdi and Von Suppe's "Light Cavalry Overature."
NOVELTY RECORDS The Hawaiian Medley "Kawaihan Waltz," arranged as a guitar duet and played by Louise and Ferera, is a selection full of bewitching fascination. Roy Parks, piano, Rossiter; drums and Goldberg, saxophone, make up a novelty musical combination that cannot be beat They have played Hirsch's "Bachelor Days" and "I Left Her on' the Beach at Honolulu," both fox-trots that are real musical treats. Parks and Rossiter, piano and drums, also play "Johnny Get a Girl" and "Everything in America Is Ragtime," two good one-steps. For autumnal dancing these pieces are unsurpassed. VOCAL RECORDINGS Asa special feature the nationally known Fisk University Jubilee Quartette sings "I Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray," "Shout All Over God's Heaven" and "Little David." These old negro folk-songs have been made famous everywhere by this organization and as recorded by the original singers the treat of hearing them is doubled. Inez Barbour, soprano, Metropolitan Opera House" sings "One Fine Day," in Italian from "Madame Butterfly" and "Annie Laurie," with all the feeling and beauty that could possibly be put into these beautiful songs. "Are You From Dixie" and "Loading Up the Mandy Lee" are offered by Harry Frankel, baritone, accompanied by Roy Parks on the piano, and there are many others of highest quality. - NEW GILLILAN RECORDS Strickland Gillilan's offering' for October is varied somewhat. His "Jumping at Conclusions" and "Traffic Cop Murphy" are brim-full of this foremost . American humorist's wit and fun and will be a treat for all. "Me an' Pap an' Mother" is in a more serious vein, but will nevertheless be as enjoyable. ' Come in and hear any of the Starr Records; you will like every one of them, and remember , You Get Better Value When You Buy Starr Records
The
Starr
Salesroom Tenth and Main
eapolis on September 18 and work west from there through South and North Dakota, Montana and reaching the Pacific coast on the 26th. He win return by the south-western route. Bryan will open In Reno, Nev, on Monday." ' .
M. E. PREACHER RETURNS NEW PARIS, ., Sept. 14. Rev. Frank F. McLaughlin, popular pastor of ' the New Paris and Gettysburg Methodist Episcopal churches was returned here for the coming year by the Conference held at Lima, O., Sept. 5-11. The church - has progressed much during the past year, and local members of the church and friends are glad to know of the assignment. poor circulation and an exhausting or wasting away of the nerve force. The blood becomes thin and, watery and the nerves lack 'strength. " - It has -been -admitted that all Ills peculiar to women, in most cases start in the stomach, that when digestion is good, the blood is good, the nerves, the organs are properly nourished and strength is the result : In hundreds of thousands of cases Tanlac has been the means of relieving the ills of women, because It gives strength and tone to the system. Tanlac is a tonic, prepared from roots, barks and flowers, gathered in many parts of the world. Testimonials from women who have used it say, "It has made me' a new woman," . "I feel healthy again," "I enjoy my housework," and - like expressions. Tanlac is now being' specially Introduced and explained in Richmond at Clem Thistlethwaite's five drug, stores. Adv. ' 8TH STREET
LTHY"
Piano
Co.
Richmond,' Indiana.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
