Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 26 Dec 1918, p. 6

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p> Vi ie , Page Six MRS. J. W. WILLIAMS GAINS 25 POUNDS Health So Bad Before Taking Tanlac Don't See Now How She Lived. "A little less than two months ago I began taking Tanlae and since that time I have actually gained twen was the statement made by Mrs. J. W. Williams, of 659 Ureus St. Seattle, Wash, recent. ¥ "My heallb has been very poor for many years," she continued, "but my condition has been 40 bad during the past two or three years that I really don't see how T lived. 1 suffered most all the time with fearful headaches and awful pains in my 'back and, in fact, I was racked with pain all over, 1 lust my appetite, and my nerves became so shattered that 1 bardly knew what sleep was. When ty husband Jost his sight my duties, of course, beeame Copyright, 1918, by (Continued from Inst week) "But it didn't happen," she protested. Ab! I forgot that," he acknowledged. "Still, I was prepared.' 1 had-the revolver all right. But, os you say, it didn't hap- pen, I made my way to the chapel door, 'let_myself in, found our friend lying in a 'half-comatose state upon one of the horrible {blue plush Henry sofas, in the shadow of | horrible deal pulpit. I gathered thut he jhad been left there to reflect upon his jsins. 'There was a bottle of remarkably fine jbrandy within reach, which I tested, und with which I dosed our friend here. I then cut away his bonds, arm in arm we walked |down the aisle, I locked up the place, threw | the key away, kicked my shins half--doren times crossing that disgusting little plot of land, climbed boldly to the top of the wall, The Pawns Count By E. Phillips Oppenheim Serial Publication rights secured by The Examiner, through special arrangement with owners of copyright. doubly hard, and my health be- | and behold!" . img bad already, I kept going |, Pamela smiled upon him in congratula- down under the strain, Tdi] [fashions i ot am wpatte yihing 1 could tu keep out of , eould: t Of | glad that I telephoned to you. bed, but finally got to where 1)" You showed « sound discretion," be a was just up, and down--would sit | mitted up one day and be in bed the| "If be had not been lame," she con next--and | even had to give up | fessed, "I should have sent to Captain Lol my housework because 1 was so , derness." weak. Every day was just another |. "That would bave been a great mistake," day of suffering and misery for; Lutchester assured her. "Holderness ie 2 me." 9 good fellow but devoid of imagination, He TT eeAL tis j ix great on constituted authority. He would went down froin one HUn~ shave probably marched up with » equal of dred and forty pounds to less than heavy-footed policemen--and found noth. | a hundred, and was just a frame ing with scareely strength to move! "Yet I must confess,"" Pamela persisted, around. [ finally made up my with a frankness unaccountable even to mind from what I read about! herself, "that if T could have thought of Tanlaec ty try it and | have cer. |#9¥ one else T should never have telephoned tainly found it wonderful. 1 now 2 why not?" Feat one hundre and twenty "Because 1 should not have classified you ive pounds and if anyone could gs being of the adventurous type,"" she de feel like a new person I do. My' clared. appetite is splendid and [am just! Lutchester looked injured. building up every day. My nerves | "After all,"" he protested; "that is not are in) good condition, TF have | my fault, That is due to your singular lack gotten rid of all my pain and now | of pereeption, However, I am able to re- T sleep like a child every. nixht, |". the compliment. 1, for my part, Thave gained so much-in Strength ; ould have thought that you were more Nee interested in the fashions than paying ex already that T can do all My |ceedingly rash visits to orientals and. de. housework without any trouble, | generate negroes." | and I have been benefited much that Tam glad to recom. |may untlerstand one another better mend Tanlac to ev hody. | He met her gaze with o certain serious: Tanlae is sold in Barrie hy | Aes ' Geo. Monkmag, in Orillia by M.| "1 hope that we may," he said ; Set DS S| For some reason they were both silent H. Gooke & Co. in Elinvale by W. | ioe y moment. Her tine had changed "Perhaps some day," she remarked, "we J. MeGuire, in Lefroy by G. R./for a moment. Her tone Ardill, in Stayner by No BL West.) Vay are cures' she asked, "that you | in Cookstown by W. G. Macka: do not mind my leaving the rest of this in Waubaushene by Georgian fuir in your hands' There are reus Lumber Co., Ltd. in) Port Me-| which T cannot tell you of just now, whieh Nicoll by P. H, Beattie, in Allis- | muke me anxious not to appear in it at, ton by F. B, Schell, in Lisly by| 1 sceept the charge as 4 privilege," be assented, "We are within a few yards of my rooms now. [ promise you that 1 Robt. E. Little, in Gilford) by James A. Blain, in Tottenham by 5 'ine ' fs will look after Captain Gruham and adviae Chas, A. Weaver, in Penetans-|him ax to the proper course for him to | uishene by Chas. A, Nettleton, ! pureue in Hawkestone by Thos. A. Stone,} Ths car came to a standstill in Hillsdale Jy ard Rumble, | "This, then." she suid, holding out her in Coldwater by Millard, in| hand willbe aout by for the present" | Midlane Se, i fe held her fingers for u moment with-- bl te fe i Jn re lout reply, Quite suddenly she decided "hut | by Chantler BR hy T. Hill, in Collings . in Belle fo. in ML. St. Lonis | he inquired, Peters & Son, in Moon- He knows." she answered with sud:en punphell. in Strand oe xed him. Then he lifted Graham, who | in Craighurst |i. half asleen, half unconscious, to_ his ond sisted him from the car.' | vad by Jury | j Ewart by A "Where shall T tell the man to got)?" by J . and in Vie- | taciturnity " toria Harbor b W. Brown,--| "Wherever it muy be, theu,"" he replied, "hon voyage!" Advertisement. CHAPTER VI It was sbout half-an-hour later when ee ee -- I {Sandy Graham opened his eyes and began | to feel the life once more in his veins. He Was seated in the most comfortable easy- chair of John Lutchester's bachelor sitti ag- 7 room. By his side was a coffee equipage ands decanter of brandy. His head still throbbed, and his bones ached, but his mind was beginning to grow clearer, Lut stren: fhester, who hadi been seated at the wricing Kly help to strengthen cir: oul ibe char 6 Gt e digestion, es res tho [ound ot his gue' movement -- iver, regulate els, "Feeling better, eh?" be asked. i t bab "ST 'mall right now," was the somewhat and improve the healt') shaky reply. "Got a head like a turnip by working with nature. | ind a tongue like s lime-kiln, but I'm he- ginning to feel myself." "How's your memory Largest Sale of Medicine in "Bold everywhere: ta bases Sse" NNR does it by improving and elimination --- the logical way. , Relieve Your For 25c. NR Today-- Relief or No Pay are three vital procetsos of | rheumatic, Polson fs allowed to re- existence--th: estion o} A Puman icexteaction. of 'nourishment | Think of this It explains the suc- from it and the elimination of the | cess of Nature's Remedy (NR Tab- waste, lets) in iy, Ww anythis interfere with these proceaseny tite enen be interrupted or improperly carried on, and sickness, it some kind follows, Ege. Gh eae ae aie m naar Satern : "sR '(NR Tablets) | is 'Fecommended' by, Little, Brown & Co. "Hasy. Let me see... J My God, I've been robbed, haven't 1!" "So I imagine," Lutchester replied. "You rather asked for it, didn't you'?" Graham moved 'ugeasily in his place. He hed suddenly the feeling of being buck at echool-- and in the presence of the head- master. / "T suppose I did in « way," he admitted, "bat at Henry'ss-why, I've always looked upon the plsce as a club more than any- thing elee." "Tam afraid that I can't agree with you there," Lutehester observed. "I should consider Henry's a remarkably cosmop)li- 'tan restaurant, where a man in your posi- tion should exercise more than even ordin ery restraint,"' "T suppose I was wrong," Graham mut~ tered, "but I had been working for sbout ten hours on end, and then rushed up to London in the car to try and keep my np: pointment with Holderness." "'Stop anywhere on the way?" "We hed a few drinks," Graham con: fessed. "I was so done up. Perhaps I had more thon I meant to, However, it's uo use bothering sbout that now. I've bien robbed, and that's all there is about it. Could 'we get on to Scotland Yard fro: here?" "We could, but I don't think we will," Lutchester replied Grvham was puzzb<i, "Why not!" be demanded. 'That 'orm- ula was the most wonderful thing that wax ever put together, and the whole thing's so simple. I've been afraid every second that aome one else might stumble upon it." "It is without doubt a great loss," Lut- chester admitted. "'All the same, 1 don't fancy that it's w Scotland Yard' busines exactly, Have you any idea who rovhed you?" Graham paused to think. His eyes -rre still troubled and uncertain "Ive coming buck to me," he muttered. 'I remember that beastly barn of ach el ere were Jules, and that musician fel- low, and the big American, He emptied my pockets... Why, of course, I remember how angry be wax... . My pocketbook was gone! They left me alone to write out the formula agsin, and then you came How on earth did you tumble on my being there, Lutchester ?"" "Tt was Mise Pamela Van Tey! whom you must thank, chester told him, "not me, It seems she knew more about Henry's than any of us. She'd come up against some of the crew in Berlin, and she guessed thoy were holding you for that formula. She got the key out of one of those men and then telephoned to mie for my help." And T never even thanked her," Gra- hom murmured weakly There was a moment's silence The re of his y incomplete chair, gripping the sides of it His eyes were large with reminiscent trouble. pocketbook had gone when hey | he muttered "Are you sure that you hud it with yeu when you cume to Henry's?" Lutchester inquired "Absolutely certain." "Do you think you can remember now what happened when you went upstairs?" "T reached the lavatory oll right--you were with me then, weren't you!" Gra. ham said reflectively. "I hung while T washed, but there wax in the room. 'Then you went downstairs and I brushed my hair and just stopped to light @ cigarette, You know that on the right-hand side of the landing there is a]. room where the musicians change. Joseph, that black devil, was standing in the door- way. He grinned as I came into -ight 'Lady wants to speak to you for a moment, Captain Graham,' he said, Well, you know how harmless the fellow looks--just 8 good- natured, smiling nigger. I never dreamed of anything wrong. As a matter of fact, U thought that Peggy Vincent--that's u young lady I often go to Henry's with--wanted to have « word with me before I joined our party. I stepped. inside the room, und that's just about all I can remember. It that other brute--Hussan, I think it was-- held something over my face." * Graham explained, "I found that I was sort of with a spring lock, and you'd never notice it, searching the room." you recovered consciousness ?"" fessed, "but I have a sort of fancy I can't altogether get rid of that there was a wo- man about." Lutchester looked at the end of the cig- arette he had just lit, : "4" woman?" be repeated. 'That's queer."" . T can't remember anything definitely until I woke up in that chapel," Graham continued, "but when they searched me and found that the pocketbook had gone, Fischer, the big American, muttered rome women's name, I was queer just at the moment, but it sounded very much to me like Miss Van Teyl's, He 'rang her up on the telephone." "Did they suspect Miss Van Tevl, then, of baving taken your pocketbook? Graham shook his head. i "T lost the drift of things just then, he admitted. "She couldn't have'done, in any case. Forgive me, but aren't we wast- ing time, Mr. Lutehester? We must do something. Couldn't you ring up Scotlad®, Yard now?" : 1 "T certainly could,"' Lutchester assented, "'but, a8 I told you just now, I don't think | that T will." =) ite) i we) VE Henry's," You can foretell; the future You say "The man who could fortell illness would make a for- tune!"' Of course no man can-- in the sense you mean. But you san tell pretty accurately what to expect your own body to do. How? Get this simple physiology: Your body machine has to be repaired. It also must have fuel to supply heatand energy. Your food supplies both repair material and fuel. But a furnace always produces ashes and clinkers. If these accumulate, the furnace becomes clogged and cannot work properly. If your bowels become clogged. -- you suffer from constipation. Perhaps you hurry to work or play and neglect to obey Nature's call. Waste matter stagnates in the bowels. You go right on eat- ing, drinking, working. What happens? The consipation be- comes established. Waste matter undergoes decay, fermentation and germ action. Poisons are formed, absorbed, carried. all over the body. They attack the weakest part of you first. Then you know you're sick, /n reality you've been getting sick sinee wou missed that first movement. Warning + Be bearin Insist on Nuj If you want to. keep well--wholly well, a the time, so that you're on your toes every day, remove the waste. Many people take pills, castor oil, purgative mineral waters to force the bowels to act. These act, but they irritate, tire out the intestinal muscles, make the trouble worse. Others take "salts" which attract water to the intestines and flush the bowels--about as gently asa firehose. A re-action follows that makestheintestinesdryerthanever and aggravates the constipation. You needn't do this and weaken your system just because all of your ancestors did. The Nujol Treatment moves the waste regularly, and easily. It is @ purely mechanical process, ab- solutely harmless, based on a simple principle--that you can move a softened mass out of a tube more easily than a hard, dry one. It doesn't gripe--you won't know you have taken anything until afttr a few days your bowels move at the regular hour. It makes you "regular as clockwork."' Don't try to foretell illness. Fore- stallit. Don't wait until you are sick. Keep well now. Your druggist has Nujol. is sold in sealed bottles g the Nujol Trade Mark. You may suffer from substitutes. Nujol TRADE MARK For Constipation Nujol Laboratories STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY) New York Interesting Interature will be mailed Lreg om application 'Charles Gyde & Som, U.S.A. gation te Cemadian Salling Agent, Graham protested. "He is an enemy. ' German--sheltering himself under his Am- cupboard' place, behind the Idekers these ering ; fellows have for their clothes. It opens | rican naturalisation, Surely we're guing jut there's that American fellow--Fis- must have been jolly quick. His arm rhot | por American, round my neck, the door was closed, and | tingte Adee nme, He: was: the "Just 80," Lutchester murmured "But that room was searched," Lutches. | ovghtfully,, "However, be baan't got "But he planned the attack upon me, "He's a wrong 'un, of course," Lutches- F Peita F 3 "Who was the first person you saw when | fF, fimiMed, "but be haxn't got aa "But we must do something!" Graham | ee = was wrinkled in the | oontinued, his anger rising as his strength | fort to remember. is of its" he con-|Rtumed. | "Why, the place is a perfect cc den of conspirators! I expect Ferrani . Arrive CANADIAN 1 a CANADIAN PACIFIC TORONTO--WINNIPEG--- VANCOUVER Arrive Vancouver 10.05 p.m. (Fourth Day) ¢ Compartment Observation Cars, Standard and Tourist Sleepin, irst. class Coaches, Colonist Cars, Toronto to Vancouver. Ping Cars, Dining Car, Firs' A round-trip ticket to the Pacific Coast via. the "Oanadian Pacific" diversity of routes without additional charge. i fie 'permite. x wise h "Royal Atexandra," Winnipeg; 'Vanoouyer Hotel," Vancouver; "Empress H eee - Passengers for Dallfornia-shautd! arrange thelrtrip to th Pacific Rook! { . Parstoutare fem: Canadiens Papi Ticket, Agent, ewe i. HOWARD. ties fae ene himself is in it, and there's that other|one of them has the formula, Not one of maitre de hotel, Jules, and those black | them even knows where it is.' beasts, Joseph and Hassan, besides "But the sttuck upon me?" is cher. "My God, they sball pay for this!" | yo. sted for all you got," Lutch Lutehester nodded. told him eurtly, "and perhaps a little "I dare cay they will," he admitted, | more." . "but not in the way you are thinking of."'| 'The first tinge of color came back to Graham bslf rose to his feet. | Graham's cheeks. His eyes flashed with "Look here,"' he said, "I'm sane enongh ; ®"8°"- sigs '4 y, axen'h T. snd 7 |. 'Perhaps I did," he admitted, "but that Zev, weal J, and in say proper sintee! | «04 alter thy fect that Tin going ts You are not going to suggest that we " don't turn the police on to that damned have some of my own back out of them.' Taco?" Lutchester crossed his legs and turned 'I certainly am," was the brief reply, |round in his chair, For the first time he Graham was aghast. directly faced his visitor. His tone, though "What do you mean to do, then?" not unkindly, was imperative. "Leave them alone for the present. Not (To, be continued) CANADIAN PACIFIC DAILY TRAIN SERVICE Leave Toronto 7 p.m. Winnipeg 12.10 p.m. (Second Day) 'THROUGH EQUIPMENT PAOIFIO HOTELS IN WESTERN CANADA OPEN ALL THE YEAR ROUND allisern Hotel," Gall i i a Ropes] pose '

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