Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
An Aluminum Measuring Cup Also Dessert Molds | > B.M.BOWE —- — ™ | TODAY THE SEATTLE STAR—TU: World 'COPYRIGHTT1919.4 BY LITTLE? BROWNGCO: “He's neighborly, jbrought you her you ought te | horse | “I-t am_ friendly wished I could ¢ mother nong the anyway. Ho Don't you think be as friendly as your honey? } I—I always to see you. But doesna visit much neighbors; she—she's al-| | mother ways buay I don’t visit much myself,” said Send us two trade-marks from Jiffy-Jell packages—the @ circle trade-marks on the front. That wih Geetify thet you use Jiffy-Jell The flavors come in liquid | form, in bottles. They are juices of crushed fruit concentrated Jiffy-. flavor. 1 has a wealth of fruit | We use half a pineapple, | for instance, to flavor a pint des- sert. The Pineapples are crushed in Hawaii—fruit too ripe to ship. We will mail you this half-pint cup. It is an exact cup for use with any recipe. And two fillings with water dissolve one package tof Jiffy-Jell exactly right. 11 Other Molds fith the Jiffy-Cup we will send you pictures of eleven other molds — dessert and salad molds. All those molds are sent free to users of Jiffy-Jel! It is real fruit, not mere flavor, that folks like and need. Serve It Often People need fruit daily. Jiffy Jell supplies it at a trifling cost, and you make it in an instant | A delicious serving of rare fruit-flavored des- sert costs you less than small | apple. | We want you | |to have them. We want Jiffy - Jel! served attrac. tively. It’s Real Fruit Jiffy-Jell means ja real-fruit des- sert. Itis not like the old-style ge!- tine dainties one often times Serve it —three | when people need | it. Andevery serv- ing seems like a| fruit-time dainty. | Cut out this cup | offer so won't forget. Ten Flavors in Glass A Bottle in Each Package Cherry Loganberry Pineapple Coffee you { Jiffy Dessert Co., MAIL ' Waukesha, Wis. THIS H Tenclose 2@)trade-marks for the Jiffy-Cup. | § Ifyou enclose 7@ trade-marks wewillalso | end the set of 6 Individual Dessert Molds Aanlndividual Dessert Mold— six toaset. Also made in pint ize and h oh . 5 pe. § : trade-marks for the set of six = A Single Application Good Health for You Banishes Every Hair Dr.Carter’s K. & B. Tea Coste but Little and You Can Make a Whole Lot From One Package (The Modern Beauty) can easily remove able, without possible in Make a@ paste with | water, | Here is how and quickly [hairy growths jury to the skin some powdered delatone and |apply to hairy surface and after 2 or because they have found out that for /3 minutes rub off, wash the skin and liver, stomach and bowels and to the hairs are gone. This is a pain purify the blood there is nothing sur- less, inexpensive method and, except. | er, safer or better. The little tots|ing where the growth is unusually| just love it. | thick, a single application ts enough. | =e —— You should, however, be careful to — lget genuine delatone. any wom object ' More people are drinking Dr. Car- \ ter's K. & B. Tea than ever before, | How Present Methods Sap the Iron From the Blood--- @ Causing Weak Nerves and Lack of Physical Strength omar Increase in Iron Deficiency Among i, and Women of Today Leads Physicians Below to Explain Why They Now Prescribe Tron—Nuxated Iron—to Help Build : Weak, Nervous, Run-Down People by Them More RED BLOOD, STRENGTH, AND ENDURANCE "Nuxated Iron is Now Being Used by Over 3,000,000 People Annually That the nervous and physical strain of present day has produced as never before an alarming defi ney of iron in the blood is the belief of Dr. T. Al jus Wallace, physician of many years’ experience id formerly of the Pritish Naval Medical Service, who plains below why iron is absolutely essential to the est development of physical and mental power. Dr. Wallace says: “In every age since the beginning if time people have fallen into certain modes of living ful to their physical welfare and it has remaine each case for Na- ture, Necessity or cience to provide ins that would help build renewed ealthandstrength jong theancient se foods and fout-loor life helped e rich, red h to replenish ithe wasted forces d preserve high jtandardsof health But this opportun ity for building up shealth is not open o thousands of nen and women in eivil life today ‘whose wearing tasks and fron im poverished foods fap their energy and vitality and make ‘them weak, anaemic ail rundown and ofte cause their blood to liter ally starve for want of ‘fron, A_BRID “Unless strength-giv- ing iron can be obtained from the nods we eat, it must be supplied In some form that is easily ab- sorbed and assimilated, and for thi urpose I always prescribe organic I e used with such that Tam ab effectivenc red bl pidity with which the weakness and general debilit us replaced by a trength and vi ed Tror a se reault ly convinced of for helping to build Strength and endurance Dr, H. B. Vail. £ the Baltir build me nervous exhaustion apparent 4 a few n three weeks it had lized my whole system and erb physical « what other up after and hr Oi i iat T out my experic d as a medi wn astonished at f Menta who have various dix cir deli fimply the res the blood, freauent Modern methods of cookery and the train of the present day hig . Time and again T hav organic iron-—-Nuxated Lrop surprised patients at the ra- fiv: ated Iron thre meals, for two your ‘strength again and see how weekly. Winter is |; lot - STRONG, VIGOROUS HEALTH Se ee Belle dryly, “But that ain't saying I can't be friendly, _Come on in, and we'll have some lemonade.” | Sheer astonishment brought Mary | Hope down from her horse, All her | | life she had taken it for granted that | lemonade was sacred to the Fourth | jof July plenics. She followed Bel |dumbly into the house, and once in side she remained dumb with awe at | what seemed to her to be the highest pinnacle of grandeur. Relle* brought lemonade. After that, she played onthe plano and sang. “You'd better run along home now. honey,” Belle said at last, when she had finished her eighth song. “I'd love to have you stay all night—but | I reckon there'd be trouble, I hope| you won't wait until your horse runs| away with you again. I want you to} come real soon, I'll teach you to play the plano, honey. You ought to learn, seeing you love it go.” | Lance happens NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY mt * (Continued From Our Last Issue.) “Well! Yuh traveling, or just goin’ somewhere?” a young volce yelled at . as sho went past the stable, “My horse he rinned away me!” screamed Mary Hope, her pi snapping as Rab slowed up and is wi CHAPTER UT A Master of Brands On the ¢ tails stopped you? When?} young for 1 away!” He rinned You musta bi riding when th away wi en purty t horse rinn nee came toward he grinning “Well, seeing your horse ain't going to rin no further, you might as well git down and stay awhile.” | I will not. I didna come to visit, | if you please,” | Mary Hop confusion ¢ spirit assy expanse known as Injun Creek, fifteen hundred head of cattle were milling restl Other} cattle came lowing, trotting now and then when the riders pressed close. | From Devil's Tooth they came, from} Lava Bed way, and from the rough! sandstone ridges of Mill Creek | d cattle, black cattle, spotted 's cheeks were hot but and dingy white, with bandy-legged, | jd not break her Scotch | fiat-bodied calves keeping close to| |their mothers. A dozen brands were | represented in that foregathering. The NL brand, of Tom Lorrigan, on most, with its various amendments hich differentiated the property of jother members of the family, sinc all of the Lorrigans owned {There was the NL Block wrath Lance re-| Lorrigan, the ANL, which was Al's ated, and Hope found the! 1, the DNL of Duke and the courage to wr her nose at him which belonged to Lance; mono. when he glanced her way m, deftly constructed All right for you, E lines | Lance called back, retaliating for saddle | Mary Hope's grimace by a kiss ‘om Lorri thrown brazenly in the expectation | gan rode to the round-up, lord of the| eing her fac ow redder; Which |range, Be him rode Al, and the it did immediately, “Careful of that them were talking while they hors he might rinned away again That'll do for you, young man'” ereupon Belle picked up a smal and threw it with such ac aim that Lance's hat went off Then she turned to Mary Hope, who was n with horror to the Jezebel's unorthodox met her out and ashamed any man willow back take a “Lante, you the girl of you! at devil, get alone, I'm Haven't you got after all the Get before I h acting! leave that club to Before I pastu 1 for st He's Mary tre bra LNL ams all of th le Lorrigan' | with the fewest possible His rifle sheathed ter under his thigh, in a two ¢ rode He ain't safe, I tell you,” Al was And you needn't ask me know, I kr it, that's all too damn 4 ole w ste cura pas n that wasn’t safe wouldn't Black Rim and makin’,” ‘Tom eon him find painte of offspring t} ma ae andl ¢ I've 1 Lance; he's an | ever heed when he Ii to nto the proving rig own, honey rest And don't r awful tease, ¢ a person. fence I—I don’t belleve I could stop. 1/4 tip trom me —I only came by because I-—my ‘Takes a kid to horse Mary Hope stammered and to head in at 4 Tom, blushed so red that her freckles were} «Now, what's eatin’ old Scotty gy JDouglas, do yuh reckon? That's “There's something T lke about) nim, ail right. I could tell him on this horse,” said Belle, running her | horseback ten mile off, He rides like white hand down the nose of Rab./4 yformon.” 1 Tom grunted. Al pulled up his horse and spurred off in the direc of the ranch Aleck Douglas then, riding stifflegged, his bony elbows Jerking awkwardly with the motion of his horse. That the Douglas wrath rode with him, Tom saw from the corner of his eye, and gave no sign Hello". said Tom casually You're quite a stranger.” Mister Lorrigan, ‘tis aboot a spot |ted yearlin’ that I've come to speak | with ye. I've found the hide of her in the brush beneath yon hill, and the brand is cut from ft. But T wad swear to the hide wi'out the brand. a yearlin’ I ken weel, Mister} Douglas rode alongside, close-set little eyes regarded | ms face ave no got the hide wi’ me, but n weel whaur {t lies, Mister Lor |rigan, and I thinkit so do you.” “Him'm. You'd ought to of brought it along.” Tom’s glance went out to ward the herd and the cattel lumber-| ing toward it far and near, ‘The Jrange is plumb lousy with spotted] | yearlings, Scotty. What do you ex |pect me to do about it?” The Douglas face worked spasmod ically before he spoke. “I ex t ye, Mr. Lorrigan, to pay for yon bea lI ken weel ye could name the mon he's in contended had my ey me. 1 can't your wrong.” watch nothing Well out You're pretty keen, d watch him dad where horse the for Cheyenne all right, but take ur . of Living |that stickit the knife in her throat.|along eatin’, I have na law, Mister Lorri-| hould pay for the] made fine doot. But ‘tis the gan, that a mon meat he consume: Meaning, of course, that you think | feeding Douglas meat to my out Don't you think you're kinda| Humpin’ hyenas! Ain't I got ough of my without Jrustlin’ off my neighbors? | Aye. Ye ha’ cattle, Mister Lorri gan: I ken weel ye should no’ be put it for bit meat—but I ker weel yon carlin’ was mine | ken campin’ there | | | | JAn I'v fit. hasty? |cattle e own to a wee spot ye've been about The downright of » Douglas wrath held Tom's hand tho, of a truth that hand trembled and crept backward, ‘Toward them clattered two riders hotly pursuing a lean, long-legged steer. Tom wheeled mechanically ind gave chase, leaving the Douglas GE OF SAFETY TO || rh to. wax hotter or to cool it It would, It was a harsh accusation that Aleck Douglas had made, Tom did not take the matter | differently as Douglas believed Duke and Mel W riding hard. ‘Tom just as he had roped shallow them from the level, waited. | them close ys ‘the a hide in the willows this side of Squaw Butte with the brand cut out; a spotted yearling, and he claims it’s his and he can swear to it without the brand I don’t know a darn thing about it Nobody does in this outfit; I'll stake ill I've got on that But he's on th fight mu as pD . f delicate, |side him when he's got his back up, | PeOL in two|He left the hide where he found it bine ss |Haze this steer and ride over there xated Tron ind see what there is to his talk. If} and so in Like a crashing avalance of mighty rocks the con- ditions of modern li are threatening the health and strength of many a man of toda It is for such men that Nuxated Iron serves as a bridge to safety by helping to build up red blood, power and endurance, on came upon ind thrown the steer nN draw that hid where Aleck Douglas He ‘Tom beckoned \“Old Douglas much you Nuxated | Iron will strength, | have gained inerea the and endurance ¢ rundown time, in many und a along ifacturers’ Note Land + ou find a hide cached in the willows, ; + | put it outa sight We don't want ‘Sy [any rustling scraps started on this Unilke |range, that’s bad medicine always. If '«|he can't produce any hide, can't, '°) start anything but talk—and talk's | oheap.” factory] A few hopes rae "y will ro- ‘tearing out lrunning strong, by Owl Drug Co. Bartell Drug Co., ‘6 Pharmacy aud all other druggists, hotly pursuing. eastul and 6 nat minutes later of the draw, the thre Duke they the steer riders still and Mel Swift DAY, FEBRUARY 38, 1920. The finest suits and overcoats you can buy are now offered to you at prices much less than their actual value---you can’t realize how low they really are until you see the merchandise. $4750 $57 56 7-59 are the prices that prevail now for Hart Schaffner & Marx finest suits and over- coats (formerly $55 to $85). 50 Get yours today Hart Schaffner & Marx rushed it on to the herd, and Tom dropped out of the race and came ‘ou can cut out that mercy talk, to where Douglo Scotty. And don't try to bring Belle was standing, Douglas’ wrath had|into this.” not vied, but had smoldered and They had waited for the wing of opposition to | m: n of the fan it to flame again. nameless estray from the Wyoming stiffly, “H Well, you still mournin’ over your | ranges, chanced to be holding herd outfit—been h yearlin’?” Tom called. “You| — ~ - ——___——_—- — - grief. Tom looked, cross “You can reach the nearest | knows about any herd. Cheyenne, a} by Squaw Butt Reduction in Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits and Overcoats Copyright 1919 Hart Schaffner & Mars Clothes Shop Corner Second Avenue and Seneca Street where the two rode up. At him|Maybe his word'll be worth some _ suspicion |ment sharpening his glance. ask this man what spotted he invited Doug- for the mo-|thing to yuh—I dunno, ask him.” (Continued in Our Next Issue.) You can he hide o When a man says he has forgotten stranger to the! about that little loan you just re about a month. turned—he is generally a liar. must have more time than you know what to do with today. Us, we have to work.” “If it's to the round-up ye're going, then I'll ride wi’ ye, Tam Lorrigan But I will no bandy worrds with ye. ‘Tis il I should descend to the le them that deespltefully use m “Deespitefuly!-why, humpin enas! Ain't I letting yuh live? o yuh reckon any other man could walk up to me and call me a thie} ind live long enough to take it back Just t you're old, and such a blamed fool you go around without a gun on yuh, I'm keepin’ my hands off you, But, damn yuh, I'll fight yuh now with thi The Douglas certainly, but th was unyielding And Their The famons scientist, Prof. Metchnikoff, de- clared that people generally become decrepit— feeble, aged—years and years before their time —that a person ought to live well over a hun- dred years. He proved that the toxic poisons which form in the intestines and cause auto- intoxication had more to do with shortening life than anything else. Clean out these poisons and there is no reason why human beings should not live, hale, hearty, etrong and vigor- ous, a hundred years or more, Buch is the doc- trine as taught iy the noted Metchnikoff. What causes those toxic poisons— where do they come from—how do they get into the in- testinal tract? Science gives us an answer in one word—Acid-Stomach. Acid-Stomach causes food fermentation; and it is this mass of partially digested, sour, fermenting food passing through the intestines that creates toxic poisons that are absorbed into the blood and carried into every part of the system, causing along train of diseases and making millions of men and women feeble, haggard and old looking before their time when by right they should be strong, healthy, in the prime of life. Common sense tells us that in order to stop those toxic poisons forming in the intestines, you must get rid of the Acid-Stomach; just as flickered un Douglas mouth ‘The law can no be Tam Lorrigan, 1 nd ye tae jail ken that wad be the for kill’ yon beastie in. the I came to sett the matter between nelghbors, and tae warn il doings on the I wadna see yer woman come cheatit no wush but y pena willow fair e to cease KO easy ta weel hae your ¢ range Ask for “HILL’S’ FIVE MILLION PEOPLE USED IT LAST YEAR HILL'S CASCARAR* P QUININE BROMIDE Standard cold remedy for 20 years | —in tablet form—sale, sure, P hours—relieves } Money back if it fails. ‘he genuine box has a top with Mr. picture. | At All Drug Stores} ip grip in 3 de Hill cid-Stomach Makes Millions Old Before Time entiste tell us that we must nid of acid- mouth to keep the teeth from decaying. When acid forms in the mouth it eats right through the hard enamel of the teeth. Imagine, then, the {ll effects of Acid-Stomach to the entire system! A modern way has been found of ig rid of Acid-Stomach so quickly, naturally, easily, that it seems almost unbelievable, This remedy is called EATONIC, a com- ressed tablet that you eat like a bit of candy, EATONIC leaves the stomach sweet, cool and strong, aids aigaasion, and assimilation and so helps you get full strength out of every month- ful of ‘foo rm eat. In cases of indigestion, heartburn, bloat, belching, gassy, sour stom- ach, food-repeating and that miserable puffed up feeling after eating, EATONIC affords al- most instant relief. Twenty-five thousand druggists sell and guarantee EATONIC, If it fails to please you your money will be cheerfully refunded. ~