The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 29, 1920, Page 11

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CUT DOWN YOUR Coffee Expense Buy the Famous “The Quality Coffee of America” THE FIVE POUND CAN AND SAVE MONEY It Goes F asthe MM. J.BRANDENSTEIN & CO. Be Cota, 2 Catan’ ten, tle Hangs On 5 of a series of advertisements, bane by a ysician, explaining how certain’ diseases which passages—such as Preumonia, Influenza, Whoop- ieasies or even a long continued Cold—often leave This is No. competent pb: ns in an inflamed, congested state, thus affording « ble foothold for invading germs. And how Vick's Vapo- may be of value in this condition. cold is simply an inflam-|away from the congested on of ‘some part of teem ant are tee ag passa ges larynx | /n ition, the medicinal in- ; bronchial Sahar . Tike| stedients of Vicks are vapor- bes—just like! ivod by the body heat. These is an inflammation of vapors are breathed in all skin. A long continued! night long, thus bringing the Means constant inflam-| medication to bear directly and this constant in-| upon the inflamed areas. mation frequently weak-| Vicks should be rubbed in the air passages so that over the throat and chest un- yy become an easy point of til the skin is for invading germs of| spread on thickly and covered serious diseases. Aj| with hot flannel cloths. Leave that hangs on,” there-|the clothing loose around the Bere, is simply nature’s “red neck and the bed clothes ar- fflag” indicating that there is ranged in the form of a fun- ‘tr below,” and this) nel so the vapors arising may should “never be be freely inhaled. If the cough is annoying, swallow a ly applications of|small bit of Vicks the size of 's VapoRub will aid na-|a pea. to clear up that inflam-| Samples to new users will Because Vicks acts|be sent free on request to by stimulation thru) The Vick Chemical Company, to draw out the in-' 235 Broad street, Greensboro, tion, attract the blood N. C. _ More Than 17 Million Jars Used Yearly ; Fon Ag 200 Your Ge Bodyguard Against Colds lapoRub Picture of Health master-piece in the Life is Nature's Caraid Nature have taken for her model? in the mirror of re your looks, your feel. ings and your condition with the characteriatice of thie picture of the human body im perfect working order, all parte of which are sound, well organized and disposed, performing their functions freely, naturally. If you fail in any single point of Fr nee, you not the picture of health. imperative. then, that you look to « means to rebuild your strength, energy and vigor—to bring your body up to @ state of efficiency in all of its parts. of Health”. 1 of the haman bla It new hounded it in color and illuminated : ‘ot bope and cheerfulnecs. The Great General Tonic fn 9 rebuilder af axhanated nerves and ten & bettie TODAY and you'll eom- + LYKO MEDICINE COMPANY KANSAS CITY, MO. red—then | 2 THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, MARCI 29, 1920. * The Ridin’ Kid From Powder River BY— Henry Herbert Knibbs CHAPTER T YOUNG ft With the Inevitable pinto tn j string the horve-trader drifted ward the distant town of Conc | Young Pe much too large for, him, hased the | tired horses with a professtonal “HM! Yah! Git in there, you doggon, or nery, threelegmed polecat, you!’ For these manful services Young Pete recetved scant rations and | much abuse. Pete had been picked up in the town of Enright, where no one seemed to have a record of his an costry. He was quite willing to go | with the trader, his only stipulation being that he be allowed to bring along his dog. | Old man Annersley held down a quartersection on the Blue Mesa His homestead embraced the only water for miles in any direction. water that the upland cattlemen had used from time tmmemortal nnersiey fenced this water most natural and neces wary thing Ol man jot a horse | died that his to o. Annersiey waa tn need One of his team had winter, So he drove to |Concho, where he heart of the jtrader. Young Pete, as usual, was }in camp looking after the stock. An mersiey inspected the horses and finally chose a horse which Young | Pete roped with much swagger | “Thin here animal ix sound, safe and a child could ride him,” asserted Young I'ete as he led the languid and underfed pony to the wagon worth a hundred, to any man. we're sellin’ him ay for forty dollars.” “ anid the trader. Your pardner sald at over here smiled bim | “Nope jforty"~and Anne |Young Peta “I'll ag’in for thirty.” Young Pete knew that they need ed money badly, @ fact that the trader was apt to ignore when he |was drinking. ‘You said I could sell him for forty, or mebby |for cash,” complained Young Pete | “You go lay down’* }trader, and kicked Vote | smouldering camp fire rose bristling, anxious to defend his young master, but afraid of the trader. The cowering dog and the | cringing boy told Annersiey much. | “Just a minute, friend.” said An nersiey as the trader started for the boy. “I for the hoa» | The horse tr look into the Pete's doe and the boy der did not want to but he did Tl leave it to im," he flattering himeelf t Pete dare not leave him. “What do you say, sont’ Anners ley turned to Pete. “Where do you live" querted Pete, quickly drying his eves “Why. up in thone hilla Like to |come along and give mea hand | with my stock? “You bet I would? “Here's your money,” mid An nereley, and he gave the trader |forty dollars it right that | buckbeard, son.” The horse trader was decetved by Annersiey’s mild manner. As Young | Pete started toward the wagon the trader jumped and grabbed him. want in |tect his face. Old man Annersiey said nothing, but with ponderous cane he strode forward, seized the trader from behind, and shook that |loome-mouthed individual till teeth rattied and the horizon grew dim. That first unforgettable year on the homestead wns the happiest of | Pete's life. Ho was intensely active tireless and resourceful—as are mont youngsters raised in the west. An nersiey taught Pete to read and to | write his own name—a pamful pr& for ‘Young Pete cared nothing for that sort of education and suf fered only that he might please his venerable partner. Pete had his rife—a thirty-thirty id man had purchased from a cowboy in Concho. and accundle, scorn Ja stationary mark and often riding | miles to get rabbits and “jacks, line ng to shoot at | that he occasionally bowled over on | | the run. That summer occasional riders |wtopped at the cabin. They came lehiefly from the T-Bar-T ranch, a leattie outfit of the lower country | Pete intuitively disiiked these men. At Your Own Any Evening Personal service and abso lute satisfaction are my guar antes. The gratifying results of ® personal examination tn your own home have many ad. vantages, and are at your din posal. Examination is free and puts you under no obliga- tion, When glasses are neces- sary, prices are reasonable. Phone for appointment any evening after 6 o'clock. . L. SUSSMAN, Registered and Licensed Optometrist 1821 East Howell St. Phone Bast 3093 Seven Years in Seattle | Wife — Takes =x Adler-i-ka! ‘Adler--ka belped my wife for gas on the *tomach and sour stomach in twenty minutes. It’ works beyond GREATEST expectation.” (Signed) Sherman Catt. Adler--ka flushes BOTH upper and lower bowel so completely ft relieves <¥ CASE gas on the stomach or beour stomach, Removes tow matter hich poisoned stomach for months. | ft CURES constipation, Prevents appendicitis, Adieri-ka is mixture of buckthorn, caseara, ering and nine other simple ingr ts, Swift Deug Co, Bartell Drug Co, and all leading druggists. growled the! The boy Mung up his arms to pro- | his He was quick | ht, 1919, by Henry Herbert Tr te y frequently drifted into warm ments to watorrights, mat that not interest Young Pete, for the old man never seemed perturbed by th arguments, foe! working @tiren, to hold and culti vate the allotment he had earned from the government | The T-Bar outfit especially krudged him the water they had pre viously used to such good advan tage. ‘This water was now under | To make this water avail fence able to cattle would disrupt the | Lynchburg Woman | Says Tanlac Made Life Worth Living; \ ee { l | | | MRS. MARY F. ROACH of Lynchburg, Va anlac Hetne been the favorite my in my cabinet for three | yes said Mra. ME. Roach, of 402 Clay street, Lynchburg, Virginia, in an interview, recently | “At the time I began taking Tan |inc.” explained Mrs. Roach, “I had been suffering from indigestion. eumationm a. other troubles for nine years find nothing to help me 1 to eat any ti would up with sour gas and a My heart would palp and when these spells I was so dizzy and hardly stand up. 1 ing veavy I bloat amothe frightfully came on me weak I could ont joften had to stop and rest while do- | |ing my hounework. 1 was badly con. jatipated and hardly ever free of headache J also suffered with rheu |matiom tn my fingers and especially jin cloudy, miny or snowy weather my pain was almoat unbearable, My kidneys and liver were out of order jand I had the worst kind of pains! {tn my back, lems and shoulders. I had no appetite and what little I did eat seemed to do me more harm than good, ax 1 always suffered afterwards and had become so run. down, weak minerable that I sometimes felt like life was hardly worth “One day I read a testimonial for Taniac that seemed so sincere that I decided to see if the medicine would help me. Well, the first bot tle did me so much i that I got another, then another and so until my troubles all disappeared Ax 1 said, that was three years ago, and I have been able to keep my self in good health ever since by taking a few doses of Tanlac now then as 1 feel the need of it Tanlac has built up and given me strength and energy so that my housework in easy for ma, It makes j ite worth living, for it keepa me j with & g00d appetite, helps me to di. gest my food property. and, by re Heving me of all suffering and nerv enat Aly night always praise Tanlac.” TAaniac ts wold in Seattle by Rartell Drug Stores under the personal di rection of a spécial Tanlac represen | tative —Advertisement, living ousnens en me to sleep I shalt every + {NOSE CLOGGED FROM | A COLD OR CATARRE | { Apply Cream in Nostrila to Open | \ Up Air Pasages 5 | nan s Ah! What rolief! Your clogred now trile open right up. lof your head are clear and you can breathe freely No more snuffiing, mucous ache, dryness breath at night is gone. Don't stay stuffed up! Get a small |bottle of Fly's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant antiseptic cream in your nostrils, let it penetrate through every alr passage of the head soothe and heal the «wollen, in flamed mucous membrane, giving you instant relief. Ely's Cream Baim is just what every cold and catarrh fferer has bedn seeking, It's just Aid Grip, Influenza Hamiin'’s Wiard Oil a Reliable, Antiseptic Preventive pan the air passages discharge, struggling your cold or catarrh hepa for no During influenze epidemien, epray the nose and throat several times a day with one part Wizdrd O11 and two parts water, using an atomizer. If you haven't an atomizer, gargle the throat and snuff the mixture up the nose, This treatment sets up an antiseptic wall of defense against “Flu” germs. * Chest colds and sore throat lead to grip. Sjop them at once with Wizard Oil before they can develop {into dangerous influenga Get it from druggists for 30c. If not satigfied, return the bottle and get your money back 6 constipated or have sick headache? Just try Wizard Liver Whips, pleasant little pink pills, 30c at druggists, Guaranteed, hawking, | Knibbs | homestead. Young It was at this time that Peto first real ole nificance of these hard-riding vin j!tors, He was cleaning his much Polished carbine, round the corner 6, perched on a saddie| ing secure in his own rights, a hard: | of the cabin, when two of the chance | Vinitors strolled out and squatted by the doorway, Old man, 4 | was at the back of the cabin pre paring supper. One of the riders, a man named |Gary, said something to his | Panion about “running the old man jout of the country.” “You can’t bluff him so easy,” of fered the companion. | “But @ thirty-thirty kin talk bust. | ness,” said the ran Gary, and he laughed Hote néver forgot the remark nor the laugh, Next day, after the riders had departed, he told his pop what he pad heard The old man yhook his heud, “Mostly talk,” he | said. Then he explained gravely own statun as a homesteader, law which al | water, and th [the land bis. A few nights after that the home J was raided. The cattiemen 1 the barn and haywtacks, while Annersiey and Pete took refuge in the cabin. It did not occur to Pete that he might get hurt-—or that his pop would get hurt. And then in a j briet moment Young Pete's career was shaped—shaped beyond all question of argument by the wan ton bullet that sung acrows the open. | jeut a clean hole tp the window and|/ dropped Annersief in his tracks Pete heard his pop gasp and saw him stagger in the dim light. In a flash Pe was at hin a “You hit bor he quavered, There came no reply. Annersiey had died in stantly. Suddenly a shrill yel ripped the silence he men were rushing the Young Pete's fighting blood pulse. He crept cau the window, aif way ring the blurred bulk! Jof running horses loomed in the| tarligbt Pete rested his carbine on the windowsill, centered on the }bulk and fired. He heard a cry and something crashed against the door | Pete whirled and fired point-blank Hefore he knew what had hap men were in the cabin. struck a match. | The were silent ne of them laughed com his the wed him th fence the bor which had made tlously to Jacrons the ened Some one men Presently Despite Pete © ree aed that | the man |who had once spoken Annermjey out of the country “It's a dam’ bad business,” eald jone of the men. “The kid knows too much. He'll talk.” “Wil you keep your mouth #hut, © don’t kill you?” queried Gary “Cut that out! growled another “The kid's got sand. He downed |two of us—and we take our medi cine, I'm for fannin’ ..." An they left Pete heard one my something which he never forgot Must ‘a’ been Gary’s shot that downed the ole man. Gary knowed the layout and where he could get a line on the window.” An inquest decided that Anners.| ley had come to hin death at the |hands of parties unknown. The |matter was eventually shunted to Jone of the many legal sidings along |the singlotmek law that operated jin that vicinity Annersley’ of fects were sold at auction and the Proceeds used to bury him. His homestead reverted to the govern |ment, there being no legal ber. Young Pote was again homeless. CHAPTER U A CHANGE OF BASP. To say that Mte had any definite when he took up with an old Mexican sheep herder would stretching the possibilities. | The old Mexican, Montoya, had a band of sheep in the high country A strange sympathy grew between |this old Mexican and the tean,| brighteyed young boy. Perhaps} Pete's swarthy coloring and black jeyes had something to do with it In any event, Pete found a home| with the old Mexican for several years. Montoya was good to the boy, fed and clothed him, while in aug? was Gary of running knew that it War Surgery for |Boy’s Maimed Hands | ALTOONA, Pa., March 29.—Little ‘four-year-old Elwood Fagan of El {dorado, deprived of the use of the fingers and thumbs of both ands thru an accident when he was a baby, is to have his hands made normal theu the surgery which was #0 successful during the world war He fell into a bucket of boiling his bands |Moore Retained to Handle Ship Case Altho his resignation becomes ef- fective Thursday, Ben L. Moore, as- sistant United States district attor- ney, has been retained by Attorney General Palmer to assist in the prosecution of the Northwest ship yard men indicted by the grand jury for alleged fraud in dealings with the government during the war, German Marks Due to Reach Yakima YAKIMA, March 29.--Thirty thou- sand easy, or German, marks are due to arrive here this week, hav ing been purchased by German sym- pathizers in the valley in the hope that they'll “go up” some time. Jewish Feast to Be Observed Friday “Pesach,” the Jewish Feast of the Passover, during which “Matzoth,” the unleavened bread, in eaten, will be observed this year from Friday evening, April 2, to Saturday, April 10. KING COUNTY school funds will increase to the amount of $825,000 by the 20:10 lay lassed by legisla! ture, says Thomas B, Hulse, deputy | county superintendent of schools, Store Hours 9 to 6 Every Day One Article or a Complete Home Outfit--- can be purchased at Gottstein’s on the same easy credit terms. Furnishings long desired but otherwise inacces- sible to many home furnishers have through Gottstein’s Co-operative plan. been obtained It has been our privilege to help establish hundreds of happy homes in Seattle through our liberal credit policy. OverstuffedRockers Reduced 20% Genuine Leather Regular Special Price Price $60.00 . $48.00 $67.50 $54.00 $75.00 . $60.00 Imitation Leather $29.50 ..... $22.60 $40.00 ..... . $32.00 Royal Morris Chairs included in this sale Go-Cart | Oriole Go-Baskets Special The handy collapsible kind that be taken anywhere $17.75 can A complete show- ing of these com-- pact little vehi- cles in fumed. or ivory finish, from ' $19 Up | 26-PIECE SILVER SET } SPECIAL VALUE The famous Holmes & Edwards Brand, in six dif- ferent patterns. Each set consists of 6 knives, 6. forks, 6 tablespoons, 6 tea spoons, 1 butter knife and 1 sugar shell, all packed in finished, lined chest. Regular $32.50 value.... We also carry a complete a handsome mahogany Special $22.75 stock of Community Brand and 1847 Rogers Bros. Silver. M.AGOTTST FURNITURE EIN CO. Easy SEATTLE S POPULAR HOME FURNISHERS return Pete gave the herder most] Pete had mot been on a hore for excellent service. |many months. To ride—anywhere! But much of what Annersiey had|To feel a horse between his knees tanght him was undone in this Mex. | againt ican sheep camp. Montoya appre-| The two boys, after the manner of clated only the boy’s sharp wits,| those iiving tn lonely places, struck and these he assidiously cultivated. up a quick friendship. Andy camped He could be trusted to go to town with Pete that night and as he was on errands and to strike a good/ leaving in the morning Pete ven- bargain. Even on the range he was | tured: often left alone in charge of val-| «1¢ you git a chanct, ride over to uable herds, our camp sometime. I’m goin’ up It was during one of these latter! the Largo. You can find us. Meb- expeditions that Pete met young) by"—and he hesitated, "eying the Andy White, a clean-cut, sprightly pony—"mebby I might git a chanct cowboy riding for the Concho out-|to tie up to your outfit, I'm sick fit, | of the woolies.” “Don't blame you, amigo. If I hear of anything I'll come a-fannin’ LET “DANDERINE” and tell you. So-long. She's one BE A UTIFY H. A IR | lovely mornin’.” | Several nights later a horseman |rode into Montoya’s camp. Pete, getting supper, pretended great in- | differe til be heard the he » Girls! Have a mass of long, | fiference, until pe near the tore thick, gleamy hair os White who had come to visit, as he 7 Thousands ve Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets area Harmless Substitute Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the sub- stitute for calomel—are a mild but sure Let “Daydorme” save your hair and double its beauty. You can have lots of long, thick, strong, lustrous hair. Don't lot it stay lifeless, thin, seragsly or fading, Bring back its color, Vigor and yitality. | Get a S6-cent bottle of Aelightful) “Danderine” at any drug or toilet counter to freshen your scalp; check dandruff and falling hair, Your hair needs this stimulating tonic, then its A woman is always telling a mana lot of disagreeable things—for his own good, life, color, brightness and abundance will return—Hurryt had promised. Pete's heart went warm and he immediately found an |extra tin plate and put more coffee in the pot. ¢ (Continued in our ngxt issue.) NOTA THEORY — It’s a fact that the use of jalcohol even in moderate doses as taken in tonics is often habit-forming in effect SCOTT'S EMULSION an easily assimilated nutrient ies the body those elements that contribute to strength. Free from a or any other harmf. al element, — Scott's builds j t strength cot & Bowne,Bloomfeld,NJ. 186 OVER-EATING a the root — all igestive evil your digestion is weak or out of kilter, better eat less K-MOIDS the new aid to better | i Pleasknt to out your digestive troubles. MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S

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