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THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1920. A Good Piano Is an Investment Not an Expense When a person buys a Piano inv nt that carries a bh any other single thing that that person ts making an her earning rate than for could be bought far the home. Good music rests the brain, helps the body to relax, melts away the r of annoyances that arose during the makes one more fit to do provides hundreds af little year-and we all admit that ments. Many @ good idea has people as they lster Piano—these ideas clicked in the minds of succ 1 to the piring music of the en have t turned into cash When company has proved a ready sou back a part of the p ure A good Piano will last a lifetime. ligible. Depend We have a fF can't play the } Player Pianc ng a Piano { pays The upkeep ts neg © in a wide range of prices. y purse, You say you in this age we have the can play, ¥ mbdr, buy ©, but is an in at which pay for itself many Umes over tan ex good dividends—will Sherman, |@lay & Go. Third Avenue at Pine Seattle Spokane Tacoma Portland LEGITIMATE OCCUPATION OF _ MAN'S MIND Is WOMAN” STC) YORK.—-Detect unterfeit $10 b to ¢ passed in New York COFFEE AT IBERTY MARKET between Pike and Liberty Theatre CROKE) Fighting Hunger Hunger is never more than a few days away from the American people. The coal strike showed us what a narrow margin the country goes on, evenin a non- perishable necessity which can be stored, Swift & Company is engaged in the business of fighting hunger. From coast to coast, from the Great Lakes to the Gulf, the lines of defense are rt drawn—packing plants at strategic points; branch houses in four hundred towns and cities; hundreds of car routes; thousands of refrigerator cars; tens of thousands of loyal men and women expert in their work. Day by day, hour by hour ceaselessly, this fight, your fight, goes on. Yet so smoothly, surely and victoriously that you, unaware how close hunger always is, are as certain each night of tomorrow's meat as you are of tomorrow's sun. And so economically is this one that the cost to you for this service is less than three cents a pound of meat sold. The profits shared in by more than 30,000 shareholders whose money makes the victory possible is only a fraction of a cent a pound on all products. If hunger did not make it necessary for us to fight this fight in the best possible way for all concerned, the competition of hundreds of other packers, large and small, would compel us. Swift & Company, U.S. A. Seattle Local Branch, 201-11 Jackson St, Jj. L. Yocum, Manager ys 5 ame Eh been brought from Montreal to The Ri Powder River | {Continued From Our Last Issue) | Doris turned away, There was @ ten moved back to the doorway welt she glanced back for stant. The dark head and the gold her over the won-| lecture, Just why Pete He waved hi and w Her emotion irrit Id she feel sentimental bec no really me from her his very identity happenings? Had he }not sald so? And yet he had put aside a letter that might mean much to him, that he might make litte | Ruth forget her pain in searching for | embered pasteboard cow | r did mean much aight to the point sure are glad to ane w where you Are and @ getting along sit | | 4 thru all right. but got his on we all cleaned out the j Your job's waiting for and ma saya ‘for you to ome home back tn his room wheal * news, and when Miss Gray came in later she found a pa |tiont with wet eyes and shaking |hands, Being a nurse ordered and then, being a woman, ranch, Miss Gray?" after a long pause. minutes’ later Pete was on his lips @ radiant Twenty sound asleep. amnile. eee | | CHAPTER X11 A Now Trail | | The next day Pet the time it on the porct ‘ound him a fellow. He fy tor had t Ruth, w sent-mir over whe about being w rest, an }again that the sheriff 4 |neo him. He wondered how he could clear himself of the charge of killing Brent | He thought of the letter from Bailey, and re-read it slowly. So Steve Gary had survived, only to) meet the Inevitable end of his kind. ‘Well, Gary was always hunting trou- | bie, © © © Roth, the storekeeper at Concho, ought to have the number of that gun which Pete packed. If the| sheriff of Sanborn was an old-timer, he would know that a man who | packed a gun for business reasons did not go round the country expert menting with different makes and calibern, Only the “showense” boys in the towns swapped guna Ed Brevoort had always used a Luger. Pete wondered if there had been any evidence of the caliber of the bullet which had killed Brent. If the sheriff were an old-timer, such evidence would not be overlooked. | Pete looked up. The place was de serted, He middenty realized that thone who were able had gone to thetr noon meal. He had forgotten about that. Hoe walked back to his/ room and gat on the edge of the cot. | He was lonesome and dispirited. This was the first time that Dorts had al lowed him to mins a meal, and It wan! [her fantt! She might have called| him. But what did she care? | Pete's brooding eyes brightened as Dorts eame in with a tray. Sho had thought that he had rather have his | dinner there. “I noticed that you did! not come down with the others,” she mid, ~ | Pots was angry with himaelf.| Adam-ifke, he said he wasn't hungry, | anyhow | | “Then I'll take tt back,” sald Dorts, mweetly. Adam-liike, Pete decided that he! was hungry. “Mise Gray,” he blurt od, “I—-I'm doggone shorthorn! I'm goin’ to eat.” “There's a man in the reception | room waiting to see you,” «ald Doris. “1 told him you were having your dinner.” The man who walted for him! downstairs, Pete surmised, waa the sheriff of Sanborn county “If you don't mind tellin’ him Tn come down as soon as T eat,” said) Pete, as he pulled up a char, | Doris nodded, and turned to leave Pote glanced up. The letter, the ma | downstairs and all that his presence | implied, past and future possibilities, | were forgotten in the brief glance that Dorts gave him as she turned in the doorway Meanwhile “the man downstairs’ was doing some thinking himself. | That morning he had visited police and inspected Pete's longing» —noting especial ly ,the hand-carved holster and th |heavy caliber gun, the factory num- ber of which he jotted down in his| notebook. Incidentally he had bor- | a Luger automatic from the laneous collection of weapons taken from criminals and slipped it into his coat pocket. Later he had talked with the officials, visited the Mexican lodging house, where he had Jobtained a description of the man | who had occupied the room. with Pete, and, stopping at a rertaurant for coffee and doughnuts, had finally larrived at the hospital prepared to hear what young Annersley had to say for himself, Sheriff Jim Owen, tmoffictatly dentgnated ax “Sunny Jim" because of an amiable disposition, which in no way affected his official responst- bilities, was a dyed-In-the-wool, hair. | cinched, range-branded, double-fisted official, who scorned nickel-piated | firearms, hard-boiled hate, faney | drinks, and smiled his contempt for | the rubber-heeled methods of the clty police. Sherjff Owen had no rubber- heeled tendénctes. He was frank- ness itself, both in peace and in war, . The sheriff was thinking, his hands Henry Herbert Knibbs Copyright, 1919, by Henry Herbert Knibbs In tt}! din’ Kid From BY— h and | lodging houre windows while bis com fon made his get-away. Thi seemed to Indicate that of the two, the man who had escaped was would be down in a few minutes, | in the « r danger if apprehended, killed Sam Brent He had ajand the ing Annersliey had gen W pertinent reasons for this con- | erounly od to cover hin retreat no lusion, F Hrent had been killed|far as possible, Then, from the by a 30-caliber nosed bullet, | lodging-he keeper's den of which t heriff had in his vest|the other man, Jim) Owen concluded from what he had/that he was Ed Brevoort, And the been told, judged that the man | sheriff knew something of Brevoort who actually killed Brent would notjrecord, © have remained in plain eight In the (Continued in Our Next Issue) Prince Is “Regular Guy,” San Diego Folks Declare SAN DIEGO, Cal, April §—"A]other new friends regular guy!’ | In his brief, sincere address at Thin was the verdict today of|the stadium he devoted most of |San Diego and her thousands of} his time to saying king things about visitors, while Prince Edward of| California and Californians Walea was resting aboard the crack | he prince spent a busy day here | British cruiser Renown, just off eted off this port by warship this port, after a most strenuous|and airplanes, escorted to San day in California Diego, where he was che thru It was the Impression the young! the downtown streets, then to Hal heir to the thre { Great Britain | boa park for pl king and a left on the thousands who packed| glimpse of the big to the the huge stadium to hear him yes | stadium for the exercinen terday. |there; a dinner at >» a ball In spite of his titles and his re.|and informal reception aboard ship sponsibilitien Ne in a “regular fel-| before the nown steamed away low,” according to every one who|—these were the high spots of hin him, w ook his hand and | vinit had a chan nverse with the | £ young lad. Plain. unasuming. 1 | Hammond Elected | Committee Chief able, he made friends on all sides, Edward is on his way to Aus-| tralia. San Diego is bis onty port] Thomas G of call in the United States. | torney fer the thatted mt LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT, SAYS PRINCE ‘Hut it was a case of love at first wight,” he said as he chatted with Governor W. [). Stephens and) Meng Republican club. claims at om Fidelity | was elected Hammond. |and Guaranty company Wednesday as chairman of the ex ecutive committee of the Young & NELSON | FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET | | FREDERICK | i A Different Plaid for Every Style in New Separate Skirts | has been adopted as the maxim of Fashion, in | | fashioning them from woolen fabrics, serges, velours and novelty weaves. | | The néw models are suitable for business and street wear, or they may be worn with | sweaters and sports coats of bright color to harmonize with the predominating color of | the plaid. Sizes for women and misses. $18.50 to $35.00 | | Four striking Plaids are exploited in the Skirts sketched. The gored model is of an attractive novelty weave in brown and dark tan. The slit pockets and buckled belt aro particularly smart. Price $35.00. A cémbination of two plaids {s used in the Skirt at | eft, as the panel at side back is in the same colors, |f} NAVY» green, yellow and black, but a different pat- terng Price $18.50. Horizotétal stripes of brown on lighter brown give a smart effect to the plalted Skirt shown on figure in sketch, Price $18.50. An unusual plaid \s shown in the Skirt at right, with plaits stitched to hips. In green, black, peacock and Pekin blue combination, Price $22.50. —Second Floor. - eioees — - ————— ——— ae H 1 ‘Will Buy a Coat months in the house of correction Martin J, Flaherty will purchase a $65 overcoat for Patrolman William inet retired from active service during with a fish knife. Nearly $70,000,000,000 the Investment in farms and their equipment, a sum equal to the total feapital of any three other major |indusiries, FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET | DOWNSTAIRS STO To Gladden Spring School Days: Gingham Tub Frocks $2.50 to $5.50 Overall Play Suits for Girls and Boys $1.95 F substantial . blue denim are these with short sleeves and trimming of plain red banding at neck, sleeves, pocket and belt. striped overall Suits - They save launder- ing frocks and petti- coats for little girls, and take the place of wash suits and blouses for little boys. Sizes 6 and 8 years. Investments in clothes- saving for little folks — $1.95. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STOP Cups and Saucers 6 for $1.75 S pictured, undecorated Cups and Saucers of medium-weight English semi-porcelain, offering un- usually good value at, set of six, $1.75. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE The Ohio UITE a mother-made air is attained in these little Frocks with their original trimming touches. In plaids there is choice of pink, green and black; blue, red and black; green, brown and black, with trimming of bias bands and plain-color color basket-cloth. Pictured at left. Sizes 10 and 12 years, $2.50. The Dress at right, in plain pink, blue, tan or green chambray, buttoning down side front and trimmed with plaid. Sizes 8, 10 and 12 years, $2.75. In fine checks, plaid ginghams and plain-color chambray there are many other styles, with trim- ming of hand-embroidery, cross-stitching and wide sashes. Sizes 6 to 14 rs, $2.50, $3.50, $3.75, $4.25 up to $5.50. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE This Little Dress at $2.50 suggests the attract- ive styles and the good values to be had in the Downstairs Store. It is of pin- checked gingham, in blue or pink and white, with sash of self material and white trimming. Sizes 2 to 6 years. Price $2.50. Also designed for rollicking lit- tle folks are the Dresses in checked ginghams, plaids and bright colorings, with white poplin collar and cuffs; also styles with plain cham- bray trimming. Sizes 2 to 6 years, $2.75 and $2.95. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Toys for Sand Pile or Beach HAT fun it is to press damp sand into a mould and see a fish or perfect shell appear, and to trudge about busily with a bucket and shovel made especially for sand games. Little Sand Buckets brightly enameled in rose, blue, green or red, white-lined, with ing of six moulds in bright colors with tiny shovel, 25¢. Watering Pots, enamel- wood - handle shovel, ed, d ted $1.50; with four painted, 30¢, 35¢ moulds for making and 40¢. sand cakes, $2.50. Sieve Sets with four moulds and tiny shovel in green or red enam- el, $2.00. Sand Sets compactly packed in box, consist- Sand Sifters, with four moulds in the form of fish and shells, to- gether with shovel, 40¢ and 65¢. Decorated Sand Pails with shovel, 35¢. —Toy Section —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Range for Quick Action and Reliability e Qype action in a range means everything to the housekeeper—a saving of fuel; a saving of time; a saving of labor. Ohio popularity rests solidly upon these Eight minutes after the fire is kindled the oven is ready for baking. Fifteen minutes after kindling the fire there is enough hot water for all household uses, No wonder Ohio owners are enthusiastic about this range! —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE. to Dodge Term BOSTON, April 8.—In Heu of six Desmond to replace the one a drunken demonstration represents United States s local detectives counterfeit: Am 5 with counterfeiting outft, 1) premises of Albert Grignon. supreme court that news print paper “was not a necessary of life,” board of commerce announces that it will relinquish control over that commod: ity. Breweries of Canada shows profits of $1,061,900 for 1919, compared with “ YOU THINK TWO CAN LIVE AS CHEAP AS ONE” DENT GET MARRIED’ LEVY’S ORPHEUM Starting Saturday er in raid on OTTAWA.—Following decision of ‘Tho annual report of the National