Red Saunders To-day we want to talk to you about "Catarrh cures" I . . . By . . . HENRY WALLACE PHILLIPS 1 tl 41 J COPYRIGHT. 1P02. UY McCLURE, PHILLIPS t- COMPANY m This is the famous story oj Red Saunders, big Red, tough Red of the plains and mines. We shall follow this expansive man through his days of toughness and sinfulness tip to the great day of his life, the day that shall bring the metamorphosis of Red. This trumpeter will not give the story away by indicating how this transformation shall come about whether through the re morsc or repentance of Red, his eonvictioi of sin, his fear of the damnation of the wicked, his yearnings for the peace thai passcih understanding, or wheth er it shall be the love of woman that shall bring this giant to his knees and make him as a little child. The trumpeter will only promise thai this conversion of Red shall be one of the must interesting and delicious epi sodes in all fiction, which the reader will enjoy and doubtless remember through all the years of his life. V.llAVTVAl I. jEDDY mill J 'wore alone at the hifce beds. He sat outside (he cabin braiding a leather hat-bund-elghl strands mil the ie- icat figure mi art that I never eouhl master. I sat IubIiIc with a one-pound pacU nge of smoking tobacco bolide me ami ncwnptipcrs within reacli, rolling the day's nupply of cigarettes. Reddy Htoppcd his story long enough to ny, "Don't use the Trlnecsu' Slip per,' Kid that paper burns my tongue take the 'Granger'; there's plenty of it" Well, ns I was saying. I'd met a lot of the boyH up In town this day nnd they threw as many ns two drinkH Into me; I know unit for certain, beeuiiHc ,wucn we took the parting dose I had a glnsH of whisky in both my right bauds nnd bnd Just twice as many friends uh when 1 started. When I pulled out for home I felt mighty good for myself not exactly looking for trouble, but mil a-going to dodge II any, either. 1 mij warbling "Idaho" for till I aiih worth you know how pnlty I au singV Cockeyed I'e tcivion used to say it uiuiIk him forget all Ills troubles. "BecaiiM,' says lie. "you don't notiee irillos when a man bats you over the head with n two by fur." Well, 1 wn enjoying everything in night, even a lltl.le drizzle of rain t lint wav driving by In rays if wetness when a Ihilfnced swatt.v at Fort .hdiu-t-Mt baited me. Now h'h i dieadful thim; In be but JqjJ io death b. a nanny gout, but for a mUK sized eowpuiieher to be held up l)f a soldlei Is woio yet. ,H'o say that I was hyl under the col lar don't give you I ho right Idea of the way I felt. I ''Why, you cross between the luM r.se of Hummer and a bobtalled flash!" nays I, "what d'yer menu? AFhnt's got into youV fiet out of my daylight, you dog robber, or I'll walk the little horse round your neck like a three ringed circus. Come, pull your freight!" It ueemK that Oil Htvntty had been chucked out of the third story of Frenchy'8 dance emporium by Hroue Thompson, which threw a great re epect for our profesh into him, Con wjquontly he wasn't fresh, like most soldiers, but answers me as polite ns a tin horn gambler on pay day. Says her "I just wanted to tell you that old FroHthead and forty braves are uonieVrs between here mid your outfit, with their war paint on and blood in their eye, cayomli. tig.. anil whooplif fit to beat hell with ihe- blow er on, and If yoji get timg'ed up with them I reckon they'll give you n hair eut ami shampoo, to mi.v nothing of other trimmings. They say they're after the Crows, but It' a ten dollar bill against a last year's bird's iieyu that they'll take on any hind of trou ble that comes along. Their hearts s mighty bad, tliey slate, and when an Injun's heart gels spoiled the disease 1n d d catching. You'd belter s'jip awhile." "Now, cuss old Frost head and you. too!" says I. "If lie comes crow hop ping on my rcHorvntion I'll kick his pantalets on top of Ills sculp loet " "All rlht. pardner," saya he. "U's your owu funeral. My orders was to halt every one going through Mut I nln't a whole eouipuuy, so you can have it your own way. Only If your friends hflv to lake you home hi coin scuttle, don i litanie me. I'ass. friend!" So I went through the otllcers' quar ters forty miles an hour, letting out u siring of yells you might have heard to the coast. Just to show my respect for the Fulled States army. Now tlila has alwajs been my luck: Whenever I made a band wagon play somebody's sure to sttll.e me for my license, or else the team les into the ditch a mile farther on, and I come out about as happy as a small yaller dog til a bobcat's caucus. Some fellers can run In a rhlnecaboo that M make the hair stand up on u buft'eler roU and get away with it Just like a mice, but that ain't me. If I sing a little mite too high in the cellar, down comes the roof a-lop of me. So it was this day. Old Johnny Hardluck socked it to me, same as usual. Cosh a'nilfihly! The liquor died in me after awhile, ami I went sound asleep in the saddle and woke up with a jar to find 'myself right In the mid dle of old Frost head's gang, the drums "boom bllupluu" and those forty odd red tigers "hyati liynmng " In" a siT.o i ... i , .imi.. ,,. .it. i .... .....i .....i,. i llltll IIIIIUV III,, ;-lll 1-1 1 1 I V illlll N.lilfc all over me with cold feet. How In hhrcs I'd managed to slip throimh those Injuns I don't know. "I" would have been a wonderful piece of scouting if I'd meant It. You e:"i most always do uny darn thing you' don't want Io do. Well, there I was, and, oh. doctor, but wasn't I In a love ly mess! That war song put a crimp Into me that .lack Frost himself couldn't take out. It was as dark as dark by this time. The moon Just stuck one eye over the ..,1.... , 41. !, 1 .,. . . . ,,. I r-MKu ji mi- in uu ir, mm wie rum hi iiiu sky was covered with cloud. A little light came from the Injuns' campflre, but not enough to ride by, nnd, bo Hlitos. I didn't know which way I ought to go. Says I to myself, "Hilly Saunders, you are the champion all around, old fash ioned fool of the district. You are a jackass from the country where ears less'n three foot long are curiosities. You sussed that poorswatty that want ed to keep you out of lids, tooting your bazoo like a man peddling soap, but now it's up to you. What are you go ing to do nbout It?" and I didn't get any answer neither. Well, It was no use asking myself conundrums out there In the dark when time was so scarce. So I wraps my hankereher around I.niMy'.t nose, to keep him from talking limse to the Injun ' Miles and prepared to sneak t where I'd rather lie. I.addy was the quickest IIiIiik on legs In that part of the country out of a mighty spry little l'lnto naro by our thoroughbred Kentucky horse and 1 knew If I could get to the open them Injuns wouldn't have much of a chance to take (ut my stopper and examine my works -not much. A half mlh start, and I could show the whole Slou. nation how I wore my hair. I cut for the place where the Injuns seemed thinnest, lifting myself up till I didn't weigh llfteeu pound and breathing only when necessary. We got along iirst rate until we readied the edge of 'em, and then I.addy had to stick his foot in a gopher hole and walloped around there like u whale trying to climb a tree. Some darn cues of an Injun threw a handful of hay on the lire, and as It blazed up the whole guug spotted mo. I uulimliered my gun, sent the Irons Into Laddy, and wo began to walk. I didn't like to make for the ranch, as I knew tho fooyu were short handed, so t pointed north, praying to the good Lord that I'd hit some kind of settle ment before I struck tho north pole. Well, wc left thoso Injuns so fur be hind that there wasn't any fun In It. I slacked up, putting myself on the back, nnd as the trouble seemed nil over I was Just about to turn for the ranch when I heard horses galloping-, and as the moon came out a little 1 saw a whole raft of redskins a-bolling up a draw not half a mile away That knocked mo slabsidcd. It looked like 1 got tho wrong llckot every time the wheel turned. 1 I whooped it up ngaln. swearing I I wouldn't stop this deal short of a dead sure thing. We flew through space, I.addy pushing a hole in Ihe air like a scared coyote making for home and mother. A-ways down the valley I spotted a little shack sitting all alouu by Itself out lu the moonlight. headed for It, hollering murder. A man came to the door In his un derrlgging. "III. thore! What's eating your he yells. "Injuns coming, pnrdncr! The coun try's lust oozing I n Inns! Hotter got a .Continued on page ti.J 9 During the past few month wc have been publishing what some rf our puitl friends have called "heart-to-heart talks" on patent medicines. That name suits us all riht "heart-to-heart talks" is just what ue have intended. There can't he auythiuir, more serious to a sick man or si;lc woman than his ailment and the remedies he or she takes to cure il. Our talks have been "heart to-heart." Every word we have printed has been written in absolute earnestness and sin cerity, and judging from what our cus tomers tell us. we have md been talking in vain. We are convinced that our frankness has been appreciated, and that our surest ions have been welcomed which naturally encourages us to con tinue. To-day, and perhaps for some lime lo come, we waul to talk about that bij.f class of renudies known generally as "catarrh cures." broadly sneaking tbe--e .ire the patent medicines that have been the chief tar gets for the attacks of the "Ladies' Home Journal," "Collier's Weekly" and other magazines which are waging cueh a lively warfare against patent medicine abuses. As wc have pointed out in previous" talks, it is not our business io pass judg ment on the crusade of these well known, highly-respected publications. The public alone must be the judge and jury. Our bvisini ss, as we sec it. is k cany in stock- a complete line f patent medicines, and to sell those medicines a I the lowest possible price. We sell hundreds yes, thousands of bottles of so-called "catarrh cures," and know nothing of their ingredients. Tim manufacturers advertise tin in, the public, demands them ; we order them from the manufacturers,' atifl sell them at the low est price. That is absolutely as far as our knowledge goes. The manufacturer keeps his formula a secret. It may be good, or it may not we don't know, and we have no means of finding out. Naturally, we would rather svll a rem edy that wc know is right- thai we can back tip with all our reputation for hon esty and :uarc-dcnliug. And wouldn't you rather buy that kind of a remedy? Wouldn't you rather hold us responsible than to hold no one responsible? We are right here, right where voti can get at us every dav in the week, right where one false move on our part will bring upon us ur condem nation, the loss of your ft hud -hip, your patronage, your inlhuucc Can wc afford to tell you anything that you will learn later is not absolutely true? Are you not safer in taking our word for lite merits of an article, than you are. to relv on the prinUd statement of a pa lent medicine manufacturer, whom you never even saw and probably never will? Common sense most emphatically tells you thai we cannot afford to depart one hair's breadth from the rigid truth. None of tts can deny that there is sucli a disease known as "catarrh." Those who have it, or who have had it, know that it is one of tho hardest diseases to cure. , I'erhaps the worst thing about catarrh' is its prevalence. Almost everyone especially in a climate like outs -has catarrh in some form or another. That is what has made the "catarrh cure" busi ness so profitable. There are so many thousands of cases of the disease and it is so hard to cure, that the patent medicine manufacturers have reaped a harvest in preparing remedies that appeal to this large class of sufferers. One of the most serious things about catarrh is that it breaks down the sys tem, so that the sufferer becomes a prey to other diseases. This f-uM Ins led the proprietors of so manv "catarrh cures" to advertise their remedies ns a specific for almost every disease under the sun. We have ONE catarrh cure that we arc willing to say to you; "We know this is all right. Take it home and use it with the full assurance thai if it does not cure you, you can bring it back to us and we will promptly refund your money." That catarrh cure is M UCU-TONE There is no guess work with us on Rexall Mucu-Touu. IV kilo:.' tJml il is niic of. Not only do wc know, but ;r uill aire yen i copy of the formula. There is no secret about any Roxnll remedy we make them one thousand of in leading druggists all over America in our rcat co operative laboratories at Itostou, Ma-s. Wc own the laboratories, and everything in them, and we operate them just as. skillfully as our com bined brains and money will let u, and just as honestly as honiM men know how Thi Ingradlfnts of Mucu-Tont The chief iiigndienU of Mucu-Tone are Gen tian, Cubebs, Caspars Sagrada, Glycerine, and Sarsaparilla. Gentian is rccounicl in medicine as one of the greatest tonics ever discovered. It is the founda tion on which Much Tone is built. Gentian com bines in high degree the tonic powers of all the known "bitters" with none of the disadvantages apphing to tlicin. Cubebs have long been rocnuniod a a spe cific in the treatment of all catarrhal conditions. Its action is prompt and its licuclit-, almost inva riable. Tn whatever part of the bod the intl imed or di'-cacd condition of the inueoiii liK-inbrane exists, the use of Cuheh? has been recommended by the best physicians for many generations. Cascara Sagrada is especially introduced for its necessary laxative properties. The combination of these with Glycerine and Sarsaparilla makes .Mucu-Tone a remedy that at tacks catarrh from every point, gradually restores and rebuilds the diseased tissues to their former health and strength, promotes digc-tion and cre ates a normal appetite. Large trial bottle, GOc. For Sale Only at This Start. How can you know whether or not you have catarrh? Well, here are the .symptoms that usually in dicate its presence. Check them over, and if you have, any of tlicin, try a bottle of Kexall Mucu-Tone. CATARRH 'OF THE NOSK : Chilliness fevcrisluies-- passages obstructed --watery dis charge and latter thick, yellow and tenacious discharge into the throat headache foul breath weak and watery eyes and sometimes loss of memory CATARRH 01- THE THROAT :-Irritation sensation of heat and dryuc-s constant hawk ingsore throat ami difficult tu breathe. CATARRH 01- THE STOMACH :niziuess emaciation hollow cheeks - sleeplessness bad dreams "Tlespondcnt dull, grinding or sharp, short pains in side and stomach nau sea after eating shortness of breath and hit ter fluid rising in throat. CATARRH OF THE INTF.STINF.S-- Dull, grinding pain in bowels diarrhoea emaciation umoU'UC" and sleeplessness CVIWRKII nr THI? I.1VFR ND KID NEYS : Skin drawn and yellow black specks floating mi :'i Id of vision weak and dizzy dull pain m small of hack and constant desire to titinatc CATARRH u- THE HLADDEU -Sharp pains in the I ,wcr abdomen and a !os of con trol over urine -constant desire to urinate burning sensation when urinating face drawn and palidcvcs dull palms of hands and feet damp and cl.itumv. PELVIC CATARRH: CoiiM.nn Icitcorrlirca dragging pain in the back and hips, abdomen and thighs stoiuacli distiirhauo s -skin erup tions sick headache--feurilc irregularities and constipation, The H. B. Orice Drug Co., THE RBXALL STORE. Yi 3 1 M