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T e, THE SEATTLE STAR BY STAN PURLISHING CO. ‘ OFFICES 1207 and 1309 Sev qth avenue ae EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. TRLEP HONDS Business Department—Sunset, Main 1060; Tdepondens sh z Editorial Department—Sunset, Main 1138, The Stare Pastern offices: 10¢ Hartford bullding. Chica Tribu ting, New York. W. H. Porte i, mar. foreign advertising, One cent per copy; six cents per week, or twenty-five cents per Month, delivered by mal! or carrlera, No free copies. re : q Bautered at the I Toe at Beattie, Wart as nde matter, COLD, HARD FACTS ABOUT OUR STREETS } ‘rnd ion ot ure of living In a howling wilderness of brick piles, empty A Sement barrels, mud heaps and like outward evidences of the joyous sontractorg’ gleeful inhuma A report from the city hall tells we that by Industry the board of public works ha accumulated a bunch of 53 un Pompleted public improvement contracts, most of whieh, it le safe to Assume, are weeks, if not months, behind in th Tt will coat Seat~ tle taxpayers a for the pl ty to man. patient up to date, fulfillment. It seems like a wild hope, but perhaps some sweet day the time will Gome when winter will mot find Soattie’s street turned over to a bar- barian horde of contractors, The work of destruction canmot last for- ever, All things have an end, It ls « nd if there is none to the insolent disregard of the contractors for the public safety and comfort, there may be to the patience of those hapl sufferere—the common people. e The contractors might think this over, | is ro) oe ee — s \ 4 GOOD THING FOR SE. Sy cad ties 4 Nipeitnaadigiin. wail ~ . < oe the dirt taken os from Second avenue tm th regrading of that thor ehfare be w ta fill. fom tn under the wharves and elevated roadw aye on the waterfront, bids fair to receive the mous ap { the business community, and if x Such proves to be the the city wid lose no time in ordering the tm- provement. ® True it ls, that the work will > eUly and the task of far greater m Ritude thar y ever fore wi taken by the mfniotpality, but tt will be worth thé momey. Seattle will place herself in the front rank ‘of Pastfio Coast cities by this move No city with a solid conerete or stone sea Wall and with substantial business blocks built on solid earth and extend- in very harbor line can ever recttve @ sertous set back In growth It te not impala moreover, that the plan will afford a satisfactory Solution of all the regrade problems now under consideration by the qounell. Why not regrade Third and Fourth avenues at once and use the excavated Garth as susgested aident Parry of the moll? In this scheme, for once, the Interests of the people and of the railroads Sppear to be In harmony The railroads are eager for the improvement of the waterfront, and by reason of the fact that they own most of the Property to be benefited, most without the improvement are men of means who The report of City En: and @ statement from him on the feasibility by public AM PARKS A MERE TOOL ard a lot about Sam Parks, the New York walking de! Gate of the Hounesmiths’ and Bridgemen's union, who has been convicted et extortion. He has domineered over the union, stolen from It and sold Out its interests, while levying systematic blackmail upon builders they will pay @ large share of thi Reception the Individual property cost. And al- »whers who are Interested in will be able and the expense. neer Thomaon on the cost of the improvem of the pian will be anxiv the genera: ‘The pubdite has he Parks hes been found out and will no doubt end hts wrecked life In the Penitentiary. And the public will comptacently fall Into the delusion that, With Parks removed, the great game of graft ho practiced is ended. One @evere dose having been iminiatered, the disease is supposed to have been ured. Whether the dose bite the rt t Of not, le & question not gen- erally raised. Parks will go to the penitentiary, but the game of graft will remain He has been far from being the whole personification of that game. He has deen but one comwhes! In a vast system. The system may be changed @ little to Mt a new ewheel that will take his place, but it will go right om. There's millions in it and billions back of it, and It will not stop be CAuse one Mar—a mere cogwhee!—has been broken. Gam Parks had an individuality af his own; he had a strong will and hard fists; when men in the unions opposed him he knocked them down and Walked to success over their bodies: he epitomised his@haracter in his own boast: 1 don't care a damn for the law er for any dama maa on th of the earth.” But, after all, he was but a type, There are others like him, in unions and out of them. His spirit was the common one In which trusts, of capital Ge weil as labor, are built up. And, indeed, it is strongly hinted that Parks was leas & leader of labor than @ tool of a buflding trust. Neither the union that Parks robbed, nor the bullders he blackmatled Were blind to what was golag on. Honest workingmen said, “Yes, Parks Ie a grafter, but in five years he hes had wages increased from $28 to H.W « day for 5.00 men.” Building contractors knew he waa a blackmailer, yet one great building trust imported him to New York, kept hie name for years on it» payroll and cashed his blackmail checks. ‘This means that the game of graft was far Digger than Parks. More cunning brains were In the game than those of a rough bully and bruiser. Greater interests were involved than those of this one man. Within five or six years the Geo. A. Fuller Construction company has Grown into the greatest construction eompany tn the world with its largest business in New York. Other construction companies were harrassed by strikes, but not this one. During the whole time of the big building trades lochout, thie concern nt steadily ahead putting up great buildings. Parks was busy blackmailing other construction companies or ordering strikes, but this one company enjoyed singular immunity. Through the distress of ita competitors it made uncounted millions. Tt was the Fuller company that took Parke from Chicago to New York, Kept his name on its payroll and cashed the checks he extorted from other Dullders. There te no direct evidence of any further connection between them. But to most minds that may possibly be enough. Sam Parks was not « dig enough man to hold up both the labor and the Capital of the grent building trades of New York. A trust with $20,000,000 stock and intimately allied with the st eel trust and leading banking and rail- Way interests was more to the right size. Parks’ size was that of a teol. ‘The New York union was robbed and betrayed, but it was not Sam Parks, the bruiser and bully, who did it. Parks can rot tm the penitentiary, but the game will go right on. The tool, the creature of a condition, ts gone, but the condition remains. No Knife—No Pain—Cross Eyes Straightened Examination and Glasses Fitted Free. Seattle, By Ear, Nose and Throat Infirmary, 4-5 Haller biock, cor. Second and Columbia. face COMPLAIN ever so little, you should protect them against a breakdown of vision. Consult us. WILZINSK! OPTICAL CO., Suite 214 Arcade; Citizens Light & Power Co. L. C. SMITH... J.W. CLISE....... C. R. COLLINS.. 1426 First Avenue Sunset... PHONES: Independent . ose sosssssees President ..Vice President General Manager Main - Phone, Main 1552) Up-to-Date Gas, Up-to-Date Methods piste Pore ~ Copyright 1009, Newspaper Moterprine Association, Great Soap Sal Continues Friday and Saturday ' Quaker ¢o'* “108. 1015 First Avenue be look Hi part lard and Oteen ide I First-Ave. puld we see her 4 weil with the ship or we knew to be @ good Detter, With him th ns for open water or to « for our makes. If he made up his mfod that the safety of the Bout era Cross demanded ve m he would take i, and let tom ak after tteelf, Mut | wide anx O eae; for, if the ship wer *. " help ua on Keu's tnlas Now the hman was the first to be moving when the day came and po sooner did all the higher }ahow us @ glimmer of the dawnlight than he set up the ladder and to show us the way to the = top You make signal; you feteh Batlormen go down where land: afr Little boat oom at mate go ovt Old Clairde-Lane he koow, Ah, m the wind J very @readful. t t ‘ harrikes. ¢ plan—bot tb all white « It was queer laughed at hin that he THE GLP WAS GONE there, and Seth Marker, lying on the stones and panting Uke @ great dow | Old Clair-de- Lane was fresh and like « pump might have done; “yonder on the hillside, shipmates—is it fire- files of tanterns? I stood to loo and hile I stood ready md a his br m English Seth Rerker named the thin heed tell as what he wished. | 9 tanterna,” eres he; “lanterns! “Mensicurs,” he ead, “speak not} sure and certain, captain.” long but go down, 1 welf am sbip- | Uttie girls) mate, too, Ah, measiours, you fo wise | to foliow me. Down there ne dog bark I show you the ladder and all be weil. nd the three ripping carrying them,” pute in Dolly Venn. Lads” said 1 “this js the une looked for, and I. for one, don't mean) Tomorrow you speak your ship—eo! to pase it by. I'm going to aak those hom For ma ney aie dio} jours: none young ladies for « short road to the| here with the children, me Rilis—and not lose any time about it shall come for old Clairde-Lune, none either.” never at no time-but you, you I ave ‘They all said “Aye, aye.” and we for the shipmates’ snke ran forward together. The halloning| It was odd talk, but no time to ara im the wood was closing in about us about {t I saw a ladder thrust up now; you could hear voloss wherever out of the pit, and when the old man you turned an ear, As for the lant-| went down I followed without hesita- erns, they darted from bush to bush/| tion, A lantern lighted in the dark: like glow-worms on o summer's night, | ness showed me a h nest ® foot so that I made certain they would | deep and carpeted over with big brown | dodge us after all tow | leaves and rage spread out. and in one | down enough, be ov n llcorner that which w not unlike « lost view of those guiding stare to | bed. There wae a little stove th gether, and found myself face to face! place and upon one side an awning with the last figure I might have asked | stretched against the rain; while cook for if you'd given me the chotce of a hundred For what should happen but that} the weird being, whom Seth Barker had called the “he-tion,” the old ow in petticoats, appeared of @ sudden right In the path before us, and, hold ing up & lantern warningly, he hailed us with « word which told us that he waa our friend. “Samper Hew thet Pa have man’s anywhere, ° —follow—follow!"" He turned to the bushes behind him, And seeming to dive between them, we found him, when we followed, flat on his stomach, the lantern out, and he running Uke @ dog up a winding path before him. He was leading us to the| ing pote and pans and other things made it pintn at a ginnce that thin) the im the man's ow: ntaine, 2 |honesty could be asked for [brought us to his own home. time to *peak of thanks. “What you've done for us me nor mine will ever for 1, warmly, “Here's a and a seaman’s thanks. We shook “hands and he the! lantern down upon the floo ' crying to the saints to help him; | Barker breathed like « winded he little Dolly Venm etood against “the wall with his head upon his arm, tBe old Frenchman drew the ladder degn made all snug. " it was pelther aaid an's hand erted he, in a nown for a Fi follow Clair-de-Lune act heights, I said, and when I remem-| “No one come here,” sald, “noghe dered the great bare peaks and steeple |find the way. You sleep, and tofor- ike rocks, upstandl biack 1b w you signal ship to wo down where} gloomy under starry #ky, 1 began to ow. For me and mine, not po. Fellows that this wild man was right tiie le’ my hy I am stranger’ in and that in the hills our safety tay. |my own country. No one remember} But of what we bad yot to learn, and| for all we knew to the contrary it might have been @ trap. |Clair-de-Lune. Twelve years I live} here—five times I sleep the dreadful} sieep which the faiand make—five we times I live where others dle. CHAPTER VIIT home, Mensieu i you THE BIRD'S NEST IN THE HILLS. /any? 1 not go; but you, you hasten because of the ale We all pricked curtour saying, @ ‘There had been a great round of alloning” and firing in the woods when we raced through them for our D our ears at this Dolly Venn, he lives, but It was all still and cold on | whipped out a question before I could the mountain side. What light there |—indeed, he spoke French prettily, and was came dowm through the craggy |for five minutes the two of them went gorge, and It fot until we had|at ft hammer and tongs. Climbed up and up for @ good haif| “What does he mean by sleeptime, hour oF more that we began to hear |Iad?” | asked. "Why shouldn't « man the sea breeze whistling among the |sleep on Ken's island? What nonsense higher peaks. As for the path itself, | will he talk next? 1t was oftentimes but a ledge againat| I'd forgotten that the old man spoke the wall of some sheer height, and | English too, but he turned upon me none, I think, but seamen could have | quickly and remind mo of the fact followed It, surely. Even I remembered | “No nonsese monsiour, a# many & where I was and feared to look down | one has found—no nonsense at all, but sometimes, but what with the allence very dreadful thing. Three, four time ae | wa BYNOPSIS and the fresh breeses and the thought, by the year It come; three, f Captain Jasper Bees, who tolls the! that we might live thr@veh the night, [it go, All men story, salle from Ingland to Kena| after al uf ve 1 could have hugged | away tleep « inland, in the Pacific, at the request| the wild man who led wh upward] Ah, the « 1 of Kis former mistress, Ruth Mel-| eo unfiie ehip f lenden, who, when rried d=| Burely no moat could have climbed] Me did it mund | Caerny nd] quicked than he did, As for the four| but he went to nd,| men he had saved from the devile in] Chinese. - Dolly, who underst aaket Regge to come in a year's] the thickets below, I don't belloye| lingo did not wet much fart time. 4 Dolly Venn go] there was one of them who didn't] “Mo saya that this isiand is ashore to ee Ruth, Jtrust him from the fiewt. If this old | by th nome t and of Hlvey They discover Ruth mich hanged | Fren m home to put pettleoat | Two or three times every year there and tearn that Caerny has left the his lege and to wear liow’s}oome up from the marshes a p island for a short time Ruth seems) mar down his back, we liked him nous fog which sends you into @ to be in trouble, but non t all the better for that, We followed | trance from which you don't recover aboard the ship. She is ch him over the dangerdus road ike| sometimes for montha. — It ean watched by Crerny's Wl children follow a master Mo Was| truce, sir, and yet thave what he says Jand Dolly leave her to retury to the| leading ua to some good ba I had True or unter Dolly waid I ship [no doubt of 1 ‘The thing that re | “we'll not give it the chan 1 They are fired at by hidden foen,| mained to tell. w had we the|fairty tale, of « though It does Dut get aboard ship without betng] strength and the breath to reach it? | not sound very pretty when y ar hurt. ‘That night a ship, lured by!” y may imagine that It was no} it falve lghta, ashore on the t thing run such @ race as we Nor t# that music any more to m nd, and the survivors of the! nad run and to be asked to climb @| king,” exclaimed Peter Bligh, mea K are fired upon. Reg becomes) mountain om the top of It. But men|ing that we should listen to a y assured that Cuerny'’s men are| will do wonders to save their necks,| of gunshots fired somewhere on th yo ay dite i ae land that is how It Is that we went! se ach we had failed to make Ruth once more, He is accompanied | Pint? Ah Ne cat = all yee d Pie ® it cay ‘ by Dolly Venn, Pe Miigh and)e fearsome place we had And meaning that it was danger Seth Barker, They see three pretty] how, with terrible gorg ous for us to go dowr Witte girls and an aged man. alll grapes of rocks, like dead . tell have put off and saved Greased in strange attire. Jasper) cering out of the darkmems nd t. anyway, We'll hail him os Ruth and urges her to return to! nowied with a hun | dawn ond h th . nowled with a hu wo- | dawn see where r Bagiand with bim. Hiution of ell the re.| They heard me in tom She tolls them that she is closely | And yet the old man must posh peat roaring In the peaks @ that Guarded, and may not leave t 4p, Up, as though he would touch the] weird, wild place; our knowledge of and, but gives him her diary to pry | the the island below; the old after he hae left her, Caerny’s men | “h.5 Lord be # French strange talk-no wonder return after plundering the ship, and | peice Bligh, at inet “ were wide open and Regge and his men take a hurried | pochor i¢ it's a mille oop far fr them. Dawn, indeed, leave, They are pursued and gradu | I pushed htm on ove wo waited for as those who are pare ally surrounded in the wood le¢ ghale and him to his | ing through the terrible night. J think CMAPTER Vit—(Continued) tenigue sometimes that, if we had known But, it look mmbard-at to “witty » in the pool, th what was fh store for us, should China Orange us when wel other 10 yards and you shall atop to| Dave prayed to God that we might not took the woodland path again, and » breath There's the old ‘lion h a” ur 7 I beltve it w a have been but for) waiting for us. 1 » thunder-iash, and changed all our de-|to the Frenchman's side and found ae cone . it to@ desperate hope. And to this m the bank of which! tna RAN “4 cea th mething Peter Bligh was the fi an great cupttke “hoie, |) Th wind blew @ hurrican hat to call our attention ttomlens and the last plage pMsht. and still @ full gale when Is It firefiies or lanterns? hel you'd have picked for a camp om all od that canee a tak : nee, bringing ov e worlds! the hillside, Dolly Venn was alfpad es “p » put down & ver all at ones, bringing out th ride! the hilinide, E y FE i avious thi The roaring of the breakers, the showers of stones which the heights rained down, the dreadful | note wild human voloes in the hills, drove sleep far from any man's eyes. And more than that, there was e ship to think of, What had be f the whip? Where did whe tt ond was wait this morning ecramble up " him to the heights tuth should be known or the worst. For the path or dangerous pinces we cared nothing| now. Imagine huw we raced for the ~ up f feet, now on dogs. And no wonder ier our hearts beat high and our hands were unsteady, for beyond the basin should find the sea, and the view might show us lite death. Ol Clair-de-Lune wae the first 0 be up, but f wa pon his hee and Dolly Venn not far behind me. Whe yke the first word I dow righ ot, but I hadn't been the heights more than tem seconds wince I kiew why it w what the true meas >. The ship hae gone? All the eyes in the wide world could not have found ber on that angry sea below us, or where on the biack apoken and of it might and looming hortson beyond) The night had taken her. Hope as rr epeak up as we might, the sure fact remained that the Southern Cross had steamed away from Ken's iniand and left us to our fates. He'll be running for sea-room and | come in when the gale fails” said Peter Bligh, when had stood all together a little while, ae erestfailen & jot as the Pacific ocean could show that day; “trust Mister Jacob to be eautious—he's a Scotchman and would think first of the abip.” “That's true,” cried Dolly Venn. “The ship's nut she'll come back again.” And then to me aid, very earnestly, “Ob, whe must come back. captain, “Aye, Ind," said 1, “let her ride out the gale and she'll pot back rig @rough. Mister Jacob ten't the one to I'm only wondering e-play Is to keep ux Amused until we sight the ship again. 4. Well, they looked doleful enough, but mot a man among them complained. They what the conw @ might be. They » to imagine that a man uld get from Ken's Isiand to San nclaco In any cockelshell the beach might show him. But 4 of them j talked about It; none char me with it. The ship had gone; the L knew when she would o in, It not for me Ing like a cblid I nor any man could make good. (Continued.) i o— Weatherman Says Snow ‘That means severe, cold weather, We've men's underwear, underatood and prices that not equaled in the city. Just call and ne N. Brooks & Co, 1331 2d ave, bide. oO Free Want Ads See Classified page for Free Want Ada. ee Consult Florence Marvin, proph te rd only | that which neither | Uncalled for Pants 2.15 f Worth $6.00 «| to $9.00 | At 3 Little Tallors First Ave . O. Block } rar In ER.Butterworth & Sons adertakers and Embaimers removed to their new block. FIRST AVENUE Roth Telephones, 98. roughly modera place which rty to call end i 1948 A the LADIES’ SUIT SPECIAL Mannish Effect Suite of Fine Quality Z i". Blues and Blacks, suit tatlor-a ed and milk Ined through Very stylish; re se 19.0. Rpectal~ $15.98 ~ 1418 SECOND Jacob Peri Near Pike Street. ‘MUCH INTEREST n those swell new fall an 88 Bho met re far tore durable than ally made for the price | Nherson: Germain G The Grand Combination Auction Sale « Horses Mules Cattle Vehicles and t the Beattie Auction Stable (Inc.), Third avenue, every models tn our T those will be @ large line od bane | here for drivers and chunks i] draught horses; if you have any kind of horves, mules, cattle, vehicles and harnesses to sell, consign them here If you want to buy, @ choloe assort- ment will be here to select from. M. J. Walker, Manager and Auction- ay Bring on your horses, Come ““M. J. WALKER Manager and Auctioneer $10 Joins the Richmond Piano Club $4.0 a month pays for the piano. And if you're not satisfied after % days’ trial we take the piano back and refund the $10. Sherman, Clay & Co. enn, 1209 iat. Go to Spinnings for bicycle repatra, BBD: FBS apm 711 Second Ave. Ei erento: Warning Aue ©. Bipes, both holding th the Royal College of Dental Bu: Hours—#:0 0 m. tot p. m option! etal #00 evens wor’ yurty fase ar /Guarantes! under the personal ee perv! ot kD. ona. Beston Painless Dentists We Have no Students—All Our Operators Are Licensed by the State of Washington Sliver Fillings s+... O98 Poresiain Crowns 3.50 ritten } Gia Crowns, mk 3.50 Bridge Worm, per tooth With sone 3.50 All Wi Our Artiote Vulcan vines, 6, D.D. 8 endant always pr 1422 Second Ave. Opposite Boo Marche fundays, $e m tit pm Laay YOU WOULD AVOIDDISAPPOINTMEN? ln your Glasses, : cal! on us Remember thas eres “eniy” up-to-date, onslustes fe the state, We wusceed because thew a oer method of Aiting EVERSOLE OPTIOAL COMPANY ua, New Tork biewk Paces, James 180. These are the only Dentists in Be. having the late botanical dis- ry to apply to the gums for XTRACTING, filling and orown- ling tect absolutely without pain d guaranteed for ten years. our offices have been established in Seattle ton years. We are the largest dental concern on the Pacifie Coast. | pvr AT prices for good work are pos- » us We do so much of it. 50¢ 1.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 igo W | We tell exactly what your work will comt by free examination. Ou plates give satisfaction, comfort an natural expression. Crown and bridge work of the best at lowest prices is our specialty. NO PAIN. Our name alone guare tee that your work will be of the bent. tendant always pres- jent. BROWN DENTAL COMPANY, Parlors— 1-6 Union Block, One Door South of | MacDougall @ Southwiek’s. * 8:20 a. m, to 6p, m. Lady a 518 Second Avenue Cor, Second ave, and James st. | PARLORS od without pain. ‘Teeth extracted free, without pain and replaced with new ones the same day. Bet Teeth . 4.00 Gold Fillings . TS Sliver Fillings . . 250 Bridge Work Gold Crown All Werk Guarantee: LADY ATTENDANT, Hours—-8 @ m to 6 pm. Sundays—9 a m. to 12 m oP AINLESS OHI ADENTISTS SAVE PAIN AND MONEY. Set of Teeth .... 22-k. Gold Crown Gold Fillings .. Sliver Fillings Teeth Without Plates . We have decided to make our Pearl Plates for jo. not cover roof of mouth. Guaranteed. We are not competing with cheap advertising dentists, but with first- class dentists at half their prices. No charge for Painless Extract- |ing when new Teeth are ordered. ‘We issue a i2-year protective |guarantee with all work. Hours-Daily and evenings till 9, Sunday, 9 to fatent | ————» a oH and STORAGE USE -~ QUEEN ANNE FLOUR HAMMOND MILLING OO., Searnc Sun- | Teeth positively extracted and fill- | 50 |e rs. | | NTER 8CH ‘Port Orchard Route The Official Line for U. S$. Navy Yard and Battleships ATHLON, INLAND FLYER, PORT ORCHARD PIER 2 Daily Time Card Leave Geattle—*s 30, 9 and 10 & m., 1:16, 2:30, 4:30 pm. Satur- ay only, 11:80 p. m. Leave Bremerton—#:16 and 11:45 a m.; 12:30, 3:00, 6:30 and 6:15 p.m Leave Sydney—4:00 and 11:25 a m.; 12 noon; § and @ p. m Leave Charieston—T°50 und 11:95 am; 4:46 and 6:06 p.m *Fxcept Sunde FARE, 60 CENTS ROUND TRIP City Ticket Office—€20 ist avenue. Pacific Packing & Navigation Co. Carrying Alaska Pacific Express on nited States mall FOR VALDES AND SEWARD. |] Calling at Juneau, Sitka, Yaku- |] tat, KAYAK>Rllamar and COOK INLET POINTS. 88.8. 1s. 8. & |] sauine NTA ANA......NOV. CELSIOR, D from Arlington Dock, p.m. No freight recetved after noon on day of sailing. Company reserves right to change steamers or dates of sall- |] ing without notice, €. E. CAINE, Operating Agent Phone, Main 1147. 18 First avenue, Seattle 16 1 EATTLE, EDMONDS AND EVERETT ROUTE Past Stre City x WINT, a Three Round Trips Deity. Leave, Beattle Ts am. tt ta Leave ziverett 0:25 « m., 2.30 p.m. and Cotman’ Dock—Beattle. at ind. L Everett Land Co. Dock— Telephones, Sunset. James 141, Eastern College of Painiess ‘ike. Masonic Temple Building. This ts not a Sage for siudenta— none-are ipl sdipitied, Ou focenpusea ‘of Io Hes fro come bere to pe ves Reis A a Gets ag -2- Becond and mage pain — preparation ret meth: known y ee not be min! ‘by those whi . ip ox! to pred Ys Lin ition Our prides | pia with fret-class work. Pury 82k Gold old used in all of our work. Towns from he to | Bridge Work from $3.50 to. Full Set Teeth, $3.50 ° | All work guaranteed for 0 years. Eastern College of Painless Second and Pike, over Peoples’ Bank Ledy giyare in attendance. Houre= 520 & Bundays, 3.8 to 2 "Pretty stad Rela te Be. By When there is @ feeling that the heart or lungs, blood or liver, brain or nerves are diseased, at on mence to doctor the the foundation of the trouble in cases out of every 100. Commence to regulate the digestive organs, get then in healthy working condition, and the other troubles will leave of themselves. Diseases which have their beginning tn the stomach must be cu through the stomach. The medicine for stomach disorders a half the ils of life ts Dr. Gunn's Im- proved Liver Pills. ‘These pills put all the digestive organs in good con- ition #0 that the disease has neo vasis to work upon. They are sold all druggists for 250 per box, One pill ts a dose. We will send a box post-paid, on receipt of 250, or to anybody who wants to try them we will send 2 pills free, Send name and address to Dr. Bosanko Oo. Philadeiph: Pa, The Quaker Drug Co., 1013 Ist ave., Seattle, 4 § 5 apa Arahat 0 I: —<