The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 21, 1914, Page 8

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itm some st me the Harvest Moon, on, heard the girl say a little wearily, trifle bored: “Oh, yes, heaps of things! Bring} ooking for something to do." Young Castle answered: will do or die trying. own room and began to look over ff she were beginning to be a/her er dresses. jaloud: “Lady Ridforth! if you're |loness of Ridforth! upon a photograph of her flance|for he had suffered the most hid e which stood on the dressing table Anda fat, 1 come back with it, Violet?" !mond shirt buttons. HENRY MILLER, GRIZZLED OL genial gentleman with al learned Miss Lindon! islands from D GIRL GETS GREAT . the March-|help him. Her eyes fell! He was not altogether sane, I think, ns and unbell that he had come to Australia the T looking ‘apart, like a stranger, |and dispatched {t by her chauffeur. |was trying to beg a passage back @m unseen third in that place. She) Afterwards she went upstairs to her/to Erisbane or Sydney “Presently Once she sald|came up to me and began to beg in most piteous terma that I would 1 questioned the man. ragged able things, but I ah, tramp | HE SEATTLE ST brief, the poor then and there. life had been broken was no longer any qu ting him out and the | bed and medical a few) nursing.” in a sort of whisper, who she was. I told him, and he gave a dreadful ery of anguish and despair. wretc Tt was as if the taking him board the ship, {t was a matter of attendance and THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE —— up once more, and her face was still, but grief had ravished it tn To be| credibly collapned | him. [ have brougut him in him. There |death.” She sald: ation of fit-| “No, I didn't even love him. on|T had—" “You told him you anid Lord Ridforth. “You him, I understand, and p | | And so," said she, “I have killed | If} made a sound like an audible groan. | back to you! | loved him,” | gan Kiswed | class, ymined to | « language she She set a sherry glass before her|in some and filled it from the little bottle| know she found. | saying: Miss Lindon dropped the Harvest! “Don't you see? Don't you un- to his|Moon into the glass, and as it dis-jderstand? Castle is not dead.) appeared the man across the table| He's not dead at all. For God's sake—” 1 bub streams of them, be-| But Miss Lindon gave a sudden to mow to the top of the! little whimpering cry and fell down as if the Hauid in it were|at his feet. She caugnt the man 1) e, but it w not, it was|by the knees and clung there, hid-| se ee | i i a id did not); He moved a step nearer,} He's coming WHO HAS A JOB HE’LL| By Justus Miles Forman | waiting,” ga:l she.) years ago, though he was English-| ‘The girl stared at Lord Midforth , wait svinegar, He looked acrons the ‘ jE wait you, Jerry Once born, 1 learned the reason for his} with frowning, puzzled eyes, She Did 1°" #b ked du Did at the gl who sat re st and (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper) more he spoke, unsteadily, He} coming, and his name, TF found that} still failed to understand, but whe! 1 do that? 1 dare It's rather |hin bard face softened, He Enterprice Association.) ead = ike me he ave an exceeding grim man and ruthie , quite er That famous—1 had wellnigh Do you love me, Violet And bitter smile elle jon, but there was | aaid infamous art known as the she, still in her odd, tender mood, You see,” she explained pa: | something In th de ed that year vest Moon awept like a stourge id tlent! 1 wanted to ma w a responsive chord tn him 1 cha the Southern world a dec Y Oh, yes, indead, Jerry to have position influence and| woman could not have done It de past, and yet I find thc: oven| Yes. And 11! wait for you, Never beautiful thin jowelry—-all that And now,” whe said, “will you~ the name is curiously unknown /feart Til walt It has been a passion with me, On/do you think, Lord Ridforth, that here in the North | She said It's ‘a test of you, that cruise, a few weeks ago, When | you could tell me more abe Then quite suddenty the pearl dis: | {sn't it? I met you, 1 delib: very-|him, any Httle thing, the Jittle appeared for nearly five years, It Tet fail T thing in my power The man regarded her very 4s with its resurrection that wo /shan't be alive ‘athe, Lene maeet ueeniy and tent } nea rher have here to deal sed her hands and went away marriage, I'd have he told her all that he knew, ¢ Misa Violet Li on came out of And that was 1 of it and soul for 1 new, | sup could remember or th nt it best pato ». She nodded to sev nd ete’ Ce | it? at that time to tel un Has ostotic. She nodded 80 t0r| eS eate slpped_ neatly Fou awe min ate" lat thatthe 19 tl of youn Gera fs in George » © morning, and eanly back into their p.ace | “Well, I fat that, and so I/\ferings, He must have talked quite presently became aware that there procession of ti Mise} took the Soames man instead. 1/ steadily for an hour or more \ d was a little knot of people before | covered her eyes with her} let him propose the ver vening | now e must—I must £0 a the window of Sydney's leading|hands, Afterward she gave a It before we landed in Suva, And—| first She drew toward her the Jeweler and goldsmith, The usual tle andy laugh, and tt turned Jerry saw u saw me let Soames | little sherry glass and looked down window display of rings and /at the 1, to a daugh of mockery kiss—Oh!’ upon tt At the bottom the iquid Drooches and of pins set with Aus Had she ever loved bir She She covered her eyes, writing was clouded and gray, but at he tralian stones had been covered shook her head slowly So now you know what I am—|top it had begun to clear. | She rose with a sort of pall of biack velve Poor Castle, with his dreams and} have been to her feet and Lord Ridforth rose And upon this little elevated plat-|his romantic oaths and his fond} Have been?” the man demanded. | with r ' form lay a single unset gem, a huge/eyes! Where was he now? Alive} | “Yes,” sald she, “Have been, It)" dri aid Mins on, “to pear-shaped, fiery 1 in/or dead? may seem a little odd but, you see, the mer of a and falt veh og uby in a mist ' The girl sat np with a little sud-| I-—love him now ow that he in/|ful g ffered through She made inquiries The pearl'den cry. Could tt be that young] dead | know that I love him; I wish | m andid in the t sure he ‘was the property of a travelor who Castle was the m sterlous trave | 1 could crawl on har and knees | won for me, 1 think he vuld t ave had graciously allowed its exhib!-| who had ht the Harvest Moon | began to be afraid to where he Hea and tell him #o € be he ¢ whi tion for a day or two, It was not/to Sydney? She dropp; A | | “Ll nursed this wreck of a man/I wish I were dead and lying with) was in the little gle and after for sale, and the owner did not again, smiling. Not he for ten days, ten very ter days, | him his gra ward shuddering #1 ‘wish hia name known. She had/was not in such as Castle, Ho was ’ y |1 heard horrors which will haun: me| | “Perhaps, you know,” she sald—|for the acid must hav parnee h mean io several things that} marked for failure. #o long as I live as they haunted] “perha ci dee me, under |throat with cruel strength erase. at they had fled from) She heard her mother's shrill) my friend before he died the other thi lo I will go now,” said Mise Lindon her mind. She said Home!" got/ voice at the window, and rose to Miss Lindon hid her face th} him all the whil ; it Lord Ridforth yped quick fmto the car and fell back against go tn | She covered her eyes, writhing a Httle exclamation of hor at} baerved {forth,| past her and stood before the d the soft cushions with a little sigh the door a monies note sent - ~ - ~—---—-— —jlord Ridforth f ’ 1 rath e it has r showed strange excite ner brief journey’s by hand, was giv er. It wa 1 Perhaps you would to n " ' aid Bre went tnroush the house, signed “Ridforth The girl gave fingers at him and/! knew his people in England and) ) now.” said } 1 . h trifle as Hes nent, 5 she ound nobody save a parlor matd, an exclamation of great surpris re in ees ag known th VW iett civilization 1 d| yo kin m dull fand so passed on into the garden » had met that middle» ge apy and to me to] tied go terribly, It 20 please Oh,” she said ou mean the p Miss Lindon went to & t t a few We reon a cru The walters cloared away the din-| t te ‘ p - F and halt you, to find a pearl for a lady who) pe ? You mean Harvest [ca Dench which stood fn the sha among th The Marquis of|ner things and departed to return crazed heomber that through | jad’ told hin nue Moc Ye ° acures hat ball | of bites and sat down there. Ridforth, making a leisure tour of|/no more until summoned, ‘The or-|# succession of deaths he was now! ‘pne girl's hands slipped ¢ we do with t wonker have to fe oman whom She closed her eyes, and it was /the globe, chanced to Include this satra began to play Gounod’s lit-|the bead of his house and an Irish/trom per face as if the streng Do with cried he. “Wear tt leved to t selfish and ‘fas if the three years past we d-| little cruise in his itinerary, and 80) tle “Herceuse Lord _Ridforth | peer had gone suddenly out of th and | of cour Wear tt at your wedding |heartless—hard as iron. I longed V@euly removed from the procession |fell in with Miss Violet Lindon and |drew a long breath as one who says, I need not tell you that I at/ for a long, silent instant 6 Wh on you|to make her suffer as she had made ‘ef time. She heard young Castle's her mother, also with a fat gentle-|“Now for it!" and raised his eyes.| once promised to a pas acrows at Lord Ridforth tone was harsh and Castle suffer, but I had no Woice as he sat beside her on the|man called Soames, a sheep owner.| He sald for him on our ship. The poor fel-| gave a loud arp cry bitter, but again » of it. I—I want to say that Dench; she weard it drop to a plead-| He left the ship, however, at ava! “I have @ little story to tell you. | low's gratitude, Miss Lindon, would, | well-n a ecren resentment y. 1 want to say that I've Gag whisper as he leanc! near to/in the Fijis instead of returning It concerns a man 1 found In Fil—|1 think, have touched your hea Castle It t wed g. I've seen st ther. to Sydney, Miss Lindon had/at Suva, where I left tt ’ You," she said vaguel eaking till tr , as keen and as Three years! And where was heard no more of him You ‘may remember of course, very terrtbl Lo ow,” she said ‘like tone—t ale human euffer young Castle now? God knew if} She thought of him now as she Ridforth, “that we arrive Ridforth regarded her a moment in| whisper The Harvest e eyes told it! 7 solute despa anybody. sat over his note. A little flush early one mo and were tobave silence. Then he sald saw it th orning in P 1k I'd go on and|and I've n great unselfishness Tt was not very often that Miss came to her che 4 she remem-|the day there. The passengers all) “A very odd things occurred. I dow. 1 saw Jerry found it—|n 8 Oh, no,! Thank God, 1 can reward it an it Lindon allowed her memories, feel-|bered the convenient opportunities |engaged vehicles to take them on|was leading my protege up the /he real ind it—somehow—and | You see, love Jerry |ought to be rewarded. Miss emotions unrestrained lice: she hed offered Lord Ridforth for|the usual drive across the hills and ‘beach’ toward one of the trader's! you brought it 4 |Castle, and Jerry's dead, and I|don, part of the story I told you Tat the sight of the Harvest Moon increasing the warmth of their ac-/ along the shore. But the late after. |stores. ‘There were trees and| He put one o hin walst-|killed him.” Then, after a little|was a lie, a deliberate lie, agreed Tying in state upon its pall of black 4 nce if he had cho 80 to|noon I spent in wandering about) shrubbery at the end of the alley,/coat pocket and stween thumb|space of vacant staring, she bent) upon between Gerald stle (only | had shaken her more than she/ do. Perhaps Lord Ridforth was|the little village. I had onee or/and among them stood two of the|and forefinger, withdrew small |over the Harvest Moon. he has another name now) and | would have believed to be possible. | slow to see opportunities. In any itwice noticed a very ragged and ship's passengers, © man and al object. It was the Harvest Moon.| “What shall I with ft, Lord| myself—No! Wait, please! Let It brought him back to her, the boy | case she had fled the’ failed | unkempt white man who # woman. The two must have imag A deep Mush awept Miss Lin #| Ridforth?” me explain. I did find him as bad ‘who had loved her, with an illusion outright. Hence—victory for the! be fing about with p ined themselves ser d securely | fac and ber hands twitched d pearl ts yours,” sald he, but|off as I told you. He had suffered | 4 ‘of reality that almost frightened |long patient Soames ve the from observation, for moved toward the pearl, but with-|he began to watch her with a new/all I said and more, but at the end|j, her. She heard the boy's voice—It| Miss Lindon took up note, and this ragged object |ah, permitting themselves, if 1 may|drew th and lay, as {t\expression in his eyes of my ten days’ nursing he did not with her once more which she had let fall in her lap,| purser and was re say so, nome slight expression of|were, half encircling {t I don't want it,” she said, shud-/ die; he recovered sufficiently to b “Give me a chance! Let me sack/and read ft through. A slow smile| pulsed. I sked him o thie mutual regard. My friend gras Abruptly she folded her arma to-| deri was a time when put on board ship for England.” ‘a city or two for you, build an em-/came upon her lps and remained | rather piteous tramp might be. Th by the arm, and when I turned | gether, and laid her face upon them,|! would have sold my soul for it; Lord Ridforth halted there Win a crown for you. Ain’t|there, It had an oddly triumphant]| purser told me that he waa a half-\to him he was trembling very vio-|and began to weep with terrible |and laughed over the bargain. Now frowning anxiously, for the girl there something you'd like done?” | look, and so had a new light that/ mad Australian reduced to extrem}-| le ike ® man in severe ague.|and rending sobs. Lord Ridforth|—oh, I don't want it stood still in her place and stared It seemed to Miss Lindon that,|was in her eyes. th doubtless through drink, that He pointed to the—ah, lady, among/ watched her without a ¢t or. ° " she sald, “I know what)at him with great and tragic eyes. range fashion, she was| Miss Lindon wrote @ Nettle note|he was without means and that he|the shrubbery, and he asked me,| But after a long time the girl sat) to do. \It was as if he had been speaking smarting & raise BRIDGEWORK he ‘Ancient and Modem FOWIN J. BROWS, DD. &, tt t raft \ It is te r abo Tarquinil, equi by seen. tooth neck, just under the free are the kim, but without ems croachment peridental ane the made the cut of a seven-t three thousand y of an ox ts nsed front tooth in idge, which ts now in im of Corneto, anciamt 9] & and this bridge hk in const tion of some e Seattle dentists which I have MODERN BRIDGEWORK. Modern bridgework ts the highest ttainme wh Ww in dental art. who is wil The real — ing to work for 7 instead of fake and stalk, perly prepare a tooth for its) abutment so that a tooth om 1 fit snug and tight around rds tt | | x GIVE ALECK M’NAB 22) 0:00: | . - | Kreatest reason for falture 1 “WEEP AND Y OU WEEP ALONE | | botchy. « ne trem ’ | A LECK McNAB wants a job. |ihe, S{Lempe made hy the incompes | CHAPTER CVIII stress and storm of life, even now Qualifications: Big, strong, twofleted. Well educated. has not been properly prepared | ter i6 bad aoe ~~ Genial. Courageous. Speaks half a dozen languages and After a tooth or root ts properly (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper |)" iad grown calm, that she a dozen mongrel dialects. An A1 raconteur, being a wit as prepared a crown may be made. of y POF | must have passed through much to + a a porcelain which resembl | Enterprise Association) fiat Sulehee | Ge caene or obia well as a sentimentalis oaty r cuembles the nat- | | 1was much impressed by “The | philosophy. tae Meee You explained McNab of McNab today, “I was a man of tectable and at the same time be By lungmey: 17 : 1 played at the theatre where Harry | state,” continued Mra. Selwyn, “for! pleased Huerta, who clapped me into prison and confiscated suitable only for side and back teeth, SAN FRANCISCO March 21. In nine of the 18 California Symone, bis wife and I went Inst|I think that the woman who ta not; ™Y Property. rie ; Gold ‘thiay filings ‘are ‘advocat —Never again can, the West | counties in which Henry Mil- night. Perbaps I would not have|able to grieve is unable to enjoy to ‘ase Oe ne fe and a coat to my back, but noth. they Dave not given, panerel uae a cattle king ike ler has holdings, the ranch been so greatly Interested if 1 had|the fullest, but I wish women could wee ‘ ‘i < faction, and, tice the ole-taeeen Henry Miller, now in his 85th | | acreage proper, embraces 660 not been with the Symones and| understand that happiness is made y eecape from that Mexican jail marked a oriele in my dowel pin, will be disregarded, wh year. He is the last of his | | 000 acres. Adding to this sub lknown Elfene’s predilection for|up of such little things, and the life. I felt | had lived too long among the wild people. | feared 1d and porcelain crowns will © divisions, city lots and proper- Pane y i : ; 1%, I had become ‘ungodly.’ My one ambition then was to get back ue in us tears and of Harry's antipathy for| world 1s full of joy if we could THE BRIDGEWORK G Vhat was tolerated and encour-| | ties in Oregon and Nevada, the | | them. only see it to civilization, study for the ministry, and then journey among The « SS ee exay ed: ‘esed in his day is wrong in this,| | Miller principality runs up to | | The story ss of the woman who| I wax thinking all these things the ‘heathen,’ teaching Christianity and right living. tistry, sacept'the pyorrhen ers measured by the new public stand-| | 4 mililon acres. | found early In her married life! during the progress of the play as y hopes have been dashed. | found, on coming to Se- the claim that bridgework and p ards, || __His cattle are estimated be. | | that her husband would do any-|1 watched Harry and Elic Here attle, that Christianity is a synonym for hypocrisy. The min- work have been done away wi His big “M” brand is on too many| | tween 65,000 and 160,000 head | thing for her if she only shed a few| were two 4 “ith evaretains| leters to whom | explained my purpose, gave me neither prac- some y which is a acres and too much precious water at the present time. Miller | tears, She wor this little gamelin the world » make t - tica’ fo and ber wr two-bits for a meal. jis a work whi for one man’s private property in| himself does not know even ap- | | in and out of season; consequentiy | and who should be ¢ ‘ hey called me ‘brother,’ but expected me to live on scrip- & settled land. || proximately the exact number. | | when the husband ‘met woman |other, drifting apart ural ‘tense, Discontented Old Man | who was not so selfish, and wholestranged simply because Pe: eoeeues all ideas of being a theologian, and got a job The very passion of acquisitive-| — -~— - oe had a normal viewpoint of Hfe, he|and luxury were gettir on rg pvigerie Shale Wh was like aoa vee among old friends. x to ce ta Mess, today still unsatiated, despite|ployes are respectful to the “Old| aturally became ry much Inter | deadly work conver je heathen. Peddie } iis ‘millions and vast dominions,| Hoss,” they merely tolerate with-| ested in her and finally the interest| I could see where El | t WANT A JO08 and. then pe become mockery to the in-|out needing him. He is not essen- | grew into love jousness and ever-ready tears got! 7 junk, which becon ity tial. In fact, almost in the way. . I caught Harry looking at Ellene|on pleasure-loving Harry's nerves | Iowa storage mi fies a a The grizzled old king of the a number of times rather curiously | and wh Harry's thoughtlessness C { R | Storage creamery work is as cle the ws range is an unhappy exile ‘rom and I knew from the way that she|and careless neglect seemed het omp ete eport l price aanahi:<s ee |, | teeth the empire he created. fidgeted in her chair that many oftnous In the self-centered eyes of| | yr AT a WHAT EVERYRODY sHOULD The knowledge that after his the truths had struck home Eliene. | of Market Today onsin triplets 20 @ Mad dks passing probably will come the | know there are times wnen the| I determined to go home and, be- Rasgscpes 2 @ Optomet quick dismemberment of his overcharged nerves and hing | fore I slept that night, to write to imburger as pew an great dominion |e alec cloud. heart can only be relleved by tears | Dick, although up to this time I | prices Paid Producers for Vegetables and . Story, jaw in | ing the old man’s waning years. | but a woman should be very|had made up my mind not to write | Fruit HER CONVICTIONS | Over 30 states | en into the quietude of his| chary of allowing herself this lux-|to him until he had written to me.| cg aane by J. W. Godwin & Ca.) is “The em well-guarded cloister have filtered | ury except in the privacy of her| I was brought out of meditation | Xpiiea, tocal cooking 6 @.128 | ployment of rumors of the growing single tax own room with no one Dut herself|by Eliene asking as the curtain | Yakima potatoes 16.00 ed ANI ig movement in the West, of heavier} as # r of her grief. went down on the last act of the | White potatos . ..-16.00 ee the use of land tithes to break up the great | Mrs lwyn, who seems to be| play: “Do you think, Madge, that |/ni\y, Wore seed Potatoes na DRUG for |holdings in the Pacific states, bol-| the wisest woman I have ever|this play is true? Will a man grow |onions, green . | Te 6 eat jstering the conservation policies known, talked to me a Mttle on this|tired of a woman's tears?” Harry | Cabbage O24@ .08 powere ot hu: ./, | which have already put Miller's re subject the other day. She said Jlooked at me quickly as though |; agi see man viston / |tainers on the defensive in many “Margie, writers have had much | anxious to know what I was going | omg the adapt: California counties t to say about the exquisite poetry of | to say lenses for the It is the handwriting on the wall | tears The truth of the matter is| “I think {t 1s absolutely true, my | . ch | aid thereof. With Henry Miller will pass the |there is, nothing poetical about |car,” 1 answered. “A woman WhO | California” head’ Tottuce | feudalism of the Weatern ranze. them, and, while your husband or|weeps in and out of season can| crate... 2.00 j ee eet Margaret Graham your dearest friends may sympa-|make up her mind that, in the end | Cs), tadianes ee (The End.) thize with you upon the occasion |she will be weeping alone, while |nense pote - | NEW YORK. March 21.—Mar-;0f an Infrequent paroxysm of grief) hubby is laughing with the other) w» nit 1.00 eae | garet Graham was just a minor|of temper, they will become per-| woman.” jar ge eee singer in Herbert's “S ip Duch.| feetly cold or even incensed when (To Be Continued Monday) ue tha Gane ” : Hy 7 one calls upon the overflowing tear | right glasses when | ean when Mm Ma eld, the % t hia examination of de- Henry Miller, Cattle King | ‘and opera prima donna, heard| ‘ucts too frequently 2 Fh vr strained eyes, he first " lee ial autad th aaa a | Almost every woman, by the FRISKY cows i ae takes note of any unhealthy condle vot thal Lind Oral tn sein | -Ammediately tt ? x time she is 40 years old has formu- 10 @ iat in-order that he may, recom= @rm old monarch because he can| trick of that kind could be pulled.|, Immediately there was a vacancy ed a working philosophy of life — ° id treatme utside of his own go longer gratify it through per-|The money made no difference to|!, the leht opera company und 1 feel, indeed, sorry for one sW YORK, March 21.—Tho po- | Tomators. crate bailed! 8 On, bate tO regulon Seed Sea | d beside 0 ol,”"| ie 6 Vaso ole q F 26 eason, seem to requ uch attens | Beans effort me, and besides, f only gota nickel,”| "ths. Kir! Nas a voice Ike) who says, as did a friend of mine|iice have as thelr prisoners eight en tion, "Hae then oatlafian hirasele ae For that reason he tsn't as con-|##/d Harold Wells, 20, as he cried|Melba’s,” Mattfield declared. “I) the other day: ‘I have come to un 225 @ 28s to the focal state (seeing quality), i tented as the poorest of his va in his cell at the city jafl last night. | "eve knew another voice to have derstand that there 1s nothing tn jcows charged with skating. The an- erate 160 @175 using the sklascope and other mods *O1 " > 6 achooner|that bell-like quality end her tc . . ; sy | 425 46 ern in ments and methods, é | Pour fishermen on the w hoaner SIRe Lat onLty: Bend her tol this world that te worth crying |tmale were taken sites custody by | , finally measures the etrongit Sf tae lever Knew How to Play anny arc y they were p ae 4, — | about.’ Policeman Decker, who found them re for 1 that rotrate the eyeballs He never learned how to play. |!" PO! eben ells held them up | Cento! esha deluetuas ve “L thought as T looked at this| floundering on the tee on Jamaica eel sae i: ee Had no ti With ostentation he| ¥!th @ revolver. : tid ner way woman's face, which showed the 'bay. over 2 Ine 3 MIN SPECT Yeas little patience. No private : " . a a —— - - Yon ‘under ° should dems yachts or cars, golf or‘tennis for 5 fal oe 18 ; \ ned abov Henry Mil ‘And so, white haired | | 85 JACKIES Go anata a6 “Ma, what's the stone age?” colt Optician {one who grinds @nd sad-eyed, he has come to lean of Our Waffles Are the Talk of 12 It usually depends on how at. {glass or other trahsparent material veel unhappy years of enforced idle BREMERTON, Mach 21.—All the the Town. vit tractive the girl is.” ied a maker and someti:nes ® jens. men who are to be discharged , Guines #00 9 Bieri | Ane an wh ‘At times he tries pathetically tol within the next #lx months, 185 in } I We make all our own bakery Relginn hares ? IME PIC | otatize eo and “thet summon a flash a oe oi energy: | number, have been made members i a goods. Veal, 65 to 120 1 @ ‘ts KS DOUGH | Gonsuls same, to have some Individual part in the| of the crow of tbe cruiser Bt. Lous, es o Try our 25c dinner, from 5 to Nork, wood bigek hogs he ie POR aan =saed | DR. ©, 'T, KNOWLTO 4 e nis name © leave for San Francisco to be ‘ ‘ mite as ° PORTLAND, Or. March’ 21.—|A Licensed, 2 thred nee peinsally he orders himselé-driven | come the receiving ship there * | , 8 p.m. SCGorrected da Sati ner Gey” |Robert L. Stevens, eget an onl : ier, | OP TOMES o his abattoirs . ' . nttor ldidates f @ ce 1 : ry stk hd athe niche: Wedding Annet 4 Hollywood L h Netive Waéhingtos |didates for governor, has with-| pr. EDWIN a BO saab yoo cod git nie x poaabage pee HORRID MAN i hs sevad Wcnijam Rutiohors oly uNC creamery, "Wetek | oy ; 11 [drawn from the race, because hefoptical Department tn rete nKs launched roll along, coining gold|, CHICAGO—Oftered his Mberty It] 29 the tyy Proos i Elliott 873 212 PIKE ST. mers, molt@ pack Fr) Potable eee hen bios Bene Aventin s he went home with his wife, Ben|} vik tah “sito, : 4 | Sastern creamery, soverno! © left for Detroit to a + venue from beef. Oranctusk tele tua nouns te ey le Only Union Dairy Lunch in i 21 |look after a coin-savng machine} are te First aventa! Osta . ve creamer ~ | 9 ; ejare t 3 enu In Only In the Way !yodayn’ trial he preferred the coun: |p. Seattle ry, to {Which he has financed, and which, |" V1 Keap ‘open, evenings” But while bis thousands of em- ty jail, m it is claimed, will make him a mil-}Unt!l and Sundays until 4, £0F ts gp 'Monatre, people who. work EDWIN J. DROWN,

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