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PAGE 8 Edible Egg, One daily, Dear Children, we beg. GRANGEVILLE, ~—Because the jail’s full ler, of Idaho county alleged I. Ww. W the hotel here. Armed guards patro! the corridors, en Child Health Alphabet By Mrs Prevteptet Peters Tdited Installment Six y following wer famou his career hung Many of his most doctrines were given at n addr Me dis le, the iniquities Letters immediate written on the president's » trip, whe > baler s, and other problems wildly acolaithing tt rope paying clone American—he a natior eader and al} of I attention to t great was homesick for hin boys and girl A Far Western Trip 1903, President Roosevelt trip to the Pacific coast Yellowstone park and the Grand Canyon of Arizona Tame Wild Creatures Yellowstone Park, Wye., April 16, 1908 Darling Ethel: I wish you could be here and see how tame all the wild creatures are. As I write a dow of deer have come down to the is the Excellent In April at least, Sheriff © q is holding 12 in locked rooms tn FIRST RUN? OF COURSE! Letters to Joseph Bucklin Bishop parade grounds mt of the they all right in fr the hay bugler, who haa be retreat Western ¢ ons. “i Soonery Darling very Ethel: 1 have thought tt good of you to much. Of er famed whieh will will be tiresome course T rath and the include San but Tam This in a beautiful hotel In which we are spending Sunday, with gard and a long 17-mile drive beside the beach and the rocks and among the pr and cypresses. I went on horseback My horve was a littic beauty, spirited, swift, surefooted }and enduring, As ie usually the case here they had a greaa deal of silver Jon the bridle and headstall, and |much carving on the waddle. We had some splendid gallops, By the | way, tell mother that everywhere n feeling next four days Francinoe »}out here, from the Mississippi to the Pacific riding grown-up I have seen most of the girls astride, and most of the women. I must nay I think it very much better for the horwes' backs. I think by the time you are an old lady the side-saddle will almost have vanished—I am sure I hope so I have forgotten | whether you like the side-saddie or not. It was very interesting going thru New Mexico and seeing the strange | old civilization of the desert, and next day the Grand Canyon of Artzona, wonderful and beautiful beyond de scription. I could have sat and | looked at it for days, It is @ tre mendous chasm, a mile deep and several miles wide, the cliffs carved into battlements, | towers and pinnacies, and the color jing wonderful, red and yellow and gray and green. Then we went thru the desert, passed acrons the Sierras and came into this semi-tropical country of southern California, with | palms and orange groves and olive orchards and immense quantities of flowers. ‘Treasures for the Children Del Monte, Cal., May 10, 1903 Blessed Kermit: The last week's travel I have really enjoyed, Last | Sunday and today (Sunday) and also on Wednesday at the Grand Canyon | 1 had long rides, and the country | has been strange and beautiful have collected a variety of treasures, | Y°°Y | which I shall have to try to divide up equally among you children. One | ponies | treasure, by the way, ls a very «mal! | | auin, badger, which I named Josiah, and he in now called Josh for short. He! |is very cunning and I hold him in! | my arms and pet him, I hope he will grow up friendiy—that ts if the | poor Uttle fellow lives to grow up amphitheatres, | wey Br ennet's sone I rode i the beach I ormora gulls and astonishing! ducks, tame More Treasures Del Monte, Cal, May 10, 1908 Blessed Archie: 1 think it ery cunning for you and Quentin that letter together, I uld have been with me wan to write me wish you ex we had a Rixey and me horses, and bridles; slender leather with The road led thru pine os forests and along the be eurf wan beating on the ocks In one place and right between two of the rocks w I really did not see how anything yuld swim a weal appeared and stood up on his tail half out of the foaming water and flapped his flippers, and was as {much at home as anything could be. autiful gulla flew clone to ua all around, and cormorants swam along the breakers or walked along the beach I have @ number of treasures to! divide among you children when I ket back. One of the treasures is Bul the Lissard. He is a« little live axard, called a horned frog, very cunning, who lives in a small box |The little badger, Josh, is very well Jand eats milk and potatoes. We took him out and gave him a run jin the mand today, So far he seeme an friendly as possible. When hf feela hungry he squeals and the colored porters insist that he says |"Dula-ny, Dulany,” beeause Du tay on Algonquin, for perfectly lovely ride, Dr I were ¢ with Mexican the reins of very ) two very hands silver rings. and cys | lany ie very good to him and takes! jeare of him, A Homesick President Del Monte, Cal, May 10, 1908. Dearest Quénty.quee; I loved | your letter. I am very homesick for | mother and for you children; but I [have enjoyed this week's travel. I [have been among the orange groves, where the trees have oranges grow ing thick upon them, and there are more flowers than you have ever neon. I have a gold top which I shall give you if mother thinks you an take care of it Perhaps all sive you a ailver bell instead. When lever I see @ little boy being brought up by his father or mothr to look at the procession as we pase by, I 1| think of you and Archie and feel homeaick Sometimes little | boys ride in the procession on thetr just like Archie on Algon- (To Be Continued Lloyd George Is Given New Backing) IT STARTS TODAY LEW WHITE THIRD — AND —- MADISON KE AG THE COAST'S GLOOM CHASERS— “OLE OLSON” AND “ABIE KABIBBLE” IN GLOBE TROTTERS WE'LL TELL THE WORLD IT’S SOME CLASSY SHOW— FULL OF PEP—LAUGHTER GALORE AND LOTS OF SURPRISES FURNISHED BY THE BEAUTY CHORUS MAT. TODAY, 27¢; NIGHTS AND SUNDAY, 40c. | BIG NEW SHOW EVERY SATURDAY | ARS CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE SUNDAY i 25 Be * jto school with @ lot of other boys. jbe too far away. You would come; to see me, wouldn't you?” Jand remember I'm going So it was settled, and Daddy took | him there myself,” Daddy Peter down town the last Saturiay| After dinner they ali. afternoon and bought him a new/|the station. Peter was all. 1 sult of knickerbockers, new “Sun-| when he climbed on the Schoo let Kim borrow you for a while He|44y” shoes, and a warm overcoat. | Daddy. asia |knows a.nice school for boys just) Early Sunday morning Peter went The last time he BY THE STORY LADY |your age, in his town, where you|to see Hal and Corny and the rest|™a’s wave from the ‘The weeks flew past now for Pe-| will get lots of exercise and train-|of his little ccowd, and promised to| thought he saw ing besides study. You will be with | wrie as often ax he coull. When/ rolling down her cheek, ter, and for Mama Palmer and Dad-|incie Peter every Sunday, and he|he came ‘ack, Mama was just say-| wasn't sure. Probably it For one day, near the end | wants to do a lot of mice things for | ing sunlight. And she : y “Yes, 1 know It's a wonderfol| anyhow, so everything wast of the first school term, Mama had Yee-en, Mama,” Peter answered |thing for him, and I'm grateful to| he started t ward Uncle P pulled Peter on her lap and asked | sjowly, “I'd like to go—if you and | Unc Peter, Buae-—it’s so hard to} [him how he would like to go away! Daddy and the twine just wouldn't! let him go." at all, Dulany is taking excellent| LONDON, Nov, 29—The govern-| cal of him, and we feed him on ment won a victory In the house of} | milk and potatoes I have enjoyed meeting an clasamate of mine at Harvard | Was heavyweight boxing Peter's eyes got too big and his mouth went too far open-to let him talk. “Uncle Peter has written to me, Mama explained, “and wants us to PETER Goes Away to commons late yesterday, when a mo | old |tion providing further investigation He | of the office of the odal controller champion was defeated, 254 to 69. The motion. | when I wae in college. [backed by the laborite group, was) T was much interested in your see considered equivalent to a vote of ling the wild deer. That was quite |censure to the Lioyd George govern remarkable. Today, by the way, as|ment The Naughty Nautch Girls DANCE “The Nampur Wiggle” —IN— ‘For a Womnas Honor’ STARRING H. B. WARNER A tensely dramatic story studded with sumptuous settings and teeming with color and action. / | ‘ dy, too. | Lightfoot Makes a Surprising Discovery BY THORNTON W. BURGESS (Copyright, 1919, by T. W Burgess) ROBABLY there was no happier | him this. A great longing to find the Thanksgiving in all the Great|™aker of those footprints took pos. |World than the Thanksgiving of | "*son of him. He lifted his — | some head and Metened for Lightfoot the Deer when the dreadful | siight sound which might show "that hunting season ended and he was! the stranger was near. With hia dell once more back in his beloved Green From ragtime kitchen maid to queen of the cabaret— j She didn’t know a soup ladle from a salad spoon, but oh, how she could ny h ih “tiv yah Wii mit irviry VW jw) wt i ae “A inl ENIAL Mert RUPOLI TAN THEATRE CT FROM AUSTRALIA Orchestra and Pipe Band PRICES; Nights and Sat, Thurs, and Fri Pius Wa ; i Sale Opens Monday, 10 A. M. 82.50 to 50: Ww SAT. iy, Thursday Nicht Mi srOOrs N ‘- Sale THURSDAY MAIL ORDERS Boe to 81,80; Mate. 260 to 81 Ou | Forest with nothing to fear. All his neighbors called on him to tell how «lad they were that he had escaped. and how the Green Forest would not have been the same had he not re cate nostrils he tested the wandering | little Night Breezes for a stray whiff of ncent to tell him which way to £0. But there was no sound, and the wandering little Night Breezes told him nothing. Lightfoot followed | Monday, DEC. 8th |} | turned. So Lightfoot roamed about without fear and was happy. It seemed to him that he could not be happier There was plenty to eat, and that| blessed feeling of nothing to fear. | | What more could any one ask? He! | began to grow sleck and fat, and| | handsomer than ever, The days were growing cooler and the frosty air made him feel good Just at dusk one evening he went down to his favorite drinking place the dainty footprints up the bank. | There they disappeared, for the! ground was hard. Lightfoot paused, | undecided which way to go. Next story: Lightfoot Catches “ Glimpse of the Stranger. i) RELIEVE CATARREL Wine Treatm: eludes Use of o Good Blood Purifier. The cause of catarrh existe in the blood, and is an impurity that pro- duces an inflammation of, and dis.| charge from, the mucous membranes. | It is commonly made worse by aud- changes of weather, indiscre in the matter of clothing, and and it is haz. | al diseane nal treatment | purifies the “m, and de- ry cane. or cathartic is need. ed, take the gentle Hood's Pills. |THERE IS NOTHING | TO EQUAL JO-TO FOR STOMACH TROUBLE For « long time Lightfoot stood wtastale ob teat tebuirtan, Constipation, sick headaches, ting, sour stomach, As he put|on the stomach and pains tomach after eating, will ly relief by taking Jo-to, n emergency remedy in the there is nothing quite the reliable, time-tried today and be con: | |iousness, bic at the Laughing Brook | down his head to drink he saw son | thing which #0 surprised him th he quite forgot that he was thirsty a footprint in the soft mud it was a footprint For a long time Lightfoot stood taring at that footprint. In his | great, soft eyes was a look of won-| Fr ample of this wonderful |der and surprise, You see that foot medy at any of the Bartell Five | print was exactly like one of his owr or Swift & Co, Four Big 300,000 very wonderful footprint. He quite sure that never had he DIVORCED PEOPLE IN AMERICA find; It was home | Yes, sir Jequal of this remedy, Try it vinced was such a dainty footprint. He forgot to drink. Instead, he began to search for other footprints, and presently he found them, Kach was as that first one. Who could have made them? That in what Lightfoot want ed to know, and what he meant to find out, It was clear to him that a stranger in the Green Forest, an somehow, he didn't re sent it in the least In fact, he was | giad. He couldn't have told why, but} it waa true. Lightfoot put his nose to the foot. | prints and eniffed of them, he not known by looking at those | prints that they had been made by a , his nowe would have told! READ THE HEART OF RACHAEL" f f K “UPSTAIRS” - “O SOLE MIO” Sung by CARUSO ? Accompanied by GUTERSON’S AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA 9 shimmy! And her bell-hop sweetheart is the, original jazz king! In the Ragtir-e Romance ORCHESTRA NUMBER Valse, PRIZMA . by “Files de Baden”..... Romzak Natural Color Scenic CLEMMER * SEATTLES BEST all PLAY HOUSE A Goldwyn Picture