Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ree eS, ee +~ VS Oo i) Virgin Islanders | pom W. Edge for U. S. Presidency WASH am to WTON, March 13.-~A nominate Senator Walter New Jersey, for president was Metarted in the Virgin Islands recent My when he was there with other tors investigating conditions. | Tt Was at a dinner given to leading Bitizens of the islands. Madge was in ed as having followed Wood row Wilson into the governor's chair lof New Jersey and “likely to follow Iie into the White House.” | ie Announcement was grected enthusiastt erties of “Hear! as Bdge bowed his acknowl ent Leading favored finizing an Hdge-forPresident on the spot jcrats in the party said there only one thing lacking woadly in the Virgin Islands ugitive Addict of “Dope” Arrested liam Boawright, 24, a narcotic . who excaped from police court May 5 last by leaping over the H of the prisoner's dock, is om in jail. He was arrested Friday bt and is being held on an open Common sense is more or less un . Na SE Grip, Fevers Other Polson- jag. Prostrating Diseases | absolutely necessary that the be thoroughly cleaned, germs | Misease destroyed or driven out ite restored and the kidneys liver restored to perfect regular fon jew Sareaparilia has been be the people for 46 years as a gen Bivod purifying alterative tonte | ine and it has given perfect ton. Men and women whose others gave them Hood's parilia are now giving it to own children and grandet with perfect confidence. [It is L family medicine, for a wide ef ailments, always ready does good at any season of by ucated yeass of the story of Temarkable merit or a mibt | We laxative. take Hood's Pils. CBBFIER EFFECTS OF. Pie INFLUENZA TOBE FEARED AS MUCH AS THE DISEASE ITSELF. Man Tells How He Won Back | His Health and Strength toll .cf human | Influenza is © 48 appalling as the trail of} it leaves. In the wake of} are strewn a mass of hu- Wreckage numbering thousands, “women and chiktren, who will ‘Know a wei! day after. is a catarrhal disease. to the putrid poisons and the} a, slimy waste matter with it leaves the system clogged, is responsible for broken | and bodies racked and/ by almost eyery chronic disease known to doctors. fs bad but the resulta | be infinitely worse and it be) every one during the period | cence to select with care! cine upon which the future 2, Bon- Towa, did like thousands of and placed his dependence on ly fifty yeers old, which he Was the most successful treat- for catarrha! dixenses in the ‘This ix what he writes left me weak and fo ths I could gain no strength. | six bottles of PE-RU-NA Vafter taking a short time, my ight went up to 175 pounds, which je Most I ever weighed. My usual ‘Weather weight in the past has m about 155 i to use this letter.” f. Allen's trouble was catarrh of throat and bronchial tubes by attacks of asthma. g00d practice to keep PE-RU-| the house. For coughs, colds, | eatarrh, catafth of the stom bowels, it is wonderfully re It is tonic and laxative in| ean buy PE-RU-NA anywhere tablet or liquid form. The Man || | In Debt {| who needs a liberal loan can secure it here on his. per- sonal valuables and pay it back in small mounts by the BEAL PAINL ‘ofder to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which je the lightest strongest plate known. covers vi | makes the’ sglentific jafter ¢ ESS DENTISTS DR. EDWARD BY RUSS SIMONTON CLEVELAND, ©., March 12.—A scientist who walked a 20-foot circle on top of a Cleveland hill day, night in and out world now 15 years ago talk A universe sions Stars that seem to twinkle in ane place and really hang in another seo tin, of the sky. Yardsticks that and west than in south Light with weight that earth when sunbeams fall KINSTEIN THEORY RELATIVITY ‘These are bits of the now famous Rinstein theory of “The Relativity of Earth-motion and Ether-motion.” instein, philosopher and matha motician, bared hia profound yet fantastic theory upon the Michelson Morely experiment, performed in Cleveland in 1887, Without the more accurate and positive results trom the experiment redone by Morely and Dr, Dayton Clarence Miller, head of the physics department of the Case School of Applied Science with four dimen are longer east lying nerth and jars the here, Einstein could never have fat | rieated his doctrine of four dimen j sional space Dr. Albert A. Michelson was a professor of physics at the Western Reserve university here in 1887, He was the inventor of a marvelously delicate measuring instrument. This apparatus, the Michelson inter. ferameter, measured microscopic ob- jects in terms of light waves. That isa hair was so many thousand light waves in thickness, instead of so many hundredths of an inch. MORELY SUGGESTED INTERFEROMETER His friend was Dr. Morety, chem- ist of the Case school. Morely sug: gented that the Interferometer used to measure etherdrift. That was the beginning of the Einstein theory Michelsan and Morely, built a special interferometer. It was to measure the slip of the earth thru the ether of the space. Ether, nct ence believes, fills all space, just as alr surrounds the earth. The move- ment of the earth thru ether must, therefore, produce an “ether wind That wind must blow opposite the earth's direction. It is easier t swim across a stream than up- stream. A beam of light, therefore, would have less trouble in travelin, acroas the ether stream than up the ether steam. ' The Interferometer was to test You are igiasad bowed and measure the slowness of | man?" light traveling against the ether drift. But Morely and Michelson got no results. The beam of light trav led at identically the same rate of “peed. They published the fact. At the great Paris exposition Lord Kel vin, the English stugent, told Morely and Miller that the experiment was the one stumbling block in his theories of ether. « “LIKE TO SEK MORE DELICATE INSTRUMENTS” “I would Uke to see more dell) cate instruments used,” he said Dr. Miller and Morely had a great “ether drift interferomoter” built. It was used at first in a basement and later on the top of a hill like @ toy merry-go-round, It is a system of mirrors to guide a beam of light back and fourth across two different courses. While Morely held a notebook and wrote the re sults Mitler followed the slow turn. | ing arms of the interferometer day y from the time the ma chine was set up in 1903 until 1996. The beam always traveled at the same speed across and up the ether stream. Then Einstein presented the worl with his theory “It doesn’t travel at the same speed,” he said, “It appears to be muse the steel and wood arma of the interferometer expand just enough in one direction to absorb the differ. ence.” “Interesting,” men, “if true. Kinstein told t of proof. PHOTOGRAPH STARBE. DURING ECLIPSE “Watch a star,” he said. a total eclipse of the sun one near the sun, Photograph sald the scientific Show us.” m another method M “during Find ita ery little of the roof of the mouth; you ¢an bite corn off the cob; guaran teed 15 years $15.00 Set of Teeth. . EXAMINATION FREE cea 10.00 Set Whalebone Teeth. . 8.00 Crowns . $8.00 Bridgework . $2.00 Amalgam Fillimg . Painless Extracting 16 years, Have itipression taken in the . Examination and y of Our Plat ime. Most of our present nts, whose work is still who k. advice free ane rts. patronag: ving ood nal hen coming to ng this ad with you. © to 12 fer Werking Peepic Wracer-Paterson Co TE DENTISTS _ Oppectte WSTORELEY day after | "| “Hes not.” It looks | TWO MEN CHASED BEAM OF LIGHT ROUND AND ROUND FOR FIVE YEARS DR. ALBERT A.SINHELSON | semana it and distort your image.” Two great sctentific parties watch: ed the last eclipse of the sun in different parts of the world. It was as Kinastein said BAT | QR. DAYTON CPTLLER, | Then the scientific men their eyes and began the This is the Michelson-Mor-| struction of aii science to fit the ley-Miller “Ether Drift Inter-| sir. theory. No law they had— |fe rometer” which gave the} cludes was right by the calculations |data Einstein used to form-|% Pinstein | ulate his astounding theory of ee orn four dimension space, binked rece think of the progress science will make, armed now with @ brand new theory to _ |explain scores of errors heretofore | beam during the eclipse, Then photo. | existing in every ac graph it when ,the «un has moved| All this because of the good right by. The photographs will not tally | eye ef Dr. Miller, who follawed the because the gravitational pull of the | slow arm of the big merry-go-round un will draw the beam of light 15 years ago. THE LONG LANE’S TURNING } —b\— ; Hallie Erminie Rives Copyright, 1917, by Dodd, Mead & Co. || eee penton x (Continued From Our Last Ixsue.) blazed “The man you brought here There was no answer from behind|as your witness was the one who the mask, and Echo again addressed | shot you! Hin very fight is confes | the governor sion. And I you knew he | “This man must have heard my|was the gullty one!” His deep voice | pleading and pitied me. He thought|rang like a bell, quick with Indie of me before be thought of his own | nation and contempt. “You hate th escape. He took the letter I had|/man before you, and when he came come for from the safe and gave it|between you and your plan, you |to me, then dragged me to the door | tried to lie the noose about his neck! jand told me to run, So I~ got] Craig's face wan convuleed. — “Damn your beliefs! he shouted Bi seco ae pain had crept {0 | writs man is a convitt—e convict! Sext Gab Ges newepegers. anid De you heat?, Me ie under sen that the man who had fired the shot had been arrested. I believed this to| The governor had seated himeelf be true.” Again she paused and her |#t the table and was writing swiftly eyes shifted to the masked figure. |!e looked up now |“You must have known my name.| “And 1.” he thundered, “am gov | Yet you never told, Do you think.|ernor, As such, T don't care who whatever it might mean to me—after|he ts, I don't want to know. It is ;What you did—that I could keep|enough that J am convinced of his lallent, if the truth may help you | inn oe, as T am of your perjury now? Here ts hin pardon, From this mo- | Sevier had no answer, The gov-|ment he in free!” lernor was looking at'her with intent: | | ness, “You mean that he is not ihe! ¢ one who did the shooting? | ha believe He rose, and if honest indignation uld have blasted, hix look would blasted the man who stood livid | Craig sneered. “She saye what) jshe has been told to may,” he said with dry lips, “You will understand | why, presently.” | Perhaps,” returned the governor, | coldly Then, Echo— |“ “I shall.” turning to} ¥ do you know thie Is not the | “Thin rman ix tall; the man who did} the shooting was short.” | *Put—nin faee, You saw it that ight distinctly? Would you know t it you saw it again? “Ag well as 1 know | ‘The governor #po evenly “Let us go back to a matter of detail. I should like to picture the jseene that night @ little more din tinetly. Where were you standing jwhen the shot was fired?" She changed her position slightly nearly in the center of the BUY THIS HOME For $100 cash and $15 per month Never sch a chance to own your home offered before, Much better than renting. I build these two-room unit houses on my half-ncro Little City Farms, in West Seattle. You move in and finish the house at your leixure, We will take you out or call At the local office on Sunday, at 8424 35th ave, 8. W ours.” quietly and] | “Here. room.” ‘And the man who shot from the | alcove?” “There.” She pointed one side, to | the bay window, before which now |stood Paddy the Prick | To Beho the illusion was consider jable, for the room was not unlike |that other Mbrary in which had oc curred the scene she was so pain | fully redrawing What was the \like?” he anked “He was middie-sized and thick set with light hair that sprang in a cow: lick from his forehead. He * * *" She had stopped abruptly. She| was staring with wide, horrified eyes at the man who stood in the bay window—at the up-thrust, sand-col ored hair, the rounded shoulders, the red-rimmed eyes, which now held a/& trapped look of animal fear. She stiffened, She pointed at him “You!” she cried. “You are the man who fired that shot!” On the ntartled silence, already #0 intense with conflicting forces, the | accusation fell with the suddenness of an electric shock It effect on Paddy the Brick was instantaneous. If ever guilt and th dread that {8 confession showed upon a face, it was written upon his, in lines unmistakable that he who ran might read. Craig started from his seat. fool!” he marled at him. But Paddy the Brick gave him no glance. ‘The fear of the hunted was upon him. He turned, and with one desperate jerk, tore the hangings aside, and with arms before his face, plunged bodily thru the shattering guns of the bay-window to the| garden 80 abrupt and fateful had been the crash of his headlong flight, that for a breath it seemed as if all there had been turned to stone. Craig first | faund volce. “Enough of this farce!” he cried. “Governor Eveland, this man is an encaped convict, and I call upon you to do your duty!” The governor turned swiftly on him. “You coward and blackamiler!” he H. C. PETERS 16 Third Ave. IBERTY MARKET between Pike and Liberty Theatre man who shot you MUST nell yours, what they’re worth at the NATIONAL COMMER Second Av. and Mad’ ion St. “You | entent a SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES AI) ateen, BE Co $320 Title Trust Co. dat yh: BN jCameron Craig! “th GAVAGE’ TIRES & TUBES Yon Poet 4 Because of the motoring public's recognition of the ted “sterling quality of “Savage” products and their approval of the chosen policy of the House of Spreckels to make tires and tubes that are BUILT TO EXCEL, this move has been made necessary. We will be pleased to have you call on us in our “2! new wigwam. XA YS 4% 918 EAST-PIKESI. oa (hiids U and gasping before him. brain had once 1 “Lat me tell you one thing more,'Uoning; nor would it ever again! If you dare to drag| quicken that Inert body, at the be his name or that of this woman into|hest of the great surgeon in Buda publicity now, to satisfy your mean | pest, or of any other. revenge, I'll nee that you are indict-| Outside in the hall there were con ed, 80 help me God! We shall find| fusion and wondering voices, as the whose testimony will be believed!" | governor, with the aid of the judge Craig would have shouted, too, but}and other willing hands, bore the his tongue seamed tied and a heavy | helpless form to the car that waited torpor waa clutching all his limbs. jat the foot of the drive. He heard his own voice come forth,| In the «lent room Echo saw the ragged and broken: striped figure pass behind the big “I-—{ dare! You—this—! leather screen, to emerge a moment Tottering, he lurched to a chair| later, still wearing the mask but clad and slipped in a huddle to the floor.|now in the conventional black-and He lay there upon his face with-) white of masculine evening dress out a word or movement. He did not|In his hand he carried a striped hear the governor's exclamation nor bundle. He Inid this on the red coals the volees about him, nor feel the of the grate. As he stood with his touch of inquiring hands at heart agd | back to her, some trick In the posture wrist” His passion had undone him.) brought ber a quick thrill of The dulling pulse beat on, but the! wretehedness In the radiance she The Cornish School of She started and looked up. The Musi usic gure had turned from the fireplace! Announces Was standing before her—with un. covéred face! “You!” she said You--you!” “Yea.” | With her eyes upon him she moved away with uncertain, backward steps Private Instruction and 1 Classes in Diction . Oral English Public Speaking Interpretation of You! All—the Ume?” "All the time.” Poems and Plays BY used. His arma were crushing her to him He bent his never—that! he murmured, | with his lips against her cheek. “And I," she whispered, “I thought you had gone away, and didn't care any more, And all along—all along * * * When they drew a little apart so that each might better see the other's face, she looked at him with lips that were still trembling, “The day after that—that night—l went to your of fice. I saw my®broken picture—and the bottle, I guessed—I guessed—" “It was true,” be said, “I threw |away my promise to you, I would |have thrown myself away with t!| My darling! SCHOOL OF MUSIC But it was not to be, heart! 1 around her now Tel. East 579 |have come back to you, dearest: she put one hand to her throat don't care to understand—now. Margaret Prendergast i'm only trying—to realize—" She ‘Two great tears rolled down cheeks. “Then you,” she whis Recently of the faculty of the Leland Powers ered, “then you know why I went there. You could not believe that I ' School of the Spoken Word. that 1 THE, CORNISH with tender flere | dearest of all the world!” At midnight the great porch of Midfields was hung gay with lanterns | and bunting and Judge Allen and} Governor Eveland stood watching the rear guard’ of torchbearers stream down the drive. ‘They had swung down the main street, a band at their head, a shouting, jostling army, to acclaim the governor-elect. ‘Treadwell came up the drive. “I thought,” he aad, Cooking, Eating and Baking White Winter main Apple Spitzenberg Apples Delictous Apples Rome Beauty Apples che Apples Winesap Apples at Wholesale and Retatt T Pear- ur face a smile of relief by applying RESINOL OINTMENT to he ching patch oh seera 4 r the irri- \ aoe os tated spot on your skin which some part of yoru Closing ban aha iey Wine Pahessin i, am eee who have us is gentle an ointment with its healing properties can $e Wee Berke knowthecomfortit gives, Atal om want i Bring to than you th would like to know about Craig. He is as he was before they took him abroad for the operation. It is un- likely that there will ever be any change again, they think.” “It has been a singular evening,” Governor Eveland said. “I am sorry Sevier was not here earliep—when our convict came. Strange that even you, Treadwell, should not have seen his face! I wonder,” he added musingly, “if we shall ever know who he was!" The judge shook his head—the same wonder was in his mind. Tread- well's face was inscrutable. The gov- ernor’s gaze strayed up the long porch where, at the further end, a girl stood with the governor-elect in| the romy glow of the lanterns. He laid his gaunt hand affectionately on | the judge's shoulder. Brave and true!” he said. “When I think of what she told us tonight, | Beverly, I have no words!” Treadwell broke the silence. He MS HIE Seattle Branch of The Spreckels “Savage” Tire Company "ig pleased to announce that it has moved into commodious si new quarters at 918 East Pike Street, where the tire trade , Will be assured of the prompt, efficient and courteous attention that ory is always a marked chatacteristic of “Savage” Service. ". The individual consumer, who in the end is the judge of the jnerits-of a product, and with whom the final verdict must rest, has set his seal of approval on the uniformly reliable performance of spoke with a little flush mounting in his face, “I hope I need not saz that I—that what we have heard to night—" But the judge stopped him. “M: dear Treadwell!’ he said, in genth reproof. “My dear Treadwell! W: - are all gentlemen! THE END. LET'S have lunch at Boldt's today Advertisement, Yesler’s Lakewood Addition Chotes building and lots with ideal Washi =. invest- view of sts. on Wilson ave, 20 minutes | from city hall. Prices are che: cash or easy terms. Rainier Val- y cars to Holly, office, 1 block ap the hill. Open Sundays, YESLER ESTATE, INC. Hl Pioneer Building Holly St. IT 18 CHEAPER TO OWN YOUR OWN HOME IN ARGONNE Than to pay rent anywhere and have nothing to show for your money. and on ¢ r terms than any Gietrict, led 95th St. w and the Dverett Interurban; splendid » Argonne quarter and half-acre tracts are selling cheaper other ‘oodinad Park Ave. just north of yet they are on the great Nerth Trunk Neulevard have rapid transit, urban, motor bus, jitney and street car. fin the Woodiand Park choice of inter- City water, electric lights, and good, deep, fertile soil. inte quarter and half-ncres. There i @ home in reach of every man O5th st. Weedland Park Ave. HOW TO GET THERE: Take G een Lake car to Kaufman's Station and 5-cent jitne: which passes Argonne, or take interurban and Edmonds bus, whic also passes Argonne Man at office on ground to show property. Go out Sund Renick Watrous Co. MAIN 94 MARION BLOCK “I Will Not Live in Debt Another Day!” You needn’t. A loan with us will pay your debts, free you from worry, and make you a better workman. Weekly or monthly payments arranged. A loan of $100.00 costs you $8.00 interest. Our Requirements: If you are regularly employed, If you are honest, We will lend you. You do not need to own property) No assignment of wages, no mortgage of property required. Loans Based on Character and Earning Power Industrial Loan & Investment Co Phone Main 4210,