The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 10, 1920, Page 8

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The Ridin’ Powder Henry Herbert Knibbs Copyright, 1919, by Henry Herbert Knibbs (Continued From Our Last Issue) “Well, I expe * te my family 1 the “I didn't kill Sam Hr Peto. “I never thought you did,” sald the Peritr, much to Pete's surprise “Phen what's the idee of dogstn’ ™e around like I was @ blame eoyote? . “You ain't bein’ domed.” said the @heriff, “not since I seen these here @ude Fl Paso police. While you been fm the hospital, I been nosin’ ‘round ttle, an’ takin’ what I found out wut some quarrels a man named Ed Brevoort had with, Sam Brent that was of tong standin’ and Which you don't know néthin @bout, an’ dont need to, together With the fact that Sam was killed with the kind of a gun that Hud's Known to pave carried ever since @nybody krbwed anythin’ of him Guess ft was Et Brevoort who was with you, wasn't itt Pete grinned. “It was me what set ft the window,” he said. Sheriff Owen shrugeed. “We all know that. I got your horse over to Gandorn, an’ the police here are g@endin’ your things up @rom the sta ion today. I seen the boys at the Papers an’ seoin’ as how they made guch a how! about your bein’ taken that there raid, an’ callin’ you a @esperate gunman an’ all, they were mighty glad to listen to what I had to say ‘bout clearin® you. There'll be Big pieces tn the papers tonight, ah” A expect when we git back you'll have to see some of them reporters * Back in his room Pete lay trying @o grasp the full significance of the Bittle bank book in his pocket. And Be thought of Ed Brevoort and won @ered where Brevoort was, and tf he Were in need of money. ‘The following day Pete had a long talk with Sheriff Owen, a talk which Fesulted in his accompmanytnk the sheriff to Sanborn. Here Pete stayed B week getting back his “sea legs”) again. Once more out in the open, | strength flowed back into his clean) Young body. During that week Pete write a letter to Dore Gray—the gost difficult task he had ever faced. | He thought of making her some kind of present, but his trate good sense) eautioned him to forego that pleas-/ t Lought to get back sheriff. nt,” asserted |! in ne an t tt in Gre for a while, for in making her/|the ranch house were unaaddlir Pete, was becoming a bit ridden in the back way, at Andy's suggestion, that they might surprise |ing that be was looking fine, and | ntient | the folles long to discover that there were no| schoolboys, as they welcomed him to| folks to surprise. | was open, but the house across from & present he might alko make a mis- eautious about making mistakes, He eontented himself with buying a new Btetson for Sheriff Owen, to be de- Tivered after Pete had left town. Next morning. long before the in- Dabitants of Sanborn had thrown ack their blankets, Pete was sad- Ging Bly Smoke. it ~ As Pete .hardened to the saddle,| way chatting about the various hap- We'll Make the First Pay- ment on Your Home Of course you want to own a little place of your own—it means happiness and a real stake in the success of Seattle. If you can’t raise the- amount necessary to make the first payment, but CAN make regular payments out of your salary or pay envelope, we are ready to make you a loan at a reasonable legal rate of interest. If you've got a regular job and can get friends to vouch for your character, that's all the security we want." : LET'S TALK IT OVER TODAY & INVESTMENT C°. Phone Moin 4210 1 Union St. SO LOD Oh, BD. OH F “42 are sick, as the greatest of all defensive | tue farthy day's journey fr almost must ec ot country without a hor an object tn life; thag was pure loaf- | Ing. on the ground that he needed this oper himself, admitting that he felt fit to he now thought well enough self to believe that Doris Gray would answer his lott: born. newer her le write to him? money walk into a store and buy an educa tion and have tt wrar and take it Mise be you'll take And me of the sp had Pete nodded, ttirned larily and leaned | remarked Andy, as he entered the | unmistakable igen back az « ‘The moa, « Fave no warning horseman, whe and bad ridden back to tho fire and sat jing tnto swallow nothing ever tried to swallow any Nfs + the Baileys had driven to town THE SEATTLE 21 bp... _ ||[ GLUG-GLUG! | Kid From — River fi STAR AT ae, ae Pete's uek bee. the 1 im mediately tuded bi in the while Andy hased Blue Smoke stall and hid Pete's saddle alightin, the At ox roke traveled faster and penings during they saw the ¢ the pony 1 and/t edge « squatted beatde his night fire, they were but a half m the Concho, Pete thetr journey an end, But he could meandering about the e and without into @ box Ma buckbeard, heard Panation of hi with indif. ference most un al in her “Ma's upset about somethin’,” ex “Beema a letter came the open. from brtet r tted that Ratley me t y's fo on | plained Natley © excused himeelt| for Pete just| “Letter from Pete!” of thing after his serious! “A letter for Pete, Ma says ft looks but he was honest with | like a lady's writin’ on the envelope. mayn she'd like to know what t aay kind of hard work, ale tx writin’ to Pete.” letters— for 1 sure would like to me him,” sald of him- | Andy pi “Well Pete might h sort ation mark and reports say the king's job is none too secure. ¢ alme perhaps, writing are clamaring for a republic. ferventty But what's in a throne, when ehodty’s writin’ to him at ‘oncho, looks ‘ike he | [6 OMO might dritt ne of these dayat |The picture? And Bailey strode into the house, | king! while Andy led the team to the corral | ~ Meanwhile Ma Bailey busted het-| ultimate wucem tn life. “Little Ruth,” preparing supper, and tt was) wrote Dorts Marr calbanaes of the boys in the bunkhouse) Pots folded the letter and put it in 1 something on her mind! his pocket. “From a friend of mine,” sounds which came from | he paid, Mashing slightly nen. Ma scolded the potatoes! Me Tailey sighed, smiled and as she fried them, rebuked the bis-/ «dened again. “You're just itching tc aits because they had browned &/ ene the boys. ‘Well, run along, and little too soon, censured the stove for | wi) Jim not to setup all night, You'll by behavior in having scorched | have your old bunk, And—TI hope that the biscuits, and reprimanded the! girt ni 14 Paso—ta a—e nico-—sen mammoth coffee pot that threatened | apie | “Why, ma! What's the matter? as Mra Baliey by 4 and showed f emotion D-does ehe powder if #0 r to her from San the urse, he would and if he answered would naturally answer Shucks! Why should she What good was his He coulin't Just And, of ¢ Sure, it’s the she at, welt Tolawe to him? evident te that ma by ped ur nm paper say, “He Gray, I a education st they had th the outfit tas a kind of p to b along with it Pete was camping within 50 yards where old Pop Annersley taught him to read and write seemed a long time o4 to deluge the steak *) “Ma's ago stoamin’ about somethin’,” inst his ¥ Pete bunkhouse. “Nothin m ‘The clatter of the pack horve bell | ner face aght the men to their feet and| “wot You mean Miss Gray they filed acroas tothe house, Andy.) why, what would she do that for? loitering behind them, amiw Pete com-| #15 49 handsome? from the stables, tried to com “Why ain’ wi o himself, but could not get ri4/ handsome, but she of the boyiah grin Jeyes and hair-—and complexion—and Hank Barley, the silent, war gazing ‘the smoothest little hands—and she's foe when be saw her ¢ye#/nuft right neat, She steps easy about his shoulders | widen, saw her rise and stand staring |ijke thorobred filly—and «he's nly turned and walked /at the doorway as Andy clumped {1./ plumb senaibie, Jest like you folks” Jown, blink-| followed by Pete. Thie ia 1 trying to) Ma Talley mat down sudderty. i eanatadt Stk: MAE be ets ac rder than he had| “it's all right, ma,” laughed Andy, |imptied comp might intimate in bis | alarmed at the expression on ber/ “And there's only one other woman face. “It's just Pete.” }T ever mw that made me feel right Pete!” echoed Ma Bailey. /to home and kind of ¢tad to have her And: then, “Gd&tness altve,| round tke her. And she’s got gray where you been ™ Jeyes and. the mime kind of hair, 's reply was lost in the atruffie | and—* an the men rose and ghook) “sakes afive, Pete Annerstoy! him, asking him a doren | others in as many seconds, amert-| th) hoh And I'm kissin’ her good right now.” And Pete grabbed behaving like a crowd of/ Ma Mafley and kinsed her heartily “He's changed.” Ma Bailey con The bunk housd) their midst again. | fided to herself, after Pete had dis- When the men Mininhed supper and lanpenred “Actin’ like a boy—to intimated that Pete should go With! cheer me op. But it weren't no boy them, Ma Halley we not hear of |that set there readin’ that letter They mt in the bunk house doore ‘tt the dishes, Ma Halley's chief inter ‘om, Pete’y changed, bless his beart! eat in life at the moment was to get! 4 week later, ax they nat at table Pete in the most comfortable rocking |asting one another whether Ma chair in the room, that abe might|maiey had tqok to makin’ ples agin hear his account of how ft al hap-|sext for practice or for Pete, and pened. plaguing that good woman conmd- And Pets told her—omitting no ¢tr-/cranty with their good-natured ban- cumstances, albeit he did net sccen-|ter, it occurred to Hill Haskins to tuate that part of his récital hating ask Pete tf he were going to beoune to do with Dorts Gray, merely men-|4 permanent member of the family, ‘tlontng her as “that little gray-eyed | or if he were atmply visiting; only nurse tn El Paso"—and th euch af | isi maid, “Are you aimin’ te throw ffhand manner that Ma Halley |in with us—or are you going to curl began to suapect that Peteswas keep-| your tail and drift when the mow ing something to himerlf. Finally. | mien by « series of croms-durstioning, com-| 1 reckon IT drift,” mid Pete ment and sympathetic concurrence.| This was news, Andy White de nhe arrtved at the femihine conctu- | murred forcibly sion that the gray-eynd nurse tn Fl! «Pete in going away on business,” Paso had eet her cap for Pete—of| nmerted Ma Failey Course, Pete was innocent of any | s@tune gnorted Andy mich ‘adjustment of hedgrar—to| «1 aim to be back sight entetantinte which he rom, and! iq pote stepping to the bedroom, returned|p™ . |e Pia f with the letter which had caused her! am, ring thing Pete did when so much speculation as to who was arrived in El Paso was to pare writing to Pete, and why the letter had been directed to the Concho. |® sult an near like that which he Pete glanced at the letter, and pee onan Andover wear an possible. thanked Ma Palley an he tucked ft| Pete's Stetson wns discanied for a in hie pocket |noft felt of ordinary dimensions. He T dent ented tf bought shoes, socks, and, fortified she told him, “ by bin new and fnconeplenous ap | parel, he—-flunked. t what kept mediately rushing peted with sod ‘rrasn, + ~~ of the approaching | br the tiny fire Just with ed in an in ward It ahe e the etre » “Pete! t rd my was sure got pretty leaped up ‘and White sheok it And Pet the flam ment . CHAPTER XUIL Home Fotks } m within of In an he ey at the corral, having st faintly shilel, Pet ¢ teot con found the An quests But ft did not take them | cenerally was locked. and Andy knew that S a4 he noon,” you oBen tt, Pete,” sinew: knows how laying In the post »by, Is Important | that doctor, mebby. Ob. it's from the bank. Sakes ive! To think of that man leaving a all that money! Mebby that) ank has failed!” | ‘lI reckon I better read it,” stam mered Pete, helplemdy. He felt, somehow, that ma would| Pete’ trom ‘tm. to the hospital proclaiming hin presence a question that never can be an. swered. Pete wanted to do just that thing—but he did not. Instead, he took a modest room at a modest hgtel. dropped in to xee Hodges, of the Stockmen's Security, and «pent 1 alighted if he didn't. Ma Bailey|severn! days mentally preparing watched face as he read the himself to explain fost why he had rather brief note from Doria, thank-|come to Kl Paso, finally arriving at ‘ing him for his letter t6 her, and as-| the conclusion that had come to suring him of her confidence in his| see little Ruth. Doris h@@ mid Ruth had missed hime Well, he had a right to drop in and nee the kid | That afternoon he betook himeeif to the hospital, and was for finding Andover there, to whom he confided.the obvious news that was tn town—and that he would | | to nee little Ruth for a minute, if it | was all right Andover told him that little Ruth had been taken to her home—and Pete wondered how she could still miss him, as Miss Gray had ints | mated in her last letter. And as he | wondered he saw light--not a great Hight, but a faint ray, which was re. and * o WA. @ WO DA. FS AOVAS NR O*RA.G*R OER CMR OR SMA ORG inate in And youcan'taffordtodoit when Health isthestake, When yoy prttocta cons, cold, catarrh, bronchitis, stomach an bowel trouble, or any other catarrhal ted in hin face ax he asked se, you are gambling. Jover when Miss Gray would t , Catarrh, in any form, reduces the re- ff] tievea trom duty, and if it wou sistance to disease. The sore and in- | Poribie to vee hier then ; flamed membranes afford a fertile field | A®@v"" *hoveht It might be pos for the growth of all germ bcivay: sui ot Verse peaponcer, bar disease, with the result that io taney’ feetinet bau | on be x some happy instinct cause Pete to you are more liable totake veto that suggestion on Influenza, Pneumonia “It ain't important,” he told or other contagion. lover, “I'l Jest mo around about rs six, and step in for a minute. Don't A Reliable Preventive and Protective Medicine | you say I'm in town Dorts came briskly down the | pital steps, gowned in The best, possible, defensive remedy is of tonic properties, potieg upon and enriching the blood, quieting to the nerves and soothing ‘ to the mucous membranes ‘ | On account of its long, well-known record BIBS | in the treatment of catarrhal diseases, PE-RU- ann NA, naturally, recommends itself as the logical and sen- sible medicine at this time. It will stimulate your digestion, aid elimination, pur- ify and enrich the blood, soothe the inflamed and con- gested membranes. ‘Thousands, in the last fifty years, have taken PE- RU-NA with the most satisfying success, and there is every reason to believe yourself in fit ani hon gray tur ote he wa. a trim skirt and jac and a jaunty ban, She almost walked int |for, aw It hax been stated |not thinking of him at al’, Sut of the cozy evening she would’ nd with her sister at the lattor’s apart ments on High at “Why, Mr. Annersley!" Fete flushed, the victim of sev eral emotions “God evenin', Mins |Gray, I—I thought I'd Jost step in |and nay ‘Hello’ to that little kid." | “Oh! Ruth?” and Doris flushed just the least bit herself, “Why, little Ruth is not here now.” “shucks! Well, I'm right glad yo are! Was you goin’ somewhere? “Yes, Out to my sister's on High rir can do the same. dightiog ie to resist disease, PR-RU-NA is ines. Don’tgamble, Catarrhal dis-§| , “1 Only been im town two or three days, #0 I don't know jest where High wt. is, but I reckon I could find my way back all right.” Withe further word they SOLD EVERYWHERE Wenstens Million Dollars’ Worth of the bubbling wine still flows? tter ammrance did not seem | It} Pete was going to help her with | were a growed man, and no wonder. | And. | And. | URDAY 10,000 DOP IN SEATTLE APRIL 10, Narcotics Sold Seattle has a “dope” population of 10,000 } The district bounded by Third and) |Wighth avenues and Pike and Union | streets in the market place. Opium ts ht here from the \Orient, sent ast, manufactured |ahipped back to the Orient to evade |the Harrison law, and smuggled in here for the addict, Narcotics, which |mold at $10,000,000 on the streets, There is trouble in Den-| Went this routp in 1919 | | Several rings, with representatives |here, control this traffic, Japanese land Americans combine in operation Many of: the Danish people|ot there rings | ‘This is the local narbotic situation as outlined by Progecutor Fred Brown today, after reports made by & corps of investigators who have been working for six months on the | narcotic traffic. JAPAN RESPONSIBLE | FOR GROWING EVIL “Japan in responsible for the! growing narcotic evil in this coun- try.” said Brown | “Only by checking export of nar- cotien to Japan can we hope to cure the evil here. “The Harrison law functions per- fectly. Under it, every grain of nar- otic manufactured is traced until it |i* consumed. But once the narcotic |leaves this country it is lost “America manufactures the mor |phine af the world” As long§as it |stays in this country, the et hae hard Ume securing it. it ones lthe narcotic leaven this country, the [Harrison law lowes it. It in then comparatively easy etnuggie it [back in. to and walked down the street. And) because Pete wanted to talk about something entirely impersonal, at once began to ask her what she thought of his latest plan, which was [to purehase an reat in the Concho. | Dorie thought it was @ splendid |pinn. She was sure—quite imper jsonally—that hé would make a suc conn of anything he attempted Pete was not mo sure, and he told her so. he joked him for doubting | himeelf He promptly tol her that he didn't doubt himself for a min ute, but that he did doubt the willing nena of the person whom he hoped to make a partner in the venture “Not Bir. Bailey?" she queried jelancing quickly at Pete's serious | fon. Nope. It's you.* } They walked another block with; out apeakine: then they walked still nother ‘They were out where the treets were more open and quiet |Row. ‘The sun was close to the edge of the denert. They had stopped in |front of a hous, near the edge of town, Pe face whs a bit pale; his |dark eyes were intense and gloomy. Suddenly Doris found two tears) trembling on her Mahes, and her| hand faltered. Then, being a sem/| sible person, she laughed away her emotion, for the time betng, and, tn- | vited Pete tn to supper, | Pete thought Doris’ sinter a migtry | [nice gil, plumb sensible and not a [dit stuck up. And later, wheh this |“plurmb renstble" person declared |that abe was rather tired and ex-| Jcused herself and disappeared, after bidding Pete goodnight, he knew] that she was a eensible hereon, He couldn't see how she could help it, being the sister of Doris. “So Ill be sayin’ good night.”| stated Pete, a few minutes later, an | he stood by the door, proud and| straight and as vital as 4 flame, But he didn’t say it, at least co-| herently. Doria’ hand was on bis sleeve. . Pete thought she had al! mighty pretty hand. And aa for her eyes—they were gray and misty and warm * © * and not at all like he had ever men them before. He! | laughed happily “You look plumb }tonewome! he nald “1-1 was.” | Pete dropped his hat, but he did not know it until, wellseveral min utes later, when Doris gave it to him. | THE END. | he 4 DEATH OF GEORGE EK. PIF ER, organizer of Olympic Foundry curred at his home, 106 Fidaigo Friday evening. The body is at! Georgetown Undertaking Co. | awaiting arrival of relatives at the parlors It has been estimated that the value of unreciaimed waste material in the United States, in the form of aperg rubber, metals, ete., is about GNVEHER ————OTRENGTH cs. Miller Says That is What | | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable | | Compound Did For Her— | | Read Her Letter— Minn.—“T was run | vous, could not at | night and was ) J more tired in the morning than | hen I went to | bed. I have two Minneapol Jown and n | youngest three | months old, and | it was drudge to care for them | as I felt so irri- | table and gener: | ally worn out. | From lack of rest and appetite my baby did not. get |enough nourishment from my milk so I started to give him two bottle f ngs a day, After taking thr tles of Lydia KE. Pinkham's Vege: | table Compound I felt like a new wo: | | man, full of life and energy, It is a| leasure to hildren an am very happy with them and fee! | fine. I nurse my baby exclusively | in and can’t say too much for your | medicine.”"—Mrs, A, L,, Mitten, 2633 24th St., Minneapolis, Minn, , Since we guarantee that all toati- is which we publish are genu- not fair to suppose that if Lydia EB. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound’ has the virtue to hi this | woman it will help Roget oman who ig suffering in a manner, | jounce on our street | Newport. children, the | E ADDICTS \or. GHENT TELLs... Prohibition’s Effect on Dope. Prosecutor How the Fiends Cinemania, Brown Says ' How Deprivation Causes Death, BY DR. (County RELI the board _ A. GH ull Phyniedan) |fews crimes formation f the rye tation esta YARCOTIC Lahed t or render valnable| when they ere deg a certain lenge the reaction sep 1 of #ymptom the flend is deprived the more intense ¢ ens.” These signg ness and dep wning, mneeing ontroled vou twitching and vd muscular and abdorainal Here in Year York the caaen time, or until the In “Japan ts the only country admitting practientty per the importa their b of nareoti Bven China has pro-| relieve hibited it. ‘The ring, therefore, its manufactured narcotics to Japan and smuggles them back here, with the crews on Japanese ors, One man can conceal narco valued at thousands of dollgrs TO CHECK TRAFFIC, PROHIBIT EXPORT “When Japan prohibits the tm portation of American dope, or w we prohibit the export of narce to Japan, the evil here will te died. Pvery grain will be che cent abit to 4 pain or er attributing riding tr 1 aw responaibilit for ly the the 68 .per cent of the | In this connect | | | m it might be tm | Jer that na- | and prohibition gone ef. | ete the number of addicta has in-| The heart and etreutation creased with leaps and bounds | weak and the face is haggard Why? {drawn with pallor, deepening to 1 Without attempting to be tech | nen, collapse, and, nical I will my that different people death. Wheg are constituted differently; there are | this condition, If one is tantaltzed| because it will have to stay in Fete u stimulation in some | the sight of the needle with « country. Then the traffic may form and those who or ein it, he is very likely to ntrolled. }lems on the placid order thru with the necessary inf “Pwo tons of manufactured | yinition 16 per of for they will do anything for narcotic was exported to dapan | mates “indulged” to a more dope. thru Seattle in 1919. This would | degree: now tu» sell, and most of it probably did | the wtimulant the sell, on Beatile’s streets for $19 |to, the weaker ones naturally 000,000, |to the dope, with the result “By checking the supply, we can|crime is correspondingly eliminate thy expense of giving the|in order to obtain the money where addict his narcotic and then chasing,| with to obtain the drug # catching and prosecuting him for it.| The rémedy for this particul It would perhaps be necessary to es. of the subject is plainly evi-|s tablish dispensaries, but restoration of light wine cause of the crime, and dope would be at least under Many of my 004 and worthy | the cause of the detection. It ig which {t in not now. friends will-probably throw up their | doubtedly nearly alf “The crows on Oriental ships: hands in holy horror, but 1 should’ mos’ pard-of and incomp ticularly the cooks, brir worry |e holdups and burglaries commit here, Go-betweens The reason why it is so much/in Seattle lately, can be traced Several other sources intervene, un-| r to amugele dope than whisky | dope ti finally it reaches the street ped simply becau the bulk is dier and finally the addict much less. It is done in every “Raw oplum wells for $6 an ounce | r. Wor n parts of China. The fin 4 hundred and one ways product in sold for $300 an | sta in their hair, and o # parts of the body. It in often sewed in the pleats of their skirts, in pow |der puffs, in the hems of their hant | kere hiefs, ete. In sending it to the jail, it is & common practice to write & letter soaked in a solution of the drug. The addict receive a “happy letter.” king, intenne paing, | teresting to ‘observe since onal fect, has int kod, thin except are be more c ore pro dult cent or t they cannot obt were ac . . NESDAY, Sheri? stz arrested Thos. Youn George Brown n! ° ustorm drift that increased were “Nt” to both had a quantity of h had * and guns, probability, if guilty, dope wag Scott ar ph lent beer and w t par the dope it over. | “ * con do for in other Re rs returning from brought home )9 foreign brides which were French and 1 British, while the rest were of other national in inhod . gous ADDICTS can communicate with each other by whistling They have a regular code when in terned. ‘The freemasonry that exists among |dopes in more wonderful than that of any other known organizatic They invariably help other brothers in distro. When they are deprived of the dope, the other fellow helps them out. | “The dope fiends move mysterious | ways, their wonders to perform.” This accounts tor the mysterious imanner in which the dopes at the jail and stockade’ often receive the jorus One fend will scarcely ever snitch on the other, because the suc coees of one dope's crime often means the mlvation of the other fellow for hin drug In some penal institutions ft ts said that dope fiends sometimes con: Good Glasses $5.00 $7.50 $10.0 | valley CH Coed. Redmond: Wolly wood Fair Hewion-Ineaquat—On account of part Huneet highway to Coalfield, take ¢ road wp hill east’ of Renton and the rave! bunkers thru Road goed beyond May Creek Ienaqnah-Vall Cy North Head Imenquah-Kedmumd Via Lake tas 18h—-Generail good, Kemt-Covingtom “Good All ronda Cow Lake District—rair Keatan-Remion Junctiow ood. Hanten-Beleves-— Fair Orillia Kas! Side Valiep—Roogh lamquals <iocte i Agbarn-DMack Diamond Good via Green fiver to Geos ereek Ali roade south | of Green river and sear Kaumolaw, | goo. “> ‘ iruvall Pall valley od lan Pane claw -Green tion fine Bnumeiaw, good Gresnwater riv PAVING 4 rep Met hel An p Via Rainier Valley. open for traffie between Reach and county lina Pav- way Taylor's mull hers ° terry * trom Des | Moines to Portage has been resumed, The Seattle Vashon Heights-Harper forty will be off run for about five days Roads on island, good Kenton-Kent-— last Bide load cloned twogn O'Brien and Kent (paving) , Dinmond—Ngad may be of Auburo Waring week detour signs at Auburn road : | BEIbGRs UNDER CONSTRUCTION Novelty Bridge Over Seoqualmie Cloned No passing Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through taking them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil, They act gently but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood, and purifying the entire system. They do that which calomel does, without any of the bad after effects. Take one or two every night for a week and note the pleasing effect, 10c and 25¢ a box. Hazen J. Titus has opened the 9th Chauncey Wright Restaurant and Bakery in connection with: the WALDORF HOTEL A better service is assured our guests and friends—everything new and inviting. The Waldorf Hotel Corner Pike and *Seventh “IS THERE LIFE AFTER DEATH?” England’s Greatest Living Scientist Answers “Yes” Tp “The dead ean communicate with the living. I inka this assertion on definite scientific grounds Sir Oliver } Lodge. \ DON’T MISS HEARING HIM SIR OLIVER LODGE World famous educator, on his tour in the interest of Psychic Research, will lecture on “THE EVIDENCE FOR SURVIVAL” at The Arena, Sunday Night, April 18th, 8 o’Clock Sale of seats opens at box office of The of-town mail orders, only, filled. ji Admission 50c to $200—plus war tax Arena Wednesday at 9 a. m, Out SE NORCENT Hh ISAT TPS

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