The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 19, 1920, Page 7

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ees av 4 w § 4 ! ; 1 @ATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1970, B CONFESSES TO PORTLAND CRIME|Wants Uniform Youth Says He and Com-| panion Murdered Driver PORTLAND, mysterious munter Tune 19 Harry has been cleared up The Dubin: Ore, sky, a week aso, by ce Moore, the confession of he and Rus 19, who told the polic fel) Blake, anned the death of the auto-ni driver so they might secure his automobile in which to take girls joy riding. Moore, according to the police, fald Binke did the actual killing, Striking Dubinsky over the head with (PAID LIVE QU WILLIAM JENNIN BRYAN should be the presidential nominee for all political parties this year, The people one and all have faith in his honesty of purpose. Mr. Bryan's vision of lofty ideals has never been obscured by the power of money, nor has principle ever been sacrificed by him for personal or political pr ment Mr. Bryan as a young lenged the ath Power of the earth in 1896 and be fame one of the world's foremost advocates of progress. He bad been elected to Congress in 1892 ing his term became the rec champion of the common peo @emocratic government in this na tion. Mr. Bryan's eye, which is the mir. Tor of the soul, has no flaw. He rea sons from the effects to their cause, and having A political ailment or ma hes th: David ¢ money remedy. If po ery is nm @esary, his words of dom and logic are as keen as the surgeon's knife. Mr. Bryan is the world’s foremost advocate of sober reason aad inter Rational peace. His motives are ever questioned, even by his polit jeal opponents. His great faith in the people and his trust in the ulti mate triumph of humanity's cause is the source from which his great strength to do service is derived Mr. Bryan has been the prophet of this nation for a quarter of a tury. In him the elements are xo Diended that he has the fullest con. Sideration for all mankind. He is the enemy of no man. People who @isagree with him respect him. Some may condemn him so as to avoid trying to answer his logic. Mr. Bryan is quick to give credit our Republican friends when ir action merits it. He ts just as ‘Quick to chastise us Democrits when i is our due; at the sume time he Which he recognizes as good in the great onward world Socialist move. ment. He loans much political tim. ber to others, but gets his from the great forests of political economy and economic determinism. Mr. Bryan never falters or hesi tates, but when a righteous cause is unpopular, he popularizes it by biaz ing the trail and public's attention, and thereby get ting the public’s consideration and Judgment on the question involved Mr. Bryan is as brave a son America ever produced. Not only time of war has he served the na tion, but he led the great temper. ance forces to victory against Gen- as eral John Barleycorn and all his Satanic legions. Now, when the World returns to peace and the United States needs ordedly recon struction and a man who can call the nation to order and compel the rich to respect the law as well as the poor, and promulgate the pubile g00d, William Jennings Bryan is the| man in whom it is aafe to impose this most sacred trust as chief exec- utive of our nation. George Wash. ington was the father and Abraham Lincoln the preserver of our nation, but it was Thomas | wowed the seed of democracy in this nation, and William Jennings Bryan ix the husbandman who has cuiti Yated that seed and kept the watch | fires of our democracy burning until through that matchless statesman, Woodrow Wilson, the seed of our @emocracy was sowed among the fiations of the world at the peace table of Versailles Again, I say that William Jen mings Bryan is the man most and Best qualified to cultivate that world democracy, and to restrain jal privilege from destroying it| home, and if the election of our president were non-p and by direct vote of the people, there is doubt that William Jennings Bryan Would be the people's cholce. THE REPUBLICAN PARTY has chosen its standard bearer and adopted its platform. Both are sat- isfactory to the profiteers Senator Harding has never at any time joined in to ad @ progres sive thought or movement, and the platform is evasive on the vital ques tions before the American people. ‘Therefore, .voting the Republican National ticket will be like buying a cat ina bag. The time now is when the people of this nation entitled sto know whether the: re voting to “place in power thowe who are friends Dot special privilege, or those who are @yriends of the people. Judging from J past performances, the people of this nation have nothing to expect from the Republican party thin year. Furthermore, when the progressives in the State of Washington are per. mitted to read Mr. Harding's edi torials published in ) and after, on ex-President Theoc Roosevelt, it will require a visit to the miracle man or a night's sleep with the oulja board before they can vote for Hard ing and retain their religiou: scruples. THE V1. DISVELS ANY DOUBT 8T ABOUT WALL being behind Senator ¥, In the issue of June 15, | q e 13, we read: “Leased Wire Ser livice of the Pout-Intelligencer and| New York Times.” ADVERTISBMENT,) BY EDWIN J. BROWN ie ready and willing to admit that) challenging the | Jefferson who} no} a tire chain, and that the two of them threw the body into the Willamette | river at Oregon City Hotel Olympian Will Open July 15 OLYMPIA, June 19.—Butlt by the citizens of Olympia at a cost of approximately $325,000, the new Hotel Olympian will be formally opened July 15, The hostelry has over 155 rooms, half of them with private baths, is six stories in height and is provided with every for venience guests ESTIONS “New York, June 14 today’s dealing was o explanations, but might be laid upon political influe upon ntiment. While the selection of Senator Harding the Republican nominee for presi dent undoubtedly brought consider able surprise to the financial | munity, conservative banking jon appeared not to disclose disap. | Pointm: nt On the contrary, the mment heard during the day was generally anited n the point that |the candidate's recon! indicated the | forwarding of Republican policies of | the sort favored by the Wall Street | majority, and as the day progres | there seemed to be a strengthen decline pn to nev much in eral too stress com opin ng Divorce Laws for All States Bullock. LOS ANGELES, June 19. — A lea to whip the sentiment of the nation into a solid campaign for the creation of ‘ol » ° t of confidence that the ticket would ag Uniform: mariage and Be, divorce laws, has been organize be strong in gathering votes. | I doutt if General Wood or Gov. | tis, city, sometimes called the ago Fal Wood or Gov lond' Rene” of America, because of | ernor Lowden would have been as! i Gor. record } satiotectaty to Wall Street as Mr. The president and founder of this ae organization ix Mrs, Georgia P, Bul é ™ Z «7, | lock, well-known atto ice pres RADICALISM IN THE UNITED \Genpot the National Women’s Law | STATES has its cause, like all other - gentle Hope ash | ra@icalion tm ‘the world. David's conflict of the laws in the army that routed the Philistines was states, pertaining to mar an army of radicals that proclaimed “ and divoree, hax led many to faith in the living God. It ts claimed pose ale ° wer that a wise and uniform re that David's army was composed of | Visor ot laws, with tetereoce to the disinherited, the criminals, the/ iio cital relations, must be made," | oppressed and the exploited, but they} jpeg : saved the day. However, David had|"""rhy state is built upon family one advantage over such men A5/ties and if we could obtain an President Wilson, Bryan, La Folletta, nd “ Broome “ _ mendment e constitution of the Johnson and Borah. There were no euendmen eign go newspapers for hire to psycholo United States or get con, & law providing for national uniform ens to pane the public Into accepting a brain laws on this ject, it would go far |storm for a revolution. |to correct abuses and do much to - raise the andar: porality ROBERT MONTGOMERY soceuae of morality and lishes a real Democratic paper inesiee cheek ‘délaus Whe om Puyallup Valley Tribune. — Every! members the executive board of Democrat in the State of Washing:| the iecsuc. tus sie aate, te ton ought to subscribe for it and) piace i nx ¥ read it. One reason why some peo : Mrs. Bullock anno‘inons ple drift into the reactionary Repub |wige campaign will ue made from lican ranks is because they do Notjing Low Angeles League headquart | know much about us Democrats, ex: | (/ ; ” | cept what the Republicans say about | us, and usually, that ls not so } i ane THEODORE ROOSEVELT, JR, toid somebody, and somebody told Jack Sullivan or somebody, that somebody was going to talk to the Republican platform — committee about the Soldiers’ bonus. Figura-| tively speaking, the big bomes gave) | Theodore and Jackie to understand | |that “little boys should be seen but} not heard,” and we have not heard) about the Soldiers’ bonus since from | Republican headquarters. ] DR. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUT} Missing Relatives LER w the smartest boy In the| | Republican convention; no one told! Mr. Guflak Hovden, of Stanwood. | him so, he found it out himself when|Washington, is most anxious to jhe spilled the beans about the stock /Imarn of the whereabouts of his gamblers that controlled the conven-|brother, Ole Hovd formerly pri |tion. But he did not complain about |vate, Company M st infantry the aggregation from Wall Street|who was harged from Camp that put Harding over, with the help | Lewis, December 15, 1919. Mr. Ole from the standputters in the United|Hovden was last seen at the Red States Senate. Cross offices, 215 University «t, on einai |April 20. He was to report there IF THEODORE ROOSEVELT can/the next morning, but never return go out and support Harding by say (¢d. He is suffering from melan Ing g00d things about him, knowing |cholla and his brother fears some what Harding said about our ex-Pyes befall him if he con ident Roosevelt in his paper, Theo: m over the country. He dore, the second, w be doing good inches tall, weighs ? to those who despitefully used his | pounds, light (bald), blue eyes. father. But that comes close enough! He le 28 years of @ ny informa to fulfilling the Scriptures to satisfy |tion that may lead to his where Wa Street. abouts may be mt to Guilak Hov a den, Route 3 Hox 64. anwood, THE VULGAR USE OF MONEY | Washir part to secure the nomination for Presi-|ment Unt | dent of our nation has taught us a/versity st., lesson that we will remember. It is - |to be hoped that every attempt to| Mrs. Mary Cayton, Kalisp buy that sacred trust will meet a/Mont., is desirous of loca her similar fate, regardless of political | brother, John P, Murphy. Mrs. Cry party or who it is that would «0 ton is unable to walk and is in the prostitute that most high of political honors. A HIGH PROTECTIVE TARIVE for our infant monopolies was over looked or omitted from discussion, but the Republican platform will not be completed unless Harding is elected, and then it will mean any thing they dare to construe it to mean, and those struggling infants will be cared for, don't worry. ONE 8P DID THING about the Republican platform is that every voter can construe it as he| likes, but no one will ever know| what it means except that the peo-| ple are expected to vote for what they do not want and get it if Hard. ing is elected. WOODROW WILSON said it was} his business to learn what the com-| mon man needed, and see that he got it. Wall Street said Senator Harding knows what we want, and will see that we get it. Do you see the difference THE MORE THE LEAGUE OF) NATIONS and the covenant of peace are discussed, the tighter the noose of defeat will draw around th neck of the elephant that is carrying that awful load of political hypocrisy | toward our National capital. | THE SEATTLE TIMES tells us |that Harding will have to be intro-| duced to the people of the West, but | he of the toot and whistle forgot to tell us people in the West that Mr. | Harding needs no introduction to | the profiteers. | ‘THE soLID BONUS has | been ducked and side-stepped by the | Republican politicians since they be. | came convinced that the people were | demanding tha this bonus be pald | from war profits = { THE AMERICAN LEGION should| as a patri not soar tail of begin to understand t Jotic organization it will very high if attached to the any political party. | GIVE CREDIT WHEN CREDIT) IS DUE. The Seattle Times has furnished its readers with the t | convention reports, and from all| angles, that any people ever ad | joyea | treatment. hands of her physician She wa her brother if possible undergoing to hear from WOMAN AND COP CAPTURE THIEF She Says He Snatched Her Necklace Accused of attempting to rob |Mrs, Mary Holmes, proprietor of a rooming house, 1920 Eighth ave last night, aftet gaining entrance on the pretext that he wanted to secure @ room, G. R. Trimmer, 23, was held in the city jail Saturday, awaiting filing of state charge. A man snatched her necklace and then threatened to shoot her after asking for a room Friday night, Mrs. Holmes says, She chased him from the house and pursued him for two blocks, until he halted her with a second threat to shoot, ccording to Mrs, Holmes She identifies Trimmer man, says Patrolman Reynolds, who arrested on a downtown street the robbery. Fred N was with Trimmer t his arrest, in also held as th George Trimmer soon after man, who time of all. t in New Community Club Organized vith M. J. Carrigan as president. the residents in the district north of Roowevalt Park and east of Brooklyn ave. organized the Uni versity Place Community Club at @ meeting in the Ravenna school fri day night. The club will pro: mote neighborhood spirit and fur t development. 40 Seattleites on. Derailed Train Forty Seattle passengers were imperiled when C. M. & St, P, train No, 16, bound from Seattle to Chi cago, an derailed two miles east of Buffalo Springs, N. D., Friday Four were injured, but none of them were from Seattle, new COPYRIGHT (Continued From Yesterday) | they all heard a high, clear volce—Jure of Mary Warren hernelf, sitting markably strong partner in any en- Neither Sim Gage nor his neigh © they would not have sup djup weakly, gropingly, on the log } terprise; and although it is silent it bor slept to any worth that nicht mice Gene to have owne ‘ ling poe lp h ne goollivieg bog night never stops working day and night, At times one would spenk, but they | ou “Throw up your hands, in for veneath which, Uke some * fi pre held no discussion, Wid Gardner, in| there Actually, im Ga was | animal, she had cowered all that aw Sundays and holidays. an iron wrath, was thinking much, | leade ful night on the heap of pine needs Wie Thebhe ievat a ane Sim Gage lay with his eyes opened | * There came an exclamation in a| which she had swept up for her The Dexter Horton Trust and Sav toward the rude ceiling. In his heart | hoarse and broken voice, “Who are | self! ings bank will furnish this paying part- all you Don't sho 1919 BY EMERSON tT wu rrender NoucnAhawt | arnes, who bent above her, his hand was something new, Hitherto in hin life he had never quarreled with How many are there of you?" tn-) fate, but smiled at it as something | Gulred Doctor Har beyond his making or his mending.| “It's mo—Big Aleck—I'm shot But now, mixed also with hin feel | lm dyit Help!-Who is it? ing of vague lons, his sense of rage, | ‘ome out, Aleck!” called the high there was now, as Sim Gage realized | 4nd resolute ce of Bim G perfectly well, a new and yet more| “Come on out powerful emotion in his soul, He “I can't come out. I'm shot, T was not the same man, now; he/ tell you never again would be, Pity pro.| . Then Sim Gage did what ordinar pinquity and the great law had done! !ly might not have been a wise thin their work! For the first and only | to do, Without pause he swept aside time in all hin life Sim Gage was in| the te flap with the barrel of his love rifle, and stepped in, quickly cover The two men were astir long be ing the prostrate figure that lay on fore wn, Wid Gardner first kicked | the bi dy blankets before him. off his blankets, “I'll find n Big Aleck was able to do no more horne,” said b ‘ou git breakfast, | than move. He raised one hand, Sim, if you can.” feebly, imploring merey Hy the time he had the eal ready ‘Come out, damn you™ sald Sim Wid Gardner was back leading a| Gage, bis hand at the collar of the horse. crippled man. He dragged his pris “Til ride down the valley,” said he | Oner out into the light and threw after the two had eaten in silence, | him full length—mercilessly—upon Wait tll I ride down to Jensen's. | ™ needle-covered sand. He'll come along. Phe crippled man began to weep, Ear ner was, he was not (to beg. It was small mercy he saw the only traveler on the road. As he looked from face to face approached Nels Jensen's gate | hat’s my man.” exclaimed Doc saw below that place on the road the | tor Barnes. “But it's not any ace light of a car traveling at speed dent with @ tree, T * gun whot He nlid off his horwe the ani-| “Who done that work down be mal, and stood, rt 1s hand, directly | low? manded Sim of the prostrate | in front the approaching vehicle, man. “Where 4 ne? ‘ell me “Halt he erted, and Mung up hin | His voice 1 rang high and im left hand high, the rifle held in his | perative Aleck shivered where he lay. right, under his armpit It was no enemy who now slowed | Now he too saw the flames on ahead down the car and cut out Nights, | in the woor A voice not unfamiliar cklled out,| “Who set that fire? demanded the “What's wrong with you, man suddenly. “Whose work was What do you want? You trying to/ that nold me up?’ | “It was sabeata? said Big Aleck “Is that you, Doc? No one passes | frightened into an ingenious Iie here. What are you doing up here?” was in here. I'm the govern Wid walked up to the edge of the foreman. 1 don't know hov car they got or t 6 They must ‘I'm on a call, that’s what I'm|of set a ‘clock mewhere to Jot up here replied Do tart it” Barnes. “Have you heard anything Who do you mean—sabcats?* about an accident up on the He-|manded I Barnes. Tt er en ee stood coldly and implacably Aceidents aplenty, right around at the crippled man. here. J don't know nothin tes 1 caught them in here—I'm in the Reserve. Who told ye charge of this work, ou see, I tried “A man, late last night. Said/to stop them. They and left there was a man hu in the tim | me here They sald d send a ber camp, for me to fo tant as 1| docte oguld. Tree fell on him. They left I'm the doctor,” replied the med him up there alone, because they} cal man, who stood looking at him yuldn't bring him out.” x re ix that woman” at so commented Wid nt Aleck rolled hin bead. t ner grimly. “I want you to wait and I don’t know nothing, I'm ‘ome in and see Nels Jensen with | shot—I'm going to die.” me, Doc. Hell's to pay.” “We've got to get out,” anid Doe CHAPTER XIII t nto t tor Barnes by “Boys, shall we get him car?” Mary Is Found | 4 ye Gage, sharply. “1 t ty o a she?” “What's wrong?’ Doctor Barnes’ gpa hag He stepped close up to Big A je Grew Gree pushing in front of the others. We don't know what. When Sim know amn you, tell me and me come home, some one had |”. on : Keep him away!’ yelled Big been here when we was gone. Sim's) sincg ogy eing to kill mef H barn is bumed, and ali hin hay, and pitty Salles ee ‘ tried to get on his elbows, his hands all mine, and my house—I haven't . and knees, but 4 not, broken kot lock, stock nor barrel left of my | sown an he was, He fechas T oth! ake cre - a - . _ - ranch, and sothing to m: bo Pl evil man overtaken by evil fate | “Where ts she Sim Dr. a long whistle. Barnes puckered his lips into "I wonder if there's You was follering right the way here.to get that poor devil out of the | A!eck “How kin I tell where she woods, But who can tell what in|Went after I was shotr’ Cae neeery ‘belt: has’ feel: hnee Ate Zou was shot? Who shot up there?" you? Did she? PWe got to go and see,” maid Wid | “I told you who shot me. It was Gardner, “You know that woman?” | “em fellers The doctor nodded. & jon why n't they kill you, if She's gone, too. Whoever it wan | (hey wanted to? They could of fin took her off in @ car from up at the you, couldn't they? Where's hea Sim Gage's lane.” six.shooter, Aleck——you took it Doctor Barnes got down out of the en my house, and you know you nr, and the two walked thru Ne Jensen's gate. en was afo I tried to save her,” whimpered | ready for the day’s work. He agreed | Bix Aleck now. that one of his boys would carry the| “You Why did you bring her news to the Company dam. |up here then? Why didn't you leave “Better give us a little something her there—she didn't have to come.” to eat along with us, Karen,” he said | Sim Gage at was talking, ne to his wife. He took down his rifle, | “b4rp, decisive, “Where is she now and ed inquiringly at Doctor| “Good God, man, I told you I Barn “Have you got an extra |“ in't know How do I know which gun?’ asked the latter. Jensen| Way she'd r She said she w nodded, finding the spare plece near | blind—but I don't believe she was at hand. “Why don't you?’ demanded sim Very little more was = she could shoot walked olit into the mo: ou she did shoot you the red ball of the sun was coming | twic "What made her? Where's up above the misty valley my gun? Did she take it with her “Go on ahead in the car,” said) after she shot you Wid. “I'll britig my horse.” | He was beginning to tremble now They met at Sim e's half./ as he talked. “Didn't she shoot you burned home. Sim himself hobbled | —Now, tell me the truth.” out, rifle under arm and the id the prisoner suddenty, little Airedale under the other, the | that in the other's eyes which leamp latter wriggling and barking in his delight. The purr of a good motor on under them. y passed on up the creek val ley toward the Reserve far more rapidly than the weaker car of Big Aleck had climbed the same grade the day previous, but the main body | of the forest lay three thousand feet | | above the valley floor, and the cent was so sharp that at times they were obliged to stop in order to allow the engine to cool. “What's that?’ said Sim Gage after a time, when they had been on their way perhaps an hour up the| winding canyon, and pad paused for the time moke? ‘That ain't no fire—it's more.” They made one or two more curves of the road and then got confirm: tion. A long, low blanket was drifting off down the the right, settling in a cloud alongthe mountain side. The wind was from left to right, so that the smoke carried free of the trail. “She's a-fire, boys!’ exclaimed Wid. “Wo better git out of here while we can.” “We ain't a-going to do nothing of the sort,” sald a quiet Wid rdner turned to look into the face gray blue voice. of Sim Gage, “We're a going right on up ahead.” Wid Gardner looked at Doctor Barnes. The latter made his answer by starting the car once more. But the car soon came to a sudden halt. A couple of hundred yards o ahead lay an open glade. At the left| of the trail stood a great wall tent In an instant every man was out of the car, the three ranchmen, like hounds on the scent, silently trotting off, taking cover from tree to tree. A few moments and the four of them, rifles at a ready, had sur rounded the tent. As they close demanded the and me, your Honest to God. got a have But what he sworr was 4 the gun, FE out. 1 tr n But mercy!" n no rifle nan shot 1 don't know t—from She t set the ft my whose none of the four ever could tell. struck Big Aleck fair below the eyes, and fell b Th blew turn his head well apart. ckward at the door of the tent. | away slowly. “She did shoot ran away ook how it God afterward would have ever knew. There rifle It He Just | for an instant they stood looking at | the sweeping blu walkes atten| motic | migh: sheet a to th tion to on less t come the behin It was coming his h he The asm “What's up ook “Ww We'y As from whieh down was Aired The of th sort “Hurry y he a ight be it, at h he the made in tha shot ba he instil | of trail, this on which it wa the followed out the fleeing girl Sim hill, saw below now, nt after th tha Wind's at tha hin ai Th ying at on the Doc’ nket of 1 make them. smoke. which phe wine it They | ar, paying no further figure lay | fire ling | Wid Gardner lifted | t little forgot him." stood there mountain 8 m turn irection the treed en to run even so very set, And ahead trail, anging, y started. id Sim dog, ide and himself bark of a so dog itself, keen of nose, almost faint i down was the said came up to him und 1 down the trail as fast } | id Doctor Barnes. | smoke.” now? | plunge | It! and any as hat the fix 1 in part | winding course of | now w A Strong Partner OMPOUND Interest makes a re- Every six months an A ery broke from Sim Gage's lps. ner for you. cok gage ar tar si ie oe counting of its earning power will be fs Wan peu Wha the ane Gabel! given you ard added to your account. 1 dont “o Y yon, a pa Mase The larger your savings account, the waa looking into the face of Doctor greater will be the rnings of your silent partner. on her pulse “I'm Doctor Barnes,” said he. “1 Better start saving now work down at the Company’s pliant at the big dam. You are Miss Mary Warren, are you not?” Bho nodded. ‘Ye D H n “I won't introduce these others, | exter orto but they‘re all friends—we ure.” T d Netion of & gentleman, The thought . B gave her comfort Savings ank “What's that smoke?’ she said uddenly, herself catching the scent Second Avenue and ing the air e The whole ain’s afire ot to hurry mour We Cherry Street Sim Gage Ket out of he Open Saturday Evenings “Il know--it wan those people! "Ch Where is that man? You found +o 8 eee him?" The voice of Doctor Barnes br a y “He'd been hurt by w had to ve him becaus he was too far gone, Miss Warre Combined resources Dexter aid be “We couldn't save him. He Horton Trust and Savings ouldn’t answer any questions—no even @ hypothetical quaition when | Bank and Dexter Horton tried him. But now, don’t try to, National Bank exceed t He got what he had comir 4 he'll never trouble you again.” rere) wine itt ‘ioe’ tits. §26,500,000.00 ked suddenly, reaching out a hand| which the young Air kinned fer vently. “If it hadn't been for that | — oo — ee little dog you'd never have found TORONTO.—Three, bandits ro | ma would you? You couds't have| NO Trace Found of | ,crcncs noses, jowsien a heard me call. I would not have .000 in jewels and liberty bonds” dared to shoot. Whose little dog?” Bunkhouse Rollers — H yours, ma'am,” said Sim| Burglars who robbed a bunk “And 1 got four hens.” house at Monohan Friday and (Continued Tomorrow) escaped with nearly $2,500, have not For geod, clean fun we been captured. With the excep /f 2 Wipe Mar. There's entertainment every “Princess” Steamships Leave Seattle Canadian Pacific Dock Pier 1, Foot of Yesler Way in checks member of the family im each day's issue, CANADIAN-PACIFIC RY. SCENERY! SPEED! SERVICE! i—TRANSCONTINENTAL TRAINS DAILY—4 “THE TRANS-CANADA LIMITED” 200 P.M. DAILY FROM VANCOUVER, B.C. WINNT TORONTO MONTREAL! no HOU o2 HOURS \Beattle [Victoria. [Victoria Vancouver ~ TRANSCONTINENTAL TRAIN SERVICE "THE TRANS-CANADA 209 p. m. Daily from Vasesuver 92 Hours to Monteral SO A.M. Ontario, Quebec. Martti a5 P.M. DAILY —T' Ottawa, Montreal, Quebec, Maritime Provinces and New Pagland Through trains—Connections for all Canadian and Central, Southern and Eastern States points STEAMSHIPS DAILY SEATTLE TO VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER DIRECT CONNECTION FOR CANADIAN AND EASTERN AND SOUTHERN UNITED STATES POINTS, KF. L. STURDER General Agen ON Secon: Please Don’t Send Any More LIMERICKS! | The Editor has gone to Steilacoom. He may recover, when Time and Rest have had a chance with him, He left these Limericks listed below as too good to miss publication. A Seattle boy said, “T pine, dear, If you're going to Tacoma today be You should travel the very best way On the Steamer Tacoma to dine, dear; 2 The Puget Sound Line The boat is O. K. 3 Has boat service fine, A wonder, they say, M4 And serves a fine lunch in the buffet. And we can be home before 9, dear.” og —H. S. COLLINS, —L. A. HOY, isport, Wash. 971 2ist Ave., Seattle, When you're feeling rather blue, And don't know what to do, To Tacoma take a trip, On a Puget Sound Ship— It’s a tonic that will last a whole week thru. —JACK H. HILL, 411 White Bldg., Seattle, The Editor wishes to thank all friends who so generous- ly contributed, and hopes they will enjoy many fine trips on the Seattle-Tacoma boats. Puget Sound Navigation Company Colman Dock Main, 3993

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