The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 6, 1920, Page 12

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Fare for Trip Is ; $10,000 “NEW YORK, oct. former German Wilhelm, < prin: now P Von Steuben, Miner syndicate called Wwe been spent FOR THE CRUISE THOUSAND BEANS of the “high spots” States. ‘ Start to Be Made in March; 6.—-Work on raider, the Von . in preparation for its world early next year in behalf of trade, is being pushed. an impressive feet long, was from the shipping board the Foreign Development Cruise for $1. By the time it ts ready for We World tour it is said $10,000,000 | in the for the world trade trip of the ‘Bteuden to “sell"—Iiterally and ee ly—America and American are: ship will be rechristened The thousand applications have sen received for exhibit space. “The minimum fare for one per: tourist and pleasure fair of America’ ents, it is a drive, similar to New Jersey, It will ‘Marge merchant liner in this fashion. ship will have a bank, staff of interpreter: and clerks, large American ice cream for 100 square feet space will be $35 a by the ship's wireless. will be staterooms BUREAUS TE k roof garden and cial representatives,” space for 700 American in- the cruise will be $10,000. seekers be permitted to make the tour, I it will be a huge floating industrial rious bus! | venture, with no frippery or ‘Veesel will be equipped with the bat- be the to be acom-|which the chamber of commerce | stenog-|received today from Admiral Ben- movie | son. — ae partor| From Weather Bureau of €X) TATOOSH ISLAND, Oct. 6—# A. M. square | Falling darome: for 700 and fe will have the co-operation of S. Shipping Board and the nt of Commerce," says F. organizer of the lis ioe m: commerce cruise probably ‘start next March, after the ves bas been on exhibition tn New Boston and Philadelphia. Phe tentative route is: lon, Yokohama, ille st., boy. | F., RB. F. D. No. 4, Box 143, AL T., 1503 EB. John, 9701 “W ©. G. $22 Que 9030 60th G. EK, inchell, G. L., 3432 ‘Pernambuco, Bahia, Rio de Janet- Montevideo, Buenos Aires, Cape m, Port Elizabeth, Durban, De- Bay, Tamative, Port Louis, Adelaide, Melbourne, Sydney, Shanghai, tong, Singapore, Batavia, Pan- Penang, Rangoon, Calcutta, Colombo, Bombay, Port Said. The echedule for the | worth for Sea of Burope will depend upon circumstances. Hin all, the cruise of the won- irl F. Q.. 4026 11th ave. N. E., Nick. 5039 32nd ave. 8. boy. W. Etruria, girl. n Anne av Paul, 4703 46th S. W., girl. RK ave. 8, E. F., 6345 29th ave. 8. W.| A. R., 932 13th ave.. boy. 2743 Beach drive, A, B,, 1220 Boylston aye. boy drive, RE. 2034 Weller st. girl beault, J. A, boy. L., 515 12th ave. 21 W. 58th, + 1713 Fitth fr, 2511 Grand at. PLL, 5226 sist ave. B., 235 Sixth ave. 408 Harri » Amon, Port Orcha MARRIAG “Name and Residence. ms, O. A., Seatsle et, Pauline E.. Seattle peers, Russell E.. Seattle .. ik, Daisy J., Seattle . 7 4 Henry Melbourne, Nome Legal Perris, aah ee eae, 8 Ont. . ‘ ¥, Philip J., Seattle ke, Myrtle tees, Char n, Cc Stace ten, De Los V., Seattle ald, Claire, Seattle Allen J., m, Ruth A., Seattle Chi rT is, Celia A., Seattle DEATHS hy Kline, idence hoxpi Pennay, infant, Ernest 0. 40, - alon. Sound View 1519 Bellevue} the Aden things Promises to be the most advertising exploit ever tal Statistics BIRTHS itz, Alex, 4631 Findlay st. Forrest E, 5518 Kenwood Ship News Tides in Seattle WEDNESDAY ‘OCT. First Low Tide 1 Lae atieet Mi le 26 pom, LL First igh Tide Mecond Low Tide | “ atreent Low Tide | iid p.m, 14 fe Nigh Tide | Nerond Low Tide E48 Dm, MORTAL pom, OO ML TRADING SHIP IN FROM NORTH Northeastern Siberia Nor- mal Again, Says Captain | Weeding, the Hibbard Swenson Co. | trading vessel Chukotsk arrived in | Seattle Tuesday from the North with | a cargo of furs, ivory and whale oil Capt, Weeding, who has been crule- ing in the Far North for more than six months, reports the Bolsheviki have been driven out of the north eastern provinces of Siberia, and that business is normal in that section ence more, ‘The vease? will go into dry dock in Seattle, Last Pacific Co. Ship for Anchorage The Pacific Steamship Co. an nounces ita last steamer of the sea, son sailing for Anchorage will be the Admiral Evans, She sails October 2. After that Admiral liners will operate between here and Seward and Seldovia, Portland Shipping Control to Frisco PORTLAND, Oct. 6.—Portlang’s shipping board business is to be transferred from the jurisdiction of the Seattle district to that of San Franciaeo, according to & message will be sent back to Amer | Passed east, 22 miles an hour. ba barge at M.-Paseed in: Motor tpom 6 P. 15 miles an hour, qee Arrivals and Departures Arvived October $—Motor achr George Wash- ington frem A: > via Ban Francisco sent Farmy Dutard from Kuskokwim River ports, towing, at 10 a mj str Jalapa from San Francisco str Queen from Tacoma at 2:20 « m, October 5—dtr Bpokane from south- eastern Alaskan porta at § p. m.; motor sehr Chukotsh from siberian cruise Satted October ¢—Str Ixion for Mantia vie Oriental ports and Victoria, B.C, at 2 a. m. Octoder §—Str Asyor towing dae Henry lard for Tacoma at 3 p. m.; str Queen for Tacoma at §:15 p.m eee Vessels in Other Ports Ban Pedro—Arrived October $: str Admiral De’ from Seattle via fan Francisco. ur Du. i. Ban Francisco—Arrived October 6: Str W. 8. Porter from Everett. Seiled Octo- ber $: Btr Celilo for Puget Hound porta. Arrived October $: Str F. & Loop from Heattie via Everett. Sailed Octobe: *| President for Se: ta Vietoria, B.C, at il am Victoria, B. C.—-Arrived October @: str Ixion from Heattle at $ & m., and pro ed for Yokohama amd ports at 11:30 am Port Townsend—Passed in October 6 Motor schr George Washington for He- attic at 7 a m.; str Lavads for Seattle awteam 2 e Reported by Wireless Canadian Geverament October &— str imiral Goodrich eff Cape Mudge, port und, at ¢ > m. Admiral Rodman tn Seymour Narre southbound, at 1! p. m.; str Atlas abeam Cape Lazo, northbound. 4 pm: str Admiral Goodrich off Sisters Point, northbound, at 3:15 p. m. U. 8. Naval October 5—atr lattery for m 5 ate |#an Diego, San 637 miles north of San Francisco mm; str Derblay, Seattle for San Pedro, 10 miles south of Cape Gianco at 5 p.m. str Quabbin, Los Angeles for Heattle, 341 miles from Beattie at # p. m Weat Ivan, a, 3,266 miles west of Cape Fiattery at § p. m.; Wheatiand Mont, Beattie for Yokohama, 1,025 miles from Seattle at ¢ p. m.; atr Clty of Beattle 49 miles north of Peters- burg, northbound, at § o- :| Vessels in Port at Seattle Smith Cove terminal—Str City of Bpo- a erminal—8tr Spokane, 2—Str Jefferson, str Akagwa: ific Coast Engineering worke—Btr ave. N. Pier D on Boy, |, |stacy at U. f. C. Burnside, POY: | Hanford st. terminal—Bee J. D. Petera, w, gir) 2424 Warren ave., N., girl at. boy. rd, girl. LICENSES Age Lega Lega - Legal Lega . Lega’ W., Winnipeg Legal Aldeana, ‘Vancouver, nm, Vincent, Seattle . 2 i ann, Golda H., Perham, Minn..21 “De Ford, Virginia B, 2, 719 27th jund, Carl, 50, 1201 Sixth ave. 3007 ite King county hos- Major, Paul, 2%, 4240 Seventh ave. B. C. Sockeye Salmon Transplanted Here Successful transplantation of Brit-| Ssh Columbia sockeye salmon to Pu a Bound waters was reported | leged in her divorce sult, filed in su- yw by Commissioner L. H.| perior court Wednesday. Marwin of the state fish commis:|roys were married in Tacoma, in 22nd Margaret M., 4 months, Prov- Duthie Str Griffay, str Maq terminal—str Be str Went Ison, Toda Ser Westward Ho, Elkton, str Elihu Thomson, Pacific Const Bridge & Dredging plant— Str Patterson. Ames yarde—Btr Roosevelt. Lake Union—Hulls Abilia, Abnoba, Ab- ydos, Addison, Allenhurst, Ahmi Bayden, Bertrand, vk, otr Al | Petuta, Cabacen, Caprerta, Charo Cineas, Cozian, Cola, Clone, F » Biectra, Endymion, Fort Mar- rison, Fort Jackson, Fort Stanwix, 1) Fort’ Union, Imufka, Leot!, Kitan, 1 sehr Saly Heffernan dry rf Brookdale. West Beattie elevator—Str Kaynecka, a} ft, wo LABOR SURPLUS IN THIS STATE That a slight labor surplus now exists in this state, due largely to the limited activities of the logging and lumber industries, was reported Tuesday by J. H. Shields, superin- tendent of the local public employ- ment bureau, Mrs. Conroy Objects to Lack of Support Helen M, Conroy wants to get rid of Walter Conroy. Walter is Helen's husband, and he hasn't done all that he should have done in the way of offering support, the wife al- The Con- 1916, € Under command of Capt, R. HH. ate! ckhe—Hte Commodore, ste | | Of the opening prices were: Te ucts 69%, up %: Pacific 126%, off %; Anaconda 52% United States Steel %: Canadian Pacific 128%, up %. loum was foreed down to 187%, Raila wero somewhat easier under pro Chicago Car Lots Furnished by L. B. Manning & Co., Necond Avenue INTO CALDWELL Says Way He Runs Mayor’s Office Is Czaristic Scoring Mayor Caldwell for failure to cooperate with the city council, and characterizing his methods af running the chief executive's office as nothing short of c#aristic, Coun- eliman William Hickman Moore de clared Wednesday that the mayor Was attempting to “pass the buck”! ¥ on the street car situation. “At the beginning of his adminis tration, Mayor Caldwell asked for an ordinance giving control of the lines to Superintendent Henderson) and himself.” Moore said. “Now that the railway ts in financial diffi culties, he wants to pass the buck to the council.” That the yor had refused to at tend im t committes hearings and had failed to work wi the council on municipal problema, was | charged by Judge Moore, | “Caldwell in more difficult to see) a HEROFORGERIS. | to Overseas Veteran i Oswald T. Toon, 20, a Canadian) overseas veteran, went befe Pre- siding Judge J. T. Ronald Tuesday afternoon, pleaded guilty to forgery, the arms of @ sobbing mother, with @ firm resolution to go straight. Young Toon was arrested last month in San Francisco on a charge | lof forging eight checks for a total | of $205 in Seattle, He was returned jand asked to be allowed to take his medicine. Deputy Prosecutor Chester A. Batchelor, however, had obtained | }” the youth's discharge papers and | Ratchelor explained to the court, “that I recommend a suspended sen jtence. He was gassed in action and jcommitted the crime to get money |to travel to San Francisco, where [he could get work planned to pay the money back | Judge Ronald went the prosecutor | One better and gave the former anp. | per a deferred sentence, ending with lan offer to help him financially. | “Any boy with @ record like yours |doesn’t need to declared |Judge Ronald, “and as long as 1 |have a dollar and you need it, it ts! w yours.” The Toons live at 4761 Graham st. | NEAR FINISH Will Be Concluded Today; Hold Up Mercer Bridge With only the ferry system, the court house fund and charitable in stitutions to be touched, the public hearing on the 1920 King county budget will be concluded Wednesday. It is expected these various budget items will be accepted with but slight reductions, if any. The road and bridge fund of $800, 000 was cut $100,000 by the commis- sioners after many citizens had both recommended and protested the cut. | Austin E. Griffiths, in opposing the cut, declared that the county needed many small highways con- necting trunk roads, and that the fund should go thru in its entirety, ‘The Mercer island bridge came up again when C. R. Adama, said to represent 2,000 residents of the coun- ty, urged its erection, The commis. sioners, however, declared they were firm in their intentions of not bulld& ing the bridge next year, and the $100,000 fund was dropped, Chairman Claude C, Ramsay de- clared that {t was not the commis. sioners’ intention to drop the matter entirely, but considered it exe pedient in view of the present high taxes to drop the project for the time being. 30 Qts. o’Beer; Yo-Ho and a Dry Squad Man Thirty quarts of beer in a quiet Uttle room. Yo-ho and a dry squad man. Fred Walker, Onarga Apts, Seventh ave. and Spring st. gave $100 ball as he watched 30 quarts of brew go under police lock. “ United States Industrial M. off 4%; Southern Pacific 99%, r 104%, up 1%; United States Rubber 78%, off ‘Traders attacked the oils during forenoon trading and Mex Great Northern Industrial Alone! Inepiration . Meroe A Penneyivania Minelair Orb ‘Texas Company Texas Pacific... Vanadium Wabsah Westinghouse Willys Overiand. - baron, Ie MH: pot roast, Chineok salmon, the; 206 can corn, peas, she, honey, She at THE SEATTLE STAR [Traders Attack Oil Stocks at New York and Force Decrease NEW YORK, Oct. 6.-—The stock market opened irregular today, Bome fit-takin, *« Company 61%, up 4; Tobacco Prod- Aleohol #4, up %; Union , off %; Lehigh Valley 63, un- uns) N. Y. Stock Exchange Furnished by 1. B. Manning & 619 Second Avenue uthern Pacific PTITTTiTrrTTrrrrirsy ty LIBERTY BONDS Nigh low » 92.06 lamb roast, Ike Mm; tbe, tall 12 4 for 20. Stall ¢ can perk and beans, Ihe; they ssese Btock— High) Low Atchison 6 Amer, Heet Huger a. Amer, Car & Fary....125% Amer, International... 164 Amer, Humatra. . % Tel, & Ted x 98% o Amer, Te Carrote-—Wee suck... .. unchanged todayy | Anaconda aa Conliflower Lier ernie ge Haltinere & Oblo.... 47% 1 | Colery—-Local, per don. 4 Haldwin Locomotive. .11% 1104 | Cucumvere—thothouse, per Ace. ooong NE 10% | “Fakima per bon .-+..++-+s00 Ky tik’ Plan Wash. per cane. ary hambureer ereen pep fewest potatoes, & Ths whale red snapper, 300, Te: hall lehecks, Ihe M.| seimen for canning, ite ; large bieaters, 2 fer tbe. coankn Statle 18 walnuts, Ite Hi tL X L | soups, 2 for tS; email te beans, bo | hy Quaker cate, 2 he the; Lima beans, i eres iH ™., Bayo beans, ite ™. Stall 169. ake White, tte ™, 2 Ma the Ronald Offers Financial Aid "55 hts 33° PP neve Primoat cheese, ibe Imon, Ike M., 2 Te The; fresh Stalls 1-2-2, smoked shoulders, tte itwe ™; . 2-T. can $1.20, b-M. can Ot * fine Japan ries, she; ibe; the; 2 the Te pha. Cr M JD coffee, ont cheese, 2, She Golden Kod pancake four fal cane and maple syrup. § ae Creametion, The Stall 157, pry |The Reporter Was aii Right for Once|' Oct. 6.—A re porter visited a lunch counter and |received a 45-cent check. |the cashier he placed it face down Without | [looking at the check she punched the cash register and placed a nickel on top of the check. poker player she would be,” sighed ont ANS, ith a half dollar on top ea Put Your First Ttoxsand in the | Savings Bank PROMINENT New York | writer on finance advises | people to put their first thou. | sand dollars in a Savings Bank like ours. He main- tains that it is foolish to take any chances whatever with your first savings, A SAVINGS abcount with this Bank will afford you Safety plus Availability. Pur- thérmore, it has never paid Jess than 5 Per Annum on Savings Compounded Semi- Annually One Dollar will open an ac- count in the Oldest and | Largest Btrictly Bavings In- atitution in the Pacific North- weat—namely the Washington Mutual | Savings Bank 810 Second Ave. Resources $12,600,000.00, THRIFTOGRAM: Thrift will help you up the ladder to Success—Extravagance will help you down to Poverty, and expected to take a “Jolt.” Ten|stew, 12\¢ M.; dolling beef, 12\0 Mb minutes later he walked out of the eg he ee court room a free man and into 1. con MJ. OB cot ane 2 cane tomatoes, 2 the cane sifted 2 cane his record while serving as @ sapper | salmon, S6¢; good butter, se Tb: Nut~ with the Second battalion of the| pis marmrtinn. * ie nee Canadian engineers. turnips, 4 Ths ons, the crate “This boy's record is #0 mood, Going to “What a stud ns TURNIPS FROM ALASKA HERE Red Bell Peppers From Cali- fornia Also Arrives | Prices held steady on the local) market Wednesday The first yellow turnips from Alaska were offered to the trade at| 3% cents a pound, Red bell peppers | from California were quoted at $2 a lug. A car of Concord grapes sold for 65 cents a basket. No changes wore regintered in the butter market or in eggs. Local Markets Temetare loca! Green, per box . outdoor Lovisiana . pro Kastern Washington .. Local cooking ..... Aligator Peare--Tierida, don ..1. Kose of Peru. Thompson Heediess . Tokay, per lug... .: “ 2.40! 23} S| 7” than King George, of England,” he i asserted. navies * | Barty oes aeshdte 2 he Bie 4 Clearings $6,295,446 69 fresh milk, 126 | || Balances ..... 1,243,449,77 lance coffes, 430% ra Pullete . + | Milm—Ter ewt ec cc cee rece DAIRY PRODUCTS j Prices Paid Whelcsale Deniers Medium to choles. Rough heavy 1260@13.60) «1 00G 1450 oleente Price Per Ton. City Price ey-—Whole * osoen ell j have offered $100 reward.” thera, Bhell M Oyster = —Cal Mrs. Kate Protteau, 2432 W. 624 st, mother of Lon Protteau, the lad who was injured in one of last Satur: day's three auto mishaps on the Bothell road, said today her son was in a critical condition at the Colum- bus sanitarium, “It ts not true that the boy was drunk, He was walk- ing along the road and the driver of the car, Mr. Shull, had picked him up, It was not a for-hire car, either, but a private machine,” LIN PULL 0 } | t work, about 1 o'clock in the after- | noon. The old man was sitting on | the porch and Phyllis was playing | alone. He said, ‘Oh, yea, I will,’ and | grabbed her up and ran for the car, | with stitches. MOTHER TRACES: KIDNAPED GIRL Stolen From Ballard Home| by ex-Husband, She Says Yor the first ‘time dane she began & natlonwide search ax Weeks ago for her vanished ex-husband and kid ped baby daughter, Mra, Idna| Clark of 1408 W, 50th wt., divorced young wife of Cressy F. Clark, said | she believed today she was on a hot trail leading to his whereabouts. Clark, whom hia former wife de worlbes ae a gambling churchman, in maid to have snatched their 4-year. | ol child, Phyllia Virginia, from the! stairway where ahe was playing in a home at 4722 Ballard ave. on Aug ust 23, while a crippled old man looked on powerless to frustrate t kidnaping. TRACE OF CLARK | | | MAN, WASH. Today Mra, Clark was informed by Deputy Sheriff Ralph Mammer that| @ telegram had been received from | V, O, Sargent, town marshal of Pull. | man, Wash, asking for a ailed deneription of Clark, and inquiring whether he would likely be in com-| pany with a woman. | “When I met my former husband in 1914,” Mra. Clark said today, “he was a leader in affairn at the Seo ond Baptist church here. He wasn’t the Sunday school superintendent, | but was the next thing to tt. | “He was a member of the 14th infantry then stationed at Ft. Law-| ton. | “Girls are often misled by out-| ward appearances of a man. After) 1 married him in 1915 1 found out that while he was pretending to be mo devoutly Christian’ he was» shooting craps, playing poker and losing money at lottery. 1 don't think he ever won anything.” On the grounds of crucity, Mra. Clark got a divorce in Los Angeles | more than a year ago. The coutt| awarded her $60 monthly alimony | and the custody of their two chil-| dren, Phyllis Virginia and an in- fant girl. They had been living in San Diego, where Clark worked for a time as a street car conductor and spent many of his evenings at- tending meetings of the union, Mra. Clark says, and in gambling houses, “He went East and that was the last I heard of him until last July. He hadn't paid me one cent to help support the children, so when I fot @ telegram from) him’ saying he would like to see me, I wired him that I didn’t care to have any: thing further to do with him unless he wanted to help me,” said the young mother. “I was working for the telephone company here at that time. I had just got out of the Firlands hos- pital, where I had been taken with measles. Baby and Phyllis both were ill Phyltis was strong and pulled thru all right, but baby| of died, LEFT PHYLLIS ALONE WITH CRIPPLED MAN “When I went to the phone of- fice every day I left Phytiis with an elderly lady. She worked two hours a day so Phyllis was left alone with an old, crippled man during that two hours. “My husband came while I was downtown and the lady was away on the stairs. “When Mr. Clark came up, the old man told him to leave the child It was either a Ballard Beach or a Fremont-Ballard car, the old man didn’t know which, and the trail was low got all the money I could to gether and had circulars printed with Mr. Clark's and Phyii{s’ pictures and) their description. I mailed the cir-| culars to every city in the United States, and the word from Pullman is rat I've had.” Mrs. Clark said she would write! the Pullman marshal today that her| former husband might likely be with | some woman. She had suspected an- ether woman was toying with his) affections, she said, at the time of the divorce, CLARK HAS WAVY HAIR, SCAR ON LOWER LIP Clark is 28, she says, about 5 feet! 6 inches tall, with blonde wavy hair, light brown eyes, and a lower lip scarred as tho a cut had been closed, He has a jugged scar| on the side of his jaw. His feet are) *mall, hands short and thick, and he walks with a short, quick step, “He in very talkative,” she said, “and seifimportant. He used to call| Phyllis ‘Snook’ or ‘Snookie,’" ‘The missing chiid is small for her age and has light golden hair and dark blue eyes, She talks with al g, drawl that is almost southern, her |‘ mother says, and might speak of) Ruthie, her dead baby sister, or of | Uncle George or grandma, who lives farm, I don't think Mr. Clark would have Phyllis with him,” said Mrs. Clark, “More likely he has left her to board in some home. I still have hope that I shall home day hear of her if I never find Mr. Clark. I Register Saturday at 9 p. m. will be your last chance to register. Books will remain open at the city comp- troller's office, city hall, from 8 a, m, to § p, m. daily this week, If you haven't registered since January 1 this year you can't vote nless you do it this week, If you're a naturalized voter you must show your citizenship pa- pers when you register, If in doubt as to your status, telephone | the registration clerk at Maia 6000, 122 COR Third Ave UNINERSULY MISSING GIRL AND FATHER Phyllis Virginia Clark and her father, Cressy F. Clark, — Sunday school leader and alleged gambler, who vanished © from Seattle siz weeks ago. Clark is now sought as her kid- naper. PUYALLUP FAIR OPENS DOORS: Greatest Array of Exhibits PUYALLUP, Oct, ern Washington fair opened today | with the greatest number of ex- hibits ever shown. Every booth in the Manufactur- ers’ building was filled with ex- hibita, while the poultry, rabbit and live stock exhibits are said to con- tain better stock than was ever before shown. The | structed at a cost of $10,000, is one the attractions this year. this building everything from baby clothes to home-made butter may be seen. papecial attention ts being paid races this year. named as Derby day and a large field of thorobreds have been en- tered. Visitors to the fair will be greeted with a seven-acre field for parking their automobiles. This plot was purchased this year by association. The fair will sunday. Woman Heaves Box LIVERPOOL, Oct. 6.—-Hang up an- other knockout for woman over mere man—and a bandit, at that! When a bandit compelled a clerk in the Wal- (13 Eps ADay From 17¥ Mre. Niles Pullete Laying. Tells How. good profi Four money will be cheerta Don Sung (Chinese for & eclentii ca You can obtain Don Sui jeiet or $1.04 aN: Egg-Laying “CAPPY RICKS” MARGARITA FISHER in “Impossible Susan” SPECIAL MUSICAL The Clarks are divorced. lasey branch of the London City and 7 Midland bank to hold up his hands, young woman clerk named Miss Wright picked up a box and hurled it at the bandit, knocking his revol- ver out of his hands and compelling him to flee. The cost of Col expedition, that led to the discovery of America, was $7,000. PUGET SOUND STEAMERS |" ALL LOCAL ROUTES STEAMERS LEAVE FROM COLMAN] | DOCK, FOOT OF MARION STREET| Ever Shown 6—The West: | Women's bullding, con- Thursday is the fair close at Bank Bandit! Bally [Port Townsend, Ana-| |eortea ane Belling. fen Jean Islands "7 “Titamtr, Poses, @menthe Old ‘Mon. ipoints in the Se Bee... Points marked ** are beat landings: Passengers for these points and for other boat landing points must make thér own arrangements for landing. and assure all risk and Mability tn making such landing. Steamers passenger rate does not include beat landing charges Baggage lability te ttmited to wear- Ing apparel, not to exceed $100 for whole ticket. 15¢ pounds allowed free, Steamers and schedules subject change without notice Freight re- ceived datly for all pointe (excepting Tacoma) named in above ached Tickets must be hased at ticket office. Open from = m te 12:00 midnight. PUGET SOUND NAVIGATION ©, Ticket Office, Colman Deck, tonte and cot from your ultry remedy dealer, oF includes war tax) for @ il. Burrell-Dugger Co., ndianapolis, Ind. BOATS LEAVE COLMAN DOCK WILL HAVE 7, % 11 A. M. 1,3, 5, 7,0 P.M. A MATINEE EVE Cheapent Wap'te Ge: TODAY page, SINGLE AT THE TRIP ei rane 10C eluding War Tax WILKES ALAcE HI CONTINUOUS 1Toui DIRECTION ACKERMANS& HARRIE TONIGHT LAST TIMES—VERNA MERCEREAU @ Co, THURSDAY TO SATURDAY A_ COMPLETE NEW SHOW FOUR MERYL PRINCE GIRLS dev Clanstent Girt Quartet SONIA & COMPANY WILLIAM MORROW @ COMPANY “On a Country Head” RICHARD WA Ya co Jugeling "<Spaibeppin: FEATURE PHOTO! PROGRAM—MYRICK AT THK WURLITZER

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