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A Pa a The fastest growing suburban community fn America. Arrange to see this Wonderful Poultry District and the world’s finest Poul- try . Demonstration Farm — during your stay in Seattle. Free Automobile to take you out and back. | For special appointment call at the address be- low. Open Evenings Phone Elliott 1470 — Since 1853 — Puget Mill Co. Information Bureau 218 Pike Street Seattle GUARANTY sizes that you have ever seen. Pumps, Oxfords, Boots—just two prices....... LEGION CAMP "GIVEN PRAISE 'Veterans’ Resort Near Port | Townsend Gains Favor It may be just a fairy tale and then again it may be the truth, Ver Kendall, manager of the American Legion's recreation camp at Port Townsend, says the beach up there is “like a bathtub, with the toe |taken off for comfort and the heat |drawn out for vigor, ‘The words aré Kendall's, “Rvery formerly O. Dd lad and summer bathing beauty that has dipped into this beach will testify to it. “They say it’s the only place tn the Pacific océan north of Los An geles where the skin doesn’t turn biue two minutes after a plunge.” Kendall ts also advertising his | mountains, “Camp Galbraith is the hub of a cirele of beauty,” he said. “There jare nO pinker mountaina, no sweet }@r alf, no greener treca. “It's ‘ne piace, at least, where TWnole Sam's former fighting boys |Nave been treated to the best of tt.” For all the good things at the jeamp $1.25 a day for service men and their families is being charged The fee includes quarters, good food a chance to dance on a fine floor, to| | play tennis, volley ball and baseball jand to hear the Filipino orchestra | that makes music mid to penetrate {the whole 1T \ | Rendall opewed Camp Galbraith /July 9, with the cooperation of the | American Legion. Two days later Ver Galbraith Ken {dail was born, “Camp Galbraith,” commented the father, “is a going concern.” ~ CORNS Lift Off with Fingers | | | * for @ tew Cents, sufficient fo remove every hard corn, roft corn, ern between the toes, and the cal- without soreness or irritation. Styles and Prices By E, P. Chalcraft If every business man in Seattle could spend an hour in the terminal | station of the Seattle postoffice dur Ing the peak load period, two things would result. First, he would see to it that his own correspondence was = matied every hour, or a# often and as early as possible during the day. Second, he would resent as a per al affront any imputation against efficioney and speed with which mail is hand in the Seattle pont offic WAT MAIL HANDLED IN TERMINAL STATION 1 spent such an hour in the term! nal static with George B. Williams, superintendent of maila, Thotisands of letters and packages passtd before our eyes as they came in from the colleetion boxes, were canceled, dis tributed and pouched, with never @ slip, never @ hiteh, There ia no chance for @ letter or a package to be lost or held over in the terminal station. With the exception of mall placed in the main posteffioe before 3 Pp. m., all collections are bandied in the | terminal station near the Union de pot. Mall deposited in the main postottice after 3 p. m. is taker here also. As the pouches from the delivery trucks they are Opened and the letters dumped on the facing table rapidly faced on: by An autom eanceling machine, a few feet away where they are shot thru at the rate of several hundred a minute, The canceling machines have a tate capacity of 30,000 an hour, but it Is practically impossible to feed letters that fast. The canceled let ters don’t have a chance to accumu late. They are carried a few feet farther along to the distribution racks. LETTERS FOR NEARBY CITIES HANDLED PROMPTLY All letters for the larger nearby chica as Tacoma, Portland, Spo way and carried kane —recetve primary distribution. | That ts, they are handled only once From the canceling machine they are placed direct in the proper pigeonhole for their destination, and pouched ready for the train. Bix full sacks of letters were dumped en one of the facing tables as I looked at the clock. Mt was 5:55. I watched the let tera melt away before the on. slaught of eight men, saw them train 135 minutes after en'ered the station. Some mail requires more handling than that, if destined for remote pointe, There is @ separate section | for Alaska mails, and ancther for) foreign mail, Packages are handled in mtich the same manner as letters, but are qanceled .by hand. Everywhere they are carried on automatic belts. No baseball pitcher te more expert a thrower than the men who sack the smaller packages... Three men stood before a great rack that held 72 open mail sacks. “As the packag r Can’t Be Beaten! The steady patronage of our Big Clearance Sale is proof of this. Endless v: to fit any purse. Join the ariety in style and prices throng at our store and be convinced, All sizes and widths, but don’t delay too long. Shop %n the morning. Small Feet Wanted We can give you on the rack the largest variety of styles in small and narrow $1.85 and $2.85 Sports Oxfords and Pumps Black and White Canvas, Tan and White are wheeled in| Here they are! fe endless belt to the! THE SEATTLE ST TRAIN SERVICE BLAMED BY P.O. Given as Reason for Delay in Mail to Tacoma came to them they glanced at the addrem, and tomsed them accurately and swiftly into the proper k | Packages sailed .acrags, over and undér one another, but never a mis did the men make. The terminal station handles an average of 200,000 letters alone each day. Tons of merchandise are handled in the parce) post section, ‘The rush hour in the terminal sta tion begins about 6 p. m. Post dgar Battle several months Seattle business men with a ¢ ed schedule of mall de partures, and urged them to send their mail out every hour if possible An exauiple of how holding mail until the end of the day works out is shown in the ser- vice between Seattle and Ta- coma, ‘There are six trains for Taooma } each day, Only two of them are | morning trains, leaving at §:10 and | 10. ‘The next train js at 1:0 p.m. As a result of this gup of three and onehalf hours between trains, mall that dows not make the 10 a, m, dixpateh reaches Ta- coma too late in the afternoon for distribution that day, Conse quently, a letter placed in a Se attle collection box too late to be sent on the 10 a m, train may not be dis ributed in Tacoma un- til the next morning, Seattle had "the name trouble on mails coming from Tacoma wot! sev eral months ago, when the loon! post | office arranged for @ boat to carry Jone dispatoh, Jeaving Tacoma at [1245 p.m, If the Tacoma postoffice arranges for a steamer or an interurban train to carry a diwpateh of mail fram fe attle, aay, at noon each day, the cause of much disatisfaction will be removed. || 1921 Record of Pedestrians Hit | by Automobiles 45 Knocked down and drag | ged 45 feet by a truck driven by Y. Shouji, 410 sixth ave. 8, Tu |day afternoon, Geo Loftum, 96% 1531 18th ave. 8, received a frac |tured rib. He wae treated at city | howpital jheod hie signal, and ran acrong t jstreet, the truck striking him, The accident oceutred at Sixth ave. &. and King st, 45 ~As unidentified child from the Ryther orphanage was [Knocked down and bruised ag 4ith |. and Stone way Tuesday after. jfoon by an auto driven by Y. J. Nyvall, 6326 20th N.B Nyvall reported that he signaled to a group of children standing by the curb. The children did not heed the signal and ran into the street, the auto striking one of them, a boy. He way [not seriously hurt, '4603.¢"" Rueben, 13, 5240 Brandon st, received « bruised left knee when knocked down and tun over at Second ave, and Pike st. Tuesday afternoon by an auto driven by Davig Mayer, 1805 ith ave, W. Mayer stated that the boy did not hear bie warning end jwalked in front of his auto. Th boy said the auto came to a sup ‘with one wheel on his leg. He was treated at city howpital 461220" Calistine, 30, was carrying @ sack of potatoes jon his shoulder at Western ave. and Spring at. Tuesday. An auto driven y T. KR Pike, 1218 Weertern ava, [struck Calistine and knocked him ‘down, slightly injuring him, Calis, tine got up 9nd gathered hin pota {toes together, announcing he was unhurt. ATLANTA. Gig THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1921 NATIONAL ~ PARK NEWS | } } Shouji said Loftus did not! Bureau of Missing 1 Relatives HEIGHT OF THE SEASO ‘The season in Rainier National Park is now at top notch. All hotels and camp rein full operation and all trail trips, both, saddle horse and foot, are being made dally by great numbers of people. Hundreds of Bastern visitors are ja the Park. The season promises to be a record-breaker in“every way. AN restrictions on Paradise Valley UNRESTRICTED- TRAFFIC (oi e" tr” semonea’ ant at Gare ase going through on the regular hourly schedules, There is now plenty of Parking and turning space in Paradise Valley. ROAD CONDITION The short plece of road just outalde the Park, which was in bad condition early in the sea- ton, is now In good shape. All Park rowdy are in good condition right through to the veranda of Paradise Inn, ‘There ia still some snow on the hillsides SNOW AND FLOWERS 2%,2,2" 70m 200" on a uraen skiing and tobogganing, the sport for which this Park ts famous Tho flowers are there, too, lots of them. Indéed, there is in progrong a battle royal: a battle between the snow and the flowers, and the flowers tre winning; thelr area is expanding day by day and the snow is giving back—the battle is really, won, Paradise Inn is making new records. The HOTELS AND CAMPS (revtse oe sinnctt ee” rete at the public approves. Al) comers may now have jumt the sort of rooffis they want National Park Inn ha: en greatly improved; rooms are now heated and lighted by electricity. New Paradine Camp is operating at capacity, The New Camp Service Building is caring for guests in 4 bighly sauUsfactory manner, The new National Park type of automobiles, TRANSPORTATIO operating this year for the first time in the Tacoma and SeattletoPark Service, met with immediate public approval. These cara leave both Tacoma @nd Seattle at $4. m. daily and run through to Paradise Valley without change, This new Camp, in one of the National Park WHITE RIVER CAM beauty spots, is now ready for service. Com- fortable tents, with or without meals, are available. Meals served short order style, To get there: Travel from anywhere to Enumclaw on paved roads, Thence by the beautiful Naches Pass Highway. The Camp is located three miles within the Park; $4 miles from Tacoma, 91 miles from Seattle, You'll like White River Next trip on the Wonderland Trafl, the WONDERLAND TRAIL 12-day saddle horse trip entirely around the Mountain, starts on Monday, August 8th. Reservations should be made at once, Both room and transportation reservations may be RESERVATIONS made as far in advance as desired. Call on or tele- phone any of the Company's offices for this service, of for further information RAINIER NATIONAL PARK COMPANY Summer LONGMIRE SPRINGS, WASHINGTON TACOMA 904 "A" Street Phone Main 190 SEATTLE 1211 Fourth Avenv Elliott 4900 ons, formerly of Bremerton. | | CHARLES EVANS.—C. W. Drake, | La Conner, Wash., writes that per- |sons wishing to communicate with Churlen Evans, advertised for in this column some time ago, should ad dress him in care of the Port An | geles, Wash., cannery, The First National Bank © of Seattle | Terrier Wearing | $6,000 Necklace w PARIS, July 28-—Paris police ate i cole now busy searching for a fox terrier Was Bie Ginds cetenaues toe which is said to be wearing as a to reproduce each items as will collar a necklace valued at $6,000 thet commenitics. Mme. Schulbatz intrusted the neck: lace to a jeweler for repair, The RUBY DELL CLEMONS—Royal | Jeweler understood the lady desired Victor Rose, 2800 624 st.,*Ballard, is |‘ Sell it and he found a pure ! jin a music hall artist. She seeking his sister, Ruby Dell Clem. Canvas, all grades up to $9.00, to go at just one price $3.85 White Oxfords and Pumps $4.85, $5.85, $6.85 . . “he Black Kid and Calf Stra p Pumps, Big Variety of These Lines Brown Kid and Calf Strap Pumps, Black Kid and Calf Oxfords, Brown Kid and Calf Oxfords, beautiful high-grade and.s-7-.....---.. Real Values at $6.85, $7.85, $8.85 Don’t Overlook Our Men’s Department We are giving the men the best values they ever had. Wonderful Shoes at .......... $0.09 and $7.85 Extends most cordial greetings, welcome and hearty good wishes to all attendi the NORTHWEST MERCHANTS CO ON during BUYERS’ WEEK. misang are pear Itehing, burnin, skin trouble whic makes you scratch, nomat- ter where you are, is a to Seattle has entertained many thousands of visitors in the recent week. During the present week, it is the hope of the officers, directors and staff of THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK that a spirit of closer cooperation and better under- standing will be developed between the people of Seattle and those who will be received and en- tertained here. United effort and a mutual understanding of | each other’s needs, together with a WILL to © work together, are certain to bring beneficial ree ~ = to all parts of the great state of Wash-. | ington, a The First National Bank of Seattle Pioneer Place—Where James, Yesler First Avenue Join Be Careful What You Wash Your Hair With ed shampoos with Resinel Ointment. ‘The figet application stops the ‘a and in mest cases Most soaps and preps contain too much alkali, which is | very injurious, as it dries the scalp . | If you are troubled with pains of | and makes the hair brittle, aches; feel tired; have headache, The best thing to use is Mulsified | indigestion, insomnia: painful | cocoanut oll shampoo, for this is pure | eeaeab of uti * will find|°24 entirely greaseless. It's very | pessag: urine, you will find! oioap and beats anything else all to \felief by regularly taking pieces, You can get Mulsified at any | drug store, and a few OUnces will leat} Ca OW the whole family for months. Positively Positively indard remedy fot kidney, Simply moisten the hair with water | aes Baxter & Baxter ‘No bladder and uric acid troubles and | °**!!Y and rub it in, about a teaspoonful | Exchanges medy of Holland since 1696. 1326 Second Ave. is all that ts required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out an ae qT I druggists, Gueranteod | P's fluffy, wavy, and casy to Bale Shore uA M Lack for the mame Gold Medal on handle ides, it, loosens and takes | uldeane bon and accept no imitation every | out every particle of dust, dirt and OWL DRUG CO, « The hair dries quickly and) » and is soft, fresh looking, | dandruff. Be sure your druggist Sives you Mulsified,—Adyertisement, |