The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 2, 1921, Page 18

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“How the New Revenue Bill, Will Affect You Is Here Told BY HARRY HUNT WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 ‘Aeeth, once the republicans get thelr ew revenue bill enacted, than it was the democrats were in power. Also, it will cost less to decorate home with art bronzes or stat or to buy Sonny that baseball E and glove. every time you take your OF sweetheart a five-pound box Chocolates you'll be a whole dime if the confectioner plays with you and gives you the fit of the two cents per pound Ax reduction of the new law! [ORE YOU SPEND YOU SAVE ‘analysis of the new revenue the form in which it was by the house, shows that the spender you have been the sayings you may be able to ws ay under the new tax schedules, | f you've been living close to the » holding down on the number cream sodas and the amount ly you consume, denying your cy flummeries and cosmetics, little and puffing your pipe sleeves instead of a smoking the bill holds only one relief That is: have a big family, you'll $400 exemption on each child, tax purposes, instead of as pieees by the democratic 1 the other hand, while the new will save you that two- fax on your weekly ice cream ‘and two cents on each pound not to mention tax free and lipsticks, the assess. it of John D. and other gentiemen ‘Incomes above the million dol- iF Mark will be reduced $330,000 on § on of net taxable income. GE CITIZEN RELIEF je average citizen, however, with of from $1,000 to $5,000 a il feel some relief under the of the law as passed by cee = Sacolly trom $2,000 to $2,- * the net taxable income is 2 $5,000 per year. Where the ia $5,000 or more, the as head of a family re- ie at $2,000. , desgiption for each dependent | under 18, totally dependent upon the of po family, is increased from these exceptions, the income Femains unchanged for the ee ON $5,000 to $66,000 income. you are not one of the super- goal @ net income sie x be more inter- the amendment which @6 out all higher surtaxes than _ per cent fixed for income amount. Harding and judges of | 5 Mts. and inferior courts are from any tax on their fed- ~It's go-| or for such other |. Ps° Tides in Seattle SATURDAY High Tide Mm, 16 tt / Low Tide 122 a Recond High Tide $4 pm, 1G ft | second Low ‘Tide 168 pom, 29 fe Second Low Tide JIALOT pom, Be tt | Weather Bureau TATOORIT ISLAND, Rept Report 2 Arrivals and Departures Arrived Str Bilver State from Manila Sept. 2 Shanghal, Kobe | via Hongkong, KOnAMA, at hor | Pedro via Kan Frar bktn Guy C. Goss fre Am, Sept. Ltr Bawa Maru fre | nite via Hongkong, Shanghal Yokohama, at 6 p.m w via Liverpe | Ptah ¢ Ruby from Bering sea poria ai 10 p.m. Salted Str Ketchikan for Southeast: | At 1290 A mM, Kept lmte dove Monotuly Via Port Alien, mt and Milo, at Te28 poms wt « for San Pedro, at 2 p.m; a Rainier for San Franc tb poms ate Westham for Britieh Columbia porta, at 213 p.m Aledion, Were Petersherg—Sept, 1—Satled, atr Jefter- fon, southbound, at 11 a. m. Cordova—Hept, 1—tatled, | western, southbound, at 2 a, m —tept. l--fatled, str Princess bound, at 1:30 p. Ketehikan—Sept, 1—Hatied. kane, northbound, at ¢ p.m Vessels in Other Ports Rromer—Aug. 21—Arrived, motorship avaal from Seattle Aug. 26—Satled, motorship Alrea for Tacoma. Aug. 30-—Arrived, from Seattle Man antilo—Aug, 30-—Arived, str Der- Diay from Seattle San Pedro sept mirat Farragut from Seattle Ines from Tacom tr Quin Erneat H. Meye r Jule Balled, str Admiral Farragut for str North. str po: ate Depere I-—-Arrivedse ste Ad- atr Senta from Bopt. 1-—Ral r tor Reatth ¥ for Seattle, « p.m. Arived, ete Jatapa | ae Reported by Wireless Received by U. & Naval Radic Sept. 1—Htr Westward Ho, Tacoma for Eureka, $2 miles south of Columbia river at § p. m.; eter Stockton, Beattie for Loew Angeles, 242 miles from Beattie at & p. isco, 229 miles from Heat! tr Ban Iheg: 5 north of Cape Bianco at for "hay ne ie $ miles from Fla tery m, Vessels in "Port at Seattle ondte cove Temae—Hiee B's Seve Beit Street Termin 7-4 ‘Penpnin ¥. destroy: nik Pacitie Terminal. of Beattie. bso Mare dl Myrmidon, jor 7—Sehr Roby. Pie S—Htr West Japp. Pier A—Str West Mimrod. Pier B—str Queen. U. & str West Hartland, senr Morea, str Silverado, etr Weat Commertial Holler ‘Works—U. 8. Tent ship Reltet. East Waterway Dock & Warechouse—Rtr ‘West Ivis, str Willeolo, str Ayaha Ma- fe. str West Notus. Todd Dry Doc! Keys, str Wen Sound Bridge & Dredging Co.—8tr Patterson. Ames Yard—-Str Roosevelt. Nettleton Milt Dock—Str Forest Ki H fernen Dock—Schr Maude, motorship barge Palmyra, THE SEATTLE STA Mexican Oil Stocks Plunge Into Decline NEW YORK, off in the President Mexican Petroleum ted the decline, ed 24 points down. It rallied at 101 Ing from ite early lo wot 43% to 464 int list was firm. Opening Sept firet hi 2.—Mexioan ol] shares, which hi 4. been soaring, fell York 8 joint after it had opens ption, recove he reat of th © de H Great North. loge includ: jOreat Nort) ucible, up a p International ment of the cut In paper pri GRAIN MARKET MAKES DECLINE CHICAGO, Sep, 2.—Grain | declined on the Chie Hoard | Trade following the sharp advance Jot Thursday raders belleved con- ditions did not warrant the sharp advance and sold freely, Receipts © fairly heavy visions were Irregular. ember wheat opened — at Ye. off M, and closed off 44: De- changed at Paper was strong In the third hour, following announce- 2 Kaldwin sold up to N. Y. Stock cdhiniine (Thursday's Quotations) Neh KH. Manning @ Co, a Atohtsan A prices of Nait. & Baldwin Hethioham st | Canadian FP d Ne wonwe WES and te i etcmber oats opened up Mc at IC and closed of comber | oats opened up Se at 36Ke and clos- ed down Se: May ened up We at 42%c and cloned © IN .. Cash Wheat CHICAGO, Rept. 2£—Cash wheat 2 red, $1.27; No. 3 red, hard L264 @1.98; No e. Binelatr On... Houthern Houthern Ratlway Btromber Chicago B Board of Trade Friday Quotations) Farnishea wih. nh a Co. ‘Batles jetel Hall Open High 25% 81.27 ox sine 1% LM tea % ee fee SeEeETER " u » 4 ing sows, rough, # Cattle—Receipts. Chelce and prime, ommen and medium. $698.34. butcher and heif ue Sasetis: dull t228@480 Russian $a, 1921 Russian Sige, 1926 A Russian OMe, 1019 je French ba, 1581 Sheep Receipts, to strong. Cattlo—Receipts, penenanees ; joge—Market nominal, Sheep—Market cominal, Batter—44o Jb. 46. Market nominal, unchanged. unchanged Fare! dow. Hene—i6@ Ife Id. : ’ Denver Live Stock Japanese iat he Japanese tnd (4s Peris ts. Seee United Kingdom Sie, i8ti.. | United Kingdom S%e, 1929. United Kingdom 5 %e, 1937 eee Railroad Securities PPECEREEE F FEE 2.100. Market strong. 6. + ewen, $202.60; feed- ere, 165.5 | been SHORTAGE ON LOCAL MARKET Weather Blamed for Slow Conditions . rain and cold weather have blamed for the shortage 0 en, Kreen corn, and for ment of watermelonn that local fancy toms were finding a rendy market! at higher prices of from $1.25 te $1.60 for a crate of 20 pounds, It was reported that the shortage will | be relieved after a few days of warm or weather, Gr corn wan from | 5 to 60 cents higher at some houses | at $2.25 to $3.50 a sack The peach season will be at ite height next week and the demand tw expected to be strong; the heavy receipts will keep the prices down to the present level. Burre! Gem cantaloupes were mov ing well at $1.76 a crate, Good-sined oples of the early varletios were ree along the street Friday. There were no changes noted on the dairy market | VEGETABLES Prices Paid Whotesale Dee! Meane—Local, per ®@. ... m the the dull me Jobbers claimed | FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1921 Odd Fellows — Here Will Go to Big Rally CLUES MANY IN LIQUOR STEAL Police and Federal Agents Compare Notes Federal agents were #till working Friday, under the direction of State Probibition Director Roy C. Lyle, on the steal which netted booge thieves $35,000 worth of liquor from the gov- nment storage vault at Elliott ave and Wall st. early Tuesday, Prohibition agents and officers of the customs, internal revenue, de riment of justice and police de-| partment were in conference in the! federal building Friday, threshing out theorles and comparing notes and ely Director Liye denied Friday that the arrest of Hobert Foroey, booked t the clty geil Thursday, had any connection with the big booze steal, “We have nothing definite to an- nounce," Lyle said, “We are still working on the many clues that have been turned up.” Bureau of Missing Relatives ent, ™ % Radishes—ioral, dos bunches, Spinach—tLocal, per box .......1.0 wash Bummer, ni Casaba Metone—Per Th. Cocoanate—-Per 100 Comb, Ber erate Cal. strained. pe Money DeweMandard crate Lemons—-Per bow Lagrnberrioe—Per er: Oranges Per case . Peaches—-Loeal Peare—Bartiett . E Wash. 1 Cuban, ad orate .. beak Dr. R. E. Turner Two thousand Seattle Odd Fellows | will attend the Patriarchs’ Interna: | tional rally of the order at New Westminster, B. C., on September 3, 4 and 5. Under the directjon of Dr. Turner, chairman of the rally com: mittee of Unity Encampment No, 2, arrangements have been made for 4 special train to leave Seattle over the | Great Northern tracks at 1 p.m. Sat- urday, More than 200 Initiates are aapiats BURTIE WILLISCROFT. — Mys teriously divappearing from hie brother'# ranch near Trinidad, Warh., in the winter of 1914, Burtie Williscroft t# sought by his aunt, Mra, Ella Rudisill, of Seattle. The missing man is described 24 ed to ride the goat at the rally. The years old, with blue eyes, light | largest paradé ever held by the Odd curly hair, and @ slight impediment | Fellows in British Columbia ts in his speech, He is inclined to be| planned. A feature of the rally will stout, be a banquet at which 6,000 will be seated. Some of the delegates expect to at tend the peacearch dedication at Blaine, September 6 Fruit Vende ers = gg and Stars Pay Arrest Negro With Caruso Tribute) sracine.to Mines) ry Carter, negro, was arrested in the railroad yards at Auburn Fri- BY PAUL R. MALLON day night on a charge of carrying NEW YORK, Sept. 2.—Opera stars, | concealed weapons. ~ Carter was said shopkeepers, church men and frult|/to have had a loaded revolver in his venders Jummed the little church of | possession when detained by a rafl- “Our Lady of Mount Carmel” here| road detective. He is said to have today to offer tears and prayers for| stated he was on his way to the Enrico Caruso, Roslyn mines to obtain work. “But he ie not dead—he live Rev, Francisco Magiiocco, personal friend of the tenor and noted opera composer, declared in his eulogy. : “He will live forever as the greatest His Diamond Ring artist of all times.” A diamond ring valued at over Famous stars of the Metropolitan | $1.000 was reported stolen from H. stage who sang with Caruso sobbed | M. Garvey, 217 Stewart st., while in thru the solemn hymns of the mass, | Vancouver, B.C. Garvey told police Rose Ponselle, soprano, and Gio-| the ring was taken by a woman who vanni Martino, bass, both of the Met. | Was to be deported to Seattle. Says Vi Woman Has | ropolitan, joined in the “Offertory| Search of incoming boats had not ¥. 0. 0. condensary, owt... DAIKY PRODUCTS iy Quarter of Verdi" Ponselle, soprano, Tommainni, tenor, with Carmetia | revealed the woman, according to po- and = Gatano | Hoe. Italian. opera Bringa His Arrest In two raids made by the police i idry squad Thursday, two women and two men were arrested and a quan. | © tty of booze taken to headquarters, James A. ‘kname, 45, logger, and Miss Nellie Williams, 34, were arrested at 608 Fourth ave. and later released on $300 bal] each. Patsy Waine, 33, musician, blew his cornet too loud when dry squad R. E./ 4) MAHONEY TRUNK REWARD WAITS Not to Be Decided Ung After Trial the finding of the will be paid until of James KB. Ma gins September 14, Prosecutor Maleolm io reward for Mahoney trunk after the trial honey, which b according to Douglas The numerous applications tor the $2,000 reward will be passed upon by Douglas after the trial, It tf expected that his recommendation will be approved by the King coum ity commissioners, J. L. Bell, the police diver, whom sled ie thought to have broken the trunk loose from the bottom of the lake, ix @ strong contestant, Kell is a third class patrolman. For many months Bell loaned his diw ing outfit to the city free of charge, and received only his regu lar pay of $145 a month. The out fit is valued at approximately $1,400, Bell has made tempting fers to well the outfit to the city mut they have been refused. Th yeed of such an outfit has b learly shown according to police, who wish the elty to buy it. Arrest 2 Men With Furs Worth $2,000 Found in possession of furs val: ued at approximately $2,000, ae jcording to police, two men are held in city Jail Friday. WwW. P. Clancy, 26, boilermaker, |and J. G. Doyle, 28, driver, are |the men held. They were arrested at the Hub hotel, Third ave. and Cherry st, late Thursday night, by City Detectives Ernie Yoris and C |C. Fortner. Both have police ree ords, according to detectives. No clue to the ownership of the furs has been found. Jap Pleads to Pay His Revenue Tax “Please come get my tax.” This was the plea received by | William T. Beeks, chief deputy col- Seattle Japanese. “We've been checking up on of the rooming houses and picty show men lately,” said Beeks, “and | penalized. We will accept his invita- tion and collect.’ |'U. S. Soldier With Because be had a small leather sandbag in his pocket when police officers stopped him, Thursday night, L. F. Verstraten, 21, U. 8. soldier, is held in city jail, Friday, on an open charge. Verstaten was arrested at Second ave. 8. and Washington st. by city detectives, Patterson Pleads ~ Guilty; Is Bibs Thomas Patterson, 816 Union st., pleaded sey tah to charges Friday and was fined by Federal Judge Jeremiah Neterer. This sed Erected on Your Lot for $577.0 Size 15x22 feet. bath, close! window two x, imi This includes all tu htt satel int; “t white “paint: ection on } your lot. pans or wiring.) were er eal lector of internal revenue, from ay barge Henry Villlard, str Griffeo, achr Levi W. Ontrander. Late 'U Union—Schr ©. & Holmes, motor- ship W. F. Burrows. tions is repealed, effective 1922. on insurance companies are | at 12% per cent of their net beginning with 1922, instead ix of eight cents on each $100 written and $1 for each ® of surplus and reseryes. transportation tax/ of eight on passenger business and cent on freight is repealed, Jan. 1, 1922, Of the excise taxes, those on soft mks and ice cream, considered ob. ible because #0 obtrusive, are butter, the T.: ex cheese, Ite Tm. Stal 2 pies, 26c each; cookies, the Stall $0, large dill pickles, B for 100i pork ples, $ for 0¢; little pig sai Bic ™, Btall 46, yellow corn, toe di Sillery roves, 3 tor 260; beans, « th 42, dry salt pork, 200 ™.; jow! tse Do tard, 2th 26c, Btall 20, choco- ete, 360 $1.96 sack, i'w salt pork, ife T™.; bacon, ite Ip, PIKE FLACK Stall 17, best American cane sumar, 4 Ta. 28 Séc, milk, 9¢ at Se can; 65, tall deity, don, y 68 tax on candy is reduced from cents to three cents a pound. ING GOODS’ XES REDUCED On sporting goods ate re from ten to five per cent. ft goods are assessed at five per instead of ten per cent, and the on the major items in the ex- lst scaled down. the rate on yachts is re from ten to five per cent, how- @ luxury tax ts placed on many | beginning at figures consid lower than those now in For instance, the tax will go on and rugs at a value of $3.50| 8 Square yard instead of $5; on Hias at $2.50 Instead of $4; on at $15 sree of $25, etc. . It is altogether too soon ‘attempt to compute how much Stall 12, Det Monte beans, pickling vinegar, site gal stati 1 pink sain apple . 2 he fi 2 taney cookies, 18e 4 $2.25 sack; Keystone coffees, Stall fresh salmon, 10¢ T.; Stall 1513, SANITARY Mall.108, pure American 40-34, boneless brisket corned beet, ™.; potatoe sauseg ibe t. Good Luck margarine, 360 th. home made mayonnaise, 450 Garden marmalade, the Mm. Stall 6, email pullet , 8 doz; Maid o' Clover “will pay Uncle Sam in taxes|or Meadowbrook butter, 60e 1b. Stall 45, the new bill. For the senate| Tee pancake flow S6e; 4 tbe, not had its say as yet, and the | (a! Golden West ‘ges from the senate differ radically trom that by the house. Soest aA ae BANK CLEARINGS _ Stall 2 T Ou i Hi ny soap, 260; $1.70. NER Yakima honey, ae pt, we, 106 Th 400 Stat 14, Dig can 4 mon, Stall 116, er boiling beef, 10¢ 60 ™ $4,916,826.66 1,115,344.10 4,945.654.00 978,565.00 powdered 2 Ton, 210 41.00 crate; $1.65 crate, Stall ie wach; silver 434,979.00 20,669.00 21, canning p lett pears, 2 doz, tho, | 22, je salmon saimon, Ihe Tb.; red snapper, 2 Ta. the. Stall ft, best butter, 60c M.; strictly frenh eggs, 28¢ doz, Stall 63, fancy white pickling vinegar, ASe gal; home made veal loaf, 40¢ TM. Stall 40, Rogers’ bmk- Bart i vc |N. ¥. Sugar and Coffee! San Francisco Produce Teday's Quotations Batter—Extras, 650 th Rape—Batren 46e don; extra first S740 dow; extra Pp “pullets, Seie don; undersined Today's Quotations Sagar—Dult Ri ; i @ Rio, spot, 7% OT Me Ib. 10% @10K6 Ib. eee Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, Sept. 2—Forsign ex- change opened weak today Mi $0. $ granulated, 4 San france, Poverty Due to Bad Living, Says Dr. Bus “A large part of the poverty of | the world is a disease, the result of centuries of bad living and bad thinking,” said Dr, D, V. Bush, psychologist, in his free lecture, “The Law of Remuneration. How to Double Your Efficiency,” in the Arena Thursday night. “We know that poverty ts an ab- normal condition,” said Dr. Bush, “because it does not-fit any human being’s constitution, It contradicts the promise and the prophecy of the divine in man. There is plenty of evidence that abundance of all that is good was man’s inheritance, that if he claims it stoutly and struggles persistently toward it, he will gain it." Dr. will be: Bush's subject Friday night “Lite's Greatest Bet. Frightens Burglar From Front Porch Hearing a burglar walking on his front porch late Thursday night, Neal Begley, a broker, living at 3724 Cascadia ave., seized an automatic pistol and rushed out in pursuit. The prowler had gone to the rear of the house when Beghy opened the front door, and ran when the broker pursued him, pistol in hand, Motor- cycle police and detectives who rushed to the scene failed to find the man. cottes, 2 Tha, fine breektawt “The Big Game” At the WILKES? It's Worth While MATINEE SATURDAY Economy Jar Stall 159, fresh small A. J. Biggar Breaks Potato Hill Record A. J. Biggar of Kent, has culti-| vated the record breaking potato hill, according to A. B. Nystrom, King county agriculturalist. The hill contains 47 potatoes, welghing 12 pounds in a‘, “If a man had one acre of such) hills," says Nystrom, “allowing tor the normal percentage of missing hills, the crop would equal 27 tons i sharp cheese, 2 tha, bho, ‘and be worth approximately $1,080.” 52 |was unhurt, according to a report jhe lay in the street Thursday after. (Thursday's Furnished by a ‘a wenniog & Co Detler Motel Baliding Btock— Atchison Gén, 4 Central Pacific ist i. Pout Gen. 4% Ge Reading Gen. 4s. A Steel & Foe P. Ket. b.. & P. Conv, be. & P. Cony. 4s... eu we. Hs | Chicago Car Lo ey eaten oy mt pwr 2 ESTIMATED TOMORROW Wheat, 110 cars; corn, 660 care; oate, 110 care. 1921 Record of Pedestrians Hit by Automobiles While running to catch a street car at Dexter ave. and Lee at. Thursday afternoon, Mra. H. Klevin, 2716 12th ave. N., knocked down in the street by a driven by Elmer Swanson, 18, 3661 Ashworth a Swanson offered to take Mrs, Kle- vin to the hospital, but she said she made to police, 521 sr ee Sidney R. Brant, 9, 1714 25th ave, 8., was struck as noon by an auto driven by A, Draper of Kirkland, The boy saw the auto coming and attempted to regain the curb, His foot slipped and he fell, the auto striking his head and side. The accident happened at Western ave. and Pine at. boy to clty hospital and later to the boy's home, Drops Perjury Cisse Against Local Men REDDING, Cal. Sept. charges of perjury placed against Jerald Callahan and George Dewey Davis, testimony given by them in the Wm. Henry Morris murder case, were to- day dismissed in the superior court on a motion by the district attorney. Draper took the |¢ 2.—The | Beet Of Seattle, as a result of the |} -Abimen passed his house at 1512 Sum: “ig |mit ave. They detected a discord -8¢/and found Waine with 40 bottles of 48 beer, police allege. Waine was taken to jail and released on $100 bail. Raiding a home at 1109 Washing. ton st. dry squhd men arrested P. Maviia and seized quarts of beer and 20 pints, which are held as evi- Veal--Fancy, o0-8 ARMY MULE WANTED TO EAT 175,000 TONS OF MONTANA ALFALFA Double rations for his majesty, the government mule, in the Phil- ippinest That's what the grent state of Montana wants, anyhow, Mon- tana this year hes a surplus of 175,000 tons of alfalfa and blue- joint hay, the Great Falls Com: mercial club has written the 8e- attle Chamber of Comnierce. Normally Seattle ships more than 7,000 tons of hay a year to the Philippines, mainly to tickle the palates of the government mules in the islands. Last year Seattle shipped out 22,406 tons of hay, valued at $475,566. Canada was the largest purchaser, PD. |Cows-—Country dreased, Tb... 4. Nght fancy, To. Medium to choice Common to qowe and hetters Medium to choles .... Comman to good Where You Going for Labor Day Fun? “Where shall I go over Labor | day?” This is a question Miss Josephine $8 |Splelbauer, secretary of the tourists’ free information bureau, maintained by the Seattle Chamber of Commerce 4408 jat 4211 Fourth ave., is answering for {0.00 |Scores of families. Miss Splelbauer is prepared to give up-to-the-minute facts about resorts ‘41.00/0n the Sound, lake and Puget sound 9.00) trips, short or longer jaunts to the 125 {mountains, streams and, Inkes—in ' 224ao0 | fact, every question that the excur- Qo | slonist or camper would like to know, Pat, 44's, city delivery HAY, GRAIN AND FEED City Wholesale Prices, Per Ton TD. ake, Rolled, 10-T. ake, Ground, 80-tb, ake, ... Sprouting, 100-1, ake, Wheat— Recta Denby Not Coming to Coast This Fall Secretary of the Navy Denby's Western trip has been indefinitely postponed, A trip of inspection he was to make of Pacific coast defenses | and of the naval base at Pearl Har- bor, Hawaii, will not be taken this fall. This is made certain today by a let- ter received today by Walter Brin- kop, chairman of the reception com- mittee of the 91st division reunion, to | | be held in Lon Angelos, September 24 and 25, in reply’ to an invitation to Cottonseed Meal Linseed Olt Meat ean Callahan and Davis have been tried before on the charges, the jury failing to agree, standing § to 4 for acquittal. Ww Beach He: [= Denby. | An elephant lives 400 years, a cat yon prefer. styles and nag at p sodeesd pei tem Foy) photos at our ta uses are plas walls. last for Fy You can move into your house in from 10 to 15 days. AMERICAN SURI ABLE, HOUSE ECO. 4008 Arcade Bldg. EXCURSION Enjoy the beauties and pleasures of a dustless ride on the bright blue waters of Puget Sound for your “Labor Day” holidays. A variety of trips are offered. SAN JUAN ISLANDS The “Thousand Islands" of the West SUNDAY AND MONDAY Steamer Sioux leaves Colman Dock 8 a. m., arriving back 10 p.m. FARE $2.50 Children half fare On Sunday the trip will be to Richardeon, Friday Harbor and East Sound—on Monday to Friday Harbor, Richardson and Roche Harbor. HOOD CANAL The wonderful inland waterway at the foot of the Olym>ics. SUNDAY AND MONDAY Steamer Kitsap IT. leaves Colman Dock § a, m.; three hours in Union City; arrive in Seattle on return 10 p, m. FARE $2.00 Children half fare For full particulars and reservations inquire at ticket office, Colman Dock, or phone Main 3993. Puget Sound Navigation Co, \S == \ ee | = | | we ( th08| 15, a dog 14 and a whale 300, | I guess this chap is afraid he'll be § Sand-Bag Arrested ©

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