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" 2 Nowspaper Fo. | terprice Assn. | and United Preas Service Ry mail, out of + 44.50 for « of “rocks” for his services. “ cepting the melodious and m regard lightly these brisk for their heavy guns are down in their holsters their holsters swing low and But in the Abraham Lincoln said there were “certain incidents im history that Of pre-eminent consequence. wes the discovery of America; was the invention of printing: ocre probably heard of oy well- plan of making cough syrup But have you ever used ; Thousands of families, the world , feel that they could hardly keep fous without It's simple and but the way it takes hold of a will soon earn it a permanent in your home. Into a pint bottle, pour of Pinex; then add plain granulated jar syrup to fill up the pint. itt Or, clarified molasses, instead of sugar it tastes good, you a fall pint better cough remedy than you could buy ready-made for three times cost, une Tt is really wonderful how quickly this home-made remedy conquers @ h—usually in 24 hours or less. it seems to penetrate through every air passage, loosens a dry, hoarse or fad cough, lifts the phlegm, heals the membranes, and gives almost im- Mediate relief. Splendid for throat Je, hoarseness, croup, bronchitis - a and bronchial asthma. : Pinex is a highly concentrated cor ind of genuine Norway pine Reet, and has been used for gene tions for throat and cheat ailments To avoid disappointment ask your druggist for “244 ounces of Pinex” Sith directions. and don't accept any- ing else. Guaranteed to give abso- te satisfaction or money refunded, Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. DR. J. KR BINYON Free Examination BEST $2.50 GLASSES on Earth We are on» of the few optical stores in the Northwest that really grind lenses from start to finish, and ‘we are the only one In SEATTLE—ON FIRST AVE. Examination free, by graduate op- tometrist. Glasses not prescribed | unless absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 FIRST AVE. een Spring and Sencen sores tay “i 11.60 of the attl eSt ar Bill Hays Gives Us a Thrill ellifiueus Bill Bryan. young gentlemen It remains to be seen whether Bill Hays, present postmaster general, will be a rock “in the weary land for the movies; certainly the movies are giving Mr. Hays plenty But it is certain, demure Presbyterian elder tho he be, that Will Hays has the | dramatic instinct, the movie psychology, as no other cabinet officer in years, not ex- “f As postmaster de luxe, Hays gave us a distinct thrill when he embarked marines, “armed to their glistening molars, on these sea-going hacks which transport our mails. _ Any hour in this city one can get a thrill, a real old Wild West thrill, as a mail n rumbles by with a sea sodjer ensconsed beside the driver, revolver in hand, ‘Tifle beside him, ready for sudden death or whatever may transpire. All over our town, these forceful ty or off, they swing at their sides the ready automatic, to our peaceful streets. - An ancient gun man of the Alaska gold rush days, one of those artists who carried arsenal in his waistband, and who shot 'em down in rows by rifling the hammer, wander. And always, on lending a martial at- A wise woman never tri es to convince a woman against her will or to unscramble an egg. suite and knowing that he would never want for good clothes. If he had read Poor Richard's Almanac, by Ben Franklin, he'd have seen this: “Wealth is not his that has it, bat his that enjoys in” Misers usually forget that mon- ey bs only o means to an end. Our instruments, our hearts, our hands, are given (@ work with in this time—to struggle with the evil, to bring out the good, in this Every year is leap ‘year for the pedestrians. time; im order that people may look back in after days and say: “Bee what has come down to us from it; see what good has re- moved all the wrong which those who dwelt in it tell ws of ; see what there is in it to imitate.”-—Freder- tek Denison Maurice. To stand by one’s friend to the witermost end, And fight @ fair fight with one’s foe; Never to quit and never to tet, And never to peddle one's woe. wv — dg 4 Wee a S (Contineed From Yesterday) | the situation just right. Joining cabin, scarcely one hundred yards away, Harold waited and/ snowshoes. care to walt for daylight. ed no further meeting with Bill tn | the darkness. But in the light he| would have every advantage; he) could see to shoot and his blind foe| could not return his fire, After all, he had only to be pe tient. Vengeance would be swift and sure. When the morning broke he would come into his own again, with never a chance for failure. One little glance along his rifle sights, one quarterounce of Pressure upon the trigger—and/| then he could journey down to the} Yuga and his equaw in happiness and safety. It would be a hard march, but once there he could get Supplies and return to jump Bill's claim. Everything would turn out right for him after all The fact that his confederates were slain mattered not one way or another. Pete had gone out with a bullet thru the lungs; Virginia had dealt him that Joe's neck had been broken when Bill had hurled him against the cabin wall. But in @ way, these things were an ad vantage. There was sufficient food | in the cabin for one meal for the| was three meals for one. A day’s| rations, carefully spent, would carry | him the two days’ march Yuga. Besides, the breeds would not be present to claim their third of the mine. He wondered why ho hadn't handled the whole matter himself, in the first placa He | would have been fully capable, he thought. As to Virginia—he hadn't decided about Virginia yet. He didn’t know of her wound, or his| security would have seemed all the| more complete. Virginia might yet listen to reason and accompany him | down to the Yuga. He had only to wait till dawn, But Harold's thought was not en tirely clear. The tury in his brain jand the madness in his blood dis torted it—just @ little. Otherwise he might have conceived of some error in his plans. He would have been a little more careful, a little less sure. His insane and devas tating longing for vengeance, as well as his late drunkenness, cost |bim the fine but essential edge of his self-mastery Slowly the stars faded, the first | ghostly light stealing from the east. The blood began to leap once more in his veine. Already it | was almost light enough to shoot Then his straining eyes saw Bill emerge from the cabin Every nerve in his body seemed to jerk and thrill with renewed ex. citement. Yet there wasn't a chance | |to shoot. ‘The light was dim; the | shadows of the epriice trees hid the to the came woodsman's figure ewif He was gone; the cabin was left unoccupied except for Virginia. And for all that she had shot so straicht to wave Bill's life, there was nothing to fear from her. Her fury was pasned | by now; he thought he knew her well enough to know that she | Wouldn’t shoot him in cold blood And perhaps some of her love for him yet lingered He did not try to guess the min-| sion on which Bill had gone, If his thought had been more clear | and his fury less, he would pave’ Paused and wondered abdut it; per what suspicious Bill was blind; | except to procure fuel there was no conceivable reason for an excursion | Sngwshoe.Irai] into the mow. But Harold on! reality, Virginia bad guesecd shivered with hatred and rage In the ad-| drunk with the realization that his chance had come. He would go quickly to the cabin, | the little ermine watched his chance to recover his| procure his snowshoes, and be ready knew the strength of there pitiless He was wise enough to | to meet Bill with loaded rifle when |arme that clasped him now. for failure. bis way, snow, toward Bill's cabin. He found to his great delight that! to him; Opera singer says no woman is worth loving un- | til she is 80. Now we know one opera singer’s age. | Seorge Drinton Chandler, THE SEATTI STAR — ‘Trieuay & AWwen, Dear Avridge Mann | | should do, about quench your throat I know it's hard for some to choose twixt love ef home and love of booum but, Avridge Mann, it's very nice for you to ask for our advice, and free of charge I give it you, what'I would eay | you ought to do. | First, | would talk to Homer Brew, to ascertain what he would early full 1 think that Homer's very nice do; and when your ear bull; advice! | If you want dope that's sound and true, and which will make a | man of you, and teach you things you ought to learn, until your cheeks and ears will burn, and you will want to fade away go and ask our Cynthia Grey! up t you. and ask your wife! AVRIDGE You're very wise, but a#till you get the tho many times it's really best to ask the wife, a» yet as to dates with other queens, it wouldn't do to Dear booby prize: you suggest spill the beans. Avridge Dame: | | | oe: at him as be neared the threshold. | the cabin waa etl dusky with ehad: ows | °rm coming for my snowshors, | Virginia,” be told her. “Then I'm going to go away.” H@ tried to | draw his battered, bloody lps into & amile. “Come tn and get them,” she re __ plied. Her voice was low and life leas, Harold stepped thru the door | And then she uttered a curious ery B]| “Now! he called sharply. There tf | was no time for Harold to dart back, even to be alarmed. A mighty fores deacended upon his body Even in that firet inetant Harold |knew only too well what had oo lourred. Instead of lying in wait | himself he bad been lured into am bush, Ell Nad reentered the win jdow and had etood waiting in the | nhadow, Just oneide the open door | Virginia had given him the signal when to leap down. He leaped with crashing force— an the grimy leaps, or the cougar |pounces from a tree, There wan | nothing of human limitations about that attack. Harold tried to strug- |ale, but bis attempt was futile as that of @ sparrow in the jaws of Only too well he ly He want-|he returned. There wae no chance | had learned it the night before, and He plunged and fought | his last for vengeance gave way to floundering tn the deep! ehastty and bloodcurdiing terror. | What would theese two avengers do what justice would they the door was open—nothing to do/ wreak on him, now that they had but walk thru. little amazed at sinia lying #0 At first be was the sight of Vi till against the o7 4) Dim in thetr power? The resistions f-| shoulders buried him to the floor >| Virginia left her bed and came ponite wall; it ocenrred to him for) creeping to be of such ald as was the first time that perhaps «he had If mo, it made his own work all the safer. | injury been wounded in the fight OEM or your needed. | She wholly dteregarded her own Her own countrymen, in eo Boo vw wenss 1/7 three of them, and that meant {t| rom Tress and Other Poems (Georgs H. Doran & Co.) ALARM CLOCKS BY JOYCE KILMER When Dawn strides out to waken dewy farm Acrons green fields and yellow bills of hay, You say you're in an awful stew, and hardly know what you & letter some jane wrote to offer boose to We think we know what you should For I don't care for any booxe, nor do I care which way you chooee; but if you really love your life, you'd better go Yet she opened her eyes and maxed) ware | | | The little twittering birds laugh in bis way And poise triumphant on bis shining arm. He bears a sword of flame but not to harm The wakened life that feels his quickening sway, And barnyard vc “It is day? Take by his grace @ new, an alieo charm o8 shrilling But tn the elty, Ike a wounded thing That limps to cover from the angry chase, He steals down st And wanly mock his young and shameful face; And tiny gongs with crue! fervor ring In many a high and dreary sleeping place. ets where sickly arolights sing, PIRIN WARNINGI Say ‘‘Bayer’’ when you buy Aspirin. Unless you see the name “‘Bayer’’ on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians | | over 21 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggiata. Aspirin Ws the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Mononceticacidester of Salicylicacié haps he would have been some-| Accept only ‘‘Bayer’’ package which contains proper directions. | | +LAKE + ¥—KTY + HOME -E +A<OKLAHOMA | Afetter trom AIWRIDGE MANN look out for Homer's little but Jook for bull in his Just do, but Ay, my boy, It's DAME, Monroe, Wash. ne, bad fought all day wounds much worse. She with | He could see her but dimly; mostly| crept with her pistol ready in her! handa. B's etrong fingers were at Far. old's throat by now; the man's re nistance waa swiftly crushed out of him. With his knee Bil held down one of Harold's arma; with his free arm he struck blow after blow into (Turn to Paco 9, Column 1) Prosperity | Today Like | Fickle Lady | BY AMATEUR KCONOMIST The economic situation in the world today certainly is a pus zie, In wealth the United sta wtands at the top, owing nobody, with money out at interest to the Amount of nearly 20 billgon dot lars, with more than half of the gold of the world in her the richest nation that this planet haw ever known. That is one wide of the picture ‘The other ix several million men out of work, dine od, in we of the thingme that make worth living, the farmer burning his corn because its sale will not bring enough to ywy coal, facing & new year without the money to buy the machinery that he needs to carry on ming oper. | ations this next season. | On @ half way plane we find England and France, They are | not wealthy like the United States, but, when compared with Germany and Mussa, are very well off. Yet we find that their tgpectriat disorganization and un eMployment are not so bad as ours. We find Germany facing a ize tn only fixed by her ability to pay; a Germany in | bondage for her sine, rightly compelled to labor for a lifetime in @ small part to pay the debt that she owes the allies But | Germany in bondage presents | few laborers out of work, no wuf. ferme because of unemployment, LEARN A WORD EVERY DAY | Today's word is PUGNACIOUS. It's pronounced — pug-nay-#hus, with scoent on the pond syllable. It means — quarrelsome, disposed to fight, yearning for battle, fight loving. It comes from—Latin to fight. Companion words—pugnacity, pug- | naciousneem. t's uned like this—"While Amert canes are not pugnacious, they are willing to fight for their righta.” debt whon “pugnare,” we Dn months ald ges st 35 Dosrs 4 CASTORIA Zor Infants and Children, Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA ‘HE cenraue company. wew vees erry, ity, 4or industries running to capac ‘The poorer the nation, the bet ter off it meems to be. TUESDAY, JA JARY 31, 1922, defeat, economia booming indum Military lust ' a | bondage, } | ag bg _tagget t to Nevada, that state would double ip it also seema to be the mother population ia prosperity in Germany's ca Virtue, vietory, wealth, with | Ninety of the people of disorganization and unemploy the United live in the eastern ment half. Always Delicious Always Refreshing "SALAD AY Sold in sealed Per annum compounded semi-annually is the least we have ever paid On Savings GAIN IN SAVINGS For first 17 days of January, 1922 $97,555.28 $753,593.29 {[ Savings Accounts accepted in amounts from $1.00 to $5,000. {| Send for our literature which tells how to save. MUTUAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCATION OFFIC WILLIAM D. COMER, President THOMAS S. LIPPY, Vice President EDGAR E, CUSHING, Secretary 815 Second Avenue ERS: In the first delivery zone, the delivered price of ~ — El A. lum: Never in Bulk. BLACK-GREEN-MIXED poe K. & . C. COOK, Telephone Elliott 0350, Distributers ; | ° / i fl Lump coal is NOT necessarily best coal out of a mine—it is absolutely without Coal stays in lumps solely fortunate blasting and handling. Each blast yields both nut coal and both sizes the same quality. Nut from the same mine are the same quality—the size through we can supply you with either. We, frankly, have the welfare of our patrons at heart and invite those who now buy lump and who, therefore, suffer the extra cost of lump—the penalty of blind pref- erence—to consult our coal ex- pert. Tell him just how and where you burn coal and ask him what nut or combination of nut coals he would recommend. Often his recommendation proves better —and the saving in cost will grati- fy you. Black Diamond Lump is « . $11.95 Black Diamond Nut is...” "10.95 Black Diamond Furnace ia . 9.65 Newcastle Lump is. 9.30 Newcastle Nut is 2 « « « 8.30 pecan Peais ss ee 7.30 [ssaq is we ee 9.30 jpenabor g y aaa 4 me > Peais » . +s . 7.30 South Prairie Furnace is =. 9.65 Diamond Briquets is. . . 10.50 Also Canadian, Australian and Utah Coals —but we advocate ing the Pacific- a Northwest dollar in t cific- Northwest, If the city of Duluth were moved inum packets onl;