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MONDAY, APRII TIAN) REPORT SHOWS Pls IRREGULARITIES Light Account Muddle Will Be Probed by Mayor tn her mest famous “Peg o’ My Heart” » with MANLON HAMILTON a. CORRSUM =: xow— Jacqueline Legee ond Smith,” 1. c. Witwer's t . : “Pighting Hood” series earing on the lig Coming— BROWN AWAITS “Mighty Lak’ a Hose” AUDITOR'S REPORT irs HERE Hyron Morgan's latest racing thrtiler— LAST TIMES TODAY “The Prince and | »: The Pauper” |): j Northwest Products TONIGHT EXCHANGES ITY MONEY Do Big Business in Fish Licenses to County Auditor D. E. Thousands of an streams or troll [many fine catches being reported. | A number of streams in Pierce ohomi#h county, closed to fishing , Were opened and drew It’s a Universal OLYMPIC THEATRE Ist and 2nd TONIGHT THE 4N Leow Sure-Fire From George Barr McCuteheon’s Novel “Castle Craneycrow” STARRING Herbert Rawlinson AND Eileen Percy { “VAMPED” Comedy SCENES FROM RNHARDT'S SRICAN TOUR A Classy, Peppy. Hit TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY Mats. Daily Except Mon, Thurs. WHY RENT? When you can get a home of your own for ing possible ™m %y-acte ground in Weat $1,900—$100 cash, $15 month. will gladly show you what 1 am doing. Come In. H. C. PETERS “THE WOMAN WHO 726 Grd Ave. FOOLED HERSELF” NEWS COMEDY “Three o'Clock in the Morning” When you listen te | Prince's Dance Orches- Dentistry at Half Price As cutting prices seems to be in| yogue, without In the slightest cut- ting the quality, we are going to do all regular dentiatry at hal Drices for Class A work Bridgework with interchangeable Porcelain (facings) teeth, shows no Bold edges, easy to replace in cane ot reakage. Back teeth are all porce- lain ‘and guaranteed unbreakablo When boxed in with gold backings, 22-k. gold crowna and 20 solder, ea $5 per tooth, If anybody else anates you bridgework at $6 inatat on above apecifications in a signed contract, and you will likely not get it.. Gold and porcelain crowns and fillings, $6 each. Silver fillings, $2 up. Fifty- dollar semi-metal flexible plates at $25. Good $30 pure rubber plates, $15. Both Trubjte teeth. A perfect fit quarantesd or no charge 4 (Cheap rubber plates are danger- | ~ ous and profitiess, hence wa do not fake: Cage) Having been estab. | jahed years as high-class } fairly high-priced dentists, and aa moat people in the state know us asl such, we feel that any further com- out who 0 ment sbout we are would be} © will show namplen of all ox work and guarantes yours to be equal to the samples. It's the beat | On Alveolar Work there will be no reductio ves | the ayatem—it Is patented and 10% | marked and no other dentists can do| Mt “degally.” It conta double the cont dgework to ‘6 and in mont | worth doubles it wie payhiont ing this £ waits, Columbia Record ever heard side is “La Goi usual At Columbia Dealer at Do Honey's New Academy, Pike at 13th, every Wednes- day, Saturday and Bunday Kve Warren Anderson's Orchestra Sunday Bargain Night DANCING TAUGHT, $5 ‘ew Mtepa Guaran It is @ ponitive| In Cases where bridgwewo: ia} Absolutely Impowsible and. ine alt | ih the iene bridgework ia ponrible, | jAtter it is mere que of which In the better. sf yo” two or more O04 teeth or root 4 Or more on ench wide, ally nn. | | All Dances and teed in # leanoma, $5.00, Chawe starte ‘Thursday Advanedd, Monday of prastion, No ing teeth can be an felon thi Dinced. The work te * Coinfortable enti tul, Aire Peouable and natural in i have made abo 000 Cason in thene offices in the past’) | Yours and the work has given wen. | rs! watintaction Went | Alveolar Dentists. 24 Haight Bidu» second and Pine’ wharp. 0. Menty oinbarrasmement Seatile’s Mecognised School ¢ thie Private low outerata ped the lakes Sunday, STAG. seeeseceecese tLATTLE eeeeeeeee . WORLD of MAKE-BELIEVE POCO REESE EEE OEE EE ESE SE SORES HEHE EEE EEEEEE — TODAY'S PROGRAMS SCREEN coLiskum © doy Leet Ray MOORE Variety PANTAGES oly exciting BLUE MOUSE ‘Suza tion. STRAND Lau | cipal the Str cast suppor MBIA “Mrs. Frances Sistek | Constipation Handicaps Anyone How to Treat Yourself c. ‘I have tr of them years them, I would have saved myself a great deal of bowel distress. I hi ater relief, in the from the ‘Pell her medicine I stomach | and cou until I triec Pellets, that I nend those I k | ble, My | hear of them | Siatek, : Obtain th o's Pleasant 1 with them et Is that I ¢ Mra, Frat 205 t ave amall Ad now drugs’ in tut vertisement ‘Shake Into Your Shoes sprinkle in the — foot-bath Foot-Ease, the healing powder for Painful, Swollen, | Sweating feet. It nts b 8 Jand sore spots and takes the sting out of corms and bunions, Always Allen's Foot-Kase to break in shoes and enjoy the blilas of Thowe who And Allen's use new feet without an tise Allen's Foot-E y that they have solved thelr foot troubles, Sold everywhere, ‘Trial package and a » Walking Dolls ALLEN'S FOO ¥—Advertisement ache Winter Garde and taken | (“WILL” COMING | Will Rogers, the tv in the Ichabod Crane in the screen adapta t Washington Irving’ ic, “The Headles the Legend of here soon ‘abl ereen he role of on of famous cle picture to the n theater. will come DVem a girl ho marries her. with him STAR SCOTCH REVUE AT ap-|°"™ PRINCESS tr n of | Rico, ~ ASPIRIN Say “Bayer” and Insist! Unless you see the “ on package or on table’ ayer Cross” genuine Bayer prod by physicians over years and proved safe millions for Colds Headache Lumbago Rheumatism Neuralgia in, Pain Accept r Tablets of Aspirin” only. Bach unbroken package con- tains proper directions, Handy boxes of twelve tablets! cost few cents Druggists sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin in the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetk acidester of Salieyleneld. | Toothache arache them to} also antineptic, | Bronchial and La Grippe COUGHS eased and checked by citoucnS REMEDY Established 1872 More bottles used yearly than of any other cough medicine Sold everwhere you are} THE GROTE-RANKIN CO OTTO F. KEGEL, President Continuing FINE CRETONNES Thousands of Yards of Quality Cretonnes Are Offered in This Sale Five Special Price Groups Are: 25c 45c 69c 85c 95c And Thousands of Yards at Prices in Between In these special lots every piece is fresh and new, and the colors are of the best dyes procurable, as near sunfast as Printed Cretonnes can be had. Those who are planning to beautify their homes will find this an exceptional opportunity for saving. NOTE: Our workrooms offer a special service—FREE—to all who purchase Cretonnes this week. We will furnish paper patterns for all valance work. The cutting, which is the most important part in the making of your draperies, will thus be simplified. —Second Floor | Great Northern Says Shipper Pays Bill \Promising Pupil to | Appear in Recital “I saw Elizabeth's music teacher esterday, Mrs. E r. She spoke highly of your daughter's abil “Well, that's very nico of Miss Barrows to speak that way about El We With #0 much phono: music afraid d not show a great deal of in t in learning to play the piano. has done very well though and tlizabeth we were r pupils jand asked me to come glad of the opportunity Elizabeth play.” She has been preparing two so. the recital for a long she does well.” ns utterly con tions for will nising pupil Well, well! Isn't that fine? Ti dress for that are a bit tight on money now, I haven't considered it, but if she has been doing so well ax that in her music, perhaps we can arrange to get the dress as a sort of reward.” "T think that would be lovely And lst me tell you of a place where one can buy such attractive dreswes, Cherry's at 1015 2nd Ave., {Rialto Blag | Whist! of d open a charge account there, | Advertisement just over the Pig'n do carry the prettiest Ine too.” ‘Take Fast Steamers at Colman Dock REGULAR 1 AUTOMONS Heatile to BS 11180 A trip Hat & NAVY YARD ROUTE Colman Dock Main 3003 are proud of her| she | I will be} hear | In fact she | spoke of your daughter as her most | abeth has been begging for a new recital and as we| between Madison and Spring, in the | and you know you may If Laws Increase Railroad Costs Prices of nearly all necessaries of life are too high. The average freight rate for the whole country, which is the lowest in the world, is now 46 per cent higher than the average rate during the ten year period beginning with 1900. In November, 1922, the average increase of the, wholesale price of all commodities, as compared with the same period, was 79 per cent. Railroad rates can be reduced in only one way—by reducing the cost of hauling freight and passengers. When a lawmaker says he wants lower freight rates and then proposes laws that will make it cost more to haul freight, that man is not sincere or he has not thought out the question fully. The railroads have only one source of revenue, viz., from freight and passenger earnings. If their expenses are increased they must have more income to meet the larger expenses, and they can get this income only by charging higher rates. : : : Some people are for Government operation of the railroads. Twenty-six months of it in this country proved it is expensive and does not give good service. Other countries have had the same experience; Italy owns its railroads, but it costs so much to operate them that great efforts are being made to turn them over to private operation. The shipper will suffer again if Government operation returns in the United States. Only two classes are openly and frankly for it—politicians who use it for campaign talk, and labor leaders who believe it will make more jobs. Both of these favor it to further their own ends. The lawmaker cannot add to the expenses of the railroad by forcing it to make unnecessary expenditures with- out hurting the shipper who has to pay the bill in the end. Low rates and good service both are needed; poor bankrupt railroads can- not give either one. How the shipper is served by this type of poli- tician is illustrated by the fable of The Farmer and the New Kired Man A Farmer had an Old Horse that for many years had hauled his farm products to market, and being well fed had strength to haul a big load every day. Finally there came hard times for the Farmer. He had good crops, but the prices he received for his crops had not gone up so much as the prices he had to pay for his clothes, his shoes, his fuel, his groceries, and his hired help. He did not know what to do. A Friend told him his troubles were because his horse ate so much of his grain and hay. The Old Horse in fact did not eat any more than was necessary to keep him well and strong, but the Farmer turned him. over to a New Hired Man who had Radical Theories about the’ treatment of horses. He beat the Old Horse almost to death, hung heavy weights on his harness, set the dogs on him, offered him food and took it away before he could eat it. Then, to make the Old Horse easier to handle, the New Hired Man hobbled him so he could hardly move and beat him more than ever because he did not go faster. When the New Hired Man told the Farmer what he was doing, he full of Glee at the Great Joke on the Old Horse. At last when the Old Horse had been made weak and lame the Hired Man said to the Farmer: ‘Your Old Horse is so#sick and broken down he will never be able to haul your stuff unless you get Uncle Sam to take him and hire some more men to help doctor him up and drive him.” The Farmer remembered that once when Uncle Sam had managed the Old Horse it cost a Great Deal more than eyer before to do his hauling, so he decided to change Hired Men and see that the Old Horse had decent treatment, but he was UP AGAINST IT to get his hauling done while his Old Horse was getting strong again, LOUIS W. HILL, Talk No. 2 Chairman of the Hoard | | |