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Air Mail Future ! | | PILOTS 10 FLY NY. TORRISCO "4 8c” Five Major Fields ih } | | Mark Night Route _ Across Country | WASHINGTON, Aug. 17. — Trial Mights, to determine postoffice department fully operate a transcontinental alr mail service, involving regular night can success whether the} 3 Mlights for the first timo in history, | a. Fwill be started ext Tuesday. Fat 11 a. m. on that date a plano ‘will take the air at New York, bound | ‘for the Golden Gate on the Pacific. At the same time another plane will depart from San Francisco with mall . destined for New York Over the night route, from Chicago to Cheyenne, Wyo., Onethird of the distance, the post office has installed every possible ‘safeguard to insure safety ‘fliers. In this area are located five Pmajor fields, Chicago, Iowa City, ‘Omaha, North Platte and Cheyen: each equipped with two 6,000,000 extending { )Bmergency fields, located every 25 Uimlles between Chicago and Chey: Senne, are {Iluminated with beacons Fand outlining lights, while at every Tihree miles along tho line smaller Mashing beacons have been put in place. Anticipating success in the trans. / | continental venture, the postoffice | department has already promulgated tentative zono rates for the service. For each ounce or fraction thereof between New York and Chicago, the J] first zone, a feo of eight cents will be charged. Between Chicago and ecrence a charge of 16 cents an | San Francisco, the third zone, J} tolt wit be 20 cents an ounce. ‘Clothes Are Cause | of Romance—Paris | ever-changing gowns, M. Henri Docet, the artist, | | conference. | for 1,000 yi 17.—Analyzing the styles in women's PARIS, Aug. ‘declared the varying fashions help = to keep romance alive. “One day ; Beloved,” he said, “is some- in tha Second Empire style; she is hobbled as if for a sack Next her draperies flow, but then race. \g00n she is so short-skirted that you |) wonder if the frock 1s half-price. Now she is Early Victorian. How P could one tire of looking at such a )delightfully changeable thing?” to the] Candlepower arc lights, one for a/ | flood light and ono as a beacon./ | | | | | Bruin q , With Circus f Mile, Emily Pallenburg and her dancing bear, Tom Tickles. Bears that around on old fashioned bicycles of the atyle that granddad used to ride, or who en spin troupes of snow-white polar bears [that walk ropes, slide from the tops Jof tall chutes, play ut leap-frog, jtecter and engage In games with sage in catchas-caten-can wrestling | ineir Koepors bouts with = th trainer the polar bears are and “Wall two giants have been taught the art of wrestling. ‘Woof* always permits himself to be thrown by his trainer, °r® |Christian Schroeder, while “W has | invariably ree) In addi er" of perte “2 3) panthers a Among Brothers and Barnum & Be gram of 1923. “Jerry,” who !s one of the nine} bruing taught by M'lle Pallenb is partial to anything that wheels. For, aside from his story bil marathon when rink out of the the center of the ta Ukewise trundies a wheelbarrow) stntetes and a hundred Sround:the-hippodrome: track. will be seen here next Monday and Bruins of all types are prominent| Tuesday, when tho blg show will with the mammoth twotn-ona show|treat Seattle sawdust fans to four this season. There are three|gala performances. wants to be the be | | human | 700 men and women Heaven in 1925? Bible Students Think So -|Point to Scriptural Verses Satan’s Power On Wane 5 a iG 5 4 8 lillions now TACOMA, Aug. 17. F tiving will never die - On billboards, in newspapers, in Magazines and in pamphiets you have seen this message. Its ee spread with great rapidity since first given to the world in 1917 by Judge Rutherford, who has given up his practice as a New York lawyer to |) carry on religious work as president ‘of the Internationa! Bible Students’ tation. and billions now dead will live ‘This is being added to the well- (known phrase by conference lectur- ) ers. The significance of the prophecy Ys explained by speakers at the Pa- cific Northwest convention, attended by thousands, in the Scottish Rite cathedral here this week. The phrase coined by Judge Ruth €rford, means that in 1925, when t big upheaval as prophesied in the Bible, takes place, millions of people ow inhabiting the earth will experi nce that change and will gain ever- Jasting life, according to W. H. Pickering, traveling lecturer of New Work, who is chairman of the local It also means that bil- Yions who have died in the last 6,000 | years will be returned to life, he says. 'f “Judge Rutherford issued his proc- } lamation of ‘Millions now living will | Mever die,’ in 1917, based upon the | teachings of the Bible as shown in ” Pastor Charles T. Russel’s i Scripture,’ Mr. Pickering “Forty years ago Pastor Russell ™ told that 1914 would mark the out- p) break of trouble. The majority of py both the clergy and the lalety | scoffed, but, true to the Bible proph- ‘ecy, the trouble really began in 1914 | with the outbreak of the world war. * “Since that time there has been Mo peace on earth. Men have vainly tried to bring about peace on earth thru conferences and world leagues, ‘but ‘will fail. Isaiah $:9-10. i | troubles of earth !s the Kingdom of )earth. His Kingdom will bring in | everlasting peace and righteousness J} and will stand forever. 6-7 4 "The Bible contradicts the fact y that all life must be in Heaven. | The Lord has not been trying to Feconvert the world, but has ap. pointed a thousand-year-day for that purpose. ‘The earth will be the Pkingdom of Christ for 1,000 years, and during this time all who are ‘obedient will enjoy eternal human — Mfe. ‘There has been a shaking of na- ‘tions and destruction of satan's em- pire for 6,000 years since the crea- "/ tion of Adam. Satan hap deceived Pi the people, but now his power is being broken by Christ, while the feriptures prove he will be bound rs. Revelations, 20:2, Chri(st died to the world as a yanaom. His second advent {s for | the purpose of dostroying satan’s ‘work, teaching all nation's God's Isalah 9: Studies in| de- | the Bible states that all these | “The only true remedy for the| the Prince of Peace, Jesus Christ, | | who soon will be monarch of all the| cycles which God commanded the Jews to celebrate every 50 years, Tho Jewish nation was a typical nation and these fubllees were types on a Jamal! sdale of tho great jubllee of Jal the earth, soon to begin. God | told them to keep 70 fubtlees, begin. ning In 1575 B.C, That makes a | period of 3,500 years, ending in 1925 “Duri © 1,000 years God will make the earth like Paradise. There will be n need for battleships. |Guns and gas bombs will be de stroyed. There will be no jails. “And there will be no profiteers,”’ th and lifting them to life rnal. As this kingdom is to be-}he added, with a laugh. ‘The, un gin in 1926, there are no doubt many | dertakers will have to go out of people now living who will pasa| business Of course, not right away. th eh the trouble and live for « 3 and preachers will have to ‘or 19,centuries God has bee All men can enjoy selecting a church to reign w n 65:20-25 Christ for the purpose of blessin 21 of Reve and uplifting the rl life. He has permitted experience good and evil, and sorrow, so that when he offers the new life they will not reject it “The date for the new life 1 This is based on the jubilee iB r. lations says: “And from be no more . row, nor crying, neither 1 be any more pain; for the former ng © passed away all | One X-Ray Free) h In the extraction cf teeth we say to our patrons: Lf we hurt you don't pay—could we say more? Set of Teeth From $5.00 UP Gold Crown and Bridge Work From $4.00 UP Boston Dental Offices 1422 Second Avenue We Stand the Test of Time 22 Years in One Location | | | Stop that Eczema! A MAZING results have been produced by S. S. S. in cases of eczema, pimples, blackheads and other skin eruptions. If you dave been troubled with eczema, and you have used skin ap- plications without num- ber, make a test yourself, on yourself with a bottle of 8. 8. S., one of the most powerful blood cleans. ers known, 8, 8, S. makes the blood rich and pure, and when your blood is freed of impuri- ne cdi Reade eczema, rash, etter, skin eruptions, pimple: blackhead: blotches and aot are bound to disappear. There are no unproven theories about S. §, 8. the scientific results of each of its purely vegetable medicinal ingre- dients are admitted by authoritle 8. 8. 8. is sold at a drug stores in two larger sive is more economical. BINYON Free Examination BEST $2.50) cLasses ON HAnTIT Dr, J. he We are one of the few optical stores in the Northwest that really grind lenses from start to finish, and we are the only one in SEATILE—ON FIRST AVE. Examination freo by graduate op- tometrist. Glasses not prescribed unless absolutely necessary, BINYON OPTICAL CO, Il good » The | 116 FIRST AVE. -| gol | darkly blue. tATTL at Stake in Trial Flights Tuesday! and Wrestle Doing the Docks BY DON RYAN OS ANGELES, Aug. I had really gone to the harbor “in search of a Chine junk that had come down from Seattle. “The captain is 17 Somebody had sent me a note about it “His wife is Euras- Caucasian,” said the note, Chinese and I believe they have one or two hybrid \ians or whatever the term is for their offspring. I think you) could get a good story out of it.” The fog Nl lingered of a denser apécifio gravity battle with the sun, Tho res d rigging of sleeping tone of work ag crane dimly on deck and de I looked in vain for the square, ribbed salls of the Junk, Sails that would have seemed like the wings of a dragon spread in that drowsy spaco which was half sea and half air. Its spell was beginning to wrap mo as I stood looking seaward—out beyond the channel lighthouse where small streamers of white were winking in the breeze, I shook tt off and moved up th headed for the office of the fan Pedro Pilot, where I 1a junk, We Wee would have made a good story for you.” | The city editor of the San Pedro Pilot, a pleasant} young man, sat in a small office at a table across from one} of his assistants, the girl who does society and answers the} telephone. “Tho Marina Exchange reported her out three days ago unknown. She would lave made you a darned good story,” n and f sitant effect Under ng truck to the water in layers where it was tn ver the ane g cl sing 4 with e foe £ and figures tha an eerie light the wed a mild under oved street we of my ose Destination t and took a clgaret © waters so far an isn’t In trade. Sort | Tho city editor shoved tu he was r “A real Chinese junk. oF | First one ever seen in th: I know. Junk Amoy, She tnn’t listed because sh of a freak, Her skipper was a peculiar man, There was a good story in him. He was a Holland Dutchman, Had a Chinese wife, And they had one son. | “There would have been a good story in this boy. The papers never | touched it, Here was this kid—a nice little fellow, too—who had | crossed tho ocean, braving typhoons—they really bad some narrow | escapes crossing in that old craft. Here was this kid who was so eager to see America. He couldn't come ashore, Chinese exclusion law kept him out. He used to sit on the deck with his feet hanging over the side, watching the men working on the docks. That's the nearest ho ever got to America. A good human interest story, wasn't itt” | 2g a HOMPSON, who covers the marine beat, was leading| me down among the shipping of the outer harbor. The smell of fresh lumber was in the air—wedded to the oily smell of the sea in port. Wo were searching for a story to substitute for the junk. Thompson ‘was sure one was there. I followed him dreamily, the spell wrapping me again as we walked along the border of this other realm—the realm of men whose world is a ship. | Tho sun was gradually winning Its daily battle with tho fog. Blades of silver Ught, like flashing axes, fell occasionally across decks and rigging and creaking cranes. Thompson paused and I with him, watch- ing a basket carrying many odd-looking bundles swing down from reaching arm of steel and drop Its cargo on the dock at our feet. “There are plenty of stor lazily, content to watch th Avit: that stretched without the hart 1 “There are plenty of good feature stories, If that German ship Bochum hadn't gone back to Hamburg you could have got a good story from her, She was tied up here quite a while, All her crew deserted because they could get more working on the docks than they could when they were paid in marks. For a long time there was nobody aboard her except the captain and the first officer. They finally got & crew In San Francisco. Tho funny thing is that the deck hands, who have to be paid in American money, are getting more than the captain, “That would have been a good story, wouldn't it?” mp hes sae motorship Tongking, thru the canal from Denmark,| and drowsy after her voyage, dozed in her berth. Her! bowels were giving up the cargo that had been packed by big, red hands of longshoremen who spoke in icy gutterals. The American language, slangy and sharp, was in the mouths of the denim-clad figures now engaged in disgorging her. Thompson led the way up the gangplank “I expect you can get a story here,” he remarked But there was no story there, Only the scrubbed stretch of half. deserted decks. The chairs with red awnings where tho officers had sat and watched the shores of distant lands recede and the shores of & new world loom. Only an occasional passing figure, blond as a Viking, broad in the chest, with cyes that were blue like the blue foe of the fjords, Figures that ret of a nouthern po northern gale wi Under the k of a door, st rank—I. Styrmand. The first office Dark, with the tan of sev nen and white teeth. Barrel n stripes Tho firat offic not Imagine anyth of inte his ship. Nothing had hap ocean There had been a small fire off guished. The cargo was not injured. Tho first officer smiled diffidently. we could see the interior of his cabin. A well-oiled carbine hung on the | wall, In sling. Beside it were portraits in frames—a woman with gray hair, Another—a young woman with level eyes that gazed out of the doorway at us. The first officer smiled again, pleasantly. We looked from the deck of| the Tongking and could nee across the breakwater whore tho lifting fog revenled streamers of white that win! brightly in the sun. Beyond them! the sea was rolling up into a sky that was also serene and silent and} | | | * won, while I stood by 1 the repose of tho sea * ald of ot ere. #6 {tropic languor a whiff of clean, r of tt H od ¥ t for i aboar r spoke in @ ish, but with ¢ American Thoy ama. He could r men about It had been easily extin-| Behind his squarelined figure | | “I'll find you @ good story yet,” Thompson, as I stood looking drowsily out to sea. | | | Are You Going on 1 An Outing? ~~ Here’s Your Dance Music! Your favorite orchestra will play the latest hits on one of these splen- did portable phonographs. You can ta m any- where. Special Summer Terms are $1 The New Oro-Tone Tho latest fox trots, the now waltzes—all the dance music’ you want, out on Down It’s Easy to Take a Victrola Portable It's in a special case, and has all the Viet features. You ean dance at the beach, on the b anywhere ar water, want It, on »-Tone with It plays with a lear tone and plenty lume; $40 on Special Summor Terms of $1 Down—$1 a Week you take a vacation 1 Victrola. They're $ Special Summer Terma of $1 Down—$1 a Week STAR WANT ADS GET RESULTS| =" National Institution : “From Coast to Coast*| => Prowning King & Co Established 101 Years NEGRO QUESTION HOT IN FRANCE Anti-American Sentiment Is Caused by Attack Final August Clearance Men’s, Young Men’s and Boys’ Clothing All this season's suits are now reduced for quick clearance. We are offering the most attractive val- ues of the season in these men’s and young men’s Suits and Top Coats bi gg ‘26” A HS: Boys’ Norfolk Suits Two pairs full lined knickers, very special at $13.75 $16.50 $18.50 Men’s and Boys’ Furnishings at Clearance Sale Prices PARIS, Aug lo Haver the red ex-kir Dahomey, rther the ptirred 1 anti-Amert n pentiment that has arisen over | he 4 of his being ejected from a Mont-| martre American the negr here when appeared in court today and to becau: patrons I r that he had not been “My shirt was torn off; 1 kicked and smashed, It was Jue to the Americans yelling, irty nigger Proceedings dis the taw girl dancer, 2 hushed up, at the time of the moles o Ge ared was all "Put fact whose was lowed has be with the prin incident. Commenting this fact, Judge declared It Against Second Ave. at University, Arcade Square Greeks Smear Tar | —— on Women’s Necks |Royal Vine Bears oat tell Soin net ot #1 3 Record: Rroduction moral uplift masociation here | apa, ) adopted tho practice of smearing | LONDON, Aug. 17—~The famous with tar the necks of women wear, |TO¥@! Vine planted in 1768 at Hamp- ton Court Palace ts bearing 600 | ing dresses cut low. | |churches of garpes, breaking all | | , about 62 cents entrusted to him for | church expense have | ASK for Horlick’s The ORIGINAL Malted Milk previous records Drought May Swell — Leetonia 2 Fgh Cost of Eats |MMOsth Potty’ Taatts NEW YORK, Aug. 11.-The price of canned goods is to be advanced] CANTERBURY, Eng. Aug, 11—~ this fall owing to damage done to| Rev. C. H. Barton, aged $0, rector of wetables by excensive dryness dur-|Harbledown, was held for trial on a ing the early summer, harge of converting to his own use Saturday and Monday SPECIALS! —AT THE— SURPLUS ARMY SUPPLY STORE 1013 FIRST AVENUE Ladies’ Riding and Hiking Shoes 150 pairs, in 12- and 16-inch tops; have been selling regu- lar up to $12.50. Special Saturday $7 85 e ve | sar Avoid and Monday only, pair.. Khaki Anchor Brand Middies selling all summer for $2.00 and $2.50 s from 10-year-old to 44. Special $1 50 and Monday only....... Ladies’ Khaki Extra Quality Union Suits 85c Breeches Short sleeves, ankle length, in Natural Cashmerette Regular $2.50 and $3.00. Made extra white and ecru. Special. .... Sox full; form-fitting; double knees, laced Special, bottom; invisible side pockets; extra quality. Only a few left. Special Sat- Mercerized Sox In black, cordovan, gray. $1.00 ay pr BLO Ladies’ Khaki All sizes. Special, 6 pairs Army Clothing Bag A real bag for your car; will hold bed- Coats $1.50 ding or clothing. These cost several Same material as Esmond Blankets dollars to make. 95c breeches. Special ....... Heer just tae thing for camp. Size 72x90. Special Sat- Speci 0; $3.25 Special, each ..... Gold Medal Single Cot New; best cot made. *.... $3.75 urday and Monday, each The Army Trench Special, each ........... é Shovel 25¢c Not a toy, but a real shovel—just the Shoes, Sox, Under- size for your car. Have been selling Canned Goods—all at extra low prices, SURPLUS ARMY SUPPLY STORE (013 FIRST AVENUE At the Sign of the Two Soldiers That have been each. S Saturd All sizes. 6 pairs . Issue Soap Best laundry soap. Special, 4 bars.............