The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 23, 1924, Page 2

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be } ? will claim nothing. a __-Lumbermen Choose 2 Retait “went, H. A. Templeton is the new ‘ce to Bachelors Planning Matrimony “Men, at that girl her,” advises educational ai M. CG. Ay w YORK ounced a course to for marriagy; sex attraction alone. h your household on tem wife MONETARY BILL IS ADOPTED French Deputies Sit Thru All-Night Session BY WEBB MILLER to co ndent) mber of an unprecedented ses h lasted thru the night, at day adopted the govern-/| nelal program. © was 354 to 218, The chamber voted on more than 100 articles during the night. Dawn ftor found many dozing in thelr chairs/of court, land attendants had to awaken them at roll calls Despite exhaustion, Premier Poln- «care kept his seat hruout the ses- * gion and made a brief speech before the final vote, Thero already are Tumors of happy results from the Work ‘of the commission of experts @xamining Germany's capacity to Gov. ‘tn pardon sentenced to two the to the * alty if your own is de Put off marr earning $4,000 « Pay more your single wtandard Income York 0 al ive psyeholog jase, 8 nd edu PARDON UPHELD Governor Okehed for Free- ing Editor of Libel ALBUQUERQUE, The N. M, F fight of the AIbuquere of sensa editor Tribune State been fina with sion of the state supreme ¢ urt that Hinkle was within his rights Mageo, Magee was found guilty first criminal libel and later of critictsm following his edt tle to “ lean out the rotten 5 machine" of New Mexico, nd to pay Hit fito Gov. pardoned the battle mediate ly ensuing to pay reparations, the premicr sald, jearen legals has Just | been adding, however, that France must/ Be prepared to bear for a certain! time the effects of Germany's de-| faults. The experts, Poincare elteved, | Will end the possibility of defaults in the future GAS KILLS FOUR Mother and Three Children Die; Six in Hospital formerly ALBANY, N. Y. Feb, 23.—A Mother and three of her children Were asphymated and 13 other per-| ons overcome by gas at Watervilet | today when the deadly fumes seep- | fig from a broken main tnvaded two } homes. The dead: Mrs. Joseph Prenzi, her §-month-| @ld infant and two other children, aged $ and 8. Joseph Prenti, the father, and five} @ther children are in a hospital, seri- omy im. Seven persons overcome were re-| Vived by pyle CHECK UP FLIGHT MacReady May Have Broken | Altitude Records DAYTON, Ohio, Feb. 23—MecCook ‘Officials today are awniting the re-| Bult of the official calibration of| Tieut. John A. MacReady’s altitude | Might, which terminated yesterday | after his altimeter had recorded a eight of 41,000 feet. { Tt is possible, but unlikely, that ‘the bureau of standards will find an | _ @rror in the veteran recordmaker’s | favor: \ Calibration made by local observ. ers fixed his unofficial height at 24,- 893 feet. _ MacReady was out to beat the ree. ‘ord of Sadi Lecointe, which is 36,- 745 feet. | Until the official figures are re-| Ported by Washington, McCook field On the other) hand, officials will not admit that| MacReady did not break the existing | PROBE MURDERS OF COUPLE "CHICAGO, Feb, 23.—Aid of police of a half dozen cities was enlisted _ today by Chicago police to help clear . the city’s latest murder myster. The body of a man, identified as| John Duffy, wus picked from a snow- | drift on the outskirts of Chicago yes-| Rerday. Last night the body of a woman, identified as Duffy's wife, | ‘Was found on a davenport in oval | * apartment. Duffy had been shot thru the head. | The woman also had been shot thru| ‘the head, apparently while she slept. Search is being made for Mr. and| Jack Horton, who shared the| * apartment with the Duftys. Mrs. Duffy and Mrs. Horton are| «from Louisville, Ky., police said. | Police are at a loss for the motive vim the double killing. Jealousy was/| “fhdvanced by some detectives, while | others believe the victims were in-| Yolved in some way in Chicago's} y Deer war. Officers in Loulsvilie, Indianapolis, | ¢ Philadelphia, Berkeley, Cal., and other | _ Cities have been asked to help in thi hhunt for the Hortons and to help find | =the motive in the affair. | a * Seattle for Meet Seattle has been chosen ag the 1925 convention city of the Western Lumbermen’s aasociation at the annual meeting tn Los Angeles. the gathering, C. H. Crawford, Walia Walla, was elected presi- it. David Woodgead, Angeles, F. C. Kendall, of ine, and Roy Cross, of Sait on the board of @ years’ success- Pike and ‘be attention to Phone East sons, John B. well of Sea’ }Lou A. Bodwell jm. . taking pariors. Cremation low the services. | Woman Succumbs to Long Illness ‘umbt: years durat .» Mrs. | Bodwell, $3, died Fri Federal ave. attle resident for 15 y here from Vancouver, B. C. lived Michig: Mrs. Bodwell ts survived by E. B. Suc two jo, and sev Tennle 4 Liph A. Bodwell, Mra. W Mrs. Louise Green, Mrs. Ruth Ever. ard and Mrs. Charlotte Harris The funeral will be held at Sunday from Rafferty’ w |McAdoo Family in Mountains Resting LOS ANGEL itigued by the strain of his E trip and {with it, | ora’ the incidents cc William G, McAdoo, aspirant to the presid: | gether with Mrs. McAdoo and their two children, were out of the city and into the mountains today. The McAdoos arrived back ln Los Angeles yesterday afternoon and | did not tarry long. After a short depot speech they rushed home, greeted their youngsters and left for | the country, MEDICAL GRAFT Child Workers § CHARGED! Mayor Launches Assault on Doctor Hiram Read that Dr, Hiram truments to ah affiday employe ben t that him to Edwin J. stato Ace return tho Brown wudlence that if out the in health mont f ottom and th toxpaye $250 year " arge that D affidavit and of his old instrum: to tho city og nitle, and Ub had to pay tho money back," sald the mayor "I charge that the state depart: | ment of labor and industry refuses » send injured persons te city even for first 1 charge that the city is being operated the Read signod $665 worth n hospital in of a little group of politteal ¢ in the King County Medical who ponging and that patients from the city hos Beattle General hosp in rests have been off the y for years, ratironded to the owned and operated by « doctora, Dr Road's friend. W0ING TO GE READ OUT" aro on 1 tried to oust Dr, Read and clean } up the olty but the counell Mareh 17 tw hoalth would not Tam going to celebrate for old Ireland and once for because Dr, Read's term expires then and I can get him out of these But I want to thoroly reorn gunizo that depagtment and the time between March 17 and the end of my term will not suffice, and J want to be ted so that T can clean tt from top to bottom and get rid of thene political Incurables.” Declaring that Alfred H Fo-clec Lundin, . by his failure to appear either at the Hoilig theater, Friday noc Eagles’ auditorium, Friday ni mitted that his charges, that Seattle is an tmmoral city, are false and slanderous, On| THE SBATTLE STAR leepWith \Pigs in Oyster Cannerie No School, No Play, in Mississippi I Routine; Deplorable Conditions Found — | BY KOY J. GIBBONS BILOXI, Miss, Feb. And wh majority > at that thu fied de wat and But when Rey, George M, 1. | Hoffmann here told the | the columns of a chureh public |of ples that slept with boy we int Iiilox! shrimp and o ter nerios, he won recognition for and for the awine wor atio rkers him Immediately a powerful local or. » informed me I must jtract,” Rev, Hoffmann recalla. In addition, the town's leading eitixens—a man interested In the canning industry—telephoned mo that he was coming to my house to seo what 1 Was going to do about |the matter. Rey, Hoffman -has not retracted, and those who protested have oar ried out none of thelr implied throats. Pomibly the writer waa more for. tunate than Rev, Hoffman, for he found no bedloving swine in human habitation. Pot re | However, ha did meet four |cannery boys, little not one of them past |his 13th year, by thelr own admis. |sion, who were having a riotous |drunk on the effects of a bottle of | shinney.” MANY CHILDREN OUT OF SCHOOL Of 97 childr Bilox! sbrimp and oynter communities, 68 said they never at tended 27 sald they went part time, five sald they had gone the minimum elght weeks required under the law, and the remaining seven alleged having completed grades. up to and including tho fourth reader, The ages of children working {n tho oyster canneries range from 6 to 14. Under the lawn of Missiestppl |eirls under 14 and boys under 12 are prohibited from working, and boys between these ages not canning acho. 1 thru |that of local interviewed in the|y nupposed to work-more than elght | CHILD SHUCKERS GET $1 FOR DAY'S WORK ity of the shrimp and oyater workers are transported from nd from Loulstana “tim families with father fishes for oysters ny'a boats, earning § share bast hildren nd atay and pick | and pickers on a and are Mberty an they ashore to sbuck Bhucker are to come and go please, pro od they don’t abuse the privilege rhe women make 76 conte to $2.50 a day, But. the writer found ho child who averaged more than $1 during a: single day, and usually | the amount waa leas Families transported states by the are furnished and given thelr ed they won, | | from compa. other canning free houses and fuel return fare, provid Stay Ull the end of the sea For thia conald ratory ation, help ts usually workers Most women workers aid they | worked from the “whistle blow.” in| the morning, until time for the| shuckers and shrimp pickers, which y comen by and 6 tn} On. | m than ween aftern, | anawered, if at all? | her | But his | Indian, Miss Grey, I have never committed any crime that | | thing. SATURDAY, Cynthia Grey: aabor phn These Young People Marry? Indian Blood; He’ White. — They Lovg One| Asiothor Dearly, but His Parents Object —- Can)’ You Advise Them? BY Should persons of a differen tion, clothed in various circum time What the answer In today's mail I find such little girl who has a strain o veins. people seriously object to the thing for them to do? Can you help them? I shall of advice on this question, Dear Miss Grey: I am ke man who has asked me to marry him over and over I know he loves me as much.| they will hardly even speak to me and I do love him dearly parents hate me or notice me when I am aroun It is because my dad was But she comes from a But, should be ashamed of, or my folks either. f| their son just the same that I am not good enough for him. | eyes are brown and my skin | It must be simply because dark. When it comes to cooking my never Can you tell mb, ples She loves a white man, CYNTHIA GREY inte rmarry? Thia que , has been asked many it be satiafactorily t race stances if Cant a question. It is from a dear f Indian blood coursing thru and he loves her, but his} What is the right | marriage. be glad to print helpful lette r8| The girl's letter follows: eping company with a young r again, d. a white man and mother an| very fine family and wealthy. But they tell I can cook or do mostly any-| I have never stepped around with any other man or} even dreamed of another. se, what's best to do? The thoughts Nursery facilities for children too} are killing me as I have told him I don’t think I could marry & to work and brought Into the| factories by thelr mothers aro pro Jed by very fow of the oyster and shrimp canneries, While the these babies parents are engaged, crawl around on shell and debrisstrewn floor, many are reported to have thelr hands crushed by pansi: oyster care or fallen off docks into je left wnatter ie 4. joe scores of children in open violation as to urs of em, stalyed and nog Coun working state law and t they ume. found of the | julrement on age joyment, also raid | 4 til quitting | | Mayor Brown sald that} Lundin ts hiding behind a pulpit to| keep from being forced to substant! ate the charges. ’Varsity Singers on Radio Program ‘The University of Washinton quar. tet will feature the radio music pro- gram of station KFOA on 455 meters Sunday night at 19 p,m. Their pro. gram follows: Mr. Botstad “Marehet Bans solo. Helle of the flea” , ntal solo— The World Sunctse “Little Pugt 0” Amoke” The Varsity © tn for the Walting soe, Keller Man of 90 Will Seek Cap’n Kidd Treasure EWISTON, Me, Feb. 'd ninety bars of gold, sail’, as I sail'd, Wd ninety bars of gold as 1 sail'd; It’s ninety bars of gold, and dol- lars manifold, With riches uncontroli’d. as I sail'd, This was the song of nono other than Captain Kidd himeeif. And now comes along Moses King, Jr. styling himself “90 years young,” who says he knows where some of those 90 bars of gold are buried, and he's planning to search for them with a device of his own manu. facture. Just as soon as the snows and fee are gone from the Sheepscot river, King will start out on his expedition to grapple for the chest of gold, which he says ts embedded in the river bed. When King was a lad of 20 he Joined his father’s expedition up the same stream, and for a sim- ilar purpose. With them went Jeremiah Trask, an old friend of the family. Trask claimed his great-grandfather had been a buccaneer with the real Captain Kidd, the Scotchman who was executed in London in 1701 for piracy. Trask told his {Mend King his randfather even helped in Kidd hide some of the valuable loot in the very samo Sheepscot river, not far from the village of Wiscasset. The buccaneer, Trask, had willed to the fourth generation charts, maps and diagrams show ing the location in the Sheepscot river of the buried loot The story goes on to tell how, after repeated trips up the stream from Wiscasset in the sloop Glory by Moses King, ‘Trask, a professional diver MacGregor and young Kin a lad of 20, the party came across a sort of chest which they believed to be that of the notorious’ Captain Kidd. But let King finish the s “I was just 20 at the time, says. “I remember the cx- Derience as if yesterday had been the day it happened. “One morning, shortly after sunrist, as we were raising the anchor of the sloop Glory to the cathead, MacGregor, the diver, noticed on one of the flukes a box-like affair resembling an old chest. “A chest it was, and we firmly believed it to be Captain Kidd's very own. It was, without a doubt, the same one MacGregor had found in the mud a week be. fore, but which he had been un- able to extract. But the thing was apparently so very heavy and #0 poorly attached to the anchor that suddenly it fell off and splashed into the river with } & terrific thud. That was the last we ever saw of ft. “Tho we stayed about that spot for weeks, night and day, work. and even went back on ex- peditions year after year, wo never found that chest again.” At dinner one evening last year King told this story to a Portland banker. He was fns- cinated by it, and said he would finance another expedition up the Sheepscot river to look for Captain Kidd's treasure chest. King, who had long been work. ing on a grappling device, bor- rowed enough money to completa his Invention, and {t is with this device he, his banker friend and A party of historians of New England will start up the Sheep- scot river in April 5 ; | Wartime Figure to Give Lecture Here The Right Honorable William Mor. ris Hughes, P. C., recent prime min. ister of Australla, will lecture off “The Pacific, the Coming Problem," evening of March 6, under the aus. pices of the High Schoo! Teachers’ league and the Grade Teachers’ club. During the war Hughes was an out standing figure in world affairs, and his lecture will show the Pacific the world’s future trade cente r, w hegiee as a gigantic Tactots ienean Democrats Groom Gov. Davis TOPEKA, Kans, Feb. 2: Kansas democrats.weroe aligned in battle formation today, following a session of the Washington's Birth day club, at which Gov. Jor han M. Davis wns indorsed for presidency. A resolution of confl dence in W. McAdoo, declaring him “free from all taint of the re. cent oll seand: ”" was also adopted |Fireman Killed in New Orleans Blaze | NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 23.—An- sistant Fire Chief Jules Pukol was killed by a falling wall; six other firemen are in a local horpital, some | | of them seriously injured, and dam. jage estimated by the fire depart. ment at between $36,000 and $50,- 000 was done to several buildings | sitroceding the department store » on Canal st. Several firemen, trapped in the ruins, were rescued, the assistant | chief being the only known fatality Partially buried in an earth slide at 38th ave, 8. W. and California ave., Blake A. Beck, an engineer of Salem. Ore., is suffering Saturday |from head and body bruises, He is |{n Providence hospital, after being |rescued by workmen, +eMe. Drlagolt | World| at the Masonic temple, the | tho | BAPTIST First Swedish—lev. Emil Friborg, Pastor, Sunday school, $45; morning service, 11; B, ¥, P. U., 6 p, ti.) even ing service, in Swedish, 7:30, Evan gelist C. G, Emmanuel speaking. First Norwegian Danish—Rev. A . Mehus, pastor. Sunday school, andinavian service, 11; young ‘a meeting, 6 p. m.; Engtish , 7:80. | Elim Swedish—Rev, M. Johnson, pastor, Swedish service, 11; young | People’s meeting, 6:15 p. m.; English service, 7:20, Queen Anno—Rev. B, P. Richard json, pastor, Sunday school, 9:45; levangelistic service, 11; young peo- | ple’ meeting, 620; evangelistic serv. ico, 7:20. First-Ambrose M. Bailey, D. Pastor, Sunday school, 945; morn Washing the Dincipies’ . BP. U,, 615 p.m | Saloon league sermon, “The Untin _ | lahed Battle,” by Maj. Prank Ebbert 720 o- SCOPAL All Saints’ Rev. Canon Ronald Hilton, pastor. Morning service, 11, “Immortality.” St. Luke's (Renton)—Rev. Ronald Hilton. Holy communion, 9; | morning service, “Interpretative Un | derstanding.” Epiphany — |neasy. Holy Harold G, communion, §, church school, 9:45 morning service, 11, “The Sower" nay Night club, 6. St. John’s Mission (Kirkland) —Rev. Harold G. Hennessy. Church school, service, 3:15. . John’s Parish—Rov. Maurice J | Bywater, rector. Holy communion, 8; church school, 9:40; “A Pre-Con | vention Sermon,” 11 Trinity Parish—Rey. William 1 Bliss, rector; Rev. R. A. Burge, n% sistant. Holy communion, 8; Su day school, 9:45; “Tho Falsity Imitation,” 11; “The Credentials of | an Apostle,” 7:30 p. m. Trinity Chapel — sunday 945. St. Mark’s— Rev, John Lauchlan, Ph., D., rector; 1% | Gowen, D. D., associate priest; Chester A. Taylor, curate. mmunion, §; church school, Ladder Up to Heaven,” | people's service league, ost and Good Heart,” 7:3 St. Michael's Chapel charist, 9:30; Sunday school, 3 p. m. Christ—Rev. Paul B. James, rector. Holy communion, 8; Sunday school 9:45; services at 11 a, m. and 6:30 p.m. school, D. HA Rev Holy 9:30 ung “An Hon LUTHERAN St. John’s Danish Mission—Aitred FE. Sorensen, pastor. Sunday school, |10; Danish service, 11; English, 8. Gethsemane—C. Tt, Swanson, pas tor. Sund school, 9:40; Engtish | service, 10:30; Swedish service, 11 30; dxisting Conditions in Germany by Dr. G. A. Brandelie, 6 p. m.; Swed ish service, 7:30. PRESBYTERIA. University—Rev. Harry 8. Temple ton, pastor, “The Evil Trio of Amer- “The Four Friends of John | Hopeless,” 7:30 p. m. ieee METHODIST EPISCOPAL Madison Street—George C. ton, pastor. Sunday services by Rev. George Bennard, 11 A, m. and 3 p. m.; social hour, 5:30; Epworth league, 6:30; evening serv. foe, 7:30. First Norwegian-Danish. Hall, pastor. Sunday school, 10; Norwegian service, 11; young peo: ple’s meeting, 5:30 p. m.; friendship supper, 6:30; Norwegian service, 7:30, First—Monthly concert of Temple chorus, with organ recital by Mrs. Montgomery Lynch, 7:15 p. m. Bethel—Rev G. House, pastor. Sunday school, 19; “From Cellar to Attic,” 11; Jubilee ser “Falincy and Fact ee METHODIST PROTESTANT First—Rev. Richard N. Orrill, Sun School, 9:45; “The Book of Jo. an Interpretation,’ 10:45; “A few Home Quest,” 7:30 p. m. rete MISCELLANEOUS Church of Psychic Science—noy, E, Adelle Loudermilk, pastor, “In. Pool school, 9 Dr. J. 0. da 3; Antl | Canon} Hen.) Mo.! -Sung Eu-| dividual Responstbiiity,"* Jonsie Henry, 3:80. Theosophical Society, Besant Lodge ‘Yora, the Psychological Beclence ot India," by Prof. Ernest Wood, 6 by Rey aressive Spiritual Rey, Emma Lapworth, pastor. Open forum, 245 p. m; test circles, 4; 1 ture and menmges, 7:20 University Spiritualist Dr. Jack Grant, pastor. Pp. M.; cirele, 4:20; the Spirit: Worl 0, Church of Spiritual ture by Rev. p.m Liberal Catholic Charch—Holy fu. | charist, 11; special class on sel of the secramenta, Chureh of Spiritual Sclenco—ney Loo F. Elmore, pastor. “Religion, | Sclefice, Reason,’ 3 p. m. Kosicrucian Fellowship— Devotion-| al service, 3 p. m. ¥. W. ©. A. Vespers—nev. Frea| speaker; Mra, Adam Beeler, | Church - Church Open forum, ‘The Heligton of Unity—Lee Mary A. Mortensen, 3 0) G soloist. WOMAN SUICIDES. Sleepless, She Opens Gas | Jet; Found Dead Desperate because she was unable to sleep, Mra, Flora B. Wright, 60, committed suicide Saturday morning At her home, 117 W. Mercer st., ac cording to the police. Mrs. Wright had been suffering | from insomnia for a number of re. About 2:90 o'clock Saturday morning she got up and went into the bath room while her husband, L. H. Wright, lay sleeping. She lay down on a pillow and disconnected a hoso to A gas water-heater and allowed the fumes to fill the tiny room. She | wan found dead by her husband about 5:30 o'clock. The Wrights have one| son, W. W. Wright Giees Asked to Pay for Lusitania’ WASHINGTON, Feb. 23. — Ger. many today faced a bill of $841,000 « part of the cost of sinking the Lusitania during the war. In making the awards in 5 in the Lusitania group, Judge Edwin B. Parker, umpire of the German. American mixed claims commission, denied 40 claims. | Tho casos came to Judge Parker as a result of disagreement between Charles Anderson, American commis: | sioner, and Wilhelm Kisselbach, the German commissioner. His decision | followed ‘the decision tn the Lum |! | for 1924, him without his parents want get that as long as I lived. He said “You should worry we were married we would gc ing me, as I would never for- about them!” And told me if » away and forget everything. But I don't think it would ever do, and still, the thought of never ver seeing him again is ju: is gy HOUSE SLASHES FARM FUND |have jenough no; — | Road Appropriations Will | Suffer Thru Bill WASHINGTON, Feb, 23, — Tho} agriculture appropriation bill, carry-| ing a total of $56,768,513—$29,058,513 for the department proper and $17 100,000 for good reade—for the fiscal year 1925 was reported to the house | today. } The the bill $471,312 below budget esti-| mates and $16,082,840 under the total Of this, $14,600,000 was cut from road funds. The committee tnereased by $400,- 000 the fund for paying indemnities for diseased cattle killed, making the total for that purpose $2,427,000. A total of $660,000 wan provided to fight the Bouthern cattle tick. j While the appropriation for inves- tigation of insects affecting South- ern field crops, $206,920, represents fun Increase of $41,920 over 1924, the fund for eradication of the pink boll weevil was cut from $411,400 for 1924 to $381,989 for this year, Of the $17,700,000 for roads, $13- 000,000 im to be used tn the construc tion ef federal highway system and the remainder for forest roads and tralia. MAYBE THAT'S TOO OFTEN! “Jack told me I reminded him of & girl on a magazine cover.” | “ guess that’s because he only nees you once a month.”—New York | Medley | “What would your father pay if he owed the baker three pounds seven, | the butcher four pounds nine and fivepence, the milkman — “Nothing, sir; ‘ed movi |!ng Show |tanla cases handed down in Novem. ber, 1923, when nearly $23,000,000 | was awarded to 278 claimants. New Westminster | Presbyterian Church Harvard Ave. and Howell St. CHARLES T. SHAW, Minister SUNDAY SERVICES 9:30 a. m—Sunday school. 11 a. m—Morning service, Subject: “A SUMMONS TO A NEW DEPARTURE" 645 p. m.—Young People’s meeting. M5 p ti,—Evening service. Subject: “THE TRANSIENT AND THE ABIDING" THE STAR’S BIBLE COUPON Two distinct styles of this wonderful Book of Books have been adopted for this great news- per Bible distribution, One is the far-famed Red L Letter Bible (Christ's sayings printed in red for immediate Print Bible for identifica! and the Black those who prefer that style. Only Three Coupons and the Mere Nominal Cost of Manufacture and Clip thie counon and two others and prevent it ‘or mail them te this paper with the sum ‘either Because facilities for the public, the wel known BARTELL DRUG BTORE, Be consented to can be prese office of the & store. All mai Seattle Star, Mail Orders: 3 Include 13 conte eeattional It it the above mentioned jers should be sent direct to the Sreent fee Fb) A or Styli ‘these coupons, and for "ponase land packing. Every Reader Should Have a New Bible ppropriations committee cut | | Do we all as terrible. What is really best to do? 8 we marry and ask them to forgive us? his paren wake I would try. ‘m thanking you, jrey, and I cannot sign my this as I am afraid I more trouble, They and probably understand me. name would call me you will M. W. to Hawaiian | Names Dear Mies Grey: Will you kindly give me some Hawallan names and A SUBSCRIBER, Aloha—Welcoms, Monesokala oblige. Pua—Gardenta; Loha—Dewdrops; —honeysuckle, ete; Source of Inspiration When Bernard Shaw, Kipling or Bobert Browning spoken of in lecture, social converse want to feel con- vermant enough with them to carry ented line of thought or know that Browning was & profound Bible student? Do wo all realize that in his the Book” there are five hundred Biblical phrases? Do we all consider that the writings of almost every author of eminence today contains! phraseology of the Bible, and many replete with full quotations? aro we to acquire which culture demands and {s really necessary for intelligent comprehen- of much references? Bible reading helps us in every walk of life, both in material and spiritual development. ‘Tho easiest way to procure a Bible is to take advantage of the offer this paper is making. See Bible coupon printed in another column for the very favorable terms, DR. LOUGHNEY’S ~ Blood Washing ‘Human Bake Ovens ‘Busy Putting Ih Invalids Back on Job Rake Oven Inst!- ng kept busy restoring to ate of health a mew batch at every season duri Ried come in ambul ¢ right thing, after rrect eating, to- aman Bake Oven tng mailed out. Siite ter 6 es en full concerning his won- ishing ing the very best references from satisfied Rake Oven, inch of local patients. DR. EDWIN J. BROWN’'S DENTAL OFFICES 106 Columbia St. for More Than 31 Years eR ARSENE ee oc ih Nataral Remedies Dr. Wo, Chinese Doe: tor, Herb Spectatiat, compounds the Chiness Nature Herds, Toot spe cific for stomach, heads nehe, colds, rheumatiom. Dervoumess, — catarrn, cough’ and blood dis. orders. Treat with oa. ture herda, No druge, a lige We Chinese Medicine Ca, 205 James St, Co: A TRAVEL BY sTAGE Portland 10:154 $6.50 Information and MOTOR BUS DEPOT 1018 Third Avenue PHONE ELLIOTT 1401 If it is best to leave him for | dear Mies Chaucer, | is | “Ring and| jot the neck, How | the familiarity | She Has Strain | | periment. | deranged sion if we do not know the eources/ | Buffalo, \druggist for Dr. | (kidney-backache) FEBRUARY y ould Remo Moles You would be freak the coloring matter in of be removed by caus of portions the suboutt can geon'a knife it te wu | wtae for the uninetructed to expert trlolty or the eur are often deep-rooted, and jens upon them A safely applied of $0 grains df salloyllc acid and 2 ounces of bay rum, It eral days to affect the mole, or two to remove tt. simple lotion which may be v twice a day consists takes ser anda eased At Palm Beach, Newport—wherever smart folks gather —Lucky Strike is a reigning favorite. If your kidneys are sick, or you suffer with lumbago or rheumatism at times, pain in the back or back take “An-uric” before meals. This can be found at any drug store. Therefore good advice to young or old is, always drink plenty of pure water. And for long life, occasionally take tablets of ‘An-uric" three or four times a day. Naturally when the kidneys are the biood is flied with polsonous waste matter, which set- es in tho feet, ankles and wrists. Send Dr, Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel, N. ¥., ten cents for trial package of “An-uric,” or ask your Pierce's An-uric Tablets. Folks praise eae , WONDERFUL HERB REMEDIES Special for Stomach and Bleod ‘Troubles everywhere ment. STOMACH REMEDY Especially for pains in the bow poor appetite, indigestion, constipa Uon, gastritis and all kinds of old stomach troubles. . Fed spots and itching on the iredness and paralysis a joints or urinary and all troubles from bad Our whalebone rubber which does not cover the roof of the mouth if you have two or more teeth. Natural Rubber, . $5.00 Gum Lyk Rubber, a perfect re- production of the’ hurr 3 GOLD CROWN BRIDGEWORK All work guaranteed for years. Examination free, OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS Established 20 Years, Second Ave. and University st. REGULAK SCHEDULS Leave Seattle Dally 6:30, 7:15, *9:00, 10:30, 11:30 mm. 143, 8. 5280, 11:30 p.m “Except Sunday. Sea x ee thao me 3:00 by [cxtra trips Saturday x 9:30

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