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MBEF eee takes five sa car. Se a wien Ahey held up. They escape from r run Ry real Bandits are cap Kime, then escape from th bandit dden!y confronted who is Weil tw says ohe is eek, The Wreck, lorders the sheriff Re put his overturned t with THE STORY > (CHAPTER XXV am Flivver Rolls Wreck bossed the job. Ho tek ba arfogunt tone, particu to the sheriff, and Sally was glad because the gave the Wreck some and in its performance ‘embarrasement about ‘at least temporarily Siem terve and confident in his femie Nota finger would he/ emits he had four men work. It took their ‘fe pot the flivver on four Bod Wells wanted to get “with and be on the trail agam. way!" called the Wreck, _ “Want to buckle a wheel “Tou can’t push her side- to this with a sense was back in the aban- Henry Williams was his helpers. They ex- would fill up the guso- the crank and say De said it would have quite a distance, per- way to the main road. sowled. ra in here, didn’t you?” “Why can’t you run fm here in the dark. “Didn't know what * running. Won't ron gm Roll her.” time. T have. her. to sk in Prelled. the thing up a With Bob Wells sweat ping under his breath of his posse silently to the humiliat ‘ny The Wreck grades the Wreck how he was going mg without Sally Morgan m@ care of him. It was one of influences that fasten you are aware of it. ‘on her. bet ‘shake it off after he returned i but he could not be walked behind the fivver int but forbidden dream, ting at his side. i" He would like that. “Keep her | What are you trying her up a tree?” @ would look at Sally, his poten and the old em- fwould descend on him ‘He caught him- afterwards, dating silences herself. 4h ft were all over. that ligand his posse would hurry Ke themselves off and van- Out of the picture. Ro joy whatever in the ‘Which the sheriff and his Subjected; she believed Meet of It was unnecessary, Hom the standpoint of punish- At the same time she did | oles alone with Henry | the woman of you worry,” repeated the suddenly bold. "You don't to—Hey! Don't you know = Way to Bt Want to upset her again? wreck her?” have to what?” she asked. Was caught unawares. don’t have to—That is, S$ not it, either. What You're not really engaged.’ & reckless speech and he peat he ought not to made : Sally was looking Eo nir¥e HOt,” she said, in n low ry Cursed himseif, e was clumsy, and yet tely groping for an 4 I mean,” aL working ba, nd gin we were supposed en that’s off. Then he said, “is that of shoulder t mudguard. Yo; 5 ul bend Hold of the body. Ana hove, or they grow any brainn your we wired remarked Sully Bd socentmbere that lng. then the engagement's off, ald, ay he glared at he ny united | the flivver/ turn the wheels on a} chwards, if you can | 18, 192 ECK £.d. Rath ©1924 - by NEA SerVice le hk t CAPPY He Discourses on Written for (pe t ot 1924 in the spring havi nb Ricks " « more imy agile mind for was at the th M se wie thru the ar personal af . ved He had dealt haps roughly; but it, Bally's eye oertain look Th blurring, even when looked an object plain familiar as th flivver Bil course; but she coult not get the|from insurance companies blur out of her eyes unless she rub. | ent of claims. bed them, and scorned that, with | |the Wreck at her elbow |pealed to the efficient Mr Let go of that steering wheel! | forthwith two clerks mmanded the Wreck. ‘Can't you|to work, with the see that she'll stay in the ruts? All| six month you've got lo ls to get busy and | forgotten that he had ever made such shove. You act like you were push. |& request, Mr, Skinner entered hk ing @ five-ton truck, No, No! The | office one bright day and laid before other way, Are you trying to bust | him a perfectly tremendous report a spring? If you haven't got any He had the name of every co brains, can't you have a little beef pany they had ever done busi He came back from the bossing Job} ness wil the type of insurance with & glance in the direction of| carried, the poid out in prem Sally, What? She was crying? He| ums, and the amounts collected, could feel his soul squirm. She was! the sums sued for, the cost of crying, but it was so unobtrusive, Mitigation and the causese there so Nearly tearless, that the Wreck! fare. knew he was not expected to 0b] tris investiga oy bs Bin ee fact that each year the amount paid beilea” he eal. | out in premiums had, with 10 ex ih. wothing ceptions, been much in excess of the said Bally sums realized from the insurance nente? : companies. This excess Mr. Skinner |had had carefully npounded semi- He stole another glance udily at five percent, and the as not crying, after all; at least, not! sumption that if the money had not now. Strange people, women. Youlpeen spent for insurnace it would never could tell how lang they were | pave earned fully that much. |woing to stick to one thing. Still, eine {if there was anything he could do |for Sally Morgan, all she had to do (YAPPY gasped as he scanned the was to aay the word. i Yesult of an idle whire and dis “Of course, we don't need to tell | covered that in playing Che game ot |the sheriff it's all off,” he said, sud. | “Saftey First” he was out a frightful | dent jsum in real money and a’ sum equal “Not" }to the national debt that Mr. Skin “What's the use of giving him the | ner had compounded the los | sauisfaction? We could just keep “Holy sailor, Skinner he mur oo” mured in awed tones. “It's a won He broke off in a cry of rage. The | der wo aren't all in the poor house.” Mivver was diving into the brush! wer again and the posse seemed unable /tning, Mr. Ricks,” the triumphant to ‘stop it. Ho leaped to assist, skinner declared. “It pays to carry staramed' om. the ecsertiency brake, | one’s own insurance fought the cantankerous thing to) wy. mean it would @ halt and fired « broadside of de-|.. 1.44 started carrying it 60 years Bunciation. But it wax more amaz-| 1°, It wouldnt bey now ing to see that they not only endured it, but followed his directions about putting the car back on the road. When he came vack to her she | 02" " ou, jhastily smothered a laugh. Not for| Oy ng consequently, should ¥ | the world did she want him to know eee en ey insurance nd | Spb. be: amnuned: her. jtake a terrific loss, we wouldn't } “They don't get anything right, lhave any fund to charge that loss he complained | against to profit “Sull, I think they're trying, he and loss. said generously | | “But they don’t understand.’ auch ‘a “Late of people don't, understand | ey. aia burelary j things.” ra premiums since the first burglary in “Hunt -|surance policy was isnved—and She menat something, he felt cer. saver bens.” Gargied, Mr }tain, Did ste mean that-there were | ¥0u'¥e | some things that he did not tinder-| Ricks stand? Weill, if so, what wure they? | “What don’t they understand?" | demanded the Wreck. } “And you've paid out enough “All kinds.” | money to cover your daughters furs Now yourre Just talikng nonsense |and jewelry, to endow a bed in « —in circles.” |hospital.” Cappy shuddered. “You's “1 suppose so,” said Sally. |paid out $25,000 in baggage insur “Do you mean me?” he aaked,|4ance on various trips around the sharply. world, and you have never lost a* “Oh, don't let's quarrel again.” much as a band-box, Your automo: 'm not quarreling. I never quar-| bile insurance ts a private scandal, My nerves may get on edge,|and a couple of bent fenders, the I'm al-|funern! of a drunken chauffeur and the renewal of a telepraph pole is all you have to show for it “You've paid out # fortune to cover ships that are sailing the seas today and oncé more resumed painful prog: | and about the only thing you've won reas toward the main road. They|on is the industrial accident insur were not far from it now; almoat/ance. ‘That's a spiendid thing for o to the top of the last rise, When|man operating a sawmill, because the, Wreck returned to Sally he was|boobs wearing tong-tailed jumpers mopping his forehead. will forget to shuck their Jumpers “Excuse me,” he said, “but they before crawling in amongst the ma- get me all worked up. Once we get | chinery. to the main road, we're all right.| “Yes, Cappy :asped, “and the dog- Plain sailing then. We'll be almost | gone accident insurance chaps make at the end of this foolishness.” lus put in a lot of expensive safety Yes,” agreed Sally, \devices at our own expense before bet you'll be glad.” they'll take a chance. Hum! Har- She bit her Mp until it made her | umbh-h-h! Ahem! Skinner, if you will wince. He was probably the most jadd all this mess up and divide it |impossible person in the world. |by 60 you'll discover that on a per | "Get you home in no time after|annum basis our overhead for in- we hit the road,” he added. surance hasn't been so very stagger- (Continued in our next issue.) ing. after all." ADVENTURES OF THE TWIN ~—O0S! s NO. 10—NICK GETS A COMPLIMENT jsuits for them jabout a week.” “All right," said Mra. Jing to her pollywog children who | were swimming near the front door. | “Come, boys, and hold stil! while |this gentleman measures you for ac the of « it Ricks of allt ) years and prepare for report showing the total of money paid out for ins and /4neé premiums of all kinds, as of /@% the total of all moneys received in pay ppy with it had had pe we a ‘ en a for b ere Ww something ur at as well ne This being the sort of job that ap Skinner, had been set result that some later, when Cappy had to ns discovered the has gone much quickly is busted,” That's all She wai our research proves one Skinner. | beeause we hayen't got all this money we might have new, now It would go direc a small holdings and . APPY thoughtfully tapped wood rel. but I’m always pleasant. ways— ‘They were doing something wrong with the flivver. Eventaully they got it right again | | | } Da! “We're getting along just fine, and send them in \xaid Mister Snip Snap to the Twins. “If we keep on we'll soon have all the children of Meadow-Woods-Barn- yard Land ready for school. But there is one person who hasn't been jin to buy anything yet, and that's Mre. Frog. She hasn’t brought a|your new school suite,” she said single one of her boys in to get a/ “AN right, mammy,” they an- achool sult. Suppose you go, Nick, |\swered. “Here we are, We'll hold and see if you can coax her to come jas still as ever we can.” to our store in the woods and get| Nick stepped into the water and |them some clothes.” measured them all, and then he sald “All right,” said | good-bye and right away. store where Nancy and Mister Snip Bo off he went. |Bnap were finishing some cloth And it didn’t take him three min-|for the Muskrat family utes to find the place where Mra.| “Hore you are,” sald Nick. “But Frog lived, because his shoes were |instead of making places for tall magic. Mister Snip Snap, be sure to make You, my dears, would have hunt-|places for four legs, because the ed, and 1 should have hunted, for |pollywogs ure so big they'll be frogs ya and days together without find-|in less than a week. Mrs. Frog ing her house under the lily pads in |didn’t say #0, but I know.” the pond. “All right," said Mister Snip Snap. | But Nick went “1 will” jit. And he knoc ‘And make them out of ldoor [instead of cloth.” said Nick |” Mrs, Frog herself ‘opened tt Mane Yea: grin “Why, how d' do! sie said, for) «gay, Nickie’, sald the falryman she was a pleasant person. “You're getting as smart as a crow. ‘I'm pretty well, thank you,” sald }y7 pelieve you'll learn this business Nick, “And I hope you are well, | yet. |too! I came to tell you about the |” which |new store called ‘Nancy, Nick & | gure, |Company.’ I'm Nick. We have all} sorts of school clothes, and we were thinking that ff any of your chil dren were going to start to school, |you might be wanting to buy «omé.” But will they fit?’ asked Mra anxiously, “If they shouldn't pen to fit, what would I do?” “Oh, we'll give you your money Hack,” gaid Nick. “AN right, then,” said Mra, Frog. "You may take thelr measure now | nd make a suit for each of them, | They are all boys." “That's Just fine,” sald Nick, “I'l measure them! now and we'll make Nick. “I'll go straight to} her front right ked on mabe “Kor out of water, and pleased Nick, you may be (To Be Continued) Mopyriaht, 19 A. Service, Ine.) DR. WO Natural Remedies Dr, Wo, Chinese Doo Bpecialiat, da the Chinese ure Horbs, root ape- lo for mtotnach, heads ache, colds, rheumatiem, nervounne: eat cough and blood orders. ‘Treat with ture herbs. No dru Mee Wo Chinese Medicine Co.” 408 James St, Cor. Second Ave, Beattle, Wash, Phowe EL lot-190 he The Star by Peter B. Ky ne d have paid if | We have accumulated too much In | }flammable property to take a chance | You wouldn't get any divi. | insurance | Frog, call ent back to the little! THD RICKS Taking a Chance SEATTI Another Coming Next Saturday SKINNER Hore M" derful shed painfull inde him a« wing had be wpertunity f early because hy n cuple r total crumble py rambled o: rying cident p and had mean ident upon whieh I think I'll throw my self downstairs and try to get back & lot of those premiums. “Skinner, did you “I've been car ley for 26 an nw yes: haven't wocident an « ac could collect ever hear the story of what happened to Sam Has- | kina, the foreman of my ranch, when he went to apply for smb life and accident insurance No? Well, they told Sam to take j off hin clothes ne they could examine him physically and finally the ‘or maid ‘Mr, Haskins, have you ever had an accident?’ Sam replied that he never had, and the doo- tor said: ‘How did you come by that blue sear on your forearm? ‘Oh! Sam reptied, ‘that’s where A rattlesnake bit me once.’ ‘Wel don't you call that accident ‘No, sire,’ says Sam, ‘he bit me a-purpose! Skinner this excure t Nis confusion, Cappy general manager and, clearing of hia throat ‘Skinner, I often wonder a man with your short vision in some | |Matters manages to make me such on excellent general manager. In 4 mo- ment of mental abberation I made this extraordinary request of you and you took me seriously, Why, the amount of research necessary to get me this futile and foolwh informat: | tion must have been perfectly tre mendous. Why didn’t you forget all jabout it, knowing that { would never |think of it again?” How did I know you would never think of it again?’ Mr. Skinner pro- tented. “For the love of heaven, | TAKE A CHANCE,” Cappy yell | ed. “You are as infallible as a | eee seized greédily upon wh and cover ked at his after waid repeated | | chronometer, How did you live without taking a chance, any- how? You're so doggened care- ful I can't play golf with you. You do too much civil engineer ing before you putt, and you take too many practice swings before you drive off. Td weep tears of joy if you'd just walk up to the ball some day and hit it swipe without carin whether you get three yards or 300, It {tion yo jawith | made u had an ounce of imagina- | u Would have come in here a lot of figures you had juct | up out of your head would have been just as interesting—/| in fact, you could have made them downright entertaining to me that| |for every dollar spent of insurana | ree have received on } 4 perity 1E “oy ARTICHOKES ON \Shi ferna © exis the ot bet te: BE our own au house # hereafter we hall t carry insurance? Of urne, we shall not carry it, becau we haven't got the courage, but we'll ft migh Me slways wonder exerciging @ lit ou fl away awufl of to Jou 4 drunkard hurr ch to the r it 4 comm) ing th wre /runner, shereas only exeret ™ would have been happ for of Mike, noe You don't pay me to take chances, Mr, Skinner retorted with ne we Bkinn the love take All uld the more reason take them,” Cappy When you were a didn’t throw rocks at Chinamen and water melon paiches? why you boy you rob “1 wasn't raised on that plan, air.” “Ged help you, Tw Skin wer the wisest man in the world is the fellow who doesn't see everything he looks at and doesn't hear everything that's said to him and doesn't belleve everything he reads, The men who have succeeded in this world are the men whe took « chance, 66TQOR instance, a friend of mine who was a colonel of engineers in the late received der from the chief of staff of the divi just before the to fill wp all the area go the war 7 sional commande Argonne ad shell holes in their tillery could ad behind the infantry Not content with telling this engl. Neer to fill up the shell holes, this chief of staff I Yee! as sured, a relativé of yours, Skinner, told him tow to fill them, altho in aivil life he had been # professor of history in a jerkowater university He the ingineer to put huge rock in ench shell hole, fill in the chinks with little rocks and top the whole 6ff with gravel, He Wasn't oconéerned h what the mr would say when, the was over, they would strike rocks when plowing. “Well, that ar who was. told one wi neh ar these ineer, knowing his business, Just filled in those holes his way. He got thousands of bags, filled them with dirt and filled the holes with sacks of dirt, The artillery went over them like tincanned dogs streak- lng it for home and the advance was so rapid that the divisional commander got all the credit for smart work and they made him a major-general—all because lonel of the engineers took a and disobeyed orders. glared at Mr, Skinner b “Ye fraid I'd find out and be angry, weren't you, Skinner? Mr, Skinner nodded miserably And you've been with me 30 years were anyhow! Oh, dear sighed, and towing Mr. ket, he composed himself for voluminous report into the waste bas. oh, dear Cappy The Tangle (Am intimate story of innermost emotions revealed by private letters) (LETTER FROM LESLIE | COTT TO RUTH BURK | | CONTINUED | | So you seerdear Ruth, Jack and 1) fare just about where we were when! 1 came home to mother’s. He [| Whitney, 1 of Karl why ja that A man is always mére or less) Jealous of the man hia, wife refuses. a t he understand that she hag settied the for alt which n n enough to marry by is absur’y wonder jealous it question once she care ff choosing him? | At that moment, when my mother came in, it just seemed to me as |tho f could not go thru with |t all. | Ruth, why do we women have keep fighting, fighting, to keep our husbands’ love? Why do we have to flatter them by word and deed all! the time? Wiry is it the magazines | jare always telling women what they | should do to keep their husbands jstill loving them? Why don't they | [sometimes tell a man what he| [should do to keep his wife's love? | | Why don't they make him under: |atand that it is just as hard for a woman as 4 man to keep on loving | without some encouragement? | 1 turned to my mother. and for! Ithe life of ma I could not keep the | tears back. What Is it, dear, what is it?” she | ania. “Mother, baby “Is that what you've been telling |Jack? Doesn't he want on “Yes, he neemed very happy over | the news | “Then why are you crying, my daughter?” | “Because I've just received a tele phone from Karl, and Jack was quite horrid about it | “Karl is very: silly to telephone you, my dear, He should have real- ized that men do not talk over the }long distance telephone to other men’s wives unless they are very | much Interested in them, Of course, I know that Karl is perfectly loyal jand fine in this, Why, yesterday he {called me up and taiked with me about a half hour. Long distance } {telephone doesn’t mean anything to} Karl, you know, He docs love to! tell his troubles. “He's very much worrled over to I'm going to have a i | Alice, and so am I, Leslie, make it jup with your husband at any cost }to yourself. Nothing in the world |ts worth the tears you are shedding | now. Let me feel that I do not} have to worry over you any more.” | “Oh, I expect we will make It up, | f said wearily, “but why should he forget instantly all about the lovely things he had just been saying to} me? Why should the faet that Karl | | Whitney was telephoning me to ask | |what he should do about the letter | jhe had written to me blot out all) the ecstacy and unity of soul that {we had just been havi why jshould he make me fee) a kind of | Jrordid and self-indulgent thing who | |must still be flattered by the atten |tions of a man I have refused to| |marry—a man who is already mar: | | ried to my own sister? “By implication he has made me one of the most immoral of women: | quickly. 5 made me fee! that he I could be a traitor to my wi well a5 disloyal to him, to gratify my own pride of conquest Mother, I cannot bi will have to make it some wonderful apology and some very fair promise before I can forgive him, ‘Thin time he has hurt my probably quite as implacable as he. This letter in so long, my dear, that Iam going to stop. 1 don't know what the next’ hour will bring forth, but 1 will probably save tha to tell you when I seo you Lovingly LI Copyright. 1924, by United Prese) TOMORROW: Letter ftom Be. atrice Grimshow Summers to Sally Atherton, Well-Merited Success A distinguished politically V. Pierce, above, eltizen, honored nd professionally, Dr. R whose picture appears made a success few hay equaled. His pure herbal remedies, which have stood the test for fifty ars, are still among the “beat sell “ Dr, Plerce’s Golden Medical ery is a blood medicine and ch alterative. It clears the beautifies it, increases the supply and the circulation, pimples and eruptions vanish Beauty is but skin dee; and good blood ia beneath both, For your blood to be good, your stomach nust be in condition, your Hver ac tive. ‘This Diseovery of Doctor Pierce's puts you In fine condition with ail the organs active. Ask your nearest druggist for Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, in tablet or liquid form, or send 10 cents for trial package of tablets to Dr. Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel, in Bur. falo, N. ¥.—Advertisement. Dis ton’ akin, blood and MAREMENTON-CHARLESTO' x SORT ORCHARD ned a6 cept Kanday, ibn erry THD ex Ing 7:15 @, m, £ Passenger fares to Port 01 hard NAVY YARD ROUTE Colman Dock MA tn-20t8 | yelled Skinner's his} | Jack | pride, and T ean bet ’ | Pampkine—L>, LOCAL MART 1 verore. |Egg Market Unsettled, New || Advance Expected Bat | pe }Qu nd ar | start |steady chgene saine f Use and art DAIRY rRODUCTS Prices Feld Shippers | Battertet— Butter rules hanged and t* s marking time at the Beattie delivery...+ Caves included? white shell xed colors fob, Beattie euppiy B. condensory DAINY rhopvucts Prices Paid Whoieale Dealers Datter-Leca! creamery, cubes. 40 cal prints, wrapped....... Extra firsts Views “a “4 “se “ae ue ne uo 2 FUULTRY AND MEATS Prices Paid Shippers Decks—Live, old, per Ib. Young, 1924, Mretiers--1924 Capone Fancy tb, ance across country | Dressed ..... | Neosters—Oia. Vi | yD ey Nght Meavy. medium quality. FOULTRY AND MEA’ | Frices Pald Wholesale Dealers | Breliers1924, dressed uo Ducks—Dressed, per Ib. | Capons—( ; Mens—Dressed. heavy Dr Bt orerens Live, : Live, Roosters ada *9 lan Hares—Dreseed, Ib. ... Cowe—Country dressed, Ib. Noge—Fancy block . Veab—Fancy ight . Heavy, coaree 6... LIVE STOCK tions at Uniew Stockyards Qee! Cattio— Prime steers Mediuin to go0a . Voir to medium ..... 5.000 4.50 76@ 616 4008 4.75 5.900 400 @ 500 400 0 wulle Chotes cows Medium to nd hwelfers... 540m 0.4 740@ BA0 ' Sheep— Prime lambs .... Common to choles . ¥ They |and don't know yet that I get angry | Prices ald Wholesale Deslers | (The prices given are those made to [retatl desiers by wholessiers, Wi few seasonal exceptions, prices to pro- Guoers can be figured by deducting the test ef transportation to Seattle asd |eppreaimately 16 per cont tor haulla; + and selling cost.) t ne My Teane — at Was, 1, Recte—ter sace Dow bu Pony crate Letioee Onlens—Cal.. per emt Rastern Wea. Green, doa, bunch |Parsley—Dor, bunches \Peas—New, ib... | Peppers—Peach box | Potntoes—Looal whl! | New Wash ema, No, | Netted 1, ton Local Per sack erate |Madiahes ‘Hutabagas Spinach Local, | Squash — Lo. Sweet Potatoes. | Tematoes —. W Homegrown, field, | rarnipe— Back | Local, dor bunches | FRUL Prices Paid Wholesale Dealers Apples—New. green, box. $1,001.25 Karly varie ES $1.00 4.00} | Hananas—Per 1b, oy Mackberries—rate 6O175 Cocounute—-Per dor. . 1.00 ‘rabapples—Siaall box + T6100 | Fige—Cal., black, crate Lib Grapes——E, Wash., 2-1b, Califor nFee Ground Cherries }Money——Coind, per Ib, | Strained, per te. . Muckleberries 1b: Lemons Cholce Oranges —Per | Peaches Hox {Beare Box . | Tranes— Italia: | Birawberrs . Watermeto 18 01% | MAY, GKALN AND PERD | (Prices to Consumer, ¥. 0, B. Seattie) | ‘Alfalfa May—Firet grade . Straw Corn—whols, yellow, Cracked und feed meal Darley —Whole, Oats—Whole feed, Rolled | Wheat Gas | Chick Mash—t100" ‘Scratch Feed-100'. . ae Math—100's ... | Linseed Ol Meal—100's Soyn Tenn Ment—100's | FLOUR AND | rlour—Locel blends Patents se |Sugar—Cane, per cwt Beet. per owt 4 AMIDES AND WoO: (iaying prices f. 0, b, Seattley Salt Hides—Lb Bulle ves Green Hides. Bulle Calfeking, green or saited— LB, srvave erate box basket $1.00@2.20 we ist 13 2 0 | 50@6.50 2.00 | 0 | 00 | jUGAR i} | | ! Lamb pel mb pel |. Salted a! { Mobiatr—Lo1) Dry, long hair gow! ‘short hair, eae! ‘Wool, 1b.— ny find ves 1, medium UR | BANK CL REID | Seattle | Holiday, } Portland | Clearings { Balances ..... ..... Tacoma ' Holliday. cA ju | Graneo | Sheep—necetpts, VIET RULES IN STOCK CLOSE No Selling Pressure Noted; Some Acceleration p News J Tides in Seattle SUNDAY serr. 14 Wiest High Tide SATURDAY sert, 13 Viret High Tide Vin First Low Tide hecond High Tide decond Low Tide | seeond Low Tide WALL sTRERT HAL KK JOURNAL REVIEW VINAN- ureau Report Weather B at 14 Ala: ka Vessels Kane, gers wr p.m. PETERSBUL Adsmiral vane, m., ate Jette DOV A 1 Watson Balled ‘“ an preferred Balled. uthbe . tpt und, at Arrivals and Departures Arrived—Hept. 13.—Btr Sagina fen A ats ane . United Mex trom | Hrookdale Los Sa 0 & porte, from from Por 06 Bept. 12 oma, midnight Baltimore v ent Jeffers Kanta 1s Tacoma, at Maine via ports, Str Floridian from | CORN WITH WHEAT Realizing Dulls Grains and Provisions ridge fe w str Stand m. Crofton Hall for Laver ata pool via po for Han Fr Dp. ms str noon, HIC. realizin Krainn, the Sept. 12 took the edge & sharp dip king place in midday in corn and wheat A liberal export business held spot at in check while deferred op- lons fell off a fraction under the opening. Export sales totaled 4,000,- 060 bushels of wheat, with Germany the best buyer. The United wale of large Vessels in Port at Seattle Smith Cove Terminal—Pier 41—-Btr Fioridian. ler itr Akagisan Maru. | Hell Bireet Terminal—U. B.C Algon auin, Destroyer 361 K Trunk Pacific raceo, Pier 14 Terminal—#ter Cu- Me Oulburre. Sire Caddopeak Mtr Brovkdal s—Htre V 1—str J A—@tr Admiral Keb: D—#tr Muth Alexai Pacific Cor 1 Bunk Nef, 4 Ship ngdom offered re- amount of Manitoba when exporters failed to follow the midday bulge | Following @ good bulge at the noon hour, corn dipped sharply and the weakest in exchange. lizers and profit-takers t turned nd despite unfavorable news er the principal growing sec- tions of the Southwest and Central territory, values continued to sag, ing down from 1% to 2% Independent action helped finish higher Provisions Saginaw. Fy. | closed —U. #. 8. Re- Week is Board Moorin. Stra) Hakersfield, Cuprum, City of Spokane. onnectiout Street Terminal—Birs Tans an, Weat Himrod Street Terminal—Mtr Stuart Dol ; from Atiant lar Beatt fyokan y Flowr Mille oats Btreet Willpote. Docks Str Osiris Termins!—Birs farta end Gals owe Strs Patterson, Regu- | _|Chicago Board* of Trade Pen? nent tte é wittoren Banta Ines, oJhn C Kt { Netter Winslow Marine Ratiw w Sept. Dec May Corn Bept Dec Ma, Clone B.C. G. Boo- je Harbor) Sir fea King, schre Vancouver, Ella | Ay A barges Coquitlam | City, Henry Villard, Granco and Griffson, vktn Conqueror Gal . Bet CANADIAN WIRELESS Dec Lucas, Seattle for Los | May Nes from Lot Angeles.) tye fan Fraucieco for Coos | sept. from San Francisco, Nominat Coon Ray. tapu, Auckland for Yancou- Nominal miles from ‘omina’ Cash Wheat CHICAGO, Sept. 1 h wheat—] hard, 31.304 @12 » 3B hard, $1.98. Seattle Wheat bard wie soft white . wintern wiser hard isthe northerd wpeing a neater red 1. Me Mee neon eee Portland Wheat Sept.| PORTLAND, Sept. 12.—Wheat—Hard DP. mi str iwhite, $1.46; soft white, $1. 30 Dm. Passed | white. $1.40%; hard winter, ola for Tacoma, at | era sprin Alexander for Seat. | "2 "PTinSe # | ved. Sept. | 12.—8tr | courver from Vancouver, at 6 Priday’ str Ruth Alexander frem San | Cattle—Receipts at 2:30 a. m, Salled, Sept. 12.—! xteady. medium, $6@7.50; com- th Alexander for Seattie, at 7 a. | mon, $466; heifers, medium and com- Kept. 11,—Str Bmpre mon, $3,5005 26: cows, medium and for Orient at $ p.m common, $248 4.767 canners and cutters, Rept Str edo, at 6:40) $1.50@3; bulls, canners and bolognas, Sept. 11.—-Btr Montebélio, at 2] 33°75@4.60; calves, medium and choice: Arrived, Bept. 11.—8tr BI Gritlo| 199 Ibe 0 to 280 for dry dock, at 10 p, m, | $6.50@7.50; 260 Ibe. up, $5@6.50, Satled, 2 none. Tone of market Hakutatsy Maru, Seattle for Toko- 1,690 milee from Estevan. | Tenpalsan Maru, bound for Grays longitude 171.16 W., latitude, | a ate Harbor (8.30 N . Vessels in Other Ports TACOMA—Arrived, Bept. 12.—Str Ful- ton Gem B, Co at ba: mi or Bas Ines trom Han Franeiace, at 3m. m, Sept, Ste President Jefferson from See vir Yosemite from Ban Fran nc 2 pm. Balled, Bept. 11.—8tr Yourmite foe Beaitie, at 8p, mi ate Ma-| Mare for ‘nt noon; tr | m 4 No. Neo. ° No. [No No. No. 1 1 1 1 « Ip out. 11.-Mtr El Segundo at Rigi for Portland, at Sept. 12.—8tr Wil 5:40 a.m; ete Ruth tle, at 0:20 a m, Quotations 0. Tone of market, couver, Mm nm trom V ARE! rider rc for Ban Francisco, xt | James B. Duke for New York. at 11 a.m, Arrived, Sept, 11.—| tr Atlas from San Francisco, at 2 p. m. ASTORIA—Arrived, Sept. 11, Mount Carroll from Seattle, at 2 p Balled, Sept. 11.—Str Baltimore Maru for nino, at midnight; str Kentuckian | 5 p.m, Arrived. Sept. 11.—str ‘over from Los Angeles, at 10 D. mi ate Montebello from Los Angeles At ll p.m, Salled, Sept, 12—S8tr Haka- ta Maru for Orlent, at 7 a. m.; str © nadian Skirmisher for Avonmouth, at ¢ m, Sept. 11.—Str Martha Hemaoth for Byerett, at 7 p. m.; atr Bl Grillo for Victoria, at 2p. m.: atr Empress of Aus- tralla for Hongkong, at noon. Omaha Live Stock Friday's Quotations Cattle—Receipts, 1,100, Tone of market, steady to easy, Yearling stoers, $8@10.85; cows $2.60@9.75; stockers and feeders, 8.60; calves, $3.50@10,50; bulls 26,000. Tone of market r. Bulk, $8.75 @9.86; top, $9.25@0.78: 260 Iba up, Packing, smooth — heay: packing, toug! Xer pigs, ers, $6,507.60. Sheep—Receipts, 260. Tone of market, steady. Lamba, heavyweights, mediun and choice, $8@9.75; culls and com- 4 all weights, $5.50@8.50; wethers, common to choice, 1G s2.t5@ envy, $67.75: slaugh- fecders and. stock- TRAVEL BY STAGE LEAVE SEATTLE DAILY THUS ALM. 105 ALM. 12015 P.M. ror Portland Fare $6.50 MOTOR BUS DEPOT 1918 Third Ave. ¥ and 10@160 high $9.90 11,000, Kot, steady to strong. 10,50; wethers, $5@ 18.75; ewos, $4.25@6, Portland Produce Friday's Quotations | Butter—Cudo extra dlc: prime firsts Ress Tone of mar- Yearlings, $7 lambs, $11. PUGET SOUND STEAMER SCHEDULES by save Money, TAC Leave Colman Dock Daily 7, WAM, 38 si ste Oh pean ingle on 45c Trip 80c Telp ~~ VICTORIA. B.C Port Angeles, Straits Points Dalty, 12:00 rokdnighit Does not call at Victorls on trip tenving Seattle Sat, midnight, BELLINGHAM, ANACORTES Dally, 19:00 p.m. Fare $1.00 ‘each war. Port Townsend Rail Con- nections and MUI Porte Daily, 8 a.m. Dem HOOD CANAL POUNTS Mon, Wed... Pri, €:00 p.m. _evelgnssaly. der current re Liverpool Grain Friday's Quotations 3c; pullers, | Wheat Open ign Oct. 11e4Kd 1196 Dec. 1tn4 at Mar. 11s 4Md 11 * Low a iis 4%d 1) Wed Ysd d Vis dead 4d Mis Sd Ms 4d . N. Y. Sugar and Coffee Friday's Quotations Sogar—BStrong. Raw, $4, Refined, firm; granulated, §7.26@7.60. 7 Rio on spot, 16%c 1b; No. Boston Woo! ROSTON, Hept. 12.—'The Woo! market is slightly notive, but peices are tirm n AN grades. Predictions are being made that when the London and Lalver- | Poo! Auctions open It in expected ad. | Vances of 10 per cont will be witnessod. Delaine woolt In the wool market of the | Oblo type sold at S¥e in the grease and © holding tor one to two mare on cholee lat pulled wools have moved ub to cr. M BA NEAH BAY AND WAY PORTS: Mon, and Thors, (Goes Then te M ip Only), LAND POINTS ta Anacortes anhject withant Frese PuGeT SOUND NAVIGATIONCO housea are holdli COLMAN DOCK- FOOT MARION St stock, Higher prices hi : 2 demand slightly, © checked the