F. C. PUTNAM 
W. T. PUTNAM 
W. T. PUTNAM. JR. 
MAIL ORDERS TAKEN FOR 
DRESSED CHICKENS, DUCKS, 
GEESE, FRESH EGGS AND 
OTHER FARM PRODUCTS 
Intermount Jparm 
W. T. PUTNAM & SONS 
‘‘THE MAIL ORDER FARM” 
INTERMOUNT FARM BUTTER, 
CREAM, CHEESE, SAUSAGE, 
AND FRESH PORK 
Eafte Cushman, OTajSJj. 
a crimp, and then we run a little melted paraffine round the top 
and this is packed m a small square box which is made for it, 
and they carry perfectly. Things leave here at 2 p. m. and reach 
Seattle a little after midnight, and are delivered the next morning 
about 9. 
This is cl house of mourning, if is Saturday morniiig an. we have 
just had a phone from the Soys that their train ~a;- delayed in 
the cascades and they missed tlx loft. They will not be here now 
till Monday night. 
&j Sunday a. m. 7 o' clock. Not so bad after all. .At 5 this morning 
I was wakened by havihg some one come into my bedroom with a lan¬ 
tern. It was Bee, my second boy. When the train was late the two 
boys' a lid one other w$o lives ne*r Koodsport found themselves strand¬ 
ed. They talked it over and decided to come home by way of Olympia. 
A boat was to leave shortly after noon. So they decided that Bee $ 
should go to Olympia and Shelton by boat from which point it is 
about 20 miles to Koodsport, walk to there during the night and 
out home the next morning. Then they went tr lunch with some friends 
Ferd, in the meantime was to go and get a cousin and bring him 
home with him to keep an appointment they had made with the canvas- 
backs. They then decided to walk to Union on the h<ok of the canal, 
stay there what -^as left of the night and get a boat and row across 
the canal to Hoodsport in the a. m. Our friends, however, know 
every foot of the road, coming over it many times a year in their 
cur, and the Grandmother said, "Be a sport, Bee, go home, its 
only 30 miles" and so he and the Hoodsport boy took the boat 
to Shelton, reaching there at 7 p. m., got something to eat,and 
