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Woodhouse-Grunbaam Farniture Co., tne, OTTO 8. GRUNBAUM 416-424 PIKE STREET WE’LL TRUST YOU THORNTON W, BE RGESS UR CREDIT SYSTEM ha on established ver (Copyright, 1919, by T. W, Burge nish your home 0 own are easie and 1 * are lower | 8S time for Just bath ere, No Extra Charges—No Interest. | Mourner t e to I it ax the nat thinking JUST YOUR WORD THAT YOU'LL PAY | © what Mourner just told him STORE HOURS—8:30 TO 5:30 m0 4 TR gn hell en yo Mourner If you don't mind aid Peter I'l! go with y Mourner sid he didn't mind, “0 place in the Long Lane There Mourner wa “ned by Mrs, Mourn 1 much like » did not have as While they n the ground so much id “Now,” if you will excuse us, we “ a if you t must be going back home,” he ground,” said Peter Jed Mourner; “Mra. Deve | you'd thing he was sorrowful inatead but usually not far | of happy. It always makes me feel a Now, if you'll sad to hear him.” » must get back home > ogee to ait on, That's true,” replied Peter, “but sitting I lke to be/ I like to hear him, just the same. keep her company | tetiot Who's that? the loose dust re and flew away, The next story: An Undeserved see where they | Bad Name of them behind | — = to cided to run up r he four Old Orchard re FIBER REED PERAMBULATOR | Jenny and Mr, Wren as busy as eve SPEC feeding that growing family of TAL Jenny wouldn't stop an in Peter wa of what b about Mr e just had to 39 715 and Mra. I that he ® tell some one, He heard Kitty the 1 amon bushes along the ne Wall, so hurried over to for him. A soon as he found Peter began to tell what he had is no longer possible for us to buy baby carriages f this quality and sell them at this price, How- r. ever, we are closing out the few that remain on our |) '**5p%¢ About Mourner the Dove - : , ‘That's oO ows, Pet inter. floor at a figure that is little above the present whole- heshedt Kiety. + Ris ait: daieat sale cost. They are made of the finest fiber reed and are designed to give a maximum of comfort. Mourner and his wife, They tho I must say that of the poorest I take it are very Nice people Mra. Dove housekeepers I know of determined to marry Jimmy Ross and be rid of him, After all, what 4 Tiina aaeeaen ere et sere you never have seen her nest a rare thing love is! A girl likes q . Peter shook his head. “No,” said|® man, is Ured working, has an eye FREE DOCTOR Wife Not in Feud, 5 ves ms.not Soe A paste ane Ge to the Husband Declares kitty the Cathira ncrhed. “Tt's WAY his Coat fits acroms the shoul 4 : : e aber soleus ‘analamer Sit ders—and in sure she loves bim. . & RIGHT DRUG Co. | George R. Clarke, husband of | 0Ut the poorest apology for a nest 7 L a ow “ és e I know of,” said he. “It is made of} Asa matter of fact, any nice man 1 ; w St rs. Mary 3B. Clarke, decla little sticks, and mighty few of them, | would have done as well unless he and-11L First Ave (there was no feud existing between | How they hold together is more than | was bald and croas-eyed and wheezed And the Doctor will give|his wife and Lulu Juneau, as stat-| 1 can understand I guess it is alas he proposed. Why, I almost you # careful examination |e in The Star Friday. Mrs. Clarke | good thing that Mrs. Dove doesn’t) thought I was in love with that a and prescribe for you was reported as having been hit! lay more than two eggs, and it's @| violinist, what with my mood and over the head by Mrx. Juneau. He| wonder to me that those two stay|the moonlight and everything. 1 ‘lf you are sick you cannot do bet- also denies she visited the prow im the nest. 1 n! There's Mourn. | could have been, in just another ter than take adv..otage of this offer. ing attorney's officce on a previous ers voloe now. For one so happy,| minute. But when I learned of the : We save you money and give the occasion to complain against Mrs. | he certainly does have the mournful-| wife, I felt only rage on her account 3 Yest possible treatment. i Juneau lest sounding voice. To hear him,'and humiliation on my own. Which y y ¢ iy ew Y _ Trade Routes Current news items carry the information that another perma- nent trade route is available for Seattle shippers. Today the “Eelbeck,” a Seattle-made freighter, loaded with great ship- ments of Pacific Coast and Oriental products, is steaming on her first voyage to London, to be followed in September by the “Orani.” This new trade route promises to fill a long-felt want in upbuilding the foreign commerce of the Pacific Coast. The Scandinavian American Bank is fostering and developing trade with other nations through its complete banking fac ed on a complete understanding of the varied requirements of the manufacturers, exporters and importers of this section, backed by a quarter-century of experience, and devoted to giv- ing the best possible service to our customers, concerns interest- ed in foreign commerce find this bank the best “trade route” for communicating with their clients overseas, for the collection and — of funds, and for obtaining reliable credit and service jata. mit aa Alaska Rullding, Wome of the Scandinavian American Bank Capital and Surplus $1,500,000.00 Resources Exceeding $23,000,000.00 Largest Savings Institution in the Pacific Northwest SCANDINAVIAN AMERICAN BANK . Member Federal Reserye Bank) ‘Second Ave. & Cherry St. Seattle, U.S. A. < Branch at Ballard ? ZoeBockly/ BY At four this afternoon I wan still THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, AUGUST 25, 1919. PETER Plays Possum BY THE STORY LADY was lying in the hammock heard papa and mamma out on the porch, So he shut hin eyes and lay very still and pre tended to be sound asleep, He often | picked up interesting bits of news || thin way How sound asleep Peter is,” said || papa | "I wonder,” sald mamma, a min ute later if Peter realizes how self: | ith he is with the twins if I give} them all cookies, he gulps his down | and then he twins of theirs.” How do you know?” asked papa Dia y ateh him at it? rning, when I gave them °, Prissy asked me to give Peter I thought her very awe nd 1 her why eter had two perhaps could get theirs eaten by the he did, and then they wouldn't | have to divide with him,” | they time Well, shall I thrash bim for it?| I won't have those girls of mine abused “No; but I wish you would explain | to him how selfish and ungentleman ty it tm." 1 wonder ments later said papa, a few mo if we ought to kill that j above Peter's ar” Peter jumped about ten feet and| looked in vain for the spider, When | jhe turned around papa and mamma | were laughing at him “Why, hulle, son! Are you awa said y Ms | HELEN CARPENTER MOORE aplder shows how all sorts of emotions mas querade as love. We believe them love, we call them love, and marry in the best good faith, not dream ing they have tricked us. 1 got myself into the right mood. I recalled Jennie Orson and that | | | | | “I put my head straight down on | wanes coat lapel and bawled.” |movie hero who ran off with her. Remember the snapshots she sent us of their bungalow in Hollywood, with roses smothering it and a sunken garden behind—exactly like views of a If he and Jen didn't marry for love, who did? And now look at them! And Ben Foster and Lisa Ellis, | lwho waited nine years for each other—and now don’t speak! | | On the other hand there was| |Trudy Connors and that chap her mother made her marry Fverybody groaned—and gave them six months to live together. Married 11 years so | far, and still going strong! an you beat it, dear? Look at the darling old Brewsters, who married in their sixties, and the happiest couple in | Bentaville, Respect, affection, com |panionship—that is what they mar. ried on-—no “love” about it I'm not |so sure but those feelings are better than the real article—-which is so scarce, #0 tricky and has so many | | imitations ee | Jim whizzed in today minutes after I had made mind to marry him The cla M4, and I felt so ex wed a walk in the of my mood he factory girl. We yench in the “Ram » feel that de ing to someone of, when Jim y turned and swept me | [mie suc Jinto his arms. | “Oh, Dolly darling, you're going to marry me, aren't you—aren't you? Say you are—Say you love me, Dolly—say it-—say it “Jimmie—don't!” 1 struggled up: | right and tried to casual. But my nerves are paying for what I've |been thru—that work for Capt | Wallis and the drop fr h ¢ |dismay, and that awfu e |'with his invitation to glittering # jand my flight from the beach Jimmie. And now this, Ig it @ | wonder T am all wiggly and jumpy? “Forgive me, dearest-in-the-world, Jeald Jim in av so kind that it was the one thing needed to finish me, I'm ashamed to tell you, Joan, but [ put my head straight down on Jimmie’s coat lapeland bawled He | softly patted m put his arms around me and hair with his cheek laid against it. But Joan—it was like orying on your brother, No |thrill at all, Like a flash it came to me what a wicked thing T was doing, both to Jim and to my |A quick revulsion came over “T e-can't do it, Jimmi I | gasped, sitting up. “Can't what?” “Marry you Oh, take me home, Jim, won't you?’ “This way out,” he laughed, bow: me toward the path in his old rry way, tho | knew his heart was please ‘BETTER THAN HOT {He Traveled for Ten Years | years | was simply another dollar for anything else. | Now, when I tell you that Tanlac saved my life, | mean every word of it, for it Is the only thing that | has ever given me any relief at all | "| Why, I have already gained fit-|f} +}teen pounds, and am as well and|{/ Lace Rufflings for col- E nd ve $1.75, $2.50 $3.00 and —Main Floor Center $ ‘To make more room arriving daily, the Cloa high-grade Dress Skirts. $29.50, and a few at $34. plaited or straight lines. skirt, or have the neat tunic ba Sizes 36 to 46. Regularly pri New Chantilly and Net Top for vestings. Remnant Sale of White Goods Upper Main Floor. EMNANTS of White Goods in which are found muslins, sheetings, tubing, nainsook, long cloth and a variety of other domestics in dimities and cambrics marked to One-Third Off regular price. Dress Skirts of Quality Reduced to New Second Floor, Kumse Kumsa, Pussy Willow and Paulette Silks, in shades of Rose, Peach, Flesh, White and Sand — also dark figured Pussy Willow and Taffeta Silk Plaids. Sizes from 25 to 30 inches belt measure. Novelty Pure Wool Sweaters OVELTY pure wool, fancy stitched Sweaters, made up in two-tone effects of coral and nile, nile and pink, turquoise and coral and gold and green, with col- lars and cuffs of brushed wool in the solid colors, making beautiful combinations. New Chantilly and Net Top Laces Priced at $2.00, $2.50 and $2.75. New features in Curtain Clunys at 10c and 25¢ yard. RAGE B® 13.75 for fall merchandise, which is ak and Suit Section offers these tegularly priced at $19.50, $24.50, Models in the full nded in contrasting folds around the Materials are Georgette, Fan Tan, are shown 75. Upper Main Floor. iced at $15.00. For Tuesday’s selling $8.75. Laces for collars and vests. All over and tucked nets Curtain and Drapery Specials Upper Main Floor, HREE to eight-yard lengths of Scrim, Mar- | quisette, Nets and Cretonnes, 1-3 off regular price. 200 yards of very heavy grade Cretonne re- — duced from 85c to 65¢ yard, and from 75c to 50¢ yard. Nottingham Curtains, 100 pairs, in ecru only. 40 pairs, regularly priced $1.75, cut to $1.45 — pair. ] 60 pairs, regularly priced $1.50, cut to $1.25 pair. exit, ladies and gentlemen. There is no danger.” “What a brick Jim Ross is, Joan. ¥ to marry him. DOROTHY. | pol No charge for admission is made in many of the Chinese theatren, which depend entirely on the profits Jewelry robbery, Albert Hill, 21, was | But what a ain it would be for me | arrested in Seattle Sunday by the coma | Let's } 141 ARREST ALLEGED THIEF | Wanted in Tacoma on a charge of ice. He will be returned to Ta- Owing to the last week of sale we are making still reductions on— ‘e go eat at 4 3d Ave; Boldt's—aptown, 913 2d Ave. from the sale of drinks and food products. SPRINGS FOR HIM, | CHEELY ASSERTS nea Seeking Health—Finds f] Do not walt | FIN Be tor ‘ancther|| CHAFING DISHES terrible at-||. CUT GLASS , tack before| WATCHES. é starting treat. CLOCKS ment. - Begin right prpelpeigied now torestore|| A $5.00 cut, or more, on mal. sufferers | Sold in your inj nervous tem to ni tment has, for high-grade watch in this The Kosine tr rly 20 ye Manufacturing Jeweler Plaza Hotel, Westlake, Near P' rite for free treatis CO, Washington, D. C. tle by Swift's Pharmacy It By Taking Tanlac “1 suffered for fifteen long years, | and took many different treatments | and medicines, and went to every hot springs I ever heard of, but I never got any relief from my troubles until I commenced tak-| ing: Tanlac,” said Tom Cheely, who lives on R. F. D. No. Seattle, | and who has spent the last ten traveling over the country in search of health. | “1 had no idea that I would ever | be 1 man again,” continued |f} Mr. ely, “for I had suffered | from stomach trouble and rheuma- tism so long without getting relief, | that IT had given up hope of ever | finding a medicine that would do| me any good, In fact, while I was being treated at a_ certain health resort my life was despaired of, and I thought it was all over| with me, My stomach was in such awful condition that no matter what I ate I would suffer misery afterwards, and the pains all through my body from rheumatiem more than I can tell] you it. The gas that formed | yn my stomach wot e terrti- | ble cramping paina, nd this seem- ed to be especially bad while T was lying If I ate anything} sweet it was almost like poison to| 1 had pains in my back nearly | the and finally got and run-down that I could] hardly get about at all | “Well, sir, I commenced taking | Taniac as a last resort, for I had | about up my mind that if I failed to get relief from this| medicine that I would never spend | C w down time. so | made strong now life. My everythipg perfectly as I ever was in my| appetite is fine, and| I eat agrees with me} The rheumatism has left | f} me, and I never know what it ts to have an ache or pain of any| kind, The w nlac has over- come my troubles after every- thing elise I tried had fatled, is the most remarkable thing T ever I sleep like a log every |night now, and for the first tithe | lin ten years I am able to go about jattending to my business and just feel fine all the tim ow that ts what Tanlac has done | heard of. ever lfor me, and a medicine that will| do that much for a man is cer-| tainly worth recommending to any- body. Tanlac is a real medicine | I} and is worth ifs weight in gold to |) anybody who .will give it a fatr) | | fi | trial ; Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartell | Drug Stores under the personal di- | Neaa, “Walk-—don't run-—to the cection of a sperin! Tankic represen ative-~Advertivement \ ui That wonderful clean- er and _ polisher. It makes your aluminum ware look like new. S. 0. S. will also clean cop- per, brass, nickel, gran- ite utensils, etc. Come and see the demonstration and learn the many uses of this wonderful polish. Price .. 25¢ Specials from Our Canning Dept. These prices are for Tuesday only. Economy Fruit Jars at $1.15 Doz. These are the quart size Economy Fruit Jars. 1-2 Gallon Jam Jar With Clamp Cover, Special - | at 23c These are the 14-gallon size Stone with the rubber ring and the clamp. er. Just the thing for putting up jam pickles. Special at............0. NO PHONE OR C. 0. D. ORDER National Steam Pressure Cookers Price $20.00 $4.50 Dozen Thin China Cups ; Saucers With Gold Band Decoration at $1.49 Set of 6 These are the thin Imported China Cups and Saucers, with the gold band decoration. They are the white glazed china in the ovide shape. Special, set of 6 at $1.49 NO PHONE OR C. 0. D. ORDERS Spelaer Helle