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ofl} fofofoojoloofojofojofofofofofofofofofofoje 0 a} ojojofojo} FUNERAL fm Tacoma Thursddy afternoon for Capt. H. FE, in Fairbanks August 1 Capt Teedie was a navigator on athe Yukon river. of the Washington Association No | 22, Masters, Mates and Milota. $4.65 Bath Room Cabinet that is worth while. of all steel with white enamel finish inside and out; has two shelves with enamel finish—the door has FOR heavy plate glass mirror 8x13 inches. measure of cabinet, 20 inches high, 1814 inches x Liberal Credit Extended ROoOS— | by o1o}0[0]o[0[0[0[0)0]>] [010] 5] ea aaa adlerdada sranied A Special =) | el bE] & &. = @ = Friday and Saturday 5 inches deep. This cabinet is absolutely sanitary and a wonderful value for $4.65, Made Outside eppos nearly as important to tell hee s Mary Marie hae mother as the girt Jocted, find ont y that olojojofojojojofojofofojojofojopofojojojojojofojojofojojofo) SERVICES were held} He was a member) —- “Gee, but | good?l"—Adv. So extensively does powdered ant mal horn enter Into native remedies Beedle, 63, who died) in China that some of the larger| and medicine factories maintain of deer for their horns. Boldt's apple pie is/ THE EXTREME POPULARITY of “Sweet Sixteen” FASHIONS Requires the Exercise of a Most Careful Guardianship In our trust we apply this watchfulness over our ward with a jealous regard for a growing endearment of the theme with women who fancy the daring, youthful and becoming lines in their dress. The unusual variety of our initial showing of Ma (Continued from yesterday) SYNoPatS any happler herself. 1 could s#ee|thing had burt her, and erie athor says Mary; mother, Marte, and | that, he has f finds that father forget it. Then he went back te his 40 a8 the other ladies did, and go Out) stare and Grandma chided mother ter her | and walk and sit on the big piazsas, |& little binck-haired woman with frivolity and mother promined thy wouldn't distract father any more, and so | 10° 0 she became quiet and very dignified, and | Ue tables. hard arse says father mar | loved it. ried. Then mother began golng out with | the college peopis, and when father ob- sald she wae trying to do as their red cheeks and jolly ways,and Stay back and watch the swans she was told, make him popular with She stopped it after ot and seen someone mentioned diveres, and |and emeralds, and silk stockings Mary Marie tried for me she and mother were living | slippers. BEGIN HERE TODAT cee But she only cried more and more, held mo tighter and tighter, herds| rocking back and forth in her chair. She took me out of school, though | and had a lady come to teach me all| mid so to mother; and I was going | had & little girl like that—!" ‘Then by mynelf, so I didn’t have to hear|to ask her tf Boston was like that those girls brag any more, anyway.| Mut I didn’t get the chance. She ‘ea | But she wasn't! jumped up #o quick I thought some. “00d | Heavens, Raby!" (How T hate to be | ‘There were lots of other Indies | called “Baby!") Then she just threw there-—beautiful ladies—only she) "ome money onto the table to pay didn't seem to like them any better | the bill and hurried me away, an I did the gins, 1 wondered if| It was after that,that she began foo they bragged, too, and 1|to stay in her room #0 much, and d her; but she only begun to cry| Mot take me anywhere except for again, and moan, “What have I| Walks at the other end of the town, done, what have I done?—and 1| Where it was all quiet and stupid, had to try all over again to comfort |4nd no music or lights, or anything ) and she ask® her. But I couldn't. | And though I tensed and teased to py She got a0 she just stayed tn her | 9 back to the pretty, jolly places, room lots and lots. I tried to make |%* wouldn't even take me; not her put on her pretty clothes, and | OM Then by and by, one day, we met Py EleanorHPorter COPYRIGHT 1920 That wan better, she and dance, and eat at the pretty lit-| white cheeks and very big sad eyes. She did, seme, when we| There weren't any spangly dresses ime imagining | first came, and took me, and I fust| "nd gold slippers about her, I can ‘They were such beautiful tell you! She was erying on a bench ladies, with their bright eyes, and|in the park, and mother told me to their dresses were so perfectly ‘love: | While rhe went up and #poke to her ly, all allke and satins and sparkly |(Why do old folks al * make us spangles and diamonds ‘ind rubies watch swans or read books or look into store windows or run and play all the time? Don't they suppose we |understand perfectly well what it And once I saw two of them|Meanr—that they're going to say smoking. ‘They had the cutest little |0mething they don't want us to cigarettes (mother said they were 4n| ear?) Well, mother and the lady gold holders, and I khew then that | tlle bench talked and talked ever I was secing life—real life; not the |* long,.and then mother called me |stupid kind you get back in a coun-| UP, and the lady cried a little over ltry town like Andersonville, And I/Me, and said, “Now, perhaps, if 1'd long time beforsiand little bits of gold and allver she stopped and cried some more. We saw this lady real often after that. She was nice and pretty and sweet, and’! liked her; but she was always awfully sad, and I don't be Neve it was half so good for mother to be with her as it would have been for her to be with those jolly, laughing ladies that were always jhaving auch good times. But I couldn't make mother see {ft that |Way at all. ‘There are times when it seems a9 if mother just can't see |thingw the way I do, Honestly, it | feems sometimes almost as if she ,wae the cromscurrent and contra | diction instead of me. It does. 1 Well, as I watd before, I didn’t Ike jit very well out there, and I don't believe mother did, either. Put it's jal over now, and we're back home | packing up to go to Boston | Everything seems awfully queer Maybe because father inn't here, for Never had the The Rhodes Co. Friday Hour Sales She Friday Hour Sales offer such exceptional values in a large assortment of merchandise that you will be fully repaid : for spending the entire day taking advantage of them. 9 to 10 2to3 3 to 4 Fifty odds and ends in soiled Six hundred pairs Children's ‘Waists of fine white voile and = Half Hose in a wide assort Remnants of drapery mate- dotted Swiss, ruffle and lace ment of colors and patterns rials, inciting Neta, Cretonne, trim, A few in black Georg regularly sold at abe 19¢ Metras ond ‘techn: Ser Gal ette, Bizes 36 to 42, but not all For this hour, pair. . hou ONE-THIRD wizes in each style. Regularly Ninety-eight Collars, Guimpes, ar, fi less than regular price, 4to$ sold at $6.50 and $1 50 Vests and Collar and Cuff Sets $5.75. For this hour ° in organdy, net, lace and net About thirty-flve White Mid- diew with all-white sailor col- White Cotton Middy Skirts, and lace combinations. Regu made of galalea Cloth in plait larly sold at $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, ed styles; waint measure, 24 to ($1.75 and $2.75. Some are 30. Regularly sold at ,#.50. slightly damaged. For this oe te AO ema MRE Ls, Kiksinacanid lars, laced and button fronts. 10 11 Fifteen hundred y: Sizes 34 and 28; a few 42. to Colored Outing Flannel, 27 eguiarly pold at $2.50 and One hundred Children’s Unton Suits, low neck, without sleeves, and low neck with short sleeves; ages 6 to 14. Broken lines; summer weight Regularly sold at 50 $1.00, For this hour,. c Four hundred yards of 26- inch Dress Gingham for chil- dren's school wear, in an as sortment of colored plaid. Reg ularly sold at 30c, For 23c this hour, yard 11 to 12 ‘Two hundred and fifty yards fancy iped Art Tigking for pillows and cushions. Regu larly sold at 50c. For 43 this hour, a yard..... Cc Four hundred Children’s Fig ure Bordered Handkerchiefs. Regularly sold at 10c. 5 For this hour, each.... OC 1 to2 Twenty-five Kodak Albuma, 7x11 size; loose leaf, 50 leavem Genuine walrus grain leather covered, imprinted “Photo graph” in gold on the front cover. Regularly sold at $2.25, For this hour, $1 59 Remnants ef Narrow Rib bons; tied in bunches of about 1% to 2% yards; assorted widths, lengths and colors in each bunch. The SEMA as yectisxasiecs 10c inches wide; go0d heavy qual ity; stripes, checks and plaids. Re lart, wld at 450, For this hour, yard. SOC 3to4 Two hundred yards Baby Flouncing and Petticoat 95. For this Thirty-five Cotton Petticoats of green, nateen, gold-colored heatherbloom and gingham, in plain gray and blue; also stripes; regulation sizes. Reg- Flouncing, regularly sold at ularly sold at $1.25, $1.50 and 65 and $1.50 a yard. For this $1.95. For this hour at .......HALF PRICE , hour, each ....-..--- 95c Dress Skirts At $5.00 All Day A special purchase of Separate Dress Skirts. The assortment in- cludes skirts of velvet, serge, Pan- ama cloth and novelty weaves, in gathered two-piece or plaited mod-. els, in navy blue, black and color combinations. Novelty pockets and separate belts. Sizes 24 to 30 waist measure, aH buying power | one thing.®© He wrote very polite and | asked us to come to get our thingn, | Kodaks, Developing and Printing—Main Floor that we have endowed it with. York on business for several day: so mother need not fear he shoul: jannoy her with his presence. ‘Then, |another thing, mother’s queer. This [morning she was singing away at | the top of her voice and running all jover the houge picking up things [she wanted, and seemed so happy. | But this afternoon I found her down fon the floor tn the library crying as |if her heart’ would break, with her | bead In father’s big chair before the and he sald he was going to New| = — = = Carrie Heywood, of course, my dear me to go. It’s sate to say he didn't, {like mother’s, onty his are behind est friend. Apyway. He never wants me to do| glasses. At the station he just © Sarah ts hovering around |4nything hardly, That's why I sus-| kissed mother and me and said he PRL sharon asking to help, and pre-|Pect him of not wanting me to go| was glad to see us, and led us to tending she's sorry we're going. But|40wn to Grandpa Desmond's. And/the place where Peter was waiting she tant . She's glad. I know |™other didn't go only once, in ages.|with the car. Peter drives grandpa’s the ia, She never did appreciate| Now thts will be the end.* And | automobile, and he's lively, too) mother, and she thinks she'll have| When I begin again it will be in (Continued T ) everything her own way now. But Boston. Only think of it—really, | ————. she won't. I could tell her @ thing | ‘uly Bostant Dresses, Suits and Coats for the Fall of 1920 has been attained by nothing more than a concentration of our every facility to still further popularize America’s already most popular styles in costuming. Fall dress of fine quality heavy char- meuse, Tunic model, embroidered cf- fects, large sash; all sizes. $16. “SWEET SIXTEEN” DRESSES They compliment the judg- ment of women who wear them just as the marvelous beauty of an Indian summer sunset compliments the ar- tistry of nature. In this stupendous collec- tion will be found a yariation of dreams in Satins, Taffetas, Serges, Jerseys, Tricotines, Silvertones, Georgettes, Tric- olettes, etc., priced at— & SEATTLE NEW YORK New Fall coat of mannish coat- nos, large coney collar, belted and button-trimmed, in ali sizes, 14 to i+ 316. . “SWEET SIXTEEN” COATS Conjure up the most ex- quisite notions you can and they will still fall short of the loveliness of “Sweet Sixteen” Coats. In the play of all lights, these stunning coaf- ings, modeled as they are, stand out with incomparable richness. Youth finds its own in them, whose creation was in- spired under the influence of youthful thought for women of Fashion, «= | 1021 SECOND AVENUE, SEATTLE Butt of fine serge, all Uned, draid- trimmed, collar can be worn up of down, All sizes. $16. “SWEET SIXTEEN” SUITS They are distinctions. They are live and snappy, a fresh relief to those who tire ofe sameness, a delight and satis- faction to the ones who seek a pleasing, gratifying devia- tion from the channels of commonness,. These suits developed in Serges, All Wool Poplins, Mannish Mixtures and other New Fall Weaves, ares the conceits of the geniuses who know the way of the lure of feminine fancies. Seicl LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO |fireplace, But she jumped up the lor two if { wanted to, But I shan‘t. minute T came in and said, no, no, Father's sister, Aunt Jane Ander [she didn't want anything. She was |#on, from St. Paul, is coming to keep st tired, that's all. And when 1| house for him, partly on account of ahe guessed she wasn't she was going, only she wished Mon.| nosey servant girl!’ could be gone |now Aunt Jane is coming. My! how And that's all. It* | sre now,|mad Nurse Sarah would be if she 4 |and we go just day after tomorrow, | knew. But she doean’t. Our trunks are ‘most packed, and| 1 guess I'll end this chapter here | mother says she wishes she'd |and begin a fresh one down in Bos planned to go today. I've said good-| ton. Ob, I do so wonder what it'll bye to all the girls, and promised to|be lke—Boston, mother’s home, write loads of letters about Boston | Grandpa Desmond, and all the rest. | and everything. The re almost as | i'm so excited I can hardly wait. excited as I am; and I've promised. | You see, mother never took me home |“crons my heart and hope to die,” | with her but once, and then I was that I won't love those Boston girls |a very small child. I don't know better than I do them—specially why, but I guess father didn't want -AGENUINE VICTROLA with all the Fweet tone and wonder- ful repro- duction that ade trola | | | MUSIC for EVERY SUMMER OCCASION Just the modeb you want to take with you on your trip, picnic or vacation. Small. in weight and size, BIG in musical possibilities. Splendid for Dance Music. WITH TEN SELECTIONS (Five double-faced 85c Records of your own choice) Boston: Yes, I'm here ked her if she waa sorry, after all, | father, and partly on account of me. | week. that she was going to Boston to| “If that child is going to be with |I've had a chance to write a word. | ? She was | she’s got to have some woman there/And so has mother. |just as giad as glad could be that| beside a meddling old nurse and ajsuch a lot going on since we came. | They didn’t | But I'l! try now to begin at the be- day would hurry up and come so we | know I heard that But I did. And / sinning and tell what happened. | Well, first we got injo Boston at | there was Grandpa Desmond to meet | us. with grayish hair and merry eyes CHAPTER Iv. When I Am Maria “PEG 0’ MY | I've been here a} But this is the first minute} There's been 18 BREAKING ALL RECORDS AT THE o'clock Monday afternoon, and | He's lovely—tall and dignified, | Special at $1.69 Many appetizing dishes can be prepared at a low cost by using a Griswold Food Chopper. These food choppers are fitted with sev- eral steel knives that will cut per- fectly all kinds meat, vegetables and food. Special at......$1.69 ‘ Fancy Decorated China Sugars and Creamers—Special at 75¢ Special for Friday—beauti- fully decorated China Sugars and Creamers—also a limited quantity of fancy decorated Flower Vases and Mayonnaise Dishes. Choice at......75¢ $3 Roll of Blue Plaster Board Building Paper, Special at $1.98 Roll. Now Is the Time to Prepare Your House for the Cold Weather We have a special lot of heavy Blue Plaster Board Building Paper we are going to offer at this unusu- ally low price. This paper weighs 80 pounds to the roll and is the ideal thing to use for house lining. Special, the roll ...cciceceesccsvccceccces ccs PheOee $3.50 Household Scale, Special at $2.69 A Household Scale comes in very @& handy around the home, especially during the canning season. Scale is like illustration, complete with scoop. Special at ......-+--2+00- + $2.69