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This Week’s Feature Sale , Closing out broken lines of Old Ivory Bed- room Furniture. Ma $55 Chiffonier . .$39.7 $65 Chiffonier . $46.50 $95 Vanity ....$77.50 $36 Bed .......$27.75 $52.50 Bed $39.75 See Pike St. Window Upholstered Mahogany Bench Covered in velour or tapes i $12.00 value $5.95 OUR CREDIT SYSTEM was devised especially to meet the demands of the buying public, and made sufficiently elastic to cover each individual requirement. (Continued from Saturday) SYNOPSIS ether says Mary, mother, Marie, and every re else says Mary Marie. A di verce if the family has Mary Marie “ter. end she decides to writ story about only rib elted” @ bwok—e bo must call it diary, becanse faiher hates novels, and she must live with father half of each yea ASPIRIN Liberal Credit Extended vee S— Co. IN! ‘WHERE PIKE MEETS FIFTH “Rayer Tablets of Aspirin” in gen julne Aspirin proved safe by millions land prescribed by physicians for over twenty years, Accept only an junbroken “Bayer package” which contains proper ‘directions to reli Headache, Toothache, Earache, ralgia, Rheumatism, Colds and Patn Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents, Druggists also sell larger “Bayer packa Aspirin in trade mark Rayer Manufacture Monoacet leacidester of Salicylicacid. BEE BESESER UEU0080 SESS02:00:0:020:50: 550088 ‘a a Since the beginning of the war, The United States holds $54,000, goods exported from the United | 000 of Polish bogds, taken in ex States exceeded the imports by | change for food, clothing, arms and about $17,000,000.000, | equipment. | le, work, for be is to be rae—they bv > “father Name “Bayer” on Genuine ¢ * Py EleanorHPorter COPYRIGHT. Sarah tele Mary Marte all about Father thinks of nothing but jars, and mother, whe te very young, finds things very lonely after the first father werything fer her, Grandma chides her for distracting father from \drat of the to an ot popalar with the let, father + Naree on tempt to make students, eutertains » mold out ied, and ings and and in Mother gore about and hae geod times and Mary Marie starts to school She le very busy trying to decide whieh of the men mother gees with hee lover because she must put the story, and besides she feels [camtomnces shown in the selevtion of Maric Marie elamifice all the possibiti- Hew of « new father according te her and Aunt ‘hour Maltin and Grandpa bre very and G are very prised. Mary Marie cofitinucs to over Mother's happinms and Mother only ence in @ while seems te be thimking of the pant Begin here taady. About, the prospective muitors—I found that “prospective suitor” in a wtory @ week ago, and I just love ite it means you probably will want to marry her, you know. I use it all the Ume now-—in my mind—when Cm thinking about those gentlemen that come here (the unmarried ones), | forget and used it out loud one day to Aunt Hattie; but I shan't again She said, “Mercy! and threw up her |hands and looked over tg grandpa the way she does when I've maid |nomething she thinks is perfectly awful. But I was firm and dignified—but very polite and pleasant-—and I said that I didn't see why she should act | Uke that, for of course they were | prospective suitors, the unmarried and even some of the | married ones, maybe, like Mr. Har low, for of course they could get divorces, and | “Marie! interrupted Aunt Hattie then, before I could my another | word, ae go on to explain that of }course mother couldn't be expected to stay unmarried always, tho I was | very sure whe wouldn't get married Jagain until she'd waited long enough and until it was perfectly proper and ones, anyway genteel for her to take unto hernelf | another husband, But Aunt Hattie wouldn't even le ten. And she threw ap her hand and said “Mariel again with th emphasia on the last part of the name the way I simply loathe. And she told me never, never to let her hear me make such @ speech an that again, And I said I would be very careful not to. And you may be sure 1 whl. 1 t want w go thru a weene like that again! She told mother about ft. tho, I think Anyhow, they were talking very busily together when thty came into the Ubrary after dinner that night, and mother looked sort of flushed and plagued, and I heard her may, “Perhaps the child does read too many novels, Hattie” And Aunt Hattle answered, “Of course she does!’ Then she said 1920 ‘and he! The Kodaks, Developing and Printing—Main ‘Floor Fashionable Fabrics—New Silk Duvetyn | ' | This new fall I just loved Leather, Golden Brown, Navy, Squirrel, Sunset, a book Inst week Sapphire, Tea Rose and ( Mother started and flushed up | "Oh, Mr. Harlow!" she cried |(Mother always calla him “Mr.” [That's another thing. He always calls her “Madge,” you know.) “How do you dor Then she gave her quick little look nd to wee if there warn't somebody else near for [her to talk to, But there awsn't | “But you do dream of the old days, sometimes, Madge, don't you?” he began again, soft and low, leaning & little nearer | “Of when I was a child and played dolls before this very fireplace? Well yea, perhaps I do,” laughed mother And I could see she drew away a lit | ¢ was one doll with broken head that “I was speaking of broken hearts, interrupted Mr, Harlow, very mean ® and blue $2.50. trimming. | White, Light Blue, Copen. | Shell, Navy, Violet, Nonsense! As if such things in the | world! cried mother, with a little toms to her head, looking around again with a quick litle glance for some one elne to talk to. But still there wasn't there. ‘They were all over to the other | mide of the room talking, nd paying no attention to mother and Mr Harlow, only the violinist. He look Jed and looked, and acted nervous with his watch chain Brut he didn't jcome over. 1 felt, way, that I ought to go away and not hear Jany more; but I couldn't without showing them that I had been there So 1 thought it wax better to stay just where I wus. They could nee |me, anyway, if they'd just looked in |the mirror, So I didn’t feel that I was sneaking. And I stayed. on Tuesday, 79¢. | anybody | fine and coarse weaves. on Tuesday, $6.75. Sleeveless Slipovers, Pink and Brown. fabric of finest silk shown in the following new shades—Jade, oral, ’ ‘ 4 Baby’s Specials Soft single blankets for the baby, in plain pink or blue and white with pink« Prices | Double Blankets, same quality | and colors, $3.00 and $3.50. Soft Sole Shoes, in a variety of styles, materials and colors, $1.00. Ribbon Special One hundred and fifty yards Taffeta Ribbon, 614 and 7 inches wide, suitable for camisoles and sashes. , Nile, Old Rose, Lavender, High grade ribbons taken from regular stock, regularly sold at $1.50 and $1.75, Ladies’ Sweaters For the cool evenings—A special lot of Ladies’ Wool Slipover Sweaters, in both Flame, Pink and Tan and regularly sold at $13.75 and $15.00, on Tuesday, $7.50. A few in Apricot, Turquoise, Pink and Flame, regularly sold at $10.00 and $12.50, black ribbon in American Beauty, Blue, Regularly sold at $8.50, PAGE 5 Rhodes Co. ~° is Duvetyn is used extensively in the new Fall Millinery and for dresses, fancy suits and trimming. In the Silk Section; 36 inches wide, $10.00 a yard. Beaver, Pekin, Sand, Copper, Coats and Capes _ At $32.50 For the conservative buyer this collection of 42 medium weight Coats and Capes, selected from our regular stock, will be - un- usually attractive. The styles vary to suit a wide variety of tastes and the materials of which they are made have been carefully selected from a stock of Velour, Silvertone, Tricotine, Satin and other coating fabrics. The ordinary shades of Navy, Copen, Sand, Pekin, White, Gray and Black are shown. Sizes 16 years to 44 bust. $1.50 to Baby’s Satin Pink, Maiz 21 3 regularly sold at .,....$ 55.00 regularly sold at ......$ 59.50 regularly sold at ......$ 65.00 sore--$ 69.50 eee $ 75.00 Colors are Blue, regularly sold at regularly sold at regularly sold at ......$ 85.00 regularly sold at ..... .$125.00 regularly sold at ......$135.00 1 1 2 trimmed with on Tuesday, $2.95. “Madge, if seems so strange that We should both have had to trail thru the tragedy of broken hearta and lives before we came to our real hap. piness. For we shall be happy, Madge. You know I'm to bé free, too, soon, dear, and then we | But he didn't finish, Mother put up her hand and stopped him. Her face wasn't flushed any more. It wan very white. | “Carl,” she bang in a still, quiet voice, and I was so thrilled. I knew something was going to happen—thin time she'd calied him by his first name. “I'm sorry,” she went on “I've tried to show you. I've tried Few Hats are made to comfort and at the same traveling by auto, train comfortable, serviceable the hair from wind and dust when ” To meet this difficulty we have se- cured a special line of Hats with at- tached Shetland mesh veils which are wear with any style of hair dress. ‘Hats and Veils ‘A Woman's Crowning Glory Is Her Hair give perfect time protect Materials and styles are suitable for all seasons and particularly designed © to harmonize with any street or trav- — eling costume. We have selected 15 of these Hats which have been sold regularly at $7.00 to $10.00 and offer them Tuesday at $3.95. —Veiling Section, Main Floor or steamer. and easy to very hard to show you—without peaking. But if you make mio say it I shall have to say it ° y " you are tree or not matters wet. o| ike, ARGSTUCDVilIN eS ae oer? |known that all along, from the very me. It can make no difference in| rig And they ur reladonship. Now, will you|inat at the beginning, Maybe it's come with me to the other side of |. their way down here. If I think | the room, or must I be so rude as| ir it 11) ask Peter tomorrow didn’t act at all ke | to gO and leave you? I told them good and plain that ours 7 was a perfectly respectable and gen-| No girl or woman is pretty if Bes teel divoree. Nothing I could say |eyes are red, strained or have made a mite of difference with some| rings. Simple witchhazel, ¢ She got up then, and he got up, too. He said something—1 couldn't hear what it was; but it was eadand look in his eyes, Then they both walked across the room to the others 1 waa sorry for him. I do not want him for a father, but I couldn't |help being sorry for him, he looked so ad and mournful and handsome and he's gqt perfectly beautiful even. }(Oh, I do hope mine will have nice eyes, when I find him) As I aid before, I don't believe mother'll choose Mr. Harlow, any way, even when the time comes. An reproachful—I'm sure of that by the} Well, I guess that's all I can think | of thin time. eee ; Most four months later. It's been ages wince I've written | here, I know. But there's nothing | special happened. Everything ha been going along just about as it did at the first. Oh, the lifferent — Peter's gone, He went} two months ago. We've got an aw-| fully old chauffeur now. One with) lgray bair and glasses, and homely, | |too. His name i# Charles, The very! | first day he came, Aunt Hattie told of the girls, and then is when I first beard that perfectly horrid word, “grass-widow.” §o I knew what Peter meant, tho I was furious a him for using it, I let him see it good and plain. Of course I changed schools, 1 knew mother’d want me to, when away haughty and disdainful sure this time. But she wasn’t. Fiest she grew so white I thought she was going to faint away. Then #he be- gan to cry, and kiss and hug me. hydrastis, etc., as mixed in eye wash, will brighten the a week's use will surprise lita QUICK results. Regular use of | Lavoptik keeps the eyes sparkling and vivacious. The change will.please you. |inum eye cup FREE. Swift's Deug is one thing she knew, and so I told her right! ;,, I thought she'd be superb and |: 24 leading drugeteta, New Hair §, | me never to talk to Charles, or both-| And that night I heard her talking h. that it was} to Aunt Hattie and saying, “To think Seattle’s rs Great Boys’ Store NOW OPEN At last Seattle has a Store exclusjvely devoted to Boys’ Clothing which is well worthy of her highest ambition. And the more than ten thousand garments which are so attractively displayed are priced at such figures as to con- vince every Mother in the Northwest that this indeed is the logical place to choose wearing apparel for her boy. You are cordially invited to come in this week and take advantage of these : Three Great Suit Values For the Opening Week Boys’ Bor $899 — 13° Le 416° Boys’ Boys’ All Sizes From 6 to 18 Years—Regular Boys’ Knickerbocker Suit Styles 500 Suits at Suits at Ideal for school wear, strong, good looking, long wearing. All sizes, in- cluding the unusually large sizes of 11, 114% and 12. Boys’ Heavy Rib Black Hose GREEN BLDG. FOURTH +"° PIKE something elwe which I didn't the words “silly” and “roman and “preco-shus.” (1 don't don't know what that last but T put ft down the way it sound ed, and I'm going to look it up) Then they turned and saw me, and | | they didn’t say anything more. But the next morning the perfectly love lly story I was reading, that Theresa let me take, called “The Hidden Se leret,” 1 couldn't find anywhere. And | when I asked mother if she'd seen jt, whe said she'd given tt back to | Theresa, and that I mustn't ask for it again, That 1 wasn't old enough yet to read such stories | There it is again! I'm not old Jenough. When will I be allowed to |tuke my proper place in life? Echo answers when. Well, to resume and go on. | What was I talking about? Oh, I know~-the prospective suitors. (Aunt Hattie can't hear me when I just jwrite it, anyway.) Well, they all |come just as they used to, only there are more of them now—two fat men one slim one, and a man with a |halo of hair round a bald spot, Oh |1 don't mean that any of them are | really suitors yet. Just come to call and to tea, and send her flowers }and candy, And mother isn’t a mite |nicer to one than she is to any of |the others. Anybody can see that | And she shows very plainly she’s no |notion of picking anybody out yet But of course J can't help being in terested and watching. ‘ | It won't be Mr. Harlow, anyway I'm pretty sure of that, even if he {has started in to get his divorce. (And he has, 1 heard Aunt Hattle tell |mother so last week.) But mother like him. I'm sure He makes her awfully nervous. Oh, she laughs and’ talks with him—seems aw if she laughs ven more with him than she does with anybody else, But she's always | looking around for somebody ¢ talk to; and I've seen her get up and off just as he was coming as the room toward her, and I'm Just sure she saw him, There's an other reason, too, why I think moth er isn't going to choose him for her lover. I heard something she said to him one day She was sitting before the fire in the library, and he came in. There were other people there, quite a lot of them; but mother was all alone by the fireplace, her eyes looking fixed and dreamy into the fire, 1 |was in the window-seat around the corner of the chimney reading; and I could see mother in the mirror just as plain as could be. She eould have seen m too, of course, if she'd looked up. But she didn’t I never even thought of hearing anything I hadn't ought, and 1 was just going to get down to go and ‘speak to mother myself, when Mr. Harlow crossed the room and sat down on the sofa beside her. “Dreaming, Madge?" he said, low and soft, his soulful oyes Just devour, ing her lovely face. (1 read that, too, | doesn't | doesn’t means, | er him with questions for any of the others—I can't tell better he should keep his mind en She treats them all just exactly alike, as far as I can nee, Polite|tirely on his driving and pleasant, but not at all lover|’ She needn't have worried. | like. I was talking to Peter one day| should never dream of asking him | about it, and I asked him. But he! things I did Peter, He's too didn't seem to know, either, which pid. Now Peter and I got to be one she will be likely to take, if any. /real good friends—until all of a sud- Peter's about the only one I os en grandpa told him he might go. I ask. Of course I couldn't ask m don't know why. . er, or Aunt Hattie, after what she| I don’t see as I'm any nearer find-| aid about my calling them pros.|ing out who mother’s lover will be pective suitors. And grandfather—| than I was four months ago. I sup: well, I should never think of asking | pose it’s sff™l too soon. Peter said grandpa a question like that, But| one day he thought widows ought to Peter—Peter's a real comfort. I'm | wait at least a year, and he guessed | sure I don't know what I should do| gras#widows were just the same. My, for somebody to talk to and ques-|how mad I at him for using tions about things down here, if it|that name about my mother! Oh, 1) waen't for him. As I think I've said) knew what he meant. I'd heard it at already, he takes me to dchool and | school (I know now what it was back again every day; so of course I| that made those girls act so queer ; and horrid) There was a girl—I Speaking of school, it's all right,| never liked her, and I suspect she and of coursé I like it, tho not quite/ didn’t. like me, either. Well, she so well as I did. There are some of nd out mother had divoree. | the girls—wel, they act queer. 1/(You see, I hadn't told it. I remem don't know what is the matter with | bered how those girls out West brag them. They stoy talking—some of ) And she told a lot of the them—when I come up, ar they | others. But it didn't work at all as make me feel, sometimes, if I] it had in the West. None of the didn't belong. Maybe it's ause| girls in this school here had a di I came from a little country town | vorce in their families; and, if you'll «Dee oa: i chaise pha deee wate -+anecesr sitar y thers Arend In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the lightest and strongest plate Known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaran- the wa nee him quite a lot a she} te All work th same day Fro Open Sunda 207 UNIVERSITY ST. teed for 18 years Examin OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS ed 15 years. XAMINATION FREE Whalebone set of teeth, $8 Crowns .. $8 Bridgework $2 Amalgam Filling XTRACTION taken in the PAINLESS ve impre jon and ne ple Opposite Fra Summer an Excellent Time to Combat the Disease. Some cases of Rheumatism give very little trouble to their victim during the summer season, and for this reason now is a most favorable time to take a course of treatment ble and remove it from the system. Otherwise, with very first cold, damp or disagreeable day, your pains will return and gradually in- crease in their severity, until you will soon again be in the clutches of this relentless disease the that will reach the cause of the trou: | Rheumatism’s Pains Are Always Treacherous |] Why not begin at once a system- Jatic and sensible attack on the mil | ons of tiny germs which cause your Rheumatism, and forever rout them from the system? This is the only way to get rid of the disease, for these germs are in the blood, and cannot be reached by liniments, lo tions, and other local treatment | 8. 8. 8. has proven ndid rem. edy for Rheumatism, especially that form of the di which comes |from germs in the blood. Being such a thorough blood purifier and clean: ser, it routes the germs from the blood, thus removing the cause of | your Rheumatism. 8. 8. Is sold by all uggists, | Write for free literature and medical advice, to Chief Medical Adviser, 611 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, | spl to Aunt Hate and saying. “To think mo $ suffer, toot” and some more which 1 | » aessetehieg Qeperte couldn't hear, because her voice was | Setésese heired, falling all choked up and shaky. (Continued Tomorrow) Stefanmon, the explorer, has | leased 113,000 square miles of Baf-! fin island, where he plans to raise reindeer on @ large scale, Sates Mother Goose Brooms Special at 89c Here is one of the biggest Broom Specials we have offered for many days. Everyone is familiar with the high quality of Mother Goose Brooms. They are made of select Eastern-corn stock and are strongly sewed. Pacific Dandy Brooms (made by the blind) are included in this sale. Spe WIRE BE oso. 56's 00 05-0 oot tehndnikn ae Cut Glass Sugars and Creamers— Special at 75c Pair Hand Cut by Seattle Experts These are the attractive squat shape clear Crystal Glass Sugars and Creamers, cut in a beautiful floral design. Special at, pair ........cccceeeee eee POE $2.25 Alarm Clocks— Special $1.49 Indian Alarm Clocks, special for Tuesday. These Clocks are nickel plated, highly polished. They have a good alarm and are reliable time- keepers. $1.50 Cobbler Sets—Special at 98c Do Your Own Shoe Repairing and Save Money, This cobbler outfit consists of a stand, three lasts, knife and awl. Special at.................... 08¢ a THE STORE FOR USEFUL ARTICL’