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Spectal $69.50 4ft..6 Brass Bed 846.35 $58.50 4ft..6 Brass Bed 839.25. $53.00 4ft.6 Brass Red 837.50 | $47.50 4ft..6 Brass Bed 832.25 | $43.50 4°C..6 Brass Bed ‘The al quarter and full size Don't fail to call in and look over our line of Quick Meal Pusename! Ranges and new line of Heating Stoves. der, we take your old stove in exchange and allow you full value and apply it on your purchase, LIBERAL CREDIT EXTENDED 1.75 | $7 @ is only a part of the line—others in the three Transferring = our Frags Beds from one section of our store t new sections will n exsarily destroy the freshness of our sam ples, so we are going to sell these samples and save the moving and at the same time fave you money, Ngte the reductions: And I saw: Regular Special $45.00 4ft.6 Brass Red $30.00 8.00 4ft.8 Brass Bed $26.50 $99.50 4ft.4 Brass Bed 8237.00 $97.50 4ft6 Brass Bed 826.00 50 4ft.-6 Brass Bed $55.00 That he talked more. Aunt Jane. That he smiled more. Grace and L That be eral times, (Continued From Yesterday) ‘That he never thunaered spoke stern and uncompromising to Cousin Grace the way he used to to That Father stayed In the house a) lot more than he used ta, T mean That he wasn't so absent-minded at meals and other times, but ‘ou Actually asked Cousin Grace and me to play for him sev That he went with us to the Sun RUNBAU readtRe & ok WHERE PIKE MEETS FIFTH SESESG00 SOS0000 000050 erected to mark the ground where the first ploncers entered Washing: | Seattle’s S. A. R. |: will be formally dedicated at/APPY, of course, and he wouldn't ‘ancouver Invites A ‘An. invitation has been issued to | \ 2° ‘At day. ‘the Sons and Daughters of the Ameri- | can Revolution to visit Vancouver, | ed on Friday, September 17, “Constitution day.” Complexion The New Special skin treatment. treGo remedy. A fountain | Mfg. Co. P, O. Box 851, Seatt day School picnic, ad never mw Father at a picnic before, and 0} don't believe he ever saw himself at one) ion That I don't know, but whole lot of little things that I ion n't remember; but they were all iO} lunmistakable, very unmistakable |And I wondered, when I saw it all fa) that I had been as bilnd as a bat before, oh, going to marry her, I mean. I was glad for everybody; for Father and Cousin Grace, for they would be be lonesome any more, And I was —— |«lad for Mother because I And, of course, I was glad for myself, for I'd much OPEN DAILY 900 A. M. TO 5:30 P. M. | “Sweet Sixteen” Frocks Are Infinitely Flattering Fashion in her caressing mood has made them so. The fabrics are super- Of course, I was giad—elad he's! knew | Medicat-| she'd be glad that he'd at last found | $3.12.| the good, kind woman to make «| and Herb Medicine| home for him, latively smart and seductive, with trim- mings essentially Parisian. In their new lines of insouciant grace applied to fabrics of Autumn shades and tints that Gown Fashion has chosen for her own, they just make a woman look her loveliest. The few shown in our windows are but a THE SUIT IN SERGE. $16 revealed within the store. prologue of the thrilling story of Fall Dress THE NEW SUITS It is hard to say whether the fabrics or the colors, or the mystic harmony of both, together with the trimmings, claim most of one’s attention; or the lines and the tailoring. Every- thing About them seems to have a compelling charm —AT SIXTEEN DOLLARS THE NEW DRESSES Their simplicity of line is an outstand- ing feature; the trimmings are inconspicu- ous b-:t important; beads, embroidery and compiementary inlays, in gay and effective combinations, play their part. All cling or drape gracefully to the figure; and yet are priced —AT SIXTEEN DOLLARS THE NEW COATS In their wide range of styling they have acquired a popularity, not so much through their low-pricing, but more from choice because of their style-pre-eminence. They are, indeed, wonderful coats —AT SIXTEEN DOLLARS THE COAT, FULL FANCY LINED..... .... 916 Seattle New York San Francisco Los Angeles Py EleanorHPorter COPYRIGHT 1 rather have Cousin Grace here than Aunt Jane, and I knew she'd |make the bewt new mother of any of them. And last, but not least I'm glad for the book, because now I've got a love story sure, That ie, I'm spretty mure, Of course, it may not be so; but T think it ts When I wrote Motheg I told her all about it—the signs and symp toms, I mean, and how different and thawed-out Father was; and I anked if whe didn't think it was so. But she didn't answer that IT’S WONDERFUL, STATES FARMER Eats Hearty, Sleeps Sound, and Feels Like New Man Since Taking Tanlac “Taniac did me more good by far |than all the other medicines I took put together during the four years of my troubles,” sald G. F. Bu n an, well kn nm retired farme lw ne at 4828 Twenty-fourth Ave. Se attle, “I suffered with stomach trouble rheumatiam,” continued Mr Buchanan, “and was in a general lrundown condition, My appetite -|got so poor that I never aat down and enjoyed a square meal, I felt tired all the time, and didn't have any energy about me and I felt so weak I couldn't even do @ little work in the garden. Every after [noon I would have "td lie down for nome time in order to gain a little strength to fintkh out the day, “The rheumatiem bothered me in |my legs, arms and shoulders and 1 |had- such @ that whenever seemed like my bac break. “This te just the condition I was in when I began taking Tanlac, but now everything is different, I have a fine appetite and can anything set before me, and a |much as I please, without any trouble from it afterwards, That Ured, rundown feeling is a thing of the past, and I fust seem to be full of new life and energy. My sleep is sound and restful every night, and I am entirely free of rheumatiem and other pains In | tact, I feel lke a brand new man |Taniac ts certainly wonderful.” Taniac ts sold In Seattle by Rartell Drug Stores under the personai 4). | | rection of @ epecial Tanlac represen. | tative, would almost We set the pace in Pain- less Extraction. We ex- tract your teeth in the morning, and give you your plates the same day. We do all kinds of Dental Work at most reasonable prices. Estimates free. All work guaranteed 15 years. || United Painless Dentists 608 Third Avenue Complete Service Crematoriam, colum- barium, chapel, pri- vate motor equip- ment. Catls any part of the elty or county, day yt: aftfertu’ Funeral Mirector ALBERTA, Great opportunity for securing farming lands on the continent. ' Prices $10 to Very Easy Terms 3,000 Harvesters Wanted SPECIAL REDUCED TRANSPORTATION TO CANADA Land Seekers and Settlers . Excursion Railroad Tickets to Alberta, Canada At Greatly Reduced Rates. Washington Country Agents Wanted. Beatile THE CANADIAN RAILWAYS BOND CORP. PINNEY & NOBLE, Agents 726 3rd Avenue, Corner of Columbia St, SEATTLE, WASH. “6. F. BUCHANAN i She didn't write much, any: | way. It was an awfully snippy let: | ter; but she said she had a head ache and didn't feel at all well. So part. y|that was the reason, probably, why | she didn't way Father's love affair, I mean. only maid she was glad, she was sure, if Father had found an estim able woman to make a home for! him, and she hoped they'd be| happy. ‘Then she went on talki about something el And she jdidn't write much more, anyway about anything. . more — about | She | August Well, of afl the topsy-turvy worlds, this ts the topmy-turviest, 1 am sure, What do they want me to do, and which do they want me| to be? Oh, I with I was just plain Susie or Bessie, and not crosscurrent and a contradiction, with @ father that wants me to be one thing and a mother that wants me to be another! It was bad enough before, when Father wanted me to be Mary, and Mother wanted be Marie, But - Well, to begin at the beginning. It's all over—the love stbry, 1 mean, and I know now why it's been so hard for me to remember to be Mary and why everything is differ ent, and all, They don't want me to be Mary. They want me to be Marie. And now I don't know what to jthink. If Mother's going to want me to be Mary, and Father's going to| | want me to be Marie, how am I go jing to know what anybody wants, | Jover? Benides, it was getting to be much a beautiful love story—Father and Cousin Grace. And now— But let me tell you what hap pened. It was tant night We were on! the pinzea, Father, Cousin Grace, and I. And I wan thinking how per- | fectly lovely it was that Father | was there, and that he was getting to be #0 nice and folksy, and how I did hope it would last, even after | he'd married her, and not have any | f that incompatibility stuff come | jo it. Well, just then she got up| and went into the house for some thing—Cousin Grace I mean—and all of a sudden I determined to tell | Father how glad I was, about him | and Cousin Grace; and how I hoped | it would last—having him out there with us, and all that. And I told I don’t remember what I sald ex. actly, But I know I burried on and said $t fang, so aa to get in all I could before he interrupied; for he had interrupted right at the first with an exclamation; and I knew he was going to gay more right away, just an soon an he got a chance. .—_. | And I didn’t want him to get a chance Un I'd sald what I wanted to. But I hadn't anywhere near said what I wanted to when he did «top me. Why, he almost jumped out of hig chair. "he gaaped. “What fn the! re you talking about?” { her, I was telling you And I tried to be cool and calm that it would make | him calm and too. (But it} didn’t calm him or cool him one bit.) It's about when you're married, | | and. “Married” he Interrupted again. (They never let me interrupt like that) ’ “To Grace—yea, But, Father, you—you are going to| marry Cousin Grace, aren't you? 1 cried—and I did ‘most cry, for I saw |by bis face that he was not. That is not my present he said. Hix lps ether hard, and he looked over his whoulder to see if Cousin Grace w coming back. “But you're going to sometime,” 1 j begged him. “I do not expect to.” Again he looked over his shoulder to see if she was coming. I looked, too, and we both saw thru the window that she | had gone into the library and fighted up and was sitting at the table read ing. I fell back in my chair, and 1 know I looked grieved and hurt and cool, | Cousin inten, came to- Es Main Floor—Rear | | i i i Women’s Silk Hose, Special Pair $1.29 HE 300 pairs of full-fashioned Silk Hose offered in this sale are reduced for a quick cleanup, and sold formerly at $2.00 and $2.50. The assort- ment is composed of All-silk and Lisle-top Silk Hose with double sole, heel ! and toe, in medium gray, taupe, white and black. Sizes 814 to 10, but not each size in every style or color. MEN’S FALL AND WINTER UNDERWEAR Main Floor fp rain and chill of the past few days make you think of underwear. Whether you desire to ¢hange now or later, it will be a good plan to buy now so as to have your undergarments ready when you do need them. Our size assortment is com- plete, Men’s Union Suits—Heavy fleeced, ribbed cotton Union Suits in long sleeve, ankle length style. Sizes 84, 36, 40, 42 and 46. A suit, $1.75. Men’s Union Suits—A splendid closed crotch suit in ecru color, and of good weight; long sleeve, ankle length style, in sizes 34 to 46. A suit, $2.25. Men’s Union Suits—A heavy Mercerized Cotton Union Suit in long sleeve, ankle length style, with closed crotch and in gray color. Sizes 34 to 46. A suit, $3.00, Men’s Union Suits—Splendid wool suits, steam shrunk, with flat locked seams and closed crotch. These have yoke back and fit perfectly. Sizes 34 to 50. A suit, $4.00. Men’s Union Suits—Ribbed knit woolen suits, made of fine selected and hard-twisted yarns, steam shrunk, which give satisfactory wear and are warm and comfortable. Sizes 34 to 50. A suit at $5.00. Men’s Union Suits—These wool suits are for the man whose occupation takes him out of doors, or one who requires extra heavy clothing. They have the closed crotch and are made in long sleeve, ankle length style. Sizes 34 to 48. A suit, $8.00. SILKS — Upper Main Floor HE special purchase sale of 5,600 yards of plain-colored Silks of- fers a timely and eco- nomical opportunity to buy for immediate and later needs, The assort- ments include a wide range of colors and plain black. 36-inch Messalines and Taffetas, special at $1.45 a yard. 36-inch Satins, Peau de Soie and Taffetas, special at $1.95 a yard. 40-inch Black Char- meuse; 36-inch Taffetas, Satins, Peau de Soie, Ra- dium Silk and Crepe de Chine, special at $2.45 a yard. 40-inch Blac meuse, 36-inch feta, 36-inch Black Satin, 36-inch Peau de 40-inch fine Dress Sat- ins and 40-inch Char- meuse, special at $4.95 a yard, “Father,” I begun; and I spoke |made me jump, he turned so sudden this time, even more decided and/ly, and spoke with such a short, firm. ate Mother.” “I don't believe you appreci-|#harp snap, Bat in spite of the jump I went “Eh? What? *- | fight on, just as I had before, firm laughing too loud, or. kind of noise,~because I be Mary, and she wanted me to Why Suffe He made me jump this time, he turned around with such a jerk, and spoke so sharply. But in spite of the Jump I still held on to my sub- Sect, firm and decided. “I say I don't believe you appre clate my mother. You acted right now as if you didn't believe she meant it when I told you she was giad you had found an estimabie woman to make a home for you. But she did mean it. I know, be cause she said it before, once, last year, that she hoped you would find one.” “Oh, she did.” He mt back in his chair again, sort of limp-like. But I couldn't tell yet, from his face, whether I'd convinced him or not So 1 went on “Yes, and that fan’t all. There's another reason why I know Mother always has—has your best interest at heart. She—she tried to make me over into Mary before I came, #0 as to please you.” “She did what?” Once more he With Piles ? No Matter If You Have Tricé Many Others There Still is Hope in Pyramid Pile Suppositories, Pyramid just as quickly as you can. It should give quick relief eee has saved many from an opera- tion. disappointed, as T almost sobbed: “Oh, Father, and when I thought you were going to!" “There, these, child!” He spoke tern and t cross now. “This absurd, nonsensical idea has gone quite far enough, Let us think no bee about it.” “ft isn't absurd and nonsensical!” I cried. And I could hardly say the |words, I was choking up so. verybody said you were going to, and I wrote Mother so; and—' “You wrote to your mother™ He ia jump from his chair this time, “You; and she was glad.” “Oh, she w He sat down sort of imp-like and queer. “Yes. She said she was glad you'd |found an estimable woman to make a home for you,” “Oh, she did.” He said this, too, [in that queer, funny, quiet kind of ay | “Yes.” I spoke, decided and firm. | begun to think, all of a sudden that maybe he didn't appreciate Mother as much as she did him; ar | { determined right then and there to make him, if I could, When I re | membered ‘all the lovely things she'd said about him CANADA most productive grain and mixed $30 Per Acre | Get Particulars, Agency jall examinations Get a 60 cent box of Pyramid Pile Suppositories at any drug store. Re right thing to do. Do it for own sake, to reliove itching, ding or protruding piles, hem- i orrhoids and such rectal troubles | ‘Take no substitute. Send coupon for free trial. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, r ‘4 Pyramid Bidg., Marshall, Mich. idly send me a Free ssiople juppositeries, in plain wrapper. Seattle’s Leading Dentist I am now devotin,, my entire time to my dental practice, I make and diagnose each case, well as do all extract: Jing between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m My offices have beer established for mort than a quarter of a century, and under my personal management swe sury 20 1901. I do not compete with cheap, transient, advertising dentists, My prices are the lowest. con- sistent with first-class work. EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D, 8. Seattle's Leading Dentist and decided. I told him everything | When I got here, ~all about the cooking lessons, and the astronomy book we read an hour every day, anf the pink ilk dress T couldn't have, and even about the box of chocolates and the self. discipline, And how she said if she'd had self-discipline when she was a girl, her life would have been very county ind jury for alleged different. And I told him about how ao erty frauda. used to it, so I wouldn't trouble No Worry With - “Diamond Dyes” Don’t Spoil or Streak Material in a Poor Dye Fach pack: of “Diamond Dyes” contains diree- tions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye a new, rich, fadeless color into worn, shi garmenta, draperies, coverings, everything, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods luy “Diamond -—no other kind—then fect results are guaranteed even if before. Druggist has MDiamodd Dyce Color “Card” showing 16" Pyramid 106 Columbia St, Buy Your Canning Supplies Wednesday— at a Big Saving 35c Doz. Economy Jar Covers at, Doz. .....25¢ 35c Doz. Schram Jar Covers at, Doz......25¢ 35c Doz. Kerr Mason Jar Covers at, Doz. . .25c Arap Cold Pack Jar Rubbers at 4 Doz.....25¢ 1-2 Pint Jelly Glasses Special at 47c Dozen You may have your choice of two kinds —'-pint tall or 1%4-pint squat Jelly Glasses, complete with lids. Special at 47¢ dozen. Size Sure-Seal Fruit Jars at $1.25 Dozen ¢ If you need Fruit Jars—Wednes- day is the day to buy them. We are offering the quart-size Sure-Seal Fruit Jars, with the wide mouth and glass tops, at this extremely low price—$1.25 dozen. One-Ply Arcade Roofing Special at $2.49 Arcade is an excellent roofing to use for houses, garages or outbuildings. Each roll contains 108 square feet and comes complete with nails and cement for laying. = |] THE STORE FOR USEFUL ARTICLES