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a a hp a: metal corners and edges; good day-Saturday Tegular price —fancy English teapots, very from our regular stock; Many Saturday 3 NEW SHOW TODAY AT PALACE HIP “Mixtures,” otherwise “A Dash of Bong eng Dance with a Seasoning of ‘ ago. Says his hat and coat are both still in the ring, and he is just as ready for action as when he first struck Sound. His statement | 7 the worst case of rheumatism im- @ginable, and added to the tortures of rheumatism, I was for years & sufferer from severe stomach end made of good quality matting, bound and finished with USinoh sine; regular price $1.50; special Fri- music roll: specla—$ 1.69 in a very heavy gabd quality of black coatex; will wear longer and lighter in weight than realsleather; regular price $2.50; special Friday-Saturday, $1. MAIN FLOOR teapots: EXTRA SPECIAL— of fine quality vitrified china or earthenware; all Ject from; regular price $3.50; special Friday- by Jimmy Rosen and company in a DR. LOUGHNEY’S HUMAN BAKE OVEN I was all stove up with |” bowel troubles. Well, to be brief, 1 took the baking treatments and ate just as Dr. Loughney prescribed | —and my complete recovery was | brought about in actually just a/ few days, and I have remained well) ever since. I consider Dr. Lough: | ney’s Human Bake Oven the won. | der of the age for relieving and/ quickly eradicating painful afflic tions even in the most aged and feeble, and no one can have stom ach or bowel troubles if they will eat as Dr. Loughney prescribes; and remember, he will let you eat Viberally, but he will instruct you as to how to combine and propor- tion your foods #o as they will set well; then the old stomach trouble and constipation will disappear like magic. I had the bad luck of tak- ing @ hard fall a few days ago while rounding up some cows on one of my ranches, I was very lame and shaken up. 80 I decided I had better be baked again. And now, after a short course of bakes, I feel entirely recovered. My wife came down with me and ve is taking the treatments also. » was run down, very nervous FRIDAY-SATURDAY SPECIALS— —no C, O. D, or phone orders; one to a purchaser—these specials, except dining chairs, will not be delivered; can be easily taken by purchaser. clasp and lock; 98c $2.50 sold deh, frame. beautifully decorated, styles to se- $1.49 fancy $1.50; —here natural finish; regular esd be farce comedy sketch entitled “Call Me Papa° Granville and Fields have an at- tractively arranged specialty replete ANASA EVERH 1 Belfair, Wash, will knock out rheumatism as se- vere as mine was, and enables me to remain free from the trouble for | eleven years, is well worth telling | rheumatic sufferers about. And 1| am sure that éleven years of last- ing relief from severe stomach and bowel troubles is also proof that Dr. Loughney knows how to treat | your bad eating habits, and that} correct eating plays a big part in| keeping any one well. Yours feel) ing tit, ANASA EVERETT, B NOTE—Dr, Loughne: treatment offices are lo: Olive 8 Bldg. ‘ competent 1 m. to 6 p.m. ps Sundays, to ani bad very poor elreulation. She| Telephone Main o212," Only ‘th is “very, very” much improved | tilly, Invalided. or bedridden '¢ after only a few treatments. She Oren Mae itaciaee 1 eee a ly just a# enthusiastic over the|cases which can come to the offi treatments as I am, and, like my- welf, she believes @ treatment that at Olive St. are treated at th offices, Write for free literature and references, exactly as pictured; full box ; very strongly made; comfort- able artificial brown Spanish leather stip seat; regular $5.25; special Friday Saturday, 95. FIFTH FLOOR tn plain centers, all colors, with patterns tn inches; Saturday of paints, varnishes, enamels, stains $2.96 .... oak dining chairs, fumed fin stripe Borders, or hitand-miss al) colors; sime 24x3¢ feguiar price wane, OBC you will find a large variety rushes, very reasonably priced. for the kiddies, old and young. The feature photoplay presents Marguerite Clayton and Creighton Hale and an all-star cast in “Women Who Wait.” eee AUDIENCES LIKE “THE PRINCE CHAP” “The Prince Chap” ts attracting | ° the season's largest audiences at the Wilkes. Two reasons for its success | are that it is a good play and well acted and that Howard Russell re- Joined the Wilkes Players this week. Rusell has an importantrole, and is Fred Dunham, leading man at the Wilkes, in winning new laurels with his perforcance of the title fole. Alice Eliott appears to afvantage in & dual role, and some fine character. fzation is done by Anne Berryman as slavey, Forrest Taylor as an English "| artist, Harry Leland as an express. man. Othere who please are Beasic Buskirk, Horace Macdonald, John Nickerson, Dordthy Ellis and Ruth Fletcher, There will be a matinee Saturday. LONDON, Aug. 25,—Two first edi- tion copies of Bunyan’s “Piigrim’s Progress,” dated 1678, were sold here for $12,500 for the pair. THE SEATTLE STAR STEILACOOM, The Hell-Hole My strength returned. I am almost ‘well again today, 1 would have been on my feet again in 10 days after my paralytic hell. hole, lL. K. OWEN, youngest dining car chief in the country and head of the Northern Pacific dining car service, arrived in Beattie Wednesday from |Oldest Soldier Is f Dead in France} | PATUS, Aug. 2.—fald to be eat, who was 98, has died. He took | arrived fora 1842. | ay after it. or colore drobes German Eagle Gone eagios which years on the THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1921, \Nigerian King Has Two Hooded Wives LONDON, Aug. 25 Emir of , stroke ff they hadn't taken me to | France's oldest soldier, Antoine Gen. | Kateina, the Nigerian potentate, tig St tellacoom, the part in the conquest of Algeria in| ing a son, & number of servants, @ He drank a jug of wine at|scribe and two w meal with s glass of prune | hoods in publi | brand . footed and wear cerise and cianamen, ~The ‘nit in England, feta. who c. ‘The wives are bare nas have perched for $y root of the Army and BY MRS. T. iI other woman patient was stand. ing beside my cot, Bhe was holding both hands down ever my face. 1 screamed, . An attendant came to the door, and switched on the light. “Ob, she won't hurt you,” the at- tendant sald, “she’s only playful.” Perhaps she wouldn't hurt me. My contention ts not that #he wasn’t harmieas, it is that hospitals where such ghingy are allowed to happen are not fit places for people wuffer ing an I waa suffering, from nerves. ‘The next night I was frightened | again out of my sleep. A commotion awakened me with a start Just as 1 sat upright In bed, another woman | patient sprang, like an animal, | acroms an intervening cot and land | ed on all fours tn mine, close behind me “HOME” IS BUT NEW WARD I screamed and cried, and, this time, the attendant caught the woman In my bed. The next day I was moved to another ward. My husband came on Sunday. 1 }was afraid to tell him all that had happened. He had been taking my tales to the doctor, and the doctor had been denying the mand telling him I was crazy, that such things, of course, did not eccur in the “hos pital.” ‘The order to move me inte an other ward was made without my knowing it. An attendant came and gathered up my clot and put them | into @ suit case. At last, I thought. I am going home-—for good. 1 fol- “This wil! be your home from now on,” she informed me, and my heart | sank. Her words seemed to expreas eternity. I went mutely inside, crushed, and fell apross a cot and went, bitterly. y there a tender hand on the shoulder, A kind She was more people on Second ave. It was nearing my “I know this ts a terribly grue- some place, But don’t you cry, My husband came the next Sun- day. It was Mothers’ day. “Did you forget our anniversary?” T asked. “No,” he sald, “and I brought you some things and 4 box of candy.” He gave me the candy and I ate two piecea. Then the box disappear ed. That was the last I saw of it. He had brought some fruit, too, “Are you going to take me home?” I pleaded. He didn't answer. He left and 1 couldn't eat the fruit. My grief was too great. Every night I thought 1 was going to die. The only way I could get to sleep was to keep re- peating to myself: “Go to sleep. Go to sleep. Go to $7 ashin, ELLIOTT 0289 f ’ AS CHARGED BY A RESCUED VICTIM AWOKE one night horrified. ere | sleep.” W. BROWN St. Paul on his tour of inspection of Gee, Advertisement, For three mornings 1 was excused from work, The nurae did that for me, The fourth day the doctor with the nume about me. 1 don't think ahe’s at the “hospital” any more. DETERMINED STAND WINS RELEASE She came to me after the doctor had gone and told me he had de manded that I go to work. “I know you're not able.” she maid, “It's a crime to think of such a thing.” But to wort I went. They put me to sowing rags all day. Day in, day out, I sewed endiens strings of rags, and to end, and wound them into balla, My husband camé each Sunday. J was growing weaker and weaker, I told him the truth, but it the doctors still had his At fast “I could stand longer, “You are leaving me here,” I said, “and I am slowly dying. I'm sick; not crazy. Can't you nea it? My nerves are breaking. will break fidence. it no My husband is a good man. He loves ma 1 knew J had won him over, A TTEMPTS TO POISON MIND FRUSTRATED Joy leaped into my heart He | took me out of there, The doctors | protested, advined him to take me to a certain sanitartum near Seattle. 1 had heard of that place. It ts a« lit came. Hoe had quite an argument! seemed | tle hellhole, another Steilacoom, but smaller. ¥ “Nof I said, triumphantly, for I |knew my hushand would go the limit with me now. “I'm not going there. I'm going to « real bospital, where I can get well.” * ‘They argued. They told my hus band I had incurable insanity; that, were I permitted to have my way, I menta? And by a doctor? “You can't direct me any more,” I told them, emphatically. “I'm go tng where I want to go, where people Cigarette it's Toasted @uxrrsxe PERFECTION COAL PER TON AT THE BUNKER Any coal dealer or teamster can get this coal for you. No soot—no clinkers—no dirt—every bit of it burns as clean as wood. It is hand-picked and washed. 2 mn by co-operative miners. This is the best value for family coal in the city. Now is the time to fill your coal bin. We have a car on the track today and ar® prepared to make ample and prompt delivery. ; CITY FUEL CO. , Distributors 1007 SECOND AVE. SOUTH From Gotham Dome wont | Say” Club building is miasing : Poldte Dread Is good!| NEW YORK, Aug, 25.—One of the! Ar! American eagle will take fig haughtiest of the Prussian stone | piace. wyet CLOTHES © - The Regular Prices were $25 to $45 The Sale Prices Are: 18 ‘23 ‘28 You can buy boys’ clothes for less money maybe; but you can’t buy boys’ clothes anywhere that cost as little as these. : We mean by that—the clothes last so much longer than the other clothes, that you buy less often; the yearly cost is lower. ; If you aren’t satisfied after you have worn the clothes, we give your money back. Hart Schaffner & Marx - Clothes Shop Corner Second and Seneca al