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You Should Be the Same A LARGE number of women’s ailments are not surgical ones. Serious displacements or radical changes have not yet taken place. A tiny part in a fine clock may become loose and cause the clock to gain or lose. If not attended to in time, the part aan fall from its place ‘and cause serious trouble. So it is wit women’s ailments, they start from simple causes; but if allowed to continue, produce serious conditions. When the warning symptoms are first noted, take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to relieve the present trouble- some ailment, and to prevent the development of serious trouble, orth Troy, N. ¥.—“When I wasa Hchinson, Kan.—*I_ was about 1 Thad a severe female 18 years old when I developed trouble. Mother gave me Lydia E. a female weakness. My mother took Finkham's Vegetable een me to a doctor and I doctored for » after taking several bot I was several months. I was too sick todo ‘and well. When my daughter anything, was as thin as could be, married she was fee! miser- and tomplexion was yellow. mmended medi- ™ Psa fe Fone aes . Motherhad used Lydia E.Pinkham's TO vutiful baby Vegetable Compound and it had ‘a beau helped her so much that she got some for me and before I had finished ra- the second bottle I was feeling fine y i rp = have been ever since.”—Mrs, RM. Greenaway, 657 J. A. Srevens,716 E. 9th St, Hutch. 4th Ave. North Troy, N. Y. inson, Kan$us. | Many such letters prove the virtue of get E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN, MASS. = IS. ‘AUTO VICTIM'S SKULL BROKEN? Man Picked Up Stunned; Can Only Speak Name Henry O’Nefl, address unknown. !s suffering from severe scalp injuries and a probable fractured skull at the city hospital as @ result of an automobile accident at 645 p. m Monday at Wall st. and Second ave. O'Neil was struck by a car driven by W. Marshall, 715 Harrison st., and knocked to the pavernent. He wag picked up in a stunned condition by Marshall and brought to the city hospital. At the hospital O'Neil was only able to give his name. Teams to Boost |Representative of “U0” Y. W. CLA. Friends Will Talk teams to promote Y. W.C. A.| Rev. Robert E. Pretiow, who rep- t an@ to obtain new mem for the group at the university in te | tortum at 2 p. m. Wednesday, in con. nection with “Seattle All-Day meet- ing.” The session will start at 10 a m., with Mrs. Helen N. Stevens acting as temporary chairman. LAST RITES FOR MISS ANNA M. MITCHELL, 75, who died Mon- day at her residence, 302 33rd ave., will be held at 10 a. m, Wednesday at Bonney-Watson's. SEATTLE EAGLES MOTORED MONDAY to North Bend, where they conducted initiation ceremonies for newly inducted members of the fully dark and lustrous almost Might if you'll get a bottle of Sage and Sulphur Com- a" at any drug store. Millions Hes of this old famous Sage improved by the ad ot Angredients, are sold “& well-known drug- Harvest Festival to Start Tonight Salvation Army corps No. 4, 1414 Sixth ave., will begin its annual har- vest festival Tuesday night, With the hall appropriately decorated, the ceremony will continue thruout the week, with the exception of Friday night. Coffee, cake and fruit are to be served. ’ DISCUSS PROFITEERING The weekly luncheon of the Con- centric club will be held at the Pig’n Whistle Thurgday, at 1215 p.m. A general discussion of profiteering problems will be held. <9 eet For Childhood's Little Wounds—Cuts, Bruises and Rashes, apply Healing 0 Zemo is actean, antiseptic liquid that cools angry skin, heals Tetter, ane gard pone Aaa “or blackheads and rashes. Fine get busy with t) Sulphur Com- tonight and you'll be delight- itching scalp. All Druggists’. The symbol, AAI, ased by finan- clal agencies, indjcates resources of Z @ mo over $1,000,000 a the best credit POR SKIN IRRITATIONG rating. AKE YEAST VITAMON TABLETS IF YOU WANT THAT FIRM FLESH “PEP” Which Gets the Paying Job . EASY AND ECONOMICAL—RESULTS QUICK. ‘Thin, run-down folks who find that business is bad and employment is scarce ‘should try taking two of Mastin’s tiny yeast VITAMON Tablets with their meals for s short time and watch how their physical and financial conditions improve. Rereriairaite vie eo cae id you are weak, thi 4 run-down or { HE Why not be a Strong, well-built fellow — with plenty of “Pep” and energy —a clear ckin Glowing with reddy health and vigor—instead of hav- ing a thin undeveloped body that shows your lack of nerve force and physical power? Just take Mactin’s Yeast VITAMON Tablets for a short time and watch the truly amazing results, eaten ad Hil ¥ eae ee fan's VETASION Tasiows otal peed deinen cit ite Ih 00 40 net eecent All Owl Drug §tores. THE SEATTLE By Aileen Claire Over the Cascades they came In the ‘608, around the Horn and acrows the | fover-infeuted Jungle strip of Pana |ma, a sturdy, courageous people, to butld up the thriving little “sawmill village on the shores of Puget Sound. Came the gold rush in ‘98 and Se attle leaped into fame overnight. The planked streets resounded to the heavy boots of bearded miners, and from the bay came the whistles of gold-laden ships down from the North. From a wild frontier town to « metropolitan city waa the work of but a fow years, When thousands poured out from the East to see the Alaska-Yukon-Pucific exposition, the city was already established as one of the great seaports of the Western world. Loggers trom the dark forests of the Northwest came into the city to spend their wages on the “Skid| Road”; fishermen from Alaska and the Pacific and the Fraser river poured in their silver herde for ship ment to distant parts of the world; and painters and musicians came out from the East to live among moun- tains and forest and sparkling waters, Tide after tide of progress swept over Seattle, and each left ite mark on the city in the shape of distinctive streets and self-sustained Little com munities. Gradually, as the city grew, it became a collection of other STAR the wealth of Alaska, of the Orient and of Europe. eee Straight up from Railroad ave. run® Pike st, one of the busiest streets of the city, and as it crosses Bellevue it becomes the Main st. of Automobiletown. | Both sides of the ntreot Are flanked | by an almoft unbroken line of auto, mobile show rooma, where the lover of a “sweet running” motor can buy | anything from a flivver to @ 90-horse- power racing car, Nearly three miles due north of Motor City, lies a Main st. of a far different sort. This is the center of Collegetown, and altho it is the prin- | cipal artery of one of the city’s most prosperous districts, it bears the plain impress of carefree youth. Along 14th ave, or University way, strolls the collegian, bareheaded, bronzed and contented, Sometimes he is accompanied by the co-ed, a pile of her books under his arm, bound for a cholocate malted milk emporium or for one of the sorority houses north of 45th, A few years ago this street was only a dirt road running thru the woods; now it is a Mecca for return- ing students, an Appian way of mem- ory for thou@ands of O14 Grads. For this is the law in Seattle. The dusty suburban road of today be comes the plived boulevard of tomor- row. The square mile of sromatic cities; outlying towns were annexed; new streets developed into import ance; vast residential districts sprang up and took the place of fir andma- drona woods, eee No city ts without Ite Main st. Paris may talk about “the boule vards,” London of Piccadilly, New York of Broadway, Washington of Pennasy!vania ave, but all of them, in their essence, are only enlarge ments of the little Main streets that wander thru the center of the country towns of the world. Seattle's business district shifted MOTHER! Your firs becomes a thriving community center, with theatres,” shops and| banks of its own. From the days when Henry Yesler started his little sawmill where the totem pole now stands, from the days when A. A. Denny picketed his cows at Second and Union, and from the days when the first horse car wandered lazi- ly along Front st, the people of Seattle have been busy creating not one Main st., but dozens of em. - | As the eclty grew it pushed ita frontiern farther and farther from |]/ Belltown was]! the heart of town. swallowed up, yet it remains today, | in the very center of the city, almost | an isolated little city of shops and |f) restaurants: Slabtown is but a megn- | ory, yet something of its pieturesque | flavor remains in the blocks below | the Pike Place market. | eee | Other Main streets have grown up. Geveloped and become an integral | part of the city’s life. Every com: | munity has its own Piccadilly. Times | change and the city grows, but Seat | tle keeps on making Main streets. and, after all, it is the little Main |[_ streets that make a great metropolix A Frenchman has invented 4 means of using the Idives and Obrous stems of banana plants as @ substitute for flax. Child’s Bowels Need “California Fig Syrup” Even @ sick child loves the “fruity” taste of “California Fig Syrup.” If the little tongue ts coated, or if your child ts Hstleas, cross, fe playful child again. Millions of mothers keep “Califor. | tia Fig Syrup” handy. They know & teaspoonful today saves @ sick up from the waterfront and settled! verish, full of cold, or has colic, a}! tomorrow, Aak finally where Second ave. now runs from the depots to thp foot of Queen Anne. ‘This ts Geattle’s Main st Yet, al teaspoonful will never fail to open the bowels, In a few hours you can see for yourself how thoroughly it works all the constipation poison, your druggist ‘California® Fig Byrup” @irections for babies and for genuine which hai ASK SONORA OWNERS . AND THE MUSIC WISE For its clear, rich tone, for lasting satisfaction of mechanism, and for artistic beauty of cabinetry, : THE SONORA IS DISTINGUISHED AMONG PHONOGRAPHS But Is Not Higher in Price —and convenient terms of payment can be arranged on any machine, regardless of its price. FRASER-PATERSON COMPANY represent the Son- ora Phonograph exclusively in Seattle with a large line of various styles and prices: * Sonora quality models in upright, table and portable styles—$50 to $390. Handsome period models, $225 to $1,000. IT PAYS TO BUY THE BEST | Call or Send for the Illustrated Sonora Catalogue | | —Fourth Floor | MRS. SOPHIE GESSNER, 17, fied] FUNERAL SERVICES for Mrs at her home, 914 Terrance st,-Mon-| Elizabeth A. Wilkins, 80, neer. : children of all ages printed on bot-|44¥. The body will be shipped to Bel-| Seattle resident and mother of Yt > Ue, Mother! You must say “Calif tho Second ave is the busiest avenue | sour bile dnd waste from the tender,| 2/8" or you may get an imitation in the city, it is not the only one. | little bowels and gives you a well,’ fig syrup. Trade necessities have dictated that each populous district should have its own thorofare, and im the city’s for- eign quarters native merchants sell their delectables along miniature rep- lcas of ancient highways. eee (The first thing that a visitor to Se attie notices when he steps down from his Pullman car, is Seattle's quaint Oriental quarter, gathered around the axis of Jackson st. This is the Main #t. of Seattle's Chinatown and Japtown. A few years ago and it was a small reproduction of Canton. Slanteyed sons of the Celestial Kingdom padded along in flowing silk gurmenta, and in upstairs rooms over odoroys pipes, the sons and daughters of the Dragon dreamed of crowded, muddy rivers in faraway China, Now the Jap, aggressive, Western- ized and modern, has almost ousted the more leisurely Chinaman from dominance in the quarter, eee Or tf the visitor comes in by Bont, he steps immediately into the heart of Sailortown—Seattle’s tremendous waterfront. Here is the pulse of the Seven Seas; the ship chandlery of the world. A jungle of ships’ spars rears above the green waters; queer figure heads, speaking of the days before steam, stick thelr marble faces over passers. by along the waterfront, and out from the holds of great ships pours Out-Door Life The ®oman who can live outdoors and take vigorous exercise ig usu ally healthy and well, But there comes a time in ew ery woman's life when her nerves are on edge. Very often the trouble is in the organs essen- tially feminine Worry, sleepless nights, headaches, pains, disorders, tr- |regularities and weaknesses of & dis- j|Unetly feminine | character in a short \time bring the dull eye, the “crow’s | feet,” the haggard look, drooping shoul |ders and the fab tering step. To retain the appear: j ance of youth, a woman must re tain health. Instead, of lotions, powders and paints ask your drug gist for Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- |weription. This is the woman's tem- Perance tonic and nervine which has had the approval of thousands of women for over fifty years, Over a million bottles were sold last year and many of your friends and neighbors can testify as to how ‘wood it ts. It comes in liquid or tablet form. Send ten cents in [stamps to the Invalids' Hotel, But- |falo, N. ¥., for trial package of the tablets, Equally efficient, as well medium can . large can . ROGERS’ BAKING POWDER 1th. can. .21¢ Rogers’ Schoolboy as popular, have been the Pleasant Pellets of Dr. Pierce's, Try them today, @ pleasant laxative, easy to, If you want clean hands- Borax Soap use —the popular mechanics’ soap, can .........12¢ ingham for burtal. Landanem is os preparation of opium. .* known ats A. (Weary) Wukins, : welfare worker, will be Washington Macarent, Sos gheto and Noodles, three Packages for ..+..00-.-25¢ A Seattle product that we are proud to have on our shelves, Carload Shipment of M.J.B.Coffee 1-lb. can TS hice 3-Ib. .40c for..,.. We buy M. J. B. Coffee in straight carload lots. Thi ere must be a reason WHY. . J. B COFFEE is a blend that ts always uniform and appeals to all lovers of good coffee; second, we sell it, every day, at the same attractive price—not the week to make up for a “special* on Saturday. ~ The Quality Coffee of America —— higher during $1.85 can 5-Ib. can for.... $1.17 P Chips for the Cleanest Clothes as fort at the Lowest Cost —It's the Borax in —a strictly hard wheat family flour, 49-1b. sack $2.10 DENNETT’S RYE FLOUR Ground on the old-fashioned mill- stones. Tie BIC mck. 400 Snow- flake Sodas Small Pkg. 124c Large Pkg. Small pkg. 12%¢ Large pkg. 27¢ p. m. Wednesday at the Butter — worth pariors. ned