The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 9, 1921, Page 5

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Grunbaum Bros. Furniture Co. The People's Popular Homefurnishers 1/3. Off onExtra Large Size Dining Tables Closing out twelve 54-inch top Dining Tables. All are of selected quartered oak in the golden and fumed finish. These Tables at present are marked to sell at the extreme low re-mark prices. We are reducing these prices to one-third Example: less, for this sale, Re-mar price $67.50, one-third off $45.00 Re-mark price $65.00, one-third off ..... $43.25 Re-mark price $57.50, one-third off .....$38.35 Re-mark price $45.00, one-third off .....$30.00 Grane os NSH New Phone—Elliott 4910 MAINES) PETER WITT is an acknowledged authority on street car transportation, but we doubt if he is aware of these facts about foot transportation: The average step is 26 Tiches. This means 22,437 steps to the mile, or 112,185 in a fivemile day. A person weighing 160 pounds has, in a day, pounded into his shoes more than 974 tons of meat, bone and troubles. Any wonder your shoes wear out? When they do, bring them to us, We will rebuild them hke new for much less than the cost of a new pair. Country work promptly done and returned C. O. D. FEDERAL SHOE REPAIRING CO. 407 THIRD AVENUE AR-RUEE= MAR-RU COMPANY, Tecoma, Wash, led by Whisky, Is Inquest Verdict moonshine whisky was cause of death of Earl Rice. 42.) Grass VAL m Kent, according to the verdict cf | othet, ploneer of coroner's jury Tuesday afternoon. \93r4 birthday tice was found Sunday night dead — a lumber pile. His companions,| Daddy, Boldt’s Butterhorns are de |. G. Sherman, C. D. Brown and Pat ‘ licious.—Advertisement. Due to an error ROAST BEEF, No. 1 Cans, were quoted at 3 for 35c. Ad of Friday, Nov. 4th SURPLUS ARMY SUPPLY STORE 1013-15 First Avenue Item should have been Corned Beef, No 1 Cans 2 for 25c Responsibility for error lies with typesetter who set this ad. they got the poisoned booze Rice leaves a widow and six children at Kent. celebrates On Every Suit in the House Will Come to an End This Saturday You may never have another chance to pur- chase suits of this quality on such easy terms. In this great sale we have gone one step farther than ever before in making the first payment THE SEATTLE STAR } § & +r fg COMMON SENSE FORD'S RECIPE No Secret to His Success With Railroad BY JOHN W. RAPER TOURING ON HENRY FORD'S RAILROAD, Nov. 9.—There is no secret about the way Henry Ford The A CLEAR COMPLEX Ruddy Cheeks — Sparkling Eyes — Most Women Can Have Thomas |Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known Ohio Physician F. M. Eéwards for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well known vegetable Ingredients mixed with olfve ofl, naming them Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. You will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a formal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one’s system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no- good feeling, all out of sorts, tnac- tive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the ple@ming re sults, Dr. Thousands of women and men! take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets— the successful substitute for ealo mel—now and then just to keep them fit. 5c and 30c.—Advertise- answer is, common sense and work To begin with, Ford has scrapped all the ancient railroad traditions, customs and precedents bi |countered. ‘The surest has en easiest way to get in bad in his company ts for a man to ss this way,” or Joand-so railroad They don’t want that man on the D, T. & I | Ford made out his own passenger timetable when he took the reins | The train that starts first on a | railroad ought to be No. 1," he said. |The Bainbridge mmodation |starts earliest in the ing | Instead of calling it No s it bas ‘always call it | “on j man “We used to do en I was on th we did this kind of a been called, we'll no,” said an old railroad “Why no! ked Ford Because,” explained the railroad {man, “The Bainbridge accommoda }tion runs to Springfield. It's « | northbound train and in this coun. jtry north and eastbound trains have even numbers and south and weet bound have odd numbers.” “Do you suppose,” asked Ford, ‘that giving this train an odd nam ber would prevent it from arriving in Springfield? The raflrosd man thought would hardly be that bad. “All right, then, we'll call it No. 1," sald Ford. The D, T. & IL employes have caught that spirit and are eager to it it, expecially where it is an obstacle The D., T. & 1. gives service on its own lines simply by moving cars ‘That's all there ie to the mystery “A freight car brings in no. reve nue when it is standing still,” « Superintendent W. H. Kinney. “The ear may stop, but the interest on the investment, keeps running. It has to be moving to be of real value to a company. We don't use yards and sidings as storage places for loaded cars. It's the business of every man working for this raflroad to help in the movement of cars and every man does help, no matter whether he is an engineer, conductor or stenographer.” One thing that undoubtedly ts of great importance in quick handling of freight on the D., T. & I. is the “check-up” policy. D., T. & 1, it is checked. The offi cial who gives the order knows tm mediately whether or not the order is obeyed. The result is that orders Natfonal Cash Registers, slightly used, good as new, at about half re easy payments money ref addi®g machine: all makes Gauipped ab employing ling of cash regist styles of rolled Have your old it 100% good ax atyle. more suit 4 good trad lar price, Cash or Satisfaction guaranteed or Also new and second-hand check protectors and unded. of reginte nth the very , including all for registers ‘lt. We make ” you require other hich case we give old one. 00. L & Madison, ttle, Trust for Small Estates We you or leave only a modest inheritance, it Service bequeath great wealth upeet tradition wherever they find | When an order is given on the; weep! | Look 'em over and In two generations there'll be no more Sam’s blondes in Uncle} domain like these. | Above, ieft to right, Mae| Murray and Pearl White; center, Mollie King, and, be- low, Rubye De Remer and Dr. Austin O'Malley, who gives out the bad tidings. eee HILADELPHIA, n, forgive your hu nd the lingering eye upon the nde | is interest may be sentimental, | but more'n likely he'll tell you its purely secientific~and get away with it For the blonde ty vanishing |two generations wé in the United | States will nee no blondes, except! the Imported or the drug store varieties! | This information comes from none other thun Dr. Austin O'Malley [noted anthropologiat ladelphin. He fixes the 4 Nov In y ngor, Me Paul, Minn., tland, Ore | | “Hlondes cannot survive below [the 45th parallel,” says Dr. O'Mai ley “and even in Minnesota they will have a hard time of it. This, of course, means that the American race soon will be dark—almost Med- iterranean. “It's sad to dwel upon,” mys the doctor. “For fairness and beauty have been almost synonymous thru. out the ages, All the great heroines of painting and literature, from |Helen of Troy to Pollyanna, have been blondes, | “So it's time the brunet had her day. | “In two generations, when artists! speak of the American type, they will mean the brunet.” | mat re obeyed. Officials spend no small part of thelr time traveling up and lown the line-—-and not private cars, either—with eyes always open. | Giving service on other lines over which cars are routed, when they | | pass out of D., T. & 1. control, seems |not such a simple matter, but Ford | appears to have solved it. The D., T..& 1. crosses all the big | trunk lines that run west from the | | Atlantic. Some of them it crosses | |two or three times. In addition to! the connections at Toledo and De troft, it has 46 connections with other roads in its 378.4 miles of main line. Ford simply plays one line againat| the other, He says to one big trunk line:| “Give me service and I will give you freight. No service, no freight. I] give it to another line.” | | The D., T. & I. is such a big feeder | that there isn’t a single big trunk — line that can afford to loaf on the makes sick up-set- ‘Stomachs feel Fine iirls—if you want plenty of thick, PAGE 5 The Rhodes Co Store Hours Friday as Usual: 9 to 5:30 A Sale of Unusual Significance Women’s and Misses’ Silk, Wool and Lisle Hose Hosiery Department—Main Floor The sale of Women’s, Misses and Children’s Hose Thursday affords a splendid opportunity to start your early Christmas buying on a very economical basis. Full-Fashioned Silk Hose Pair, $1.29 800 pairs Women’s Silk Hose, in sizes 81% to 10, full fashioned and with re- inforced lisle garter top and soles, in black, African brown and Cordovan. They have slight factory imperfections, and the assortment does not include all colors in every siz Perfect hose like these sell at § a pair. Choice, Full-Fashioned Silk Hose Pair, 89c 5 pairs of Full-fashioned Silk Hose in outsizes and having reinforced lisle garter tops and soles. In colors of white and medium gray. Sizes are 9 to 1014. Formerly $1.75 a pair. Thurs- day, a pair, 89¢. a pair, $1.29. Fancy Wool-Mixed Hose Special, a Pair, 98c 300 pairs of Women’s Fancy Wool- sortment of »s are 9 to 10. would sell regularly at $1.50 a mixed Hose in a large heather mixtures. Siz These pair. Choice, a pair, 98¢. Women’s Mercerized Lisle Hose, a Pair, 49c Mercerized Lisle Hose in white and 350 pairs, Burson-fashioned and with reinforced wide garter tops res are 814 to 10. Formerly 65¢ a pair. Thursday, a pair, cordovan ; and double soles. 49¢. Children’s Fine Lisle._Hose Pair, 39c 200 pairs of Children’s Hose in black only, with knees and soles and featured i range of sizes from 5 to 1014 at, a pair, 39¢. Fine Lisle reinforced a full Choice Semi-Fashioned Silk Hose Pair, 79c 150 pairs of Women’s Semi-fashioned Silk Hose with reinforced lisle garter tops, heels and toes, in black, African brown and cordovan, Sizes are 81% to 10. These have slight imperfections. Special, a pair, 79¢. Cotton and ‘Lisle Hose # Pair, 29c; or 6 for $1.50 350 pairs of Hose, including Wom- en's Semi-fashioned Fine Cotton Hose in black, and Full-fashioned Lisle Hose in medium gray and beaver. Full range of sizes in black only. Medium gray and beaver, in size 814. Special, a pair, 29¢, or 6 for $1.50. Children’s.Cotton and Lisle Hose, Pair, 19c; or 3 for 50c 150 pairs of Children’s Cotton Hose and Lisle Hose in an assortment of large sizes and in black only. Sizes are 914, 10 and 1014. Formerly 50c a pair. Special, a pair, 19¢; or 3 for 50¢. = The Store jor Useful Articles. STORE HOURS: 8:30 A. M. TO 6 P. M. NOVEMBER Stock Reducing Our Auto Department Offers Some Wonderful. Values for Thursday We must reduce our stock of Automobile Accessories, that is why we are offering these unusually low prices. Wool Auto Robes, Special at Clover Leaf Auto Sponges, $1.00 to $2.00 Values. . .69c | Rainy-e-Day Windshield Swipes, Reg. $1.25, at. . .98c Save-a-Sleeve Auto Gloves, Reg. 50c, Special, pair. .25c These long-arm canvas gloves save your sleeves when working on the car. Rubber Mats for Running Board, Reg. 50c, Special 39c 5 or 6-Inch Common Stove Pipe Special 19c Joint Regular Price 30c so small that anyone can afford to buy any of the high-grade suits in our store, and pay for it a little at a time. tiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all ns get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you | don't. It doen't do much good to try to brush or wash it out. The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dis- solve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the sealp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely de- stroy every single sign and trace of It, You will find, too, that all itching land digging of the scalp will stop, |and your hair will look and feel a | hundred times better, You can get | Mquid arvon at any drug store, It | is inexpensive and four ounces Is all you will need, no matter how much dandruff you have. This simple rem 44. never Cadls Ady a Uscmcal, ‘ is just as necessary that you make provision to have your estate settled efficiently and safely. Our service as Executor and Trustee is par- ticularly important for the man of moderate means who cannot afford to risk loss to his family. Large Size 0-Cedar Mop = You can keep your varnished and painted floors looking so 4 and at- tractive by using an O-Cedar Mop. These are the large size mops, treated with O-Cedar Polish—they are made | in the triangle shape so you can get | into corners. Speci! at 8s ay Glo. “Betty Bright” AluminumTeaKettle 7-Quart Size Special at $1.69 Regular Price $3.00 : This 7-quart “Betty Bright” _ Pure Aluminum Tea Kettle is a remarkable bargain at this price. We have just 150 of them to offer, so you had bet- ter come early. | Special at | 89c Regular Price $1.50 Let us show you what we mean by Credit—Gladly Let us explain the advantages and small cost of a trust arrangement with us. | ‘ THE NATIONAL BANK Or COMMERCE OF SEATTLE Second and Spring Two Entrances: 1322 Second—:209 Union — 30> 0 > 0G 0 Sie =I I — I OF 0C 0 CPO lessee So co S50 Ke ==> 0 = >.0 CF20)

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