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STANDARD —no goods sent C. O. D.xR No approvals or ex- “N changes. We _ cannot guarantee to fill mail orders. Quantity is lim- ited on many items. SATURDAY SILVER AND GLASS COMBINATIONS —variety of glass dishes. eS] | trimmed. Including covered butter —see our display win- dows for other unpre- cedented special $1 values. Every one a a star item. ODD PIECES POTTERY AND CHINA | —large assortment of odd pieces of art pottery and fancy china. Regular $1.50 to $3— values. Special Saturday THIRD FLOOR dishes, mayonnaise dishes, etc. Reg- ular $2— values. Special Saturday. a MAIN FLOOR COTTON UMBRELLAS —fine cotton umbrellas. Good steel —1 qt. best quality lino varnish. Just frame. Ring handles. Guaranteed the thing to brighten up your lino- $ rainproof. Regular price $1.75. Spe- 25, Special cial Saturday .........+es0se-0+ ‘ssiconis) ¥Uscii PATENT COATEX BAG | HEAVY RAG RUGS —general utili ing bag. Finest || —hit and miss center. Colored striped quality potent aoe. ‘Double handle $ 1 | * borders. 24x36-inch size. Regular $ | strap over top. Regular price $2.50. price $1.50, Special Saturday...... MATTING SUIT CASE leum. Regular price $1 1 QUART LINO VARNISH __| * Saturday ... veaceeccoand * I || ‘1 IMPORTED FANCY BASKETS || —large assortment of imported fancy $ | | | baskets. Attractive shapes. Values J from $1.50 to $3—. Special Saturday —silk lamp shades. Small size. Variety —very fine quality matting suit case. $ $2—. Special Saturday .......... lar price $1.50. Special Saturday... ‘ SRCOND FLOOR —white net curtains. Attractive de signs. 3 patterns to select from. $ DOR of colors to select from. Regular price 15-inch size, Brassed fittings. Regu- WHITE NET CURTAINS Regular price $1.35 pair, Special Saturday, pai ieesnatepcte 1} LACE FILET PANELS —9 inches wide. 2\% yards long. Very fine quality. Regular price $1.50 per panel. Special Saturday .......... MAIN FLOOR Is Good $7.50 $100— $10— $2— $125— $1250 $2.25 —— *n, oA $500— STANDARD FURNITUR L. SCHOENFELD & SONS SEATTLE FOUNDED SECOND AVE. AT PINE ST. 1864 E CO. TACOMA L. SCHOENFELD & SONS |Game of Football Returns His Voice CHICAGO, Feb. 17~In the ex | IT WENT TO THE SPOT Henry E. Campbell, R. F. D., No. 3, Adrian, Mich, writes: “I had a bad cough for three years. Tried sev- eral cough remedies. Got little relief. I tried Foley’s Honey and Tar. It|citement of a football game James | went to the spot. There is no better | | Derry recovered his voice, which he remedy on the market.” Good f0F | bay ton ote care eth | coughs, colds, croup and whooping | - oS yen re |eough. Children like it. Sold every-|sepise ¢ re | ‘There is one sure way that never — | fails to remove dandruff completely | at less meat if you feel and that is to dimolve it, This de |" pa nvach Bi. atroys it entirely. To do this, just| ackachy or Bladder | met about four ounces of plain, ordi troubles youi—Salts is |mary Uquid arvon; apply it at night fine for Kidneys | when retiring; use enough to moisten pi {the scalp and rub it in gently with | the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or tour more applications will com pletely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter bow much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all ttehing jand digging of the scalp will stop in- stantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and | look and feel a hundred times better. 7 can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive, and four ounces {s all you will need. This Greek Archbishop Deported by Rome ROME, Feb: 17-—The Greek are dishop of Rhodes was deported to Patmos because he denounced a re ception given to the Italian crown prince. Three appeals im his behalf have been made to the Italian gov ernment, but all have been turned down. SULPHUR CLEARS ROUGH, RED SKIN Face, Neck and Arms Easily Made Smooth, Says Specialint Meat forms uric acid which excites| Any breaking out of the skin, and overworks the kidneys in their even fiery, itching eczema, can be efforts to filter it from the system. | quickly overcome by applying a little Regular eaters of meat must flush | wentho-Sulphur, declares a noted po ea drape fa at — jskin spreialist. Because of ite germ ! v@ YOUur| destroying properties, this sulphur | bowels; removing all the acidn, waste| irosaration begins at once te acothe |8nd poison, elee you feel dull mis-|‘riteted skin and heal eruptions pgew ~ begpeptheg gd ag palMs | such as rash, pimples and ring worm. in the back or sick headache, dizzi- | coated and when the weather is bad i |you have rheumatic twingen. ede tl ly ee boone |urine in cloudy, full of nediment; the | DAFras nately onae 2m jchannels often get irritated, obliging | Shon obinin a one! panos : jar of Mentho. Juring the Right” OF ‘Maree mes! sulphur trom egy good druggist and ‘To neutralize these irritating ncida| Ue 't like cold cream—Advertise and flush off the body's urinous | eos waste get about four ounces of Jad |” Balta from any pharmacy; take a| tablespoonful in a glass of water be-| fore breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine and bladder disorders disappear. Thin famous salte is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and hag been used for | generations to clean and stimulate | sluggish kidneys and stop bladder ir ritation. Jad Salts is inexpensive; -oF harmless and makes a delightful ef | Meare fervescent lithia-water drink which FE millions of men and women take now , and then, thug avoiding serious kid ney and bladder diseasos.—Adver- tinement dé | simple remedy bas never been known | to fail—~Advertisement, THEATRE ‘ WEEK’ | } DOWNTOWN THEATRICAL CARNIVAL Pop. HE BEST 772 18-25 OPERA VAUDEVILLE, mn is an perfect as skill, scientific instrumen| Of experience can devise, :00 Glasses $5:°°,. FREE EXAMINATION GLOBE OPTICAL CO.| * 1514 Westinke Ave. Between Pike aud Pine Sts. makes STOMACHS EL FINE KUG STOs PHOTOPLAYS ~~“? STOCK | Novelist, is said to know more about | women than they themselves know | READ HIS LATEST NOVEL W. L. GEORGE, Famous English | THE SEATTLE Sufferers from akin trouble | STAR COAL STRIKE SEEMS SURE Vote to Be Taken Unless the | Operators Bow BY FRED G. JOUNSTON | INDIANAPOLIS, Web, 11-The strike vote of 600,000 coal miners to be taken within the next six weeks unleas mine owners before April 1 continue the present ‘aslo wage neale, undoubtedly will favor mumpen sion of work (hen, union officers said today Kivery indication te that the opera tors will not agree to the existing neale, Several groups have private liy mid they would not continue the lweale after thelr contract expires April 1 and the Indiana and South jern Ohio amociations have issued | public statements to that effect. |" Reports to headquarters of the United Mine Workers here may the operators are still determined not to negotiate an Interstate wage afres ment with the union, The miners | will Invite them to joint conference jagain in an effort to prevent the walkout. Meanwhfe beth factions are | watching the national capital to pee whether the government will act in | the matter, ‘DOPE ADDICT SELLS BLOOD Doctors Wonder If Opera- tion Transfers Trait NEW YORK, Feb. 17-—-Whether |tme transfusion of blood from the) | veins of a dope addict carries with jit to the patient @ taste for dope, in }@ question that is causing several |New York physicians concern. Members of the narcotic squad ar | rested James Milo, who sells hin | blood for transfusion, on a charge of | deing s dope addict. Police my that he bas admitted that he bas been taking dope for three months and | that he hag been used in five blood transfusions during that time. Dr. Carleton Simon, head of the! | narcotic jon of the police de | |partment, has begun an inquiry to jascertain whether any evil results at |tended the blood transfusions to which Milo engaged since acquiring & taste for dope. | It wan inarned that one patient.) into whose «ystem a quantity of Mi | lo's blood had been injected recentiy, had died 24 hours after the operation, but the patient, according te the physician in charge, was not expect *d to live when the operation was performed. Milo has participated in 25 trans fusion cases, and his name and ad- | dress are on almost every hospital | He has reoeived tint tm the city. nection with food requirements, yet, she must know how much food in| required by mem. bers of household. = narily she can trust pretty much to appetite-—un- Perverted appetites are very useful guides to rational eating. The adult who always maintains a uniform normal weight has usually | adjusted his food supply to his needs | If a child makes healthful, steady | |guins in weight thruout the period of growth, we can usually depend upon ft that the child is eating right. | Some adults are too thin; some too fat. Some children have too large appetites; some are too pampered, For such cases “it is necessary to | bave accurate measurements by! scientific umethods of the real fuel |meeds of the body to check on ap | petite or as @ guide when appetite | fails, } It is now understood that « man | y in bed thruout the 24/ |hours of the day burns at least 12 calories for every pound of body weight, which means for the average |man a@ daily total of from 1,600 to calorie | jiying aulet f th 1,800 } | If conditions permit, It ts better | | to eee that this enermy is taken from | food, rather than that the body be | permitted to burn itself up. A gen-| eral starving policy for the sick is as obsolete aa blood-letting ‘The energy expenditures of men, | women and children have been close |ly studied thru the use of a device | called the respiration calorimeter, a |chamber tn which a person may re main for some time | It measures accurately the actual lenergy expenditure. Hundreds of obmrvations show that men under the same conditions of weight, age and occupation use practically the | same amount of energy. | A definite amount of work calls | for a definite amount of energy in| the form of food. | The only reason why we are not | |foreed to stop working when food is withheld is that we are able to| learry stores of fat and a little ear-| bohydrates as reserve fuel, and also | to draw on our body protein if neces. | sary Thun men have fasted 30 and 40) days, but the body becomes more and | | more impoverished and when the re: | | serve supply is exhausted there must | come fuel in the form of food or all | work stops and death comes, | | National Safety Council cottatea | | 15,000 persons were killed tn auto-| mobile accidents in this country last year, Her Unwelcome Husband” THE STORY OF A WOMAN'S LOVE THEATER PAYROLL IN Investment of more than $7,500 000 and an annual payroll in Be Oliver Lodge. Heo says r 4! tor bigamy, has been sentenced too tween $5,000,000 and ve 1 attia of between $6,000,000 and |) nowhere which permit antve years imprisonment here for the $6,000,000 heat will also permit e ¢ cold. | name offense Friday, after @ three-week survey of the theatrical Meld here, under. taken by the arousement traden employes in tb the allied trades,” reads the atate- ment. “The payroll in conserva lively eatimated at between five and wx millions.” First woman with sovereign an thority was Semiramis queen of Aeryria, 2017 B. C | il) prices below the actual cost. Our main interest in this sale is a clean stock, not big a FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1922. |Lodge Comes Out |Master Bigamist’ | as Weather Shark! Sentenced Again | SEATTLE ESTIMATED LONDON, Veb. 11.--The theory CARLISLE, England, Ve tt G NEARLY 6 MILLIONS |) advanora by movers) ecientints, that Jonn , who has served prigs Beattie theaters represent an on termn in Vranes, Holland, Bel sium, Scotland, Wales and Ireland cause the p hot ia vie « summer was fo ‘ounly combatted by Mir Thene figures were made public CITICAGO.—Bixtoen year-old boy Fer Cota muceonsfully undergoes serious opera-|and as a Pr | on with jazz phonograph music tak-| BROMO QUIN ing the place of general anaesthetic. | §P!U)ne bears the» Grove. (Be sure Local anaesthetion only were used. | MO.) 200—Advertine ableta “There are approximately 2,600 theaters and in Kvery Day « Good F caaalay Last Times Priday—Wallace Reid in “Rent Free” . CONSTANCE TALMADGE Opens Here Saturday * at 11 A. M Columbus was glad In her biggest, to see the U.S. A. after most picturesque his long trip. picture— And when he could throw a rope! A lucky strike for him. LUCKY STRIKE, “Polly of the Follies!” with the famous Zieg- feld chorus and beau- ties in the cast. First Call for the Tired Business Man! MALOTTE at the Wurlitzer Why? Because now | millions of emokers prefer the special flavor of the Locky Strike Cigarette — because It’s Toasted* Wt - which cccle (a the dehescus Burisy Saver And also because it’s 15th Anniversary Sale Don’t miss our 15th Anniversary Sale or you'll mizs a big bargain event. We are celebrating our anniversary by cleaning up all, odd garments and broken lines at profits.» REMEMBER, when you buy at our store you are getting goods backed by 15 years of good business reputation. Value, service and satisfaction are the things that have made our business. CLOSING OUT LADIES’ READY-TO-WEAR AT BARGAIN PRICES! Boys’ Long Pants Suits $25.00 values—NOW $10.00 There are only about 15 of these Boys’ Long Pants Suits left, so we shall clone them out at $10.00. They are in good styles and weil tailored; neat mixtures of all-wool tweeds and cassimeres, Ages 10, 12, 14, 16. while they last—$10.00 Boys’ Knee Pants Suits $8 and $10 values, now $3.98 There are over 60 Suits to select from in this group, and for value they can't be beat. The patterns are good, the style is emart, and for school wear they're just right—tweeds and cassimeres. Nearly all sizes from 8 to 16 while they last—$3.98 An Anniversary Special! 150 Boys’ Blue Chambray Shirts 35¢, Detached collar style; fine wearing material; neck band sizes 12, 1214, 13—While they last 35¢ 31 Ladies’ Organdie and Voile Waists go for 59¢. Former values up to $2.00. Neatly embroidered; white and in col- ors ; sizes 36 to 44, While they last 59¢ 9 Children’s Dresses fhat formerly sold for $5.00, now sell at one-half price. Fine cotton Plaid Dresses ; collar in con- trasting color; neatly embroidered; belt with fancy buckle; ages While they last $2.50 Just a small quantity of our Ladies’ Fine We have about 25 Men’s Cloth Hats left. They have stitched brim and crown, all-wool materials; sizes 6% to 714. Former price $2.50; while they last 98¢ A dozen’s Men’s $5.00 Union Suits go for $2.19. Mixed-wool garments, medium weight, long sleeves, ankle length; sizes Vests left—mercerized stripe; pink; 34-36—While they last......... $2.19 a weight; os quality that in- sures long wear—While they last, regu- A clean-up of 25¢ Cotton Sox for men, at] lar size, F5e: extra size. abe ak the cut price of 3 pairs for...... 50¢ 45c Fleischer’s Germantown Zephyr 8- fold Yarn at the bargain price of 25¢. Colors are white, black, peacock, navy, light blue, purple, lavender, garnet, cardinal and old rose. A clean-up of Ivory Hair Receivers and Powder Boxes—$1.98 and $2.25 values; while they last ..............008 Broken lots of Children’s Scuffer-style SHOES at a bargain price—button; Black and colors; good wearing. Men’s 50c Ties are cut to 25¢; open ends; four-in-hand style; attractive patterns in light and dark colors—While they 20c Arrow Collars for 5¢. Good styles, but discontinued in stock; broken sizes; slightly soiled. Men’s 10c Handkerchiefs for 5¢. Soft heavy soles; black, brown and two-tone; cotton Handkerchiefs; hemstitched sizes 111% to $3.50 values—While borders. they last ... nS saunas poe $1.98 Ladies’ Oxfords $5.00 Values for $3.26) Tho value ts even better than | sounds Smart WALKING | OXFORDS; heavy sole, low rub- ber heel; black. Sizes 6% to 8. . Starting in the Post-Intelligencer | NEXT SUNDAY