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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1922. THE Member American Homes Bureau REMOVAL SAL The rt portunity for money-saving was never as great as is offered in this Removal Sale. dreds of t bargains in homefurnishings await you. Don’t let the opportunity pass. SPRING RUC SALE Hun- LET US SHOW YOU SOME AMAZING BARGAINS! You don’t have to feel obligated to buy a nickel’s worth. Come in anyway—let us show you our huge assort- ment of beautiful new rugs, and at prices that make them bargains! Let us show you an easy way to say “Good-bye” to the worn floor coverings, rugs and carpets, that are perhaps ready to be replaced. Every piece must be sold from our rug rack as it will pass out of our hands when we move into our new store. NOTE—There are also special offerings on Linoleums, Curtains, Bedding and every other article in our Rug Section CHILD'S GRASS ROCKER Offered at Removal Sale Price of $2.75 Rockers are of Chinese Grass, hand woven, substantially built. A won- derful value at the $2.75 Removal Sale price of HUGE VALUES IN BRASS BEDS $29.75 - $3.00 Down Down Down Down $100 Purchase. .... $150 Purchase..... $2.00 Per Week $200 Purchase. ............scssseees dee oo 50 Per’ Week $250 Purchase................+++ $300 Purchase This is indeed a remarkable offering. Bross Beds with 24-inch posts; 1-inch filler rods in head and foot; top and foot cross rods 2 inches; similar to illustration, but a greatly improved gerikts $29. 75 Removal Sale price. . GRUNBA Gees INC. ing made the trip from Yokohama in Down $4.00 Per Week NO EXTRA CHARGE—NO INTEREST Where Pike Meets Fifth | Youths in Pistol Oriental goods, the liner Wenatchee, | pastern consignees. ed at av: | oo Capt. F. BR. Nichols, 4 Smith's Cove terminal Tue: ‘The body of the late Capt. Howard Thomas, who died at Manila, was brought homme by the Wenatchee. —The most healing, soothing and effec: tive preperation for Kidney amd Biad- THEATRE vee’ WAUDEVILLE |: "+": side. Se at all druggists and desiers, with money-back guarantee, Sample “For the love of Mike, Dick, do sent free upon request, you know that girl in the pinkish dress? I guess you do; you were! dancing with her. I've been dying | to meet her all evening, Sho surely is a stunner.’ FRANK WRIGHT WILCOX | DANCERS NA-DRU-CO,, INC. 86-88 Exchange St., Buffalo, N. ¥ h, mant 1 don’t mear bentuiful girl tm the kid that T used to Where's she} Mary and Ann Clark Emerson and Baldwin to say that th “The Wonder Girl” Same daly little at your house! Roberts and Clark been? What's she done to herself?" gags” : . “Well to school, | CHARLES OLCOTT and as fon, what | REAMY and AND do they vex? Pow iby thtentae | der, cloth They de and wholesome MARY ANN thetr hair ay and they —that's ft person” OLYMPIC —_——— - i" ee “| But as for the girl in question, she Wheat Hearts. —* porridne tem of charm which was She | knew how to dress and where to get | | the right clothes, She always went Jown on Second ave., In | had a aye | more than powder and colffure Gino Pills are recommended and 5 oy obare oa fold in Seattie by Bartell Drug and a little a month, and Stores, Swift's Pharmacy, corner Seo- ond and Pike, and other reliable | Gruggists.—Advertisement. there she was—a beautiful girl.—Ad-| vertisement, rior court Tuesday against Way Downey and Leo Hall, two youths) who were captured Friday by Patrol-| man J. BE. Berg, after a pistol battle.| pects’ saisee Satta Maa -|KID SISTER es Aree hea arty organs to regain normal action, ridding This TWKE IS SECOND . A” Be ee ee ae ae MOORE! Pen CINDERELLA SEATTLE STAR Has 40,000 Homes Under Her Thumb! Katherine Miller Has to Keep Tab on City’s Poor By Wanda von Kettler Mine Katherine F Miller nas 40,000 families under her thumb. That's because she “indexes” them and files the « Mise Miller ia tn char elal service the Seattle at present h in tte eabl records. Mine Miller fell hetr to her families January 1, when change was taken over by the com munity fund from the Social Welfare league. Her families include moth ere and dads and kiddies who have ty fund, whieh families lnted wervice pela) Katherine Miller at some time recetved ansistance from jnomm Beattle charitable orgnnization | They include those who today are tn need of ald; they include those who no longer need the nelp of organiza tions. The records of these famitios are confidentio "ly kept—-thetr secrets only between officials of ‘wanizations Yet why keep all these statistics and litle secrets? \HERE’S THE WHY FOR KECORDS In the matter.of-fact, businesslike f Cornette ty fund terms, simply to: 1, Prevent dupliication of re | lief, saving money and time. 2. Prevent duplication of in- vestigation, saving the feelings of the applicants. 3. Prevent confusion tn the minds of applicants, such as re sults when several people give different advice. In the words of Miss Miller, “The records serve as an exchange for all organtsations Included in the commu. nity fund. Upon receiving an appl: cation for relief each organization calla te happen that that applicant han been | aided before Perhaps he t# still in need of assistance; perhaps he ts We have that recorded. Per hapa he ts ap « at one organ teation when he might receive aid more suited to hin needs at another. We send him to the better place. “Perhaps he in a ‘professional ber: * Oh, yen,” anys Mise Miller, “we *¢ to do with many of those checked up on individuals who © axked for charity from a# many jax 16 different churches and agencies | j—all at one time. We found one man jwho had requested unsistance to thin} jextent, and who at the same time! |was earning a salary of $200 | month. Yea,” Misw Miller muys, “the family was getting along very well unt!) the Investigations were made.” MOST REALLY the nervice ex. | We have a record should it} 4 THE PAGE 5 RHODES co. Our Windows Will Tell Making nT in the Curtain Dept. Upper Main Floor | CRETONNES; 500 yards of a durable weight Curtain Cre. | Special Attractions | | tonnes, displaying new pat- t in both light and dark shades. Special, a yard, 18¢. IMITATION MARQUI.- SETTES; 400 yards, hem- stitched and 36 Inches wide. Colors are cream, ecru and white, Special, a yard, 28¢. MARQUISETTE CURTAINS; 200 pairs, plain hematitched, and in cream, ecru and white. Curtains that old formerly at $1.26 pair. Special, Thurs- day, a pair, OB¢. Ready for that Outing Trip? Complete Your Plans With An Outing Suit Second Floor Attractive as well as serviceable, these Outing Suits are the proper apparel for hiking, motoring, climbing, fishing, and all kinds of outing wear. They come in khaki, wool and wool-mixed materials, and are priced as follows: Khaki Outfits Breeches, $2.25, $2.95 Knickers, $3.25 Coats, $2.50, $4.25 Leggins, 95¢ to $2.95 Skirts, $3.25 Hats, $1.25 to $1.95 Middy Suits, $5.45 Divided Skirts, $4.95 Wool Outfits Breeches of all-wool army cloth.....eees Skirts of all-wool army cloth Coats of all-wool army cloth.... Breeches of wool and cotton mixed. Middies of wool and cotton mixed........ Children’s Regulation Dresses Special $2.95 Upper Main Floor These regulation Dresses are just the thing girls’ school wear. They are neat and easy to keep clean; made of a splendid qualit; y galatea and cham- bray, in white, navy and Copenhagen blue. Sizes range from 7 to 14 years and you will find them exceptionally good values at $2.95 each. Men’s Muslin Night Shirts 95¢ Main Floor Full cut and well made Night Shirts of a good weight muslin, ‘1 V-neck style. They are trimmed with large pock- ets and pearl buttons. Each O5¢. 40 Cotton Batts Special—89c Each The Bedding Section fe s : fering 40 Cotton Batts comforts, special for Toe at 89¢ each. They are made of pure white, fluffy cotton, in double bed size, T2x8# inches, and sold formerly at | $1.15 each. Summer Céins for Children Planned Plane for the children’s summer camp at Lamola were laid at the an nual meeting of the King County Ant-Tuberculosis league Tuesday, in the Y. W. C. A. auditorium, Chil- dren who are underweight and un. nourished are taken, each sum o the camp. Arrangements been made to care for more ren than ever before, Bellingham Hotel Becomes Sanatorium BELLINGHAM, historic Fairhaven hotel, bullt in the early 90s by James J. Hill and C. X. Larrabee, has been turned into a sanatorium by the Yoghurt Health | Laboratories. The hotel, an imposing structure of brick and sandstone, was erected when {t was believed that Bellingham was to be the metropolis of the| Northwest. date sanatorium devoted to the Yog- \IN NEED OF AID | Most people, however, according to | | Mise Miller, are really in need of aid | when applying to the Institr r the benefit of th “is the exchange ¢ i ahe . od. 1 usage on the part of the leharitable organizations avoids duplication of investigation—there ts nothing so injurious to # family as continued Investigation. Ant a con glomeration of different ndvice is Just as bad | “One season of the year, the service exchange (a deci.te con ‘venient in a little different way,” de clares Mise Miller, “is the holiday reason Organizations and churches may check up on the donations and baskets sent by others. It «voids the possibility of one family receiving five turkeys and another seven sacks of flour. It assists in a sort of sen ble distribution.” eo Wenatchee in Fast the remarkably fast time of 10 days, hee Mitier Sus bee with the Com ; Trip From Orient} ?,ou and 6s minutes | Fight Face Charge | munity tuna wince Aurust, Un 4 7 Tips - 7 7 1 1 eo t ot e yea © served 4 ror f-- Carrying a cargo of silk, hemp. | pales and 188 cases, was unloaded im-| Taking an automobile without per.| t!l phon ne ppl enc — THE evs lcereals, furniture and miscellaneous | mediately and reshipped by rail to| mission is the charge filed in supe dsibahinkanstiaes: Me Miller “she much pre. family work.” THE NEW YORK AMERICAN SAYS “Rush and see ‘Foolish Wives.’ It’s an elaborate production and a great picture.” Cured Her Rheumatism Knowing from terrible experience her, with yc | jdress, and # forget.—Advertisemeny” hurt system jealth dieting, April 26.— The} It has been vacant for some years, | but will now be made into an up-to | ac, Mich., next July, will be Amabile Press C Clubs [State instead, according ame gram received by Roy Erford, to Meet in Seattle |dent of the Seattle Amateur] The 26th annual convention of the | club. | United Amateur Press association of America, scheduled to meet tn Ponti- SNS JoEws PALACE HIP | TODAY TO FRIDAY DORIS MAY IN “EDEN AND RETURN” VAUDEVILLE WITH THE INIMITABLE Grace Cameron “LET’S GO” AND OTHER FINE ACTS matter where ins or what caused them, t quick relief without jes or poisons. Just appl) ver the part thet hurts, end pain will be Extra! Afternoons Only! e scnayeer LLOYD “HAUNTED. SPOOKS” | ine ortest wae ~~ ually CT = a reat | gzeauee! ey +4 Don't euft: Seem at Bartell Brug Coe and other leadin, ompany tS j } - ei) STORE FOR USEFUL ARTICLES: Q —_ |: © AVE. NUE > UNION STREET. Store Hours—8:30 A. M. to 6 P. M. END OF THE MONTH SPECIAL eo Enameiware Lemon Soap 3 for 25¢ Table Oi-Cloth Aluminum Percolator 75, Earthen Tea-Pots 69c | Cotton Gloves Long-Hdl, Spades, Good Quality 98c | Earwig Bait, 15 Pound Package $1.50 | Old English Floor Wax, Pint Cans 59c | Old English Pretetet ..« Pint 59¢ | Hair Clippers... . Odds and Ends 49c¢ Per Yard 29¢ | Knit Wrist (0c ° i . $1.49 | QUANTITIES LIMITED