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wading penne mihi te eC RODIN SINE LE SOON ALE LD SEATTLE GETS Watch N ew York Election NEW SHIP LINE White House Omen Is Seen MIDWEEK SALE EXCHANGE SECTION FURNITURE, RUGS, RANGES AND HEATING STOVES —all are priced to insure quick sale—an opportu- nity to secure that odd piece needed or furnish your entire home—at a very great saving. Our usual liberal terms will prevail during this sale. An example of the pricing: Fine All-leather Settee. ........... Hall Clock, Mission style. Singer Sewing Machine. Grass Chair Mahogany Library Table. Fine Quartered Oak Extension Table. Mission Box Leather-seat Rocker... .. Quartered Oak Buffet ........ Oak Chiffonier with mirror... Three-quarter size Iron Bed THE RHODES 2. Service With South America to Be Started WASHINGTON, Oot. 25, — In- auguration next month of a new passenger and cargo steamship line from Seattle and other Pacific const Ports to the east coast of South America by way of the Panama canal was announced today by the United States shipping board, Swayne and Hoyt of San Fran. olsco will be the managing agents for the shipping board. The steam- ore President Hayes, President Har- rison and the Susquehanna will be Placed on the new route, Starting from Seattle the ships ‘Will touch Portland, San Francisco, the canal and then at a port yet to be ecided upon tn Porto Riso, There they go south, touching at Rio De Janeiro and Montevideo, These same agents are now oper. ating cargo ships over this route and a few of them will be re tained. It is expected that there will be @ passenger vessel sailing each way every three weeks, Flapper, 62, Takes a Bath on Stage Hundreds of women lined the streets around the Coliseum theater Tuesday morning and staged what threatened to be a riot while striv. Ing for entrance to attend Edna Wallace Hopper's special “women only” program, Tho 62-yearold flapper who was A Sale of Discontinued Models Needle Art Work—Half Price and Less! Needle Art Dept—Upper Main Floor This sale affords an unusual opportunity to select a wonderful variety of pretty Christmas Gifts, all hand-worked ready to send—And another big feature is the remarkably low price. Bedspreads, Pillow Cases, Fancy Pillows, Infants’ and Children’s Dresses, Aprons and Rompers, Women’s Nightgowns, Combinations, Dressing Sacques and a host of other useful things too numerous to mention. Fwery number goes at HALF-PRICE AND LESS THAN HALF PRICE! + -825.00 Domestic Specials Upper Main Floor Silk and Wool Dresses $29.50 Japanese Crepe; 80 inches wide and in‘a complete range of plain colors; a yard, 25¢. White Outing, 36 inches wide and of a splendid weight for children’s wear and gowns. A 8x10 Fiber Rugs .. 9x12 Axminster Rugs 8x10 Grass Rugs . Small Rag Rugs... Acorn Steel Range ...... Extra size Ohio Range, wit Quick Meal Range. .... Majestic Steel Range . Poiret Twills, Tricotines, Canton Crepes and Satins make up this attractive as- sortment of Dresses in long waist line and blouse effects. Grand Oak Heater .. Live Oak Heater ... Buck’s Oak Heater . Airtight Heater .... These items from our Exchange Section are but a few examples of a $10,000 stock to select from. RUNBAUM BROS FURNITURE CO. INC. SIXTH AVE. Sctween PIKE and PINE Grunbaum Building Poindexter Will Give Talk Tonight Senator Miles Poindexter will be the principal speaker at a repubd Nean rally Wednesday night in the Bungalow church, N. 42nd st. and Bagiey ave. Other speakers will be William A. Gaines, candidate for Will Give Address on 30-10 Measure Willtam A. Monten, Spokane attor- ney, will address a meeting to which the general public Is invited, at the Frederick & Nelson auditorium, ‘Wednesday, from 4 to 5 p. m. on the equalization nomines for county assessor, and | Cooper, ‘Thomas F. Murphine and William Phelps Totten, legislative candidates. Rotary Night at Moore Wednesday Members of the Rotary club will attend the Moore theater en masse ‘Wednesday night, which has been set aside as Rotarian night in this third- of-e-century anniversary week of the etrenit, Tuesday night was Elks’ night, when a large number of the lodge members and the Elks’ band at- tended. rejuvenated by plastio surgery took a bath on the stage and demon: oe the “art of staying beaut Preceding her bath she covered herself with a special solution of ol! prepared according to her own formula. Rancher Kills Self and Then His Wife SAN DIEGO, Oct. 26.—Jacob Fischer, 40, a rancher, yesterday shot and killed his wife at his home here, Hoe then committed suicide. Neighbors, seeing lights in the house and no one about, called the police. ‘The couple are did to have quar reled recently, ‘Three children survive. |\Say Douglas Fir Co. Has Great Monopoly SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 25, —~ ‘Charges that the Douglas Fir @ Ex- plottat: Co, has secured a monop- oly §5 per cent of the pine and fir output of the Pacific coast are being aired here at a hearing before the federal trade commission. It te Stimson Operated on Here Tuesday Operated upon Tuesday at the Se ttle General hospital by Dr. C. W. Sharples, C. D. Stimeon, Seattle capt Butterfiles live only about two/talist, wan reported to be resting HE critical s' of a woman’s a cae comfortably Wednesday, comes between the years of 45and 55, and is often beset with annnoying symptoms such as nervousness irrita- bility, melancholia, heat flashes which produce head- ache and dizziness, and a sense of suffocation. Guard ur health carefully, for if this period be passed over safely,many years of perfect health Se Re PRe 1 eM ee SaR TAT TRS Veg may be enjoyed. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable gy, “pee is especially adapted to help women through this crisis. t exercises a restorative in- fiuence, tones and strengthens the system, and assists nature in the long weeks and months coverin, this period. It is prepared from medicinal roots and herbs, and contains no harmful drugs or narcotics. Its value is proven by many such letters as these: De, Colo—!I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Cn and I can not tell you the good it has done me. It is good for young and old and I always keep a bottle of it in the house, for I am at that time of life when it calls for it. My husband saw your ad. in the papers and said, ‘You have taken otyhing you can think of, now I want you to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound!’ So I let him get it, and I soon felt better, ‘I took about six bottles.’ I keep house and do all my own work and work out by the day and feel fine now. I tell everyone about the Vegetable Compound, for #0 many of my friends thought I would not get well.”— Mrs. R, J. Lawton, 1850 West 33rd Ave., Denver, Colo. Mt lis, Il—"T have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it is all it claims to be ant ben benefited me wonderfully. 1 had been sick for eight months with a trouble which confined me to my bed and was only able to be up part of the time, when I was advised by a friend, Mra. ith, to try Lydia FE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Wiver Pills, I was so much benefited by the use of these medi- cines that I was able to be up and about in two weeks. I was at the Chango of Life when I began taking the medicines and I passed over that time without any trouble. Now I am hale and hearty and do all my housework.”—Mrs, Euma Curver, 705 E. 7th St., Metropolis, Ill. Letters like the above do influence women to try Lydia E. Pinkham’'s etable Compound LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO, LYNN, MASS, Governor Nathan L. Miller (above), Rep., and Alfred E. Smith (Dem.) NEW YORK, Oct. 26.—Advice from political wiseacres ts to watch New York state on election day. They have it figured out that the 1932 campaign will make or unmake an important presidential contender. The man is Governor Nathan L. Miller. His political fortunes make the state fight a subject of national Interest. If Miller wins ft ts argued that he will be the biggest political figure tn the country, next to President Hard- Ing. That is, among what may be called regular republicans, A m spectacular person of presidential will be Gifford Pinchot, ected governor of Pennayl- for his progressive history and his startling victory over the republican machine give him a halo Miller cannot get. Miller, however, 1s being talked adout more as the man who may get the republican presidential nomina- tlon, if he wine this year—and more important, {f Harding doesn't want ‘There ts no national tsrue In the New York campaign for the election of governor and United States sena- tor, Searcely any other kind of an ie, ether; lacking which, Gov- ernor Miller and his democratic op- portent, former Governor Alfred FE. Smith, are engaging in a dry, statis- tleal debate over which of them con- ducted the state government most economically. ‘The senatortal contenders are Wil- Mam M. Calder, republican senator nines 1917, and Dr, Royal & Cope-| land, democratic health commis- sioner of New York City. The two tickets are a queer mix- ture, in personalities and political complexion, Smith, Tammany high priest, known to everybody as “Al,” fs @ professional politician. So ts Senator Calder, Brooklyn republi- can leader. Miller ts the judge type, @ poor mixer, @ non-political cam- paigner. Copeland, tho a physician and a former professor in medical colleges, 1s a champlon publicist, who isn't @ politictan by training so much as he ts by instinct and absorption | (the latter in the rough and ready Hylan fchoo!). SMITH BORN IN THE EAST SIDE Sintth 4 the genial type, with a permanent smile that ts infectious, and a handshake equally as ready as his wit. He was born on New York's east aide and still lives there At 49 he has aldermen, and governor from 1919 to 1921. Ho ts now head of a trucking concern. Miller, who beat Smith for re-elec- tion, is 64 and lives in Syracuse, He has been school teacher, lawyer, cor- poration counsel for Cortland, state comptroller, justice of the supreme court, and associate justice of the court of appeals. Ho resigned the highest judicial office in the state to resume practice of the law, In 1920 he hit the national spotlight by booming Herbert Hoover for prest- dent, nominating him at the Chicago convention, He went back into poll- tice the same year and was elected governor. REPUBLICAN VICTORY EXPECTED Calder, 53, contractor and real estate man, was @ congressman from 1905 to 1915 and was elected senator in 1917, Copeland {8 a Michigan man, 64, one-time practicing physician in Bay City, mayor of Ann Arbor from 1901 to 1903, professor of ophthalmology at the University of Michigan, dean of the New York Homeopathic Medt- cal college, and New York City health commissioner since 1918, New York state normally is repub- lican and New York city democratic. Since 1894 there have been only three democrats out of 13 governors, elected in 1910, 1912 and 1918, Smith's strength is indicated by his victory in 1918 by 64,000 votes, altho two years earlier the state went republican by 234,000 for senator, 160,000 for governor and 110,000 for president, and in 1920 Smith led Cox by nearly two to one, losing to Miller by only 74,090, while Cox lost the state to Harding by 1,090,000, Republicags see victory November 7 chiefly on Miller's record, And they also think they will benefit by pre-convention strife among the derm- cerats, altho Copeland undoubtedly was nominated for senator as a sop to the Hearst-Hylan group when Tammany decreed Smith and not Hearst should run for governor, re been assemblyman, | sheriff, president of the board of} | directly on the Senator W. M. Calder (above), Rep., and Dr. R. S. Copeland (Dem.) publicans think William Randolph Hearst's affection for the democratic ticket has been pretty thoroly alienated. ; * Russians to Give Program Tonight A novel musical program is to be riven in the crypt of Trinity Parish church Wednesday at 8:00 p. m. Hilary Dronoff and his two daugh- ters, who five years ago fied from Petrograd, will be the performers. Mr. Dronoff was professor of music fn a Petrograd institution. U. S. Chamber Man Will Give Address Alvin E. Dodd, manager of the do- Mestio distribution department of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, will addreas the Sales Man- agers’ association of Beattlo at jin: ner at the Washington hotel at @:16 D. m. Wednesday, WHAT’S IN THE AIR PROGRAM FOR WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25 KFC—1115 a m.; 2 to 8 p. m.; 6:00 p. m.; 6:20 to 645 p. m.; 9:15. KDZE—1020 to 11 a m. and 2:30 to 4:90 p. m. daily and 7:15 to 816 Monday, Wednesday and Friday. KIR—#15 to 9:18 p, m. KZC—645 to 715 p. m. KGY—Sundays and Tuesdays, £20 to 9:30 p. m.; Fridays, $30 to From 24 Hens “Never Got So Many In My Life,” Says Mrs. Dean. ” yard, 19¢. Lingerie Crepe in flesh and white, and 86 inches wide; a fine quality crepe at, a yard, 39¢. Bleached Sheeting of a good weight, and 81 inches wide, Priced at, a yard, 53¢. Mercerized Damask, bleached, and 72 inches wide. A good quality for home and restaurant use. A yard, 69¢. Lunch Cloths of mercer- ized cotton, and 45x45 inches in size. Priced, each, at 98¢. The Corset for Stout Women shapeliness, and priced at §6.60 and $9.00 o pair. PAYS HEAVILY FOR FREEDOM Vindtented, Dut with his fortunes wrecked, George Guyette is back in Seattle. Guyette was arrested here Septem- ber 8 on a charge of murder in con- nection with the death of his friend, Joseph Brenning, in Minneapolis in “We spent over $800 in traveling and other expenses,” Mrs. Guyette complained bitterly, “and when the state found my husband innocent and did not even bring him to trial, we were given $50 and an expression of regret. I don't think it ts fair.” The Guyettes aro staying at 215 Kinnear ave. 30-10 Plan Subject “T started using Don Sung on | My 24 hens if ind ves lattag eels | 3 or 4 exe , koOn bey niaying 1 | to 20 eggs m day and have laid fine ever | since. I never got so many eggs before | in my life and I have, been a poultry for 26 years.”"——M Ka Coviville 0. Betacadie cds No guess-wor kept he ge oa ee. w and three 0 Bung and got over 150 dozen extra egg Ewplt “It doesn’t ps without Don Su You're lowing, money every day you “get along without it” hy not test it for your- this easy way: ¢ Don Sung to 16 | wh Then watch resulta | for 80 days. If it doesn’t | Show you a bg increase in eggs, if it | doean't pay for iteelf and pay you a | good rest | bests i us and your | |money wi be prompt! funder Don Sung (ent 44 “ beneficial in ev heaith: and ning. earlier. The whole jock Inge ¥ season, inany | weather, w eA are scarce and high, to Ignore the wonder. | bearing from Don re? Why not let results, with your is no trouble It conte nothing to try. All chance to prove our claims, Get Don § send 50 ce paid (largo 6 much) Bu Hh tis Columbia Bidg., ge by mail pre- olds three times ugger Company, Indianapolis, Ini Ex-Government Physician Warns Of peril attending the use of one set gland formule for all cases. There are several dozen combina- tions of gland formulas, ea a certain ailment, and if y the wrong one for your case, purself infinite harm, rv for you to call and see bo. examined free, and which one i# suitable | . Port of Health, 1327 | opposite the P. O—Ad- Cured Her Rheumatism from terrible experience for your Knowtn the suffering caused by rheumatism, Mrs. J. EK, Hurat, who lives at 608 5. ugias #t., C388, Bloomington, Ii,, © thankful at ‘having cured her= that out of pure gratitude # i" anxious to tell all other sufferers just how to get rid of their torture vn simple way at home. Mrs. Hurst has nothing to sell. Merely mail your own name and ad- dress, and she will gladly send you this valuable information entirely free, Write her at once, befgre you forget.—Advertisoment, | Municipal league. of League Debate A debate on the proposed 0-10 plan for distribution of school funds occupied Tuesday's meeting of the The educational committees of the league brought in a majority report opposing the plan, while the minority repprt favored It. Their styles are artistically set ‘forth with beads and braid trimming. Colors are navy, brown and black, in sizes 16 to 44. values at $29.50 each. Attractive *THETRHODES CO. For the Baby’s Wardrobe Infante’ Dept—Upper Main Fi Infants’ Double Blankets. . sesceee- 81.25 to $3. Infants’ Single Crib Blankets... T5¢ to Knit Leggings, a pair... Knit Sacques, special Baby Buntings... ; Wool Bootees......++++ Infants’ Silk Quilts, special White Corduroy Coats, size Choice at o...+seeeeees 6 Sveltline ot g ° Dismissal of Capt. * Sullivan Is Upheld Dismissal of former Police Capt. Charles Sullivan for alleged irregu- larities tn handling police money, ts upheld tn a 4ecision announced by the civil service commisison. Charges were brought against Sullivan as result of a report by the state exam- iners. neh’ Stylish Stout .. 95¢ to $1.95 . $3.50, $4.95, -35¢, 50¢, 65¢ 6 mo., 1 and 2 years— ... $2.50, $2.95, $3.50 D trati Daily by Miss M.J. Cran- Conductor Is Paid $15,000 for Hand Oliver 8. Brown, former freight |conductor, has been awarded $15,000 |@amages against the Chicago, Mil- waukee & St. Paul railroad by a jury in Superior Judge Mitchell Gilllam’s — court, Brown was thrown under a train at the Black River yards Janu- ary 3, 1921, by a dragging brake beam, losing one hand. ‘The nicest cathartic-laxative in the world to physic your liver and bowels when you have Dizzy Headache, |Colds, Billousness, Indigestion, or Upset, Acid Stomach is candy-like “Cascarets.” One or two tonight will CASCARETS 10 For Constipated Bowels, Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, Bilious Liver empty your bowels completely by morning, and you will feel splendid. “They work while you sleep.” Cas- carets never stir you up or gripe like Salts, Pills, Calomel, or Oil, and they cost only ten cents a box. Children love Cascarets, too.—Advertisement. | Store Hours 8:30 A. M. to 6:00 P. M. TRANSPARENT GLASS OVENWARE CAKE PLATES Special for Thursday at 29c Bake your cakes the better and easier way and serve in the same dish in which it is prepared, CUSTARD CUPS Special at 10¢ each. ENUE O-CEDAR POLISH MOPS Special at 79c $1.00 UNION STR regular This handy size Mop is treated with O’Cedar Polish and made in the can easily get into the corners, 1-QUART 0-CEDAR POLISH, regular $1.25, special at 79¢. 6-INCH POLISHED STOVE PIPE Only 500 to sell at this low price. Some bargain—polished pipe for the price of common stove pipe. WEAR-EVER 2-QUART ALUMINUM PUDDING PANS Special at 49c Better hurry! They are going fast. 1 | | | | triangular shape, so you | special at” 256 LENGTH ELECTRIC SOCKET Specially Priced for Thursday at 49c Make one socket do the work of TWO. -Indispensable in every home for attaching electric irons, percolators or