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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1922. Member American Homes Bureau _GRUNBAUM BROS FURNITURE CO. INC. SIXTH AVE. Sctween PIKE ond PINE Grunbaum Building | Failure to post of $1,000, as he hi his attorney, EB. B ¥ TOYLAND Our Toy Department—now ready for the early shopper located in our Downstairs Store. Monday night of C. Tuesday tn the county charge of malicious | tsnued Saturday night, Percolators jto Ineonventence Weat, }to post bonds Monday At 6 p. m. Monday He was | Enumclaw apesch by C. © | candidate for U juty Sheritts Dill, Stewart | brought him to Seattle. Sheriff Starwich filed 26-plece 1847 Rogers Ambas sador Pattern in this Anniver: tary Chest $22.85 priced at very charged the A feature from our extensive stock. against Sheriff Starwich Tilustrated is a nickel 6-cup capacity Percolator fitted with the Edison Automatic Safety Switch and furnished with cord. 15.75 Priced at . charges Francisco Villa Roasters | Francisco Villa, one time hua, according to word agents. in battle. ecial for the week, Seamlena | Blue Stast seit. basting Roant- with ¢m% 15 inches long and 6% Inches deep. $1.39 ial wt Rochester Casseroles heavy nickeled frames and Pyrex inserts with dainty § etched decoration; an unusual = T assortment, grouped to sell for 9 00 ° only, each ........ commanded was routed ~ DOWNSTAIRS STORE lowers of former days. Bi ral, where he le schools a solution | of many Juvenile problems that now perplex the authorities, Margaret Stahl, dramatic reader of New York city, will render the automobile comedy, “Six Cylinder Love,” next Saturday night. DR. A. W. EVANS, the Welsh orator who opened the Y, M. C. A. lyceum course Monday night with his lecture on “Let There Be Light,” stressed the need of a bet- ter paid teaching force in the pub anyone. ~| Brandon st., Seattie hospital at Vancouver ¥ the result of over-stren RECOVERS FROM RHKUMATISW Had rheumatism five months that would go from my left knes to my Deck. | Tried many remedies | thout relief. Finally used Foley | i in fifteen days was right in that lunch basket luhill Green Chile Cheese near Tenino Monday lwith her 16-year-old son, |tempting to walk where dizsiness azptome of oe, relieve tee id bladder guicrly y and badder rein. mare Siered Fie wd bendesiee cording to the report. FORMER MAYOR | UNDER ARREST Auburn Man Fails to Give Bond in Sheriff Case ond in the sum promised thru Wheelock |aulted in the arrest at Enum B. West, |mer mayor of Auburn, who was held jail on @ prosecution brought by Sheriff Matt Starwich A warrant for West's arrest was Sheriff Star. wich, however, sald he did not want so notified |him by telephone, and West agreed further had been heard from West located in a theater listening to a political | democratic | 8, senator, by Dep-| Campbell, | George Bundy and Tom Smith, who against West after Weet last week sheriff with making false oath In connection with his naturalization proceedings. The case was dis miased by Justice Reynolds, of Kent, for lack of evidence to support the Is Reported Dying |" | GAN ANTONIO, Texas, Oct terror of northern Mexico, ts lying at death's door in a little house in the mining town of Parral, Chibua- here today by Mexican and federal He was reported wounded Villa tn said to have gone to Par |ral after a small band of men he | and com: | pletely whipped near his ranch at \Canutillo by a band of Murguistas 9 made up from among his own fol | He waa wounded in the fight and|dredweight to $9.2 his followers carried him to Par has remained con- fined to bis bed, refusing to seo Woman, Walking to California, Faints Mra. I. Williams, formerly of 3914 is now In the [Ww THE Fruit Fickle, Turn to Hothouse Lamb| By Jack Hall == YAKIMA, Oct. 81.—The acute car shortage and the $1 a box freight rate to the Atlantic coast have! caused apple growers here to do a great deal of serious thinking this| fall. | One result may be thé eventual) y|chopping down of some orchards in -}the lower Irrigated levels and the substitution of permanent pasturage. The orchard here are still feeling | the effects of the severe freeze of | threo years ago, when the thermom | eter went down to 86 degrees below | and stayed there for a period, some: | thing it was never known to do be-| fore in this valley, Some of tho! trees were split and others died. Hach spring since new damage has | dinclosed Itnelf. The harm was the greatest tn the lower ne Tt is now being urged y many rticultural and civic lead.) ers here that these lower levels be gradually converted from fruit sec tions to pasturage This would make ponsib! great development of the * house lamb” Industry, the Keting of high-priced from lambs born in January carefully raised for the fancy trade, It also would lead to further development of the cheese and butter business. “The high freight rates (and they are going to remain high) are giving us cause for a good deal of serious study,” one leading fruit grower told | The Star SEATTLE STAR Growers “If for some of our bulky tonnage we can substitute a production of butter and cheene an great or greater in money value, but vastly smaller in size and weight, it will jtoward solving our problem, “Put a shipment of butter and choose aboard a steamer at Seattle, and it Increases in value for ye it makes its way down the coast, |thru the eanal and to the Kastern | market, Think that over tn light of our present car troubles, the high rail rates on fruit and the future outlook for our orchards of the less |f) paying class, “The coddling moth pest, which left « large portion of our apples wormy thin for, in not a serious menace, because scientific spraying will wove It. The trouble this summer was that the bulk of the growers fol- lowed the usual schedule of 15 between spr only hot spell i gave the moths The gro a start, watehed the situation sprayed, not at the ac time, but Just at the moment it 92 pairs of white, steam and ecru Marqut Net Curtains; the Serims are round thread was needed, had little worm | settes with heavy men lace insertion and with lace edge—one with fine lace and the reat trouble. edges, Formerly $6.60 and §6.00, with Harmen lace edges. Colors are white, “Our orchardista are up against cream and ecru, YVormerly $1.75, $1.95 and one other new element, however, $2.00 @ pair, which must be reckoned upon. That is stiff competition from the Eastern growers, They are adopting Western go far) | ee RE Sa —— a A Continuation of Our Sale of Women’s Velling at 39¢a A Mid-Week Sale Curtains and Curtain Materials Curtains at $4.75 | 40 pairs of heavy round thread Sorima and a | fine quality of Voile; these have ail hematitch- ing with fine Ince edges, The Scrims have lace edge; others have wide, fine lace edge, | Cluny inserts with hand-drawn work, Colors Formerly $3.60 and $3.75, are white and ecru, Formerly $6.95 @ pair, | Assorted Curtains $1.35 \ Marquisettes and Filet Marquisette Curtains $2.75 14 pairs of cream and ecru Marquisettes; ecru curtains of heavy round thread with Barmen Marquisette Curtains $4.25 22 patra of Serims, Marquisette Curtains $1.95 Scrims 1234c Yd. thede OF pruding, wpraying, grad 36 pairs of white and ecru Curtains, hem- ing and marketing, With their stitched and with imitation Cluny lace edges 6500 yards, 36 inches wide and in a variety of proximity to the great consuming Formerly $2.26, $2.50 and $2.75, colored, figured patterns; also plain %6inch centers, that mekes them a formid Marquisettes in cream and ecru. Formerly 16¢ | @ yard, able factor for the future.” —————) Milk Advances to 13 Cents Nov. 1 Beattle retail milk price will ad vance to 13 cents a quart November day by Harold N. Moore, secretary of the Seattle Milk Dealers’ associa. | tion. The advance is made neces sary, according to the announcement, | |by reason of the wholesale increase brought about by « higher rate quoted by the Seattle Milk Shippers’ ansociation, which will increase tts] rate November 1 from $2.75 a hun-| The latter or |ganization te composed of producers, | ‘who nay the boost is the result of high feed prices. Police Arrest Two More Cafe Robbers Gordon and Frank night arrested KR, Moffitt, 21 on with the at Detectives ¥. Ducett Monday Gullen, 21, and 2 en, in conne tempted robbery of John Kahn, own Mexican Chile Parlor, 604 ‘ing and a collapse on the highway jer of the Mra. William to. Sacramento, | Lieut, W. #. 1 expects to make her|confeased to the erime home, She t# not seriously ill, aca terrific battle, Lester Colley, 19, was ar and, according to all three men Kahn, after routed the bandit trio and put them to flight. Union st rested previously Kent — tive Preferred Stock. more than seven per cent. erty and net earnings is HIGH CLASS. The Dividends ferred stock. can be paid on the common stock. erty to provide extensions to its service. cash put into the property. SEVENTH AND OLIVE An Investment That Fully Meets the Requirements This is Puget Sound Power & Light Company's Six Per Cent Cumula- At the market price of $85 it will yield the unusually high return of ANY INVESTMENT SECURITY must have back of it ample prop- erty or ample net earnings. A security that is protected by both prop- on the cumulative six per cent preferred stock outstanding of the Puget Sound Power & Light Company have been paid IN FULL since the organization of the Company. The net earnings of the Company, after paying all operating expenses, taxes and in- terest, are more than two and one-half times the dividend requirements of the pre- The property value of the Company is greatly in excess of its bonded debt, notes, prior preference stock and the cumulative preferred stock, including this issue. Dividends on the cumulative preferred stock must be paid in full before any dividend Preferred Stock Investment The money received by the Company from the sale of this stock is put into the prop- The preferred stock is preferred as to assets and dividends and {s preceded only by the bonds, a small amount of notes and prior preference stock, all of which represents | | |claring an emergency, 85 ROADS IN STRIKE PACTS | CHICAGO, Oct. 81.—Elghty-five of | 1, according to announcement Tues | the country’s 201 Class 1 rattroads | have settled the shopmen's strike, | Jaccording to figures compiled here yesterday, Fifty-eight of these rail roads reached agreements thru nego: jtlations thru the shop crafts organ-| | teation on the basis of the “Baltimore | agreement.” Twenty-seven formed reached. Tho mileage of Class 1 and other [| “Baltimore plan” | while the mileage of | rate | roads accepting the totaled 77,854, roads affected by company reached 92,166. The Santa Fe, Loutevilie & Nash-| Coast lines are the |f) mont recent roads to reach an agree: | ville and Atlantic ment thru company unions. |\To Commemorate C-2’s Long Flight A, Cal, commemorate the Oct. 31—To first Pacific coast, ax well as to pay a mark of respect to the ill-fated C2, burned at San Antonio, officers of Toss field, Arcadia, are preparing to mark the spot where the C-2 landed thera, A square of concrete Is to be net fn the ground on the exact landing place of the big craft. Inserted in this will be a brass piate, giving the date of landing, names of officers jand crew and such other data as will tell briefly the history of the event In } seroma ated herve 9 OREGON CUTS PHONE RATES PORTLAND, Ore, Oct. 31.—De- the public service commission, by a vote of 2 to 1, adapted an order Monday reducing telephone rates on party lines, Un-| TELEPHONE MAIN 5000 jice is mot affected, | Corey dinsented. | months, limited business and residence serv. Commissioner Tho new rates are to go Into effect | December 1 and continue for a few until the commission has | completed the present rehearing and | made permanent findings, which, s in extimated, will be within the next six months, DR. WO Chinese Doctor Nature Chinese Herbs BALLANTINE’S MALT syYRuP 45c Qt., 23 Lbs. Open Evenings Until 8 p. m. SEATTLE MALT & SUPPLY CO. 110 SENECA ST. dust Off Second Ave. Free delivery any patt of city ELLIOTT 4042 Agents Pabst Blue Ribbon Malt MIFFLIN ALKOHOL MASSANE Che talrnal tonic 95% Alcohol company | junions thru which a settiement was! transcon. | tinental flight of a dirigtble to the} | Marquisette Curtains 98c i | 22 pairs, plain hemstitched; also hemetitched | Serims with lace edge, in ecru only, Formerly $1.35 and $1.50 a pair. Silkoline 23c Yd. 400 yards, of a quality suitable for comforta, Formerly selling at 300 a yard. Cretonnes 18c Yd. %64nch Cretonnes in a wide assortment of patterns and colors. Excellent for comfort cov- erings. Formerly 250 a jard, Madras 39c Yd. 600 yards, of 36¢inch Ma@ras with cream grounds and colored figures, Splendid for bed- room curtains. Formerly 65¢ a yard. iT Cretonnes 35c Yd. 400 yards, 36 inches wide and in floral and conventional designs, Color combinations are attractive. Formerly 600 a yard, Couch Covers $6.75 5 of them, of a heavy weight and in pleasing colors. Formerly $9.00 each, Men’s Globe Union Suits—' Off In Junior Sizes—34 and 36 Only The Union Suit with genuine trouser seat and flat lock seams. Priced special, a suit, at $2.25, $3.00, $3.37, $3.75 and $4.50. Superintendent ot Public Utilities 12 ARE SAVED George F. Russell. “It is expected | that the change will be haif complet- FROM FLAMES jig tat ante” Ramen sa sons. ‘When the heavier cars are entire- CHICAGO, Soe ee eee pee ty'ronl ae ogg > toda ware reneuet Soe | total saving will amount to at least story apartment building here to-| $742,000, day by jumping from the top win- 000, Russell said. dows into life nets. More than 100 persons were made homeless by the blaze. iE Drivers of taxicabs went from| door to door waking up the sleep: | BF ing occupants and warning them | of the fire. | ¢ TEETH EXTRACTION | FREE DAILY OHIO PAINLES two or more teeth, Natural Rubber, eet of teeth Street Car Expense Is Being Cut Down Approximately $400,000 will be} clipped from the overhead of the mu- nicipal street railway by March 1, 1923, thru the substituting of one- man cars for the heavier, two-man vehicles now in use, according to WHAT'S IN THE AIR PROGRAM FOR TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 KFC—11:15 a. m.; 2 to 3 p. m; Most of Ne gh geen resent bey recommended y our ear! ers, whose work is ‘ouitt | Sooa aatisfaction. All work guaranteed for 18 Examination free OHIO 5:30 p. m; 6 p. mj; 6:15 p. m; 6:20 p. m.; 9:15; 9:25 p. m. KDZE-—10:30 to 11 a, m. and 2:30 to 4:30 p, m. daily, and 7:15 to 8:15 Monday, Wednesday and KC Sundays and Tuesdays, 8:30 to 9:30 p. m.; Fridays, 8:30 to 945 p. m. Established 20 Years 2nd Ave. and University 8t. Open 8 te 6 Dally—# te 12 100 COIN-GOLD CHINA 41-PIECE DINNER SETS Specially priced at An excellent value at this low price—beautiful Imported White. China, with Coin-Gold decoration; regularly sells at $25.00. Set consists of— 6 Dinner Plates 6 Fruits 1 Sugar 6 Bread and Butters 6 Teas 1 Creamer 6 Soups 6 Saucers 1 Laker 1 Platter 20-INCH AIR-TIGHT HEATERS : Very low priced at $1.98 Well made, with extra lin- ing and a good draft; regular price $3.00. 6-Piece Enameled KITCHEN SET regular $3.50; special at $2.49 Finished in white enamel with gold letters—Containers for Coffee, Tea, Sugar, Flour, Cake, and large Bread Box. Special for Wednesday at $2.49. (8QeB6S0.) Friday. CUT RATE - KIR—B8:16 to 9:15 p. m. acta ete eS DENTISTS a