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MEMBER AMERICAN HOMES BUREAU: FOR BETTER AMEKICAN HOME SSeEe FRIDAY-SATURDAY SPECIALS— —no ©, 0. D. or phone orders; one to a purchaser—these specials, except tron- ing board or rug, will not be delivered; can be easily taken by purchaser, a holiday | |folding ivonin SULTANA and suggestion: —— D'ANA cloth: gift pillowslips— reduced-— 3 — PR. elaborately embrotd ered white pillows! ips. Chol of oped edges or heme’ medium eine, fold- hems Size 36x45 ing lroning board ae i very aturdily bu! ° fe box," Regular price $3 Regular 6. octal Mriday-Sature Se mae ya MAIN FLOOR coed! tn box. Special day-Saturday, 83— pr. ZLANINE FLOO! epectal Priday-Sat variety of English rock leasing green and Kemet 69C —twisted reed grass on fiber warp. Your chotoe of sev eral color combinations, Special . 87.50. SECOND FLOOR designe. Regular $i— and 1-25 values. Special Friday- Saturday practical character dolls— _dolia Greased in costumes of soldiers, eall- ors and Red Cross nurses. Height 25 Regular price $1.40, spe- c 7 70¢ cial Friday - Saturday each. TOY DEPT.: DOWNSTAIRS FLOOR sonal poses jay-Saturday ... inne MAIN FLOOR cee? IVORCED OCT. Educational Week DENVER, Cola-—Dtvoreed Octo- 13, WED AGAIN| Program in Making Speeches tn the downtown district ber 13 at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, W-|and im the high schools are planned B. Phillips and Bertha R. Philips) as part of the Educational week pro- decided to make up and were mar-)¢ram being prepared by representa ried here yesterday. Tho the membership of the G. A. R. has been sadly reduced by death, the latest figures show there are still 92,171 of these veterans tn the United States. Itching PILES PAZO OINTMENT instantly Re- lieves ITCHING PILES and you can get restful sleep after the first application. All druggists are suthorized to refund money if PAZO O{NT- MENT fails to Cure any case of BLEEDING ITCHING, BLIND, or PROTRUDING PILES. Cures worst cases in 14 days. 60c. Boat Schedules: =—SAVE MONEY = TACOMA omMrO RT DAILY 7,0, 11 A. M., 1, 3, 5,7, 9 P.M Son sinein ree ordinary cases in 6 days, the |! tives of 40 Seattle organizations. Prominent educators will be obtain. 4 for the period, from December to 9, according to present plans. RISKY EVEN TO THINK ABOUT WALLA WALLA, Wash.—“Who's head of your house?” the court askea W. H. Bramiet, on trial for not sending his children to school. “My wife,” answered Bramiet “What would happen if I sentenced her to 15 days in jail?” “I wouldn't know until sho got home,” answered Bramiet. Simple Way to Take Off Fat ‘There can be nothing simpler than taking a convenient little fablet four times each day until your weight ts reduced to normal. That's all—-just purchase « case of Marmola Prescrip- | tion Tablets from your druggist for | one doliar, the same price the world over. Follow directions—no starva- tion dieting or th exercising Bat substantial food—be as lazy a® you like and keep on getting sli mer. And the best part of Marmo Prescription Tablets is they ar your absolute safe- them from your 4 direct to Marmola Detroit, action THE SEATTLE | Mounted on the back of Jen lson, the “pig-woman” of New nie, her mule, Mra. Jane Gib- Brunswick, saw the man and | woman who murdered Rev. Hall and Mra. Mills. THINKS LITTLE MAN IS VICTIM |30-10 Measure Sure Would Bind, Says Chamber | That “tig money” will not be hit as hard by the 2010 school fund) equatization plan as some of the |nmailer Fastern Washington counties is the claim of A. A. Olea, director of the etvic and taxation department of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce. In a statement for The Star, netting forth his opinion of the measure and | how it would operate, Mr, Olea says: | “Those anxious to have the '30-10'/ mearure, Initiative No. 44, panned. make three claims for ft: That tt | wilt equalize inequalities tn our e@u-| cational mystem, that it will not Im | crease taxes, that it ls Opposed by) selfiah ‘moneyed’ people. “The Star ts right when It says the Dili te ‘so densely cloaked in legal verbiage that no one but a corpora tion lawyer would be able to digest it” But an unbiased, careful study of this measure will show! “That % will not equalize, The thirty-tefiere have wept copiously over Gistrict 60 in Okanogan county, the poor district, and contrasted it with No, 363 in Clallam county, the| rich district. The Washington Edu | cational association's own figures prove that under 30-10" the rich dis trict would be given more state) money to lavish on its eight chil | dren, while the poor district would/ not receive enough more lo maintain a decent school for @ full term. “Grant county, where the dry farmers have not had # crop for six years, is the poorest county in the state, agricuituriate say, Yakima te the second richest county in the United States. Yet, under “20-10," the érouth-stricken Grant county farm ers would have to pay $62,943 more into the state school fund than they | get out, while rich Yakima county | would take out $96,158 more than it} would put in. Pierce county (Ta coma), gets $160,000 more than it puts in, and this money has got to come from the smaller districts. “Ralph Swetman’s own figures, published in the April number of the Washington Educational Journal, prove that the chief beneficiaries under *30-10° are the populous, rich, heavy-\Qe districts. The first 20 largent {ties get $917,000 more out of °30-10° than they put in. From where will this bonus to the large cities and towns come, but from the poor rural districts? SHOWS WHAT COUNTIES ARE HIT “What counties are heaviest hit by the proposed annual increase of $3, 800,000 In the state school tax? Are they where the railroad terminals are? No. Are they where the light, power, telephone companies and the big timber interests have their largest holdings? No, The counties that must pay the big penalties under this bill are 14 hard-hit dry farming wheat counties of Eastern Washington. Only eight Western Washington counties are taxed for more than they will receive from the state fund. “The 14 farming counties will lose practically seven times as much as the eight Western Washington coun- ties. Is that ‘collecting where the wealth is’? “It is not the ‘big interests’ that are hurt by this bill, but the small farmers and the home owners. Let's FOR. ROUND TRIP v TORIA. BC fT ANGELES -STRAIT POINTS DAILY, 1200 Midnight Wees Kot Ge Through to Victoria on Saturday Night Trip) SAN JUAN ISLAND POINTS of Teeth Free From to ll a Seen “7 ON OST Just a gentle rub does the trick | AtanyDrugStore—Keepatube handy | Thos. Leeming & Co.,N. ¥., Amer. Agente BELLINGHAM - ANACORTES PORT TOWNSEND [AIL CONNECTIONS AND MILL PORTS HOOD CANAL POINTS TURSDAY, FRIDAY, 400 a.m, Freight Oniy Specml for 30 Days— Set of Teeth French Baume NEAH Bay & WAY PORTS tion of your teeth. sidered the best; $2 per tooth, CF In One Location for 21 Years J and PAINS 1420% Second Avenue 5.00 A real specialist in charge of our Plate Department. Radiographs — the only reliable method of knowing the exact condl- One X-ray free. Our treatment of pyorrhea is com BOSTON DENTAL CLINIC #00 who are the ‘selfish interests’ op- posing the ‘30-10." They are ‘Farm. ers’ union of Garfield county‘ (one of the countieg the 20-10ers claim needs their salvation), president of the Cowlitz county grange, the Farmers’ union of Asotin county, the granges of Lincoln, Adama, Whitman, Walla Wall, Columbia and other wheat- | growing counties, the state superin- tendent of public tnatruction, who sponsored the last incrense tn state ald because she thought it was need. | ed, and who now saya $10 more state ald per, census child is not needed; county superintendents of Franklin, Dougias, Lewis and other counties; all county assessors, the state tax investigation committee, headed by Nathan Eckstein, former chairman bf the Seattle school board; the Se- attie school board, the preaident of Whitman college, and many promi- nent parent-teacher organization of- ficlals, including such women as Mrs, Wm. B. Bebb, a founder and past president of the state organiza tion; Mrs. A. G. Greenstreet, presi dent of the Seattle units of the Par- ent-Teacher association; 4 great ma- | jority of the country papers, the pub- Me schoo! administrative code com- mission, and numerous elvic bodies, such as the Vote Information gue, and the Municipal league and imbers of commerce MONEY ‘T SUFFER “Will ‘big money’ be hardest hit under 30.10°T Again, no. Based on the present anunmned valuation, the additional $3,800,000 state tax pro: vided for by °30-10° will be collected from the following sources, approxi. mately In the amounts given: “Public service property, $485,000; Timber and cut-over lands, $450,090; farma, $900,000; homen, real property in cities and towna, $1,265,000; per. sonal property, §700,000. “If thin measure te dertened eape- cially to get the ‘big Interests,” tx tt good sense to tax the ordinary peo of the state $2,965,000 extra an- Hy, in order to get $925,000 out of ne public service corporations and timber owners? Why add $3,500,000 to our state school tax, when the highest authority In the state, Mra. Preston. says that only one-twelfth of that ~um ts needed to correct all inequa ? “Thery can be no Goutt but that the measure will increase taxes. Whea aid was Increased frown $10 to $20 per pupil, there was an in crease of $7,342,000 in schoo! taxes two years after its adoption. In 1919 the total school t under the 10-10" plan were $18,998,000, and tn 1921 the total school taxes the neo ond year under '20-10,' were $26,330,. 000. Every time state aid has been increased, @istrict levies have tn- Jcreased out of all proportion to the inorease In average dafly attendance. “From 189% to 1922, the average @ally attendance increased only 271 per cent, but state ald Increased 660 per cent and the total district levies increased 1,180 per cent.” Pioneer Woman’s Funeral Services PULLMAN, Wash, Nov, 2-~ Funeral arrangements for Mra. O. W. Christensen, whose body ts en j route for burial here Saturday, are being made here today. Mra. Chris tensen wan widely known thruout the Puget Sound district as a pioneer of 38 years’ residence in Washington. She is survived by her husband, O. W. Christensen, manager of the Clear Lake Lumber (Co.; & son, w. |W. Brock, of Bremerton, ‘and two | brothers living at Spokane and Oak. land, Cal. other Why Not Try The Newer Form Of Iron And Be Strong and Well and Have Nice Rosy Cheeks Instead of Boing Nor vous and Irritable ali the Time and Locking Se Haggard and Old?” “The doctor gave some to Susie Smith's mother and she was worse off than are and now she looks just fine.” | Trerecen be no healthy, beautiful rosy- cheeked women without iron. Good physicians have strongly emphasized the fact that doctors meld prescribe more of the newer form of tron—Nux- ated Iron—-for their nervous, run-down, weak, haygard-looking patients. When the iron goes from the blood of women the roses go from their cheeks, and strength and vitality from their bodies. This newer form of iron, like the iron in your blood and like the iron in certain green vegetables, is highly: tothousandswhowishquicklytoincrease ae Strength, power and t fs surprising how many tron “deRcency nd de absolutely fo anal change f ¥en can tel the plen their blood beautiful, healthy, roay- women, full of Ife, vitn und vitality, fet Noxated Iron from any drugaist absolute guarantee that it will do the you or your money back. Vor sale in this city by Bartell Drug Co., Owl Drug Co., Swift Drug Co. University Drug Co, @ O. Guy, and all other druggists, 'APPLE CROP IS | MOVING SLGWLY |Early Shipments Are Less | Than Half 1921 OLYMPIA Facing a slug: sith market this peavon, shipmentr of Northwestern apples to Eastern tates up to Get. 7 total onty 4,460) cars, or low than half of last wea- | son's early movernent, Most of this| lows tx attributed to the larger yield | in the Bast and the unsettled con ¢ ditions tn city markets, very and N Fine-Quality Mocha Gloves .... 63C Two-Button, Large Assortment of Colors, Including Grays, Tans, Blacks, Etc. All Sizes—5% to 742 This sale is going to stand out as SEAT- TLE’S GREATEST GLOVE SALE. Here is a real chance for Seattle women to Intowh, deputy f the bureau of statiat jon, In the secretary of | | ward to a limited mv y of apples | thwent for some time on r ehortage, which avier demand later | when the present shortage In relieved Car load ehtpments of apples in| the month of September, 1922, to’ | 2,095 year, grape shipments | 1 carloads last year to dropped from “ from 39 white potatos Cantaloupes } wm 69 « Rept. t Your: peaches increased” from te0|M1 buy gloves at less than cost. These gloves are cars lat year to 819 this year: water 30 cheap that every woman can afford to buy two or three pairs. Sales like these are mighty “Ideal Christmas Present Gloves are the ideal Christmas present for a woman. This sale presents an opportunity to buy three pairs for practically the same price you pay for one pair. Young men who wish to remember mother, sisters, sweetheart with presents that will be appreciated should attend this sale. Three pairs of fine gloves for less than the price of a box of candy. Sale Friday and Saturday Only! This sale will start tomorrow morning and will close Saturday night. In order that you may have a choice assortment to choose from PLEASE COME EARLY. WESTER MPORTING CO. Central Public Market—1422 First Avenue Between Pike and Union and mixed vegetables from & enrs to! 29eare, Crop forecasts for 1 sow | nailer production of corn, ontn, | a apples and hops than the 1921 yteld, | with larger crops produced this year In potatces and pon Way prices thi r range cond erably Meher the per ton on Sept m 1921, ¢ 7) per 15 being $14) tn Idaho, in Washington and $16) tn Oregon, as compared with %11 In! Idaho, $12 In Wastington and $10 tn |Oremon on the mame date Inxt year jClover hay shows about the same variation. Alfalfa hay on Sept. 15 / was priced at $9 In Idaho, 815 In Warhineton, $18 fn Oreeon and $11 in Californian, as compared with $6, | $4. $8 and $9. resnectively, tn the four states on Sept. 16 Inst year | | The Grand Falls of Labrador are} 2,000 feet high, as compared with Niagara's 164 feet HS HEAT STOPS PAIN | IN FEW MINUTES, Rhoumatiom, ftumbage, neuritis, backache, stiff neck, sore muncles, otraina, spraina, aching jotnte. When you are suffering eo you can hardly get around, just try Red Pepper Rub Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers, and when heat penetrates right down into pain and congestion relief comes at once. Just as foon as you apply Ted} Pepper Rub you feel the tingling heat. In three minutes the sore spot is warmed through and thrgpsh and the torture ts gone, : Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from red peppers, costs little at any drug store. Get a jar at once. Be ware to get the genuine, with the name Rowhes on every package.—Ad- vertinement. The best astronomers aay only about 7,000 stars can be seen with the naked eye, but some astrono-|his dictionary, containing approx!- mers estimated the number re-| mately 20,000 English words, recog- vealed by the telescope as high as/nizes only 12 as untraceable in 100,000,000, origin, Professor W. W. Skeat, in the re cently published fourth edition of Now $3.79 Massage through vibration is now an accepted method for the treatment of many bodily disor- ders and for the promotion of skin health and beauty. The $5.00 Star Vibrator, the leader of all home-use machines, is now being featured in The Owl Drug Stores at $3.79. It has three applicators and is guaran- teed for one year. Operates on alternating current. Ask any “Owl” salesperson for detailed information as to the Star Vibrator—its simplicity in operation and its wide usefulness. Just Arrived! Another shipment of the famous English beauty clay— Terra - derma - lax. “Owl” Price $1.00. FREE To all customers Friday and Saturday—A sample of the American Chicle Co's. high quality chewing gum FOUR FLAVORS Black Jack California Fruit Yucatan Beeman’s Mail Orders Filled in Order Received u First and Pike Third and Pike Elliott 6335 Westlake Pine and AMAA TA ey