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in a PAGE 8 ssity tm every e we are making 0 down on any h PHONOCRAPHS We are the firs State of Washingt Phonographs on the P: Tr m and have thi HOUSE OF PERSONAL 8 AND RECORDS biished Hrunswick De in the © largest assortment of Brunswick VICE TERMS CHEERFULLY ARRANGED 1216-18 Third Avenue Phone Main 3139 mogtaph and Kecords Davis Pianos Coeds Show How Three Gowns Are Made of Two How to make two dresses serve the needs of morning, afternoon, street and evening wear will be | demonstrated at the Women's league | fashion show at the University of ‘Washington in Meany hall, from 4 to 6 p. m. ‘What is known as the “three tn two” dress will be dispiayed. Coeds) ‘will be shown how to make an after- noon or street dress out of a morn ing frock and how, by the addition ef a sash or panel, they may have gomething appropriate for evening ‘wear. ‘Thirty coeds will model classroom costumes, afternoon frocks, evening and street garb. They will @isplay their own garments which the committee in charge of the fash- fon show considers the acme of good taste in feminine apparel. “We aim to show that the college girl can be appropriately gowned at all times, no matter how restricted her expenditure for clothing may be. Bhe need only be judicious in the gelection of her material and con- Servative tn style," Marguerite Mueller, chairman of the committee arranging the show, says. A fashion show is put on at the campus every fall and spring to ‘@timulate good taste In dress among college women. It is the theory of the Women’s league that girls ~ hcamatara tet REA Aa Girl Mail Carriers Prove Big Success MADRID, Nov, 16.—The employ- ment of girl mati carriers proved so successful during the postal strike that several hundred will be re- tained. Airplanes on Time in Spite of Storm PARIS, Nov. 1°.—Two London- Paris express airplanes flew safely above a terrific sandstorm on the French coast and reached here ex- actly on schedule. SEE THESE PRICES For a limited time only we offer new cord tires and tubes at a saving of from 40 to 50 per cent off list. These are high-grade standard tires and tubes, full oversize, and we invite your inspection. We guarantee satisfac- tion with every tire and tube we sell. - Non Skid. 30x31... if 8.50 13.00 13.50 15.40 16.10 16.80 20.00 21.00 22.00 23.00 24.00 25.00 26.00 27.00 32.50 Mail Orders Shipped C. 0. D. Subject to Inspection. TRIANGLE TIRE C0., Inc. 125-127 Eastlake Ave, Cor, Stewart and Eastlake Phone Elliott 2372 i DWWWNNNNNNNNNNES SSSSSSSSSRRRKRSS Friday, | can neither be cajoled nor brow. beaten Into sensible dress; that the only successful method ts to inspire her to imitate what is regarded as |appropriate dress by making it at-| tractive to her, | A tableau showing the evolution | tm the vagaries of feminine fashion since colonial times will be given. | The public ts invited to the show. Jack the Peeper Sigh Panic in England’ VANGE, England, Nov. 16.—This/| village has been terrified by a “Jack the Peeper” who peers thru th windows at night. Women « afraid to venture om the streets! after dark. OVE COOLS in COLD BATHTUB i into @ bathtub of cold water, Mra | Dalrymple testified In her suit for divorce. Fleet of Airplanes Lost the Trail GRIMSBY, England, Nov. 16—~ A feet of 16 aeroplanes which had Jost Its bearings halted above Grima by. The commander finally de scended, got his bearings and led the fleet away, “ AVIATION RUM” CYCLER’S GRIEF CHICAGO, Nov, 16.—Sam Bungo- mimi! was fined $1 for reckless riding on a bicycle. He told the judge he drank some “aviation whisky” and was unable to distinguish between a pavement and a sidewalk. Forges Check for 8,000,000,000; Mad VIENNA, Nov. 16—-What ts de. |clared to be the world’s greatest |forgery was committed here by | Friedrich Schulz, a shopkeeper, who presented a bogus check for 4,000,- | 000,000 crowns. Be was ineane, THE All New York society was present at “the wedding of Louise Morris, great-granddaughter of the late William H. Vande?- bilt, and Dudley Holbrook Miil was surrounded with all the ding. 2 of New York. The ceremony glamor of a Vanderbilt wed- Landes Tells How State Got Its Great Resources By Seaburn Brown How the enviable mineral, agricultural and Climatic re sources of present day Washing. ton were slowly created during the acons of time consumed in the geological history of this state, was graphically told by Dean Henry Landes of the science department of the Unt versity of Washington tn a leo ture before members of the En- gineery’ club, Fifth ave. and Seneea st, Wednesday evening. Ilustrating his remarks by re jopticon views, Dean Landes sketc sed the marked changes that have oo-/ curred since the earliest knowledge science has wrested from the records left tn the rocks. The coal mines of the Carbonado, Bellingham and other coal districts were formed prior to a period when Washington, particularly im the! southwest part, had a climate stm-/ Har to that of present day Southern California and Mexico. Palms and other semt-tropical CHICAGO, Nov, 16.—Love cooled | vegetation fourtshed In and around | ern mountains when her artist husband threw her| huge swamps. The combination of | slopes and the tremendous volume of decaying plant deposits and the brakish swamp water formed mate- rial which later, under the pressure of millions of tons of additional de- posits, hardened tnto coal, Why is the great platean of Eastern Washington covered with a deposit of fine earth? It at one time formed part of the Pacific ocean's bed! At one period—millions upon millions of years ago—a depression of land that Included the bed and mouth of the Columbia river, allowed the sea to invade far enongh to cover the Mat plateau. The rtv- ers emptying into the bay thus formed, carried in the earth that today covers the surface that was once bare rock. Excavation by the mammoth ice foes which covered a large part of the state during the glacial periods of prehistory, and erosion by the great rivers which formed from their termini, played @ part {n shaping the contour of Washington's surface, Deep gorges, which the passage of untold centuries have widened into broad valleys, still exist as monu- ments to the glacial age. Vastly more important changes however, came @hru the rising and sinking of land, particularly along the sen coast. One up heaval lifted the Cotumbla river bed and the astern Washington bleed easily Are You the Lucky One in Five? Not if your gums Wise are they that heed bleeding gums. They are fighting Pyorrhea, the sinister disease that attacks four persons out of every five past forty plateau above sea level; another lifted the Olympic mountains out of the seal Washington's coast has undergone unbelievable changes, there was no Puget Sound; that area Was @ great plane. Again, jeank until the present nea st waa under water and tho peaks of the| | Olympic mountains formed « low) group of trlands, The principal effect of the altitude variations is upon our climate of to- | | day, Dean Landes pointed out, We have an unusually variable rainfall In the Olympic mountaina, the wet| ocean winds, saturated, release suffi. | cient molsture to bring the anoual fall to about 160 Inches The sea const strip—betwren the | Olympic and Cascade mountains—re- celves the proper amount of rain to create an fdeal agricultural locality |The Cascade and Rocky mountains rob the drying ocean winds of so | much motsture that extreme Eastern Washington Is comparatively dry. Waterpower, tn abundance, ts a re~ sult o tthe heavy rains tn the weat- ‘The ateepnens of the \the mountain streams are ideal for | the production of practically unlim- | ted power FORD WORRIES MONEY POWERS They’re Afraid of Him In the Railroad Business WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—Finan- etal Amerten ts not only deeply in- tereated—tt is badly ncared—over the pronpecta of Henry Ford becoming a bower in the railroad world, “There's @ fortune in it for any man who is clever enough to con- vince Henry Ford that he should con- fine himself to making flivvers,” said & long-time lobbyist for Wall St, tn. teresta here, when reports reached Washington that Ford was in the market to buy the Wabash and Vir. sinian rallroads and hook them up in one big system with bis Detroit, Toledo & Ironton road. Wall St. has several representatives in Washington these days who make Mt their chief business to watch and analyze every business move Ford makes. If they know what they are talk. ing about, Ford ta not only after the Wabash and the Virginian roads, but his agents are also dickering for the purchase of contro! in the Minsourt, Kansas & Texas system, with ite 4,000 miles of main track, connecting such growing cities In the West and Southwest as St. Louis, Kansas City, Oklahoma City, Joplin, Dallas, San Antonto, Galveston and Houston One theory that Wall St. is holding to with strong hopes is that Ford is only bluffing about the rallroads. It will be recatied that only a few months ago it leaked out of New York that certain financial powers there unfriendly to Ford had decided to encourage other makers of low: Priced automobiles to give Ford the stiffest kind of competition. As 4 retaliatory move, it ts now pointed out that Ford would make things mighty uncomfortable for financiers generally by going into the railroad bustness on a large ecale. A financial statement on the De your gums firm and healthy. The formula of R. J. Forhan, D.D.S. Pleasant to the taste. At all druggists, 35¢ and 60c in tubes. road cloned the year 1921 with al deficit of only $530,556, as against a deficit of $2,184,835 in 1920. Mystery Surrounds New Trunk Murder SEATTL } [ A VANDERBILT WEDDING At one time, | © land) and thousands younger, too. troft, Tolrdo & Ironton railroad that ord filed with the interstate com- Forhan's For ,; Gums, if used merce commission here the other day i consistently and used in time, will cauned railroad executives generally » }o sit up and take notice. prevent Pyorrheaor check its prog- Ford showed that his road tn 1981 . Brush your teeth with it It 4i4 a gross business o} 463,669, as ess. 7 against $5,161,216 in while ex- will keep them white and clean and penses were only 17 in 19 aa against $6.5 6 In 1920. His STAK It creams yo For Every Milk Use For creaming baked ap- ples, Carnation may be bf just as it comes from tha can or it may be whipped, aweetened and flavorsd be- fore serving. If you haven't tried whipping Carnation it will be « delightful revela- tion that you may always have “whipping cream” on short aotice, Just place @ ean of Carnation Milk in water and heat to boiling. Remove promptly and chill thareaghlgs hen chilled, open con yi pour milk into bowl, placed in another bowl filled with cracked ice. Whip at once with ° °99 beater. You will find many Aelpful suggestions im the Carnation book of 100 tested recipes, Write me for free copy todey. P. &-—Be sure to attend the Pacific Northwest Fruit Eapovition—Leara the best epples fer cach season, Pure Milk “From Contented Cows” THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1922. ur baked apple —— economically T is now that the golden brown, sugary baked apple makes its strongest appeal. And, in this fortunate section of the country, where apples at their best are plentiful, every housewife should give her family fre- quent and ample helpings of this delicious fruit food. But, to make the dish even more delightful and its health-giving qualities even more pronounced, pour over it a liberal serving of rich, creamy Carnation. : Just try that combination today if you have nof already learned how good it is. Carnation’s double richness, its full, creamy flavor, combine with the flavor of the apple to make a perfect breakfast dish or dessert, Carnation is pure, safe, rich. It is just fresh, tested,”~ full cream milk, evaporated to remove part of the natural water. Then it ig hermetically sealed in cans and completely sterilized, Nothing is added. Order a supply from your grocer today, Insist on Carnation, - (© On OB a) " ————my lh OS Milk The Label ie Bed and White 5,000 SANDWICHES NIGHTLY | THEY MAKE 3 Maw 4 TONGUE Mrs. Hannah Smith and Mrs. BOMBAY, Nov, 16.—The finding BY JOSEPHINE VAN #RIFT | wald went into the sandwich busi-|restaurant keeper, started filling} “Four years ago our weekly Pay oy) of @ ‘woman's body in a trunk! NeW YORK, Nov. 16—Two wom-| nose four years ago. As she saw| them. | roll totalled $66. Now it amounts Fo rhar Ss shipped from Delhi has given the on 11 New York's dally lunch to $1,900. We have seven auto 1s police @ baffling mystery , the noon-hour hordes gulp down| Business boomed, and now Mrs.|tryces eng 7 : % | basket. their coffee in a hurry to finish | Schwarzwald’s sister, Mrs, Hannah | UUCK® 884 75 persons working MF FOR THE GUMS L le M Bach night they turn out 85,000) their’ luncheons in the restaurants, | Smith, helps her, Vore than a tooth paste egless Man Proves | sanawicnes which are gobbied up by| sho began. figuring how. large a| “To make our a6 000 sandwiches."| that thely Mitten sens serene Lucky in Accident. 2? ,1%ne thousands who grab | piece of ham she could insert be-| say the women, “wet + | that thelr kitchen is as “clean ae ® it cheeks Pyorrhea Y IN AccidenE syack to eat at tho soda fofntain or| tween two slices of bread and ntitt| other things, 4,500 pounds of breag [oer But there aime CAIRO, Il, Nov. 19,-~Harry drug store—Just to save time, And| make a margin of profit. Ga aiouias ce re Pounds of bread. | women in it making sundwiché Formole of &. J. Porkes, D.D. $. Frow, an ex-soMier who lost both) then spend the rest of their lunch| Sha went to several corner drug-|becf tenene deg ne pounas of | That part ts lert entirely to men. Forhaa Company, New York legs in the war, was thrown clear|hour window shopping or Killing| gists with her idea, They liked {t.| chees 800 foe bounds of Swiss) “Woman's . place," says of an automobile accident which| time, So who started taking ordore and | 110 nung onen okss, 185 chickens, | Schwarzwald, “is going after killed two companions, (Ali decauso Mrs, Nettle Schwars-|her husband, Julius Schwarzwald, a Oe of ae one lee 25 GAL +1600 LBS + 15 + 150 LBS +400 LBS Music Service for Old Hymn Write The second festival of its kind t be observed here in 85 y the Gymanfa Ganu, will be held next Sunday at the Welsh Presbyte } chureh, 10th ave, and E. John st. as} This is a music festival in hon Joro of the memory of Ieuan Gwyllt and | Tanymarian, two Welsh hymn com | @V¢F posers. Services will be in charge } ‘The! of the pastor, the Rev. J. Rhys, der, 3 Pursuit of Thief Winds Up in Bed CHICAGO, Nov, 16.—While purew ing a thief across housetops, Police man “Hank” Peters fell with the fe gitive thru a roof into a bed pied by Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Refuses to Preach to Coatless Crow: BOSTON, England, Noy, 16. cause some members of his coi gation insisted on sitting with coats, Rev. A. C. Cragg of St. an’s church declined to preach further, Baby Falls 40 Feet, — Seems to Enjoy It NEW YORK, Nov. 16.—The two year-old baby of Mrs, Charles Samp son fell 40 feet from an open Wilk dow to the lawn below, then sat and cooed delightedly. ee One +300 DOZ+135 : 119 ) LBS = $5000 swiss EGGS CHICKEN: CHEESE REN} SANDWICHES Nettie Schwarzwald and Their 35,000 Sandwiches gallons of mayonnaise, “And getting it”