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TUE Home of the 3 DAYS MORE and then GONE! This is his FAREWELL Picture— RODOLPH | “THE YOUNG RAJAH” —with— Wanda Hawley Robert Ober Charles Ogle Maud Wayne memories. —— PRICE: MATINEES— Baleony ‘ Lower floor SDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1922. Big Successes In Paramount's Bertram Grassby Valentine wishes to leave everyone with the fondest AND THIS LOVE ROMANCE DOES IT! Coming—“Brothers Under the Skin” TONIGHT, WEDRESDAY, THURSDAY, AND YOU? Surely are not going to miss— Paramount’s masterpiece— “WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER” A more-talked-about picture has not yet been made! Performances Daily at 11, 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 . 55¢ Children—Any time, 25¢. Augmented Orchestra, Under Wineland Saturday—William de Mille’s “Clarence’—with 3 Stars! | Tonight Only— MILTON SILLS in “The Forgotten Law” STARTING WEDNESDAY FOR 3 DAYS ONLY That widely-read Saturday Evening Post Story— First National’s— “WHITE | | | SHOULDERS” with a most astonishing cast— BRYANT WASHBURN, TOM FORMAN NIGEL BARRIE LILLIAN LAWRENCE, RICHARD HEADRICK, KATHERINE MacDONALD, CHARLES FRENCH and LINCOLN STEDMAN The drama of the price that is paid when a mother markets her daughter’s beauty. Coliseum Concert Orchestra FRIDAY—THEN GONE! | For your convenience # limited number of first bal cony and loge seats may be reserved at the box office for each first even ing performance, at $1.10. No telephone orders. AFTER 6 P, M— Upper balcony. ..65¢ Lower Floor.,...76¢ (All prices include tax) 75¢ Playing the “Raymond” Overture | win J. Dingle, of the Dingle Far Rant | | | tHE SEATT Denies He Tries to Learn Ship Secrets Speaking tn p t of charges his firm tao} purpose of ler that rating for the ning the crets” of Pacific coast shipping, Bd deel wanization ts oration, ared Mon merely Boonomio ¢ day that th in the business of private entery Engle is in Seattle with « to a branch office for the cor view opening poration here, Shipping men of fan Franctaco, where the Ding! first opened reas EYES IMPROVED Natural mo- Defy detection. tion. Not easily broken. irritation, Fitted at your home for less than half the old-time price, No trip to} the City or Optician, Can fit any | one #0 perfectly that no one need know you ever bought or wear an Artificial Bye. As different to the old style am daylight and darkness DENVER OPTIC CO. S882 Barclay Bik. Denver, Colo, DR. LOUGHNEY’S | And Prescribed Diet Completely Eliminated My Asthma, duced My High Blood Pressure Over 100 Minimums, and, too, My Constipation Is Gone With the Rest of the Dis-cases, My blood prea- Ing Dr. Loughney thie letter of it he may wet ti her aimilar Dr. Loughney’s Latest FREE Book just off the press, entitled “RHEUMATISM AND KINDRED DISEABES; CAUSE AND TREATMENT” Send in your name and ‘address, writ ten piainty, and watch for your book by return mail, NOTE—Dr. Lougtiney’s eke Oven ent offices are located at the cor- ner of Fifth and Un in the Crary Hailding, Rooms 910-811-912-919-914, Dr, Loughney ts assisted hy competent y nurses, Hours, @ a, m, to @ p. m Sunday, 9 to 12 only, Telephone Main | e242. disorders are the that preva’ d by patient tem. organs may need at- kidneys should down condition, Dr, Kilmer’s Swamp. kidney, liver and bladder medicine, because as soon as your kidneys be- o improve, they will help all the er organs to henith, A Trial Will ‘Thousands and thousands of peo avines Any ple everywhere have testified that] Swamp-Root 1s what you need, you | the mild and immediate effect of|can purchase the regular medium Swamp-Root is soon realized, and|and large size bottles at all drug stores, |that it stands the highest for its re SPECIAL NOTE—You may y enclosing ten cents to Dr obtain Kilm | gives you the opportunity to prove the |They will also send you a book of valuable information, containing many | of the thousands of grateful letters say they found Swamp-Root to be and bladder troubles, The value known that our ant mention this paper,--Ady ei Usement, readers are advised to # | Address Dr, Kilmer & Co,, Binghamton, N. ¥, When writing be sure and LE STAR ‘No Quitter Wanted on | inside ne. | “And No Japs!” Adds ap! Men Now Ther By Ralph J. Benjamin BLUFFS, WHITE Deo, 5. cer of the Coast offices, he 4 vigor: | oar ghd ec ously to federal officials because of | - “ ; | for veterans at White Bluffs the the firm's foreign connections, Hanford according to news dispatches from ao bopgetomer f The American Legion post, , e a which is of the few 100 per BREMERTON.—George W. Gow aa tn the county, es land, 66, manager of Barton & Co. aarecnsped “ | interests in Bremerton, dies here aft All Japs keep out er short tilnens. Quitters and Jap» ure not wanted —~———tlin the Priest Rapids valley, The state won't accept quitters or let them get on the soldier-sallor farm tracts if It can help tt he legion have determined to keep the > Japs in ly « Jap men and there are Occasic Japs out, |the valley now | drives in and looks the land | but the legion men spot him, and let }him know, without wasting words, | that he tan’t wanted, And he goes conservation over, The department of jement the reclamation and set ro | gram tn the Priest Rapids valley, ts |trying to beat the old, old adage | to develop the land; that it is always the third settler on the land who makes good that old system ts to select the sol |diers and sailors and marines very carefully, and then help them over the rough spots, them, keep them at work, and make them ence age ban Fe ie te tenia |Know that the state t# interested in } oppostte rite for booklet | hair 4 |their progress. To date the project owe Fhe gad par gg Help others. | vanager, J. C. Scott, has had only ive 0 rn te bo C0 WOAFET. | our applicants for tracts who backed He 8, 80 aver 1 gy person, ) cut when the going became rough, oo 120: gegen and these men were not farmers in any sense of the word; they were ail right, but they didn’t ft in. “It would be wonderful if we could take men on with smaller down pay ments and then loan them money as it,” says Project Man “But the law forces us ager Scott to ask for the payments we require, |and the state constitution won't per. | mit us to loan the money. “The boys we are oting now are given to understand that after we have gone the full limit t is up to them to get in and work, work, work. No farming i# easy, but tf the men put their hdarts into it at the end of 10 years they will have homes and good incomes and con. tentment that only goes with « | good farm. “The veteran who comes in should have at least $1,000. That seems like @ lot of money, but ft te neces sary. There is work to be had, but unless the man has more than the ordinary amount of sand, he will need at least the $1,000, He must buy cows and chickens and horses. And he muat live, “The young man who has $1,000 and who hands over $600 of It for a first payment on one of these tracta, and then pays out the rest of his savings to tide himself over until his land starts bringing bim « return, is Tore apt to be a worker and a thinker and a success than the fellow who comes in with noth- ing and risks nothing. We not want failures, wo want suo ceases. This is only a very small project, but if it is successful it will pave the way to larger land settlement work.” Here are the men actually work- ing their tracte under the land set- | tlement scheme: Dale M. Atwood, Everson; James Coffman, Haas; William Wing, Albert F.. Moede, White Bluffs; Shaun Kelly, Spokane; W | Morford, Olympia; Ira 8, Jones, Nes- Roy C. Robinson, Walla Edward Ponsat, Walla Walla; m: Virgil! O. Kern, Tacoma; Oris W. Brown, Moscow, Idaho; Bilan F. Murray, Sedro-Woolley; Albert L. Brockway, Seattle; Guy W. Phare, Dryad; James FE. Shull, Monitor; Eimer C. Yoder, Hanford; Patrick Healey, Black Diamond; Chas. F. Wooten, Butte, Mont; F. D. B. BL art, Winthrop Here are the men who have ne lected tracts but have not yet moved on: Frank A. Damon, Prosser; Horace E. Boas, Alder; Walter Phare, Eliens burg; George E. Morton, Bothell; Walter Elliott, Roslyn; Arne Hole, Everett. These men, after making their first payments, have aix months to get on thelr land to | start work. Some of them have be gun work and all will be cultivating their farms by epring. | Virgin Kern, former Tacoma boy, fot on his land Inst April. He was one of the first. He has about half | of it under cultivation now. He |raised a good-sized crop of corn !some vegetables. tin of and got two out oa | “This looks Iike a mighty good bet | to me," said Kern, “and I am going to have a lot of stuff in next year. | (I havent’ any kick coming.”" THOUSANDS HAVE KIDNEY TROUBLE AND DON'T KNOW IT results in distressing canes, Symptoms of Kidney Trouble Swamp-Root is not recommended for ything but if you suffer from annoying bladder troubles, fre quently passing water night and day, smarting or irritation in pass ing, brick-dust or sediment, head ache, backache, lame back, heart disturbance due ble, uric acid rheumatiam, lumbago, loss of flesh or sallow complexion, kidney trouble im {ts worst form may be stealing upon you. Swamp Root Is Pleasant to Take If you are already a sample size bottle of Swamp-Root & Co, Binghamton, N. Y markable merit of this medic ‘ from men and women who just the remedy needed in Kidney, liver 1 suc “8 of Swamp-Root are so well nd for a sample size bettle, and development, that ts carrying out | The only way to beat) alfalfa from about five} to bad kidney trou- | convinced that | This! | State Settlement Land the American Legion; e Making Good a a || COTTON AND TOBACCO ARE GROWN IN VALLEY WHITE BLUE Dec Columbia, avout 10 miles north of here, has proved it, Last yenr he grew several ~ of cotton and some high grade tobacco Dumert has seven acres under cultivation. But he raises enough feed for 23 cows, two horses and a big flock of chick ens and some hogs. Incidentally he raises ali kinds of choice fruit which he sells at far prices. And, he grows chestnuts, f berts, all kinds of garden truck and tons of high-grade Buropean grapes, and takes two crops of potatoes off part of his land every year, This te a true story Kern's mother lives at 727 Tacoma ave. | Albert In Brockway, | hasn't hig house and yet, but he ts living in bt of Beattie, barn erected chicken NO) that it takes three crops of settlers | house, and expects to have the rest of bin buildings erected this winter | He has about halt of his land broken | up and part of it in rye. “I'm getting | jalong all right,” he says | Guy W. Phare, of Dryad, stopped hin team and rested up long enough |to declare that he thinks the proj ect @ wonderful thing. Manager Scott Phare i going to eats chad, tan. H | Shaun Kelly, of Spokane, got on | his land early and had a fine crop of | watermelons this year, He also has |= big alfalfa field and a big start for declares next year Patrick Healey, of Black Diamond, | fo just completing the leveling of | half of his land and will tackle the He, too, | reat of the sagebrush soon thusastic for the project | | Roy C. Robinson, of Walia Walla, | declares that he is going to show the | other fellows how to make a lot of | money on early pbage next year | Ho ts an expertenced farmer and a big help to the other fellows. NEW YORK—Thirty Y. M. C. al | Volunteers blow breath into lungs of | Simon Schum, victim of broken neck | | and paralyzed back | | Schum now has chance of recovery, say physicians. IF NIONEYS AND BLADDER BOTHER Kidney and Bladder trritations often rewult from uric acid, says a| noted authority. The kidneys filter | this acid from the blood and pass tt on to the bladder, where tt often re. maine to irritate and tnflame, caus ing 4 burning, scalding sensation, or! setting up an irritation at the neck | of the bladder, obliging you to seek |Teliet two or three times during the | |night. The sufferer is in constant | read, the water passes sometimes | with @ ponlding sensation and ts) very profues; again, there ts diffi. culty in voiding it. it, bees tion. ing and sometimes very painful, | this ts often one of the most simple! allments to overcome. Get about! four ounces of Jad Salts from your ase they can’t control urina- ; i Biadder weakness, most folks call |}! While it ts extremely annoy-| | | pharmacist and take a tablespoon. |}| in @ glass of water before break. | ‘ast, continue this for two or three days. This will neutralize the acids in the urine so it source of irritation to the bladder | and urinary organs which then act | normal again. | Jad Salts te inexpensive, harmless, | |and is made from the acid of grapes Jand lemon juice, combined with lithia, and Is used by thousands of folks ho are subject to urinary Ginorders caused by uric acid irrita tion. Jad Salts is splendid for kid. |neys and causes no bad effects whatever, Here you have a plensant, effer. lvescent lithia-water drink, which ful quickly relieves bladder trouble.—Ad. vertisement. Prize Mask At De mey's New Academy Friday Eve Dec, 8. Cash Prizes Beauty Contest Wednesday evening, Dec. 6, five |} cash prizes for most beautiful |] ladies. Don't miss these parties. |] BIG DAN( ery Saturday eve. || CHARITY BALL’ every Sunday eve. AMERICA'S FID ACAD- || BMY. Rest music, largest. and |] moat’ select attendance. Admia- | Jes 20c, gentlemen tiful place for re- fined dance | DANCING TAUGHT |] Boginnors’ classon start 7 |] evening, 6:46 sharp. — Inte Clans Thursday evening, De |] 6:45 sharp, Advanced | ¢! ery Monday evening, 8:80 to 11:80 (or haatra music). Plenty of practice ) embarrassment. The soclal feature th double the price, Spe- © all securing tokets be: T will sell a full torm of ns in our M $6.00, in * for $6.00. Consider: of this school, the | 0. It y earn dancing and aire @ firat-clans #chool |] Deo. 7, Tickets are good until used Classes are conducted by Mr, De Honey himself and a number of assistants, All popular dances, new and fancy steps, are taught. Private lessons alt earn from 4 ability emiea no longer ts aj]! THE CROTE-RANKIN CO | O7T0 F KEGEL, President Mahogany-Finished Spinet Desks 75 195 @ HERE is something so personal in giving a Spinet Desk — yet nothing could be more prac jf” tical. The Desk illustrated is finished in brown mahogany and is a Christmas gift that will hold a lifetime of constant remembrance. Twenty ape on sale tomorrow specially priced, each, $19.75. Furniture Gift Section, Balcony The Art Needlework Section Features’ A Gross of NIGHTGOWNS At 79c Each Ladies’ Stamped Night Gowns for embroider ing, made of fine long cloth and attractively priced for gift giving, each 79¢. ; 360 Stamped Towels at 25c Each If you have planned to give some one an embroid-: ered towel for Christmas then here is your opport nity to economize—‘Dry Well” Towels, size 19x inches, with hemstitched ends, priced, each, 25¢. College Girls’ Gown and Chemise Of unusually fine quality in new and different st} and designs. You can embroider the simple desig stamped on the finished gowns in a very short time— | two hours’ work will finish one—and make a er, a TH Christmas gift. On sale tomorrow, ch | Buy Your Toys, Dolls and Games .- At The Grote-Rankin Co. The Toy Section is con- veniently located on the first floor, right inside the Main Entrance—and here you can shop leisurely and comfort- ably. No stairs to climb or elevators to wait for. Don’t Experiment with — your Baby’s Food ORDEN'S Eagle Brand Milk Bagle Brand is not a B isthestandardinfantfood. pared’* food et all. It te thas been used for .er- pure country milk ations. Countless mothers have found that it builds strong, robust, healthy chil- dren. Physicians recommend it in stubborn feeding cases— for Eagle Brand is easily di- gested and supplies complete nourishment, with pure sugar. It can be pur- chased wherever you are. THE BORDEN COMPANY Borden Building New York, Keapersted en's Confectioners. STAR WANT ADS" GET RESULTS