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4 PAGE 4 WILL BUY will every room values that ed for Now is the ideal time ¢ Furniture are offe PLAN Open An Account at the National its Easy to Pay — the National Way _/ ’ A WEEK will buy $50 | L. 004 worth of Furniture ’ A WEEK, will buy $75 L504 worth of Furniture | iP 2.01) A WEEK wi bey 5300 | | & 2.00 4 Wen a fous | | 3 WEEX wit | one | | +3, 5() A WEEK will buy $250 | Bee Sew worth of Furniture Convenient Side Icer cessary bh rs as This ne ‘ We Charge No Interest- “$29.75 Four-Piece Bed Room Set Chifforette Tated—a be American Wa prited at .. "Statements Letterheads Billheads 215 Spring St. Phone Elliott 0064 DR SUSSMAN Room 415, Peoples Bank Bidg. HE can in which Borden’s Evaporated Milk reaches you is a means of safeguarding the milk. There has been a lot of preju- _ dice on this subject. b The best milk that is produced goes into that can. It is abso- lutely pure when put into the can. Then the can is sealed and "both can and milk sterilized. What could be safer than that ? No germs or dirt can get into a sealed can. No bacteria action _ can take place in an air-tight, | sterilized ‘can. | Infact, the can isyour protection. | THE BORDEN COMPANY Borden Building New York National Ei eentd es: A18-424. PIKE STREET, CORNER F/FTH of Bargains NATIONAL EASY CREDIT TERMS ' when y Bt +, BASY CREDIT mplete » ¢ furnishing « isa Piece Overstuffed Outfit "$197.50 Baby Carriage ee ay res ~~ Swe | Steps From Stage ‘Willlam Leonard, Day” when a stranger the shoulder. oped, was a detective who Leonard for stealing the jewe lady of the compa i at the theate: Seve Iso cha $28.75 5 | Into Arms of Law SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, May 24 hsm Many things that, perhaps, we lack today,” violinist of ri | theater orchestra, had just stepped | | into the wings after two encores for his playing of “The End of vee Saas sunshine and rushing winds of that favored region. apped him on The Seinen it devel wanted s of the | carvings, testify. then THE SEATTLI TAR T ‘HEN AND NOW The ‘Setiorita Palks of thc ient | Te ovihus ican | BY DON RYAN I OS ANGELES, May 24 enorita A 1 Palacios, of - Mexico City, is in Le Angelk the invitat of tl Woman’s City club. She is speaking at various clu ve tising the arts and crafts of t India of the terior of Mexico. tohed ¢ 1 1 1 found Senorita Palacios at the Alexandria and talked io her on the i old rthing interest in the disco joor In Mexico imilar to, all wearing silk of King Tutank mezzanine, whieh was full of women, young ¢ printed with designs Inspired by the reepnt un this seemed freakish vur back nin many ways hamen in Egypt Egyptian relicw Mt when right at s of a civilizatic very ¢ are the unnoticed fur Nile ways as of the wivanced and in every way as interesting as the ecivilization UT of alwicker basket, wove the Indiar and painted by ( in checkerboard design, Senorita Palacic « handfu of small heads baked in cla They had been dug up at the sacred city of Trothhuacan, religious capital of the ancient American continent, as Tallan, on the present site { Mexico Clty, was the administrative capital It ts hard to estimate accurately From 2,000 to 5,000 years before Christ The first thing that struck me foreheads, The cranial cai was the remarkable height of all the { these old Toltecs must have been men thelr Jong halr was piled In heek-bones, straight noses like th From the tops of their ears to the tops heats was a long stretch—another recognized mark of superior eity They had and large ears mentality I was nt n kentlema oulder “What the dickens aro those?" “Never heard of that tne myself,” he sald thoughtfally he asked, swered Tho I used to be in the novelty business Kussian, ain't 1?" A parse tho. 6 sample ea “Good trade name, in supposed fellow of t “e HERE does your brother think these high! races came from when they settled Mexico? the senorita when she returned. “He has a theory that the older and superior Toltees came from the lost continent—Atlantis, They migrated from the East, Ho believes that the Aztecs, who later conquered and absorbed then, Aska They show traces of Oriental influence.” came from She showed me pictures of two temples side-by-side. One was Toltec the other Aztec, The older had been buried with earth by the conquerors and had been unearthed In recent years. The walls were covered with great heads of divinities carved in high rellef in basalt, “How did they do it? I « “They had only stone toola, didn’t they?” Tho senorita amiled o! anti. - “I wouldn't venture to affirm it, but my brother has a theory that they used steel tmplements. They had many things that we know nothing 04. SAT for a while thinking about this ancient race, living | on the high plateaus of Central Mexico in the dazzling | They were warriors, proud and cruel; artists of painstaking intel- ligence, as their. surviving pyramids, loaded with intricate They were dancers. Everybody danced. The nobles and the people in other the great commemorative ballets in the market places or on the stops > Leonard. of the temples. Even the king himself, at the relighous ceremonies, when the worshippers paid homage to the sun, the moon and the planet Venus. I reflected that wo have some things they didn’t have—notably Ford care—and foe cream sodas—and moving plcturen—and sewing macht and radios—and Kollege-Kut-Klothes. I reflected again that they had many things, which, as Senorita Palacios | remarked, we lack. They had, for example, a highly developed native | art—sculpture. Another highly developed art—the dance. They had poetry we know—for it always goes hand-in-hand with the other arts, They had leygure for reflection. They had pleasure in sunsets and In lovemaking an@ in their native drink, distilled from the juice of the metyl plant. And I concluded that while we are immensely superior in jone single accomplishment—the super-development of me- | chanical contrivances—another race living on this continent | 2,000 or maybe 5,000 years before the time of Christ, enjoyed |an unlimited chromatic dispersion in life of which we | possess nota trace. j ELECT WEST | PRINTER HEAD) | A record vote was cast at the} jannual election of Seattle ‘Typo-| graphical Union N Wednos. in ona of the 1 spirited ions of recent yearn, ( of the union declare that before hi the members ach ho election 1 Thursday reelected pre vice pr to the inte t Atlanta, Georgia, in Joseph B, Murry amuel H, Constipation | Is Relieved _ Prompt—Permanent—Relfef | The CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS! rarely fail. Purely ‘ vegetable — act surely but gent- ly on the liver, Relieve after dinner dis- shown assista wecretary treasurer and trese — re- ant at arms; Norman S, Gale, Weve Indiges- Davis Taylor and J, M. Litonius, Sonimprove the complexion—brighten | executive committes; A. T, Berg, the eves. | recorder; Fred ©, Cattle and Davis Small Piil—Smail Dose—Small Price committe Ault, A Anthon I Clift J, Ca im M. M, Mooney, de ‘ ‘entral Labor Council; Fred Neilson jand John Parker, delegates to State! Stephens, delegates to] Acid Indigestion Typographical confer-| » Slope The only tied vote was that on R,|% Benedict and Bugene tr the membership committe jA | tor | will probably be decided by that exoe taking in ig tho formation | indigestion | the stomach and] eanive, burning) Known as hoart white the acid irritates and ins] | Ree 1¢ lining the | ible lies entirely * development or sec iden {ve | a draw, stomach, | of gan and ac Gas distond. that full otimos ‘Take Fast Steamers at Colman Dock To atop or provent thie sourlr the food contents of the si d to neutral! tt 1 of mach fold, and make REGULAR SCHEDULE AVO Heattle ly onsut 6:20, 7:16, 9:90, 10:80, 11 and ve ctor af acid ‘atomach, 40, 11:80 Po da taken in rier of a the on the acidity & porfeotly remedy to and Dally, 11 AUTOMOBILE FERRY Keattlo to Bremerton Dally 11:90 A. Mf, 2:00 7, M rip Bat. & Sun., 9590 An antlactd, sueh as Tisurated can be obtained in olther powder blew the stomach to do its work properly without the ald of artificial digeatents, Magno- «ia comes In several forme, so. bo certain to asi for and take only Dine urated Magnonta, Whioh ta expec prepared for the above purpo: Advertisement, hie of Tabor; Philo Howard| Tells Safe, Certain, Speedy Retief for | & Use Wire Brush to Scrub Model Infant Alarm Clocks ( ) Guarant ( Vriday mf Saturd. a Discovery of Gold Boosts Land Price Armstrong At and Once Things Rubber Hose Table Stove Cooks 3 ’ | SPECIAL Only Special Friday and Saturday Only \ Corrugated, Moulded 25 ft. length ,.$3.19 (As Pictured) | 50 ft. length ..$5.98 t Hardware @ SIXTH AVENUE and PIKE; STREET We Deliver, Store Hours Ba All sizes from 16 to 42, “Henley” brand—all the style. manufacturers price 6 to 10 ....,. A Jobber’s surplus stock! 8 a, m. to 6:40 p. m. THE BON MARCHE RGAIN BASEMENT Our problem—and yours—is economy. sary expense in order to reduce our prices. Economize by doing your buying in the Bargain Basement! Seven New York Dress Manufacturers Clean House!! 680 More Dresses Most Popular Fiber Crepes More Than Twenty Styles others are For Men 192%. 1 . THURSDAY, MAY 24 Girl Football Game Ends in Wild Riots nest to r Guat pon the th of perfect you do Don’t wait until tomorrow to begin Women’s Pumps One-strap Tennis Pumps, with spring and low heels. 1,000 pairs of these in sizes 244 to 8. We eliminate every unneces- 3,000 PRS. OUTING SHOES For Men, Women and Children All U. S. Rubber Co. Shoes! “Keds.” For Children High and Size: In sizes 1144 to 2—High Tennis Shoes with heavy rubber heels, in brown. (For hard wear) . Big Boys’ Tennis sizes 214 Oxfords and High ty aand Shoes with heavy rubber heels. Sizes For Misses Sandals, High Shoes.......+6 Sizes 11 to 2 Plenty of dark shades, Plenty of plain colors, The Men’s Shoes are 29¢ Tennis Shoes Oxfords s 6 to 104%, Oxfords and For Little Boys Brown Shoes in to 6... 4 00 “Parade s than