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— if Be Bividual It looks ode or in any care of ir infor. ing or d, od ple? nes are Bureay ‘ Convenient Payments GRUNBAUM-BROS 'URNITURE Co, INC. SIXTH AVENUE BETWEEN PIKE AND PINE ee BUY NOW —PAY LATER RUNBAUM BROS.’ easy credit plan has fur- Seattle homes. Buy what you want and arrange to pay for it while using. There is no delay or trouble in opening a charge account here, } : nished thousands of \ ; } g | | Blankets a Very fine 70x80 AllYVool Blankets, colored plaids, = $27.50 bound, Tex80 Blankets— Pink, blue and rose plaids; tound.....-.., 918.00 66x80 Alb Woo! Plaid Blankets, finely woven in helio, tar ray =... 913.50 66x80 adage Blankets— ius esses, 912.00 66x80 a Plaid Fullstze Cotton Comforts— Silkoline covered—plain verde $6.75 Dorders. .. coo... . nd Bedding Heavy Cotton Blankets— 66x84 size; : $7.50 all colors . on Sheet x76 Whil Blankets; pink $ or blue border... Poe lO 68x80 Tan Cotton Sheet Blankets; blu or pink border... $4.00 Down-filled Sateen Comforts— Sorters.--.... $20+O00 Extra quality Comforts— ‘Wool - and - cotton - mixed; brocaded fiber silk covered; Fine quality Wool -and- Cotton - Mixed Comforts— Silkoline covered; plain sateen $ 1 0 50 border. .. —Add Blankets to Your Account— Pick out all the Bedding and Blankets you need—add them to your Charge Account without additional payment down. GRUABAUM BROS. FURNITURE CO. Leap Year Girls Are Wasting Time PORTLAND, Ore, Jan, 15—Leap year maids are falling down. Mon- day, for the first time In four years, no marriage licenses were issued by the clerk here. Proposals will be received by the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, Navy Department. Washington. D.C. until 10 o'clock a.m. Jan for delivering mechanical mometers. copper pipe and electric coffee percolators to the Navy Yard, Puget Sound, Wash. Apply for pro- posais to the Supply Officer, Navy Yard, Puget Sound, Wash., or to the Bureau of Supplies DAVID POTTER, Paymaster Gen- eral of the Navy. 1-5-24—Adver- jt. For that little lunch just before they part Bluhill } convenient — appreciated Bononcnesonenenenencuse Portland Merchant Ill in California SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 15—Abe Met President of Meter & Frank; Portland, Ore, one of the largest de. partment stores in the West, ts ill at the St. Francis hotel here, It was reported that Meler had suffered a stroke of paralysis last Saturday. This wag denied at the | hotel. | “Mr. Meter ts very much better to- day,” the United Press was informed by those attending him. Further detatis of his {IIness were refused. Test, Says Magnus | NEW YORK, Jan. 15—Magnus |Johnson, Minnesota farmer-nenator, jhas an ali. “They gave me a |cow,” he sald, explaining why |retary of Agriculture their recent milking cont | ington. ‘The senator ia visith ' ‘The largest refracting telescopes in |the world are in the United States, WEDNESDAY—A SALE OF ROCHESTER ALL-COPPER WASH BOILERS © At a Big Saving Size No. 8. Well made and fit-in cover. THERMAX ELECTRIC RADIATOR For quick warmth on cold mornings. The Thermax has a 12inch copper reflector and is mounted on an adjust- able base. Very attrac- tively priced for Wednes- day at $4.98 a s¢f COBBLER SETS A complete $3.98 ; have stationary handles “WEAR-EVER” ALUMINUM SINK STRAINERS Limited Time Price 19¢ Regular price $1.15 Seamless, durable sanitary. Get one while they last. and now, outfit for general boot and Priced Extra Low at ‘GIRL SEEKING LOST FATHER May Have Been Victim of| Hotel Fire Here Nearly four years after the grisly nutted out Lincoln hotel burned tragedy whieh woveral lived when t jon Apri 7 {that the heartache and misery of | | Uhat day may be very much alive in} tho clty of Burley, Idaho, | In a lotter appealing to the Seat | tle Masonic lodge for ald in locating | [her missing father, Jessie McBain, | M4, remarks that he was last heard | from while living at the Linooln jhotel about a year before the fire. | Ho was at that thne working In the | shipyards. | comes a grim hint Jessie in the oldest of five chil | dven living with her inyalid mother | at 185 N, Conant, Burley, sho writes: Hor letter saya in part “t wish to ask you for Informa: | |tton, WIL It be possible for me to| |find my father? He has been a} |Manon for years, Seven years ago| he left here, and we have not heard | jof him for five years, Hix name ia| |John Jerry McBain, Hin last ads} |dreas was Hotel Lincoln, Seattle." | Records concerning the fire do] |not mention the name oi 5. J, Mo-| Bain, which was the name ho rexim tered mains, ‘Is John J. McBain wandering | Jabout the world—or did the falling | |walls of the secthing building bury | |the last chance his family had of| h under, so the mystery re \Preacher Acquitted | on Heresy Charge) NEW YORK, Jan, 15—Dr, Harry| Emerson Fosdick, Baptist minteter, | and a professor in Union Theological | semirary, was vindicated by the| |presbytery of New York yesterday | afternoon on charges of heretical An substitute pastor, Fosdick has | been eccup the pulpit of the Rev. | George Al der in the First Pres. byterian church. In one of hie ser. mons, entitled “Shall the Fundamen. taliste Win?” Dr, Pordick was charged with violating tho Presby.| terian creed tn advancing advanced | modernist doctrines. The presbytery decided that Fos. |dick, a8 a Baptist minister, did not come under direct supervision of the Presbyterian assembly Three Chinese Held on Lottery Charge Charged with selling tery tickets, Chin Min, |and Gee Quong were awaiting no- |tice for m hearing before Juation lc. C. Dalton Tuesday, Bonds wero Jeet at $1,000 each, The men were jarrested at 204 Main st. Monday |by Officers A. L. Pederson and P. B. Morriss, of the police public | moral: A. | THE Es WA Dr, Joel Boone, shown above with his President Coolidge’s personal physicians. Washington. word of God. gf places for lovers are not 4. The church {9 not casual, Spoon in Church SBATTL wife, is one Photo taken Minister Invites eth on the aide t church, ¢ parties, gave > the young pe 14 btw fle place that counts,” ared from the pulpit af ture, 60 You can do a little who had rical war on autemo- and story 4 and casual meet Come here, you young people. A bit of sly spooning tx not barred tn our pews.” Rey, James Clement Reld, of the Howard Presbyterian church, red that the motoring pub- lic could help in doing away with automobile petting parties by turning thelr spotlights on sus- piciously parked machines: He blamed parents for the clandestine spooning parties, Stato ‘or W, 8. Scott an- nounced today hig intention to enactment in the next legis lature of ‘a law curbing “auto. mobile petting parties," He will do thin by drafting a law limiting the parking time of automobiles in parks and In dark streets it you this in ople of MAYOR LAUDS |COUE COMES DRY MEASURE} At variance with an opinion ex-| pressed by Judge Bon B. of the Denver juvenile court, Mayor clgaret and commented cheerfully Edwin J. Brown belleves that na BACK AGAIN) NEW YORK, Jan. 15—Dr, Emil Lindsey,|Coue, back in our midst, rolled « | today on the action of a committes lof the high church of England in tional prohibition 1s a pronounced placing @ stamp of approval on his success. |system of healing by Soe In response to a request for his | “on. observations on the mat lhe Rey. Miles H. Krumb At Dance Suppers a wise choice is | a cup of hot |BOVRI It relieves fatigue and renews vigor s the goodness of beef EWAMELED PANTRY PAILS Made of heavy gal- vanized iron; white en- ameled with “Pantry” in gold letters on side. Has fit-over cover and bail; fine for kitchen refuse; measures 9 ins, in diameter, 9 ins, deep. An excellent value at 98¢ $1.98 hoe repairing. Sets consist of guaranteed stand and 3 lasts, forged steel hammer, knife, sewing awl, ete, 24-INCH 8’ ND AND 3 LASTS, SP -ECIAL aye an sta Baby's | SONNE SUITE “California Fig Syrup” | Three Girls Held “Ca full and print: be direct child! of the First | Dayton, 0. a ternent that f the alc in tho Best: Laxative aby tn feverish breath 5 Or ed on bo! conatipated, “It ts splendid; at least the lumphing over thelr fears,” he id. “T have had bishops among my at |customers—" he caught himself and| ed apologetically—"I mean my nta, but the church refused to jon me formally, m pleased that the high church land has proposed the direct wer of moral and spiritual sugges. m be combined with scientific lodge Tho little Nancy druggist will lec | ture in this country under the au. the “Cous national inst! ter from ed States |of Ei r to na! o a Den In passing he remarked that tt wns not neceasary to repeat da familiar “day by day, in every way formula. He approves the use of a phonograph record or similar ‘agency for automatically repeating the “bet ter and better” suggestion to one's is |relt ¥ jail to ft having stolen more th of women’s ap. Wilshire homes, wed reports re eral residences com. if that clothing was missing, ther with a new maid The girls, Anita Measure, 19; Anita Tell, 2, and Marion Martin, 22, are sald £0 have secured a series of posi ions and left with dresses and has |and clothing coated: | winning confidence of other valuable the after their easpoon. employers. Fig - ison, vaste Mother, Babe Ar va ani Buried Together Mother and child were to be given last rites Wednesday afternoon neral services at for Mrs tt Douglas, prominent of the Y. W. C. A, and a ‘nt. | member of Myrtle chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, and her Infant hter, deaths husband; her father, Bain; her sisters, Mrs. Joseph Tuson, Mrs. W H. Ruddell and Mrs. Nellie Carr, and }a brother, John Bain, Jr Wa John Interment elli_ cemetery e juice ot Stores Victimized | by Man and Woman being al man stolen from th of the Tumwater Lumber Co panied tl 1 woman accom forger on his visits to Ain Minne to the Bastern | © they aro prized as 1g states in special stock | CORN-FED CARP aro shippe lars & from Tox fish f T from these BES. DEPARTMENT STORE The Hosiery Event of 1924! 12,000 Pairs in This Sale! f Starting at 9 A.M.Wednesday In calling your attention to this sale, we wish to emphasize the fact that there are many wonderful values to choose from and your attendance will convince you that savings offered are sufficient to make it worth while to buy in quantities to cover a long period. Hosiery for Women, Misses, School Children and Infants Women’s All-Silk Hose—Special $1.89 Pair All-Silk Hose in black, white, silver and cordovan shades, with reinforced garter tops and feet. In this group are also a few pairs of Silk Hose with reinforced r slo garter tops and feet. higher. Women’s Full-Fashioned Silk Hose $1.29 Pair Full-fashioned Silk Hose with reinforced Usle garter tops and feet, in black and a good range of colors. Sizes are 8% to 10. ‘Theso Hose have small imperfections. A par, $1.29. Women’s Semi-Fashioned Silk Hose 95c Pair Bemi-Fashioned Silk Hose in regular and out sizes. These come in black and assorted colors; have reinforced feet and lisle garter tops. Sizes are 8% to 10, Very special, a pair, 95¢. Women’s Silk-and-Fiber Hose 59c Pair Heavy welght Silk-and-Fiber-Mixed Hose in black and an assortment of colors, Sizes are 8% to 10, Slight imperfections. A pair, only 59¢. Women’s Fancy Ribbed Lisle Hose 59c Pair Fancy ribbed, mercerized Lisle Hose in an assortment of good colors and black. These are slightly imperfect, also, Sizes 8% to 10. A pair, 5O¢. Children’s Lisle Hose 29c Pair Children’s Mercerized Lisle Hose in plain and fancy ribbed weaves, and in either black, white or cordoyan. Sizes are 5% to 10. Special, a pair, 20¢. Children’s Lisle Hose 19c, or 3 Pairs for 50c Children's Morcerized Lisle Hose in black only These have slight defects and range In size from 7 to 9%, A pair, 19¢—or 3 pairs for 5O¢. Sizes 814 to 10. Regularly $2.50 and FOR THIS SALE—a pair, $1.89. Children's Three-Quarter Sox 29c Pair ‘Three-quarter Sox of mercerized lisle in fancy ribbed patterns, with novelty turn-over cuffs, and in an assortment of colors. Sizes are 6 to 9%. These are slightly imperfect. A pair, 20¢. Infants’ Lisle Hose 19c Pair Infants’ Mercerized Lisle Hose in black &nd white only, Sizes are 4 to 6. These are slightly imperfect, but mot noticeable, A pair, 19¢. Infants’ Cashmere Hose 29c Pair Infants’ Cashmere Hose in white only. Sizes are 4 to 6. These are slightly imper- fect. Only 20¢ a pair. Children’s Odds and Ends 10c Pair Odds and ends of Children’s Cotton Hose in white and cordovan. A broken line of sizes, Special, a pair, 10¢, Women’s Full-Fashioned Lisle Hose—Pair 49c Fullfashioned Mercerized Lisle Hose in regular and out sizes. These are in black and an assortment of colors, Sizes are 8% to 19, These are slightly imperfect. Special, a pair, 49¢, Women’s Fancy Cotton Hose—Pair 33c Cotton Hose of drop-stitch weave in black, and green and brown heathers. Also, Mere cerized Lisle Hose in black and brown. Sizes 8% to 10. Only 38¢ a pair. Women's Hostery Dept—Main Floor W |Dating’ Agency Is | Forced to Close EMPORIA, Kan, Jan, 15, — Boys and girls are no longer bashful and can arr their own dates, operated a mporia shop today, No Need to Be Dyspeptic If Stomach Sours, Gets Gaasy and ten and Lighten yapep= al mber that a 60-cent bh ¢ Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets will i ‘ weet and thus th i e fo,—Advertise: men lating | |Masonic Temple Is |Ruddy’s Old Wife — | Fired by Vandals ASTORIA, Ore, Jan. 15.—Police today are trying to trace the fire The building was to be dedi- turday. Mar-/bugs who they aro certain set fire|> to the newly-built Masonic temple | °ees When they read the signature students, |here last night, resulting in $25,000 Jean Acker, motion plcture a Retains His Nam ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, Jan, 1 Rudolph Valentino, first nw fad and a good idea, sald former wife of the “perfect love on a hotel register here, IMPERIAL MIDGETS 25—Little Men and Women—25 UIT VAUDEVILLE ‘Twice Dally—2:30-8115 B.C. HILLIAM AND COMPANY “Hilliamesques of 1023 Jenn Sothern Rarrett and Cunneen ENATOR” FORD jehican Roberts Martinet and His Famous Crow MASON and KEELER in “MARRIED? Toples of the Day Pathe Ne Orchentra Monday Evening, Jan. 21 Frank P. Hood Presents FAREWELL TOUR (PIANIST) DE PACHMANN “The world's greatest Chopin Interpreter, playing an en- tt opin program” SE THURSD, S—81.05, 82. 0 LOCAL MALL ORDERS