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DAY, MAY 31, 1921. ESN SER VICE MESES | OUR CREDIT TERMS FOR 1,000 NEW ACCOUNTS 50 Purchase, $ 1.00 Down, $1.00 Per 7S Purchase, $ 3.00 Down, $1.25 Per Purchase, $ 5.00 Down, $1.50 Per W SO Purchase, $ 7.50 Down, $2.00 Per Week Purchase, $10.00 Down, $2.50 Per Week Purchase, $12.50 Down, $3.00 Per Week Purchase, $15.00 Down, $4.00 Per Week NO EXTRA CHARGES—NO INTEREST For The June Bride You Don’t Need Cash Pay Our Easy Way Don’t let the fact that you have not sufficient money actually in the bank deter you from having a nicely furnished home. Our liber- al credit policy was adopted for all our custom- ers, but more particularly for those who, though unable to pay cash, want well furnished homes, just the same. This means that we have cut all red tape—we will furnish your home complete with one of our outfits and you pay a little down and a little each month. No trouble than opening a bank account—come in and see us. LIVING-ROOM SUITES Warm hospitality and comfort are expressed in our extensive display of living-room suites. There the large, luxurious, overstuffed suites that invite repose, the dainty chairs and daven- in mahogany and tapestry and the cane | , " | | Week Week Week le} M4 SPEECH TO THE HORSES, Haw! naw! MOVE FARM BY HERBERT QUICK WASHINGTON, May 31.—What | stands in the way of better times? The great big thing which keeps ie | failure of farm crops to move DINING-ROOM SUITES Tn our display you will find just the dining-room suite you have always pictured in your home. There are many periods represented; in fact, a display so that the most fastidious will be delighted. We You can't fail to ba suited. Priced from $76.50, m 8 pieces; $108.00, 9 pieces, up. BEDROOM SUITES Our display of bedroom furniture is amazing im its variety, including al] the popular periods from Louis XVI. periods to the sturdy old Colonial in mahogany, walnut, ivory, etc. Priced, 4 — | pyttadlagsd 00 up. stream of recovery. tell you how we may cll face of the jam and cu that holds all the rest bac key from floating down to market WHY FARM PRODUCTS FORM KEY-LOG IN BUSINESS JAM Don't stop re ing. This iw the | real goods, It is not mine, I am [merely the instrument thru which | this paper is to tell you about it. But | first let me say why I call farm prod ucts the key-log in the business jam. First, farm products lead all oth ers in value and tonnage, And they are stopped dead in their tracks. They lie on the farmers’ hands like | an ice crop in Greeniand—just as if nobody wanted them. And the world is starving for them! People who could pay for them ff Grene PUL irs Uece WHERE PIKE MEETS FIFTH Si New Phone—Elliott 4910 dow? by the roadsides and dying for them. Women are pressing starved infants to dry breasts People are eating the bark of trees | and filling their agonized stomachs | with clay and earth to deaden the A second cup is the rule when you serve Folger’s Golden Gate Coffee. Its tempting flavor appeals to peo-| 4 ple who know what good coffee should be. When you consider that seventy-, one years’ experience in coffee roast- ing and blending is back of Folger’s © Golden Gate Coffee, you will under- stand why it is the choice of so many thousands of coffee drinkers who de- mand only good coffee and coffee that __ is uniformly good. | Tell your grocer you want to try | Folger’s Golden Gate Coffee—and when you find out for yourself how it is you'll be back for more use it is — | “Different in taste from other cof- _ fee and better.” wre FE Oe EE E C J. A. FOLGER & CO. San Francisco - Seattle - Kansas City- Dallas Shizuoka, Japan FOLGER’S GOLDEN GATE PRODUCTS COFFEE ! TEA EXTRACTS + SPICES ‘AND BAKING POWDER [Rec _ Ki> { s\CUT THE KEY-LOG! BREAK THE JAM! STUFF, GET GOOD TIMES | pangs of starvation. Us poor and Idle and miserable ts the | f Tam/|M ANWHILE AMERICA'S Business has a logjam across the are ¢ I arm going to! farming « down the! the divir and pre and vents the great raft of products and wool YHE SEATTLE STAR 5 | THE VALEDICTORIAN REHEARSES WE ARE STANDING ON THE THRESHOLD OF LIFE, GAZING WITH PALPITATING HEARTS ACROSS THE MOUNTAIN ‘TORS OF They go naked fix for the world. For it is ruining footed for lack of them. God! the world financially, morally and ywh on this world so ad to hope, so lost to spiritually, | And if the farm crops could move }to market, the hungry and naked * * ‘ a . | koing to tell you how to move them. CROPS ROT could be fed and clothed, the idle |j/ Suites, rich in their simple beauty. All are priced To move them now. Not in 1922, not! A crops are rotting on our! could be act to work, the tammere| at the new low level—3 pieces velour, $125.00 up. Jim 1923, but in this year of grace| hands, our farmers are unable to . 1981, say thee Senta ee eee nnelda | COUld begin to buy and build and pay olng ‘untitled, our wonderful | thelr debts, the factories could begin ans are beginnin doubt | to operate, the mines could start up, {I} of the world, be the railways could begin to haul | low | cause 1 can buy their wheat loadee an ole oe corn and fat stock and cotton | ‘ede’ traine—the wh ese | stream of human functions would be |]! If the devil had had the making of | thawed, and things would move not | things all to his © na! will, he | only in our country, but in all the! couldn't have ech ut @ worse world Thin thing can be brought about Daddy, bring home some Boldt’s|py a aimple act of congress which | French pastry.—Advertisement, Si they had the chance are dropping | i LOoOEcCwWw> _AMUSEMENTS _ | everyone knows we could and ought Lace HIF jto PA Now Piaying THE REMEDY | The plan I am advocating, and Jetia Cértiss Dancers PD |whieh I want every community in the United States to advocate in pub lic meetings, petitions and resolu- | Uona, so congrés may know |that they have the command from | the people to act, is to pans a bill which will be introduced in congress, = |to establish an agricultural foreign | trade financing corporation to extend | proper credits to nations, to corpora tions, to co-operative societies, or to individuals wishing to buy our sur. | plus farm products and having real FOR THE SITUATION Bell a @ Beliarave Gergen | wool, pork, Corn, oats, wheat, rye and like staples. The demand ts there tn Europe. An Winter: tat “SINBAD” European peoples have got used to consuming our products. The! farm. ers last year gave to Europe under | the “gifi-corn” project some 600 tons of corn. Up to that time most of the | European peoples did not think that corn was fit for human food. But Howard, the head of the American | Farm Bureau Federation, started the movement to give away the corn to | Hurope’s starving peoples, and Carl | Vrooman, formerly assistant secre |tary of agriculture, took hold of the movement and carried it thru to a certain levgl of success. Europe ned to eat corn! In the Greates' Belgium in 1915. His little mills | ground a few hundred tons a month. Some of the gift corn went to Po land, where the great food of the people has been rye. START THE THING AND WATCH IT GROW! Now Poland has already agreed to |take 1,000 tons of corn a week, if T\they can only be given credit along |the lines which might with perfect safety be extended thru the agricul tural foreign trade financing cor. | poration—which congress is going to } set up if there is a mass meeting in every agricultural school district in the United States in the first week in |June, and in every city precinct where the business, church and In- bor people open thelr eyes and see what this thing wolud do for them Start this thing and it will grow be. yond imagination. To return to Poland. It will take |almost any amount of cotton and spin Jit and take Its pay in the cloth it ‘spins, And the densest and nakedest population in the world is in Poland and at Poland's doors. The farmers of the United States in thelr “gift-corn” project gave of their land and labor to the starving; FOR THE BLOOD Write tor bookleton the blood free Swift Specie (y Deptt Atlanta a,» aise Aa . ee ae» the moneyintheAshPle? Remember that you pay real money for your coal whether it burns up and gives heat or lands in the ash pile. Try Cassidy Wellington next time and youl get most real fuel for your money. It's rescreened and specially prepared in opr own plant for range or furnace, ASK YOUR DEALER OR PHONE US DIRECT ARROW COAL Co. - Ballard ae W. MER™¢n* Ave. N. W. D4 Columbia Street | will merely enable us to do what} security to offer. This means cotton, | — Hoover started grinding corn tn} PAUL & hoes Co: $$ Sleep as Snug as a Bug ina Rug Pe es Billie Burke Crepe Pajamas Sales Booth, Upper Main Floor TOCK readjustment sales now in progress in- volve in this display 500 Billie Burke style pajamas, assembled from our regular stock. They have a combination Blue Bird design in blue on pink crepe. These sold formerly at $3.50 and were later reduced to $2.45. The variety includes sizes 15, 16 and 17, featuring exceptional values. Special Wednesday at— $1.69 All-Silk Charmeuse Upper Main Floor An all-silk charmeuse, 40 inches wide; a dress mate- rial very attractive when made up. In navy blue, black, purple, Belgian blue, peacock blue, taupe, brown and jade. A splendid value, a yard ++. $2.25 Sport Flannels for Summer Wear Upper Main Floor New sport flannels in colors of scarlet, olive green, Copenhag- en blue and white, suitable for sport coats, sport skirts, middies and suits, This material is 54 Chiffon Taffetas Upper Main Floor A taffeta for waists or dresses; 36 inches wide. It is in colors of navy blue, both light and dark brown, gray, rose, black, henna, Harding blue and Japan blue. Excellent value, a yard seeeeeecees BRAS All-Silk Messalines | A 36-inch messaline in pink, blue, tan, cerise, tur- | | quoise, Belgian blue, Nile green, tomato, navy blue and inches wide and ranges jJ} lack. A yard .....sessceesceecceneereceses BLIS in price, per yard, Changeable Taffetas $2.25, $3.00, Changeable taffetas, 36 inches wide, in six different $3.50, color combinations. A yard Bk BLS i005 « on BLS $4.50 and $4.75 the railway laborers worked gratis to ship it, the railways hauled it free. It was bread cast upon the waters, and ft will return after not very many days—if you, and You, and YOU get besy and mix common eonse with energy in about equal portion, season {ft with the holy wpirit of enlightened selfishness and get busy on this bill, which will pass if you ask for it and command it. More tomo’ Three Houses Afire in University Dist. Fire starting on the roof of A. G. Longtin's residence at 6031 11th ave. N. E., Monday spread to the home of F. Seaholme, 6029 11th ave. N. EL an@ damaged the two homes to the/| from extent of $3,750. Most of the contents of the two houses were saved. The Longtin home was damaged about $2,000, the contents about $200. Damage to the Seaholme residence was estimated at $1,500. The residence of James Eagles Celebrate New Member With its membership past arrived to witness the ini 200 more members, TACOMA—Mrs, Mary Eliason, 55, killed by street car. She was car- rying flowers to graves of relatives. 5035 11th ave, N. E., was sc ime | we i AW ENUE AND - UNION § STORE HOURS: 8:30 A. M. TO 6.P. M. HEAVY FRAME, FANCY SCREEN DOORS $4.98 Sizes 32x80, 34x82, 36x84, 36x80. This is an exceptionally well made door, with 114-inch frame and strongly mortised. Splendid for front doors. Set of six White and Gold Cups and Saucers American Semi-porcelain Special, | per set ..... $1.49 Popular size cups and saucers, plain white, dec- orated with a single gold bat did f d Splen or camp an kitchen. _ ”? Me Phono er 6. ©. D. er Aut uto ents rders, "Big Special on Washing Powder Golden Rod BORAX NAPTHA * Special 2 Packages for 45c Regular 85c each. Has no equal for clean- ing, washing, scouring. Use on dishes, glassware, floors, woodwork, windows, washing clothes, etc. The “Baker” occupies but lit- tle room when folded and can be erected any- where in a few minutes. Com- plete with joint- ed poles. Made of khaki twill. 5x7. ..$18.00 | 7x7...$25.25 | 7x9. ..$29.00 “Little Giant” Grass Hook 75e value, 49 c Special at .......... Handy size Grass Hook with steel scythe type blade. Detach- able blade. ~ (WASHING, POWDER