Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
STAR GIRL BE 11 ROMEO IS HIND SCENES 2!" Alas, poor Romeo! Shakespeare's hero is in the elty jail awaflting trial lon boore chargen C. Romeo was ar- |Fented nt Fuuinier ave, and Atlan ft. Monday night with @ bottle oF moonghine, offering our entire stock of furniture at reductions of 20% to 40%— —we are now staging the greatest sale our furni known. Prices were already tow—now they are ture department has ever henomenally low. And it is hatdly needful to emphasize the welcome fact that even at these drastic reductions Quality has been maintained. What you buy now will be held for future deliver? should you so desitfe—and remember, “Your Credit Is Good!” at JULY SALE prices. a sample JULY SALE value: 3-piece Colonial —SAMPLE VALUE: American walnut finish 8-plece Colonial bedroom suite? exactly as pictured; dresser has size chiffonier; a better value than we have been able to offer fot years and years; special price, 3 pieces compl: large 24x30-inch plate glass mirror; full size bed; for this JULY SALE— é Your Credit I5 Good | DOUBLE INDUCEMENTS j TOMORROW Ladies’ Sport Skirts NEW BOX PLEATS $7.50 How about a new wool skirt for sport and outing wear? They wear best and always look well. We are showing a very attractive lot of neat check and plaid patterns in several pleasing colors; new box-pleated effects. Sizes 26 to 82. New Summer Sport Hats Special $1.98 You'll be interested in tflese new Sport Hats at this special price. They are shown in straight sailor and chin-chin sailor styles. Made of felt and dated orange, blue, Kelly, rose and red; smartly Warner’s Corsets Special $2.50 A very special offering of Rust-Proof Corsets for nor mal heavy figures; full skirt; medium bust, long hips— graduated clasp; flesh color All sizes, Ladies’ Union Suits Special 75c Don't mits this special of feting—@1.00 Union Suits for 75¢. Bodice style, light weight and of gbod, firm eot- ton yarhs; sleeveleme, lace knee. Sizes 26 to 44. Cotton Sheet Blankets—Pair $2.50 $3.00 Values. Gray and tan with pink and blue bor- ders. Size 64x76 inches. Bleached Sheets—Each $1.50 Made of good heavy sheeting; size 81x90 inches. Window Shades—Each 80c $1.00 Values. Green and buff colors. guaranteed spring roller; size 3 by 7 feet. Huck Towels—Each 15¢ Good quality of Huck Towels. Size 17x82 inches; plain white. Made on a ‘105% fegular price $215— “TACOMA, £. SONORRPERD & Sa IT’S FAIR AND WILL STAY 80 Weather Observer Says It Rained Little in June It's fair weather Tuesday and it's going to be fair Wednesday, Weath er Obeerver Georg? Salisbury wants it understood. fis barometer says no, Moreover, he wants to correct the impression that any considerable | amount of rain fell in June. Appear. jances, he say#, were deceptive |There were only 13 days on which there was a measurable quantity of rain. And there was a total precip! |tation of only 1.29, is compared to the normal fall of 1.72 during the justial 10 days of rain in June. The highest temperature was 75 degrees and the lowest 49 degrees. |The thermometer has reached 96 de- |qrees, back In the Jun of 1902. DR. H. T. HARVEY (Ex-President Michigan State Board Dental Examiners) Dental at bag Diagnostician Pyorrhea Specialist ‘ X-Ray Laboratory Highest Order of Restoration Work Done 504-12 Eitel Building SECOND AND PIKE SEATTLE BANISHED their tertures may now be Ba! fAouficement and send at once to ff. M. B. LABORATORIES Fundreds of former gufferers are antonished and delighted with the Fry 4 and PERMANBST relief they have recéived from out wonder- ‘ul new discovery Asthma-Sera. Asthma eff May Fever, with all AT BIG FIREWORKS SHOW BY WANDA VON a. Not m ow t | battle ot Chale Ther Mow | day night from tho top of Bunker i, Bug T did | Bunker Hill is that part of the noonery on the luke aide of the ata dium which Monday night over looked No-Man's Land, and on which | we finatly suceseded in adjusting lourselves after much Wrestling with whidding gravel “We" stands for Frank W. Mike jnell of the a r corps, Jobn ro Sapaueon, Hk commie ot the Akron, Ohid, post, and mynelf. |*We" named Bunker Hill, It was good hill, We decided, and Bunker 4& good nama, #0 Why not? | Capt Trevanian G. Cook had per mitted me to enter the field cartier in the evening so that I might amell | the gunpowder aml view, close-hand, jthe fireworks maneuvers + He had paraded me from one end }of the stadium to the other when he spotted John C. Henderson stroll jing about, infocent and unaware. In the language -of the street, the) | emptain Passed the buck, and John |C. Henderson becamé the victim, | So it was John C. Henderson and his friend, Frank W. Mikesell, who | showed me the inner workings of the | fireworks in the stadium. eee Tt was thro ther I learned that skyrockets are set in racks, and | Mt. individually from the bottom with AD MEN ARE T0 BE GUESTS HERE Delegates to Session at Ta- coma Will Visit Wednentiay evening the delegates to thé 18th annual convention of Px cific Coast Advertising cluba, now in eesion im Tacoma, will be the guests of Seattio publtiahers and the Beattio Advertising dub. ‘The party will come over by boat at $30 p m, and will return to Ta coma in time for the next day’s sea. sion, which opens at 9 & m Monday wis entirely given over te pleasure by the delegates in Tacoma. | All business wae sidetracked for the celebration of the Fourth. The prin- pal speaker at an inspirational meet- ing Monday night was Rollin GC Ayers, of San Francisco. Tuesday night ie scheduled o Gance, under auspices of the Ta coma Elka Thursday, Scott C. Bone, recently appointed governor of Alaska, will addrems the convention at the Ta coma Commercial club WASHINGTON, July &.—Senator Lodge today introduced @ resolution in the senate for a recess from Thursday of this week until July 28. This was the signal for the ag ricuiltural bloe to open its fight to keep the senate sitting until the agricultural program has been an acted, Lodge and other senate leaders in- tend to force the recess upon the farmer gtoup if possible, it wan stated, SAN FRANCISCO, July 6—H. C.| Spencer, former paymaster for a/ jlarge Northwest shipyard, was ar-| rested today by United States cus | toms officials, charged with trying to «muggle cocaine from the steamer Cuba, which arrived from Havana} Saturday, BHow ¢ CAN IT BE DONE FOR..... Furnish a good frame, | lenses and case, including | thorough examination of your eyes by Registered Graduate Optometrist, complete for $5.00. | FREE | EXAMINATION Globe OpticalCo. 1514 Westlake Ave. Between Pike and Pine Sts. FOREVER POREVER. Tear out this an- 1923 Alaska Bidg., Seattle, Wash. & torch. I haw thewe racks; they were stationed almost at the waters edge, far in the lake side of the kladium, @nd looked, with the rockets adjusted in them, like #0 many warped ploket fences, dust one thing about the work Ings of rockets bothered me. Supposing that one of those Gaazling malti colored stars, afer bursting forth in the dark blue sky, should forget to come back, and stay up there with the stars thag really belong. How under heaven would we EVER get it down? eee When the first 100-pound mivo, & gigantic display of tnvender and gold, silver and fuby falling stars, and the melting shreds of Beotch broom bad faded away, Mr, Hender. oon suggested that we move farther back into the stadium where lens Gamage would be done our necks from gazing vertically skyward. So we moved back among the dis Play stands and stood by President Harding and Mr, and Mra. Jiges, . Now display fireworks are peculiar thing& They are lighted by « ayetem of tiny gunpowder s#tep-iadders, which otirve and turn around the outline of the pictute to be shown. ‘The rungt of the tiny ladders, |about three inches in length, are filled with colored powder, while the! Chateau-Thierry were shot in grinder on the fire wagon. wides Are made of slender fuse, Thin fuse ta lighted by &@ torch and the light Is carried almomt tn#tantane. ounly to every rung of the ladder. The Unforgiving glare on the face of Maguic Jigus in made pomible by Writkles of gunpowder tubes. Betause of an argument concern ing the shifting foree which made it ponsible for the Wreneh box car of blue and gold fire to “roll” across the stadium, we started out in search of Thomas G, Hitt, of the Hitt Fireworks company. And we found him behind the “Hanging Gardens of Babylon.” “Yon,” he told us, “everything's going fine.. But I surely have | @worn # lot, and I'm the super Intendest of ® Suntiay school, too, What can I do for ya?” Bo we proceeded to question, thene are the things we learned: The French box car was not | dragged acrom the stadium by two men, and those were not feet we saw moving beneath it A system of pulleys, opernted in the side lines, shifted all moveable displays in the exhibit. The great pin wheels were made to revolve by the fores of flames which shot out from behind the wheels ands supplied a propelling power. The heavy shells which were heard during the battle of and salvos from steel guna from foar to 12 inches in diameter, eee Mr, Hitt told us in detail of the; plane made at the studio for the dis | plays, and explained during hia | busiest moments, withottt swearing | Jonce, the friction methods of light- ling the rows of wheels. We recommend that Mr. Hitt not | be removed from him position as superintendent of the Sunday school. eee Back we trailed to the band- stand then, and watched till the night was over. We saw the little “how dry I am” bottle that fizzled blue fire at the top so fervently that somebody shouted, “some yeast cake!” We saw the slender, golden starfish that melted away in the sky t nothingness, We saw Louis J. Witte, & rector of the evening’s program, and we told him we liked, his party. eee Onty for one thing would I have given up my seat on the band stand Monday night, and®my climb on | Bunker Hill, and my front row view of “Wighting the Flames,” and my strutt around the stadium with Cap tal nCook—only for one thing. I'd like to have been the horn . Much waste in fabric tires~ no need of it HERE are four or five mil- lion car ownersin this country using fabric tires. When they sce themselves being made a tafget for the sale of ‘‘odd Jots’’, “discount offers”, “retreads” and ‘‘seconds’? — what do they think? You can hardly blame gua/lity seekers if this kind of situation is ‘getting on their nerves. / Some people seem to feel that the spread of cord tires has made tire - makers and tire-dealers in- different about fabric gua/ity. Others have the idea that fabric tires get less attention because they run to smaller sizes. The makers of United States: Tires would like to go on record as to how they feel about it. cAs people say everywhere | United States Tires are Good Tires They are engaged in serving people. . They build the most complete + line of. fadric tires in the world. This year ‘‘Nobby”’, ‘‘Usco”’ and ‘‘Chain’’ Tread tires are more , universally popular than ever be fore. Because they satisfy a legitimate need for fabric quality. 4 Neither the size of the tire nor ) the 4ind of tire has anything to do with U. S. Tire standards. Back of every Fabric Tire bear-* ing the U. S. name stands’ the same quality that has made U. s. Royal Cords the outstanding tire. e s es This is the logical stand for the oldest and largest rubberorganization to take. Tt builds by policy —or doesn't build at all. United States Tires United States @ Rubber Company Tire Branch, 212-216 Jackson Street