The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 17, 1921, Page 5

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\ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1921, PAGE 5 “aul NUNES SERVICE. AS MUIINISNUTNAUITNN Grunbaum Bros. Furniture Co. The People’s Popular Homefurnishers OUR CREDIT FOR 1,000 NEW ACCOUNTS 50 Purchase, $ 1.00 Down, $1.00 Per Week 75 Purchase, $ 3.00 Down, $1.25 Per Week ' THE SEATTLE STAR = | ABOUT THIS TIME O’ YEAR ON ACCOUNT OF THIS HOT SUMMER, WERE GOIN T HAVE ‘TH COLDEST DERN WINTER. ON The Rhodes Co, hf cone BE iI! SEST LiKe y ii! 00 Purchase, $ 5.00 Down, $1.50 Per Week Y 130 Purchase, § 7-50 Down, $2.00 Per Week oo otetnardy Tet Saare rchase, $10. wn, $2.50 Per W TCHA! i Purchase, $12.50 Down, $3.00 Per Week Ye A Mid- August Sale of Purchase, $15.00 Down, $4.00 Per NO EXTRA CHARGES—NO IN 2 SS Week EREST Misses’ and Women’s Apparel Ready-towear Department, Second Floor eerseeee Steel Baby Bed $9.75 Child’s Ivory Bed Made of steel. Has best steel fab- ric spring. Size 52 ipches long, 28 inches wide. Spe- cial, $9.75. NBAU g Co. WHERE PIKE MEETS FIFTH New Phone—Elliett 4910 |jifSiil Apparel listed for this Sale has been taken from regular stock and consists of broken lines of sizes, styles and colors, for which reason we have marked them exceedingly low for a one-day cleanup. Every garment offered in this Sale has been reduced to a price that makes it an exceptional value. Silk and Georgette Dresses, Special $9.95 17 Attractive Dresses of Silk and Georgette Crepe in a good assortment of col- ors; 9 Navy Tricotine Dresses will be ifcluded in this lot. Their former values were $16.50 and $19.50 each, and were then reduced to $11.95. Your choice, Thurs- day, $9.95, ‘ Navy Tricotine Suits, Special $14.95 85 Navy Tricotine Suits in spring and summer styles with braid and button | trimmings. Sizes are 36 to 44. These suits formerly sold at $24.50 and $29.50. Special for this Sale, choice $14.95. Tub Skirts 60 White Gabardine Tub Skirts in four distinctive styles with fancy embroidered pockets, They were formerly $5.50 each Special Thursday, choice duced to $2.85. Special for this Sale, choice $3.95 $1.95 Japanese Embroidered Kimonos $2.50 Beautiful Japanese embroidered Kimonos in shades of pink, blue and rose that formerly sold for $4.95 and $6.50. Also Figured Crepe Kimonos in all shades and combination of colors, that were formerly $3.95, $5.75 and $6.50 each. Special for this Sale, choice, $2.50. Gingham Dresses 60 Gingham Dresses in an assortment of colors and patterns. They merly sold for $5 nd $6.75 each and were then re FORECASTING NEXT WINTERS WEATHER... ° SarreRTelD 2D ; UNION RAIL MEN |“ized‘bicticemene!TO SPEAK HERE See Pe Te eee! FIGHT TRANSFER ON SCANDINAVIA “ ® superior logic of woman is the force} ‘Lanch with me—Rest for Less. ling to charges made by detective . {Protest Hae ne equal for RNEUMATION ana ~ RU Set Sa ie ales om TREATS 62.08 per box. Descriptive book tree. seis Wasa, Fer Sale by D: KAB-AU COMPANY, Tecoma, by_Dragatete, Fare Bicnd Coffee—tne very CHICAGO—Mrs. Winifred Bagley, to which the world must look to Quick Service. | agency | shape the results of the disarmament : 4 A. HANSEN—40 Economy Mut. Non-Union Plan at} °onterenes Me Wickham Steed, ed De HG, Leach to Explain itor of the London Times, declared in ee eR Erie Shops jan address hereto the San Francisco| Relations With U. S. Tick Tock Clock Shop }) osiesco, saz” 11—reaoaa omens Center fe a Women’s Khaki Outing Wear $1.95 Repairing done right. Call for and del! Without extra charge. 432 Walker Bldg. Cor, tdand University Main 3372 union leaders here today prepared to! ” 7 pret *aid, i ultimately the only one that | States and Scandinavian countries will be explained in a free lecture by An assortment of Khaki Outing Garments consisting of 13 Khaki Coats, for- merly $3.75 each, 5 Khaki Coats, formerly $2.95 each, 4 pair of Breeches formerly | $2.95 each, and 1 Coat that formerly was $4.95. Your choice, while they last at | $1.95. H Women’s Corduroy Outing Wear $4.95 | [Protest to the United States railroad labor board against the transfer of | @Ppeals to men, the Erie shops at Marion, Ohio, to/ weary of men's conferences, private control under non-union con j ditions. < cated squabbles. More than 600 men in the Marion | “ shops have refused ta enter the em | american ploy of the Railway Service com-| 4 strike threat was contained in and the world is} which | Df Henry Goddard Leach, secretary of the American Scandinavian Foun- dation and former member of the _| Harvard university faculty, at Nor way hall, 2016 Boren ave, at § p. m | Wednesday apparently end only In more compli Federation of Labor. Announcement pany, formed by Marion bankers « the information on the situatior t Preceding the lecture a banquet in P . toes . ‘ j To all my friends and old cue-| | business men to operate the s Marion! cont by: union leaders there | honor of Dr, Legch and his wife, who Corduroy Outing Garments in an assortment consisting of Coats in sizes '36 to | tomers: I have opened a new ruct, according to inform | arrived from New York Tuesday, will 2 must measure, and Skirts in sizes 29 to 33 waist measure. Special for this Sale, | store in my own building, at 1014 od by B. M. Jewell, he board will receive the|>e held at 5:30 p. m. at the New a garment, $4.95. Pine Street, and will sell Gov road department of thé |nrotest and act on it at the eartiest , Washington hotel, with the local con & eo f ernment Paints and Genera! {suls of Sweden, Norway and Den. Merchandise at lowest prices. MIKE COHEN 1014 PINE STREET Between Terry ao@ Boren Aves. Established since 1906 “Square Deal to All” moment, it was stated by an influ-| ——— datial member | mark attending. At the same time, other raltroads| Dr. Leach explained that the foun re making ready to follow the ex: | ation, of which he is secretary, has “ : ample of the Erie, dt was learned by | “fTanged for the largest exchange of Wireless Service the United Presa. If the labor board |*tudents between the United States} po. eais to turn over to @ private holdw that the Erie is acting within |“ any foreign countries Forty fellowships of $1,000 or|Concern the wireless service main- its rights, it can be stated that at} "/Pompous Funeral City to Keep Its f for Serbian King! homage denied him much of his life Be ited than Pals | Nalunotim dy \P Neo TABLETS <- BF CET A Take Steamer © ne Colman Dock da midnight connecting at Port Angeles with stage di to of Men’s and Young Men’s Suits Values Are Most Unusual and Variety Is Stills Fairly Com- Drehensive. ‘Saturday is Also the ‘Last Day of the SEMI- ANNUAL SALE of “MANHATT. ” SHIRTS It’s a Good Plan to Do Your We feature “LUXITE” HOSIERY for Men, Women “and Children Shopping This Week. ,heastys WATCH FOR OPENING OF THE “CHEASTY | JUNIOR sHOP.” suit. immediately vU NEED TO SUFFER . Tired, aching feet are a needless handicap. You can free yourself from constant nervous strain and annoyance, from smarting and ex- | cessive perspiration. Thanks to scientists who have made a study of the feet, Blue-jay| Treatment is now bringing relief to) men and women everywhere. A refreshing, deodorant bath with Blue-jay Foot Soap, a cooling, soothing massage with Blue-jay Foot Relief, and then a light coating of Blue-jay Foot Powder —this is bliss for tired, aching feet. | Write for free booklet — “The Proper Care of the Feet”—to Bauer & Black, Chicago. Your druggist has Blue-jay Foot Treatment Keeps feet feeling fine \ Anyone Now Can Have |] Pretty Curls and Waves Hair tortured with the hot curling | bound to become dry, bh hot, moist Sitmerine is also & and health. t and xtur fully # ert our & little a Clean t the hair just before de ry t our be { ¥¢ your eyes are inflamed, weak \tired or overworked; if they ache; if \picture shows make them feel dry’ and strained, get a bottle of Bon- ‘Opto tablets from your druggist | dissolve one in a fourth of a glass of) water and use as an eye bath from} two to four times a day. Bon-Opto| ‘allays inflammation, invigorates, tones up the eyes, ake Sind tau rock's thas ts mantry fnstances S. Sooth n: UO and Heal Advertisement 221-Third Ave “COR UNINER SIV y | $8 Crew $s least four bie carriers will follow | ™Ore have been established,” he said, | tained by the city harbor department “by which 20 American students are sent to Seandinavian countries and 20 students from universities in those countries are brought here. “Last year a student from the Uni versity of Washington finished his course in fisheries in Bergen, Nor way “The whole scheme is cementing the relations of all countries involv od. We have chapters in many cities, including San Francisco, and we expect shortly to have one here. “We publish the Scandinavian Re view, an illustrated popular maga- zine, and in many other ways spread knowledge of the countries affected. “The arrangement is financed by bankers and business men.” AUTO CARAVAN IS COMING ON CHICAGO, Aug. 17.—Twenty-eight families, preferring tall grass to tall) buildings, pulled up stakes of their | modern camp on a South side vacant! block yesterday and started moving | westward. The auto caravan is moving on to Idaho, where the fami- lies, who originally started from! Brooklyn, expect to settle, Ninety hardy men and boye, garbed in khaki and denim, bronzed | from living in the open, presented a pleturesque sight as they broke camp. From tarpaulin covers over the tox, in every stage of make and condition, protruded shotguns, bird frying pans and a jumbled | ny makingsup the camp. { ry member of the party was | a successful business man,” once | said William D. Scott, lender of the modern pioneers. “They tired of dress suits, lobster salads, elevators and the artificial life, and want to get back to nature.” In order to imtroduce our new (whalebone) plate, which Is the lightest and strongest plate known, does not cover the roof of the mouth; you can bite corm off the cob; guaranteed 15 years. t Whalebone set of Teet ATT AN for 15 years. Have impressions taken in the morn- nd get teeth same day. Exami- and advice free. See Samples of Our Plate ridge Work. We Stand the Test of Time. Most of our present patronage is recommended by our early custom- ers, whose work is still giving ood satisfaction. Ask our cus- fomers, who have tested our work When coming to our office, be sure you are in the right place. Bring this ad with you Cut-Rate OHI Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY ST. Paterson Onpeaite Frasez- Cc BELGRADE, Aug. 17.—Pomp cael } | will be pald King Peter of Serbia at his funeral. The king died yester- day after an illness lasting most of | this summer. Prince Regent Alexander immedi. | ately ordered the country into/ mourning. penetra Cs It was planned that full royal”hon- | For French Pastry look up Boldt's |ors be paid the king and that his/ Advertisement, body lie in state until the funeral. | were rejected Tuesday by the coun- elt budget committee. The committee also decided to tn sert in the 1922 budget an appropria. tion of $5,400 to continue the harbor patrol on Lake Washington. The Store for Useful Articles Store Hours, 8:30 A. M. TO 6 P. M. peer eee te eautiful Assortment of Rogen Silverware Special at 98c Butter Knife and Sugar A fortunate purchase en- ables us to offer these re- Shell markable values. This heav- i ily-plated Silverware is in Child’s Knife, Fork and the popular Manchester pat- Spoon Set. a manufactured by THIS LOT, 3 FOR 98¢ Rogers. e Medium Knives THIS LOT 98¢ EACH Medium Forks on pee Salad Forks Be y Bers o Dessert Spoons Meat Fork Table Spoons Cream Ladle TEA SPOONS, 6 FOR 98¢ Luna Soap Special 9 Bars for 25c Here is the biggest soap bargain of the year —just think of it—9 bars of Luna Soap, made by Proctor & Gamble, special at 25¢. (No Phone or C. O. D. Orders) Jar—Special 59c This is the oblong shape Glass Butter Jar with cover; 2-pound size, special at 59¢. _ $6.00, $6.50 and $7.50 Wool Bathing Suits Special at $4.98 The August Cleanup Sale of Wool Bathing Suits offers some extra big values. You will find a very attractive assortment to choose from —many pleasing color combinations and a good range of sizes. Spe- cial at $4.98. > $2.50 No. 8 Griswold Waffle Iron—Sperial at $1.49 You can have crisp, fluffy waffles for breakfast every morning if you use a Gris- wold Waffle Iron. It bakes them: right— with the real Southern flavor. m 1 A Big Special for Thursday at $1.49.

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