The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 16, 1922, Page 5

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FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1922." ry i?) eo ) waeuil 4 it i?) 4 is MEMBER AMERICAN 50% Cotton-covered Garden Hose ..ccceses cepa Print Linoleum at $1.00 per square a) LIBERAL CREDIT EXTENDED 1&8 a S— : FURNITURE CO. IN 5 SIXTH AVE, BETWEEN PIKE AND PINE STS. 4910 HINES) OUMNEST PHONE ELLIOTT HOMES BUREAU Seasonable Articles OFFERED AT SPECIAL PRICES IF YOU HAVE NOT ALREADY MADE YOUR SELECTION CALL TOMORROW OR SATURDAY $13.50 fie" "$11.85 7 $5.65 Si. en Freevng $1.69 $16.50 sn" $12.65 trom per eq. yard. ®1.SDt0 $2.70 No Charge for Laying yard and up. Restoring Good Eyesight and Preventing Eyestrain through skill and experience is the Service we offer you. COLUMBIAN OPTICAI. CO. gir Ren aor, PORTLAND. OMAMA CITY. DALLAS e*4 SALT LAKE STORES IN DENVER. KANSAS LO8 ANGELES.—MMme. Ernestine Schumann-Heink, famous contralto, | be held tes Gist birthday. Has degree | Ebiscopa! |] her by University of Southern Calt- | AMUSEMENTS | PORTLAND, Ore.—Ten cases of | Rareoties and four members of crew | | arrested on Vapanese steamer Meiwu Maru by federal agents at Astoria. « fO KILL RATS a served. j The lumber market is back to & normal basis, This was the comment offered by representative lumber men Friday on recent local price in- creases of from $1 to $2 » thou- sand feet. but so steady that lumber mv thruout the Northwest are per cent higher than normal berman said, “is healthier today tha: THE CONFIRMATION class wili|'t Nar Deen for years. Sunday at Christ chapel, | | reaction. “But the present growth has Just been healthy and normal, and F feet that lumber prices are now settling down te normal, don't look for any more b 7. but that {i was simply in line wit Progress for months tn all market pected. as lumber mille generally « prices. It was explained that the local In crease was not confined to Beattie, , ‘The return to normal has not been laccomplished by any such meteoric | rise as marked the war time boom. Tt hag simply been a steady, gradual | Inerease—no gradual that it has hard. | @7¢ shrinking ry Seen mevleunhee Seah Gay <t0 bee | Rutiding in Seattle is active and prow now | Pécts for construction work this year “Sometimes the price goes up ro 1, Brooklyn ave, and &. 41th | *uddenly that we're afraid: we know at., it was announced. Rev, Paul B./ @f doctor of music conferred UPON | James will preach, h a slow advance that has been in No great increase in employment —except in connection witht! pres ent citywide building boom-i« ex: Now operating at Just about capacity. ‘The improvement in lumber con ditions te ascribed by the Loyal Le | general industrial and commercial conditions; good crops; We Want You to BUY CLOTHES CAREFULLY Just as the reputable merchant does it. “Plunder Merchandise” never affects the buyer for a store which handles high-grade clothing, because highest value is the first consideration for Glib talk of “bargain” prices on the money involved—not the price by itself. Professional clothing buyers, of course, know what to look for. They examine quality, tailoring, style and fit—all of which must be equally high in standard to produce a good suit. That done, they seek only a , 3 fair, honest price. 4 You, too, can be an expert buyer if you will judge in the same way. At this store we bring the matters of material, tailoring, style and fit to your attention and then let you judge whether you are getting FULL VALUE FOR YOUR MONEY. The prices: be $30, $35, $40, $45 and $50 We are especially well-stocked with clothing For Summer and Vacation Needs Here are several attractive offerings: Whipcord Suits.......... $39.50 Scotch Tweeds, . $29.50 Whip Cord Topcoats, $34.50 916 SECOND AVENUE railroad, municipal, highway. paving, school, | .) meeting, marshal, and Frank Dowd, state sec) THE SEATTLE STAR PRUSSIANS DEFY EBERT’S ORDER Yon Hindenburg is still a great hero in Allenstein, East Prussia, where early in the wor | he stopped the Russian Cossacks’ advance. \military celebration when Von Hindenburg visited there recently. This photo of goose- stepping soldiers parading before Hindenburg (arrow) shows how the order was NOT ob- e President Ebert ‘Lumber Market Back to Normal Stability Jbonpital, irrigation and hydro-electric | project construction: iron and steet | boot and radio develo, ment, result- | ing in sharp increase of copper activ | ity. | On local conditions the legion’s | bulletin has the following to say ‘New business has @lightly fallen | off in the last two weeks, Shipments continue heavy Export inquirtes are Nght, and unfilled foreign orders Rail trade is fair, Timber cutting business is scarce. Local lumber sales nd ata fair price in month ago. Rail prices “The entire market,” one big tum. lore deginning to feel the last ad vance. Export prices have not yet advanced in proportion with costs. Coastwike trade is good, Asiatic bust | ness is not promising. Some author! # too fast, and that there'll Be ®/ tien look for Chinese buying to in.| crease in volume before the end of jthe year,” EAGLES TO HOLD Seattle to Send Delegates to Bellingham Led by Meir At-plere band, drill team of 42 men and marching club of 200, Seattle aerie, No. 3, Fraternal Order of Pagies, will march down Second ave, Sunday in parade forma- tion. They will leave by special train The convention will last three days, according to Crawford White, state vice president. The teams and offt. | cors of the various aeries thruout the state will compete in ritualistic work fonday night, and the Seattle Eagies’ band will render a concert Wednes day event White will attend the will H. HL Kulles, grand | Tetary, Sixty nine delegat It rep. resent Seattle, with one alternate del emate for each |Pierce Divorce Is Reversed by Court Holding that a man cannot leave his wife of hig own free will, then obtain a divorce on the grounds that | lthey have not lived together for a certain time, the supreme court Thursday reversed the decision of | Judge Walter M. French in the case of Henry J. Pierce and the wite, Mra. | Violetta Pierce, whom he sought to divorce. : |Waterhouse Put on Advisory Committee Frank Waterhouse, president of the Chamber of Commerce, has ac cepted an appointment to serve on | the advisory committee of the de partment of commerce to give advice jon major problems regarding the romotion of commerce in the Far cast | Tagebiatt to carry gas pistol or blank jcartridge gun and to walk in middie |MOUNTAINS ENTICE EARLY VACATIONISTS this year, Bleanor. Are you going to a fashionable summer resort or do you plan.to rough it?” | going to the mountains. get away from the city and out into the open somewhere, where I can drink in p lot of fresh air and get some good exercise.” "That sounds good. When do you #0 and for-how long?” of June this year and I will be gone two weeks. Iam going to motor up to Rainier Park with my brother and hig wife, [ can hardly wait tilt |1 get started.” “Hope you have a good time and T know you will. What are you go. ing to wear?” “Oh, 1 have a lovely now tweed sult It's a peach. Jacket and (knickers for hiking and roughing tt, | And, then, if we dance at the lodge I can wear the skirt and a blouse. 1 got the sult at Cherry's for only $16.50, sister got herself a lovely Joraey sult for $12.76, also a hat. Got it on credit, too. I was able to make most convenient arrangements for paying down what I could and {then I will make monthly payments for the rest, On Second ave., between Madison “and Spring, 207 Rialte Bidg., over the Pig'n Whistie,-Ad- vertisoment. ‘ANNUAL MEETING “I hear your vacation comes early ; “No summer resort for me Im! L want to| | “Oh, my vacation comes the 26th ordered there should be no DEMAND PROBE "OF DRUG SALE /90,000 Doctors Urge Con- gress to Act BY EDWARD M. THIERRY WASHINGTON, June 16.—A con- certed drive has begun to secure passage of Congrenaman Lester D. | Volk's resolution for a congressional linvestigation of the narcotic drux | evil, which has grown to such an ex: tent that American addicts are spend ing more than $61,000,000 a year for | rugs. ” A tremendous impetus has been given the fight for an inquiry by the revolutionary action of the Ameri. can Medica! association, representing na, in publicly en. ik measure. has kept the resulution | in a pigeon hole since last January,” | ays Congressman Volk, who ts a Brooklyn physician, “Now the medi. cal profession i» waking up. Bn dorsements are pouring in from state | medica! and pharmaceutical societies jall over the country. “Until the maladministration of the narcotic law is exposed, hundreds of thousands of innocent drug vic. tims will continue to be persecuted. It t# & question of saving tives. “Not more than 10 or 20 percent of drug addicts are criminals. The {vast majority are responsible per. sons, forced to hide their iliness as if it were @ crime. “The criminal addict has no diffi. culty getting the drugs he needs in the underworld, The tremendous profite are squeered out of the re- *pectable victima “For relief they must go to high | priced sanitariums. If they have no [money they must go te innane aay. j lums or Jatle, or buy from the street | peddier. And failing that—they can |eommitt muicide! For if they don’t, they are doomed to die @ lingering death.” ) Dr. Vote de i that unless there in an open investigation of the entire narcotic situation the recently passed Jones-Miller law will fail of its pur- “This law was honestly drawn to | prevent the importation of narcotics [except for medicinal use,” he saya. \" Tt ts to prevent the misuse of drugs [and check smuggling | “Hut it haa a fatal loophole for wrong administration. It ts just as Wkely to increase smuggling and { Heit sale by vendors, openttg iMegit! mate channels and closing legitimate channels.” The Volk bill seeks to expose con ditions that have taken the narcotic | Problem out of the hands of reput- able physicians. Dr. Volk, with other students of | the drug evil, believer in solving the [problem by education and by en couraging medical workers and stu. | dents once more to take up the study and treatment of narcotic drug addic tion without political and other lay interference OTTAWA. Ont. — Twenty-seven amatier vessels of Canadian govern ment merchant marine to be laid up land disposed of, according to W. C. Kennedy, minister of railways an canals, TT’ CLAODENS ORE, TIRED FEET | “T12" makes sore, burning, tired feet fairly dance with delight, Away | j#o the aches and pains, the corns, | |callouses, blisters and bunions. { | “TIzZ" dra wa | out the acids} and poisons that | puff up your! | feet. No matter | | how hard you | work, how long i you dance, how | far you walk, or! how long you remain on your feet, T17" bring restful jderful for tired, aching, swollen, | narting feet Your feet just tingle for joy: shoes never hurt or seem tight Get @ box of “TIZ" now from any druggist or department store. End |foot torture forever—wear smaller | shoen, keep your feet fresh, sweet }and happy.--Advertisement | —_—_—_—_— Foley's Honey =“Tar SURE and QUICK Relief from COUGHS init? | Best for Children and Grown Persons ie SAO LE Nee eee TER Aged Pioneer Is Authorities at Oak Harbor, Whid-| The by faland, were making @ thoro in.) vestigation Friday of the deatlr of Jacob Balda, 65-year-old pioneer, who — burned to death in hia home there late Wednesday. when the fire started. His daughter. inlaw, Mrs. Gerben Balda, dashed into the flames and was drageing him to safety when the roof fell in, crushing him. The Gextroyed —— Merchandise | ——— have been living the past nine months. citizens of them. Boys’. Outing Wear Khaki Lace-leg Play Suits and Wash ‘Trousers Bh yt te ; aki Knickers Sport Shirts Khaki Sport Blouses Flannel] Shirts Flannel Blouses Khaki Hats Bathing Suits Overalls Overall Suits Everything for the Boy for Summer, and very reasonably priced. Women’s Sport Hats $1.95 to $12.50 ‘The Millinery Dept, & displaying a new assortment of attractive Sport Hats of satin, felt, straw, tweede | and straw and ribbon combinations. Also, Hats made of ribbon taffetas and embroidered duvetyne in all the beautiful shades. Unusual values from $1.96 to 912.50. Women’s Tweed Coats Special Till Noon—$13.95 Second Floor Long and three-quarter length Tweed Coats, half ined and tm belted and loose back styles. A pleasing amoriment of colors in sizes 16 to 38. Ettraordinary values offered until Saturday noon only, at $18.96. Silk and Wool Dresses—Special at $7.35 Silk and Wool Dresses, including Taffetas, Canton crepes, crepe de Chine and only, are priced special for the day, at $7.36 each. Poiret Twills, in small sizes Dependable RHODES co Dependable Values m—Monday, Wednesday, Friday Three Months’ Vacation For Boys and Girls! Now that the daily routine of study has ceased, mainly to allow the children’s minds to rela¥# and to build their strength that much greater for the next school term, be sure that you encourage them in clean and healthful sports. Parents should dress their boys and girls for a little more rugged life than they Play will make better men, women and BROADCASTING s Girls’ Gingham Dresses 95c Upper Main Floor Pretty little Ginghgm Dressem are very neat for girls’ Bummer wear, and they are comfortable, too. This assort- ment includes checks and plaids ‘n blue, green, pink and color combina- tions, with attractive trimmings. Sizes are 7 to 14 years. Specially priced for Saturday at 9B¢ each. Collar and Vest Sets Special $1.25 Main Floor White Organdie Tuxedo Collar and Vest Sets, charmingly trimmed with ainty Venise and Valenciennes laces and colored embroidered bandings, Very dainty styles that are most pleasing and attractive for Summer wear, Special, . set, $1.26. Men’s Bathing Suits Main Floor The Beaches Open Sunday ! Weave, Fancy Striped Plain Suite ... Pisin Wea Sults ... a Piain Weave, Fancy Striped Ge ba ce ccakancpan :84.50 Rib-Stitch Worsted Sults....94.05 Jantzen’s Rib-Stiteh Wors' "Fancy Striped Burned to Death transcontinental Foreign Wars, nie — Rail Fare for Vet Convention Halved passenger association has granted a one fare rate for the round trip to all mem- bers of the Veterans of Foreign : Wars coffing'to Seattle for the 23rd Balda was asleep annual encampment, August 15 to/ 19, according to a telegram received | Thursday at encampment headquar- tera in the Railway Exchange build: | from Ruel W. Elton, New York, house wes | national adjutant of the Veterans of Store Hours—8:30 A. M. to 6 P. M. ‘Women are now acting as “1 urers in eight counties in | | Sees FOR CHILOREN OR AOUL' ‘Wiese urea are ees Sega 4T ALL Goop pavoaisrs WEAR-EVE Aluminum Preserving Kettle Eight-Quart Size | Special at $1.69 Get One Today Fine for preserving strawberries. 20% Reduction on all Wear-Ever Cover to Fit aluminum, a5e¢ = GOOSEY CARS Special at $1.39 The best toy ever made for small chil- ren, Get one and please the kiddies, Special at $1.39. == TOOL SPECIAL 98c No. 14 2-foot, 16-inch Tongue Polished Steel Square. Special at 98¢, HUNTERS’ AXE Special at $1490 CAMP GRATE Complete with leather sheath; fine for camping. Special at $1.49. \l ~ LEAN-TO AUTO Oceupies but little space when fold- ed. Without ventilators. Poles extra. "BEST COTTON HOSE 50-foot, regular $7.50....... 25-foot, regular $4.00........$2.89 This is a high-grade Hose, tightly woven, lined with a heavy, pure rub- ber tubing. IMPORTED SQUARE WILLOW Take one on your camping trip. Special 7x9 Brown Canvas $9.49 7x9 Baker Twill $17.49 Special - 85.49 ES, FOLDING Special at 49c

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