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“MEMBER AMERICAN HOMES BUREAU: FORK BETTER AMERICAN HOMES” /—5 days more of these - supreme JULY SALE values — reductions on as good furniture as money can buy. Furni- ture from the world’s most noted makers, The merchandise is here to substantiate our claim; the price tage are here to verify uctions. No room too small, no mansion too large, no order too trivial to receive the best service that the Standard Furniture Co. can render. -—this JULY SALE and the wonderful advan- tage of this store’s unexcelled credit service makes this the ideal time and place to select —a feature of these last 5 days of the JUL tremely low prices on our entire showing ment all JULY SALE priced. these sample values: ogany .. —4-piece bedroom suite; Louis XV. period Soe neeerewevegeestereesseseses © eesees $178 regular price $27.50 exactly as pictured. Finely upholstered in artificial leather. Has high, comfortable back. Deep padded back and arms. Spri t. Ai JULY on Di ing sea’ nm extra special star feature: this mattress —one of the best mattress values we have ever offered. Pure cotton. $ 85 Fancy art tick. Roll edge. Round oe: Special for this JULY “geste uy FOURTH FLOOR, FINAL CLEARANCE Bohn Syphon Refrigerators — duce these sample values: —6-piece dining room suite; William and Mary period; —6-piece dining room suite; William and Mary period; SHUR TOM ONNES 5 vos vicnde ce Captes cect iveren ey eee% mahogany ........+. +e Cae aher! 6 kes ye —6-piece dining room suite; William and Mary period; tion mahogany .. —9-piece dining room suit —the world’s best re frigerator. Several styles to select from. Priced from $72.50 to $260—. You take 20% to 33%4% OFF these prices. They're cheap at any price—at these reductions an extraor dinary value! ; Italian renaissance; walnut. ce Re ae NR a Se ERE MEER EE RS —9-piece dining room suite; Queen Anne period; maho; OBR. csetvdgiecssccccgtecerethindescnadee ebb. tah —9-piece dining room suite; a reproduction of an En sign; Kenilworth oak........ THIRD FLOOR. STANDARD FURNITURE CO. L. SCHOENFELD & SONS FOUNDED SEATTLE SECOND AYE. AT PINE ST. va L. oon et SONS MARK dining room suites at very unusual savings— —values that give you a saving plus a saving. Hundreds of din- ing chairs, tables, buffets, china closets—also our entire stock of high-grade period dining room suites—all very deeply re- ¢ tor the last 5 days of this JULY SALE. —6-piece dining room suite; Queen Anne period; combination —9-piece dining room suite; Queen Anne period; walnut. . —9-piece dining room suite; an antique period design; Italian TRADH THE SEATTLE STAR floor space crowded to the bursting point— that’s the reason we consistently reduced the price on every piece of furniture in this tremendous stock. And so these unpar- alleled values, You'll see that by the price tags. Not only price, but CHOICE and QUAL- ITY. Check up the thin, your home needs; then come in one of these 5 remain- ing sale days. bedroom suites unparalleled in value! Y SALE will be ex- of bedroom furni- ture of the BETTER KIND. Mahogany, walnut, ivory finish or oak suites and odd pieces—an exceptionally large assort- regular JULY SALE price price ivory finish $ $ 145— ogany Se —4-piece bedroom suite in attractive parchment enamel. —4-piece bedroom suite; Louis XVI. period; mahogany. . regular JULY SALE price price Jacobean seeeeee S136— $ OT— combina- eoes 200— 169— + 236—~ 188— 450— 338— 521—~ 385— 621— 390— bind bebe 567— 425.25 glish de- 28 Us rye 767— 575.25 Wany.... Credit Is Good ~aeetlers from | CHIEF SEATTLE | To Nile and Potentate Dear meduries; Congratulations! I have watched your ititie romances since you both | inh, I will be at your wedding, Jul at Woodland park. You a very happy married lite, an neither of you can “talk t CHIEF 8 To the Galbraith Dock Dear Gul: For heaven's sake, get somebody on your telephone who ean give out correct information, I know of two oa on Saturday where parties of four persons each were disappointed and in one case forced to wait two hours becanse an employe had told them incorrectly about boat railing, One tsiand boat was vartously reported from your office as leaving on rtain trip at 6:15, 7 and 7:30, That's | Otten Kervie®—and very poor business. ork upl | CHIBY SEATTLE. Dear Friends; ‘Thousands of people thruout the country have post | pon their vacations on account of the rafiroad = atrike. But if the railroad wor walk out, why can't vacationists—to their favorite } camping grounda? CHIEF BEATTLE. | To the Weather Man , Dear Mr. Salisbury: Keop It up, keep it up! But do give us a little | rain for the farmers and the lumbermen. Then more sunshinel CHIEF) BEATTLE. To Frank Moran Dear Frank; I wonder how many Seattle people know what a beau i tiful boys’ school you've got at Rolling Ray? Why not invite ‘em over home Bunday, and let ‘ern vee that the Kart has nothing of Puget Bound for @ first-class boy's college? CHIEF SEATTLE. To Seattle Motorists Ladies and Gentlemen; Don't forget that Dr. Loope wanta YOU atittomobile to transport ehuting to and from The Wayfarer July 2 Just cal! him up at Capitol 2267. CHIEF SEATTLE. To Homer Brew | Dear Murmorist; I see you get razzed by the erudite “Washington Newepaper” for calling your column “Home Lrew.” Why not borrow | Dr. Leope's heading, “Sunshine Smiles"? CHIEF BEATTLE. 'To the Hotel Committees | Enthusiastic fire: You're off, 1 weet Good luck. I'd buy a bond myself-—if my capital weren't limited to ‘wo bits and a Canadian penny. CHIEF SEATTLE. Gentle Fane: Did you know that The Star wes conducting a contest for you? If not, you'd better took up the detalis in this edition—they might interest you. CHIEF SEATTLE. To Amateur Photographers | To Miss Nile Arizti | Dear Lad?: I'm mad at you. Here you are going and marrying and | not saying « word to me! Why didn’t you enter June d'Amour's wed- | ding contest jast month and get married at the Standard Furniture | building? CHIEF SEATTLE. | i} To Dr. Orlando Edgar Miller Dear Peychologiet: I understand that you object to being referred to as an ex-convict fust because you\happened to spend a vacation or #0 in prison. This paychology’s pretty good stuff, isn't It?—must rum more’n half of one per cent. CHIEF SEATTLE. | | To County Officials Gentlemen: 1 get quick « kick out of the way you received The Star's editorial of luet week, urging a clean-up of the courthouse gang. very one of you approved of it very heartily-—adding, of course, that YOU were one of the exceptions to whom The Star referred as being honest. I wonder just which ones The Star did mean, CHIEF SEATTLE. To a Certain Woman Motorist Madam: I was standing at Fourth ave, and Pike et. at about 4:30 To the Man at Window 12, Postoffice Kind Sir: Just a word to tell you Chief Seattle Ifkes obliging people One day lant week somebody stepped up to your window and asked where he might sharpen his pencil. You got up from your déak, came to the window, and said “Give It to me.” Then you carried It back to the pencil grinder behind your desk and did the deed. | hanks for being an obliging human, CHIEF SEATTLE. } | | To L. G. Horr, Grand Jury Foreman | Dear Sir: Congratulations! You and your 16 ampociates said some thing. You said a lot. The rewultse of your work are going to go | echoing down the King county corridors for a long while to come. Your jolte were well placed and timely. My hand to you! CHIBF SEATTLE. | | To Railway Shopmen | Dear Strikers: ‘This state has been free from anyththg Ike violence in connection with the strike. This t« {n great contrast to reports from | other parts of the country. I trust Washington's record will be main- | tained thruout the duration: of the controversy, since violence gets nobody anywhere. CHIEF SEATTLE. | To National Guardsmen, American Lake Dear Soldier Boys: Has the lameness as a result of your newly om left you yet? nm tho the sun is hot and the prairie dust # ating, I hope you 2,600 men will get a lot of pleasure out ef your work, A true bulwark in time of need, the guard undoubtedly will measure up in the future as it did in the world war. Good luck. CHIEF SEATTLE. initiated military t Dear Chief: I read your letter to a “Certain Fountain Lunch Owner” and I rise indignantly to protest, Please, oh please, dear Chief, do not slander the hog or an honest- to.goodness hog ranch ‘The hog ts the cleanest animal imaginable and not to be considered in the same class with the general fountain lunch owner, How do I know? I have eaten at many lunch counters and have watched the process of cleansing. I've also lived on an honest-to-goodness hog ranch, where Mr. and Mrs. Hog and their piggies were given the chance to really be what they certainly are—clean—tho few folks know it, Therefore, Chief, don’t you thing you owe the poor old abused piggy wiggy @ little apology? I think fou do, BEDNA WEAVER, 7757 Eighth Ave. 8. W. Dear Chief: Commenting on your letter last week to David Hen- Gerson, I believe the object of the Rainier Valley line, also the Everett interurban, in placing the names of the crew in charge of the car in & conspicuous place to be seen by the public is to try to make the traveling public realize they are dealing with human beings, I refer to the manner in which the public treats thelr motormen and con ductors. If the public would treat the public servants—street car men, restau- rant men, restaurant help, elevator employes and many others—in a considerate manner, the officials and proprietors of the above-named businesses would have very few complaints from the public, How long could you, Chief, stand the selfishness that a street car man receives from the public without talking back? I'm going to ask you, what consideration does an obliging street car man receive from the public? Almost NONE. A atreet car man deals with ax many as 800 people a day. All with one object—get what I can and charge It up to luck, Just about once a month do I run across someone fair enough to say “Thank you" for some nico little favor I've given them. And I have probably favored as many as 600 people in a month. A fine example of the “Seattle Spirit.” Get busy, act the gentleman, and officials will have much fewer kicks, What 1s the feeling of a busy conductor when you hand him ; 8 transfer tightly folded like a cigaret and rush by him, your only object to get in the ear? Can he say, “Nice, considerate man”? Did you ever stop to think what a mean little trick you hand your accommodating motorman, when he watts for you to run some dis tance for the car, or when he makes a special stop at an out-of.the- way place and picks you up, or when he stops for you when*you fail to give him a« fair warning that you would like to ride on the car? I'll tell you how you act In cases of this kind, if you are only an aver. Ago Seattle citizen. You would not waste a word or a step to keep your credit good with him, But, oh no, you don’t want a selfish deal from public servants, Get what you can and charge to luck, ‘What is a motorman's opinion of an able-bodied man who will open the vestibule door and without an excuse in the world leave the door open for the chilly wind to whistle around his neck? Not the best in the world, allow me to tell you. Yor the one person who will thank @ street car man for a favor, there are a hundred or more who will turn him down, f Here 1s a policy I would like to see Seattle's public adopt: I'm going to be just as much of a gentleman in my dealings with public servants as L would ask them to be toward mo, Very respectfully, A STREET CAR MAN. 'TWO LETTERS TO CHIEF SEATTLE MONDAY, JULY 17, 1922. |Girl Hikes Here | From Los Angeles | Mins Marion Jacobs of Lon Ane | gelen wae in Seattle Monday @ a two weeks’ ike” from Los Ame goles, Min Jacobs, tho admitth the bad been given several “lifts” declared she hod always done 167 |miles a day, She plans to leave® | this week for Vancouver. B. GC. | | Efforts to Revive : Drowned Boy Fail © BELLINGHAM, July 17—Leonara © Whittaker, of Laurel, was drowned in Wheer lake yesterday afternoon | when he was seized with cramps, | Fire Chief Frank Stearns tried um nuccenstully for 45 minutes to resus 7 | citate the youth with a plumotor. SEUVEIUIETONSUUNUEAUAUOUAEEUNAAU = New Designs |= DIAMOND RING MOUNTINGS Platinum— $35 to $300 18k White Gold— $12 to $85 Jeweler 1518 BECOND AVENUB Between Pike and Pine Established 1888 “Say it with Picturettes” 0:50 - 7:15 - "9.00 - 10:30 aS + 85 - 515 p.m. From Bremertoe te Ly Saturday and Sunday 51030 ® =m AUTOMOBILE FERRY Connecting with Olympic Hi way — the short route to Hood nal and Clympie Peninsula pointe, Seattle to Bremerton Datly 74S - 120 am. S15 p.m. Extra trip Saturday and Sunday 6:30 p. m, to Seatile Daily OG om. 130-500 p.m. Extra frp Saturday and Sunday 1030 p.m mitted ts Navy Yard at 1&3 poms Passenger fare 80c round trip. NAVY YARD ROUTE Colman Deck Mais Our whalebone rubber, which 4 not cover the roof of the mouth you have two or more teeth. Natural Rubber, get of ogee wi *. $6.00 Gum Lyke Rubber, a perfect re production of the human gum, of teeth. (GOLD CROWN BRIDGEWORK. ..........+ Most of our present patronage i | recommended by our early custo mers, whose work fs still giving good satisfaction, All work guaranteed for 15 years Examinations free. OHIO DENTISTS | 2nd Ave, and University, St