The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 25, 1911, Page 3

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TURDAY, MARCH 2 - Everett True Interferes--It Is 'M NOT A BEAU, AND s » Nataladiaiie gious” “ THe BUTTER! AND DON'T GET FRivoLous * POEM . BL aL HA er Hay, BEAU, WITH MES YOU'RE ONE OF THESE ROL- * e+ ss ** FRANK FPURTAR AG THI® OTHER RTY— LICKING SMARTIES THAT GO THROUG The WHAT KIND OF CHOW . = HM LIFE WITH SAVER KRAUT~ You 1 |Web HUN? ADAM AND AVE ON A RAFT, PASS Me THE APPLYING ALLEGED COMIC SLANG TO TWO DOUGHNUTS = HERE, DEAL ME THE HOT DOG IN THE Hay, BRACE AXLE GREASE ~ DECENT FOOD AND i OF LIFA PRESERVERS AND DECENT PEOPLES BLACK COFFE. SCORE CARD. ONE IN THE DARK. IT DON'T GO y " HUM, HAs water POACHED BGCS— HELLO, FATTY, DISPLCASURG DISGUST DISAPPROVAL te Z 375 i of bait that | would buy! —————— res —— ee ; Se era a = Thursday in the First Presbyterian AROUND THE WORLD STORY NO. 27 ERRSME SOE Sy & % 4 dtINE OE the Oeaial Labor coum setrgg ep rl genet fig oo THE STAR'S TOURISTS SEE SIGHTS 0’ LONDON: or tors Suckiatisioan sce seam ~2 rit union Is consid-| SERRE RE EE em Ori & new scale of wages for the | Lumber men from all over the The Glass Workers’ union wili @#shthour day. Much practical work Is reported tomorrow night by a chorus under| state are in Seattle today planning give its first annual ball next Thurs-| . by Dr. A. J. Steelman during the |the direction of Claude Madden the season's work day evening at Eagles’ hall, Seventh; OAKLAND, Cal., March 24.—In a|firmt year's existence of the local - os av. and Pine at | contested divorce, Charles Grass al-|branch of the Society for the Porewstt saemene Bod - be! Special Sunday sahent. aatvioea leges that R. D. Finnie, a Sacra-| Friendless. preached by Rev. L. Richardson | are to be held at the First Christian tate neta ee ee cab! mento business man, took Mre ti - - at the Mt. Baker Park Presbyterian | church tomorrow evening, followed now working the eight-hour day Wanda Grass joy riding on the &. Tremayne Dunstan will church, and Rey. Rollin EB. Black-| by an address by Dr. in 7.0: alban, ob ae Bakere’ | Ye? gave her candy tn his store,| preach every bight nex ek at man at the Interbay Presbyterian ae i ae union, has just organized the bebere|A2@ beer and sandwiches in the/the Keystone Congregational church, The orchest oF songs iy ~ 8 in North Yaki 4 Aberd basement | church byterian eburch, ern é De 0 a oe — Mra. Grass entered court at the - Preparations for the conference] rection of Walter Whittlesey, wil 4. Allen Smith, professor of poll-| head of 24 Sacramento women, her| “The Holy City” will be sung at of the layman's missionary move-|render an additional program to- Ucal economy, will address an open ' witnesses. Plymouth Congregational church! ment, to be held Wednesday and morrow evenin, Hele A Bank’s Real Growth of Nine Hundred Per Cent. With the publication now of many 1910 statistics for the city, county and state, our enter- prising publishers are contrasting the figures with those of 1900 to show the progress made dur- ing the decade. Many of our banks and business houses are also contrasting their present totals with those of 1900, and The Scandinavian American Bank is pleased to submit its summary, as follows: eects ae Working Capital 1900, $110,000; January 7th, 1911, $1,107,460.63 ‘Star's Tour of the World.) {the London police, is a different And in the foreground of the ple GROWTH wi i i 900 March 23.—Only 26,932 | matter. Over 7,000,000 people live{ture is to be seen something sal A net ‘0 without consolidation of ara live in the city of London. |¢Te. A million of these go into|typical of London as the Nelson | of London is no bigger in| most striking feature of the city these vehicles, some drawn by| Pi m " (Peitiaton than Danville, 111, where |! London. This is Trafalgar horses and some driven by motors, | A net GROWTH without consolidation of 900 per cent Joe Cannon ‘somes freee For | 23uare. named in celebration of the and all London rides in them n 4 victory of Trafalgar, and graced by them. Street cars are comparative When you speak of banks that have really GROWN, banks that have become big because “city” proper has an area of | : . the Nelson column, reared in re- ly scarce in London. } : E- eer, Covering the very |membrance of the hero of Trafalgar. From London we shall go to a| j are popular and successful through no other power than the good will of depositors, your ‘f London. Incidentally the! On one side of the picture Is to clty that was bigger than London : j “tively rT Sa avis Bi ed r Pie of Sutheriand gets most of |be seen the national gallery, which once—and net we long ant yne mind instinctively turns to The Scandinavian American. k Daid for “city” proper |shelters many of the great paint bt Imagine ely, Paris, the “oe ey , - : : . London, covered by owen poe in England . can ieeed alts aise. | For it was not the officers, not the directors, not any of the big capitalists who built up The aa - | Scandinavian American Bank. Nor was its ten-year increase of 900 per cent to the splendid totals ollars Strength Counts THE MARKETS | of today brought about bron any process of consolidation. in all life's affairs. Strength comes Of the larger banks, sometimes referred to as the “Big Four,” The Scandinavian American froned of pure blood;—good blood comes | _.Tht ellemm eras orices ‘i ger banks, sometimes referred to as the “Big Four, : w when stomach, liver, kidneys and | brea Sank is the ONLY one that has remained-unconsolidated. Its figures represent growth—REAL ie ith | bowels are kept in proper condition | t ‘ied GROWTH-—a net INCREASE of 900 per cent in Deposits; a net INCREASE of 900 per cent in Smooth ay a little care and we Capital, surplus and undivided profits, which constitute the working capital of the Bank. : | A> eis Edges BEECHAM : . But there is another side to these figures—a side that does great credit to the thrift of our SUPERIOR LAUNDRY. people. Did you ever stop to consider, for instance, that the Savings Deposits alone of The “The Bati«factory 1 bs ’ m Cie } 4 4 J F ; : ‘ n tt st | - rn 5 Scandinavian American Bank are as large in proportion to population as those of any of the big “ . a ~ $100,000,000 Savings Bz $ ow r re: s Co “re Yeposits wo' ake a | Sold Everywhere. Im boxes We. and 2%¢ | Du SA $100,000,000 Savings Banks in New York? They are; and its Commercial Deposits would make a — pretty substantial commercial bank besides. If success be measured not by dollars and cents, but by the number of people we serve and satisfy, the figures are still more notable. The government census gives Seattle’s population as 237,194. We believe we have more. Figuring five to the family, as most statisticians do, it gives F: us fewer than 50,000 families Yet with 27 banks in the city, The Scandinavian American Bank Whole corn, ton’. |: . alone has approximately 30,000 depositors Thus it comes about that, notwithstanding its humble little front at the corner of Second and Cherry, The Scandinavian American Bank REQUIRES and HAS more bank clerks, more bank room, more bank fixtures and more bank facilities of every sort than any other bank in the North- west. The bank was opened on April 27, 1892. But before that—as some of you old-timers will re- member—there were many people in and around Seattle who intrusted their savings to the per- sonal care of Mr. Andrew Chilberg, founder of the bank and its president from the start. ALASKA BUILDING—Home of The ae ee ee There were banks here then—good banks—but these people did not care about their strength Spanish onions a or standing. Handing their money to Mr. Chilberg was to them the safest thing they could do Dressed Meats—Kelling with it. HEY MEAN that the Moving Train has auto- matically protected Itself from a collision. No The number of people and the amounts they saved grew until Mr. Chilberg felt that the respon- train will follow it onto the block of track it occu- ples, The signals are oct automatically, “As. the aw sesireseenessd ° sibility was altogether too great for one pair of shoulders. So he talked it over with some of the train enters a new block an electric circuit is broken and the : Pe F 1 older bankers, and as a result The Scandinavian American Bank was born—born nineteen years ago a eeebore fly metey signalling othe bd next month, in the basement of the New York Block, where the Chilberg Agency now is. ‘STOP’ y remain set until the train passes jock j beyond. Mr. Chilberg’s idea then was to surround his trust with safety, and that idea has been the cor- The System gives perfect protection. ‘Any defect or acci- tees ; ner stone of the bank’s policy under his continuous presidency. to the electric system, a broken rail or an open switch, s9ne teereee will break the current and set the semaphore at “STOP.” A ~y : Whether you come to deposit money or to borrow money; whether you wish to send money Main cannot etner a block that 1s not safe in every way. ‘ to other countries or to other parts of this country; whether you have money to collect from The Electric Block Signal and the exclusive use of Steel Flee fest. - ‘ ‘ points in the new world or in the old world; whether you choose to buy some of our Seattle Im- Coaches make our system most inviting to those who demand Pec, sameene Sofety and comfort when they travel Lent lard scatterer . provement Bonds or our carefully made First Mortgages—your every transaction is to be sur- TWP" moked Moate—Heliing rounded with the safety that only a strong, conservative, well-conducted bank can provide. Line of Shasta) }!:3 iis". Bollea ham .. Limited fics" 1.0:5L-and Union Poche ===! The Scandinavian American Bank 716 Second Av. First Av. 3. and Dearbprn. Oe a’ arom Main 932; Ind. 1995, Tel. Main 7998; Ind. 2623. Rent aes, rte a ad ore tee, A. CHILBERG, J. E. CHILBERG, T. B. MINAHAN, J. F. LANE, W. D. SKINNER ~< ~*” ee ie” tint Better, President. f Vice President. Vice President. Cashier, wal, #1,p65 1601 General Freight and nger Agent. ry Ite SKA BUILDING, SEATTL!

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