Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WW ALS \Sesemeene Women Fighting sioner Lou C. Smith after an extend: ‘ , ed public heartng tn which business t D men and members of taxpayers’ or- 0 own azz, ganizations took part, Commissioner e Thomas Dobson is tl. would require 1,000 acres, If ft ao copts Monday's offer, 700 adjacent aco = ores, options on which have already been obtained, will have to be pury | chaned. | ‘Tho cost of the proposed hospital Will be between $2,000,000 and $3,d00 es 000. It will consist of many small 000,000 Army Base In| dunsines with a contrat adminietra- | “stitution Bid for; County | ‘“P...ticany ait persons at Monday's Donates Land hearing favored the donation, pro) vided it would not Paine taxes. | oR Chairman Rameay explained that AR offer to donate to the govern: | 1. remaining 120 acres at the Wil 999 of the 420 acres comprising | ow, will be sufficient to take care of op lhenlegtlghel rare a stockade for prisoners. it Which to build one of the five Paeepttata authorized by an $18.) In the musxeam of the school ot} congressional appropriation | medicine in Paris molds of brains} Wired to Washington late Mon-jof remarkable personages of France afternoon by the county commis-|are on exhibition Prepared for the Call of Mrs. Marz Oberndorfer WASHINGTON, March 29 “Make good music popular and popu lar music good” ts the slogan adopt ed by the General Federation of Women's Clubs in a campaign just started to drive out jazz and improve American music generally ‘The campaigners are headed by Mra. Marx E. Oberndorfer (Anne Shaw Faulkner). | One of the means by which they hope to reach thelr objective is the music memory contests which are being started in all communities, | “Several country clubs already | have acted to bar jazz music at their | dances, Dancing masters are seek. | ing to revive the walts and two-step,” | mys Mra. Oberndorfer. “If America is to become a great nation of music, the jar munt be eliminated. It t# time young Amer) jou learned the good folk music ot its land. “We must try to ald every city and village in Amertea to make music a vital part of the daily life of the community.” TOM MARSHALL OUT TO WORK He Says It's Work That Nation Needs INDIANAPOLIS, March 2.— AXLE PACKING WASHERS ‘Thomas W. MarshaN. former vice An extra laree, heavy felt washe r rear axle which President, added here today to his re will prevent grease from working o} bout three Inches leomt Weshington htement that im diameter and when compr to to axle housing on * ighth at America needs is a good it hugs the axle shaft very tightly % 15¢c Being toro can get by. Price, each « oe A it secs ~ bad What. also is needed te for every- “@ |body to go to work at something SVUPPLY useful to his fellowmen at some ‘\ 2s Carn On price, even tho that price may ap- GENCY pear unan WESTLAKE & LERORA |,, 220 ‘rouble with the average man s s s is that he has been doing just as s ittle work as possible and trying to get as much as he possibly could get for it,” exid Marshall. “And I don't blame him I have been doing the same thing myself. “But I expect to go to work. “And if I can't get $25 apiece for the talke I have been making over the country, why, I will take $12.50. “And in the meantime President Harding ts going to be my president, just as he ty going to be the preni dent of everyone else in the United States. “When I was a little boy,” con tinued the former vice president, “the geography which I used in school had a picture on the outside of @ Mr. Atlas in the act of holding up the world. Carrying the world ‘on one’s shoulders is a pretty big job—I know, for I tried to carry Indiana last year. “No one man can hold up the world. It in up to each of us as an individual to do his part honestly and well no matter how small.” Bolts and Lugs for all cars. We now have them in any kind or sia, Need any? If you do, drop in and see us. Nelson Ratchet Wrench Made specially for clear- ance around auts on Ford transmission bands. The ratchet feature makes this 65c wrench work very fast. Price.... AUTOMOBILES Our private trade-in Funeral services for Capt. Robert w Funeral Thursday auction and for Fire Captain Norris, 50, veteran of the fire department, will be held at 2 p, m. Thursday from Bonney-Watson’s parlors. Interment will be in Lake view cemetery. He died at Provi dence hospital of pneumonia Mon day morning. He ts survived by his wife and a daughter, Blanche, 18 He had been in charge of West Seattle station for two yearn and a member of the department for 23 years. Services will be under the auspices of the B. P. O. B. |Mail Sack Theft Proved Flivver CHICAGO, March 29.—"Hands up!” hoarsely yelled the bold, bad Iman in the flivver. Robert Burnett, mall truck driver, who waa collecting mail on the Weat Side today, put on his brakes and stopped. “Throw out those registered mall sacks,” continued the bold, bad man. “I crave action!” Burnett threw out two sacks, and the bold, bad man went on his way sale the first day sold over $20,000 worth of cars. It has demonstrated two facts—one is that people appre- ciate good mer- chandise; another, that we are selling just as many cars at private sale as at auction. People want to trade. pjoicing, COME UP TODAY OR Bei ee vs ont: mine ne"! nd a flock of newspapers anc | Open 9 a M. re 9 P. M. mail order catalogues. Auctions 11 A. M., 2 P. M., 7:30 P. M. Chaplin’s Mother Arrives in U. S. Automobile Department Pine at Bellevue Seattle’. Greatest Automobile Auction Sale Frank Waterhouse & Co. Pine at Bellevue YORK, March 29,-—Mrs. of the com: d to join tomorrow. y from Liv erpool, and after a brief formal de tention at Ellis island, was released to her son, who had in advance made arrangements for her care while! here. Because Mrs, Chaplin is suffering from a nervous disorder, it was nec. essary to arrange for her admittance in advance. Her departure from | | Liverpool with Chaplin's secretary, s !Thomas Harrington, was so hurried | |that her name did not appear on the passenger list of the Celtic, SEATTLE STAR Mental Telepathy at $10 a BY LEE SULLIVAN “et you ten, he challenges.;Me looked at the woods, where the RATTLING cough shook the|My sportin’ Diood was up, beonus? ragged tops of the trees met the I thought I had @ cinch, #0 T took | macy " loud Poet nh? paunchy form of the retired him, He waited a moment, seem wa f — ee Be * } el © bootlegger. ingly deeply buried in thought. He beens to me ane ote hi “Tl retired because of a bet, Now, looked out at the murky water, “*When I made the bet, you were marked. apr hg ot the blurred. beach owed, and how easily you pay “It waa Jim, that infernal, eternal wt = hal it all by framing up a k or gambler, that made me make the and selling the boom you bet that forced me to retire, We Totes Shrapnel in wtend of turning it over to were both running boose for The Hows. Am I right? Big Boas and were down on the His Face 23 Years) “1 paid nim the si0” bench one night waiting for the i 20—wenty- ‘The retired bootlegger moved his boone boat to flicker the right num. | OMAHA, Neb., March 2 head back a few inches on the ber of lights, when Jim, from the |three years ago Walter L. Mackett,/bunk, so that the sun, partially depths of his turned-up overcoat,|16, q member of company B, Sind pg oa by . ng ad coy barn no longer shone in his face. U. & infantry, which flanked Teddy |"" | virnvey's ring rattled an he “‘Roone in wonderful and proht-|Moonevelt’s Rough Riders, WAS) moved, whistling, down the hallway * hell,’ 1 agreed wounded by @ shell, which Killed hit |nenind the thick, solid walls. ‘The “"l mean mental telepathy, he!puniie’ in the charge up San Juan /retired bootlegger Micked a speck corrected and 1 apologized. Then hill in a night attack from bis otherwise spotiess striped he went om ‘By it, T can tell just] fe was taken to the rear and «| quit. what you are thinking right now. |doctor picked pleces of shrapnel out| “It was that bet that made me “I hastily a#tirred my mind away /of his face. retire, I worked on the idea on from visions of that ravin’ raven} Recently, while shaving, Blackett) which he won the $10. I perfected haired chorus girl and told him it} was surprised when another piece of /it and carried it out. Hverything was absolutely impossible shrapnel came thru his nose. worked fa until after the cy ‘It's wonderfult Lives to See the Prescription He Wrote in 1892 the Worlds Most Popular Laxative Remedy Founder of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup P. the largest liquid laxative in the world, past i old age, but hale and hearty—Still eees patients — Wonderful achieve- ment of a “country doctor.” Winere were no pile or tablets or sult waters there were no pills or tablets or salt ety) the relief of constipation, and no artificial remedies made from coal tar. The prescription for constipation that I used early in my practice, and which I put in drug stores in 1892 un- der the name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, is a liquid remedy, and I have never had reason to change it. I intended it for women, children and elderly poovle, and these need just such a mild, safe, gentle bowel stim- ulant as Syrup Pepsin. I am gratified to say that under successful tmy ption has proven its worth and is now the |. it selling uid laxative in the world. The fact that over eight million bottles were sold by druggists last year that it has won the confidence of mothers whose chief interest is the health of their children. DR. W. B. CALDWELL TODAY Born Shelbyville, Mo. March 37, 1890 Began (he manafsetare of his famous Prescription is 183 Bt to pertiontenty to me to know that the biggest half ¢t million bottles were bought by mothers for themselves and the chil- dren, though Syrup Pepsin is just as valuable for grownups. The price of a bottle holding 50 aver. age treatments is sixty cents; such a bottle will last a family several months. Ihave never made a secret of what is in Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. It is a compound of Seams ond other simple laxative herbs Pharmacopoeia. I consider Syrup Pepsin today in Sho Sete0s SONS, 700 Ot ET Sah 8 OA 1892, the best re: y a family can have in the house for the safe relief of constipation and its pg ola) ills, such as headaches, bilious- ness, flatulence, indigestion, loss of appetite — sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds and levers, Millions of families are now never without Dr. Egyptian Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, and I believe if you h in and pleasant-tasting aromatics. will once start using it you will also always have Tica tagrosients are endorsed in the U. S. a bottle handy for emergencies. TRY LT Sard me yo name and address and | will send you a free vial boule of ey Syrup Pepein. Address me Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 513 Washington Street, Monticello, Minois. Everybody now FREE cuir s sei, and icts well w know the best Weta me today d EAGLES’ DRIVE FOR MEMBERSHIP IS ON Non-Political—Non-Sectarian Seattle Aerie No. 1, Fraternal Order of Eagles, is making a decided in- crease in membership because it offers the best protection to its member and his family for the least money. Every worthy male citizen in the city over 18 years of age eligible to membership. FEES REDUCED For a limited time the fee is $10.00 for men 18 to 50 years of age. Over 50 years admitted as social members only. Dues $10.00 per year. We pay sick and accident benefit of $1.00 per day for 84 days, in,any one year, and furnish a corps of six physicians, in ordinary cases of sicRness or accident, to a member and his family. We pay $100.00 Funeral Benefit in case of death of a member. In addition you can secure life insurance at a safe rate. If you want to be thrifty and secure the greatest benefit to yourself and family, JOIN THE EAGLES NOW. THE FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES IS THE ONLY FRATERNAL ORGANIZATION OF NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL PROMINENCE THAT ORIGINATED IN SEATTLE. EVERY MAN IN THE CITY SHOULD BE A BOOSTER MEMBER OF THE EAGLES. A SEATTLE ORGANIZATION THAT HAS MADE GOOD. A HOME PRESERVER AND A HOME BUILDER. LOCAL PRIDE SHOULD TELL EVERY MAN TO JOIN US. EVERY PERSON IN THIS CITY SHOULD WORK IN HARMONY FOR THE CITY’S UPBUILDING, THE SAME AS THE E: HAVE. SPACIOUS CLUB ROOMS, BOWLING ALLEYS, , THE FEE AND DUES ARE DOWN TO BEDROCK. It is an organization that is one hundred per cent solvent. It is the only organization that gave outright in cash $1,000.00 to the de- pendents of every member who lost his life while in the service of the World War. These gifts amounted to $1,250,000.00. In addition we took no dues from our members while in the service. Benefits paid last rr, by yap Aerie No. 1 were $28,002.70. Assets amount to $247,108.05. ITOWNS FREE FROM 3 EAGLES’ HALL, Seventh Avenue and Pine Street. sce 8 It binds you to no sect or creed. As you enter our Hall, you depart—a free man. MEMBERSHIP Membership in Seattle, 6,000. Membership in the State of Washington, 25,000. Membership in the entire jurisdiction, 500,000. APPLICATIONS NC ‘ FILE, 250 NEW MEMBERS ADMITTED DURING MARCH, 264 BENEFITS Benefits paid in entire Order last year, $1,651,336.88, Benefits paid by entire Order from inception, $22,993,263.09, The total Assets of the entire Order, $14,759,832.58, JOIN THE EAGLES NOW JOIN THE SPECIAL CLASS INITIATED EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT, SEE ANY EAGLE FOR FURTHER INFORMATION OR CALL AT EAGLES’ HA , . ‘ call Elliott 644, or Kagles' Clubrooms, Biliott 6391, ce ee tere fake knockover 1 was driving along the lonely road, when I met him. He had done the mme thing— |framed a knockover “He gave me the wrong end of! & gun and knocked me over for my | ex Later, he | th own knocke@over booze. |double-crossed me and I retired |ere—t0 the pen.” “Dirty trick that; warn't Hin hearer sympathized. your idea and your booze and send-|got me here rr 1 Picture— here. Throw; or, Why the Bootleger “Retired” dapgnrhagy os winttolly 1 didn’t mind it so much, ne didn't cop my Mem When he said I was Piof the tramed knockover, #8 Tuy thinking of the black haired af mn it?" |darned “Stealing |the $19, keh quiet, and used i It Hut the idea was so that I just paid him es § Condemns This We are talking abou “The Faith Healer,” now -unning Knock— A leading Seattle minister called up Mr. Von Herberg yesterday and protsted vio- lently against furthe: showing of “The Faith Heabkr.” asserted that it malgned the Allied Churches of Ssattle. - Boost— He Dr. Frank Crane, famoui edi- author, lectu:er, CHURCHMAN, said of The | Faith Healer” The Yew York Tribune of March 20: “First of all, it’s a good picure. play. The story is good, the theme gripping. * * * It's a great picture, out of the edi- experience. ur a a ‘ Opinion— If we thought this pictur: im- proper we would not shov it. We believe it a clean piture. We believe Dr. Crar is. RIGHT and the eminet Se- attle clergyman WRONG Your We are not here to offind pa- trons, but to please thea. Give us your opinion. If aw com- mittee of Seattle chtnechmen or laymen will cometo us with the unanimous decleration that “The Faith Healer” is im- proper, we will -ake it off at once. That seens fair enough, JENSEN & VON HERBERG