The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 4, 1921, Page 2

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‘JOIN OUR CHRISTMAS the manufacturers and by ourselves. OUR SPECIAL CLUB PLAN: —make your selection from any of four models; take your choice—mahogany, fumed oak, golden oak or American walnut, Make your payment of only $1—. Your machine will be tagged with your name—stored free of further charge—and delivered at Christmas time. In the meantime, you can make small payments of $1— a week. The balance remaining after Christmas is then divided into twelve equal and convenient monthly payments. By the time Christmas is here Fhe will have @ substantial amount already paid. And you will insure yourself against the time when these standard makes of talking machines are impossible to obtain. —take your choice of any one of these VICTROLAS: VICTROLA 80 $100 VICTROLA 90 $125 VICTROLA XI. $150 VICTROLA XIV. $225 America’s Model City Proves Happy Town main street. [school houses, a bank, civic recreation hall, Y. M. C. A. $100,000, has deposits of $500,000. tion. = | ficera. Where once the rural fisherman )% whiled away the days with pole and line, is being built a big steamship scientific struments and years of eccccccccccce a@etermine whether or not a tooth is ab scessed. We will X-Ray one tooth for you without charge The Regal Dental Offices 1405 Third Avenue @orver Third and Union Clart Ground in aaetues Our Own Factory. Glasses $5 Complete Free Examination Globe Optical Co. 1514 Westlake Ave. Between Pike and Pine Sts. INTER GARDEN THEATRE Erte Dempsey-Carpentier World’s Championsh MOTION soak PICTURES GIVE A CLOSE-UP VIEW OF THE BIG FIGHT THEATRE Jas. Q. Clemmer, Mgr. winter GARDE Pay only, VICTROLA CLUB wa limited to 100 members —here is an announcement that will bring Christmas cheer to 100 Seattle homes. However, after we have enrolled 100 members and the supply of 100 VICTROLAS is exhausted it will be an impossibility for us to accept any more members, for the J} Star today, reason that we will not be able to secure any more of these machines this season, —the plan is a very simple one, and a splendid opportunity. The VIC- TROLAS included in this club are the world’s standards of their kind. They are well-known, nationally advertised, guaranteed in every way by cerned, being served by a railroad, interurtan and two Great Lakes steamship lines. The interurtan tracks are to be moved at a cost Of $1,000,000 so as to run thru the Where the old vitlage was, ta now the factory district. Houses that Mich, Nov. 4—C. cosy homes nestied aa tf stumbering | Av not been moved already will be Harold Wills, multi-millionaire, dy-|along the St. Clair river, today thers | prmee’ par, _ to the Dew reat is a | ‘orn down, peleay st hy Soe Rete wer! Every cttizen of Maryville in so en. | modern improvement, up-to-date | tuslastic and backs Wills so thoroly | postoftice, |that they're working seven days a week and 12 to 14 hours every day board of cemmerce, municipal or |'° help him achieve his goal, yt|chestra, moving pictures and every- bag Rodegpone we en, one hts | pile. toi to citizens, ms oie Dee [aca | with his plans. He easily bank, ve been a virtual di: The little capitalized thet the city. Bu@ be han By nrg ca The police department, clad tn |help of another regulation metropolitan uniforms, is | nant, John R Lee, built up such a on the job—but there is no jail. \C°OPerative organization and put ‘There is no need for one. The po-| things so much tn the hands of thone lice keep busy acting as traffic of-|'!ving there that there is no frie last cont. Ford teu. 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C. CMY nnn nn an eee een ore een ee nee oes ceeen nett EVERY THEATRE SEAT HERE BETTER THAN A RINGSIDE SEAT AT JERSEY CITY In the meantime THE SEATTLE STAR FATE OF NEW BANK | UP TO DEPOSITORS| | ‘The bid of the newty incorporated | Bank of Washington to take over the ansets of the Scandinavian American bank of Seattle wan filed in the superior court of King county today, A hearing will be held in about ten days on the question of the aooeptance of the bid. acedrting to Ralph Stacy, president of the bank, the depositors of the old bank have it within thetr power virtdally to determine whether the plan will or | will not be approved, “The court probably wit he guided | in « large measure,” he said to The “by the depositors | “And he would get ft quicker.” ASKS APPROVAL Or DEPOSITORS Mr. Btacy asked that every deport. |ter who does approve the plan at ones write a letter to the bank stat: | ine bis approval, or elxe call at the [bank within the next few days and | ffl In @ Blank to the mame effect. The bid that was filed in euperior court proposes to pay a eum equiva. lent to the preferred claims and 60 per cent of the general indebtedness “Inaemuch an it is not now possible! |to determine precisely the amount of | | the Indebtedness,” the bank offers | to pay $5,400,000 for the assets and lap to $400,000 additional as shall be found to cover the needa. ‘The bid is made conditional wpon| bank open in January.” Have You Season’s First Cold? Are you muffling and sneezing? Nose red, eyes watering, carry- ing two handkerchiefs? This is the time when ol4 Mr, Common Cold gets in his ancezy work; when windows begin to shut, furnace fires are made up, not enough fresh air in home and offices. The U. 8, public health service has put together some useful sug: gestions on how to avold and how to treat the so-called “Common Cold.” And the little bulletin points out some of the dangers, and maken suggestions on how to avoid spreading the cold germs. If you want a copy of thi« pamphlet, fill out carefully (printing your name) the coupon below and send to our Washington Infor mation Bureau. WASHINGTON BUREAU OF THE SEATTLE STAR, I want to avold getting a cold. Send me your bulletin “Common Colds.” I enclose two cents in stamps for postage BRO me ae ene ae sr nen es ewe nate sence ce | wishes. I can asmure any depositor in my opinion, he will get fully | uch money thru this plan that | the state banks and the state bank- |ing department have evolved as he | would under a liquidation, which would drain the guaranty fund of its She was Seattle barber, died Thursday at his UNDER THE AUSPICES of the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars, funeral services will be held at 230 p.m Sunday for Aman G. Brattstrom, former Lin cotn high stadent and member of the 16ist infantry. Brattetrom died tn a hospital at Orleans, France, from wounds received in action. He is the Two additional industries, ene em- | A commission form ef munietpal| son of Mr. and Mra David Bratt ploying 1,200 men, have purchased | fovernment was organized with & | strom, 6514 Second ave, N. E 10 and 25 acres of land for factory |™anager directing {ts business af.) —— sites. Several others are nezotiat |fair. W. H. Watkins, manager of | their first pennant, is village prea ing. the Detroit Tigers when they won dent. Saeed y| TWENTY YEARS, | ‘Bid for Scandinavian-American’s As- || sets Is Made to Court { relieving the state guaranty fund of | all Mability; upon approval of the plan by the superior and supreme |courts; mpon a final settlement of | the claims by July 14924; upon a stipulation that all depositors of $100 oF Jews be paid tn full, and upon |an agreement under which the bunk |whall liquidate the remaining assets of the old tution free of charge for the depowitors except as to legul |couta, subject to supervision by the state banking department. | SMALL BANKS | RAISE $1,250,000 Mr. Stacy polnts out that the new, bank and its subsidiary, to be known as the Lumbermen’s Bank of Beattie, at Ballard, will together have cap!tal of $1,260,000. This money haa ali been subscribed by the 110 «mall; state banks which are members of | the guaranty «ystem, and is in lea! of the money which would come out of the guaranty fund (and break It) if the usual Liquidation proceedings went on. | “Tie state bankers and myself have put in four months of the hard. ||] eat wort of work and considerable ex pense on this plan,” sald Mr. Stacy to The Star, “and we are satiafied that it is the best available way out! for the depositors, It means also | the salvation of the state guaranty | system and the establishment of a! big, strong bank ip Seattle, | “Hut our work is now dona The matter is up to the courts and the! depositors for thelr approval. We} hope to have the superior court hear- ing by the middie of the month and the supreme court decision promptly | after that. We hope to have the new PININ STOMACH } — {Woman Undergoes Opera- tion for Odd Ailment BROOKLYN, N. Y. Nov. 4~eur.| fering intense pain for many years, | Mra. Catherine Lawrence, editor ot} ®& weekly newspaper and author of| several children’s books, has Just | / fearned that it was cansed by @ pin} which was swallowed when she was, | 8 child, 20 years ago. | Two weeks ago she went to the |]! Green Point hospital. An X-ray pic | | ture revealed a pin embedded in the timmues of her abdomen, An opera-| Another bidder for votes in| 0% was performed. Her condition | Nile temple circus is Miss) 'mprovoment, and she has been told Eva Burkhardt, 2021 Fourt,2\% the pin. She now recalled that ave., graduate of Queen Anne high school and _ associate member of the Washington state organization for public health nursing. nominated by Dr. Ira ff. Brown. The prize in the con-| nerai services will be held at 3 p. m. test is a $2,850 Paige automo-| Sunday at Grace Presbyterian Mrs. Lawrence now shows signs of | when « child, making asdoll dream, she had pins in her mouth, and} swallowed one. | | ROBERT L. DIXON, 76, pioneer home, 1735 24th ave’ Dixon opened a barber shop in Seattle in 1865, Fu- church, ] 4 a family affair— Morris ts taking hts medicine, | |}) af right, and the result ty that |] Scores of women are having the |] shoe chance of their lives, but to- |] day wo want to remind you that |] We offer the same money-saving ] } | | values to every member of the | family, ‘Women’s Shoes, from $3.50; Men's Shoes, from $5.00; Boys’ || School Shoes, from $3.00; Grow. ing Girls’ styles, from $4.00, and |} every pair such a bargain ag will make you @ booster for life of the Davis & Morris Upstairs shoe Store, up on the third floor of the Se#board Buflding, at Fourth and Pika, COME ON UP! Moti | | ai SEE BLOW TWO EVERY ‘ Copyright 1921 Hart Schaffner & Mars on Pictures Here a F STRUCK EVERY MOVEMENT, OF THE CHAMPIONS Hart Schafner & Marx Clothes Sh FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1921, Women’s coats | tailored like a man’s, made by Hart Schaffner & Marx — Women have always admired the finer fail oring and better fabrics used in men’s clothes: They have wanted the same quality in their — own coats. Hart Schaffner & Marx decided to — give it to them. The coats were an instant success. Stylish © models, better fabrics and finer tailoring and © sewing than women get now; and the prices % are much lower than women are accustomed to pay for fine coats: $40 to $70 Corner Second and Seneca INTER GAR! ew Days Longe im ORAS FIRST SHOWING 10 A. M. '‘_—_— SEE DEMPSEY KNOCK OUT, CARPENTIER INTER GA THEATR Jas.Q Clemr

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