The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 26, 1922, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

before this date. ali amateurs, —exactly as pic- tured. Fumed oak. Saddle seat. 150 chairs in this lot. Regular price $4.50; special for this 1-day sale, $2.65. _—these cash prize these sample a— MEMBER AMERICAN HOMES BUREAU" “Hello, Radio Fans!” —the closing date of our $23 AMATEUR RADIO CONTEST is 6 p. m. Saturday, May 6th —to win one of the prises Included in this special offer your Radio Set should be brought to our Radio Department No entry fee or cost ts involved. Free to 1-DAY | DINING CHAIRS 1-day sale of 885 diningroom chairs at ex- ceptionally low prices. Over 20 different les to select from. Special at these prices THURSDAY ONLY. this dining chair: 265 regular = eae _—Jacobean oak; artificial leather slip “sawed golden oak; genuine leather slip seat dining chair...... r sawed golden oak; genuine leather slip seat arm chair.. credit terms are for YOU: on per- chase of feraiture ameount- ing to $150— $200— $300— $500— Your J Credit eter. Is is *SOTASLIONS| i price | —-fumed oak, artificial leather seat dining chair ......cceceseseeceee $4.75 Pr oak waxed; wood saddle seat _—fumed oak, wood saddle seat dining chair . $285 395 475 715 975 10.75 firet weekly payment payment $15— $2.50 $20— $3— $30— $4.50 $50— $7.50 “TACOMA . SCHOEMPELO B S0K3 The familiar tin-foil package with the yel- low tabel ia the only form in which Fleisch- mann’s Yeast is sold Enigmatically 1. J, Brown Gressing @ meeting of Queen Anne hil residents, In Queen Anne Congre wational churoh, sald Landon ts wrong, The bank- ory are in front of me and the Tuesday night Dr. nines for mayor, ad pomines, had xplanation from Brown the banking Interests the dentist-orator’s can Brown's quick reply brought forth a ripple of laughter from thoae who | apparently did not stop to analyze it | It was an overflow meeting, ‘The upper part of the church was crowd lea to the vestibules and steps. Down | stairs a part of the overflow held an ther meeting, While one candidate / peaking upstairs, another was ing those below All candidates for city counct!!, port and schoo! board, as well as the may 1922 Record of Pedestrians Hit 1 Billie Cox, age 4, Manhat- tan apartments, was bruised | Monda. when knocked down at How. jen and Boren ave. by an auto [a by G. L. Davis, 901 Pike at. —@ A, Haentsa, Seaboard 189 wiisains, wees serack Monday at Fifth ave. and Pike st. by an auto driven by Charlies C. Cremer, 606 B. |Teth st, but wae unhurt, 1 90 ried H. Coben 319 Maiden Second ave. and Marion st. but that the man was uninjured. —The small son of Mre. 1 191 Anderson, 1444 22nd ave. 8. |W. was struck Saturday at Fourth ave. and Jackson st. when a wh of an auto driven by H. MeLean, 223 ret ave, & [He was unhurt. | 19 Mise Fredericks Moore, 1B. 43rd st. Saturday by an auto ldriven by Spencer Adams, 6215 Ka }venna bivd. 19. Andy Shaw, 7035 Jones | ave. N. W., sustained brain leoncussion when struck at Allison st and Franklin ave. Saturday by auto driven by Una Reine, of Kirk land. 19 1, W. Woodhouse, 2615 } Marion st. reported Satur day that his car had struck an un known woman at Fourth ave, and | Seneca st. She was unhurt. 1953" A. Price, of the Van } Siclen apartments, was bruised when knocked down by an janto driven by A. McLeod, 644 29th ave. at Eighth ave. and University st. Saturday. 196." Milla, 4818 Lucille ist., was unhurt When an ante riven by Marco Franco, 137 . struck him at Pike pl. an dist and | ine at 1197; Josephine Thompson, 1412 | Summit ave., bump on her head when an auto driven by A. BE. Lamont, 1410 Minor ave, knocked her down st Bellevue ave. and Pike st. Saturday. 19837": six-year-old son of A Nelson, 4425 Corliss ave was injured internally and received & broken collar bone when an auto driven by Mrs, M. M. Hart, 5268 14th ave. N. E struck him near bis home Saturday of @311 199 Elinor Lenke, 5, Phinney ave, was struck down Saturday near her home by an auto driven by C. G, Collister, 210 W, 78th st. 200-20 1 —While watking on Interlaken bivd hear N. 24th st., Saturde Scomberg, 2159 Ham young woman compe knocked 16 feet by 4 poll bruised. 20. ~~), Matsumura, $59 Direct or st, reported Saturday that hia car had struck and bruised an aged woman at i4th ave. and Cloverdale at. 203 L. D. Geestin, 5622 Brook lyn ave., was cut about the head Saturday by an auto driven by |Ben Stangland, Hollywood apart ments. The accident occurred at Third ave. and Pine st eae This day last year 17 pedes trians were injured by autos, | making the total 283. Fleischmann’s fresh yeast | increases the action of the intestines UNDREDS of men and women have already found free- dom from laxatives by eating Fleischmann’s fresh yeast. Doctors are now agreed that proper elimination of waste matter should be brought about by food. One doctor comes right out and states plainly that the indiscriminate use of cathartics is one of the causes of constipation. Physicians all over the country are recommending Fleisch. mann’s fresh yeast because it is a fresh food, rich in those ele- ments which keep the intestines healthy. Try it out for yourself. Begin today by adding 2 or 3 cakes of Fieischmann's Yeast to your everyday diet. Keep it up and see how normally and regularly your intestines act. You can get Fieischmann's Yeast fresh daily from your grocer. Brown Says His Back Is to People and His. Face Toward Bankers by Automobiles | reported Sunday that} representations tn connection with jitle above the adult normal and he had struck an unknown man at |selling the Patricia inn, 1607 Fourth normal type of impulse. 7, Matic club will present @ minstrel came off and hit him. | 1208 EB, 43rd st, was unhurt! .WANTLA.—Decause, he says, they when struck at Mth ave. N. BE. and) gossiped about him, Lee Long, former | nleep. reesived a) _—_ - WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1922. TNH! SHATTLE STAR Seemed | THE PULSE _|"TN WAYFARER’, Quality is Not | Wnroliment of more than 2,000 par. | BY DK. Kh. HM. BIsiHtor 7 Heipants marked the first assembly F & doctor were oe pie Wayfarer chorus an? cant for | not within CH*Y | ine yoe2 production at the Wirst) call and romeone| Meinodint church Monday night felt ate % * ‘Tye firet meeting of the complete | . fecer could you executive committee of nine mem to lve ol {oralty nominees, had been invited to Geterwiiné th bers will be held at Ple'n Whintte | the meetings dition to some do-| Thursday noon, ‘tev, Cleveland) . Landon declared if elected he gree by reading|Kiethausr and James Matchett were | would stand for atrict law enforce his pulse? | rolected as additional members of the | ment, Brown sald he would out taxes in halt, The normal) committes, Among thone who spoke te the an) sembly were Judeon J. Beattle Mbrartan, weloor pulse fe umually ; tge E about 12 beats to |Candidate Accuses the minute and | given a single atrong, but soft im-| tictpante in behalf of Mayor Cauldwell, Employes of Port hin. ‘in certain « be-l|and Matthew Hall, president of the | ‘That dozens of men now on the comes doubled, or irreguiar, or hard| Alumni association of the University | |payroll of the port of Seattle are and amall, or #v woft that one Can| of Washington, who promised the touring the county, palgning for hardly feel It. support of the alumnt and urged the | jone of his oppone the charge | In fever the pulse rate increases | support of the Montiake bridge bond | jmade at several tings Tuesday about eight beats for every degree o ue from all those interested in night by Julius Day, vort commiasion temperature; thus, at 102 degrees I. |The Wayfarer” and the university, candidate. One expects a pulse rate of 100 or - - | “1 want to warn you,’ May sal@, ubove, This is one way to measure Dentists charging you double our prices cannot give you any better work- x manship or better mate- bss rials than we put in our a tae dhe wr ear A work every ey; Low prices gave me my start in business and I am continuing this same policy. My patients expect good dental work and they expect rock-bottom prices, and I give them both. Best 3 Best Crowns $5 All reputable men use = Bridgework $5.00 The name “Mary” has been given to 17 daughters among 12 monarchs hat there ie @ move on foot to your temperature or that of anyone ‘turn over certain valuaide port that might feel il) in your family {| of Mogland. properties to private interests. Bome « clinical thermometer is not at of my opponents, one in particular, hand, haw always been opposed to pub Of course this method ts not al Holyowned utilition—and yet th saceurate and a suspicious tem ask you to place them in charge ture should always be measured bo cet ao Why Have Gray San $18,000,000 publicly-owned en he clinical thermometer. | . | prine ‘Typhold fever is one of the excep: | j | “I belleve in public ownership, and tion# to this rule and a high tem: | always have; otherwise [ should perature with a slow pulse should make one suspect the presence of or have the nerve to be a candl- for port commissioner.” tile disease, Day asserted that the port could! Pres#ure on the brain center, an tn be run without “going into the red." *poplexy, or fracture of the skull, charging gross extravagance by the #180 produces a #low pulse. Bo does present commission. Jaundice, Irregular pulse sometimes indicates organic trouble [and should be looked into by @ phyal- clan. ‘The normal new-born baby has a Nourishing will restore your hatr to orie- inal color, whether black, brow ecessary for you to have aray bair, whieh handicaps you socially and in business, longer ie it LELELELEEEbbbbbbhibhbhhhh hhh hh Arrest Seattle Man on Charge of Fraud Fi: vate of from 120 to 140, which Under indictment by « federal jy characterized by the uniformity grand jury, on a charge of using the and quickness of the impulse; that ja | Malls to defraud, Eimer Scott, for: is the rebounds you can feel in the|t mer Seattielte, will be returned to adult pulse are-absent 4 | this city from Lox Angeles, where has ‘The baby’s high rate of pu was held under arrest Wednesday, — lgradualty decreases with time, uni Seott t* alleged to have made mis at the end of two yeare it ls a ra Nourishine Positively Not a Dye Nowrishine # m real tonic, whic » we - foots certain standard mate- rials and use certain standard methods which T can do any kind are recognized as correct. 1 of recognized good use the same materinia and bridgework at this Kents, and oy work stands Price and make s the test of time. profit. BEST RUBBER PLATES $15 Examination Free—All Work Guaranteed Obey That Ever-Insistent Impulse and Visit Dr. Wilson Today! DR. J. T. WILSON First and Pike Over Bartell’s Drug Store Elliott 1833 ave, to William Hager, last January Seott's wife ts sald to be under in dictment, also. | MEMBERS OF the tr ha Dra show at the playfield house, Califor nia ave. and W. Lander st., Friday evening, under the auspices of the park department army cook, stabs four Chinese to death with butcher knife while they j | | The simplest way to end a corn is | Blue-jay. A touch stops the pain in- stantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in two forms—a colorless, clear liquid (one drop does it!) and in extra thin plasters. Use whichever form you prefer, plasters or the liquid —the action is the same. Safe, gentle. Made in a world-tamed ists, Dental Surgeon Diagnostician Pyorrhea Specialist X-Ray Laboratory Highest Order of Restoration Work Done Examination and Estimate Free 504-12 Eitel Building SECOND AND PIKE SEATTLE New styles—High quality—Low prices Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes give you everything you want OU’LL find all of the new colorings here; new patterns; new single and double-breasted models; new sport styles; new notes in both suits and over- coats. Nothing better anywhere. Ladies who get al! tired and hungry doing thelr morning shopping can get a new grip on the gay if they'll drop Into” Boldt’s for their lunch, You'll find the finest quality; fabrics and tailoring that keep the style looking right and gives you the long service that saves money for you Or, if they are «till downtown at dinner time —well, w little tact will get hubby to say “Let's eat at Bo'dt's tonight.” And here's a hint to the unmarried — girls— but they already know how to meet George “by aecldent” Just about mealtime, Lunches are 50c Dinners 75c Sunday dinners $1.00 _BOLDTS ‘Two Conventent Locations | 913 Second Ave. (~~ 1414-16 Third A: M. PRAGER & COMPANY Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Shop Corner Second and Seneca

Other pages from this issue: