The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 12, 1923, Page 9

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1923, THE SEATTLE STAR = We Tell It With VALUES = FATHER FEARS |Movie Star | U For Constipated Bowels, Sick Headache, Colds, Biliousness, Bad Breath 2 To clean out your bowels without cramp- ing or overacting, take Cascarets! You want to feel fine; to be quickly free from sick headache, dizziness, biliousness, colds, bad breath, sour, gassy stomach, One or two Cascarets, anytime, will start |Drinks Husband's 1923 Record of || Drug, Is Dead Pedestrians Hit || en te by Automobiles | Mra. Predortck Dunphy went to his} 29-": unknown woman, struck | the drugs in his offies. } at 10th ave. N. BE. and B. 63rd | ~ aM st., Wednesday, was bruised about E., but was unhurt and continued on oe hie according to R. L. Sweet, | his way to school th ave. N. E., driver of the} —Rabe Sheppard, 1016 Harrison ar which struck her. 3 st, was knocked down and| 302: Mottram, 1811 19th ave.|dragged 25 feet at Seventh ave. and | was knocked unconscious at|Pine at, early Thursday morning, Pike st. and Bellevue ave, Wednes- | by a taxi driven by P. M. Smith, 6217 | ~ ae, by & san driven by M. P.| Fremont ave. She was bruised. wane, of tI ks‘ club. Mottram | —An wnidentified man was ‘was taken to the city hospital. 133 knoeked down at 38th ave. 8. 3132 small boy was struck at |W. and Aldaka st, Wednesday night, | Boylston ave, and Pine st.,|by a car driven by J. P. Jacobsen, of | Wednesday, by an auto driven by Des Moines. Jacobsen said the man Mrs. A. Johnson, 7307 24th ave. N.| was unhurt | ALFRETON, Eng. Jan. 12—-Di- I veesed by her husband, a physteian, the bowels acting. bowels work wonderfully in the morning. Cascarets never sicken or inconvenience you next day like pills, calomel, salts or oil. Children love Cascarets too. also 25 and 50c sizes, Any drugstore TOMBOY AGGIE Warns Mayor She May Burn Up Town HOMESTEAD, N. J, Jan, 12 Amaie Kelly, 18-year-old Jersey tom: boy whose capers have won thetr way into print several times tn the Jawt month, ts misning from her fath- er'e barge, moored in the Hacken Upset Stomach, | sack river here, But Capt. Jim Kelly | Ageto’s father, ten't @ bit worried about her nafety, however, and ts begging the police to keep a watch on thé town, for he wa town's safe when Aggie's ashore, Agate first came into prominence & month or no ago when she fooled Rayonne police into believing her to be @ quiet, demure little thing and then spotied everything by blowing cigarette amoke into the face of one of the policemen. Next day she was arrested in Now Durham for “doing up" two native lade who stuck thelr noses up when she came off the barge. Later still, When taken at night, the 10¢ boxes, DELAY TRIAL to Stay in| Vaudevelle in Homestead, ahe slapped girls’ faces) ON INSURANCE | iter iiteatend te saving bor wp | & tree” and showed her the rope and Whether or not Ruth Plumley, |the tree, But Aggie’s father stepped now serving @ life sentence in Walla|up fn the nick of time and routed Walla for the murder of ber hus. | her captors, sh ae . 4 And it ts this last incident which band, Hugh C. Plumiey, will be paid | 1, ‘neneved to be the reason for her the two policies of £1,000 each, taken | aneence, For Jim Kelly has told the out on Plumiey’s lite by his wife the! police that Aggie always has the last day he died, will not be decided until | say, the Inst alap and the last prac: the summer montha. tical joke, and Is now off somewhere The trial for sult brought by Carl | devising some trap for the native C. Marts, guardian of Ruth Plumley, | Homestead girls. against the Equitable Life Insurance Co,, for the funds, was postponed again in Federal Judge BB. Cush man’s court Thursday, the day it was to commence, Tt was declared that for Fatal Crash the plaintiffs in the case were not| MONMOUTH, Eng., Jan, 12.—Mra fully prepared for the trial Eleanor Davies was awarded a ver ‘The cane was stricken from the|dict for $6,260 against an automo court calendar and will not be set | hile owner whose car killed her hus- until the May term of court band. Wife Gets $6,250 LMM TT GOOD Flour. ? On the large signs and in pleasures ahead of fill the family =u i ‘BREAD. Bake it yourself at home—with Excellent Posters, the grocer’s win- dows throughout the city—look for the smiling miller man, with his horseshoe and sack of EXCELLENT FLOUR—just as you see him above. Let him remind you of the baking you if you'll just flour bin with EXCELLENT FLOUR. NTU “KNEADED SINCE 1892” Wealth can conjure forth no fairer food. Economy knows no wiser fare—than just tit “EXCELLENT” Prices Today: 49-lb, sack.... 241,-lb. sack... 10-Ib, sack. . AT LEADING GROCERS eee eeeeene ULAUUIUVEARGRULCEEOTOEEUERUCALAE AAT John Davidson John Davidson, the movie actor now in vaudeville in a dramatic skit on the Orpheum #tay on the spoken stage for several years. Davidson says that much more can be implied with the spoken word and that the pantomime of the movies is @ hard strain. | Davidson in the star of “Circum stantial Evidence,” « clever jury room skit at the Moore theater this week. | ———__| ADOPT SLOGAN | FOR NEW YEAR| Convinced that 1923 will be a pros perous year for Beattie, the National Exchange club here met Wednesday night at the Northold Inn and adopt ed a slogan expressive of its faith. cireult, plans to “We believe in Seattle, in ite intel ligent energy, in the civic pride of its people, the abundant wealth of ita resources, and the brilliant future which 1923 and years to come hold in store” i» the standard the club will follow. Canon Bliss, head of the White Cross in Beattie, was the principal speaker, and plans were formulated for the reception of Clarence Harter national organizer for the body, who) la coming here. Bold Cave Man to Languish in Jail | No longer can one with caveman | tresses and drag bi | castle, Judge C. C. Dalton ruled late | Thursday when he sent William Del| [Mer to the county jail for etx Del Mer was found guilty | lof having kidnaped Mra, Reta Al-, |vayare, @ candy worker, in broad) daylight on New Year's day, taken her to a hotel and to have de | |tained her by brandishing @ razor, | until the next day. | Mra. Alvayare testified that Del Mer urged her to leave her husband, | Sigurdo Alvayare, a restaurant work er, but she refused and finally ef-| fected her escape. Del Mer was also | placed under a $2,000 peace bond. | ‘Packers Wanted Control Measure WASHINGTON, Jan. 123—De! nouncing the agricultural appropria- tion of $410,500 for government regu- lation of the meat-packing Indust Senator Fernald, republican, Maine, declared In the senate yesterday that the packer controi bill should be re. pealed. | “This packer contro! law has cost the consumers of the nation—espe clally the farmera—more than $500. 000,000," Fernald said. “The bill was New ‘York, Lbs Angeles A New Delight in Every One of These Thousand SMART DRESSES For Wear at Affairs that Call for Fashion’s Smartest Mid- Winter Creations, and in the new lines which have caused them to be favorably accepted as the FIRST SIGNS OF SPRING. These Frocks, designed for functions such as the theatre party, the dinner party, the dance party, display a high degree of real artistry, suf- fering absolutely no discount in view of their small price, —Taffetas in Navy, Brown and Black, as well as the deli- tate pastel shades, pleated, tuffled, tucked and puffed, in styling of the new turn. —Canton of exceed- ingly fine quality, exquisitely conceived, delineating the lines, drapes and smart touches that are to prevail in the early spring modes. _ There isn’t one of these pretty and fashionable Dresses, in Canton Crepes and Taffeta, just from New York, whose clever touches will not make it affection- ately companionable, at— § Taking in all sizes, 16 to 44, they are pleasing to both the woman and the miss who wish restraint, yet seek forceful ef- fects in distinguished, youthful This is the “Sweet Sixteen” way, presenting the styles weeks in advance of the time when approaching Spring days will see them blooming in the height of their popularity. And you, very naturally, want to give them your approval NOW. just what the packers wanted.” Physi: | MANCHESTER, | Eni “Housowite's depressto legally recorded malady. A coroner's fury found It responsible for the sul- cide of Mra, Jane Salter. Thin? Ron-down? Sure Way to Get Right Weigh Increase Y our Red-Blood-Celle. That's the Sure Way! S. S. 5. Builds Blood- Cello; This Meane Strength! Do you know why insurance com- panies refuse to insure a great many men because they are under weight? Gimply because to be under weight ans Find Wife’s Malady sften proves low figh! body. It often mea . m! the number of your blood -celle, ou begin to become plus, That's why A's, Se since 1826, has meant to thou- sands of underweight men and women, @ plus in their strength. Hollow cheeks fill out, You atop betag ene Inmity-looker. You inapite confidence. body flila to the point of power, our flesh becomes firmer, the ines that come from thinness dt pear. You look fer, and you feel tt, Tee i ure vegetable medicinal ingredients. BMS. Bl cota ‘at all Grog stores tn r size bottle Is two sizes. The lar the more economical S.S.S. eee Gavel Knocks Out Unlucky Bailiff CHICAGO, Jan, 13.—Judge Emory Smith ts a stickler for order in his court, Consequently he wielded his gavel fiercely when spectators ap- plauded a verdict. He pounded so |hard that the head of the gavel flew off and hit Bailiff Patrick Maloney ‘on the temple. Maloney was uncon- scious for several minutes. Now he | dodees when the court gets wrathy, Chinese Herb Specialist HERBS and ROOTS are sure Cures for all aliments of both sexes. Jal HERB REM- EDIES are ter chreale cough» paralyais, iam and stomach, heart, blood and kidney trou- bles. Call or write, 019 Third Ave, 16, Phone Main 6353. Eyes Examined Free ‘Throw away your cement bi- focals. We have made it poasible for you to wear toric bifocals, ground In one piece, including the highest quality frame, for— $7.50 Marcum Optical Co. | 017 First Ave. Near Madison YOUR HEIRS You cannot pass on to your heirs: 1. Your business ability. 2. Your experience in financial matters. 3. Your judgment of investments. Therefore, “Boast not thyself of tomorrow, for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth.” Solomon never said a wiser thing. The vital things which you can do today may not bear postpone- ment. Name this Bank the Trustee of your Estate, and you will be assured ‘of financial responsibility, years of experience, and matured judgment in its administration. Trust Department Union National Bank Hoge Building of Seattle Second and Cherry

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