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—_ of 535% 37395 i i WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1928 | Kid Ambitions (No. 15)|| E. J. Brown, Mayor of Seattle SEATTLE RATES WOULD BE LESS Need for Skagit Project Is Shown Solons OLYMPIA, Jan, 24.—enate and house power bills, which are com manding the dulk of the attention of the legislature, were again under fire | Tuesday night, when a conference of King and Pierce delegates met and discussed the merits of the meas. ures, Tt was shown that the cost per ktlowatt hour tn Seattle when the! Skagit project ts completed would ainount to 22-100 of a cent Tt was stated that the Skagit plant would equal the great Muscle Shoals plant in actual horse power, Representative Bone, of Pierce, maintained that no city should be made to pay An earnings tax on its | power when sold outside the county tn which it te aituated. Mayor A. V. Fawcett, of Taooma, | Geclared all of Pierce county favored pubitely owned natural resources. Ropresentative James Davis, Pierce, who sponsors the power bill which #tipu cent on ears of plants selling power outside county shat! be levied, denied that he waa affiliated with the Stone.Webdster corporation, end stated that he had been wrong. fully accused. Both the Bone and Davia bills wit! de subjected house within a short time, Ria GRIP Grip, Grippe, La Grippe, Influenza, Colds, call it what! so alarmed the club that « campaign | to neglect our musical training you please, “Seventy-seven” | 20w being planned to acquaint ge. | American's lack of appreciation is is needed—30c. ta Upon recovery take Humphreys’ Tonic Tablets, No. 24, price 80c, Medical Book in English, French, Spanish, Portuguese or German sent free, tells all. At Drug Stores, or » tance or ©. O. D. Parcel P o Hum. PET tlowes Medicine, Company, 66 William st, New x. _-~_ Stop Eating Meat for One Month— End Rheumatism Heavy eaters of meat suffer most eumatiam and kidney trou- ies. That's because meat contains hi ravate and of rheumatiam, stop T one month, and at @ take Anti-Urie t uur system of accumulat io a remarkable blood tenis, which they are noon See eects cf ae v o give satisfactory re- ¢f rheumatiom oF BAS. He i F Dizzy Spells When you are constipsted, not enough of Natures lubricating liquid is pro- duced in the bowel to keep the food waste soft and moving. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it acts like this natural lubricant and of) that a tax of 6 per| But 400 Seattle Pupils Are Enrolled for Music further fire in the/ H) $5 an years olf, and living on a@ farm in Oregon, Ogle county, Minot, one day heard a man make & political speech tn the achool house, That man wan a lawyer, Mayor Brown dec! to be like him. “Not thi knew exactly what that meant.” says the mayor, “but I heard somebody say the fellow who | made the speech was a ‘great lawyer and a great man.’ ‘My! T thought, ‘wouldn't it be fine to have them say things like that about me? I'll j de a lawyer,’ * A few years later he was given }the opportunity to study law tn the MM’ EB. J. BROWN, when 9 Ogle county, taking charge of the for him. Still later he went to Kansas City, and tn 1899 wes graduated from the Kansas City law school, Two years before that he pansed the dentist ex- amination tn the same town. Now he in mayor of Seattle, He has tried @ lot of things. the information tmparted to office of an attorney in Oregon, | latter's horse and cow in exchange! |Women’s Clubs Plan Parents to Music Needs Despite the establishment ef com- petent standards of musical instr tion and thore courses in the f mentale of music, but 400 of the 400 high school puptis in Seattle are taking music, according to the fig ures obtained by Mrs. Loulse C. Beck, chairman of the music com. mittes of the Seattle Federation of Women's clubs, The falling off im enrollment has | attle parents and students of the ben- | efite of the music courses, It has been largely due to the wom. o's clubs of the city that the musto | courses were installed in the schools, | In 1915 but three teachers were re tained for both grade and high school After @ persistent campaign by the | clubs and the Seattle Musical Arte society, the number was increased to | 16 in 1920. Daily classes of 70 minutes’ dure tion were offered with school credit, and a number of students enrolled. Later registration dropped so low that the clamor for tax reductions In 1922 resulted In the music force be tng cut to 12 Instructors, Mra, Beck oaid. ‘The school bearé ts anxious to tn- crease the music department if need for expansion can be shown, they WOMEN! DYE IT NEW FOR 15¢ ‘Skirt Kimense Draperies Ginghame Stockings Everything Buy “Diamond Dyes"—no ether kind—and follow the simple @irec- tions in every package, Don't won- der whether you can dye or tint suc- cessfully, because perfect home dye- ing ts guaranteed with Diamond Dyes even If you have never dyed before. Just tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dye Is wool or silk, or whether ft {# linen, cotton, | or mixed goods. Diamond Dyes never streak, fade, or rw SULPHUR CLEARS A PIMPLY SKIN Any breaking out of the skin on face, neck, arma or body ts overcome quickly by applying Mentho-Sulphur. ‘The pimples seem to dry right up and go away, declares a noted skin | apectaliet, Nothing hag ever been found to take the place of sulphur an a piri remover It is harmless and tn | pensive. Just ask any druggist fo small jar of Rowles Mentho-Sulphur and use it like cold cream —Adver Us for Those New Glasses se * Somrun 1003 Westinke, A CLEAR SMP “Ruddy Cheeks - + Sparkling Eyes—Most Women Can Have Says Dr, Edwards, a Well-Known Ohio Physician Dr. F. M. Edwards, for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients « pre- scription made of « few well-known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive ofl, naming them Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. You will know ther by their olive color. Th tabl are wonder-workers on tl iver and bowels, which cause @ normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one’s system. If you have @ pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated | tongue, headaches, @ listless, no-good feeling, al) out of sorts, inactive bow. ele, you take one of Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets nightly for « time and note the pleasing results, Thousands of women and men take Dr, Hawards' Olive Tablets—the suc cessful substitute for calomel-—now ATIVE | fess then, just to keep thom fit, 160 and 30c—Advertisement, y | the city m | ing of music | Spokane. Campaign to Awaken | have Informed the }to Mim. Beck, the ongly advo in the schools, aa it provides fundamentai training which cannot be obtained from weekly lew |@ons of short duration, Thia train. | ing ts easential and should be more reatly appreciated by Seattle par | enta, she says. “We Americans are all too prone An | ever more clearly shown than when he is attending a concert the The Biay, | Austrian or the Scandinavian pelibound. The American look» or We must cultivate a love of good music tn our children,” Mrs. Beck declared. |Here and There| Mount Shushaldin, tm Alaska, re- Ported in eruption. eee Péward N. Callaghan, former) army officer, convicted of $80,900) theft tn three minutes in New York eee Two die when 250 horsepower en sine explodes at Salt Creek, Wyo.,/ oll camp. Spain may shel death penalty for civil cases. eee James L. Butler, 67, founder of Tonopah, Nev.. dies in Sacramento. mutaaboth Be ead: ili post. pe, Fin, first wom- tte gut 86,000 postatice 00 Otle Dortch, 19, youngest boy to receive death sentence in Alberta. Confessed murder, . BR Hanh | wentenced to life imprisonment for killing wife in Forty killed by potson moonshine in Chicago since January 1, two more than those killed by autos, | Will Advertise Power Features Beattle electrical men met in the the Pacific States Electric company’ 3 advertising campaign, denigned ;to increase the use of electricity in the bores and to Improve and stand ardize electrical equipment generally. Advertising to be carried in the 80| largest papers on the coant—12 tn} the Pacific Northwest—will be the main feature, according to F. EB Harris, vice-president and general salen manager of the company. In| Addition, 425 billboards will be used along Washington, Oregon and Call. fornia highways, Other speakers tnoluded Norman W. Brockett, president of the North: west Power association; D, Linn| Plata, assietant treasurer of the Po citie States Electric company; J. D. | Barnhill, advertising counselor, and | E. Homan, Let Contract for | $700,000 Building A contract hag been let for the construction of a $700,000 building for the Sisters of Charity of the | House of Providence on a site be tween 6th and a7th aves. 8. W. jand W.\ Hudson and W. Edmunds ats, The edifice, to be known as Mt St, Vincent, will house a home for aged, @ chapel and @ headquarters bulla the Ristern. Brection of this buflding, which will be completed by December, comes as the result of a campaign net afoot more than two years ano for a home for the aged. A bulld- Ing committes, comprising Frank McDermott, John T. Heffernan, Thomas C, McHugh, George Don- worth, Frank M. Sullivan, Arthur @. Dunn, Dante) Kelleher, J. D. Far rell, William Pigott, Dr. William Shannon and Henry Seaborn, raisod $150,000 for the home, and also nu- merous contributions of butlding| materials, The Sisters were so en- couraged by this success that they | decided to move thelr headquarters from Vancouver Wash., to Seattle and combine the two butldings. Grant Tamale Man Delay in Hearing | Arraignment of Marcus Joffray, held on a charge of contributing to! the delinquency of minors while po-; Moe search for his missing girl wife, was continued unti!] next Tuesday, late Tuesday. Joffray, who conduct 4 4 tamale parlor at 1423 Old Fifth | ave,, was broveht before Judge Cal-| vin 8. Hall Tuesday, but a change of | venue was granted when it waa moved that Joffray had already ap- peared before Judge Otis W. Brinker. Judge Brinker will return from a trip east of the mountains next week, | THE SEATTLE STAR MOVEY] 700 Pairs of Women’s and Misses’ Stockings WOMEN’S SILK-and-WOOL STOCK- INGS, in heather colorings. Slight ir- regularities in the weave - - ~ $1.25 WOMEN’S or MISS WOOL-MIXE D SPORTS STOCKINGS—wide rib weave. Regular 79¢ - ~ - - =~ 59 MISSES’ BLACK COTTON STOCKINGS, fine rib. Regular 85¢ - - - 25¢ CLEARANCE of ODDS and ENDS in Women's Stockings—also Very Greatly Reduced. —Firet Floor ’ 1) ’ Women’s and Children’s Underwear 120 WOMEN’S UNION SUITS, Fall weight — MUNSINGWEAR, CARTER'S, STERLING and LUCILE makes. All sizes in the lot- - - - = - - $1.95 86 CHILDREN’S COTTON PANTS, knee and ankle length. Sizes 4, 6, 8, 10 in the lot - - «+ «+ «e+ - = 2h —First Ficor Linen Handkerchiefs (1,000 of them) Special 15¢ Women’s Handkerchiefs—all neatly hemstitched and embroidered. —First Floor Remnants Greatly Reduced 1,000 Remnants of Colored Wash Goods in usable lengths—Devonshire, Crepe, Outing Flannel, Gingham, Percale, Voile, Swiss, Wool Flannel, Organdy, Silkoline and Comforter Challis. —Second Floor eS tt Clearance of “ELDREDGE” Sewing Machines 15% Ott on all machines which have been used for Demonstration (in the Sewing Machine Department, only). | 2 $125 Console Electric Machines, Two- | on (no bobbins to wind)—$106.26. | 4 §75 Desk Model Electric (ELDREDGE | B)—$63.75. | 1 $82.50 Cabinet Machine (ELDREDGE | Tie Seool) $10.12. | 2 $69.50 ELDREDGE Two-Spool Ma- chines—$60.07. | 2 $72.50 ELDREDGE Two-Spool Ma- chines—$61.62. 2.50 ELDREDGE B Model—$44.62. | Al | Machines Guaranteed for 10 Years, Payment on Convenient Terms. —flewing Machine Department, tm the Basement A Sale of New Axminster Rugs Splendid New Patterns—Excellent Color Selections! oxt2 Size $37.50 Remarkable Value An exceptional assortment of room-size rugs, at an unusually low Movey Day price. An excel=nt assortment of new designs and new colorings. [FRASTIER- IN CO, ‘SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET THURSDAY MEN’S Union Suits $i. 29 500 for Movey Day Clearance length and long Medium heavy weight—ankle Stand- sleeves. Ecru and mottled blue-gray wool. ard construction throughout. , Men's Bection, Firet Floor Extra Large Turkish Towels 65c 800 in Movey Day Sale. 86x54 inches. Heavy weight. With corded borders. —feoond Floor Silk Chemises $2.95 NEW: A special purchase of 800 Crepe de Chine Chemises—trimmed with fine laces—some with hand-embroidery. Pink, Blue, Orchid, Honeydew. ——Seeond Floor Dress Goods Remnants Greatly Reduced. Good lengths of Dress Goods and Silk—in plain colors and novelty patterns—all very much reduced for Movey Day. Linings also reduced. —First Floor Trimmings 25c Yard Band Trimmings (plain and fancy), Embrolderies, Laces, Net, Fringes and Ruchings greatly reduced —the Majority at Less than One-Half Price. —Firet Floor Movey Specials in the Special Price Basement OUTING GOWNS—289ce 800 for Movey Day. Good weight, with double yokes and set-in sleeves. Striped outing flannel. Sizes 16, 17, Regular $1.39. COATS AND DRESSES—$9.50 18 Coats of Velour, Melton and mannish mixtures —some fur-trimmed. 26 Dresses—silk crepe, twill and jersey. black and brown. Sizes up to 38, BUNGALOW APRONS—65c A Clearance Lot of broken assortments. Splendid quality percale, well-made, neatly trimmed. SATIN HATS AT $3 100 new Spring models—in bonnet and off-the-face styles. Fruit and flower trimmings. CHILDREN’S STOCKINGS—35c In brown heather. With shaped ankles and elastic woven legs. Slight imperfections—otherwise these would be priced 95c. Sizes 8, 814. INFANTS’ STOCKINGS—10c 600 pairs—fine ribbed Cashmere Stockings; silk heels and toes, Slight imperfections in the weave. Black and white. Sizes 4, 414. Special Price Basement Navy, ----A Great Day for Money Saving Novelty Necklaces—25e Crystal, green and amethyst, white bone, jet and pearl beads—261 nov- elties, some finished with tassels. Graduated and even sizes. —VFiret Floor Beauty Bowes—$2.95 Black Vachette F large and small si: mirrors and the usual long, double handles. uty Boxes— With large fittings— —First Floor Mesh Bags Reduced—$3 4 smart styles—all in silver finish, For Movey Day—$3. —First Floor Women’s Shoes—$3.85 High heeled Shoes—regular price $11. In white, black and brown. 41 pairs only. Remarkable values! —Second Floor Silk Negligees—$6.95 Taffeta, Crepe de Chine and Satin — Negligees and Breakfast Coats im pretty tints of pink, blue and peach. —Second Floor Infants’ Coats—$3.95 WHITE CASHMERE Coats—lined with sateen. Some with embroid- ered collars. 27-inch length. A broken lot—very much reduced. —Second Floor Veiling Remnants—25c each 1- and 13-yard lengths—lovely novelties which were twice and three times this price. In black, — navy, brown, taupe and purple, 8 —Firat Floor Blouses and Smocks—$1 Wash Blouses and Smocks of linen, ” dimity, voile and linene. A clear ance assortment—soiled from hand ling. —Third Fleer School Girl Scarfs—s0o Brushed Scarfs, in 68 inches long and Tinehen $1 Table Damask—75c yard Linen-finish Table fine quality. In stripe, rose designs. 64 inches patterns, 3% <a weight. 81x90 mh 80 only. —secona Fleer White Goods Remnants— Reduced Short lengths of Flaxon, Ni Longeloth and a wee of other fabrics, A Table of Odds and Bade Gift Novelties 25 ee Polychrome BOOK-ENDS, 4 ir CANDLESTICKS, with can- dles, 50c. q 1 $15 LAMP SHADE, $5, 1 $20 LAMP SHADE, $10, 1 $8 Silver Boudoir LAMP BASE, _ $3. 8 $4 Luster DISHES, $2, 10 $2.50 esneink WALL POCK-. ETS, $1. 12 $1 INCENSE BURNERS, 60¢. 10 60c INCENSE BURNERS, 400. 1 pe Hee Brass COFFEE 20 $1 $1 EVERLASTING FLO’ ;OUQUETS, boxed, 50c. wR | i —Girt Section, Fourth leer Want $500 for Damage to Lawn Awakening from an all-night park on the roadside, the automobile of Henry W. Schwartz, at B. Jefferson st. and 17th ave, of its own volition began @ wild spin down the steep in- cline, It crashed thru a hedge at the home of Mr. and Mra. Max Jo- “Daddy,” bring home some of | Roldt's French . Pastry.—Advertine- | ment, jot S639 HEU ORI ee Ynone Fi eephs, 1601 B. Jefferson et., demol- ished @ decorative lawn tree, tore up the grass and defaced a sustaining wall, in all inflicting damage totaling $500, according to a suit for this «um filed late Tuenday, naming Schwarts as defendant. “Gee,” Boldt's Coffee ia goodt— Advertisement. No better remedy in the World for, deordere of satarshal origin such as coughs, colds, nasal ca- tarrh, “stomach and. bowel troubles or any disturbance which involves the mucous membranes lining the human body. old origtoal ‘Try the Prof. Kincaid to Talk on Heredity Prof. Trevor Kincald of the Unt e'clock tn the Labor temple, Sixth and University, entitled “The Prin. ciples of Heredity,” illustrated with stereopticon slides, The lecture will versity of Washington wil) deliver|¢ given under the auspices of the @ lecture Thursday evening at 8 VY Vy. Ss Mal Ee Rhenmatiam, Sciatica, Lumbago, Burning pain in the Bladder, Scalding ne and Gravel Seattle Labor college. The public ts cordially invited. Navy Yard Route Colman Dock