The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 5, 1923, Page 4

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Gx La aN IS SSE0S Geographical Center of Seattle The geographical center of the city toas chosen for the site of the Seattle postoffice, Metropotitan Center is the logical development of this commercially important district. One of the newest building units to be added to the Metropolitan Center group is the New Medical Building. It will be constructed on Fourth Avenue, between University and Seneca Streets. It will be a beautiful seven-story building, con- structed of brick and terra cotta, with granite and marble at the street line. Of all the medical buildings in the United States this will be one of the. finest and most completely equipped. OFFICE RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED NOW 1301 FOURTH AVENUE METROPOLITAN BUILDING COMPANY Seattle ,day. His fall was caused by a de | fective ladder hook, he claims. ‘Seeks $20,000 for Injuries From Fall | Injuries sustainea when he telt| from a boxcar at Black River, the rnight of November 19, 1922, have prevented Harry Brine, a , from Sngpeeny to work, cent FE ics show that in © are 945 females to every 1,000 males. Kolloge’s s ‘Bran i is nature’s relief A French doctor has made 16 suc cessful transfusions of animal blood into men from the terrors of constipation! =": « + Never make light of constipation jer any one of itseymptoms—there is no telling what disease you may be head- ing into! The one thing to do— ‘ IMMEDIATELY—is to fight consti- pation to the last ditch! Not with pills or catharties; they cannot gire _ you lasting Telief! Not with foods ¥ with a low bran content; they do not "have the bran-bulk to do the work! ‘What you need, what will give you permanent relief is Kellogg's Bran because it is ALL, BRAN! Kellogg’s is scientifically prepared to relisve constipation. It will relieve the chronic ase or the mild case. You need it, your family needs it! Bat, you must eat Kellogg’a Bran regularly—each day! At least two tablespoonfuls; in chronic cases this mount with each meal! And, eating * Eellogg’s Bran is a delight rather than a hardship. It has a delicious, appealing nut-like flavor that wins the most fastidious appetite. Every day when you eat Kellogg’s Bran as a cereal, sprinkled on your favorite hot or cold cereal or cooked or mixed with hot cereals, think of the health every spoonful contains for you! Think how Kellogg's Bran is sweeping and cleansing the alimentary tract; how it is driving out the toxic poisons and freeing your aystem from dangers of dreaded diseases! Your physician will recommend it, Kellogg’s Bran is extra-delicions made into conntless bakery batches. Recipes on every package. All grocers sell Kellogg's Bran; it and clubs in individual packages. Ask for it at your restaurant. Advertisement 7 | ensploy rk CHILDREN CRY FOR | CasTORIA ~ MOTHER:- Fletcher’s Castoria is especially prepared to felicve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation Wind Colic Diarrhea To Sweeten Stomach Flatulency Regulate Bowels | league, | porters of the Aids in the assimilation of Food, promoting Cheerfulness, Rest, and Natural Sleep without Opiates To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of pf Halehn. Proven directions on each each package, Physicians everywhere recommend it. ede FLU, GRIPPE CASCARA-sest TONIC LAXATIVE Known 8-603 TuseRcoLosis RHEUMATISM, PRIVATE Dice ETC, safully itrented ibe you explanat wh ail you thirty: 7 condition fully ad w ; KART den ‘MEDICINE CO. TACOMA Advertinemen WASH. | | for LEAGUE PASSES MANAGER PLAN Vote to Send Report to City Council Immediately With practically port of 100 me present the Municipal league Tuesday voted to sond the report of its clty manager plan committee to the city council, M. H. Van Nuys, attorney, and Prof, Frank J, Léube of the po litieal nee department at the university, presented the report of the committees to the league, using a darge chart (o Mustrate their points, Former State Senator Ralph D, Nichols presented a minority report, which was rejected without a} second, Decision to send the report to the council without delay was reach- ed by the league when it was re- called that the council had failed to act on a similar geport a year ago thru lack of time for {ts con: sideration. ‘The referendum muat be posted 60 days before election unanimous sup> which means the council muat get | it out of the way carly In January: ‘The new plan of government pro- vides for tho vlection of a council. The council then elects the civil service commissioners and the elty manager, Tho city manager then selects his cabinet of six, including heads of the law, finance, safety, welfare, works and utilities depart: ments, All departments of the city would be administered by this body of men, which would be similar to the present boant of public works, but with wider power and more respon- sive to the clty manager POWER LEAGUE IS ORGANIZED) | executive . | utive are answered by the author] {,0° jjne Seeks Passage age Erickson and Bone Bills for Development Fred J. Chamberlain of Puyallup fs the president of the permanently organized Washington Superpower formulated Tuesday & meeting at the city mbers and designed te development of hydro-electric of the state. Complete harmony between » Grickron bill, pro: posed, and the Bone bill ix nought Decision was made to take up both | measures counell push the facil by | Seattle is allow the organize power developmen out the state. Hom: counsel for t jected once b signed act to public thru spon a gener sored ermit power Seattle and thetr bortars ne Erickson bill will be taken main issue, according to new secretary, but it is likely that both measures will be sub mitted by initiative for a vote at the next election Granges, Mabor unions and other interested organizations, will be in- vited to affiliate themselves with the superpower orgunization, Local ea gues be orgunized thruout stute to ald in the public owner » fight during the period preced next year's election Other officers elected: Carl E treasurer, and J. M Oliver T. Erickson, both of Homer T. Bore, Tacoma; J, Fausett, Everett, vice prest anger is also obtainable at first-class hotels Women’s Rest Rooke Opened by League Ar for women has branch Trade building been oj of the National Women's Union league at 417 E | First ave. and University Tablets of As| pirin” been proved safe by million nd prescribed by physi- clans twenty-three years for Colds and grippe misery. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost only few cents at drugstore. Each package Colds and tells how to prepare an Aspirin gargle for ore throat and tonsiliti«, over Stiff sore neck That ache and tension in the neck muscles—you can be rid of it! Apply Sloan's. You don't have to rub it in, Just pat it on gently. The tense, strained muscles relax. The pain stops. Get a bottle from your druggist today and have it on hand. 35 cents. It will not stain. night | contains proven directions THE SEATTLE STAR An Intimate glimpse into the life of Prosident Calvin Coolidge from July 4, 187%, when he was born at Plymouth, Vermont; until August 3, 192%, when, the dim light of a kerovene Jamp, he took tha oath of office of the president) of the United States in the sitting room of the fantily home at Plymouth, is given in’ the » book, President Coolidge,” by Edward Elwell Whit- ing. ‘The author, who contributes Whit: ing's Column’! to the Boston Herald, han been in a position for many years |to make a close ntudy of the presi: dent in the various public offices that he has held, and has imparted the | knowledge that he has gained of this jman In @ very pleasing style in his book, Coolidge's life history may be |summed up, one gath#rx from Whit |ing's volume, by one word, ‘worl | His early days on his father’s farm was marked by regular, but not un: pleasant toll, In later years his early training for diligent accomplishment | stayed with him. After he had been |nominated on the republican ticket, lor vice president his friends urged him to take a rest, telling him that Harding wan enjoying a little vaca tlon, “Harding is not governor of Mas- sachusetts,"’ was his only rejoinder. The president's brevity In speech can eanily be accounted for by « re- mark once made concerning Cool- ldge's father. “Calvin Coolidge in a chatterer compared to this man," & woman told a visitor at the Coolidge home, And so the visitor found the Colonel. Whiting’s volume fills a great need in our country, Coolidge was catapulted into the president's chair overnight, leaving a whole country wondering about the man who now held the reins of the nation. A hun: dred questions concerning our chief and an evening's reading can be made both profitable and enjoyable The Atlantic Monthly Preas are publishers of the book. (Net, $1.50.) eee WITH THE MOVIE Join Amid, (Lothrop. Shephard Co,, Boston, $1.60.) MAKERS I by Lee There ix no subject in the world| more fascinating | tures, To get the views and | news and the thrills of the rcreen, men penetrate darkest Africa, and travel to the ice-clad homes of the Eskimo. than motion pic Actors and actresses of the ‘‘sil veraheet k their lives in hair raising fe ms and tigers are we to take part in jJungl automob are thrown from mountainsides, Hundreds of men [and women w for months, sands of dollars. ning’s millions the world over di dally to see the results. ready the influence of this great w industry is almost unthinkable. The glamor of trip behind the scenes with glimpses of the men/ and methods of the cinema—the sud | den rise to fame and fortune of stars Jand producers, the camera trick thrills on the’ screen ile in this authentic and constructive book, designed to further boys’ un derstanding of “better pictures,” by & man who knows al) the ins and outs of the motion-picture game from personal experience. thor haw supervised nearly branch of active motion-picture f duction, and in now producing his own pictures, He knows what he in writing about 2. THE BOY WITH THE U. § DIPLOMATS, By Dr. Francia Rolt Wheeler. (Lothrop, Lee $1.75.) ‘This book dealx with the vast is fues that shake the world, and the part played therein by the diplomats of the United Ame a looms large, very world's |affairs, and many an exciting hap pening, which has changed the of the world’s history has been the result of a shrewd move | by one of the diplomatic representa | tives of Washington. All dealing directly with the world war have been omitted, and the interest is centered strange developments in th Seas, on mysteric on unexploited dramatic, today, of the forty-niners; of ruined peop! weeks spending to make one eve nereen entertainment of people that giv Co. tes | course inwues fields—m ore on the rescuing and on wild f those most myst all betr political 4 told tle story of ate battles, fought BREAK A CHEST COLD WITH HEAT « grim | with Among New Books An Intimate Glimpse of Coolidge seer Ne: a smile and « courteous word, over the conference table, A vivid lght ik thrown upon the secret ways of the world, A great book, this, and one which reveals the power of America anew er ee) FOUR COUSINS, by Emilie Pouls son, (Lothrop, Lee & Shephard Co, $1.76) A good grandmother in Norway was lonely and found life dull, 80 she wrote to her four daughteri— one in Sweden, one in South Ger many, one In a Norwegian city home and one far up in the mountains— that each must send a child to stay for a year, So they came, and if disturbance and excitement and va- riety were what Grandmother want- ed, the four cousin certainly fur: nished enough to satisfy even her active mind, The book tells the story of their year together, of thelr mistakes and troubles and pleasures, thelr quar: rels and parties; of the heroism ot the parson’s Anniken, of little Ger man Anniken’s running away, of Christmas at Blommedal with its old time customs, etc. ete, The four girls, so totally unlike each other, the masterful grandmother; Miss Duns, her dull-as-lead, but gooda»-| gold companion; the cranky old| coachman, and the other charact ters) are portrayed with the same livell: | ness that marks the author's other books, aid “Four Cousins’ will be) most eagerly welcomed by the young | readers who already know Dikken| Zwilgemoyer thru “What Happened to Inger Johanne.” stake THE IROQUOIS SCOUT, by D.| Lange. (Lothrop, Lee & Shephard} Co,, $1.50.) Prof, Lange's high-grade “India Stories” are too well known to} need comment, and are gaining all This one has exceptional historical value, as it is in the time} of the Revolutionary war, The} scene is laid in the valleys of the) Hudson and Mohawk. touching the] and] ¢ hundreds of thou: | y and| have The au-| stomach & Shephard | compel | for | elements | Thousands of men and women from | # doings In Haltl, | x5 ma than the gold fields| | OF RED PEPPERS: tight, aching chest. Stop up the congestion the pain, Brea Feel hort time, Red Pepper Rub’ that brings * jn the cold rem quickest reli cannot and it certs seems to end the tightness and drive rignt edy hurt you the congestion and soreness out Nothing has such penetrating heat aa red peppers, and i penetrates right down |Into colds, aching mu | cles and sore, stiff joints relief comes concentrated, stion, at once. | ‘The moment you apply Red Pep: | per Rub feel the tingling heat In three minutes the conge spot }is warmed through and throug | When ffering from a cold rheumatism, che, sore muscles, just get a jar of Rowle | Red Pepper Rub, made from red pep pers, at any drug store. You will the quickest relief known, A say “Rowles,"—Advertisement Bladder Trouble KIDNEY STONES, HACKACHE, — a bad cold loosen up in just a| stiff neck or! Weat Point and Fort Niagara. T outstanding figures are Ganadog a young Iroquolw scout of the Nations that remained friendly to the Americana, and two lads of the Hudson valley How Indian Ganadoga and his boyhood friend, Jonas Stilwell, search for the latter's older in the land where Chief Br his Mohawk warriors and among the Ohle 1 Kentu EAC Ee bhatt PEELE, the warlike The ante t calm, Washington, ¢ kindly, genial, } tively shown aderful leadership sities oan few been obliged to ym 12 to | alee | boys tre ‘Alvita Restores 3s Health After Forty Years of Indigestion Men noute I M4 Aigention, trouble and k ments will be glad to k case of Mrs. Mary A. Linton, Long Beach most imm: Alvita California st who obtained after taking lincovery Having suffered for 40 at the do with w tors termed ner vous indigestion, #o badly that I was pump I just wanted to you that after using your Alvita Tablets for two weeks I am entirely relieved uble—and recommend your Alvita too to suffering humanity use a stomach 20 years cannot highly suck ita tablet prepared from the plant, which science rich storehouse of vital mineral lime, tron and phosphates. tion of the land h efits from Alvita you have tried, try this remedy of nature now, A dol |¥ lar buys a box at any drug store Advertixement every taiffed ARERR RnR RE BE NY an Oh aoe - “ ¥ Cherry’ S in. Y READY TAILORED CLOTHES 4 fr MEN and WOMEN ” MILLINERY—WAISTS—FUR Rialto Hide. over Pigin W “I can vamp a good postsh, it I can stage a right-2 appearance,” sez Harold out of work. Then he saw a Cherry adver- tisement. Natur- ally,... got the “‘posish.” OUR TERMS FIRST payment weekly payment... NO BIG FIRST PAYMENT... and q you GET what you BUY. Ce Dr. Wo, Chinese Doctor Llerh speviation Christmas is the Station on the Road of Life where all trains stop for one day each year to feed the hearts of men. Ee eee | % Tailored Neckwear Collar Sets in several styles, in lace and linen. 3,00 to 4.00, Ostrich Fans that would delight the young miss as well as her older sister. 4.95. Ribbon Corsages, colorful and cleve ly made. 3: —MacDourn' The Most Charming Gift of AU “Saab’’ Sets The exquisiteness of garments that are entirely hand-made, the loveliness of sheer, pure white, and adornments of hand-made Irish or Filet, make these sets of gown and chemise, creations indeed. Those trimmed in Filet. .12.95 Those trimmed in Irish. .15.00 —MacDougall-Southwick, Third Floor Prepare! From China comes a lovely array of Chinese Embroidery Finish Mats that make the love- liest coverings for small tables and consoles. Your friends in the East will appreciate a gift of this kind, and mailing them isso easy. 3.50 to 5.00 Gifts at 3.00 or Less For the Tiny One’s Merry Christmas Mah | and decorations tor Panty Dresses—2.75 and |Jongs parties 2.95. hgh ke. Snuggly Bath Robes for the young person from 2 to 6. 2.50, Cunning and Cozy Wool Sacques and Sweaters. Shoes the cleverest conception in footwear for the very young. 1.95, Bunny are —Third Floor Powder Cases are py thoughts. Of course you want From the Men’s rosebude as well as two , one-half yard Jengths of Shop ribbon two inches wide in harmonizing tones. Silk Hose —A gift elegance. 3.00, hap- af Garters Neckwear— Knit 3.00. ashion and Royal Ascot. may be made in many different colors and the ribbon required is only one and one-third yards, two and one-fourth inches wide. Fownes Gloves—2.50. —Men' Shop, Street Floor Tde; Jumping Ropes, 5, Meas- Ash Trays, 1.00 uring Spoons, 85c. —Fifth Floor. —MaeDougall-South- wiek, Street Floor. Men’ Special Offering in s Knit Vests 5:50 OUR doctor will tell you they are warm and healthful; your van- ity tells you they are snappy in ap- pearance; your good: judgment tells you here’s a real buy. Smart, indeed, in four-pocket style with contrast knit effect on pocket edges. Stripe and check effects to choose from. Grays tans, browns, greens; 32 to 42. —Men's Shop, Street Floor, Card Table Covers to be quickly made for gifts. White, un- thed; also black sateen—85c —Fitth Floor, Marshmallow Forks Set of 3—75c Shoe Trees 75c —Fitth Floor Children’s Bibs 15c to 50c Unbleached muslin. —Fitth Floor, a Laundry Bags 85c Unbleached muslin; very useful, with blife band on top. Fitth Floor Colored Border Scarfs 75c design in white, This is a good last - minute gift suggestion —Fitth Floor Feather Duster Sets 1.25 Powder Your Backs 1.00 Fitth Floer Simple Mpsey says and quit fi that he w Without 8 ate wonder PWhite or a gy

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