The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 2, 1924, Page 11

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The S$ 1{ SECTION TWO ————_—__— WRAM JOHNSON GETTING BUSY Will Try to “Smoke Out” President Coolidge SEATTLE, WASH., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1924, -RENCE MARTIN a ols by United Presa) IGTON, Jan, 2.—Hiram wil try to “smoke out"| t Coolidge. Johnson, tn the! m he will open next Wedni @ay in Cleveland, will try to force Mr. | to debate before the coun: | : ues Johnson will raise, . Be Coals has no intention at| present of taking any large personal | in the pre-convention campaign. ‘organization, he fecls, is entirely | ‘competent to handle his bid for the tican nomination, Johnson is | @etermined that Mr, Coolidge shail) Mm. BY JIM MARSHALL Instructions to newcomers for got- ting the homebuying urge in Seat- tle: () Leave & pet pup in the town you came trom, (2) Sleep in an apartment house wall bed. If these instructions are carried out faithfully, tho reporter guaran- |tees results, ‘They worked tn his case, anyway, | For the next few weeks he ex: |pects to hear nothing but. “strictly | | modern, brea | thusiastic frocks. wa his Cleveland speech, Johnson wil lay the ground work for what a to be the biggest battle of fighting career, The Californian Phy counting himseif a victor, but he feels sure that he has a chance to} lowed within | vinta, $1,000 down and $50 a month. | show. |cholee location"”—and the rest of the | realtor’s patter, od his bank bala: eo will fall} He hi A raitice! Jeaders regard Johnson as’ jaboring under an unbeatable handi- lack of the sort of organiza- fon which will function for Mr, handing the first permit of the year i Building company’s xew $750,000 Medi-| getting the second permit of the year for his | y Bittman, architect, ig third in line, to re-| of the Pdcific Steamship company’s $4,000,- | Robert L. Proctor, superintendent of buildings, Coolidge. A. H. Albertson, architect for the Metropolitan But Mr. “pao — tame | OM building. Next in line is Stephen Berg, ee ties te syperent. jnew $565,000 apartment house, white Henr; Mr. Cootidge, he believes, Is not} ceive the permit for the first $500,000 unit fwpensible for this, but members of 000 terminal dock and warehouse. administration are, he contends, a “4 vent, Johnson rs out to rally ee 7 ————— sil ‘the discontented to It. ‘Landlords Warned to a ee Keep Apartments Warm get Sound Bridge and Dredging Co. | { 4re no regulations concerning heat. | Some of the trouble arises, Frasch | said, because many apartment| houses burn coal in the summer and joll in winter, Landlords of some of | | these walt until a cold spell before | | chan, over. The result fs fauity th ol! plant and conse : Naraban | ¢°T You say : | illness in the rooms above, | pre cans Ericey anervees|““Direct Action” Used During Cold| Fav ‘ay to be showing Improvement at | 7 the St. Luke's hospital. His condi tien is atill serious, however. © Joseph Levy, 13-y the season's first coast Spell, Says Health Office While thousands of Seattle apart {| ment house dwellers. expecially those | heat. » jin northside-ofthe-building apart: | ments, suffered tn the recent col that north side apartmen orth rooms of private hou: marticularly hard to keep warm, liy with a wind blowing. jow casings in many casea a air to enter, making it ctim of } ordered him to. supply sufficient We can obtain quicker action in this manner, and, after all, the ants of te: object of the heat ordinance is bl Dat has a chance to recove Shull was fractured when his euall, ties ey oll dacer tine wecure heat for the tenant trashed into peep an ntpee Ego mttepged to leaving them coh ack of heat ts due Mu * the landiora.~ he part of the th office will 4 RATURE IS SET AT 65-70 DEGREES A be ty ordinance requires all hote © wha action appears neces ndiords to maintain rooms between the sald Wed sary, Frasch said. , instead of ar #. we bave in-/ hours of 9 a.m. and 10 p.m. This} You can sell that old plece of fur. , pointed out should range front 65 to 70 de-|niture by placing a small Want Ad in The Star. Phone MA t 0 < system, and During the night hours there Clearance of. Silverware At Burnett’s—Whereby You Can Save a Third and Can Every piece of silver-plated hollow-ware in the store is to be sold for a third less than the fair fixed price. This is because we have more than we need to keep store with! You may now buy the finest tea sets, the most elaborate pieces for the dining room and pay but a trifle over the actual cost of production. What is of even greater importance is the fact that you may add any or all of the items to your aecount—if you have one—and pay in small amounts weekly or monthly as may be convenient for you. And—if you haven’t an account this will be the happiest time in all the year to open one. Just select the things you'd like to have to grace your table and ask to have them charged. Sale opens tomorrow —lasts as long as the supply holds out. Coffee Sets Tea Sets Quadruple Plated Silver In the finest of all the At SEE OUR PIKE some four and five pieces are too many—reduced a to the set—All are reduced third. All are complete @ full third, with trays. $20 Tea Sets for $1 0) Coffee Sets for $30 Tea Sets for $1 . $35 Tea Sets for Coffee Sets for $50 Tea Sets for $ : $75 Tea Sets for i Coffee Sets for $100 Tea Sets for $6 ‘ Plated Platters $7.50 HANDLED BREAD TRAY $4.95 F very peenitieg and beautiful are these platte ae $5 SANDWICH TRAY $3.45 m the U. S. A. and duplic finest “S field” Wares from the Old Country. They may be had in $13.50 GRAVY BOAT for $8.95 Platinum finis in burnished effects id either $15 GRAVY BOAT for $9.95 $7.50 CASSEROLE for $4.95 $2 SALTS AND PEPPERS for $1.35 $10 COMPOTES NOW MARKED $6.50 $15 COVERED VEGETABLE DISH $9.95 Plain or with a and tree” for meat juices— latters for $4 $15 Platters for $9.85. Up to the $28 Platters for $18.65. Goblets, Sherbets and Wine Glasses Half Price! As shown in the illus- tration—the finest qual- ity thin optic g each piece | engraved in Students’ 2-Pants Suits well-tailored and checks, both spor Virgin wool dark stripes plain models. pants. They're wonderful values. Take What’s Left of the Travelers’ BURNETT BROS., 909 Second Ave. monies eattle Star Pup and Wall-Bed Urge _ Newcomer to Buy Home Cliff-Dweller Homes for Hound and Good Ol’ Sleep-Shelf faster than Henry Cabot face when Magnus Johnson starts to talk In the senate, bought a home. PET PUPS GHosT DISTURBS SLUMBERS The pup'y name was—and te—un- len® he has come out second best in 4 wrangle with a trolley car—Spike, Just a fox terrier mutt, whose en- welcomes always muddy paw marks over the report er's clothes and Not worth 40 cents on the | apartment ,/oPeN market and wouldn't be al-| newcomers of the But, doggone It! At the ond of that | dog gets to a fe} Overcoats that compare favorably sold in Seattle recently at $35 and $40. —of the highest quality— new designs—and in the Ca oe highest quality we ean 1 OWERCOAT WINDOW of these have three and find— yet because there *25 Suits, Each has two pairs of fle pattern. z were bought to sell at Toilet Sets at Half the Regular Price $10.50 a dozen —and they command that bd fi “5 Ave ct Some are for Men and some for Women—ail are of the orf Chath We fare - olbaitie quality and the sets include Brushes, Combs, ] oe e zt hs rata ure Pieces, Cloth Bru 1 all the toilet . : . the spleen: nece ae of the Pullman traveler or the over night cevour ot 4 trip. In artificial Ivory, Ambertone, Shelltone and in Saws is a Black Ebor i Cases of the finest leather Home of 2-Pants Suits these go at er- ‘ Again-as-|c rice Prices ra » to $ according to size 2 ¢ et of Six et Just half the regular price 401-407 PIKE—AT FOURTH Seattle’s Largest Upstairs Clothing Store PAGES 11 TO 20 JURY REOPENS POLICE PROBE {Indicted Men Will Be Ar- raigned on Friday they ike n apartment houses and hotel because don't Bometimes, at nignt, the reporter catches his wife crying softly about the’ pup, And the baby alway cries, nights, because Spike ton't there to wag a stub of a tail and eroon over him. Got to get a home and get the dog over—-that's all there ig to it, brother! Tho less said about apartment house wall-beds the better. You spend an hour tinkering with ‘e Ready to rush their investigations to a complete and early conclusion, the King county grand jury resumed in the evening, generally nip its deliberations, Wednesday and re- @ couple of fingers, Then, gingerly, | opened {ts inquiry into the charges you cmwl in—and LIE STILL! jof graft in the police traffic depart About 2 gm. you turn over ana| ment the bed playa with a clatter) H. W. Xasmussen, toymerly a dis- Uke a boller factory in an earth.| Datcher for the Red Top Cab com auake, Then you hurl the mat-| Py. was the eign py esevoal ee tress and covers bodily to the floor| Pétore the fe ai bape ec msde and sleep there, in peace, for the |e had no knowledge of police gra made | balance of the night | If the reporter were a rea} estate new|dealer he would go around houses, reminding pup they left 4 mile of a bench | behind them. ‘Then he would muke ja sneering remark about the wall Yknow how @|bed and, pulling the contract for| heart. jthe home from his pocket, say vith a friend! “On the dotted ‘line, ple Lodge's He will have his wife's the | odd men Sn jgrand jury calendar D. m., and ing all th , taken up at 1:30 p. m. All of the men Indicted are out on bail. The big special purchase secured by our Mr. Parks from a manufacturer’s surplus stock of high grade OVERCOATS is proving to be the great- est value-giving event.in many months. SEE THESE COATS TOMORROW! We have employed extra salesmen to take care of the rush. If you couldn’t get waited on Monday, come in tomorrow. $25 we are selling with many STREET At $35 we are selling heavy virgin wool coats, plaid back, Skinner satin linings in sleeves and shoulders, guaranteed for two season’s wear, and exclusively tailored. Coats that compare with the highest-priced garments shown anywhere. Designed by one of America’s foremost designers. You owe it to yourself to see these Coats be- fore you buy. We invite comparison with any sale or regular garments. Look around, then come and see them. in and Every Day Is Sale Day at the Tailored Ready Co. Ready Co.

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