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

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’ - _— ee er | SECTION TWO of Cohen and Carroll iiss Sieg iss kc. held Sund ‘And Cohen Points With Pride to His} Money-Saving Bond Law BY J. R. JUSTICE | passed Somebody has complained that) Lou Cohen has an up-to-date clgar Jonn F. Carroll and A. Lou Cohen, | store on Second ave., and he is Coun- who are candidates to succeed them: | cilman Cohen, selves in the elty council, have been | Councliman Cohen points with excluded from the gallery of council | pride to the fact that he it was who manic beauties we have been trying | got thru an ordinance compelling a to arrange, If there is anything I} change in tho manner of offering | should like to do in this roundup fot | and selling municipal bonds, He has | candidates, it is to play fair, The} figured out that enough has been | main purpose of it all has been to} saved to the city in the sale of bonds} get men for the council out in the / since the adoption of his advertising | along or passed away, open. It seemed also fitting that|and bidding plan, to pay his salary} some new blood be Injected into that | for 40 or 50 years. A aturally body. ta 0 i like to be allowed to For, | With Erickson and Fitzgerald} of that salary Ge: out, there will be room for new | after all, business ts business. | 1, and it should be blue blood, If} Councilman Cohen is also very} it fs to make good on the job of the|much wrapped up in his proposed two departing councilmen. For they | city auditorium, He is backing the are both strong men, whether you like | proposition to» have the voters pass them or not, But Carroll ang Cohen | upon a bond Iasue for $750,000, to be must be given all of a square deal, or} added to some money already pro- | more, j vided, for tho purpose of erecting | So I went down to look them oyer | this auditorium, If his plans are| and find out, if possible, just where | carried out the auditorium ts to be} to hang thelr pictures in the collec: | built on the five-acre tract that the| tion of beauties. “Mr. Carroll had | city owns up on the hill near Denny Fone up to look over the Skagit dam | park. and Mr. Cohen was not around. For| I want to say this for Councilman three days I went down to the city! Cohen: He is a good story teller, a hall, and for three times I got the/ good fellow and a good salesman; same answer. Jand he ts Councilman Cohen. All of Maybe, after all, ft would be Just; which he learned to be in the good as well to inquire among the neigh. | old days down at the corner of First bors. _ OA jand Cherry. {ELLOW-COUNCILILEN > | LIKE MR, CARROLI. | found that he stood very well around the county-city building, amd that his, fellow-councilmen looked “upon vo RE PREVENTED: as a good man, They say he ‘is doing a good work on the. street com: mittee, and has laid out future plans that he should be allowed to complete Later in the day I went into a bus iness’ office, a here: received good report on Johnnie Carroll, trom his boyhood up. CHICAGO, Jan. This is ail he y, but you take it | gd of Sam for what it is worth. anand E Should I see Mr. Carroll, and, should he contradict this estimate, I | | | | | Actor and Actress Calm} \ Hysterical Audiences Presence of I ran right into : ‘@ pleasant hour together. Of course |“ everyone who has been around here calmed the playgo- | somo of them left. | n Miss Duncan was ncene when the | js and the tnrush of ence. There | t for seats as ncores few of the old-tine dignitaries around pts} town haven't sat on a goods box In his place and lstened to the wonder | oy gold stories from the North. It on these some goods boxes around this same cigar store t many a political scheme was hatc ‘ in the good old days. And it was|jeaped to here that the best story tellers gath-| immediately ered day by day and talked andj and t smoked, | hel BOND ORDINANCE IS) A SCORE FOR COHEN But the old “smoke house” Is gone, | 804 we are safe.” and many of the old-timers have} Most of tho goers resumed as ina large was estimat imber Deals Reach | Huge Mark in Week Timber deals Northwest durin; purel imber. in the WE TEACH ALL. COMMERUIAL RD ancues Why not get our advice as to what branch to spe- cialize in. We can give you yaluable information. to swell the Punch Boaed War | Extends to County | Day and Evening School Success Business His Father’s Story Sends Son to Death RK, A College Crary Bldg., Union at Fifth Ave. MA in-0642 Head Pharmacist Attends Meeting Dean Optometrist and Formerly with Mar Optician Foreign Clubs to Okeh New Station nts can Free Examination Sure-Fit Optical Co. Set Funeral Date vr The Seattle Star PAGES 11 TO 20 SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1924, rance in 1918, Seattle ‘Tax! company, opers Too Many Yellow te Cc. b: . Ss “yellow cabs,” against thre abs in Seattle |,, drivers. (Phe idcivera Fava Just what protection a trade name | ca a oming physician and sur-| gives its owner against rival taxi| recently returned. from | concerns copying trade name colors | ‘ow, Scotland, and Vi-| will be decide the result of a| wir,” to pedestr suit filed here late Thursday by the! $5,000 is asked influen| Famed Surgeon | pak to Locate Here | jjor0 ; * of Dr. | known noy-Watwon chapel, Ho died Wodnes: epidemic In day. ity from Spokane to lo for Herman Boltz Funeral rites for Herman Bolts, 58, Bolt in survived by his widow, Mra, Josephine Bolt eo sons, Dr ph oltz, three son, Dr) ye Winiam O'Sb Paul itz of | chard O'Sh nent! Ho is widely Kynocological specialit, | ving solicited crying “yellow cab, 8. A judgment of urverein,, and a business | Bolts of Seattle, and H. r taland, man Bo! |geon } sisters and two | ited with na | study in Gen, hunter M. Liggett during the }enna clinica. @ the life o ut lay afternoon at the Bon |b . % 148 DALE ——— ihere's a Big Difference The Tortoise and the Hare was and isa popular “Fable” with children. But— grown-up folks prefer “Facts.” We know the Tortoise never caught the Hare. That wasn’t in the cards. And yet the Business Tortoise makes just such preposterous statements. He knows that he’s running a losing race. Seeing a modern clothing service forging ahead fast our conservative friend makes desperate efforts to attract attention. He springs a fable on values—stages a sale—shouts about bar- gains. But he carries too heavy a load to make the grade. Deep in his heart he knows that he cannot equal F-B values, without going broke. Yet he pulls his Fable all the same. Facts versus Fables Fahey-Brockman meet all Fables with cold hard facts. We never stage a sale. Why should we rob Peter today to bait a hook for Paul tomorrow? When a suit or an overcoat arrives at a Fahey-Brockman store it carries no selling expense on the part of the maker. There’s no jobber’s or commission man’s toll on the garment. It represents quantity buying for cash reduced to a science. We place a rock-bottom price on that garment while new. And we sell it fast because anybody can see that it’s top-notch value at a glance. Fahey-Brockman Price Tags are worth more than casual attention. They’re copied, we know, but not in detail. Note the insert at the bottom of each figure. A flat guarantee there—no side-stepping. We sell quality clothes, for men and young men, tailored by America’s best craftsmen to retail at $35, $40 and $45 for $10 less in each case. A whopping big saving on the new suit or overcoat you want at any time or season. Buy Upstairs and Save $10—On New Clothes That’s something more than an advertising claim—it’s an absolute guarantee at Fahey-Brockman’s. If you want “left-overs’—rejected, shopworn merchan- dise at a 15 or 20% markdown (?) this isn’t the place for you. But—if you want a new suit or overcoat, quality of material and workmanship guaranteed—a garment only a few weeks at most from the hands of Eastern Master tailors—we can do business and save you $10 at least. Come on in and ask us to show you. Every doubting Thomas becomes a warm friend. So will you. Let’s get acquainted! Raleigh Bldg. Sixth and Washington Portland Fahey-Brockman Bldg. Third and Pike Seattle " j |

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