The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 1, 1925, Page 4

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—-— oes—equal to those carried by the most expensive st at a tremendous sacrifice in order to compel quick sal values are possible. Come and see for yourself, One group contair | lines of the season terns in Oxford Strap Slip- pers in patent, satin ng broken One group of wonde best pat black made up trap ¢ and Oxfe low heel proved merit and $6.50 to $8.01 with high and low heeis ues to $8.00, © Clearance Sale! Hundreds of Pairs of Highest Quality _ Shoes Greatly Sacrificed The new spring footwear will soon be clamoring for roor ks must be sold—at once. And so, hundreds of pairs of $3.80 group of smart, y strap Pumps and ose Ht cut-out Oxford effects to _— . } » patent, satin, suede : and kid; several styles of tan calf Slippers, in- cluding turned welted soles; all kinds of heels, Values to $9.00, $5.80 (__women's NOVELTY SHOES | Mail Orders 322 Pine Street Come Early Many Styles $4. 8 0 Promptly Filled for Best Choice Some Thoughts by Big BANK ROBBED, Whereabouts Questioned | Men on NewY ear’s Day) ARREST MAN | orn, se esti EW YORK, Jan. 1.—Nicholas Murray Butler, presi Iumbla university, today gave the United Press the following statement: “Ig every American would make this New Year's resolu ' tion and keep ft t world | would shorily be a r and happier place: ‘Learn to think | straight; have the courage to | uom is i) ay what you think and to act Tear’e. resctution as you believe; shun Intolerance, ee 5 ther of race or color or | Pr ge ROSA ; follow the golden rule; ae remember that other nations ¥ no claims to and. other peoples have their me arg by pwn preferences, prejudices. and | mind. mak sensibilities, and avoid offending yout napa them by harsh or ungenerous speech or act; support the rule of justice between nations as between men, to the end that law and not war may be the ar- biter of International differ- ences.'” Kreatly enco look In 1926 chewing 5 nj leads to grou v stubbornly reft hang | views on any subj he | evidence Is own mind, for o CHICAGO, Jan. 1—Edward | N. Hurley, former chairman of No More Hiccoughs Is i Promise of Scientist fees | ASHINGTON, Jan. 1—The the hundreds of papers read by hiccough germ has been e cee scientists. tracked to its lair, finger print- | nesunhed Stats tain equilibrium of popu ed and made an orderly citizen, with births and deaths just b Dr. Edward C. Rosenow of the ancing in 1960. ant!-Klan faction g Mayo foundation has informed A powerful and as yot little the American Association for understdod serum hes teen die |?" * the Advancement of Science. covered, a few drops of whic Anuouncing the isolation and if placed In a city’s water sup — identification of the germ which ply, would clear up a typhoid HERE’S MORE ABOUT caused the mysterious epidem- | epidemic } : u ies of hiccoughs, Rosenow sald | — ns ! RAGSDALE it {s a round germ that throws [| } { fawepies otf a poison which acts én the | Wet New Year’s || STARTS ON PAGE 1 nervous system. —— The system reacts spasmodic- | London Feature | ...5 011 in t ally, causing the hiccoughs. | LONDON, Jan. 1—London was re-|night. Thursd The germ te a streptoceocris, covering from {ts merriest and most |fast ti jomewha! 0 a1 sf [fast atlas severe tonsilitis and cere |¢xpensive New Year celebration since | Colvin tain kinds of blood polsoning, the armiati Other disclosures of interest Carols broad : were made at the convention in | Ben” opened the celebration at mid- Ragsdale. “Get me out. od: a night, while streets were thronged Colvin then got Stark on the with a great crowd to greet 1925. phone and ordered the release of Los Angeles Has a Thero was a din of nolse ax the| the two. “I will guarantee theit carols ce and streets were crowd-| “ppearance to answer Noisy Celebration |." ):1:1 the largest crowds in years throng: | many ‘Amaatiaane. Cheuaiite’6t bot | cocurretics, A eeete jtles of champagne wero drunk. “L only have Rag: The din was s0 terrific along | Services were held in all churches| trom w Broadway that several store windows |at midnight and thousands unable} much to were broken by the concussion of |to get in the buildings stood In front utomnobiles backfiring and other|in the #torm to join in singing the noise tnaking d carols. Nearly two score revelers were! ae treated Rag companion was drufk, ¢ receiving hospital for | wounds of various sorts, with « Industrial Speaker [or tho roaahowes, p jentiful sprink of black eyes. Po alarala an Beas atoms ss weer ds) _ rlere Next Monday | tt Dertiy to satne the hip by a stray bullet Bvery clergyman in Seattis has|cuting Gene Mahoney, an er of the|been {nvited to hear P. H in, | ow Sos Angeles Athletic clu cele: | general secretary of the National In. | neither of us were drunk prating on the fourth floor of the |dustrial Peace and Ed lub building when he toppled thru|ciation, speak in room D of the| han was a window and fell to the street.|Olymple hotel at 10 o'clock next Mon-| badly fr Physicians sald he wos not seriously |day morning. He talks on rights of | was ding beside his Jemployers, employes, and the public. | whan wa hit tt" 0 13 Aberdeen Girl Employes Direct Police INiles, Ohio, Man Shot in ss ; Front of Klan Hall 1J. Ce | home t “| GRO end of the pleces of tr the end of a serew driver. jwill stan¢ |them good ast from the “Big} _ “I’m in jail, Captain,” robbed of $400 at FE carly daylight, despite the| charges,” Colvin told Stark. LOS ANGELES, Jan. 1—This/ bad weather. Colvin said that he would take city celebrated New Year's eve In 4) rotelc and restaurants were crowd-| 0 official action against Ragede Hilarious manner last night, one Of! eq with merrymakers, {ncluding| pending a full investigation of tho o's story, and + he told me, he was not ame," said Colvin dented that his dented that ho was intoxicated, We had been making the rounds|by thre men. L/ |$20 with his pass rhe used in x the places,” Ragsdale had several drink. ational asno-| “I do not belleve Deputy Harra-|held up nea nk either, but he ened by the crash, men driving a small coupe bit EATTI [SALESMAN DIES IN FLOOD Representative of Seattle Drug Firm ts Drowned | ~~ Wounded 1925 ROARS INTWo ARE SLAIN3 SHOT IN NEW AT CHICAGO YEAR PARTIES FOR GOTHAM New York Moist and Noisy at Birth of New Year TROTSKY DEAD? parties pays | Assassination Is Reported; LON J pewa the ¢ UND THE BATTERY Dm app of radio freq your own se driver brass tubing. r nuts and the other ng rings are $$$ __—____——_~, HERE’S MORE ABOUT ROBBERIES | STARTS ON EL ig \| hth av 8. and TAncoln hotel, robbed of $27 a plekpocket ao tt companied by a pretty Man carried can and wore gl 5 P. Barril York hotel, robbed of $4 and R. Smit 7 Sixth ave. robbed of ny two bandits a and Union st ma, held up on and lost $26 J. Mark, Y. M. C. A., held up at Sixth ave. and Madison st, by two bandits, who took somo smatl 9 Washington st., nd Jackson st 5,000 note and t Dupont, Puget Sound hotel , knocked out and robbed of | $38 by thre motor bandits at King | tne street sta Arthur BE. 68th Hospital Treats 15 Street Fighting and Minor Accidents Feature “Happy New Year” | | | | | in Cabaret! » Negress Shoots Former Lover at New Year’s Celebration Here THURSDAY Coat: CLEARANCE SALE! Dresses Gowns Retluced Two Men, Women Wounded Two Fatally Wounded Michigan Celebrations in New Year Welcome All Ensemble Suits '/+, Price a, THAT SmMuss PINE, WESTLAKE AND FIFTH IN RAID | Thought They Were Hijack: | me ers, Victim Says who said he was addres "Kills Sweetheart in Love Quarrel shot throat with a aN 'S MORE AROUT PROSPERITY STARTS ON PAGE 1 SS not ing ness genius and men 0} surely Davi . predicting “still grea HIGHEST t le prices of commodities fn | tho United States are settling to a over pre-war | level of 5 prices, I maining before t living ha cent above pro-war for t years, he stated. therefore, continues Joy the highest real wage in tory,” TRUSTE 100 per cent higher than | AMES, Manager Puget Mill Co. RROW, Vico President RAYMOND R tanding developm rf Northern Railway Company by three men, | taining pro t small amount of eash Hbover tandard Oif station, 10th ave, ana| going up now while other commod- y st., held up and robbed by two | ities remain sta.ionary, thug incr ing the farmer's purchasiné power rm products are “They Are Practically As Solvent as the Government Itself”’ In an addregs before the convention of the American Bank- ers Association at Los Angeles in October, 1921, Alvan Markle, ing the convention at the request of President Harding, Postmaster-General Hays, Secretary of the Treasury Mellor and Attorney-General Daugherty, stated that “no depositor in the savings banks of New York State had ever lost a nickel” and that these Mutual Savings Banks “Are Practically as Solvent As the Government Itself” s statement becomes the more interesting and important when embered that the law governing the Wé GS BANK of SEATTLE is a copy of the NEW YORK BANK LAW. The principal reason why the Mutual Savings Banks of New York and the Washington Mutual Savings Bank of solvent as the Government itself” rigid, scientific Savings Bank Law These laws guarantee, not only the high character and financial re- sponsibility of the Trustees—they also prohibit the lending of money to Officers and Trustees, Another important feature is that Mutual Savings Bank laws limit the amount of interest that may be paid on deposits, thus eliminating all temptation to invest money at “high rates” in an attempt to pz These are a few of the reasons wl NEVER HEAR OF THE FAILURE OF A MUTUAL Some Interesting Figures Increase in deposits during the last 12 months ...... Number of savings depositors on our books ........ Dividends paid depositors during last 12 months ..... Deposits Made on or Before JANUARY 10, 1925, Will Share in the Dividends from January 1 Washington Mutual Savings Bank 1101 SECOND AVENUE , Resources $ WILLIAM A. PETERS, Peters & Powell, Lawyers ROLLIN ANFORD, Vice President E. A. STROUT, Jr, Secy.-Treas., & Strout Ww Company C. E. VILAS, Investments F. W. WEST, Vice Presiden EUGENE B, FAVRE, St L. 0. JANECK, Yakima %4 to 2 SHINGTON MUTUAL AVINGS attle are “practically as that they operate under the most in existence. SAVINGS BANK. $5,406,000 00,000.00 5] VY. L. RHODES, President Rhodes Bros.

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