The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 26, 1919, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| RETIRES TO joys i * e@idestablished business here. QD As Mr. Berg jocularly puts it. | My friends ali know that I Rave always wanted to live on \. “Lénine Agent Denies They, ) OF COUNTRY LIFE INSTALLMENT THREE Ted wan the first of the oh to leave home for school, He was despera homesick at first, but soon got into the swig of school life, Mame, the nurse mentioned. was an old family servant, adored by the children, Roosevelt writes in || his autobiography that. t time they offended her |, when, thru mistaken devotion || Named a favorite pig “Mam Roosevelt home mt overrun with pets, ranging bear cubs to ponies, from snakes to badgers over wan they The times from | was ADVICE AND NEWS Oyster Day, May Tth, Blessed Ted: It was the greatest fun seeing you, and I really b satisfactory time with me away feeling that doing well. I am entirely satinfied with your standing, both in your | | studios and in athletics I want you to do well in your sports, and | want even more to have you do well with your books; but I do not expect you to stand first in either, if so to stan woukl cause you overwork and hurt your health I always be Neve in going hard at everything, | whether it is Latin or mathem boxing or football, but at the Ume [ want to keep the sense of proportion, It is never worth while to absolutely exhaust one's self or to take big chances unless for an adequate object. I want you t6 keep in training the faculties which would make you, if the need arose able to put your last ounce of pluck and strength into a contest But 1 do not want you to squander these qualities, To have you play foot ball as well as you do, and make al good name in boxing and wrestling and be cox of your second crew, and | stand second or third in your cl in the studies, is all right. I should be rather sorry to see you drop too near the middle of your class, be cause, as you cannot enter college until you are nineteen, and will} therefore be a year later In enter. | ing life, I want you to be prepared in the best possible way, so as to make up for the delay. Dut I know | that all you can do you will do to| keep substantially the position in the class that you have so far kept and I have entire trust in you, for | you have always deserved it | The weather has been lovely here 1901 Cc. C. BERG _ Seattle's Oldest Established . Manufacturing Furrier, De. tides to Retire—Will Close ‘Out Business at Once. ‘Old-time residents of this Sity will be interested in the @Anouncement that C. C. Borg Who has been continuousty in as a furrter in Seattle for more than a quarter of a century, to active Business and retire to his Cali fornia ranch SMr. Gerg has for several been developing a fruit Faneh near Fresno, Cal, and feeling that this property now ‘Weeds his undivided attention Me has decided to close out his you. you were cease CAA farm, and I have accumu. Tated enough now to ‘support’ @ fruit ranch.” The store at 1415 First Ave. * be closed out at once. ‘ } fixtures and equipment “Will be placed on public sale . Store will be closed ' yy and Friday to give ' Opportunity to mark down } @¥ery piece of fur so low, as OMr. Berg expresses it, “that ‘the goods will quickly sell i themselves without the aid of “@lerks or advertising.” » At high quality furs, at About half present market are of interest to you the papers Thursday the apples will not be out for ten days. The May flowers and blood. | root have gone, the anemones and bellwort have come and the violets are coming. Ali the birds are here pretty much, and the warblers troop thru the woods To my delight, yesterday Kermit when I tried him on Diamond, did excellently He han evidently turned the corner in his riding, and was just as much at home as pow | sible, altho he was on my saddie| 3 fi | ‘Have Been Repudiated | ‘ he his feet thrust in the leathers | : YORK, Nov. 25.—Russian above the stirrup. Poor mother! NEW oe government. of /P&# bad a hard time with Yagenka, | S the csar in the United States have | £0 She rubbed her back, and as she! been repudiated by the Boishe- | ™*4'y needs exergine and I could not | ————— — —— YS ‘BOLSHIES’ ~K |have a saddle put upon her, I took Mmletambersador to the Uniced |e Out Dareback yesterday. Her F told the Lusk legisiative | ®*!* are so easy that it is really ing committee here today, |™0Fe comfortable to ride her with: | nd when question. |°ut * Saddle than to ride Texas with : - one, and | gave her three miles| PTE toe achat Conernment |*RATD cantering and. trotting to vemnela the $100,-| esate Jr) is @ very cunning theihe he sald wes now }Or 0 cu Dic. 1 wish you could) aid was now | see Kermit taking out Dewey, sr: ove Za sn Unit . bed ates! and Bob Evans to spend the day on @ Russian fovernment:|the grasa, Archio. is the sweetest é rhea et ens aolstare ana e follow imaginable, He te al “d ° - nking of you. le has now BE tas corscee aurtoctics, he struck up a great friendship with ‘ never exercised that privilege “aciearwee 7 nap 7 “xen peed = ‘ee's) regret, as Mame would eo > Bonds oe a to $50,000,000 | + keep him purely for Quentin Pate Mlosied by the czars govern: |The last-named small boisterous per ett Merensky regime, “Martens |“0" Was in fearful disgrace this Keren: . tens| morning, having flung « block at| his mother’s head. It was done in sheer playfulness, but of course uld not be passed over lightly land after the enormity of the crime had been brought fully home to him. he fled with howls of anguish to me and lay in an abandon of yellow omath| headed grief in my arms. Ethel ix |earning money for the purchase of the Art Magazine by industriously hoeing up the weeds in the walk Alice is going to ride Yagenka bareback this afternoon, while I try teach “Ethel on Diamond, after Kermit has had his ride Yesterday at dinner we were talking of how badly poor Mra. Blank looked, and Kermit suddenly observed in an aside to Ethel tirely unconscious that we listening “Oh, Effel, I'll tell what Mrs. Blank looks like Davis’ hen dat died—you know, dat couldn't hop perch.” Naturally, this is purely private anecdote. ARCHIE AND QUENTIN ., May 7, 1901 Recently I have 4 Spproached the National City hank officials to explain that the! C bonds were stili good,”| geld Martens, “but | was never Table to get a hearing with any of a a Witartene said he had talked with | many persons, however, who | connection” with the bank and they “had asked what the chance was of ning the bonds. Martens declared he had in his papers from the soviet) government offering to red the honds, but sald he could not ues them before the committee “hecause they were property of his government HIS HEAD TATOOED LONDON, Nov. 26.—The first case of a man having a wig tattoed on his head came to the attention of the authorities in the Thames Police Court. One of the prisoners ar. raigned there had blue-black lines like parted hair, covering head. i pro- en were you Like one up Oyster B Blessed Ted 4 Gain Strength Rapidly on Vinol inol is successful because it is a non-secret remedy ich contains Beef and Cod Liver Peptones, Iron d Manganese Peptonates and Hypophosphites — no oil—the very elements needed to build up ength and robustness. Children love to take it. ‘The Wonderful Efficiency of Vinol is proven by these letters $. C.—* My little girl five e, Il).—-'*My little girl of age had been delicate all her y id had Whooping Cough She was weak, run-down, no | and Scarlet Fever one right after the , and she could nut keep still ik and run ite. We were very much worried her. Our druggist, who is « ,, said Vinol was the best tonic forher. We tried ae pes ved by headaches. M mended Vinol and the result was that her health and strength were built up see how she has im very quickly by its ase. Mas. Jonn . GEORGE Mrs. Leonard Lew ran-dewn, ie conditions, there is 20 remedy like Vinol. y will ba returned if Uinol fats — q /e—_ 4g OUR COD LIVER AND Vinol IRON FONIC IS THE GREATEST STRENGTH CREATOR KNOWN ‘ at ¥ ‘ND DUGG Y WHER | citing. | | The cherry trees are in full bloom, |‘ the peach trees Just opening, while with them before supper, und give| while sister went on to Host | dealing Joseph Bucklin Bishop conymewy ODORE ROOSEVELT MRS NICHOLAS LONSWORTH Alice, now Mrs. Longworth, known as “Sister - father were gone in to play Quentin after they gone ¢ bed, &nd they have grown to expect me, jumping up soft and warm in their tommies, expecting me to roll them over on the bed and tickle and How ever, it has proved rather too ox and an edict has gone forth hereafter I must play bear with have very ‘grabble™ in them. that ug the play’ when they have gone to bed. Today was Archie's birth and Quentin resented Archie's he (Quentin day having presents while had With the appalling frankness of three years old, he marked with great sincerity that “it him miserable,” and when to task for his lack of altru none re m. taker | int it he expressed an obvious ly nee and said boys things. a INCIDENTS OF HOMECOMING Oyster Bay, May 31, 1901 Blessed Ted I enclose some Fill pino revolutionary postage stamps Maybe some of the boys would like them Have you made whether you would shooting the third week or the last week in July, or would you rather wait until you come when I can find o definite from Mr. } We very much wished ¥ while we the Fr night it was and 3 have mind tr up your like to w (San cisco) expe fally beantiful also wished that been with us when we were out rid ing at ¢ Major Wadsworth put me a big called Tritor om bred mare. thin, It expe Alice you could reneo splendid horse and sister They would jump any was sister's first expert 4 thoro 32 TAILORS SUE | H FOR $100 EACH no 10 ws Say Competitor Violated the Open Shop Agreement Thirty-two master lors of Merchant T tion, each ft suit age agair Stark, presi The London Tailors, Inc., in Tuesday, charging violating an open sho said to then bers oka 0 dar sper court him Journeymen tailor labor u Stark ness under said to hi London T of excaping from the th the to have made by the The closed she $44 week! demands of the strikers When the master tailors sult October 24, Stark in é have promised to business and drawn, The not withdraw suming uit SPOKANE MAY SUFFER ANOTHER MILK RAISE SPOKANE, Nov. 26.—A further in the price of milk may fol low a producers’ meeting toda Producers recently asked hundred pounds. Distributor them $3.80 advanced the half a cent a quart The producers cents now. leged striker 44-hour w wage scale were the mi started Heged to withdraw fron the suit was with tallors say he nd the $4 a gave and price want another 20 QUITE A PIPE DREAM BERLIN.—(By Mail.) —Dusseldorf furnishes an apparent pipe dream to the effect that America is plan ning to erect a “pi palac there, whose real purpose would be to further American supremacy. ‘The material would way from the report sald, commercial building ed all the States, the necessary be fh United Archie and! jumped in August | but did splendidly and ny fence at which I would Tri I did not try any: thing very high, but still some of © posts and rails ¥ about four et high, and it was enough to test ter’s meat. Of course, all we had stick on as the horses she on re » do was to in the letters, and her great chums perfectly and enjoyed it quite as much as we did four or five fences that I went over I should be ashamed to say how far I bounced out of the saddle, but after a while I began to get into my It his been a good * since I have jumped a seat again many y fence | Mother oft at Albany and stopped I came morning. St and Dunne (Mr. Dooley) were on the train and took lunch with us. It was great fun meeting them and I liked th ermit met me in high r, although F did not reach the houne until 10 o'clock, and sat by and we exehanged ancedotes while I took my supper Hthel had put an alarm clock under her head so as to be sure and wake up, but altho it went off she con | tinued to slumber profoundly, as did Quentin. Archie waked up | fielently to tell me that he had found her turtle fust as small ha t already existing treasure of the same kind. This m & Quentin land Binck Jack t neither them been willing h of th curled up fan Quentin is here alone Gaudens, tt he me ve leave me Black ek in a chair, but conversational, an element of harass te correspon for moat to my effort umulated announced that he ortoles This neemed to warrant but it turned out had taltimore catch barn swa (To Be Continued) Salute the am and--- nided Dyspop- ties Who Refuse the Good Things to Eat for Fear of Indigestion. No Trouble Like That If You Follow Meals With Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets oof br of nicely there you th gs and alte ant table autocrat of the 1 can't eat ham and This is thi dc eating what ur meal with a wia Tablet to relie rumblings, drow rn act uch does when It ma Many phyate r indigestion. Jige ative n all drug is perfectly n jans prescribe them dyapepsin and other orders, as they are sold store relief and are highly app TOO FAT? Reduce 10 to 60 the. $100 GUARANT tem. Obtain OM of Korein at any busy drug store; or write for free brochure to Korein NH-1128, | x Become | atarvine | ehtfully easy Ht lows skimming the | 1 ham on al have al DAY, NOV. 26, 1919. Another Kind of War Just when we should be getting back to a peace bas s, Seattle and the Northwest begins to experience the real rigors of war—a baking powder war. Eastern concerns, eking to control the baking powder markets of the country, are demanding your attention, through newspapers—on the bill- board#—with house-to-house demonstrations. Don’t take them too seriously! Pure food laws are still in foree and sed upon the wholesomeness of every brand of baking powder offered pa for sale. competent food officials have When an advertiser devotes too much space to decrying a competitor’s product, there’s a chance he is trying to divert attention from a weakness in his own. When the noise of the baking powder battle and pers tency of demon- strators annoy you, take refuge in the following facts: OUR PEACE TERMS— 1, Only two baking powders in the United States failed to raise prices to the consumer during the war—Crescent Bak- ing Powder was one. 2. Although you pay no more than be- fore the war for Crescent—25c a pound— you get the same high quality—the same efficiency—the same results. 3. No baking powder produces more leavening gas than Crescent, which car- ries more than 14% carbonic gas—nearly one-eighth more than its nearest compet- itor. 4. You use no more Crescent in baking than any other powder regardless of price —one level teaspoon to the cup—four level teaspoons to the quart of flour. 5. Crescent loses less leavening power n the cold mix and retains more for use in the hot oven—greater insurance against failure and more uniform, evenly raised foods. 6. Crescent does not contain Alum. 7. Crescent produces sweet, wholesome foods. No “bitter taste” can possibly re- sult from the use of Crescent. Our Guarantee Is Back of Every Statement | Why Crescent Sells at Pre-War Prices The first | Because it was our way of lightening the war burden for the con- sumer. rificed part of his; advanced costs of material We sacrificed much of our normal profit—the grocer sac- were met partially by more efficient methods of production and by conservatism in ad- vertising, both newspaper and demonstration. But the chief reason you are paying no more for Crescent is because profit and the grocer did likewise. we took a smaller With few exceptions the retail grocer carried more than his share of war's burden. foods you must look farther than the retail For the cause of war prices in grocer. Let the war between the Eastern baking powder interests go mer- rily on without disturbing the peace and happiness of the North- west. defense and protection of our home people. 1 Ib, 25¢ 3 Ibs. 70¢ At All Grocers wut | CRESCENT MANUFACTURING COMPANY, of} a ht | | tn | American Red Cross Doctors Are I} g for Wounded Men at Riga | the city. H is here from E of the situation. 1 city thru German lines a fing of tru All firing by both sides stopped as he came across he first man to enter the from the } the of the city x |} RIGA, 10—<By Mail.)| hinted at leaving American Latvia Red Cross doct nd night Nov ot | rlin to ors and! Lieut.Col, Edward Ryan nurses are working day caring for the hundreda of soldiers See ounded in recent severe fighting in nt of the city ‘The only medical and supplies in city are brought by the Americans and the distributed to local t re the largest number This last experience of Ryan one of many thrilling episodes has participated during 10 years. Before the >» the American City, and during was cap: surgical those | the the and side by the enemy since }have been pitals whe ound f shetis is can be cared for have been dropping | in which he blocks of the hospi the past on he was physician not a! embassy in Mexico trip thru that countr only within a few ar |tor days y mroinent danger of cap member of the American force has | a and the ¢ has | ae Rulership of the new state of Hungary js the goal of these mem bers of royalty. They are, left to right (above), former Emperer Charles lof Austria Tlungary and Carol, crown prince of Rumania; (below) the \puke of Abruzzi and the Duke of Teck. Crescent Baking Powder at pre-war prices constitutes * the 5 Ibs. $1.00 EATTLE, WASHINGTON. tured by bandits. His disappearance ; lease set out to reorganize the Red precipitated an international crisis, | Cross commission in the Balkans. CRIMINAL OF FAME GOES TO POORHOUSE and had charge of a unit in) PANSVILLE, N. Y., Nov. 26.<At When the Austro-German the age of 58, Alonzo J. Whiteman, invaded the mer millionaire, state senator and served as mayor of Be mayor of Duluth, has been admitted short time; then was imprisoned by |to the county poor farm to end his the Germans for eight weeks. Dur-|days. Whiteman spent his boyhood ng his stay in German hands he/|here. At the height of his career he continued his medical work with | met with reverses and became a erim- Serbian wounded and upon his re-| inal of national repute. ASPIRIN Introduced by “Bayer” to Physicians in 1900 3ut in two weeks he escaped and} wurned up safe and sound | He 1915 Serbia came to the Balkans edrly in You want genuine Aspirin—the | Neuralgia, Lumbego, Rheumatiam, Aspirin prescribed by physicians Neuritis and for Pain generally. for nineteen years. The name| 4) “Ba: oon thaw “Bayer” means the true, world- |, iid eigh ae ae eatiag: famous Aspirin, proved safe by | rety “Bayer * ae . millions of people. a Greer peck: Fach wunbroken package of “#° on hs las “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” con-| Handy tin boxes of twelve tab- lets cost but a few cents. Drug- tains proper directions for Colla, Headache, Toothache, Earache, gists also sell larger packages. in trade mark of Bayer Manufacture Monoaceticacidemer of Salicylicacid ON WEDNESDAY, DEC. 3, 1919 The United States Spruce Production Corporation will offer FOR SALE AT PUBLIC AUCTION at the Cot-Up Piant, Vancouver, Washington ALL MACHINERY AND SUPPLIES nd at that date Material will be delivered F. 0. B, cars at Vancouver, Wash., or the Cut-Up Plant. One-third CASH to be paid at the time each sale is made. Balance by CASH or CERTIFIED CHECK as soon as order can be written up. MACHINERY CONSISTS OF Pulleys, Shafting, Roxes, Conveyor Drives, Saw Arbors Sawdust Chains Saw Mill Carriages One Yates 24x30 New Timber er Saws—-Band & Cireu- lar [Filing Room Kaquip- | Five $-Drum Hoists | ment Pum | Lath Machinery Steam Cant Flipper Log Kicker Three 60x16 Boller One 54x16 Bolle. Six Myers I°..l Dozer Deep Well Pumps ingines ctric Motors, 440 Volt Transformers, 440. V. to 220 or 110 V. Railroad Jacks Railroad Hand and Push Care Air Compressor Tanks Air and Steam Hose Wood Tanks Valves, Fittings, A Large st Mi Steam Headers Two Boller Peed Pumps Iron Conveyor Trough Pipe wt era each wit and Fittings. Steel Floor in front Three 66x16 Rotlers of the Boilers each with Stack and | Boiler House ench Fittings ‘with Galvanized ‘ne Heineshoes Horseshoe Nails and Call

Other pages from this issue: