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PAGE 5 Coo venti [ ‘CHAMBER WILL SUBMIT PLANS {Would Change Methods of Electing Officers ype iY ( ‘Vail | mi) } ed: WA TODAY——XMAS DAY——FRIDAY NO LONGER! LAT R l TAT WE WISH YOU A MERRY CHRISTMAS By approving the recommendation & special committee on elections w the board of trustees of the Chamber of Com ay voted to submit to mbers of the Nn & referendum proposing a sweep chagge in the manner oting elections officers and trustees, The referendum provides | for the amendment of the bydaws to llow secret voting by the insertion f marked ballots in plain envelopes which wil of headed by Worr Beautiful OLIVE TELL in the RICHARD HARDING DAVIS STORY OF THE FROZEN NORTHLAND If the refereridum carries, the sew laws will be effective for the coming annual election January 17 With the referendum on elections will be submitted a referendum | posed by the Gre Seattle bureau, colar providing that retiring pr nts of | — Ex-King | invited Ki |the chamber will automatically be-| Manuel of Portugal will have scores | way tleket come members of the board of trus-| of “maids of honor” at hia Christinas r & period of three years. Thia}inner party, This statement has »aal will alao become effective at| Hot been officially confirmed, but aming election if voted upon|Who cares about offictal confirma rably by the required majority| tion? Have we not recelved the hint of members. | from headawprters—the anctent bake Decision to continue the work of shop at MRichmond-on-the-Thames the U. 8. Housing corporation as the| re aids of honor” are Seattle housing office of the Cham > And to bear it out, does not | ber of Commerce was reached by the} Manuel tive Just across the trustees, who appropriated sufficient at Twickenham, made famous the old “Twickenham that your grandmother used Portugal suddenly upheaved 1 itself a republic, and « Manuel to buy a one northeast by north, the ex-royal young man nelected the en virons of Richmond for a home solely on nt of the “maids of honor” in the old bake OV n Hill wt, Peo ple say all sorts of things. And be #, the former monarch DID have meek and well-fed look, as tho he enjoyed the delicacies of the board Moreover, there a persona who swear they themselves live at Rich mond so that they may have “maids of honor” fresh, warm and crisp at afternoon's baking from. the ovens which for nearly two nturte have turned them out daily by hun dreda, I may a» well what a “maid of hy is & cheese cake cake, mind, but @ glorified cake, a seraphic tartlet, and ambro cial mouthful of golden pastry filled with something mysteriously sweet and creamy, with a brown crispy on top. a Rhe ally 4 No common cheese Let's go eat at Boldt's—uptown, 1414 3d Ave.; downtown, 913 2d Ave. cheese Sue Real Estater to Recover $23,900 900 from John rager of the firm of McGraw, Kit er & Case, which they claim he ned from George W. Stetson founder of the Stetson-Post machine works, by coercion and conspiracy before Stetson died, April 12, 1919 was started in superior court Wed rren H. Stetson, gen-} sf the works, and Ella dministrators of the At the fire bite you cast your cyes to heaven in partied delight. At the sgeond you kneel, feeling that a of such divinit should be fittingly received. At the end of the first tart you rush into the xeream in wild emotion. run back—and buy more They fit, indee still fitter for an ex-king - believable that a lar placed for Manuel's Christmas fes tival It would be unbelievable for him NOT to order them ~ a Navy Man Asks Divorce Because |" """" =" him completely ‘besides acting in a Mient proprietor of the old Original Shoppe is that King Henry VIIL, at |inost unbecoming and unwifely man | ner.” emtate river street and Then you tarts, | money for the next six months tol wil continue the work of the office. | Seattic warehousemen and cold storagemen will be given representa tion by « group in the members’ counell of the chamber A petition | requesting such representation was! granted by the trustees by song, Ferry,” every to sing? I don't expect you You, yeu are for a king It Is quite r has been And again, yes! © believe that Donaldson, te The cured the @% your gums are sore, sloughing and bleeding, you have |] Pyorrhea, so-called Riggs’ Dis- ease, which {8 a menace to good health, We are the onty Dentists in the Northwest who spectalize in this @readed disease, Examt- nation and estimate free. Spectal care taken of children's teeth, Rensonable discount to Unica || administrators claim Bock se: | June 11, 1917. |Uncle Sam May Have Job for You you play on a calculating ma by ear? Do you yearn to fill cy in the position of calculat operator at the navy money Judge Wearing Flaming Tie Is | ne honorable Because Gertrude G. Hodge, his wife, accused him of being & “narrowminded, small town Ca chine ava ing machine of dramatic situation with the scene of the Yukon during the gold rush period. Reading, noticed Anne Boleyn one day seated on a dias with a silver dish « cakes before her and cheene | Nabbedas ‘Red’ Elmer C. Million, attorney in the Hoge building, and his highly con vervational cravat of reddish hue, have been inseparable ever wince he came down out of Skagit county to make his home in Seattle, Million was formerty The judge and his vivid red neck tle caused no mment in the days when the word “red” was not synonymous with anarchistic plots ad lb. But in these latter days the Judge has had a lot of uncomfortable mo- jments. He has been torn between love and duty, At times he SPECIAL XMAS ADDED ATTRACTION nbad, the Sailor” A Treat for the Entire Family. ys He Had _ [NO WOOD ALCOHOL for Booze! IN GOTHAM DRINKS thouent nie duty snout lead him in Commis:| NEW YORK, Dec. 24.—-Purther| to disregard anything that savored court |Festarch will be required to ascer-|9f redicaliem even to the extent of hitching the hardware to his favorite | | y morning, charging | ,_secoaged leony Pt aged aesree of | brand of cravat. But the habit of a 3 7 }11 > c rinkers in the pas’ tak os Bohnert with having in his) 0 Gays. The health commiasioner's ae alate aac ideale Mash intende® for PUF-| chemists failed to find wood alcohol nave are So it was that Judge Million istillation. Sohnert is in}in 55 samples of whisky tested in| oi) op Ten Million. local baseball jail. saloons wizard, assistant claim agent for the | departmen of public utilities and lformer Second Lieutenant in the United States army, kept right on wearing his famous feverish neck Ue In spite of black looks and mut tered imprecations. Far be it from \the futher of a boy like “10,000,000” to be at loggerheads with his con. science over a mere red necktie! | But after an experience Tuesday levening ax he stepped from a train lat the King st. station, Papa Mii lion i# not #0 agglutinated on his beloved red necktie. The judge was about to pick up [his bag and suit case when a brace lof plain clothes men spotted the | Million cravat “Hal hoarsed one of the “dicks.” |“a red in our midst; let us give him |the north and south.” Judge Protests And in spite of the judge's violent veto, the detectives proceeded to “friek” the Million bag and sult case “This ‘ was filed W. McCielland’s (OY SCOUTS ATTENTION! You are to mobilize on FRIDAY--9 A.M. SHARP at Fourth Avenué and Virignia Street and, in a body, march to the ‘STRAND: THEATRE ‘te be the guests of the management and see Soldiers of Fortune” Adapted from the book of the noted RICHARD HARDING DAVIS guy must be pretty foxy; I can't find any Bolshevik litera ture in these keisters,” other detective. “I'm not a wobbly nor a red nor a Bolsheviet nor an anarchist nor anything of a similar mold," pro | texted Judbe Million, “I'm an attor ney.” “Show us your card,” of the detectives The judge searched feverishly for one of his professional pasteboards, but, alas, he had neglected to bring his card case The detectives sneered openly “You're a wobbly all right,” lof the plain clothes men said, speared him with a fishy ‘Think we'd better run him in?” Told to “Beat It” I gtiess not.” detective. “We even napped one one as he eye Scout the got “Oh other anything | wear eat on him bly necktie.” it,” snapped the detectives The judge did and he was angry that he dropped a dime into the coin box of a street car instead of a nickel About that necktie of vivid hue? Well, the judge will wear it now Blit it kills him a we A notice has been yoo through the mail. may not receive it in Be on duty at M. Sharp. Signed: JOHN H. PIPER, Scout Executive. |Revenue Officer Put Under Arrest CHICAGO, 4 rowakl reven ficlals today bribes John Somo chief int ted by department of justice with accepting nection with the of prohibition laws pecifie charge ki that he n a saloonkeeper in return ing him to sell Hquor |O’Brien Will Get New Postmaster An examination for the position of fourth-class postmaster at O'Brien, | Wash., will be held at Kent on Janu lary 24, 1929, it was announced Wed |nesday ge the civil service hon. For jand information | service commission |p. C. The position brought compensation of $207 for the fiseal year Dec district agent urre of the charged in n ement sgainst accepted wa Beautiful Teeth Are scientifically and artistically treated in this dental of. fice by 4 staff of skilled dental surgeons, each specializing Min his {ndividual branch of dentistry. And better yet, each ts ® partner in the business. Under such em aw we main 4 absolutely assured of the v st in dentistry ry b We have ysternatized the finish in @ surprisingly short time, making it possible for us bine a moderate price with our rapid and efficient work com ta address the civil Washington Elliott 4357, Open Evenings. A time time. man can't be as wise all the as a woman is some of the If Adam had been wide a | wouldn't have lost that ri) superior court judge.| maid the) application blanks | wake he | — dy guy,” at a dinner party in New York, April 20, Bernard Hodge, former teutenant in the navy, bs seeking to divorce her in superior court, She signed a the atrical engagement for the Orient ' | | | were married in Philadelphia 16, 1918 From that th she displayed cool toward him, he charges Was at sea she leased a magnifice apartment of New York's | moat expensive boulevards. | cording Hodge, proceeded squander his money in recklew fash: | | ton. When he returned he met her at a] private dinner party in a cafe on the White Way, and there she tmnored| FINE ONE GYPSY, OTHER IS FREED Lena Mitchell, gypsy, was found) not guilty of petty larceny by @ jury} jin Justice Otis W. Brinker's court} Tuesday, while her sister gypny, Anna Johns, was declared guilty of | vagrancy and fined $50 and co#ts which she paid. The trials were the lresult of a series of hand-holding | parties in Rainier valley, in which the two gypsies told fortuntes indis- | tify her, and said “all gypsies looked Lena Mitchell was accused of #pir | iting $10 from one of her chents. When he was called to the stand, he could not positively iden tify her, and said “olj gypsies looked alike” to him. Attorney Jack Sulli-| ven then established a perfect alibi | for the accused gir! | Anna Johns had no such good for |tune, After she had told the fortune ot a Rainier valley business man, December §, this man missed $10. | He called upon her to answer for the missing money Bh found the money in hin wateh pocket, but he} |claimed she had it in her hand all | the while. The Jury waa convinced and found her guilty | a on one to to} away Aero Club Honors Alcock, Who Died | in Plane Accident | Declaring that the of Sir} John Alcock, the first transatlantic pilot, In an airplane accident recent ly, was n sacrifice to the English flyer’s conviction that aviation has Ja definite place in the commercial | }and milite velopmenta of modern |life, the A lat a meeting thie w lutions extolling th |pioneer aviator and ¢ the members of his f | NO WONDER DUMBINSKY | [IS STILL FEELING BAD SBURG, Pa, Dec. 24 | Ivek nt back to Webster | @ souvenir, took with him} pair of American boots from | ding house. They happened | to orge Dumkinaky’s boots, | | They happened to have $3,000 inj cash stowed in the t The Jauthorities cabled to Rotterdam in| | Dumbinsky's half And ed | this response; “Duty high throWn In river." Dumbinaky | violently itl away CIVIL WAR COLONEL PAYS $4,000 FOR SHAV SVILLE, Pa., Dec. 24 Barnhart, who se has an unusually | beard, He ny he had a J elvil and flowing ed or ly to grow colonel ¢ have was in Atlanta, during Sher mana m h to the When the Georgia barber charged him $4,006 in Confederate mon for the work jhe swore that never agi |touch a razor to hiv cheek | never did | |SHOW TICKETS HIGH FOR NEW YEAR’S EVE NEW YORK, Dee, 24.—The high ext prices on record will be asked by New York theatres for seats to New Year's Hv rformar Five dol lars will be about the lowest price for a ticket. A pair, with the specu | ator's profit and war tax, will cost jat least $12.20, in the long fer war con wed uid his last n would And he men and their families, All work guaranteed 15 years United Painless Dentists INC. He reprimanded her she then called be him the cites an cause for divorce. After signing the gagement she told him she never come back to him unless he provided her with 4 palatial b California or Honotulu A present of a nays Hod Bhd mockery nays, and yard, Puget sound, at $2.96 per diem? If 80 woman over etvil in examination chine opers App er 0 able associates, The tart he |lets were disappearing with and the were. No names miracu king ask knew called ‘maids of king. So “maids were, and “maids of to this most and if you are a man or 18, the United Sta commission announces in calculating m: «on uary 29, 19 tion blanks and information may be obtained by applying to the secretary, 11th United States civil district, 303 postoffice build: | low en-| what would | rapidity, they p let them be * naid the o they modern day All the kings and royalties who have ever lived at Richmond and at | **rvle Hodge including Ih, 10s: plaint. He was an accountant here| been supplied with before the war and has just returned | famous cakelets here after the war and his unhappy married life 1 theatrient obs nervice me in| 0 he they and m hon: high powered os remain auto, regarded marriage ax ways, in the com-| Kew, Phone Elliott 3633 Bours: 8:20 2, m. to @ p. m. Gundays, 9 to 12 George ma ve the original recipe} If a mountain refuses to come to of which wax kept by Anne Boleyn} some men they put up @ bluff of in an iron box and jealously guarded. their own Call Often It’s not the size of your savings deposit that counts. It is the regularity with which you make your deposits that is the vital factor in building up your account. Frequent deposits of small amounts mean that you are succeeding in your determination to save. No man ever retired on the money he spent. A lesson can be learned from the life of the late Andrew Carnegie. At the age of twelve he earned $1.20 a week. When he retired his annual income was around $10,000,000. He attributed his suc- cess to his ability to save something out of the $1.20. You, too, can save by a plan. Put aside a certain sum each week or month in The Scandinavian American Bank. You will not be sacri ing anything, but will be laying away something for your future. We help your savings grow by paying interest, compounded every six months. The Scandinavian American Bank provides absolute safety for your money. This bank is a member of the Washington Bank Depositors’ Guaranty Fynd, which guarantees the safety of all deposits in member banks. We will be pleased to have you call this week and start your savings account. And then—Call Often. Capital and Surplus $1,500,000.00 Resources Exceeding $23,000,000.00 Largest Savings Institution in the Pacific Northwest eat led fed fad, CU aTNe SYMBO oF SAFETY iV ero isd SCANDINAVIAN Member Federal Reserve Bank! ‘Second Ave. & Cherry St. ‘Seattle, U. S.A. Every married woman travels un 7 4p assumed name, 608 Third Ave Cor. James St,