The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 11, 1920, Page 11

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WEDNESDAY, AVOUT ft, rem, * * a No. POTLATCH . M™= “POLLY™ Woked about for something to show the @hildren how high a 12fo0t post would look, “The poste in the Potiatch house were about as hich as those tn the pergola,” she «aid, “and across that row of posts—bdig thick posts they were—they placed a long, tong pole “Now, how those Indians ever got that long heavy pole up that high, I can’t see, for they had no Machines to lift things, and they certainty were not tall enough to reach that far. ra Snakeleum gave a By week when he sold fish, squaw did a washing, both worked in some potato feld, he wouk! eee they away. Hatin tH 7~* A, * a ~ % a | i Reddy Fox Disobeys GRANNY FOX had sent nEerene ileal Redd@y Fox heard a very faint, for you in his bedroom ‘way but he knew it, He and listened. It i Halt of Bowser the Hound, knew by the sound that chasing Granny Fox. grinned. He wasn’t at all about Granny Fox, not the bit. He knew how smart that whenever she want- Tt rf fa ‘il Reddy Fox curted himself up and tried to sleep. He intended to Reddy His bedroom » mer Brown's Boy that he could not comfortable. He twisted and turned and fidget @4. The more he fidgeted the more uncomfortable be grew, He thought of the warm sunshine outside and how comfortable he would be stretch- ‘ed out full length on the doorstep. It would take the soreness out of his Something must have hap- pened to Granny to keep her so long. If she had known that she was going ame back, thought Reddy, and Reddy Fox crept a little the lon«, dark ball, He could Stallle » ~ & bel C et. 126 from the whfte man’s table—dro- ken alices of bread, and cold meat and potatoes—almost enough for the Indians to live on, “So Snakeloum lived Iike a bem gar for two years and over, worked hard and saved and saved and saved and little by little his pile of money grew, and at last be maid, ‘Snakeleum rich man; Snakeleum make Potlatch, big Potlatch.’ “And off he went to buy his gifts, for a Potlatch means gifts big gifts, not just party favors. “Now, isn’t this a funny thing? Snakeloum lived on Whidby Isiand and he knew nothing about tele phones, or telegrama, or even stamps, but his invitations went Promptuly—and this is how they went: “One Indian mid te another, ‘Snakeleum make big Potlatch,’ and the other Indian «aid ‘Ugh? “Then he paddied off in hia ca hoe and after a time he met three other Indians in a canoa, and he in turn sald, ‘Snakeleum make big Potlatch on Whidby Island,’ a: then the three Indians said ‘Ugeh" “And by the time these three had ltotd thefr frienda, almost the leaves jot the trees, and the birds were tell- hn all the Indians wp and ¢ Sound for miles and miles knew there was to be « Pot- lateh, and got ready to we “They didn’t hurry. “The Indians thought { feottsn te my and I'm not sure but they were rent. “If tt looked stormy they walted for fair weather, and if they were a day or two late, what mattered it? An- DVENTURES | the TWIN MRS. SQUIRREL’S COMPLAINT. ach he takes up all the room, and | have to live outside.” just see the sunlight on the Pretty soon he went @ little bit near | er, He wasn't going to disobey Old Granny Fox, oh, no! No, indeed! She had told him to stay in the house until she returned. She hadn't aid that he couldn't look out. Reddy | crawled a little nearer to the open door and the sunlight. “Granny Fox is getting olf and Umid. Just ag if my eyes aren't as/ sharp as hers! I'd like to see Far % Vd... He Crept Just a Wee Bit Nearer mer Brown's Boy get near me when I am really on the watch,” said Red- dy Fox to himself. And then he crept &@ little nearer the open door, How bright and warm and pleas art it did look outside! Reddy just knew that he would feel ever and ever so much better if he could stretch out on the doorstep, He could hear Jenny Wren fussing and scolding at some one or something, and he wondered what it could be. He crept just a wee bit nearer. Now be could hear Bowser’s voice, THE SEATTLE KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES Boot SH Maten with all his might to hear it at all, “Granny's ted them ‘way off on the mountain. Good old Granny!’ thought Reddy Fox. Then he crawled right up to the very doorway. He could still hear Jenny Wren scolding and fussing, “What does ail her? If it’s hot of If it's cold, Jenny Wren ye ecold. From morn till might the whole day long er limber tongue is going strong, “I'm going to find out what it means,” eaid Reddy, talking to him- | self. Reddy Fox poked his head out and —looked straight into the freckled face of Farmer Brown's Boy and the muzzle of that dreadful gun! Next story: Ol’ Mistah Buzzard’s Keen Sight. Council Clears for Anti-Barking Action : lout it was #0 taten that he had w/Tulalip Indian Fair 'prick up his sharp little ears and) to Set New Record ‘The Indian fair of the Tulalip reservation will probably’ be held in the latter part of September, accord ing to Peter Feulner, Seattle man, formerly an employe of the reserva praia alt ir.98: Pion Ne Seattle’s Leading Dentist I am now devoting my entire time to my dental practice, I make all examinations and dingnose each cane, 48 well as do all extract: ing between the hours of 9 a. m, and 5 p.m My offices have beer established for mort than a quarter of a The Seattle councl| chambers have | century, and under my been ordered cleared for action and the stage is set for the second hear. ing of the howling and barking dog ordinance Wednesday afternoon. The first hearing last Wednesday remult- ed in @ jadylike riot, and the city hall is holding its breath until after today's battle personal management ».u.08 suly 10, 1901. I do not compete with cheap, transient, advertising dentists, My prices are the lowest first-class work. STAR Ice @NO I TOLD ETHELSERT HIDE IT WHERE NOBODY tion, who has just returned from |there. He prophesied that the fair this year would be the beat in the history of the custom. The st |and produce raised by the Indians better each year and there is more of it, skys Feulner. Kidney Remedy a Pro ‘When kidney dineases have been successfully treated for a period of more than forty years, it is reason- jable to assume that the remedy therefore must possess unusual merit. Such is the remarkable record of Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy, Without its ability to give relief and benefit its users #0 that they would continue its use, |it could not have existed 40 months, much less 40 years of ite enviable |record. Many letters have come to us to prove that it has been a jhousehold remedy for years and years. Here in what one grateful woman has recently written: “I wish to say that your remedies have been used in our family for 16 years. We are never without a bottle of Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy in our home, and it | { ABERDEEN.—Having driven 10- inch casing to depth of 2,700 feet, Standard Of} Co, to resume drilling at Moclips with eight-inch casing. “Gee, but Boldt’s epple pis is good?'—Adv, for 40 Years nounced Success fs & wonderful medicine for all dis- eases of the, kidneys and liver. (Signed) Florence ©. Schmidt, R. F. D. No, 1, Dunkirk, Ohio, For the elimination of potsons due to impaired kidney action, Warner's Safe Remedy was famous for 26 years before this woman so judiciously began its effective use. There are thousands of people who realize that their general health de pends upon their kidneys and have found Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy a reliable family medicine, Forty years ago it was named “Safe” because it is SAFE absolutely; equalizing the work of both the kidneys and liver. Satis- factory resulta are obtained in the most severe cases, dit is sold by druggists everywhere. A sample sent on receipt of ten cents. Warner's Sate Remedies Co, Dept. >, [nas aaved many @ doctor's bill 1t|561, Rochester, N, X BarHacbor cellent hotelsand summer sere ee / ff Sas BT TAT TT a a No- | LEPT TH‘CAR IN TH’ BARN LAST NIGHT AN’ CHICKEN MISTOOK TH’ ORIVER'S SEAT FOR NEST AND OEPOSITED the Newport of the North Shore, with its manyex- _

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