The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 25, 1920, Page 11

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[Sfer | * « | * By Mabel Cleland |} Y, OCTOBER 25, 1920, Page Seal ® T Oe om (/REPOBLICAN DEMOCRATS ARE BOTH ACCUSING BACK oTnere oF BOY OG “Tre SPIReEoDRLCY: | THIS YATE 190 ( FASHION LN THE EARLY DAYS P ¥ got this story al by her-| eelf from a Seatt it's true. the lady Much alive today, and if Perry and I make mistakes in tHe te calling down ¢ lady, and and is very get a long time ago tyou rdly believe how long re have such a way of old when on g about 45 years 70 and over) two young couples took up their belongings and: went tract of land they Olympia, “They thought it was going to be a grand get rich Rverybody thought so. You re member how easy it was for the settlers to get land then; a man Duite his cabin, Aled his ¢ paid a few dollars to the govern Ment and he owned 160 acres of Seattle or Olympia, or wherever he chose to say, so you see how hard it would be to decide “Nobody could tell surely which | would be the bigger city--Seattle or Bellingham or Everett or Port Townsend, or any of the other Sound cities—for they were all Just little new c xe in the Dig forest, with a bit a home dotted about here and there, and Bittle farms and a few bussing saw mills. “Well, these two young hus-| Bands and their wives decided to | to this place near Olympia, which the people who couldn't} household over to a owned near place to | skirts | self how ‘cute’ they would be on | them for quite different sort of proposition then and now, but they weren't These two girls were just aa jolly and just as pretty, yes, and just an much interested in clothes as your big sisters are now. when they were making their plans they said, ‘Oh, let cute bathing suite “oute.” at least, lady used who make son (Yea, they that's the word thy told Peggy the st “So they got some pretty woolen goods and ttle = round necked waists with short somers With ruffles "j made sleeven and saucy bi DOINGS OF THE DUP > AVO' F short plaited nets for your at the knee and and you Tom, tr Loos AS THOUGH PRICES ON MOST EVERYTINAG ARE Comma pown! a really pretty girl about 18 years old and that's aboug how oki these girl wives were When their sewing waa all done and the young men were ready went to the little house which had been built and was all ready for them. “And what do you think? When the husbands saw the cute little You foolish girls! retUest things you and spoll them in tr’ So being dutitul wiggled a litte all right! we'll wear Suse dresses since you like them so well!’ And they put their arms around each other and skipped off for all the world like the high schoo! girls you know. But that ten't the end of the they suits they said, ‘These are the have; don't @ You Know we'll Have. To BW OuvIA ANKE WeoDING PRESENT (Drawings by ‘ “YG ~ <THIN MY OLP “THAT A ARE HOLO)WL' THEIR VoTes \ TO Miah Give WN Gtoege “THAT'S man: Gerona Louc! r Grove) LOT OF FELLOWs | t j J + PAGE 11 IN “WHAT'S NEWS TODAY?” SURG VoTeS Awe TOO HIGH -VOTRS THAT USED TO WE BOUGHT POR MALY DOZEU NICKLE BEWIES ARE NOW TRING NG A & DOLLATe \ BOTTLE oF HAI TOC By ALLMAN TUN LiKE TO -hal MUSH SO weLlL. cute little dresses. (Te Be Continued ‘get in’ called ‘Hogem. “Maybe you think girts were a nr ADVENTURES | Foner Sou BUDDY BLUE BOTTLE READS TAS GLAD = Was J AGTUER BEEN “TALKING ABOUT Ae? GtE-TMGLAD You CAME, T {}COULD WARDLY WAIT “To SEE You. DAWGUNIT ETHELBERT ny SimPKivS BO you were a0 BACK YOU Took FRort ME Ow TH’ 1919 WORLD SERIES GEING AS TH 'ta ‘very good ‘The next person to read for the vis Grove reader, for all his eyes This was ope page Buddie read: im the Meadow School | “When the monarch surveyed bia re-, Bottle, cent territorial acquisitions, obtained ttle short of read-|by much devastating. warfare in| Seraten, the fairy | which vatuable amgunition bad been » couldn't find enough | wasted and “devoted. retainers had 19 go around, so Buddy | laid down their existences, he fell @ large one. But he into a melancholic revery from which couldn't hold it at ail, not even when none of hid vanmals could arouse of his hands, or feet, | him.” ‘. it ls that a fly holds! After reading the last word as glib Dedeprad | ly an if he'd been mying his A BC's, So Nancy laid a reader on the Buddy bused back to his seat. feacher’s desk, and Buddy watked| «xy, my.” said Mr. Double C ‘Over it calling out each word as he| Chuck, “whose little boy ix this, Mr.| came tp it and then passing om to gerihble Scratch? He's very smart! | the Buddy wasn't a very g604) seribbie Seratch bowed proudly | reader, for all his eyes were so big | and explained who Buddy was. a pony ooo sn eh “Would you mind explaining just | Jou. altho no one elae knows it. The | What h* WAS reading?” asked Mr. | teacher's desk happened to be our |" ~ Old friend, the Magical Mushroom,| Poor Scribble Seratch pulled hin who could speak every language. too, forelock desperately, but it didn’t and, when Buddy came to hard |help a bit. “I haven't any ide word like “irreprehensibility in. | bad to confess, “but it sounded all! fempestivity,” ‘the Mushroom whis- | Might didn’t it? pered it into his ear, | (Copyright, 1998, N. EA) OTTO AUTO men Tri tif) | toes BY THORNTON W. BURGESS _Happy Jack Squirrel Turns Burglar APPY JACK SQUIRREL stood, top of it. There was only one door- in front of thqold stump into| way, and that was the little round Which he had seen ped Chipmunk | hole thru which Striped Chip. with the pockets of his cheeks|munk had entered, and then come fait of acorns and out of which he| out. It was too small for Happy | ‘mre, “™O8™ ee © oe wee come with the pockets in his| Jack to even get his head thru.| what a sight! ‘There ‘was corn cheeks quite empty. | the his cousin, Chatterer the Red there wore chestnuts and acorns “It obrtainly is hin storehouse, and | Squirrel, who is much smaller, could and a few hickory nuts, tho these Tl firid out if he is the one who| h4ve slipped in easily. Happy Jack | aiq not took #o big and fat ag the Pat all thone big, fat nuts from under | *Miffed and sniffed. He could smell | oney Happy Jack wax looking for Ne tall hickory tree,” muttered Hap | "ts and corn and other good things. | tagpy Jack chuckled to himself, a y Jack. My, how good they did smell! His wicned, greedy chuckle, as he looked. First he looked this way and then | © shone greedily. And then something happened. he looked that way, to be sure that| Happy Jack took one more hasty) “On! Oh! Stop it! Leave me Ro one saw him, for what he waa | jook ardtind to see that no one was alone! yelled Happy Jack. | Special Agents and Police ended Sat- The most for your ; ° Railway Special actuary ik tha Uesld tous ob tas Set | met tie Bead for Agents Meet Here &- & ®. station. ‘The next meeting | Ratest “for” your eet, ng er safest for your Quarterly meeting of the eNorth |i! be in Portland in December. {fuer [Pac ific Coast Axsociation of Rattway | —) DOCTORS ADVISE PORT WINE AND. health, is the antee given b: SUN OF-TAGOMAS FIRST MAYOR OUT WITH FACTS work, and lots of times I'd have to planning to do was a very dreadful| oking, and then, with his long. @hing, and he knew it. Happy Jack | *harp teeth, he began to make the | doorway larger. The wood Next story: Happy Jack Squire's was going to turn burglar. A burg tough, but Happy Jack worked with Lester Was Both Sur- take hold of something to steady me | and keep me Head: | aches, fierce, from falling. splitting Jar, you know, is one who breaks} \ headaches into another's house or barn to steal | might and main, for he wanted to | which is a very, very dreadful thing | &°t those nuts and get away before to do. Yet this is just what Happy Striped Chipmunk should return or Jack Squirrel was planning to do. oy one else should happen along He was going to get into that old geump, and if those big, fat hickory | nuts were there, as he was sure they were, he was going to take them. He tried very hard to make himself |Q believe that it wouldn't be stealing He had watched those nuts in the) top of the tall hickory tree so long | that he had grown to think they bel, Jonged to him. Of course, they didn’t, | but he made himself think they did.| So, when Chatterer the Red Squir-| Fel had come along and wanted some, | Happy Jack had tried to chase him Out of the tall hickory tree, and be tween them they had knocked down a all the nuts. When they had stopped quarreling and burried down to the ind, not a nut was to be found. | Borne one elue had got every One of| aro | — them, Happy Jick had Hl ~~ \Wine in Old Ladies’ em. ypy Jhck had suspected ; rs that it ea his small cousin, Striped | rages or rh With | Home to Be Seized Chipmunk, and had secretly followed : | Onf complaint of the W. C, T. U,, Btriped Chipmunk to this old stump, d see him. Soon the Hole was big)20 gallons of wine in the G. A. R hich he was sure must be his cous | ugh for him to getdhis head in-| old ladies’ home near Tacoma is to be! preasure around my heart and chok-| ‘Taniac is sold in Seattle by Bartell | in’s storehouse It was a s#torPhouse, sure|confiscated. The wine was home-| ing sensations became very trouble} Drug Stores under the personal di Happy Jack walked all around the| enough, Happy Jack worked harder|made. State Prohibition Director | sonie, | rection of @ special Tanlac represen. | eld stump, 40d then be climbed-ou!' than ever and soon / the hole was McDonald will do ye contlacating. “Diesy spells interfered with my | tative OLIVE OL A prominent physician, in an inter: | view today, says if the public only | knew the tonic value of port wine| and olive oil, they would stop buying | all sorts of nostrums, | prised and Delighted | nearly ran me crazy, and rheumatiam With Results From) in my legs trom my knees down not * only pained me but troubled me in Tanlac — Feels Thirty) standing when at work and in walk-| | ing home gi | Years Younger, He Says “Altogether I was in a mighty bad | fix, and nothing seemed to reach “Since taking Taniac 1am all over] my case. 1 got worse instead of| those fierce headaches and dizz¥| petter, and became fearfully restless, | spelie; Tam not only stronger, but! turning and tossing about nights be- feel like a young man, full of vim] fore 1 could get off to sleep. Then and energy,” said J. W. Lester, re 1 read what Tanlac was doing for siding at, 608 Mast Thirty-ninth! people who were suffering with|] 15 years. Take care of Street, Tacoma, Washington. | stomach trouble, and made up my Mr. Lester has reached his three! mind to give it a trial youy health, score-and-ten, and all his life has been |“ was surprised and delighted | X-RAY FREE a foundryman, In fact, he inherited | with the results from my first bot-| 9 to 10:30 A. M. the pation from his father,| tle, bought more and kept right on Tacoma’s first mayor and owner of| taking it and getting better all the the 1 ima Iron Works, the first| time. I have taken six bottles and ~~ United Painl Dentists foundry operated in Tacoma. Mr.| am now well. Nothing troubles me, Lester is still active in the foundry! and in feeling and energy 1 am Phone Elliott 3633 Third and James Street. Powerful New Radio for Soldier School! ‘Thru Principal W. J. Smith, the Knights of Columbus free evening school for former service men has just placed an order for radio equip: ment that will make the school's wireless station one of the most powerful on the coast., To Hold Ressevelt Exercises Wednesday Exerctaes in commemoration of the birth of Theodore Roosevelt will be held Wednenday evening in the Met ropolitan theatre. Invitations were lbeing mailed today. Col. George B. »| Lamping wilt preside High Class Dentistry At most reasonable prices. Extraction absolutely with- out pain or bad after ef- fects. All work guaranteed Port Olive is. a combination of | rich, creamy olive of and rare old} port wine, scientifically blended with | other medicinal agents It quickly restores tired-out, run- down systems; is especially valuable | in anemic and all wasting diseases, ingreases weight and strength, and | tones up the entire system. ‘ oo Start today taking Port Olive, na ture's food tonic, and see how quick: | ly you improve, On sale at Owl} Swift's, Rartell’s and all neighbor: | hood druggists, or write us direct, in: | closing $1.75, and we prepay a large bottle direct to your home by parcel | post. The Port Olive Co., 745 N. Main ‘street, Los Angeles, Cal, ¢ | line now, manufacturing steel beds.| thirty years younger than my age “Wor aeveral years 1 have been! shows, according to my birth record bothered with stomach trouble,” he| “Tanlac has been # veritable god | continued “causing me lows of appe | send to me, and in the interest of tite, Pains and cramps in my stom: others suffering as I have suffered h at times were awful, Gas) 1 am glad to give this testimonial.” side “TRY STAR WANT ADS.

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