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A WORD FROM JOSH WISH © ¥ou c'n git insured against fire lan death, but you n't find any DGompany ¢' insure you against i makin’ a fool uy yervelf. 7) Seven more days for your ee popping, oh, gals. low, the camera fi ts gtill | J without « full house | Ponai sent to his victims a Christmas mee He's got a little out erve than the gas pany in| altar; first be reconciled to thy brother, then come offer thy | etl gift.” | eh es Human brotherhood must take in humanity, else it is a i Af 450 1. T. U. is ay good as 600 7. U. then Dr. Matthews te a and dance artist with Singer's iputians eee Phap with $100 cash and $1,000 ik certificate who hankered for a 4 excitement got it after a tow rinks, a little poker game, and a Markeyed vamp. Proving that has loose change ought neve cana “* Bubway scheme seems to meet : Buccess ag an ice cream par Yor in Iceland : “With the railway golpg in the hole why spend money digging ‘Beddea, the subway scheme sounds Much of underground methods. eee PPhie is the night of nights, when body’s like to borrow Joel War- stockings! . gee by the papers that Becre- Houston is recommending in the tax laws, You under tand what a change in the tax laws means? It means that the of imposing them may be put that they will be paid rf gaine old people one maiches are now being given of the cigar stores. “What's ‘em?” matter with mr _ FP WORKS LIKE A GAS FURNACE on Brothers, local plumbing heating contractors, has a large ‘of steam fitters at work install. a near heating plant in the Mil} hotel, at Iron Mountain.—Mar- Mich., Mining Journal. eee e is a big difference between your volce and cultivating ee mt Wilson is to receive the of $40,000 for his work of peace. We'll bite. ‘ : soe wish to announce to my social that I have accepted a post with the Spitz clothing store. O8CAR DONHOST. Mattoon, Ill, Journat Gazette. see that as it may, Eva Ledger is per in Sioux Rapids, Ia. Wick lives in Marion, Ind., for divorce. And J. Yate Mason is a doctor in eee “Our policy,” says the Kankakee, Republican “ix fairness to all, ly none.” see Autos, announces the census ore killed 8,508 persons last year. broke 4 ict more. Pe TODAY'S QUESTION _ What are you going to have for dinner? ANSWERS FRANK DABNEY, 526 Broadway + “Turkey and fixin's.". MRS. MARY CURRIER, 209 17th 8. f we eat at home we'll Wwe an eightpound chicken, plum- ding, mince pie and 4 few other HL. K. DENT, 916 Edgar st: “IT! you one thing I'm going to have ready, listen—I'm going to a highball.” MRS. MIRIAM COLLINS, 1730) ave: “Oh, just about the same | a E (tmas dinner we always have— turkey and cranberry sauce and the Fest-of it.” | GEORGE DRAPER, 502 W. Crock T think I’ have corned beet c Jenkine—Well, we have secured one blessing, anyhow, In the equality | Of the sexes. Hawkins—Yes, | never could see why a man shouldn't have as rouch ay as a woman, ie of Washingt montha or $9.06 per year Good Will to Men This was the song the angels sang down from heaven's heights on the wait- istmas. Of all songs, it is the one our most now. Men need to be reconciled to one another. we not had enough of hate, of antagonisnis and alien- Have we not had enough Is it not time for men and nations to Let us bury its ani- ‘ing, wondering world that firs a town and broken world needs ations and est of fighting? be friends? mosities. ° The war-hurt nations need bread and “work, They need They need credit and capital, But they need good will materials and markets. Their need for all this is desperate, more than they need bread. How often shall a nation forgive a sister nation? times seven, which is a heavenly way of saying there must be no such thing as unforgiveness, This is the note Christmas should sound thru the earth We cannot better raw Pton this anniversary of the Savior’s birth. honor HIM than by forgiving one another. The ministry that is needed today is the ministry of rec-| God has no song of hate for the Christmas gift upon the ‘onciliation, fangels to sing to men. counterfeit, The invisible thoir is filling the sky again. lare preparing to sing their Christmas hymn. | will they sing? They look on our strife-rent world, and then |they sing an old song: he will ¢ will His few better moral object lessons for bey or man that made such noise. Consider for 4 moment the defunct drum. thing. hearing world, accepted as inside, the biggest sound of ail the Arctic north about Roald Amundsen sing. that practical-minded men regard as of great What new land he may discover can't be sold; nor put up as collateral) on @ loan; nor turned into @ resort for summer boarders. the very fact that there is nothing really “practical” makes it so gloriously worth while? dangers and enduring unimaginable sufferings merely for adding a little bit to the sum of human knowledge, Amundsen an inspiring example in @ time of selfishsecking venture that o it's 60 years ago toda: “Pitty years?’ Speceh? call the children, grandehiidren and all tives and friends who have come together to wedding. (Ah, young married folks, what will the 0th anniversary of your weddifig when your family ts gui you to hear from your own lips a sort of accounting of your married life?) “Well,” grandfather begins it's wonderful to be On the part of the think ing in. family arise, Evidences accumulate that Mexico is settling down in and stable Chamber of Commerce of the United Staten. hundred American two years. life. | chants, the attitude of the general trade situation The American C! an commercial agenta re better than it ever has\ been, and that America encouraged. If this testimony had come frorn political sources likely to be influenced by the present Mexican government, it would be necessary to discount it; but coming, as it does, from American business men loca who are reporting for the benefit of their colleagues in the United States, it must be accepted as representing actual conditions. business, Pickpockets have Pubtienh ngements? The war is over. “Leave there thy Listen! Peace on earth, good will to men From heaven's all-gracious King, . . . * . , rest beside the weary road ind hear the angels sing.” The Boy and the Drum than a by The Have Seventy The angels | What | It was a bright, sparkling the house with sound, until everybody was tired of Then the boy opened the drum to look for the sound and found nothing! Too many men are like the drum. ¥y make a great sound in the the sound passes aa the currer of thought; and the men are great in proportion to the sound they make. true of men aa of drumw that the larger the vacancy louder the sound produced, so that the bass drum makes Grown folks, however, never think of looking « of doing inside of twolegged druma. Let's be more like the inquisitive b who hunts for the source the sound in his drum. And, above all, let's not spank him for so, but, on the contrary, develop bis young habits of searching fe teuth in drums. Amundsen once in a while there comes by courier a news item tront At present his ship is jammed tight in the ice, and, a prisoner of the frosen sea, Amusdeen has settled down to pass the long Arctic night in waiting for the breaking of apring to release him that he may continue his journey towant the pole. Amundsen is an epic figure of whom a Homer wold have Uked to Homes’s hero, Odysseus, came home and took it easy, after many adventures in which be overcame dragons and defied the spells cast by enchantreases, But the intrepid Amundsen scorns to other middleaged men who like to sit and dome at,their fireplaces winter nights. the ease and comfort that appea! It is only a few years ago \hat he negotiated the diffi ‘ ite way again he will not discov value is on It may be that Hut Braving a the Golden Weddings ” says grandfather, echoes grandma “there is married happily 60 years "t much to be «aid. Put it must be sacrificed In for the any difference That's about all Mexican Stability ‘The latest testimony to this effect comes of American eoncer rows the and other importa Kio Grande, ort that in every part Boy, brush the dust off last New Year's resolutions. no terror for a man happiness that very same girl to or ts cult Northwest Passage and scarcely had he returned from that voyage than he started on the journey that ended in his discovery of the Bouth Pole. And now hia restless, questing soul plumage into the unknown. for apother much in Amundsen's ad thousand make of} presenta | wedding It should serve as a» ruide for the conduct of married folks who, at the end of 50 years, expect to make a good accounting to those gather to help them celebrate their golden wedding. cups and making mental notes on new ourtains for the livine room. That's the devil who makes most the trouble, inciting husband and wife to insist each in eternally right in| ‘ all the differences that come up during a long married life are driven farther and farther apart, “Married life, to be successful, must be a series of compromises, of giv Pride of opinion That is the main consideration. let the husband remember that his wife is the whom he used to yield in all matters of dispute ip the days of courtship and in the days of the honeymoon This is a verbatim report of a speech delivered at a gokien recently. 1 have to say 0 peaceful, from It reports that more than help celebrate the golden you have to say for yourself on neared about | Home folks Ien't at all husband it is just a matter of keeping in mind that ma is the same girl he was so madly in love with at the beginning. “We have had our spats, ma and I make great tragedies out of mere incidents life is the uncompromising spirit But we were not like those who The worst thing in married of And so they ot the may whe safo phases | amber of Commerce in Mexico City reports that banks of Mexico business ta 8 in Mexteo feet greatly d in Mexico, Bryan is now in Florida waiting for the Chautauqua dates to ripen. sturning from a shopping tour After hia vindication in Greece, ‘tia said Constantine had to order a larger crown. England and Ireland are trying to get the boys out of the elinches by Christmas, Having tried the telephone and mail, one is tempted to get a message thru by helograph, the | Ww gow Se THE SEATT VERETT TRUE— + LE STAR By CONDO AREN'T YOU ASHAMGD OF YOUR. Serr TO APPCAR, HALF - PRESSED Fi! | Christmas the little boy to whom a drum was given will/ begin puzaling over the origin of its sound, Investigating the matter] drum a few days later, and, much to his astonishmer it's all hollow inside where he thou the sound was. | should not be discouraged by spanking, for there are! busted drum) Those their stocks if Chicago two thousand r » agree on some There are at BY ©. Why not the laurela go stow them? W n transposing bent on makin, wolf instead of Yet when Dr rd for th tive ri progr fires the coll army of reflects writer, He say nation, the statement in my been previously and speak yright? truth and give verdict? It fe not true, It | wood half-truth, with 46 years « > be v As for whether the x and trailed those who cut in time to be have the brusl an wi erdict is the memory others progress, The glad there has ot credit. Th for all, But history not to be used | ments of truth tions. ment and relat the case, Eve ®| not recklessly houses have begun business in Mexteo In the last| Besides this, numerous American manufacturers and mer|the world war. as Chambers of Commerce and other associations are | mightily, making inquiry concerning the Mexican credit situation, the volume of| belatedly, that belongs to any The nable linens. in purging the try from the weakness and to the strengt but to the stre paign. for any real, against booze. did their utmo legalizing it, am of booze to fi food 1s a good incident There was a riot and the police Refore the present weary for thore that want to cha 4 bundged millions hange Tignt away the natural evolutions of history be of coroner and makes up bis ver | dict on the death of Boose, he shows against moraliste and meddiers whe took away our darling tipple cold-blooded The same statement in substance has Does he with the lineup of this most stub born fiht of the century nome may be dear ng the rigor mortia stage as he is dead, who caused his death? credit, it and Dows, John B. who he they have lived to see 1920, they are not going to quarrel over a matter in not to be used to wet-bianicet the worthy memory of any man, It is *«, half truths or ill-balanced state It in concerned in the align without challenge. Winniag the booze much a composite victory as winning tho some came into jop of fixing the ratio of oredit which |a hand and but few were a handicap | ‘tousle-headed professors with their test tubes, facts, gave invaluable aid in the crea tion of @ liferature during the later stages of the war which made the po- | sition of the fighting ranks impreg Ineurance actuaries compiled the figures which were valuable pri marily to their companies, but came into the fray with machine gun de: Efficiency experts suc But valuable ag they were, few of them made the joonditiens they 4 the food content of alcohol to he so 1 that It would take o hogshend In PLeBLiIC WHERE ARS YOUR EAR PROPS AND YOu. RADICALS (From the New who Uhink bolsheviem is coming tomorrow may be comforted by talked to he did not approve of Russian methods wa lied. ayetem is changed in © it and think they know HOW, t agreement ie a long way off from rational socialist think they knew what else Meyer London, adicals, Me nat lefinite plan, That least 67 varieties of radicnis L. PERCY the pencil pushers let to the right ones as hy must they persist its facta? Are they we history reverse it repeating tteelf? Crane plays the role o histerie method and ights of “the terrible eas” which seriously hie rebbad an a: “It waa net the fa It was That true scientists.” wither new nor made by other writ ers, Then why the think it can historic fixity to bis ia not even & as anyone knows of aotive aoquainiance | but the corpse slow in reaching But in so far ery matters little who first jumped the 1 him to the end, or In on the chase just in at the kill, shal h. Nevertheless, the npardonable slight en valianey of the Goughs and Jed the army of true reformers are #0 been 4 kill and that ere in glory enough is another matter, It an 4 vehicle to carry to the coming genern fons of all the facts in n famous writers can deal with those facts war was as All contributed so it #0 it is folly to ri#k the single fore All gave only York Journal) and that w to buy nocialist In congrens, the United States, | If it te really necomary Thru Other Eyes Editorials and Comments Reprinted From Various Newspapers to uid nel the will be like Berger and Hiliquit to Junation who believe that all the world’*| white have my unqualified and sin ubles are due to the individual wickedness of a few successful men ere aympathy. But A country Uhat bas, perhaps, one million people that would ike a] Lec Linton also had my sympathy VIOLENT change, four, millions who would like a DECIDED change, andl iis father had my sympathy; and DON'T WANT ANY CHANGE {# not apt tolnis wife, who still survives, has my candidates for the croix de guerre there are, or were, two agencies that neem to league. lecturers, the coveted fanation you pleane. perspective of history honors reason, permonality the morifice. Famaticos moralista kept ‘iers made it it steady, sure ing his antics, joy your laugh out for him y rides his mother 6 sults brother 14 ship Mdew the I--I ride @ hebby bby! a hobby! hal I ride a hobby ating plane, Bome rid a taxt, But still I ride my hobby Some ride a Rolls-Royce lme Some find « Ford Some ride a plow Is just a simple hobby Some ride « tank Put I prefer « hobby. Whore footinan in a bobby I'd rather ride a hobby. Some (Copyriatt, 1980, ferreting out the y rd industry of the coun palpable cause of its no contributed not only h of their companions, ength of reform’s cam. facts, figures and covered the basis personal aggression Indeed, some of them nat to find reasons for ‘The fellow that found Here American farmers in which might have been immediately applied Wheat Oats, 60,000,000 bushels Potatoes, Sweet potatoes, (two-fifths of the ‘Tomatoes, 185,000 tona, Cotton, 850,000 bales, survey of the U. 8, agriculture, “This play of yours gloomy day “In what respect?” urnish a kilogram of case in point. “It is overcast.”-—D joan, Tiyride my hobby! N. B A) Call be more eligible than the cold biboded scientists, namely publicity agents and the AntiSaloon The men and women, writers and workers and the organization co-ordinating all the foress are the lawful candidates for them moraliste and meddlers if It does not change the ‘They furniah ed the warm-blooded fighting seal They put the energy of argument convincing po- the teney into the facts, figures and con-| auegtion in your publication. Tam | ditions, And the AnthSaloon league} oot consuring The Star, But I be) as the generaliasimo, the General] iiove that hoth sides of all qu Foch of the movement, enlisted all)... serious and widerapread as this one the forees for victory. Fanatics | sould be considered furnished the fire, moralists furntah Vv. A. MINOR, Pverett. muita ed the altar, and meddiers prepared ee furnished momentum and med. It takes neal, honesty and agereasion to be a good reformer. Look at that word “fanaties.” It ontains either antics ‘br facts En | The Hobby BY EDMUND VANCR COOKE kn Teatlens soa, hot and throbby n, Plant Diseases are some of the losses t the prevented if known control measures had been is but my machine like those in Franca, All spiked and sealed and knobby; Home ride inside an ambulance, Some people ride in that patrot Some ride a rail, but on my soul, Unit 112,000,000 bushels 50,000,000 bushels. 40,000,000 bushels total erop). Peaches, 6,000,000 bushels, Apples, 16,000,000 bushels, Tho figures were compiled by the department of ITS LIKENESS like itimore Amer fina the i t- sation ti Fort Stellacoom are ge! he is @ hare-brained follow, display. | atiens at he is harmless. If he is a serious minded fellow, sure of his facts, look Devile cannot atop him In the Editor glary and robberies now #o prevalent We are all playing the game the best we can with the hands dealt us Bome of ua in the deal have gotten only physical strength and bra and low, instinctive cunning, @ have to play the game of burglar and hold-up, We haven't the intel ligenge and educated cunning to play | hurrying w nt whie tinuously jus, They 4 ‘'s Mail THE WAVE OF CRASS CRIMES |the ex weeks I waa there I never the direct cause of @ fat sh resulted in the de an aged man | good day's work any 1 | wanted me to do two men's work At different times 1 asked the at PRIDAY, DECE ER 24, 1920, WHAT DO YOU. KNOW ABOUT SEATTLE? yd The Star The times are|saw sugar or milk at the table altho QUESTIONS out of joint, There is anarchy all|there was milk for the pign For! 1, Upon what Seattle business man over the world. Our commercial olv-|breakfast with our mush we ad/did the king of Bweden confer fisation, which has destroyed all|some cheap molasses. Vor picking | knighthood of the Royal Order of sense of justice, has brought us to|a few. strawberries one day in the | Wasa? think that every man @hould be for|garden 1 was kicked and recelved| 2 When was"the U. 8. battleastp: himaelf and the devil take the hind-|a blew on my head that s«tuaned | N ka launched here? mast, During the last contury, naw |me afd caused the blood to flow 3. What were the first reinforced tiona have acted on the philosophy of! from my left ear While putting | concrete structures tr Beattie? Lat him take who hath the power,/up hay in the orehard I was for) (Answers Saturday) and him keep who ean.” ‘This phil-| n to bring in ripe apples that | - 2 osophy at the base of our commer-|pad been shaken off the trees by| PREVIOUS QUESTIONS celal civilization, and has developed @\the horses and haywagon n tho 1, In 1901 Henry Whiteomd harsh, greedy chauyiniem. As this i#|they lay there to rot. If @ teamster| leaked the Denny cow pasture at acted on internation in It to DY lewiied to have the harness on the | Second ave. and. Union, had the cows wondered at that it ould develop | jorses by 7 o'clock in the morning,| removed and commenced the con the same traits in individual men? \ihe attendant would curse and| struction of the Arcade building And that it has ia evident the|awear at him whether the patient] 2 A. F, Haas, president of the graft, profiteering, egploltau: bur-| wan 26 or 60 year old, and thru bis | elty council, is @ veteran of the clive, war 3. The superintendent of etty 1! ing is charged with The responsibilfVag us to work one morning he acel h of The attendants con wanted more work out of were not satisfied with a re but they power business with an income o more than $2,000,000 per year. He receives a salary of $6,000. Pern iocindar as tng Sadie sO DT \thrown into @ roaring furpace |tead of eending them to such insth | the game of finance, exploitation, | |graft and office holding, We play |tendants if I could see the superin tutions, pt would be a merciful act Jonly the gamen tr hich the hands |tendent, but was told that he W&®| indeed, in comparison to the feartal }dealt ux have some chance of win-|not in or that be was busy. T then | surtering and tortures some of them lining. If we held better cards, we| wrote to an attorney and took tht) nave to endure from acts and the would sit in some of the higher |letter to the office, myself. ight) coig indifference of the attendants, games, That those of ux who hold YOURS FOR ee THE OTHER SIDE OF ISHOM WHITE CASE Editor The Star 1 have read with Jeop interest your pathetic appeal for the Jife of Inom White. The bey has my sympathy, such as a clear con- clence of a sineére person will per- | mit me to express. Mr. and Mra.| FAIR PLAY. . ympathy, Never was a more bein- ous crime ever perpetrated than the murdering of Lee Linton, Never did a person deserve more to be hanged than Leom White. _ ‘The letter published In your paper Saturday over the signature of Harry Hi. Wood is one worthy ot) notice. When he quoted: “Thou shalt not kill,” In defense of White, 1 wonder tf he thought ef Lee Lin ton? When he anserts that death never punishes the murderer, but merety the ones who loved him, I wonder if he thought of the wite Lee Linton left, and the love she had for him? If White is mved from his just desorts, it will be a signal to thou- sands of other youths that soctety will protect them tn their criminal careers; that If they munter, the plea | eri that “Thou shalt not Kill” will sve} them from the gallows. i tal to see but one side of the | RELATES TREATMENT AT STEILACOOM Editor The Star: Since the Ta- coma Times has devoted many col umne tn te valuable daity paper tn- forming the public of the fine,/ cood-Aamaritanlike care some of the ting under the supervision of Dr. Keller and his angellike attendants I will ask you to publish my per: sonal experience with the same Dr. Keller and attendants ehowing the treatment given the more helpiess and friendless patients. After brooding for months over the loss of money, T *vas taken to ward 9 at Steilacoom by an em ploye of the twetitution. T was very sick. On the third or fourth morn: | ige I was jerked out of bed by an} attendant and received several) blows from his fist, 1 was ordered | to the tabfe even tho I wanted no| food. They tried to open my mouth and feed me by foree. I became} absolutely numb in my limbs and was utterly helpleys. Then an at tendant kicked me with his shoe! until he got tired, and then jerked} me by my mustache just as if he} wanted to tear off my upper lip. After about two weeks I was taken to ward 6, There one day, after writing a letter, I was taken by my throat, choked, and shoved into a room. From ward 5 I was taken to ward 17, which was an outright dungeon, At this time a) demented inmate was given the| keys with the privilege to lock pa- | tients in, beat them up and kick them or do as he pleased with them, and 1 witnessed many brutal acts in that ward, and I, myself, was jerked from a toilet by an attendant, There was hardly ever any toilet paper provided in ward 17; and in Complete the Christmas feast with “Blue Moon"—the holiday drink.— Adv. a! States in one year by plant disease CHAS. SCHWARTZ Optometrist and Mfg. Optician ined and G in Fitted 297 Kipler Bik. S18 Kecond Ave, Tel. Main 2651 ‘Take 1 or # Lessons STEVENS’ #43, 04 Teaching If you value time « oney | Little Cost Private Malls Day and Bvenin) a Young Lady Asnistants, 4th and Pike, Main 3011 Danced tn leading places of New York City. Momber Teachers’ Assn. days after m friendless. we are the only one ip SEATTLE—ON FIRST AVE. extions|BINYON OPTI delivering that letter when called upon, to” I stand ready. the poor hands are the most numer-|at the office a man in charge told | testity to the above statements be }ous accounts for the crass crimes | me he did not forward that letter|rore any court or before any tm lthat are so prevalent in the United |and enticed me not to have it for) vestigating committee | States. ® |warded by telling me it would do WILLIAM HUG, | Hanford, Wash. | me no good to an attorney and Puget Sound Hotel | oA 16, 1920 1 would only have attorney fees 10 | —$—$———— SES. ig |pay. Then one day I was called to WHERE WAS LAW [the office before Mr, Keller. wel IN STAGG CASK? asked me what my complaint was. | Editor The Star: De After|I related the brutal treatment I re reading the Stage case, in thia|celved in ward 9 and he an vening’s paper, would like to find|*wered, “Why didn't you do as you lout if it is possible for ¢wo or three | were told?” | |men to get together and settle a From ward 17 I was taken to| |point of law ax eantly us there men| ward 14. The food was better but| have mottled this case? If they can,|s0me of It was not prepared to eat) (Me TET Why bave any court of law? Or| for it was put on the table just as it p are our laws so pliable and can be|Game from the garden In ward 14) jf a tretched so ax to have one for the|I saw an attendant slap a patient's! lq j!nfluential or rich people and anoth | face for playing with s chair The| er for the common class? Thix state| Patient was angered, and owing to) |was the laughing stock of the whole| their equal strength, they hit and!, oraer to thtroduce our new joountry in the Ruth Garrison affair, |kicked one another until they were |(whatebone) plate, which t# the but why repeat the doxe so soon?| both eut of breath lightest and strongest plate known, |Sbe t* more guilty than Stagg him-| At length I wrote a letter to some | 0000 0° wd can bite corn off the jeelf, inasmuch as she had no inter becca a roo ME st of | cob aranteed 15 years *t In the boy. Ar irl that would) things end as or jo parole me! ... . " fe ee Ph ge as whe|out for things became unbearable | Waniebone set of teet lid Mrs. Stage and bragen it right|No employe of the Institution ever 2 eee * : thru, certainly deserves some kind/saw that letter. I was paroled on pas. { pupishment In conclusion I will say, if the/ ** courts would order some of those] All work guaranteed for 16 yearn Have impressions taken in th morning and get teeth same days Examination and advice free. i and See Si jen of Our Piati Brid - We Stand the Test of Time. Most of our present patronage recommended by our early custome ers, whose work is still giving goo gsatiefaction. Ask our customers wh@ have tested our work. When coming to our office, be sure you are in the right place. Bring thig ad with you” OHI Cut-Rate Dentists 20T UNIVERSITY ST. Opposite Fraser-Patersen Co. | SALMON unfortunate victims A in th States, Delivery Guaranteed | ed im tee and ro-iced daily | Bexpress company. Mail your Pacific Salmon Co. B. F. O'NEDL, Prea, Pier Ne. 12, Seattle. Main par Loe yy ayy Seaboard Bldg. im 1034, OFFICE OPEN EVENING as raduate op- prescribed | L, CO. nation free, by Glasses fo! 111@ FIRST A’ We Wish You A Merry Christmas and urge you, in the enjoyment of your own happiness and comforts, to give substantial heed to the appeals of those who are in need —that they may also have a share in Happi- ness. . NATIONAL CITY BANK OF SEATTLE Second at Marion Get the ORIGINAL. Fresh, full-cream milk and the extract of se- lected malted grain, reduced to powder form. The Food-Drink for All Ages. Used successfully for over 1/3 century. J Superior to tea, coffee, cocoa A quick lunch readily digested. Invigorating, Nourishing, Delicious Ask for Horlick’s at All Fountains Prepared in a moment by bri powder hot or cold pas Keep pine opm iy Fant dg Ask For ans Get Horlick’s thus Avoiding imitations SUBSTITUTES Cost YOU Same Price ‘Write for free sample to Horlick’s, Dept, B, Racine, Wis, AT of handling $10,000,000 Nght arty r 5