Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE § THE ie f.) (iin , Sontiti's Music Week November 6 to 12 Inclusive Is Being Observed at “Seattle’s Musical Headquarters” from all parts of America are engaged in the highly profitable poultry business at ALDERWOOD MANOR Egg prices are higher, poultry feed is lower leaving a handsome margin of clear profit for the savings account. FREE EDUCATION at the $200,000 DEMONSTRATION FARM. Financial assistance in building. Why not start now and bé ready for the spring hatch? ra You Are Cordially Invited to Attend A Series of Free Recitals on the AMPICO Reproducing Piano and on the Latest Modern Phonograph PUGET MILL COMPANY Since 1853— SEATTLE, WASH. 220 Walker Building Every Afternoon at Great Stock Reducing SALE! Affords You a calfskin, tan calfskin and , Wonderful black” calfskin Oxfords, all to Opportunity *"$6. 85 to To Buy High-grade Shoes at $9. 85 Phenomenally Low Prices Our stock at this time of the year is Brown kid, black kid, brown All high-heel Pumps, Strap or Tongue, in combinations and colors. Nothing held back; they are all to go- at $5.85 1 1 85 too heavy. This sale may not last long, _Ladies’ High e but while it lasts it will be the great- —_ Shoes in est value-giving sale we have ever con-, _ brown kid, ducted. Every shoe in the store goes black kid, on sale except our two corrective shoes brown calfskin —the Cantilever for Women and the and brogue A Grant Special for Men. patterns ; , Milady heels; ‘ all to go Remember One Thin gad prices— ~—if you want to continue to wear the Brown kid, black kid, brown calfskin, black calfskin and gene leather, low heel Strap ‘umps, all to go at $5.85 same high-grade shoes you have been accustomed to, and at prices you pay for second and third-grade shoes, we Page you to take advantage of this All Men’s High Shoes and Oxfords in all leathers and styles to go at $6.85 to $11.85 No charges at sale prices, Positively no refunds. No exchanges after 11 a m. Shop early for better service. Baxter & Baxter 1326 Second Avenue Brown calfskin, tan calfskin, black calfskin Winter Ox- fords, all to go at $6.85 $8.85 heard before, It seemed to be SEATTLE STAR Faithful Mutt Dog Whips Serpent to Save Master 7 nd, grow: his nose under the his dog that was dunt a mutt coming from under a sealy rock. By Hal Armstrong | j,r'woluer atuened a sh. te , and guve « tremulous | "“Somecmes ter want toyetner | fint-and aa terge an dishpan HE blacksmith shop door was | fiang bark. f content hunting, almost beneath his feet not quite closed. “Get-—-you! stormed the man. “He's a ficel roared the man. It wax a hot day toward the Late More shrill A tiny ball of fluffy yellow pushing the door open and ad “No good, vicious, cowardly end of summer, The boy knew Something about the sound made fuzz whirled past and crouched vancing. “Snarl and snap at cur! No place for fices round ae some rabbita were, on a pan Instant im the corner, trembling. me, will you? You vicious—." here. Put him down wil 1 beky hillside that faced the CRICKET, A heavy boot swung forward He raised his boot again “1 WON'T!” — » with savage impetus. “Don't! _ Peano, mister, don’t BOY SHOUTED The hillside was five miles It must be a cricket, he de ‘There was a sharp little ery of | Kick hit “1 won't boy shouted, | from home, but what are five | cided, nome bie kind of cricket piteous disappointment and A tow-headed bey, with noles and turned, and ran hes toe boy “s M dow as bly, than any he terror, The pw ball sprang, in his stockings and scuffed At home that night the boy oy” hey were threading peo He reached down rolled and tumbled thru the open up shoes, catapulted into the and the puppy lay together be: UP the rocky slope in the bifs. and tipped the rock ovef. door, The heavy boot crashed scene and threw himself down Lind the stove, Puppy eyes at his master’s There was a swift rush, @ against the wall. A ridiculously on his knees beside the ye'low looked trustiully into the cyes aging up the rear snarl of rage, a shaggy yellow diminutive mutt puppy righted ball and gathered it up into his of the boy, and a great ove some 'T8 Fost" benend. hulk struck the boy with great itaelf on the sidewalk, faced (arms. vas born. They curled up by The boy came to a slide of force and bowled him over down about, and, with tail tucked in “You can't he ‘explo led, the fire and went to sleep. scaly blhck basalt that had the hillside, a flash of fangs, a atid nose wrinkled, confronted getting up, “I won't The boy named him Fido, and dropped from a cliff high above /* whine of pain and savage ven the man with the heavy boots The boy backed away, hold they went everywhere together, him. He mounted the slide and pounce, a bark of victory who stood in the door cursing ing the puppy close, The purpy and grew stopped short, Sontething ‘The dog bounded to the bey, — ee ee os pomreees | They grew, and learned, Fido bussed tn the rocks close beside looked up pleadingly into his ! learned tricks from the boy, and him eyes, wagged his tail, dropped It, the boy Iearned from Fido what “Danenwnt’ it buxeed, louder and, with a strange cry, hurried are obedience, self-denial, fidel when he moved, not so loudly back along the trail ity, honesty and valor, And the when he stood still, but con- Beside. the upturned rock boy learned, too, that he neve stantly, “remanent writhed the headless gray body | could be, no matter how bh It was a sound he had never Of @ big enake. At the end of the snake's tall weve @ half dozen rattles. ~ With a shiver, the boy ran after his dog. He found him down the trail beside a spring, with his muzzle thrust deep Into black, sticky mud “Good, good old Fido!" he eried out, throwing himself down be wide the dog and hugging him “Good, good old dogt* It was five miles home. All ready the dog’s lower jaw, his whole head and neck, were well ing rapidly. The snake had bit- ten him in the lower lip. OH, PLEASE GOD, | DON’T LET HIM DIE “Come, Fido, good dog!” urged the boy, getting up. “Come home! Oh, please God, don’t let him die!" At the end of a mile the dog lay down at the side of the road and moaned, He was puffed now twice his normal size. The poison Was spreading with deadly effect. The boy lifted him up and car ried him. Two hours later they stag: gered into the barn, Fido was etill alive. A bed of straw and plenty of soft, black mud for him to fosh in, with hot broth once a day, administered with a spoon, brought the dog back to safety in a week, Two newspapers told a story next day—how Fido, a mutt dog, had saved a boy's life from the, fangs of a deadly ratuer. And, years later, a grownup man came home. An elderly woman met him at the gate. He called her mother, and kissed her, He looked all around about the yard. “Where's Fido?” he asked. “My dog?” \ LEADS HIM TO MOUND OF EARTH BAXTER & BAXTER] | | | \ { | | | The woman led him around the houre out into the back garden and to a mound of earth under the cherry tree in the far corner, Neither spoke, The woman and went back to the Nog The man bent dodwn and pat- — the mound, and said, broken- iv: “Good, good old Fido! Good 014 dog!” It was a long time before he came away, and there is mist in his eyes as he writes this «tory— the story of his old mutt dog. And Thureday night he ts go ing to the Mutt Dog show at the Crystal Pool to see a lot of mutts and a lot of tow-headed boys, with holes in their stockings and seuffed-up shoes, who know that the mutt is the best breed of dog j that ever lived. Receiver Is Asked for Overseas Club A petition asking that a receiver be appoined for the Seattle branch og the Overseas club, an ex-service men's organization, was filed Mon- day in superior court by H. ¥. Blogg, who cites claims against the club ag- gregating $808.43. Gas, Indigestion, Stomach Misery —"Diapepsin” “Pape's Diapepsin” “really does” put bad stomachs in order—“really does” overcome infigestion, dyspep- sia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes--that—just that— makes Pape’s Diapepsin the largest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what you eat ferments into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food ; head is dizzy and aches, remember the moment “Pape's Dia- comes in contact with the h all such distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing—almost mar- | velous—and the joy is its harmless. ness, A large sixty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin is worth its weight in gold to men and women who can't | get their stomachs regulated. It be- |longs in your home—should always |be kept handy in case of a sick, |wour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It's the most efficiént antacid and stomach regulator in the Aches, pains, nervousness, diffi-| jeulty in urinating, often mean ‘serious disorders. The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, | bladder and uric acid troubles GOLD MEDAL BEM On quick relief and often ward off deadly diseases, Knownasthe national remedy of Holland for more than 200 years. All druggists, in three sizes, th. | Look name Gold Medal oo avery OWL DRUG CO, the public on packages entrusted to the mails, while only one out of 10 takes the precaution to insure his package against damage and partial loss by properly packing it, says Geo. £. Williams, superintendent of mails, in the Seattle postoffice, $100 against theft or total loss by damage. Insurance fees do not, ho ever, cover partial loss, Yearly, a number of clerks are employed by the postoffice department to re-wrap packages, poorly and hastily done up and entrusted to the mails. open packages to find lovely dolls) broken, and other toys that would | way out of the packages in which jthey were packed. Watches, jewelry, kodaks, cut glass, flowers, candies, and many other articles arrive at! their destination in worthless condi-| tion due to dye lack of care in pack ing. All breakable or easily Gamages Fur ur Agency Sues mission on the sale of 800 Russian | sable skins for $85,000, the Seattle Fur Sales agency instituted action | in. superior court Monday against the | firm of Seldenverg & Wittenberg. | “Sweet Sixteen” You look so young and you feel so at your best in a coat that many women wear them in preference to other coats that cost a lot more. Yes, 100 Coats 200 Suits 150 Dresses New and Beautiful Have Just Arrived! Seattle—Portland New York San Francisco—Los Angeles VERY TIME WE SELL a “Sweet Sixteen” coat, suit or dress at SIX- TEEN DOLLARS we enjoy a peculiar pleasure and zest in the work of bene- fiting the purchasers and in adding new . splendor to the “Sweet Sixteen” theme, and greater importance to the Bee? SETS FFELP ETE TE JEBEL ETSERRZE2 the alert. Postoffice Working for Better Packing November has been designated) articles should be plainly marked by the postoffice department as “Per. | “fragile.’ fect Package Month.” The American Railway Express and theysAmerican/of insured mail, says Williams, and Railway Association are combining | little time in packing, and adequate with the federal department to teach the public how to prepare packages properly for mailing. Insurance fees are gladly paid by Packages may be insured up to Yearly, at Christmas time, children ave given much joy, have cut their UR INTEREST in the eternal feminine quest for something new in dress keeps our organization in New York, under the direction of our Mr. A. Harris, always on As a result, the garments that come to us represent the keenest of styles and that high order of craftsmanship and execution char- acteristically “Sweet Sixteen.” “Sweet Sixteen” has developed from a wonderful garment for misses into a more wonderful garment for women of all ages—sizes 16 to 44. The department makes a specialty insurance at a very small rate, as- sures the sender that his package its destination safely. Small packages containing valuables and weighing less than 4 ozs., should be sealed and sent by first clase mail. Larger packages should be sent by insured parce] post. Registered let- ters containing valuableg are auto- for a value up to insurance may be se- cured up to $100 by payment of extra fee. reduction of arms, spoke 1 before the King County ‘ederation. will hold a reunion at the H ler Friday evening at 6. Daddy, Boldt's Butt “Advertisement. in Bright's hall, 4th & dies 15¢, men 65c, pays . for Commissions Seeking to collect 2 per cent com- WANTED, HOME FOR A YEAR FOR PRETTY 15-YEAR-OLD GIRL Who's willing to provide a home for a pretty 15-year-old girl for a year, so that she can have her chance in life? The child ts virtually an orphan. —neither her father nor her mother can be found—and she has been raised by an aunt. But now the aunt is ill and in poor circumstances and feels unable to keep her longer. The girl has a distant relative in Seattle, but the latter is of ex- tremely moderate means, her hus- band is out of work, and, what is more, she has a_ child of her own, So she has appealed, to The Star for aid. In @ year, she thinks, she will be able to look after the youngster and give her a business course—but she wants to find a home for her until then, so that she can finish the eighth grado, i Star will direct all inquiries hi , The easiest one to fool is yourself, and the most dan- gerous. Especially in money matters. The ‘man who spends all he makes is deceiving him- self. His prosperity is fic- titious. Save a of all you get and your foundations are secure. We welcome your savings account. LARGEST BANK IN WASHINGTON Established 31 Years Second Avenue at Columbia Street ©