The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 7, 1922, Page 11

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WOMAN PLANS 10 PLANS 10 COOK HER WAY INTO SENATE! { WHAT I'LL DO IN SENATE | I'LL DO IN SENATE KEEPS HOUSE | DURING HEAT OF CANPAIGN Mrs. First Member of) Sex to Be Named for Toga | CLOQUET, Minn., @emocratic nominee for Unites senator from Minnesota cooks the best ham and cabbage I ever tasted. To make election certain all she has} to do is to invite the voters to din-| ner. That's the kind of a woman Mra Anna Dickie Olesen ts. they say she's as good a politician ag she is a cook She's the first woman to recetve| ‘a senatorial nomination from a major | party, and her friends are willing to/ bét this year’s crop and the family | flivver that she'll be the first woman to sit In the senate at Washington. | | “I'm running because I see great wrongs inflicted on the plain people.” | she sated She left self.” HER OWN HOUSEKEEPER ane Bhe ts. She keeps house, does a family washing herself, goes door ar a book agent- she loved him at first sight | Mrs. Olesen was born in a los} cabin on a farm at Cordovan, Minn.| pounds eves Kray. their print In even her cheery amile doesn't hide. “Half my heart lies In the ceme- tery where my first born ts buried.” \ she said. ~*My jewels are my little daughter | and my husband others like them—for we are all @ne dig family-—-that I want to to the senate.” LIVE IN DOUBLE HOUSE The Olesens live m a fiveroom! half of a double house, upetairs, | “We pay $20 a month “Rents are terrible up here!’ Bhe meant it, too. _SECTION pot +i The Seattle Star Anna Olesen; BY ROY GIBBONS duly The t | Slates And up here “I'm a plain person my conditions is 37 and tiny; she weighs 100} Her hair is brown and her} Poverty and sorrow have | her face, whieh |all heme. It is to help them | ot she said She said her | closed made superior to ‘o/BY MRS. ANNA DICKIE OLESEN market, darns her husband's Sas | Nominee for the Senate on the Demo- and makes ber own clothes and the clothes of her 15-year-old daughter, Mary Winifred, Her husband is Peter Olesen, #0: /state in th perintendent of the Cloquet schools. |unselfishiy and humanely as poss | met him when he came to her | bie. eratic Ticket in Minnesota CLOQUET, Mina. and foremost I shall represent Inited States senate as|*ider a travesty on our American July 7.—Ft i Ne one person can bring about | and she says!the millennium or perfect Utopian |these things about I will represent no group, no class. Ro special interest from a pe 1, Ruarding the interest I betieve that the treasury of the United States should be guarded as| carefully as I protect the small earn: | fings of myself and husband in our} I will introduc legislation pat terned after the farmer loan biff, to wubwidine property owners thru fed. | eral aid and make America a nation home owners freed from rent | nightmares. I will fight with all the strength in me to see that human rights are y rights, and propert Everything that the Olesen girthood’s chief fear was that the|have now was bought with mor mortgage on the farm would be fore- ‘saved penny by penny. In her ca Correct Apparel for W. ‘omen Modish Suits Ratines Velour Tricotines Cool, smart-looki blue suits in strai box or belted You will find these suits at this July Clearance Price typical Car- man values in every smart line. —Second Gallery or folds of.se BEADED BLOUSES Take 10% Off Their Prices Many are imported models in over- blouse style with heavy beaded de- signs on foundations of Canton crepe, Georgette or crepe de Chine. Now Priced $10.00 to $27.50 Less TEN per cent —Virst Gallery effects, with rows of cire braid, embroid- Reduced to $49.75 Eponges Checks Twill Cords ng Semi-tailored Suits of black and white Ratine. 3rown and tan, Sorrento and tan, and red and white checked Eponge in semi-sport sty Well-tailored Velour Checks, the new longer e And a wide assortment of navy les. with oats, ight line, bloused, trimmed elf material. Second Avenue at Spring Street ‘The time hax! * congress to de Ht legislation for a people's | Anna Dickie Olesen and Her Daughter, Mary, Marketing for Dinner. I wil vote aguinet every power, per- son and influence dangerous to the perpetuity of free government 1 will expecially seek a reopening of the Newberry case, which I con at! | lea Le. I shall unceaaingly work to bring | Abolition of child labor. Stimulation of Kuropean trade. Repeal of the Eech-Cummings bill. Construction of the St. Law: reneetothe Sea highway. Reduction of the present tariff ot bill. Restraint on the leasing of public off lands to private monop olies. Careful conservation of Amer. fea’s natural resources for future generations. Endorsement of the full pro gram of the League of Women Voters for women and children. First and foremost Iam a woman. After that I am « politician. I wil! do duty to my country as I would to my children. 1 will mother tt palgn she spent lem than $500, and it was saved out of the household money Mrs. Olesen says she has three vices—iemon pop, chewing gum and tea. “When I get to Washington.” rays. “most likely I'll be a social} | failure. I simply detest. playing cards, tho I've no objection to them. And 10 o'clock is the latest I like to be up. 1S STUDENT \OF BIBLE | Mra. Olesen ahe went to high school and had one year of university work, but she says most of her education jcame from studying the Bible. She} carries it on her campaign tours, | @ into prominence | © war by lecturing before | women's organizations. | She has been vice president of the Minnesota Federation of Women‘s| clubs and wan a delegate to the| lemocratic national convention in| |San Francisco in 1920. | Women ought to vote with their don't their she» Some | a woman presi Russian German Alliance Fails | Efforts of} t strong | MOSCOW July commer This, they made Russia a| @ position she wilt| nila would have a! nation, cept r ac i aaliaist Tragedies| Break Up 2 Homes| | WALTON, Eng. july Mrs, | ¢ ah tried to rescue her} hu nem he fell into the| Thames, but he was drowned. cee } BRISTOL, Eng., July John | Heywood saw his wife thrown into | the water when a ferry boat upset, | but was unable to rescue her Love Tangles Leads 3 Tribes to War) | SINGAPORE, turning from the ¥ report that three tr gone to war rth married a third. July 7 Traders re y Archipelago | « there have! er a princess, She to two chieftians and was bet } DOING HIS DUTY A country mer walked into the general stot p | want,” said the recently | ber kept the store, | Whatever do you want with all} | the m things, Mr. Giles’? | replied worthy the | 1 gracious!” rd widow, who out all the provision | Los Angeles Times, lg T Pittsburg to Send Twelve | Coaches Here perior Judge A. W. Frater, She said at Republican Lunch | - ~ she had not heard trom Schults in lv Play Poker and Special trains wit used to con. | yeare R. W. Swetman, field represe 4 FA vey ‘Yas sigs eget -| |tive of the Washington Educ pal | Listen to Radio their 2 Weta ? asnociation and of the Mothers’ con oR 16 ae | held ” 7 ibe Heft gress and Parent-Teachers’ aswocia ts in oat yey ee ent pecial out of auguet 4 tion, and A. M. Fitz, executive secre: | unique m roviding thelr kee coivedat veterans he day {interest Is being manifest | of th al interest in bei wanifen ¥ 1, of the music at the luncheon, ndree Carthe nd Grace Gerard 5 Oliver W. Graham, commander ot | ed in the coming mooting and in the |4M4ree Certler and Grace Gerard The club will hold its annual ples Corporal Henry ©, Diller post, No. | visit of Pennsylvania men to Seattle |/fom drowning. She kept both afloat id Fitz against it no next Friday at Ravenna park, bee 169, Veterans of Foreign Wars, of | lwntil aid arrived. w.l at PAGES 11 TO 20 1, WADE F RIDAY, JULY ATTLI As 922 2, | gs lnhabttaciail Taaes $27, 203: 59 ‘Claims Husband Is Burglar; Divorced PECIAL TRAIN (( HEROINE} 30-10 DEBATE 4 burglar Luc y A. Behultz waa J. M. Thatcher, supervisor of tre Bu | swetman and Fitz to Meet granted a divorce Thursday b: tary of th a] will debat fore the Tax Reduction ¢ the 30-10 init teburg Milwau 2 guests with radio receive y can listen to music ag card party The recommended bestowal of a Carnegte al Lewts, & St, Paul hes, according to mayor of New Orleans has on wince ite forma hey play adquarters Fri «0, Mr, Graham states — medal on V 9, who fescued | x46 y Baird will have charge | ginning and the great Northwest 5 p.m Meet the F-B Fan! He’s an American gentleman—a regular fellow—one who delights in a square game and plays it to the limit. The Fahey-Brockman Fan may be a vigorous youth or a gloriously-young grand-dad. He may be a banker, a business executive, a professional man, a salesman or a skilled mechanic. But—he believes in “Value Received” and Fahey-Brockman with his whole heart and soul. F-B CLOTHES jues than average Our Greatest Asset The F-B Fan is our greatest and most valued asset. There are tens of thousands of him—all intent on adding to the scope and prestige of this—the fastest growing clothing house in the Northwest. The F-B Fan insists on “Daylight” methods in the merchandising of men’s and young men’s clothes and we obey his instructions gladly and to the letter. The Things He Demands The Fahey-Brockman Fan demands “Better Clothes for Less Money.” He insists on the best product of America’s first-class woolen mills—thoroly cleansed, combed and shrunk virgin wool, in the latest design, with lasting style tailored into every garment by America’s foremost craftsmen. And he knows, by actual test, that Fahey-Brockman’s guaranteed Clothes are positively the greatest clothing values procurable. ¥-B C “LOTHES Greater values than average $40 Values LLy ins values than average $45 Values Observe and scrutinize all clothing displays in town —go into the shops and examine fabrics, workman- ship and style with patience and care—then come on over to Fahey-Brockman’s and your own good judgment will do the rest. F-B Prices delight tourists now in the city. The canny gentlemen from the fashion centers of the East want to know how we can sell for less than their home merchants. We tell them candidly about our meth- ods—our buying power, our 60-day turnover, our great volume. The facts satisfy them and they join the grow- ing army of F-B Fans.

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