The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 27, 1922, Page 16

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Boys’ Suits Browning King & Co.’s High-Grade Norfolks, 2 Pairs Knickers Friday and Saturday $13.75 You Save $5.00 to $8.00 i] Every one of these Roys’ Suits Is of al)-wool fabrics, strong and full of service; tailored and styled to perfection, Sizes 7 to 17 years i} —specially priced for 2 days only ......060e.sceeee +. $13.75 About 75 High School Sults, sizes 32 to 36 chest measure, mpecial, Friday ang Saturday only ........0..... teeceeewees S10.75 Sale Now in Progress Boys’ Flannel Blouses, extra Boys’ Sweaters ........85.05 value at ............81.65 Outing Fianne] Pajamas, good Fay patterns, quality -......05 s Boys’ Shirts, specta!...81.15 and $1.45 Boys’ heavy ribbed black Hos, mpecial .......4. cere es BOO Boys’ Imported Golf Hose. Browning King & Co. 2nd at University St, Seattle AUTO MAY COST GREAT FORTUNE Oil Land Deed and Girl's Absence Mystify TULSA, Okla, Oct, 217--A minsing heiress, a kidnaping plot, an alleged worthless deed to of] property valued at half a million, and the whole brought about by the gift of @ shiny new filyver to an unsuspecting rela- tive—all of these figure in an Okla- homa mystery, the disappearance of Millie Naharkey, Millie, 18-year-oldd Creek Indian, heiress to of lands worth $500,000, ts the missing girl er, went to a mountain resort in th |Osarka, Her guardian and lawyer, Stephon B. Nelson, haa not seen her aince, On July 6 a deod wae fled here, conveying all of Millie's property to a local off magnate, for $1,000 and promise to pay $24,000. The deed was dated July 3, Nelson has started mult to annul tt, declar- ing the girl was not of age at that time Search was then started tn Mis- |sourt and Oklahoma for the girl. Foxy Red, her half-brother, ex- plained that somewhite friends had offered him a new automobile If he | would coax the family to make the |trip to the mountatna These “friends,” he sald, explained to him that Millte’s cuardian was attempting to obtain her birthright, and that the move was necessary to save it. Millie fs the daughter of famous Creek counctlor, Moses Naharkey. who owned mutch of the land where | now stand many Tulsa oi) million- aires’ homes. With all of thetr near wealth, and despite the fact that numerous oll | wells on thetr former property, with in aight of thetr humble home, now gush out thousands of dollars worth of off dally, the Naharkey family ts nearly destitute, and living on small sums advanced by thetr attorney Even the stole face of Foxte Red | shows sorrow, now that he has |loarned that he unwittinety betrayed hin half. for the promise of a shiny aute *. DAVIS AT BIG G. 0. P. RALL Hians have been completed for a republican rally, one of the largest of the present campaign, at the Wilkes theater Saturday night, when James J. Davin, secretary of labor, will be the principal spenker. Seere \tary Davis will reach Seattle from Spokane fust before noon. He will be the quest of honor at the Young | Men‘s Republican club tuncheon. Im. | mediately afterward and during the jafternoon he will be entertained by |Larry W. Long, secretary of the central committee rts Baffled by Zulu Speaker LONDON, Oct. 27.—A group of Stenographers who tried to & Speech in Zulu were com- ly baffled. This was due to the that the Zulu language con- 18 aifterént “click” sounds. pt for Monarchy tee Revealed in Lisbon | VIGO, Oct. 27.~—Leaders of the royalist party ure o funds and making elaborate 0 to overturn the pres. government at Lisbon. In Japan «@ vegetable leather ts | than from Dealers in Booze ibe the boxes “Bibles.” Trains | Stop When ing the war of going home early. called the mitsamata. add flavor to thelr banquets, “Everything in Music” MeEOTHER never plays hy tA | the piano any soot A | Perhaps not. Per- Bee | haps the fingers that used to play “Just a Song at Twilight” have grown a bit stiff. Not with years, exactly—but when onesewsasmuchasMother does, fixing things over for the - gi, and keeping Brother in a No, Mother never played the piano any more: until, one day, Father ordered that Pianola sent home. It is a double joy now that Mother takest the afternoons by herself, playing out her moods, and the jolly evening with the family all together. For the girls have callers, and Brother stays home, and Father himself likes to tilt up his cigar putting on a lively new melody, Ah, youother Mothers! Isn’tit time your homes had one of these wonder-working instruments? APianola may be had hereon convenient terms, your old piano counting liberally in the exchange, “Everything in Music’ Sherman jG@lay & Co. Third Avenue at Pine SEATTLE Shipping Bibles NEW YORK, Oct. 27—Rootieg:| Miller and others will be among the! rs are evading the prohibition law | guests. re by shipping cases of whisky be escorted to the Wilkes rally by the |!" . D. to customers, and labeling | local Moose lodge. a Night Life Wanes LONDON, Oct. 27-—Night trains|Par North that whaling operations fecently added to the tube service | are more successful now than in any have been discontinued because resi- | previous dents of London got in the habit dur- Pliny eays that the Romans, more 2,000 years ago, imported the inner bark of & | Roquefort cheese from France to|been man's companion for about A Pianola Editorial: No. 3 | In the evening he wi be given « inner at the Arctic club by Moose offictals—he t# director general of thelr organization. Senator Millen Poindexter, Congressman John F From the banquet he will Furs and Whaling Cargo Is in Port With messages from waters of the season in history, the atearnship Brookdale brought a cargo of furs and whale products valued St $1,257,660 to Seattle Thursday. Tt ts estimated that the dog has 7,000 years. “Through the Night.” } “Hawaiian Nightingale.” “Will You Remember Mef” “Sweetheart” (from “May- time”). “Alice Blue Gown.” | Bhortly before she became 18, the! girl with her parents and half broth. | FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1929, TOOTOAUONEAYOAPASNSUUEOAUUAEAEOO ASOT | Hyder, as incorporatora. |paring to send a company to Ko- jh | signed to engage in private business until Christmas, according to a re leent t | fi , a p 8 © a | n T ® h | r. Y = - | € Pe = © € = © = © x — % 6 = r Bee } = ai: = P | os | : Pr : x The proprietor of this jeweler’s shop at Reading, England, | : = 4 turned misfortune into a good advertisement by inserting = ow this placard in his show window, smashed by a brick. | 7 pete Zs dhstaapalirsicniniceonaliesininiieaimaldanaaaiasiaanegied boca | 7 | \King to Speak to | i Notes on || ___ Fathers and Sons Henry R. King, who spoke at a fa S ther and son banquet every night of n been the first to rexpond to a call for = ° orators to assist In thie year's obser- § in CASK || vations: at Tone wt ereas at 1° dinner for fathers and sons of the : D | Greon Lake district, November = r The Seward Peninsula raflroad has | Roosevelt high school, = been formally transferred to the ter | _ a ritory of Alaska by the Pioneer Min | pistner that 23 claime have been & 7 ing Co., according to word received |nongeg by the discoverers, A. M this month by the Alaska department | Grant and Frank Giles to J. J z of the Chamber of Commerce, from | pricg and Tom Aitken of Anchor eB G Col, James G. Steere, president of the | nga - Alaska rood commission, Juneau, | “shat ® nest ahaa Prides Pyeng The Cape canary ts the only nn ; % seanton of the property for the terrt bes bird of Africa that ts widely a z | torial overnment, transffor belng|*20¥® for ite sweet, continuous ; E made ‘ acne. ward Pentnmula rafiroad te e na gauge route, extending from @ Nome to Shelton, in the Kougarok district, a distance of abotu 75 miles = Rerular service over the road has| 4 been discontinued for several years. : pe pi 5 | Several hundred thousand feet of | bs timber have been secured by the! e ° * Alaska road commission from the | former army post at St» Michael, and wit) be used in putting the road in operating condition, Other matertal for the rehabilitation of the road next «pring will be assembled this winter. Under the agreement made [between the Alaska road commisnston | land the territory, the comminston | | will have the responsibility for the maintenance of the property and its | operation, The Mammon Consolidated Gold Fichta, a mining corporation center) etivities on Seward penin: filed articles of incorpora- with the territorial secretary, ing James Frawley as resident Alaska agent. During the past summer the Hammon interests are reported to have acquited the prop. ertien of the Pioneer Mining and Ditch company, a Lindeberg com- pany, and a number of other de sirable holdings in the Nome dis. trict, |» ‘Three gold quarts claims, located on Muddy river, a tributary of the Teku river, near Junedu, have been taken under bond for exploratory and possible development work by the Treadwell Gold Mining com. pany. The Hyder Radio and Telephone Jcompany has filed articles of incor poration at Juneau with Irene Hall, J. A. Hall and B. Lk Dale, all of With « large seaplane as part of the equipment, the Mattingly Pico tures, Inc. of Los Angeles, are pro- diak to film a seven-reel Alaska feature, “The Arctic Phantom,” Ac- cording to Information received at the office of the governor in Ju neau, the company plans to take summer and winter pictures tn the natural colors, j ©. T. Gardner, supervisor of the Tongass National forest, with his dquarters at Ketchikan, has re- as part owner of the concern of Sawyer & Reynolds, loggers. Orders tor two @ half million feet of lumber for shipment to Australia and England will keep the Ketchikan Power company operating announcement of Eldon J Daly, manager of the mill, The lumber will be towed by tugs to Seattle and transshipped to Autsra a and England, ‘Word wna received recently tn Anchorage of a new gold discovery north of Mt. McKinley park and 60! miles west of McKinley Park sta-| tion, It ts reported a 72-foot ledge has been opened with ore running $400 to the ton. Th lers and surest and unvarying VY can tell you that one of his most rapid sel- ers is Carnation Milk, because of its richness To Every Boy Who Secures FIVE New 500! to The Star. THE STAR has purchased 500 Inter- collegiate style Footballs for 500 Live, Calot Liquid Otose easily renews the surface to its highest Justre, Apply with damp cotton choth— thes poleh dry. At garages and other dealera, STANDARD OTL COMPANY (California) CALOL Wide-awake Boys! b a FOLLOW THESE INSTRUCTIONS : NO MONEY TO COLLECT—NO MONEY TO PAY ; B All you have to do is to get FIVE people who are not now hav- 5 ing The Star delivered to them to agree to subscribe for three months. s Worth Your ® Attention : An eubecrs ptione goat be Nowa tage fs, people who are not now L aving The elivere: them. pe neg gsr You Soot hee i conees - money or make delivery of The Star ‘ Z —sim: e the order for the paper. Sear Unie a aie Upon verification of subscriptions you will be awarded. the football. Remember that The Star is n’s Most Popular Daily News- > paper, and costs only 50c a month delivered. Therefore it should be be FRIEDMAN easy for you to get FIVE new subscribers. g Ps friends and neighbors, who are not now taking The Star, will & & be glad to help you. ES W OL F S ON -_ a subscriptions must be paid in advance at the rate of 2 a mon’ Have subscribers sign this subscription blank, Be sure and ‘ First Aveune subscriber's phone number when ponies - Corner Columbia oc TO SUBSCRIBERS ‘ | _1 hereby subserfbe to The Seattle Star for a perlod of three months, and there- | | after until I order same discontinued. I agree to pay the carrier at the rate of 50 , | | cents a month. I AM NOT NOW HAVING THE STAR DELIVERED TO ME. ; That's how we catch | oases anagieiioa pba sa" | ; the leaks in your roof. | 1 Prompt service on all z sy calls. ] a PUGET SOUND i SHEET METAL WORKS . Main 0176 & —_ CG 2 K HOP TO IT! . = ‘ = Bring All Orders to the 3 & | Circulation Dept. : = R oe Seattle St eattie ar q Seventh Ave., near Union 5 si Carnation Mith' Products Gen HUOUUUUUULIURIUAUORIEALEDUAOLTUUTLUAULUUCLURAOOUUUOUUUTEES ih aatt 1160 Stuart Bidg,, Seattle, Wash, i"

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