The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 30, 1924, Page 16

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THE SEATTLE STAR i - : “ yo : Consider Parkin +s shia — _— D. & R. G. Railroad ;Author of @Lord Escape Flames Via Labor Is Urged te ing i ” Di i i k “Butter Bill Ordinance Nov. 12 ah 2: * e | Brings $17,395,700 Fauntleroy Dies Single Phone Wire Bac r No Silver Spoon for Col. Hartley |} .Brings sre rms sew atm +4 ! <i His Friends Say He Made His Own Moffey; Worked in Woods and|"? &""**! ie 5‘ cree ; “n on Farm in Mid-West; Fought by Organized Labor ae bale: ; ; ft - : ratio STORM WARNING POSTED! etal “SWEET SIXTEEN’S” W-O-N-D-E-R WEEK 7 i O I q IED * WEATHERING IT Stormed until at times we have had to Limit Admission, because this event found us prepared with the merchandise to back up every promise —the Promise of “VALUES,” not “Sale” Merchandise to “Bait” custom- ers. That’s the Promise that Seattle Women Have Faith in—The Promise that has caused them to Pack this Shop every day since the opening hour. Li it Col. Roland H. Hartley, republican candidate for governor, is shown here romping with . ie-grandchildren at his home in Everctt, Hartley has two sons and a daughter. HE T OUSANDS AND 7 ‘'HOUSANDS OF DR ESSES EOPLE who think Col. Roland | ms t: ae! FS] Pone-—aapytr 1] wi cin lie ar BANK IS ROBRE Another Far East ma Tee esoon* tn mouth” are | Education Mission CO : badly mistaken, the colonel's frien¢ vic ee B. ¢ 2 t ve % = Mere Soa Za ING OF “SWEET SIXTEEN” MODELS PRESENT | |: And they cite f "Girl Prevents Big Haul =» ot t r tt ste cerpts from t fund " hi ; Brove their poin' 30.—Author!-| » America on eke 2°") SURPRISE AFTER SURPRIS ) New Brunswick, Cani spade dees be ey pasa c t ¢ $4, 1864. His father was a Ba y robbed Aurora State 8: Will ox ae Dinister, and ‘there were 11 « See Ree” rere J AbeU | S458 children. : At the age of 14, Hartley followed | < Reseral of his older brothers. to) +5, : Page, N. D. He got a job breaking | ,, when it was % sod with an ox team. Later he |; ton the|Ptared in a boulevard cafe her hauled lumber with the same team | purcinr atnem hem ao |e full evening ¢ for buildings on a new farm. ‘Wille i pour"f5dk ott | the alaren Papert F Then he spent five years workl0g | she was roughly ordered banda in the woods near Brainer The burgiars then scooped up wha . bes At the age of 20 the y cash was in sight, but made no at D became private secret tempt to rob the vault ——————es - ing Mayor of Brainerd. : ‘ cere | evenings and Sundays and finally E fratusted from a Mianeapolls acad- Progressives Hold the " | ne: idl Tews | Mass Meet Monday| 0 Vd coun FIRM The La Follette-wWheeler cam Bt In 1885 he went to Minneapotis oe, ya De -ottielally «closed tn It looks ax though such values were never pe ey 3 @ "the | Stattle! Monday night h a mon expected again, th y is going on and became bookkeeper for the) 90° 0 US testing a Siltpne LF = ‘ s Ae Dees mites pare Lanner OsD. ORO ang at 8 otleck ! | 1 = = ipl cs 1 the Cloughs afterwards became gov. | CTU" Chekeskene a was a . f { these value a, efnor of Minnesota, and Hartley be | Pafices Thureday. Entertainmen bh . came his secretary. Hartley mar-| Shit provided for the} The New York the ried Miss Nina Clough, the govern. rie Sool at ee | “ or’s daughter. ; ; Hartley came West in 1902 and| Pininohice PARIS Bool thay éngaged in the lumber business in |, PARIS ‘0 Ame cowboys Everett, with morfey he'd saved in| “tOPPed the show hey ap. More different styles than we ever 2 ad abe ann ae dead ae at - ATF found it necessary to carry—Every is the “silver spoon stories.” | ig 19 | Style for Every Occasion, for Every In 1909 Hartley was elected may: ; ; eA : : Or of Everest and in 1915 was | coe + "* Woman, Miss and Junior in all sizes. * elected to the legislature. He ran |); « for. governor in 1916 and in 1920. 0 In 1920 he came within 6,000 votes a A of beating Hart. | ‘s | In the war Hartley joined the * ‘Third: Washington infantry and was % at Hoboken when the armistice was | : signed. | : ‘The colonel ts considered by labor | : { as its enemy. In the campaign| GIRLS’ COATS for Dress 16 - DRESSES—for Evening 16 ab -tnalsar ithe greener toe ereeall| and School wear q affairs and the Dinner = ing denunciation of organized labor. He was-fought bitterly in the pri-| x Atta bee | SES’ COATS—for $16 DRESSES—for the Afternoon 4 E — ed ss, General Utility, & School q e—ENSEMBLE SUITS—e and “At-home” ~ ‘ > | : ’ : The amazing effect | ND . | MATRONS’ COATS—for Dress, $16 A DRESSES—for Informal $16 ; of e-ru-na } Business and Street wear DRESS ES wear, Street and Business ” 1 on ¢éatarrh ea oe uses : ; oy s ta: COLLEGE COATS These garments, in Fashion’s latest vogue, PARTY FROCKS PE-RU-NA is the old way, safe For Campers, . ; For the coming : and reliable to treat catarrh and Sport and Dress > shown in a variety of styles— Winter gatetios. mo 4 Sport and I all diseases, and they are many, of . Bre farrhal origin. Given to the tworld of suffering more than half $ $ : a century ago, by Dr. | F S. B. Hartman, the | (@) \ Un world’s great- Ay tob } est Sishority | a 8 4 on catarrhal y troubles, Pe- ° PY ha raitg tine COAT DRESSES—The perfect $ 1 6 = 1 thee aa ensemble of Coat and Dress = 2 favor in the = ia American home | = for the emergen- | = c cies of every day. = 7 Tablets or Liquid While this event started with more than 2,500 = Sold Everywhere arments in this phenomenal collection, the sales = | a a \ at this writing have been so large that if you =/ re have not bought yours, you shouldn't delay in =! N B ° Ki doing so. ew rowning Ing New shipments to supplement the hundreds i ‘ and hyndreds of models that’ have come and . OVER( OA | S gone, arrived yesterday. K ) r ¢ It is your good fortune if you come early to (ne From our own New York factories more han a have a first choice. | dozen different models by srowning King’s English | designer, sold only through the twenty-three Brown- ing King stores from Coast to Coast--one profit. Now!—get relief in one minute from corns, callouses and bunions with Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads. They remove the | | Cause—friction and pressure. Thin, easy to apply, antiveptic, healing. | 30 t 7 5 ; 9, Dr Scholl's Zino-pads “Put one on--the pain is gone” tn Fnta gm 2F_ Mail Orders Given Careful Attention Second Avenue at University Street TWENTY-THREE STORES FROM COAST TO COAST

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