On the cover of the October 18, 1919 edition of the Town Crier was the distinguished gentleman John Spargur, the conductor of the Seattle Symphony from 1911 to 1921.
What Are People Doing?
We let our vocabularies be limited, and get along rawly without the refinements of human intercourse, without refinements in our own thoughts.
What Are People Doing?
Like wine to those that be of heavy heart are the lovely days of September.
What Are People Doing?
On page six of the August 30, 1919 edition of the Town Crier, a writer waxes poetic about breakfast.
What Are People Doing?
There’s an ad in the August 23 issue of the Town Crier. It’s for the Cremation Society of Washington on Queen Anne Boulevard at Sixth West.
What Are People Doing?
“In August time,” the Frederick & Nelson ad reads in the August 16 issue of the Town Crier, “the highways, trails and placid waters of the Puget Sound region provide matchless settings for the Kodak enthusiast.”
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There was high praise in the August 2nd, 1919 edition of the Town Crier for the Theo Karle Club concert that was held at the Armory in honor of the Eastern Star delegates
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Town Crier writer Adele M. Ballard wrote in the July 26, 1919 edition, “And now the residents are seriously considering the exquisite propriety of changing the name of the one-time fashionable First Hill to Hospital Hill.
What Are People Doing?
There was a time, a hundred years ago, that people hunted by phonograph.