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Notice
the popcorn machine moved out onto the wood planked
sidewalk to attract customers.. The sign at lower
right offers "Ice Cream To Take Home" and the
upper windows advertise Henry the Fourth and Chancellor
Cigars.
The
small vending machine to Nick's left, attached
to the door casing reads "Pulver Chewing Gum"
and to entice passers-by, is the slogan "One Cent
Delivers a Tasty Chew".
Below,
to Nick's left, is their "paper vending" chair
with the twisted and curved wire back that holds
copies of that morning's Seattle Post Intelligencer.
The white vending machine at the far right, attached
to the building, pronounces in vertical letters,
"Wrigleys Spearment".
My
fondest memory of Nick's Confectionery was in
the Î30s when he had "grab bags" for sale. I can
remember stopping at Nick's every day on my way
home from school and purchasing, for a nickel
, one of his grab bags. If I didn't have a nickel,
I would scrounge up some milk bottles and trade
them in for the treat. Not knowing what was going
to be in those white paper bags was the fun part,
but it always contained some of his homemade candy
and sometimes a really neat toy.
Nick
was a great salmon fisherman. He would be out
on the Sound every chance he had. That was in
the days of the Seattle Times Salmon Derby and
Elliot Bay would be jammed with boats, mostly
rentals from the several marinas along the shores.
One
of his favorite fishing spots however was on Camano
Island, a little over 70 miles north of Seattle.
He would leave his home on the corner of 45th
and Dawson, across the street from Whitworth School,
and drive up to Camano and like most people in
those days, rent a cabin and a 16 foot Reinell
outboard boat and motor. In those days you always
caught salmon. It was just a question of how big
and how many.
He
usually rented a cabin at Camp Lagoon resort on
the Northwest side of the island. That was only
about two blocks from a group of about twelve
summer cabins built by residents of Rainier Valley's
Columbia City area. In a previous article I mentioned
that group of cabin owners and the unofficial,
but functional, post office address they had,
Columbia City #2.
I
knew Nick quite well and ironically my wife and
I purchased one of the remodeled Camp Lagoon cabins
in1978. My grandparents, Will and Edith Brown,
had sold their Columbia City #2 cabin about 1955
that they had built in 1927. My fond memories
of spending my summers there enticed my wife and
I to again have a cabin on that stretch of beach.
I wonder how many times Nick had stayed in that
same cabin which we enjoy today. Unfortunately
there are no salmon left to catch, but the crabs
and clams are plentiful.
Confectionery
stores were popular in the early days. Pierre
Weiss had one next door at 4871 Rainier Avenue
in 1911 that included sporting goods along with
the usual fare. Ulysses S. Tibbetts and his wife
Mary had a confectionery at the same location
as Nick's, also in 1911, according to the King
County Directory. Others at that same location
were Fraker's Confectionery and M. .Paul's Confectionery,
date unknown.
Later at that same location there were several
drug stores including Otto Richardson's Drug Store
that later moved to Hillman, Rainier Drug Store
and Elmo's Drug Store. The one thing I remember
was they had a soda fountain and I was a regular
customer always ordering either a green river
or a vanilla malt.
Today
the Wellington Tearoom is at that location. Owner
Gwyn Baker has also just opened a second location
in West Seattle. Seattle Magazine focused on the
Wellington in an article on Columbia City, and
Gwyn was featured in a national coffee and tea
magazine and both the Seattle Weekly and the Seattle
Times had articles about the Wellington. They
are now offering weekend brunches.
The
Wellington is yet another example of the positive
things that are happening in Rainier Valley and
particularly Columbia City.
Buzz
Anderson
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