The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 23, 1920, Page 6

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Food Values of Bread One of the reasons persons cannot | 2. live on bread alone in because of the) THE AGK | severe milling process thru which | white flour is put before it becomes | The Seattle Star Ry eut of city, He per month; # mentha, 6150; ¢ montha, $1.75; yeon rf Te the State ef Washington Outstde of the The per month, for ¢ montha of $1.00 per year, My carrier, city, Lite per week FOR SEX INSTRUC TION ‘Today's Best Net—Don® shoot her | “| husband, the weak. . . One thing about living a dog's 3 ore slaves who fear to speak for the fallen and ie | @ Thucydides renmrked to Wurtpides, Just before | | Battle of Parthenon, 3 “The human critter Js vocally bitter.” ty, he doesn’t mean it. came up from savagery he's still gavage—with his tongue. waa a time when man attacked any other he met. Buried his spear. Dit Aimewith his hammer. there was always a chance that the other Bad something he wanted. Joln-skin, a warclud, a wife way to get it was to put the other man out way. Man has a presidency. Another man wants it. the barbed arrow, the barbed tongue the hard club, the hant word, is, it's so ineffective. hammer-tongue confined to politica, mee a play which doesn’t get across. Might be justified in saying, “I think was hardly adequate.” ‘ you really bite off ts “Rottenest acting saw" Fead a book which bores you. you ought to my, “I wasn’t quite up to | in it." you probably say is “Drivel and drool? pay ten. dollars for shoes. comment ts, “If I had my way, these robbers De shot at sunrise.” in it? at all. Just Thucydides again “The human critter 2 Is vocally bitter.” the | “Everybody is interested in the ‘Back to a Farm’ movement,” says a contemporary. | seem to be—at least, they seem to have Editorial by a Boy have started. and worry Vacation for for ma “When we kids are at school she knows where But when we aren't she's worrying all mischief we're making, or what or about the autos on the and our vacations Just {a out us ool ie more work we're at. the time what swimming hole we're tn, | streets running over us, “There's no fun tn vacations for ma “She must get up as earty in the morning as she does the rest of the year; and cook and bake for us, only she cooks more and bakes more because when we kids are home we eat so much more “And she has more washing to do because we get our white things dirty so fast. But it funny thing about ma. She never complains about the work she has to do for Os, but she's always proud about having done it so well © “When she goes to a picnic er some place, gh takes us all along. So it's no plenic for her at all. “She always has to be running after us to see that we don't get lost or hurt and keeps on worry- ing about us all the time “Poor ma!" . . Poor ma! Yea, boy! Put, rather, glorious ma! Who excels her in self-sacrifice, in saintly patience, in Joyal service, in utter selflessness? Her fine virtues know no vacation, Canada is to have a resident diplomat at Washington. If that means that he ts sure to get a residence, we know several Cana- dians who are willing to be diplomats.—Sas- katoon (Canada) Star. Crop Reporters Begins the annual crop reporting battle. lfe--you can always say that the wuret is yet to come, eee Women never make good artists jas they can only paint one face, ee The “Bargain Counter™ ten't half) e bad as the “Bargain Chaser.” eee No, friends, @ haretip ts no rela-| tion to @ rabbit | eee | Englishman: “Are you one of thone old forty-niners? | “Yep, I sure be."t “Well, I never could understand why they didn’t call them fifty and jaye it over with.” | o-e Now that straw hate are the vogue the men want a light, straw lored blonde on their arm to nateh. eee The overall suit in the whew fad) for bathers, They claim that they can swim easier in them. But we dido't see any of them trying to} prove it |Innaes is stuck up. “ee A milkman friend of ours married) & swell looking dame so he could have peaches and cream with a@ lit Ue mush But be got lemonade without the sugar see ‘That's the reason they call these |peaches chickens. Because they! can't tell what they look like really | tll they are picked | 7S £2 | “Won't you come into my par lomt” said the spkier to the fly. “T some nice, sweet syriup 1 like for you to try.” the fly, “I don't} I've bon stuck op fly paper.” , | eee | Nice thing about beach sunburn) jis that we usually get skinned be-| THANK Sugar be refined and ever mo|| KECP RIGHT ON GoING tf —— H THAT FELLOW'S A CARER UL DRIVER, BUT HE WON'T Be ABLE \] HERE AnD DODSE A Tf) cikea You Yo MIS3 You tt Mov STAY ovr OUND {RLIN|]S Deevisn SAVE FIRST THOUSAND AND . KEEP IT UP, SAYS BANKER. bread. The mineral nalts and neu- |tralizing substances found in the | hulls and outer coating of the wheat are eliminated. An eminent dietitian recently sald |that the reason worms are seldom | found in high grade white flour is |because the worms cannot find enough varieties of food in It to live. }On the other hand, bran and whole | wheat flours have to be watched | pretty closely to keep the worms out. | Instinct teaches worms where the food tm What luck would @ person have | living on starch ak ? That's what | living on bread alone means, literal jiy, if it is the white, fluffy kind Dr. Harvey Wiley, wile connect jed with the government, tried to re- form the flour industry, But it is doubtful whether this can be done until more women know the value of whole wheat and demand better | food qualities in the four The Nemesis of the Farm The American tarmer battles un |ceaningly with the crow, that black imp of Satan that soars in the freez nd mocks him impudently wood bordering on the corn- Thegfarmer is the crow’s life long enemy. Because be believes— and investigation shows he's 38 per cent correct—that the crow is a | cornfield robber 7 And he is, in @ way and to an ex tent. | ing facts about the crow, however, that shows that for the 8 per cent of corn he eats he destroys a host of buss and insects that are crop de- stroyers of the worst kind. And most of the corn Mr. Crow destroys, ex: cepting in tHe early spring planting season, is that from November to March, after the harvest season, and which is merely the waste grain. The United States biplogical | wurvey has developed some interest: | “ My boy tn 14 years olf and re joently has asked me any number of questions about sex matters. I am |not only puzzled as to just what |replies to make, but whether at this |nge it would be advisable to discuss the subject with him.” ‘This letter from @ father 1s quite | timely. When the boy or girl begins te ask questions the parent should be in @ position to answer them intel- ligently and satisfyingly without reference to the age of the child. Inability to do this will result in the child seeking his information |Clsewhere, usually from some se- | quaintance or companion, It ie real- |ized now that it t# quite impossible |to prevent the child from getting |this knowledge. The question is | whether he o rahe is to get from |#ome responsible person, or from some source that may be dengerous. | Just whit is the proper age of | the child for the parent to impart this knowledge cannot be net dows by hard and fast rules. Environ- |ment and the individual must be | taken into consideration. | ‘The public health service has pre pared some interesting Hterature | thin subject for the benefit of the | parent, Write the “Information Editor” U, 8. Public Health Service, Wash- jington, D. C, for the book, “The | Parent's Part.” Q. Wil! you kindly ten me wheth- er the following formula will harm me if I take two tablespoons three times a day? It is to be taken for the porpose of developing the bust. I am 19 years old. How much should I weigh? Will it harm @ friend of mine who has consump- tion? The formula ts: Calcium Lactophosph...10 grammes Fluid Extract Galega Tincture Fennel Sirup Simple .. A. You are not only wasting time but are extremely foolish to take this remedy fog the purpose men- wir back to the farm.—Houston Post. ' nacre peat: wink os a atc he Reported by B. C, FORGES, Maiter of Ferber’ Magasin The biologieal survey studied the| tioned. Get nourishing food and! ° one ' Movies and Cities changes that movies have wrought in nearly community are among the unsung wonders of ‘fitm P “takes no old man to remember the time the districts in towns and even some cities went | ad at 6 p.m. and dark after 9 or 10. But today—or rather tonight—the main street of | town is a white way, a product of the movie | eh has revolutionized nightlife in town as well im the larger cities, just as it has broadened in- life and, generally speaking, made it more while. é the lights of the Little Gem theatre burst ma the gloom of business districts after 6 p. m. i was quickly shaded by the electrics of the @ few doors up, while across the street the opened for business with a glass canopy in with red, white and blue lights, and, afl, an illuminated sign. es gorgeous new candy and ice cream | of three or four competitors to operated to cause so many and social life of American motion pictares during the general, the changes have reason an article costs $10 more is we the material in it now costs 13 more the labor 9 cents more.—Baltimore Sun. _It is to be hoped the mayor will approve the Ml without delay. The measure, passed by council, is the first real step to curb Japanese here. It will positively save the hog- industry to ¢itizens of the United States. addition to this, it is a measure that com- Mteelf highly from a hvalth viewpoint, It ferve as a check against the utter filth that the Japanese ranches. It will also add )& feat sum to the city’s income—a bit in seturn for costs involved in municipal collection of garbage. Too bad white 7 pulp can’t be made it of presidente timber—New York So far as prices are concerned, we may as ee orrere for a late fall—Nashville j. Farmers are given | Corn getting along; little hot sun’ll do it good. Other products holding | Not enough labor, Poar seed. Won't be « normal yield.” . ‘That ts the plaint from the growing end. to pessimism at this time of the year, They talk like a football coach three days before the big game. On the other hand-— “Crops are fine. Wheat maybe a trifle better than will be about normal; the five-year average. ton not as bed as it looked. their own.” ‘There, now, you hear the other side, the buying side, talking. Cotton brokers, grain dealers, millers, are inclined toward optimism just before harvesting time comes. And both sides are keen crop reporting experts They investigate. They can tell almost to the bushel how large the yield of a field will be. There's only one redeeming feature in this double side suspects reason why. the other is lying and knows the So they aren't fooled. They merely side and that of the other, yield of the crop. and usually that's the Why not show the Turks we can forgive and pres by offering them the mandatory for Mezicof—New York World. - “Have a Heart” If you answer the smile of the taby acroms the | aisle on the street car— ‘That's having a heart runs up to you on the street-— That's having a heart. corner by the arm— That's having a heart. You will live—and prosper probably—if you do | Rone of these three things, or stmilar little kind. | Messes. But you won't be living a free and natural life, a life that knows real love and real kindness The world today is too crowded with the other kind of men—those who return the smile of a child with a blank stare or a scowl, those who would kick the kitten, those who look the other way when they see a blind man fn need of assistance. Let those who are of that stripe change, and a warm sunshine of genuine love will flood the world. There can be no wars then, no prejudices, no fights. Pronouncing these*towns the Poles are capturing requires freedom of the sneeze.— Baltimore Sun, Cot-; If you stop to stoop and stroke the kitten that | If you guide the blind man across the crowded) fore we get home, anyway. eee | When a guy cleans us, we say he's done un dirt. see | Profiteering landiord takes a at dame’s nifty clothes and up: “You look good for about $100 lady“ | Lady | “I'd feel sorry for you if 1 had on my one-piece bathing suit!” ore This guy D'Annunzio has Fiumeing around quite a spell eee What has become of the old [fashioned pound cake that contained & pound of butter, a pound of sugar, ete.? been | | See by . the Papers that Irving edged campaign of misleading crop predictions, Each | Heriln, the ragtime writer, has mar. | ried up with one of the Talmadge sirts, "On to Berlin” may be the split the difference between the estimate of one|™*™* of & flit yet, even If the war) is over, eee, Yet a man will worry himself gray cleaning up a million dollars jwhile all he needs is a dog and a gun and a fishing pole eee And now the government fears a | shor ee in conta ‘This is another fact brought out by the convention—tack of sense Prohibition did away with most of our scents. A hundred cents won't make a \century | You know they want to put the picture of some of these profiteers on the next pennies they decide to make, because they are real cop pers. They put Abe Lincoln's picture on the penny show that there was really one man in history who had |nense, | Tho there t# a shortage in nies, money is still cheap, pen. | A Week’s “Lay Off” A sigh of regret accompanied) these words, by James BL Forgan,| the great national banker of Chi cago. 1 bad asked Mr, Forgan whether |the opportunities for young men | were as great today in the banking | fel as when he won his spurs. “There are certainly at present,”| he declared, “greater opportunities | than ever before and more of them! young men entering the bank Banking in this cou in an evolutionary stage rable European war has created the opportunities, and the! federal reserve eystern—not yet! fully understood or appreciated—at fords us the means of taking ad-/ vantage of them.” Mr. Forgan early reatined the value of inepiring and stirring to enthusiasm those working for bim.| and, to thie end, he established in| 1903 a generous pension fund for jemployes. He ts as solicitous for the welfare and advancement of the youngest officeboy’ whe comes un Ger his wing as for the officers His advice to young men--he has three sons of his own—is to equip |themselves for high DR. HT. HARVEY | ident Mic! tate | Dental Examiners) Dental Surgeon Diagnostician Pyorrhea Specialist X-RAY DEPARTMENT IN CONNECTION Highest Order of Restoration Work Done, Examination and Sstimate Froe. 504-12 EITEL BLDG, SECOND AND PIGS SRATT | | for ing busine jtry is The dep! poritions—and save money. Being a Scot, he absorbed the «pirit of thrift with hin porridge and bis Shorter Catechism, “Eextravagance,” he declares, “is America’s national sin. Most young People make no effort to save; few even of older years save systemat foally, My method was to start the new year by fixing the sum I would save during the year. If I decided to buy &@ $1,000 bond I would pay perhaps $100 in cash, borrow the lance from the bank, and repay S every month. That $75 was the first thing I paid on receiving my salary. The remainder had to last the whole month. December found me sole owner of the bond. 1 never speculated—I can't read the Stock Exchange tape intelligently even now.” stomachs of thousands of crows to dincover their diet. In 2,118 stom- achs examined, 625 different kinds of food were found. It wan estab. lahed that the crow is a remarkable destroyer of May. bettles, grasshop- pers, tussock moths, «ypry and brown-taj! moths, cotton-worms, army-worms, canker-worms nd chinch bugs—all of them crop mies. The crow ought not be exiled. He ought not be exterminated. The chances are he does much more good than harm. Perhaps at times Mr, Crow needs fo be chastened a bifi But it is hardly conceivable that he should go the way of the buffalo and the pas- sengér pigeon and thee great auk. ‘There is a piace in the scheme of Nature for the crow, else he wouldn't be here, “ plenty of fresh air, a sufficient amount of work, rest and sleep. This will help you if you are much under- weight. It may be that there is + some underlying disease and if that is the case by all means have @ physician give you a thoro exami- nation. If you @ill send me name and address, I will send a booklet efititied “The Road Health,” which gives a table of average weight. Address tion Editar, U. 6. Public Service, Washington, D. C, aeiengen i The first five presidents of United States ended their terms service each in the 66th year of Bis Bring home of Boldt’s Lunch Pastry and Rolls. | ! Or even a month's enforced idleness holds no fear for the man who has formed SQA SS SSN RQH SS SS NS F => KS SS the habit of earnings Q No matter from the you can where your only fully also profita A a it grow. Four Milli PUGET SAVINGS uu Loan Assoc KANO ABOUT THIS TIME OF YEAR “THE MEN— FOLKS — aoe ONE NG ERA ER Saving while are good. hew small the amount you can lay aside Pay Envelope Start Saving Here money is not pac but is ly employed. Regular Dividends add to the amount and add to your interest in watching Resources now over ion Dollars SOUND and LOAN ASSOCIATION Where Pike Street Crosses Third The Largest Mutual Savings and lation in the State of Washington Bvt by skilled, progressive workers—, With the most modern equip- ment and time- saving appliances— In what is conceded to be one of the most up-to-date rub- ber plants in the industry. Marketed under a zone selling system which efficiently dis- ” well-paid, volume and labor- 4 dealer tributes an ever-growing with true merchan- dising economy. Tire buyers are therefore privie ledged to buy Vacuum Cup Cord and Fabric Tires and “Ton Tested” Tubes at the price of ordinary makes. See your local Pennsylvania and be convinced, Adjustment basis—per warranty tag attached to each casings : Vacuum Cup Fabric Tires, 6,000 Miles ‘Vacuum Cup Cord Tires, 9,000 Miles Channel Tread Cord Tires, 9,000 Miles PENNSYLVANIA. RUBBER COMPANY, Jeannette, Pa. Seattle Distributors CANAL TIRE COMPANY,Inc._ - “Where Westlake Crosses the Canal” “KNOW US BY OUR METHODS” 3001 Westlake North

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