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Opinions are reached. \ “The commission's report is con | Mre. | Jooked lke a mess. - then by the rague.” | SHE SALVAGES HUMAN PRESIDENT Wilson Accepts League In- vitation to Mediate Turk Nationalist Trouble WASHINGTON, Dee. 1—Preat @ent Wileon has accepted the invita ton of the league of nations to act As mediator between the Turkish | Nationalists and Armenia, according to a state department announcement | Of yesterday. ‘The preskient said he wouk! offer his “personal mediation thra a rep Tesentative whom I may designate ‘This was taken to mean the presi Gent does not contemplate a trip to Armenia, His health js known to be Buch as to forbid such a trip, The president's decision was made ‘Known in a message to Paul Hy Mans, president of the league of na ons assembly, Bt Geneva. eee GENEVA, Dec. L—President Wil #0n's offer of persona! mediation in Armenia was expected to reach the Jeague of nations assembly today ‘The assembly is in plenary seasion and the president's message, ad dressed to President Paul Hymans, | Wer expected to be announced by him on receipt Wilson's warning that military ald Gould not be axpected and that large @xpenditures woul! have to be ap Proved by congress, and therefore Gould not be axsured, caused no dis May in the assembly. It had been Agreed previously that necessary ex penses or military expenses would be | furnished by the league. If the league accepts the presi-| offer, the matter probably wil! There is a man in this city who | Mra, Cralg Yesterda 0 W the special Armenian commis | came here five years ago with $200 fon, which will agree on the course |a wife and plenty of ambition, »eif- @f procedure to be recommended to | confidence and a keea insight inw Wilson, The league's permanent as. his own capabilities. sembly on military, naval and air He invested his $ 200 In a busines fighting, made pudlic today the text/ that, a few months ago, was employ ef a message to the United States, in-|ing 75 men and wes peerless in its ‘viting that country to participate/line on the Pacific coast. tn a study of disarmament. tly understood,” ta Message read, Then family troubles came, multi the | plied, expanded, swamped him and “that the presence of | ruined bis business. At early middle the United States In the conference age he was a wreck financially and im no Manner commits the American every other way Hig morale was #0 low he couldn't }look @ yellow dog in the face,” sald Paliner Craig. “He government, no matter what final Bidered merely a basis for considera American participation in confer) WRECKS; FIXED HIM @aces at Brusels and The Hague was tssion will |looking for just such wrecks ag was Costs Fine prohibition Of hig still, pleaded guilty in court Tuesday and was fined _Metropolitan this. zations club Wednesday She took hoid of the wrecked bust arrested Saturday | nens man and after a dosen inter ton, when a mad bull chased | views, to use her own words, “he agent in the di-| started out to lick the whole cock | eyed wortd.” | "He was packed and ready to leave the city whea I found him out.” said theatre Her mission here, as national Mra. Craig occupies a suite at the New Washington hotel She has} appeared as lecturer, since coming here, before the Chamber of Com Merce, the Masonic lodge. Ad ciub. 100 Per Cent club and other organs She spoke at the Sugeet) . Josef Lhevine and the Steinway Piano Josef Lhevinne, great Russian pianist, will be heard at tonight. the The piano will be the Steinway. his instrument. O genius of the piano can rise any higher than the artistic limits ifnposed by Josef Lhevinne, a great Russian pianist, uses the Steinway. In simple consequence: there is , no mechanical limit to the artis- tic genius of Josef Lhevinne. Sherman, ‘Third Avene at Pine SEATTLE ~ Spokane - Pi ay & Co. Want a Raise? Here’s How * BS * * * * * * * Use Your Mind Correctly and Forge Ahead Double Your Pay in3M onths Mrs. Grace Palmer Craig, who is here telling people “how to go after what you want and get it.”"—Photo by Bushnell. © came up } and told me he had alrea gathering up the loose er shattered business and ‘wo to see the color of tl who could make him get out of town.’ ” RUNS REPAIR SHor | POR IMPAIRED MORALS ‘The secret of Mra. Craig's ability | to “put ‘em on their foot is & clear dincernme wrong wit You might hu I conduct o repair shop for people} with impaired morales. } We are the cause of our own op Vironment. Most people «pend too much time worrying about what they haven't got, instead of taking | jadvantage of the things they have |S They lack @ perception of their jown qualities, “They are troubled with wrong thinking. They are thinking nega tive, instead of positive | “The principle taught by the So- jclety of Applied Paychology is #0] cluttered up with tama, fads, fikew and tmpostors, that most people are at @ loss to understand & Hut the | Literary Digest has taken all these | fade and isms that are founded on | & germ of truth and has extracted | | the kernel of the nt, so to speak—! 2 pay chology SHE'LL DOUBLE YOUR SALARY IN THREE MONTHS “I will take any man and quar Antee in three months fo put him in| | ® position to double his earning | capacity the lomsons that I give, | his own od ie his only text book A bodearrier I wow teach In ex aetly the same manty ae 1 would teach Frank Waterhouse to double | hin income 1 would find his weak links, point them out to him and tell bim how! to bulid them up. ‘The method of Festoring selfconfidence and pelfre Mance ix juxt ax definite as the tmethod of ‘building up the muscles “I Kansas City | found «a man who had four college degrees, from Yale Harvard and Columbia, Yet he wae working for $4 « day “@ common laborer, He had a wile and three | children COMMON LABORER BECOMES $500-A-MONTH MAN “In analyzing him 1 found he was an artistic genius. He was tumid, senuitive, lacked self-asnertivencas. In five months he had a« position as @raper and window trimmer in the biggest dry goods store in Kansas City at $500 monthly salary to man's eyes olr m na country and Europe, ally under the master that brought out Paderewski, 1 found in the outskirt of Kansas City « few months ago} trying to make @ living raising] chickens. She is now of the biegent | ebur and at the gurden, build « ho of machinery, no we tempt to make any kind of a gar ment or dish of specific directic wsure bin uc cess than the average individual un dertakes any of the more vital imues | of the business of living j “The fact that #0 many people can be found who are college and universit kraduates, but who are Aisagreeably filling positions of wait 4 without more or laborers, who are living in ari-} ous kinds of friction and inbarmony, | proves that there ls hothirig to’ be learned boo! that will assure even the preciable * ting the m fi plenty of peopl © exhwus cally every other text book and never learn the first A BC lesson in the only one that can assure him of any degree of happiness afd success in his undertakings—the textbook of his own mind. It is easy for @ man or an who 8 a dozen languages to be 90 pe t a nega tive thinker as tho uld not nd write hin own There are as definite ‘rules of the game’ of living that will insure a person success in hix undertakings in home or business affairs and hay mony in his intercourse with his fele low beings a whieh any aut ist om sured that if he going he will! arrive at th ned point These rules 4 an well exactly Keir that one need know scarcely more than to spell his name correctly to understand them Few people realize thar the wav thew in ne ly oF, cipies fore she takes » the It i esthnated that one-third of; . . . ‘A young woman who had «t tied | Work the dn negatively before sl kos up the rey. 1 | eA Young woman who had atudied| Work Welt or blinds them or|eponatility of manineor breaking | sll pervonn in gaintul employ in the| Manicures Unionize - | nying in one | su ¢ | and every man having any influence WEDNESDAY, DECEMPER 1, 1928, THE SEATTLE STAR HANDKERCHIEFS for GIFTS In Impressively Inclusive Selections HERE is little need, of course, for emphasizing the importance of Handkerchiefs in one’s plans for holiday giving, for recognition of the acceptability of these simple, dainty and inexpensive remembrances is practically as universal as Christmas itself. We may appropriately, however, direct attention to the very thorough-going prepa- rations made to ensure our patrons extremely diversified selections, within a price ] range broad enough to fit every gift plan. [ WOMEN’S HANDKERCHIEFS IN PROFUSION . HAND-EMBROIDERED IRISH LAWN HANDKERCHIEFPS, 38 in a box, for $1.25. EMBROIDERED HANDKER- CHIEFS OF SHEER LAWNS, with punch work designs in cor- ner and hem, 3 in a box, for $1.35. MADEIRA-PATTERN LAWN HANDKERCHIEFS, with scal- ‘ loped edges and corner motifs, 3 ! in a box, for $1.50, AMRISWYL - EMBROIDERED HANDKERCHIEFS of fine linen, 3 in a box, for $2.25. APPENZELL - EMBROIDERED HANDKERCHIEFS in many dainty patterns, 3 in a box, $2.75 to $3.75, MADEIRA HANDKERCHIEFS, finely scalloped and embroidered on linen, 3 in a box, for $6.00. INITIALED HANDKERCHIEFS of sheer lawn, finely hemstitched, with script letter, 6 in a box, for $1.00. FINE LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS with Appenzell embroidery, $2.00 to $3.50 each. IRISH LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS with hand-embroidered corner mo- tifs, $1.00 to $2.50 each, EMBROIDERED HANDKER- CHIEFS of white mull with col- ored tape and mitered borders and floral embroidery motifs, 85¢ each. (FIRST FLOOR) FREDERICK & NELSON . FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET HAND -EMBROIDERED HAND- KERCHIEFS of lawns and linens, including novelties with colored embroidery, 50¢ and 75¢ each. HAND -EMBROIDERED HAND- KERCHIEFS of Irish lawns; also double hemstitched handkerchiefs, imitation Armenian lace - edged handkerchiefs and novelty printed lawn handkerchiefs, 35¢ each. COLORED LINEN HANDKER- CHIEFS, introd ae dainty con- — in drawn-th: work, $1.50 e FINE ARMENIAN LACE AND —- Paert aggre ; in choice selections, emphasizing 1 per op hand vorkuneenin? ata i wide price range. ; and happiness of another| UMted States are women, | i) Philadelphia, Pa.) “human life im her business of} PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 1.—How! opens their eyes to their partic opportunities for success. If pr Thursday, Friday and § the #u wuld only be brought to realize that motherhood they hold by far the greater per vn ‘ €an a poor but honest manicure live ; of ihe causes’ of thelr own| The olbburning transatlantic liner Jon $14 a week, including tips? ‘They THE FAMOUS scones of failure within their own | Acquitania bas the rece uh | can't in Philadelphia, so the girls are || Vitsinia Oysters, wer, and that that power is not | fastest abip, having gone fo hour banding together to form a union || P® aware ..... ed »wer, which is all too weak /at the rate of 31 miley an hour | that will give them better pay, re-/ Per pint ..... ewe cocade cirel one a_i | Ordinary privates of the National Guard earn $64 @ year, | gardiess of tips, which have dwin-/ | died to almost nothing. | To connect mare adequately the Vir western and southern sections of 5 Philadelphia. Pa. the city is plan | PRYR'S CENTRAL cm , } ning the construction of a massive | Between Union and Pike, on $1,000,000 bridge. j tetore another decade has parsed will have become so «tandardized as to eliminate all the fakes and impostors from the field YLAIN OF DIAMOND @) human affairs will be required to have a working knowledge of it And next—iod «peed the day——when every worman must know these prin RINGS AND WATCHERS ALBERT HANSEN puaccennawuni | Over fifty years ago al = 50 HENS LAID 3 EGGS . =m Young physician practiced) A DAY. NOW LAY 35] Rheumatism widely in a rural district and| Remarkable Home Treatment Tells How to Make Idle Hens Pro | Given by Ned duce Money in Winter form success in the curing of j disease, This was Dr. Pierce, who afterwards established & himself in Buffalo, N. Y., and) 3 placed one of his prescrip- 3 tions, which he called “Golden | 3 Medical Discovery,” in the) & drug stores of the United States so that the public could easily obtain this ve markable tonic, corrective _and blood-maker. Dr. Pierce manufactured this “Discov-| ery” from roots and barks— a corrective remedy, and in- gredients of which nature had! put in the fields and forests, for keeping us healthy. Few folks or families now living) =] have not at sometime or othe: used this “Golden Medical Discovery” for the stomach, 4) liver and heart. Over twenty ~«|four million bottles of t '} tonic and blood remedy have been sold in this country. jbecame famous for his uni- kea ean using Don Sing tn oniy 2 or 8 Within tare 4 dozen a FOR TEN semi-annual dividend periods this Association has never paid less than 7% on the funds deposited by our members. The interest is compounded semi-annually. Cl al wan gettng from day. I shail never be without at winter prices clear profit should do as wi no trouble to ure ‘Don fg and you y trying it under this offer # Don Bung and wateh NO CHARGE is made for opening or clos- ing an account. Funds subject to withdrawal after your account is ninety days old. We wel- come new accounts of from $1 to $5,000. MONEY RECEIVED on or before the 4th is credited with interest from the Ist of the month, your money will Don Sung (Chine a aclentific tonic an K WOUUEANEAIHOPENLVOUAAHUUERUNONQORUHTAUEULaUGEarUAteatnnagre aaa cavveeat | SEATTLE SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION 93O9- Sd Ave. OVVORVAVOTTUUNR ANNO AUAAOPHHAANEUARTOGGEUHAAAAOAAGURUOUgAOGEGEEndaUtUeet LSU or. ung from your yedy dealet, ot ar tax) for a| package by mail Burrell-Dugger Co. | 214 Columbia Bidg., Indianapolis, Ind Jackson *in reaponribie, Above KAR: Max no e Wer Sale by Drugminta, . .