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v 0 ‘Of (he state, 86e por month, # montha, or $9.0¢ pe earvier, city, 120 per week. Raterpriee — Anpoctation And United Press Service Dalty by The Mar Publish Co Phone Main 600. Owe IN TODAY'S BEST BET that day lost | low, descending sun | from this town | ‘Rew drive begun. eee | t tatives (of educa- | al institutions) are harden Fim arteries and brains."— e Guile to Washington Inction, apparently, to gome of whom appear to ea with softening of the eee Oh, gosh durn ye, yes: ‘are wise, Legislator,” the! man said, told me my tax would light | You continuously pile upon | } ou think that your system {s, puth,” said the sage, * medicine ads, Se romance you could cut with i Rnife, Practice I gathered in the bunk j the rest of my life.” Legislator,” the young said, pep hasn't lessened a $d law upon law to the wads) before— | think that {t's most time | = White mule three years | in Montesano Vidette. two gallons. eee tonal bridge is pro- Detroit. Who is doing the we don't know, but we'll! (re union is back- ‘wife there, sitting, weeping, | | of the Earth,’ 4 pages French, 11 hours’ forging. my hubby goner* to Canada,” they telt her, the Bridge of Ryes.” eee des civilization has some aidelights. parlor, you heard a} The Lord Grant Us Isostasy AS OTHERS SEE THE WORLD Kiitorials and Comments. Reprinted From Various Newspapers MAKE HIM AMBASSADOTU HE WORLD is out of balance. The earth is not. Thus do we see illustrated the superiority of Nature to Man, If the reader fails to see what is meant in the above, let| him be comforted, The writer only partly knows himself, However: Petrology is the science of rocks, Dr. Washing- ton, a petrologist in the geophysical laboratory in Washing- ton, discussing the chemistry of the earth's crust, explains why we have mountains, continents and oceans, It is be- cause those portions of the earth's crust which lie highest are lightest; while the lower portions where we most of us live are heavier, and the lowest portions which make up the floors of the oceans are the he portions of the crust. To prove this he has brought together the largest number of chemical analyses of igneous rocks ever collected. The earth, as a whole, is twice as heavy per cubic foot as the upper twenty to fifty miles, which are called the crust. Instead of being liquid fire in the inside, the earth is solid, but hot, and it has “viscosity.” That is, it will give to pressure. If that seems incredible, let us remember that icebergs, while fairly stiff, actually bend and flow. So of the un- known substance of which the depths of the earth consist. This viscous substance allows the heavier parts of the globe's surface slowly to sink into it, while the lighter par- tions are forced upwards. When the heavier regions have sunk low enough to have forged up enough land surface to balance them the move- meat ceases. This balance is called “Isostasy. May the Lord grant that the peoples of the earth may |soon show sense enough to achieve what “stocks and stones accomplish—balance, and steadiness, and freedom from con- vulsion. Give us a little more isostasy. It is not Wall Street “stocks” that are referred to. were too much to Pray for. A B C of Success —*There is no fear of my starving, father,” said the deaf boy, Kitto, begging to be taken from the poor- house and allowed to struggle for an education; “we are in the midst of plenty, and I know how to prevent hunger. “The Hottentots subsist a long time on nothing buf a little gum; they also, when hungry, tie a ligature around their bodies. “Cannot I do so, too? “The hedges furnish blackberries and nuts, and fields, turnips; a hayrick will make an excellent bed.” This deaf boy with a drunken father, who was thought capable of nothing better than making shoes, as a pauper, the became one of the greatest biblican authors and scholars *° in the world. His first book was written in the workhouse. stances,” exclaimed Dr. Talmadge to a class of young }men, “that you are on a level now with those who are finally to succeed. j “Mark my words, and think of it 30 years from now. | “You will find that those who, 30 years from now, are the millionaires of the country, who are the orators of the country, who are the poets and writers of the country, who are the strong merchants and bankers and lawyers and doctors of the country, who are the great philanthropists of the country—mightiest in church and state—are now on a level with you, not an inch above you, and in straitened . circumstances now.” * * * ¢ was when he first gained the full meaning of the first 15 lines of Homer's Iliad. His father died when he was 16, and Elihu was appren-| ticed to a blacksmith in his native village of New Britain, Conn, | He worked at the forge 10 or 12 hours a day; but while ;blowing the bellows, he would solve mentally problems in arithmetic. ¥ In a diary kept at Worcester, whither he went some 10) years later, are suc: entries as these: “Monday, June 18, headache, 40 pages Cuyier’s ‘Theory “Tuesday, June 19, 60 lines Hebrew, 30 Danish, 10 Bo- hemian, 9 Polish, 15 names of stars, 10 hours’ forging. “Wednesday, June 20, 25 lines Hebrew, 8 lines Syriac, If, 20 years ago,|11_hours’ forging.” Burritt mastered 18 languages and 32 dialects and 10 'd immediately get up| years later became president of Westmore college. ya, when you hear a bang| stir. You know it’s either: ty holding your neigh automobile tire letting co. having his house| by the bolsheviki, or Your neighbor's homebrew up. eee Maughed the first time we OME of the belles of 1600 were troubled with freckles! just as the young women, some of them, of 1921 are. | Yes, and what did the belle of 1600 do about them? Very |simple. She turned to a page in “A Book of Phisicke and |Chirurgery,” and when she found the paragraph, “To Take |Away Freckles,” she followed it: “Take the blood of a t That B: “Let me say in regard to your adverse worldly cireum- ° .—Elihu Burritt said the proudest moment of his life " | nail ‘em shut difficult |} Some Ancient Recipes ™:": THE SEATTLE Com or an (Prom the For anbarsador to Wngland. eral Coxey Coxey believes In * brand of open diplomacy would help ¢ Coxey among the “best mir shortly before the president-elect left Other “best minds” had arrived and Not Coxey! He telling what he said and what Warrer It was more news about “front 4 Harding ted. Among other things, Coxe aifoted ON HOOVER—That appointment all the others combined, Great pream and alse not to put bim in." ON POPULAR REFERENDUM Ohio and in the » 1 am not in amendments or laws. Where they he atinfactory.” Not satisfactory to whom, pen diplomacy” wae ONE-MAN CARS | WILL bo rT . Editor The Star prising lack of pe ome of our ¢ wary 17 an if it would be Impongible for There is a sur pective among ar critios, In your Jan iswue the paragraph, “It thin systern to be made to pay,” tam sample. Doubling or tripling and changing to one ot muffice, and he| faren man naye he or he wouldy't #o | grasping power house® or dea costs mone ut He didn't say! counts the lamps in each car putes for 600 cars, and then, at thoughts of the mc +. ieee! bis ght meter would apin wi A load and throws up his hands That's che way of Sguring another: The smatles ra use from 60 to 90 kilowatt hours tn ight hours, ut 306, or $1.50 for fulece, a s for operating labor gueaiast ‘sesneny about the one-man car now? Friend Motorman's “dingding help r” in no way decreases power con and mighty little elee, ox rease the jee In the and we grant how hape he com «how » KUCH and the largest use at against $1 Where ts the ponsibie? How sumption copt the net returns. In. per cent, eliminate crowd ys, and swell the rev with one swat with out laying off a man. Every time a man quits, let his buddy run it aloge at a saving of $4.93, or at least $10 or $30,000 monthly on nervice 15 ing and ity ¢ nue 20 per oe per car day 100 care. ‘The latest style of conversion cow about one hal Do you «till t he reagend en-/ tran Very well! Let's place an ther farebox up front and a sien! roclaiming "64%e token good here’ and another ‘fare 16¢ that tx about what the differer at the rear. f ail r gaten are empty | boy to each door on the sitneyn, © see that they art clowed up before starting, and ete how quickly they or conse to compete. Stone & Webster were not natintied with fivecighths of 1 per cent. They were about to flood the city with onenmn cary and much elec (if we didn't buy) that would have giv you a more polenant tummyache t at $16,000,000, Mr What 15,000,000 against the wealth of , ty and the demand for service? An auto for each family would cont $100,000,000, and no place to park them for gag enough to go around. Lat's swallow a dose of optimism ywn to brasetack economy in efficient operation, Tho one-man ear will do it, The oneman car in boost for it; it is your sab Citizen coming vation The next generation wilt hand us the laurels for accomplishing In 15 yeare a task which needed 50, and when the revenues have balanced the account, the price will «ink into insignificance, even as the purchase a, which caused guch a furore at the time History repeats boost! Think It ove INSIDE OUTLOOK and if i il | that joke about the rich man|hare, anoint them (the freckles) with it, and it will do} & twin six and the poor man six twins. ai ee By | the Canadian Pacific really ® Trotzky $40 it might pay the sbt shipping him three or four loads of roubles. 2) eee Price of raw cotton has 60 per cent in the last eight and we expect any day now Some humorist spill a joke all-wool clothing being around the Brooklyn navy been passing the time by shellac. Which, say we, is paint. upon a Train from New - And the Train wa# Full y) ft was there a Young Mother with a Little Bend the little maiden and I became friends; were going unto South Girls like me, and I do verily Girls are made of Sugar and #at with me, and we set up Beds. And we made of them Beds, and we tried to ma’ in the Train, but we did not succeed very well. we had ridden all night and id it drew toward evening. And z rt, and the miles unto Chic and On feago in Two Hours and Bend will be before that she eald, I would that South F 4 T inquired of her why she sa /And she said, There will be Very tarn in South Rend T said, Why dost thou think Letters to learn? she said, I bad just begun my father got a new job in for us. And I learned A and down to X and Y and Z% and how to spell CAT id DOG and COW and many more ) that now I must begin all over again Will be different; and who k PARABLES; RU Sake a she had Dominoes wherewith to play. and here do they cut off the Dining ‘Bnd it is our last long stop. And we shall reach | Twenty, them away.” Easy. dn this wonderful book may be found how “to make an aching tooth fall out.” It advises one to “take wheat meal a paste, put that in the cavity and the tooth will fall out.” For headache, the advice is, “Set a dish or platter of tynne upon the bare head filled with water, put an ounce jand a half or two ounces of melten lead therein, while ye |hath it upon thy head, and that will help wonderfully.” “tynne” and not the “bare head” with water—but a little slip like that doesn’t mean anything, if the cure does the business. It must have been a serious thing to have had freckles, a toothache and headache all at the same time in those d LITTLE GIRL IN THE BLUE DRESS oF J the Sage, York even unto And Among the Girl. | ©, spell COW in South Bend? And I said, Fear not. They and only a few of therm begin it with K And she said, It will all be #0 differe nd I fear tor | it. | wish this old Train would go on and, on believe that Good | never come to South Bend. Spice and all that And I saw that the little maiden was treased by reason of the Very Hard Letters. And I said unto h ‘ear not, my dear. been in South Bend I have passed through it a hundred times there are A and B and ( and X and Y and Z, and there are twenty-six of them and no more And she inquired, Art thou sure? And I said, Sure thing. And GAT and DOG the same as in New York learn there will be good in And the little maiden wa Now this hooting, moveth swiftly; spell it mostly with a and wore dis And the Dominoes to Single Beds, and ke Beds such as mueh of the day I said, This place | cago are an Hun are and outh Bend. comforted. whonging train of human Minutes, and ever and ind anon there getteth on tend were farther {4 90. Hard Letters to place to which he journeyeth, life's destination with fear. and wh And I p God that he would send unto all such some of his Experienced Angels, who would say to all such timid souls, Fear not. The Alphabet of Heaven is the kindly deeds and gracious words which thou haat learned in the Kindergarten of Life. Heaven and jarth have a common Alphabet, and all that thou hast learned will be of value there. And the little maiden flung a kins toward me as the’ Train pulled out of South Bend, and L beheld her in the arms of her father WILLIAM &. approacheth there will be to go to school South Bend and B and © all the And my mother And the noweth how they BARTON, and mix with the milk of a herb called splurge, and make}! This quaint Englishman means, of course, to fill the!| | I have | all that thou didet| life | some passenger who wondereth how it will be in the/ ed unto my! shower bath an ED. PINAUD BLDG, rushed over to bia hotel and wrote With my Warren? ° CASK STAR mbus Citizen) y other high diplomatic post—Gen Biome of Coxey's wervice and practices it ur diplomatic nde” who conferred for strawhat land 1 departed in heavy with Harding silence a frank “piece” for the tit than papers. yoreh” confabs we have neen Harding aa followw haw Caused me more trouble ure has been brought to put him in| rience in legisiation tn of ha voted the fave « the 5 vote ave results } PASS LAW TO STOP MARRIED WOMEN’S JOBS: Bditer The Star Many of the marrie® women who are employed have good homes and hushands get ting good wages, They do not need to work at all, It is a great ain | fore Ged and man to atiow thin to go on, It ought to be made a state law married women to work except whe are sick or in some why Juat think of the poor little ohiidren suffering w because their fathers “ok at the money ntries for starving ave our own 1 thousands of them. child to wup- got way leon than $20 a pay rent So why that have | joba from) A Wibpow forbidding » husbands right 4 ut of work, 1 ont to fe are w, have a hungry mout . IMPROVED PRINTERS The Star: The “Inve forred to in a clever editorial paper about November 21 culated my mind, and I offer + improvement in a printer's justification is a situa! wition. | common spaces are} ged, In & row, but h are eo needful for careful justification, should be shifted to the lower left-hand of the “q” and “x,” ae they m frequently, In job type it te inconvenient to pull out the cases to thelr extreme width in reach the thin npAces, ANA cases Bo projecting are Ii able to fall and “p j M1 LVESTER, } 607 Cherry § Bleak, Advertinerent ACE DANCING CLUB Invite you to dance with them every Friday night. Queen Anne Hall (Formerly Redding’s) ( JUST RECEIVED 10,908 More U. 8. Army All- Wool Regulation SHIRTS, All Sizes, From CAMP TRAVIS, TEXAS Prices $2.50 to $3.25 Get & SHIRT for your Outing and Ft i. Fine for te line Khaki Shoes, Tents and Khaki corner, | cabinet order to Goot, J Roldt's Clothing, Army Tarpaulings and Canvas, Coveralia, $3.00 CAMP LEWIS WIRELESS Surplus Army Store 901 Third Ave, Near Madiso: 4119% 14th Ave, N. B BUSINESS MAN goes home to a comfortably warm d then takes a “rub down” with ED. PINAUD’S LILAC and is a new man. He also uses a few drops of ED. PINAUD’'S Eau de Quinine an his head and is perfectly refreshed. Try these famous aids to comfort. PARFUMERIE ED. PINAUD American Offices NEW YORK |venna bivd SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1921. : ide Pie a to Boldva. ment | —Adverti Thoroughness haracterizes our tm every transnetion, and Missionary Society Inquiring Reporter. to Hold Prayer Day Monday will be observed as annual 4 day of prayer by the Woran’s For: | eign Missionary society of the Metho- dist Epinegpal church hei in Green Lake! | M. B. church beginning at 10 a. m TODAY'S QUESTION | Do you agree with Secretary Dan-| REV. M. A. that the United Stat#s should Cordially Invited pecial ners fees are to be ness judgment, 4% & navy “equal to the strongest” in the world? ANSWERS SAMUEL GLEN 209 Malden ave: “I'm certain that the foremost | nation in the world should also be| foremost in matters of self-protec tion.” FRANK PYL Being a strong hould have a little bit better navy than that of any other country.” MIS, W. G, HAMLIN, 1820 12th ave: “I don't see why not.” MISS ELEAN' will deliver a sermon Bun day morntng entitied, MY WORLD THE FIG LEAF CONDITION FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Seventh and Spring Peoples Savings Ban AVE. K vw. evening he will the subject, and just @ bit atronger--enough to hold our own.” | CAPT. M. T, POWERS, 1230 EB Vir st: “Certainly, positively, Why should we do anything else?” Be aVal- entine - Mm 5.31 eat Dru Dest Sees OWL DRUG COMPANY Special Agents THE SCANDINAVIDN AMERICAN BANK. SEATTLE Branch al Ballard ALASKA BUILDING SECOND AVE. AT CHERRY ST. DIRECTORS: A. CHILBERG, Chairman ef the Beard. OFFICERS: RALPH &. STACY, WM. KR. STOCKBRIDGE, Vice President. FRED E. SANDER, Vice Presiéent. . 3. &. LANE, Cashier, HGIL MACK, Assistant Cashier, SS. LINDSTROM, Assistant ONNER, Secretary, Ce. 4. FLANK, Casbier. PERRY POLSON, President Implement Co, rRED BR. Seattle 1 RALPH S. STACY, President WM, R. STOCKBRIDGE, View acy “BRANCH AT BALLARD WETER, of Weter & Reberts, OTTO S&S, J. PEDERSEN, Manager. t G F. FLOREN, Cashier, Shortens Pancake Preparation use OLymPic Pancake Flour. You add water or milk, mix and cook. Scientifically milled—and untouched by human hands—the Otympic line includes your favorite cereal. St most grocers, along with Ovrmric Flour. OLYMPIC/ pic : > 4 POPPE” TEC ye een aD