The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 18, 1921, Page 6

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Newspaper Rn- terprise = Aawn. ERE’S a fairy story fo dren. it an unusual fairy story. Once upon a time there v little man, named Chun, a most remarkable hen, called Cynthia. _of a miscellaneous breed an hens, was merely a boarder uming $4 feed, ete., ing else; but in the fi May this remarkable bird two dozen eggs. Please get dates, figure: acteristics of this hen firn your minds, dear children. | Well, the first week in " white, strictly fresh eggs. “perfectly delighted. He to all his henless bragged up Cynthia to the rrocer. The grocer was a Funny little Mr. Chump feeding Cynthia all wanted, because, you that will lay 24 eggs right a bird to be honored and considerable. ptters to the as tor— ON GIRL AGAIN TEMPTED Editor The Star; I was interested in “A Reader's” article in The Star ‘ef April 28 concerning the Clara} Smith Hamon moving pictures. | Certainly it is to be hoped that ev- ‘erything possible will be done to pre- ‘vent such pictures from being shown No moral uplift can result from such Ne ye | ‘There is no doubt but what the “de- | ‘ednt” people do “draw their skirts | aside,” especially when the erring! ‘Woman is poor and unattractive. But is not what Christ did. If the jt people were not quite #0 scorn. | and Pharisee-like, more little sis-| “mon fer her mistake. I am giad she| Was freed. But—poor little girl! She} Is not satisfied with her portion—she Wants the world! If she had profited ‘ay her sordid mistake she would re-| tire now—gilad to have escaped the s. But the-temptation is too strong. | | Now, as before, she yields to the} tempter in the masculine hide! The} Moving picture promoters, the y, high salaried attorneys tempt with gold and fame—and she is} Poor little girl, that she should @onsent to make millions out of her) shame! What a splendid opportunity | would have had to turn away from the glitter of gold and the chaff | @f notoriety and devote her life to helping her sisters—other Clara Smiths—who, like herself, have taken | the wrong path, but who might come | ack if somebody cared. Clara Smith has been offered a loving hand by a Big Sister—but she hhds refused it. Some day Clara} Smith will regret that she turned| @way that prot ed hand. AD M. BURGESS. ° t HOW “ACCIDENTS” ARE MADE + Editor The Star: Just a word as fo the careless auto driving. This is| the third time something like this has happened to me, only this is the Glosest call I ever had. Was so close I thought it was the last call. 1) have lived in Seattle only one year, #0 I can't call ail the streets by name. Anyway, the afternoon of May 6 Bbout 5 p. m.,1 was driving along the pavement up the hill just this| wide of California, A motorcycle Was The Seattle Star A Fairy Story It may interest you, too, for there’s truth and fact in it, making Puntiened by ‘The Pubtehing ee Sasent By mail, out of etty, Se per month; 1.60) € months, 68.76) year Phone M Prem Servic $5.00, in the State of Wasnineton ate, N00 per nh, 00 ~ 446.60 for @ montha oF $9.00 per year, , ety, 180 per w boarder on Chump and, ¢ rolled along, he had to buy eggs at 4( 50, 90 cents per doz., if he got eggs o his menu, and by February he had t pay $1 and take his chances as to th age of the eggs at that. Now, in the city close by where Mr r your chil- was a funny who owned whom he ; the months This hen seemed to be comes Cynthia with 24 beautiful, | eggs to every one he met, and Of course, Chump now had more | than he could eat and so he sold thia’s remarkable product to the d so he paid Chump 20 cents the ozen for the eggs, marked them with @ lovely sign reading, “Strictly fresh; 80 cents per doz.,” and put them right ' out at the front of his store. y to his bosom, went home and ‘But 24 was Cynthia’s limit. May 7th, 1921, she returned to her | former vocation as a non-productive d, like other | big giant, ron Chump, and doing | t week of always laid } One day in s and char- nly fixed in May, 1921, | Chump was last May. showed the neighbors, skies. r ;a kindly man ” Consumer hugged his | Mr. Chump’s the $4 feed see, a bird off the reel loved, pret- | inclosing two | delightful bulletin for everybody save After | The died like men; From each little hamlet, From the valleys they country’s call. came The call was clear and they heard dear, pride; But many a soldier's heart pleads Give him the privilege of work For it's just as hard a battle « But now he fights for lc died. world. the country. most charming things of its Ladies’ Musical Club. coming down. I saw a Ford sedan coming down the hill behind the mo. da tew yards from where | the torcycle, I would pass the motorcycle, Ford sedan turned out on the wre wide of the street right In my All I coul@ do to avoid a serious eident was to stop as quickly as pos: | sible and try to back up, and they kept right on speeding as fast as they could. And what do you think? There were three or four women in driving. WM. O01 5953 24th Av INSIDE INFORMATION Father—Willie, go into the house and get something to hold these ap. ples I brought home, the sack tore open. Willie—I’'ve got something right here, dad Father—What? Willie-—My stomach.—Boyw’ Life. DO YOU KNOW HI Jack—What kind of a fellow is Blinks? Bill-—-Well, he is one of those fel lows who aiways grab the stool when there is @ p' to be moved.—Ore- gon Lemon |the governor. jresponsibility of an execution. the White when Gov. Hart left the state. tem. \in a score of other states. money, stocks and bonds, a day damages. who was can’t accommodate you all,’ compliment.” If 5 your su in bottles, be Answer to yesterday's wanted to sell 100 bottles hotties each day what 10 hours, named | got very hungry for an omelet. went to his grocer and laid down a bright, round $1 for a dozen eggs. “Are they fresh’ }fun at poor Mr. Chump. jin his face and call him the “Ultimate |his size, on earth. | writing this paper /reau, 1400 New York ave., Washing- /ton, D. C., asking for a free bulletin |unterstand—nepresentative Knight jon “Preserving Eggs for Home Use, To the land of Little White Crosse A call from home and fireside and from all that they held most And to still a sweetheart’s tender kiss—to dry a mother’s tear They won, our hearts were giaddened and it swelled a nation's There's sunshine in the valleys now and shadows on the hill For the tide of war has ebbed and the big grim guns are stili; For just a soldier's fighting chance-—the right to work and love Pay the living what we owe them; Ged will We Thank You! ‘HE appearance here Monday evening of the Ballet In- time of Adolph Bolm, emphasized anew the debt of gratitude that Seattle owes to the Ladies’ Musical Club. This organization is accomplishing an inspiring task in bringing to the city the great musicians and dancers of the 9 ee Coyle’s Decision CTING GOV. COYLE’S reprieve of 30 days. for Isom White is the fruit of calm judgment and clear thinking. It will be so regarded by every fair-minded person. The tak- ing of a human life, even of a condemned prisoner, is a ser- ious thing. The final responsibility for an exectuion should rest upon those who have the power to prevent it, be. As acting governor, Coyle would be violating the thies of his position if he attempted any pardons or paroles or commutations of sentences during the temporary absence of Likewise, he ought not be made to bear the The 80-day reprieve leaves se in statu quo, in exactly the condition it was 1 It is Hart's responsibility, jand it is Hart, not Coyle, who should discharge it. Chump and Cynthia lived, there was a Skin-m-bothways, who owned a large, cool cellar, or stor- age, and who had made a life-study of the possibilities.of the egg. Febri em!” and the biggest fool, for|sovernmont arsenals, and I may to But, dear children, }if you would fully understand poor |«« you can do so by|"" 's Washington bu- |perines of the air folly cents in stamps. It’s ing it is what really caused Mr. Chump " }to murder Cynthia. “Thousands of soldiers out of em- ployment.’”’— (News Item) “JUST YESTERDAY” country called and they heard it, they fought and they No matter what fate had to offer, they took it all with a grin. Nesting beneath some mountain tall; in millions, one thought—their It, for tt called them all to go just like daisies in a row No matter what the cost was—what if they fought and died “Our coyntry first,” we shouted, asx they shouted when they fell Upon OUR battlefield of glory but THEIR battlefield of hell. his prayers are to God above to win life's game of chance, he ever fought in Fi and not a nation’s pride. keep the ones who JEFF NEW Without its capable and discerning management an its farsighted activities, music lovers here would be deprived of the opportunity of hearing many of the great artists of The Bolm Ballet and the Little Symphony was one of the in Seattle. Credit for bringing the great Russian dancer and his asso ciates here must go to the Ladies’ Musical Club. For this, and for many other kindred services in the past, lovers of the arts will say a heartfelt “Thank you” to the kind ever seen Build a home, and you are taxed. Hoard your money in a bank, and you escape taxation. the machine, and it was a woman s U.S. government is suing marine unions here for $10,000 The strikers must feel like the darkey asked to change a twenty-dollar bill. Try This on Your Wise Friend of milk in 8 days would your first and increase 60 miles from starting point Mr. Chump So he sked Mr, Chump. “Oh, yes!” replied the kind grocer, | |“they’re the Cynthia eggs you sold me Skin-m-bothwa 30 cents for them and he fresh in his storage ever since. ’em, or leave ’ This enraged Mr. Chump much and aroused all his cruel instincts. went home, cussed Cynthia as a stupid, | you » worthless luxury, murdered her te her from ears to ankles. Now, the neighbors are all poking They laugh J pr: ys paid me kept them Take So, he and |, new. munic if need That's the Washington It’s not the system in Oregon and California and Taxes high here? the homeowner has to pay not only his own taxes but also that of the banker, the broker, and the others who own Sure, because “Sorry ah ’ he said, “but thank you fo’ th’ |f'R& it and Jast sale, be er hone ), n 0 e Family trees is sometimes tke other treesthey need sprayin’ Flattery is a knock—knocked in side out, From the Congressional HOW TO ABOLISH WAR I may to the gentleman that when thin country goes to real universal conscription and conseripts labor along with the youth of this country, and conscripts wealth along with the fighting forces of this country, and when y all eal! to the colors first thone 0 and and when Imponsible that 18. siren shall arise out of the hell of war, as have arisen of this confMict, then I my to y wir, that the day you mention will have arrived, It is to strike at the t of war, not at the means of defense, that I offer this amendment (to have all material produced in the you, gentlemen, that until this coun try begins ite fight against wae all the line, all dreamn of| convention: 4 international mbiies will be the vain whis a we will « nd to speak n makers can the tinue to hear voices anguage which munit #9 | UR) Obie. oe a@|HE HAS TWO YEARS, AT LEAST I propose to learn more about this ). South tive Mcfwain (D. Carolina, SOMETHIN A ncie old us that “in 18,000,000 years | not have any trees up Bere, not have any vegetation, anything which man raises that ean subsist on, and the human you > aN qGe I was reading my paper, A list of ships and @ lint of ports tp which the ships were And it suddenly seemed that @ great wind blew from the face of the many | And my heart it throbbed with @ ewifter beat when I read these pint of harmless and delightful lem. ‘Third ave.;|On bleach. Massage this eweetly trae Steamer Vanwa, sailing for Liberia, 7 PU be ths cra |GPARE lot to the foam Soaiiah, Sukmmiar Momonene “If I wear any at all it'll be the old | # tion into the face, Name »coland, Dahomey, Kam 4 arms and hands each day, then Steamer Clavarack #alling for Barawack, mea nwell, For the sailing let was a magic charm that cast a potent # And I dreamed of slumberous tropic ports where life in #lee i ra OO | Gaiilliong, [ier & Barter. 13} w alex’ dully enough, when just as it chanced, 1 found bound, bonnet? such words as| pell, LEST PY cane, TODAY'S QUESTION Are you wearing the old straw| | ANSWERS Hingapore, Karac 1 Kagoon!* V. L. ESTERFELD, 822 Jackson st: “Just for a day.” |1 could feel the throb of the whirling screws and the heave of the deep! m CROWE, 1934 Seventh ave “I've got a brand new one, but the floods hawe come.” BICKLE, GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH SKIN WHITE Squeeze the juice of two lemony in- to a bottle containing three ounces |of Orchard White, which any drug | store will supply for a few cents, y bidg.:| shake well, and you have a quarter shortly note the beauty and white ness of your skin Famous stage beauties use this lemon lotion to bleach and bring that roft, clear, roxy-white complexion, }also a» a freckle, sunburn and tan 707 Union st tnatitution (West Point) if the people | Giant Skin-m-bothways, and not hav-|keep me in congress.—Representa TO WORRY ABOUT) ame up thy way! “L never wear a hat |my head—with a eap.” “Steamer Granite State malls for Honolulu, | | Colombo, Calcutta, Batavia, Penang, Steamer William I mile for Port Swettenham, | REMARK ABI E Abbadan, Surabaya, Samarang!* K and Rio and Christobal, Aden, Rosario, | And I envied the men who were golng there over the deep-sea trail I could read you letter after letter | For tho I'm thrilled by the sailing list I never will get to sail; from men, like mynelf, who never neratched a democratic ticket in all the days of their life I never have and never expect to.—Representative | Hudspeth, of Texas. . Aw my eye ran down the column filled with items such as thdbe Yea, I cover s “Steamer Santa Ana sailing for Iquiqul, . Piseo, Taltal, Callao jenafric sailing for Ceara, Bahia, Natal, Maceto;” Para. Steamers by the dozens sailing for the troj Crops this year will be the cheap- | est rained in a long time—-A. W.| . Douglas, chairman of statistics com. mittee, Chamber of Commerce of the United States, | Sailing for the Northland, wra Salling for the Orient, sailing for > Africa, Australia, Asta, Borneo Sailing for Malmo, Capetown, Rotterdam, Oh, I will read about ‘em but I'll never get to go. Never, never, never get to go! din # ew Zealand, While the manufacture of gas for | war purposes has stopped, the man. ufacture of gaa for poisoning the human mind is more active than | ever before,—Representative London, | of New York, | eee H Germany can ‘put a ton of steel in| England at @ price $20 a ton cheaper than England can make 1t—Charle: M. Schwab, steel king. cee (Copyright, 191, by Newspaper Enterprise Association) - With 4,000,000 men out of work and Russians here with gold to buy, why should we not develop a mar- ket?—Senator Reed, Missouri. Nature’s Medicine Two teaspoonsful in water three times a day —makes you feel better! | | race will disappear from the earth An old man, sitting some distance back, said, “How many years dt you say?” “Eighteen millions yearé,” said the setentint. “Oh,” maid the old man, “I thought you said §,000,000 years."—Representative Fish (it), New York it is not possible to give you specific advice. | In one form there is an actual | breaking of a blood vessel in the | brain. Thie is called “cerebral hem orrhage.” Depending on the location of the hemorrhagé, there is a varia bie amount of injury to the brain sub stance, some of it permanent In another type of stroke, there in a gradua) plugging of of the blood vensels of the brain due to hard ening and thickening of the arteries This is known as “cereb throm bosia.”” In this, a greater or lees pro: portion of the brain has its blood #up- ply entirely cut off, and again, de pending on the size of the area in volved, and on its location, there are more or loss, extensive symptoms of brain injury A third form of stroke is the result ef a sudden plugging of an artery in the brain by @ bit of blood cloth. ‘The effects of this are practically idents cal with those of thrombosis. After a stroke has occurred, it is important to keep the patient very so that further injury may be od, especially while there may be danger of an extension of the trouble, as in homorrhage. In fact, treatment resolves Itwelf very largely in good nursing, so awto keep the pa tient quiet in bed, and later, perhapa, in a chair, to prevent the develop: ment of bed sores; to avoid constipa- tion, and perhaps, to see that the pa- tient’s urine ts drawn off at regular intervals, There is very little in the of drug treatment which can be loyed with success one Most people lose half of over hate iM and seem to expect it. Chici ‘a or white diarrhoea in tho trouble. The Government states that over half the chicks hatched die from this cause. An Avicol tabletin drinking water will save your chicks all such dis. Within 48 the nick ones lively, as wm. May, of “I was losing M Rego, Ind., write: 10 or 15 Chick day from diar- before I received the Avicol "t lost a one since.” nothing to try Aviool. If find that it prevents an tontrols white diarrhoea, chick cho era and all bowel diseases of poul try, toll us and your monay wil b« |Promptly refunded, Avicol is sold by | most druggists and poultry remedy |dealers, or send 520 (includes wart tax) for a package by mall poat- paid. Burrell-Dugker Co. 100 Cole \wmbia Bidg., lndianapglis, Ind, 0 you don’ 41 OR —makes you eat better! —makes you sleep better! —makes bree better! Fe le called Noture's Metieiaaboconne Wt be pure: ly vegetable and is of the most ficial roots, herbs and known to science. Over 20,000,000 bottles sold in six years alll | t mil aN ww d walka tk | for A The pleasure is worth it. There’s no substitute for Camel quality and that mild, fragrant Camel blend. The fellow who smokes Camels, wants Camels. That’s . because Camels have a smoothness, a fragrance and a mild- ness you can’t get in another cigarette. Don’t let anyone tell you that any other cigarette at any price.is so good as Camels. Let your own taste be the judge. Try Camels for your- self. A few smooth, refreshing puffs and you'd walk-a mile for a Camel, too. | bleach, because it doesn't irritatem | Advertixement Camel » Albert Hansen Jeweler and Silversmith NOW LOCATED 1518 Second Ave. DR. H. T. HARVEY (Ex-President Michigan. State Board Dental Examinces} Dental Surgeon Diagnostician Pyorrhea Specialist X-Ray Laboratory Highest Order of Restoration Work Done j Examination and Estimate Free 504-12 Eitel Building SECOND AND PIKE SEATTLE ib Camel

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