The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 2, 1921, Page 7

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Bee OE ———O or TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, CE ONLY IF NATIONS. | ARE BROKE Edison, Ford and Firestone | Talk Disarmament Be- tween Bites at Camp , By Karl A. Bickel News Manager of the UNITED PRESS BELINGTON, W. Va., A —Keep the nations of the wortd from obtaining mo ney to prepare ag next war.” it this is done—and America has the power to do it—Presi @ent Harding will suceced in the conference he has called for limi tation of armament, gn that manner U up today by Thomas A. Edi gon, Henry Ford and H.'s West Virginia ‘and talked about disarmament prosperity and coll ENEMIES OF DISARM. AMENT ett AT WORK ‘They issued a warning that Presi ‘The enemies of disarmament, they gai, already are busy The conclusion was that the suc the foresight, courage and determi gation of the president Gix cars and two trucks of Amert @® most famous camping party Were stretched down a country lane the improvised kitchen, Fisher, it, 1921, by che United Press) situation was dent Harding “must look out for the gaa of the conference depends upon 1921 | his | Ford asked of Edison restone | fa they sat on the shady bank of a| mountain munched sandwiches, frizaled | |Trave ing Salesmen to Have Big Picnic | Traveling «alesmen who cover | Southwest Washington wilt ive a pienic at Chehalis August 18. | There will be various “peppy” toa. | tures, including a ball game to be| followed by a dance. Merchants of Washington and Oregon are donating prizes, wave tm another batch of bacon, and | ; the aromatic smoke of the campfire drifted over the heads of the party as they talkée, Kdison leaned agninst the side of | his car, Firestone sat upon the run ning board, Ford, his coat and hat | off, his mop of fine white hair} thrown back from his well-tanned | forehead, moved restieasiy about, | sometimes reclining upon the ground, | picking at the grass, or, if stirred by the talk, springing to his feet, mak ing his point and then dropping to the ground again, ALL, DEPENDS ON MONEY, SA EDISON You think that Harding ean put disarmament program | } } } | | I don't like to answer that ot | hand,” replied Edison. Vd rather hear you say it off hand,” retorted Ford. The man who first envisaged the | electric Nght waa sijent for a mo ment. ‘Then he spoke: “1 think {t will depend upon mon ey." be said, “If the money can be | found to keep on maintaining armies and navies, I think the conference will fail. Only the absolute lack of | money and the inability to see where | they can get any more funds to pay | for the expense of war preparedn: will force the military element to ac cept a real disarmament. I¢ Harding can keep them from getting the mon ey, he'll succeed with his program. | It pretty largely rests on him,” “The common people around the world will back him up on that,” in. | jected Ford swiftly, “They are sick and tired of spending money on old wars and new ones, They are tire of the claptrap talk of ‘the nex war. Why, I have received as many g cook, was putting a permanent | as 2,600 letters in « single day about Mightiest of All Special Values in High-Grade Wearing Apparel Will Be Offered During the Month of August at Cheasty ALL, DEPE: QUALITY OF LEADERSHIP Firestone had not joined in the talk until now It's America’s great opportunity he said, “It all depends upon the Jquality of American leadership There's all the difference in the} world betwee the man © “ys, ‘Come on, boys, follow me! and the “The motives of men,” said Edison | slowly, “are unfathomabie.” “Thump! responded Ford, “You said it" HOQUIAM Henry Caswell, 63 Legion Posts Plan Employment Agency Plans for the formation © of an inter post employment by the American Legion discussed Monday night at a meeting of Maple Post No, 21, at Roosevelt hall, 1616% | Third ave, Representatives of See tle, West Seattle and ard posts Wore present it-—-letters from everywhere. “Poople rarely object to taxes if they feet they are getting something bac their money. But they know now that military expenditures mean waste, The estimated military expenditures of the United States for t xt year, Lam told, are over a billion ald have one-half the United for a single tion for wars to | come alone, I'd be able to pul a power plant on every water pow er site in the country and pro vide the nation with on h elec tric power to move the trains, light the homes, public buildings and man who saya, “I'm with you! Where shall we go 1 belie that Harding has the courage to Map & program and say,| Come on, boys". If he does, he'll| win, If he doesn't, he He's | going to have subtle opposition, It] won't come out in the open, But} they will be right on their toes to wreck the conference if the the Kitest indication of indecision plonéer of Hoquiam, dead. | | | | you that the falls are three miles up. culating to get to the falls In about | } utes to the mile THE SEATTLE STAR TROUT? YEA, BROTHER, MANY! |Reporter’s in Snoqualmie Forest He took his Vacation Wanes. tralix, cook, wash, keep house, patrol, was perched fishing How to Get to Clear ||! {rest fight fires, watch careions|time about it and would have made : campers, fishermen and hunters, find|a nice target for a 22. He was very CreekRanger Station |} jos: persons, anewer foolinh questions |dark, too, for this time of year Come thru Everett and Arling- || 40d nall up signs like these Along the creek on the way down | ton, thence to Darrington, The ng seyd 1 flushed a family of nearly ful road is paved three miles past Do Not, Deface or Litter grown pheasants. They were almost Arlington and is hard dirt to These Camp Grounds }as tame as the Rhode Island Redg in Pass thr Darring aT ee Heattle They flew up into a clump! the main road. Making Safe Your Camp Fire of trees and sat there watching n It's not od from bere o1 sanhs juiting ovt the Last and talking in wonderment among but is not so bad, It ends at the}! spark before you leave; Get — | *hemaelves. ranger station, where there are That Last Spark na ay good camp sites ee 6 There are bear in this country . " mnlore, they tell me, and plenty of Gaptnge Pit This Way deer, But bie gume is hard to get out, the country is so rough and the! By Hal Armstrong This Is Your Forest; |brush #0 heavy 5 CLEAR CRE KANGER Help Keep It Green owe ATION, mr t, Dial We drove in here just as C. and iy WHBy Co —We Stop! | Max Schaal, N, and K, Deemer and broke camp on the Stillaguam. Did You Put Out | Ken Sehick, all of Bellevue, came ish early Monday morning and That Fire? down from Murphy and Clear creeks my valiant chauffeur, the wife, | a3 @ with about 76 of the finest trout piloted the family cat and me Keep the Forest jyou ever saw. They loaded ‘em all safely over the ruts and bumps « nm into their car and carried ‘em back 12 miles back to Granite Falls Prevent to Bellevue. and from there to Seattle Forest Fires. ae ee eee eee A young chap tn soldier duds was We left Tuesday morning for our! And others about throwing lighted | Jus ting up Suak trail pew camp here, We have caught! matches around in the woods, warn “ft came out all the way from trout and eaten trout until we care] ings to amokers, etc., ete., etc. Michigan,” he said, “to see my old not at all whether we ever see trout Aside from" these duties, the rang: | buddy. He's up here in the woods again, re. Here at the Junction of the River Sauk and Clear creek one is within 4 day's hike of half a dozen fish bout 20 miles or #0. eee Another day in this jand then we're starting home. in the winter, cut wood for the campers and pile it neatly around the camp grounds, build tables and kin dred things for campers’ comfort wonderland Wife fil streams. It ia no trick to get det alae! | wants to see “The Wayfarer.” here, the roads are good the whole} When you make that threemile| I'm going fishing again tomorrow, distance journey to Clear Creek falis take | and what I catch I'll bring back for (Two young squaws, mounted on yuses, with papooses clinging to Frank Webster, who loaned me some money once, and Jack Schiffer and along @n assortment of flies and a can of mlmon een, them, just rode by the camp and] pp, » themselves are worth the |some of the rest of the boys, mala “Holle.” oe ‘i trip, but you'll want to fish on the| Tonight and tomorrow night I can We left Seattle at 7 o'clock Tues | way down, You'll need salmon eggu | sit by the camp fire and talk to the Jay morning and reached here at 3 during most of the day, Trout will | wife (she’s a great pal on a camping that afternoon, We stopped an hour! begin hitting the fly glong about 3/trip) and breathe the piney air and n Everett, getting fishing tackle|y m.. and when they do, look out. | puff the old corncob, Did you ever And buying a camp bed-—one of the | you'll be hauling ‘em in one on every | notice what a difference it makes if kind that folds up and requires a | hook |you light the old pipe with an em- mechanician to put togetber again. | I saw, and could have killed If I'd | ber? | had « gun, a mink near the falis, He| Why do folks want to live in cities, oF | was skirting We had trout fried with bacon f a big rock on which I anyway? morning, for supper. Yesterda breakfast had bacon fried with | ut After breakfast I set out for Clear Creek falls, three miles (rang: | ers’ miles) away, and fished until T| had caught the limit We had more trout, fried in butter this time, supper last night; fried trout for breakfast this morning, along with| cantaloupe, toast and coffee, and} COUNCIL RINGSIDE NOTES ON for the wife tells me we're going to have| CITY COUNCIL MONDAY— trout, stuffed with onion and sage Unanimously adopted a memorial urging consideration of Japanme dr ng and baked, for supper @ immigration question at the proposed Pacifie coast disarmament con- night ference, what? ag to those rangers’ Some trout, Just a word Selected Councilmen Tindall, Coben and Erickson for begs county board of equalization miles, Golng past the rangers’ cat Granted seven cabaret licenses, in, you see two signs. One says Ordered placed on file all communirations on the jitney question, “Sauk Trail,” the other “Clear Creek | Informally declaring that the present jitney regulatory ordinance | Trail.” and the latter sign informs| should be enforced, Unanimously and vociferously accepted invitation of Canadian Scotch societios to attend jubilee the coming week-end. Referred to the utilities and finance committees an ordinance appro- priating $115,000 for extensions and improvements to city light plunt. Received clan of $253,140 for alleged infringements of patents in bridges. You set out with long strides, eal | three-quarters of an hour—15 min After you've walked an hour and a half, you come to an her sign, It aays, “Clear Creek Ranger Station, One Mile” I don’t know how those rangers measure the construction of three Seattle Referred to committee an ordinance for the repaving of the street rallway right of way on Western ava eee PAGE 7 FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET DOWNSTAIRS STORE Preserving Season is merely ; fruit closc labor-savers and safety devices that are now available for every need. The Housewares Sec- tion and Downstairs China Section are well- supplied with: eable prelude to a well-stocked .e kitehen is equipped with the Surety-seal Glass - top Fruit Jars Old-fashioned Mason Jars, in pint and quart Cherry Stoners Wire Canning Racks Jelly Bags for straining Preserving Kettles, in sizes aluminum and enamel- Economy Fruit Jars and ware Caps Hand Fruit Presses Good Luck and Sureseal Rubbers for glass-top jars Jelly Glasses in the fa- vorite low shape, 6- and 8-ounce sizes Measuring Cups Long-handled Spoons Colanders Parowax Fruit Jar Funnels Col-pac Canners for ax Bn Cover steaming fruits and De pages k vegetables, with re el Pressure Cook- movable jar holders —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE miles, or why, but by rangers’ miles it oughtn't to be more than 150 miles or so around the earth, All @ ranger has to do, besides measuring miles, is build cabins, pack In grub by packhorse, build Supreme Biend Coffee—the very best that grows—I1 Ib. 400; 2 Ibs, 75¢; 3 Ups, $1.10, Lunch with me—Reet for Lens. Ringside fans at the council battle Monday were entertained by a “pass the buck” contest between Superin tendent of Utlities Carl Reeves and the elty councilmen. ‘The football used was the fitney question. Reeves wanted the city dads to de | clare right out in meeting that the refused to legislate further on the subject “We've got an ordinance which the supreme court says ts good,” said the city father# tn effect. “Why should we legislate further?” } As 4 result of the council's refusal to commit themselves further, it is expected that Reeves will begin |shooing the jitneurs from the high ways this week. A greatly enlarged group of “Kup- penheimer” and “Society Brand” Suits 33 Discount To effect a final and immediate clearance of all “Crofut and Knapp” soft hats in the store we offer you your choice of these fine Hats at. i ie $3. 15 Values up to $12.00 $30.00 ict. Cin ‘ocr “Men's ana Young Men’s Clothing Departments regard- less of original price. We may say that many were sold regu- larly at more than twice this sale price, See window display. SEMI-ANNUAL SALE OF ‘MANHATTAN’ SHIRTS CONTINUES.---It’s a National Event Regular $3.00 “Manhat- |Regular $4.00 “Manhat- |Regular $6.00 “Manhat- tans” at......... 8215} tans” at .......-$3.15 tans” at......... $4.55 Regular $3.50 and $3.75 |Regular $4.50, $5.00 and | Regular $7.00 ‘and $7.50 “Manhattans”... .$2.85 | He 50 “Manhattan” “Manhattans”. . ..$5.65 Be ees yeas 74 All other brands of shirts in broken lots are included at these sale prices, ve a nice variety from which to choose. so you 100 Dozen Wo- y ’ = Cheast (Silk) Hose ‘SECOND AVENUE AT SENECA STREET Saxony $6.00 and $6.50 Bathing Suits— $4.95 Just Received Express Colors—Black, White and Corde van. Quick Service, . A. HANSEN—10 Rocnemy Mit. jitney must be eliminated. cee But the Seattle onene beara and) Under the ordinance now in force, a \Jitney drivers must file applications for permits whh Reeves, stating \routes, time schedules and termini. | These applications can be granted or refused as the council sees fit. The temper of the councilmanic |body is to keep the jitneys off all |lines now served by the muny rail- | way They will be allowed to act a “feeders” for the street car system. | This will effectually eliminate most of the jitneys, | Approximately 65 fitneurs will be | permitted to run for at “edst 20 |days, when their time for appeal |from the supreme court ruling ex- |pires. About 150 jitneymen did not |Join in the supreme court appeal, jand may be ruled off the streets immediately. |State’s Auto Men to Elect Officers}, TACOMA, Aug. 2.—Officers were to be elected today by delegates as. |sembled in the first annual conven- |tion of the Washington Automotive | Trades association. The convention jopened yesterday, with Robert W. | Martland, secretary of the California | Automotive ‘Trades association, as | principal speaker, There is a move ment to achieve consolidation of the | Washington Automotive Trades as- THe sociation with the Washington Au jtomobile Chamber of Commerce, Kills Girl, 20, aud Turns Gun on Self SPOKANE, Aug, 2.—After shooting Hannah MeNeill, 20, to death yester day, George Schulz, 50, turned the weapon upon himself in a ranch house about four miles south of this jeity, The man is not expected to live, No motive for the affray could be learned, EMEMBER that story BENJAMIN FRANKLIN on himself ? hey pe a boy he ought price he paid for it up, sprog hom k Fes sarap! wis mone th: i SECOND AND COLUMBIA Largest Bank in the State of Washington Established Thirty-one Years NOW PLAYING 2:15 AND 8:15 P. M. | WALLA WALLA.—Fire on Ja leob Valaer farms destroys 750 acres jot wheat worth more than $35,000 “Intensely human, with a big emotional sweep and heart interest in every stene, ‘Over the Hill,’ a motion picture epic of mother Move and filial ingratitude, was revealed at the Metropolitan theatre last evening, and sounded every stop in the sympathies of a capacity audience.” Everhardt Armstrong, Post-Intelligencer. dup the Went Write for “Princess’ attle, Pler 1, ‘Foot of Yeuier Way, 9:00 A. M. DAILY For Victoria and Vancouver. 11:30 P. M. DAILY Fer Vancouver, D. ©. Direct FOUR TRAINS EACH WAY—EACH DAY Canadian Pacific: Rockton LOW BACURSION FARKS Quickest Time Across the Conti- t by tt MIT ED" “Do not go to see ‘Over the Hill’ at the Met- ropolitan theatre, expecting to witness a lot of spectacular events, but go prepared to learn @ lesson of love, unselfishness and sacrifice.” -—Daisy Hgnry, Seattle Star. “The local screen never has presented any- thing more tender And fnore beautiful than the picture classic, ‘Over the Hill,’ which had ita local premier last evefing at the Metropolitan theatre before an audience that taxed the ca- pacity of the theatre.” —Seattle Times, nen “TRANS-CANADA CITY TICKET OFFICE, On a hot day, what really touches the spot so well asa cool stimulating glass of iced tea? And it’s doubly delicious when you make it with Folger's Golden Gate Black Tea because 71 years of experi- ‘ence has developed that fine tea flavor to the point of perfection. And neverforget that Folger’sGold- en Gate Tea is good the year ‘round. Black or green it is a most delightful beverage—in Summer or Winter. Compare Folger's Golden Gate with other teas, Just tell your grocer you want ite J. A. FOLGER & CO. San Francisco - Seattle - Kansas City - Dallas Shizuoka, Japan HOW TO MAKE TEA ‘Never Boil It teaspoonful p. Pour water, Al- low it to steep five minutes and then serve at once. If noc used imme: the Tea into anche! poe Pou FOLGER’S Golden Gate Products COFFEE - TEA EXTRACTS - SPICES AND BAKING STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS ini sis 2 cA SN i

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