The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 10, 1922, Page 6

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montha, of $0.00 pe § He is a speculator. or 20 per cent or more on a “sure” are started. the title to the land (or have it investigated at the borrower's ex: off. ‘ Don’t Be a Sucker! The small “investor” who tries to make 15 per cent on his money is not an investor. The agent who solicits the funds of small Investors promising them a return of 10, 15 investment is, consciously or unconsciously, misrep- resenting facts. Sure investments paying 10 per cent or more are exceedingly unusual |" and, when genuine, are almost never offered to the general public. ou It is often well worth while for the man who can afford chances on speculative new promotions. Industrial progress comes as new enterprises But even the best-planned new enterprises do not always make good, In most communities the small investor has opportunities to buy real estate mort- |! gages where he can personally inspect the properties mrteneess' can personally = pe | f | to lose money to take | Once they read fashions to see what was going on; now they read them to see what's being pulled are paid, and that prover = March, and still Seattle has no battleship for a ‘ are, moreover, a very park ornament, large number of railroad bonds iharraeeren and industrial bends which bring Beware the brides of March. & greater return than do the bends of the United States gov- These three do not usually co ermment, with practically absolut¢ toceiner, A bond which is abso certificates. safety. In choosing these the iutety safe and instantly market ‘emall investor should consult his able will not yield anything like banker. so moch as a stock with a nar ‘The working woman of man row market and with uncertain _ with a few hundred dollars to im future earnings. West may today come to the bond A real estate mortgage will Gepariment of a great city bank = yieg y higher return than a **mbspecalative highly marketable bond because no matter how safe, it is not likely that the holder of the mort- gage can quickly turn it into cash in an emergency. The small investor who dors not need to convert his principal into cash in a hurry may safely aim at = higher yield than the small investor whe feels he may need his principal back on short In What Way Shall Money | "Ar reos ncaa rie an Be Collected? temior, tent sce am BY AMATEUR ECONOMIST [they were in the quiet, settled A writer signing himself R. A. lites ites tee: wee. The B. in a letter in The Star tells [| small ies thatthe proper American pol | Vester whe ferveces emergencies fey is to collect the European [which may require him to con debt and use the money to de | vert his savings into cash, with velop our irrigation Lomerrend lout towing Jeet when be wil Now this has a reasonable | oy i eg am a hat it will may er to limit sound; he assures us tha’ rage daa oe bring prosperity. Well, why don’t we do it if it is #0 easy? If R.A. B. really has a scheme whereby we can collect this money he should explain it to us. I for one would appreciate it very much if he would publish a let- ter showing us in detail just how | this could be done. Shall we ask them to pay in gold? If they should send us | all they have it would only make ‘a small payment. We are told | that we can’t import any more gold without jeopardizing the whole financial structure of Eu If they cannot pay In gold, they will have to pay in goods. I want to ask R. A. B. what goods we should have them send to us? Shall we shut down our woolen mills and let the English furnish our clothing, or shall we close our machine shops and let them manufacture our machi From “Builders and Other Poems’ I count that frien: nery? Which has not a It is easy to tell us to collect Great lor ; this money, but mobody has a right to tell us to do a thing who eannot offer a reasonable method EE whereby the thing can be accom. | plished I presume that 40 million men have told the public to collect this money, but not one that I have ever heard of has offered the method whereby it could be accomplished One suggestion as to how we can settle this question is worth Some message But who Hold now the In & million ertions that we Our mesting here. should coll it in full I hope R. A. B. will offer this solution rib —— — Dear Avridge Mann your letters “How can the sure to get “ Dear Grandmother Grimm: I have a garden, too but on the bush the r when they s« DR. J. Hh BINYON Free Examination BEST $2.50 GLASSES on Earth | We are o of the few optical! stores in t rthwest that really grind len: rom start to finish, and we are only one in SHATTLE—ON VIRST AVE. Examination free, vy graduate op- tometrist, Glasses not prescribed unless absolutely necessary BINYON OPTICAL CO. 4416 VULST AVE i ratch and make blossoms there which they to feel and say and w and blot has not!” POEMy o 4 (Charles Serthner's Bons) THE RENDEZVOUS BY HENRY VAN DYKE i= that no words can hold, And pamsion-secrets waiting birth. Along the #lender wires of speech from the heart is sent an tell the whole that's meant? Our dearest thoughts are out of reach. | I have not seen thee, tho mine eyes image of thy face: vain, thru form, I strive to trace The soul I iove: that deeper lies, A thousand accidents control And swear to meet me in that land Where friends hold converse soul to soul. APetter from ATVRIDGE MANN make a hit, but others I don't nce, when you seem to choose to boast of cigarets and booze, I get s0 peeved I'm red with rage, and foam and stamp upon the page 1 paw the air, I baw!, I shout; and when they ask what It's about, self-same brain have ’* But in the garden, growing ther where grows a lovely, sweetly scented rome; ¢ adorns, are quite a lot me bleed, I think the rose | nd if you pearch each soul with care, you'll find both thorns and t folke choose to see; #0 I believe the better way, “In men whom men condemn as still; in men whom men pronounce divine, I hesitate to draw the Cirritge Tamm The large Inmvester is able to diversify his investments and, by “net putting afl his eggs in one basket,” secure a larger yield with substantial safety, even tho among his investments are some of a character, The small investor cannot diversify very much. He must have « high degree of safety in everything that he buys. “Average person consumes eight matches per day.” —-News them Why not cat toothpicks? At beauty shows, most of t doen LEARN A WORD EVERY DAY Today's word is CHEVALIER. It's pronounced — “nhev-a-teer,” with accent on the last mytiable, It means—a nobleman, a chtval rous man, a cavalier, @ gallant, a “perfect gentleman.” It comes from—French Her,” a knight. It's used like this—“To make a good impression on women, you should have the manners of a cheva. lier.” “cheva-| gour p Uttle worth y things untold. Clasp hand tn hand, | like a bit; for thoughts of such a dif ©, if a nettle beside th flowers for beauty and brought the and such GRANDMOTHER GRIMM. Anacortes, Wash, of ugly thorns; and partly think of you or me, depends on is just to learn M1, T find #0 much of goodness I find #0 much of sin line between the two—since God Moi THE SEATTLE STAR | while the tendene y in this country |chandive ta billed for Washington ; wen fe < pv eeyiery e cal ce tar Prebunning t ental alle by 2 tis ope beaiea @ | ib 4 * ccbaiiisiaiinaie : ____- + 00. wtat Waaht Building a Merchant Marine far ag Dngmaster k d in eonne t worth conmidering in warding ship appearing in n which private shipping | worth ment ng. Viverybody knows nday’a Star n the following ed in this country, |. @.,/the entire «ystem # the war and food for thought for Amateur| mostly by a few corporations with | today is utterly ince Maybe onomint” Star readers generally large capital, At the time we were “Amateur Heonormiat an suggest al To become an exporting nation, | holding our own on the seven seas | remedy for that-—this writer cannot 4 incidentally a maritime nation, | With our “clipper” ships, the owner.| When Coxey went to Warhington in must do something more than|*hip of our “merchant marine’ wan | quest of shipping board veawels, he rely find a fe ) arket for our puted in the form of #hip shares | was asked by one of the officials von, It wufficlent to load vin and 64thm he knew it ships, Hin re ur whips and wend them away to|é y reign port must contrive to ere wa n the © ships must be affor all tendo to make a LINGMASTER The Germ and Merchandise shipping nation i ; a , r Editor The St fected. Then whoes—think of the . Ph ote. tein Chhate oni and the small investor who cannot afford to lose his money should not be called upon [)).)\).¢/ ines tae wetent 7x tows FRR PETE AY fat Oe Aa ragga they we ected. Vor | breeds of germs will take their placay te, take these chances. are in fact adverse to our own in 8, ree roverning the re | store, trying ail wtylex and wixen, |" * apecidhge: Gone eeene ene, Ye oe Peay Boa rect 7 ang . : Bigs ereats. f mere ha ine, My! What pre with perhaps f buying peremeny! . the mail order| Moreover, a very high proportion of the securities promising great returns which | We cannot hope to become success. | jons the state board of health i*| just merely ome 1 ng on mall order “ rs ; - ful as a shipping nation and main.| taking for the welfare of the #tate!/murt rule the shoeterias, with no are offered to the small investor by solicitors are issued by untrained and over-opti- {tin « merchant marine until we de |lmn’t it just wonderful? How they clerks to check them. What will the P lop merchandising organizations us| are going to manage all these things | ‘germ board” do about that? Make mistic men, while a very substantial number of them are outright frauds, <eiuuie i or aaniies ' » ad cts to, or & ated with, our|is & pussle to me them buy without fitting, or erect . = ss e shipping organizations, Nothing will Viret, how much more harm ts | glass cages at the entrance of the The bonds of the United States government and the bonds of virtually all our [ice inoney much fanter than a ehip|there in sending out bed linen or, stores and furigute each person or ; ry ry tied to a dock or steaming the high | wearing apparel on approval, than entering the building; or fumigate states and municipalities may be bought, of course, without hesitation. lucas in ballast, When one of our|for a person to finger the whole|each person's feet or perhaps eact There are savings banks almost everywhere, well regulated and dependable, There | »»ips bas reached @ foreign port and | stock at the various stores? What | pair of shoes fitted? Tow are they |dixcharged a carg no freight in| about a mult sent out on approval’| going to tell what person carries are local savings and loan, or building and loan, associations whose management [offering at satintac rates, wel Seems it would be mafer to have one nw and what one doesn't? Then ss must be in a position r two muita tried on in @ hi than jerks must all be fumigated, eat and trustworthiness the small investor can investigate for himself. for her. This is th or & person to enter a « and and wear asafoetida are oyed by large foreign ® paw” over a doren or so and per. | their necks. Money, bills, wrap jeerns, and that is why they are suc-| haps try on that many, That would | paper—nothing must be exempt antl ‘necessitate each garment to be disin-| Suppose as soon as a car of mer Chatterton or Pied Rinad--oe GOOD Bread? Certain stores are featuring the fact that they must have bread to sell at pre-war prices. They ignore the fact that good flour is still about $4.00 higher than the pre-war level, to say nothing of other materials. Real philanthropy should be encouraged: us to question tie motive, but We Know This— Cheap bread made by subtracting valuable food properties is no bargain. By baking a mixture of cheap flour, water, salt and yeast we could cut our cost considerably, because we are equipped to make bread as cheaply anybody. This is the kind of bread commonly sold by bakers 30 years ago, when bakers’ bread was.in general disrepute. Not until the baker be- gan to use real high-grade materials did he gain any standing with the housewife. Quality baking started in Seattle with the opening of the Chatterton shop nearly four years ago and you will acknowledge Bakers’ Bread has improved wonderfully since our coming. Anybody Can Bake Cheap Bread But this kind of bread would disappoint and discourage your family and the few cents a week you would save on its purchase would sub- tract valuable nutriment and body-building qualities from your diet. It takes knowledge and experience to make Good Bread and our experience has proved that people want real value and nutri- ment in the bread they select. That is why we use fresh milk daily and the best materials money can buy in the production of CHATTERTON AND BAKE-RITE. im to please the public whose kind patronage supports our When GOOD bread can be made cheaper, we will make it. W s Wonderful Bread—Buy CHATTERTON’Sor BAKE-RITE BETWEEN PIKE AND PINE 1514 THIRD AVE. _ tegen ty RALPH H. HOITT, Manager WHITE | RAISIN VITAMINE Far be it from BREAD BREAD HEALTH BREAD GRAHAM | WHOLEWHEAT RYE BREAD | BREAD BREAD of the ship. too well known to be FRIDAY, MARCTII 10, 1922. think or trout How 6 regu people | There md the 4 kept from spre ing wer might be a fev floating ar where everyone the he “germ dispellere deavor to look after a few y| germs for popul before the next generation there maybe 1 will er the future ation ng The biggest new dis- covery in food sanitation is the invention of Prof. W. P. Heath for manufacturing ice cream by substituting Heathization for aeration, Ice cream is kept eat- able by mixing air with it in freezing. In ordinary ice cream this is common air, a destroyer of the precious vitamines, Prof. Heath discov- ered a way to substitute a pure, vitamine protecting atmos- phere for air, making an ice cream that is infinitely better as well as more “9 flavory. “co aft He uses the same at- z . eye . I mosphere that is utilized in ber making carbonated water. This ned atmosphere is not only purer than air, Me but has the virtue of increasing the tasth ing ness of the products with which it comes * in contact. It brings out the creamy rich- é ness of the ice cream and the delicious tat flavor of the syrups and fruits with which 4 ice creani is made more tasty. = der * Ke Insist on SEATTLE x “Heathized” Ice Cream— whether you buy a dish at the soda fountain or bulk ice cream for + the home. It is pure and better. Your E dealer can get it. on wet ie Had your » ws Polar Cake = today ? Mothers! Caution your children to demand Polar Cake, the ‘‘Heathized” ice cream bar—your surety of purity— For the Week-End All the well-known goodness and richness of SAT’ ¢ “HIE, ATHIZED” Ick CREAM is Totem Treat,” the private brand ice brick of unique and palate-tempting . Phone your dealer your order now for “bricks” you will require this week-end. TOTEM TREAT Private Brand Ice Cream Brick Special for the Week-End the SEATTLE ICE CREAM CO., Phone Main 6225 . For More Than Twenty Years Producers’ of Seattle:‘Cream of Quality Ice Cream

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