The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 12, 1922, Page 6

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MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1922. @ months, 92.76) year, he state, #86 per month, Ty carrier, olty, be & month Shorrock is exasperatingly logical—at times—but unfortunate ly, is rather shortsighted. ers will = be It is very well for Mr. Shorrock to TROP, ~ FOR RENT? H. C. PETERS, 726 3rd Ave. year when it is too late for teachers|when he stated that the exivting! that “save the children” and dies! invention, a morale fumigator, by! bs 3 A swell neighborhood is where you have to wear your shocs to sit out on the front porch. THE SEATTLE STAR | biggest thing in the world. Our fed | a | Editor The Star ;menerally mixed with Water: this was | , nts, Our armies pe nd a ° e e tie » congratulate you on your, known as “vinum"; the “onerum,” or are of it, stil, if Dear Folke nitentiar a 1 actor knowledge of human nature, Which | unmixed wine, being regarded as the ,, Sades Sk ie thet ies is, after all, a quality somewhat | beverage of confirmed drunkards, | and: Sie: Caneen I've often thought—and so have you, our wants are really very iS is |paper not only for the people, but, t drinking 2,000 yearn “#0 t5 “save his children” at the expense haps a little bungalow, or maybe just a radio; perhaps it's just a Program that deserves a good deal of study on the part of the people of Washingto was certainly 10 tion last month, expressed themnelves we; they think they haven't got enough, but want a lot of other Pacific | host were competied all the jorthwest,. Machinery for the making of metal auto plates, road signs and the like; has @ver received, on a pluttorm|| pate has sent; they never seem to grow! about the things they trouble perish, and wine unto those that be will be better off busy than idle, Then there is a hope of making the institution self- [made trom a misconception ax to ommended than otherwine. It ts folly |{ne luxury of high living trom the ‘ j We call spirits, brandy, rum, whisky | to any great extent at the time the dives. foes thalits sisal prere Mr, MieerOlll| means of which deals can be Gta of menace. vi es Even in thelr use of wine it was SIDNEY M. BENTO? school alone) will seek work during | tle if they can be run without it. If| poison. Lugubriously yours, If the ex-| rent, heat, power and other important overhead items, Human won a noble victory, but have dealt ing the eize of classes at a “reason-|happy and contented. It is worth for heaven's sake, let us yank it out | ; gallery will yell at you if you en In short, the penitentiary converted into a factory com- the expenbe of the chil-'can compensate for the knowledge| Writ that chers can give their | #94 in the state house at Olympia. thelr war profiteers, iven a chance to grow, will develop flourishing e . rom lack of personal attention uetive of morale, and it will be| side of school which they must do to| vestigation will disctose that the eity,|| per month. Garden é e e are not supposed te have flashy me for a home. salaries, coming at the end of the|in the board meeting last Friday studies. These are the conditions| tbe demand of the hour with a new keep in mind that he has orders | par schedule of wuiarien entails too high | to la price for morale. He said that AL 4 mo is not worth os much as the eral government valued it very high eomary In an editor and may ao, Probably latter did net contain pursuing th few; of all the things we haven't got, we never crave an awful jot in some degree, by the people something different from the | of morale, that is his business: raise in pay—and we'd be happy, so we say Machinery is being installed and plans being laid for converting that institution into | ing: the wine At dinpnatioally on this very point when! | stuff. jentertaining? A wise host selects hie a fermented liquor ‘shoe manufacturing equipment; a shirt and other wearing apparel plant—such is the not to cut teachers’ saluries, Mr have to do without I have been interested in the die of heavy hearts.” Prov. 31:4. There . what the intoxicating drink of the|to misread our guide to a Mghteous | teachers’ grasp. sustaining, and that, of course, is a tax-reduction measure not to be sneezed at. jand gin. Now, over 90 per cent of | Bible was written. After all, the vi | Johool tusks at the week-end © views with such stanch complacency. | Petsed to the four winds, economie- Free American labor cannot compete against prison labor. Workmen supporting emt aguipriously. yo The astronomical dimensions of | creates in the teaching force a feel-| with morale and they merit the just| let's have done with it | traction of morale is the magie-te- a staggering biow to a great cause able minimum It means that teach nothing to th hildren in t hool-| and do it in a hurry. And while we! ter an Halian theater all dolled maid that the clase roomal that twe abers of the board best servi: the community when | We have long euspected that there is Folks are not supposed to be of the teachers. ‘That is what Mr.| noticeable in the attitude of the | make ends meet, when the men in| county and state offices are luxuriat- || will hel; Be. clothes or diamond studs. If they _ Previously, the prisoners were used in a jute mill. “Peshikani.” healthful open-air work where they were not sub- As long as Daugherty doesn't is going to have plenty of road-building to . ne that Being who manages and go: ‘That is one way out. There doubtless are others. The ee cere 4 her he te told t jo wnlil he @ be solved, and Mr. Pace, at the head of the work, is {"" ** ia tht track. up a new Ford story that is good i yhat is the co-operation of all informed persons. W + la Bictew Gon, Pad tal “Here, put this casket on wheels . . Here's big news for the Great American the right workmanship. Long domestic Lots of people would be poor if they didn’t owe much. for nearly 200,000 cars, trucks and tractors for June delivery. ainticartitapsiglis — . ; His June production schedule It’s a wise man who sends his wife on his vaca- calls for 5,400 cars » day or nearly 11 « minute, which seems about the last word in speed. i. Very well and good. at nome jly during the great war, and it paid A nt for your 15,000lead in circula-| more than 1 fF cent or per cont © aot to get te They ® but yet, how y we could be if we had only two or three! Why shouldn't the people know | drinking of today But he must be reminded that the But when we look at other guys, who have the very things we ‘an immense factory which will turn out many sorts of finished products — products | interesting ¢ discuenic hat they gave Dr. Sharpless the highest | Put there are other folks we know who en’t got a lot of guests with a view to their enter. we find the adjuration, “Give strong aylor wan also elected to the board For happiness, the facts have shown, is not in any junk we ancients really was. As I under-| life in attempting to substantiate any| yy, * * x the misery caused by modern drink.) dence from that source is in favor of outside work to supplement their ally, expeditiously and painlessly, : nen instead of continuing | morale is one of the much-vaunted | . s 2 Me vont-eraduate studies ec u each, ilies cannot live on wages such as will satisfy men condemned to years of servi School Salaries and Morale thelr post-graduate studies in the! suis one of the declena appurte.| _TAlnler Beach, 3 t teachers’ salaries are pared. The tax/ing of antagoniym and resentment |reprobation of Mr. Shorrock vice for shrinking the budget, then Director Shorrock, of the ers feel that the ers have | rooms to be under the care of such|are about it, let us try the sam against small private plants scattered about the — up. ot be overcrowded: the teach-| fused to rve their promise their minds are filled with appre.|too much of something in these two | very prosperous in these times, Shorrock calls “saving the children.’ | teachers next year. professions with families, and the|ing inva riot of morale. Possibly, it) | Tent: exbibit such they are at once set was abolished for sufficient reasons. For a time the Wonder if it wouldn't be a good to the humiliation of being gazed at by crowds, after the sword-fish the people Among all things in the wni- and The Star would like to see the prisoners engaged erna all the reat. As you admire does not condemn the administration for its Walla akin to Deity —Marcus Aurelius. conscientiously to solve it. But The Star does not nihmentvan The Latest _ The question needs the intensive thought of many per- — ‘meugh to pass along. It runs like idea? come to life. He sat up, ran his and lay off five men.” Smoker—a genuine quality cigar for quarters morale ls regarded an the ° ° * The Wine of Ancient Times wriee for it, and, Judging from “The City of Happiness ix in the State of Mind.” The Hart administration is going thru ut the state penitentiary with an industrial | tion. Por you evidently believe in a aleohol at the outwade so it-may be pay tie A, “Et Mr, Qheweeste It really isn't much we need to make us very glad, indeed; per what the people think? Whi re, On the other hand the drink Men-| vorery of Beattie in the school elec: | prize, they hardly ever seem to be a more contented bunch than would an evening party be like if the which will compete for markets with the output of factories thruout the vote that any candidate for the board | dough, and, having little, seem content with just the things that taining each other; also, it saves him drink unto him that is ready to on & atentier plattorse at the same own; for money goes and goods decay, and transient pleasures but that gentleman, having un paws away; but latent, lasting joy, we find, is ever in the State ; ‘or isone mittedly they strong drink in the Bible, Perhaps a| the moderate exhilaration consequent | nb & thernl rapenaeation, voted pase aver 3 The idea, of course, is to furnish employment f the i me Ad y y goed deal of erronvous deduction in| upon imbibing wine wae rather rec | for Mr f “evsesion Fi motion to snatch of Mind! stand it, the ancient Romans had no! theory brought about to combat a owes knowledge of distilied liquors such as| condition that could not have existed Ne —_—— ————— But, from the Pacific Northwest Products standpoint, from the standpoint of the - ee interested in fostering here a great manufacturing industry, the scheme is r ing results from the use of such|the light wine and beer advocates. | dininished incomes Others «t} and our public school system forever | quid refreshments as these, Yours truly know of more than 20 in the high | @bolish morale in the schools of Seat-| rid of the noxious and uneconomical universities and colleges. It ix true ‘tude behind the bars, Then, too, the factory must figure =——— | stir hd tar [so ‘cbtale “caiplagineat | sieWbird. |that ail of thoes ceottine furicc torus lphncée” of 6 Sanmeiadeh “age; then Fy. ‘eductionivts, the email bore poll-| that will more than offset any effi- It ie worth nothing to a great inati- ogg Prison products are sold with few of these items Sword Fish | to whan Gs teland and the petty altrulste have! ciency that may be gained by keep-| tution to have all the workers in it taken into consideration. eshikan| pat is wha ation, declared that any | done them « grave injuatioe, and | teachers. Not a p For it is an} 7 vs ath PRCT Ng RE Pi ea achieved should not be| that no “easing up” of their work|axiom as old and as true as Holy |™medy at the county-city bulldin is quite likely to put many of them out of business; 1.) Wisi the Italian people call si e certain to throttle in their infancy many industries co must not be very greatly | koep salaring at their present level. | hensions of pecuniary troubles, when | political centers of our beloved state, | ‘rook? sutinae an eee ; the children must not suf stionably such « feeling is de-| they are thinking of other work out-| and it may be that @ searching in-|| joc ground, #100 cach a: oH Ladies are not supposed to have fee Prevent such a result would be short-sighted folly. STS Svpeccd to have fecny {What dees it mean’ it means thi:| "Ot core, Mr- thorrock ova not | women with dependeata, are dented |we aive this suggemion ercaen pus || Menliae mane Yes Maciel | It means that the reduction of/ value morale. He admitted as much | the privilege of further Professional | Melty, some genius will respond to down as war profiteers and are. stigmatized loudly and boldly as were employed at road building. That, in the opinion The was a fine constructive plan. It gave the ‘ Star, thing to inaugurate “Peshikani” calling in the good old U. 8. A. it resulted in the economical construction of some ak wh rg Pela ch-needed highways. For many decades to come catcalling them. verse, direct your worship to the greatest, And which ia that? It isa in that line. Such a plan, if properly worked out, need not bs them at all into competition with free labor. She Week dn ends ok aioe are fe pay @ proportionate regard to the Wa industrial program; because there is a big problem & cheeals priah eee pees that in establishing industries which will bring Ford Jok i he ° oke labor and free labor into competition he is on t Peter orl pia @ é this: e in this state. .The Pacific Northwest Products or- 4 tattow dreamed that Henry tation is taking leadership in the matter and de- was dead. The pallbearers wore carrying the casket when sudden- ° bd e Always act surprised when a man says he is are the fem pallbearers and as. one rice ; / i adams arried and when a woman says she isn’t. i To appreciate thix joke about Ford's speeding up production, 5 cents. The Wm. Penn, the right kind of a cigar. Built of the right tobacco by ~ Radio Craze Sign of ie Just Started zal Promise _ Traveling salesmen say they no thee an increasing number of “La Wanted” signs in factory and where new buildings So have most of of Commerce, estimates in our country. — Unskilled labor was hardest hit by depression. The tide is turn- Sng and running in the direction ef “more jobs than men to fill them.” in five years. number of surprises. The There couldn't be better news, “for generai prosperity has for its foundation the prosperity of un- ‘skilled day labor. $100,000,000 business a sprang up unexpectedly worry about opportunities ? comi fewer f rica. Betton eachanye suspended three MMS fewer in America Dor fraud. Why not a slogan: A Fair exchange is no robbery? clock, OOD for the di- estion — good for the teeth—good for the nerves. The original pepsin chews ing gum — with a quality that never vari Beeman’s Pepsin Chewing Gum How far will this radio craze ex pand? Alexander Eisemann, pres ident of National Radio Chamber home radio outfits are now in use Eisemann considers it probable that this will increase to 6,000,000 America seems to be an indus. trial Pandora's Box with uniimited industry, which expects to do ones are born every tick of the A sure thing is when daughter decides she is going anyhow. It takes two to start a fight; but that isn't why pi marry. The Star's idea of nerve is buy- ing @ pocketbook on credit. Closed Cars More Numerous You have noticed the growing popularity of closed motor cars? A third of Ford's output this year will be closed cars. Packard of- ficials are said to expect 70 per cent of their fall sales will be closed op Engineers om the auto industry believe that the percentage of closed cars eventually will settle at 40 out of 100. In Seattle the ~ ratio doubtless will be her. | If you have « closed ear, keep the windows open as much as pos- sible. Fresh air is the only anti- |dote for the health deterioration |that results from sitting still in |a car without exercise. | | | Many 4 groom puts off the wed- ding until his father can afford it | { | Eskimos never bathe, That's why | Eskimo kids look #0 happy | The hobby-horse moat people ride drinks gasoline. LEARN A WORD EVERY DAY | 1 | Today's word is WELTER 1 It's pronounced. wel-ter, with ao jcent on the first syllable | It means—to tumble about, wal-| j}low or roll; the act or motion of! | weltering; hence, | moil | It comes from—Angio-Saxon “wiel |tan.” to roll | It's used like this—“From the wel jter of figures which tariff dispu-| it is difficult for the! | an to form much opinion | | Sopeeening the probable resulte ot} pending changes in the law,” contusion or tur-| « filler, select binder, and Sumatra wrap- per. A neat, full-bodied cigar, chock- full of satisfaction. Wm. Penn is as fine a cigar as you ever bought for 5 cents any time, any where. According to cold-blooded profit- and-loss principles The General Cigar Co., Inc. has no right to price it at 5 cents. Manufacturer and dealer both have cut profit to the smallest margin. The smoker gets the benefit. a We are doing it for the cause of smoking. The American Smoker has National Brands felt a longing for a 5 cent cigar to smoke, and The General Cigar Co., Inc. has met his need. It can do it through its huge manu- facturing output, and by discounting the trend of the times, and co-operation by dealers everywhere. The Wm. Penn is at least a year ahead of the time in quality for the price. Try a Wm. Penn. It will seem like old times to lay down a nickel for You'll know it’s better tnan old times when you light it, and begin a contented smoke. Beneral Cigar Cor Wm.Penn NOTE Phereis only one price for Wm. Penn—5 cents straight © —$5.00 per hundred—$50.00 per thousand. Please do not ask your dealer to sell for less —he cannot afford to do it. A BP er AO ON fit

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