The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 25, 1922, Page 6

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7 ToMSDAY, TULY 25, 1999. eS The Seattle Star SEs c jaaningtom, Outeite of the st ee ner month, $450 for @ monthe, or $9.00 per year By carrier, elty, & men’ What About July, 1929 Sweltering in the summer heat, maybe you are envying the Amundsen exploring ty which will spend seven cold years drifting over the North Pole. / < ‘The polar ice, forming constantly near Alaska, makes a solid ice field which moves ‘ uf ace ly up over the North Pole, onward until it meets the warm gulf stream and melts. 3 . / fast as it melts at one end, it keeps forming at the other, There you have per- motion that gets nowhere. in this ice, the schooner Maud will go where it is taken, with no voice In the » “at the mercy of the elements.” = ly interesting would be to know what the explorers will find civilization like the Maud thaws free of the ice and heads homeward down the Atlantic, in 1929. Jot may happen in seven years. And a lot will happen. For a precedent, con- what has happened since 1915, seven years ago, when the world war was in first stage. At Virginia Mason Hospital By Tom Culverwell ere [ea ET EY FY ES FT ET A i t “1 ( THRU CITY STREETS We} anh i LEO H LASSEN The Sunset on the Window Panes As seen on the Seattle skyline from the West Seattle hill AVE you ever climbed this familiar hil H When the eun winds down the Western lanes, To look across the bay between to see The sunset on the window panes? Se i \ \ am |) BA Take fast steamers at Colman Dock The windows are the eyes of every room And they reflect the smiling sunset skies, Even as all friendly hearts reveal Their souls by light of joy within their eyes. When the gods of twilight work their wonder epell And spill on the heavens their eplendid stains, Come, climb thia Hiawatha hill to see The sunset on the window panes! “Song and Dance Averts Panic’—headline. Sometimes they start one. Los Angeles baby was born in a flivver, A bouncing baby boy. Nevada sentences two Chinamen to death, This leaves 499,999,998. One day last week no aviators were killed. NAVY YARD RO c Me 3 CLE ET Er Fi) ment can equitably distribute the coal supply to different clasecs of coal consumers and to different | sections of the country. i would fasten permanently nification of the term upon the inatructors of the youth. The ingenue says—you can nearly always tell by the faces) more tractable, the patrons make whether you've given them the right medi- Pog to reason” if cine or not. i ' i Hi | til i , ‘ i a elt Li : ! ity i by i ) 4 ge tte HE Fis it} z ore } over . ‘ans i af i “ li ie i i i i ij j i i : : 3 ‘ | i } i it i e ; pi it itt He 5 é t } Hf TRE} Esa: iy fs F BE i 2 FE i i “ L il ; i ii i gf 5 8 i ; : i + rf iy ifr i i Leki ag i | t? | i Hip ei Hitt 85 i i EVERY DAY Today's word in AVARICE. T's pronounced averis, with the accent on the first «yllable. The firet | a end the | are short. The second « ie ag the @ In ask. It means—exorasive love of money or gain; covetousnesa The adjective is avarictous, It comes from the French “ave rice,” taken from the Latin avarttia | (from evaries, meaning avaricious. It's used like this: “To desire money for tte own sake, and to hoard it up, is avarice.” AIVRIDGE MANN. Mr. Clement Scott, Vancouver, Washington. Dear Clem: I see Pacific Northwest guys have copped an Elke’ convention prise; for you're elected, no they say, Grand Tyler of the U. & A And I em glad to take my quill, and say, “Com eratulations, Bill" I'm not an Bik, bat tho I'm not, I think they're quite @ Gandy lot; for anywhere I ever 0, 1 find they're boys I'm giad to know; besides, in very many ways, they've earned the right to lots of prose From what 1 hear, they have « rep for entertainments full of Pep; and so I've always had a bunch they're quite a lively, Joyful bunch, whe don't admit @ gloomy dub to membership within ther ERS EDITOR Teachers and Their Pay Raitor The star: The offort of Mra. Anne fi. Stewart | of the single teachers are contrib to show in her letters to The Star of June 22, that teachers are over. paid Je, in the words of Monsieur | Beaucaire, “a mixture of what ts uting either wholly or in part, to the federal department of labor are in- upward trend of lle H 83 i 5 3 § to their incomes that most of them would Moreover, teachers must purchase expense that stenogrephers and | ene had sald that “about TS per cent! chronic agitators Go not have. word “teacher” or “peda , he iy |sest $2.60 cuasses |i askin’ ye it ye ken'’—hio—whaur he itves.—-Londéon Mall RHEUMATISM LEAVES YOU FOREVER ond tae Marametie Fae Soc hoe author! is fr tp iver A | oe ag: a Ee pee oe | wilh your mosey Free Examination c Sess ing. and oer Rater RaT es start te ‘we are the esiy one in 4 - the dia Se a SEATTLE—oN FinsT who tor os AVM. |Torments of acute rheuma Examination free, by psgtsconde 24 sires all, sutterers to know tometriet. Glasses mot prescril unless absolutely necessary. ceueiers he has Alien, Y¥.. the Giscoverer The support of dependent relatives,” she | “sieve.” would have been approximating the truth, UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM SHOPMEN WANTED FOR RAILROAD SERVICE AND AT WAGES AS FOLLOWS true and the most chaste art.” Her! The teachers know that Mrs. Stew. offhand assertion that “teachers are,| art, and those for whom she speake, about 15 per cent of them, single | do not wish teachers to attain « com women without @ tle,” Ip not sus | dition of economic Independence, or ceptibie of searching inspection. If |even @ condition of economic com By Bertha E. Shapleigh Cooking Authority for N. E. A. Service and Columbia University One peck spinach 12 new carrots @ hard cooked eggs 2 cups white sauce MY cup gTated cheese ‘Wash and cook the spinach tn just enough water to keep tt from burning. Add to ft one-eighth teaspoon baking soda, two teaspoons salt, Cook from 20 to 50 minutes, drain, chop, ané season with butter, salt and pepper. Pack into a pan or bowl, and keep hot over water until ready to serve. Serape the carrote. Wash end cook in a very little water unt! tender, adding one teaspoon ealt. When carrots are tender there should not be more-than a tablespoon of water in the kettle. Add two tablespoons sugar and two tablespoons butter and cook in this syrup .-71 cents per hour Bye Ee 70 cents per hour Sheet Metal and other workers in ee ee my re . .70 cents per hour Freight car repairers ...... -63 cents per hour Car inspectors ..........- . .63 cents per hour Helpers, all crafts ...,..........47 cents per hour These men are wanted to take the place of men who are onihing the decision of the United States Railroad Labor Board, an eir status, and the FULL PROTECTION GUARANTEED, are ex- plained by Mr. Ben W. Hooper, Chairman, in his statement of July 1: “In the past a man who took up the work of another man who was on strike against ‘wages and working conditions was termed @ ‘scab’ or a ‘strikebreaker’-—terme to which much opprobium was attached. In the present situation created by the strike of ehop- craft workers, men who assume the work of the strikers cannot justly be reproached with such epithets. “This is not a customary strike in which the employer tries to impose upon the em ploye unjust wages and unreasonable working rules. In this case the conflict is not be tween the employer and the oppressed employes. The people of this country, through an act of congress, signed by President Wilson, established a tribunal to decide auch disputes over wages and working conditions, which are submitted to tt in @ proper manner, the decision of this tribunal against which the shop crafts are striking. “Regardiess of any question of the right of the men to strike, the men whe take the strikers’ places are merely accepting the wages and working conditions presctibed by a government tribunal and are performing @ public service. They are not acoepting the wages and working conditions which an employer is trying to impose. FOR THIS REA 6ON PUBLIC SENTIMENT AND FULL GOVERNMENT POWER WILL PROTECT boll WHO REMAIN IN THEIR POSITIONS AND THE NEW MEN WHO MAY Apply W. 8. OLIN Oregon-Washington Station Seattle, Wash, WILLIAM CARRUTHERS 106 South 10th St. Tacoma, Wash. itis or W. L. MILLER 436 Central Building 4. W. FOSTER 609 Tacoma Building Tacoma, Wash. Seattle, Wash. until slightly browned. Cook the eggs in hot water, which does not bofl, 40 minutes, shell and keep hot, Make the white sauce, using three tablespoons butter, four table spoons flour, one-half teaspoon salt, one-eighth teaspoon pepper and two cups milk. until cheese has melted. On @ large platter, in the center the sauce; at regular spacer place wo carrote which have been left whole. » two carrots and sauce to 0d accompaniment. Cook until smooth and thick, add cheese and cook turn out the spinach. Pour around the ewes, and tn between the eggs Serve some spinach, each person, French fried potatoes This recipe will serve aix Improved Passenger CHI P ICAl via NICKEL PLATE ROAD —LACKAWANNA RR. and Lowest Fares wy 8 me Sammer Tourist and Circle Tour Fares To Mountain and Resorts in Eastern States and H.W. Kelly, D.'T. A. 2. 4) A. W. Saunders, T, f., A. N. Hansen, T. Metropolitan Lite Didg., Minneapolis, Mian.” 24 RareRoad KAWA NNA R. ced faeee SING Serr are OO tle ‘Fimericen Beau ELECTRIC IRON The Best Iron Made penny “hmyg Pape pct more at first, all re: things do, but the best always the cheapest in the end. Buy this fron because fits oundy construction in- sures yoars of satisf: service. . Sold by Dealers and Electrical Companies Everywhere. Manufectured by American Electrical Heater Company, Detroit Oldest and Largest Exclusive Makers. Established 1894. «

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