The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 15, 1922, Page 24

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| the Cook oh mi ges of den, aw FOUR LITTLE VENUSES REAL ATHLETES | der the Impu us an exam ¢ of playful apirit, give for exercising that improved upon annot have th So he begina to train his children when they are but few week lacing them thetr cribs In this position,” he says, “the baby tries to fores himself up, push ne about and getting resistance at every movement, When he raises his same instinct.” he pushes down on his hands, he de velopa his chest The average parent lays the baby on bis back Me kicks around all right, but gets little benefit from ft for there ts hardly any resistance But if someone would raise the baby by the hands, flex ite arms or push ard and forward, of. some opposition, great good result.” { | | ‘The Star) Members Education Board, : Are Accused CHICAGO, Sept. 15.—Seven_ mem Bers of the Chicago Board of Educa tion and five officers of concerns Selling supplies to the board been indicted by county stand jury on blanket Conspiracy to defraud, &nd malfeasance. Hundreds of thousands of dollars Appropriated for the school children @f Chicago are said to have be Odtalned in graft by certain 4 Bers of the board who swung cor tracts for phonographa boilers and Teal estate to “friends” at exhort tant prices. Among those tndicted are Patrick HM. Moynihan, member of the Ill hols commerce commission, and head of a phonograph company; Bd.) win S. Davis, deposed president of the board, and William A, Biither | former board attorney. All but one @f the commissioners tndicted have! been ousted from the board by Mayor Thompson | Scienti t Explains BY ALEXANDER HERMAN Why Women Gossip | ew York. sept. 15, —A tive BERLIN, Sept. 15.—#Vomen have year-old girl, raised in the city, can @ fighting instinct; women have no|**!™ & mile, chin the bar, dance @utlet for their fighting instinct) #94 Walk for hours without tiring, equently women grow “catty” Her three sisters, the oldest how shrewish, turning to gossip and|*om Is eight, can do as much—and fuch like. Thus Prof. Kar! von|™°re Zuhohlen, a prominent paychologist,| Al! of them are stronger than boys explains the existence of the dis.| “4 prettier than most girls. It's the Agrecablo women described as gos.|Tetult of a bringing up directed by sips. j* heir father, Bernarr Mac Bios ak cal thor When a youngster, he had been Bishop Throws Out weak and sickly. He determined that his children would be healthier. Bo Charges of Heresy | 0 stisios the probiem, became an OXFORD, Eng, Sept. 15.—The| authority on physica! culture, and Bishop of Oxford has refused to|ix now raising his girls to be “regu hear the heresy charges made /lar fellers.” against Rev. H. D. A. Major, prin. Almost any parent can do as cipal of Ripon hall. This ends the| much.” he says, “if only he realizes cane. that smal! children are nothing more BY ROY GIBBONS bor when measured In the products CHICAGO, Sept. 15—"The American of another form of labor will bear farmer ts being crushed by a\labor/an equitable relation to the amount system that permits part of the peo- | of human effort involved in each pro. ple to fix thelr own wages, while the | duction. agriculturatist’s reward is fixed by| “The fundamental difficulty now In| competitive conditions.” that the price of the farmer's prod ‘This is the opinion of James A.| uct is fixed by free competition. In the case of wheat, by world competi tion, “On the other hand, the price of what the farmer has to buy Is de- termined by the wages paid tn its Production, and these wages are not fixed in free competition, but are ar- tificially established. “The farmer, therefore, Is the chief victim of @ situation tn which o class of labor is subsidized by wages maintained at an artificial level, and another class which has its wage de termined by free competition. “In the end, economic law will force a correction by luring men out | of the low-paid occupations into sub- | sidized occupations until food scare: | ity restores the balance. i “Human society cannot be main-| tained permanently upon the banis of half competition and half subsidy. | No legislation, tariff, tinanctal or oth er, can reach out and cure this situa. tion. There can be no cure until we give up our attempts at partial so. claliem and accord free play to eco. nomic law.” (Copyright, 19: |Reproved, Servant | Commits Suicide} ROME, Sept, 15.—Reproved for carelessness for the first time in| the 40 years she had served her| mistress, Marte Porrl drowned her self, | On First Holiday * "eee in 30 Years, Dies) | 8ST. MORITZ, Switzerland, Sept. | | 15.—Taking his first vacation fn 30 jyears, K.P. Pearce, an English | | lawyer, was killed while @ skting, | Patten ‘ —PANTAGES—— fa Guete the decreased price of farm || Mate. —. ~ stents, Tao what ow Pinying — _. bas, pea beeanlingd BILLY “SWEDE” HALL Patten for years has been a keen|| , Nopinen, & wlerse F student of agricultural conditions, | @ Duffy, and his views are accepted au-| thoritative by students of the sub. . Ad “{ am asked where the farmer is! headed for and what solution there ia for his present situation,” Patten said. “In reply I answer, the farm- er in not headed anywhere—he has aiready arrived. His trouble is fun damental and it cannot be cured by Patten, multimillionaire wheat king POMDy of Chicago, given in an interview in | Eddegel which he discussed the fact that the farmer's dollar has shrunk to 71 per | cent of its former value. The drop local applications. “Crops represent the wages of the farmer. He gets so many bushels of wheat for his year's labor. The ex-\ change value of the wheat measured | in terms of the products of other la bor represents the farmer's reward. “If his products will now exchange for only 71 per cent of what they ex changed for in 1913, as shown by government reports, then his wages have been reduced by that much, — | “When economic factors have free | “play, the reward for one form of in-| - BEERERIBESS ER ES mu Have You? a | @ Hundreds have had their lenses “Peri- | fused.” Have you? | “Perifusing” eliminates irritating light i 4 yl ag mw The cost is but slight. SColumbian tical Co# . 1315 Fourth Avenue Main 1941 * EES RE RE RIE eee ee TWKE DAILY THIS WEEK main 777 2ORE Orpheum Circuit | VAUDEVILLE #2": f KARYL NORMAN |) ihion Winte” OOR LEON AND COMPANY | BETH Bent | Assisted by Tathot and 0° JACK AND JESSIE G' JESSIE: SENATOR | FORD REED | 4 HOUGHTON in “Calf Love” From Michigan t's the way Mr. McFadden ts now developing his only son, aged seven months “I want him to grow up an strong an his ters.” anys the father amil ing “As noon an they were able, they learned how to «wim. My wife taught them. aport—juat another game — rapidly, They were soon able to do a mile. Swimming in one of the best exer. clses for developing symmetry. poise and that round joothnens that makes for grace. Next to it comes walking and dancing The four little MacFadden girls: Left to right, Beverley, | THE SEATTLE | Bables oo downward in| head, he strengthens his spine. W Par They took to this new) STAR 'HAIR-EATING | i ee (Divorces Stylish Gives Up Her Love for | _ in England Tody | “ LONDON, fept. 15-~“Have DCU N l hild’s Sake) 7... ameless C a. ae | ene | Hivere actions pending are |Mass More Than Foot leat BY ELEANOR M. BARNES | freedom. Lillian bad no money to) of Lady Catheart, Lady Whit i Is Extracted LOS ANGELES, Mept. 15.—How|obtain a divorcee, Max was finan-|Tady Maxwell-Wilshire and qe | many women—or men for that mat-| ejaliy embarassed and he had no) countess Rhondds ° | ter— possess as great love for their ald met | NORTHAMPTON, Maas. Sept, 15:| jife partners, as does pretty Lillian| Srounds, anyhow = |. What is eald by surgeons to be one) x4 n? ? Max was arrest bigamy charge | black, jong lashes, She is gf ola of the most unusual nerien "Lillian ts working as waitress in| —recetving stolen rds | young. tions in their A small Kast Seventh #treet bash! yyitian refused to testify against! “I've missed him,” she said = fully concluded when a mass of} poyne Bhe spends ver Hittle | 5) The bigamy charge was! there ts only me to rry human hair was removed from t Lillian is trying to save stomach and intest can) oe og yp Plt faprgs dropped lif the other woman lost him id intestinal tract of ar sate tines, tons; @ eaveeel OO a ae teak | Syear-old girl, who had muffered ers’ fe nm blah . “ 1a hia debt to nociety | there would be two—and hep | from acute st le several | Ja naving paid his debt to sox a me | fr x st mach trouble several) Whig sacrifice t# being made by |)! Poses Fa of having received|'* beautiful. I've got acew ar the girl, because she loves her hus is being bart eve Ash An X-ray photograph showed &/ nang He wants his freedom! ameaiae age 03)? laser ‘on't Cee | dark mass in the stomach. Ques The girl, who is young and | o.8, ¢ j loning him—I couldn't stand tw tlontug revealed thet the girl h8d) alone, is unhappy because she “Probably Tam a fool to still [another woman go thru | been in the habit of pulling out her! gould not hold the affection of love him,” said Lillian, “but I | have hair and swallowing It. One portion) stax, the handsome, flighty boy | would like to get divorced. He Probably some of the men | removed by the surgeons was more| whe had sworn his undying | wants his liberty, too, and as | come into the hash house | than « foot and « half long. The) jove for her several years ago, | long a» the other woman has | Lillian waits on tables think UA te teeovert Lillian didn’t know enough about| her baby it isn't fair for me to | might, in time, return their | _ |men when she married Max, Fina keep him. There is no other | tious smiles—reply to their | LONDON, Sept. 15.—Mrs, Adateliy be deserted her for another man in my life, altho I have | banters. i | Impey declared in an address here| woman | met many | But Litiian has other th £E that girle who play games do not} The “other woman's” baby came| Lillian’s eyes are big and inno-| think about Her little ave time to powder thelr noses. along iater—and Max wanted his cent, They look out from behind] cards has fallen about her “Western Auto” is noted for its excep- tional values in auto supplies and tires, etc. Low prices on quality merchandise has been a large factor in the success of the company. Here is an example. We offer Genuine Cham- pion Spark Plugs, one of the most popular on the market and used as equipment on Reo, Pierce- Arrow, Studebaker and other cars, at the sur- |G prisingly low price of 38c. This plug, quality ates red, is one of the best buys on the market at the regular market price of 75c. rf oe “All thene exercises are: good for 10 4; Braunda, 5; Beulah, 7, and | ine poy. too. Tut be needs tn addi fs ; Byrnece, 8. Below: Bernarr|tion some more rugged sport—box. Come in today and get a new set for your car. 38c o MacFadden's favorite exer-|'"s. Jiu Steu or wrestiing. we Genuine Champion Spark Plugs. All sizes... be : he vel | “But the child's exercise at all cise, good for father as well as|, “"" * of hia play. Wh fi aires imes must be part of his play. on em : it ie fun. it ie beneficial. But ic te Fr ace : {t becomes hard work, It is useless. Ei bebe Pama wy Bo need freeh | ute all parents played the games| > die en ee or with thelr children, it would be bet Re ‘With the proper training, the|ter for both children and grown-upa ye strength of most children can be tn. The chief fault with the bring creased from 26 to 100 per cent with: jing up of most youngsters is over- out much trouble in a comparatively |feeding. Our children are never i. short time a fed between meats. « How “They eat simple, wholesome food, « By letting them play the games| go to bed between seven and nine. co they enjoy most. sicep until eight, dress lghtly and “In these,” he explains, “are found |are growing up— the best exercises for children. “Healthy and good natured.” tm the the “Kitties and puppies as they run,| And the emiles of the youngsters value : ighe - Fagen p — mest compact Gasoline Gauge * Wreatle and roll around the floor, un- | proved Sony po “pan Bone hy od Pat “ggg nw apo gh pot Nn vce Made of natural finish s0o- IE Secentical ether . For All Ford and Chevrolet Towth moh i Cars | with indicates | se". $25. 50 one of the these, and not get | S oe ry gaugnt out of 6 | Special price eal avings on 1 Ires|] (S:./"...... $1.78 at Western Auto quantities of tires three an abateuten them through be our 60 stores wis all middlemen eliminated, is 5 able a: give you tires at prices actually 20% to of 30% lower t ust tires of similar quality would m cost if distributed in the usual manner. “ TALKS 3 1G saturpay ALL is officially here and to start out with a big rush, regardless of profit, I offer 235 fine new Fall suit patterns in this— ANY STYLE suit or overcoat materials anywhere. Come in and be convinced, TAILORING CO. EXTRA SPECIAL! MADE TO $ 00 YOU WANT 2 h* LOUIS SIDELSKY Third Avenue Corner Columbia T ask you to compare these materials with any $40 or $55 “Sidelsky Suits Satisfy” pedal—posi- tive in action at all times Warne tha fellow behind eo he will not crash into your car, ’ sa ment. all the new- est features, including lubri- cation guide in the a colored figures. Our Price $12.90 TAX PaIp The popular double-arm type that are everywhere making Forde ride pees They are Superior type . ...$8.75 A cushion to your b x a It reste the back a aide a ort person to reach the pedals with great Th strong. well- made cushions that will not be Camaged by moisture or sun. Price $1.95 t action on no bali der, It must be preciated. Complete . Saving Sam Says How about the season? Good ping equip- ment greatly Mail Order Department If you live out im the country, far pow NTowN STORE 2041-45 WESTLAKE AVE. AUTO ROW STORE 812-18 E. PIKE ST. TACOMA STORE racirie EVERETT STORE ears co”ny WESTLAKE STORF OPEN SATURDAYS TILL 9 PL M,

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