The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 13, 1922, Page 13

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rs oe Satie SS Ae ay carn om oR ERNE ree . ; | section Two] The Seattle Star SEATTLE, WA IENNA IS PICTURED SADDEST CITY IN EUROPE PAGES 13 TO 24 H., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1922, If James M. Cox Describes Conditions in Old World “Europe Thru an Editor’s Eye” Is Title of Interesting Articles M. COX necked pheasants and some quail, of Ohio, precisely like our own. England has “A Birdseye View of | the grouse which nests tn the moors, rope.” |some pheasant and a partridge wh in the middie west is called the Hun what Regartiess of individual j garian pheasant ‘a about tw . » = et to inter j views may be wie vg = common {{h® Size of a quail, It has neve | Rational policies, thers ls # ne Euro. | ttrived in our country, It does well desire to know ners pon sensi sn. | DOWever, in England, Bean situation. For this res When one sees the flowers « gent was given to the request Ot) ed contribute a series of articles based upon the impressions which were de urope, he ts apt, if knows nothing about the wondrow variety of bloom in the Orient an! Yeloped from close contact with most | i. tronic, to conclude that there 4 of the continental countries. | nothing new, at least in the growth Until this summer I knew no more | Co rovers under the sun. ‘the about Europe than those who had! trumpet vine is found from Bri yead its history and what has been be, Rome, and all through the A ‘Written about the present economic | 4 ustria, Czechoslovaka, Germany 4 g@atus. Our first article may have | i ahand Hitle interest for those who have | been overseas. They are so vastly in the minority, howe that it m not be out of place to give some at tention to those uninitiated in £uro- pean travel From an agricultural viewpoint, The French, German Duteh and English are great lovers of flowers The saliva or scarlet sage is jeverywhere, The oleander is grown jin pote in northernmost parts of France and Germany, but after or gets in the regions of the Mediter seen Normandy is doubtless the ~~ | ranean, he finds it is as hardy as the PF eautitul country in Europe. The dl | rhododendron, The beauties of the Versity of crops, the pleasing, UNGU | bvGrangea, which we Americans : lating character of the land, the well | have admired so much In Its best de ge and magnificent 48 / velopment in the White mountain,| JAMES M. COX, democratic presidential candidate in fances, make a picture that ts lasting. | are seen to their beat advantage in| 1 . , gay Pp ia t ©} On the continent, Calls MANO Oat | Docstere ‘Tale’ he ene leaves Iitan 920, ex-governor of Ohio and editor of the Dayton News, ) Been fenced. Cultivation of the soll | an@ approaches the lake regions. The | has spent several months in Europe, not as a diplomat or} | ie intensive and fence rows would | geranium, however, does better in| peacemaker, but as an American newspaper editor, getting a, Ne ga yee er hur eee in a ay »,| first-hand the true state of affairs in the Old World. His ony © @HATEAU DISTRICT higher in yell ‘Continental Eu. | 8¢ries of articles, “Europe Thru an Editor's Eyes,” will ap-| (MOST ATTRACTIVE rope, for the most part, has only | Pear exclusively in The Star. | es “The chateau district of France ts} mongrel types of cattle. In America |~ i" ; - - ee attractive, but It will — | we breed specifically for milk, butter. | } VE os 1 to a farmer, Switz. | fat or beef. In Europe, food, aside 5,000 HA : und das delighted the senses of |from milk, fe not considered. The Seeks Square | | PAIRS You SEEN : pilgrim: centuries. The great |cows must pull the plow and make * } -dihew break into the skyline contribution In milk and butter. Ho! Deal for Child EXTRA TH ie SIGN Garry the flora and the fauna of|land, of course, has beautiful herds Without Name |) i PANTS on the curves ‘@rery climate in Europe. One seen | Of Holsteins. The Jersey and Guern:| | j $5 and $6, of the highways? f q tilled areag at the base of the | sey Islands are yet the base of fine | Match that It points the ey puntains; the hay fields come next | breeding in these types of cattle, Sut WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.—A square fand then the pasture land first for|¥ou don't see much of them on the /deal for the 32,000 children who art the cattle and lastly the goats which | continent 3 born out of wedlock in the United browse to the very limits of eternal | STRUGGLE FOR EXISTENCE Staten each year! HARD IN MOUNTAINS This is the aim of a proposed unl Installs Kitchenette in Em- way to better values, ployer’s Office odd Coat and Vest. a shell and shrapnel. 4 history, and believe it is a native of | as beyond the scope of congressional endearing term was used to Helen beautiful. - e Taest cores a Viewig: te thourands| The Norman family of horses ts tn |form state law covering illegitimacy. | | CHICAGO, Oct, 13.—Alleging that “4 of acres as smooth as the western | Yogue in the northern parts of the| Prof. Ernest Freund of the Uni.|>¥ much means as intsalling @ kitch-; e grea es VO U I Y ) e O usiness 1n e plains and as rich as the richest val-| continent. Belgium, in some respects, | versity of Chicago, and chairman of | ©? tn his. office and cocking his i loys. Much the same character of | has improved the breed. ee enttols| the committee on law standardiza- | meals, Pomcage an ed rociahegy wh — hi . ° ° ° 1: a nd eden. horse of England is a refinement of tion for the United States Children’s | ndue infliue Dv t f th uy ] R g J V' ; The ery ptt eto ple. | the type. The saddle horses are fair.| Bureau, is a leader {n this move to} Sok am wes Biles, millionaire, that 1S Ory (0) e al ore ea 0. 1S m en 0 e ture of country life is In England, In|No one would be interested in im lle gi ooh bee om hi F ll WHY? aii parts of Europe save in the moun. | porting sheep to America except from pamond. Att: Bion, actuator ef t 1s fali Season. $ teins, the population is so dense that | England and Scotland | cma Oe <tagawen Di ne rel ble lands are veritable garden} The hardest struggle for human! [the Colonel,’ eng Meriaet sage . The most appealing architec |e@xistence which we saw was tn the om peehews have Ee litigation In fare is in France; the prettiest vil-|Cavennes mountains, north of Avis wo gor ay gg i Caleago to ost ® lages in. Germany, although the|non. To an outsider, the scenes here bag coher . ual e Swine chalets built in clusters in the |are pathetic, but the mountaineers. / Paws newt 4 mete o 9 eg as “4 mountain sides, adorned with flowers,| Who know little or nothing of the) bs a grag peers “eg it i are a fascinating feature. outside world, seem perfectly content aes’, p rig es Th ] ff d h $. 9, ‘The quaintest city is La Puy, tying | Wheat fields wrapped round the pees ond gel. Aap ibang e@ values oirered here in mens . fh the region where Roman rutnware|mountain slopes look like = mere | | "Tne petition. alleges that Mi , } ine Mee ne Mroached by [they are oot over tem feet wide. Tn | Weck catered to “Gol Mla’ ore and boys’ clothing are absolutely [fF Sadern tte, It ts off the beaten path |some sections there are no cattie. | apy Alana SA oayorwel regs without parallel ! Of travel. It attracts mostly students |The goat supplies milk and cheese, | Saat nassdal dnd dinleren ar halen % in geology. Inte a bowl, the rim of 4nd the hurnan food consists almost | erent with rs Mise Po —, the mountains, | entirely of bread, cheese, wine and a} his the mifitonatre that Which ts.created by ; leven after his death he could direct fature has protruded vast columna|few potatoes. The grape will grow |his fortune, “Thru these bizarre . ¢ ret 9 hard as to defy the whims Pa. pbipcaesli divavennsntas! | means” she is alleged to have wooed seasons. n Col Siew or h oJ \e I think Paris ts entitled to be | *xPeriments now going on are in Ire. | | peel ba fea ears bona - lied the most beautiful city In |'#nd. Czechoslovakia, Albania and | After her death they wore married, = " her |Germany. These questions will be | 4 - wed eee ©. it dees tn heriin and in [treated later. Stripped of Eastern yo royrooe gr Emenee yal wdc pane there would be an added | Europe, It ts perfectly apparent that | CHARGES PLOT i charm.’ ‘The parks in the Gee {Central and Western Europe mom 70.WIN HIM | e ’ \ man and peri RS are jo agen rgd oui tata food Among other things the petition Er The saddest spot fs Vienna, |*urply. The average farmer has 4 | spel tagece. Wien’ wax” abou “4 neither wheat nor oats nor rye to of. Ernest Freun “re er “> gone by. but the fountain springs the demand from the western hemis-| lessen the burden of both the un-| 06 po ae Mee pth ele . ‘ of civilization are drying up. phere will be tremendous, provided | wedded mother and her offspring. to the task of searching out his! 4 Cathedrain are always of interest.| Prope has the means with which| The proposed law places upon both | i" Ana vices and cunning! & ot In current history, the one at Rheims |‘? buy. parents of a child born out of wed-| nyed ania & bet atk ~d 4 4 Goubtiens takes first place, The old! The great staple ts the potato. | jock the obligation of education and | Pisred Npon then t hen oe! fardinal who held mase during the] Without it some parts of Europe | support. “For wnny years. price. te” the Bombardment says it will require 40/CoUld scarcely have lived since the) ~rhig plan,” says Prof. Freund,/ death of his wife he was accus ¢ years to repair the destruction of | 8°. There ts some doubt about it#/ comes as a result of our feeling tomed to call hin secretary by the an i origin. Authorities have traced Its /that it is both impracticable, as well! namo of ‘Mamma,’ and while this st the Chilean and Peruvian Andes a fo two cathedrals alike. The one at | legislation for the federal govern | Week, his language to his invalid 7] Rouen fs rich in history and archi- ee ~ pace oy Lay hp as fer ment to support these children. wife was cold and harsh at all ss T]stecturat charm. The most wonderful | 0° e yf orm, the) Such protection must be insured by) times,” the bill continues. Th d bl h ip Hectaral charm. ‘The most wonderful Goch American claims may not be| such ret dmee.” the e extra pair doubles the wear. } size, and in tts contact with the early well based. Sir Francis Drake tn troduced it into England tn 1656, al “Our committees has made its IN HIS OFFICE Every size, color and pattern. is days of the Christian religion, "St. Ps | recommendations, and commissioners| She established a kitchenette tn! Peters at Rome of course takes first | (hough a bd gee arene is sald to! of ail states in turn have brougut | his office to cook his meals. “The h Place. The art treasures in the} ier a it — - nee pd |thelr findings from the report to] economical lunches were to show at ere, Vatican are priceless. t nm one remembers that) sir respective law-making bodies. |him that she wished to add to his | t,| Lewin and Clarke, in their expeai-|‘"* rod Bd ° + Westminster Abbey, which in spota| O°"! 40 Northwest, found the In “The law in question is not #o| Pile of pennies,” the petition avers. f beginning to show signs of phy#l| sng cultivating watermelons, he in.|4rastic as the Castberg law of Nor-| Three years before the death of Sl decay, will always be a shrine for) oif44 to the belief that food staples| Way, which provides that every |hie wife, Mrs, Frances Bliss, the : Episcopalians. Englishmen may live |) Froedtert sc ae saat child {a made the legitimate offspring | Y was heard ‘to call her hat: their remains will | ginally pretty well scattered Set E e the hope that their remain: peur" tae all tas cars of the father, r over to her with the words, 9 buried there. I doubt whether tt 3 pe ‘ ome over here, papa, and kiss s © Gould make appeal, however, to any-| These matters of European life| “Rather, it seeks primarily to 90] oni, Lis oetice, the bill states. | OY: e ~ | ame et may hold some interest, but they de. | cure a guarantee of financial support | M5) 7 ile, Sines, tne Die Maken an - serve no place in the treatment of | for the child, with the state standing | = nee MISSING ON the more abstract subject matters|guard, to ee that the father con.| Prior to his death Bliss was the — ; ROPEAN CONTINENT dealing with government, war, peace | tinually acknowledges his reyponai-| )Jollm OF An extravagant and dis = io tnd ts t Desege tnet|cae ataneeas Ser coms hace” |e Cools Gopi gal gg -Fants Suits @omparable to that in America. On (Copyright, 1922, by N. B. A. Service) “At t, tod many states peel believed, it is met forth, that” his @ continent you do not hear the — At. pe gly pron i teu Der | wealth would increase forever, and a i h fong of the lark; the robin redbreast| Ex-Governor Cox will dincung| Tt Cary exit of Rie Benen i court, | Ne told his secretary about the time n fancy cashmeres and & fs missing and if the cardinal Is|France’s problems and the French |* ComPromins paymil’ au jhe atate| cr nis marriage to her that he worsteds, ages Te) there, 1 did not see him. ‘The moun-| people of today in his next article, | 74 leaving the mother oF Tl would keep watch over her from be- 6 to 17 ° E tains were extremely disappointing ee to care for the child In peelings | yond the grave to control her man teeeeee 1 fe 1¢ proposed law will make the/| , a ie fh thia respec After using her coffin as a dining gh gee gr |4mement of his property on earth, a if Singularty, England, which des! table for cow 50 years, a French |2°Payment of money for support @/ and that he would manifest his dis- POLO COATS for the little id farther to the north, has many more|octogenarian was recently buried beg gem hase 4 autehs oae | pleasure with her by a visible sign fellows. Made of fancy cash- #3 5 : ” ream beat; ‘0 specified amoun be perl if she would even entertain a r nd. chevio tu Tt ls shmmmanddotas it lected bres mitted as now countenanced in mont | thought of doing anything with, hie men. su t mixtures. localities, but the payment In each | wealth that he did not approve, \ i i izes 8 to 8. case shall be fixed by the court and} wits At ~~ | See the smart new styles in plaid Exceptional "EN PA TY will be continua during the de | in | | | seeee YOUR HALLOWE sondiney of the wid |Close School to | backs—also our all-wool, yoke values at i 4 There ix a decided difference In| * “ r 4 Here's that bulletin prepares by ‘The Star's Washington bureau ||, There 8 & decided Alfforence tn Fight Bedbugs back, and inverted plait back EXTRA SPECIAL CHINCHILLA OVERCOATS . that will tell you all about mew to haye a wonderful Hallowe'en andle the situatio: ST. CHARLES, Mo.; Oct. 12Be “ A pie 3 ‘ i oF i of q Th.” escominns far mincatiows, soviiationa, eawven toctate:. [| rensthe, imate |uatiourtes bam Erte ete 90 hcvlarons GABARDINES — also dark tan Boys On and. Two- : brats and grays, in ages telling, the refreshinenta—they're all in the bulletin. If you are evatiiching weltare stations thra|ttat they exawied all over the build | and gray Whipcord Cravenetted ‘ants Sui $5 45 3 1 « $4 85 Preparing for a Hallowe'en perty you will want this bulletin. It's which the work of protecting un-|ing it was n y to close the Ae oe taht ages 7 to 14 P Price . : ‘- : free to Star readers, Fill out carefully and mail the coupon below. lnamned ‘bables ie casrint.an adhool ih District No. 1. and dlamisa| Overcoats. They re beauties! SS eee er r'O??)YO''-— —? In ‘Tennessee the father of an | the children for an enfe “1 holiday 4 4 | iMegitimate child may be required to) While the building was being ridded i Washington Bureau, Seattle Star, pay not to exceed $40 the firat yeur | of the pests, The pests made their 2 1322 N. ¥, Ave., Washington, D. C. 1$20 the second, $20 the third, and/ appearance soon as the children " ij om, . lfrom then on the court may dispose! reported for the opening of the school . T want the bufletin “HALLOWE’ -" and inclose four | of the child cems best jand the patrons and teacher were | 4 cents in stamps for postage and mailing costs: In Ala 1 the court may order | puzzled as to their origin. ‘There was | 4 | the father to pay not to exceed $60|no possibility that any of the chil : : e 3 AME a year for the support and educa-|dren could have brought that many a Boys >, ig | {ion of the chila bed bugs from thelr homes and the Home of 2-Pants Suits for Men and ) pet STREE’ 1D NO....... “The one main thing to be con-| decision was finally reached that the URTH STREET An aldered.”” saya Prof. Freund, “is the | bugs came from the wood with whien | FO AVE. aT PIKE 3 city . future of the child. Our work must |the building was erected, The doors | j f : ‘: . be a benefit and not a hindrance. |and windows of the school were Seattle’s Home of Hirsch-Wickwire Clothes—Finest in America, Ready to W 4 STATE ... ee eeeeeeerees ‘And one of the main things to do|cloved tightly and after fumigating | s— ear 4 ‘ is to bar tight the loopholes exisiting | for a week the pests were driven out’ ; el in present laws thru which the/and the children are pursuing their ‘ father ig permitted to escape.” studies 1 peace and comfort now. A f!

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