The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 10, 1922, Page 13

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F Moses led his followers out of Egypt, | ——— —_— MENNONITES — BUILD HOMES | | IN NEW LAND Pioneer Band Is, Paving Way for| Army of 30,000) Out of Canada Texas, Nov. 10. emigration ‘The sines El, PASO. greatest relixious | F and one that bears some resembiance | world war fone The « te the ancient biblical event, is be oe carried on by members of the Mennonite religious sect in ¢ ‘anada, | Who are now moving from the Do. minion their new homes tn Mexico The movement of the dp the outgrowth of trouble with the an government during the Swerld war, over refusal of members it the sect to participate in the due to religious object hief tenet of the sect for Bids members to take up arms. When the draft law was put into qifect in Canada, it caused wide dissatisfaction among the tes and they began to Mennonites look fora place where they worship their Ged according to their own customs. ‘After a long search, loaders found ge tract of land in the state Chihuahua, northern Mexico gov t, newly esta’ and welcomed the thrifty emi. They were given valuable concessions and long before the band of Mennonites a Acgpen the government and streets built i ch ome wells § mee ret contingent of Mennonites, | ®eres of revolutionary movements y | q@uitivating the soll, preparing p way for an army of thir-y thousand “fore, who Tomes there in search of religious "freedom | Portitions act, a year or so ago, and| | "Young of three spectal — all thetr belongings livestock, left their old Cnndion over a year ago. Today, 2,- 10 members of the sect are building 5 churches, homes, and are the intend to make their two villages have been em ‘The families live close to tm Europe. Each Mennonite ts per- this is held tn fee simple. A ooigeatndoabge camel gece agua @mment and the colonists look ‘Mm for leadership in business nal Personal affairs, as well as spiritual) @uidance. This plan is similar to/ that of the Mormon colonies In the same state. The Mexican inhabitants look upon | the newcomers with great respect, | Rot unmixed with awe for they are| teeing them the things they premerd Most—religions freedom and exernp- tion from military service. ‘The land selected by the Mennon ites has been the battleground of and is rich in revolutionary lore. It/ was thru this part of Mexico that | ral Pershing chased Francisco ita after Villa's attack on Culsihut taichic, where Mexican bandits mass. fered a dozen American citizens sev-| @ral years ago, is near the Mennonite colony. It is not far from Colonial) Diaz, a Mormon colony, raided and| burned by Red Rodriguez, a Mexican | Marauder The Mennonite lands are a part of | the extensive Luis Terrazzas estates | im Northern Mexico. The estate was | broken upon the passing of the Land fies been distributed among colonists. | was one of the richest men Z the ~ Pate before the division of NURSING GROWS IN POPULARITY Girls Desert Off Offices for the | Hospitals CHICAGO, Nov. 10.—America’s| women are deserting the| riter, the shops and the movies | enter the nursing profession, ac- fording to Mary E. Wheeler, super: Mtendent of the Ilinols Hem fehool for Nurses “Nursing ‘# more popular today | than it has ever been before,” she | said. “Our nursing schools are over- | Mig Wheeler declared one of the | Chief reasons for the popularity of | the hospital profession with the! young women was the change in the | system of schooling. | “Nursing sehools are being put on | AD educational basis, and are not un- | der the strict military discipline they Were formerly,” she said “The young woman of today is an) independent creature, and: she -re? fented the old military discipline. “Conducted on an educational | basis, with the lid tilted on diset- pline, our nursing schools have at- tracted unprecedented attention, and raised the standard of the grr sion.” REDUCED HAZARD North—-What do you think about | the yellow peril? Went—1t's dying out. There aren't | Bearly an many Chinese laundriea| there used to be—New York in The Seattle Star SE ATTL » WABH., FRIDAY, ELIGIOUS EXILES ARE FINDING IS YOUNGEST HOSTESS youngest official hostess. Miss Elizabeth Hanna, granddaughter of the late Senator ished, was cam-| and Mrs. Mark A. Hanna of Ohio and niece of Mrs. Medill for foreign agricultural col-| McCormick, wife of the Illinois senator, is Washington's =z DEDICATE NEW TEDDY STATUTE Portland to ‘Pay Tribute on Armistice Day PORTLAND, Nov. 10.—Portiand’s Armistice day celebration will center chiefly about the dedication of an equestrian bronze statue of Col Theodore Roosevelt, which Dr. Henry | Waldo Cos, Nfe-long of America. The bronze ts of heroic size, and gracing Portland parks, It is the first equestrian statue to make the city its home. A. Phimister Proctor, of Palo Alto, Cal, is the sculptor, He made a name for himself by his “End of the Trail” group at the Panama-Pactfic exposition. The final work on the statue was done in Proctor’s New York studio, and shipped to Portland by boat. | The unveiling ceremonies will com- mence in the Park Blocks, on Port- land's west side, at & o'clock the afternoon of Armistice day. By that hour the parade will have marched and the crowd will have remembered the end of the war sufficiently to gather around and hear read a specch from the pen of President Harding Apropos to the Roosevelt ceremonies, and an unveiling speech by General in little towns, surrounded by | ftiend of Roosevelt, has presented to| John J. Pershing, who will come to farms, which are operated| the city and dedicated to the children | Portland, {t has been learned, for the “Mitch the same as those of peasants sole Purpose of representing the President at the unvelling ceremony. mitted to have only 160 acres of land will be one of the few such statutes | Dr. Coe will make a talk on Roose- | and this velt, whom he knew intimately when the two ranched In the Dakotas, and Proctor will tell the story on the 1 regtion of the steve AT THE MANY Don’t fail to inspect stock. the school colors. Mallory and Stetson Hato— 36, 96 and s7 ARROW $ SHIRTS See our Fourth Avenue window display of these Shirts. Never did you buy a better Shirt for $1.50. We also show a big line of the better grades—priced at from $2.00 to $8.50. We also carry a complete line of the Vassar, wear, including a specially good showing for STOUT MEN. STORE OF WINDOWS our windows. We show complete line of new merchandise each week— more goods than some stores carry in their entire 122 Come Here and Inspect the Most Complete Line of UNDERWEAR $2.35 eine: B. & L., Medlicott and Winsted Under- that you can find anywhere in Seattle. cial for this week is COOPER’S heavy random mixed Union Suit, at SWEATER SPECIAL Heavy All-wool Worsted Sweaters, in all They sell the world over for $12.50 and $15.00. OUR PRICE..... Tailored Rea ‘10 \London Claims World Financial Supremacy) BY DAVID L. BLUMENFELD | LONDON, Nov. 10.18 London still the financial center of the world jor has the heart of finance been transferred to New York? The answer given exclusively to the United Prean by the president of one of the world's biggest and most influential banking concerns is that and wil remains continue in the head of world finance. * may be more money in America—there is,""—he explained, “but the machinery for world move ment which extets which has been built up thru generations of adventure, expan and cannot be scrapped by the mere passing momentary influences of world incidente—such as ware and financial crashes. “When the war was over in London, failue on success, and the! accumulated navings of five hundred years of British world trade had| been passed over the United States | to pay for war material, the, unitiat od said: This means the passing of | London as the headquarters of f-| Oe. This means that in future! New York and not London will set the pace? “But just as Vienna, the capital of @ ruined and wrecked maing the fin jal b ‘central Europe, particularly the Bal: | kan country Just Frankfort thruout the generations and even into the heights of imperial Ger. many continued-—and still continues to hold the German financial sdep- tre, so does | of financial experts, schooled in the| | Mistory, the ethics and all the secrets of universal money matters, contine to direct and attract world’s | money market ALL A MATTER | OF EXPEDIENCY | “There is no race or contest for| superiority, The financier of the| London market would not mind’ two pins if he had to go to New York for financial direction. It wouldn't worry him in the least if he had to #0 to New York or Spitzbergen. It Is not m quention of civic or national pride. It in « matter of expediency “Here is the financial built up, developed, completed thru years and years and years of ex perience and personal touch “Put it this way, and it will be better understood by American read. ers. Why do people when they talk of ready made clothes instintively jturn to Rochester, N. ¥.7 Becaune | Rochester thru years of experience and effort has become the principal ready made clothing town of the world. That in a trade mark and as. set. The same applier to furniture state, re-| iquarters of machine, “People who did business | ners will chosen from thone al- | London three hundred years 88°) ready entered } have maintained their connections True, the regulation solution has| | thru thelr descendants, so that nat-| not been submitted 26 times. Much | urally if @ man in position he turns | fewer times than that. But one or two other solutions, which might be London with tts race| NOVEMB ER 10, 1922. REFUGE ‘Cease, Ye Figurers, | | It’s Over! world complete confidence in that capacity "That is why the international f nanciers of London, with their « “Help! cries the contest trol of the intangible machine, have! He is floodea now with “Sherlock the pull Holmes” contest answers, which he “Another illustration. Queen Eliz | started opening Thursday afternoon. abeth's merchant adv thks he Mike do fe a she sent out, the Frobishers, Ot close tab an the Dral and the Raleighs—to dates of mailing, ince the prizes are in the golden harvest, Iaid a founda-|to be awarded 10 those submitting tion of personal influence acroas the | the first correct answers. seven seas which has never been din Due to the rush of letters and the rupted. long hours {t takes to open them, the ris asking that no more be sent Hoe finds it necesnary ut the whort. Th 6 win CONNECTIONS OF 1ONG STANDING in. contest one day with | “The methods of proceedure have| accepted as proof of considerable appeared “In their place, in charge of the wonderful machine, are five banking | institutions, known as the “Big/ * which In the course of « gen eration have mopped up the thous-| ands of private banking concerns| and today control the millions which are the leverage of Tritish credit Without the “Big Five” there would} probably have been an enormous fi nancial crash during the world war The wmaller industrial concerns} couldn't have maintained themaecives against the pressure. The “Big Five,” working in harmony with the| Hank of England, stood up like the Rock of Gibraltar “The greatest of the “Big Five” fn the London City and Midland bank, and its head is Reginald Mo: | Kenna, who has just returned here from « tour in the United States “Now the strange thing about this fe that Me great bankers of London today are individually poor men. “They are professional bankers, working on salaries which would be considered exceedingly small in| America. ! “Personally they hor deal in money An Event of representative of the | department. either speculate | Highly $8,000,000 to Be in Grand Rapids, Mich. i applied to beer in Milwaukee, It appiles to corn and beef in Chicago. “The Chicago pork packers know all about pork packing and the grain brokers have a command of their ‘besindes which gives the rest of the Men’s-Wear Specials | Our big spe- Regular FOURTH AVE. AT PIKE STREET Bath Robes values, at $8.50 to $10.00 values, at. . Many patterns to choose from. ady O. Spent by Railway | Including 60 locomotives and 1,000 | cars, equipment totaling $4,000,000) has been ordered by the San Fran-/ cisco transcontinental railway lines, | according to Charles A. Forrest, con- tral agent for the Pacific coast Electric Irons At this price one might think it @ cheap tron, but | the price ts the only cheap thing about it. Standard well finished, com: weight, Electric Section Lock Similar to plain brass finish. ter buy now. Special at ... to match, pair. . Builders’ ishers with long handle =< FREE with each polisher for Chri: All-wool, all ors: Sizes 28 to 34 Sizes 36 to 44 | Sizes 28-34 .. $6.50 $4.85 $6.95 Van Wye, Thermo, and HON Other NO PHONE Sport Coats OR €,0.D, Leow as $3.85 ORDERS new Fascisti cabinet, Last Day of Our FTes¢ Inv Saturday is your last opportunity to “get in” on these won- | derful Anniversary Bargains. The items listed here are only Electric C urling Irons nickeled iron with ebonized i even heat element. Special at— plete with cord ané tilting eatables, Has four cutter rest. Guaranteed blades. Opens for easy Special at $2.95 cleaning. one-piece heavy bevelled escutch eons and good lock. building or intend to, bet BUTTS—3%x3% Floor Polishing Brushes Genuine Je’ nson’s pol of Johnson's Wax Paint Section Sweaters Buy One Now for HIM Pure all-wool | shaker and Jumbo weaves. Sporting Goods Section | REMEMBER There Are Thousands of Other Items on Sale, Many of Which Will Make IDEAL HOLIDAY GIFTS IN (Cue (NEW MINISTER LIKES ALL U.S. _ BUT FOR MEALS French Girl Can’t Go Ameri- can Salads 10 MOUNT VERNON, Ia Mile. I likes eve meal They ment was | “The salad stirred up with | Bot like it! Mile. Coqblin, a French student at Cornell college here, is studying for her B, A. degree and also is in charge Jot French conversation clas | She admitted a high regard for Americans, And she likes Germany, “But the English—they are very rude sometimes, rude to foreigners. 1 ike you Americans better. You are more like us.” Coqblin, from Leuze America but the ything in are terrible!” The indiet- softened by # laugh and greens all do fruit mayonnaise—I changed a good deal even in the last] thoughtfulness, shall complete the Ir ten years number of prize-winnera | Than which there can be no higher “The individual princes of finance ane winnees of the Sherloc joompliment, olmes mathematical contest will be | have disappeared, death has exacted B 4 e ite toll, and where that has not in-|"*™med tomorrow Theophile Kossi has been Miner Caught in tervened, banking amalgamations ja ve * i A . have done the rest. The individual| , INNER TABLE HUMOR |selected by Benito Mussolini} Coal Fall, Dies | financiers such as Rothchilds, Sway ‘Are you fond of chicken, Mr.| CENTRALIA, Nov. 10.—Hugh thiing, Panmure Gordon, Morrison, | "UP jto fill the important position| tandsay, 32, miner at the Tono coal the Gurneya, the Smiths, the Milis,|,. 80th kinds, madam—the kina | mines, is dead bere today as a result land the Curries—all of them world | *8te killed to dress and the kina|of minister of industry in the | ot injuries received when he was famous generation ago—have die-|net® dressed to kill.”"--Boston caught in a fall of coal yesterday Tranonrint Lindsay was married, mnual | entory | Tremendous | pail thousands that are on sale in every | Automobile Horns handle. Guaranteed, Mack eommeted:. | Hand Horns with — bracket to fit any car. Well built—at $2.20 Auto Section $1.78 Food Choppers The best food #hopper made, grinds every kind of Sets cut, with knobs, Willow Baskets Dull If you are Belgian Willow 72c Clothes Baskets; | ees strongly woven; four | 29c izes, $1.19, 98¢, | 79¢ and 69¢. | Section | Aluminum Sauce Pans Heavy stamped — alumi num, straight sides, with ; cover; 4qt. capacity. Spe- | brush and clal at 98¢. A l-pound Household Section $2.69 Nickeled Towel Bars se 18 inches long, of one-piece seamless brass tubing, nickel plated. Will not rust. 57 Special o c Istmas, at Plumbing School col Furnace Shovels A regular square point D-handled shovel that can be used for furnace or other home 47 purposes. A wonderful value at. . c worsted, 86.85 Tool Section ins

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