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PAGE & } BHOULO Published Daily by The Star Publishing Co. Phone Main Worry Pare Enterprise Association and United Press Berviea By = Te His House tity, 480 moath; # menthe $1.88, € months, ARTS: year, 14.00, in the A ATS nie HO Mate of Washington, Outsids of the sce per month $400 for @ Nor Menthe, er $4.00 per year, By carrier, city month. MINE Qiiman, Nicol! —; Bes, Nonedneck — Danadian Pacific Labor Capitalism Some months ago, when the Railroad Brotherhood Bank, at Cleveland, reported a year of remarkable growth ‘and successful financiering, this paper commented on the i! power labor organizations could hold by pooling their Fun Well, that brotherhood is about to open a bank in Wall The brotherhood financiers propose that their Wall institution shall be an object lesson in humanitarian king. something different from the esttablished in-'em-quick-and-often” policy, The stockholders’ ofits are to be limited to a reasonable per cent. and Surplus will go as dividends to the depositors. Rates Of interest on loans wil! be reasonable and special atten- m Will be given to borrowers who want to build homes. Be The Wall st. crowd w!! love this new enterprise in { cir midst as they would love a hornets’ nest. That Gleveland Brotherhood bank forced the other local banks Teduce interest rates and smooth down their arrogance | SOMETIMES OPTIMISM CEASES TO BE A VIRTUE -HE SEATTLE STAR MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1¥Zo. LETTER FROM V RIDGE MANN (The following was written for the patients at Firlands and is reproduced 3ere for other shut-ins, with @ few slight changes) SHUT IN Oh, World Outside! Ob, World Outside! { hear you sound your siren call You beckon me to join the tide where human ripples Mee and fall, But where I lle, my soul can thrill to starry skies and rainbow gleams; and I may wander where I will—tn boundless dreamat Ob, World Outside! Your path is strewn with sorrows greater far than mine; your fleeting pleasures pass wo soon, your rising hopes Today or Next Spring? $15 A MONTH Stop and think what your ows home would mean to you with thin 4 rooms, bath and break- arden 760 to so soon decline! But here I wander all the day, where D: aud ve im wal will handle. Call for wtretohes far and free; and troubles quickly pass away—in reverie. H Cc. PETERS Oh, World Outside! Oh, World Outside! You cannot know the wealth I fool; your little dreams #0 noon have died in shadowed forms you call the “real.” But here I know that Life surrounds the dreams that jet my spirit My-—unfettered Life that knows no bounds tn earth or sky! Oh, World Outside! Come, let mo bring the borrowed Faith of 726 Third Avenue TN Childhood's day; be again Aladdin's ring, and mystic woods = New Designs where pixies play! Believe the things denied by men—the talking = trees and laughing streams; believe in hidden things again—believe | = DIAMOND || tn Dreams! = RING | Oh, World Outside! Ob, World Outside! fome day again I) = heed your call; some day again !'ll join the tide where human = MOUNTINGS ripples rise and fall, But let me stay a while in peace to dream res $f of all my soul would do, when Fortune bids my trouble cease—and S Li latinum— dreams come true! = $35 to $300 = 18k White Gold— $12 to $85 Buch an extent that the latter banks denied the Otherhood use of the clearing house. But, the brother. Bod used the federal reserve bank instead, and this it lean do in New York, if Wall st. gets real ugly. PIN M federal reser ve banks or Daugherty to get out an Sold them sold them for $8, and he lost money.—Senator McLean (R.) iy from the workers the right to stamps for postage. for sirikes.—Kepresentative Cooper (R.), Ohlo, The radio of last year as compared with the radio of this year Is like comparing a wheelbarrow to a PiercoArrow.—Kepresentative n (D), Miss. You can get by a railroad crossing on your good looks, BEML. «oer eeeeeeeeeereee eeeeee Time cures everything, but it takes such a long while, Tt seems up to Wall st. to get congress to abolish the Do you want some practical suggestions on earning “pin money” || And he went dashing down the in- tn spare time at home? Would you like to know how hundreds of road screaming: 2, : boys and irk . and ‘omen, have added betantial 0 * 1 . Tunction agai anybody taking only reasonable profit, fs poh a Brera oes biarcee “aay Prev praca 4 Nar igh ai : ain't a2 1 ain't Growned. Established 1883 Hor loaning money at reasonable interest. brought them In good returns for the time and labor invested? Se eee aa a ty EAT ; Sa | Our Washington bureat has complied, out of the @xperience oe ||. ° Wat 0008 Im the police station P i re PATRIOTIC AT FINANCE Uncle Sam's boys’ and girls’ clubs, and from many other sources, ||%* Solihull near Birmiagham He/ iz FT was convinced (during the war) that it was my patriotic duty to buy ,% lat Of suggestions of « practical nature for people who want to had « hard time convincing the au- A f 1 conceived the idea that WF bought another man’s flock of help tnerease the family income, The bulletin will be sent on \horities that he was tn his right 1} fa ep I doubled the number. and | pald $25 and $26 a head for ordinary request. Fill out the coupon below and mall it to The Star’s Wash: stan! Zs y beeuuxe I wented the soldier to be able to wear woolen clothing. ington bureau: | They wired Mra. Hit ne “4 1 « ; se wre ‘ the man to whom ’ Pltome come A se Yeors later I sold these sheep for $10 a head, and the man to wh ce aks eatin wim WILMAM PRILIP SIMMS -—- Washington Burean, The Seattle Star, | coming to view @ corpne. ee 2 N » Washiagton, D. C, Instead she found her husband—| Rice is becoming less popular in, these strange new apples, Unfortu. >. he i BR aoa pm pun 1382 New York Ave., Washiagton, . | alive and well China. Conml W. R. Langton, At-|nately they don't know which of the| Miracle Rasily True. Strikes wit be averted, not by th I want the bulletin, “Pin Money,” and Inclose two cents in | “1 don't know what happened to| tu provinos, reports rice comes &|, 445 pe ht Bo they wit!|| Dense Schools. oteeeeee Ax soon as Eltore rests up, he and| quently mentioned fn the Bible, ts the| tt, but Mexico came first; Canada was) {name in the headtine. “y | “Prank Eltome—Frank Eitome— ONEY | rank—bii'me— Albert Hansen 1518 SECOND AVENUE Between Pike and Pine HUTT SsuULULIUNUUULAUOUUUULUUEEOUOAOOLUOLUAOL \| Galilee’s Fishes. ” third among the natives’ favored | ma,’ are be jong missing pode asnarioea flour being firnt | have @ whit until next year to find| jman. “When my house myland American corn meal second. out the rest of the secret. jie went completel: blank. I have see oe 8 Picket w. bayer teat | been walking all over the country do-|. wrot: ll thy erican Museum of Natural y Land oranges are now °) Latest rds show that of the) ; i jing od4 work on the farms But I|fashion fx England. Every 10 days| records a of the! tory, bas conducted researches con- | didn’t remember anything until I saw a shipment of some 16,000 cases first 21 nations importing American | cerning the fishes of the Sea of Galt- |that newspaper piece. Then my mem-lieqvee Jutta, Palestine, for the Brit |!machinery, only three were el Ptpersepay etry yl geet ory came back to me like a fash.” tah Istes. Jaffa, the Joppa so fre-|urope. Probably you'd never suess| ccally might esa gh Gia . | 1 2 hin wife are going to begin mpending seaport terminus of the Jerumalem/|necond, Cuba third, Japan fourth, sista ees toes anti ge ara ag j his Inheritance by opening up @ little | raliway. China fifth, United Kingdom sixth, % . shop near thelr see France seventh. Sometimes an Acre. Not “ successfully, and, as they came to Not until Spain 18) shore, Christ told them to cast their The Black Ghost land. Lord St. Audries claims he saw the ghost. Eng- h scientists are taking his claim seriously, for he is & man of high standing. His father was “chief whip” of Memory and conservative party, also vice-chamberlain to Queen BY MLLTON BRONNER ' Victoria and King Edward. NDON, Jan. 26—Brought bask/ ‘Lord St. Audries encountered his “black ghost” In the ving dead by the flash of | aditional theatrical atmosphere. He didn’t believe. in pdientingieden sie ee ae irijiia bid ts. But he was curious. So, on a week-end visit, he {tine is home again, bapplly reunited his hosts decided to investigate a nearby haunted [with nis tamity. u ” He le Frank Eltome, who a year Phi haunted house was a deserted dwelling, crumbling | *#° walked out of his Bome ut Ox- % “ > ry ford and disappeared. decay, littered with fallen plaster and other rubbish. pina poe eee host’s headquarters were supposed to be in & |pearch for him. She enlixted the aid oor bathroom where, some 50 years ago, an insane jot Frank Gray, member of partia- had committed an atrocious murder and later com- [ment from her district. Together $1 they ran down many clues—only to Sy suicide. Br-r-r-r! be further disappointed. ord St. Audries mounted guard in the upstairs hall Meanwhile @ rich relative had dled tt of the bathroom door. He had a candle for light. and left Eitome « considerable leg iends remained outside, acy. But no one could collect it, for we is Lord St. Audries’ report of what happened: ee of the door. down the dark passage, something rushed like an Boyeral weeks ago ® man’s boty bat towards me. It was black from head to foot and it seemed | was found floating In the Thames built In the form of a very powerful man. But two thing made | at first it was thought that It might ‘Know that }1 was no human being. First I could see no face, just [be that of the missing veterap, but jus blank Secondly, tho it came with huge leaps over the rough, jjlater it. was identified as that of floor. it made absolutely no noise. James Simmonds, of Northampton. when this thing dashed out I waa struck backwards with an Then came a big sensation. Sim- re ible force. . . . I found myself fighting, struggling with I know | monds walked Into his father’s home what, down the steep stairs.” : one afternoon alive and well. Having escaped, Lord St. Audries learns that no dog The newspapers featured the story "A startling ghost story is creating a sensation In Eng- British Tommy Recovers “What are your constituents may.|Today there are 225,000 acres under| Speaks volumes. Me be coaxed into the garden around the haunted house, [8%4 revived the belief that the is is the most significant part of his story. vee leurologista, specializing in psychic phenomena, would A few nights later two slovenly that what Lord Audries saw was a creation of hig | ¢reased men, tired out from tramp- find—an hallucination while in a highly-strung psycho- |!9& the countrymide In search of an ginative condition. Authorities like Hudson admit |°%4,’2 oC f° Sais Pees vat so-called ghosts are actually “seen.” But they do | down - in - -the - mouth. out-ot-luck. admit that seeing them necessarily proves the exist- |They couldn't even find a night's and presence of departed spirits. Hallucinations in |'°" .¢ ine stretched out and ms seem very real. picked up a page of a newspaper ly- fany others firmly believe in ghosts. ing in the mud ‘ou can get just so far with psychic phenomena, then Saeco De aay. “eee | Fomee i 3 hi "And bi Pg where you have nothing to stand on ex- abaat the sears ce the bel Gad i {n the Thames. ter all, faith is man's greatest power. EVERY KNOCK A BOOST gentleman from Georgi: has called me the “wet nurse” of the FOG-CRASH I accept the tithe with gratitude. He has placed me in the with that great prots of civilization—the wolf that suckled and Remus, and that has come down thru the ages embalmed w—Represeniative Hill (R.), Md. ‘oman’s place may be in the home, but her danghter’s place seems to in the auto, homely woman looks much better than a pretty man. Compensation Act Needs Changing ‘The workman's compensation act which has been in re in this state for several years is founded on good mon sense, It protects the workman when he is in- d, Theoretically it makes it worth the while of the iloyer to prevent accidents, It provides for safe- rds, But the act needs considerable gmendment to bring down to date. It was passed when living costs were ich lower. The sums which it provides shall be paid to injured workman are too small even to meet ordinary ig requirements. The machinery of the compensation partment is bulky, cumberso 'e, too expensive, There é too many delays in payme \ of claims to workmen. amounts BA gd for pensions for wives and fam- of men killed in industry are altogether too small. Phe state legislature should pass the bill proposed by ie state labor organizations, providing for increased com- ations. The chief burden of the expense should fall i shoulders of the employers, Then, a scale of pay- which employers are to meet should be arranged that the employer who does safeguard kis workmen d who does prevent accidents in his factories or plants ii pay less. The careless employer should be more vily penalized, HOW OLD 18 ANNE? ft takes the civil service commission two months to accomplish mt hing, by an Investigation, how long will It take them to accomplish , pane tative Andrews (I.), Neb. A gaping hole was torn in eaking In the senate, Bert M. Fernald, senor senator from Maino, the side of the freighter West t this lofty, solemn sentiment: “No restrictions oughi to be placed |Calumb when she collided any Kind of business.” with the freighter Western , heart’ shout dope peddlers and bootleggers. Plain in fog-shrouded New. rag ctleo makes , but wh ba & pert York harbor. She barely Pee eerie ise Pulr tach et A aba Rat made a Brooklyn dock before to » dime, the hardest thing to keep Is 15 conta, settling in the mud, Bore Speaking of oranges, Cassar’s le jnamed as the 19th nation does an-| nein to the right of the boat, 17 PRUDENT QUIETUDE sions planted the first trees in Spain.|other European country mppear.| au’ ana tie nets were fled unica ing about your record in congress ?*| cultivation. . “Nothing,” replied Senator Sor Aa S The “missing link” is disappearing. | chromidae are delicious fish and oc- His Fortune «= And apples! A secdieas, corelens|'This strange creature, first cousin, | yr in such abundant schools that to | “Haven't you been able to interest |apple has been discovered at Abbots-| according to H. G. Wells, both to u#ia persom standing above the wa- “Lemme seo the piece,” sald his | them tord, Canada. It ts of the Pareuse|and the anthropoid ape, is the ab-| ter they look solid. He looked at the picture “I've done better than that I*velyariety. The discovery was an aocl-| origina) Australian. Only 69,000 of} They have been seen in shoals of avoided attracting the attention of/dent. Apples from a new block of/him remain. Odd that Australia| more than an acre in extent, sc close- Professor Gudger says that the companion. frat. friends in a manner that will atmply | Fameune trees, top-mrafted eight|should contain both the “monkey |ly packed that it asemed impossible “Why he's lost an eye, just Uke) wake up my enemies."—-Washington | years ago on Rabka seedlings, were|man” race and perhaps the most pro. for them to move, all with their dor. me,” he went on. Then he read the Star. being graded when they ran across|gressive white race under the #un.| sai fing above the top of the water. SAY “BAYER” when you buy Aspirin. — Insist! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets, you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over 23 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache — Rheumatism Toothache” — Neunitis Sciatica Neuralgia Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions. Handy “‘Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets —Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists, Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid a 4 a