The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 16, 1923, Page 8

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Donald McKa pper left the way € yard of trim-lined cl nto the water Christened “Glory of the culmination of months of the that could be secured in the w bespoke the speed of whic! builders predicted for her a Finally, fully-equipped, she slipped out of the ton harbor and set forth in search quer, The waters of every sea of the globe by the proud prow of the ship as she sailed hemispheres in search of new adventure Port after port she tou i, always leaving behind the impression of her superiority other er Proudly, and as if borne on the wings of the wind, she sped from New York, around the Horn, and to San Francisco in 90 days, a feat that has never since before been equaled. ~ Those were the days of glory for the fine old ship The Seattle Star s vessel was the skilled ship labor Her neat lines pable and her Sea me she was ca great future Bo. of worlds to con was cut the over Phone Main 0400. Nome mail, out of By Published D paper Eoterp: . $2.00; year, 2.50 Ban Francisco of- New York office, *How to Make a Million Henry Ford, in an interview, is quoted as disapproving e thrift method” for getting ri “The world is crying for service,” s five service and you cannot fail.” Just so. There weve Socrates, ays Henry, and adds, Aristotle, Columbus, ohn the Baptist, Abraham Lincoln, General Booth, John Wesley, Savanarola, Mary Lyon, David Livingston, and en Jesus himself, who might with propriety be included the category of the world’s greatest ‘service givers.” ny of these met death in some form at the hands of rich of their time, and none of them, so far as own, qualified for the millionaire's blue book. Of course, the facts are that the vast majority of tlie “Save the pennies—be eful, service-giving men and women of history have ssed out as poor in this world’s goods as they were en they came into the world. And even the experts on riches fail to agree: methodical—give ities,” says John D. Rockefeller. “Don’t think of anything but service,” ord freely to advises Henry “Go into the rubber business in Africa,” advised the your credit to the last penultimate cent,” said . H. Harriman. ‘ Keep out of debt. I have never owed a cent in my fe,” said Marshall Field, one of the world’s greatest erchants. | “Loan your money on the best security—money always ” said Russell Sage. ‘ Make your railroad and it will make you,” lius Vanderbilt. said Cor- * “Wreck your railroad and sell it to the boobs,” said Gould. “The world loves to be humbugged,” said Phineas T. num. lake the government build your railroad,” said Collis ‘Huntington, or, “Have a millionaire uncle,” might be advice of his nephew. len again it may be that Henry’s idea of “service” § relative, to be taken only in a strictly Pickwickian high-up Krupp officials sentenced to from 10 to 20 years’ impris- know what to do. They will appeal to a supreme court. To be it is a French court, in this instance, but ‘most any old supreme will do. FEDERAL JUDGES, FOR EXAMPLE devil is very near at hand to those who, like monarchs, are ¢ to none but God for their actions —Gustavus Adolphus, the deat and dumb persons in the United States, 47,000 are males only 43,000 females. Looks like unjust discrimination, A fashion note says, “The styles for women reveal individuality.” N. Y. Doctors to “Tend Bar”? - Some more cheer for old Mr. Barleycorn, this time in @ decision of Federal Judge Knox of New York, declar- the provision limiting doctors’. prescriptions of booze a pint in 10 days to be unconstitutional. Of course, me other federal judge, elsewhere, may declare the ite and the United States supreme court may finally e Knox, but, during the mix-up and delay, New s can produce the “full-as-a-goat” condition by ing the right doctor, one given to pint-size preserip- ns, for instance. it is interesting to note in the reports of the proceedings e Judge Knox that the case was brought by an or- ation of 100 “prominent physicians,” that a ques- directed to 30,000 physicians showed a vote of to 49 in favor of no restriction on quantity of liquor scriptions and that the judge made the point that no nit had been placed on the quantity that might be used sacramental purposes. It seems that, in New York state, at any rate, the doors a for the doctor to become a “bar-keep” and the u to become a place in which to fill up. Maybe ell get to prohibition by this road, but, Oh Lord! it’s undabout, roundabout! nn A Chicago newspaper man escaped from those Chinese bandits in his . The pajamas were probably pink and the bandits mistook him an angel and didn’t chase him, are simple little dev lees, easy to ‘get into, but hard as everything get out of. Groceries are edibles bought on credit and paid for payday if you have i) money left. DENIAL BY BERNICE M. BARRY Y OUR love words fall upon my heart Like fragrant April showers, Upon the barrenness of soil! ° That bears not fruit nor flowers. You do not know that I have turned Him from my very door Whose lightest word would quiclen My heart to life once more. and she bore herself with a haughty grace even long after the steam engine began to crowd from the high seas such craft as she, Her speed defied the at tempts of the mighty new inventions to wrest away her crown, new fields to conquer, She sailed always onward, still acclaimed the looking for fastest sail- ing vessel that ever hoisted canvas, In the days of her prime man, wise in the ways of the sea, of Andrew Lund the wheel of The Glory a cisco harbor after her record trip around the It was Lund who carefully he was commanded by a a man by the name it was Lund who stood proudly at she sailed into San Fran Horn picked her during course those days when she was fighting her last and mighty battle against the steamships that were plying hither and thither, regardless of the winds and the elements: But in that relentless battle between science and the pride of an old sailing vessel, of the Seas, humiliated, became a refrige the Alaska shipping trade. science won, and Glory ator ship In Even in that capacity she yutgrew her usefulne an tied at a Tacoma doch Today The Glory is but the water's edge beach of Endolyne set the torch tk dull ved reflec plying bet as the boat flames ate i distance it Icoked as if in Seattle her outlir aging vessel e ¢ Strange as it ma proudly boasted |} is now but attle harbor iid ship he once fell back over the He at least will a common sea in the coasty piloted, very suffer THE TAIL THAT WAGS THE DOG tan men are (hv —} | SHOULD have CUT THIS OFF WHEN HE | be intere LETTER FROM \V RIDGE MANN Dear Folks May 16, 1923, I went to Walker Whiteside’ piay-—"“The Hindu” ts {ts name; “It's Eastern stuff,” fame.” had a Maharajah, too; And im the end, the | | | Editor The Star: In the issue of May 11, in an edl- torial headed, “College Folks’ Relig- ion,” you write things for which you should be commended. The theologs of the Mid-Atlantic conference, who came to the conclusion that college- bred young men were not interested in the church need to learn that God does not care one whit more for col- lege-bred rebels than for any other | I heard them say, I always liked the Eastern things, as Omar Khayyaim's Jugs, and Burmta girls, and magic ring, and Oriental rugs, Before they raised'the curtain there I sald, “Believe it if you dare—but, anywaf, would strike an awful blow at freedom of the press; so here and now I'll let you know the way the scenes progress, They had a villain In the play they started in to find; he raised the deuce With England's sway—they called him “master mind.” they showed us foreign field#; and then, to beautify the view, they gave us Bydney Shield. And then somebody stole the moon—or nomething rich and rare. A couple actors tried to spoon with pretty Syd.ry there. a thing we all admit should bring a blush of shame; but still, they can’t be blamed a bit—-I might have done the same! They sought the villain. thru the scenes, and gave him quite a run; they madé us exercise our beans to figure, “master mind"- Gordon Kean, who is, I find, the guy who wrote the play! Write Yon LETTERS ie EDITOR “and Walker's known to d the program well. It don't tell!" Now that They And that's “Who's the one?” altho I shouldn't say—was College Men and the Churches kind, as he is no respecter of per: sons, Tho pity in not for the church, | but for the educated heathen. But there fs another silo to the} question, and that fs: The vast over. | whelming majority of people are not} college-bred, and still the church has a goodly number of college men in| her ranks. The only thing that can| save the college man is the Gospel of | Jesus Christ; and the very men who | Christie for any loge-bred inless printians by a & course In | service. Men re not made ( study and ao: vrintiann by f God; and t oom h membership as isa on a college of church t that we have a > many college-bred men in the ministry who were never saved, and because their deaf cars cannot hear the voice of God, they are seeking to tear the Bible to pieces. The church is not aking college men to be in terested in her, but is urging th 1 to sted in themselves and flee from the wra the church, and the onl men Duntap Bag Why Isn’t Pass Plan Tried Out? Editor Tho Star Kindly print re naon given by elty ref and lying unde » her and all ¢ tion into the een Tacoma and § at her planking some might but when uld be plaint seem, s master’s an, d then for years she wa 1 charred hulk, burned to water off the n shallow afternoon ight & ngers on the saw the red Sunday night At fire might be neared the old ru the n e cast & k Pas the boats seen the captain who once of the famous clipper, running out of the Se- trade. He, like the grand rose to his zenith and then path he had climbed. 4 pang of remorse when he ores OLLIES Bhe was one of those nobodies from nowhere. Had caught a little fish, | Me way in the Standard Ot! pud-| But advanet I met her ¢ He had jus Had you pr Bhe wo! I am never haughty- Nor haughty to the humble People of breeding never are. She was going over a dinner list. Excluding some of the beat in tows. | Myself, among the number. | She gave me a venomous look, An sho said her dinnér would be exclusive Her father had been a butcher, 3 answered sweet! as well as eet one day. | a big raise in ked her with popped. humble a pin, you father un y YORK CUT.” arbitrary attitude of the majority! members of this body I would like to/ know it As in the soning ordinance, too much authority ts usurped. The tax- payers’ protest Is unheeded—he ex ists solely to foot the bills H. B. F. First authentic record of glass 1 was about 1226. The Glory of the Seas” is no more; that her owners were fo reed to burn her because no buyer could be found, But Captain Lund will go on sailing the séas per- haps until he makes his final trip “across the bar” while “The Glory of the Seas” has made her last voyage Henceforth, she will sail only as a phantom ship, flitting across the ocean, her sails set, coming as from nowhere, disappearing in the same manner. And the old sailors who once trod her deck will see her loom out of the mist, disappear in another bank, and then be gone forever. The life of both the proud clipper and her captain suggest those ever-true lines in “‘C ’s Elegy in a Country Church Yard": “The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power, And all that beauty, all that wealth e’er gave; Await alike the inevitable hour. The path of glory leads but to the grave.” learns that Enjoy thirst- Young and old—all may know great delight in pleasing taste and quenchin; ng thirst with a ure and wholesome everage. Pistons Down —this non-detonating gasoline 78 seconds from lather to towel! A super-keen blade for the world’s That's the secret toshaving in 78 seconds with a Valet AutoStrop Razor. A perfected blade, a wonderful development. 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It permits increased compression because compression is limit- ed by the tendency of a gasoline to de- tonate. ill authorities know that. And increased compression means in- creased power and efficiency. Hill-Climbing ‘‘Gas’’’ With Union Non-Detonating Gaso- line you'll note a new “‘lift” on hills and no “knocking” due to gasoline. There’s new speed on the level and a swifter rush in the pickup. Sustained impulse reduces vibration— saves wear and tear. There's higher efficiency and more mileage, therefore, in a gasoline like this. Union Non- -Detonating Gasoline is the product of progressive refining meth- ods. Its quality is governed by exhaus- tive tests. The research of able chemists, equipped with the finest facilities for studying refining methods, is constantly devoted to its improvement.

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