The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 19, 1923, Page 8

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PAGE 8 The Seattle Star stand. That the United te r I t dry hard ean be disp and the price, can obt rhe qual ity of the wet g lepend one’s reso This is an importance can be measured by the one of the major questions paign. Blame amendment cannot be fixed « any is more to be cen s public holders. How can the ordinat tizen be expected to observe a law which he eyed by high federal and State offi cers have 1 I Managed to keep it in stating wha Aside from tl tion’s healt! ing is weaker Either we s! Can we look t can- } taenth for the r the ¢ eenth group have este tor drink t out Some 80,000 of Mr. Ford’s famous products have gov Mast four months. Perhaps the troubled folks over there @ut Tryin Cobb's theory that the flivver is a peacemaker rope the © really trying Old Bill Hohernzollern refuses to pay his taxes in Holland, on the ground that he is an invited guest. That puts him in duteh with the Dutch, Washington gives us the news that the nations owing us big money are “making gestures” toward payment, and that calls for a feint from us After close and long scrutiny Denmark has been able to recognize Russia in her present disguise, Just Another Killer Man-made lightning been Blazing, streaming, deadly lightning. they say. What is the not this: “Man-made lightning will kill whole armies.” We had wondered why anybody should desire to vent” lightning. Now we know. When F his kite as a lure to nature’s product, however, his pur- Pose was to control his catch for the good of mankind. Mostly it has served well. In a smaller degree its service has been less creditable. Now it is to do its worst. Not a thought of good. Not an idea of turning the great power to the betterment of the world. Only a ' thought that it may be used in war. Only a direct sug- has “invented” —powerful, On test, “it works,” thought born of this invention? Just “in- nklin sent up » gestion that it may be employed to kill whole armies of _. men. Heavens above! Is there nothing but hardness left in human hearts? Can our best brains think nothing— imyent nothing—but the terrible machinery of war? Pasteur once said he had “an invincible belief that Science and peace would triumph over ignorance and war.” Peace is now crying aloud for its place in the world. Science, in a large measure, is holding it back by giving Aa tribute to war and the ignorance of which war born. number of blind persons in the United States is decreasing, but are still enough to fill prohibition enforcement, offices. On the other hand, it is best that you know the outgo of your income, ‘Ho matter how painful it may be. Fourteen men are running for United States senator in Minnesota, ‘Those Swedes are certainly ambitious. Broken records in this airplane game are all right provided there are broken necks included. Those Genial Packers The big packing interests in Chicago have informed the “secretary of agriculture that their acquisition of Morris “& Co. will not result in control of or undue influence over livestock and meat pr “The purchase,” sumers of meat products. Can't you see them—those genial meat packers—as they gathered around the big table, their souls oozing _ philanthropy and their minds mulling over projects in the interest of producers and consumers? It may be they had | been absorbing and digesting Judge Gary's thoughts © Yelative to the Bible as a business adjunct. 4 Also, maybe not. But something had come over them—that was cer- fain. With radiant faces and hearts full of good will, " they asked each other what they could do for those who » grow the cattle and those who eat the meat, real suffer- "ers from improper and unfair prices. Like a flash a happy thought came to them, and they cheerily said to themselves : | “We will help producer and consumer by helping our- selves. We will get rid of one of our most aggressive competitors by buying him in.” They gobbled Morris & Co. Then they happily ad- journed, still oozing philanthropy. Don’t you see plainly what they have done for all of us? Yes, neither do we. A common dog is the safest watch dog. Get a valuable d . able dog and bur- Bihey irisy. steal bim. . s To keep a new table, phonograph or piano ooking nice make the family wear rubber heels, exe old electric light globes. Very valuable for scaring stray cats at night. rt never won fair lady, but faint light has won fair lady many 1. Friends and Lovers Writing about sex, Dr. William J. Robinson com- ments that the ideal relationship between lovers is to have a real harmony of tastes, desires and ambitions—to be friends as well as lovers, But people who fall in love are so rarely alike that there's an old saying about the advisability of marrying one’s opposite. This is not true mentally and spiritually, ‘ It is f ie physically, as part of nature’s scheme of even- ; ing things up, restoring the balance to keep us from wan- dering too far from standards. So the big woman mar- ties the little man and Goldie Locks prefers Black Eyes. Ou never can tell when we will have a flood. 1 fi Pati this summer. “tthe children learn People going on plenles to forget everything usually forge salt for the eggs. t even the Pitching horseshoes would be a nice game if che such a had habit wing tobaceo wasn't _ Chairs last longer If tacks a eed upright in the seat, op The honeymoon ends when the furniture store collector begins, THE SEATT rc EVERYTHING COMING THEIR WAY _ LE Chamy in the shade, and show ‘em how marble prize. Way back they hammer nd pe Witho I'd like champion, toot spite of the y have m& boyhood again-—perhaps I'm a kid even yet! Bo go take a dip in the ocean for me, and tell the Atiai “hello.” The ocean, the city, the sights you will things that I, too, used to know, And as to the marbles, you give ‘erm your best, for that's all a fellow can do; and when it's & question of standing @ test, Seattle is banking on you! Girridge Nomn hat revert into }be partially also, It looks like a mouse equipped with wings. | However, the pat ts a very une ful animal and it is probable that, in time, he man | will prevent immense damage is now suffered by crops. The bat eats tho insects that eat the crops. The bat also ts very fond « Gag i+ toes and this Increases his value | greatly. There is popular prejudice against | Scientists are experimenting with |the bat almost equaling the general | bats and trying to devine nome plan |fear that is felt of snakes. for keeping them in captivity. The It is probable this is due to the {difficulty is that they feed only ltact that the bat is a nocturnal| while om the wing and do not get lanmal, hiding in dark corners in|enough food when confined in a Its appearance may |small space, FOOLS By Berton Braley HE wise men sald, “Why, the world {x flat! Our fathers’ fathers have taught us that; And all experience goes to show ‘That what our fathers have sald tn no. It's only fools who would dare allege ‘That one could sail o'er the ocean's edge.” But the fools—the fools!—let the toxin sound it— Balled to the blue-sky’s edge—and ‘round it. responsible, Afraid of Bats? They're Very Useful. Fond of Mosquitoes. Feed on the Wing. | | | HE wise men said, “It is all a dream, ‘That anything can be done with steam,” The wise men said, “He's a fool for fair Who thinks we ever shall ride the alr.” But the fools believed, and the fools held true ‘To thelr foolishness, till they saw it thru; And a fool must follow his natural bent— So now we swoop thru the firmament. Jalfleo, Columbus, Wright, pioneers Conquering nature, charting spheres! And ever the wise men—learning naught, Jeered the aims and the ends they sought tr of al! of the creeds and schools, Man is led to the heights—by Fools! ipa fools, the fools! how they loom in sight, w Three in One Family Restored by Tanlac ' {without cating thing and never feel the least bit hungry. I never slept well, Just lay awake for hours every night, and got up mornings fesling exhausted and miserable, “I have taken two bottles of Tan- jac now and am feeling fine, «I have already gained over five pounds in welght, for my appetite {s splendid and I enjoy every bite of my food, That exhausted, run: down feeling is gone, for I sloop like a log every night, and 1 feel ko well and strong It t# a pleas ire to do my housework, My two daughters started taking Tanlao soon after it began to help me so much, and we are all three gaining more and more every day, We Just think ‘Tanlac Is grand,” Tanlac i for sale by all good druggists, Accept no substitute, Over 87 million bottles sold, All Gain Renewed Health, Strength and Increased Weight, Declares Mrs. Brownstein—“It’s Just Grand,” She States “Hoth my two daughters and my- self ure now taking ‘Tanlac and Im- proving every day,” said Mrs. Sadie Brownstein, a highly-esteemed real- dent of 1980 Folsom at., San rans cisco, Cal, “or months and months before 1 began taking Tanlac 1 had been in miorable health. I was losing weight, felt. dragky and out sorta all the time and se od to have absolutely strength or enorgy. 1 got so weak 1 couldn't do my work, and just would drag Tanlac Vegetable Pills are nature's around in the house, T had no ape own remedy for conatipation, For petite at all and could go for day# salo everywhore,—Advertisemont, tien or tl i dan er tetcomatl ca RC , na will be domesticated by | If this can be done the bat | that | T GIVES UP SECRET June 19.—Ad. ‘or information uts of a mo er two children have been a ed after Their bodies have just been removed from an ned pit at Simmondiey, ne »p, midway between here and | Manchente two years AUTOISTS, NOTICE! Fiji, June 19.—) license to SUVA cid got a passenger caught him with « the machin drive 9 gers in and conte» T. L. McCormick J.E. Harrison - H. A. Schaub, Jr, E.J.Peach - - G.I. Syverson - Lyle Kuney - - Leo Bardarson - S.K. Verner = - R.H. Hickman - Mary M. Glum - Effie Flint - - Aleta Grow - - st ihn ins Clarence Linstrom- - + - TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1 Ossified Constitutions BY HERBERT QUI¢ 1K RIEDA’S OLLIES orning. why sdolr resembled 1 knew Her t og room. And she looked like an emergen case, In the morning. No wonder had a room from her husband knew her secret I alone 1 wa. We 6 such de apending the night. 4 slept together early nachinat McCall Printed Pattern 3260, $5c. always want a frock of Gingham dress of gingham Is in his season there's good reason budge First, because shown in such q " b are made in thel in the MoeCall Printed F A new model { checked gingham, tions of these sketched. tissue there are many more—for plaid and gingham, plain gingham and combina- Doucall-fouthwick SECOND AVENUE AT PIKE Located on Second Avenue at Cherry Street Our Tellers THE TELLERS of the Union National Bank are the men and women with whom the majority of our patrons come in contact most frequently. There is a family spirit here—we want our patrons to know all of us, and we want to know all of our patrons. Our tellers are: Note Teller Payroll Teller Paying Teller Signature Teller Collection Teller Foreign Exchange Teller Safekeeping Teller Domestic Exchange Teller Receiving Teller Receiving Teller Coupon Teller Savings Teller + Savings Teller Trust Department Bond Department Wm, A. Reynolds - - - Asst. Note Teller S.M. Evanson - - - Asst. Collection Teller EthelGlenn - - - - Statement Teller Elaine Culliton - - - Statement Teller Thomas E.McLean - - - - - - = Paying Teller (Georgetown Branch) MarieBuhl - - - - - + + +=: = - -Receiving Teller (Georgetown Branch) AlbertLinstrom - - - - - - - - eerie Paying Teller (Ballard Branch) Walter Clarke - - - - = - +. - Receiving Teller (Ballard Branch) Clare Cayo Savings Teller (Ballard Branch) L.G. Stanton Note Teller (Ballard Branch) Foreign Department

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