The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 10, 1923, Page 8

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\ Prase Borvie 9 $2.00, ¥ fan Franclece New York officg A Date in History tory, the United States flag the house of the British parlia- For the first e in |} (at half mast) floats over ment. Should Kk flag over our ng George die, would we raise the British houses of cong We surely ought to do it, Not in token of respect for any title or of any individudal but as tribute of respect and azppathy of one great people for another. *The Eagle poised over the den of the Lion! The touch of the spirit t makes all men kin, The gleam of hope brightening “Brotherhood of Man,” writ upon the clouds . of the heavens. Poor, weak, groping civilization! can we not be honest, loving brot at other time in when we meet to sadly look upon our gre dead? pass off the stage of Ife clo of good “in Thousands of men breathe, move and live and are heard of no more, Why? They did not a p the world.—Chatmers. French and Moors are haying a war. Only a small one, so wo are not invited yet. If you want » man to feel at home let him raise cain because the dinner is late. Bootleggers are too busy to take thelr vacations now Bathing beaches have a large floating population. Gobs Like Seattle (The following news item is culled from the San Diego Sun, It was accompanied by a photograph of the free souvenir pass over the Seattle municipal railway given to all sailors of the Pacific Fleet on thelr re cent visit here) “Seattle is treating us like kings. it to Seattle.” This was part of a message received today from San Diego bluejackets aboard destroyers now in Northern waters. Every officer and enlisted man of the battle fleet was given a complimentary street car pass. It entitled him to ride any place in Seattle on the street railway. Seattle also impressed the bluejackets with its spirit, “We want you to feel at home,” by establishing soft drink stands at various points in the downtown, section to “set Yem up to the boys.” San Diego sailors were given all the lemonade, orange Juice, etc., they could drink. It was free. The bluejackets all have a warm spot in their for Seattle. You've got to hand hearts Imagine the apology of a Dallas, who hit a burglar by mistake for her husband! Texas, won The mad college graduate informs us several men working under him make more than he does. ‘The trouble with running away with a bunch of money bs you have to go further than it does. Is Bad Axe Still With Us? The Star awaits later news from Bad Axe, Michigan, With great anxiety. There is, or a few days ago, a desperate situation up ther The battle for the champio: county baseball | * Bad Axe team was contésting h promise Of success. But all Bad Axe blades and fans—the whole town—were agreed on one point, and that was that vic- toxy depended on “Wild Pet pitcher, and on “Wild Pete” alone. That r > situ ation tense | yond compare. Stern repre: the rule among Bad Axemen, but anybody could t they only Meeded ill news of “Wild Pete 2 tension and set the town aflame. Til news came! Pitcher “Wild Pete,” and baseball bulwark, was apprehended just as he had in- advertently put two gallons of very bad liquor in his automobile. And the most important game of the season was only a few days At first, Bad Axe was dazed. Th ~ as it loss of the Huron county pennant owing to the inoy tune conduct of the police, it went wwild~—wild. Latest reports were that the chamber of commerce Was in ssion, the mayor and city council in conference, justice was in sober deliberation, the polic force and the outraged, angry and desp Were being led in sobbing by the first saxophone of the Bad A: Iver cornet bai Appeals had | high off of the government and there Mination to stop not short of the president. No one would dare to predict what would happen in ca of failure. And beyond that there is no n seceded from the Union ere t! Menacing the gove: “Wild Pete,” the But we do not know. So, we can only wait w y and hope that all is well in Bad Axe, and with “Wild Pete,” the pitcher. ant in the Huron The Bad Axe may have it now be hands on There are books on how to play golf. The golf widows need one on how to stop playing it, Among the evils of returning from vacation is finding you left some thing in the ice box. Prohibition in England is just marking time, Just treading water. while in America it Is A Coal Miner’s Idea Over and over it has been said there is an excess of min in the coal industry Neither the miner nor anyone else denies it. And this ¢ s, from all appear- ances, will continue to grow. Improvements in methods are increasing the “per man” and “per mine” production. Not so long ago Judge Gary, of U. S. Steel, wanted im- Migration bars let down to get more men for the steel mills. Now, what’s the matter with ta from the mining industry steel trade? Impractical? Yes, so long as men must toil 12 hours a day in the steel mills; impractical if, in the proposed change to the eight-hour day, steel mill wages are to be cut down proportionately. But with an eight- hour y, a fair wage and good work- ing conditions i in the steel mills, there'd ve nothing of the “impossible” or “impracticable” about The idea comes from a veteran 1 poe coal who thinks about the past, present and future, lieves the plan would benefit the steel trade, trade, the workmen in both casi And who—besides Judge wouldn’t? sing the excess men and turning thém toward the miner, He be- the coal and the public. xary, possibly—thinks it A Columbus, Miss., man who went swimming before cooling off got rescued, all rig A cop's auto was stolen in Chicago while he wasn't In it, so they didn't get him. A June husband tells us two may live as cheaply as one, but not so quietly, |< plished in THE THE L/ SEATTL ST TRIBUTE The Land of 35,000 Lakes BY FRANK G, CARPE) N his Seattle address President Harding compared the posst | [eae of Alaskan development with what has been accon: Northern Europa Frank G. Carpenter, which the same idea ls further developed —Editor, Following is an extract from an article by famous traveler, on Finland, In at one. granite ever In coming } if Joined end attle the treen 200 million, o are pine. have more t which 70 per cent nment knows hig Tomw ft can Tt has more © pines and 20 m ( Europe are h wood pulp, sprint may tal force of Imatra fs the The drop is n {4 80 Narrow that one can a stone from one bank to the other, but the water soars as cated here. {t files thru the rocks with a As to nolse that can t printed on Fi onda of be seen moving ove to the ports. The making plant of Europe {# lo- lumber, Finland has about 200 sawmills, and there are woodworking factories of ption. The lo; ‘cos being nawed carried to the sand rafted The cut in 13 billion ‘o plank a In the «pring year is more t n from Early Fall Styles in SILK WAISTS About 100 of the very latest styles in Tricosham Sill Watsts~ just from the designers, Some aro Jacquettes with long ties, others are Slipons with printed designs and braid trimming. Five distinct models with all stzes In each style. Colors are navy, rust, gray) brown, bisque, red, gold and black, Specially Priced for Saturday NTER motor car road an inch thick and sufficlently wide to. accommodate 20 cars traveling abreast all the way from here to the moon. The Finns are # m of farmers, Altho only a twelfth of the cou cultivated — there * I have come here I have motored out into the country and d with the farmers Tho t out derstand t) other parts of 2 s are well cu farming regions ¢ se and the RIEDA’S OLLIES Ho alwa ened her, To flowers in the not been there, do not know, wuld have talked abo from tho ears up. ‘There was only one bench, In the garden, And they were always on it I moved the bench one day. He was so absent-minded, He never knew, Until ho again itkened her, the blooms about th Y were onions. FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1923, To Warren G. Harding Good-bye, dear friend! Wo strive, thra tears, Ah, not The grave is not the end; Fe'teld our love, whee sadly bow Your kindly life tg never gone; Our whispered words are worthless, now— Your heart that hailed us each » friend, Attuned alone to mortal ears. Thru countless years shall carry on! But Hope suggests and Falth declares You see with more than mortal eye, Good-bye, dear frlen@! Tho Faith may know And know the love the nation bears, That Life Is vietor over Death, And’ bear we while we say, “Good-tyer’ Today we tallc with bated breath, While voices choke and teardrops flow, Good-bye, dear friend! And have you left? ‘Today we pause to mourn our loss, And Is that flower-laden grave ‘The end of all the life you gave To pledge s love that cannot die; From longing hearts we send across To serve a people now bereft? The vaulted blue, » last Good-bye! Pa LETTERS: Minister Should Not Snoop © he should do #0, me than that of holy com. | set and leave his church duties for te PPITOR | the purpose of 1 detecting can only be ling and brand himself a ypocrite in the eyes of all liberal-m da men. | His duties should be confined to | the church and congregation, in or- fer to retain the respect common and the his ca among men for any | Christ of August ould a preache y 1 do not| For a preacher fo disguise -him drink liqu yours, TREATED OND Preachers and Liquor Frere poe | Aitor The Star: whole, W iy tear it ae. bits | DROPSY . sng WEEK FR Bhort and read just what woe wa MRS. LETA DE MRS. DAISY DELLI rm Yakima, Wash. | Were ts our opinion of a preacher |drinking strong drink—Lev. x.:9; | | “Do not drink wine nor strong | uced im 16 to 20 days. Wonderful | pes ety. (Write for tree tral treatment, ROPSY REMED | 90! ¥ 60. | 16, ATLANTA, Ga. ie drink; thou nor thy sons with thee sas when ye go into the tabernacle of the congregation, lest ye die; {t shall The Eastern Outfitting Co. Presents Interesting Fall Modes be a statute forever thruout your | generations.” ‘Then you will go on and find| |more in Isatah xxvill.%; Tit. 1.7;) | Prov. xxili.:21; Prov. xxvi:9; I. Cor., | vill; L Cor, vi:0-10 | Tho word of our beloved Jesus ts true, and we take the Bible as « making of hay the grass has to 1 racks as in Nor- | Sweden. The most com- vehicle ix a sled, which the hauling of grain The sled a Into the are used both 1 eon many women at work in the fields and the labor goes on from daylight to dark. J summer World Travels. Copy- | by Frank @. Carpenter.) SCIENCE Not Indestructible. Burn in Electric Arc. Hardest Substance. Diamonds, (Carpenter's right, 1983, CREDIT TERMS Daily we are receiving new shipments of fall wear; each one has revelations in delight- fnl style creations—garments fashioned of rich, high-grade materials, and the latest is a shipment of Capes, Coats and Wraps of fashion’s newest fab- ric—Kerami. You will admire its beauty and added attractiveness is achieved with fur trimming in many of the coats. Fitch, Opos- sum and Wolf are the favor- CRED GIADLY diamonds were sup- | uctible, But now burned away complet | by the heat of the electric | ertheless the diam | substance yot disc It in made | pure carbon and ts the same ma s the soot of a chimney or ite of a pencil nds can be made artifically, are very small y expensive, T' that enormous pressure portant part in the con s Jouth Af @ rock nd lava. Your New Fall Coat on Easy Terms You can have any coat you select delivered on a small down payment, the balance is paid at your convenience, If you value you pbs aoa Mind There is such a complete display that every woman will be able to find a coat that appeals to her particular taste. DR. M. € Speciall, year, newer more Jasting | more serious ailments. | No knife, Consultation in free. Bring your | hardest cases | 1004 Tht oo i | ta Shes The Models Displayed in ~ - the Window are Only Sug- gestive. Come in and See Them All, terns. The lots Men’s and Boys’ prices, Saturde -come Saturday. [tA National Tri Rational [%A National Insti ution ition “(AG From Coast to Coast’ Frowning {ing § . Established 101 Years August Clearance Sale Men’s and Young Men’s SUITS and TOP COATS This is the event of the season. afford to miss this clea Top Coats, the season’s are broken, but we have all sizes at these remarkably low prices: Suits and Top Coats $21 $96 $3-75 Furnishings at C ‘learance last day of Manhattan Shirt sale Second Ave. at University. Coats for The Little Miss Too! Sport and Dress Models Chie little coats that will delight the little miss are shown in smartly fashioned styles. Some have pretty fur trimming. Sizes are 2 to 14. LS Men’s Bradbury Suits Quality Tailored Models in Fall Styles One- and two-button styles are chosen for men this fall, Bradbury tailoring assures that the best materials and work: manship are combined to produce the quality suits that render unusual service, $29.50 You can’t rance sale of Suits and s best models and pat- and Upwards Arcade Square

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