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PAGE 8 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 192p. THE SEATTLE STAR Seattle Star 4 Oe fan Franciece New Tork offiog What Brings You Happiness + Savages on South Sea islands get more satisfaction and Happiness out of life than we do with our incessant pur Suit of the dollar. Dean Charles R. Brown of Yale Divin 3ty school, makes this comment. It is open to argument, it happiness certainly requires more than material pos- ions. Por instance, the early American pioneer who farmed is 10-acre clearing in the forest undoubtedly was hap- fer than many a modern farmer with his fields stretch- as far as he can see. * The happiest people seem to be the ones with simple ts. That's why there's somet in the home simply and co: rtably furnished, with @ touch of luxury here and there. On the sé principle that the young woman who can afford only one diamond tS more real joy from her lone diamond than the rich man with diamonds galore. Recently we visited a home that cost $50,000 to furnish. had about everything that anyone could desire. But pidly the impression grew on the visitor that the fur shings were too fine. Like living in a candy shop, com- with having a candy appetite and only a pound of bons available. ® Our civilization is machine-made. We've been passing thru a period of Big Production Mania. As if the way to Happiness were to heap our country to overflowing witn tos, garments, fi | The result: #) Material things cease r our actual wants are fully suy We'd rather be a boy living in a log cabin with a radio & prince in a palace. g appealing, to all of shortly i Pool weather does not cure summer laziness. exeuse for being lazy. But It does take away . ithe put-and-take craze is back again. We put the heavies on and " take them off again. They say liquor traffic along the Canadian border is heavy. Wonder jit is going or coming? Millions of Americans Illiterate ‘Five million men and women admitted to the last cen- takers that they could neither read nor write. The iteracy comm in of the National ational associa- says the correct figure is ne. 000,000, since ly half the people who can’t read or write are too ; ud to admit it. q * This shocks the educators. ; generations since reading writing were excep- al accomplishments, in many communities only the yman being able to make records. Don't worry, we're ssing. But it's only a matter of a a wind carried a bale of cotton part of the way to town. Prob- a trade wind. * = "Most of us can see how the styles change by comparing our ‘suits with S With a daughter in high school there isn't very much that her parents don't learn. e We Learn to Farm the Ocean ‘e)Whales are being killed in such tremendous numbers, the-use of modern weapons, that they are threatened ‘ath extinction. So warns Uncle Sam's biological sur- ve . It urges proper steps for conservation, such as in- national agreements, closed seasons for several years, d so on. ’ ‘And, undoubtedly, such steps would make whales multi- ‘ply. It illustrates man’s mastery of the ocean’s depths— is ability to farm the ocean as well as the land. Ocean | farming will expand. Sea food will form an increasing of the diet of future generations. skinny have a slender chance of keeping warm, but the plump— y have a fat chance. marks, telephone numbers and splotches are removed from the by repapering. spare tire is excellent for mixing milk shakes, Fill the tire and let | Bie children roll it. fork is all right if you have enough spare time for it. The Wood Alcohol Industry Wood alcohol, scientifically known as methanol, will be ly used as fuel for autos. So predicts Dr. Ralph H. , who's discovered a cheaper and quicker synthetic of making methanol. ' McKee estimates that 68,000,000 quarts of wood alcohol will be manufactured in America this year,. which is frand news for boctleggers. Government is criminally figent in not properly safeguarding the public against ping duped by disguised wood alcohol. The sale of all ther poisons is rigidly restricted. One safeguard could se compulsory use of strong scent. parents worry about keeping the kids in clothes and others about i the kids in autos. + Some day a genius will arise to vaccinate us all against book agents | and insurance men. q ‘Piles Mathis ‘Whe grocery bill may be reduced easily by feeding the family candy ? every meal, ie at Hy Capitalizing Patriotism British movie manufacturers, unable to compete with ican films in their home market, as a last resort are ng the British to patronize British films as a matter ; patriotism. | + Some one in a cynical mood once defined patriotism as 3 the last resort of a scoundrel. While this may be false philosophy, the British movie incident is worth notice as illustration that patriotism frequently is used in | @eonomics as a crutch for industrial inefficiency or a ¥ k for things and motives a lot worse. a _—_—_— * What this country needs is a law against grass widows being as good ing as they are. feather forecasts are not so reliable, but they are more reliable than forecasts, _ The Agony of Hiding Out Imprisonment is mild compared with the agony of hid- ' fig from the police, says Joseph Lundy, Boston lawyer. Tht figuitive lives in constant terror of arrest. He is ever | waiting for the thing he dreads most—capture. In many ses they are caught because they become frantic from ding their secret and “have to tell somebody.” Worst of all, man cannot escape from himself. He {s is own judge and jury, whether his crime is murder or ¥ petty act of meanness. Don't help your son get his arithmetlo problem. It tsn’'t right. About tho time it Isn't, ‘othing rors to bo as good or as bad as tt once seemed, |) Weare being reminded by the trees that they une a loose leaf system. ; Geologist Predicts World Cataclysm/{ Would Change Poles and Shift Seattle 1923 Disasters In Danger Zone A” I Eartt avake In Kam M E thquake in Dalma quake in Asta th Bela de. thquake in Persia jon of Mt. Etna leatroyed. uake in red thou yo, Yoko. nquake in EDITOR'S NOTE—Due to the great demand for extra issues of The Star in which De, Milton A. Nobles’ prediction of a world cataclysm was used, the article is being reprinted here. It was published for the first time on September 15. BY BOB DORMAN pyrignt by United Pr PHILADELPHIA, Sept. the Japanese earthquake a wa taclysms that will remould t ¢ map of t world to be 4 out age? {ilton A. Nobles, geologist and of earthquake and vy jomena, thinks #0, re than a year ago, in a New Minor, Persia, India, Japan and St beria—the exact sp the big earthquakes and eruptions of the y Oceans engulfin of Asia, North Ame: New lands rising to double the area of the Western hemisphere on one great American continent and joining Australia and New Zealand inent three times their pres where most of volcanic The map shows earthquake belt, land and sea, and the new land he pre- dicts is shown by cross~« shading. vertical lines quare RIDA CLIMATE WILL REIGN THEN r with the t hat the all-yea and Pa xico Into an an, and Cen America and West Indien slgamated in the new American 1 suppose,” laughed | earthquakes, ai | PREDIOTS ITALY WILL SUFFER NEXT » makes errifie ¢ Ten years ie th la world reborn |tween them, proved ; that when Mt. Etna erupts im Italy the lava sinks In Mt. Heola’s crater in land. “Continual h’s crust will open a c the sea that will connect with the fires beneath the surface in this doomed belt “This will cause the formation of ateam, and jthus gene of the aem be. readjustment ormous pressure ally blow up A submerge them. Fate of Nations Seen by Nobles be ot “Aw the water rushes Into these holes, oceans will be lowered in their Present beds, causing new lands to emerge. NATURE'S PLAN FOR FERTILE WORLD This change ts merely the pla nature t world ever f has happened before and ts a and the al regic explosion ol t America and 4 the world on its going Europe and t axis. Now it is againt De. N in the study of voloanic and earth. | quake phenomena, is known in Phila delphia as the “hermit sctentiat.” He liven fn eeclusion “and epends his |days po over books and maps in a dark little office in Sansome wt to happen tes, who has spent 25 years STARBEAMS | From Kaneae City Mtar Two can Ii pretty cheaply as ona All a woman wants to eat n Jays is tomatoes in some form © r nearly Gem-Nut Margarine You will like it— It tastes good and the price is right. Swift & Company, U, S. A. LETTER FROM ORE MUSCLES, LeTeRS RTD _ Why a Banking Department? fe an t and carefully| If w ntate (and | partmer would remain we have a good managed ¢ the there are man soft gold of dreams and memories Grain-gold, undulating to the wind's cares— wine-gold, Sparkling in cryftal goblets—sun-gold, frashing upon rippling waters—the gold of passion, f quest and conquell— treaiure-gold. And what can add so much to gold as “a touch of henna in the shampoo”? “My S A touch of henna in the shampoo for the hair of bring out all its An Interview with an internationally famous hairdresser—By HELENA J. KNIGHT E beau monde of Paris and the social world of New York acknowledge him a master of his art. “Madame desires—?” His bow was perfect. “Tell me. What do you use that works such miracles with the hair? How do you give it such freshness, such life, such lustre? What is your secret?” “My secret? It is hardly that. It is known to every woman who makes of beauty a cult. It is simple. A touch of henna in the shampoo.” “Henna?” I confess I was surprised. "Ah, madame,” he said, quickly, “I know whatyou think—what manythink. Butinevery artare refinements.Somemis- use them, but the artist gives them their subtle values. So it is with henna. The artist puts just a suggestion ofits warmth into the shampoo, and with it touches madame's hair. The effect is magical!” “That is beautifully said, monsieur,” I could not help exclaiming, “but the colar of the hair—does it change?” “But no, ‘madame! The blonde re- mains a blonde, the brunette, a brunette, 50- a bottle, at drug stores and perfume counters HENNAFOAM CORPORATION, o have a banking de-|a on every shade of hair. It is particularly STEWART & HOLMES DRUG COMPANY, \ r removed from of its big than a sorry to e dispense wit el e, there y be fewer bank fail ¢ progressive institu mmercial public ly designed let us see to it that |to ¢ one and that only | woven spell of dark mysteries— Lyric sheen of moonlight—magic shimmer of farlight aks ade pliae: of. caste gf ath et Bie promising secret intensities—slumbering fires that Jered new dawns and new sunsets, In the night of her hair—the lustre of “a touch of henna in the shampoo”, ecret?— every woman, to lustrous beauty.” But the transformation! Ah! After the shampoo with a touch of benna the hair ot each is radiant with its own natural lustre, and with more! “All women do not know, madame, what a wealth of undiscovered beauty their hair holds for chem if they would only bring it out with a touch of henna in the shampoo.” “And you would recommend that every woman use it?” “Yes, every woman—provided she can obtain the properly blended shampoo with a touch of henna.” * * e HENNAFOAM SHAMPOO combines @ touch of henna, scientifically prepared and proportioned, with pure, cleansing vegetable oils. When the clear, subtly fragrant liquid of HENNAFOAM SHAMPOO is rubbed into the hair, it foams up in clouds of soft lather, As the lather cleanses and invigorates the hair and scalp, the touch of henna works beauty-magic, If you would reveal the full beauty of your hair, begin using HENNAFOAM SHAMPOO today, eet he, sviv 18 the more! ABRAM’S MPrHoODs For the benefit of people the treatment from Wet somo happy pationts, ‘Tod heat time to ‘call, i aad 511 Wes ELECTRO-MEDICAL DOCTORS 19427 Bd Aves Opponite the P,Q BEREIEE ES g by esc ees