The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 5, 1923, Page 20

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Is the Health dentist will pre- without a doctor or at your grocers, —your family scribe, Get it prescription, Full of Vitamines, 100% Entire Wheat Flour DEMAND SUNSHINE LIFE-O-WHEAT Delivered Fresh to Your Grocer Daily 2 j a BREAD Product of Sunshine Bakeries YOU LEARN BY DOING IN THE Y. M. ©. A. AUTOMOTIVE COURSE working with equipment—120 Electrical equipment—175 hours op- erating Machine — Too such ax found In up-' shops—180 repalring ice We Match Your Coat and Vest All for Ocea- learn to use In Automobile The course in- of eludes careful study principten of mutomenite ruction and opera aren er trouble sheet: ing and quick methods of Fepalrin: : Z Take "a few days o “DWI Scanian absolutely tree BROWN'S training and learn first DENTAL OFFICES band why the Y. M. ©, A. Braduates, “are” tanking 196 Columbia 8t. Necd among Seat cage Scipleyers of Seas mobile mechanle Leading Dentist for te ey Than 31 DROPSY : | ing red ced Fa 16, to 2 United Y.M.C.A. Schools Fourth and Madison. MA in-8208 | COLLUM DHOESY KEMEDY OO. Dest | ele 16, ATLANTA, Ge. WEEK FRER Short | breathing FIRST PRIZE ¢ PAL K S10 SLOPE Att excitement at the fair! The judges are busy tasting, testing and approving the cheeses. They look 80 alike—same size, same color —“Te’s impossible to distinguish them” you say! But after tasting all the cheeses, there is no hesitation as to the winner. It is TILLAMOOK. It excels in flavor, firm- ness and creaminess. That's why Till- amook carries off the prizes at all the big fairs of the west. See that “TILLAMOOK"” is branded on slice. None genuine without it. We stand bac of our guarantee of uniform quality. Write for our attractive new booklet of rect es prevsted by Miss Alice, Bradley, head of armer’s School of Cooking, Boston. There are so many new and delightful ways of serving Tillamook. TILLAMOOK COUNTY CREAMERY ASSOCIATION Tillamook, Orexon # 25 cheewe Hichena comed and operated Tilamock deitynen. TILLAMOOK. for LAHoos TREATED ONB : THE Red Se hool hou: LE STAR 4 | 1, 4 RELIGION JOIN Two Combine to Assist in} Fighting Wets | WASHINGTON, Oct. 5,—Buniness and religion will join hands tn the United Staten to secure prohibition enforcement Plans for this co-operative move will be laid at a meeting In Washington, October 14, 16 and 16, | when 600 delegates representing bust |nesm and the churches will get to- gother | Benator Borah, Gov, Gifford Pin-| chot of Pennsylvania and former Governor Milligan of Maine will be Boi among the speakers. In to ad dreas the conference October 15 on Shall the Constitution Be Nulll-| fied?’ Warren &. Btone, head of the Brotherhood of Locomotive in member of @ com-| mittee which will seek to disprove that American labor 1s in favor of} | modification of the dry lawn to per-| mit light wipes and beer, as Bam-| uel Gompers, president of the Am-| Jorican Federation of Labor, has} ntated. | Dr, ©. E, Watson, secretary of the Counell of Churches of Christ in America, who ts helping make ar- rangements for the conference, said a! force of the mont expert atatl in the country is gathering show the effects of alcoholic aineers, ix one indul- gence on men in industry and bual-| ness, on the homes and morals of the people, and on thelr health. | “We know there Is now more vio. lation of the prohibition law than there should be,” maid Dr. Watson, | "What our conference will do will be to face facts and deal in facts, There has been too much knocking and ridicule, too much wild talk not based on exact data, Bome nay there | are many drinking today simply be- | cause of prohibition. That ts propa | ganda, pure and simple. | The purpose of our conference Is to align the moral, religious and |co-operation for active enforcement.” | s onward .tarch of rural education is shown in the accompanying pictures. No. rural grammar student who wants ci dated grammarschool at Maple valley. No. 2, Union High school at North Bend. Pr high school can do it the largest in the county, seats 95 school children and is owned by the Redmond Consoli-| BUND Cornaie | d rict. No. 4, the old-fashioned “little red school house” type of school that is dis-| “phere im an accredited high appearing. No. 5, a four-room school at Hollywood that has b abandoned as the stu-! schoo! at Skykomish, right near the dents go on to the larger consolidated school. No. 6, one of the rn teachers! cottages summit of the Cascaden that ao-| 1 rampli he accommodation now provid ‘rs sjpicommodates the children in this | , an example of the accommodation now provided rural teachers by their|commedstes the enllt . | “Our big problern ts transporta- BY JOHN W. NELSON [bile has made this possible. . The adopted In the rural schoola, alt}tion, even with the auto bus, It t the Little Red | tomobile has 1 the « Ih school teachers must be col-|a# been found best for the dis- to the Ge 1 , or ‘university: sradwates--Al- te to own their buses, altho tt It has 4 at all ot the 636 teashers {i » of the transportation ts still . are King poaet SoA ponent tracted out to private individuals. « t 8 of t | univers aduates. | Where ft is difficult to obtain wut |rurale 1 in King county ia ¢ ont | Country school teachers no Jong-| able accommodations for teachers, Ic here hool bus lines Injer have to handle all grades be-| cottages are built by the echool dis nd in thelr place has come ¢ rm ty, b a eight, except in altricts and used by the teachers sotidation, transportation a J f ® ow 4 instances, The prac-| These are usually comfortable three, | mation. Big brick a at argest a in the ting more than one grade| four and five-room dwellings, with ters with large at county trucks whizs roada, x the tak’ mfor of the city t Seattle boy or girl can car in 45 min o new trend utes? b MODERN, ACC HIGH SCHOOLS Not alone in the gra does th untry & ar focilities that ¢ with thelr city ® excellently Union | cons he 8 are Ic at points thruout | cou f thene is ac credited. edited high school means that duates are adm! |ter to unive |the nation w have thelr ath |. Then the schools letic leagues, thelr debating contests jand thelr interschoo! competition, | Just as the city school does. The cur-| sue for $85,000 h | riculum of the rural school compares have been favorably with that of the school, truction of school bulldir tween Sunnydale This consolidated enned valuation ¢ the high sche greater changes have occurred] wilt have an att nl education during the past * than in ‘urban education, in the opinion of Hulse. The automo according to Thomas B. Hul ant county superintendent, the more expen: branches [dustrial work do the city Dol < pila, Standardized m tion and school 7 6 districts where are now t ly there were ‘There are still a few hi that cannot see the ad of consolidation, Hulse, t the movement is spread- h year, ABANDON BUILDING FOR NEW PLAN As a result of this move, ® of vacant school build ut the county, They are, the «mall one-room type, © @ school offi-| but even larger in a few Instances, janitor or|/such as the Hollywood school, |where a fourroom brick building ds idle and va it because the idation is of. completed by 6 of the district saw the ad- b the students on few miles to @ big consolidated ool at Redmond. The Union high school ts oper- A bond is |ated on a slightly different basis. nas been sold and|In consolidation, the districts are 4 for the'] made into one. In a unton school, high| they aswume proportionate burdens be-|of expense, but still maintain their dintricts and be erected and Lake Burten. identity as in many! DOORN, Oct. &—The former Ger- district has an a»-|casen have separate grammar| man crown prince has grown tired of f $2 ln for the younger children,/going to the Prussian gevernment e the older ones go to the Un- lance of 460 pu-/ion high school. “There isn't a school tn King) Oets has been under aequester of ethods of instruc-| county but that has access to &/the Prussian state government since racticos have been| high school,” Hulse said. “Every|the revolution. The income there- i and cross last mght=, DR. CALDWELL'S== ‘SYRUP PEPSIN 4 ought vigor by morning How To Keep A Child Healthy ickness was a part of a child’s life, but we know better now. The secret is in the food the mother allows the child to eat, and in watching that elimination occurs regularly two or threo times a day. Mrs. J. Russell of 19,141 Havana Ave., Detroit, Mich., keeps her family of two young children in perfect health with Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, and Mrs. R, L. Smith of 519 } i Ave., Ei Pittsburg, Pa., says her famil: of three cl dren have never been sick a day since giving them Syrup Pepsin. A Substitute for Physics Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a scientific compound of Egyptian senna with pepsin and suitable aromatics. ‘The formula is on every Pec You will find you do not have to force children to take it, and it is much better for them than castor oil, calomel or coal-tar drugs like phenolphthalein even if covered with sugar or chocolate. Syrup Pepsin is mild and gentle in action and your child will have an easy passage without griping or strain. It does not contain A picks as ago parents thought that Monticello, I needa good lazative and trould Uke to prove wha Pepsin by actual tert. ‘ Litas vrs narcotics, and you can give it with absolute safety to an infant at the breast. “Magic” in a Teaspoonful Breer store that sells medicines sells Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup yas and the cost is less than a cent a dose. Give half a teaspoonful to any ailing baby or child at night when you put it to bed and you will find a happy, laugh- ing youngster in the morning. ‘take Syrup Pepsin yourself when constipated, and give it to any member of the family young or old, for any ailment due to constipation, such as’ bil- iousness, headache, lack of appetite, sleepless- ness, bad breath, cankers, fever sores, indi- ion, and to break up fevers and colds, Stop that first sneeze or sniffle and you will have a healthy winter. seeeee lf You Want to Try It Free Before Buying ‘Syrup Pepsin,” 516 Washington St., Illinois. say about Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup Send mea free boltle, Addr reo trinl bottle to a family ned wherever between 30) m more than more than 200| bates were held.” there | modern conveniences, where several teachers live together. | “Rural schools of King county | ‘ old days one| have 19,000 children attending them. | teacher ctimea have a| They have their football, baseball, | hundred att fn one room, | basketball and track teams with | Tho consolidation move has al-| contests to decide the county cham- | eliminated practically 100) plonahips each year, Last year districts King county.)there were 460 active students in |declamation and some excellent de- One of the principal results of | the modernization of rural education | |has been to keep the boys and girls | jot the farm on the farm. It has | bettered the community life of the | farmer, offered him greater com- | munity and home interests, and strengthened the tien of what the | late President Harding declared was America’s most splendid tnstitution, | the Great American Family. GERMAN PRINCE TIRED OF DOORN | Wants Permission to Go Back to Potsdam every time he wants to change an employe on German estate, Ocls, from furnishes the prince most of the |ready cash upon which he and his | family subsist, A portion of its goes | direct to the prince and a portion to |his wife, who usually lives with ber children in Potsdam. In an interview with me the prince declared: “L have taken the bull by the| ‘hornm It fs an unbearable situation | and every time I want to make a| |change in the administration of my lentate, or have nome slight renova- tions made, I am forced to apply to the Prussian finance ministry, "Therefore Iam demanding my [rights in the courts, asking that the |wequester be removed and complete jcontrol again be vested in me, Be- sides and above that, my aim natur- | ally is to return to Germany and| resume administration of my proper- ty myself, and live for and with my | family.” | The wife of the former German heir does not share the exile of her | husband at Wieringen, off the Dutch coast, because the children could not | |be properly educated in that out-of. | |the-way spot and a private tutor |would cost too much to maintain | |there, ‘The general cost of living in| Holland for the whole family would far surpass the prince's budget. The princess occasionally visits her hus- band at Wieringen, but for the most part they meet under the roof of | Castle Doorn. LOS ANGELES, Cal—More than 100 aviators have united in forming | the Professional Pilots’ association, with the chief object the abolition of “stunt! flying, which is sald to be responsible for moro than 60 per cent of airplane OTTAWA, Ont—Motor vehicles coming into Canada from the United States bringing tourists during 1922 showed a remarkable increase over 1921, according to a statement is- sued by the federal departments of highways, For periods of less than 24 hours the number was 818,974, as compared with 490,887. For periods of two to thirty days the number was 175,635, compared with 128,696. From one to six months, 2,420, com: pared with 2,212, FRIDAY, DOWN! DOWN! BREAD) FLOUR Best in Town |) Myrtle Brand \ SLs. 24% Lbs. 11b, 1% Ibs. | Sim i 12 7 10 | 10Lbs, 49 Lbs. Cc Cc |} 37¢ $1.69 SUGAR «- 76c Premier Salad DRESSING; small 16¢; Golden Bantam Golden Bantam, Early dune, Sifted... Superfine Tiny nee Karly dune, Sifted., Tiny, Whole ....+4 Standard Whole Cut Refugee ... CORN PEA BEANS Mason Jars QUARTS 83¢ | PINTS 69¢ CAN NOW Fruits Are Cheap Meat o' Wheat Trisoult ... Canned Milk, all brands Swift's Wool Boap..---.6%¢ Wool Boap Ch -+-6%¢ | LOG White Star Tuna, Ks 19¢ White Star Tuna, 31¢] Van Cam Black Figs, per Ib. 10¢ =A line Choc. ban CRISCO ‘ Campfire Marsh: + 25¢, 37¢, s Piggly Wiggly Prize Balloons are still coming in. Bring yours in and have it redeemed! ALL OTHER COFFEE 1S UP IN FPRIC LB. CAN The Liverty Market, 1506 Firet Ave. cee 1188 S4th Ave, at Union St. 14th Ave, and E Pike Country Gentleman ..... in glass Ralston Bran 17¢ Post Toasties 20¢ Bran Flakes 13¢ | --1B5e CABIN 100 Lbs, -21¢ | Malt of Meal 23¢ 4 OCTOBER 5, WIGGLY 3 OF A KIND DOWN! MILK Pasteurized {0c Save 3 Cents $9.50 large 37¢ LILY OF THE VALLEY BRAND Needs no introduction to Seattle Housewives CATSUP VAN CAMP’S in p DEL 4 pints SNIDER'S *s Pork W. L. AVERY, Pres, and Mer. from Yokohama. 39c © an. 95e 14th Ave. 8. and Beacon ine 23rd Ave. and E. Union St. 251 Broadway N. at Thomas Harvard N. and Eastlake 19th Ave. N. antl Prospect 1219 Bast 45th and Brooktys 13 CLEAN STORES IN SEATTLE MOSCOW.—The foreign minister, Georgi Tehiteherin, In a note to Ja pan, protests against the expulsion of the Russian relief ship Lenine earthquake rints . Walkers 183¢ SYRUP...... 26¢, 50¢, 98¢ & Beans ucts 11¢, 21¢ The note adds that Russian subscriptions for the relief of Japanese still continue to be received. 23¢ 26¢ 28¢ 20¢ 346 i7¢ B4¢ 27¢ 24¢ ean can can 24¢ Rep MONTE + .28¢ 16¢ . 26¢ 17¢ , $1.89 sufferers "TI show you a REAL Shampoo!" removes every trace of eee apd Keeps ¢ the ng hors fnantly and leaves 20 hairis er, you eo a A Rose oo oo. I t

Other pages from this issue: