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THE SEATTLE STAR Lloyd’s and Henry Ford FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES By carrier, city, month as a ; 2a . Nicoll ® Rothman, Special Representatives. Ban Franciroe Chicago office, Tribune Mids, New York officg, It ts =, Defends “Brother! Isaiah” Star inwer to Dr, Fletcher |Thore i# in Wriday’s Star a mo = traordinary interview with Dr. 4 Fietcher, a minister, concerning Waltor The 1207 Beventh Ave, This is an eae Borvio The Seattle Sta Published Daily by The star Pubiiehiny phon Main 0600, Newey snterpr y not astonishing. that | started in Tower wt. in a ons teweewecser ee 4 Monadnock Bldg i Canadian Paciti Boston office, Tremont Bids. Gigantic Telephone Profits The disclosure made by President Houston, of the Bell telephone monopoly, that this great parent concern is earning 9 to 11 per cent profits by milking the operating companies in various parts of the country, comes as mighty interesting information at this time. With the Pacific Telephone & Telephone Co, locally leaping from court to court with its plea for higher rates Lloyd's of London has insured an American firm against the of Henry the presidency, charging bustness election if Ford ts in the transaction as but that ts not courts of lav " A contract of to Britivh ns, contracts 6 are void if made by Tho man rd this r wager fow of the atreet merely want to make @ bet about | + oar things he saw at the Kirkland auto |park in relation to the work | ducted by Brother Isatah Dear dear! Wow the ] was shocked, Really jyou talk, not Hke a jand minister of the Gospel un hysterioal little girl, Please re member that the young girl's mother jherself says that her daughter fell Jover In a faint soon after « out of the car, and ~ dead (of heart failure, befor er phe was la coftes house, Moving to n they cannot uso bard at. and Abchurch lane ot Lioyd’s, But if office antes of busi ¢ Mr. Ford as a news od 0 date might in the judeme ners. A or B be detrimental business, he ean insure Britian ship | hia con poor pastor my dear alr whup man but like ur da Fleece from Lis ation ¢ nhown, sand un » hos t ary rid, and its merchant ohiy dorwritera in London. did a ship only, It of dollars' the world's ping insur war the Ger has written t worth of risks on man subma Atrained, the compalgns pelgn on the pie ‘OU can have her for your very own and she won'tcost youacent, She's nearly eighteen inches tall—-a chubby, cuddly baby doll—and se pretty! Hold her hand and she will toddle along beside you. Betty Lou is her name, She has big blue eyes that close when she sleeps, Her cheeks are round and rosy. Betty Lou has « cunning red and white gingham drew, trimmed with lavender, bonnet to match. Her cute little stockings and patent leather shoes slip on and of. nic table or before th called. Being ca ni could to revive her. He probably had} no notion of “raising her up from| Yours the dead,” nor even knew that she! fore was already dead, which no one but| Small a doctor could certainly ascertain, | Vaver You way “there wasn't an audible | Sendne 7 . money | prayer sald. the name of God wan not | leven once mentioned.” | Now, my dear pastor, in your opin fon it was a dr ul and an imp! | omisaton for this venerable man on the ground that its property is being CONFISCATED, the knowledge that the present rates are helping earn the gigantic Bell concern 11 per cent dividends will possess great interest to every consumer, Corporation Counsel Kennedy aptly pictures President Houston's corporation as a corpulent and affluent parent keeping child clothed in rags so as to profit from the coins a sympathetic public tosses into the hat the tot is obliged to continué passing. healer wa | You will have such fun putting her to bed, then waking her up and dressing her egain, Way of gaming or w on 1 with events in which the ins no property interest, pr prospectiy but It ea flying color marine, Tho T u the orde ured f $10,0 Lioyd's goes t to the 17th The time came when the sur- century, when ward Lloyd yd'n was wo big that it LETTER ing hant was in I will send Betty Lou in exchange for « small favor, Justwrite me, saying ‘‘I want Betty Lou,’’ and I'll tell you how to get her. You'll find it very easy, Clutch Pencil FREE © made n it to pro Kinds of haz d crops, civil t ought the weather, disea that threatened loss and disaster. Any risk @ man doing any Kind of legitimate business, FROM) VRIDGL TL A NN ware, any THIS’ BEAUTIFUL y 2 “Mamma” Doll CEM SN SCADA SAS RRS eS ERS eect eves ndinasenemwereese _ self to the voters. Saw the other day where a reporter Interviewed a fuel engineer on how to save coal. Ho ought to have consulted an apartment house Janitor, We know. Women will never be men’s equals until you can tell one she is ugly and escape alive. It Won’t Do, Doctor Dr. J. W. Summers, of Walla Walla, who as a repre- sentative in congress for his district was a blamed good physician, wants to be governor and opines that the right way to get a start is to smack Gov. Hart early and often and for any reason at all. Dr. Summers gave out a statement declaring that the taxpayers of this state are being plucked for a tidy sum of cash for state capitol buildings, whereas said buildings could be constructed if the state capitol lands were sold. All of which, of course, wasn’t true and the doctor could pare found the facts if he had troubled himself to look for em. The state capitol buildings have cost, and will continue to cost, the people of this state enough. Never worry about that. But, by raising the money for the buildings by levying a small tax, the state is holding the capitol timber lands and the lands are growing in value. Sore day the capitol land grant can be sold for five, probably ten, times as much as the total cost of the capitol build- ings. ‘ Dr. Summers was a nice, colorless little reactionary in congress. He hasn’t any red-hot record to commend him- And, he'll have to do better than simply hammer at Louis Hart. That alone will never get him into the governor’s chair. The next governor of this state has got to have a real platform. He can’t ride in on a hammer. Henry Ford says the army ought to be used to down the booze evil. We know at least one colonel who could. do a man’s size job in this respect. From the way Lloyd George hops about he must be a Welsh rabbit. Alkali Al, the “Business Man” Leave it to Correspondent Porterfield, covering the Teapot Dome naval oil lease investigation in Washing- ton, to unearth the real crux of this Fall-Sinclair deal. Fall told the senators that he handed over Teapot Dome to Sinclair in private because that was the “busi- ess man’s” way of doing business, and he was proud of the deal. Let’s see how business-like it was: The government owns both Teapot Dome and Salt Creek oil fields. Salt Creek is the field to which the Teapot Dome oil was sup- posed to be draining. Fall let Sinclair exploit Teapot me because it was being drained. The government is collecting royalties from both fields today. From Teapot Dome, leased in private by Fall to Sinclair because that was business-like, the government averages 17 per cent royalty. From Salt Creek, leased by public bidding, which Fall considers unbusiness-like, it averages 30 per cent royalty. As a business man representing the government which Epieved him, Fall ought to be proud of his record as a cowboy. Scandinavian commission is studying a plan for the transmission of electrical energy from Norway to Denmark. Are there no Hiram John- sons: 7 Denmark to protest against such’ insidious foreign entangle ments Children and the Constitution Children under 12 cannot be used in industry in Mex: ico. The constitution forbids. Children from 12 to 16 years of age may work only six hours in a day. It required a greater change of custom to bring this about than would be necessary in the United States, It is estimated that formerly 15,000,000 children, between 4 and 14 years, were compelled to work from dawn to dark in Mexico. Mexico has seen the light and has acted. The United States has seen the light and, thru congress, has twice acted to end the employment of children. The supreme court each time has nullified the effort. Now a movement is under way to have the U. S, con- stitution amended so that the supreme court cannot ques- tion the power of congress to protect America’s little folks from the profit-seekers. No amendment ever sub- mitted to the American people should be easier of ratifi- cation by the people. Mellon answers Pinchot again and hints that it is time to drop the subject. A hint from Mellon used to be enough in Pennsylvania, but somehow we suspect Pinchot isn't going to take the hint, Your Own Boss The Armour Meat Packing company tells its 60,000 em- ployes they can become silent partners in the business by buying preferred stock. This stock will be sold to em- ployes on the installment plan. It will pay guaranteed dividends of 7 per cent. Only a few years since the Armour firm was practically “a closed corporation.” That is to say, the Armour fam- ly owned most of it and controlled all of it. é There's really nothing unusual about the Armour method of letting employes buy an interest in the busi- ness. Many businesses already have the same system in operation. It’s the ideal way to save. The method usually is for the employe to subscribe to pay so much a week, then that amount is regularly taken from his pay envelope. The employe with stock in the business is more loyal and works harder. That’s the theory, at any rate, and it averages true. So it’s a definite part of ‘the “effi- ciency” movement. You never can tell where such a thing, once started, will lead. Take a business employing 100,000 men. If each of them invested $1,000, there’s a fund of $100,000,- 000. Quite a fund, that. Will the day come when employes, by their savings, will buy a controlling interest, then gradually take over the businesses that employ them? An interesting pros- pect, decidedly a possibility. I'm not a however, hg er had a better Fall than this! will all be @ver soc make 0 wun begins to shi pang ever us! And Defends “Brother Isaiah” oi the sin of the Zar Editor The Star T am with Dr. tho First church, CG Methodist pitol Hill ¢ nly take exceptions has to say In your issue and weird and horror hort © he uses In chastising a ng Brother Isaiah, “the of Biloxi, Miss. According to the statement, he was an eye-witness to only two cases of healing at the hands of the healer—a woman, w he anointed y and th tion to life of the al-| Nora Selfors. And! doctor's own ready pon this ev brand Isaiah as an k reverend gentleman had not taken | the time, or the trouble, per to talk to the good people in and around | Home-made Remedy Stops Coughs Quickly The hest cough medicine yoa ever used. A family supply easily and jG dulckly made. ‘Saves about 62, | OFOO46O5400444o4C70+4004 Yon might be surprised to know that the best thing you can use for &® severe cough, is a remedy which is easily prepared at home in just | a few moments. It’s cheap, but for! prompt results it beats anything you ever tried. Usually stops ¢ ordinary cough or chest cold in 24/ hours. Tastes pleasant, too—children like it—and it is pure and good. ounces of Pinex in a | pint bottle; then fill it up with p srenalased sugar syrup. Or use ¢ | ficd molasses, honey, or corn syrup, | instead of sugar syrup, if desired. | Thus you make a full pint—a family | suppiy—but costing no more than a jamal! bottle of ready-made cough syrup. And as a cough medicine, there is really nothing better to be had at any price. It goes right to the spot and gives quick, lasting relief. It prompt heals the inflamed mem- ranes that line the throat and air pagsanes, stops the annoying throat ickle, loosens the phlegm, and soon ‘our cough stops entirely, Splendid ‘or bronchitis, croup, hoarseness and bronchial asthma. Pinex is a highly concentrated com- ound of Norway pine extract, famous for healing the membranes, To avoid ppointment ask your druggist for “2¥, ounces of Pinex” with directions and don’t accept any- thing else, Guaranteed to give abso- lute satisfaction or money refunded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. “ASPIRIN Say “Bayer” and Insist! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on package or on tablets you are| not getting the genuine Bayer prod- uct prescribed by physicians over | twenty-three years and proved safe by millions for Colds Toothache Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" only, Each unbroken package con: tains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and| 100, Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetio Headache Lumbago acidester of Salicylicacid, try to help this girl without r |his eyes heavenward, and c |loudly and oratorically upon ¢ |was it not? But God is not itt | up there in the you know, list i outy He Ia here with! earts, Why be theatric ionstoGod? He can t His name aloud or that entertainers or pleasure November 8, 1923. Fh tf will in the at- ilustra oreabout t. And narking, “That re- at once be o days are in our Y'it tell the world : my goat; out premiums in of Henry Fe . ¢ I'd hate ‘awh to miss The f and then we'll all be the later weather of pain—I find a man of ¢ word of I ,, Says infest the busy day, ed away. Tho Fu ent brings—and trials “s mT Neglected Star r that I hope r paper as I war know what be ey when they 4 let pe *!\ comes of their mi ou of | vintt rummage sales, lack of| ‘Today I visited a woman at a local 2W MeN. | hospital and thought of how hard| is on the aide had worked from 8 a. m. until He tn od Will Industries, rum: 6 him mt, at Pike Place magket—that is, In south banement A short time ago she caught a ne. 4, but being in need, stuck behind the wrapp h was set midway be h and north doors, Afte two days of it she had to give up, and her landlady found her one with premat In any | all for them | to him with The a ‘© wasn't an kiand, as to whether tho healer | auc ot God 4 performed blo pra: the name works n the |T stood was not ev know but what the| ring up silent! ail the time of hin| | na, and which, by the way, | hee} in the prayer advocated by Jeaus— ~ the prayer in secret, or - WALTEI CLEANS * TEETH THE | jee RIGHT. WAY ence. A. HALL 316 15th N, SSEW unt that the Rev. Fletcher COLGATPE’S is the safe,common-sense dentifrice. It con- tains no grit. It washes and polishes —does not scratch orscour thedelicate col: TRIBUTE To Marguerite Rolle ) say that lke a rose thou art L Repeats a tribute frayed with time, Tho old, old aymbol of the heart That bards unnumbered clothe {n rhyme. I sought unceasingty in vain To find for thee new similes— ‘Thou art too gay for April rain, Toe fair for lovely melodies. ..... And so, ike other bards have done, ‘The same old tribute I murt bring: Thou art like a rose, dear one, That Beauty offers in the Spring, These words tho rone are honoring, Comparing It with one so sweet to a i tion. Woman Ig} yas oa ‘ | enamel of your teeth As thou at play in the garden sawing: c.D. PHILLIPS inc. 1308 Second Ave. BETTER BARGAINS IN COLORED FOOTWEAR Starting Friday morning, you have unrestricted choice of our entire stock of Colored Shoes, which includes every pat- tern and shade in Autumn styles. Featuring Log Cabin, Otter, Beige, Brown, Camel and Gray, in Kid and Suede— in the latest Strap and Gore-Side effects, with Spanish, French or Cuban heels. Complete run of sizes assures per- fect fit—AND these reduced prices mean a REAL saving. 5.00 VALUES 7.00 VALUES 3.85 5.85 8.00 VALUES 9.00 VALUES 6.85 7.85 HOSIERY Showing a splendid stock of Quality Hosiery in Black and New Colors 1.00 to 3.00 TALKS, WALKS AND SLEEPS richer - wil Out and Mall This Coupon Now~—~ Jane Brown, 284 Kuccesa Bldg., Des Moines, nd clutch pencil free and tell me how to get - St reward for promptni really interested in th to get up, so whe lay, she was 1 no one from Good] said he came to see her or] G y notified them sixth day send someone to inves- te and then punish them to the I am for will, but my 1 wil) means b nd to everyone {RS, H. C. 8., Dumas, Wash, How your appetite clamors for thet * salty, tangy Flavor \ I, J HEN your appetite asks for green olives, it asks in no uncertain terms. You get hungry for them, then hungrier. The thought of the salty, tangy flavor just rouses your desire, You want some, You buy a bottle. Then you bite into 6ne—so firm, plump and meaty. That's just an invitation to eat another, and another. They’re great! They’re good for you—for the whole family, children included. Green olives are plumb full of calories—1400 to the pound; more than fric- asseed chicken or white bread. There are novel ways to serve green olives for every social occasion. At dinners and parties. At luncheons and teas. Write for « copy of our free folder which gives many oi the green olive recipes used by America’s most famous hotels. Address Association AMERICAN IMPORTERS of Spanish Green Olives 200 Fifth Avenue, New York City panish — GREEN “AU queen olives and stuffed olives are Spanish Green Olives.”