The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 13, 1924, Page 8

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land things for the big time. PAGE 8 | The Seattle St od Dally be epaper Ente The Star Publish an Wake Up! N OLD-TIMI ell-gar who used to follow the circuses 3 stuff his pockets with shekels of the yokels who thought they could guess w ell the little pea was unde ss “I worked on the theory that nine peop 10 are never wide-awake. They go around in a 5 trance Being drowsy, they are constantly off their guard, It takes a powerful emotional stimulant to rouse them-—a loud shout, shrill auto honk or a spectacular appeal to the eye or to the primitive »tions.”” Everyone has noticed that on some day e fee wre wide-awake and active than on others. One day he rises alert and keen as a razor, next yawning, drowsy, thick-headed. The “all in” sleepy feeling is usually caused by toxins —poisons that have accumulated in th body as a result of improper diet, lack of necessary exercise or insufficient sleep. Any of these three is as poisonous as over indulgence in stimulants. You seldom find a keen, alert, wide k in who i an out-and-out failure. His eager bition land him into disaster now and then, the same as running but in the long run he wins out. And most failures—with, of course victims of not being wide-awake. Success, therefore, is largely a matter of good health of the body and mind. Sensible food, outdoor exercise, fresh air, plenty of s'eep—these are more than half the battle. exceptior You'll Get It Later ‘OUNG men frequently get discouraged because they are not making more money. They forget that a lot of the work they do in youth will not pay them any return until later when they “cash in on” experience. Take the case of O. Henry. He wrote for years without being able to sell a single story. At the time it probably Seemed to him that in writing he was doing work without getting paid for it. But gradually O. Henry became a master craftsman. Then he began to collect pay for his years of toil, at a rate as high as a dolar a word. During all those unremunerative years he was really building up an invisible fortune that later turned into actuality. Keep this thought in mind—that you will not be paid until later for a lot of the work you do now. Success, even on a moderate scale, does not begin to come to many people before the age of 40. Then or later they collect back pay—high or low, depending on past effort or negligence. Are you growing weeds or wheat? Long Live the King! UPPOSE you have sailed ’way over to dear old Lunnon, and you have maneuvered about until you have suc- ‘ceeded in having yourself listed for presentation to the king and queen. And you have rushed off to gay Paree to buy gowns And the French gown-person sends you a big bunch of flimsies, frills and furbelows, accompanied by three ostrich plumes. And you know what the flimsie plumes invite your goat. And you as how come and why. And the gown-person replies that you can't be pre- sented at court unless you have plumes in your hair— h! And you try and try, and you call frantically for help, and there is no answer save the echo of your wailing cry. And your tears flow as you are forced to wire back to Lunnun that you will have to see the king later, as you cannot be present on the auspicious occasion for unfor- seen reasons. And those reasons are that even the most expert, adept and ingenious dress-architects are completely baffled when it comes to making plumes stand proudly erect and gallantly waving on heads that are bobbed. And you ‘know the whole darn trip has been completely ruined. Yes, it happened—really and recently happened—to two American climbers. Long live the king! are for, but the the gown-person Thinking More een help us, several colleges have installed courses 4 teaching book agents how to ply their trade. For- tunately, they specialize at selling from behind the coun- ter in stores. And that job requires education. More so steadily, say speakers at a convention of book dealers. They find peo- ple are “thinking more,” increasingly buying volumes ‘on serious subjects. And movies and radio have stimu- lated book sales instead of curtailing them as many once expected. What of the Future? BOTTLE holds just so many drinks. The ground con- tains just so much iron ore, copper, coal, oil, gas and soil fertility. We're using up these natural resources fast. They exist in such gigantic quantities that it'll be a thousand years or more before they’re exhausted. But humanity has many thousands of years to live. Problem of making a living will become increasingly difficult. LETTER FROM V RIDGE MANN June 13, 1924, Dear Folks: From high school and from college they are turning out today; their heads are full of knowledge; they ure started on their way. The comic papers stiow them with # big and bulging brow, with all the world below them—they are graduated now! The dope proclaims their motto is a firm, “I shall not fail!" It tells us how they've got to swing creation by the tail. The weary world is waiting til! they straighten out tho mess—with mystic symbols stating Ph.D, A.B, B. 8, Perhaps, in retrospecting to our own scholastic youth, our sober recollecting finds the dope is partly truth. Mor when, with fresh diplomas, we began to buck the game, we breathed the sweet aromas of the scented wines of Fame What hopes of life were teeming in those roxy days of June when you and I were dreaming of the heights wo'd conquer soon! And thank the Lord we started with « bouyant heart and mind tho dreams have since departed as we've settled in the grind! So, graduates, go to It—for the world is now your claim! Go crack its shell and stew it—if you fail, don't give a damn! “f shall not fail!” Just hum it up the rocky hill you climb, may not reach the summlit—but you'll have a dandy timo! THE SEATTLE STAR JUNE 1 1924 tIDAY Who’ll Boss Tammany? Looks Like This Is the Man Dope Olvany to Be Selected on July 15 BY ALEX HERMAN N. BAL Service Writer 1 { tu ‘ firmament I 1 u te He 5 His f 40 t " t t, 7 | &@ man-sized and broken wu its direction and this year @ presidency ma | be at stake. | For Tammany will exert | tts power to win the democrat | nomination f Governor A |} Smith And Al will sweep the cour ¢ nominated, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS OU can get an & au tion by writ to The Question Editor, Weshington Bu- reat, 1322 N. Y. ave., Washington, D. C., Inclosing 2 cents in # for reply, Medical. 1 marital advice George Washington Olvany and his wife. To the left, Tammany Hall's probable neu boss playing golf. To the right, trap shooting ye one of subject to the ca nm, In, t | He t any, « charming un he > who Isn't giving muc . and play even when the to politics yet. But she w solf on a private fourhole have to break thru ice to, get if it begins to inter with course on the estate to wate her husband's happiness and And they go in swimming. ‘ But beth father and son are comfort She Bobbed Her Hair To Save Trouble, and BY MRS, WALTER ! Having emar 4 them Woues have a aeiven have only succeeded aves to the jue from the frying pan many are the fermir th because they are which have been ca yw at the tender mercy of mar string tf cellist and barbe T jong haired by onl ten ot | Any worse f bobbed- haired nist ° h ° Most. women sake horn their } r by a but lis s and the haired 1 by nome hour and one er. The only tn their tm What Folks air “yn Jong in the back an iteelf in front dertake: requests can- - Every time they are invited |§ pot be answ EDITOR Are Saying out thay faust needs Pi always used in the plural? | 0. W. SMITH, prea the caaroatliee A. Yea panies ain; “Reputation is but the gen thelr particular pet bob will not lreport, while character in the Intrin live up to Its reputation. Their 2 an ‘ federate generals| sic value.” sare bur i with a defense in ¢ Episcopal Pe = cir style of trim and of ex CONWAY TEARLE, Moviedom plaining just why they cut off | A. Yes, Gen. Capers became Mahop| leading leading their locks lof South Carolina after the war, and|lot of good Generally thelr excuses are Leonidas was bishop of| far fetched and fantastic, altho ana in 18j!. During the civit|acclalmed if ise) now and then one tells the truth cepted a commission aaj less authory J let them use t by saying that she cut her hair neral; later he was com-| brains.’ because everybe else is doting a9 Meutenant general. He 2 te it and she could not be happ battle | DR. GEORGE ELTON HARRIS, winout jooking just ax muc eee |Baptist, Kansas City, “Tho racifista| ike everybody else ax possible believe phynical security and pre PEN Q Does the United States govern-|ietea ane aro more to be destred So far as saving time 19 gon |ment offer any reward for the kill-|¢han moral principle.” | cerned, if our ears have not de jing of any kinds of birds? res agg celved us, the bobbed haired | A. No, Q When was the American league} (baseball unded? | A. In ated Q What does “secondary” educa-| tion mean? A. Education in high schools, and} schools of high school grade; tt does | not include training in primary ana! | elementary grades Q. How are cornflakes made? A. From corn which is soaked,| | rotled, and parched, and a little salt! added to it see | Q. Is thore any estimate of the! | value of fresh water fish caught by angiers? tA, Yee, is estimated that the lcatch in the United States during| | 1923 had @ food value of $48,000,- | 000. | Telling It to Congress (Excerpts from the Congressional Record) ARBITRATIO: | We should have le, lation that {would make arbitration a reality, | |that would cause an agreement or contrate in writing providing for ar-| |bitration to be binding upon the par- | ties and an irrevocable proposition. Chas. L. Bernheimor, New York City chamber of commerce, before senate | committee on the judiciary. MORE THAN WE WANT | | America hay « tremend urplus in the natural resources of her soil, uch as met of all kinds, mineral oll certain Js of lumber, and especially a plus of grain, cotton, | cattle and” various food products, which our country must export if! our farming population is to pros-| per—Rep. Rerger (Soc.), Wisconsin. | see THE TRAVELING VLAG I want to seo that American flag fly clear thru from Nome thru the unexplored area and to Spitzbergen and today in the ¢ have flown | do not do minder affair ki me sition a thru the it, I wo, If we Will do it—Ce before house naval Norway rtlett, nmittor Sez Dumbell Dud: Lest you forget what a fine coun- try you've got, there's a suicide epidemic on among || the, Japanese be- cause they can't come here | fattened by an act « reason for the being of labor banks woman may get 15 minutes ex ming and be dinner in a jiffy, mains that THEODORE GARY, sourt highway litical issues will not lems any more th i airman Mis parlor where she formerly spent ore JUDGE KENESAW MOUNTAIN days. LANDIS: “‘Altho America poured men into the world war wit tation, no one seemed to realize t! some of them might get hurt GENERAL DELIVERY would need hospitals.” see f . & JAMES J. DAVIS, secretary of BY HAL COCHRAN aT the nital and Ya 3 T THE postotiice window in | labor pital and labor are Siam mee ese twins. When one gets sick the any old town where stran- gers inquire for thelr mail, you other follows eult.” se & can always tell, by a smile or a BESSIE. BEATTY, writer: “When frown, whether hopes come as we do not like the world os it ts,|| Wanted, or fall we try to put ourselves in an imag A youth saunters up in a ner he’s handed It's one he's many a day. It's no wonder vous-like and a letter from dad waiting for The-e's a check he's glad A little old lady breaks out tn- to smile as her heart has occa- sion for fun, She stood in the line and she waited a while— then they gave her some mail from her son. A girl in her teens who ts flashy and fair, will suddenly reg: frown, She asked for her mail, but she found nothing there world.” way, WARREN S. STONE, Brother hood of Locomotive Engineers: “The inary been and the reason for thelr success, have been, I think, that they have sought to render good service and safety ahead of profits.” (A THOUGHT | He that covereth his sins shall not prosper: but whose fesseth and|] from a sweetheart in some other forsaketh them shall have merey—/ | town. Proy, xxvili:13. And thus, at tae Genoral De: Of G28 livery, all day, folks’ spirits go MAN should never be ashamed|| up or go down. The ones who to own he hag been in the wrong, | are always affected thal way are which is but saying, in other words, the ones who are strangers in that he is wiser today than he was! | town yesterday. for The Star. ao _ FABLES ON HEALTH Pope | (Copyright, 1924, GAINING AND LOSING A were popular toples in Soattle for «mall talk|and plenty of milk. Drinking of milk, between meals, How to take on a little weight||s advisable. If possible, milk rich was a matter that attracted as|in cream should be secured much difference of opinion as how| A short rest after eating helps to get. thin—and fow agreed where persons affected can take the atal Ae: fslaucl ita toode for| time Such a rest will greatly speed lweight gaining are now generally) UP the blll al hgh 3 thera i Le oa | chief trouble is that a gre accepted os a arene rea ie] many thin persons are of the ten aiteth Eh a study ©"\ sion" variety, and it is difficult for S them to gain unless they can ar These are—Kirst CREAM AND) vange for more rest and take from BUTTER AND PLENTY OF lthoir shoulders’ the welght of the THEM. | world, ‘Toast at breakfast, with plenty of| Otherwise nervous indigestion is , |likely to follow an attempt at d dressing, milic and but-| woight-gaining. Look at Her Now! } of gaining welght and reducing] roni and flour mixtures for starches| It was a terrible thing when were the & but much more ous is the tragedy of hay m the slaves of en of their ntuper Johnston W July 4 < ill Keynote ‘ “i ” ‘Cont erence HARRY B. HI t Hu A t 4, the w Robert M. la I ‘ 4 Nai ri an t © ren ‘ 7 off as ference t e to se for ll be called to president hinists fh meeting Johnat of the Internath of the nal committee conference for progressty tion | A progressive independent platform, shaped to appeal to the | average ual, the wi ante acity an cha m worker as to take advantage of , because of vernment tite effort under which work, as well as to cons: In support of this pol! there {xa complete boa] mine tn oper ation at the British Empire exhit Wembley park, London Klectric machinery can take down into this mine 2,000 visitors an hou! These people seo the miners at work and inspect the equipment for their safety and comfort, which is same as in actual mines. The his of coal mirfing is told to visitor: thru a complete assemblage of models of mines and the machines used in working them tion to “Meet Us and Wear Bay Jewsiry the Way You're baying your home—on “Fong time” credit! WATCHES! For the Graduate Dlinots, Figin, Waltham, Baler Howard, Hainilton. All the bast, advertised lines, in handsome gift A and give him any Watch in the hens. reet . Wei TRADE § MARK mond on your finger. This Perfect Will start talking for y: ing a few dollars down that you will probably eld: down. SILVERWARE! For the June Bride 1847 Rogers’ Bros, Holmes & Ed- wards and Community make, the love- Pecos er sete In beestifal designe. st or i Gien wakes you the pemesess “Meet Us and Wear Diamonds” MONEY ALWAYS GETS HE “TALKING HASIT" - tiie “Good Bye” Blues and Teach Them “Diamond VEN Savings Bank dollars are “tongue- tied” when compared to dollars in a Dia- DIAMOND RING $57.50 ° down Flawless bine-white beasty set in the Intest sfield & Goldberg SEATTLE’S CREDIT JEWELERS 308 Pike Street “If Sam Weisfield Can't Repair Your Watch, Throw It Away” Ri Talk” Blue White ‘ou today by just pay- and a little each week spend foolishly. $1.50 a week mountings. Start wear- WRIST WATCHES! For Brides and Graduates Sart t of time! | Nothing PBygtandpns Ll he one Wrist Watches—1 = Eigin aed others. $1 aay Oue Waten Repairing is of the best qual- ity that men can produce. FEEL BETTER IN FEW Quit P day! Notice Quick Difference in the way You Look, Eat, | Sleep and Feel Gaining Quick and Sure Relief Through Use of Dr, Thacher’s Great Prescription The At agitation over SHLY. | POISONING ix sweeping the coun try. Tho menace is great! Its one that should cause every man, wom an and child to pause and consider J one’s own condition, Solf-Polsoning, as it is called, ts the ct result of allowing the Liver, tongue coated—bad taste in mouth and offensive breath, Why You Feel Badly This explains why so many suffer from just such symptoms as poor digestion, sour stomach and forma tion of gases, Improper movement of the bowels, pimples, sallow complex jon, slok headaches and a nervous, upset and overtaxed condition of the ning Yourself To- Read How Vast Numbers Here Are| | tho body's filter, to become sluggish | |and clogged, This is why many wako up feeling dull and tired HOURS OR NO COST! system—why one catches cold |This Self-Polsoning menace not ly to one’s as science }own neglect, And, has traced these symptoms directly just to a poisoned live | medical authoritie and system, so have perfected a The great prescription of Dr. HL. §. hacher ‘onsidered the most ef. ficient of all methods in aiding Na ture to throw |tu off th poisons, Great numbers here are dally re. porting quick relief from its use and practically every experimental meth. |od of overcoming Soelf-Poisoning hus been abandoned as case after case of remarkable restoration to health and | happiness through Dr, Thacher's Liver & Blood Syrup has been noted Strengthens System Dr. Thacher's Liver & Blood Syrup 80| helps Nature to cleanse and tone the jeasily while in this rundown condi-|liver, wake up your appetite, jtlon and why the system is not/strengthen your digestive organs, UKs Ithy enough to throw oft various | soothe the tired and over-taxe | diseases as Nature intended. |nerves, brace up your system a) Duo to Neglect purify your blood. ‘Tho result ts yo! But there ts no need for arm! pag tpalhemmaterucn Or Yous tength, vigor and energy. Sold Under Guaraniee Dr. Thacher's Liver & Blood Syrup contains ingredients that are known to physicians for their corrective and health-building qualities. Just try it |remedy that overcomes the causo of|@®4 Notice the quick difference In Self-Polsoning and quickly relieves|t®® Way you eat, look, sleep and feel. midetaplevmuthectnes is sold by leading Gives Quick Retief the understanding You will be completely satistie others have, or there will be no st. Avoid substitut Remem: this guarantee, Dr, Thacher's is sold and recommended by | Drug Co, Avo. | Co. 807 1st 4 nier Drug 915 ist Ave; Cascade Drug Co., Bal lard Station; Columbia Drug Co, 4872 Rainier; Warren Drug Co., Coo. Howell & Minor ana Cor, 4th & Olive and The Washington Drug Co., M ison at 28th in Seattle; Enume Drug Co. in Enumelaw; Nasmyth Drug Co. in Kent. Get a bottle to: day.—Advertisoment, =

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