The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 8, 1924, Page 6

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: > TUESDA JULY 8 PAGE 6 THE SEATTLE STAR ale [ A Busy Day in a Hotel Lobby How We Pay Homage to Washington Sta BY RUTH FINNEY aetna == ae a" A ¥ - ~ } Seotclation ad Usitea Prese servtew, (we save No Roos) | peponteRs 1anoRING | |Scees ane FIC * ae f — aa a 2 months $1.66, 6 months $2.00, year & QUT WE CAN Pur ‘OPERA STAR TO | lRucaeSmED to Pay RY” He's GoT HOTEL W im i [a Coron THe | Fuat WITH TELE | ADVANCE Veet ae A $3 ROOM, i “a ss : wien T me EAE Al OPERATOR ; b cAR /\ AND HE USES) l| LOBBYGOB sat We ts | ; - All| aa EONAR «Ht FRESH RATES x ‘ cherry t ' . , ee $I, ‘ z a hi EVERY hour = 4 . ‘ . 7 y ) 4 we —— « ‘ More Holidays ‘3 , ‘ NYTHING denoting extreme novelty certainly re : : a) re | lieves the hum-drum of these times delightfully, as , nea ke t ‘ pee remarked the fisherman when he “played” his fish for ks ago, and the two f : 10 minutes and finally pulled up an old rusty hoopskirt of . ve ows the vintage of 1860. ie . So we are indebted, somewhat, to the Japs who propose ps furniture bef ' s . ‘ B tb set apart one day of the year in which to express their tata Me came over, plun t flag : : lrumiliation by our exclusion act a be Bog r ¢ The project is charmingly suggestive. We don’t have beled @ sift ¢ x " ‘ a pond A enough annual holidays. Why not a “Gloom Day?” There fayette ' ‘ one ur are chronic kickers enough to guarantee a howling old “Dis ou notice’ ot a be re : e one gaten ( } celebration. Or, for general inspiration’s sake, there : gar: i i ; a # , * | might be included in “Gloom Day” income tax d mov sonal 4nd temeneuiath *0Fnat told ‘Wan tot aon aomnattebed | ing day, housecleaning day and such, with bath day for | acroas tn ts urd to ‘mata abate a By ! : the kids. Wouldn't it be glorious if all of us could sur A THOUGHT | ding. Shia be a. eFieiay y rbund our grouches and get them out of our systems on | | Seoiteetas caressa aaarte he way they knew to th : ‘ However, we ought to warn the honorable Japs not to to fat Me edi Bote he will sce De —_—_——_—___"—_—. ‘ f get into the habit of establishing annual gloom days over veRY FIFTEEN pers Bee Sez Dumbell Dud; § acts of our congress, else they are to make their national TAN is to be 5 bP | eames: SVOSROnen ae Seca F i life just one long drawn-out concatenation of Oriental é nt ene. but . wi | Hearst, bors and girts loltered The old vib ‘ | groans and wailings. 4 ae 4 | tage staan Tt may be true, as 9 modern historian states, that Cain furnished the first front-page story, but Adam showed the carllest editorial acumen when he inaugurated the woman's department that even yet is an impor tant press feature, which sold everything hag moved to town and calls itself a drug store, 2 . FROM Raz Letters enow Readers All letters to The Star must have name and address. McFARLANE SUICIDE Wditor The Star TAS _(wuars Tue \(* Foreor To) ( TWERTY IS | marreR WITH)| TIP THE CHE! THE SMALLEST ) your WAT) \_ GIRL 1 HAVE Tag iu =) CAN YoU LET ME TAKE A DOLLAR UNTIL Blaming Broadway 6 ELL the girls to stay away from Broadway. Tell them there’s only heartbreak there and shame- 2 forth of the dust, neither doth trouble Ss f the dust, n rd ul spring out the ground.” vering faith, “Tho he slay me and and bitter pain.” I believe that Peter Clark Mac.|¥et will I trust in him,” also the les. ' . os “ ; 5 Yurlane, ng his life, clearly | son, “F » if thou be willing to | So said Imogene Wilson, called “the most beautiful girl “hsieeseif soc ot faiths 30°04 | teckave' thle tlen'trvet ak eererhe: on Broadway,” as she soothed the bruises she accumulated nd betrayed him to think he was| less, not my will but thine be done.” at the receiving end of one of Actor Frank Tinney’s Keatings. i But why pick on Broadway? It may be true, as Gus | Edwards sobbingly sang, that “there’s a broken heart for | * every light on Broadway,” but the famous street is not at fault, entirely. Much depends on the way it is ap- Broached. | Those who have nothing to carry there or trade upon but pulchritude are quite sure to come to grief, as did able to Judge what was best for him-| This lesson could not have appealed | elf and for the happiness of bis'to him for he regarded it not, and loved ones; and in his inability toen-,another wonderful one which he| dure affliction. ignored, that of Paul's thorn in the| To the Christian bis memory can | flesh, in which the blessed assurance, be but as of one who knew not the| “My grace is sufficient for thee,” is truth, for he showed himself unac-|an everlasting solace to all weary, quainted with its wonderful sustain-|heavy-ladened, long-suffering chil- ing power, He considered not the|dren of God. beautiful lessons faund in the book fb a eee ee Canada Faces Crisis With Britain | BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Rouno Trip ro KANSAS CITY} PROPORTIONATE FARES CORA OLIVER, ‘ It cost Senator Brookhart only $37 to be renominated in Iowa, showing ——— FABLES ON HEALTH Sow far oven a little money will go in an agricultural state at the present tine. rt Nees FOOD IS BUT FUEL } ally quicker than| Won’t Get Far ae, pe to be a fact that girls NFASHIONABLE to have thin ankles, announces tou if Paul Poiret, the French fashion dictator. He says the eee ideal feminine ankle measures four inches around. To be Q. On what day of the week did in the swim, smaller ankles must be padded. May ree come? * This is one style that will get to Paul’s front door and epee cre no farther. The thin ankle is a womanly ideal because, stowed on the head of the Jesuit of Job, “Altho affliction cometh not 743 Summit Av N. F ; . i r. nen’ . st Premier Sting iar TO OTHER CITIES Imogene. Those who have other things of worth in their Watunoton, July § t No regariad a one of bey ps im paly ie tat are pk ghar = ; Opty “x ot aR ce ia crisis In the relations be portan nternational jevelop his cabin m a 3 4 i k 7 Ad “ eee end On (Ay: UY GSDOSSE AN “| Svea Candin, dad tp Sriten {| <mgsli!in. years | mit it tor ratieation to the || Mothers Never Lack for vice willing to boost. empire is being watched with Canadian Minister of Justice | dominion house of commons BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON These Excursion Fares from : i i tly " c 2 >. 4. . P ~i m ' There is history a-plenty to prove the truth of both intense interest. here where it is Lapointe is of the opinion that And be promptly told London ous ibisar Wilh swe thoes Géaiy 11 Feaies miay arebes tease Go kactee Seattle in effect daily & B assertions. Broadway simply treats its guests as they an’ imperial conference will be why. “ NG esthnitpiady prorpinpog tr dca: Reais Duthie Sept. 15. Final return tlmt [© ish seek to be treated | necessary to define not only Wo believe parliament would Voie te alee cian aeae the cle Oct. 31, 1924. Stopover pritk BP 1 Soiled a aca QUESTIONS = || canuses rignts, but tne rients | not approve it in view of th preacher, doctor, | sire to give your child the thing fests going and returcige a hore RS whe or parts of the ‘course pursued in this case,” he or bac or uncle, he wants. ‘0 deny thi 5 8 “ | That South Carolina man must have staggered the investigators when | ef the various other parts of the | course pursued tn ¢ ad esnray bogota hageo-penadin mart | pce aaa geen Call us by phone and let wt AE they found that he toted his liquor in his wooden leg. AND | i, Y F | sy ihern sheriahad Wingtnae “hone ceal make all your arrangements fo | dian Premier Mackenzie Canada r iy recognized the |] how to bring up ct en. the will of the child {s as nothing It costs no more and will save in | ANSWERS | 5 n o studied speec | Lausanne treaty, but would not We are told how they should be 1 Vebarinased’ ti iaetial agitate the your valuable time, tt Going Down Siiakis weak tes tattkwrar ba teas? ankly declared | be bound by any voblt as fed and fondied. Some insist upon | Vo oe your lowe” H. A. LAWRENCE th | Pr foie of factor poviedo i confronts three al | which the pact might tend to strict discipline, while others hold | For no matter how grown-up General Agent, " fr S r i i : yi y te writes & ira ed mpose upon her in the future that fewer en Ww evelop . ns sdiady Aan ; RICES are dropping in nearly every important country |] Biter” Stars" Washteetse wer || 1. Complete independence impose upon her ta, the future, || that tower rules will develop tbe | or'sornuticated our boys anders || i. or . : repay fies m . Cue 3 2, Annexati: ith the United | go to war or tuke othe nate’ ants ost es snecsihaghin Be: : = been issued in such vast amounts that a rise in its buying Medical, ity iii ate! rape Fd ty tating at Abend lad ane naethae “nesthae noesiil ctiaaits, Sanpete, senor ies ( Sa r ' | States ‘ " anc : i power is impossible. ” ee | she had. n d in making guidance. seater 4 Wholesale prices, for instance, have been slipping in 3, A more clearly recognized thus establishing far-reaching |] ‘The woman who labors inces- | ~ sre Deatiad eit tacasiee America. In England they are falling at a rate of 25 per | relationship as a self-governing precede vs tat ana || {2ntly to Keep her youngsters | mothers speak from the depth of a 5 j h i ften has the Atlantic! tion within the empire P t King tavors full and |] full and clean and with buttons 1 9 great ignorance. ‘They can not C cent a year and now average only 75 per cent higher than re ait wig res teslors pantie) «pastor within le complete. eeif-government with intact te criticised for not giving | heor the eetee of neve bn in 1914, compared with 226 per cent in 1920. What makes of machines were| _ Minister Lapointe just a in ‘the empire, rather than to |] more time to thelr spiritual needs, | pleads always for your baby, nor : | It's a world movement—downward. How far? ued? | boldly stated Canada’s position. set Canada up as a separate |) while she who spends hours in | taste the rapture which your } ; cial Sand ovules ‘A. A. OC. Reed crossed the Atlantic,| Canada must be consulted as an nation or Joln the United States their company Is blamed for not | child's job brings to you. Do not 4 { liversity conferred on Ambassador Hanihara the degree of | yray, 1919 the navy seaplane} caual in matters affecting the Ireland is watching events 1} counting their calories. blame indulgent mothers too Brown university Vv, 1919, in v iP : ‘ be of laws, recognizing, no doubt, what he tried to do to the immi- | wo.) jraj. G. H. Scott and crew, empire, he said, “for Canada is a dosely. Her status as a ff | Just being a fairly good mother much. Pity them, for they are 4 gration act. crossed the Atlantic in July, 1919, in| ‘sister nation dnd nothing clse state puts her on exact equality /1 ig the hardest job in the whole | the slaves of a passion so great $i the British dirigible airship R-34| would sho be. with Canada, and Mr yd * sri || world, not for what pebple are that no man can comprehend its at : . . Copt: Alcock and Lieut, Brown The crisis was brought to a ada gets In the way of inde- saying, and not because the chil- magnitude. or ; Foolish Sentiment crossed in a Vimy-Rolls planc from| head, after several yearn of Bepieson; tretand nowt i dren themselves are such prob. Only God can judge a mother, a Be” Biers Sets y, |Newfoundiand to Irctand, June,| Anglo-Canadian misunderstand- South Africa expects to fol- |] jems, but becuuse our love is | for He alone can understand her a A N ITALIAN is released from prison in the old country. © | 5919. i . | ings—when the British govern- | low sult and subsequently Aus- || qiways warring with our good | exquisite Joy of posession, her Orchard a It’s claimed he served 54 years for a friend’s crime. eee | ment signed the Lausanne | tralia, New Zealand and the || sense high hopes, her haunting fears, OUTE Se A bachelor, he sacrificed himself for his friend's family. Q. Where was the first savings! treaty, ending tho war with | rest of the empire |] Nothing fs so soft asa mother’s | and the deep and abiding love 7 : r aod t , eat . 10 U. & founded? When?| Turkey, without consulting Can- Annexation of, with or by || heart, and no matter how your | which ensnares and beguiles her. || (J a ri piles chatty eet UL fas: Procies noseabinn or | ake’ Ghd witnocl notation, |, Gangeu, io, wet euroealy” oon : outside story Ss. Fiction ers y nr YTS. | gavin ye at the parley idered here. But developments e . . * * ; pela) 19%, Boston, founded, 1816, representative at the parley « ; The simple truth is that this Italian was foolish. Senti- pee iey Canada was asked’ to ratify are being watched as cpoch- Y ment is rarely sane. Q. Who was the “Black Pope"? the treaty, She refused. Not making. at : A. This title was popularly be-| : % D 0 B of FABLES ON HEALTH | would have to be eaten to get the E thing that stumped Mr. | samo calorio result, {ann when ho wan considering| These are matters that the aver- dietary problems was why food can-|age person docs not stop to con not be measured In welght or bulk. sider when sitting down to eat. The ‘The mistake. of thus measuring |*POonful of oltve oll, or the little! food is a common one. porter oe cream he takes may be| a | giving him a caloric value equal or ter eave msemured in fuel units, Det | greater to all the rest’ of the food are mentally quicker than| Q Who presides at federal im- like small ears and dainty fingers, it’s supposed to indi- cate fine breeding. Detroit is so anxious to become a convention city that it may decide annex Cleveland in order to get the necessary hall, To Cage Might Cure NEW YORKER calls attention to the fact that that splendid exhibition of creations, the Bronx zoo, has No exhibit of the greatest of mammalians, the genus homo, and offers to place himself in a cage between the orang-outang and the chimpanzee. » The suggestion is not wholly without merit, but why waste a perfectly fine fellow who offers to sacrifice him- self? If it wouldn’t be too humiliating to the orang- outang and chimpanzee, some judge might sentence the auto speed fiend to a term in that cage. LETTER FROM AYVRIDEE MANN wunee : Paradise Inn, July 8, ;Dear Polke: ‘ Kirk Hillman's B-V-D's made a hit ‘at tho concert at the Inn the other night, They are his three kida, Bi11, Yan and Don, They gang a /triplet or tripod or whatever you call it when three people sing, Mre, Romeyn Jan- | son is hostess at the Inn, She used to ging at the University Christian | Church, Rev, Kleihauer can _ || now preach a sermon on the gebsecty "Prom Our Church o Paradise", OOS RAl Pie It's different with me, || When I sing, the wife gaye it sounds like h---, __ Brita None —_| | { Peachment trials if the chief justice | of tho supreme court of the United States is impeached? A. The chief justice of the su- Preme court presides at impeach- ment trials only when the president} is impeached, but in all other cases of federal impeachment (including impeachment of the chief justice) the vice president of the United States presides, see Q. When was the Jack Johnson- Jess Willard fight held? A, April 5, 1915, eee Q. What are the dimensions tn feet of an acre of land square in shape? A, 208.7 feet on cach side, «ee Q. What are the chief exports of the Canary islands? A. Fruits (especially bananas), onions and potatoes, hater) Q. What {8 the area of all the islands in the seas? A, About 1,910,000 square miles, eee Q. What does the namo ledge” mean? A, Tranquil, “Rut- Q. What kinds of fruit are prunes and raisins? A. Prunes are dried plums and raisins dried grapes, e+e Q. Is there any reason to believe that the winters are warmer? A. The U. 8, weather bureau says there is not. oiiease Q. Which votes first on a bill, the senate or house of representa- tives? A. The branch in which the Bill is introduced votes on dt first. If the bill originates in the senate, it ts voted on in that branch and sent to the house, and vice versa. The} only vills that must originate in| the house of representatives are bila} for raising revenue, tho it has be= come the custom for the house to formulate the appropriation bills. se att Q Why blooded? 1A, Beeause temperature are reptiles called cold- their with blood varies in And many foods have thelr caloric | ‘alues so well concentrated that by taking a small portion the same ef. fect can be procured as when a large | amount of some other bulky food |. eaten, ho ts eating. A few instances of this may be found by noting the following food | article? each of which contain 100 calories: One large egg, one large- ized baked potato, one lamb chop, ja dish of sweet corn, an ordinary An example of this is olive oil,| helping of baked beans, two squares which Is a concentrated food wherein | of cube sugar, a handful of peanuts, Betting| the surrounding temperature, 300 calories por ounce, or there: abouts, may be found, Ordinary veg- etables are bulky and several pounds a square of butter, a glass of milk or a quarter of a glass of cream and a largo orange. JULN SS Age like winter Youth 1s full of sport, Age’s breath is short; Youth is nimble, age is lame; Youth is hot and bold, Age is weak and cold; Youth is wild, and age is tame. Age, I do abhor thee, #Youth, I do adore thee; Oh, my love, my love is young! Age, I do defy thee; O sweet shepherd! hie thee, Crabbed age and youth Cannot live together; Youth is full of pleasance, Age is full of care; Youth like summer mom, Youth like summer brave, Age like winter bare, For methinks thou stay’st too long. —William Shakespeare, weather; | Endorsed by bakers everywhere, Place a standing order with your baker or grocer or - Raisin BREAD on Wednesdays He will then deliver it or reserve it for you every weck—fresh from the ovens, fragrant with the rare, rich goodness of Sun-Maid Raisins. To make sure of having this famous mid-week treat every Wednes- day, phone your standing order now. including the Retail Bakers’ An- sociation of America and the American Bakers’ Association Raisin Bread

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