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THE SEATTLE STAR FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1924 cee ae aes ea . ia SEE SATS ET eee iid r ear = c Entertaining a Hard-Boiled Visitor ) eee) ERS DON’T VOTE e Seattle Star |‘ Ala aaa ORS I i | Newspa tring “Ansociat nd. Prone Bervice pal ikea wren are Sam. bars pee eee ie Sunday ‘ ; England's t revivalist Aged, | good \ Eh ao he s John Wesley’s record of 27,00 Questions Vicar Aitken’s ol ¢ Answered * Vicar Aitken’s observation is that vit r io ARIEL ED a: have b broken down by th inve nt cle and auto. He overlooks golf. “Every cl Science has conferred upon us has been used to take men tional away from the chure' ," he 8. ‘ asd yp : An exception is radio, which has created an invisible Be at R te and labor, er A whe church audience numbering into the millions 4 rd Me mean A Big Year Taking a developing NCLE SAM says 1954 will be a big year in two ways. poe sor Ree. ton 3 ty 4 2. He hopes to announce then the final paying off of the vot ‘ 7 : : War debt. The treasury’s plans are based that way The - j C date will be later if prices drop materially and the people : 73" oe ae Mcomes are correspondingly cut, thereby reducing money Baie , , . Ne * available for taxation. Smoking Room saseed 1 hich withdrew fterence betwee La Follette r Tn 1954, also, Uncle Sam expects to have the country Stories er dollars from coln and ¢ r 5 bone-dry. That was the date set by experts when 1 Stories oe tional prohibition went into effect. They didn’t kid ther : / S : 8 IENCE } Selves that it could be brought about overnight. One ger 4AID " 1 1 “7 ad oat ; [ Fooling Plants eration, at least. pana or m i put ; : 4 7 kr 1 one t 1 must took | "at “dark hors oy) The Solution “* aren ra nado | rere ec aco father arrested for keeping his boy chained Mery p nots whl i AES up all day at home. Pa says he’s always working sa stna reper ayrergrngeree aya and chaining was the only way he could keep the lad home. “He stays out until 2 o'clock in the morning some- ? The solution of such a problem is not chains, but more grounds and recreation centers for the young. High id values and congestion of population have taken from ith its rightful heritage, a place to play. Even alleys, light of boyhood, are becoming a vanishing institution. ' How can we expect youngsters to seek innocent enjoyment | when they haven't any place for it? i Keep Your Pep man 56 is still young, Arthur Thomas Wilson took a 7,500-mile hike with a 50-pound pack his back. He started from Detroit with only 78 cents. luman natfre is pretty decent, he decides, for motorist ive him lifts at least half the way. This cuts his actual ke to about 3,700 miles, but that’s a big achievement for a man of 56. Many a man under 30 couldn’t do it. PROVE a Monster Mortgage ‘HE Wall Street jackpot grows. In the first half of the year 1408 million-dollars’ worth of stocks and bonds . added to the listings on the New York stock ex- rane, The bonds totaled roughly twice as much as the is. And over 271 million dollars represented foreign We are rapidly approaching the day when the entire ional wealth will be blanketed by securities. It will a big mortgage, and everyone will pay interest on it. (BUYING OUT THE BOSS oe BY ALBERT APPLE & (@ E of the six oldest business firms in the United States is Devoe & Raynolds Co., Inc., manufacturers of paints ‘and painters’ materials. It has been active for 170 years. Sixteen of this company’s employes have just’ taken over e business. They bought a controlling interest. It re- d a lot of money from each of the 16, for it’s a big siness. i ing employes purchasing the interests of their boss. ~ Later you will frequently read that thousands of employes ve, by pooling their savings, bought out their employer. pits may be the eventual solution of the labor-capital lem. It certainly would go a long way toward making every more or less his own boss. the country, including sources of raw materials, railroads ind marketing organizations. ‘HE income of the American people for six years is just about equivalent to the entire national wealth. It is e. Living expenses have to be met first. Only savings gould be devoted to buying ownership of industry. javings. By organization. and sufficient time, employe: tould buy out all employers. OULD things run smoothly if employes by purch became their own employers? Not unless the “MM an organization with almost military discipline to handle Management. Petty jealousies and rivalries would be al. Every business, to be efficient, m s at its head, the same as an army mu resided over by a general with the power of decision, | Our original American settlers discarded the monarchy dea in government. But they brought over and clung to he monarchial system in business—the employer the ruler, imployes his subjects. We are gradually in business get- i a semblance of the democracy we have in government, inal attainment of the goal may be thru the pooled buy’ ower of employes. LETTER FROM | VRIDGE MANN August 15, 1924, y united ing Dear Folks: I went to see the Bell st. dock, to take a look around. It gaye me quite a’sudden shock to see the change I found. The mighty hall ih which they store the goods that come and go, was being decorated for the Northwest Merchants’ Show. Four hundred booths were strung along the hall that once w bare. They hada mighty busy throng of decorators there. was putting in displays along the busy wall; it made working maze—and in its midst was Paul, Paul V. Knudson, I was told, must oversee the mob the bird they picked to hold the secretary's job. It's “Knudsen this” and “Knudsen that” in everything they do; no matter what they're driving at, he's got to see it thru. For months a bunch of men have ‘They've given time and toil and t, and never thought to shirk And now the job is nearly done; the exposition’s ne: be a dandy one—the best of any year! So let us 1 a big bouquet to those.who p Hemphill, Mason, Jet us add a word of praise, before we're thru, to he’s a bird to whom a lot is due! Uv ritge Yom as A crowd a whirling, for he's met for exposition work ar; It's bound to d the game—to And lastly ‘aul V. Knudsen || Such stories are becoming common—a small group of 3 e than enough to buy all the business organizations in|‘ But it all illustrates the gigantic power of the people’s | ion as sol dren men w as to noth | | | l oury, [brutally fran did they? Noticeable orn. | | t what n't ven either. it’s printed in ‘There he was nineteent ul Pry | Came |in | Anne } ered tha Presic his preddeces Ithere wa land recreation Adams, unlike |form of an e ie. Potomac r | One morn | ing! ITH Mr to the Man wont visit feel in h Journalist named incidentally, known lof Yellow Journalism.” and herself published a weekly re-| ase | view of Washington life coming of hot Anytown soda fountains and n onald women &@ cafes, in t be so AY anpr to the Well, listen to this There uned to be nm when pr United States wa: In art © last Amer | | aine a n Fr many countries —¢ slovakia, Swede Hollar | exam \ t be ost feo cream effe P is ever BY RUTH FINNEY WASHINGTON, and I went { y question of fact or informa- or tea nd Id no 4 r own on a time In Wash dent, held in awe by newspaper report And a time when reporters got wanted from an official symptoms of ‘gratitude’ for an interview, of the any Here's a legend of the old days, Of course, all this income isn’t available for any such pur-|*¥thentlc at least to the extent that the more complete t cen | Washington guide books ur a Roy the Sho founded | part of woman all. and, “Mother known as when she desired an y morning r ask for buttermilk Few people know how !mportant| ® part the use of sour milk, in any | *Wallowing of a little sour milk will whether buttermilk or ny especially prepared | be Plays in fighting intes of its forme one of the 1 concoctions tinal pois Lactic tained in which thrive ning So, if milk germs |, which Is the ew with President John Quincy Adams, and President Ad have a Realjcare to seo her and repeatedly re have a staff |fvsed her request ms did not uthed a little and discov: | dent Ada: rs and hig » s spent the early morning hours whe ong with n ho one about in exercise | But President} White j occupants took his recreation in the | House swim in @ bathed as usual, | He started for the shore. And therp sat Anne on his cloth-|‘rhis lacustrine She wanted an interview; certain quesions to ask. would be land, FABLES ON HEALTH BUTTERMILK BENEFICIAL | had was acid con. our milk, is @ mediim in| elude putrefactive cannot keep some | but intestinal tract amount. o *, G. ORR days, IN EUROPE beer n mode and mar In M well People Antwerp, Ielgtum, would b wxzled to know what growing English co pleased to retire and Jet Mr. h rbed por tons, ning wer her que as from the water President Adams did. Unfortunate And she did the exclusive View (thus secured in not be covered, Tho Mbrary congress has numbers of “Paul but they are of a much Inter date when the owner hip had evidently passed to other hands ter Anne lived in the historic bullding just oppisitel the capitol known as ‘Old Capitol.” It was here that con: gress met after the capitol building had been burned by the British. The | national women's party, waging a fight for ‘economic equality for | women, occuples the building now. Saskatchewan Gets Lots of New Homes 1 | REGINA, Saskatchewan, Aug. 15 Building construction in Saskatche- | wan actually started during the! month of June was valued at $674, 000, an increase of $114.178 over the| pmonth of June, 1923, Building per-| | mits in Moose Jaw for the first halt! jot the year totaled $390,347, and in| skatoon $936,130, | | |Uncover Neolithic European Villages | BERLIN, A 16.—The Um schau, Germa leading actentific | Journal, reportg that excavations in| jthe "Berner Oberland,” Switzerland, have revealed an entire village of | pile-dwellers of the neolithic period. | dwelling is the first | [discovered in that part of Switzer. | manufacturing their belligerent lac- tie | rms m constant enemy of in- inal polsons will be on hand This does not mean that the mere do the work. The good germs must} kept and to do this we} must feed them. | ‘The foods which best ald in the Propogation of these good germs in-| | a rather free usage of milk, | me cereal such ax oatmeal, cooked for 10 minute light} f raw starch | F military service of the L or who have formerly served in the army, buried at pole is warmer than the Sou In the Arctic the summer su the icebergs and the navy or marine corps, are Arlington. about 70 tons. i skunk “wood-pussy.” | tion by ing The Question nm I climbed up in the 1 aoe, 1 net Bhs |greatly stimulate growth of p hair ar tor scratched me Washington, D. ande en electric light, merely as once and t Kg The third! | two cents in loose sta t, has been atch ve beolutely malicious and, | ply. No médical, Jegal or marital “aitedk “stseai® oh le be stropped hie rasor ked| Jadvice. Personal replies, confi- ! rte in the U. 8. Tee im for mirror and gave mynelf| | dential. All letters must be | uiture experimented with pow the once-over. My face looked like| | signed | erful electric lights. ‘They found that h I had allowed my wife to have the — not only the time of blooming, but Mttle more careful?’ I asked. He re-| @ About how much was the debt|hy increasing the amount of lig - 2 ie ferred me to a sign on the wa'l and/or the United States Increased be-| ‘There are‘on exhibition plants tre: The Lord upholdeth all that fall, |i: read, ‘Every time the barber|Ciice of the civil wee? ed in and similar plants and raiseth all those that be|scrmtches you he is fined 10¢ A ws aera ha 0% 011| that tare eon aderalic., "ie ane bowed down—I's, 145:14 sc’ ‘And,’ sald the barber, ‘I war period. enous all to about|that are “light-hearted” are the o. 60 $5 at the races yesterday and I mig 000,000,000. tronger and larger Waar: n of the earth is not well enjoy it right here r pak be ¢ on? ' * else full of « amition?—Virgil, 'y Q. What would « a glass fist Z wont tor crnex'naen wot veine|| NATURELAND ag | { temperature in er n draft from a wi It ts estimated that the great pre ow or might have this ¢f-| historic temple in the Valley of Mex- fect was built ¢ than 8,000 year Cab 4 e the pyramids of Q Of what I Egypt A. Vanillin is the see iple of vanilla (pr ¢ antains , : ; ein, | tanilla bean) but it is also » d 8 most beautiful ot. It's Gent her fine! netically by the oeldation of of recent eo gath’ring she's got; and has added a mystery nore eae ie 4h. she the waters have been iz ee ae era Te Cra ee ae eae nye. 4|. Qi S00) fiah ever; cleat: Chale! epeat| mantityivalnie uh Hie eete cae dicen c 3 Aner Se ay. She ever has had them as birthday gifts, too, A city A. No, they cannot do so, as fish\to four feet a year, and nobody can of doll folks for h 5 have no cy phenomenon. A num There's little old “Ol! Cloth,” who's f and “Sister,” who Sa wae s have been ae 1 knows how to talk : eats ree rx y who's dressed up reall oO Asa anyi civilldas pefmhitien. to ad on its nas quaint, and a man doll who's able to wal ‘ be buried at Arlington National uilt on higher points. 8 of A mamma doll open and shut as she's tipped a bit forward ser that cataswoitred Se amall dancing fellow is made so he'll strut and she call; if : ‘ ; A “88 all dancing fellow ts m Hell erat and she calle'hin| "" 4 7+ aa ioffod of enttated. mone a speck of an ts er Jumpity Jack buried in Arlington fe may be} lan showing but a And then, an old rag doll that’s not even dressed. It seems that to pleces| 5 os 4 the eu es uf ish zc! é Pho aap it oF acy theatbced. buried in the same grave the ish mosque. She D it much longer than all of the rest, and she loves it , 1 r 6. & 6 he b t of a time of the civil war, civitian war (Copyright, 1924, N. B.A. Service, Inc.) refugecs were buried in. Arlington Icebergs from the Arctic rise up Now, however, with the ption| in peaks and towers, while Antarctic mentioned, only men who are in the) jcebergs are usually flat as a table son is that the North th pole. n melts sides break eee down first. Temperature rarely goes Q. How large do whales got? to the melting point even in mid- A. The sulphur vottomed or dlue| summer in the Antarctic. whales reach a length of 90 feet or . more and, it is calculated, weigh} Some Western folks call the ahs DIAMONDS ON CRED Give Her the Diamond Now!! To Wait Is Heartbreaking to Her -BEN TIP 1431 THIRD AVENUE—KRESS BUILDING $1.00 $1.00 DOWN ™ DOWN “Diamonds with ease on terms that please” I