The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 21, 1924, Page 6

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)

PAGE 6 , SEATTLE §& fFHURSDAY, AUGUST 2 924 — ag yee ear Comes NOw the Threshing a The “Readingest” People i vee World ate woes 2d Aa aia EERE er. ges eopile 1n e Or ic ss U plift for the Editor NOW ALL! DO JS SEPARAe GRA From The CHAFF “dics Guse wo you will shortly appear the principal libraries of the LITLE Gea world, upon desks of the greatest ex and in the f a Al on the hook of a-fisherman with the lovely floral mon * 2 ; { A Thought nicker of “Hyacinthe Ringrose!” Less tempting lure s 7 : : % y La ; 2 . ; wee eons a J than that has caused m a fish to swallow hook, sinker, i . selina t Blessed are they which do hunger " h h € . rn and thirst after righteousness: for line, rod and reel and climb up on the bank er, < agli $ | es ¢ they shall be flied —Matt. vil? All that Hyacinthe requires, in order to record the A 3 J “ ’ oe 6 prominence of the editor, internationally, is some particu 2 Venta 5. » Z ‘ y . ‘ing F Kk 1 lars. First, particulars as to birth. Quite easy, since the 5 aA 5 . Z - editor was there at the time. Secondly, information as to v ‘ Y, Z y im “achievements.” An immense field for selection. How ( . * See - ever, reecntly the editor golfed nine holes in 132, and, at the start of his career, made $6 a week abl piel . ‘ : : S 5 As : ge As 4 | | Canada Lost by “Drys” | Itde largely on your diet ing and clothes, doing his own laundrying p Suggests Monsieur Hyacinthe. There ain't an) een 4 { a whether or not you can that $6 period and the present state of affluence, just : er ec | HINGTK Aus t | te on the wet and Loge eke Fy ae during the years and years of ordinary application of the nose to the as - § ry a in tober and os 5 grindstone. : r az quoted At he That's why Shredded Wheat Also, $10 to Hyacinthe, who kindly presents some rea- © given up : plane ‘sy pide sethen hr. on the sonable observations, to-wit: ‘Even a standard work must a : Car F t “ Ee = Sheps of people. Shredded Wheat is be conducted upon business prince. and : eee , a | Paences rv ee a 6.0 will bey tigke re gr d ns cost of producing such a book and arranging for its dis- a “4 \ N \ fier sea a u Cn st nourishmen tribution in North and South America, Europe, Asia, and P) , rf har sed rips nena ; Pi “ pertect food cantly Gigueted/ Africa, must be considered. It is not only necessary, but | fee . ling 5 tie © gone be tia " ‘ | Delicious with fresh fruits, equitable, that this biographical dictionary should be to sampling booze instead, at rc self-supporting.” ! The editor's temptation to post the benighted of Asia | f i and Africa on his birth particulars, his prominence and » Questions » When You Begin to his achievements, is sure strenuous and it may be done é A dé ; just as soon as he learns how in thunder Hyacinthe Ring- nswere G Ol | rose, way off in Imprimerie, 4 Rue Longchamp, Nice, et C established France, ever got hold of the idea that the editor ever had w can ¢ . 8 me BY ALBERT APPLE———— n tet authiclty lee ca a birth, prominence, achievements and $10. oe 2 sppetiony tt fines : Nquor n and T the age of 109, Mrs. Nora Bradley Kane died in New-| ‘° ae pace r ion of lic within | m be mad roceeding , Conn, She claimed she never had a doctor until a} pra t t that oa “2s heed bs agent sion so char with W hat’s y ours? noo A Barscs te treme sd 4 e ore her death, yet had always enjoyed fine health at f States probibition | 5% nce ors of - . Her formula was: “Work hard and leave all the rest tc Yat is to be the “symblem,” as Artemus Ward would greed eget eh God.” . A fine formula for a person gifted with excellent healti nada ' F partes gees <es | i put it, of the new party movement? Nquor iscults ~ The stone blind elephant seems to fit the present day ‘'She never had a physician, for the simple reagon that she| valle ery province w , : t aitecieee republican party, and the jackass paralyzed in both hind sInever needed one. Incidentally she ped an unfortunate) '° "ert it ea. One by warrants. In some of b legs seems to suit the democrats. ey Sigh sty feature of some medic that it often cures one n of Tia’ sebeatias : : rire tae Pe hale 8 Let's have a campaign complete in all its appurtenance some doit reah the the body by wr another Que Manhioba, spec nie is Has the reader a suggestion to offer? re ride. ‘ Doctor's don't prescribe as much pills and tonic as they es ubed to. These have their place in certain definite ailments, ‘ le: join i i lan ain arv| but the medical profession is recognizing Proper Living and|~ On With War! : wisidie Sanitation as the best medicines LINOR GLYN will not be frightened by self-styled | ie : a ME critics who would ban her works. She will reveal RMULAS for living to very old age are constantly com-} love as she has seen it.—Author’s Press. x ing to light in the news. The public is always eager for! She will, hey? Well, if Elinor is going to reveal a | you can get an answertoany| (them. But, unfortunately, these formulas rarely are of brand of love that she hasn't already got into her books, | question of fact or Informa- | | much value—because what is one person's meat is another’s| here's where the office staff gets orders to take part in a git se cle Page | poison. the “Defense Day” parade. And that’s no joke. j Waahlagtial, D. C, and encioaing Aged people frequently claim that temperate living is re-| pl Er alt | two cents in loose r sponsible for their advanced years. | | ply, No medical, I Yet the other day a healthy veteran of 74 appeared before © | Reduction for John! aera, All Kettere seuse ts | (Magistrate Gresser in New York on a charge of being intox-| a arene HES 5 . | signed. |icated. He said that he liad been drinking whisky for 60 oe Vite ee \s&-————_ >." | years, and the only difference he could notice was’ that many millions invested in health of the Chinese. pNangr te nor mhabatertised to: be f Rockefeller! I ay skin us, t g 7 ; th . . A ' he Eoin tetennan PoP Ai tae Pill eta da | ake ‘cuttings ‘A P ZOPLE who survive to very old age usually come from| \\% Both Silk and Wool Soit that John’s income tax is reduced: It must be tough ‘aia * a ft ving long-lived stock. as one family, members who grow to| ¢ aoe 5 r ‘s ‘ laboue e turity have a tendency to live to about 70, while i for an American to pay taxes like John does, when he eS ys pay ey ie, ‘i Z a a 4 wants to, produce 100 per cent Asiatics. Av another family most of them die around 60. | Featured at This Popular Florence Price second... Making allowances for individual cases the deviate from = pag «the rule, every family has—-by the law of averages—its Mant in on, pure sand danger year, when death seems to strike down the greatest - : a i Puzzler which co! Bt f number. If you have a record of your family tree, you can} PERFECT joy are these charming frocks for F WILLIE has a dozen bananas and eats 12, how can | shaded place, and. cove ey it ta check up and learn your danger year—when to be most Autumn. Stunning in desi n and low priced he give six of them to Rollo? Solve this simple little ttinga| careful. beyond comparison ae the denttiven olfeantite roblem and you will be ih great demand by reparations | should de carrt winter, The age of death has lose i tt hed pts Ander : Siifereneen <n Europe. wisee la a druabiaie of Weatieae ‘ ees a connection with heredity. | in this dress collection offered you the Florence g how feep the sand. welll ouoce a ee re a : —_——_| vay Germany in June bought over 188 million dollars’ worth | {"7,Mou*e., Keep Wie wand wall Pua EEE, 9 | Mey: of goods from other countries—and sold only 119 millions. | sbsut six sonia : What Folks VACCINATION | This put her in the hole 69 millions for the month—and | saatey® Are Sa mn { June was a typical modern month for Heinie. Reparations | @ What is calking and how Is It " y g | | ee have to be pzid largely out of surpluses in foreign trade; |4"°?, The argument between tho medical | Frocks with lait: can’t be paid out of deficits. Germany, however, probably | _ 4. Calking te o process in which) DR. HENRY VAN DYKE: “Noth-| profession and the persons who op- | Pees: joakum is forced into the seama be- juggles the figures. Those quoted are from Berlin. tween the planks of a deck or thelarytiing omens 2, t7ine tO 90| pose vaccination has been’ given new | tucks, tunics, graceful anything: when you are off balance staat hf, 6. sebodtaauag tAcaebad te ort leipelue Ey’ a Feoent’ehidatta: oF flares and flounces— | prevent the entrance of water. After) SETSUO UENODA, Japanese |smallpox in the Philippines. In this | Bunk lane scams are spread, as much writer: ‘The Japanese have no way epidemic more than 60,000 persons e of them Just a bit oakum ia forced in aa possible un-\to redeem them elven from humilia - t fi ; [Cake 18 Loree, xem) afl / died \ ferent. A CHICAGO butcher tells how he sold shoulder steak |‘ '! peat ig Mt aera dare GaHERE Gants: ' Dr. Vicor Helser, in a speech be like hotcakes by advertising them as “excellent coro- | putty. Spectat chisct-shaped toola|row the bread of bitterness that is{fore the 1 | nation steaks.” The fancy name caught the public. Jare used in calking called calking | served them.” ton, in Chicago. said: “Shall a few We are a great people for labels and names. What used |("?"*.” rie th alae De Bifeatatricl cd act + persons with their unproved allegn F z to be a crock factory is now a “pottery studio.” The | plates are aie wter-tight by| “Ur th ‘a litt rb tions be alllowed to spread a , ! military draft masquerades under the more gentle name, [calking. In the case of fiush edges magic an¢ 1 is not to man. | ton, blindness and death to in t ¥ “selective service.” What's in a name? A rose under jor butts the calking tool commonly! kind!s taste.” : |victims of their folly? Should we | : any other name would smell as sweet—but not in our | ‘adler the seam, but when one itt mouse baat Me: Bsllavee tele ai | j Lie Bal | American Medical associa: | : plate laps another its edge is driven! ROLIAN LYNDE HARTT, writer: | NOUse bec he believes it is non: generation, £ |down by the toot against the under\ *trreligion’Is generally wiven na the inflammable, if his action menaces | plate, chief cause for divorce, whe the homes of others?” | ing the very period when . Those opposed to ation form | Pa 4 i trained speaking voice.’ ever vaccination is used. Q. What are the names of some|_ © = my 1 i ma sat aI Xf and wool crepes at this Mo" planted a garden, a dear little garden, when warm weather first| ns h t woods known? FABLES ON HEALTH | gnum vitae, quebracho a sawodon au ms pg day and night just to plant the seeds right) (sometimes called “ax-breaker"), ¢0-| BE CAREFUL OF WATER ) cobola, chony and hick Ory. Dad thought it quite funny where went the spare money that mother| fiw ey | | Q t does word Christ) membership has inc divorce mall but very etic class and | : : time also lem of cination has been | ( | Annointed” Messiah,” erly contested in many places, | owe |, EDWARD W. BOK, ex-editor; “It! legally and otherwise, ‘The chief ar-| v y ‘ j pee os a where was *Jack|!%, Curious that the American manjgument of the medical profession ts | . i |. Wen an ae carne Tack! with his perceptions always alive to|that such epidemics as the one in \ . oun choice of silks, | EGU nLee tral tinge, | unuet not xensed the value of|the Phillippines are prevented where. | hy i satins, crepes, twills very unusual price. ibe é oft kept in a cup. For seeds she was spending. Her pra ever ending,| ,& 18 It true that robin red-breasta| QE careful of the water you drink| have been prevalent in several re-] Gi vent i a up. Yor sede se was soenting. Her prayer, never rte ang only In the fall of the year? |4 on your woek-end or vacation | gions already this summer Autumn at hand, and it’s time to start acquiring , p A. No; they sing all thru spring,|trips during the summer months! | Pure water is easily obtalnabte p raaratn ys : : * She'd sprinkle and hoe just to help the things grow and she kept it a\summer and antiann | Such was the warning to Mr. Mann | most sections, Sat When’ ae f new wardrobe in ‘keeping with the season. Let secret from dad, He'd get a surprise and he'd open his eyes when he sat ere and other residents of Anytown. | spots are reached by auto, thi this store famo for v all the things that she had. Q. When «did: William Jennings) While most running streams are| ble is not always a good one : us alues, take care of your (Bryan write his letter about “desery-| likely to be free from pollutic Jounce of prevention that lies In bolt. | needs satisfactorily and economically, At last came a peeping, thru lumpy. soil «: long slender stem j hi ¥ i s ing democtats" ‘and what was it) While most spri © a pretty ing the water ix certainly better than | growth of green. And sen canis another. “Ah, ha,” shouted mother, “that! about? j bet, still it i8 wise to inquire regard: | the inroads of a fever-epidemic must be a radish—or bean. | 4. In a tetter to the offictat in|in& the water in any district | A small quantity of chlorinated | Then summer rolled ‘long and the garden went wrong, as a fine total (large of castomas administration in| Wherever the slightest Suspicion | lime will help Kill germs that ma ‘| loss were the seeds. The garden was green, but ‘twas plain to be ween that| (12 Dominican republic, Bryan, wh:e/ obtains = in outof-the.way places, | living In water, but for safoty's sake iy secretary of state under the Witson| Water may be boiled with but little |it ix better to build a fire and kilt the best thing that grew there was weeds, © | administration, asked if places could| trouble. the germs and get rid of the impuri (CepysIEnEAELE/N--2, A. Bervice, tne.) |e found in the Dominican customal Typhoid and Mher fever ravages ‘ties thru boiling s for deserving democrats. His letter | was severely criticized as au attempt! K pig |to reintroduce the “spoils system.”| » 4 \ ¢ ; | p ‘The Upstairs Shop That Saves You Money iy welltine___ Q 14 the sentence, “1 not go ; (va “be” ta rarely ured, in prosente| 4 q <) > = aD UNION g . 32) WASHINGTON, (ale day Lnglish, “Am” is usually used, - a. Sh 4 a but “be” 48 correct, sl Aig eee ccc .

Other pages from this issue: