The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 28, 1924, Page 6

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The Seattle Star . OF Ns GTTOOSTS A108 Elections U.S. Urges All | Children LBACH * Commis Mysteries of Life rtal, Tom Sawyer unexpected If we less thrilling “Taming” the Public (Ga eATONG g lly get the public under more * perfect control ce, it develops tt o men are like America t they ; ceiver hook when they get slow service t tar company in Paris makes this arrangemer : Adan ; on Central's board, they 1 and order Ever, a i € » loses his place ¢ oves down tl 4 We'll all be tamed to stand without tching of ; , tens ; these days ' e cream to meke‘esanes ea ta | Lewis A. Kaltack An Electric Age e voter N THE ELECTRICAL industry, possibilities for expar ma ape kd rie ¥ sion are unlimited, says President Swope of General e Knox { Electric Co. : : ; Elect ty will take t ce of the coal fu i is 4 “aprer ——SCIENCE —-——, We are rapidly moving into an Electric age. Electricity, Smoking Room pas / controlled by a fingertip applied to a button, will be ns . Stories Roy ¢ ‘ f man’s slave. Power will come from falling water and Seo ae from coal burned at the riines to generate “juice,” inci- clotties, wor to keep: thee erewi 3 f: BELEN TEES — ur dentally saving long coal hauls. Sees brn yan | savant nee | Our One Big Weakness |\:." oe appl a ! ID YOU ever stop to think of how we fall for the HE ELDER John D. Rockefeller is traveling more M t : ‘om nobility stuff? slowly. He finds that a trip of 200 miles in one day wiiei.® There was such a mob of palpitating Americans tires him too much. ihe dy, eo first about the Berengaria before the prince of Wales came Speed is the gait of youthful individuals and youthful Dita aien i cntiata. cian ae aboard at Southampton the other day that he had to nations. As they get older, they begin to realize that steal aboard before daylight to frustrate them. they have all eternity ahead of them, so what's the use of The liner was loaded to the guards with Americans, rushing? men and women, who had wildly sawed off th trip The wise man doesn’t allow anything to annoy him. A to Europe so they might boast of having crossed on hundred years from now, it won’t matter anyway. The the same boat destination is the cemetery. Why hurry? | j 3 iy an 6 . 4 the 4 Be side wa ; | A Thought | Jolted ton back home. To sh sane geek ee ere WRITER or poet might produce better work after = ~ trl dessa . Ww would jus ) Death Val-| above, not on things on earth—CoL getting a wallop on the jaw, claims a scientist. A aap fos nge he Ke/there skp ii... Es oe ergy aroused by anger may flow into intellectual responses | -—————_—___________ Ame 8 world of climbera —result in excessive physical or mental activity.” i] e acorn ak A hard jolt of any kind is a grea’ stimulant. Men go | Questions to seed on the job when the path is .so easy for too long. Getting fired is often the best jolt. It rousés a man ¢ Answered ¢ from lethargy, usually he gets a better job—is fired up instead of down. such great] A FFECTION is the broadest basit | of good in life.—George Eliot Berlin to be the great American What * is YOU! of the German saddle-make > became & personage worth going far to nee | Burnett Bros, Jewelers. “Pay Us a4 You Are Paid” » we look at it that way Not much! Every Everett—Seattle—Tacoma—Chehalis —Portland—Salem—San Francisco t a iragout fi and San Jose don schem was Gloria Swason ear there ts all b American n le The Assets of Birth ete il ee eo Indi Runner queen. HE NEW edition of “Who's Who in America” contain . are its Are we snote? Poseurs? Hypocrits? = a pith “Pp U A Y biographies of 25,357 prominent people. Twenty-three ash St as ae a e ebou is great Am 3 ak ay Ss s§ ou on | Are Paid’’ out of every 100 of these, by the way, never attended college. A fourth of the total were born on farms, a fourth in small towns, a fourth in small cities, a fourth in big cities. An acorn grows into an oak, not an evergreen—whether SHIEK OR HUSBAND? HQ it’s planted in the backwoods or in a metropolitan park. e BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON ' Environment is not all. We bring into this world wit! eee \ to? ! us fully three-fourths of what we become at the end of Watxine down Secor fost this stuff about hus H the road. Many never develop their inborn possibilities. " ain get rid of 1 Life’s Uncertainties | Metoatesti oul monet te can accumu HE most fascinating things in modern life are taking | Yh Bae aecicedl teotoanener } is ibat & : = A eee place in the scientific laboratory—which used to be a | | dential All letters must ey profile of a ® e w that the | dull place for most people. | xigned. carne rd Pes workaday wife of their's who For instance, Professor Huxley takes a normal egg that |* Rg 6 va Na Mook at hed Ht codec mses. ioe end | 4 would hatch and produce only one newt (salamander). He | 4 wien were the Jews driven) Ovlient | they talk, and to put plenty of : ties a string around the center. .The egg gradually sep- | trom Jerusalem? - After an additional | salt, in the fa worth all arates into two, from each of which hatches a heal A. The final revolt of the Jews octet ah neha phar eats i eid cs of the Follies | 8a ay , he grafts two eggs -togethe against the Roman power, 192-185 at the ball game and was t po ae “ F bloodshed and devastation. The Em how they were dressed, or how Life is more mysterious, the closer we get to its secret. | peror Hadrian in rebuildi Jeru-| and untidy. His collar was beautiful they were, husbands ‘i salem name Aclia| Wilted, his tie askew; he was « well as wives would be in entirely too fat and neetied a A shave s pera: Sec Brains | Saracens teadiaett te | coBee bob yeetanaieoratan: fe as R. GOLDENWEISER speaking: “If you take the | @ what does an “inning” in base-| brains of 1,000 ordinary undistinguished individuals | ball mean? 1? aahiut abe ae Bar ea? and then 1,000 scientists, artists and men of eminence, A. An inning mcana that three} Not on your We only had you will find no distinguishable difference between the |" ©” cach side have been put! that lovely warm feeling of se One | curity and well being which wo series in size and weight.” NaF two series in size and weig! . comes at the sudden sight of | | But you would find a difference in the shape of the the pressure 500 feet m, and thought how nice and ; brain, the same as a high forehead and eyes far apart are ? | caniorable rg is and how | nvites i sure signs of intelligence. A APPETITE | Capito and a mighty bad fix sleek slim after we t we gave a thought to | pounds per square inch fine that he belonged to our | However, the inteliect is not in the brain—which is, to (ee hero nat, i | thought, just what the telephone is to the conversation + . ion said se bad rarcane fa, that passes thru it. Lincoln’s brain has gone to dust, but | Sez ambell Dud: | me iat nila oehen : | ne rince his thoughts live on. e {athe cari elieve it | | % a SSN alae of Wales will|| is the wav most husbands feel HUNGER | Zi ; “ } | Z 9 not visit New about their ¥ | Z York on his Their eyes may stray after . mi th § trip here. He || the dolied up young things with apse Wheat with fresh ‘ \ | The picture tells about all. there is to tell! rip here. I iia: SHAT Uphcabtienaseeteck oy ruits has an entrancing ap- | \ The famous White Gold-filled Elgin Watch— is coming over || thing would they trade for her peal these days, | ( q . with a knife and chain to match! At a lower i) for pleasure. ne pita te i washed-out "Two of thése etlip: Geen pre Uns anybody ever hoped to meet with— | PORE ET REST RSG a “ap Art MA baked loaves of whole wheat | . Deli . BABLES ON HEAL supply a most nourishing meal = ivered for a Single Dollar Es y ) —yet light and easily digested. | : Paid for $1 Weekly 0 ni ‘ Tal And Shredded Wheat com. | aN \ Only a limited number to sell at this price— IHE mind of a boy keeps a-turning around while he's li 5 H 9 roan et 5 ae! ‘ gee 7 his youth. He's learning the right from the wrong, ‘twill be found i TREATING THE SCALP | bines happily with fresh fruits | - Te ee i} . F ry ‘ ¢ Idea Oo} o1 low s and he's picking deception from truth -———— h uiintoabreakfast or mid-day deli- | : sguoplbe Ara ha to ib ocho cate od There much {s ado in his fast-growing head, ‘cause creation has made it | cacy which cannot be imitated. . . that way. He's getting his pointers from what's done and said, and a lot Kee } the hair clean and they In cleansing the scalp use hot of them enter to sta | Ip in good condition during | water and make a good thick suds i] As gray matter grows and the youngster fills out he will find he'sta ming) the dusty, hot summer days wag 4) with tar sc or any good shampoo | of his own. If training is proper, there isn’t a doubt he'll be anxious to go| uty to which Mrs, Mann of Anytown | soap; use a nail brush in scouring It re e it alone. applied herself, articularly where the|then rinse with baths of | several | A college or high school, and good enough for any All boys pick an idol; they worship it much. From youthdom to age it|Children were concerned. water, the te A > age water, the temperature of which WHOLE { . | | will be the one little thing that contains the real touch—"Ah, there's an| Just how appreciative the hair is|should be gradually cooled example for me.” o od shampoo is show s| | P f % good shampoo is shown by its! Give the head a first rubbing with Quite lucky the father who's lived so that he his son's best ambition| gloss and soft, fluffy look after the| inspires. And any son's father, by trying, can be the idol his youngster| shampoo has been applied. admires. a hard, thick Turkish towel, Other rubbings can follow with ordinary Use clean brushes i d don't be|hand towels, Women often find it (Copyright, 1924, for The Seattle Star) afraid of frequent washes so that i Is be helpful to warm the towels before | dust maysbe thoroly removed. Once | using, as this will dry the hair more Bim EE He {ull meal | intwo biscuits 909 Second Avenue Which is between Madison and Marion Streets MAN cEhat bakes mean iat foe . ‘the ite ii ge

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