The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 9, 1924, Page 6

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PAGE 6 THE SEATTLE STAR TUESDAY, SEP The Seattle Star AS THEY SAY IN CHICAGO: A MURDER A DAY MAKES THE, ALIENISTS G/ 2 ieee =" |Coolidge’s “Labor Talk” Stirs Up Unions|\WALES REAL MOTIVEIS | W | Captured, an Audience! “in : 110 Fire An Audience” L J v| W { € 4 t 1 ( 3 t ; car ( : Go i s No soone ¢ 1 I Mr. ( dge unted to make a Labor Day speec He didn’t have to hire a hall becau e had the White House rent But | i i f J C » bi I Over cs 3 trusty . “ Out in t ee f ers, but 112 = t sta AS Se na . The first pa: r any ; story. cs ee ee } ‘ , , t Slemp said the . { given ¢ the aw audience nor who they were nor where the P) Questions P) 2 t from or how But there were represented unions that were never hear ¢ Answered * ——SCIENCE ————— of and unions were represented by men they’ had never ————_—_—_—_————__———" | Elephant School } t heard of peeches went off fine Q What fs the ¢ tn I t! All in all, it was a*triumph for Common Sense, the para- Lal ; REY ge mount issue of the campa | “ , é & : “If you want to make a speech, go hire an audience.” raf i civil P t 4 A new political maxim is thus bestowed upon us evid altho the White A ft z hi Saving Sam’s Oil f the visitors was the of contains fe OMEHOW or other there seemed to be an idea that, nization ; he city ¢ i when the glacial hand of Mr. Coolidge fell upon t Coolidge's . a a | ot ‘s Naval reserves, oil was to be “left in the grou oy as x hyou can get an answer toany ‘ court could decide whether Secretary Fall's deed o ee hed . que ‘ ip Was valid. t ank ton 5 Oy, ss Not so. fact t ¢ the _ The astute special counsel have not enjoined the extrac- as is soone sai for 0 ; eee ol. They-t Lega: . ladyice. Persona! replies, confi- * later to Uncle Sam and Messrs. Sin fi | dential. All letters must be} And the receivers ar H t . t P : ;. . } signed. ae many thousand calf-powe 45,00 & Tee " ; The receivers of the Elk Hill reserve re H ¥ Q1 ~ i radeon; Sime extracted enough oil in July to make : } ect aap i . ; ; $169,000. a sioerlad; laud What they extracted in Teapot Dom t tr i ship places in August, the Lord only know ‘ Thus is the naval oil being “protected.” t Public Confidence | What Folks Ave New York, NY* pri NA AONEY in circulation totals over 4,665 n dollars, Are Saying es See hae nage 3 Raph Burnett Bros., Jewelere—“ Pay Us as You Are Paid Everett, Seattle, Tacoma, Chehalis, Portland, Salem, San Francisco and San Jose Uncle Sam reports. Over a third of this is federal Feserve paper’ money, much of which cked only by REV commodities—warehouse stocks, carl of bric’ We're gradually losing the gold and silver fetis the “elastic currency” route. It doesn’t m any ference what's back of money, as Iéng as the public jar: God confidence in it. It was loss of public confidence, quite edocs as much as printing gigantic amounts, that knocked the anes hedges props from under German mark. FLET CHER, =i oa Ba tal matte but I'll be t Practical Prospecting see . IAMONDS occasionally are found in glacial drift in our sarees ors hae . : country. One as big as 17 karats was discovered in gravel while digging a well in Wisconsin. These diamonds were brought down from som in Canada, carried along in gravel accompanying gl of long ago. Geologists now are tracing the course of these glaciers. They expect to find the mother diamond mines up North. Geologist is taking the place of the prospector in min- ing and oil. 1 § all the 3 s we have been in the Jew- elry business we have never sold such beautiful, dependable watches for so little! Each watch is encased in a fourteen-karat white gold-filled c. which is guaranteed for five and twenty y Each watch a fifteen-jeweled movement, tly the same as is used in the dia- - ies which sell for hundreds of dol- lars! Each watch is guaranteed to keep time, or A new watch instantly, and with- out a word of protest. You may have one of these beautiful watches on payment of a single dollar. The balance may be paid at os Gambling—for What? IED TOGETHER with ropes, three Italian mountain climbers slip and fall. Going over a precipice, the | S88 nd the rate of, say—a dollar or so ave catches on a rock. They hang suspended above a Perey ae AY 1) It : L To theae are als a week, leep chasm five hours before tescued. ity hoe Vala tl ' . The curious part of it is that they will continue their | woria 1 ¢ [ EC fl RIC HAY -MAKING } mountain climbing, which is about the last word in use- | asain ee Se Se Eee De Pa SE Tess occupations. Man risks unlimited danger when the a 7 STON, Sept. 9—An trol in egg , goal is futile. In practical pursuits he is cautious. Many | Smoking Room atiacun a fellow who wouldn't gamble $10, for fear of losing it, | Stories od t tries to beat the train to the crossing with his auto. 1A ROUGH-LOOKING fe Mysticism ; end to space. The universe is 228 million in diameter—a “light year” being an rement six trillion miles long. Figures shed by Professor Silberstein. What's beyond the “end” of space? The scientific an- swer is that space is curved or spherical. No one can really comprehend it. Higher science blends into mysti- cism. Man approaches a comprehension of the spiritual that exists on the other side of the thin, invisible wall. 8 Dr. Smith, these Matthews have to Cy | an stammered a ed to the ne DALY “O) frit me ott Pomel, DOE J) [Pally bracers an tame r and 0 accused an IHROUGH one cause or other, one th off from w he won't have to He wa His mind can be eas el that it’s shirk. r co i es in the morn and, thought of a rest. But men, so {t seems, only rest in the FABLES ON HEALTH blessed. Be: 4s , the m man who walketh all ds II rine up to do ax he! CARE OF TEETH | Ba, And wat ous cae evan of oof iy? Why, mw mense ss A Thought | | late ffir ER a a *t Bookkeeper, who pushes a pen; what rest thought will enter | © nme |THE first’ starting to brush) After each brushing, the baby's his dome? He feels he 1s getting a needed rest when he is writing long This people honoreth me with baby’s teeth—so the Mann/toothbruash should be thoroly drawled the Englishman. acers in E There Are No Extras— No Interest—No Tax The price is the same (four- teen-eighty-five) whether you pay all cash or whether you decide to join the great company of fine people who are as sure as he’s born thought letters back home. their itps, but their heart is far | family 1ed—a smell single row|cleansed. It is well to dip the buying Diamonds and Watches and Silver Another man, may be, sells lawn mowers all And then, when a rest! from me—Mark vil:6, |tooth brush should be used. ‘The| bristles in salt and hang the brust and Gold in the Burnett Saving Wee? comes to pass, he also will use one to fill up his 7 see of the brush should never be|out to dry This will keep the bris x e Burnett Saving Way! and wou'll find him out cutting the grass. laughs, it mugt be It may be right true that a change does one good, but too many fellows they are the |! than one and one-fourth | tles clean and dry | Write if you cannot come and we will send one to you nh as is possible the child gece won't Jet it. A man could get rest if he knew how—and would! But he ost dupes he has.—Colton Many parents wonder about a taught to cleanse its own Money back cheerfully if you want it! seldom knows just howto get it. eee | dentrifi A dipping of the brush | tee mt itch should be kept that | (Copyright, 1924, for The § | AY b I] d: {in salt solution is all that is neces-|the child does not become careless '|Sez Dumbell Dud; ||." aad forgetful about te See Being rich consists of having more than someone else, BURNETT BROS. ® 909 SECOND AVE Which Is Hetween Madi- s fon and Marion Streets

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