The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 20, 1924, Page 9

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The Quickest Way to the Seat of the Trouble With the Rising Generation Is With the Shingle F 'China Rebels ifs eer ) ; LVEI T -oints Out More Perils rar * . 4 ah aM TRINA Over Qrder to (Tindal Points Out More Perils out . o $1.40, 6 8200, ye Pl; . * e ant Opium ° N | ‘ ) ae is WEEN he at [Our Rail Problem | Wien miet | aera mame be | | a: ur Rail Problem aS Pobor? loran weneeiy ee nore : ; 14 , W,.Re NEA Service Inc +1 Sill paves ta , ; ortant this TI" costs 90 cents a andre a mounts to ship ordin- BEGIN HERE TODAY peal bce cunt’ Welty, eth atesial | eee ema cic) ea 7 by the mer : ‘ . Praag ary fir by rail from Seattle to New York. | ' , res * the s chorus from The jaile were filled with f sie ae the Gors t i » enn . web: ° . pan i t natives of Africa be, 24 , | BY PHILIP TINDALL t t That’s $360 for an average carload of 40,000 xpedition Into Africa in |'g as of Afiiee nai the ox: | | sre WhO were fined and in bem | Chairman Utilities Committes Boom i ry ig It costs $2.81 a hundred pounds to ship machin- | [2!)2,,2!9Re} Koonevelt are his so a sateen canadian AAA ae OR oie eee | FY“ t ent t es j , ery by rail from New York to Seattle. That’s $693 | Aitne Sunk ie a pad bean gathered togethers ASE! | pianie, The or t m4 : mn t mt Paige ‘ , 4 for a minimum carload of 30,000 pounds. ~, BD: # indeed ei set oe ees , a “26foot_ masonry é This is typical of the “transportation problem” Ogame-erowdes ie pemanion' Cot aneen &e to commit a crime. Here |» seneal po PO oe Mgr Wing pt p 4 a lowes —the penalty that consumers are paying for liv- | Usne'% utes dent z-president - igs ts ' fe =e shouts: | i full powe ties of 1 2 ing too far from the source of production. party ae to tae hina t t Bri a aT" fu pal hg Jew York aa) meer ite . y Raossvart le tat i mM) fought wars » ¥ the se FLOOD DANGER GREAT New York used to grow its own lumber, ss It Jearly hours of the trip 4 pares r Noted Hunters There white man's t of m 1, ite | ‘ IN BUILDING AT GORGE would still be, if the forests had been conserved aches” Simba Station—a famous [28 all ‘Than the comacted apes) tru 0 1 yt Engine eilention “alae - te D. to vee < a evital t tis | the t : and systematically replanted. NOW GO ON WITH THE sTORY Bh lay ig Met plea PhS ull the bet | : There is no’ reason why Seattle should not produce its CHAPTER II The China did miracles in ridding her 1 the day | ¢ q own machinery. With hydro-electric power almost for the abe, Ewan NG ya Amerik!” farms t elf of The poppy fields ofr t ‘ 4 ment , ny no authority to t 1114 i i J had the tra me ey were t we f @ million é ewhere ui ‘ G s¢ Os asking, there is _no reason why it should not produce its soar 55" gpa poy were £0) een dane were Hae a 1 pivotal feature |) aoe = ON Y own silken goods and why it should not establish factories | gated-tron punta ‘eigarese Une sol rtp od ae « ‘ \ ttended to, Before the A word 5 py oa ES for the manufacture of innumerable articles that now are |rafroad depot at Simba, t eS mn. os } « ree creek dam t n tive ¢ being shipped in from across a continent. | hed group gathered ak Alfred Pease knew Africa like | Jefly Americans, began cia’ noes ‘ die id There were many weird and won-|ence of this particular part of East Ie th thn oe ¢ yuld become er | da ‘OU have observed the tendency of industries to center | : iit tes acca Gon DAM Lage mY DAs |, Sones, each in a special district of the country. Shoes have } ; | | ne is worse than opium. on we have tt by pe been made in and around Boston, autos in Detroit, steel | svelirn — to resume | Jam and ne ear presaaa in Pittsburg. And so on. a atm ne | ot nine (thee or. | Be All this is a part of our age of specialization. Com- } | e Gorge plant will t munities or districts of the country are getting so each has its own specialty, just as each individual has his “skilled line.” | Usually industries congregate in. particular sections be- cause there they are close to fuel supply, near the raw materials they need, or strategically situated for distribu- tion. But when lumber is hauled from the Pacific Coast to Questions oe agg Bg haga pate” ta || © Answered * || wi: power be ; a y ree plant, Q. Were the Atiantic and F seh bd la jo built fre creek, and I y of the council ttle is in the | Skagit wer business, not in | ble benefit t | | Joceans ever connected at the} Isthmus of Pans ama before the Pan-| i Gorge cre ad. business | the lowe se 5 Tye tp oy pe el OY | cally submerged by fresh whose lands are Jama canal was built? | A. Yes. Where the tathmus now se power who have given # will only produce, say, 35 | ter months, | New York, which could grow its own lumber, and ma- al chinery is hauled from New York to the Pacific Coast, 7 osha sd ep sca the ed Gorge and Cedar } which could make its own, the cost of long-distance trans- 1) } ; he Mioce Pbebasger De sy ‘ nts a winter output of ° ‘ » Animals on a ranch at ‘oro, British Eas ric if focene a few million yeare 6; me 65 ¢ nd horse portation more than eats up the savings due to specializa- | Joro, British East Africa es acrid vy Let pas heres 2" mper ections j tion by districts. } tories to be related about He had r > Q. Where was Wilbur Wright! take care of our anticipated next ote ip | p te the swahill vert farm a few mi ' at Ly : winter’ load of 56,00 horsepower BY ELIZABETH MARIAM , pur! has been well and| i a ¢ Wilbur Wright, who, with his ot: thin Jabra pallies ES, we are too far from sources of production. That's cast ) : fl brother, Orville Wright, invented rpt HS rab p wee her eh diway | | the real “railroad problem.” The solution? k, the traffic man Pe we | airplane, . ar Millville The question may. arise as.to | Pasig imperfections are The ual whose intelli- It is shaping itself naturally, by economic evolution. uae of piney and had never been to England | Ind. x f ¥ nthe eye and few | gene he iar than eri There is an increasing tendency for districts of the coun- “pie apacbig Na ae Le Turtle, Whe WOH)tG BOT) eu cuacet martial | la ee ee aes ae ina | us what we know we: din Ret 4 try to try to make themselves self-supporting. Seattle al- Manes colony? P ie | Nees aa uakinwe sate? ee give. But too often we forget i ready is beginning to appreciate this fact. was in charge of the amail| 4 New Foundland. Setitek wear deco this ec with those who i Many can recall when nearly all iron and steel came beget rters. He ja an 5 atc are not Bessa with Ger siaaay ' . he be “1 “ »K Plains but had man Q. What were the trans pon Rear 14 | ity, and become as unjust to / from the Pittsburg district. The Smoky City still is the en we reached Macha-! years Sy alehead iB cei ceed by thet ee isted_ mind ger Orne by King pin, but gigantic steel industries are growing up in | ko Road, just before Kaplt! Plains) Bast Africa an his home. He t game vit aig: Pot J rai will nd learn to ; other points like Birmingham, Ala., and Gary, Ind. fepot, we climbed to an altitude of ; rh , eT the m d Its en , } s ne oh S a a: P with the s that it The Boston district used to have a monopoly on shde- ne we bad been travel! _ 7 -scTEN pile, 0 monn ag Aha sirenatls nal _ n be k or well, in weakness? or, you ast quar o members of making. Today shoes are manufactured everywhere. Time was when Akron made the big bulk of the auto tires. k a man with the Roosevelt party were bewtidered. prey ee yy ha da ey in See a They had been told a great deal about ge tie ip cay Were INV oe one leg to walk upon two, or The world at large dives down e high cost of railroad hauls is destined to break up thousands up mands of ieee Sine a gett oe 41 you cap pit an anower to uay cH a physically unfit body to do into {ts heart and its purse for the industrial specialization by districts. id game they wo but the/,, ed by the expedition question of fact or Informa- 4 the f the manual labor of a Her- physical cripples and material . much greater than the t many journers thea| | tion by writing The Question of the Ksepeeens tals of science—the| cules? fortunates. It would be open- Editor, 1832 Ni York a \" record of the rocks.” t. a - he doo roade: 3 Th M f F | Washington, D. C, and iahedea | Roc Ke are & gort of calendar of the} réet Hatea sealeg sdepad sata edi a erst Soe th tai e menace oO ear Roosevelt Impatient mh ee gad Bagger wong gobo cations a very dood to have, and live up to the likewise for the twisted, stunt- in t a any - auien ply. o medics egal or ma ba ile east ae sumed 2 ogy many same standards of justice, con- ed mind, for that too can be ene pecele are slain by fear than anyother human punt ne x| |advice. Personal replies, confi- | |°f arth's earliest animals. This! ception and accomplishment that crooked, like the limbs of man, * emotion. all coun if 1 eine treterd on ot b her adit r e tasok FO see and reedbuck tees than a mile) | omeae AM tatters must be ns Bebg rds not be wrong, altho! our mind, of greater capacity of and rich or poor, like the for- There's something.in the composition of the human 5 banter oh herds cf many|eeene | Sinema” As ties, Be read wromp, \18)" thom cat ane, cade tunates or unfortunates along mind that makes it susceptible to terror, when if reason there were m atentpaty:| a eae pss santa, abate to scat th achieves life's pilgrimage. numberless varieties nd fear could sce them The ex-| tly has grown en could prevail, nothing exists that would cause the slight- |» est qualm. * * Q. What causes petrification? jr FABLES ON HEALTH — ee Bia a a . A. Minerals in ac ion taking the Peey Probably the long nights in the terror filled world of No Lions Visible Nath exes coligcti ‘the! ptace of human or antmal tiawe| The records show clearly that there| x = 2 . rev ra om - " r ar utrefaction. time when the on ack ‘our predecessors when strange beasts of prey ranged the See eT ere sree” Wis eklaticnte o cears FIGHTING A COLD | Monkeys sprang from branch t# black jungles built into the fabric of the human brain | ,,.ncn. chatte Procemses of evoltstion | Sd silver dollars wete ma this fear complex. 4 past th ‘oad trac x. sped past trees flanking the rallroa¢ 4 aced. From these facts | ¢¢-—\NcE 2 : * P e P u old has been con-) drink; then a good pufgative and ¢ w s | trac As a spectacle and an edu-|— nable theory of continuin, O rage Parents who frighten their children with stories of | track B spectacle and an 62-| gage, sorting eae erp ont nt ped | tracted the rules for preven-| 00d rubbing of neck and chest with cation In 200! mphorated oil. hen the foot is t n man's body, | family doctor admonished. tts a pt 4 id Ns ie ath will ad - rare : a! mfthne. of Rae hke brain | It is then advisable to avoid)/a blanket and then immediately go sin ime inter 1 therefore tha | drafts, various Muctuating tempera- | t > bed. A bath with water at 95 to évolatlotary prospect for inate res and skin exercises }100 degrees is restful to the nerves |prom | “Tho great idea then is to keep/and skin. the body warm, and the feet In light, preferably vegetables |ticular. A hot footbath is a good| And, afterward, build up the body thifg right off the bat; then a hot|and skin to avold recurrences.” I walked up boogeys or other supernatural or natural horrors are ee peemntting Soll against the race. The fearless child | UPNTPAssed— nnd ot a no other| ith Colonel F is the healthy child. part of 4 can shake | “I am tremer Disease thrives and grows on fear. Many people are | hands, as jt wore, with nature and Pesin: | oosevelt, exel prone to be stampeded by alarmist stories of disease | '** Wild Cenizens is: halted to Which create a mental state that offers less resistance (*—>— Ath G to its ravages. ii Presented With Gun ot i i i ; | a re plentiful here, ‘ori ‘The best protection against harm of any kind—finan- |” sireaay knew that Colonel Roose- | nt grips with then witha emote cial, physical or mental—is a steady nerve, a strong |veit was a keon naturalist, and) time,” = heart and a clear brain. |thought a great deal about the pro-| cHierancy It i# not kel n this p on should be reversed,” the Mann Q. In the watermeion a fruit or a U. 8. Department of Agrt classes it as a vegetable a 656 | ow the plains towa game. “But 1 wan’ st of all. Th is the meaning of the a okome A. Kokomo ts an Indian name} meaning “young grandmother.” | eee | Q. What fs the highest pension] Smoking Room Stories i ry hes ad | * ald Dy o 0" . i Fear disrupts the nervous system, palpitates the heart | ‘ection of the fauna in Son | At Buffalo Camp Ce ee ait cae oeeiane: | Rinmaan EEE eee action and fogs the mental processes. pest ert a ete ah rp ONSIDERAGLE excitement and| 6: |THE traveling salesman stopped | | British sportsmen presented him with A. Thirty dollars a month, | ja b autiful 500-450 Holland rifle as| astonishment had been occa- | = reading long enough to tell this | ne - a | sloned thruout East Africa py the al fla one & mark of their appreciation “of his | oe inerenihin ae py th —_- ®) “The last time Twas at home, 1| 4 ; fortune that | services on behalf of the preservation | | Trailing the Prince |oervpceles by means of national parka [Ma come to the rifles of Colonel| -, | Roosevelt a 4 Kermit during the f t | IN. ’news: 5 7 : land. forest reserves, and by other |, 0" 0 ae A LONDO. paper is greatly shocked and | nd forest. teirr own me this gun |", Weeks of thelr sojourn In this | ‘ t o | ‘A reader of this column asks |had to go down town on some bust: | for a ist of the principal col- | |ness, and a sweet Ii lleges and universities in the | |ting near the co: Have Something le old lady sit ctor kept asking (\ astounded because the press of the United States |™* reo ine between | #04 of Hons and sunshine, || U.S Any other {interested |! jhim to let her know when she got has “pursued” the prince of Wales since his arrival-i with _ ptt: aa Not a hunter within my knowledge | | Tet4e%, Ay obtain such @ list | Inear m certain section of the town rs is arrival-in~~} Aden and Mombasa: y knowledge} | hy addressing a request to our | |She evidently changed her mind, as the |of over five years’ experience of the | | for Your Labor this country. It cannot understand that the prince, on | We were now penetrating tne ee nny eves had ae tance of the) | Washington bureau, enclosing 1 | |she neared ‘downtown’ and Pi P i f greatest wild life sanctuary in the ever had had tho luck to| | 5 Dont stamp for reply. | | i his arrival here, became an item of news. He came to [erent tt ed ant ene inapired | Kill seven lions in almost as many |g 7 Cent Postage stamp for reply. | [um to the conductor, bvadiar a arvsi|| interest himself in both social and sporting activities. ; oosevelt: days after landing in Mombasa, to . . r e a f ig this opinion of Roosev att to} your pard H : He is a public man and an interesting character. No ere can be no possible grounds |"4Y nothing of many other varieties! Q. How many are on the crew ole mane SURGE tT ties were | : better basis for new8 could be laid. ubting the great wi ox oy ina | record game. It constituted an easy |the president's yacht Mayflower: |at the Biltmore oe, BULA SIP 8 | As a matter of fact, however, the prince has not been | Polley of Kame roerven Ai Otte 1 lad : of timo occu-| how much does it cost the govern-| “No, ma'am.’ «al : Th hele r y gato e ation gen It is al? in achieving it ed Sa a y . am,’ sald the conductor, Why work only 7 your ” “pursued,” as the London paper seems inclined to be- oe African | East Africa, within the first month | the oak ft be nieaee hg Teeeckes| Rot on the salary 1. atte: | yan i y,,to, waste your money! ag Only ee public seated nae been chronicled. lf rnment to hay 4 out thisjof that Bening in Gat country A. The Mayflower has ct preeent| Wh SF ae eee ee What have you to show for your labor in le has not been interviewed and his private pleasures Ruse. Game See ew, pir hereafter, if) @ crew of 165 men. The total cost BRE ns of the nights have not been tresp: fel cpu nor ie [be 6 eee ta ath a aateyi Thetec| tues We eiecn exceptional £004] of running the yacht for the fiscal cat Folks | the last year g ul asset for this y; and for|fortune in shooting, East Africans| sear ending June . seribed. He has been carefully guarded from cranks | tho world at large.” spoke of his having had Roomovelt | 2 ar Big ld sey ao earl Are Sa an S; f k The ¢ ‘ iti ; ke, we could see thou-’ Iuck,” S6OE,ITE, SNe Ae: paMas from, novel g Stop spending foolishly d ‘ and getier he savereee American citizen hasn't Ag, ie SOR He ae pat pion pee resonant et Pp Sf g foolishly and start a cared a whoop about his presence here or sought to see |%*028 of mame pis + | eee Sie LCA orene T. P. O'CONNC ster . 3 ‘. a ; h aly y rifle-sho | . OR, Irish statesman Dexter Horton Savings A —lay: him. Only a small portion of*the small and idle con- |.f tie ‘Machnkon Road depot. An Skinning Big Job ll Q. How does the amount recetved]and writer: “There is no author who| gs Account—laying tingent that can afford to chase princelings has con- | our train t crona the | ————— jy tho postotfice yey has helped me so much in my work | aside a part of. your weekly or monthly cerned itself with him at all. Their vulgarity is their | ?'s!n*. the cely ‘bothered | ‘The many trophies, Includi | pare Ne ie ee Seas, arity is ¢ Sarr is Kes as they’ nibbled cluding In| service | | we sS wher 7 * own and represents not at all the true American proprie- | ¢y,... ape a tt nek Tatanted particular the four fine buffalo] A. The revenue of the postal) WHITE, Kan acuiee a will be safe and ready for heads, were in th rge of Heller,| service for the fiscal year ended} Re ta you when emergency or opportunity arises. #0 out, look at it; take June $0, 1923, including fees’ from|the children; it's a’ wonderful sight money orders and profits from|Dark, green, straight, golden tassel-| fred different of less than ties. |no fewer than a Such women as trailed ’is ‘ighness did so. because foc eat Pea fr they were of the character that do things of that kind | 80 yards of us as we stood Us who was working laboriously with his native assistants in the skinning |tent, His Wakamba assistants, who on K They all appeared to recogn ad bee | postal savings busin amounted| ing corn, the most t B i here as well as elsewhere. The men present on various | they were in their legitimate sanctu- |tor this m specially trained by him) to $592,827,926.09. The audited ¢z-|in the world, énce in tater: Savings Department Open occasions probably were controlled by nothing more |ary and had nothing to fear. lihipliatand wate fcvalieble: Very apt! penditures for the same period scare ene Saturday Evenings 6 to 8 o'clock than curiosity as to the prince’s ability to sit on a se. ‘An hour's further run brought us| ‘i $556,850,966.41. FRANK A. LE writer: | 5 ya 5) lity to sit on a horse, | within tight of Kapiti Plains depot,| There is an immense amount of ee “Trying to make a thinker out ota } | wor ‘0 be dono rep) uap ed 5 ane ca distance we could see the pork ot + i Ks om aM Preparing the| @. What are the comparatlve mer-| lazy m like trying to keep a hog | wilte fey town that was the firat| t ssity of vile Sista each as ele-lits of high and low test gasolino|clean by giving him Turkish, baths: nowevelt expedition In | Phan Minoceros, — hippopotamus, | for use in motor cars? Will a high|it never destroys his love for mud.""| os if any. Resources $39,749,393.66 camp of the R | Africa, It shimmered whitely in the |Uffalo and giraffo—for shipment to} test gasoline injure the cylinders?| ; |nowerful rays of the noontime sun, | Mus petted in even greater where| 4. Jr ts impossible to give com-| ALON R | the is are killec a ot ¢ | Jand appeared to be of unusually Pe ttnerthe: Sr Aae ina ree N-| parative figures for the value of|dianapolis bank ie er ort on |! © dimensions Tacaebaahion ad’ aeguiid See oF high and low test pasotines. In|embezalement: “My advice to young # é ¥ i . d some 69) Keneral, the power which can be) men starting out would t a | e ry iat ri to 70 skins. Heller, had saved every . MOU: ay out} . 9 708 " 8a very ue low te gasoline | o y . 4 | 260 Natives Aid || singlo one of them: As a taxidermist | {veloped from a low test gasoline) of any: institution that doesn't pay | i - a Min the field, Heller can have no equal] %* sre! as from a hich test/cnough saldry | On the platform we found all the x WUaly casoline, High test gasoline, how- © ee | in the p in the world. | OF SEATTLE Established 1870 ever, being somewhat more volatile,| DR./F, P, MILLARD, president ‘OW many friends have you really got, yea, how many friends do you| native porters awaiting the arrival is apt to make starting easier and| National League for the Prevention know? Just how dd you tell Just who ts, or not, and how does reall of their new leader. They wore some| (Continued In Our Next Issue) Glendship grow? 4 260 in all, and each one of them was| ————— acceleration better, particularly un-|of Spinal Curvature: “Are you ner: | a a wilt eiesitee a freee of yours and his greeting for you is | drexyed in a blue Jersey with red let ez Du be Du |der cold weather conditions. The} yous and unstrung? Short bed. Do| Third A ach smile. He feels that that;one lttle thing assures that he is a friend worth| tering on the chest, short khaki |ehief disadvantage from the wae of|you suffer from insomnia? §| ird Ave. and Cherry St Second Ave. Entrance rs 4 m Jc p c omnia? Short re bhiey ySt. ( while 4 : x » diel Now Open r Knickers displaying their bare, black say, 4 gasoline of low volatility is the di-|bed. Have you sciatica? Short be Avi fee b You only may see him when things are okeh and you carry no troubles| knees, blue puttoes, and to crown ¢ Detroit thief |\ tition of the crank case oll, hich | Beda today are made for vere Second Avenue and Cherry Street (Hoge Bldg.) Seaboard Branch, Pike at Westlake Ballard Branch, 5228 Ballard Avenue who stole a@|| makes necessary frequent changing! people.” | kitchen range || of the oll There ia nothing to be} ee en range | feared from high test gasoline with} PROF, C. F. MARVIN, weather also believes |\regard to its causing explosions of | bureau chief, Washington: “It ia unl —- that prepareds |) scr violence as to shorten the Ufe| versally pted that there is some. | of a car. If anything, one would) thing alluring about the moon, but fo sift. But supposin’ things change on the very next day; lu he ready to| their. heads a red tarboosh. They give you « Jift? | stood in one long line, with the gun- Expressions of sympatby; Jonns, now and then, will often give folks a| be . Byces (grooms) and personal new start. A friend sets you pluggin’ all over again when your own back-| servants in the front rank ing haan't the heart ‘As Colonel Roosevelt stepped from The answer to friendshtp is simple, at best; it’s something that's easy to|the train, they raised thelr hands sum. I'll hang to the fellow, and pass all the rest, who's for me whateyer| above their heads and@roke into a ness is a burn- || expect rather lower pressurca from| when It comes to generating heat or may come. deep, gutteral cheer of welcome. i i ale ‘ Tie em Tie y Kcoieighl- load it6P ame ear poet ate se get aay ae ing question. ie vast carats than from that oes the weather, it is not Dexter Horton State Bank Georgetown

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