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— PAGE 6 THE SEATTLE STAR WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1924 The Seattle Star ; , F . ’ P 1 8 Ave. Phone Wheeler, im bis Seattle apeech, mentioned the ¢ . Trust ¢ t ‘lt * Ma . a veya Rg oo yan Wall ie D I BY N. D. COCHRAN ¢ tt ta i ona (rp r ¢ ‘ Caen Oct, & Vice Presidential Candidgte 2 t t J 4 Japan at Geneva Charles G. Dawes is a ban He is at the head of eount 1 f r as he of nations had emerged from | the Central Trust company, of Chicago, During the s a Keg . BOOKS | ee es een ove McKinley campaign of 1896 he was on the republican mic 6 : Th ce who started bonfires of joy over its certain doom | executive committee with Mark Hanna, After McKin- the audit LOKIMER PAPER —s pan was thre stening to quit unless its views on | ley’s election Dawes became comptroller of the currency tt YOUND WORTHLESS Se rtaion from America were accepted, now realize they | When he retired from that job he organized the Chicago hen the r fated too soon. a t now ther me discussion rning the eon en . Bp fact, tho gxyokan Re by : on feiihe: of | nection of Dawes and his bank with William Lorimer and 1 pe Of the greatest internationa > ; his bank. Lorimer was United States senator from Illi | t rican interests mankind, the league g¢ 1 oa Papas nee | ed § ’ ' : ip a way that should heap coals of fire on the heads of is and was expelled from the senate. After his expul that inst tution’ caivat hawt ¢ started in 1910 what was known as the La Salle | mat insti ons orst enemies. | ‘ i | Street National bank in Chicag Boiled down, what happened was this: William Lorimer was president and Charles B, Munday ic The league commission, in drawing up plans to safe- vice president of the Lorimer bank, which started*with | alg ae 1 ®uard the peace of the world thru arbitration, interna supposed capital and surplus of $1,250,000. This bank the re | | tonal security and armament reduction, agreed—without | began doing business on May 10, 1910. During that | naming names—that if Japan ever went to war with t | year and early in 1911 examinations of the bank were United States over immigration after immigration had | made by the Chicago Clearing House association; and been declared an American “domestic” problem, she would us a result the Lorimer bank was unable to obtain mem- automatically be declared the aggressor and stand out- bership in the Clearing House association. After May, lawed accordingly. 1911, it was denied the privilege of clearing thru other With Japan howling for punishment of the United Sts bank for excluding Japanese immigrants, the Japanese d On demand of the con at Geneva naturally objected. They wanted the le: | directors of the bank agr interfere anyway, even if immigration in America was failed to do as they agree STATE CLOSES LOKIMER BANK stroller of the currency the ed to do certain thin but and on October 12, 1912, the purely America’s business, And she threatened to walk | bank was in worse condi- } € ‘ it innuff re thar out unless the league complied. } tion than when the agree- Nr east nave cies b to the clair ; en came the compromise. Under it, even if the world | Ment was made. from t fl " of its dey and other uestions 1 F ld} } , CHANGED INTO ‘i . ide ins 5 e id he » rig’! iB 1 Paar 6 creditors court should decide against Japan, she would hav the right A STATE BANK ” a ; . erm Seay é Answered é to bring up the question again before the league of nations. pe a Saete cevrpraiy ped owen 4 And the league, acting under its covenant, would be bound changs ‘th aa ;: suaaal ateea te to try to avoid a conflict. to a state bank netua or other der y Q Where is the great key to the The fundamental principles, therefore, have not been ap a : : . a By om than $ bourse i pistes Lape Ea altered an iota. If the league could find no formula satis- | od pala. in cag ; ee Ss at tiie stitend saad 1 Meuks Savion Georce Washuartedt fying both the United States and Japan, and Japan insisted | 44 of $1,250,000, by wanted to be sure that the car nication as ation of the |home, La Fayette presented it to on going to war, she would stil! be declared the aggressor . re to the new bar tal and su had been paid | K. The solvent stockholders, George Washi jean adter the sista éad suffer the outlaw penalties accordingly. es oe leat rs wits arg unk ao ah and w Mon ha 1 and a by of whom were people of | a of the Bas les We lose nothing and gain additional security against war Habilities, but without putting up LORIMER CTS the iaheew thay shed ‘ints 1 a alah taliee oduct ori bted var more y. Much of the With Japan as a result of the doings at Geneva. CASI FROM DAWES } in the bank, but had to pay | pression, “A little bird told me.” | national bank's money had been | ‘i | jn addition amounts equal to A. Probably from the Bible, Ec- loaned to Lorimer and Munday, | But Lorimer’s bank ten, and thelr speculative was mostly Lorimer and Mun- | the par value of their stock, clesiastes X, “For a bird of the air ; their’ asedeiates: abd speculative have the $1,250,000, Most « 1 enterprise ) Lorimer’s na we DAWES BANK IS shall carry the voice, and that Enemies to Love Ha which they were | money of tho national t | tional bank cou! t er Not being able to get the cash | SUED FOR MONEY |which hath wings shall tell the . ; : had been loaned to the directors to his " cash, All elsewhere, Lorimer appealed | gubsequently the Central | matter.” CSENATOR LA FOLLETTE has been singularly fortunate Before the Lorimer savings Lorimer, Munday and thelr as it soent. that cash | personally to his friend: Dawes, |' yas oe was sued for. the euene J and wise in his selection of enemies. They are about * | | ei0rs benefit of the Lorimer bank's | . . | creditors for the $1,260,000 which | @ Are the and the pike _ the Dawes bank had permitted [the same fish? here are they Why Dirigibles Are Costly || : ors sex. memes [ited in ue the cali surplus A. They are different species of <5 RPS | Judgment given the |the same family. The pickerel is nt will not permit {ts use | |found in Northern Wisconsin and tie very best kind he could have, for they are of great, a@tho unintentional, aid to him. He has called the roll of these enemies from time to time, and, as he identified them, he explained to the public that they were the beneficiaries of privilege and greed—the Dawes bank for the full amount, 1 bacon lc Oct riley ir * the coming gibles a tutarns r | | Minnesota and cast to Lake Cham- Men and institutions that have seized on the government ental Sight of the dir um not only has the wor Fst ee a areal (he ei. |Blaing the pike ss: found im Ctnate ' e and taken it away from the people. It had been supposed Shenandoah been made amet of being non-ex- | jeine court of Iilinols held that |@nd Northern Wisconsin and weighs 79 these grabbers would refuse to ackowledge the La Follette 5 the world war, it would Std cero the Central Trust Co, by mak- |/f0m 10 to 15 pounds more than impeachment, since confession thereof would be a very W. Tora ae cpaare Hie ‘ ee | ing false representation that | pick Renter: ' direct aid to their accuser. That would have been the part . Fatah 71 fate the. dirt S naitionn ae Em Nr | repel arc g ok sont’ @ What president’ ot: the U. & Of political wisdom on their part, at least. But whatever © 1924 NEA Service Ine. | cy reaches Lakehurst from | 1 0” Sethe Lorimer bank, and | D&S received the largest popular " adepts they may be in the matter of business and govern- , his black-bearded and efficient guide| . 1% those days helium cost fos tho Shenandoah across the | asterward wrosgfully taxcngis {VOOR 4 tae s lal _ mental manipulation, they do not know politics. They do "pape °- | ari manager dhe reap ei er ‘will be purified and | back, had made iteelt lable tor | | 4- Werren G. Harding, 16,152,- not know that their open opposition to La Follette is the Ipads of tho expedition were a pumped into the ZR 3 as soon an | the ub va zt 7 = anti pat Z best thing that could happen to him —that their every ‘ te entrained, and tha nirters| . Now, however, hellum ts pro the hydrogen is emptied out to Gre toe ie Lacie Bes eet cre is a boost—but it is true. One by one they have ae ee ee an near Fort Worth was rich tober 12, 1912, if it had any Sez Dumbell Dud: , _‘fessed up and announced their hatred of him and his cause. government engineers pre ation: tant, wan “erected value, and the case was re- | Some of. the The American Bankers’ association is the latest of these reset gi - wens the: Siet soon hellum. was being pro manded to determine the value | ome iciari . i ‘ rite ba yeee od Ant corheniatetalquantitic | of that stock, if it had any, | political lead- iciaries of the dollar-over-the-man combine to offe1 will be cut in half, M | - 4 A : ” te ‘The only plant producing hel. | Today the production of the | | The matter was referred to a ers talk as if ae the independent candidate by denouncing him. Sig tn tomrararalal a plant runs anywhere from 1¢ master in chancery, who report- | they believe ‘ ie, it does not do so by resolution, but its vociferation pat Fort 000 to 2,000 cuble feet of helium ed finally that the capital | that wheat and is quite as illuminative as the other method would be. It but | ’ nave already | stock of the Lorimer national copa dee SoMa is against La Follette because the things he stands for are partme 5 additions to bank at the time of the change * ° \ iv : which will to a state bank had a value of to do all the things no favored few can view, save with alarm. Mant bd | s to New | the ¢ at compar ity NOW GO ON WIT Mr. La Follette is advertised somewhat by his loying | Heller was the 1 friends, but his carefully and discreetly selected enemies | Londiani. He was als 303.58. This was done by voting. finding that all of the Lorimer | fettle @re doing a far better job for him. They may elect him, |""¢ *teat!y browned by the tropical in smal} but in Eu such minute traces exist in Ca un. Shortly after this the long stream of porters came winding across the The Promised Land velit toward the railroad depot, | looking from the distance for all the T A BANQUET in Boston & young man in dinner | *°r!d lke a string : clothes walks up to the toastmaster and says: “Don't "you remember me? The last time I saw you I was shining your shoes. I was your bootblack.” Then the ex-bootblack introduces himself as P. Nicholas \ t elli, assistant corporation counsel of the city of Bos- | {hidren were | bi | bugles made ton, officially representing the big city in the absence of |bamboo and that even Germany, the pioneer of llghter-thanalr navigation, must use hydorgen in all its dir igibles. | Hydrogen has a slightly great: | er lifting power than helium, 4 but in highly explosive. For that reason the United St gov Mr, Dombey’s Offices — | Americ an flag that never had left | the sound of much cheering, rained. As the freight | _ ind a curve the expedition during all ite many journeyings thru the wildernes tra . | t | were ina court where ¥ |camped with the Hon, Berkicy Cole, | , there was an old-es- Lon! Delamere'’s brother-in-law and | . 3 - 1 non of Lord Eniskillen | | tablished stall ot 5 Jogs choice fruit at the A number of th I leaning out and wavi: | na Mkubwa! They had with them hunt ‘s horns. Ot (Goodby, Great Chief,") came the dis Mayor Curley. were chanting a safari song in praine| tant shouting from the train, And|S%4 Wandotobo hunters, who were f corner; where per- "A pretty good old United States, isn’t it, with bootblacks | °f Pwana Mkubwat (The great chief) /then it passed from ight. | forest Iroals they: wire out 10:8 \ A ambulating mer- becoming public officials, a bicycle repair man evolving | % | Colonel Roosevelt, went off in an- x a T NATIORSGENTOTICn when he turned away : 4 chants, of both sexes, Pinto Ford, the auto maker, and a poorly paid office clerk | NATIVES ENTHUSED |)" rey are rently tine people,” no | ther lrection with Lord Delamere iS {i offered for sale at in Cleveland winding up as one of the richest men in the Waigis: tilaelisr ain ella arate soft 1 am real sorry $0)" Gunn nd I went on to Na any time between world—John D, ; |tain sign that they had enjo hah ae |kuru, and were shortly afterword The more you study the careers of the most outstand- afari in the Uasin Gu Aap CHARS R I et, Africa [201004 there by Heller and Tartton. | = ~ a ‘ the hours of ten and F. ere yet glad to be back in civil he Last Safaris in East Africa | we ail reached Nairobi next morning} 4 fv H Ra ing of the big successes, the more you ponder that they | ion cu» m tag “8 0 cern | five, slippers, pock Yarely had powerful friends to assist them. tion once more That evening the Dogeadahst ROOSEVE: Kermit, | about 8 o'clock | v 3 were to go by train to Nairobi, whe Cunninghame and myself had| On Dec. §, Kermit Roosevelt passed .’ eS . et-books, sponges, They fought their way—created their opportunities : instead of finding them. y would be paid off and Jecided to travel down to Lord Del-|thra Walrobi, en route to the Shimba dogs’ collars and charged. Colonel Roosevelt had ar amere farm at Njoro by the ordi-| hills, near Mombassa, in quest of Parents are forever impressing on boys the advantages _ of making influential friendships. While such connections train s0 as to s A-with ‘Tariton to give each| nary passeng some specimens of the rare snble an. | ham } = ¥ Windsor soap, and a. epedlal casli “Dotiee Tor, his | tine |telope, which the expedition had not sometimes a pointer iful wervic | Itw hat there 1: yet shot. This ante} is prac tually stalked and killed two fine} the Delame for about 10 days.| bongo, a female and a young o1 They hoped to get some specimens | But he had not been able to find af of the rare bon are giant p urally, my first thought was to} ; ater"on Colonel Roosevelt rode in| train th 1roC only obtainable in the coastal regio or an oil painting.” _ Gertainly are valuable, they are more apt to serve as a ball- i vt tile ceca memeber oped PON it aate arid Mombas, Kermit had ol ! Se : “and-chain restricting progress, for the young man is rite horse. He wa tr was, th ed te train | just returned from the bamboo i . . * Dombey & Son tempted to rely less on his own efforts. | tis ‘sale ‘(eveckidand t ni a ares ndiani; and away forest st Njoro, ies he told at Y GAB ; a Dickens - . aa eae we started with great pride and joy that he had | SS We cannot all become big successes, and there’s no use | d The Hobbeyalts’ were the: eudste or} actual pretending otherwise. Not all have the necessary natural ce how he had borne the strain of @ility, education or environment. But there is very little [ine long safaris Yeason for any man winding up as an absolute failure. In jf the outrageously lying in v report that nd the even more | bull. However, a neighboring settler neither of which ani-/had given them a fino, freshly killed this golden land of opportunity there is room for all—and | *4 piaen chreulated about his ullésed | rai a rarely ever cen by Euro-| specimen and to their beries waa how Modern business demands a superior location, pleasing always room for a newcomer to the ranks of success, for | possitly have looked In better health. | Pe ans. Next morning Kermit went | comptote spay environment, and adequate service, The White-Henry- aay man who can do any job better than it has been done | He was ver wn, and seemed to{ ff Into the bamboo forests and! (Continued in the 3 Loh ees R Stuart Building answers every demand for offices of before. © most remarkab Pay He told with ce enthy distinction. ft) f Develop Your Personality phigh. vachad-wittaiedd at Mr ition CV al | Location of an office in the White-H sSeuart fi he fe m si ‘ Hoey haa [ WORDS AND GRAMMAR ] Building marks it as being among firms of iiteeiiy atid 0 TS 19) «| acron “eho. 1 the shown ‘the , standing. The standard of maintenance and operation Coch AATUS) * | 82ttlom who had then shown the 2 to seo stich Institute, | wlary or i itéduetalte® tow’ they! wpeated silo BY EVA 1 iner my vocab-| in Metropolitan buildings is as high as in any other Ha fad Beane votyleica th 10D | Director of Personality © a day, in| lavthriline. sfectecin, tec he qin Boston | reading in conversation, you men havo been xo fortunate 1s THE preceding lesson it was [cae aoe a word spled bea - Seventy Nandi warriors in thelr pointed out that one’s expression burs ok that‘ word up.) arn it. Use eo times full war paint and armed only with | of thought an important part| arn ete | conversation the next day. Every their narrow and Jong spears had | of one's personality. An tmportant a Us ft jay. avery day add a word building in the country. F COURSE, we all } w that a tire will blow when it's given the service = ; provided the entertainment feature of expression is the uso of| ppat’s in it. No man is 60 dumb but who knows that will come, when | When a warrior apears a lion, he jw | conn {, Cxpression ta the uso of! 3 How may I learn of mistakes @ tire is worn, any minute naatied MAE MEM thelr ee |in word usage, grammar, pronuncia j - icc ) : me i leader of the 1, How man rds do I know?| tion? There r ; 5 ‘And also the | ther dim ones or brights, are likely to flick and| fighting sections of the tribe and] yp yoy nen me Bei 1 RHOw? | thor THeres is) Only ons wey. t The Rental and Archi- Bout. That's no great surprise when you just realize how they're juggled rege person your tlearn anything and that ts by study, | wear a head-dre made from | : fe et about: mune of tho slain live. slo tx| YOCwulary Is considerably: te 1 but study need not be difficult, There | tectural vera : , Pe et} 6,000. Yet, the average dictlonary|ure books on “words 4," hr A Then it may come to pass that you run out of gas, but that's merely a| then allowed to head @ file of war-| erliaie*thbt nob Sou hav th joi Manhamtnehiecuie ya seek nati fi I tation. A Mult of your own. It ts something, you sec, that would never need be If s when on the warpath.” THEY | jome—contal 100,000 1 1A Oa RR RECUR ORC es Sha bees ‘Arak heprontinines Your gas tank were constantly know? ape falurilly very Kean ot’ tho! \’'. tinwesar, thakemrcar |p eidelte dade agg hp Be Pewee dat office plan which has ee. oe they this your old engine may miss or a spark plug [sn pocaring eee ee eure | only about 15,000 words, no it your] I Pel ee sie te went tee! their sanction is abso- ° afl 6 m abt x : in spearing Honw r scople —reallze 01 ©) oe May fall and go flat. Just trout hat ar n you're driving a car,| "ett witt toll wou ull imge reached 6,000 or 7,000 youlnbuse the language. Wor instance lutely correct. and yourgrow to expect them at that 1 1 ane peat a i | would be well equipped to express) + i on," suld Colonel Rooseyelt, “for it wuipy Press| many people do not know what an But, here is the kick, and it makes a man sich If you're Vilwaya'ln WOty story ana” ourself clearly. You can easily ax-|adverb is; consequently they. us Wo far from a nice garage p or & neat repair shop when there Hoe Wroke off suddenly an he| certain r vocabulary strength by}one and their language ia fright thing goes wrong with your car? caught sight of Cunninghame, who| king a dictionary, going thei it}ful Others are constantly using (Copyright, 1924, for The Star) ad been In a freight yan loading | With & pencil and marking those word when they mean another | stores nnd specimen |words that you une 'And still more mispronounce words. “Hullo, Hai gant wewe? : 3 Gi lace tes satus Wel ual ame METROPOLITAN BUILDING COMPANY then ran forward eagerly with out 1 a i ey Jntretched: hands (o -srect. Canines | 301 Fourtn Avenue | hame | SEATTLE Aw ‘they shook hands, and when the smiling Roosevelt affectionately patted Cunninghame on the back, It wis easy to seo how great Was the slove and esteem the colonel had. for