The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 23, 1924, Page 8

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k= = = PAGES THE SEATTLE STAR THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1924. — Pe Sa tins ale > enn SL EE 8 cananenrenies pres: ke bl : = ; - ) Je’ ' This Far Wer r . ~* | Well, We've Come This Far Already | Wan leve and Oil lndarcate-Rinanee —| ———_—$—$ — = — af | 7 | Butter Bill Fight, S Ch | utter Bill Fight, Scollard Charges) t —_ - ' . : ony eR Ree vs eR siy 5 - A Living Death H MAN a life sentence dies at an average of j : 10 ye ter ntiary gates clang behind W , of Joliet, IL, pr ders er the death penalty to : : nt Monotony is about worst thing « S « That is, on the basis i ; : I I ding catastrophes of : e cage has it easy com : Linseed pared wit as no hope of release. pmevigpy on Co i Unliket s the power to think, which rine into t a " u ‘ 7 * intensifies s j xpert- zs $ Days ir r op; nights in a cramped, pa if a ager . Chicas ‘ barred cell. This is not life. It is a living death i ‘ s combing } MALL wonder the ors "'is only 10 garines stuido this state LAW DOES NOT BAR r 2 ‘ ~~ years. Existence is s enough, at times, even are fighting Nef VEGETABLE OLL GOODS 5 Palmottvé p Co + when we have our freedom. On the other hand, there is ats ee si Ss rs 4 no such th as real freedom at i : 1 f s 8 + We are ail prisor serving a life sentence imposed | teat + by customs, regulations, the system of economics and the | hingto : ! + inexorable laws of nature try: We can w Per s Cs = ; 5 The problem of getting enough to eat and to clothe, sane Resigns tpt ‘ th of | piper! } warm and shelter ourselves is a life sentence in itself for - * son. + the average } f freedom We boast only liberty we have is P polities perstition still have us nomere soa'oxt wae | Unsung Heroes of Today! + jailed. is, fortunately, slippir ¢ solicitor bs , ~ «Bab GiORR : tho very slov mak ho to-k 5 . G. tk : A Faux Pas, Billy Pr nt : HAT’S Brother William Allen White trying to do | 4 ; : oyer in Kansas, start another anti-Bible fight? 7 areeitly fi ‘“ . + It seems that a virile political woman of that state 1 ¥ oP ede Ham i doesn’t like Billy’s anti-KKK candidacy for the governor- Perkins Ca (the Ur ship and she quoted Paul at him—‘“When I was a child, a t i gi spoke as a child; but when I was a man, I put away , es: altod SPR aa Serbia: bey. t tot A. = Be i. Powe knee ly floored the lady t | hat, if | gang ny seit My sal aa Sisk ph ‘ fhereupon Billy floored the lady by replying that, if | 7 ab. W d& lk I fl > nd you will & t I s ed t . st tle Mcaadada heat te *she was fond of the Apostle Paul, she had better read P) Questions PR) ap ar a n uences lations of 1 eat and nut t r vite ra + what he said in I. Corinthians 14, vei 34 and 35. And ¢ Answered * *you can almost hear Kansas political women hitting the Sci i ae, Coming British Election | oat in i Thus mine rescue work. '*D: e been + Bible, for this is what Paul said, in part: s b tite. § 7 { Q What does the abbreviation , , » : heape 4, in this “Let your women keep silence in the churches . . . | “Ltd” after the name of an English BY WILLIAM P. SIMMS png cael ep be Miaila bride attent mp And if they will learn anything, let them ask their hus- | ny mean? “| to the entry of mar in n a made. by ~ bands at home.” A. This means “Limited.” Under ASHINGTON, Oct ! Deny ppt hmnar sh lh pe Me ie a BS A . 4 . va ngl compan ti ‘. expronsed ho . t 1 SCIENCE | If this isn’t enough to make the Kansas women incline | 17 ,iimgusn Eublic company tats, W' valerate yelper letely excluded If billions of dollars Earth’s Neichb 7} ¢to pay particular attention to Billy’s candidacy, Kansas | oy the sharcholder ts limited to the ts tha es" eua’ tha’ weaitnle mf RU mangaric tu { arth’s Neighbors ; Women, especially the married ones, are “different.” | paid-up value of his stock loss of Aust New : NY i ota 24 o. |} tand or fia, in one ¢ oh e nets Saturn and Jupiter Ms | Q What are the rules for proper| secret causes wu { o a4 iT been the objects of much Better Times etiquette In an elevator? British elections f | rea fe Sree eae partially aes i F % A. A lady always precedes a gen-| October 29, - " to their great and to the im O FAR this year railroads have handled, roughly, 32 tleman when entering or leaving an Premier MacDonald's ates butt provements in methods of observa- t cars of freight for every 34 cars in the corresponding | elevator. When ladies are togcther,| to prosecute =" hare hie | period of last year and 28 in 1922. sracedence should be given & ine a ve vem = ke ea tt \ - { a Janie, thé giant of the solar sys | * older wo or or, Gentle jeged weditious w a, and J level ‘ cal proces: for |tem, is now {Times are getting better, and the roads lately have been | V/4¢" woman thor’ hate [a en ele.| sp-called “Angio-floviet treaty ‘ a aynthetio gray iro from earape $ moving almost as much freight as a year-ago. When ator. are far from being the sole rea mons, t be a of thin metal, a waste of automo 3 ¢ireight moves on a big scale business men are getting ¢y0:% fons ms ee baat poeres |S f Rete te These scraps were ‘ound the sun once in > _Yeady for heavy trading—general prosperity. A ST TERR ORT): SRSA gino e neey SmeRe, 101 Se- | BineaL passed. rth $4 @ ton. Saved ageing with it a number . ’ ¢ ‘OU can get an answer to || feat what, in many ways, bh ot fort DAIRY INDUSTRY ‘ uturn is the greatest 3 . SS ES | truct 4 stroe aval 9 er = ee H . ener Gaemee & lee pepe ascsnthener shielded oy Sia vane Poe rE LANGUISHING HERE 5 planet next to Jur It has 10 formation by writing The Seat ho mont succes . No sooner was MacDon f “a EE joons, Saturn is the et with the $ Costly, But--- . tle Star Question Editor, 1322 | | Britain has had since the wo power, however, than he Demons: s8 on 5 D b il D d rie P aa fe : i160, ii int : see . oe | New York ave, Washington, D. war. tracked the Bingapore pro, sled wage pel prs 5 || studied the ets with a telescope, } HE three big political parties will spend $10,000,000 |} Gana inclosing 2 cents in loose The epectre of Japan in com Wh Uberals pc RA ez um vet 2 ad. aw that Satire did not look ike tha ay this year in electing a president, experts estimate. stamps for reply medical, | | piste dominati Far East tives thought beielfideschage 3 hell ts pe other but he "Soul deta 4 There’s no way of figuring the cost of the time and onl or cue eaves et | ern waters, a ¢ ant menace | = ue ee eal pte t be in of- | e with “900d inten- |\ cover why, as his telescope was one ‘ rgy A siadiacalad { " sonal replies, confidential. | to British dominions, therefore, | Sco long, anyhow | “8 tons, as rumor || of the first, if not the first, made and el xy expended ee? arguments minong voters and ts the letters must be signed. la more, potent t any of the | But disquieting things began ae ecys, then the || \t magnified o: 30 times. Cone ‘individual's search for the right candidate to vote for. | ———-—} reasons thus far. made publi The United States © fewer Gi . { Ten million dollars, a lot of money. But it’s our cheap- | : eee | MacDonald's greatest xin, in | 4 Japanese immigrants ave sidewalks must be aaee pepe naga ig bac aa? fest form of education. The average voter wouldn't know Q What {s the entrance mlary of} the eyes of many liberals and | began to seethe with ad rosa git far dara | beige tann ip ee wiih Seni > i ities, a Q C1 - | federal prohibition agents? conservatives, was his failure to | 7 ton promiece. ‘ a % ot unything about politics, and not much more about econom an aie ane |between them tics, if we didn’t have the situation thrown into the spot- | | 4 ea Ne his boid —— = = light every four years, and made interesting by its element | . | T rs AY . x WAS y years, s s eters | ricks of Fake Mediums ‘ WK NX \ IQ gd contest. Q How should a monogram ring F k S - ‘it But there was still a | NS MSS SY \\ KW’ ' re be worn, with the initial away from ake pr seer oI : "er et at NS , or toward the wearer? war should come in the Pact N Murders--and Payment A. It 4s customary to wear auch Photos Many conservatives | SN 7 0 E = Ja ring with the.initials toward the eel wucn B War we © 4 SS ELECTING at random 146 American murders, the | Seca. the life of the British empire | SS 3 Metropolitan Life Insurance company followed them | eh gen | Hector Bywater, noted British | NX up and found only one execution. In 22 cases the assail- Q. What is the average life of an naval authority, quotes a Brit- | NS ry Pas s Ss or . | ish imiral telling hi tha | \ fants committed suicide. Out of 146, there were only 69 {4 From 0 10 15 dove | Ae aa iiedacienle Gene | WN sindictments. Thirty-two other cases were so-called “justi- ‘ see | and an equally stro Manila, | NN Hiable homicides”—such as self-defense. | @ How old ts the Prince of the American fleet would have | NWS i Thirty-five were sentenced to do time in penitentiaries, | Wales; what is his full name? eal Jemiee. Chagos in, 99 to) ide | WSS + Ina third of the cases assailants still are at large. The | ,,j1° Me was born June 8, 1804. I's Fe teens pavel | tpoli ded tao third deter be | full name is Edward Albert Chrte- battle in the Far Fast | Police rounded up two-thirds, a good record—far better | tian George Andrew Patrick David An American defeat in those | than can be claimed for the judicial system. Windsor. = | waters, British experts ngree, | * would leave India, Australia and Q. Of whhrt are chocolate and New Zealand exposed. Only a powerful base at Singapore, en- | abling Great Britain to bring | her entire naval strength to bear in Australasian waters, offers | A Mechanical Nation cocos sade? i: 2 : : A. Both are prepared from the| P pa OUT 250,000 American-made typewriters a year are | seeds of the cocoa trec, extensively being sold to foreign countries. Not many when you | “wtivated in tropical America and | was a half more than in Jul y, the very dull mo | oh 0d | Thus when the plate is devel. | with strife belonging not to him, ts fey 43 y y Dees ne | 4 “apirit”™ lk b ‘More climb like that and the steel mills will be operating | earsece hemiies naasstrase bes ‘ saat bast | pene enon bei fesnd bette peed Lc at top speed, capacity, advertising for help. het Patios date Sons x } ter-faty yeast, alfalfa leaf flour, honey and-food -saits. Prov, xxvi. consider the population of the outside world and their |‘"* "st Indie | BY HOWARD THURSTON |. anything tike a guarantee | average inferior writing machines, | @ In what country did the cus- gpa rok unt as crac) NO MORD Ours is the first country in which penmanship has | tom of using orango blossoms at Seis, pimograne” Bian NO MORE become a lost art. We have a mechanical nation—and, so _ | weddings originate? Hin FEL WEE porters e lindper ne 2 200 eulaty, a8 a. anita far, our civilization is nine-tenths mechanics. The artistic Pama a wachaes tn therusenl ware Ween. AT eeten dollars a week.” | and spiritual and intellectual will come later. Right now Q“Dods'a fig tres“ever bloom? the picture is developed, dim, | “Surely you cannot lead a good America is solving the problem of making a living easily, A. Yes, but because of the pe-| transparent faces or “spirit | Christian life on that!” | Once solved, our best brains will turn to so-called “higher culiar structure of the fig tree, the| forms,” appear hovering about “That's the only kind you can lead pursuits.” | flowers are borne, as it were; on| the person in the picture. be seven per”’"—Whiz Bang | j é ic nee: | the inside of the receptacle, where Fraudulent “spirit photo: | \\ KEEN | they cannot bi seen. graphs” have been taken in this | N 3 | etere way Tiny faces are carefully pre | Quick Comeback ‘ Q. What is chiropractic healing? | pared on «mall bits of transpar i A Thought ] . : N 0 GOES the steel industy, so goes general business. lasale EhLariy tiruomanloatenon o)| these celluigia es ae itaseat | — | S You. capt buy and cook healthier foods thair-Vitomen N This country’s production of steel ingots in September | the spinal column |' to the lata of the camera | Ho that passeth by, and meddieth Shreds. Contain--whole wheat, spinach, lettuce, celery,but- \ It's more-thanany-ordinary cereal, it'sta_vombiation of b b . . | nest eggs and the eggs of the run-| The plate may be carefully see | "54 jest “foods— ‘oan olesame: sk American industry certainly must be in good health | about chicken? watched while it Is belng devel E should enjoy more peace if we} Nature's healthiest, fe s—a_wealth ot who ae eM when its recuperative power is so great. To crawl half | 4 No difference. oped, and any plate may be used. did not busy ourselves with the compounded -in_a-balanced, ready,to-ea form — Rich, way out of hard times in 60 days is quite a fect a | words and deeds of other men, which Crispy, Delicious Vitomen Shreds. ¢ “ti . d d cA juite a feat. Old | (Another article will appear to- ‘appertain not to our ch arge.—J SS r ‘et Sake e panics used to drag along for years, | Smoking Room morrow.) Taylor When you are-too"tired-to preparé-a-limeheon, give your children a treat-and-a change. After they-have had a bowl full of Vitomen Shreds with'milk orcream and sugar you can NV send them back ‘to-school knowitg that they have had a \ \ \ wholesome amouit-of nourishment without overloading \ \ \ Stories FABLES ON HEALTH \“Pesmangeage( CHILDHOOD PROBLEMS | | was going’ good,” said the| [smoker from Indlanapolis, “and sin | eer j Was getting the drubbing of ita life. O you teach your boys and girls;modern mother must teach her chil | Vehemently he inveighed against the to face bravely the minor diet | dren to face the trying moments of | |major gins of his race, lke crap-| culties of which childhood te full? |e. ot a, ‘i 7 |shooting, pullet-ifting, etc, and fi-| It is one of the most important |f¢ 9nd to tell them they can be sight that will/ nally he came to the cardinal one of | functions of a parent, and one of the | Tong as well as right their stomachs, | ~=-~~=- Remnants UT in the yn away, Oni &reet you today Keep your children healthy with \ regularity will take caré of itself, tongén Shreds and their rd there's a garden, once fair, but it's withered and faded a trace of what used to be there {s the ' all—melon-stealing. "Bredren, I sez | most neglected | How much development of future the choed of te ‘i | | 2 | a lend aan ll Lore 1 is toll thru the blossoms that shone in the} unto yuh, keep away fyum de melon] The average “mother complex” |character lies in these moments be. Order Created ix pig baud ) And planted ‘the soll, but the growth thus| patch ov yuh neighbor. It is a|srows out of tho protective instinct tween mother and child can never be 2 | crime, I sex unto yuh, to steal out in|of the mother, It is the mother in-|estimated, but it Is now a scientific F m Y fe tha vere Cc e! renes Pe Qn . Stems that were once in thelr greenest of green, and stood proudly high|de dead ov de night and take ‘at|stinct to protect the child from all{fact that if a child can be placed ro our in the air, now droop in sadness, jus! aking: we . Ratarad ‘Uiepate Pp ines, just making a scene that ts totally|which Mes rich on do groun’ an’|the bumps of the world, to take the | squarely against the petty difficulties doesn't belong to yuh—a, awful|child’s part under all circumstances |of his young life and see them thru, tiful. blow: the spot, while the chill winds have | crime!’ and to keep it away from the realities |he will be much better prepared to Hut Plossoms have shriveled to rot, and of beauty| “At this point one auditor arose, |of lite. |face the major difficulties made a sucking sound with his lps,| As science penetrates human re-| Parents should think this over and hie ‘twill fade e'er much | snapped his fingers, and then, appar-|actions it is rade plain that thelact accordingly! n elapse. 'Tis surrounded by death, maybe gasping for|ently remembering where he was, ent t he last roe of summer, perhaps. down in confuston. But the parson (Copyright, 1924, for The Star) had noted it all. ‘Whuffer, mah fren’, dus youalls rar up ag’ snap yuh fin-| gahs an’ sqush yw Up wen Ah speaks uy melon stealin’?? “‘'Seuse me, pahson,’ replied the Abashed man, in a low voice, ‘but yuh jus' reminded me whur Ab done ig dat knife uy mine,’ ” The warm summer sun has neglected the # taken its place, there's hardly a trace. Just one little rove in this garden still grows, but Much time breath. It's Grocer Balanced Breakfast Food |}, \ Ke IA A Ready-to Eat ' ;

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