The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 25, 1924, Page 8

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Hf EAT rut TAR Frese Service © 87 Monigeme *« rt | shine. Everybody gets noisy and the wome You say things to your best friend’s wife said them to yours. That's a “party ‘t help us much HE dictionary doe gathered together for social pleasure or The difference between a “party” and a ment provided. Twenty-five years ago you went to partie } Tf it was a card party you did not play progressive euchre for a hand-painted vase around the wall. You sat in embarrassed 1 by the restraint wore off and you began 25 years ago to enjoy yourself without bei You played games. If you were young chaste. The maidens giggled, blushed and If you were old—21, say—and sophistics “lady you grabbed was the young lady you But you cheated, remember? Your girl he wiggled her little finger. We are not su 4 Byen 25 years ago wicked men went to sjudice against it. When the party was over you took your fast worker you kissed her at the gate. te—almost midnight. That was a party. Who Benefits? IHE Kitsap County Transportation com- j pany is before the county commis- Sioners today asking for a supplemental agreement in connection with its ferry Tease, permitting it to move the present emergency ferry pontoon, slip and cradle at Portage, on Vashon island, to the new sanding at Fauntleroy. This is in connection with its proposal to land passengers from Vashon at Faunt- Teroy as well as maintaining its Vashon- Marion st. service. It is up to the county commissioners to determine the rates and time schedules for this new service, if granted. Tentative schedules and rates, prepared by the com- pany, provide for reduction in the pres- ent fare of from five to 10 cents for pas- sengers to Fauntleroy. The distance from Vashon to Marion st. by boat is 914 miles. The distance from Vashon to Fauntleroy by boat is three miles. After the foot passenger on the ferry | Jands at Fauntleroy he must travel for 45 minutes by street car at a cost of eight or 10 cents to reach the downtown sec- tion. The running time for ferries from Vashon to Marion st. direct is only 55 minutes. And yet the company wants to Tower rates for the Fauntleroy service, mearly six miles closer, only five to 10 cents. Who benefits by this? Aiding Pedestrians y IMPULSORY auto liability insurance M\ now is in effect in nearly all of Swit- zerland, As a rule, the auto owner must carry at least $20,000 worth. The laws fayor the pedestrian who gets hit. The | burden of proof is on the driver. And the | Car owner has to pay a tenth of the big damages out of his own pocket, and all of the damages up to $25. They claim it’s safe now to cross Swiss roads without running. Tf it was just a party, you joined the oth folded, you tried to pin the pig’s tail to the pig. to the pig’s nose. The young ladies shrieked and the young gentlemen When supper time came the young ladies hid behind a curtain, showing above. The young gentlemen grabbed hands over the curtain, and the young guor from a flask. They were regarded askance and called “fast “Fast” men got drunk 25 years ago, but not with nice girls. They had sort of a = and Mrs € case Condit ve ( ¢ N c Pc 4 ( 1ing M ( t g oA eruel and tre Condit is « ting d to do with “pa ; Nowadays Twent Ww we t the quotes > parties any we ca d 4 The “part dit and Mrs, ¢ went to were neither bet than other ; ' You roll back the onograph. You slither and jiggle, chee jow] with your over a hardwi floc If the phon ig snappy ¢ Love canes back with a C2 or “My swee ° \ i ns a a she was awfu smart,” or “Last night on the back porch I loved her best of you sing. : ae You get down on your hands and knees and shoot craps. You drink g 00 en incline to hysteric » for which you would kill another man if he a party “A number of entertainment.” persor ted to a sox party lies in the character of the enter your Sunday suit and own hack ror ar other g ar You 7 sts in th estraint and made conversation. by and to have a good time. It was quite possible ng drunk, you played kissing games. The salt ducked when you diffidently pecked at ther ated, you played Blind Pig. That is, blind Sometimes you pinned the pig’s tail fawed ith only their hand took in to supper. was behind the curtain. As pre-arranged, ure whether you married the girl or not parties. They slipped a ay and drank hard r girl home in the town hack. If you She didn’t ask you in because it were One Step Along OUNCIL should not stop with the re- moval of the 4 to 6 parking ban in the north end of the downtown business district. This action, taken late Monday, was : step in the right direction. The “4 to 6 rule was an unwise one, and obviously had been considered so by the police, because it was only spasmodically enforced. It was unfair to merchants in that section of the city which it covered, for it permitted autoists to park their cars all day long, excepting between those hours, preventing customers who wanted to do business in the stores from being able to park their cars anywhere nearby. This will be remedied to a considerable extent by the substitution of a universal half-hour parking plan, But the council should not stop. It should devise and put into effect as soon as possible some wise, efficient and satis- factory plan of straightening up and keep- ing clear Seattle’s traffic puzzle. The longer such action is delayed, the longer our already long list of traffic vic- tims is going to become. A Warning to Gunmen HOOTING of Car! Peterson, notorious as a gunman and automobile thief sus- pect, by Detective J. J. Kush last night should serve as a warning to other crooks that the Seattle police department is sin- cere in its warning that crookdom will pay the price for operations here. To those who contemplate burglaries, stick-up jobs, safe-blowings, et cetera, The Star offers this advice: Go to the county morgue and view the body of Carl Peterson. Notice closely how true the bullets of the detective sped to the heart and to the brain.’ Kush shot to kill—and he killed. View that, crooks, and ask yourselves: Is it worth the price? ae Answers to Your Questions @ How are taffeta and satin dry, Boston, Mass, cleaned? . A. By sponging with Q. What is Denzine, etc, and pressing with a| president of the gasoline, ; HERE is plenty to do, when y | your time ‘round the house. such terri i shores are thought of, of course, by your spouss You'd much rather rest, but you're quick asks favor galore. Much trouble she wirs; many thin has ne hasn't t likely ee ee has bu was in it. You're hopping around as on the jump every minuto. When all things are mended and w bangs off 19. You hie for the ha fix them all over again. orking is ended tt and you know, th outguessed a in the t new trouble is found and __. KCopyright, 1924, for The Star) j!arm iron, ad the of Lotta Crab. A. Gen, A. $200,000 a year Clarence 2. Edwards, Q@ Should a ger with a Indy nan on being intro. A. This depends on the lady: it t her place to wishes to do 80, but ladies rarely shake hands wlth gentlemen whe shake nd her hand if she Germany's “Rotor” May Revolutionize Motive Power a, BY Cotun ogt T Flettner's boat, showing the 60-foot rotors fore and aft, and below, Anton Flett ° ‘ } " r ‘ ement 4 More, Not Less, Income Tax Publicity May Be on Way BY LOWELL MELLET! W + . 4 . ‘ * a * ting « Ham 5 Ame ols b r r Thiswelt sutficlentty | «figures. set ponte Smoking Room . Es ains as muck reas | Stories 7 SCIENCE rue senate marets {GORILLAS the Belgian Letters ! Name and Address Must Accom pany Kach Letter That Is to He hed in The Star ——— MUSSOLINI AVING DEER § the bag itm’ that the hunters who go into » woods for a deer bout like t tices on ground hor Jhunter pr rabbits | The craftsman 1s a rare!10 blobks doesn't bother Mr. Hender |bird, but one 1 could do on 4 committee, but damage to the yu in a 6 that than all the rest of us do to tenal would cut ‘ |profit in half, is a horse of ] at we hire the best|color, There can be no doubt, that | | be found, and tax|the city has the. right to its own head for their ven: | streets that tt ped ji ur ¢ ur hunter |from o: ting in opposition expenses and $1 of every $2/own car seems reasonable; but \deer tax paid. Let him-stay in the|that they also should bar — fitneys field until it becomes ni ry to| from running in opposition to a pri jprohibit ranchers from branding deer | vate line, that has no $16,000,000 to | | their spring ca pay off and yet charges the same coms able te o him-|fare, seems unreasonable y|selt from most of us, and I hear) ‘rye poorer transportation result there were wolves and Indians here anc pending | introduced formally. Gentlemen al-| before we came, as well as cougars, s ist of| ways shake hands with cach other| L. W. ANDRUS. |on being introduced bd sy heidi rae ee CALIF, SCHOOLS reed ike oacte uae How can kerosona be colored) yraitor ‘Tho Star: Noticing an ar Wi “yet A. Almost any oi tele in a recent iasue about what er acted meaner. peen oil rpet ip Itjamount of suitable dye. The it! cau the wick to crust rapidly. sprung «you can get an auswer tif | any question of fact or in- certain | | formation by writing ‘The Seat- curtain! | tle Star Question Hditor, 1323 © spring that| | New York ave, Washington, D. you're kept) |, and Inclosing 2 centa in loone stamps for reply. No medical, legal or marital advice, Per- sonal repiies, confidential, All letters must be signed. ————_____.. nee he practically ning ste: room he clock in the house e next day, you can . can be colored old vacuum cleaner|red by dissolving 4n it a quite amalt dye eok.| does no good, and too much might California schools h about “Il Hott bay freezing * 1 would like to relate my experience with South ern Galifornin schools. winter in Long daughter attended One day in geography |achoo! there where it was grown, etc ter nrose and was telll wheat belt around ¥ Washington and also oly St Wes grov ton, Ida. ( home) ‘ Her teacher looked at her in as- My daugh- about the 2 Walla in bout how ex n around Lewis hich was our former a study about wheat was the topic, | — 629 ©. | JITNEYS report of th the Bmpire rson's opposal to way bt he do if th he North 1 in fact that half of th ulk eight or ing depreciated property values. No Jone wants to live where transporta | tion is poor If the city cannot afford the pro posed bus line, why not give us a jchance by -giving the jitneys a free Jhand in the valley? ——J That the aged men be sober, ve, temperate, sound in faith, in charity, in-patience,—Titus ii erent ATURES that have much heat and great, violent desives and perturbations are not ripe for ac tion till they have passed the morid fan of their, years,—Bacon, [A Thought ] o Labor Party thru W antea| me Akeley, for of theme « acted mu EPIDEMIC OF Dud: ist pre- 500,000 ¢ about | y, prob- the agiving foot. james in hig eS Good living and good form—both call for green olives at Thanksgiving OF COURSE the experthostess meal is prepared and served. serves green olives at her Green olives belong on your ‘Thanksgiving dinner—and on Thanksgiving menu. Keep a many other occasions. Well liberal supply always on hand, she knows their lure to appe- They're appropriate for lunch- tite—how the enticing, piquant cons, teas and suppers, as flavor of each tempting bite well as formal affairs, How Kindles a lively desire for all many of the dozens of de- the other good things to follow. lightful ways of serving them And social custom all but do you know? Send for our demands them, Not only to new free folder of green olive add a welcome touch of color recipes. A post-card will to the table. But also because do. And be sure to have their presence proclaims the your grocer send you correctness with which the green olives, ' Association AMERICAN IMPORTERS of Spanish Green Olives 200 Fifth Avenue Dept. 59 New York City panish GREEN OLIVES

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