The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 4, 1924, Page 8

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let-dow: ters were Forbes United a departed f other tur Sick a : opportu ‘ friends, + He like + disgrace + The bet One ivi ; tutes tw t There is i + when people n abuses fof public trust. Not because y should *be howling for the blood of the men who + betrayed them. That not necessary + But because they seem to be utterly indif- tferent to the two neartening episodes, completely disinterested, without any de- ire to study their significance and so to ‘guard themselves as a people against their repetition. + The war seems to. have left us so we have a pe shall get ba about is May 2 so long enduring that we to normal. + Gunmen Lose Their Badges HEY’VE got an attorney genera ‘ West Virginia now who apparently | does not believe that deputy sheriffs | ‘should be hired and paid for by private femployers. This marks an advance in )West Virginia. | State Attorney General England has ‘gone into court and obtained an injunction tagainst Sheriff Don Chafin (now under }penitentiary sentence for bootlegging), ¢the county judge of Logan county, the } Prosecuting attorney, the county commis- isioners, about 250 deputy sheriffs and 50 jeoal companies. The petition for injune- ftion charged that Sheriff Chafin appointed +these deputies so that they might act as Mine guards and that the coal companies paid their salaries, in addition to paying | }Chafin for making the appointments. | : The court issued an order restraining county officials from appointing these pri- vate gunmen as deputies and restraining } the coal companies from paying’ salaries + of county employes. : West Virginia is beginning to catch up Mr desire to s fear he will lose ¢ Dawe t himself Not Very Necessary NTRODUCING Dr, J Moffatt, eminent thec ian of Glasgow, who issues a transl 1 of the Bible into what he calls modern English. Dr. Moffatt be lieves that the Bible cannot be properly understood by the present generation un less it appears to them in the language of their everyday F It must be admitted that there have been failures of many attempts to make folks fully understand the language of the Bible. The differences in the understand- ings have even given rise to numerous denominations. But it is not necessary to understand all of the Those who cannot understand the Ten Cc ments and the Sermon on the M too dense to be affected by the matter in what language presented mmand- One Real Shock! OMETHING shocking has happened in Washington. There is a tense situa- tion there now. Officials of high degree are’ speechless, nonplussed. Officials of less deg: go dully, dazedly about, con- versing, if at all, in awed whisper Per sons on the streets to whom the news ha filtered merely nod to each other they meet and go dubiously, listlessly abo their affairs. The men of | autho in the matter are completely at s to what course to pursue, since there are no precedents to which appeal may be made. The wheels of government, mighty as they are and potent, seem hopelessly gummed and helples inadequate. The heavens seem to ha fallen with a bang. What ; the) & [ou can found| | any ques Q. What was the slargest gold nugget ev ¥ A. One weighing 190 pound fin 1858 in Australia. t | C., and inclosing A. From 60 to 65 cents per pound, * usually 4 sonal replies, letters must be a ship sequal w ¢iost expe A. An equal weight of oil. Oit is a {Tittle more expensive than coat but ithe difference in cost . The support is wiped out fon of fact or in- formation by writing The Seat- tle Star Question Hditor, | New York ave. Washington, D. stamps for reply. legal or marital advice. confidential All practice and exercise tudents of toe themselves on they first stand on their toes, an answer to] | 4 + distinguished | from contracts for the future det lery of cotton. term " 1323 2 cents in loose No medical, Per- signed. . of the muscles. Q. How do rawl? e dancing help to) 14. py of the when) the stomach and the means muscles of bars ribs? after e thy the increased steaming radis ial pays th 7 TOONS) seeks of fancy dancing and exercise the Dark 8? ; term ayn Be How do. toé dancers mat yj of th scles of the ankics and and rofere ;a0 this kind mut | legs Lamb's wool is kept in th | pertod of ab 1,000 years, s hurting their | toe of the slipper to keep the toes) times dated from the invas of } A. They become accustomed to the| from callousing, and the student| France by Clovis in 486 to the in thard tocd shoes and the standing| takes alcohol foot bathsand massage| vasion of Naples by Charles VIII, vand walking on the toca by long to relax the toes in 1495, and sometimes from 476 to 6 —————— | 1520, the beginning of the Reforma | tion Q. What ts the 8 of the Board of Simplified Spelling? e the begin: bad. We % that will make wu: You shouldn't expect plan + now and then slip. And it's been first lepre ion ind then to nev that sor in our ev life an uncertaif tri day you sit prett u'r * for luck’s kinda , You've no time ork seems like pla ' life's a worry; you're all ir ' Wyss id everything ms to go 4 MH A, Bh u're constantly @fretting ‘ ‘eauwe nowhere you're gel ng; you aimlessly travel along. ey 4 only just living, ‘cause fate’s always giving a taste of the frown sand the amile. N une fellow doubts, it’s the ins ‘have that make living worth while. (Copyright, 1924, for The Star) and ked, for it's true that they| meré plant A, Lake Placid club, Bssex county, |New York; Godfrey Dowey, scere | tary, g of good, then an| rave a session of} @ What Is turmeric? A. The aromati f the tur It ery-day fling that) "own as curry powder. ordinarily Q. What is the of th American Dental assoclatio A. 905 Stroh building, Detve | Mich.; Wilta 4, Giffen, president Q. What the paifti itas” by Ab H. ‘Thayer mean 1. The name means “Dear LAttle Ones” and the painting representa | the arttas ideal of maternal love. the outs that we| @ How dialects and jan many | suages ar thore? 54 have been recognized, Ty » well known, we | A Phough: || Seine oe | Q relate them with any other ‘ ETE | Memetas sis wi, ty, Her Sherman, @lay & Co, that my grief were thoroly | them in faith or practice,” Dr fi and my calamity laid in the} Pettit said ; ay : ; noes togett lob vi? The siad to apologise Third Avenue and Pine Street | eat | | Seattle T Is from the level of calamities,| SOME LAND IN NEW YORK 5 ot that of every-day life, that wel city sells for $304 a square foot, or | learn impressive and useful lesson. about $13,000,000 an which | | Th 1 jour idea of dirt farming as | | | aun FABLES ON HEALTH ——————— | 5) ayn x AQ { PROPER VEGETABLES | \\- elas eine ae | \ 4 M ALWAYS hearing about)be considered a table of these vege-| these vegetables that I ought] tabi : to eat with ‘my meals, but what Spinach, cabt artichokes are they lettuce, ast r, string In asking of his physteciarf,| beans, 4 or dande o| Mr. Mann question that] Hon | occurs to any number of peoples | Of the “straight vegetable’ list A] There is a great deal of talk about] selection may be made from the fol { “green and leafy” vegetable and | lowing — Jof giving them to growing ehil-| Carrots, ontons, turnip beets, | bar f | are n. beans, pea Mant, lentils, toma | | Here, then, In given what might! toos and par Set = | This Vtetrola is j ¥, f | S250. | Kis, KO, S75, . | 8100 and up . to $y8o wa | ' \ AOS ~~ DECI { 1 | Business Outlook Bright < Says U.S.Chamber Heaa | Cutting Off His Nose to Spite His Face RICH D I seneral lev What Folks 7 asiraaiat Are Saying : Letters! Must Accom Name and Address pany Be Hach Letter That Is to The Published in Star Why It Pays to Select, Rather Than to Elect, Under City Manager Plan) Committee . I be bp Star K at0,| gente tented by, |" Another Arete Tomorrow wes Sez Dumbell Dud: Beg Your Pardon, Folks! |». Festa ton | ; nll eam —— ‘ night schools | sessions. oa ti might, what can, what will be done? Who wis be with the LENE is there to suggest or plan? And the | A better mai A a gue Ala eee cause of it all—the crushing, heart-still- | r f 4 man of i Gs We, Ratti oft Overwork ing meaning of it all—you want to know? ‘ ex : : ie sete 4 ‘AMOUS strong man, Fred Beasley, | Well, brace yourself and set your jaw for | k - pry Ad | 6 could lift 20 men at one time with his | the jolt. qualif H K back. He dies at age of 28, which recalls This man Stewart—William E. Stewart | 5 reful | he that he wrote a book, “Why Athletes Die in full—found that he had conducted the | ° Cares in fe Fe : ok sas . . )Young.” | census bureau for $30,000 less than the | [ : ) -. Fi a / Over-exertion of muscles and heart is | appropriation given him and—think of it | f r 7 YAY WAS TAY one ay NCAT CH: why athletes die youn | and weep—he has turned that sum back | + Most people are ve areful not to over- | into the treasur, u, understand, | In Sacr | rs : fexert their muscles. Few of them need | has done that—a bureau! acone A Victrola will make your home advice about not over-exerting their | Hurry with the restoratives and stimu- | elected happier for the young people, and + brains. | lants! It’s a knockout tion, a i i 4 cea > | put for everybody. Be sure, by looking for i : 292 : } sonst the Victor trademark, that it is a 4 1? ? Answers to Your Questions on genuine Victor Victrola, : cilmen That, as the poet remarks about | Beauty, is “all you need to know.” For twenty-five years the Victor Talking Machine Company has been building andimproving these instru- ments, None but genuine Victor Victrolas are sold here. Any of them, from $25 up, is yours on convenient terms, f the their ex teach just a e definite time | h Day Adventist

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