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

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ONDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1924 | 2 ¢ _ “§ i * office, 418 2 anew Representatives San Frenciecs | Michigan Ave o, Th Tremapt & 2 1. @ & months tree. One Audience—Two Shows Why Folk ike zzles this messa, type Ame Crete 1 we j Can people dont like s 1 r i puzzle The kins uni thing. It isn’t odd that : y wants versity museum has a relic ¢ ‘ the best buys LEATHER.” the Phaestus D that no man n These © pa gned t I tir has ever solved orgenizat . The Greeks had their rebuse d acre and sel! leather i to oppose the invasion of their by fiber and other Such co-operation would not dreamed of, only w years § it was each tanner for himsel the other. They still do. But tl that a common enemy has grown up that it can be opposed best by co-operat cs” 6 UCH co-operative advertising, to boost S the products of an entire industry, is becoming common. Brick makers band together and in their ads urge you to build with bricks. Opposed to them are timber interests, united in urging lumber. So it goes, in hundreds of industries. A new type of advertising has come into existenc . The reason is that an era of substitutes has begun to cut into sales. The individual maker or seller still must advertise or lose business. ~But increasingly the tendency will be for individual members to band to- ther in advertising to oppose rival in- ustries that are after their custome i: £2 leather substitutes LL this illustrates that reaching the consumer is like a situation of “one audience, two shows.” Ina street carnival or at the circus you find ballyhoo men en- ticing the crowd. All of the shows may be worth seeing. But the crowd will not pay admission to all man has his cro tles fi dof hu nature, ths solve, beaten and cowed t n tence, of human rela t everyday affairs, is rested and restored by encountering a problem that he can It ve. s him, he must work over it, bu he dominates. The thing is brought to submission and he is supreme. T valuable experience. We all need to succeed frequently, If we are not ited victims of our xes, each of us must in which he can be a at ast sa to become broken-sy own inferiority comp ttle work mqueror, cross-word puzzle is the answer for Ititudes of us She Forgot too Late PROMINI woman in New York went to her garage the other day and started her automobile, She thought of something she had for- gotten, went back to get it, and left her motor running in the closed garage. Returning, she got as far as the door of her car, where she fainted and fell. When found half an hour later she was the performances. If they would, the ballyhoo men wouldn't be necessary. dead, What ballyhoo men are to rival side | shows, so is the newspaper advertisements | in business. The newspaper ad talks to the crowd, inducing it to enter one place of business ers. Good times are in the making. A boom has started. Prosperity will soon fill the ae of potential spenders. And where ey will spend their money will depend ely on newspaper advertising. Never in this country’s history was there a more Jogical time for persistent newspaper ad- vertising than right now. Labor Spreads eka labor plans to expand in the life insurance field as vigorous- ly as it has branched out into banking. The two are closely related, insurance being a method of scientific saving. Organized labor is just beginning to realize the powers it has by reason of its organization. Labor, with its savings, eventually could buy out its employers. F A Weather-Vane ees is improving swiftly in near- ly every direction. One case is the copper industry, which so far this year has exported 140 pounds of metal for every 100 pounds a year ago. countries now are almost as big as before the war. e ? cainty | @f™ or ha jepended on for - ° ? ? | ~~ Proper doe 0'4 the various fons, all are | open to the objection that they | (ean digalie seerertenedBhed |e B) softening processes, and as a dasis| here are honest | 1% ‘nade more oo ty asd | American citizenship stay away from hye’ can get an answer to| | wr some facial beauty clays. It has! i that congress | Ove than the av the United States without invalidat- any question of ‘act or Im | | possidilitics as a material for paint,| ™msht g rash and aeiih pra rile ing his declaration of intention? formation by writing The Seat-| | ceramics and as filler, “un. American.” A congress, oyu ms . | A. Not more than siz months, tle Star Quesilon Hditor, 1322 wet 6 elected I y by farmers, is | The committee thinkn that ex soe | New York ave. Washington, D. Q. What 1s the land area of the| Pictured as legislating away the tending m is enough of a | Q. On what day of the week did| | C., and inclosing 2 cents In loose | |. 0145 | right of boys and g up to 18 signal whenever action fat Christmas, 1901, come? stamps for reply. No medical, A. 56,255,000 square miles, to help thelr parents on the motorist in going to effect others A. On Wednesday. legal or marital advice. Per- € 6 farm. The answer, of course, in the vicinity. gidetin. sol ary beanie Q When did the circular naw| !* that no concetvable set of Pedestrain and motorist both Q How can magnolias be raised} | letters must be signed. | Patented by Samuel Miller In Eng-| Consresamen ever will do any: are told: by. the. cornmiittes: that from seed? land in 1777 come into untversal| ‘ne of the port : they must be considerate of each wi. The seed should be palnted in| The more dustHke varieties are call-| use? But It ts a dangerous power other, well-drained soil as soon as they|ed Kriesclguhr. A. During the 19th century it} ‘© ive congress, enemies of the | os | esteain whould reals @re ripe, and it is well to remove ea J A came into universal use wherever| Dl! protest. The answer to that || + tes that oliver wvuane 68" losenss the shell of the seeds before plant-| Q What are Oreades? machinery could be had for work. | is that cong already has dng. Be careful to prevent them) A. In classical myth, mountain) ing ie, : powers vastly more dangerous, > from drying out, and plant them in| nymphs, attendants on Diana, tae = if it Is to be assumed that con- A Thou ht | @ cold frame or in the open ground. ear Q What kind of an instrument| Stem slwaya ts ready to do Zz rigee™ ty, Q Who painted the picture, “Car-|is a Inte? | : , | @ What are the swiftest ani-|nation Lily, Lily Rose”? A. A stringed musical instrument]| ‘ Ho shall give his angels charge | Pa pL tat tae of the guitar family. The formal) Smoking Room over thee, to keep thee in all thy | ae Wolves, coyotes, elke, deer, an- e208 difference between a lute and a Stories ways, They shall bear thee up in leJope, rabbits and whipp: Q Who was Yuma? guitar is to be found tn the back, their hands, lest thou dash thy foot Sesto A. In Hindu mythology, the tord| which in the lute 4s pear-shaped | mm Vit Q What is the value of a half sent dated 18097 wolokeeds A. From 5 to 15 cents, ee er ® Q. What {s the proper way to Q Has Soviet Russia ever been Tecognized by the French govern- 4. In drinking soup the spoon! congress in the German republics, for dinner, and Dot, aged 6, was al- ment? must dip away from the drinker.) A, There (s no generat name|lowed to stay up later than usual, A. Yes, very recently. The outer rim ts turned down as he} which corresponds to our name|One of the ladies, the wife of a Sez Dumbell! Dud: eee dips it, Fill the spoon not more| “congress.” The German legislative| Wholesale meat mere would sit Q. What 1s tripoit? thon three-quarters full, power {a vested in the reichatag (the|With her dress slightly ted. Dot | . 5 A. A mineral substance employed\ apse popularly elected body) and the |W searching the back of her juve- What this |} in polishing mctats, marbles, glass,| @ What country has the oldest] reichrah, in which body the vartoug| Mle mind for something and at last t seeds etc, 30 named because it was orig-\ postal service? states of the German republic are| found tt country needs |} Shipments to other | | | or buy a specified article in preference to | oth } Answers to Your Questions of hell and the. tormentor of use a soup spoon in drinking soup?! A. China, dating from the Chou Carbon monoxide gas from the running motor had killed her. Odorless, it silently crept around her and poisoned her before she could flee or up for ratification ity to tax citizens 100 call for help, y the otal logial. } t _ do but no cong . ever She knew what carbon monoxide woul thd powe but con do to her, but she remembered it too lat t un Kreme doe © war every ren day 5 | Tho American people at the Death Rays | moment may be more ready O mysterous death-rays have been i agismak Fe ace Becatss discovered, says Brig Gen. Fries, | congress defended the people head of the chemical warfare service. He | of government agents against a tax bill that was de says all known rays and power obey cer- | Ur federal child labor signed ¢ - . _ at of the t e | tain definite laws. He adds that the sar Of T8I8, ‘until thas pat was Sha’ aaenaies othe is true of poison gases, and denies stor’ HE pez? oes ten. 4 because congress had about new and terrible gases. Ee here <2 an teal nense of the country’s After all, modern warfare is mainly a The averng ad no { to the returned nol. | matter of starving the people back of the | sen to of the exiate | lines and exhausting their powers of eco- af rine eg Sj ] nomic resistance, That's our greatest na- out to work at « uto 1g@na Ss tional strength. and then o1 — = | where ehiid was | ea z = maa T; " | below the standard set by the 4 Better Times | es eee soa Artes ONEY collected in taxes by Uncle Sam tact with federal agents | sige ae ps i " J ale of the 1916 law bbe Honea | in four months up to Nov. 1 totaled moral; that ia, {t | Accidents suggested by Secretary roughly 736 million dollars. This was over 79 millions less than in the corres- | | 4d Highway Safety in t | ponding months of 1923. The slump was ployern who were inclined to | * Mis! soap thipugtioul the mainly due to business depression. | take sdyan of children. | ‘: : tinplified | 7 5 & That It réall s effective he aimplifio With prosperity returning, 1925 should | That 't rfally was effective was | : : sig u shown by the {mmediate in. “Efforts to standardize 4 fill the people's wallets. That means, big- Cleans tn the thomber GF cht ' Pang ger incomes to tax. If congress curbs its dren em J in mills when the | the - a pg veone Ait. spending, chances are that a substantial ‘ome court held the federal ficulty has been the attempt to | hole can be cut in the national debt. ) titutional | the} and in the gultar 4 flat. is without ribs, which are casential to the framing of the guitar, oa. a | The tute | The Seattle Star [e=<"|| Common Sense in the BY LOWELL MELLETT 66 TTS w repeat, “‘Father,' she sald; ‘why ore In- ties to keep an eye on em. | these daya,” the smoker, looking at the picture tn | Q. What {s the equivalent for our| his watch. “We had some friends in AVORITE argument | t the child tal everything It } or do, Congr an the pe has the Child Labor. Law than rome others propaganda was than @ year ago o It was an pensive extensive and ex nda. It went to great lengths to prove that here was one branch of the American government that could not be usted and to some legree it Doubtlers emies of child labor will e lens of thin ar gument tn other states. Efforts to prove state legislatures tt the governme branch of nnot be trust ary h ly to be suce ree ne Confusing! enforcement au- | lonference on Hoover's | Indicate too m an be anticipated on enacted by con 20th amendment fs | position of | fingers exter against a stone—Ps. xei.:! no telling where children eee {ll pick up the things they sald a man in| ROVIDENCE has given and sleep as a compen the many cares of life 4nally brought from Tripoli in Africn. represented, i , y WEEE 2 sMicéous rock composed of|Evnasty, wohlch began about 8,000 Pas dion’ atockin's Hike sausages?! ; the silicoous frustules of Diatoma-| vcars ago. Q. Havo any automobiles ellmbed X will have to be. told; Dot onions. cae, It {s often soft, friable and| eee Pike's Peak in high gear? phe diperg repre thinicdds earthy, but now and then 4s render-|. Q. What is bentonite? A. During the 1923 Pike's Peak| here days, are BELOWKNE e4 firmer and more solid and even| A, A mineral, a variety of clay.| hill climb five cars, of different extremely hard, probably from the| It is used as a gubstitute for Fuller’s| makes, ascended the mountain in dmpregnation with opal substances.| earth in clarifying oils, in wwater| high gear, SAN oe Q. How many laying esen 9 a hen during a Iife- teach children, and grown men an well, good for them is a job that centers upon the FABLES ON HEALTH A JOB FOR THE COOK to Ike foods that are|assortment can be built clude spinach, lettuce, beets, pota cook herself, number of r motion of the —Voltaire, is deodorized A nelection from which one week's Street | ther us hope sation for | might: tne den peas, ) ntoes, cel: tion have come, and come to stay the ing his because they serve public convenience 1 own notorist should realize that pment of this new form of locomotion doen not t nke awny from pedestrian the right to a reasonable use of the streets and highways,” says the report deve The pedestrain should cross streets at internections and the motorist must encourage him to quit jay-walking b him safety at these points and hot coming to a stop directly acroas the pedestrain's we when the policeman's signal has» chan 1 “Public streets, mittee, “are no assuring says the com. longer a safe Place for children to play. Pub. playgrounds should be sup. rted and multiplied so that street play for children may be eliminated.” ———$_$__/ a t ° t = r Her first offt entert I m the o 3 folk ¢ off fe | ¢ t t t ® I at ‘ t t t | “ e ° | be 4 s tor | | ty t e t et x fair t M . | s count FROM ‘ > Aves Readers have name and address. Letters All letters to The Star must Abuse (This is in answer to a» letter fr Mary Lee, wh in a letter to The Star recently criticized a jury for acquitting two men charged with abusing a dog- Editor.) roblem confronting cific D west, oft 1 thank our worthy lawmakers of t when {t comes to picking | conservation policy be enfor The € out justice, ot ual plan for cd gs our for uld have @o = m ests will be devised bh trained * on our furtes mg those lines, but there ts one c of us to assist and » prevent forest fires. lines followed by | government in its educational propa- a work for fire pr mtion, there estion I would like to make, rete or stone fireplaces be ed in all natural camping nd we bear the | ST° for the benefit of campers . and plenickers. These fireplaces |should replace the bill board and way for every is to he Along 9 denial on either side : had been t muti t does e mean If they are ac re “guilty.” je of “Justice.” | There was tne we have court | ys and judges. | | | _ For her inform so get written retire tc “Jury room" to 4 court instruc- the only “not j ernment KOLBEI ¥ THORDORSO! 1415 W. 58th st. jtions, and In the “de erdict possible was + OF THE TWELVE SCIENCE | Meany Ha! __ || EARTHQUAKES | Editor The Star | A government commission has been nending daily four|4 appointed in the Philippines to study engineering precautions to prevent a disaster to Manila by earth- As a mother, children to the university, may I ask Fire Marshal Laing a question? 7 we i quake. ome cescal| The Manila observatory has long buildin tall necessary fire es’| been famous for its work in connec- asbestos curtain, without | on with earthquakes, typhoons and nto print and appealing to| Volcanoes, The work done there is the board of regents to condemn the|90W of especial interest because of grand old historic Meany auditorium? | the fact that the growing congestion Does he know the fears of Uni.|!n the streets of American cities will |veraity home owners, who oppose the|™ake the loss of life and property | ® million dollar boulevard | Much greater in future disasters tha: grand approach to the campus, thru|!m the past. the aie ot a razed Meany hall? How| There have been 11 such disasters these property owners are for wid-|!n the last 21 years. Six of them ng 40th xt. from the bridge to the| Were in American lands, three were ampus instead, a thus saving | Japanese and two were Italian. Much |both Meany hall and thelr own homes | progress has been made in the study |from extr assessments? _| of earthquakes and, while {t cannot | Is there no nigger in the wood pile, | ¥et be said that science can predict |Marshal Laing? |them with any degree of accuracy, | M.E.). [it 4s probable that this will be done (Marshal Laing sa he notified|some day. Meanwhile, certain cities |v sity officials about the condi-| have adopted strict earthquake bulld- tion of Meany hall months ago, but|ing codes, Others are trying en- [that nothing has been done. Offi-|gineering experiments and others jclalx at the University deny this—| doubling their water supply, for it is fire that causes the most damage. cure the co-or ty's depart proposed NOW IS THE TIME TO ARRANGE FOR CHANGES IN TELEPHONE LISTINGS OR ADVERTISING COPY TO APPEAR IN THE NEW TELEPHONE DIRECTORY The Classified Section of the Telephone Directory is constantly used by the pubs lic as a business and professional guide. It is, therefore, important that business telephones be properly listed under the «. appropriate headings in this section. ¢: other advertising done by the ad) , capable of time? oe Coc! ONS A. A microscopic examination haa DAILY |shown that a hen contains from POEM 500 to 1,000 oocytes, or potential alone, ‘cause you'll find it a i ISN'T much fun when you play |i ‘8 missing Is fellowship tone, but dreary-like game. The main thing t you've only your own self to blame. When standing in solitude, thoughtless of friends, 2 man lays real life on the shelf. No sooner does real living egos. It takes about scven or cight| Thus Mrs, Mann sought to vary rs to lay them all, |the type of vegetables served at each $e 6 meal, and also to alter the style of Q. Where and when was the Por-|cooking them, Such — frequent sian meton first grown in the|changes in variety and appearance United States? and taste are to be recommended. A, In California in 1900. A list of vegetables, arranged for rer taining such ve. lentils, tomat and onlons, , peas and young Another list can be complied con: otables as asparagus, squash, cauliflower Or the vegetables can be arranged The manuscript will be closed tired of yourself, A he stand, tmong men and start till it ends for you sort of get rty old handshake and then, means a tot 4 But smiling alone {xn't it's mile, now] In a sick room over night? | under-| A, No, unless the room ts very known| poorly ventilated, or unteas the odor when you|is so hed@y as to disturb the we flat various day Q. Is It injurious to leave flowera|by the hou can cream them and on another pre pare them without sauce and upon another ¢ them into one dish 4, can be jot ife who, on 1 down yme days, green vegetaties, such as spinag the cabby varieties, ete. With a little planning t wifo can secure such a se ombine two or thre of and secure a according to thelr family: L the bean, pea and lentil type; fy and lettuce or he house. lection as hake your own hand, The world likes a mixer, good-hearted, well met, and his welcome by all never ends, We all can be mixers it only we'll get around among folks and make friends, You can’t find theshappiness other folks can if for only your own uelf: you care. You've yo€ to mix ‘round Iike a regular mant*stead of playin’ at Aull solitaire, F ACopyright, 1924, for The Star), t Sie ee mp patient. During the night the flow- considerable variety, from day to day ers give off carbon diowlde, but not in suffigient quantity to be harmful to anyone, (Pat ae Q. When did Wilbur Wright die, and of what disenso? A, He died of typhold fevetg May 50, 1912, would please any diner, WITHIN A FEW DAYS. You should arrange NOW for any \ THE desired changes. PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY

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