The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 12, 1924, Page 10

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A 10 THE SEATTLE TAR —- - o— - - —_=—_ -— / a . , » Ne = ) | ‘The Loves of Eunice and Claude—No.2|| Among th Book «| The Seattle Star = eLoves of Eunice and Claude—No.2|| Among the New Books * SS ee as bs “Seeteinnn, Maciel Ren oe ot eae | | The Second ‘Chapter’ in The Star's New Picture Novel, a Serial Love Story T m e ayn Sowe na ah gg Page Senge Me Ee arm aoe | e40 [ lold by Photographs in Daily Installme Cops and Fireme) What's in a Name bety th r to retain their own maid : he passes the 1 did his share to keep the fire hot i ¢ The same citizen when he ruled that the woman doctor in ri - e patrolman on the r the employ of the government t si H - “ borhood beat iliness. her married ne to the payroll or ‘ @ transcer t guess was tha citiz wouldn't get her check } the t i met 3 € in the role | Elsie Hill, member of the National c n i DE of cu t whe réd the fire Woman's part und a “Lucy Stoner , p i lads ame fe or prop married to Pr Albert Leavitt, has clung erty poor answer, be- to her maide ame successfully, but ad cause probs more citizens mitted the oth day when her baby wa ate « appeal to the or aid in their- hour born that its name was to be Elsie Hill ° ‘ of need th ured in the net of the Leavitt we ( law; and fire , too, sometimes become If this custom is to be established as a unpleasant about bonfires and littered precedent for the other “Lucy Stoners” P t , basements and 3 eur electric wiring. it may answer criticism of some of the . . Maybe it is in the attitude of the police- agitators who have held that using the | ; ‘ men and the firemen toward the public husband's name merely indicated the im | ove Maybe policemen become hard-boiled thru proved status of women in these civilized | * I t revie their daily association with eight-minute times. Tracing descent thru the father i | _ tenes. 50 Oe eggs, and pass on their just grouch to rather a social achievement, it is said Innocent citizens. If a woman has established a profe You will notice that the neighborhood ional reputation under her maiden name children may frequently be found playing it may be said with the newly wed hu about fire houses, that the firemen are band of Rita Weiman, author and usually friends of the small boy, that they wright, “why change the show him how the engine works and the Her husband is an advertising man, so | I c why of the chemical wagon. You also knows what he is talking about. | if notice that children never play around In private and financial life, however, ‘ os ied y patrol wagons, that it is a small percent- why not be Mrs, So and So? What earthly | an | z _ ‘ age of patrolmen who have the confidence difference does it make? Seems as tho it | h the poet-t at) fle of the kids on their beat; and that, while | should save a lot of embarrassing situa- 4 ensentia t in picturing t —— <r most boys announce they are going to be tions! t t as of i a] p firemen when they grow up, few boys wr thoes wi r | W hat F olks hanker for the cop's job. Speaking of Preparedness : re 4 Macdonaig| ‘dition of Christog "i | Are Saying | Yet policemen who are human, and come T WAS no less a person than the la- |! “COL LISION! e ey ‘Bl ke f h 2 tei Mar od fee ee aicat tae the Where the I Begir \ j in daily contact with children, find them- mented Patrick Henry, of “give-me- A Firat thins svnnreeeurer ed cee Wer Ureeey Sete: \ mes Meta ite sat dp Selves idolized. For instance, these cross- ing men who guide school children across busy boulevards. Any man who holds that position for a year will be found en rap- port with his wards. Isn't that sufficient reward for every man to try to make himself just a little More gracious toward his fellow men? liberty-or-death” fame, who reminded u that no better way of judging the future could be attained than by’ referring to the past. The idea seems to have lodged securely in the mind of one San Francisco lady, at least. Appealing for divorce, this lady assures the court that on last Christmas day her husband lurched into his home so very, very drunk that he went to sleep in the presence of comy She fears the same sort of humiliating experien this com- ing Christm nks a divorce will a sure prev and will the court please hurry, since the time is short? Preparedness? Huh! These big. birds who are always planning for that sort of thing for the nation can easily learn a thing or two from this plain lady of the Golden West. She goes after definite results without any windy vociferation. Paper Profit HE younger John D. Rockefeller, it's claimed, has “made” about $100,000,- 000 by the stock market boom, that sum being the estimated gain in market value of securities he owns. However, it’s a “paper profit.” The extremely rich, as a rule, do not cash in. By selling, they’d lose control of indus- tries back of the securities. And modern Croesuses are more interested in CON- TROL than in, immediate profit. A Boys’ Era N AIRPLANE will be built by students be ive, Younger Convicts HIRTY years ago the average age of ! t convicts sent to state prisons was at New York university. They expect from 32 to 42. Yow the av years. And under 21, Among many reasons, the drug traffic | looms largest. Majority of big crimes by | young men are committed in temporary recklessness imparted by drugs. Dope is to fly it in the Pulitzer races next year. How long until lads in knee trousers will be building flying machines as they now build radio sets? Youth again will probably lead the way while the older gen- eration sits back and “waits until it’s per- fected,” as with radio. ge age is from 22 to 25 rly a third of them are Darius Green was a lad. ' the foundation of modern criminality, ? ? Answers to Your Questions ? ? oe es DEN se PL a eaten ae? | Q What is the difference between| given free of charge to patients who! Q. How many miles of Mattees a clinic and a dispensary? are able to walk in and then re-! are there in th 4 States A. A clinic is an institution or @\ turn home, no beds being provided 4. Accordiy Sy nergy jadi department of a medical college\as in @ hospital. The terma are there are 2.5412 pape Ec So which is devoted to the examination | sometim. used interchangeably: | is for milea Of Gilles. ana and free treatment of patients. A| however, the word clinic has more! towns dispensary is an institution usually| of the element of research and je oa connected with a hospital in which| teaching than has a dispensary. medical and surgical treatment is, PERE ES Q. Where the navy prisons Q How many hanas does it tak te dated States: locaton? . Ho y hanas d ake At Portsmouth, N. ; Mare 7 SCIENCE to win a game of auction bridge?| ssland, Calif; Parts Teioade no SUICIDE | A. The. game is won when oneland Cavite, Philippine Islands” | side has a trick score of 30 or more pecig $$$ $$$ $$$ | points: it may de completed in one HY do people commit sulcide?| hand or more. The rubber of 250| Q When were tooth brushes first This question has been asked| honor points goes to the couple win- Used? since the dawn of history, and has) "ing two successive games or t The first mention of a brush never been satisfactorily answered,| ut of three games, but the cous or the teeth is found tn folune 60 i ytcinning the two games may not o/ an ency ia published in r, while a motive sometimes is] inning i ae ble in individual cases, there| ave the highest score, and in that|Leipsio by John Henry Zedler in kde many more cases that are mys-|C@8¢, the rubber goes to the couple 1749. Previous to that approgimate . af can hs Sa 3 e Shaving the hig core time, only roots or rags had been lories, and also there are such events | having th cheers sere \ased ' “suicide epidemics. | | One of these historic epidemics oc-| Q. In what states has the popu-| tarred in Ancient Greece among] lation increased the most since the| Q. When did the Moyer-Haywood young women. Others have occurred| previous census? | Pettibone trial take place? in recent times in Oriental coun-| A. As follows: 1920 | tries. Until recently, ese kill York. .$ 10,385,227 ed themselves in large numbers upon the occurrence of any public dis aster. In the United States, with no teachings that suicide is meritorious, as was the with the Japanese, there are 13,000 suicides a enna, Calif. Ohio Q What is a limited or constjtu- 1) tional monarchy? A. One in which the sovercion ta xe | limited to the exerctse of particular to | | powers or functic by the laws or realm ase about can get an a question of fact or in- constitution of th year. There are, of course, large tion by writing The Se eat © humbers of unknown suicides not! | t1, gtar Question Q. Who was the last king to be Included in the figures and many) | New York ave. forced off the throne of Great more who made unsuccessful at-| |p ©, and inclosing 2 cents in | | Brita lempts to end their lives. Dr. Wm.| | tooge” stamps for reply. No A, James Il. This waa in the) Bteinach, noted psyc vist, of New) | medical, legal or marital ad- bloodless revolution of 1688 York, says the underlying factor in| | vice, Personal replies, confi- | | fhost cases is a disordered mentality| | dential. All letters must be | | f Vr a mental disease which might| | sienea | Smoking Room Jasily escape detection. — | Stories a | Ho work’s the thing that all little folk of humor insists that they do it. They oft take books home so their lessons, lent story toller they'll know. In the evening they sit and go to it | anecdotes Arithmetic, history, readin’ and such are the things that they study at night. A lamp and a table and chair give the touch that will help to mak little folks bright. | short time It's study and study for Sister and Buddy, as thru their books slowly|the present Turkish question, they go. And then they will stop and ask mother and pop some things) “‘Ever hear about the two Har. that they’re anxious to know. vard freshmen?’ asked Lodge, ‘Welt, “I can’t do this problem; it's too hard for me,” says Bud of a problem| the first freshman asked his room. of his, Then daddy replies, “Come and sit on my knee and I'll show you| mate where all their pins had gone how easy it is to. Dad hems and he haws and tho reason’s becaune he 1s finding it's true sa rule, that his mem’ry's gone bad since his days as a lad, He's for gotten the things learned while in school. | (Copyright, 1924, for The Star) know, ‘cause their teacher sense and was an excel He had more pat almost any man you might meet. 1 remember someon@ asked | “'"'Darned If T know,” replied the other freshman; “pins are such fun- ny things; they are pointed in one | direction and headbd in another,’ | ey | We like bridge better than cronn word puzzles, |switch bridge int wwe you can a poker game, Playing bridge Brid get, that's the modern debutante : bat idea of murriod life, soot ERB and working UT eR ENO! A. At Botse City, Idaho, in 1907,| to illustrate points than | him, al ago, what he thought of | For what happens next see tomorrow’ "THE WEST IS IN THE SADDLE! | Star. DR. HENRY VAN KE, preach | Star Washington nur 1922 New York A . W ABHING TON, Dec. 1 Changes in the per ft board Under Ay rules rt | membe an must wtart at the ommit an im nervice pass away or fi », the n men step up last, after s within ite grasp nt, because the nfl has as a member of t committee, How Do YOU Do It? BY DANA SLE f and a banking exp at the “note wi small sum in J are even iting the stumped to do that his head; so accustor banking clerks to con little Interest table book YOU go about tt to hat per cent one f How " af rod bik s do reduce the fra and the numera to the p lem; half goes into a hund and sfx one-hundred 4 a fraction times; so the an- ire anxwer sixteen dia ~ How many famous novelists ann the average technical h Mterature examination tn Ke small college 1 this NRY L. DOHERTY Ne rk: “The coming HE situation of t to hela Zi tawnere nich tok || Sez Dambell Dud: ful hullabaloo o there in.the cour yard?” asked King jeorge nervously. vot a thing, held by the at [ A Thought ) ; ft |i f the impor | amittee, unless Whoso boasteth himself of a false eter to have rd, but the thaltinanship of [Sift is like clouds and wind without grikcs | tach ta ‘ommerce Com- | Fain—PTov. 25:14 h nickel fliv- n In that case ator O ele ver,” replied the Ernst of Kentucky would become N° MORE delay, vain boaster, but keeper of the privy th hTer tiie dudliglaty Gois begin.—Dryden ecale. Approy Leena -————_- FABLES ON HEALTH doth) STUDYING FOODS ) by westerners include agric Mann found his second lesson to be| nature existing in certain foods » * pe Recerca by Senator:? concerned with the comp on of | esse nutrijon. Their chem! ations, held nown so they have br Time has shown that certain mate- | come d as vitamin A, B, C, rials are most usef food. The | etc. headed by Je proteins of dif-| The first two are the “water and Washington fi nd carbohy-| fat solubles” so essential to body nu ies and trition, while vitamin C is found in tim per cent of a mile is a ners who come to y off our dollars none is likelier ever to re ceive a warmer welcome than a tall, angular, awkward English | man who arrives Dec, 28 to re | colve $25,000, He Js Viscount | Cecil, who hag been, awarded the first prize of the Woodrow Wil- son Foundation for his work in | behalf of world peace. As Lord Robert, he became known to many Americans dur ing and after the war and it is doubtful if a single American, thus fortunate, failed instantly ke him. Homely as a Lincoln and as {i}-fitted in his clothes, he compelled new acquaintances to look beyond externals and meet the real man beneath, And one was not long the case of there was in concluding, in Lord Robert, that n, indeed. of a long Lord line of leaders in British public life, He was the third son of the | Marquis of Salisbury and be: E L he chek he arquis of Sa ] ] ef ar hes ; Pere Peden tate <t08 longed by birth in the very inner late Senator Lodge was an| circie of British nobility, Shy and ustere and prosy person, with nO! sincere in manner, he gave no (AN TIEID Wecbiing rate that mee eae evidence of feeling that such ron Ho opr: op pe jot Scie gs as classes exist. From the \ Washington, “He had a very keen| ‘nes 98 i xi rom time he left school to become his ecretary he has been en father's | waged in public affairs and that is his passion, Ho thinks of the | public as a whole and his devo. tion is given to it as a whole; he never has been much of a party neha |than the law's allowance of game {and tho others will not, elther. | Of course tho meanest man ts the sts look almost dominoes or Pe ert en - These mah jor as old-fashioned , Shockers, as ‘SMILES ‘True sportsmen will not kill more | Jone who told his children Santa died. Noxt merinest is the one buy ing only educational toys, $25,000 Well Bestowed! | have been n Great evitable ch , tive In the council and of the I Natio! it was necessary firs Africa to point the way by send ing him’ to Geneva as her repre sentative. thoug for South gue of Whether one believes in the League of Nations not, one cannot khow Lord Robert—now Viscount—Cecll and not realize that the league organization cor tains at | 5 nd wi to mak for man who |: and intelli one istently complete unsel the the working gently league an ishness food of a instrument mankind It would be hard better selection than the trustee of the Woodrow Wilson Founda have made for their first ward, to name a tion LOCAL FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS COMMUNITY HOTEL 6s, 1948 @ 9F 6.40% Ist to yield Chanslor Lyon Co. dst. 6148, 1935 @ par to yield 614%. Bloedel Donovan ‘Timber Co., Ist 61448 @ par to yield 614%. Thomsen Clark Timber Co., Ltd., Ist 7s, 1934 @ par to yield 7%, . 30. H. BURR, CONRAD & BROOM Serond Ave, ISL iot-38! Call or Phone for Circulurs and lemon juices and ing in diet, when scurvy hi gress te NOW IS THE TIME TO ARRANGE FOR CHANGES IN TELEPHONE LISTINGS OR ADVERTISING COPY TO APPEAR THE NEW TELEPHONE DIRECTORY The Classified Section of the Telephone Directory is constantly used by the pub- lic as a business and professional’ guide. It is, therefore, important that business telephones be properly listed under the appropriate headings in this section. The manuscript will be closed WITHIN A FEW DAYS. te You should arrange NOW for any desired changes. THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY 8) ae

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