The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 7, 1925, Page 8

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PAGE 8 THE SEATTLE STAR co Newapaper terpeive Apon, 1307-09 Sevent and United Gliman, N nan. ot ] Pres Servic, | 4 r Yo ffice st ’ a per Smee — ar $2.00. By carrt Ente ond clase + The Eleventh Commandment N a period when there are numerou elements tearing at the Bible, why should a body of perfectly fine Chri fians, seriously-minded peop! get to @ether to especially interpret, condense and make more readily understood the Ten Commandments? The work was pet formed, nearly 20 centuries ago. +> While Jesus of Nazareth made few di rect or indirect references to the Mosaic Decalogue, he, undoubtedly, had closely btudied it, and he gave to the world what Might be called the Eleventh Command- ment! “LOVE ONE ANOTHER” There may be doubters of Moses’ awful interview with the Almighty, but this Eleventh Commandment is fact, if any historical record is. And it, alone, is enough for humanity. “Love one another.” It is the whole Decalogue.. Do and you cannot fail to revere the Cr you cannot fail to honor your parents; you cannot kill, tommit adultery perjure yourself, or covet what is rightfully another's. } Obedience to ‘any law is thru fear or love of the law. Most of the crimes of our period are because men have little love of the law, but fear it, and fear always breeds folly. + Jesus knew man. “A commandment {his own) I give unto you that ye love one another as I have loved you.” Child of an immaculate conception or not, Jesus was giving his life for others. Service! The spirit of both Decalogue and Eleventh Commandment. The law, concise, definite, plain, certain! All may inderstand it. All may have it in the heart. + Why revise Detteronomy? The whole bf the law is in “Love one another.” And as you love this Eleventh Command- Ment so shall you avoid sin against God or your fellow-man. | Preserving Mother's Voice AD of bemoaning the fact that radio has cut deeply into phonograph and record sales, recording companies might take a leaf out of the photography industry. . For a long time, photography was very largely devoted to preservation of the likenesses of people. Inexpressible the consolation and comfort in looking upon the faces of the “loved and lost awhile,” or the octogenarian might see how he looked when in the cradle, for instanc In thousands of American families there are old “daguerreotypes,” bleared by tears and kisses, that millions of dol- lars could not buy. Human solace and helpfulness! The mother has not wholly lost her dead baby. One looks on the features of dear old Dad, dead 50 years ago, and again hears what he said about a boy being square toward everybody and doing his level best in everything. ' Why not with us, as long as we live, the happy laugh of our children, the loving words of mother, the sterling advice of father, even the tender whisper- ings of sweetheart? We pay $3 for a phonograph record of dead Caruso. The pile of jazz records grows like a stack of batter cakes before an ambidextrous cook. A new catchy song is out. We grab it, needle it to death in three evenings and hate it ever afterward. What wouldn't you give, old gray head, to hear mother’s delicate, sweet voice in “Lead Kindly Light,” or “Bye, Baby Bunting,” or father’s hesitating oration that time when he performed before your primary grade graduating class? What the photograph does in preserva- tion of loved ones’ faces the phonograph can do in preservation of their voices and yet in not one home in a thousand is advantage taken of it. The human animal sometimes never sees and is, very often, slow to grasp blessings which the Lord lays down be- fore him. Maybe, because this is the era of speed. Bpe .| The Seattle Star h Ave, atier at Beattie, Wn Published Daily Seattle, Wash. 0600. nthe $2.00, | ; « Co. Phone MAtn f March &, 187? \ Keep This From the Wife =)? the dentists’ want the earth? Anato L mists, psychoanalysts, hygienists, absent-minded doc that most human ills, all from bunions to dandruff, faulty teeth, and now Southern educator who that, if husband is vig orously profane, it is becat he has bad teeth, and he should be ordered to the first painless performer handy dietician tor advise the way are due an illustrious advises wives , even som up to comes Perhaps, the idea is that, when hus band géts thru biting the forceps, he won't have a cuss word left in him Perhaps, wife can vision a_ toothless husband who can only harmlessly blubber when he undertakes to cus Howbeit, the dentists will greet with three cheers the idea that husbands must visit their shops for moral reform, at the regular Dental Association chargé per tooth. The Undertaker Will Agree HE Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals, in a recent release, said: yood news first. We have turned the corner in prohibition enforcement, and may expect a steady improvement until a satisfactory condition is established,” The New York Times, on the same day, “Five deaths from alcohol poison- said: ing and one case of acute alcoholism with in 36 hours were reported yesterday. K Vital statistics made public last week showed that deaths from alcoholism to- e in May, the largest ‘om that cause for the taled 79 in the sta number of deaths month since 1913. The Great Three Gone 1B LESS than a decade Death has taken the three greatest independent Roosevelt, La Follette and Bryan. And no leader anywhere near their size is visible. Great is the national loss in the depart ure of this splendid trio of men who defied party when partisanism was wrong and who were great in their confidence in the common people. Two of these leaders were great enough to bolt their party tickets, outright. Bryan was always defying the strong ele- ments in his party. In his campaigns bi-metallism, anti-imperialism and temper- ance reform, Bryan fought Big Busines and powerful elements in his own party, courageously, persistently and at the risk | of his political all. | Millions followed these three men. It takes courage, high patriotism, intelli- gence, to make a genuine independent. Mil- lions are still independent. It is not well that the country be left without a strongly independent element, well led. Roosevelt, La Follette, Bryan gone! Who cometh? Uncovering the Enemy CIENTIFIC circles seem to accept the reported discovery of the cancer germ by the English investigator, Dr. W. E. Gye, and his co-laborer, Barnard, the famous London microscopist. The discov- ery is but the first short step toward a goal at which scientific brains have aimed ev since “the germ theory” was first presented. It is one thing to discover a particular germ and quite another to discover how to deal with it. Science has associated with the tubercular germ, for instance, for over a quarter-century, and still the dealing with it is pretty largely guess- work. Whatever sort of germ Gye and Barnard may have dis¢overed, and whatever their difficulty in dealing with it, they have started something in their peculiar use of a combination of camera, microscope and ultra-violet ray in hunting the cancer germ. Human life seems to depend, very largely, upon su ful warfare upon in- tangibles and invisibles. Suce to the “Big Bertha” that science has got trained on the cancer germ! P P Answers to Your Questions P ? Q. What is the meaning of the term heliocentric? A. This is an signifying that the sun is taken aa\ if OU can astronomical term| | Wie center of reference or view. it| | Ue Star Question Editor, | |tracted by pulling on the shank |New York ave, Washington, || without furt Ke is opposed to yeocentric, which indt | twtthout further damage to the tig 1,| | D. Cy und inclosing ents In | | guce eates that the carth is taken,aa the! | 1 i WY Ged NONI Toaier, # | | loose stamps for reply, are | medical, legal or mari ad- {| parce | @ Why js it that strawberries | vice. Personal replies, confl- |} ong oq ‘ ‘ rr Q. Is John McCormick, the hus-| | dential, All letters must be ||.” | raspberries will not_ make band of Colleen Moore, the famous! | signed, |Be0d Jelly without the addition of rish tenor? x- SSE ED aims «Serene ig | *Pple A. Colleen Moore's husband is not) fishhook has entered the flesh, do| y \. These are apt to be more or the Irish tenor. He is the West-| not attempt to remove it by pull-| poy lacking in .pectin or acid, or ern representative of the First Na-|ing it directly out. Such a pro-\ 20s Gnd therefore rill not make Honal pictures. 5 es AA tal AB Sali ab St (ses jelly by the ordinary methods ddnegeed the tasues. The better plan ts tol mu te ecialy the cane tf the Q. What is the best method of re-| depress the shank of the hook, push is quite ripe, because both gmoving a fishhook from the A, When the barbed flesh? | the end of point ajan 7 NIN ge SHOES t any question of f | formation by writing forward and outward in upward direction, J aie ———KB j} out on the answer to || 1he barbed end ia then cut t or in- | The Seat- 1322 an a wire || been removed, the hook can be ex pectin and progresses. and bring it|? . ae aa Q. Can you sug for removing mobile wheels sy dirt from auto before surface at another point, off with cutter or a file, and having act decrease as ripening est A good method repalnting wire brush.and cotton waste rub the 1. Saturate the @reasy parts with| crude oil and turpentine, or with kerosene, and let these softeners do their work for some hours. Then| jwith a sharp putty knife, scraper | ; “yo shoes are lookin’ shubby,"gsays the missus to her®nate. | grease off, and finish by waal ‘ “You'd better brush ‘om up a bit; they're in an awful state, | te surface well with turpe Nepenieacd Why den't you stop and think about the prestige that you lose b be Se" Bd goin’ down to work each day with dust-bespattered shoe Q. hea " i | fo father, after bre t, seeks the brush and rag and shine, Sas l.2 aout via he A fas dean he, “I'll take your tip, and get my to lookin’ fine.” A half an he a hand WHatrns er hour of labor, ‘cause you know hi ers stick, And then he finds | loof@ , Nahi tas the polish drie r than s wren usually builds her! Of course you wouldn't t if he, then and there, would atop, | neat tn a hole in a treo, but wilt but mother intervenes with ¢ the best of what you've got.” §o |uae any available crevice, and haa\ Hitle chunks of polish, with his fingers are applied, and then the brush | been known to place ity bulky near| and rag ure used and father's satiatied of sticks in the pocket of a coatl But mother's still complaining he calmly sneak And this | hanging ina shed, The enya are ae fe just the story that will happen every till father tires of hearing Jor ‘clght in numbor, very. thte kely | ft on coming home at night, So, after while, he stops down town and and very finely speckled all over has ‘om shined up right (Copyright, 1026, for The Star) with pinkish brown valued each season, Two broods are ( UT OUR WAY ITS ENTHRALUNG STVFFY, THE VASTNE THE MYSTERIOUS SPLENDOR OF IT ALL ONY WHO UNDER THE DESERT STARS CAN REALIZE Ted BIGNESS A PERSON SLEPT Y WAY OF UNINERSE - FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 19% HORE WONG THAG, ONIN A MAN wo Any HAD A DRINK FOH Ss MONTHS RIDIN! TH’ OESERT * A HIPPED, HO f 1TH FUST CHANCE SALOON Kins REALIZE & TH’ BIGNESS 0 11115 fle: UNIVERSE } BY WILLIAMS) ( — End of the Rainbow The t lef and perm to gone ce to see her the life of he upe ne 20th —— totes or ne sonnet ew Ss an nas — SED . 5 Se By J. R. Justice P. / t B F l ] l BY reason of rapidly in of the city until the completion aying to Be Fooled Electrically [Be poten oldie a Me oir -aet te semesle By Senator George W. Norris, of Nebraska should need a more abundant four or five years heyce . 1 supply of water IF this power plant would (Copyright, 1925, for The Beattle Btar) ‘ AND such supply was owned also plant the steam plant —- — — _ J | by the city at Cedar lake; | now operated in the city, at hia tw th that is supplied by ee of the homes of America 1F Lake Youngs, a natural | about half the cost by generated and distributed | On ow reservoir be n Cedar river | AND there should suddenly Ont r ‘ y r 1 mit of t trust HEN the. people» of the and the city was also owned by develop strong opposition to the i ‘ p pow ade out to ¢ cor United State at t learn Seattle | plan to bring into Lake Youngs for ¢ umer's nh of the that improvement in devel: | | AND only. needed-to be. con: | Ail of the Cedar river water by 5 expenses of the agent or 4 opment of — electricit ha nected with the existing water aqueduct; Ds T think t who went to Canada for the pur renaiied peat IF there should also begin a@ ' oft hyd 1 me of deceiving the very ma iv a’ anna) orthan a nile hue and cry for the immediate f oO Canada, } out of whose pocketbook it must tdo maid? tHEAE adonentton construction of the two steel parsed ur ed by the big be paid had been completed, all but 368 | Pipe lines, which would mean tates, F to owne fight raging In the United State | it will be to in. the AND the contractors wished be cons ted, nenate over Muscle Shoals. Mar- | they will begin to rea | to throw their job be. | AND there should be a lot of velous propaganda has been dis. | demand that the benefit of cause they wanted more money dust and smoke over the situa- tributed thruout the whole cour wonderful service be exte | than their cont called for tion try in an effort to persuade the to all the people, whose money, | WHAT ought to be done WHAT would you think people to permit the government in fact, already has gone into | about it? about it? lo give away this valuable prop | the enterprise e568 erty after it has been developed | At Muscle Shoals the power ila IT 4 WHAT FOLKS SAY th $150,000,000 of the people's comen from the great Tennessee counc mone iver, owned 1 Lake Young of the Cedar F. HEATH COBB, financial? The electric trust has been at u 2 river water t 1 aqueduct expert: “Nine out of 10, business | work in every comm tr a people AND the water department men are unable to talk without | to influence member of the ation, when the stream is | wished to bring only a part of | pencils in their hands.” house and members of the senate developed xe he this water by | e steel pipes one) s to turn Muscle Shoals over to | so cheap that Ap IF the pla the council | PROF. M Jaffa, U. of C.: private parties for operation in the ultimate cost of the con- | would include the construction | “The world's strongest charac Canadian mu And the few who have been sumer of a hydro-electric power plant ters and the most progressive thousands of standing up in the senate against How long will an intelligent near Lake Youngs, to be op: peoples have been and are meat th charg this unholy and uneven fight and patriotic people permit the erated with the surplus water eaters.” this, the | have been everywhere denounced natural resources of their land that would develop some 40,000 ere reiterated | as socialists and bolshevist ] to be utilized for private gain? horse-power at a lower MARY ASTOR, movie actress; for the } y Fee | How long will it be before they than 4 ower is “Men from 19 to 30 seem to be 1 yh gamo of min A yet the power monopol Te jue and demand that the oped in the Northwest | just blah. All they think about. Seal atiot hn? haw beet as not succeeded in getting | I easing of cheap cle | AND it should be shown that | is flasks of whisky or gin in 5 - hat the | Muscle Shoals, They tried and | Shall bo extended to ¢ | this plant would take care of | the hip pocket, automobile rides pa bain to m great extent they su i all the light and power needs |! and petting parties.” pigdt a ; ceeded in fooling the American | = = 1 maginatior tricity, In the homes of Amer ca, and all for the purpose of misleading those very consumers who lectricity in homes across YOUR electric from any is an ftem that you must pay, and that goes to make up the expenses that the electric trust was put to in trying to mis. represent the governmental sys ght bill to. private com pan tem of Canada, Some of us not pay t clectricity stock tual cost of our premiums on watered profits fictitious values, t is more cruel than all the rest, a con iderable sum for our own decep: but w tlon Nght bill coming into a household in this Every single electric by telling him all sorts hoods in regard to the manufacture of fertilizer, Fer aide but had to reach the farmer wan a issue They the Shoals erating base th were bound to prevent development of Muscle into electrical gen might Jeop: t compe They an hat Mize or at te that been monopoly knew the experiment had Muscle Shoal and the demonstration of cheap generation and distribution of made to the people, their goone—while it might not once mado at electricity be actually cooked—would at least begin to stew. They can't afford to have cheap and abundant electricity put into the homes of this country, It means tho begin. ning of the end of thelr own rates and supply. And now in their desperation lest they shall not be able to turn Musclo Shoals over to privates parties, they aro starting another form of propaganda. This is to use the power generated at Muscle Shoals for some unnecessary and unprofitable business that will use It up and keep it out f Mr. Fixit of The Star Here Undertakes to Remedy Your Troubles, if They Are of Public Interest Mr. Fiit: I have been con fined in jail for 10 days on a grand larceny charge, I am entitled to bail, and cannot un derstand why I am not allowed my liberty. [ wish you to look into the matter! J, B.C. Mr. Fixit has given your case 1 lot of time and finds that ou are clearly entitled to ball There are certain complication in the way, it the chief one js finding some who 1 willing to go your bail. The matter has been discussed with your attorney, who ts the proper person to arrange for your release, and he has prom ined to call on you at once: 4a & Mr magazine tell the such a Vivit solicitors so they will truth. Recently 1 told solicitor 1 would take Can you fix some month, After receipt to find of a the for one and paid for that time magazines wards 1 read the 1 had signed some contract to take the magazines for two years. 7 only want them for one month for which I have What ahall I do about it PUZZLND. Write the magazine the publications for one month only When that time is up. refuse fo accept them from the post sort paid the that publisher of you wish man, If you feol that you have heen misted, And remember (hat the proper time to road a contract or you sign it receipt ts before Mr. Fixit: The railroad cross ing on 12th ave. N. B., ond block north of 48th st. is in a dangerous condition tis almost impossible to cross here, and is likely to get hurt in attempting tt. Please fia it TAXPAYER Superintendent Jackson of the utilities department, will have this investigated at once, and make whatever repairs are some one needed, with ——ae | By Mrs. Walter Ferguson @ ——— —_ a | Gomera) Lit c er ent creeping after biite | promined joy, ut to place it nume ' ‘ k | hundredfoid iv P pot of gold ha come the 5 A “ di em mu one om who member of the supren ellige court of that and a : x The 1 were w en to s, ID. . wes Concentration One of the trends of modern business is for busy men ystematize their finances by concentrating them —selecting an institution through which to carry on their financial transactions that has unlimited scope and will be equal to any contingency. | For Seattle men who wish to adopt this practical pol- tematized TH i y PRIDAY, AUG, 7 If 40, you are domineering You have pride and spirit You have loyal friendships And your personality attracts. Your sense of humor is keen You laugh easily And others ecateh your spirit You very original And have your own slant You have unusual talent That may bring you fame I an unusual way You are lucky in love, FINANCIAL — Facilities _ Service _..Counsel icy, this bank, with its strong resources, highly sys- departments, experienced personnel and extensive connections offers un- usual conveniences, There is no account too large or too small for this bank to render satisfactory service—no financial transaction too complex for it to expedite—no type of commercial -banking or trust service which it is not competent to perform, THE SEATTLE NATIONAL BANK. SECOND AVENUE AT. COLUMBIA Resources More Than 25 Millions DRO ‘ nits

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