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el! CHANCE FOR © CHEAPER BREAD But Grain Farmers Will Get Better Prices | CANADA'S CROP DOUBLE | Export Duty May Be Placed | on the Grain WASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—Better | prices are on the way for the farm-| ers wing states, but it a lower bread ¥ € Deavier tariff went Into effect Canadian wheat virtuatly has stop- ped coming into the United States, e@: y 70,000 bushels being imported ar this year, as compared with G.82 D in1924 Canada’s this yearn crop has nearly doubled ne estimated at 400,- juty for the purpo ort flour, and the radians promises to send up prices be: ntemplated when the tariff was fixed This situation, however, It was ex-| ed, is due to the unusual condj- of a bumper Canadian erop and ormal crop in the United ctor that had not been and which would not be repeated, WILL “REFOREST © STATE LAND Long-Bell Company Plans) Huge Longview Project Sept 18 project ev ivi n by a firm started immediately 1) Lumber company, accord: | > an announcement made by M.| Nelson, wsident. The Piogram by the gt Ryderwood, Wash, center of company’s logging operations seeding on the ground from the timber has been taken. Ri tation is to be carried on at th rate at which timber is removed, anc the plan is to —_ within three b the ‘end o of a three m survey by company ex re modeled somewhat after those} sed in successful reforestation now under way in the Catifornia redwood district. Plans now call for a Nurseries | to provide| gg from 3,000 to| ly are contems| ng operations |, according to 1 snags large ute fire hazards are} slash disposal is| pianned. Close! nd the plant. | nus woods to mong the pl up forest areas ai TOWN DESERTED Prosperous Mining Commu- | nity Now Is “Ghost Town” | | i} | REDDING, Cal., Sept. 18.—The lit 4le community of Kennett, in Shasta county, has passed into the “ghost | sown" class. | Once a bustling copper camp, Ken- viett’s industry has been suspended. ‘fhe Monmouth company smelter, ‘ormerly the source of income for has been closed permanent- the Keystone mine, for 20 nod producer, has uncover | vein of paying ore ts of Kennett, which a| s ago numbered 1,500, have | begun to desert the town, and nothing} remains but the “ghost’” of former | prospe @. ae a slick spreading cheese! ? Bluhill H a H and for cooking “ask for Horlick’s The ORIGINAL i Malted Milk For Infants, | aes | | TheAged | Rich milk, combined with extract of choice grains, reduced to powder. Very nourishing, yet so easily digested that @ it is used, with benefit, by ALL AGES, niling or well, An upbuilding diet for infants, invalids, nursing mothers, Con- venient, Light Nourishment, when faint or hungry. Taken hot, upon retiring, it | induces sound, refreshing sleep. Instant- & prepared at home—no cooking. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1925. Nation’s Foremost Book of Health “How TO LIVE New 18th (1925) Edition By Prof. Irving Fisher of Yale University | and Dr. Eugene Lyman Fish, in Collabo- ration with the Hyatene Roference Hoard Rewrilten bi Almost every aiiestion one could ask about how ti suffering ts pininly $2 4, D Vunk & Wagnalls 964-380 Fourth ———$ THE SEATTLE STAR PAGE & America Will Not Stop Seeking Conquest of the Air ESPITE ‘THE LOSS of the giant dirigible Shen- andoah, with its appalling loss of lives, despite the failure of the naval seaplane to complete its non- stop flight to Honolulu, with the final and dramatic rescue of the crew, “Americans are not going to give up the task of conquering the air,” insists the Buffalo Evening Post, and this resolve finds indorsement in many editorial utter- ances throughout the country. “It is not the American way to give up in the face of de- feat,” declares the Savannah News, which is confident that the failure of the Pacific flight and the loss of the big air- ship will not prevent our Government from continuing its experiments with both heavier-than-air and lighter-than- air flying machines. The men who fell to death with the Shenandoah, the Albany Evening News reminds us, “be- lieved in the future of aerial navigation, were willing to risk their lives in pioneering, and would not have Americ: say ‘stop.’” The Atlanta Jowrnal declares that, “Sacrifice for a ‘vision splendid’ is never unavailing, and the blood of those who fall in battle for the skyways will become in truth the seed of ultimate victory.” But while public opinion, as reflected in the press, does not seem in a mood to approve any panicky retreat from the field of aviation, neither does it seem content to ignore the problems raised by the Shenandoah disaster. The de- mand for a full investigation of our naval and military air policy has been brought to a head by Col. William Mitchell, deposed assistant chief of the Army Air Service, who in- vited court-martial by his sensational charges against the War and Navy Departments. It is not only in this country that our experiments in avi- ation are exciting intense interest, for the Shenandoah dis- aster created almost as great a sensation in Europe as in the United States. In this week’s “Literary Digest” you will be able to under- stand the trend of American public opinion on the subject, you will sense the problems that have arisen and which will undoubtedly come before Congress. The story as told in “The Digest” this week makes vastly entertaining reading. A British Thrust at American Religion A slam at American religion by The Church Times, the leading “Anglo-Catholic” organ of the Church of England in London, is keenly resented by The Living Church (Milwaukee, Wis.), recognized as rep- resentative of the High-Church. wing of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States. The Church Times in a two-column ed- itorial characterizes American religion as Puritanism that has allied itself with Capitalism. ‘This American Puritanism,” we read, “with its Calvinistic tradition and Methodist emotionalism, has probably. been less affected than any other form of Christianity by modern ideas. Like the old Calvinists it still holds that,God is chiefly glorified by hard work and money-getting, and that to restrain social pleasure is asacred duty.” Read both sides of the controversy in this week’s issue of “The Lit- erary Digest.” Here Are Some of the Other Vital News Stories in The Literary Digest for September 19th On Sale Today at All News-stands, 10c. Murderous Maniac at Large | As the Coal People See the Strike | German Recovery Under the First Year of the Dawes Plan The Man Behind Soviet Diplomacy The Oily Serpent in Mosul’s Eden As Europe Sees Our Tourists The Handwriting on Industry’s Wall The Fall of the House of Stinnes Oregon’s Wooden Railroads (Just Published) a Lite Nertoninion Institute, ot Enlarged 0 prevent or relieve physical Women as Chauffeurs The Negro as an Artist The Babbitts Are Boiling Hot “America First’ —In Lewd Literature Teachers as Peacemakers The Man Who Wears a Swarm of Bees in His Hat The “Charleston” Is Here to Stay! Schools for Lady Life-Savers How a Sorcerer Bluffed a Surgeon Many Interesting Illustrations Including the Best of Humorous Cartoons TheliteraryDigest | FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary) NEW YORK The Genesis of Pink Lemonade How English Names Trap American Tongues Spanking Babe Ruth and Petting Ty Cobb Has Dempsey, Like Samson, Been Shorn of His Power? Stocks vs. Bonds for “Long- Term” Investors Department of Good English Whether SIMILES AND THEIR USE By GRENVILLE KLDPISER (Just Published) A elmile strengthens or adorns Ing, for Wy ae “white a full of them, Yeu. can writings of World's Greatest Thinkers Sympathy salon, Tible Simile Quota 380 pager ia jot ot; $2.14, poatpald, run enalls Company, Publishers ] Fourth Avenuo, New York, How to Adorn Your Speech! you write speeches, stories, sermons, advertising, or merely personal letters, you need that helpful book bellish Your Writing mt on of Prose Simile Phrases on Love, Griog, ete; Miscellaneous simile Birasess Poetic pelle Verses; ich treasure- trove of inspiration Fe suggestion,