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: st es Oe ee : ‘ praessesne wer: THE SEATTLI STAR TUESD OCTOBER 27, 1925 a —_——— ————_______—— -— — --—- arenas assent eae — =o eee ee eee ee ee age a ‘I nm Small ‘Pown? This Man Made a Mallion! ~» The Seattle Star ===) || No Chance in Small Pown? This Man Mad On: % Seventh Ave., Sealtle, Wash ly . | | = - ey “4 . * pn. Bpecta presenta Ban Francisco ale | BY BERT VINCENT © ' ( ‘ } a ; t of . oa o 9200 ba i | g \ eR FLOSSING UP ALBERT IS UNLUCKY te ) “i WA t ying ¢t a ory Rl JEREMIAH BEVERIDGI S ! V d t ‘ 4 a r G ig Cc - - ‘ news Jackson of Indiana has appointed {| OUT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS | ) P i That v x picuous lawyer to succeed the lat & ‘ tion w r Ralston temporarily, There mer : rs z , ple as t per headlines, but, for sot ROMEO? » { NAPOLEON ? BOYS . UH BoTH to newspap Ay ; r ackson could e him, and t f, OM HE ORIN NM. WOU rere LIKE - LIME | lguagugess = ~ Accordit to * pre nt & B oratory wi be heard Sania Mucseee LAs ae IEE On nt Caan aes | (TO THE SMALL wich’s deputies hs kidnaped’ t the classic halls of congre. | . iis ho SPY EG 1 | ve ray <P aia i oners in Oregon to escape the ad The best of the stori why B aia FANS Re hae } LooK || lOW N YOUTH tion law, and, single-handed, had brought igi led to win the seat three yea | MAS OUE RAD HW | MEAST RONNIN “ie ees 5 LIKE A || G. ‘ wag” them 500 miles to Seaitie by handcuffing ago never has been printed before, H \ A THET GIT UP, h OvUH! L HAINT: IM JES GOIN EGGe them together and placing them acros it { { MIGHT HAVE NATURAL - L BORRIED etl the hood of his automobile A oF eee “i } A BOOKER “MERE tT OUKES BES suit. / by 4 ‘ , s 3 mn ree day efore the election the | MEGG : that deliberate lies will not be coun that. Ingal kdanavhen ware to vote! |I ; tenanced by the public or by the newspa Beveridge. Why? Because he t pers, ever an official who adopts al- ; boy in a Catholic school in most ) ans to get himself onto the t Inthe three days that re : v . front pages of the papers, the better off the Beverids works whi ‘s he fee be. ; learned of the imperial decree did not aelt the sheriff wants to do some real have time to overtake this honest mistak« — - flossing,” let him “floss” up a more sat of the klansman. His boy was a student t . ctory explanation for the public of at St. Marks, an Episcopal school! ‘ € the recent jail “break.” seen ue 8 A CHANCE TO TEST CHANCE FOR RECRUITS baa hve ins ; RES E COOLIDGE probably ha r 1 an ROPOSALS to build an intercepting little sympathy with Wayne B f amp clr sewer for the Oregon st. outfall and Wheelk idea that the army and n ; 4 rps a pump to lift the waste over the hill should be used to put down the pre t ¥ ¢ have been advanced by John E. Carroll, whisky rebellion, in case the civil authori { t Stra chairman ts and sewers com- | ties fail. The president wishes to save (| ‘ mittee : ; money on the army and navy and there gh og en is - of Council members have voted funds for would be no saving in that scheme ot “ - building septic tanks on several lake sew- But it is a sound idea. It might not he Gar tc 1 large at as ers. These are objectionable to residents result in prohibition enforcement, but it prices have ? a CH Ice pie of the lake, but the proposal to build the would increase the number of teetotalers as; +, first floor, just as you come in intercepting sewer system to eliminate in the U d States. Brig, Gen. Lincoln ‘ them is opposed on financial grounds by C. Andrews, borrowed from the army t« The ¢ ¢ » occu. He believes that every mer- certain councilmen. head the prohibition forces, immediately vei Doon of me ane is es isteipen ” ie " st Either an intercepting sewer or the quit drinking, he said, when he took the . » ppt ay re Pa ot tank must be installed on the Oregon st. | job, If the whole army and navy would Boo : Pe hae thes als sewer without further delay. Carroll do the same, that would be 260,000 r¢ ie Sit okas 4 their crops, and ts claims the pumping system ean be in- cruits to the cause. TA a t anyt from ay ft ” this man Garver. does. stalled as cheaply as the tank. 1 THE CRITICS bills us sacs eaten J it eshing m fog } 3 n . . a ee eee ‘Opportunities for young peo- 7 Since the question of a comprehensive TERRIBLE! «api eme eee { WHAT FOLKS SAY intercepting sewer system is moot, the NOTHER blow at romance ) Si 6 yg pean ye Tigike ead P, SHAN In thi council can test its efficiency and com- Many a love song has been writter 4 | Garver says LOUIS P, SHAN “In this pare its workings with the tanks without about supposedly romantic gondolas of A ho ut Doctor: ! My —opinio t the rani tenn a natal oy additional cost by approving Carroll's any a love story has used the by M Walter F | ne fficlency s no human * plans for construction of this single unit als for its setting sy Mrs alter Fergusor | . phon eed fely felt than t It would seem to be a sensible thing to now—just think of it—a Venetian TAT ERS hE = ae life as it ts do rather than build another tank, which may later be completely eliminated from the lake share and have to be replaced. “GASOLINE BUMS” (From the Monthly Review of the U. 8. Depart- ment of Labor) HERE are enough workers resident in Oregon to harvest all the crops, if properly mobilized. But since so many of the farmers feel that they need a large surplus of floating labor in order to establish a reasonable wage scale, they encourage applicants at the farm gate. Result: Oregon has been confronted with the problem of the “gasoline bum” —the casual laborer who drifts from place to place in an automobile with his family and all his worldly goods therein. This floating labor presents not only the problem of his employment, but of the education of the children of the family. i gondola “chauffeur” asked the police to arrest a couple for kissing in his gondola. | The man who did the kissing was locked | up for four days. What are gondolas for, anyway? Venice seems sadly in need of a Cali- fornia or Florida publicity agent. A DEBT WE OWE HE sale by the patent office of 155,- 000 models of inventions submitted | to the government bureau before 1880 calls attention to the inventive genius of this country which has made possible its great industrial development. Many of the models were only wild, impractical ideas, but in the majority of | them y some inventive germ which a more practical inventor later developed. This country, as it enjoys all the com forts that countless inventions have brought, little realizes what a debt it owes to those thousands who had all sorts of wild ideas to revolutionize the country. ? 2? Answers to Your Questions ? ? Q Is Spanish language spoken tn| B wos omitted by the car all South American cou’ ? OU can get an answer to] | councils in making up A. In all of them except Brazil, any question of fact or im | | ures where the Portuguese is spoken formation by writing The Seat- | | ae a Ae ties tle Star Question Editor, 1323) | 0 ana f 3 Q@ Is the vanilla bean grown in| | New York ave, Washington, Cae nat Is the longest-lived a the ‘United State | | D. c, and inctosing 2 cents ia Soha es aman TeHo. 16: prows only in tha| |locee stamps: for reply, No|| 4.. The turtle. In the Galapagos ponica medical, Jegal or marital ad- Islands are turtles known to be 400 oo ie ehis Vice. Personal replies confi-| | vars old dential. Ali letters must be] | ee That © meaning of the | Baier. ee. | signed. Q. Was Gutzon Horgium allowed ‘A. It 48 a contraction of Dorathea| * ; era A, - se finish t Con derate memorial a Gift of Gout. ed from “artist,” which ts used by|at Sto tain | * . rial. He had an altercation. with Q@ What js the difference be : : ; pa BAe oe Ber: salt tween an artisan and an artist? Q. Who won Decathalon the governing rd of the 8tone ‘Av An artisan, or artizan, is one|the last Olympic games Mountain association over financial who practices one of the industrial A. Harold Osborn, United States.| matters bain refuaed to go on with ac eke the avor a sculptor arts, a skilled mechanic, a trained the eman. The word is distinguish-| Q What was relation: | ; | roamees. 7 . ____.. | tween Mary Queen of in hia place pee SMOKD GROOM |! 4 STORIES | ei | Q. Is hemlock good fo = bows? DAY, on the street, 4. No. Bows require a hard elas-| n into two little f ibout 8 and 10," begar os the kindly looking man in the Q. What kind of nes are EER] vasa Redhat; sacmenia” “The : dider | varoider stoncar? Mr. Fivit: 1am a doy nearly | Mr, Fleit: I need a night one was calmly munching a 1. As the name indicates they are) 177 9nd teork half days, Would SAI BE A Lae ia $ labgey rec while the other |atsk shaped. They aro about. one to stop school and work | am a widower and ec five was crying as tho his heart was thick at the cdge of the| «day. T could double my pay. | children. Would like to ar broken. I inquired of the 10. nd taper down to a thin| 1 have my parents’ consent, At | range so that I can ba at hom Why {s the little fellow er i sed to hel Rr. D B use I won't give him is used in playing nds| hy hoc u can not rp this] family th ot my apple’ of dames intil you are 18, under ord dad a night fot “pidn't he have an apple Ps set | nary conditions. A high schoo! aes himself?” I asked, for I had no Q. Wa re ever a book called| education js worth around $50,- | Mr. Flolt Why is dt the tieed a fresh core at the smaller |The History of Joseph, the Car-| 000 to any Ithy boy, aside | Young people of this day ar bora teet eitae TSG ine Biba? froin "the pleasure taraut not taught to respect aged per "'¥eh, He cried when I ate | A. his ia one of the apocryphal| of ‘t. The average difference | 40n4? On a Wallingford car 1 that one, too,'” ‘yooks of the New Testament that} between what an educated man | #010 moat of the seata filled und an uneducated one can | with atudents from the unt dari thr life; Matabout 6 per versity and high school, white cent interest, on $50,000. No | (# the alates elderty men gnd doubt the president of every women were standing. | bank in town had y sire | MiSs. H. D tadbivvadhool oat ue, | here {# much ground fot | None of themgcould now hold | your complaint, but there seems hia Job {t Roabnbsko | to be Hittle aemedy in sight } ‘ua Ne } When parents make up their ee Ei ‘i nie | Minds that rearing thelr ehil | r Pil joes the public dre s their most important HEN yer buried in yer labor and yer tryin’ hard ta think, and a | Ubrary have to open wide the | a rae. 8 ean th tok {h. lot of things are runnin’ thru yer mind, the man who starts to windows in the reference room | earnest, there will be a change? whistle sure can put ya on the blink, and set yer daily workin's fat get plenty of air? 1 have a a bee behind w } severe coll from aitting in a Mr, Fight: The @dewatk on It's simply irritatin’ when a shrill note rents the air, and plays a draft there, Can {t be fined? W. Ste¥ens at. belween 4oth Gull fattoo upon yer ears, At times the sweetest whistle seems amean | Vv. | and 47th in overhung with nerve-racking blare, that thrives upon the trend of thought it smear There 4 no law on the sub, Neoteh broom and blackberry ‘The man who turns ta whistlin’ doesn't do it Just for spite, I } fect, but it In m neconmry roe vines, making i impossible to just his way of bringin’ out hin cheer, A tune may Kinda haunt him | ulation, Mrewh air ean be over ® pars with an umbrella withoue and he lets it come to light, forgettin’ that it pesters thone who hear worked jn this damp. climate, going onto the parking strip. Let’s build an auditorium where whistlers may collect, and let thelr | hut it is more often not. Hunt | hia has been xo for two year whistling Habit Joudly throb, Just give ‘em all the chance they neod | a corner where the draft doc Can you fle At? My Be Tt and then, we may expect, they'll be too tired to whistle on the job, | not strike you, or ait face to ‘The street department has (Copyright, 1925, for The Seattle Star) ‘ the window, | promised to attend to. this, Quem Elizabeth of Eng tie wood like ash o men are akin to id you Dr. Wilt whose 1 ead the at Mayo, 8 me ta kn wn and h 1 thruout the civilized w who reflects everlasting it u America? Did you read what he had to say o of the medical p about wealthy Some n of Dr partly because of me Mayo's cour thing all when we hink of the ma Dus progres n has been made in thia o7 aclence within the past 50 years, is it not enough to make us stand back ery, “A miracle What a wonderful thing {it Is to Know that in so many small cofners of the earth, while we go about our play and our there are men of ardent of vision, of undaunted who ing their lives thru that the race ma benefited and that our ts lived. ‘These men labor that all the vicious germs which bout us un ‘cond cousins or hickory. mn Mr. Fixit of The Star Undertakes Here to Remedy Your Troubles, if They f \ Are of Public Interest WY Hy VP SE ALEXANDER SMITH, 1 oll r nto more oil than there is in Mexico; I fell down fn it and got it all over moe and even then I dared not think it could be true. I may make a pile out of my discovery and I may MALCOLM Alaskan explorer. ‘I at Point Barrow. I Combine your capital and ket under one roof. In many owns one 1 find a drug store, a bard. ware store, a dry goods store, & grocery store and a furniture store TUESDAY, OOT, 77 i arein email ¢ If nstan motl Your emotions are conflicting For you have a dual persona ometimes these doctors work ity | “What they should do ts to {| 20 Anyhow, I've been there.” if a lifetime in obscurity At times you are sympathetic | combine their capital and have 1 MRR Ta 5 TNT n do they get pla nd generous } one big store under one | ts intial sad pict | Ase seam wetsana’ | ane coon | AMOUR) thelr very arrogant. | hardware 4 2 yee n to will make many | goods department, a drug and | Watch ye and pray, lest ye nla they sundry departmen | enter into temptation.—Mark t “Then the comy 14:18, " strong enough in large WF fae trembles when he sees knees.—Cowper. ‘red’ out of your credit. HEN the bookkeeper 1 LOSS. PO) A loss is indicated { EY) WAILURE as for a Therefore, when our bills promptly strikes a balance, it reflects either a PROFIT or n RED ink This has become a symbol signifying the book balance is concerned ou buy ds from your , figurativel local merchant and fal speaking—is in the red, that merehant and in addition must ind printed forms necessary to pres to meet your credi Your failure friend has money ¢ orb the costs of office help and postage you continually for payment to PAY YOUR BILLS PROMPTLY Lup In the means goods sold to you your al § THIS FAIR 'TO YOUR CREDITORS! Of course It Is not If you allow He 1 Intend to take your accounts to become whether time past due, you leave tilend merchant an to infe you have fe dark doesn't know you mé by your negligonce account that y your whether gotten the whether you will fail to pay it at all Patrons of The names of from whom the s class must be recorded “in the red’ on the merchant's books as a protection to other Privilege of [he charge account might be requested, such patrons are passed along the line merchants ay your bills — ROMPTLY ASSOCIATED RETATL CREDIT MANAGERS OF SUATTLE