The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 4, 1925, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

= = VJ D 0 PAGE 6 THE SEATTLE STAR WED a ogre Fe ee ~V~ Our ouR WAY BY WILLIAMS )| rp >: Wal , The Seatt] St. [rae Ri i hal dae /|The River of Gold—No, Publishes Daily | i New Ea e ea e ar | @by The ster | SS ee ize | Water Carries Menace as We Prise Aven 1307.09 Seventh Ave, Se Wash | Publishing Oo. anes Slate, | Hundreds of Settler i By meat. ext per nthe. 92oe gene | BE Home NO MORE. BUT 3s = ; etter at Geatth, Wn, under act of Maren 8, 1819 } | EARLY FER SUPPER | : { hoe agi mic | ow _ ~ — -_—~ — PAUL -EE-HEE-IF GHE Viiow pont Am cM © ; MORE POWER TO HIM FINING AN EDITOR $15 | ONY KNOWED I WONT] Be Woneeg \FIGHT AN MAKE | MIRACLE, and 10 to 1 you didn’t no. “TRHE state of Kentucky has what it call i 1 Ee HOME FER A FEW I PELLERS! YOULLI \ BIG HEPTTAISHON, ’ : A LX tice it—t} i ot enougl | a “gossip” law ae ¥ FUNDERD SUPPERS! i, NS . ink WEN WE saiT : ’ Von Hindenburg defies the political The city commissioners of Covington, eaAUe: EE WEE ALL mM mere NC > Sh 5 opr cyclones in support Locarno peace Ky., decided to borrow $50,000, WRN mS NY } \ ' F . pact Upon his electi as Germany The Kentucky Post printed a piece about GONNA RIDE TH / r Z ‘ president, few months ago, Europe it. The Post said: “Those who have held \ FIRST HUNDERD 2 y ; } embled oy the return of Teuton mili positions in the city financial department \ MILES! \_ BD . tarism A e-lon. onarchist, & man ay that, insofar as they can remember born and reared as a mi t, a warrior, this is the first time in history that the 4 v with undried blood on hands had been city was broke within a month after the be ’ s given the leadership in Germany, and a June taxes had been collected.” the foreign correspondents visioned for us Mayor O'Donovan caused the editor to be another world’s war horror. An aroused arrested, charged with violating the gossip ty dragon, with smoke in its nostrils, flame in la Judge Manson fined the editor $15 i its mouth and bloody froth in its jaws, was and denied a request that the fine be made r the picture. large enough to permit an appeal “T will stand by the republic, Germany Last week Judge Manson’s name wa f m must have peace!” said President von Hin before the primaries for renomination, Congre denburg. He has kept his word, in defiance after a lively political campaign. The cam fe P it of politics, “reds,” monarchists and war paign was fought almost entirely on the a profiteers, question of whether he should have mad We are acquiring a heap of respect for that fine large enough to allow the editor ; that old gentleman who is trying to steex to appe He had been a judge eight year a wire . Germany straight. and, save for that slip-up, had been a good J ; in - judge | pitt IN THE RIGHT SPOT The judge was overwhelmingly de ; A‘ » league of nations would do feated pose © federal ge ce og tro gel ata Buti Which would seem to establish a Ken roe ate $ 24 ) ue French, Italian and probably Spanish fleets tucky editor's right to be fined more than f for thea i sae will establish an economic blockade against $15 if he wishes to be. KE cal Greece, if the latter disobeys orders to quit Seriously, this is a real right. Many =) ne . Hehting. citizen in many a city has been given a ; * : _ juaee rie It sounds like the real stuff. If you can’t nominal fine of this kind, which under the WEST WARD HO! ack LEASING OF POWER cal bdas par hit them in the head, hit them in their law is not appealable, and so. prevented a fn wr wea senvee me) RIGHTS IS ESSENTIAL ear ‘by fle money-bags! In the solar plexus, for- Pte Rai be Chek on ue fr af Eee a aren ee rote te. bi “hem coe sooth. The late Prof. Bob Fitzsimmons | Where Ae - ated. A man safes Pe , All Letters ¢ and Address the vit the bill, pro used to drop the biggest of them by hit- , falsely arrested often has no recourse Letters to the 1D ditor are t 1 in The Star Gat ee Papell feria ting them there. Disarmament may make | *S#inst those responsible and no means of ve mS ce J | ing the West from a new powe old Mars take notice, but, to make him lie | “l@4ting his name of an unjust conviction. RAINIER TUNNEI on ; : Stace! tia shaken mavinds to the poly, Naturally such a pro down and squeal “Enough,” soak him Soe) Seay Rasen aa Eel Ne 4 Sit ‘ SOKA ua sania d hever get past cc where he carries his dollars! FUSSY FOLKS yee ee sree f m t See ina dticts ae he eee re Sos people get so fussy about how the ; . pe e . C t privile f we “ty HIS EYES AIL HIM American flag is raised that they com- Y : ‘ , a ding f nt \ Ke of Cade aie INNENKAMP, ceievrated European Py ue erect ic er oie: . : n committe portrait painter, commissioned from | want to balnsr tite Th A abet: neuen 4 jeal of interest in I é ve Ps mite fast being res Vienna to select America’s 15 most beau- | know just precisely how the anay like a 4 tr : money out’ of und a ty sive Esp vis tiful women, has finished his two-year job. avatit: precise'y ow the army likes to een bonded f set taliaGaann Peavey ative governn surveys Bs * @ it raised, what difference does it ° have been completed, showing 2 his galaxy are seven San Franciscans make? of five bridges: more munity. Paciilties are matter whi (ihe. prosect Teantule he house count ’em, seven), three New Yorkers, Sectainiy ha: vumané. allot ; | would mean that we, who have ained by any Postal Import . to irrigation committee | If 80, y three Hollywood angels, one Chicagoan and i tc es eee ES A ap | er been counted In on the Fe aity éanay (0 toa patie otteGes cece aoe ae Cre } pees ald Washington. Not a Seattle beauty about raising it. He has the spirit even | seat aed money : rit Cr 7 eed roing over the ground. A ater av Casual inspection by a poor, ordinary pets So jer kins oe See oh the cere- h tg ° anxious to recelye deposits pertinent to outlin ha spire chritude superinduces the opinion that little mistakes of Metall ves eae ipaiade: j and t r pa t : about a better the uppe 1 will be devo a Linnenkamp might well have put ire yooh pena erned tere. ay the t € gene acetenicing ‘hy tt ct to the into his job some two or twenty more TIAN DOG | Believe r a t ment of the bi snterente signs th years. A mere two-years’ inspection of SUCCESS ed. Enough #0 that we a _.Aa_& part of our program to | Postmaster ct est friends American beauty is too almighty much like 1h 1871, Adolph Koppel came to this king f bridge. We want | Es : going quail hunting by blazing away, from country as an immigrant. His first | or It's © ale | y : a back bedroom window, with a double- employment was a messenger boy for Now barreled shotgun. This is not saying that Linnenkamp has not got some real Amer- ican beauty on his canvas, altho he evi- dently isn’t at all partial to the bobbed and has a fondness for the sylph-like, not to skinny sort. However, there’s one criticism that cannot be successfully impeached. This foreign artist put in too much of his two years with his paint brush and too little with his eyes. To illustrate, there is in this very town Miss—but, why start a war? banking houses. The telegraph wires now carry the announcement that he has been elected president of the Central Savings bank of New York, an institution with assets of $162,000,000. It’s just another story of the success made by foreign born American, The chances are that even greater opportunities waited the native born youth when Koppel was a struggling messenger boy. But many of them failed to “make the. grade” ) over the same route Koppel traveled. ? ? Answers to Your Questions ? ? Q What was the full 5 of} was publi Admiral Sampson? been actir € A. William Thomas Samps nl t r Q How old is Corinne Griffith the movie actress? A. Twenty-four Q. What is the trar n of the Latin of t ds on the United States? A. Beneath the golden scroll is the inscription pyramid on a i A THOUGHT For everyone that doeth evil hateth the light 3:19, ate t m oft Lowe is consum ndustrial ndar year at $69,292,245, arts? 1923 of! ‘Novus Ordo Sedurum,” meaning “A new era in the ages.” Above is the moti, “Annuit “He Drospers our Coeptis,” beginning.” Q. If an army nurse marries and if recelving compensation from the government for injuries received in| Mr. Fixit of The Star Undertakes Here to Remedy Your Troubles, Are of Public Interest tear ei 1902, but she Nad| which $40,013,175 4 CaS | paged in magazine | terial . ae tf They || I the world war, does her compensa-| ——_— —_ ton stop? Mr. Fixit: Thursday morn- | and Eighth aves, should be A. Marrlage docs not affect the| ‘ng at 19 o'clock I saw a ma kept clear of machines. Cai compensation of an army nursc| “rive across against the sig you fie uF MRE. R. G.I who is drawing compensation be nal at Fourth and University, This is only one of the m: cause of injuries received in service in officer plain clothes automobile 5 of tt i the sorld. war. bawled him out” in a terrible | It Is referred to Dr. M.A. Mat 6n4 | tone of voice. Made him stop thews with power to act Q What is the address of the} @"4 gave him a slip. Do you | see headquarters of the Campfire Girls?| tink this officer was trying to | Mr. Figit: In the 2800 bdlock A. 31 E. i7th at, New York city.| impress upon the crowd that om N. 6lat st, near Firat N. E. Pea ty he had great responsibility and * Q When and how did Gene Strat authority? He a pile of dirt has been on the could have ac- parking strip for some time. It complished the same result ina | ‘should be re plate wield more gentlemanly manner. Can do it? ariyee When was her first book published? h . TAXPAYER. e 8. A. Gene Stratton Porter wag kil-| YOK fie hhn ; re Mr. Wixit has no wheelbar ed in an automobile accident on The traffic officers may | pow, but ‘the street’ department December 6, 1924. She wax 54 years| IO’ ce LO pir eaten vee of an | Pa® promised to attend to the of age at the time. Her first dook| but long suffering isa part of an | removing of thin dirt 8) earn that lesson should be sont Si) YOU, can set an answer 101 | to tho “cow pastures,” wher Mr. Fixit: Last summer our any question of fact or in- | traffic is not #o congested. You streets were beautifully decor formation by writing The Seat- should report fl nt offender nee because the decorations te Star Question Ealtor, 1922 telitieculel were high enough to permit ar ew York ave, Washington, oe open vew along the atreets D. C,, and inclosing 2 cents in | | | The evergreen decorations dur loose stamps pears No | | Mr, Fixtt: Persons attend ing the notida ? MAGa at medical, legal or marital ad- ing the First Preabyterian Bden': a0L Hd MAKE theysapatag vice. Personal replies conti. church are compelled to dodge’! tne er and made tratfle morc dential. Ali letters must be | | ie Ne PLEA MES area difficult, Can you see to it that signed. jl, bites toh bd cb A over, the decoratigns are higher this Spring at, between Keventh | Ghristinan? arerean SATURDAY morning we rise with the chickens an’ dres Opie as fast ax we can dickens. A real thrill 4 We hitch up the sled to our pon Thru pancakes and comin’, oh syrup A) and then we his limbs. We're off on our long winding journey try, to ol’ Uncle Jim's. @ Woe clip o fast gait, an’ we know he'll be waitin’ we arrive, We'll help with his chores, and we'll plas the right sort of spirit alive We skim into sigh® and he shouts, in delight, a fn meant, We join him and then he best of our energy's spent w ‘The day soon is done, and we've had heaps of fun feelin’ in trim, T wish I could show all the day's fun wif ol’ Uncle Jim, turng (Copyright, 1925, for Mh Seattle Star), youngster This haw been referred to the decoration committes of the Chamber of Commerce | | | Mr. Fixit: I bought a pair of | shoes | | for a lady who ia 90 years old, They did not fit her, and I exchanged them, THis palr also wan not satis- Jon’ factory, and I took them back, wa HN ilike: tiie but could not yet my money refunded. Had to take a due ene Hittite linibes bill, 1 traded out part of hin MAIR Ee eouR but could get none of my money back? Can you fia to welcome “us when ita? BOA out-of-doors with Many merchants will not take | back Wearing apparel at all eting that really | Some who do will refund the again, til the Money, and others give only a CAs) lip to be traded out, each merchant making his own rule nbout this There is no compel stores to do » unless there was misreprosentation and we homeward kids thot 1 know way to | his p benefits tha ley and our district would re ceive, the leaxening of trame haul of freight by a mm the Hill and Ca Hill that can go thru the ed tunnel, ete We want and need this tunnel, and having built by for our hrother want them to join us in this. proposition or forget the bridges he covets For #0 far we have been playing Christmas tree for the balance of the city, having things hung on us to be taken off and given to others, then forgotten until the troe HUGO KELLEY AUTO The Star next Christm: CAMP Editor 1am an oj ice station at vuto camp and Tam writing thi in regard to the closing up the park. They closed it up the 11th of October and since have turned tourists away to the camps outside the city Most of them are Informed that the camp is still open. Other cities have their camps open the year around, It would not cost the park board anything to keep it open and it surely will leave a better impression on the visiting tourist. I thought that you might be in position to do some thing about it CAP. POSTAL SAVINGS Editor The Star Owing to certain circumstances which have developed from time to time in our endeavor to dis seminate news with regard to the operation of the Postal Savings writing arloué local system in Seattle, I to the editors of the papers with a view to correcting what may seem to be a mistaken the position impression pertaining to Postal Savings and It mmunity vice is operated for tho purpose of providing banking facilities to thone who, for vari- ous reasons, profer not to place their money for safekeeping in commercial hanking institutions, The rate of interest paid ts 2 per cont, which amount is, of cou oxeceded by all banks money received on deposit is df local bank tributed among the who qualify for these funds by posting collateral and — thene banks in turn pay the board of trustees, tal Savings system 2% por ce@® interest, the margin providing for the maintenance of the service, Monoy originating In any community js always re. tained right Jn that community and not withdrawn at any time. Tho Postal Savings was not is Promise to mouth ding 4 1 be striking Swing-Johp ish one | | (More on “The River of Gold” j Thursday) | WEDNESDAY, NOY. 4 H you are systematic in perfect order. te In all details. rare business capacity NM be quite confidence trustworthy your children will be your 6 fe story of Réd Rock Cheese is a story of achievement—a business «romance. It is the story of a home deli- cacy that outgrew home boundaries in / few short years, until today it is a favorite food of mil- lions of Western people. _ —then one memorable day an old Ford made RED ROCK deliveries / The recipe came from Holland gen- erations ago and was kept in one family through all the years. Fresh milk and sweet cream replaced skim milk to make a food entirely different from ordinary cottage or “Dutch” cheese, It was light, rich and sweet. Finally, in a little Oregon farm home in the Tualatin Valley itcame to the attention of people from the outside world. Friends, neighbors and visitors asked to buy. And so its fame spread until the farm home became a small home dairy, furnishing the home-made cheese to the neighborhood ahd a few people in the city. THE RED ROCK COMPANY ~~ Kent, Washington; Tigard, Ore, Then one memorable day an old Ford made its first deliveries. Early in the morning it went out over the valley roads to Portland. It was a prophetic trip—forerunner of the fleets of trucks that today carry Red Rock to thousands of dealers up and down the Coast. Although sales were computed then in hun- dreds of pounds and today in millions, yet the same original qualities remain as in the home-made cheese of the days of the first Ford delivery. The recipe is unchanged. We still use the same high cream content —45%, to 479% of the volume of every pound of Red Rock is sweet pasteurized cream. Still made in the country too, and still made with the same high standards of purity and unvarp. ing quality. Early every morning fresh Red Rock Cheese is delivered at your dealers, Its high nourish- ment value, its healthful qualities and its deli- cious sweet and creamy flavor make it one of the finest of foods and deli- cacies, Accept no sub- stitutes -— there is only one Red Rock Cheese. ‘Made fresh every day. in our country creameries gon; Petaluma, California your

Other pages from this issue: