The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 16, 1925, Page 6

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i : eieetienipaishinsneneegettetieenan-sreeromeeconipirreie rote | e-| Tne Seattle Star Ave terprise Aw ) Seventh “ Hoe ase mation at Ge ~ Stop Biting! ampaig plans now bef contir that have n City council ordered | ment providing ately there were pl: courts for an i City coune rs placed have an election of 15 freeholders wl submit the new model to the to bat with a proposal to circulate pe narked t e@ ci laced upon for a preve the 1 on way of Aisgustir n than n recess r appointed by the city council. op t the measure from going to a vote. ballot- the } baa | Go to W ork! — — > the public with the whole for the advocates of the two ie the “bickering and biting” tactics » ballot the Municipal league amend- Immedi- yosition camp of appealing to the charter revisionists’ plan to » would remodel the city charter and nd now the Municipal league comes s to prevent the freeholders’ elec- tion plan, and to have the question of whether such an election shall be held submitted first to a referendum vote The only result of the whole thing will y 4,000. Hundreds voted t it be be mat the pub l ise to go with cause they thou it was undemocratic either band o unless y do for one organization to npt to force -about r tactic th ibl scept, ready-made, a plan in a right-about fe ree 5 Pag geri = HE STAR city It nd rf believes a manager is vita t gestion is thi interests of the city. Despite contrary opinions as to its ity, it believes that, if the Muni league amendm over at the poll by a big majc ts would re- fuse to alter t majority. nt went wish of that But it does not believe the measure will Pass without several amendments The Municipal league stands pat on every clause, with a “we'd rather lose than change” attitude. And a city council ma- ‘jority echoes their wishes. But, even tho the plan is defeated—and we fe tho we'd like to see it carry—the advo- tates of a manager plan can win in the freeholders’ convention if THEY STAND TOGETHER. Twenty-three thousand votes were cast for the manager plan last year. It lost by ADVERTISING | pony THOUSAND "frantic fans saw the University of W: ton shove the ball over the Calif line at Berkeley Saturday for a 7 Municipal league's r it will be, US football ry. Eighty million folks read about it in the newspapers, listened to it on the radio, or talked about it with their neighbors on the street corner. When the university rowing team went East last summer, and lost the champion- ship by a half-length on the Hudson, mil- lions more learned about Seattle. While we're spending thousands of dol- lars in advertising ourselves, our city and our Northwest, let’s not overlook the fact that probably the biggest advertising me- dium of all has been our university and the excellent athletic teams that have issued from it. Aix STAR'S Let every city mans begin now to work together toward elect ing a list of freeholders who are in favor of a city manager system. There woul be no doubt but what they could be elected ager plan they would report out would be: A plan, the legality of not be questioned. 2—A plan that was satisfactory to a ma jority of all the pro-manager advocates in the city. 3—A plan that would be passable at the polls. advocate vote which could HE only way we'll ever get a city m ager in Seattle is to pull together and work CONSTRUCTIVELY. Trying to tear down the fences of the other fellow will get us nothing. DANGER IN Cum NITY clubs along the st Washington may have sledd trying to force council action in getting an intercepti m that will inate the ution of the Is age. But we hope they will stick on the job until they get results The S pointed out last spring when it opened up the question of lake pol- lution, this is one of the biggest perils we are called upon to fac nd it is a problem that will get larger and ae annually. Now is the time to act. And the city council must be made to do it Construction of such a sewer system will be a matter of two or three years, at the least, and unless we get to work at once, we will have a condition that will be not only unpleasant, but might dangerous. = Q. What is the estimated value &— @f the gold and silver colin of the world? | A. The gold coin of tha world {s| | formation by writing The Seat. | eee atimated to total in value $92 Ue Star Question Editor, 1323 Pay ee RN 007,900; silver coin New York ave, Washington, | is the population of ‘ D. C., and inclosing 2 cents in loose stamps for reply. No T population of Europe Q How many b . sy. | | Medical, legal or marital ad-| | ts catim $76,000,001 ects s are there in Ew wise Pecootial vepbie cont | Fasbilard iA. There are eight; one in Eng-| | Qnvat All letters must be}) How 1 is tho Island of land, one in Belgium, and siz in CubA? What are the names of France. the provinces of tho Island and} eee other words, unt the person ad-|who js tho president? Q What fs the meaning of the/| vertising orders it stopped. area of Cuda ts 44,81 mame “Tillie?” Ba 616 mii Ite provi: Ma- A. This is a contraction of Q. Who defeated Gov, Alfred Smith | Rlo, La Habana, Matanzas, -Santa tilda and means “mighty in bat! in 1920 for the off f gover Clara, Camaguey and, Oriente. The eee vie? | prestdent {2 Gen. Gerado Machado, Q Who was tho far in the mo- i : . whose term began May 26, 1995, ? n fille ote erved ’ tion picture, “The Reckless Age?’ lene. Fea en tis vas bon and rune for four years, | office. | @ Are tin cans made entirely of | */% pees | A THOUGHT ile tin? | | A. No, they are made mostly of| Q What relattonsh!p is the hus-| OTT oS) ENE Sheet stecl, the outside and inside| hand to his wife's sister if his wifo| God 1's our refuge and surface only being coaled with a|has died? | strength, a very present help in thin layer of tin. | A. Whether the wife ts Ining or| trouble—Psaim 46:1, . Pee ce dead, the husband docs not. bear| edie Hi Q. What do the letters T. F. mean/any relationship to ¢ father,| A MIGHTY fortress {s our When used as an vertising term?| mother, brother or sisters of his 4 God-—Martin Luther A. It means “till forbid,” or in ‘OU can get an answer to any question of fact or tn- ? ? Answers to Your Questions ? ? ,wlfe. There ts only an affinity be. | tween tha husband and the of his wife Mr. Fixit of The Star Undertakes Here to Remedy Your Troubles, if They Are of Public Interest Yon /| Mr. Fiztt: When will the looking Into this and as soon next civil service examinations as a report is recelved, you for postoffice workers be held dial itiow in’ Seattle, and what subjects baie lll be considered 2, 0. P. : MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16 | wre usidered? B Mr. Fieit: The Leavenworth | The next examination will bo Commercial club has Before tt If so, you dreamer | held next t. Call at for discussion the matter of eee Bat on yourself to doing tier 9 building employing convict labor on our | lexan 5 nc WA al | publlo roads, What do you ize tsi think about (tr HBR You let your mind wander, Mr. Vieit: Recently I asked 18° eeatd «34 You must settle down to your Yossi woah abe thes OoHaG es | would 9 00d for the work eh tan: up three fect of | convicts, would possibly reduce And learn, to be pr 1 he on the south side } the cost of building roads, but You havea love for li re ic ARe Botta fall caged “oh Wivak ee would ralso considerable. opjec rid you are o great conversa- thing has been done, I | tion from labor. A number of tionalist enclosing a stamped envelope | States wo employ convict abor, You are h idealistic for a reply in the event you and as Lid continue the prac And many people will admire can not flo tt D. M.A toe tt would seem that It works you. Tho street department 1s | Mlstactorily Mr. Firtt: We have just built a new home on 29th ave, 8, There are no sldewalka on our side of the atreet, Tho malt carrer refuses to cross, over to our alde with our mail, but leaves it with the house on the opposite aide of the | street. Can you help us? ci m, ol furnace, my wintertime friend. To you, for real com. | MRK. J. A. J. H fort, I'm turning, When once you are started I always depend Tho postman 1# acting in ac on the heat from the coal you are burning, | cordance with the regulation of You run my bill high ‘cause you eat quite a bit, but you're worth the pontoffice department, in every penny you cost. You always are alding in keeping mo fit, and | cases where thero are no walka without you, in winter, I’m lost |} An. accommodating post Your mouth stands wide open and, bless your old woul, tam ready | would airetch a. point, You and willing to fill it. I know, as I constantly shovel you coal, that have two remedies, Put up a when chill comes, you know how to kill tt maflbox on tho opposite side of Burn of, Ol Feliable! Meat up my home with a fire that t9 always tho atréet with your. name ‘and a insmmer, And then, in return for the hunch for thix pome, t will | numbor, or get a petition to the give you a good rest—next summer. city council asking for a aldo (Copyright, 1926, for The Seattle Star) walk on your wide of tho street. (g . YORAM SARE kindred sare Pinar del THE SE ATTLE STAR 8 MONTHS ON THE JOB; 4 BIG MIST AKES KES | Secretary Will Preside By Willi@ W" HINGTON, No¥ of State Fra g which, scheduled tt convenes next month, x In office a bare eigt been the center of fa brought down upon ridicule Which con ord: One major blu INCIDENT NO, 1— Karolyi, former pres® whose published pro, | his people from the } called the George ry | applied by Secretary | kept in place by Secre- | tary Kellogg in the face | of nation-wide protests INCIDENT NO, 2K —“«<s INCIDENT 3—K s Unt fi to DP Schist otis coh | Editor’s Mail | _ ars 1 Y 1 r r 1 . © com ee I 1 gn tt B Horn Bi y » Was a o, went after t elk in ‘and Jack: bie rities wn A naved thowe ne made tho gene clamp the lid ¢ tions at the 1 sraveled streets to be where. 1d such sty ‘oung men stc t chap He 1s lookir of the street an » is at him a silp,” 1 benide Ben! Seo Kellog C pl ®-About the eK sk about the Jow hth ternational incidents Punt } nes or Wasilf ton of State Hugh Record; lidge Do? What { p Sim head of S« ellogg a storm is brew time congre n out of the cabine ecretary Kellogg » » on . and rec h ry much crt arly, if » every Ps gare count Michael <Ogarian republic, » struggle to free yoke entitle him to be of his country. First s, the muzzle was gate. All his arrange had beon made, including the Ameri an visa to his passport Begretary Kellogg oud dered tho visa can pre sumably on the ground that he fs @ communist INCIDENT NO. 4 ees } ¢ t Karolyi to come to this cou even as the private guest of Mra, Ralph Straas rn aire and @ regular reput Exa idge tt ts that eter —— = OUT OUR W AY BY WIL LIA sent fat EeMELT TAL AB Aan It in understood that Senator Boral publican, of Idaho, will push for th of tho ln hich gives c ora andful of men, the power ar Is There a Movie Trust? First of Series on What the Federal Tre ide Commission Found in Filmland bits of movie film just then ap- boy sweep ‘ow York fv leading Today, 0 aesthetic, al aspire ent of Film far, figure or us Playors-Laaky veled the co amis- charged with November 24 mpeti tteries of lawyers w ¥ 1 why the little gra magnate arrived at his undisputed facts of his life are these; ved in New York from 16 years old, in 1890, with Marcus Loew, tho ed vaudeville king, be was 2 ny arcade there exhibiting the 4 he — 1914 he was spokesman for three film oc » ucing similar pictures. In 1916 ho morged ¢ ot 5 Famous Pt old Paramount rely distribution Now, for the f tion and distr der ono head. namo n ‘Paramou me for his film. In December, admitted purpose of bi aters in which Paramount pic 1 be she the ures woul issued $10,0 distribut! on were brought head. The immig had made progress biters tt began claimed, war ¥ r admits hi company eventually bought terest 24 theaters in tho United States Finally, protest became 80 loud that the federal trade com- mission fasued a complaint and his associates W. H. Fulle commission’s chief counsel, be- ano excuse an old lady. It ne. gan taking four years of test! | pleased mo so I laughed all the 1911 he produced tho mony. | way homo | screen's first feature ploture, | What Friler found will be MRS, ALBERT DAVIS, | phe Prisoner of Zenda,” star. | told in a second article tomor- Bell Apartment-Hotel | ring Jamos K. Hackett. By row. = (Advertisement), How to keep family problems facing every tho greatest that constant watchful care ta 1 Mra, Wdward Sheridan, of 41 § Quebeo City, has every |ablo to keep her family of sev healthy 1s mother. ritating coughs and colds threaten lea® vult "T have used Pathe@® John’ Bronchitis for robust health, She says Medicine for years and alwayn have a house My children had and 1 used Mather John's Medic nore serious {ln au Matiolt St., reason to bo proud of being | are ‘en ehile one of the So many Sr | wonderful, so 1 lren in such | tonto containing bottle in the a long time proved to be | to children and ¢ As Wather Johx thought somo other sufferer.” Wor seventy years mothers have used Mather Medicine and have found that it nour! os and builds up the body driven out in the natural way 8 | ingredients in a blend whieh | FATHER JOHN’S MEDICINE Has Helped These Seven Boys and Girls to Keep Strong and Healthy my testimonial would he: that cod liver off and other valuable} ) particularly palatable sily digested by them 4 Medicino contains no alcohol ot | dangerous drugy It ts safo for anyone, holp John's | » strength: | Coughs and Colds It is a real food WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY- THINKIN’ OUT LOUD. ONY NINE MORE 1 KIN STANO IT AT Muc I HAFTA LGUES AT — OH BOY! AFT WONT PE \ ORFIL SUPPRIZE |\TELL mE-T'D0 Su — MUMBLE SOME MEERS-~ hr LON >~ BUT é R AT- AFT The Real Cause for Your Poor Health Will Yield to CHIROPRACTIC Adjustments of ourselves we reach to Health ges y grave. us yy too many diseased humans ditions of poor health door of fate. They imagine hu they through | painracking a wa dreadful with more ago 3 them to the deepest condition ¢ they have no If you a thi should be impre er this you that you self be belief. have misle ond a You were ne healthy, ver mor taken in your life if you all yourself to think that 3 ence in this wo purpose th lightonment, n for your own happin anda mutually pleasant associa- tioh with your friends, health, relatives and my friend, {t was nover In. lod that you should be caused mental sufferin extent where you will belleve that pun- ishment has been to the visited upon you for what ‘you may regard a, the sinful Health and Happiness of your fellow men. Your presence among ws Is a welcome one, and you will con. tribute something worth whilo to all with whom you come in con- tact. You wero conceived, given an equal birthright and carefully matured to contribute your sharo in the world’s progress; it was intended that* you enfoy good health, much happiness, and # rounded-out life of important usefulness, That's your reason for being hero now, and nothing should deter you in its successful prose cution, The fact that you are unfor tunate by being temporarily sick {s probably not your fault at all Moro than likely it is duo to an accldental Jolt or Jar during your childhood, All of us have slightly displaced segments of the spine which were used by some trifiing shock—abnormalities that wo did not notico at the time or the kind that may not be remem bored. Perhaps nothing has hap pened since to show us that wo have any spinal troubles, yet nine times out of ten such a condition 1s responsible for all diseases con tracted by mankind. Thero are 24 movablo segments {n tho human spine. ‘They ‘are called vertebrao and their position (one on top of another) form Kighth of a Seric of Edueational to everybody as At regular intervals there ere lateral branches (called nerve trunks) which lead eff the spinal cord to all parts of the body and its extremities, The danger of poor health threatens us when these nerve trunks become “pinched” at their points of egress from within the spinal col- umn, for the openings which per~ mit ther passage lie between the vertebrae. Hence even a siigh of one vertebrae of © spine causes the pinch on a hich has the same if on a hose and retarding or interrupting the normal flow of water. alposition effect as step thereby Every organ and tissue depends on its normal flow of life-giving impulses from your brain through the spinal cord and trunks. Let where it its them nerve be be vertebrae and one of pinched passes out tween two mo corresponding organ or tls. sue of your body ts deprived of {ts full share of impulses—you are now ready to chronic disease. welcomo a A chiropractor can trace the reason for your {lness directly to the malposition of a vertebrae in your spine. Professionally, he calls this a “subluxation,” and he knows that a subluxation fs a common cause for disease, You will find your chiroprac. tor thoroughly capable and well worthy of your trust and confi- dence. Beyond a natural in- grained sympathy for you, chiropractor will not ba con cerned so much with “how sick you are’ as with “what started you” on the road to poor healt! our Your chiropractor has been trained in first princlpley and therefore your reason for belnge sick is what must be learned first Attor definitely fixing the post- tion of that segment (or vertebra) of your spine which ts abnorma by reason of being slightly out allgnment, your chiropractor \ induce this movable. segment return to its normal position by series of adjustments—and a c ropractor’s hands are his only tools. There aro millions of people in America whe are living in robust health as @ result of Chiropractic adjustments; there are more mi! lions who thank God for Cl practio's benefits to them; s} still there are more millions wh only accepted this wonderfu Health Science after everything else had failed. They can tostity to the fact that Chiropractio e justments alone are responsible for their prosent wellboing, Hap piness, and ability to enjoy Goc Health, Consult knows your chiropractor, te Talks on Chiropractic By Chiropractic Publicity Bureau SA EET TR ARAN De NPR NATE PSTN RTE marvcaresnsr tert erasers 2)

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