The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 23, 1920, Page 6

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$6.06, tn the 4.60 for “Hardly a day pass | sociated in your mind with fe ©) Bplintered machines and gory 7 But did you ever consider es that are being flown ¢ a, 3 ~ sense of the picture: son such “crashes” are fai SeagaEs Psi ¥, Cease to do evil; learn to} © §do weill.—Isaiah i:16-17. } Letters t _Editor— Write briefy. Use ink or typewriter. One side of paper only, Sign your name. IES THOSE WHO Editor The Star: There has been Much said about the Japanese ing control of Seattle's markets le gardens and hotels, I cer y am not a Jap lover. far be m that, but why not put the blame it belongs? Who made it possible for the Japs Acquire all of these things? Seat business men, of course. A man who will sell out to a Jap, be it a restaurant or the lease of a for the sake of a few doll in my opinion, Worse than th If people would stop patronizing Japs they would soon have to ‘out of business. It seems that a On can not go into any restau tim the city but what you will see : or more Japs employed th | Why not start a war on all restau owners who employ Japs, and it so hot for them that they Ml be compelied to fire the Japs? A. L. GUSTOFSON, 4104 W. Ray Ss BUYING JAPANESE OUT Editor The Star: As the Japanese on on this Coast is a serious why not do as Abe Lincoln tried do in civil war days—buy the Jap Just as Mr. Lincoln proposed te the negroes? You cannot blame) Jap for the invasion. It was Intedness on the part of the Inited States government. GOUVERNEUR PAULDING, 3522 Govn't, Way. . D PUT CAR TRACKS nM! ER CURBSTONE | Editor The Star: At a time when street car proposition seems to occupying the attention of th of Seattle, permit me to state h phase of the question, one ch, to my way of thinking, is far important than anything that been presented in the way Of pinating the dangers incident to et car traffic. The proposed plan is stmply to PP transfer the street car tracks from - center of the street to the curb either side of the street and let autos and other traffic take the .| . Easily said, is it not?—but =a easily done, you think? There have been before thé coun “€il some proposed extensions of the @nd demonstrate the practicability Sand the desirability of its being] Adopted, wherever and whenever | Public policy demanded. JAMES LIDDLE, 825 10th Ave. “q YS WEST FOR ‘ HT WINES AND BEER ) Editor The Star: The people of the | West are for light wines and beer. I D@p and down the Coast in the past two months, and I hear it every | Where I go. In a smoker, the other day, going from Spokane to Walla Walla, we Mook a poll on the liquor question. Where were 12 of us. All voted M@gainst a return of the saloons, One WWoted bone-dry. The rest voted for Hight wines and beer geen wine and beer so TI wiles of a nationally advertised yeast WRhave increased 85 per cent “past few months, It is har to be | Much more bread 4 An idea that has, like Topsy and ‘the Hoover boom. owed,” has heen suggested to me by hundreds whom I have met in my travels. PPhere ie not,'so far aa I can discov Per, any organized propaganda behind i It has simply occurred to a lot of at the same time. The idea is it the government should take the sale of wines and beer, r ing the price and guaranteeing quality. Everywhere the senti At is against the liquor interests, ind there is no desire anywhere to Bee the brewers and distillers again a factor in American politics R. W. MADISON, OUT OF THE RANKS Comrade Rawviski--Would you Believe it, I just now saw Comrade Pohikataki sign his name to the pay iesaae Perhovitz—And Tnever he was @ scholar. 1 suppose We'll have to clase bim with the Pies “nears Ths Pps ¢ By mall, ovt of city, fe per month nontha, or : »s that one doesn’t read “of some horrible airplane accident.” Haven't you heard this remark a dozen of the pape times lately? And hasn't flying become as- United States? Or did you ever compare w Pthe casualties between the automobile and a “prop.” lane for distance traveled? ‘here is something about a plz ‘ing a mile to its doom that appeals to one’s que. And that is the t on his part, and perhaps a) Dhave traveled probably 15,000 miles! In Montana and California I have | The Seattle Star 3 months, $1.60 of ° Outs Riate of 4 year, By carl miata, city, Lae per week. ve « Given a machine that is carefully inspect- ane plung- ed, a pilot that is experienced and cautious, | and flying is hardly more dangerous than} driving a Henry thru a crowded street-—| thfully chroni- shrieking headlines to the coatrary. a) What Is, Is Not The process by which enormous profits are made, (0) the 2 on the books, has had a flood of light thrown hearings before the Anthracite coal comminsion, which ase in wages should be granted to the miners. presented to the com industry whien | termine what, if any, incr The consultin mission a history | ts the mine, workers of the control of the anthracit le short of amazing in the racite railroads have concealed profits of the t This was made posgible, according to this docum | system which rendered the finances of the coal | railroad company practically one, Before the end | the railroad companies, either operating directly compa! unmi anthracite 1 in the United § ling coal that it became © operate at a profit on the basis of mut ent coal con 4 were then sup railroad compan the bonds, r ways ansist | | rtation rates, with furnished arent result rates have ¢ © are no my of railroad owne ets stung in ; the miners get Only the private owners profit schoolboy think of Volts & Then he goes down for the th And it's very simple. and “amperes.” d time and never pressure and in three minutes fills your tub with You wouldn't say that “a pound was water or t It might be a pound of salt or a ga But if you know that your water is have 30 gallons of it and you k |be so very hard to de’ ¢ how long it would Pounds and gs n, are measuring standards. Volts and amp r are exactly the same to electricity that pound The voltage of a current is its preasure (pounds). quantity’ (gallons). f vinegar pou: you have the amount of work it will do. The same h ts a horse-power. w that’s not bard, ts {t? © of about 15. That means it will f of electricity at 2.5 volts (pounds) pressure. Walter Dill “rating scale” | The essence of the scheme was to have men reaching @ certain point on some pure! Seott’s scale wan made as follows: Ther wrote his name at the botte the general average, half | Then a fourth man who | the middle man and the lowest jbut his physique. | The same m About "1 | the tracks Weve that the people are eating that | across a track ahead of a train, to save a minute! and then risk his life in his hurry to cross a congested ntreet, | thritt What's the hurry? It's better to get there Everybody knows th of course! But the hea | family wiped jot the | body knows it by heart, but nearly everybody forgets , needs it most. |things, and it may be that you'll feel the But before you When the home. Later his folks found him sitting on hatch them. Before he as 10 he had burned a burn,” chopped off a finger, was nearly drowned, @ liberal doze of seidlitz powders tc gas generated would cause the lad to fly, Tom Edison was what they called a “b publicly whipped in the village And now look at him! Don't t something you woul You may deprive pos' the boy's desire to experi t have done. they will work out Germany's indemnity, Time may cover a multitude of sina, but it ia doubtful if the Bull-Moose party will foryet that Harding compared Roosevelt to Benedict Arnold, Most of the unpleasantness of hot wedther consists in studying the thermometer, Jt doesn’t help much to hope for the best unless you yoet acquainted with a savings bank. ome people try to do much good, and some try to do many good, ‘EVERETT TRUE Let ME Look aT THat CAST MEMO~ RANDUM 1 Gave Hiiahed Daily by The Ata @ month, $2.76) year, or month, cled in red ink when the ordinary automobile| accident is tucked away in ” modest corner} There are men in the vicinity of Seattle veteran aviators—who have flown distances rful tailspins, that would take them around the earth al corpses? hundred times—-and without a mishap. the number of There are scores of military aviators in} y over the state who flew for months under adver r conditions and did not so much as break] is trying to de) revelations of the nea they control . by a bookkeeping | of the 19th had come into the ownership of over 4 the or without companies, fi tification for ve those of the ave resulted and enabled the than H. Stanley Benedict Gallons of Current f+ ty and immediately the business man, the housewife! “PICTURE BRIDE,” generally where one of the parties to « mar speaking, ls @ woman in Japan | riage contract lives in Japan and the who has betrothed herself to 4 Jap. | other under foreign jurisdiction, nor ancse man tA t an exchange of photographs. Prior to the pas eration act requi teat, marriages upon or are, electricity. Amperes is, or are, electricity, too—~only-~" You turn the tap in your bath tub, The water flows at n waa water.” ds pressure and that you | fore a ke to fill the bath tub, - gear nese civik law against such mar-|the pyramids of Egypt.” But since May 6, 1917, marriages |riages an the so-called “picture| think o° that? immigranta at American docks | bride” marringes and for that reasor And did you know that the French have been prohibited. The Japanege, | he considers them-at east not illegal | Revolution was @ bread riot? yw the in Japan. He nowhere declared the| that a bread shortage dethroned the raphs | practice to be an established custom |czar? that hundreds of millions of | ft long standing and did not appeai| men never heard of bread? that « on in Japan. \tor ite validity upon that ground. pound of peanuts contains more food g standards of electrical current. 4 are to water ‘The amperage is ite and gal therefore, today mer Multiply the number of pounds of water by the number of gallons and) practice of exchan, and recording the contractual rela js true with volts and amperes. Multipty thetr number and you have watts, the unit of work. Seven hundred and forty-six wa! o—a dry cell, or battery, has a voltage of two and one-half and ish 15 amperes (fallons) nene'man fF | is admitted into America as the wife| Thi» practic of the Japanese man with an full/ Of the laws of the state of California, |tion? that the » enough for the human race, and we have not begun to realize its sources? that the use of sugar as | food is-almost as new as the use of petroleum as fuel? and that lof starchy. foods is not wheat, but married status an t been p States and married in accordance| It sometimes happens that a man with the laws. This is in absolute contravention | ing him. The Army Rating Scale cottdid a notable thing for the army. cording to which officers could make fair and reason. able estimates of each other on which promotiona were based. He devined « of our state laws and rights, sinos, | under the constit - | States, each state controls the do-| preciative she may take to the lec-| “Daddy, bring home mestic relations of its residents as | marriage, divorce, guardiansh and other family relations. | There is no basis either in domes of international law for permit ting any foreign government to as | knew them best as better or worse than other living men, arbitrary To may that Tom is better or worse than Dick, whom everybody kn means far more than to say that he deserves a grade of 80, | nobody knows what 80 means to the man who says it : pecs, postroned for reasons I don’t! x ber. My proposition is to try! pach officer wrote down the names of about a dozen officers {his own rank whom he knew well, {ncluding good, Then he picked the one who was highest in some one given like physique @ncluding bearing, neatness, voice, energy and endur and wrote his name at the top of a second slip hh picked the one who was lowest In this mme quality and ‘Then one in the middl between the highest n he called high, half way man and the best; and a fifth, whom he called low, marriage over both parties where # within the jurisdiction of the United Sta who represented It is a long established rule among between the ivilised half way between | ummated in any other country in full ac laws prevailing therein. But the pio | 4 ‘© bride marriage is not an estab | ve In arranging these names for his scale he wag to think of nothing hod was used for other qualities, each officer making} different rating scale for each different quality method can be used in rating school immigra ‘This is very clearly shown in the} letter of the then Japaneses ambasan Mr. Sato, at Wa note dated Api Stop, Look, Listen 0 persons were killed at railroad crossings States last year. Most of them were in automobiles jook; others didn’t listen, and very many triéd to beat the train across | Men waste hours and hoard seconds. A fellow will loaf all day} It's @ poor sort ia a part of Mr. Satos’ letter | ‘There is no provision in the J ¢ than not at at a railpoad crossing has become a commonplace} THE SEATTLE STAR —By CONDO! THATSS FouNnwy— Xk Hap t* HeRe Jost A Moment Ao, | BUT ¥ DON'T | seem to ne age King Banana. (Copyriaht, 1 riness v ousness unto the mpirit The average book re more than the average, lens for the purpone buy, for the re plished review jo Franc urer, “Apropos 3, Py ET'S SPREAD THIS RAT NOST r GROUT ON THO FLOOR WHERE WS | [ie Ca ee) a elven.” AT tT, AID | [out ourselves” TLE HEcP FIN® U7 CUE | | eoing to recommend that you not borrow, sample, nor not borro ” the dreams it started. nd strengthe (4) Itten 9 @ bank or a ‘friend. eee ant for it ts “The World's sources,” by J. Russel fessor in Columbia unive I nawure you that behi deadening words, Food Writes for The Star Today on “Picture Brides” Hehte in. Doctor Frank CRANE’S ‘Daily Article The World’s Food. Peanuts vs. Steak. (A Book Review). (1) The author has something te ay, womething you want And this something 1s solid fact Nothing ts no beautiful as a fact (2) He nays it delightfully, The} ots are 86 ordered an to fillip your agination. I have had to lay the book down a dozen times to follow 1 thru. Such are usua os, It t# the kind you hand, and turn to again and again, | Its title does not sound attract! J thor Of the making of books there t*| no end, and most of them the flesh and @ bor are a yea. is entire of qut to you what books you want to won that the r weems to Ko up t akespeare Mollere let us proceed to talk ‘There ix one book, however, I am inspect Because it is a regular genuine k, by the four tests know () What he says enriches your nowledge. Something passes from to you that actually r ideas nourishes | book you keep at a pre three | @mith, and Professor in a University there lurk wondrous skie lrounding stars, amazing’ grottoes of glittering treasure and all the entures a vigorous and vital mind BY H. STANLEY BENEDICT | "Phe view*you get of the world’s (Me Califorpia State Board Control.) con alte batters rent and impending wor United tates thru has there appeared before the cour lany case invbiving this point, © of the 1917/ the reason that the places of actu ng @ literary | residence of the pa: rival and be-| form no essential requirement for a| pisaion of the immigrant was | marriage to be legalized.” 1 generally by the immi| In other words, he merety staten |; gill the time betw s of all Bauens coming Ww our| that there is po provision in Japa-] washington and Cheop fzation, prognostica eee Here's one se! ly ft ng photo; jes concerned lier of food supply there ar more change since the George Washington than there food supply gives you ® grasp of cur nothing else can give. You see food} determining history, shaping pqll- | tics, deciding warn, indicating civil ng the future ence: “In the mat- been was ore built What d'ye and eee Boats carrying picture brides have | value than a pound of steak plus a 1S | ate, the world could eas es. The picture*bride | bringing In . which fa In vtolation hundred times the pre both parties | should be discontinued at once, the United ent {hits an enemy a hard blow by ignor- | on of the United) When » woman's hash ian’t ap-| the banana Roldt’s French pastry.” | juriadiction in the matter of a eee ns for each country te as valid, marria Money in the Bank pec F you have ever experienced misfor- tune—and who has not?—you can appreciate the message ‘of cheer con- d by those words. The best friend in time of need ts a Savings Ac ordance with the customs or | custom of Japan, but is in| reality only a recent practice | count. If you have been planning to have one adopted for the purpose of meeting | for some time, why not begin now? Every day lost means money and time lost. cha: t a conditions brow adoption of the new| n act | th Resources More Than Thirty Million Dotlara Second Avenue at Colu picture marriages. Following | law sp “ramen” "| | El The Seattle National Bank partment of state in reply to an in-} quiry from the department concern the legal status of these Japa There ts no attempt whatever at been for yours arriving regularly pound of potatoes plus one-third of & marriages in compliance with the|from Japan, the latest one, arriving |@ pound of butter? that if we would laws of the state in which the Japa-|&t San Francisco on July 17, 1920, | stop war, quit fighting, and co-oper- y feed popula- j contains food ny | re- king some of top, Look, Listen? is the classic among snappy slogans, | Father, Withhold Thy Strap! | Some day your boy will do something out of session with the strap reserved for unruly outbr pply the strap think of Tom great inventor was 6 yenrs old he was missing from and had administered another boy, square as @ warning to other boys. © too sure your bey needs a whipping just becanse he has done rity of a Tom Edison by curbing too severely ent, to try out things, to explore, to discover, Germany has the finest educational institutions in the world. Perhaps A celebrated physician says it is wise to train for your vacation three weeks in advance. Congress evidently thinks 365 days better. BEST $2.50 GLaAsses ‘We are one of the few optical stores in the Northwest that really «rind lenses from start to finish, and we are the only one in SEA Fxamination free, by graduate op- tometrist, Glasses not prescribed unless absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. save teeth rather than to replace them The teeth that nature gave you are the best that you can ever have and, by proper care, you can retain them for your lifetime. If, however, instead of having them regularly inspected and maintained in good con dition you allow them to lapse into a condition of ex- treme decay there is no remedy but their removal. You will be wise to visit the dentist twice a year and have your natural teeth kept in @ state of proper re pair. DR, J, R. BINYON Free Examination All Work Done by Specialists, Who Are Part Owners of the Business, on Earth LADY ATTENDAN K—ON FIRST AVE. wn spring aad beneca, | OPEN EVENINGS Phone Main 1530. UUOMIOOOUUUUUUOUAGUUUUGUYOOUOUOQUOOUEOUHEMUUUE ELLIOTT 4357 1604.4 ve | Back beset ne: | MMs ETHICAL DENTISTS == | Today's Best Laugh: 1i'LL SPREAD THE CANVAS The summer. | has been picked to take the place of Burton as skipper of the Shamrock IV, weather observer's ds the josh column weather's #0 doggone loco it the forecast about six days a You have to admit this for the men Niagara Falla: Preeumably to get his name in the ‘Twins, who #a Some men will pay $20 a quart for poison booze with pings mentioning bim, calle . murmur, but on my donk, ‘The only chance a girl gets to wear nowadays ig when g0e8 in swimming 1 called the number and asked for of that name. No empty b So many of us ha on tor sheeiff the wonder is who’ be left to vote for us. 6 filed as candt Spanish bull fighters have gone on Now ff all the bull fighters in this country would go on st Junk dealers have decided to enti worth of inaurance, truth about Ye garbage men, high cost of living. ter out of place, will and notwdy would have to read this| b4ndiers of m lumbla Colo— new American oldt's —Advertisement. AIR FROM 500,000 steamer Palas New York from It 500,000 strings of garlic Tan, Red or Freckled Skin Is Easily Shed 7 man advertises in Vi enna papers for 2 bly wants enough to last him a cou-| of ple of months your summer-s * muddiness, urnelf of the #kin t rk detectives are now ques ry mercolized wax ng out-of-town folk about ight as you use cold Immediately the offending sure n begins to con wder-like particles outer searf skin is abi everybody in New York. AMES IS NAMES ond layer of «kin resents @ spotless arkling beauty ob- ters firet infantry, ¢ signed, B. A. Poore, col p Lewis, are | lized wax usuaily is to completely renovate « bed ven if Germany stil! hag her schoo: hasn't a navy When Art and Science j inds, then you have the Bruns- wick. Whether it be the delicate notes of the violin, flute, the crashing volume of the military band, the bird-like soprano, or the robust tenor, all are inim- itably reproduced. We carry a complete line of this wonderful instrument, also a full line of Brunswick Records. payment plan ts within reach of Our easy 1216-18 Third Ave. Between University amd Seneca Streets Phone Main 3139

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