The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 17, 1922, Page 17

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FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1922, ¢ READ THIS MESSAGE: SEATTLE NEEDS NEW BLOOD, of a tonic, or a tutor from Las Angeles. I sold real estate in Los Angeles in 1901-—population then 101,000. I boosted Los Angeles to beat the band—told prospective yera that Los Angeles would be the largest city on the Pacific Coast. My boss told me it would-——MY BOSS WAS RIGHT. But why did Los Angeles grow? Because every man, woman and child boosted—even the In dians and Mexicans boosted. Think of it! 101,000 boosters tm 1901-—300,000 boosters in 1910—and ever 600,000 boosters now! ‘What would Seattle do {f 315,00@ people began doosting this beautiful city? Les Angeles doosters used judgment. They are a wise bunch—they wrote to their Eastern friends, urging them to spend the WINTER in Los Angeles, because they knew very well if they spent the summer there they would never come back, They told their Eastern friends about the orange and lemon groves, because they knew their friends bad never seen orangs groves. We can’t tell our Eastern friends about orange and lemon groves and our beautiful winter sun- shine, but how about the Big Mountain, “Mt. Rainier,” Snoqualmie Falls, Lake Crescent, our wonderful forests, the Great Puget Sound and Alaska? Do our friends back East have such things? Be wise boosters, lke Los Angeles— ask your friends to spend the summer in Seat. tle or Washington! DO IT NOW! Sit down tonight and write a letter or a postal to every friend you have who lives outside the state; urge them to come to Washington this summer. Tell them to buy Washington apples, or Paul's Jams—they are for sale everywhere. Go to our Chamber of Commerce and get some dencriptive folders of Washington and send them to your friends—the Chamber of Commerce is advertising for tour ists, Help them—they are really doing things SEATTLE NEEDS 315,000 REAL WILL YOU BE ONE. OF THEM? If so start boosting today. If you own real estate you should boost all the harder. If you don’t own real estate you ought to buy some. Now ts the Ume to buy it—will never be cheaper. This city’s all right—it's going to grow, and grow fast from now on. You didn't buy Liberty bends when they were cheap because you thought they would be cheaper—what are they worth today? Those who bought real estate in Los Angeles 10 or 15 years ago made lots of money. Those who buy real estate now in Seattle will reap a big profit. If you are a rent payer buy a home—that's boosting Se and you too. It will make you & better citizen—and « better booster. HELP THE UNEMPLOYED WAR VETER ANS! Look over your property. See if you can't find something that needs repairing, or painting, or cleaning. Find something for the HAT’S the enormous sum spent in one year for advertising in NATIONAL MAGAZINES by two “condensed’’ milk companies. Who paid the bill? You, the consumer—yet you got the same quality milk as if you had bought FEDERAL MILK for less money. Colored pictures and pages costing as much as $15,000 each, for one issue, never put quality into any milk. If you want pure, sterilized milk with all the butter fat left in— Insist on FEDERAL Sold direct from the factory to the retailer through our distributing agency— Consolidated Milk Products Co. 419 Cotman Building, Seattle LET’S GO! ||Let’s Start Something Be a Booster or Move to Los Angeles—Knock the 3c Street Car Fare! Boost for a Mayor That Wears a Vest—Boost and Buy Washington Products boys to do-—even a day's work will help some poor fellow out. and find a« little work for them, Buy Washington Products Do you like the coffee that is served you in hotels and cafes in Seattle? 90 per cent of the coffee served by these places is roasted, blended and sold by Seattle mer chants? Don't buy foreign coffee, buy Seattle coffee—Maximum, other brands. The same thing applies to hundreds of other producta, too numerous to mention, Urge your friends to buy Washington products; tell every member of your family to buy them. Roost everything, anything that will help Seat Ue. Begin today and keep everiastingly at it Plans are practically completed for the finane ing of @ $3,000,000 hotel for Seattle—big men are behind it-—real live business men who have faith in our city and men who mean busigess I can't tell you any more, but you will hear all about it very soon. ‘This is St. Patrick's Day—you can abvays re member the day you began boosting for Seattle. Wear a green tie today—and be sure and buy one made in Seattle Two Weeks From Today T am going to start the greatest Real Estate Campaign ever put on in Seattle. Nothing but real, bona fide Bargains will be handled. A full Page advertisement will appear in this paper two weeks from today—March 3ist. 1 will not advertise any property for sale in that ad, or any future ad that in my estimation ls not a real BARGAIN. I already have several clients who give me their property for sale at bargain prices, If you have any property which you want to sell and will put your price down low enough, I want you to call and see me Let's co-operate—let's do some business. If you really want to nell, or must sell, my new plan will well your property, The big department stores run full page ads offering bargains in various de partments—that's just what I am going to do Farms, Ranches, Large Homes, Bun Chicken Ranches, Suburban Homesites, Business Property—anything that is a bargain will be handied. I ha large number of clients, many of them ready to buy real bargains. Call and see me and let me teli you about my new plan of selling real estate. Yours very truly, D acon a 206 Marion St., Ground Ploor. Elliott 2900 Member Senitlce Real Eatate Ass'n. Get busy Do you know that Crescent or a dozen As Mr, Bermann Says the Thing Looks to Him By Robert B. Bermann Hirosi Saito, Japanese consul in Seattic, haw taken it upon himaeif to contradict my report, as publinhed in The Star, of hin address before | the Rotary club members on Wednes: | day That in, Neither I | done #0. | on The| on the) | I premume he has nor anyone else Star has heard from him subject, but I notice that he has given out for publication what pur ‘porta to be “a typewritten copy” of | his addrens. On this “typewritten copy” 1 have onty one comment to make It may be a splendid tterary document, but it is not the speech which he delivered to the Rotary club. | 1 was present during bis entire apecch, sitting only a few feet away Itrom him at the spsaker’s table, and |I am willing to take oath that the typewritten copy” is no n the actual address which he made than [thin statement is the Ten Command ments In the first place, I don’t believe that Mr. Saito ts physically capable | jot delivering the addresa which he [purports to have made, He doubtless has sufficient knowledge of the Eng [tsh language to WRITE such « speech, but I seriously question} |whether, with his Japanese vocal | |chords, he would be able to arcend vocally to the sublime heights of elu. [quence ascribed to him in the “eopy.” | In the second place, anyone famil. | jlar with public speaking knows that [which they prepare in adva And Mr. Saito certainly strayed far \afield from his prepared copy when/ he actually spoke, Whole paragraphs that appear in ithe “copy” were never uttered before | the Rotary club, and some of the! most important statements which he! actually did make are not to be founa| in the “copy.” For instance, the “copy™ quotes! him es saying: + + « Then a ninepower treaty as to China, a treaty relative to} Chinese maritime customs, a treaty relative to submarines and poison- oun gases, and a naval dimrmament treaty were simultaneously signed. The longstanding Shantung ques tion waa also settled by the Chi neaeJapanese negotiations . . . and #0 on. IT am «cure waa present that everyone who will agree that Mr Saito never uttered those words. Nor that he made this Mowery statement in his introduction “The sea was calm as a mirror) all the way thru, and the boat waa one of thone palatial greyhounds} plying between New York and Southampton.” And #0’ might go on indefinitely. nicipal Railway, Saturday, SCRATCH FOOD, PER 100 LBS.... HIGH PROTEIN EC PER 100 LBS.. ONION SETS— MILK Powdered Sugar 3 Ibs, 24¢ Brown 4 Ibs. Rice—Fancy Head 5 Ibs. 35¢ Sugar Stall Stall 110—Rhubarb, Ib. ... Stall 129—Dill Pickles, 4 fo Stall KEROs Satisfaction Guaranteed—| Stall 114 I STALL 130 100 Ths. Granulated Sugar 85.60 ) Carnation or Borden's Milk, can " De Co-Operative MilK, 3 cana... 286 | Centennial Best Flour #k. $1.95 | Fisher's Blend Flour 82.15 | 6 Ibs. M. J. B, Coffee 81.79 Qe Citrus Powe Stalls Meat prices that SUGAR CURED sea pound . CHOICE S' pound..... CHOICE STEER pound CHOICE pound hit THE SEATTLE How They Line Up on What Jap Said }Ae the Rotary Club Officers | | ditor ‘The Star | hilt | be building warships again within 10 TIMES SQUARE SIXTH AND VIRGINIA UMBRELLA SALE Lost and Found articles auctioned by the Seattle Mu- EXTRA SPECIAL; 2 LBS.. SEED POTATOES (EARLY ROSE All varieties of Chicken Feed Milk delivered free—C. 0. D.'s accepted SUGAR Stall 137—Best Full Cream Cheese, Ib......... Stall 136—Sauer Kraut, 2 quarts ............. 25—Fresh Churned Butter, 2 Stall 36—Cauliflower, head Stall 118—Grapefruit, 3 for ...... Stalls 48-134—Smelts, lb, 15¢; 2 Ibs... ENE G TOKIO FUSS’ MARKET METALL NEAT if STAR See the Thing At a meeting of our board of dires: | tors today, your front-page article on | the spesoh of Mr. Hiren! Saito before | the Rotary club yesterday was unaph mously condemned. A newspaper, to merit the confi dence of the public, and of the men who compose this club, must tell the truth, Not only must it tell the truth, but refrain from quoting only & part of the truth when half-truths, plus An animus, can inflame preju dices that destroy international good will Rotary holds no brief for the Jap anese, but ix on record by a member f 90,000 leading business and al men in 24 countries for deal, It is the unqualified the undersigned, the beara opinion e lof directors, that your paper has to- tally disregarded this principle in the | vicious and inflammatory interpreta tion, purporting to be a report placed upon Mr, Saito's speech be fore the Rotary club of Seattle you terday Mr, Saito wag the guest of Seattle Rotary yesterday, and, regardiess of differences in opinion, is entitled to our courteous consideration. We therefore regard your attack as a de. | — Uberate insult to the membership of | this club. THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS ROTARY CLUB OF SEATTLE. Origine opy signed by W. A Wicks, I lent; G, T. Gunter, Inv mediate Past President field, Vice President; G. L. field, A. A. Gardner, Wylie Hemp- | J.T. Hardeman, H. H. Manny C. H. Morford, J. 1. Mendenhall, W. C. Morse, W. E. Turner, IB, A. Wana maker, Directors, R. J. Bcho-| But there in no nesensity, for 1/ have quarrel with Mr, Saito be-| = cause he did not stick to his pre-| pared speech, I do object, however, to his «tv ing out the prepared speech now! as ® verbatim report of what he/ said. Eapecially when in no portion | of the copy does he make the fol-| lowing statement, which everyone Present heard him utter: “The scrapping of a handful of warships will be of no avail. Untens | you are mentally disarmed we will years.” In the “copy” this statement ap pears an follows: { “The scrapping of a handful of | capital ships, at Washington, would | be of no avail, if mental dimarma. | ment of man is not to follow and be | promoted.” | ProJapanese enthusiasts might | hold the difference to be negligible but anyone who carefully listened to Mr. Baito’s speech must realize that it in & vital matter, Flite 4880 March 18—Lower Section. csvsmmeees 2029 25c 40c 3 Cans. . 25c Per Case $4.25 Cube Sugar 3 lbs. 24¢ Sugar 24¢ Beans Small White, 5 lbs. 31¢ Lower Section .25¢ .25¢ 15¢ 25¢ 80¢ 15¢ ).25¢ ..25¢ r 10¢; 1 doz.. Ibs. AS BURNER if Price Sale for Short Time WESTLAKE MARKET PHONE MAIN 5952 Ib. can Crisco bara Ivory Soap 3-Ib. can Ghirardelli's Ghoce late ‘Re 50 Olympic Pancake Flour 206 bo Cream of Wheat 200 rolls Waldorf Toilet Paper 25 dor 10-11 save you money ...124c .. 20¢c 20c a , Wbiee'e UT ETT Te Vor, even acoording to the ™ Mr. Salto sak: “ international mind may, in words, armament," Butter. | ted uniess the United 8 proached the question in intergationalism.” Putting these statements together, | | there is but one conclusion to reach— Mental disarmament means inter nationali#n. he dencribed as had declar 1 that the copy to have an other | ‘mental dis-| properly and shortly before this | residents question could never be net ap | pir of COFFEE fn? m brothers" Pacific years.” Star, coast verny is to be solved. Therefore— Unless the United States becomes | have no apolozy “internationalintic” ficing the Interests of its own citi- Japanese |zens for those of our nd permitting the Japs| to take complete possession of the| I then Japan bullding warships again within 10 | He did not my this in so many words; ag I explained in Wednesday's “Balto did not issue his warn- The tnternationalistic epirit is nec am as @ flat statement.” | enmary te the Jap. American contro- But whe could ask for a clearer PAGE 17 Own inference? In conclusion, I wish to my © to offer to Mr. |Saito. But I have one to make |to readers of The Star. In the hurry of writing the story just febore “press time,” referred to his threat as “thinly-veiled.” In this I believe I erred. After mature deliberation — have come to the conclusion that it was not veiled at all, bub) rather a blatant insult to the s whole American people which should not be tolerated. — sacri. “little brown | “will be OLYMPIC-CENTRAL | PUBLIC MARKET Entrances First and Second Avenues Saturday Speci: als SUGAR—PURE CANE, 10 Ibs......59¢ American Grocery Stores Co. 3 BIG DOWNTOWN STORES Upper and Lower Floors, Central Public Market—Seattle Market, 109 Occidental Ave. Mail Order Dept., 1112 Western Ave.—Phone Elliott 5074. $5.85 FEDERAL or CO-OPERATIVE Mi Ske ROYAL BAKING ; POWDER, 2% Ibs. Wesson Oil, gallon Fairco— Shortening; 4b. 3 for BSE: 6 for Peas, Mission Brand: Standard; Eastern Solid Tomatoes, ‘Tomatoes, Pineapple, Pineapple, Broken Sliced; Pineapple, Grated— Mission Pears, Phelp's Jam, 8-oz tumbie: Marmalade, 7-oz. tumbler, Apple Butter, Libby's; Raisins, 11-02. pkg., seeded pint 25¢; quart 48¢; % -—_ Pack; pail, - Peas—Fine 25-cent value; Sifted June; can Se: Peas, Finest Wisconsin Sugar, 27¢; 3 Corn, Paris Brand (Maine), can 19¢; 2 ring Corn, Country Gentleman; can 17¢; 3 for .. Corn, Wisconsin; Extra Standard; 3 cans. Asparagus Tips and Stalks, No. large cans 14¢; 3 for. 2 cans. ...0.0. Extra Sliced; 2s 25¢; 3 for 2s 194; 3 f wee Pineapple, Grated—Hunt's Supreme; 2%, can 2s ZL¢: is, Mat, ‘ Royal Anne Cherries, large can.. Del Monte Aprieots, 2s, can 2Z¢; 3 for 2%, can B3¢: 2 for 2 for . 18-02 can i, 14¢; Raisins, Sun Maid, Seedless; 15 ozs; 2 pkgs. WESTERN COFFEE CO. STORES 2% cans. for 1420 First Avenue—Lower Central Market 1426 First 109 Avenue—Olympic Market Occidental Ave.—Seatile Market EXTRA SPECIAL! Our Very Beat Coftee— Only 2 Iba. corr T ALL TRAS ‘STORES FLAV-0-) und 40e—-2 Ibs. for The a customer, LUNCHES RITE UNITED BAKERIES BREAD Better Than the Best! 11/2-Ib. Loaf, 10c 1426 First Avenue—Olympic Market Olympic Meat Co. 1426 First Avenue Free Checking Stand Rack Bones, 6 Ibs Pork Sausage- .20¢ Pure Bulk; Ib. Steer Pot Roas Ib, -12%¢ Steer Short Ribs, 1D, csscesecvees 12%¢ Veal Roast Veal Chops, 2 Ibs. for Pork Ro Rolled Ro: Potato Salad, pint.. Club Salad, pint. Pork Liver, Ib. Anchor Bacon, Ib, Bacon Strips, Ib.. 25¢ . Be .16¢ 24¢ Bacon Back, Lean, Ib. Strictly g Str Eges; 3 mS; de tly Iresh dom . doz, ... eee ABE ‘15¢ Pullet .22¢ -. 65¢ WESTERN DELICATESSEN CoO. Upper and Lower Floors, Central Public Market—1422 First Avenue Seattle Market—109 Occident. Large Queen Olives, pint.......25¢ Market Closes 6 P. M. FLOUR BY THE BAG at Less Than Car- load Prices! FISHER’S BLEND, 49-Ib. bag. ...$2.10 DRIFTED SNOW, 49-Ib. bag... .. lisa. 0S PATENT EXCELLENT, 49-lb. bag $1.95 REX HARD WHEAT, 49-lb. bag. .$2.15 Raisins, Loose Muscats; 2 Ibs. Ase 26-Ib. box .. Baker's Cocoa, % lb 25¢; Ib. Baker's Premium Chocolate; %-Ib. 23: Ghirardelil’s Ground Chocolate; Ib. 29: Ghirardelli's Sweet Chocolate, 1Ib cake Booth Sardines, can 19¢; 3 for Fine Sardines, in Cotton Seed 0! 6 for .. Oysters; G-or. can 17 Shrimp; No. 1 can 17¢; large cans Wakefield Kippered Herring, 2 cans Heinz's Baked Beans; all varieties; sm., medium, 3 cans 47¢@; large .. Salmon—Alaska Sockeye; Ib.-can Salmon—Puget Sound Sockeye; %-Ib. Salmon—Med. Red; %-1b. can, 3 for . Hill's Red Can Coffee; Ib. 42¢; M. J. B. Coffee, Ib. 40¢; 3 Ibs. Golden West Coffee: 10 Crystal White and 1 Creme Oil Soap. 4 Creme Oil Soap . Citrus, large pkg. . Clorox—Bottle 20¢. satisfied. Our “Special” Blend Coffee, Ib. ----.-.-e0- Try it—money bee! 1420 First Avenue Special—Pure Pork Sausage, Bulk— pound .. ereerr ti Pork Back Bones, 6 Ibs. for. . Bork: Lilet Tos oo ce i'n owas ce Choice Pork Roast, lb. ...... Choice Veal Roast, lb. .. Steer Pot Roast, lb... Steer Short Ribs, Ib. .. Steer Rolled Roast, Ib. Sugar Cured Picnics, lb. Sugar Cured Carnation Bacon, Ib... Sugar Cured Bacon Strips, Ib..... Sugar Cured Hollywood Bacon, Ib. ..16¢é Sugar Cured Pickled Spare Ribs, pound ... se cestece es meee Sugar Cured Corned Beef, lb......1246¢ Bay City Meat Co. 1420 First Avenue Pure Pork Sausage, Bulk, Ib Fancy Steer Pot Roast, Ib Short Ribs of Beef, Ib. Rolled Roast, Ib... Shoulder Pork Roast, Ib Shoulder Lamb, Ib. . Fancy Veal Roast, Ib. Fancy Veal Chops, Ib, 18¢; 2 Ibs. Pork Liver, Ib. ..+sees Sugar Cured Picnics, Ib... Sugar Cured Carnation Ba Sugar Cured Bacon Strips, Ib.. Sugar Cured Hollywood Bacon, Sugar Cured Corned Beef, Ib...... Avenue Mayonnaise, Tb. ..............35¢ Chicken Croquettes, each.......10¢

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