The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 21, 1922, Page 6

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By mail, oul of city, Sle per menth: F menthe $1.40; € monthe, #2 tn the «tate of W Outeide of the per mont Wonthe, or $9.00 per year My cerrier, ety, bo a month. The Seattle 400 for 6 _ An editor’s mail is a wonderful institution, Every day a batch of snappy new ideas, For instance, this morning the postman hands us a missive from Jim Marshall. Jim has been listening to office seekers. He can't understand why a candidate will we expose his family history, join a half dozen fraternal orders, boast of what he has : and make wild promises as to what he will do if elected, : if “I do not know why I should be expected to vote for a man because he was born ig in Yahoo county, North Dakota, in the spring of 83,” Jim writes, “It is true, how- : , that this reason is about as good as any other advanced on the average dope E Jim’s hunting a man “who stands alone and tells the whole world to go to the devil necessary. | Jim proposes that the following questions be submitted to all candidates to deter- their fitness for public office: © Do you like dogs? offered your choice between a $100 set of the volume of Harold Bell Wright ands paper-backed edt of the Confucian philosophy, which would you choose? What is your opinion of the men who drag religion into polities? “De you favor “strict enforcement of all laws,” or are you endowed with common sense? Which do you consider the better play, “Up in Mabel's Room” or “The Halry Ape”? | De you mow your lawn voluntarily, or does your, wife have to nag you? ae "s ideas sound reasonable. Why not submit these questions to every candidate and publish the answers? A could get a better idea of a candidate's character and fitness by studying the than by reading the office seeker’s own self-praise. A nickel isn’t so good as a dime, but it goes to church more often. One day last week a man understood what a You have scen ‘° A that insanity ¢Tain caller said. Georgia man wants to build an ark. Is it that highly emo wet in Georgia? “goes off the handle” sities : ° He ts not exactly erazy— You see more people talking back than coming en the borderiand, the under back. excitement some of a have pertodic fits of violent condition, in which mental def 77 ing Car gt clencles become intensified. curing © this individual Civilization does 00 many inn the Alluring Car “nerves.” He sane things, that ft ts high time BY BERTON BRALEY te the ordinary we began seeking and bsolating 1 do not sce much fun about of life, the madmen responsible. A car that's Just » runabout; haven't Two seats is not A. Warren The senator from North Dakota An awful lot (itr, McCumber) would be very When have friends to \ says: “It te cied if I would employ the adject- ‘ce ierrate oe excitement = ive “good” and say that this was the match te a good tariff dill, Ie would be A touring car ts trig enough, lack of emo ™ore gratified if I should say 1 And furthermore it's big enough ene of te > was @ just tariff bil; but 7 T To take a bunch ano should say either I “ena _— And heaps of lunch, homicide inaccurate. It ts nett good ” Jost, It 40 ded ond onjuct, ong J And thes make riding merry. . expect my friend would com: iy ise: ile :Manertption, a about those two adjectives—-Sena- A big car wHl take care of you M these Unstable Personalities tor King (D.), Utah. When there is just » pair of in judgment and calm » tang . Fanning amuck Dut defore I sertously undertake And three, or four, days in cur midst. te make of the poor man an inde- Or several more, pendent, intelligent, struggling Can ride when you desire it. v5 Soo i drother man, to wake him from his type torpor, to set him on hia fect, to ot kindle in hie sout that fire that If on trip you bang along the Imade irene my soul full of light and And want to take a gang along ih these im warmth, I must have something Your fun to share Stearns, we more than the impulse of @ wise ‘The space is there ce epelnaaend AG tt Tal aaa allaca Whenever you require it, want to, fF = ite that oppresacth the poor re- want to but cannot. proacheth his Maker; but he that And so to me, « touring car is con- honoreth Him hath mercy on the 14 much the most alluring car, to do. He = P00r.—-Proverbs ae. 108 pis With ‘ a walter: 2e After they oet talking movies we To take your kin by Inability = may learn what a man says when And friends upon excursions. In hard he gets paid for kissing Mary Pick- mentally par fH To ride the folks you like about, sees NO = “He knocked me down $0 times,” And pick up some who hike says a Kentucky woman asking dt- about Rave te Be voras. Thirty ts tee many. Yes, that’s the thing jd The boss can get away with loaf- Makes motoring ally stronger, ing on the job by pretending he is Least selfish of diversions! lor them even im figuring out something. (Copyright, 1922, Reettle @iar) explaining eee eee The old horse-trader didn't hove Does the gentleman from Ten- aa many things to He about as the neseee know that last year, because modern auto-swapper. of the diminished appropriations in je Per. Rt seach the department of labor, the secre- petrified Very few men who long for the tary of labor, James J. Davis, never They are good old days could eat thru a2 drew a dollar of his salary for him- inches of mustache. self, but pald st out of his own open aacantache ainda pens pocket for extra help to do federal “dumbbells.” nen an office starts out to vce Work? — Representative Gallivan @ man it uawally finds Mim coming (0). Mass to meet it. ASE ENT Re tas pe. ie When daughter eats ontons at Funny things happen. One store *v2Per father knows he can have 4s advertising petticoata, SOF Ore outing Tir outy i BM PRONE As someone has said, if an epg ta One-hal, 5 GP Sa aha tae wae ite Know dad at all, dt 40 wecless.—Benator Walsh (D.), Mow A man can inherit dollars but not findings should be passed on A speeder docan’t break any rec- ords getting out of the hospital TEETH EXTRACTION FREE DAILY Take fast steamers at Colman Dock REGULAR SCHEDULE Lesye teattle dali ean - 745-900 108) iam A$ - 918 - $13 p.m. *Racept Sunday SPECIAL NIGHT SERVICE Bremerton Our whalebone rubber, which does not cover the roof of the mouth if S| you have two or more teeth. | Natural Rubber, set of $6.00. THE SEATTLE STAR OEM | ¢_lOr CRAP Bo THE FOG By Esther Clark Hill in “The Lyric West” ‘The gray world, the gray world, That clouds the face of Spring: ‘That clothes in nebulous white shrouds Bach near familiar thing— Even the river's vol sounds strange, Sullenly murmuring. . No warm light finds the gray world Of filmy vetla and spray; ‘The clinging beauty of the fog Has shut the hille away; God'n liv sun has died and left This lovely wraith of Day! ‘The gray world, the ghost world The winds lie where they Met While Spring comes shyly veiled in gray To keep her April tryst © you who died before this day, What loveliness you mined! LETTERS 2 LUITOR The Glory of Man and of God Editor The Star: of Plato,” he says, “had the an A letter appeared in your columns] cient mysteries.” Well, what if recently signed by Albert Mackay. !they had? Did that keep them from He quotes from William Jennings | sipping down to oblivion in dark Bryan to the effect that “mo: ness and moral corruption? Mr, ethical questions belong exc Mackay musters out his mighty men to religion and the priests.” This/and lines them up on parade-—fir quotation was not given in quota | Oliver Lodge, et al. If these men tion marks, Would, Mackay be kind| held views opposite to his, they enough ‘to give the quotation, word| would not be so great In hin sight for word, as spoken or written by| Does he forget, or dove he not Mr. Bryan? know, that we can bring up man With regard to Mackay's “inside|for man an againet every one of version” of that terrible Southern | his, and just as great? tragedy, I may may that it does not Hut it is not a question of men, appear trustworthy; he juggles too] whether small or great, “that your freely with the terms “mistress” and | faith should not stand in the win “wife.” Mr, Mackay Informs wt/dom of men.” Personally 1 have that “no quarter” ls the motto of} great respect for Sir Oliver Lodge, the “republic of mage and philoso-) just as I have for Sir Albert Mac pher” (of which fraternity he ts) kay; that t*, when they mind their prewumably a member). I do not|own business, and keep their noses claim to belong to that “rowgh| out of other people's burinens. In conclusion, I would may that Oliver Wendell Holmes did not “ex press” the “glory of man” when he penned those immortal lines; he wa» not thinking of such a thing; but he certainty was thinking of, and expressing the “Glory of God.” He. had rather a poor opinion of the “glory of man,” and, in this respect, house” outfit; but since Mackay likes it that way we must accom modate him. He has the nerve to tell us that “millions are evolu tlonieta, and yet good Christians.” Thin statement tn very far from the truth, in fact, it ls false to the core; Mr, Mackay ts not a Christian nim nelf, and on this particular subject, he not know what he is talking|I agree that he was “a noble man about * lot science.” Yours, “Egypt, Chaidea, and the Greece HARKY G. MONROE. At Seattle’s Tourist Park Editor The Star: tertain the tourist. Yet, every eve As a taxpayer and resident fn the| ning finds the seats @ll occupied by neighborhood of the park, I have had | Seattle people, and our guests, the the opportunity to observe the opera }tourists, stand outside Jooking on tion of thie new and wonderful ad.| Th® park superintendent has had to vertising medium for Seattle. I have| “lear the building before the wn talked te. Guta of these ing and | Could be seated and the evening en going Beattie gueats and think the|tertainment could take place. I know people of Beattle should know what | this in 4 “Seattle spirit,” and ba! the tourist thinks of our city and ita (little publicity, I feel, would put the method of entertaining them while | Public right and Seattle will surely They bee panne es | profit by treating the tourist as a | gueet oo i. of the menage : One unfortunate thing about our | SW: oiiang perie ee Sore tourist park ia that it joins our most) gome objections were made on ue Prominent amusement park and Con-| count of cloaing the driveway thru sequently draws a great crowd 40)1¥./ the auto park, but when you stop to many of whom wander thru the tour. consider that clouds of dust raised ist park and you hear such remarks |p machines going thru the park as, “Why, they even have reall settle in food spread out on the out and, “Why, they even have! door tables, and that these people sliver.” A great many people seem) want to sleep and not be annoyed to forget that the present-day tour), cars of Joy riders going thru at ist comes from & class that is welll ai) hours of the night, this is no im. to do in his communty and is! position " traveling for pleasure or health or! qhiy letter Is not written for or vacationing here. gainst the public or park, but just Seattle has provided a Cine com-|m few observations that might help munity building with an assembly | make the auto park a succens hall for the entertainment of the! Yours truly, tourist, and Seattle organizations | BR. W. CLARK, have viunteered to come out and en: | 807 N. Goth st Favors Al Lundin for Senator Editor The Star ybonors, for as #ure as he does I Uked Lawyer Lundin's letter orme Cotterill will be elected tn about Captain Tennant, in your is.| this state, If he files for the U. #. sue of July 15. He seems to me to | senate hit the bull’seye In more ways than| I do want to say, that in this one. |Matter of Mayor Brown asking Why is it that splendid young|Capt. Tennant to find Le men like Alfred Lundin do not file |anurderer or resign, I think be is a for congress or for the U. 8. senate? | visionary idealist ke Wm, Jennings Look at Mrs. Miracle. She is un-| Bryan, who has thought that he known, and yet she boldly files| could be chosen president, and say and wins, Why do so many of our|no to Wall Street. I am told that finest youth wait for the Standard| Capt, Tennant votes right; always Of! Co., or for somsone like Richard | for the sate and sane. And he is Ballinger, or a Jacoty Furth, to wake} sald to be wealthy—worth about ‘erm up in the morning? Be a Mrs. | $200,000. To me, it seems unwise Miracle, Mr, Lundin! Senater Poin-|to offend any true machine polt dexter is getting old and stiff if|tician who is always with our cor the joints, Hoe has made hin pile.| porate interests. Without a power Don't let him hog af the party|ful bi-partisan machine, would we EXCURSION TO EAST SOUND AND FRIDAY HARBOR An ideal outing trip among the beautiful San Juan Islands on a fine steamer, Georgeous scenery; every inch of the way full of interest. Sunday, July 23rd From te Saturday and Sunde: ‘Wednesday, Friday, Sunday 11:36 p. m. ‘ gepranedig pockaetons | Gum Lyke Rubber, a perfect re. | production of the human gum, wet Mets evens, $10.00, GOLD CROWN 54 |BRIDGEWORK............ Most of our present patrona, a |recommendea by our early custo mers, whose work ts still givin, g00d | satinfuction, . 990 p. m. turdey and __ Free Examination .6&O GLASSEs prézee ng with Olympic Hi, thé short route to Hood Ce- Olympic Penineula pointe. Beatle to TAS ~ 11:30 a.m. 415 p.m. Katee tip Saturday and Sundey 9:90 p.m. Daily 190 - $90 p.m. of the few optical |rq 945 s. m. a: a jorthwest pesiiz | tip Saturday and Sunday 1090 p.m, All work guaranteed for 15 yeara $e fh Visitors accompanied by Bremerton ~ pisee Aary sacameby fin per- mitted ia Navy Yard at 1 & 3 p.m. Passenger fare 80c round trip. NAVY YARD ROUTE c Dock Mai 3 | ba Ed Ea Ed ET) Examinations free, | } OHIO. DENTISTS 2nd Ave. and University St. Examination free, by graduate op- tometrist. Glasses not prescribed unless absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO, m6 ViMeT AVE STEAMER SIOUX Round Trip, $2.50—Children Half Fare LUNCHES SERVED Leave Seattle 8 A, M. Return 10; Tickets on Sale Now PUGET SOUND NAVIGATION CO MAIN 3995 _ SOLMAN DOC P.M. LEARN A WORD EVERY DAY Today's word fa PRECARIOUS. the e It's pronounced pre-ka-rius as the first « in event, the a long, | and the i and u short Accent falls | on the second syllable. cans—depending on the will of unsettled, or doubtful of} from the Latin “pre cor obtained by begging or prayer (from prex, prayer) It's uned Hike thie he maintained hold,” “With difficulty his precarious foot (RADIO PRIMER} COMPASS KADIO..A radio re ceiver by which the direction of a} sending station may be determined The jai tp & loop which can be turned until the maximum radio energy | ived, The direction of the sending station is along the line of the loop not be In danger of seeing a Bena tor LaFollette in office in every state in the U. &.? And a Henry Ford president of the U. #.7 Even in this state we would be in danger of seeing Mra. Wirwell Wilnon elect. ed to copgress and Edghr Snyder chosen as governor. 1 believe in idealiam. Tut let us be practical idealists, We need civil servies: To win and keep « good civil nerviee job the applic must be indorsed by the bipartiean machine. He can't hold his Job unless the polt- ticlans want him there, Civil ser- vice was started in thin city, I be: Heve, by Counciiman Blaine, of the Rolo club, Do not abolish the civil service fence, for Capt, Tennant or for any city or county or federal office. This talk of politica) ineurabies, who are” married to a life Sob, in dangerous, Even so prominent a scholar and author as Henry Adama, in his recent famous autobiography, Griefs Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4 Editor The Star: | Knowing your keen Interest in the | welfare of Beattie citizens, I would | lke to recite to you a few of my! gricfs an an apartment house dweller. | Subject — SEATTLE LIGHTING co Grief No, 1—In comparison with other cities, Seattle people are pay-| air of the basement, laundry rooma, ing a very high rate for a very low | Further, I have heard | BT. U. eae. nothi and their immediate connections is capes, so as to #eriously pollute the Dear Folks 4}, 5 FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1922, | APetter From | ALVRIDGE MANN’ At Oberammergau, they aay, they hold the famous Parsion Piay; and people go from everywhere to nee the solemn pageant there, that they may think, and see, and feel, with quickened sense, the world’s Ideal, I've know; but I have good and true—1" pageant play. never had a chince to go, and so I've minned a treat, I und so xhould you), a sight tha nm Beattie folks portray the great Wayfarer n just an 1 naw the tattered fields of war, with fiends who dealt in deaths and gore, whoxe blinded nex or age; where only lust and hate survived Yanks arrived hell-begotten rage knew po respect for until, at last, the The vision changed; my thoughts were led to paths the Master used to tread; I raw Hin birth, the \ife He spent, the throngs who «He w Golgotha’s tragic crow I heard the mighty, and death 4 then | watched, with bated breath, mingled notes of music from a thousand throats, while slowly on the stage there trod a varied mans of sons of God—of every color, race and name, trom all the ends of earth, they came. And thru the scene's suggestive spell I grew to feel that all was well; that somehow, some Ume, thru the away our brotherhood of man. years, our God will wipe ars, and we shall learn His mighty plan of one big payn that common honesty, integrity) bills sent by the gas company, with my record of money put into the me ter, shows that the gas is being short metered by about 20 to 30 per cent. Grief No. 4~—Pertodioally the meter room (which is in the basement) has been broken into and the money in the meters stolen. The gas company | has billed me for the amount stolen out of my meter, and upon my refuse a) to pay the same, has turned off and uprightness are not to be ex pected among political office holders. I believe that both his father and grandfather held office as president the bigger crook, To win over the mob, we should, as Mr. Lundin says, let well enough alone. Mr. a mistake if he thinks that he rules this city as its chosen chief executive. The real chosen rulers are those more than 56,000 highly paid civil service office hold- ern who hold life jobs as long as they vote right and safeguard cor- poration rights, With Mr. Lundin, I would emphatically «ny the grand jury was composed of visionary idealiats who knew nothing of the political game. Yours for sanity, OfRS) URIAH FAIRCHILD, 3616 Brooklyn Ave. Brown make: the gas, apite of a very material decrease in the price of coal. Grief No. 2—In the apartment house where I have been living, the company’s installation of meters so faulty that considerable gas es-| In ma 4 hails, and at times e¥en the apart ments, Griet No, 3—A comparison of the In making hi for painiess extraction DK. BROWN'S DENTAL CLINIO Thanking you for your patience tn reading this recital, I am, ly yours, GLENN DAVIDSON, 768 Bellevue Ave. N, Money-back guarantee with every sult. Laff, the Tailor, 1106 3rd.—aAdy. ENTIST arfitiefat eth: ‘bridg ind porcelain ci of teeth at The Delicious Bread —of Energy and Iron S _ You remember how good a filled, full-fruited raisin bread can table for three reasons: 1. Flavor; 2. Energy; 3. Iron ay ic. ERVE raisin bread twice weekly on your rously Your grocer or baker can supply a loaf like this. Insist—if he hasn't one he can get it for you. Full-fruited bread is full of luscious seeded Sun-Maid raisins—rich in energizing nutri- ment in practically predigested form. Raisins also furnish fatigue-resisting iron for the blood. Serve plain raisin bread at dinner or as a ty fruited breakfast toast with coffee. Make delicious bread pudding with left- over slices. rai sin bread. No need to waste a crumb of Begin this week the habit of raisin bread twice weekly in your home, for raisin bread is both good and good for you, SUN-MAID Seeded RAISINS Make delicious bread, pies, puddings, cakes, etc. Ask your grocer for them. Sen book of tested recipes. for free Sun-Maid Raisin Growers Membership 13,000 Dept N-439-7, Fresno, Calif,

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