The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 18, 1923, Page 6

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Daily dy The Mtar Publishing Co, Phone Main o40¢ prise A) t The Seattle Star fan Franctece ef New York offioa, ; When Papa's Love Skids “The editor got quite a pleasant kick out of one of the letters from readers which came in the morning's Leaving the signature off, the editor passes the ter on to the rest of you folks, believing that you, too, vil enjoy it. The letter says: ) Bome days aco, Mr. F | FOU printed a letter fro: P poor wits, in which sh ed out her heart. She said " the ala, but Tahe had tried to be a go t pathy. to hie Wife, and to make a p chooses to Tome, but ehe finds her hue z band's Jove slipping and bee Mor advice tn regaining his at fections. Heavens! We women foaded with this sort of Magazines, dooks, Papers, special pamphicta tell "GR ond retell us, of all the ghe must do to get a fa love in the first place the arduous labor which ( never be relaxed in or Mer to hold tt. for 5 We are told to cook anpe aplextor tein Meals; to keep the pr t house tity, but to the biow as Hiustand to muss it up afte um he pleases during his stay Mhervin, for he must never feel restricted tn his home; to [mitet him at the front door 4 Right with a smile of ; to keep ourselves ity lert #o an to be te converse intelligently Bim, in case he fools | the mood to talk; not to however, because he of, might be feeling nervous from ant never nag, any of pour be be never yuld always y gowned, but st in curl papers; ly to hin Kisses, him with our he ts not In the mood for them; we should dist so as to keep our girlish figures, nom how pro perant a tummy be may op keep cheer bore news carewes when ur th dev fui ing » be break ruin our and iewen his bear tn o his wavering tears wil n us wher allow ton seems to be flicke tn the direction of her females, for what ts more tire some to a man than @ woman who i always suspicious? And to be extremely up te date and heroic, we must needs now go out and gather up any promiscuous {ilegtti- mate children which he may possess and bring them up as our own We conclude, our correspondent thinks that, with ull _set of tire chains, papa’s love may be kept ENLIGHTENED RUSSIA Mason, 9 prominent woman educator, recenily returned from i the Russian comminsar of education has removed ilit- of Petrograd. He compelied those who knew how to Write to teach those who did not know how to read and write, result that within a comparatively few weeks, Miss Mason eitizen of Petrograd, man, woman and child above the ace of years, was able to read and write—Representative Husted uury $26,357, mileage and sslartes or resigned members saved. In deficiency bill it appropriated @ salary gifts to widows of congressmen. Funny congress book *@ much about food over in China half the towns are seme kind of chow. thing about 1923 so far Is remembering your new auto tag attle’s Chance in the Future cked teams, of eight men each, raced to see assemble a Dodge car the faster. The winner car—motor, top and all—together in less than You don’t find that kind of speed in any except America, even in contests. it auto trade news is Ford's deciston to $10,000,000 plant in St. Paul, to employ 15,000 t will save freight, bring his product closer to the field of the Northwest. a straw showing the way the wind blows. In rs you'll see many other industries scatter. will get a considerable share. It will be readjustment to the growing problem, trans- A CHEAP BOSS says the democrats will elect the president next year anything foolish in the meaniime.” Colonel, why don’t democrats pair with the republicans on ali matters thing is seeing an old bachelor petting a baby, expectally 20 years old. _ Buying Eagles With Nickels the war, when the German mark was worth THE SRATTLE STAR MEBBE THIS WILL ONLY MAKE THE DOG MAD t KNOW Youve 4 PeerecT RIGHT % do T, BUT Honestly 1 OON'T SEE How ITs GONG. % BeneriT ETHER OF You ome) County Ring and Judge Griffiths Editor The Star: Not infrequently meets in Seattle te the grand fory determine | freelance buotlegger pursues the ur even mezzo of hiv way without mak paid to enforce ihe A® none such were a re led to the conclusion ,that our abundant supply ts of the oreden tlaled variety. The bootlegger, however, te not the only, or most dangerous, outlaw Ddasking In the light of official favor, The only difference between the ring rule of King county and anar chy ts that anarchy ts not so exten- sive and ts lees dangerous. One day upon « battlefield, my tf ther, then @ young boy, wept and sobbed by the grave of an only broth er, reluctant to leave him there. As be hoofed It to Mobile with a his heart, they told him his loss and uttering would not be im vain; that the great government for which he fought would put its protecting arme sround his children and his ehil- dren's children. The Danger to Editor The Star: Monday night's paper contained an account of an unfortunate acol- dent, concerning roller skates, a city street, an automobile, with the heart breaking result that a emall boy ts near death. I neither condemn nor condone the motorists, Personally, I do not |¢rive; rarely ride in a car except when compelled to do #0, and nearly have heart fatium when downtown witnessing the hairbreadth chances both pedestrians and motorist take, I am delighted with the efforts toward more careful driving and realize that too many persons drive around town | too fast and too carelesalf for safety 1 do few! that the mpeed itmit within the city should be reduced cannot, or at lenst do not, always People | when disobeyed. But I am y of the othe the hearts of the other others and fathers at big. most of us sensible, something to abolish this nerve-rack ing, tragical thing that statke Amongst ust HELEN BOVIER, Ten Greatest. Men in History fine tty, and Can we not do We area | Oh, deceived and outraged dead, the ship of state, manned by pirates, han become a Juggernaut to menace A woman whose associations are question ast In the superior cum of the augmenied by t nave Kattor The Star t, surrounded by the Jer world oun roborant for the charactor me: mae ane son an the greatest of the grea’ Roosevelt second, and Shakespeare third. Then came, in order, Honry Wadeworth Longfellow, Alfred Lieya and shady ‘The judge of the police court sent them there to rob ber and destroy ber reputation. And and i sesamedie me. » 7 | rennyeon, Herbert Hoover, Charles | ail that motley crew ef the; Dickens, John J. Pershing, David lcountyaity ring whe know more, Loyd George and Andrew J, Voi- | than or I of tte lawleaen we Siar us pectien ia Now, t wit refrain from comment. If they are not criminal, ghey are |!" on Shakespeare, Longfellow, Al afraid of the credentialed thug, or fred Lioy Tennyson and Charies | the 4,000 votes of the ring, They | Dickens, as they belong to a dirter | have no voles or spine ent category of men. I will, also, From out this cowardly gang one| eve out Lioyd George, as a poll man aions steps forth to battle for | tician should not be ciased as a witnenses our heritage | Pour-equare he stands—bigand fine |of thie government. When he was and clean—and his name ta Judge | Placed in charge of the Bastern tam austin B. Ontttithn. ine countries he handed ovt « loaf MRS, FRANK J. ETTINOER _| &f bread to the Russian people wit! Beacon #200, | 98* hand and with the other he gave Little Children io ae © holding !t to thelr Itpe so that they might taste the bitter polson pre bedherd death constanuy, It does seem soribed by the powers that be As to Andrew J, Volstead. It is not even that some ordinance could or should |e joke. | be parsed; an order issued or some| Now, the writer will name 10 of measure taken to prevent these|the greatest men of his own ohotce. |chances. I realize that It is a diffi The greatest man who ever lived oult matter to always contro! the! since the existencs of humanity, tr |impetuoun Gesires of children; to|iwing today. Mis name is Mr. Mar make them realize their Gangers; to| con. He is the aaver of human liver jmake them curb thelr natural inclin- | Thougands of people have been aaved ation toward the daring pleasures.|by his invention, via, the wireless. But It does seem that parents could | When « ship ie in distress in mid enforce upon their minds the neces | ocean the 8. 0. 8. is sent out and att: aid comes from all directions, When Every district with paved streste|n person takes sick on a steamship, haa cement sidewalks and while to| where there i» no doctor, the wire use them might not be so thrilling, | lees operator calls for a doctor. In a the youngsters might live to enjoy |few minutes he is with the patient such pleasure longer without being | prescribes for him, and departs maimed IN f the pansengers ees him come Directly tn front of my own home, | or leave, but the patient secetven | where some of the dearest children | treatment. Therefore, Mr. Marconi | the great Car knapeack on his back and grief In um to eave from the vandal's hand | @Teat man. Herbert Hoover's great | \ nese consists of his being a member THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1928. | LETTER FROM VRIDGE MANN To Burope Oe Pillage, burt bring sons of men Unset the Hell living t ae Forget 1 to it tart @ bloody fray! Call out the armyt Lot war be resurrected once again, and Keligion? Let it gol f Hate—foi Lora! our pride to hate the nations him death, 4) push him off the earth! Co Christianst A #lay ite bane to all the het ot your trenn and ato? mon your Go ntrive to t arth, and de owt te op Crows his fenoe, lay waste hin felde—forgetting it, Mr therst Kill your brother man! Am 1 my brothe Destroy the wenk-—~ Empty wordst the Creed forget the Let Pence Mon! Forget yo kindness cease! Raise Mars on bigh r peaceful trade Boe frensied built up & a" ears tear down the things wipes away f toil! Forget the 4 lasting monument of own of honest #weat—buil debt Go to It, Chri years Men! Turn back the world tn one wild, wtians, Neighbors, be nm fiendish flood 1) wh and blame your God Giri tors, Bdlson #tands preeminent. He trified the world, One of his tn. ventions , the phonograph whining hy vy might as well include Charles XII. of Sherman, who 1 up Atlanta, and his beautiful ally In existence, and slogan ts #till in our memory. And y that rome world-| why not add gitting Bull? | lived. In « T ee men were engaged tn the the people | work murder and destruction. ten to the voice of which caused the greatest miseries | and privations to mankind. Then we} will give credit to thone who deserve tn 8. ARONSON, 209 18th Ave. N. otoc Sweden, Napoleon, burr will be perpet wt tent bea m artint has ars from now ot Gen. John J been crowned a Pershing also haa the greatest of the 10 greatest man tn history, I Condemns State Printer System MAitor The Star: | ed and used for fue) in the furnace Your editorial, “24 Cente and $3,"/of the state house, Recently the re the state printing «raft. Why) people of Olympia put up @ kick on| don't you oome out and tall the | the amount of paper cinders, which, | whole story carried by the great draft of the For furnace, scattered all over the city, the wtate b causing no little inconvenience to printer's « care to my knowledge Aefrauded by the thn the atte al at the atate house re ho various departments !* print-' cently informed tne that now they Fe ] TT. Ty _ ‘GY ’ WANT TO REDUCE WEIGHT? Are you too—well—plymp? Got some txtra pounds you want | to rid yourself off Do you hate to get on the scales? Is your figure all wrong for the prevailing mode of gowns? If #0, our Washington bureau is ready to come to the rescue. Tt hae o government and other approved sources some sim but effective, ruler for reducing the weight. It tells and o b tin gives sample menus and other off the fat. If you want this bulletin 1922 New York Ave., Washington, D. ©. I want « copy of the bulletin WEIGHT REDUCTION, ané ; tnclose herewith two cents in stamps for postage. MAIER | scnctasenencnsncheeaaeensttttedumanaisntiuntiniasgiinn SCIENC Coue’s Theory. Originated in Nancy. Had Forerunner. Dr. Bernheim. When Cousiem first o*racted ab othe Btar cok oa tention in France, thin uma it would sweep this country also, The visit of Coue to the United States and the great spread of bis doctrine of autosuggestion will jus eacribed it and pre the prediction. Cou is a pharmacist of Nanoy, France. Hin cult te not the first that was born in t y. It was there Bernheim wrote his volume Suggestive Therapeution.” Alisa vo the sanest definition of hyp n with his “sug 4. The definition wast m is a condition of the mind in which susceptibility to «ug gestion is enormously exaggerated.” Twenty years ago Nancy was known all over the world as the Mocca for students of this form af treatment, The fundamental of Couleism has much tn common with suggestive therapeutics h bale this surplus paper and sell ft for junk, saving the state, I believe he stated, thousands of dollars. I have seen with my own eyes tons of this printed matter im the basement of the state house. I venture to say that if this fool sh and wasteful state printing graft is done away with that the saving would buy Gov. Hart and each of his officials a new car for ten thou sand and leave a margin besides each weaston. If Washington can spend more money than the combined states of Texas, Missourt, Indiana, North Da- vota, Kentucky and South Carolina, with @ population of 14,000,000 as against ours of 1,141,900; if we «pend more of the taxpayers’ money in administration than the combined states of Iowa, Kansas, Indiana, Missouri, North Dakota, Kentucky and South Carolina, with 15,000,000 populatio::, then why not try Char- |ley Heighton’s plan—cut straight 26 per cent and get back to something like normalcy? Start with the state printer. Now ® word about Representative Charies Heighton: Before he was of age he wag admitted to the bar. When he was voting his first vote ho was a candidate for prosecuting attorney in = certain county of Idaho, where vice was rampant. And elected. Before he had completed his term © had made it so hot for a gang of rooks and politicians over there that he wan offered the assistant chief's job in the Seattle office of the United Bt department of justios, and be- fore be had been there lang we all have their brakes exactly right.|in the city play, I see many auto. |is the greatest of the great. Slower driving would mean greater | mobiles driving almost at @ e#top;| William T. Q. Morton, the second cents, the Hamburg-American and North Ger- Lloyd steamship lines sold $32,500,000 worth of ds. These bonds have been called for redemp- be paid off April 1. they'll be paid off according to shrunken value of Investors will get back $5,000 to $10,000 for tment of $82,500,000. Luckily for Americans, these bonds are held in Europe. LONG-LIVED WIDOWS are now 49 widows drawing pensions as a result of the war of ch has been closed for practically 119 years.—Representative (D), Miss. pie’ enehorse towns are one-filling station towns now. subsidy bill has subsided. The World’s Largest Tree Phe largest tree in the world is discovered near Wai- i, New Zealand. Scientists are debating whether it is 1) years old or only 2,000. All agree it will live another WO years unless some greedy destroyer cuts it down. Bt probably will be its fate, since it contains enough to build three houses of 20 rooms each. To get , men destroy the best things in the world, includ- best things in themselves. street car system isn't so terrible except that most of the cars in the wrong direction. about your vacation one hour every night and you can decide to spend it by July. ‘ean live cheaper than someone, Two Ways to Figure It information that may help you understand of the next few months: Germany claims that she already paid indemnity equal to nearly 10 billion 0 Not all in cash, of course, The figure includes ndered merchant ships, deliveries of coal and dyes, of lost colonies, restored property, etc. French have a different way of keeping books. glider stayed up in the alr seven hours. out from under a glider. Some day ‘the earth will might as well have a good time. This life is only temporary. with boose, if you have the booze. It fe easy to catch a man safety for everyone. frantically honking their horns, and | greatest man, also was @ life saver. In the residence section where I live we have paved streets and many children. Each child apparently i equipped with rT skates, nall foot autos or a cart of some sort, and the majority of them ex ercine themselves on the pavements. After school hours until dark the streets are fi with the kiddies of all ages, careloesly playing, flirting the little folks, completely absorbed in their pastime and so accustomed to cars, never see nor hear them un til the machines are nearly them. We have managed our children alive and happily an. tertained with these m play things by beginning early in their training to keep them off the atreeta, and inflicting either rol upon to keep punishment—not cor: | Years ago, when Col. George Lyon graduated from Har- vard, he went West and became a cowboy, editor and later banker. Now, at 78, he has returned to Harvard and is tak- ing special courses in public speaking and Shakespeare. He was the founder of anaeathetion Previous to his finding the great remedy, miltions of people died un. der the surgeon's knife, not being able to endure the great agonien, Ray Roentgen, the dixcoverer of the X-ray, has saved countless num bers of people from untimely graves and from being per ortp: pled. Every affected organ of the | body, and broken bones, are shown plainly thru the photograph, so that the surgeon does not have to guees where the injury is, but goes direct to the very spot John Harvey, the next greatest man, the discoverer of the circuln tion of the blood, also t# a life saver, Jas his discovery gave the medical | Profession a wide field of study, and therefore made great progress. Pastour, the diseoverer of antitox fn, alxo is among the life an’ should he © am, | greatest m James Watt ts another one of the greatest of the 10 men, being tho discoverer of steam power, which revolutionized the world, ‘The next greatest man was Morne, pioneer in telegraphy, You can any news fro t y, Australia. Next was ler Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone. You can | know in London, in a few minutes, nit in your Seattle office and hold a | Conversation with your friend tn New | York, the same as you can talk with |your next-door neighbor the back fence And of all the mecha ors, and his p! ng the 10 over MARRIAGE A LA MODE In Sussex, Mngland, there ts a eu perstition that twins never should be married in the same church, Also, it ia the rule, at a first mar. riage, for a bride to appear ungloved. \but gloves are worn by a widow who weds « second husband, If there Iv a cat in the houne, the bride must feed the animal herself on her wedding day, or it Is belleved some disaster will befall her within @ year, EE TIRES can now be ‘ bought in Seattle direct from the manufacturer’s own rep- resentatives, and with the best expert service as well. A Lee factory branch {s now in operation at 1630 Eighth Ave., corner of Olive Street, under the management of C. C. Miller. The Lee Tire & Rubber Co. stands squarely behind their product on the Pacifie Coast. “Not how far behind, but how close behind,” is the watchword in our branch stores where the manufacturer pledges not only the efficiency of Lee Tires but the intelligent at- tention of its branch executives and salesmen. The growing popularity of Lee Tires on the Pacific Coast has made it incumbent upon the manufacturer to give the tire-buying public the opportunity of purchasing direct from factory representatives. The Lee chain of Western branches promises the buyer the utmost in service and the closest contact; with the source of manufacture. There’s a Lee Tire for every type of service—Lee De Luxe Cords in all sizes for passenger cars, Lee Puncture Proof Tires, the last word in tire equipment for commercial purposes; three types of Ford-size tires, and the durable Lee DeLuxe Tube. LEE TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY Seattle Branch—1630 Bighth Ave., Cor. Olive St. (Temporary Address)

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