The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 28, 1923, Page 8

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THE SEATTLE STAR BOTH—“YOU LET HER IN, | WON'T” WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1923. LETTER, FROM VRIDGE MANN To Alloe Gentle The Seattle Star Published Daity by The Mar Publishing Oo Phone Main 0660 Hew Paper Enterprise Association and United Pres Hervion By out of Sity, S80 per month; § mentha, $1.00; ¢ months, 68.00) year, $080, By earrler, efty, #0 & month Gilman, Nicoll @ Kethman, Special Representatives faa Frasctove of fics, Monadnock bids.; Chicage offies, Tribune bidg.; New Yerk effin Panadian Pecific bidg.; Boston offica Tremont bids ee o j Raisin | Pie Ly Ppece of Sy vara le bakers and ¢ shops Ia your I haven't got & singer's ear; I'm not an opera fan. To tell the truth, Iam, | fear, ® medioere man. 1 figure music's mystic sway ite rhythm, time and beat—ap awful lot upon the way it fite my dancing feet George W. Fischer Passes ‘ , I saw grand opera long sge—how long I'd hate to say; if I With the passing of George W. Fischer, Seattle has . A W/ = “me ¥ a print it here y . And ever Jost one of its valuable citizens—a man who, by building a y many y Pup A great industry for himself, added materially to the Wealth and happiness of the entire community. More than this, hundreds of individuals have lost a ‘< and loyal friend, and a family has lost a loving husband and father. | What greater tribute can be paid any man? Many potentates have died and left far less. peighborhoo town. Just phone « grocer or one of these shops and heave one of these luscious ples delivered, all ready to serve. Why bake at home when there Is pie like this mvailable? Try one and see Made with delicious Sun-Maid Raisins Had Your Iron Today? know, I'd give my age away I heard that great event, so bave passed away, I've wondered how tt went But I'm @ bird that brought a « crowd that s to learn—I like to see and hear; you ance I couldn't spurn, to educate my ear. 1 knew the ou would bring was bound to be all right; and so I went to hear you sing, and picked “La Tosca” night And tho I wat and had my fil! of melody of tone, 1 must admit I wonder still (You know, my head is bone) And what I won dered more and more, with all the song I heard, ts how you mem orize the score, and never miss « word But when I heard you alt and sing, alone on that settes, it made one most important thing extremely clear to me; for long before your tones had passed, I le 1 to understand, and sensed the subtle charm, at last, that makes grand opera “grand.” West Virginia woman presented her husband quadrapleta, However when they cry it is a quartet. Farm loan board plans loans for nine months, leaving farmers broke nly three months each year. Pohn Malgrons, of Parsons, Kan, was all stirred up, Doctors foand 27 “spoons in Jobn's stomach. Wolves ate a Canadian trapper, so now he can’t be a movie star. me something as good as the Ber | Rute I will join the cult, But I mon on the Mount and a rule of|know that time will never come conduct to compare with the Golden | F. B. ‘The world geta better. You seldom see detachable cuffs now. Do Not Push Your Sister’s Face = asd mevats Wea ee A "These are the days when one hears a chorus of reli | FOR making cake, biscuit and flaky ple- that congress is no longer in session. There is hardly @ny Variation, The session was a failure. In this respect Mie Pee | crust. For more wholesome, delicious frying. Variation. The sessic as 3 ure. his respect Pit is like other congres Congress talks too much. The \ For all good cooking. Tules prevent efficienc Important subjects ignored and unimportant grafts command attention. f re are Wranglings with the executive and with the judicial de- partments. In this connection The Star recalls a poem. gomething like this: “Oh, do not push your sister’s face Nor give her mug a swat; Remember that it doubtless is The only face she's got.” is our little sister. The face of congress is ithe only face it’s got. After all, it js our congress. If Pit is inefficient, it is our inefficiency. Congress is our esentative body. Officially, not unofficially, and ac- 3 , it represents you, me and her. If it does not rep- "resent us, it is our own fault. If congress is stupid, it is because we are stupid. If "We can’t invent a system of representation which repre- ents us, we don’t deserve to be represented. Congress is ’ yost about as good as the people represented. Taken and large it is a cross section of our country. When we are damning congress we are damning our- When we say that we are better off without con- We are admitting that democracy as worked out by € tative government” is a failure. ally, the writer is not willing to admit this. He fan idea that even a congress like this, or like any her of the congresses that have gone before, or will me after, is better than a monarchy. If we don’t like the people who represent us in con- ess or in our legislature, we had better change our con- and legislature; we had better change our politics; iterate our parties; and set about choosing people who ill better represent us. ‘So again we suggest: “Do not push your sister’s face.” They chim an Ohio man who threw his wife's chow dog at her ty ixy, but we don’t think ho Is. SOCIETY. lief EXTRACTION FREE DAILY TSresh Ni came fr] Snowdrift in a (ney, Ue airtight bucket It goes partial plate, which does not cover the roof of the mouth if you have two or more teeth. Natural Rubber $5.00 AmB set of Teeth .,.. GOLD AND cnowns ........ 94.00 “ie Most of our present patronage is recommended by our early custom- ers, whose work is still giving good satisfaction. All work guaranteed for 15 years, Examination free. : OHIO CUT RATE DENTISTS Established 2 | Second Ave. and Open © to 6 Dally—o and soul to the sick of earth The cult of atheiam doesn't teach wolf-nacrifice. We do not turn to athelem to I the highest ethics proof,” then, of both Chris 4 athelam tn the fruit the loss of A CONCRETE formation you need De concrete walls and base 4 in the latest bu 1 to furnish you free. as Casy to open as winding ae the clock fs taught 1 e etter, gentler | t gaineay that the athelst lecturer give Fill out carefully and wishes, tear the c¢ Bible, as an histo to pleces, tf it will Washington Bureau, The Seattle Star, 1 Now York Ave. Washington, D. C. 1 want a copy of the pamphlet, “Concrete Walls and Baso- ments,” and inclose herewith loose two-cent stamp for same. Name... A en nn eee At Ae Rn Ad meme eee CHY. - +p neenn tn the ae ae ae on ae ne eh ne din Snen ome BIRO, asian ananne rman onan smas nor ennemeeenmetes sautenamdmnt | | Processes, designed to remove everything in the crude which bes no lubricating value. LETTERS 2 ED TOR Christianity, Atheism, Science Editor The Star: ,way * © © Tho Rev, Stickney Grant of New] phenomena York has been in trouble with hid] J am not particularly orthodox bishop over m matter of orthodoxy.| myself, altho I tall myself a Chris The New York pastor doesn't be/ tian, I don’t care whether the Heve the world was made in six] Bible ts reliable, historically, or not days or that Eve was Adam's rib.| I will ahed oo tears If science proves He rejects the story of Jonah and Cet | to me that the whale didn’t and Four Causes for Suicide the whale and Imughs at miracles. couldn't «wallow Jonah, Maybe the ay | He accepts the theory of the evo-| miracle stories aren't true. Why is the suicide record mounting? 1 of mankind, Science is right} But I am out of patience with There is a psychology of suicide, according to Prof. E. |and the Bible I» an unreliable his-| my acientiflo friend, nevertheless Moss, hea of the department of applied psychology, torieal document, Mebby so. | Surely, if science disproves the e Washington university. are four general classes into which suicides can A Tennessee man who has kept his wife 62 years should write a book, perhaps he is too busy. men have been shaking hands 20 or 80 years without learning it should be done. Science explains all your pocketbook tn a hip pocket may stop a robber’s bullet. I have a friend who has what he| Word of God, then its advanced calls a “scientific mind.” He {s out} light should show us benefits to of patience with the reverend gen-| mankind, other than material, mu tleman of New York. He agrees|perior to the benefits of Chris. with the pastor, and he wonders) tianity. When a man or woman is found with gas turned on, Or a victim of bichloride, window jumping, etc., Prof. S$ Says you may look for one of these reasons: Disappointment or trouble in love; failure in business ambition; delusion of personal wickedness, persecu- s, etc.; despair over illness. And police precincts may expect suicide calls around or 11 o'clock in the morning and 11 or 12 at night. hese are the hours, Prof. Moss says, when a person the suicide idea is most likely to carry it out. Why? The psychologist doesn’t try to explain. Sta- istics simply show that most suicides occur at those urs. Possibly around midnight, the climax of a day of f intments has been reached; and at 10 or 11 in the orning, some last attempt has been made and failed. Methods vary with the sexes, nationalities and races. Statistics show, Prof. Moss says, that men are more fre- quent suicide victims than women, and that they usually € 4 more active means to end it all—a revolver bul- drowning, etc. A woman, when she decides to slip | Sg the border of her own volition, is more likely to on the gas or seek some other passive means. to Breen Ronee ;the Norwegians and edes prefer drowning, the Spanish daggers, the Ger- Mans poison, etc. . F mE THE GIRL/S DANCE tle modern society, with Its “comIng-out parties” for de- butantes, has nothing on the Washoe Indians, of Nevada, who have a : que dance given to every young girl in the tribe publicly announe Ang sho Is ready for marriage. It is called “The Girl's Dance,” and the thar nothing for four days. On the fourth night the dance is held i girl carries « long staff to support her because of her weakness, ‘After midnight @ big feast is given.—U. 8. Department of Interior. ) Nearly every one of our district attended n stripping bee at the home Mr. and Mrs. Masek Saturday evening. After the stripping was com- @ dainty supper was served. Then began the fun—Antigo (Wis,) _ Obinese cabinet bas resigned. Now they need a new China cabinet. Florida man saved twiee from drowning himself should try bootleg. Make the Motions, Anyhow According to Attorney General Daugherty and other close friends, the campaign for President Harding's re- | nomination is already on, with a clear field for Warren Gamailiel. Evidently the 1924 pot is already simmering, but cer: tain signs move us to prognosticate that the republicans “had better hold a convention in 1924 and formally nom- Bad nows for the bricklayers. Idlanapotls man has a new trowel laying twice ns many bricks. . When & bad cold meets « good disposition the bad cold wins, D. 6. ships shoe polish to Africa, Bot they use it for cold cream, pastor “doesn't chuck the) I am grateful to actence when it y business,” meaning| cures my alling flesh and mends my fo his preaching from|broken bones, but I have noticed atform, | that sofence expects to be paid for . my friend says, I» a| its services, jes to frighten children] The cult of atheism grows strong: with. He demands “proof* that these/er. Where are athelam’s hospitals, tales aro true | orphanages, aayluma? fi ‘Tho Old Testament Is purely leg-| ‘The surgeon who performs opera endary; the new, a pack of lies. Bar-| tions in a free clinio may be an ley loaves and fishes? Water and|atheist—but ho didn't and wouldn't wine? These miracles etmply didn’t| build the hospital, The Christian spirit bullt the hos If the sick “picked up their beds| pital. And {s the surgeon’s skill a and walked," they weren't ag sick| God-given gift? Or would you call as they thought they were. It was|it one of a box of tricks known to suggestion — auto, or otherwise.| apes? Christ won't cotne again, but we| ‘Tho athetst doexn't quit home and have Coue. Day by day In every| loved ones to carry healing of body occur. Just to see to it that things in his department are run- ning smoothly, Postmaster General Harry S. New, recently appointed, watches an employe sort mail at Washington, \ " wi / Fluffy or Flinty? —which kind of ‘‘carbon’’ comes from the oil you use? Soe carbonaceous residue is depos- ited by all motor oils. That is a known fact. But there are two kinds of this so- called “carbon.” One is hard and flint-like as in dia- monds. It attaches to cylinder walls, pis ton and valve heads, and it stays. Chisels or acetylene torches are re- quired to remove it. An Abrasive Being hard and gritty—hard enough to score cylinders—it acts as an abrasive, wearing cylinders, pistons, and rings. It prevents valves from seating prop- erly. Compression is thus lost. Small particles become incandescent, causing pre-ignition, which results in “‘knocking”’ and lost power. Spark plugs, becoming coated with it, are short- circuited, and miss. A Different Kind Most of the small residue from Aristo Motor Oil blows out with the exhaust. What's left is soft and finffy. Being softer than the metals, it can't cause wear, Your car runs thousands of miles far- ther without grinding valves. Spark plugs practically never “foul.” As a pure lubricant this ail is unsur passed. Neither paraffin nor asphalt is contained in it. It forms a tough, thin film penetrating to and protecting every part in any weather and in any motor heat. It passes every known test of perfect lubrication under all conditions that exist in motors, It’s the best that a great company Hike the Union Oil Company of California can make. If you want such lubrication, with en- tire elimination of all “carbon” see that you always get Aristo Motor Oil, for sale at all first-class garages and service stations, Miion Pi Company Aristo Motor Oil

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