The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 29, 1923, Page 8

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Pudlishet Detty dy Paper Baterpriee Asso: HY, Boe per month " ty, See & mont farrier, city fan Frenciece of wtbinan, Mpectal Representatives : as . ts i New Terk office, dite ~ Why, Mr. Kelly! We read in the Washington dispatches that our own Guy E. Kelly, of Tacoma, G, O, P, national committeeman for Washington, has telegraphed the big guns of the party that this state just naturally is tickled to death with the Harding administration and that Harding has “won the approval of the republican voters in Washington. = Now, we like Guy K , and we're surprised that he'd kid the folks back there at Gamaliel’s knee like that. Or did he add a line to the telegram which the G, O. P. Jeaders didn't make public, something like this: “You fellows had better get something done.” : The Harding administration hasn't been so bad, To be real bad, an administration, state or national, has to do Something. And keep right on doing it. We know a man—a fine fellow, a good friend, an ex- cellent provider for his family, a regular good old scout who tries to be a good friend to everybody. He would like to have that cottage at the side of the road that the poet wrote about, “be a friend of , And he gets “in wrong” of r, and loses more rey, and makes more mistakes than the meanest man in town, His chief fault is that he isn’t a get-things-done sort of @ chap at all. And Harding must be like that—a lovable Amiable, smiling, good-hearted gent! n who hates to hurt anybody’s feelings. But he n't been getting things done. Most anything may happen between now and 1924, but We can’t help wondering if Guy Kelly has forgotten all @bout what the “republican voters in Washington” did to Miles Poindexter. And Miles was one of the real big chiefs of the Harding administration, voicing the Harding beliefs and boosting the Harding plans. 3 ICELAND GEYSERS Toeland fe the birthplace of the word “geyser.” It has been called the Tand of frost and fire, and indeed In no place are the evidences—nay, the ¥ery forces themselves— of frost and fire brought se forcibly In con trast, The Island Is qninently a volcanic region, a central tableland With sharp volcanic peaks, hooded with grest glaciers, mantled with snows and surrounded by a more or less narrow strip of low bordering the sea.—U, S. Department of Interior. ‘everybody's heads in the movies. | Censas figures 111,111 ts the number of Japs in America, but ft sounds _ Bore Ike a crap gama 3 ‘One nice thing about movie and baseball scandals is we soon- have _ Rew ones to talk about, Bmootiniss plants a ganien and throws away his can openen Whitewash for Murder That Arkansas legislative committee which promised to i h the facts necessary to see that justice was done for the murder of FE. C. Gregor at Harrison and for the of citizens from their homes, has made its report. It is most peculiar. The investigators very carefully ced details of Gregor’s fate up to 3 o'clock on the poon before he was hanged from a railroad trestle. ft they could learn nothing, the report said. ‘Also, they no idea as to what individuals took charge+ / ae 8 o'clock, altho they knew who had him Wonderful! Positively wonderful! Newspaper cor- pondents had no difficulty in ascertaining who seized and hanged him. His wife heard from him over telephone at 9 o'clock that night, and he told her who were. But the authorities could learn nothing what happened after 8 o'clock! It looks as tho the only penalty for killing in Arkansas en 8 railroad wants someone murdered, is whitewash Protection for those who do the dirty work. EVERYBODY'S RIDING Motor vehicle registrations in the United States have increased from fn 1916 to 12,233,375 motor cars and trucks at the end of 1922. year the increase amounted to 1,775,080 registrations as compared Nn average yearly rate of approximately 1,390,000 for the preced- five years —U. S. Bureau of Public Roads. A movement fs on to require full medical examination of every school hill once a year. Some progress since days ‘way back, when mother to go over a fellow’s head with a fine-toothed comb once a week. Skipper says off » Pacific island lobsters bits pleces out of anchors. It & sign of spring. Some spring poetry ts so snd it ought to be written on the back of an tax blank, ng can happen in New York. Tenants gave a janitor a watch. It’s Safer to Be Healthy Cancer {s especially likely to attack constitutionally ong and healthy people, according to a popular notion. nd you find the same idea in many medical books of ding. ‘The truth {s this: Cancer and tuberculosis tend to at- persons who are constitutionally weak. So announces - Raymond Pearl of Johns Hopkins, after studying the life histories of 100,000 residents of Baltimore. _ Live sensibly, keep the body’s general health good by ity of fresh air, exercise, pure food, sleep and health- epsing. Then aay any disease will have a hard time “getting” you. Better than guardin against indi- vidual diseases. ‘ “4a ; peat em | Fifth ave, New York, has a school for instructing women in eth a, and styles in smoking. It is necessary, Nothing so riles us as ‘40 have the lady in the seat next to us knock her ashes into our butter Georgia women are organizing the Kamelia, female branch of the KK. K. Ob, well, it the women go to wandering around nights in masks and nightgowns, nobody will do any sleeping, “A righteous man regardeth the Iife of his beast, but the tend ) of the wicked are cruel—Prov. xii,:10, Sek a aster Te: 4 Knaves will thrive when honest Plainness knows not how to live— I is not clean-up time until you can leave the windows clean up, Our Mental Bull-Fighting acinto Benavente (not a cigar, but the name of the anit author who has written and staged 80 plays) visits America. He says our blood-and-thunder movies ‘and stage melodramas are “intellectual bullfights.” _ Think it over. Mayb i Mayt been too harsh with the cruel sport of the Spaniards, Mental cruelty is as evil as the real thing. Tho sentiment of justice te so natural, so universally acquired 7 mankind, that it seems to be tmudependent of all law al party, KA be ligion —Voltaire. : _ Brockton (Mass.) woman claims her husband has been drunk two years, showing some men get their wishes _, He not overmuch wicked, neither be (nou foolish; why shouldst ‘thou fie before thy time?—Kecles, vii.17, 145 Angeles will build a $50,000 dog hotel, where every dog will have Wis day every day. Many a man gives n lady his car seat to keep her off his corn, tf @ i Bolt words turneth away black eyes, THE THE PRESENT BRITISH P. SEATTLE STAR sTIME _ 17 = ¥ LETTERS 5 EDITOR The Carman’s Side of the Case Editor The Star | In reply to the letter written by George P. Harris tn Monday's Sta suggesting cu the street car men's wages in order to keep @ 5- | tc fare. do a little figuring for him, does get a regular eight-hour run It's all night work practically, and he & m., after ing wage and w ke car men have | tc wages, why doesn't wh and take the civil service att It's open to all ett! | mens. After passing It at a high per- j centage he may be called to fill a| Maybe tt would be well for the rest vacancy at of the barna tn seven | of us workers t: gent to Mr. Hi. sm ris employer that he cut Mr, Har © for two wealts with | wages #0 that we could buy wh: y then qualify; also wees or helps to produce, re of pay! and also the gre md equipment. He at we could get butter on at the foot of the extra hy ured of $2.22 1-8 « * works 31 days in There on the extra board yearn. Pos. But Mr. Harris rather eo a street car man and bis family live in poverty #o that he could ride for a cent or two cheaper. evidently y there are falrer ed men and and they also will have some my at the election, of which and one-man yoters In t lines. hearty all | t night, seme- n 16 hourw#in order to} | get eight hours’ work. Then the Respectfully, R. HORDAN, So oeieaie gs | Defends Pasteurization Method |} (in reply to W. F. N, on the pro- | milx ordinance, In under date of | Pasteur | The point you bring up about the sugar being caramelized ts ent! y Tam sure that a law f you will find | posed paste the letter in the Your letter, addrenaed to Dr. Read, department, haa tod et ati ae a The moderate tempern- Sanaa TY ekiitedlt degrees, while it does kill | ; tale tie | All disease germs, has no effec te atthe Of pote bat I. | the food value or dignatibi | milk, and the chemical composition product remains unchanged. formation tion of mi ¥ is for making ‘0 boll milk in order to free it from ngerous disease germa. The germs f tuberculosia, which are the most Pastour-| heat resistant, are readily destroyed T would have you know that) at temperatures between 130 and 140 tho pasteurization of milk ts dono un-| dogrags, jder tho state law, and a city ordi-} Your statement in regard to raw nance, and that both state and city! mitk being emsential to your health, {have inspectors in the field to se@) and the tact that you place absolute | that the law is complied with, confidence in milk from “tubercular tonted” cows fs really paradoxical. In the first place, I can see no reason for raw milk belng ensential, when the pasteurized product ts exactly the have you statement | tle is not perfectly Porfect pasteurization according to the stato law ts “uniformly heating milk to a temperature of not loss than 140 degrees Fahrenheit and holding the same at such tempera-| samo, except that it is made into a | ture for a period of not less than 25] safe milk by destroying the disease | minutes, and Immediately thereafter | germa, {f there.are any present. of cooling such milk to a tempera-| There are several reasons why we ture of not above 560 degrees Fahren- | cannot rely on the tuberculin test to derstand that !t is not necessary | * om SCIENCE Heredity, Environment What Is Inherited? Old Discussion. New Gland Theory. would | it ronme: Many been m: learned arguments have j@ and many books have n on both sides of jentinte ing trongly to the environ side than to the claim of hered: eral now A new theory ts that physical traite of the glands may be transmit ted, and, nome of there gland ng & direct effect upc ty, & eiilarity in m be Inherited In this fash) ay uarantes raw milk to be free from he ge of tuberculosts. | department of agriculture has fc test to be only 90 per cen hb makes it . that the germs be ed m the cow to the human, thru the If there are c jann making the tests in the field, If cows In advanced stages of seane do not react, and if cows exted once « year, how can 6 the raw p cular germs? Th as to the source no diseason, epidemic propo hroat, typhoid, and other # dincanes haye béen trans- ted by the raw milk supply in ars past, and aro matters of offi clal record in the cities where the epidemics occurred, Tho first step in combatting a disease of thin type was |to pasteurize the milk, no matter | where the supply was obtained, Do not knock pasteurized milk, leven tho you will not use it yourself. Remember that there are many ba- | bles and children who owe thelr lives }to pasteurized milk. Study the milk situation a little more closely and you will find that the statements I have madé are absolutely true, Visit a pateurizing plant and observe for | youreott. GEO. W. WILSON, 1023 N. 49th St. “Show action—smile decorated with the Distinguished Service Medal for valor ¢ left to right, are Carrie L. Howard, first lientenant, A rmy first lieutenant, and Catherine G. Sinnott, second lieutenant, that's it.” So Gen. Pershing ordered his 1 THE GENERAL DOES SOME SHOOTING yalorous nurses whom he} n the world war, The nurses, The U. & | etfi- | THU MARCH 29, 1929 LETTER FROM) VRIDGE MANN Dear Avridge The & baw are t Mann —— — — Thief Uses Woman | Young Couple Is Wed In Spotlight for Human Target | BT. LOUIS, Mo, Ma Home-mede Remedy Stops Coughs Quickly The best cough medicine yew ever eed, A family Thus you make a full pint—e famiy supply—but costing no morp than p ema! bottle of ready-made cough eyrup, d as & cough medicine, there tg y noth ad better to be hb , loosens the phlegm, and seo ps entirely. Bplesdi: €roup, hoarseness an pine extract ng the membranes. sppointment sak you 4 ounces of Pine: sand dow't seoept any- Guaranteed to give abeo- ction or money ratysded to know about gn and cutting the lettuce, Fill out the on below and mall to our Ww ington Bureau, The Seattle Star, 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. ©, I want a copy of “THE CITY HOME GARDEN” bulletin, tnd inclose herewith four cents in stamps for same. ; § Name ; 4 Street and No., | City Btate OPP ARAP A P A RPRAERPRDRRAA RPA Washington bureau HU.S.NAVY YARD Take Fast Steamers as Colman Deck REGULAR SCHEDULE Leave Beattie Dally SERVICE fl From Beattie to Bremerton | | * e * LJ * LJ * LJ Colman Deck Main 2093 i VY YARD RO s , CeCe ECE ee ‘Married? Pat Says, “T Should Say Not” DUBLIN, March 29—Patrick Gave in sued to restrain Miss Rose Mo« Manus from boasting that she was bis wife FEAR_ puta /ovon YOUR POCKETBOOK? | Fear is a partner in the sale of many a quart of high-priced motor oil. The motorist pays for added protection that he does not get. The extra money usually goes into expensive merchandising and long haul transportation costs. Get These Facts Correct lubrication is the reduction of friction to a minimum. Thousands of tests in our research laboratory have proved that Zerolene oils and greases reduce friction to a greater extent than any other motor lubricants we have seen and tested or been able to produce. One reliable test of the purity and sta- bility of a motor oil is the amount of carbon it forms. Zerolene oils form on an average 30% less carbon than other oils. They produce less carbon than any other motor oils | known to us. To do its work an oil must get to the | bearings. Authorities agree that Zero- Nurse corps; Nena | lene, made from selected Western Naph- thenic Crude, has greater penetrating or | “crawling” qualities and greater adhe- siveness than oils made from any other crude, Zerolene protects every bearing and keeps the pistons and cylinder walls thoroughly coated with ofl. In doing this a little Zerolene works into the combus- tion chambers. This would hold true of ~ any oil doing its work as well as Zero- lene. Moreover, Zerolene burns more cleanly than other oils, depositing a rela- tively small amount of carbon. When an oil gives greater oil mileage than Zerolene the car lubricated with it gives less gasoline mileage, thus proving that such an oil does not lubricate as well as Zerolene,—it does not reduce friction and wear to the same high degree. Use Zerolene and Save Money Zerolene costs less because of our ex- cellent facilities for producing and dis- tributing it in very large quantities to users on the Pacific Coast. Zerolene oil and grease lubrication will give you greater mileage from your Red Crown gasoline. Zerolene will reduce repair expense to a minimum. As a practical demonstration of the quality of Zerolene you will find that your car lubricated with Zerolene oil and grease will run from 25% to 50% farther without needing to have its valves ground or cylinders rebored. Let the Zerolene Chart guide you to Correct Lubrication. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (CALIFORNIA)

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