The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 24, 1923, Page 8

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Phone Main 9600. New a “Main Street” Gets the Idea | The phant progress of co-operative community i I Advertising go¢ : Recent ye have seen various sections of the United States make themselves famous and prosperous thru effective setting forth of their resources and_ their charms in t that reach people living in less € ediur favored local California made herself famous by advertising; present the big cities of the Pacific Northwest and the railroads that serve this region are ie conducting a scientific and clever publicity drive of sim- © War nature. And it is winning rapidly. Tourists and Prospective settlers are coming by thousands. j Now another step is taken, The towns | have gone in for advertising their local attractions in an effort to turn parts of the big main tourist stream in | their respective directions. A dozen or two Western ff. Washington communities have co-operated in this way, Pet using a full page of Star display space weekly, This = is modern constructive work and is bound to bring big results to the live men who are pushing it. small i 4 Vou can fly from Paris to Constantinople, But why should anyone desire to go to Constantinople? If Mr, De Valera is so determined t SS doesn't he move over to New York city? live in an Irish republic, why Right in the midst of these prohibition days the Reptile Society of America bas been organized! The wild men of Borneo will now be more so. The telephone will be established on the istand A Prize-Winning Editorial ' William Allen White, editor of The Emporia Gazette and famous novelist and publicist, was awarded the Pulit- Zer prize of $500 for having written the best newspaper @ditorial during 1922. It was published in the Gazette, "duly 27. The editorial was an appeal for free speech and its reading is commended to those, including judges, who @ct upon the assumption that suppression of free speech and throttling of the press have a place in democratic institutions. The editorial follows: TO AN ANXIOUS FRIEND You tell me that law is justice is tyranny, no mutte above freedom of utterance how you may t and I reply that you with expedie at have no wise laws nor today is in © from enforcement of wise suppreasion than from vio Tess there is free expression lence, because in the end sup. ef the wisdom of the people and, alas, their folly with ft But, if there is freedom, folly will die of its own pol pression leads to violence—tin deed, violence t# the child_of suppression. Whoever pleads for justice helpa to keep the Son, and the wisdo will sur peace, and whoever tramples ¥ive. That is’ the history upon the pela for justice, of the race is the proof made in the name of man’s kinship God. . only outrages peace | AAS tS ABM nt ab Kills You say that fre something fine in | ferance is not for heart of man- which God | Stress and 1 reply there when we got our > @ad truth th: Of streas is freedom of utter. ‘nce in danger. No one ques- tions it In calm days, because it is not needed. And the re- ot Verse is true also: Only when will éurvive, this state will free utterance is suppressed prosper, the orderly business | ts it needed, and when it ts of life will go forward if only Reeded it is most vital to men can speak in whatever dustice. Peace is good. But way given them to utter what if you are interested in peace their hearts hold—by voice “thru force and without [ree by posted card, by letter or by When meets manhood. that is killed, brute brute on each aide of the line. So, dear friend, put fear out your heart. This nation only in timo @iscussion—that is to say, press. Reason never hax fail 7 free utterance decently and in ed men. Only force and ex » order—your interest in justice preasion have made the fs slight. And peace without wrecks {n the world. _ Developments in that “House of David” investigation, over in Michigan, to the thought that Benny Purnell, the high rinktum, was a real in all things but the whiskers. One big drawback to the general situation is that so many persons to think that there ix nothing in the majesty of the law but the ‘This country will not be a good place for any of us to live in if It ix not Feasonably good place for all of us to live in—Theodore Roosevelt Rip roarin’ Hiram Johnson, the California senator who eats entangling alliances alive to keep them from endan- 4 ig his countrymen, is on his way back home from Europe. _ “Leave Europe alone!” shouts Hiram. That's his new gan, or rather, his factory-rebuilt old one, which was, “Leave America alone!” fiiram has been to Europe for six weeks and now mows all about it. He’s made a grand tour of the water- g places and eaten frogs’ legs and sipped in silence at it of the resort hotels along the Mediterranean. hasn’t been to Essen, or Moscow, or Lausanne, or a of important trouble centers, but that’s all right. He ‘Anew all about them from the geography he borrowed {trom the senate librarian before he went to Europe, and | ; he knows just as much now as he did then, P+ Hiram says the hemispheres have nothing to do with ‘each other, and when he takes ship for America, the Old ‘orld and the New will be cleaved in twain, for good, | That is, except for some more cleaving the’ Hiram intends to do when he gets back to th@U. S. A. and sac- fifices himself on the altar of public”weal as candidate or president in 1924, But what's a personal sacrifice, hen the world must be cut in two? ' a ABOUT THIS TIME 0’ YEAR The Seattle Star Ca ag eR TT ‘ WHERE'S MY af} RON QO ! tmerenvie p> ta stavice” > in the pla of having one divorce He thought wanted he lov | atill he couldn't take men are egotistic guy they're mighty wise, rw they and hate to And #0 they had a verbal fish formed he wasn't right w } make you feel hofne And a { And then I thought it often {| truth, as any husband knows, is “Have you had a drink?" get by with that,” they think, "I So in the future I surmise I'd standardize my booze conte had a few or tho I've gar “Yeu, dear—but only ONE! wa Fishing and Bathing in Green Lake Editor The Star; in a recent imaue of The Star I no- ed that Game Warden Beach ix ting up a great how! because o 1 has been put on fighing in Green| inke by the park deputies, Righto! | Perfectly proper! What's the great! lidea of fishing in Green lake, any-/ way, one of the finest fresh water| bathing lakes in the city, and fo ad-| ageously situated—right In the neart of the-city—whereas there are} jhundreds of other places surround- ling Seattle where fishing can be| |done? Mr. Beach says, “hundreds of| |dollars have been spent and a lot of| Jenergy in stocking this lake with! |fish the past five years.” During all| |this time the game warden and fish| | commissioners knew that Green lake} | was a city bathing resort, enjoyed by) |grown-ups and thousands of chil dren, then why should the gamo war-| dén attempt to stock this Jake with | jfish and rob thousands of this fresh water bathing plnce, located as it | in the heart of the city? If they have spent hundreds of| doliars and “lots of energy” (sitting | in wwivel chairs) in stocking this} liake with fish for the purpose of| making a “fish pond” of it, then why | | did the ejty council a few years ago| |make an appropriation of about $8,-| |000 to putify the lake, turn in spring| | water, ete, to make it an ideal bath-| ing place for the thousands of chil-| dren and grownups of Seattle? All this appropriation, of course, was not | used, only about one-fourth of {t,| which was used inzmoving the bath-| house to the nortli end of the lake, | turn in @ few springs at the north} end, #0 while on the subject {t might! | be well to learn what has become of | the balance of the appropriation question i#: “Shall this be a ‘fishin | pond’ for a few anglers, and a few would-be anglers in ‘casting prac-| tice,’ or a bathing beach for the} masses?” Mr. Beach may nay there are other bathing places near Seattle Well and good, but the water of not one of them {# as warm as it Is in Green lake, nor so admirably situ- ated. There is always a great howl about “playgrounds,” and of continu- ally improving them, then in all common sense is not Green Inke also a “playground,” only of a different nature? The former is dry, the lat- ter wet. Let those that want to fish go to some of the other fishing places, but don't rob the kiddies of Green lake, What would Los Francisco, Portland or Tacoma do were they blessed by nature with sich a body of fresh water in the heart of thelr cities? Don’t you think they would improve it to the limit for a bathing resort and aay to ———~ with the fish! Mr. Beach further says Lake Washington, too, is full of fish and Seattle has more fish in its limits than any other city in the world, Mark you, he sayy world. This is a broad assertion, and granting it be true, then let those that want to fish - “tackle” Lake Washington, and some of thoue other places, but let's make Green lake one Angeles, San her bird d, because he thought he knew kid themselves ab “No, not J none, | Girritge Namm LETTERS re LDU TOR of the nicest and cleanest inland fresh water bathing resorts in the world, The words, "in the world," can just as well be applied to bathing ? TACKLE ? The Star Keene ts en a8 and un-A Iwoman or to put trictions on what] jang and Ontario | Bobbed hair is so becoming. 1 iventock animals or # | 1 offered to cut it for birds it 5 in a free] Many small going businesses are | try t for wale, Do you wish to buy one?| 1 did, ; “ An far M want ads will help you locate her again t on man’s best t what you want She now wears a w whe said it wasn’t true, But the doe ees tel - Yor | ‘eene tha to think Keen m4 ng, and lke Uey're wrong any married ¢ tirely stomach, sinc nay t, like Toh often mined. A < ry fow clined to know it's just a nave a lot of fuan, if I should al . thus: No matter tho I cate om and to have If a man dog to be watching to havo ne jand seo that | Dogs know things his they |watch property. t watehman's work and are not over- Aw far as the human race, I children tea jting each of d nests, 1 | decency at | which comprived a ‘Animals and Poultry in City «« councilman t his heart seem to t 1 1 will also may th jand two boys T raw inve You: of the mc Valleys and mou Lands discovered not yet but # Mystical madness of nights in June And the charm of the Star Qu { Here's to the writers who take uy f Into the jungle deer ere all the hidden dange opard monstrous # Poisoned pool and the tangled bras Endless river and bottomlens lak And the death that comes wi “i r t but @ bully ta r con ime t ¢ lur New Oregon Auto Law Goes in Effect SALEM, Ore., May 24.—Tho auto mobile registration law, + —|registration of non-residents’ car 1 72 hours after arrival in the *, becomes effective today dia wks on No ct in to be made for reg which is merely intend It was aub k on m toriste to prevent abuse of the tirely right. It ts American for an automobile registration law ly thought Offices of registration have been = fashion. she t Medford, Salem, I nged en 1° he can sympathy for all | @ knows or seca a a place, be ought | ugh to keep out,| children do, too. are expected to} Imually they do a paid in either human sympathy or « robbin¢ nail at the end at to wire, which they applied | t as fishing. Did not the councll know | to a groceryman’s horse, just for fun. when the $4,000 appropriation was made for improving Green lake, that the game warden had a “prior lien” on the lake? And if they did know, | vicious, and instead then why was the appropriation! Christian love and made? Cut out that “fish stuff,” Mr, Reach, and let's hear from oth. ers on this matter. The Chamber of Commerce ta|chance of always coming to tho front/ thin world, about entertaining (and God knows | compani what all) the visiting tourists, Would | have yet to see one not a nice, clean woll-kept inland/{ndividual had ne bathing beach also have some effect| back, which I am on them, particularly those autolsts| always man's nobl at the auto park, being #0 close to| your chickens, Mr. the Iake where they could take thelr|jows, soldiers who little morning and evening dips (and| dog nips” also)? So get busy, use tho|cussedness, don't ¢ balance of the appropriation made| dog slandered. for the purpone: Very truly, L. Boys to blame? ents were | parents encourage very attitude Pyorrhea Strikes Four —Misses Only One Nature warns with bleeding gum. Four persons out of every five past forty,and thousands younger, too, contract Pyorrhea, So be on your guard, especially when the gums ate tender and bleed easily. Play safe, Brush your teeth with Forhan's For the Gums, If used consistently and used in time, it will prevent Pyorrhea or check its progress, Keeps the teeth white and clean, as well, and the gums firm and healthy. Pleasant to the taste, The formula of R. J, Forhan, D, DS. At all druggists, 35¢ and 60c in tubes, No! Human beings such as these have it in them to be naturally animals and all things helpless, their A dog hasn't gathering but I find « than many worth In this life of human I thank you. ANCE Nuey nut as| ‘The Zenolene-lubricated automobile av- erages 5 % more mileage from the gasoline consumed, because Zerolene, giving better lubrication continuously, permits the de- livery of more engine power to the wheels on the ground, : It is a fact well known to automotive engineers that the carefully selected West- ern Naphthenic Base Crude from which Zerolene is manufactured is the best crude so far discovered for the manufacture of motor lubricants. This crude, carefully se- 4 of instilling a attitude towards brutality by their} much | knowledge in | thom better | men, and 1| attack where the > way of coming sorry to say {sn’t jo method. Keep Keene, but us fel- know what tho are to hear the SHAPMA lines to our refineries and distilled by our exclusive high-vacuum process, produces in Zerolene an oil having the right body at all operating temperatures. This means that Zerolene thins down properly under engine heat, conforming to the reduced bearing clearances in the engine, due to the expansion of the metal, and it thickens again as the engine cools and its bearing clearances increase in size, due to the contraction of the metal. For stantly protected by an adequate film of oil at all the ing temperatures of engine opera- tion, This reduces friction and wear and delivers mcre horse-power to the wheels on the ground and gives greater mileage from the gasoline, RIEDA’S OLLIES ‘oud of her b And a beautiful shade Mine is nondescript brown Women never know when to stoy It was just this side of the scalp. lected and transported in separate pipe STANDARD OIL COMPANY (CALIFORNIAS | THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1923. —_———— | FRECKLE-FACE = Wind How Bring Out Ugly spots to Kemove Easily 4 et ak, en « ua REAL ROMANCE enon the expen BY CHARLES NICHOLLS WEBB ' . Cee ain H™ 4 te 6 te fr I - ; With n tt t t ‘ y Tourney and joust and o wild night r needed for And the magic of M ‘ Here's to the writers » Nightly «o i c unk the druggist for Into the realma of Space a ngth Othine as this Mare and the L 4 of the Golden Gie J guarantee of Puck and hia « it to remove ought to be At all good dealers her 7 more asoline mileage © : 30% Less Carbon Because of the carefully selected Wes:- ern Naphthenic Base Crude from which it is made and because of its purity and Stability resulting from our exclusive proc- ess of manufacture, Zerolene forms on an average 30% less carbon than other » oils. It forms less carbon than any other motor oil known to us. The minimum carbon deposit left by Zerolene is soft and flaky and most of it blows out with the exhaust. What re- mains is relatively harmless as compared to the hard, flint-like deposit left by many other oils, some of which often cost twice as much as Zerolene. As a result, the Zerolene-lubricated automobile may be. driven from 25% to 50% farther without having the valves ground or the cylinders rebored. A Better Oil Even If Does Cost Less * Zerolene costs less than other oils because of our facilities for producing and distributing jt in great quantities on the “Pacific Coast. We do not have to pay long-haul transportation and high mer- chandising costs to make it available. All that you pay for Zerolene goes to buy quality only. ! Zerolene will reduce your upkeep cost, add years to the life of your car and give you greater satisfaction in driving. Ask for Zerolene by name —at Standard Oil Service Stations and at garages and supply stations displaying the Zerolene sign, mm 4 ®

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