The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 25, 1923, Page 8

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THE SEATT The Sea od Dally by The Sta ‘The Star is printing this picture of Point Carter, Lummi island, taken by B. W. Huntoon, of Bellingham, for two reasons : (1) Because it is a beautiful picture. (2) Because it is a significant picture. It shows a scene along the route of the newly-estub- lished Bellingham-Sidney ferry thru the San Juan archi- Y . It is characteristic of that whole great scenic istrict which is traversed also by a ferry from Anacortes and by various small steamers. _ While the San Juans have not been so much exploited as have our mountains, they cofistitute a wonderland ich, no doubt, will make them an equally strong tourist ion. Their irregular shore line, their multiplicity “Marine life, their wooded beauty, their cloud effects, aap charming beaches, make them a recreational asset of first order. _ They are just beginning to be “discovered.” Every Season now additional thousands will visit them. The _ Star believes they are destined to be the summer play- ground of multitudes. “There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man; but God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye ate able; but will with the temptation also make a way to escape—L Cor. x13. As there is much beast and some devil In man, so is there some angel and some God in him. The beast and the devil may be conquered, but in this life never destroyed —Coleridge. Girl living across from us is a window dresser. Forgets to pull down the shades at bedtime. - The male halibut is much smalier than the female, so shed a tear for male halibuts. i $230,000 for Somebody Who will win the British government prize of $230,000 ‘or the first helicopter flying machine to stand still for “an hour 2,000 feet in the air, and rise and descend verti- cally with ease? Some one WILL win it. ~ If you're alive and living in Seattle 20 years from now, you'll find helicopter machines as common as flivvers are today. They'll be kept in garages with doors in the roof. Convict escaped in Atlanta, Ga., dressed as a girl, so if they don't catch him, pneumonia will. _ About time you get Christmas all paid for, here come June wedding commencement gifts. We know what the Fourth of July is for, It is so they can hold a big prizefight somewhere. If you are going to sleep on your back always be sure to close your mouth before starting. Grange Protests Court Rule The Pierce County Pomona grange adopts resolutions deploring the fact that the supreme court of the United States has set aside some of our most humanitarian laws. The grange urges congress to act without delay to curb the tendency of the court to take all power urito itself. The grange charges that “this government is rap- idly drifting away from a real democracy to an auto- €ratic government by the courts.” Thousands upon thousands of protests are being made against this autocratic tendency of the high courts. A Congress made up of politician lawyers may not look kindly upon the curbing proposals, but there willabe « congress some day with a real desire to serve the people, _ and it will clamp the bridle on the high horses that the judges have been riding. Several were hurt when a Macon, Ga, grandstand stood as much as 4 grandstand can stand, “A Detroit man kept cool while his cat locked In the tee box. fe was robbed, because he was They are trying to find what made sugar go up instead of what will Make it come down, We don't know where winter goes, but we hope the last one went where it is hot. A. good man is one who loses a dollar and hopes some poor widow will LETTER FROM ‘VRIDGE MANN eamure But What dangers Pitch in a Cirridye 4 am LETTERS 3 EDITOR Calls Our Frieda Diabolical calle 1 get Club Sends Its Thanks bure » Reattle Chamber Very truly | | ours, LLOYD SPENCER operation and publicity given to the P nt | Remembering the Street Names Editor The Star The “Battery” (For “Kno Mra, “Blanchard” with “Lenora’ thank The Star for the splendid “Battery.” Bell.” the rings « comen to and “Vir There stands Mra ttle Week") | Here Is @ suggestion to those who door ginia” at her side remember the | hg find it difficult to [names « }from ( J has to make frequet > M's Cr ia 0 J'e—James, Jetterson. Yealer | amused hit | following See der (Ce Jar) “Vine” on | der |“Wall” On the “Wall | there ts a Earwig Bait; Is It a Graft? Editor The Star No. W. H. Har D r ngr MRS, O. I. LARSON. 6716 24th N. W., Seattle. we are not allowed to buy the grodienta specified, and mix it our elven. We must buy it from _|member of the get an official not ou will carefully examine the “bait” potson between certain dates. To| you buy under the state horticultural avold adulterations and’ counterfeits | department's stamp you WILL NOT the only poison talt which will be| FIND A TRACE OF BRAN, but you recognized as fulfilling this require-| wii? find that the b has been sub- ment is the authorized formula:| stituted with GROUND HUSKS OF | Bran, 16 poupds; paris green, one) OATS. | |pound: sweetening equivalent to] Other years the milling companies |three pounds of sugar to the above) tyrned these oat-huska fo get rid of }amount—and such bait must bear | them the state horticultural department's stamp of approval.” Yot, what else can you expect? A. T. AXPAYER. | The Beaver Trap andthe Cat | Eéitor The Star ymen handling them, it fs not a very | In answer to M. Y.'s remarks about |eaxy proposition, anyway | }my case of the beaver trap and Hu-| The writer is not a man, and no! | mane society, it would appear as tho| man was available round about, so | he had not read my letter. Certainly | by far the quickest way was to go} Ithat he is not acquainted with the|at once'to phone the Humane society |facts. . not an original ideal, elthet—but| | ‘That there ts only one officer to| on occasion resorted to by a! work the relief of the whole Seattlo| neighbor |district, I have already referred to in| Hewever, the city pound man came one sentence. Jout immediately (the Humane #o- | As for the writer's not releasing| clety advised me to call them), which the cat-—that was {mpogsible, as I) was far better than waiting for Mr. | must admit I am not “any able-bod-| Horrocks to come home—a matter of fed person, who can open a steel|about five hours trap,” and from what I have seen of] What was a beaver trap doing Inj s) Are You 700 tin! by embonpoint, or just points? “skinny”? In either case our Washington bureau is ready with help. They haye a bulletin on “Weight Reduction” and another on “Weight Increase” which give suggestions, food lists, menus and other helps so that you can elther coax some more pounds on an underweight body or take off some of the surplus rolls of fatty tissue. Just. fill out carefully the coupon below, indicating which bulletin you wish, and mail as directed one Are you troubled Do your friends call you “fatty” or ch BOTS en Bee BES. eaamaaamaaaamaa' I want a copy of the bulletin marked with “X” below and 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. inclose’a two-cent postage stamp for same. WEIGHT DECREASE | WEIGHT INCREASE CO a | | } Washington Bureau, The Seattle Star, $ RIN SAY “BAYER” when you buy Aspirin —_—_. Unless you see the numo “Bayer"| pain in general, Jon package or on tablets you areler package wh | not getting the genuine Bayer prod-| directions, Handy boxes of twelve | uct preseribed by physicians over] tablets cont. few cents, Druggista | twenty-two years and proved safe}atso well bottles of 24 and 100, As jby millions for colds, headache,|pirin is the trado mark of Bayer toothache, earache, neuralgia, lum-| Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester bago, rheumatism, neuritis, and for} of Salicylicacid, Accept only “Bay: h contains proper el GRAFT RING, If the community ches LE STAR “FIXING” THE COURT President Wants to Hear ‘wee Mrom People on His Trip“ Will Refuse to Discuss Polities; But Will| Answer Any Questions Asked by Auditors WASHI What x hecklers government? from view, his Ask_President Harding this sum-\trip ty not to be p ! mer when he comes thru your town| Mr. Harding offered ¢ if he does apiit his an. with anyone who The president ts going out pre} would guarantee a minimum of pared to answer questions, While hes trip. What he he won't have time to answer al do than make speeches that may be asked, he wants to tell himself ix to listen to speeches the people what they want to know. | ¢ror and women of the and cities he will stop in recently would rather 1 the i Isn't that point question an lon and prohibt. nternatic y to impress namely, to y ver, Pe M. G. tng We had been successful in catching had lly de-| 80 de stroyed several plants oiled | that others, and the trap was reset for an-| the other. That MG facts Is proved by his remark about ing the vered. The net close to an old tree! wh atance with 5 quainted with other uses. subjects ne beaver, which ermined Mr, Harding nobody shall to him purpose of e his own polities! fortunes on his trip that} he intends to tell his audience if they ex- dincussed, they be dinappc 1. He will tell and vane fa not familiar with the wherever he goos tha | trap pect to hear po them, and logs p hem in bridge | that » ve st about is form, 20 could get near the trap by merely “stumbling.” The Humane society's officer, who later called on me, satisfied hintelf| that everything necessary was done. and the cat's misfortune was an ac- cident. He himself explained to me the inadequacy of the society to moet /"7 forever trying these days to) all the help required of them, owing |#*t the president to express his to thetr dependence on voluntary | Preference for a republican conven: contributions and @ small portion of | tion city for 1924. fund. Cleveland, in the Harding home 3. to acquaint state, wants one or both conven- himself with facta first-hand and the and the president has been only persons who know anything|urged to say he favors Cleveland,| about this are myself and mother,| Some rival gty started the story | and the two men from the city|that Mr Harting would oppose pound. My two hearest neighbors! Cleveland because it was in Ohio were out Yours truly, and its selection would look lke that ¢ cars of work and not the polttic ents that will inter. | The politicians, who cannot forget politics even if Mr. Harding can, T would arivise M. tiona, F. 1. HORROCKS. republican favoritism to Ohio. 3916 West Ida St ‘There {s active propaganda in SEA’S PROM BY FULLER MILL That first ¢ of guile me to those waters r all too short a while er if the reason > for the sea it speaks of freedom And I hunger to be free! In tha York city by who say that what a national con vention {* for is publicity, and that New York is the best place to get t. But oth favor of New some RIEDA’S OLLIES Who couldn't be enticir Bhe used the most exo’ I know I am old fashioned I prefer wood violet It 1s so modest. Her bottle was huge. Bhe could easily have given tat half, Women are so stingy. Fore aoe I asked her for the name, She had forgotten it SAYS MEXICO | 1 picked up the bottle. HAS LIBERTY | Of course {t was an accident. 1 spilled it. MEXICO CITY, Mexiks, Mey B= ‘Mexico {s a classic country of Iib- that, by the bridle of public opiniony erty."* which sometimes makes us hypocrite, This 1s the option of Jose Vas-|tcal or too puritanical. concelos, secretary of the Gepartment| qt cannot be said that mental sla~ of public education in the Obregon | very ever existed in Mexico and cabinet. In an interview with the) much less that it was due to the in- United Press, he said fluence of the church, because, since “From the standpoint of free-|the reform war carried on by Jaures thought, Mexico has been since the|in 1857, Mberty of thought has been reform of 1867 a classic country of | as effective in Mexico as in any other liberty, to such an extent that fre-|/nation which calls Itself civilized. quently Mexicans in other countries! ‘‘In few parts of the world is the find themselves surprised by meas. | influence of the church and sects less ures which curtail this Mberty ofjwith respect to thought. It can be thought, such es for example the|stated that Mexico has arrived at a villgance which the postoffice depart-|state of mental anarchy and {t fs this ment of the United States exercises | fact which causes such a difference over publications which circulate|of opinion regarding the manner of thru {ts postoffices, and more than|carrying out reforms.” Just What She Needed, _ - Declares M rs. de Leon r cities rep hat get rk is not the voters lc perfum {clam ip heard of that th would look bad “under the to have the thumb” of ich ts m good eal like haseball—something | to talk about until the season really opens. had scarcely any life or energy, My nerves were bad, I couldn't sleep on rest well at night, and was so weal and worn out it was just about all could do to get around. “Tanlec had always helped me eq much before, I decided to try it thig, time, and altho I have only taken it for a short while now, I am rapidly improving every day. My nervesara better, I sleep better, that wornout feeling is gone, and I feel better tn every way. Tanlao never fails me, and I cheerfully recommend it to anyone.”* Had Scarcely Any Life or Energy at All, but Now ‘Is Improving Every Day —“Tanlac Never Fails Me,” Declares San Francisco Resident “This ta not my first experience with Tunlac, for I have tried it on several occasions, and always found it to be just what I needed,” recently declared. Mrs. Anna K. de Leon, 837 Central ave. San Francisco. Tanlac {s for sale by all good drug. “Lately I was bothered with colds| gists. Accept no substitute. Over and bronchial troubles, just seemed {37 million bottles sold.—Advertise- to be run down in every way, and| ment. A DANDY FIELDER’S BS ’ Free to Boys Every Boy Will Want to Own One of These Professional Style Fielder’s Gloves—Ge: Yours Today—It’s Easy You'll be mighty proud to own this fine fielder’s glove, made of choice waterproof leather with welted seams; special laced heel; leather lined thruout and webbed thumb, HURRY! Here’s How to Get Yours, Without Spending a Penny! Just get five people who are not now having The Star delivered to their homes to agree to take the paper for three months, | You do not have to collect any money or make delivery of The Star—simply take the order for the paper. | Have subscribers sign the subscription blank and as soon as you have seéured the five orders, | and they have been verified, you will be pre- sented with this Genuine Leather Fislder’s Glove. | ctee JUST AS EASY AS ROLLING OFF A ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS MUST BE NEW— | THAT IS, PEOPLE WHO ARE NOT NOW | TAKING THE STAR, HOP TO IT! Bring Subscriptions as You Get Them to the Circulation Department The Star | SEVENTH AVENUE, NEAR UNION a leoia Vie BE THE FIRST IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD TO WIN! USE THIS SUBSCRIPTION BLANK FOR THE FIRST ORDER Additional Subscyiption Blanks can be had at The Star Office SUBSCRIPTION BLANK | IT hereby subscribe to The Seattle Star for three months and thereafter until T order same discontinued, for which I agree to pay the carrier at the regular rate of 50c a month. 1 AM NOT NOW HAVING THE STAR DELIVERED TO ME i PPO eee onan eeeeeeeenenens. TORO ener e eee eeereneeenaseetenes. | | | I | | | | aRENRTER Prone here ree ment, “medi day a cod liam some for 19 Bev ernoi organ elecal nervatl falied noune Don 600,009 Thigl moditi Spe Willia terest PO Legia ington) urday. ™ Seat ers, 1 the grt Fland and M sale w weas G for th of A: der an ans in)

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