The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 6, 1923, Page 8

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PAGE § THE SEATTLE TM, RE-INFORCEMENTS STAR DAY, JUNE BY W. H. PORTERFIELD A Memorial to Roosevelt His admirers have varied mucl heir proper and adequate memorial to Theodore R« Some way, monuments a t signs of all kinds seemed to lac a full recognition of his chs there are various memor projected, but no one star ing ample tribute to a many-sided man, Up on Lake Mattawamkeag, far in the deep woods of Maine, someone who knew and loved and revered Theo- dore Roosevelt, has created a simple memorial that, al- tho hidden from the throng, is big with memory of the man. Jutting into that f: lake is Bible point. On a tree at the top of the point is nailed a wooden box, 4 inside the box is—a Bible. Inscribed above the box are these words: “This place, to which a great man in come to commune with God and with che beauty of the visible world, is dedicated to memory of Theodore Roosevelt. Z : “Stranger, rest here and consider what one man, hav- ‘ ~ ing faith in the right and love for his ows, was able to ty / 3 j , 5 Bo for his country.” pA AM . y / , . : E What Veterans’ Bureau Will Do The place, the words, the simple nature of the tribute, ¥ i a, seem pregnant with memory of sculptured stones or stilted piles of the velt culptured d necessary to Today 2 exi and others ar out above all others as p: 1 SCIENCE Study Asthma. Discover a Cure. Pollen Injected. Red Ring Tells Tale. ler and services. Ce lee gain ew i" tw dirt and them on their he knife have n youth liked to Bere. ates wonder and / 4 2 \ TM ate the happy banditry, introduced on law order #0 that now one can t scsi If you are a world war veteran, relative or friend of a veteran tf you are in doubt of your rights to compensation, insurance, medi. cal relief or vocational education} if you want to know where and how to apply for veterans’ relief of any kind, our Washington bureau is prepared to help you. A copy of an eight-page printed government’ bulletin, giving full information on just what the Veterans’ bureau is prepared to do in the matter of cla ization, medical treatment, vocational tr & list of all district and sub-district offic where you may apply, is given, Any ex-service man or other person interested may obtain u free copy of this bulletin by filling out the coupon below and mailing to our Washington bureau with 4 two-cent postage stamp. sopled places. This report about the rising generation going to the dogs is a few mil Men years old. A compromise is when a man agrees to let his wife have what she wants if she will only shut up. Isn't it about time for the business men to stop shaking beads and start shaking hands? oclal un’ {forded renner omen by ope every profession and ¢ industry to them, ith men, which Justified A man with a house full of kids can go to a show and sleep thru a shooting act. Washington Bureau, The Seattle Star, f 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the VETERANS’ BUREAU pamphlets and inclose herewith # loose two-cent postage stamp. About the most important things going on now are straw hats. band strength linations in | |these matters alas, when a woman is almost at the point of break from her household. cares and ial life, to ta cn out duties often the breaking homes are often neg ed for lack of strength, or some ail- develops because of overwork women will do well to remember Lydia E. Pink- ham's Veg Compound, made from roots and herbs, benefits 98 jout of every 100 women who try it, ‘and let it help them.—Advertise ment, RO RIEDA’S el ME gd, OLLIES wre wl’ wa arTar V RIDGE PANN | }1 could have loved him myself. June 6, 1923. But no one had a chance, |Not. when sho was around, |And she never left him. There she stood, Glued to his side ax usual “Isn't ahe a peach?” Fortunately he aaked me the ques tion “Yoa," I answered, “A Clingstone/* dune is the month in which Cupid has orders to shoot on sight out Planning for Our “Next War” Secretary of War Weeks and the general staff are propagandizing about “preparing for the next war,” In | Dear Folks the name of Mars, what occasion is there for this “next 1 went to see war’? Against whom? Is it to be a war of offense or tas om ie defense? If defensive, who is likely to attack us? aiatarsT'd get wy goed event When the whole world seemed on fire across the ocean Phe was tald 1 is, Fran March we were made to believe that we were in grave danger. k We went into the world war not to aid plans of agwres- sion, but to defend our beloved shores and to protect the idea of democracy. lot Does France wish to invade our shores? Or our cous- the fi ins, the British? Will the Turks get so far from home as bag de ark Rust a Goals to attempt to massacre in Buffalo, Detroit and Seattle? to. catoh @ ¢ . ple mask. He kept Are the Germans and Belgians menacing us? Or does them working hard and fast, and seemed to think it play; he res anyone think Lenin about to lead a red army in our di- cued all his friends at last, and calmly rode rection? Must we tremble at the menace of Japan al- I thought of all the clash of class that then was holding sway ( I thought, it didn’t really pase—we seo It ntill today, Of course, we've laid the sword aside, but still we like to fight—for money, power, claxe or pride, and not alone for Right. LETTERS ie EDITOR Pity the Poor Beaver! Editor The Star Would it be too much trouble to print this reply to “R. B.” on tho beaver question? Would like to ask ““R. B.” if he} |for she) is the sort of person who will plant a garden and then see It leaten by beavers because he. in so tender hearted that the trapping of a beaver pains him. This tender|of poor reasoning. Brace up, "R feeling would no doubt evaporate if|B." Shake off that brother-to-bea you, "R. B.," were better acquainted | ver feeling, and forget such petty jwith the beaver and his ability to | qhibbling. JESS V. SAPP, pick the best of the garden. This} Sedro-Woolley, Wash. Our Outdoor Playgrounds Editor The Star: j Juan. Cities have parades, feten, reviews, revues means Birect and No,.+..++ The Purple Mask’—the curr it I failed to ask a word about th how I knew, before I went, wit play, you know But tenor Leo Ditrichstein City. of 1803. Hint ble knowle t I wondered wh did Wa f & 00¢ 1 | flew, and le State... However lay grease rm of state er th of o They ha j for those were Haven't we had enough war for a generation without fconjuring up nightmare wars? Can’t the war mongers and profiteers wait until the last war is paid for? Can't jobs be found for our veterans and enough insane asylums rovided to take care of our shel! shocked? Can't our | jails be emptied of the last war’s victims before this in- decent talk begins of another blood and profit orgy? Yet, the general staff talks of “the next war.” Best thing about being captured by Chinese bandits is you have to go to China to get it done. Avoid Motor Oils containing paraffin, as- it or any non- ubricating substance. Aristo Oil is refined by the most advanced pro- cesses, designed to remove in the crude which has no lubricating value. Bet the man who thought up hugging was surprised the firet time he tried it out. More boys are playing ball this year, according to the man who puts in - window panes. jtender feeling, no dodbt, embraces other animals, such as rats and| mice. Of courss, It Is heartleas to trap a rat and let him suffer, poor thing! | Such talk as one being required by law to tend @ trap such as thix ia silly, For we havo enough 1 now, and many never enforced Such talk of such a law is a sign Skinny girls usually swim much better than the other girls because they stay in the water. Aman on a vacation spends more money accidentally than he does on purpose while at home. we A Piece of Impudence Then, again, there is another angle from which to view Judge Gary’s refusal to permit the abolition of the 12-hour day in the U. S. steel mills. He says a change to the Shour day would increase steel prices 15 per cent and Yequire the employment of 60,000 additional workmen. He plainly indicates his belief that the present immigration Jaws would make it impossible for his company to secure _ that number of new employes, and a labor problem, im- possible of solution, would confront it. A “Gritt Carbon: For days you can lose your: | spectacles, | self in a wilderness of lonely water;| and grand|one of the most wonderful stretches We know, of a fact, that the application of the 8-hour am never has worked any such hardship as he guesses it will, but let that go. The feature of his reply to the sug- gestion of President Harding that concerns us at the moment is the direct intimation that he is willing to trade. In other words and in effect, he says to the government at Washington: “You throw down the immigration bars and let the rabble of Europe in, and we, in return, will adopt the 8-hour day.” Cheap labor is what he is after, and for cheap labor he wants to bargain with the United States government. If he can’t force the government to the desired end, he will maintain in his mills a system everybody, in these days, knows to be vicious in its every aspect. Judge Gary was not in the least convincing. 4 He was impudent. Take no thought for your life, what ye shall eat; nor for the body, what ye shall put on. The life is more than meat, and the body is more than raiment—Luke xii:22, 2 The radio set doesn't work as well in summer as in winter, Neither does the society set. Where all are selfish, the sage is no better than the fool, and only vather more dangerous.—Froude. Some Day, Perhaps The cardiagraph is a new invention. It is a powerful microscope with an intense light attached. Its purpose ig to reveal to the naked eye the beating of the human heart and permit one to judge of the health or ill-health of that organ. * Another invention, now in process of completion and "full test, is a photographic outfit that will lay bare the whole internal economy of a human being. By it, it is asserted, absolutely accurate diagnosis of the various ‘ailments that afflict us may be obtained, These inventions come forth because of earnest purpose : to promote health and circumvent disease, Many victories over death are of record. Some day, perhaps, it will be true that nothing—absolutely nothing —is sure but taxes, Babe Ruth seems to think he has a stéady job as home-run king, A boy follows in his dad's footsteps by faking after his mother, Watch where you place your confidence or you will lose it, A political machine must be something like 4 talking machine, # opera, but they are all feeble, drab} imitations; all but a groping for the | infinite reality that les out doors everywhere In the West. If you desire a real spectacte, one |} with reent and color and poetry to jit, go fishing in the foothills of Mt. Rainier and at evening drop down of quiet—sometimes—salt water on earth. At random these ore a few ap: pealing places and experiences that occur to the writer; any coast ram bler can supplement ‘these with three score totally different ones, but equally wonderful |into the Nisqually river valley. If it is splendor and expanse and solitude you after push out across the lower Columbia in a canoe at daybreak some summer morning, where the river is an in- land sea, and where you can paddle for hovrs without seeing or hearing aught of human being. Take a motor punt and a week's supply of food and hend out from Seattle towards the Straits of San the forested bayous of the South Western Alaska this Pacific Coast stretches a fairy land, In its thou sands of miles of range there ts hight of nature, and every are every and climate the rest of the earth offers, and mostly it is untouched by man, except on its very edges. As a playground, the Coast is about to come to its own. D.K.M. | MERELY HABIT By Berton Braley J HATE to quit the thing I've started, I like to see it through, It isn't that I'm valiant hearted, But when I've planned to do A certain stunt, I cannot quit Until I see what comes of it, I WOULDN'T say it was persistence ‘That keeps mo on the Job. But, when I've got a certain distance, I'm simply all athrob To keep on going till 1 see What luck waits at the end for me, HATE to quit the game I'm playing Until T've played {t out, I know that I'm a fool for staying At times, beyond a doubt, But still T stick till T have wcanned The pasteboards in the tinal hand. 1O I keep on the course I've charted, Beenuse I want to view How, things come out that, hopeful-hearted, I thought thit I could a I hate to quit the thing I've started, I like to see it through! (Copyright, 1929, The Seattle Star) thrill and every variety of altitude | From the | peaceful, hot sands of Coronado to | —that Scores €ylinders and Rings There’s a softer, fluffy kind Some carbonaceous residue is deposited by all motor oils. Every manufacturer of motor oil knows that. But there are two kinds of “carbon.” One is hard, flint-like and gritty. It clings to pistons, cylinders, valves and rings. Cylinders can be scored by it. And chisels or acetylene torches are required to remove it. Causes ‘‘Knocking”’ Being hard and gritty, it acts as an abrasive, causing pistons, cylinders and rings to wear. Small pieces become incandescent, causing pre-ignition so the motor “knocks.” Spark plugs become coated. So the spark is short circuited and your motor misses.- Particles attach to valve heads and seats, preventing proper seating and resulting in loss of compression and weak power. And this ‘“‘carbon’’ of flint-like hard- ness collects in quantities two to three times as great as the other kind. Can Not Wear The small residue which Aristo Motor Oil de- posits is of a different kind, It is soft and fluffy. Most of it blows out with the exhaust. What is left is softer than the metal of cylin: » Pistons’ and rings so cannot score or wear them. Motors so lubricated run thousands of miles farther without the necessity of cleaning. Your motor retains tight compression and full power, and you save repairs. Aristo is made by the lubrication specialists of the Union Oil Company, equipped with every accepted facility for producing perfect motor oil. A durable, fine film penetrates to and protects each working in any weather and at all motor heats. Tested by famous drivers under conditions far more severe than any you will ever cause your motor to encounter. If you would operate a smoother, well-pro- tected, longer-lasting motor, always use an oil like this. For sale at all first-class garages and service stations. i risto Motor Oil

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