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\ JULY 1928. 5 ' THE SEATTLE ST MINNESOTA GOES ON WAR PATH! GOOD REASON!-~ a Nn cm a — os a A 4 HE Minnesota election cannot be dismissed by a dis- socialistic division of goods or a community ownership of repeatedly struck at this root and in that sense, in fact, are f cussion of the relative elegance of Magnus Johnson’s _ property. radicals, / grammar or his garments, as some shallow minds are at- Their real trouble is that the banks, the railroads, the __ The calling of the special primary and the special elec- ) tempting to do. His victory is one of a series of lessons grain exchanges and the other exploiters have, for/years, tions in the midst of the farmers’ busiest season, tho the f that have been read to the two old political parties. taken their (the farmers’) property and divided it at will, rei postin will sap ped his seat Au s1x ore hed tp ° ‘ , ‘ 5 P ig tore rutal assault upon the farmer's right to vote. e = pe ae Ca 4 » because Preus » leaving the farmer but little more than his mortgage to ?PUtal : y ng ; Ui It was not a farmers’ revolt alone, bec LSE Preus, the <i g 8 ; C g sacrifice his harvesting or lose his franchise. He preferred, republican, was beaten as badly in the cities as he was in show for his toil, ., . this time, to save his vote, and that shows in what deadly | the country. . They do not believe in government by groups, which i8 garnest he is. i Right years ago the people of Minnesota abolished the a fair definition of sovietismand bolshevism. And so they The result in Minnesota is not local. The same indica- state democratic party as being a hopeless alternative to object to the government supplied by the two old parties tion was shown. in Washington, in every state of the union | the republican party. Now for a second time within a which has been a government of, for and by the groups or at the last election. Minnesota has merely proved that the year, this rock-ribbed republican state has given the G.O. interests who furnished the campaign contributions and work-a-day citizens did not act last November in sudden » P. an unmerciful drubbing. took special privileges in return. anger or spite. It is silly to say that the farmers of Minnesota are If “radical” means anything, it means “going to the The result in Minnesota is one more plain notice served touched with bolshevism, soy 2tism, communism or social- roots.” The working people in Minnesota, both on farms upon the political bosses and their owners, that the folks ism. If there ever were individualists, these farmers of and in shops, believe that the root of their troubles lies still believe in a government of the people, for the people the northern prairies are such. They believe implicitly in in the control of parties by professional politicians, who in and by the people, instead of a government of politicians, the rights of private property; they do not believe in a_ turn are controlled by campaign contributors. They have for special privilege and by campaign contributors. pinnae The Se tar ||, LETER From) | these, especially the fulmar; give olf in addition to food, \\ Our Animal Editor Says: Gn wk in Auras the natvog SO catch fulmar in great numbers and extract from their bodies n oll of pureness and quality | ness, Bome insect, you'll say. | platform of ties tn fre | equal to that secured from cod | - - imprisoned mals | livers. Altho taken from 4@ fan Francisco ship ia. iste pears on the tral 4 Roby Do wild animals ever meet | them fr | bird, it is practically a fish oft New York office epee , erts tells the Boston Trans | with accidents? ‘They do. ‘The | Once the oll is extracted, the Mont Ps fe RR gg ES ERA Sometimes he and: hi | writer recalls finding a deer im bird's flesh {5 preserved for crowds are much alike, no matter what its name, But Mhat in they | Pafed on tho sharp, weather o Winter; F008 | med seasoned point of a spruce limb, :. { Sunday night I came to te a starry sky, and wandered Develofing the Waterfront Sunday night T came tc meath & a one day, while hosting, Inet: | sie Gal pees Boia s , rs . “ 7 > 6 a hi attle South 01 t ; The good business judgment of the people of King Fron Gi « Landing, mg to Manzanita dock, the Vashon } jenoting to dump. Aine a hist poate. tn Soult | are becoming scarce because ot a Py . ~ ars 7 ere ¢ . Ong or should a h So, having | ‘d e e =e rpec or : Ox ¢ he eo jer a | county in approving the Port of Seattle plan for acquiring |] Paine ARPT EEGAA ertlinhitne inser and: got. oande pace wrote | tripped and pitched forward no | Kriss they « | joee Sete aerate eeesoiive Sandia and developing the Skinner & Eddy site No. 2 is verified |] pirdseye view of all the human race ant aint wala that the spruce limb penetrated | fllcted with a dise | lished all over North Americas | by the announcement just made concerning its sister tract, I saw there wasn’t any doubt, from signs the crowd possessed | aia a edus baee a Vier the forward muscles of the | phagia As a cure tt | Canada alone has 800 fox ta ' Skinner & Eddy site No. 1 that lots of folks were tuckered out from all thelr “day of reat.” | right hind leg, The animal had | eat bones of dead animals, | Yarmers everywhere are propas a rel by Pacific Ste shi For on the faces there I found a weary look that suid: “I love a | | evidently struggled desperately, | that are full of phosphorous. | gating and protecting muskrate The latter has been purchased by the Pacific Steamship Bunday on the Mound—but bow 1/4 tove « bed? Goethe thn : | but was unable to free itself, | But woe to them if there be | skunks, and the like, Some have | Co., President Alexander announces, and is to be im- Of course a flock of kids were there—a restless bunch, at that irda, but they, have not yet | With the assistance of « guide, | Dutrid flesh on the bones they fabhd 'sataeeeta techn 4k wee proved by the construction of piers, warehouses and an of- || they wandered nearly everywhere, and very seldom While taken up jax. the deer was released and it ooh, TH SEAt Gane the: atte be- able as any livestock on theig Y ildii ing in all three f illion dollars, || ving couples settled down beneath the starry sky tted al limped away to a nearby come afflicted with lamzetke, farms, The government biolos ) fice building costing in all three or four million dollars. Ihe se to tower aE cay datinian oo stream and drank deeply. Only which sounds and ts fatal, gists are now studying fur a That is good news for Seattle. The Star congratulates | Vor on the boat the human fase ie very | a few days ago an eastern : - farming with the hope of find: » the company on its enterprise. Also it is satisfying in- any better © to wee UN An We are: The thin | paper told of two moose—cow St. Kilaa, one of the outer- ing a way to keep Billy Beaver, ) 4 * 8 : Ror the No: & ana anne i and bull—that leaped the fence most small islands of the mist- Jackie Skunk, Tommy Marti | formation for the Port of Seattle aka For - “ TAY comin Gk wpe yyy along the Northern Ontario rail- | ridden Hebrides, was about the | and/Harry Muskrat safe agai Site, adjoining No. 1, is an even better tract than the | | way and landed in a treacher. last stand of the great auk. The extinction. When one reflects ous bog. Both were nearly wubmerged in the ooze when last one seen th and the bird t that America expends $100.5 000,000 a year for fur garments © latter. It faces on the open bay, whereas © ‘around the corner on the East waterway. its neighbor is | ° | So if No. 2 is Tirridlge Zamn l we | | | cap b ’ clears Setar ee dincovered by a crew of a pass | tinct in 1845 few in and New York's import and ex. worth while developing by a private company as a great | ratories | ing trafn, These humane men | habitants « ubsist port fur trade alone amounts coastal shipping terminal, No. 1, more ac in ttle cuss notified a section gang, a few | put. to $375,000,000 a year, the size of the biologists’ job is vizual: water and closer to the center of the city, is even more " tudied and «a means | mil beyond, and the latter | worth while. h 4 The Port is paying the Shipping Board only $600,000 for the tract. It is, indeed, worth, as was argued'in the | to | und of putting It out of bust hurried to the scene, bullt the . | spring campaign, three or four times that sum now, and many times the latter sum potentially. | i Score another victory ioc tia gu: It is so prevalent down in The Orthodox and the Unorthodox Washington that no orator can hope to make himself heard above the | gaitor The Star: \From an et q thrumming, and so golden utterances have degenerated into something | Vory recently I have heard a I, else. number of old-fashioned preachers— | Tee IL SETS |Free Methodists and cthors—sneer The Arctic tern summers as far north us there is land and winters just [bitterly in thelr sermons at the as far south. The two homes are 11,000 miles apart, an annual round | deep thinkers, like the poet Shelley, ible to deep |= | God, awe | trip flight of 22,000 miles. He’s champion long distance migrant. |Mary Baker Eddy, the philosopher |! placed him In « paradive and ie eee |Charles Darwin and our great ora and there This 2,000,000-volt lightning made at Pittsfield, Mass., would be nice to. |tor and humanitarian, Robert Inger the tree of evil, so that he a hand to collectors. soll. q OFT S % What an awful monotony and Crowds on street corners are not talking polities. They are trying 10 | 4 coriness we she have if we ‘et across. y is the spice perish, and my Avoid Motor , Oils containing paraffin, es- or any other non- ubricating substance. Aristo Oil is refined by the most advanced pro- cesses, designed to remove A tpon in ae crude wh! no lubricating value. were all alike jot life, The rose > only fi Fetch Mr. Willard’s Armchair Now, if Mr. Willard is thru showing up the 40-year- [say «1 am olds—and we judge he is—maybe we can go back to our |[unheretical be armchairs and such occupations as do not expose us to [the hucki F public derision... We, who are that age, never have taken the it kindly of Mr. Willard that he has insisted on showing nt say “I am God made suckles and | ay : us up. iMab.” H » in’ “Queen A FRENCH . Mab. 6 says in that po F th Ave. N. E 4 But for his eagerness to prove he coud sone back, re | Buren ones x ! Ath Ave, N. E | rest of us might have hoped to escape undue notice. e Bf ! could have asserted we were back—or never had been | Proposes Sou d Ocean Canal a | Paitor The Star main artery of our cc coe, the anywhere to come back from—and maybe youth would | have been satisfied to let it go at that. But when a tataeaa champion steps from our ranks and says 42 years don’t | Seattle, the bulk of Uncle © have to take anything from 26, and then does take it—on | Will be in Puget Sound. It Is « not 1 time of | lutely con ud exit, by jon, to a non of our r al peril, is at 1, as to entrance er nation. A fri z 4 § ; ua Wi oie : worthy and interesting in sure; the one closest ashe “7 ee | olga Willard that’s knocked out, Jessa at the great fie ary every tle of language, rit ts we » «its the whole ing OK. ‘or practically the first t in theland habits of thought. Yet : ; The wise who inhabit that nook know the truth, even finest harbor on the Pacific Coast. | miliating a t How terribly dan |No doubt the Pacific oc 8 des-| gerous a thing, that during th i isn’ 4 s any business if Jess isn’t one of them. At 40, no man has any business |tined soon to be the center of the|our fleet is in its home w our in the fistic ring, no matter how much he weighs, how | worta’s activities. Even now its | safety les in the handa of England. muscular he is, what reach of arm he has, or how good | commerce has an importance seem-| 16 she groat war proved anything he thinks his heart and wind are. None of, these physical rin dl ore se by La a hac ana it proved that warships cannot pase qualities, whether he has them or only thinks he has, will sicenansirs ase crieph =" st aR waters controlled by land forts. Re. prosperous while je it member England's attempts on the stand up against the same or inferior qualities in a man of chaos, and whi Davlahebaes J of 26. experts tell us our fo rear : is Doubtless there will be kindly hands to assist Mr. Wil- |!" Europe's?’ Why, b iE Meee hate § r 5; > fie world commerce and industry around | *F¢ dominated by England's forts on | lard back to his chair and hand him his pipe, but we can- | th pacific renders tus independent of | Vancouver island. time —that Scores @ylinders and Rings There’s a softer, fluffy kind is bound up ‘ause our new | 3 not conceal from ourselves that he has made the company | rurope. We can thrive while those | No one in America has a more » round the fire a little constrained. They may not re- {nations commit hara-kirl j friendly feoling for ¥ nd than I , 2 i t i = proach him in words, but Mr. Willard must not complain” | More and more often as the yarn enol to her clellnine oan Some carbonaceous residue is deposited in loss of compression and weak power, if he finds their looks cold.. They have been trying to up- | cuaraians of our country's commerce, | ing past centuries; to her present-day by all motor oils. Every manufacturer And this “carbon” of flint-like hard- * hold the claims of 40 in fields where 40 has some chance. of her cities and people, resort to|# against Prussian “kultur," as of motor oil knows that. 11 Nor sae They have been getting away with it. They have been | these waters Jagainst French greed and selfishness ; i. ,, ness collects in quantities two to three py nave bee : | Bremerton is the homesto which|to her generally fair conduct aa a But there are two kinds of “carbon.” times as great as the other kind. P trading on wisdom—sometimes reaching youth’s jaw |,, with it—but never engaging youth with youth’s own | re must come in time of need for| nation. } 6 prays more hopefully The necessary facilities|than I for everlasting One is hard, flint-like and gritty. It and weapons. Willard thought he could do it, and 40 now _ {have been gathered: there at great | tilty of action betweon England and ae to pistons, cylinders, valves and Can Not Wear views the result. Viewing it, 40 is almost forced to be- Rags ha tt ene my apr ; ae say again, it | . ‘The small residue which Ari lieve Willard isn’t 40. If he were 40 he would have had | naiticont harbor of Puget Sound, a|unlt of our, commercial. lite and ot Cylinders can be scored by it. And posits is of a different kind. Its soft and Aust, more sense. ‘ ‘4 ince a ——|our national safety lie under her chisels or acetylene torches are required Most of it blows out with the exhaust. What is Still, welcome back to your armchair, Mr. Willard. | ental oe to remove it. left is softer than the metal of cylinders, pistons Pull up to the circle. Have a match. Sit here long | ee invtann iM Sonate tie canal es and rings so cannot score or wear them. ys r j u aa | i rom the sound to the ocean . 5 Geauga maybe your head wil grow to be at oto | SCT NCE |i ett ai Causes ‘Knocking’ | sotor so hbvtted in thousands of mile 8 8 e' . | eafet papec' y, by i i i i y tfully, Being hard/ahd!gttty de actilar an farther without the necessity of cleaning. ‘ fi ‘ : Y¥ t tains tigh ressi abrasive, causing pistons, cylinders and poweceai Fol avatem cea rings to wear. pe Aristo is made by the lubrication specialists Small pieces become incandescent, of the Union Oil Company, equipped with every causing pre-ignition so the mofor accepted facility for producing perfect motor oil. “knocks.” A durable, fine film penetrates to and protects Seay at ean each working part in any weather and at all park plugs become coated. — the motor heats. Tested by famous drivers under spark is short circuited and conditions far more severe than any you will ever your motor misses. cause your motor to encounter. Particles attach to valve If you would operate a smoother, well-pro- Canada is nearly 30 times as large as Great Britain and Ireland, and Rickets. 40 times as quiet. ; ‘ - || It’s an Old Disease. | If money talked, a 1900 dollar could tell some wild tales about when it | . ‘ ak Youns. || Bones Softe Me 5 RIEDA’S Bad Diet Is Cause. It takes a lot of sense to get by without knowing anything. | OLLIE 5 | The skull of a child who died six l ven thousand years ago has ' | Women with the most clothes seem to wear the least. | found at Glamorgunshiro, | Only five more shopping months until Christmas. and study of this skull! gome women are so unapprec of |shows that the child suffered from | ative ets, ‘Therefore, this disease of] G6 cornu 4 Sei S |childhood must have prevailed dur | meee SMUG: Wes Only <a. Ford, d Police Gazette and Pastor Ing. the brones and_stone ages, an{ But she hnd none at al | ; 4 i. tected, longer-lasting motor, always use an oil " | heads and seats, preventing ike this. For ; mae 4 aig t t mes yo were by going } \. sale at all first-class garag 0 bu an auto for visi ore 4 ars it did in modern times | We were both going to a junch ‘. 7 3, y & sod and Bie. ters te Charles Dg i ae whembers Rickets is a disease characterized | eon | Proper seating and resulting service stations. : of his congregation, Rev. Charles F. Taylor of Hast [oniety by « softened condition of| In the country, 4 Orange, N. J., has been chopping down trees and clearing |the bones. 11 frequen causes} I offered hor a lift 1 a large tract of land. children to become bow-legged and| It wasn't my fault, ni ; il Pavaal 5 You may recall reading, a few days ago, that the de- is rexponsible for many other do-| If everyone nearly ran into us, | UU 10n. 1 } pany & ceased owner of the Police Gazette, pink sporting paper, fines 1 Msic3 Movie “ohd, aeiss| Their GABE renaeionene c bs i left an estate of close to two million dollars. ing from rich has plain exide | I nover missed a bump, | , ——_——- — owing in th It is true, ¥ o s Finding a four-lear clover is not considered good luck, if you fail to 14 Ie one of the al But what right had she, o \ see the bee on it. b |Practically wiped out by It} ‘To quarrel about 1t? a i — — - | was found that improp Het, due It was a fearfully hot day Nothing is harder on a woman's complexion than her enemies, to the lack of certain vitamines,| ‘I'wo mote miles lay ahead of us. i - ee was one of che chief causes. Te R ing out o 4, Fi A tablespoonful of dynamite put in the cake makes it rise, Inatoer, oranges, Nutter fat ana ie | Ea ich un $10 aac : _— — — light constitute cure and preven But I used it, Some of the bathing girl idols have feet of clay. tion, Until she war out of sight,