The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 27, 1923, Page 8

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THE SEATTLE STAR FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1923 @ Many detourists are in town. @ Nearly every day is sun day now. @ The average young Seattleite’s version of “Love one another” is “Love |-— one or another.” What the United States needs is a serious shortage of serious shortages. @ Statistics show the average woman eats less than the average man. Figures, however, do not. ===) NEXT SHOW a Ba ' a Senator Brookhart’s Second Name BY HERBERT QUICK NOW COMES THE BIG ty Ruth Ban Francisco Vek tan Franelvee full name ¢ hia 0 at : \ H art of rolth = Brookhart; but lois of oe only the Wildman part The fact in that the wen. ator nee Wile ees. | He is undertaking a be: labor to seek to put the but he Js not rad wanizing the people of the United ) Seal lowa culean States to put into practice the ua system over pr ” e § . nor wild. coopera Hi Hiramer Than Ever Hiram Johnson, back from abroad, says he “went to Europe an American and came back an American.” What he should have said was he went to Europe Hiram 2 ete \ we and came back still more so. He is stil! against the league of nations, still against the world court, still against the United States lifting its Michauie ootipecation| whieh Ms to try to stop another war, which, he admits, i { 7 art advocaton m ans Sust ly “in the making.” a aa ) / / hi nde ste 310 mart In his New York speech, Hi prided himself on being a = ADVICE pp liberal. Hi is the same sort of liberal as the old fellow in A easter ie, Eastern Washington who voted against a railroad passing thru his town because “if the Lord had intended folks to BY BERTON BRALEY [VE tried to ten Exactly In fact, he is backing up Presi dent Harding. In one of the president's Western speeches, he vocated “the organizatic ers into to ‘shorten the bridge | tween producer and consumer,’ and to reduce the toll.” The * just about as much Thi old and trie pperation. It successful where it 4 ays Bocklens has al rok lean nt without noc His utterance haa been followed up on Roch coopera on returning from his Kuropean trip do not sound wild at all, He lays great the necessity of or | fale prince Senator Br hart in adopting this task, which he did before } nt to Europe by the + ples | an ch atrena on Hy, In not nomins thing which Harding nd ts for it very intelligently know Brookhart means when he speaks of cooper ation, We don't know just what Harding means But we shall know, before we have to vote for or against Har ng for He will have We what ride that fast he’d make ‘em with that kind of legs.” ‘ou straight and true what {s wrong with you Henceforth I call you not servants; for the servant knoweth not what his lord doeth; but I have called y friends; for all things that I have beard of my Father I have made known unto you.—John xvclt, 15. I've done my best to make you see The faults of yours which trouble me. reelection. : : I've sought to guide you as @ friend Prince of Wales is planning to travel over Canada incognito, That you might amend f last congress passed a sort of thing is quite popular along the Canadian border, too, u might amend providing for cooperation am: farmers to get cheaper money for personal loans, The can do it is thru form cooperative corporations ‘agricultural credit corporations.” Whether this system will func tion or not depends on Mr. Har ding. He can, thru his treasury department, kill the system in birth or make it prosper thru the federal land banks—or rather the federal intermediate credit banks which are run by officers of the land banks Wilson made the first branch of the rural credit system, the farm mortgage part of it, @ wonderful success. This {s demo- cratic campaign material. Harding can make these little agricultural credit corporations a similar success, He has the time to do it. Will he? And show you how / | ome 3 i Your way of life Ht makes a girl mad when her fellow steals a kiss, and madder if he a PS Bic @eesn't steal it from her and, as it were, ome a Noble Character! B' T are you properly With humbleness and gratitude, endued Just about every investigation reports that living is so high because ‘Tings cost so much. For all the good advice you ome for target practice, Well, speaking frankly, you are not Some marry for better or worse. A man whe thinks he is too poor to marry is not in love. At various times, an I recall, You've counseled me to © & hall,” Loud ties make almost as much noise as squeaky shoes. And even told me I could go 19 Be To hotter spots than Horneo. Happiness isn’t scarce. It just isn’t being used much, Port Doing a Good Job : Sa The Port of Seattle is doing a good job in bringing di- rectly to the attention of leading Eastern Washington fruit, grain and wool producers the facilities available here for the handling and shipping of their commodities, Seattle is wonderfully equipped to market to the world the output of all its back country. Seattle has been un- fortunate, however, in having within its home circle a lit- tle coterie of selfish men who were willing to give their city a black eye before the outside world in order to fur- ther their own ends. These men have belittled the Port of Seattle, painted it as bankrupt and a failure, when, as a matter of fact, it is one of the greatest agencies we have for community advancement. The Star is mighty glad to see that this truth is being 0 ; , brought directly home to our neighbors thruout the Pacific : : rete Bihan For tho we wm Northwest. er Fi weh an attitude quite kind 9 Oe Who iam your good in mind? What's that? YOU have a moral plan To make of ME a Better Man? Confound your high and mig You'd better mind your own a Where do you get that kind o! Be on your way stuff enough’s enough (Copyright, 192%, ny The Beattle & i it schoo}, | — yout his teach: | with Tilston was puzzled. | But He took the blegest bad girl, who hout his own age, spread her pretence ore y over his knees, and pad dled her, That ended that mutin Next day the girl's father came down to lick the teacher, I | Ralston, and attle In a warret him with crim! dismissed school for the and went to court to act as hi He glory g00d er if he had igh to LETTER ERO 7. Hakding Warren, to un; disdaining vou long im the nomi 1 WORLD WAR VETERANS noth Deta ing ele wan fi fled information as to the benefits provided by ment of the United States for disabled ex. service men treatment, voca ining, and insurance, is contained in 1 pamphlet on , which contains a list of all lecal offices of the Veter au, showing you where to apply for any of the benefits given by the government to world war veterans. This pamphlet may be obtained by filling out the coupon below and mail {ng {t to our Washington bureau. thout a teach yuly atick It out, Bo husky Sam Ralston | f . the boys were ao-big and bad Seattle Town! We look thru to think of political tre raw-boned, tall, ud, we eet got the job when he was 20 h T t day y dorrier’s ban, because we belleve ined to lick Ri licked all his predecessors. one by one,” 1 anne and damning o fir the big boys organ-| ston, even an they had Washington Bureau, The Seattle Star, 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. 1 want a copy of the pamphlet on “The Veterans’ Bureau,” and inclose herewith a two-cent postage stamp. day Ar own attorney for the defense | was acquitted “That's where I got my first taste of the Jaw,"’ Ralston one said, “and from then on I studied law." Soon thereafter Ralston began the practice of the Jaw and the cultiva tion of the friendship of Tom Tag gart, He practiced and cultivated until he became governor of Indiana. Ralston tx dry, politically and per. wonally, He doesn't belong to the golf block In the senate, Nor the wocial block, being a man of aimple tastes. He ix 66 years old and has kept himself in good physical trim. He doesn't say much, but he surely |can chuckle! . Warren, to have you around, to show you our mor ‘and city and Bound. For here ts a spot tn our glorious land that Nature has made with a generous hand. And here we are living and giving our best, to take it and make it the peer of the Weat; we feel it reveal, in its wonderful span, a glimpse of the goal of the soul of a man! We welcome you, Warren, to walk on our sod, where mountains and waters bespeak us of God; and may we be with you, whatever may pass, submerging ourselves for the good of the ma. dia's call ia for all of her sons, to classes and mo and lowliest ones; (t's true it t¢ you who are head of the van; but pladly ye meet you and greet you—a man! % Unridee Tamm, “Judge Leahy was a rough rider,” says a writer, describing the Jurist in New Mexico who is doing his level best to throttle a free press, Not only “was,” but “is.” “TL take you on, said Ralston Either they thought that was fair, or else they thought It was easy, no the nted. They put up thelr bles toughest man, Ral « tize and age. tough fight, which Immediately he bad to take on number two, who was easier. Again he scored. After their third champ went down the boys gaye yp. Next day, big girls of the school organized. They said the bad had not covered themselves 1923 Record of Pedestrians Hit by Automobiles 1 -5 -Mr, and Mrs. 516-517 vivax Feaeria 1410 Third ave.. were knocked down at Fourth ave. and Pike st., Wednes- by an auto driven by Ther F. | Eriingson, 67th st. Both} were slightly no | Tall girls don’t marry so quickly because they have to stoop to make a man kiss them. about Pedestrians have the law on their side all right, but the autos hit them from behind. Chicago robber got $11,000 for working two minutes, but such jobs never last long. ws When a summer cold meets a sweet disposition the summer cold wins. Many a man can’t meet his friends because he can't meet his expenses. boy The future becomes the past before you realize it is the present. Ralston I al Boomed for | Democratic Dark Horse An Editorial for Lawyers We have in Seattle many able lawyers. This editorial is addressed to them. Wade H. Ellis, of Washington, D. C., Charles S. Whit- man, of New York, and Judge Marcus Kavanaugh, of Chi- cago, a committée on law enforcement, appointed by the American Bar association, are back in* America after studying law enforcement in Europe. Judging by a state- ment, issued by Lawyer Ellis, they are prepared to report Has Great Chuckle So Should Make an Excel- lent Candidate for the Presidency WASHINGTON, aly 27. politiclans think that the man wt | stands the best all round cate A lot of But ft co! +] Ralat on can chuckle at He comes from a good state, 1 Bhs parents. that justice moves much more swiftly and satisfactorily in England than it does in the United States. Tf this is all they report, your bar association is apt to yawn in their faces, for somebody has been so reporting to the bar association for years, and years, and years. President Taft, among others, told lawyers a long time ago that the improvement of the administration of jus- tice was the most important question before the Ameri- can people. “We must make it so that the poor man will have as nearly ‘as possible an equal opportunity in litigating as the rich man; and under present conditions, ashamed as ‘we may be of it, this is not a fact,” said Taft. Now, it is an axiom of present-day justice that it is the client with money that gets the delays. It is the client with money who can afford to hire lawyers clever enough to create delays. That is about all there is to the ques- tion which Taft said is the most important before the American people. The bar association has a code of ethics, but this code hasn’t seemed to speed up justice to any extent. The Star would like to offer a suggestion and ask that some Jawyer in Seattle to pass it along to the American Bar association when it meets next month in Minneapolis, This is it: That the spirit of sportsmanship be introduced into the legal profession. That lawyers bind themselves to go no further in the interest of a wealthy client than in the in- terest of a poor one. There is a certain point in most eases where the atforney knows that to seek further de- lay is to seek the defeat of justice. He usually recognizes this readily in the case of the poor client. Sportsmanship would only require that he also recognize it in the case of the wealthy client. Is there a lawyer in Seattle game enough to propose this to the American Bar association? Frank A. Vanderlip, ex-banker, fight man appears to lead It." “Mhat's genuine modesty. says a third party is possible “if the Re But he wouldn't name the “right man.” Trene Castle isn’t going to get a bit of sympathy from us in her domes- ‘Me troubles. She started the bobbed-hair craze. ‘The rising generation gets many of its faults from associating with Mnly place a man can write # telegram in two seconds Is on the movie pereens, Only a few more months until we will be wishing it was summer aguin. Do you remember what you were worrylng about this time last year? Many future convicts think they are too good for hard work now, Think of the money this hot weather saves you on coal, ‘There are entirely (oo many self-made grouches, Hospitals are ready for vacationists’ returns, ana. He tk Jeffersonian ngerat jin faith, which ought to make him a Wil 1, which he ts not. On the ary, he is ve afe, #0 for Big Business, which is som what wary of Jeffersonian democrats, however much the them. Ralston was a good governor of Indiana—that ia, averuge governor But Ralston has somo far better catch-can chance of captur democratic nomination for president when the time comes is Samuel M Ralston, U. 8. senator from Indiana | They say, for instance, that Ford may be the popular favorite now, but his boom is a freak one. McAdoo | may be the favorite with himself and | friends but the powers-that-be in hin re against him, Al Smith may be the choice of the wets, but that's | his misfortune. ator Underwood | qualifications for presidential timber | may be the choice of some demo-|than that J cratic leaders, but not of the people.| 316 was bo | And s0 on. Presidents." He was born on a farm, But this fellow Ralston. Jand all good presidential timber } Just who is Ralston? should be born on a farm. His folk: | Well, he’s just a jolly, stout man,|were poor, but honeat | wh looks something like Chief Jus-| west to Indiana | as good as the in Ohio, ‘Mother of when Sam tice Taft. He has a chuckle like |boy. Lieut. R. J. Maughan (right) saying farewell to his bunkie, Lieut. Edwin Johnson, at Mineola field before his second attempt to fly across the continent between sunrise and sunset, They moved He grew up, milking the cows, | Taft's, only it isn’t as well known.{and working early. and late, which |1 want t A small boy named Robin 518.3 of 6302 10th ave. N. E., was knocked down when he darted across the street near Wednesday, by an auto driven by BE. J. Hegel, 715 N. 48th st. was brulsed 5 M. Haska, 14, of 1917 Har 19vi00 aye. N., was bruised Wedne: 10th ave. N. ldriven by K | hara hotel, Old Friends Find New Common Interest Tom! Wait k you something.”’ hello, Bob! Did you just and Roy st | say “Oh, |. "Why, | get in?’ oe man, been in ¢ uuntry and T started at daybreak this morn Jing in the old bus and reached a |spot which Js destined to be | playground during our vacation,’* Wish I | had known, I'd ha d the wife and kids into our car and trailed be | hind you."’ | “I was Just about to say that 1 | tried to get you by phone last night Jund ask you if you cared to come with us, but I couldn't get you for | some reason or other, 1 tried several | times, but finally gave up and went | to beds" | ‘That's too bad, We went to the | show last night, and you. probably | called while we were on our way home.’ “Well, anyway, that's past, but 1 do hope that you ean get your va eation the same time I get mine, 80 We can go Up to this little haven of beauty and rest together.’’ “I'll sure try, Bob, It will be easy to arrange it, I believe, Are you town town now?!! » Want a And way, I've sure our to Cherry's, at Avo., between Madison and Spring, in the Rialto Bldg. just over the Pig'n Whistle. ‘They had a suit in the window that sure looked good to me and I'm going down to buy It." “Well, 1 your do say! So you buy clothes there, too, 1 just hought a new one there last weok ‘They have a fine ine of men's cloth ing. Good patterns, good workman ship and excellent values, and the most generous credit accommoda tions, too, My wife bought a stun hing suit for herself and xchool eouts for our two girls there yoaterday,"’ Advertivement, ’ his home, | His head ay when he was struck at | by a car] B. Adams, of the Wil-| 4 minute. ‘The wito| . rye’s Delicious Bacon “Everything the name implies” on that fishing trip Bacon with eggs, fried in the rich drip- pings, bacon with the fish—— That’s real food anytime—but on camp- ing and fishing trips, it’s the finest food that money can buy. FRYE'S DELICIOUS BACON fits in naturally whea you're on an outdoor trip. It’s mild, tender, sweet as a big of honey—made of choice young pork. Try it once and you will never go on a trip without it. More economical by the side ETI, <

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