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| : it; and we, as representatives of the Seattle folks in A certain residue is deposited in motors by all motor é Siiiiess, sre going to vote for that increase” oils, as every oil refiner knows. The common kind, 4 ————. mate’ ; a of had bap-|5 called “carbon” is hard and gritty. It Makes a Difference ‘thee ee a ou xe |he tral It clings tenaciously to valve-heads, cylinders and , ay OMEN fought with one another for positions of |—————||_ THE STORY OF THE f t | pistons. It accumulates at two thousand to four thou- ¢ vantage,” says the dispatch, “and Jackie was ex- | . L. LUNATIC were. tht | sand miles. tricated from the melee with great difficulty by his | Questions =P ; Bed i ig iad | 5 ’ father.” Pa OAS. erp, | It clogs the valves, leaving apertures through of St. James palace, one of the homes of the Prince of Si AERTS SAREE Wales. The dispatch goes on to say that there were “ex- | @ What i meant when one says)" o ott frees theca He It attaches to spark plugs and short-circuits them ) citing scenes” there when “thousands of persons,” chiefly |'t. is 1 yaad eae. af iia gay bea so they “miss.” : ae and children, “stormed his car in an effort to see (A. The meaning is that the indl It becomes incandescent and pre-ignites the gas—the motor Dear old Lunnon has been severely critical of the “pur- | his inheritance of course, hy cts belo ay sand knocks. Suit of the Prince of Wales by the uncontrolled and vulgar | am nature, like all animal nature (grooms) followed | It acts as an abrasive which, if left too long, scores cylinders THE SEATTLE STAR CHURSDA Sea Thrillers Fill the Records of Marine Insurance Bureau! 4} ' ae Ey tie loses V2ROOSEVELT | . Thinks About 1 the U.S. Today Will One of the Judges | \ : N \ ALRICA e: al a The Seattle Star oF Please Answer This? vine er a Dees bert Foran | —- —_—__—__-—/ BEGIN HERE TODAY IFTY THOUSAND 1 me court, by a 4 \ tot firs ‘ t sion, and that th f the electors are x 7 . barred fre the ballot Major judges based . action or f t \ pr tial elector public office senger boy” of a politi 1 i tal party only al way in which * ne f t ; ’ his name ¢ l t uthority of os8,¢ ° : Such a politics and 1 t s t tits The Star technicality arty & ise q incek < saeiathtla is | " pine a h fact that 50,000 per 1 awe ra ’ NOW GO ON WITH THE sTOKY NIGHT MARCHES | . pointing to t tead | Sez ‘Sez Dumbell Dud: | yD f sons in ( ed their desire to vote Foal aie. t mem , 7 - Pol Bd a y of the for La Fol the right } w tint f the world . after ¢ f vou dont have t ¢ era ¢ This pape a hould have the ¥ . reduced t 1 r right to vote whom he please i tha ery pos- | f* Ley it 3 3 Bible avenue should be opened to r it possible for him | big one he built to cast Len V | w A * ' t th ar s the four California judges who ruled | * 5 t amona Reainst the La Fo lette ticket acted as their consciences Ae ther It wa dictated and that politics had nothing to do with it ( hot to But our courts, are likely to follow too literally in the pieces. | ths of precedent, to let some minor tech —_—__———— licality, Carests Ng upon the shading of a word's meaning, decide e to look too much upon the letter and too little ipod “the Spirit of the = Majority judges ruled a presidential elector is not a | Public official. And yet the constitution of the United States says in Sectior Article 11: * shall appoint, in such manner as the legis- | direct, a number of electors equal to | r of senators and representatives to | ay be entitled in the congress.” If mer »poin ted by the state to perform a most im- portant function for the state are not officers of that State, what, in the name of logic and common sense, are they? Will the majority tourt kin to canen “Weak Eyes? Camphor lature thereof the who Which the s of the California supreme a decision on this question? i Maybe It Helps, But--- HE STAR is glad to see that the Kitsap County Trans- | portation Co. is going to build a new ferry dock at Fauntleroy. It is glad to see any move, by which the ferry- riding pub- lie will benefit, as a result of this newspaper's insistence that ferry service be improved. But it doesn’t believe that building a single ferry dock at Fauntleroy, or at any other place on the Sound, is going to be of any great help. What Seattle needs—and will need more and more as the territory across the Sound grows—is an adequate ferry terminal, where water commuters can get quick and reg- lar service. And, until such a terminal is provided, hit- and-miss improvements by the individual companies will be Only drops in a bucket that has no bottom. What They Should Say ENATOR WESLEY JONES and Congressman John Miller are scheduled to address a mass meeting of the postal employes in Woodmen’s hall Friday night. The Meeting is on the question of increased wages for Uncle Sam's postoffice employes We don’t know what Senator Jones and Congressman Miller are going to tell the Seattle folks, but we know what they ought to tell them. | They ought to tell them this: “We know that the postal employes of the country are grossly underpaid, and that the need for an increase is ur- “I have run my Studebaker for the past two years on your ARISTO MOTOR OIL and during this time I have not been compelled to grind the valves or scraps the carbon once, and my motor has good compression and runs good. Before using your lubricating oil and while using others I was compelled to take up bearings and scrape carbon from under the rings quite often. But not 20 with Aristo Motor Oil, and therefore, I can recommend it to anyone wanting a high grade motor oil.” (Name on Request) Stars The and Stripes Fly at the Head of the Safari urn on the What Men Say | “lof Aristo Motor Oil you, too will find to be true 6 Masai natives led each Jackie Coogan had arrived in London and was in front . Answered tg which power leaks. mid-day, the huge crowds” in the vicinity of New York. Indeed, the papers of | #* changed and is constantly <, ") r} | changing due to the laws of evolu of that city profess astonishment at our lack of decorum, | (009 sioh inecorably tend. toward and necessitates re-boring. —Soft, Fluffy The residue from Aristo Motor Oil is different. It is soft and fluffy. It practically nevef fouls spark plugs. It rarely causes power leaks through badly seated valves.” Being soft and fluffy, it has less tendency to cling so most of 8 passed in single file} native | id volunteer the information that “nothing so shocking | the survival and perpetuation © could possibly happen in any other civilized country.” | that kind of life beat fitted to aur a difference whose kid is being | vive under cer being in environmental But, you see, it makes Se oat K ; . - conditions—whatever they may be—|* shown off and where he s shown. Se REATLTE emeiec Tk woman? | usage, the term ia merely a sophiam Gliding | put forth by anyone who tolahea 101 oppose any idea of change in met HORET, French aviator, remained soaring in the air | 04s of doing things. CHAPTER VIII | Roosevelt in the Land of Lions — | | lur |"Dear Foran over nine hours in a glider, drifting around like a Slade Bill] «An right; 1 return the it blows out with the exhaust. « gea gull. He had a motor and propeller aboard for Bete th ioe Aiae wnat AS — Wal’, |iettor. I'll gladly Furthermore, the original deposit is much less than of hard eee, but they were sealed and not used during the [mer in the CULE RARERE Boel the game “carbon”’ and accumulation is about one-fourth as fast. gliding. j A. Yes, it is true 5 : ther date ‘ood These little gliders, operated on the principle of a kite, ee : tat| So average motors in g condition in which nothing but Aristo is employed, will require no cleaning for many thousand extra miles. That result will be enjoyed by motorists who drain their crank’ may become “the craze” within a few years. Properly handled, a glider is about as safe as playing football. |ea o at You'll own a flying machine of some sort before many Ava, if they become caught 4s @ waterfall or between rocks and Q. Can fre ater fish be drown f the camps years. | eis es water gets in Behind the gills, or| unt In to me at the Rift} cases, fill with Aristo and use it unmixed with any other kind of oil. hey can be suffocated if they pet * phn sri: hi | they can be suffocated if they get) m ; was ma arrange In view of this—the saving of ‘‘carbon” removal, and its cost, strangle a fish just as too much| wre yy PRL IAM AEN ee Se lz the additional use of your car and its more complete protection, water will astra a person tehiatate: Antti jaw tripite: the’ eolith, of —we believe you will want to try this oil. We print testimoni | LR Ke Ty P als §, ( Be apo airwate wie tis : upped Hell-Roaring Bill Jone Ny Uaaiia Waa ae | { ee Pes to ee know the definite results they get. You may bath’? : " " ~—H I velt, by sai runner, his home ave the same advantages. At TH 1840 the Danish bg, Chrle-|| RIVALS BRET HARTE © ||‘! | Mesa! runner, hls home F . GpoNsipe R the clothes that a youngster outgrows, They have oft been| tian II, in order to strengthen hi ; * ltetter I had received from his ex-| or sale at all first-class garages and & problem for mother. Suits and things will not last ‘cause a chila| Portion in Sweden, had a large Brows too fast, so they're handed right down to his brother. number of Swedish noblea decapi rival for Bret Begun. A tuck may be taken and style is forsaken. This hand-me-down|tled the “Stockholm blood bath.”| iit (fine auntitle habits of the! reception of Colonel Roosevelt on his | ie 5 fun, north i e ne in - ish East Africa roturi “to NAL bl | A pleasant smile’s shown by the son who is grow | dawn on the morning of June I had been asked to obtain, if pos cut down his clothes. He shoula worry! why Q. Is the pumpkin a fruit or Althe tents of the Rooxevelt expedition |aible, pproval or Sky , suit, Ix the thing that he cheerfully : vegetable? : wera struck with the exception of|tions for alteration’ of the dates de That's not truc with the other brother, 1n place o | 4" Lt tt eiasted a8 a veactadie, |Colonel Hoossvelt’s: Hin tent. wan|elded upon Mite, be suet frowns (iault opts Geparted, He's Kinda done ee ie | ched until the very last mo-| (Continued in the Next Issue) @t having to wear hand.medownn x | Q. Why was Lord Byron refunsea|™° 0 that he could enjoy reading | | (Copyright, 1924, for The Star) | a memorial in Westmir his books from his famous | A. Hecause the dean of the abbey in Library,” At midday they | A Thou ht | believed Byron's notoriously im moral | ye to raarch off to Hotik thru. the ref life made it unfitting to give him a|° mile thirst belt.” as the wa. | \———_—__end of the Kedong Valley 4 rnor of East Africa, | Service stations. 1 the arrange made for th. Honey, the Harte. But | ax he watches mom , he will get a new| hy Avoid Motor Oils containing paraffin or asphalt or any other non-lubricating substance. Aristo Motor Oil is refined by the most ad- vanced processes designed to eliminate everything in the crude which has no lubri- cating value, memorial in @ house of worship. tae a | Better it is to be of an humble | ane y spirit with the lowly, than to divide | In order to supply the necessary |the spoil with the proud—Py Q In what year did the battle) water for the large number of na-|xvit19. aor occur in which Gen. Cuger was|tive carriers, the personnel of tho] cae) be by the Indians? | expedition, and the horses and mules, | EW ARE w Motor Oil spirit rages in A. The battle of the Little Big\four ‘ox-wagons had been rodt t; for one inspired, t } for one insp! on Horn, Montana, occurred in June,|tioned from Mr. Ulyatt, the Cupe 1876. Colony farmer whom Colonel Roose: your bre wand are possessod—F l od