The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 19, 1916, Page 4

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Momber of the fertpps N weet Len ato ed at Ment out of city, ene year, $8.60; 6m onthe, o1.9¢ Camp on the Mexican border at Brownsville, Tex: on Mexico's doorstep and ready to answer the call to arms. F IT shall appear that the Carranza government refused the necessary guard for the it popular sentiment in America will demand that President Wil- who were massacred near Chihuahu Son abandon all that’s left of his policy of ‘watchful are correct. ; It is Carranza’s first duty to protect American li Instead of putting down the bands of bandits and making successful war on the disordered forces of Villa, he spends his time on excursions from point to point, distributing civil favors to his favorites hiskers. and letting the populace admire his magnificent These Americans who were stripped, beaten and arantee of protection. Sam his guarantees, Uncle ought to preserve THE WATCHFUL BLOOD! |} CYNTHIA GREY’S LETTERS AND ANSWERS |* Q—Piease give directions for Ing on table at a banquet. Q.—if | am to marry a girl living | tha j ENID. [in anothe where shall | get |the A—A few general rules for a|the marriage license? JL. [dest es tress are the following: ‘Warm! A.—At the court house in the/bra @ishes for hot foods and chill|county seat of the county in which | var for salads and frozen des-| the girl lives. jbre . Serve to the left of the — jabl all dishes from which he| Q-—! am 17 years old, but weigh | My weight has In- himself. Stand at the right |138 pounds. 1 show it particu- | wh when setting a dish upon the| creased lately. less appetite. THE SEATTLE STAR» ffiee as per Month UP to moe Hy carrh STAR—WEDNESDAY, JAN. 19, 1916. PAGE 4, ‘Views Use United States, Declares Fa- mous Spokesman of the Here are quartered a part of the 25,000 United States troops massed waiting” A at once, year or more warned Americans to get action because of what ejected that warning larly comm Within ended. recent been given, de es ante justifies our tecting in It makes action by the needs and wants. removes ( government he heart of the Ci little His forces are melting away. undoubtedly His circumstances and prospects are al- hunted. He will caught. together desperate. His last but logical the United States in an effort to unite the Mexi- : can masses against an intruder. He has been given help in this, if reports as to the refusal of guards by the de facto government in this Chihuahua affair ves in Mexico. butchered in Chihuahua, If the effeminate de facto government of Mexico cannot prese them by his own powers. WAITING POLICY IS TOO THOROLY His food must be t which will digest easily under conditions, Fish and exes are frable substitn The in worker p and ied diet ples and coarse ads, milk and cheese sult e. 8 for are Q—~is May an unlucky month in ich to get married? fable before an individual. Be alert|!arly in my face, which troubles me | D. AND F. for any signal from hostess or|greatly. Can you advise me how| A—Any day of the year, save guest to replenish a dish |to reduce my flesh? Sunday and national holidays, is d | SEVENTEEN. |sultabie for the celebration of wed dings; but custom, superstition Q—Would you kindly advise me; A—Taking on flesh is due to so convenience and fashion have help- M8 soon as possible the proper many causes that without complete | Markings of a English setter dog. knowledge of the patient's habita ®4 to fix certain days an ie where | may find a book on{it is difficult to sug a remedy, 8% more propitious than others a 2 G.H. /Only a physician can do this intelii.| The month of May was shunned, tr A.—The English setter is a cross|gently. Lessen the quantity of|the olden time, but many happy Wbetween the field spaniel and the| food, avoid starch and sweets, and ™arriages have proved the fallacy Pointer, and should have a soft coat | increase amount of exercise taken, Of the superstition with a slight wave, but no curl in|These are general remedies, and | the hair. There is a great variation |should be scientifically adapted to| fn color, which is valued according|the individual. %© the following scale: Black and| white, ticked with large splashes, or the blue Belton; then orange and should eat who is employed at brain for | art White freckled, known as the or-| work? CALLY, jPatents, department interior, | ange Belton; k and white, with] A—Food for the brain worker hington, D. ¢ fan markings; and black and white.| must differ from that of the man tbe purpose of the Books on dogs may be obtained! who labors in the open air, because *nd the @t the public library AUB OUT Ri he has little exercise, and u EUMATISM 4 Q—A gir of 23 is seeking your Get a Small Trial Bottle---Rub Pain, Soreness, Stiff- 2 yoina man one year my junior | dif 4} ness Right Out of Joints and Muscles---Instant uf Relief! Best Liniment, Doasn’t Blister af ‘ieeaainsndiasmmentiy you to decide. TWO LOVERS } A.—The viewpoint of persons of w Rheumatism is “pain only.” Not Limber up! Quit complaining! |unlike nationality and trainin # one case in fifty requires internal | “Get a small trial bottle of old hon often very tte ent, a 1 Kometiine e : est “St. Jaeobs Of" at any drug |causes trouble he differer me frestment. Stop drugging. Rub | tice and in just amonsent vom Il be your ages 1s quite timma Soothing, penetrating “St. Jacobs) tree from rheumatic pain, soreness, acyice is, do not pre Of” right into your sore, stiff, ach-| stiffness and swelli Don't suffer! |at present, Let time de ing joints and muscles, and relief | Relief awaits you St. Jacobs Ol!" \er or not you and your tieart comes instantly. “St. Jacobs O1l"|has cured millions of rheumatism |are suited to each othe fs a harmiess rheumatism and back-| sufferers in the laet half century, |) @che liniment which never disap-| and fs just as good for sclatica, neu | pointe ralgia, lumbago, backache, sprains, !her t isch lipeadaicaeahateheheonsarenne Q.—At for six months. each other dearly, |It would be wise for us to marry be. cause of these two things jleaving the Important Q.—To whom shall | write for in- ‘mation about patenting a small Icle? Is there danger of fraud if Q.—wilt you name the foods one one sends complete drawings? Write to th imissioner of ance for stea a parsonage wedding should | keep on my hat and gloves? a small veil suitable for a large He ferent nationality of a ® also Many ambitions are like tramps Te today aud gone tomorrow, ago, happened to those who months, tection to American lives and property having the administration has recognized facto government in Mexico. Failure or refusal to live up to those guar- 2arranza American lives and property in Chihuahua, differen United States SOAKED Aitho we love} 1 do not hig We are question to) | Largest Sale of Any Medicine inthe World |quirtng no earth Dual Monarchy, Is Mere- ly Collection of Parts of Hostile Peoples—Wash- ington’s Patriotic Amer- ica Has Decayed and Vanished! BY GYULA DE PEKAR Famous Author and Member of Dual Monarchy Parliament, Who Spent Part of Hie Boyhood in America BUDAPEST, Hungary, Jan. 19 The which you Amertcans call united, and believe to be united The States people They are a collect f the parts alien, antagonistic parts the rit of patrie battle me lands ers, natior and inte tional, stand at the present the United States ts an internation nts, instead of a of her Im of their he of trans a majority al colony real home f The herolc patriotism, which so many thought was a thing of the past, has reduced to ashes the artificial economic patriot jam of materialistic Amer migr a Stick to Mother Races erica who, before the war were united to a certaln extent in a nity of common interests conscious that tn truth sliishmen, Frenchmen, of national love and lax comm have becom they f Germans, 18 Americans administration Drastic the out of Mexico. nothin the feller ays get up, o'reilly ye him, and the lad hopped up, whats your ts from recognition and name in PERSONALLY pre 1: ot Mexic if just irast rastl Villa such what Sketoned by Famous Hun garian Artist, Major Pekar that they are warring Rus Hungarians, Austrians and hatred, sians Italians The war of pen and tongue ena |deed between these enemies has burst the thin surface of cetiead patriotiam. He is being be executed, if recourse is to embroil peace and first in the hearts of bis| countrymen,” built up a national re-| public, not with one eye on the poll- ticlans and the other on cold-blood- ed merchants, but in the flames of blood-christening, In a struggie for | Mberty against a domineering moth-| ert the outcome of a great na-| tonal reaction { The was a new England | n contrast to old England. Even today those few small states the northeastern corner of the! ted States called New England America’s national foothold. Only Americans in New England | There lives the puritan, conserva: | tive New Englishman, the real| Yankee. | I, who studied in a Boston gram: | mar school, well remember the un adulterated New English enthusi-| |anm when we were taught the his-| jtory of Washington's guidance of a republic in right of t to Uncle fi" were there by WITH “AMERICAN thru thelr struggle for lib- ey Washington planted the tree of liberty in the soil of the United pects dia from all feudal roots,” in legacies kept up the su |Premacy oa high character of the ion well into the » nd half of the 19th century, when they were overwhelmed by millions of freed pero slaves and a growing immi |gration of MILLIONS OF Et |ROPE’S SUPERFLUOUS AND UN | DESIRABLE ELEMENTS Ceased to Exist in 70's | The ‘literate dregs of all nations} lovertiowe certain sections of the} jcountry, and each year Washing. te 8 people became more and more adulterated. it is said that there Is still room for 200,000,000 more peo- pic in your United States BREAK A CHILD'S | COLD BY GIVING SYRUP OF FIGS Cleanses the Lit Little Liver and Bowels and They Get Well Quick. When your child suffers from a We wonder what will happen cold, don’t walt ve the little) when it has <eached its full ca- stomac liver and bowels a gent pacity. thorough clear at once, When The American nation no long peevish, I pale, doesn't! er exi in fact the United eat or act aaturally; it] States ceased to be a nation in breath is bad, stomach sour, give a| the beginning of the 70's. | teaspoonful of “California Syrup of| The American theory that the Migs,” and In a few hours all the/alien who, as he steps on your free | clogged-up, constipated waste, rour|soll becomes reborn at once as an bile and undigested food will gent-|Amertcan, is splendid. BUT IT IS ove out of the bowels, and you|A FACT THAT THE GERMAN ehild again AMERICANS OF CHICAGO, FOR snuffles INSTANCE, REMAIN GERMAN feverish or | EVEN IN CHICAGO, A KOOd Ac Centuries are needed of Figs,” tojsuch material, The Unitec ho differenc y do it, but will you have time give and California uate Syrup ate m er treatment needn't oa harmle "fruit, 1e3 ons of mothers keep it they know tts tion on the tomach, liver and els {8 prompt and sure, The know @ littie given today sick child tomorrow dr ra eof “California Syrup of Fig tions f iidren » this 8 be he saves a| With of steel in his grip, J prey the tion options for $3,000,000 worth V. Pater Seattle ( Dry Dock ¢ East Tuesday fabricated steel will be used construc here of taree for foreign in or ges and for bottle, Be old here. Get by “Callfornia Safety First | Indigestion, and many arrived lar und from the The th 00-ton t Two ships are already in the course of construction, and In a few weeks the congestion of building five ships will foree the company to expand and use property adjoin ing The ert rway tion freighters constipation, biliousness iments of the digestive | organs are often the source of serious At the first sign of disordered ions take the reliable that is al a company on the also is considering west side of Last ways dependable - BEECHAM S Sweet potatoes, placed in cut Klass or other bowls, filled with PILLS water, send forth a decorative yel lowtsh-green vine, the plants .e but one ag Sold everywhere, In boxes, 10¢,26e | much water, * PATERSON BACK © ‘’ WITH BIG ORDER patriotiem of America” see ee All the efforts and words of President Wilson can ave hothing see we The American nation United tates ceased to be a nation Popular indigestion and political decay, 7 ate yet rote & pome about names not cutting mutch hobbie wainted w rest & figure o'reilly bumps into him aid & he What Austria Really Thinks of America; Not Nation at All, Leader in Country Says; s House Divided Against Itself, : AMERICANISM AS A HUNGARIAN SEES IT united ha into The states that you Americana call pleces The herote patriotism (of Europe), which many thought was a thing of the past, has reduced to ashes the artificial economic ‘om both AMERICANISM AS OUR PRESIDENT SEES IT The main arguments of the Hungarian author's in dictment of the United States were met by President Wilson his Philadelphia speech, before foreign-born Americans, in May He said And while bring } countries with you, all countries behind you—bringing but not looking ¢ your shoul which you intende yourself to America unless y ve purpose of your will thoxo Americans maelf as belonging to a pacticular national group in America has not yet become an Americar; ‘and the man who goes among you to trade upon your uationali:y is no worthy #on to live unde Stars and Stripes you come with a that which is and seeking purpose of le ving to pe their spirit petuate tha You cannot dedicate every respect and with A man who thinks of h to leave in them, 1 become in the pop sald the other nite that a pete what is dead now ce, & his name was i: feller wasent ack mich @ foolish n. ¥., mundy like that, but 1 gess ¢ | or he woodent b=ve ritten fire. or some th manny ome would not have been popu & there ® p tn harlem thats gol sto get hiv name changed th boy was beeting it home purty fate & he was on the out guarantees of pro- side of about all the licker he cood hold & stand anny chanct of landing anny weres neer his place he Was putry tired too so he sets down gn ‘the curb to take a lttel| out Weather he was on the rite st. or not when copper whatcher doing there, the cop inkwired d standing rite clome to the offiser kind of stuff, mr o’refll his nite stick, now te ura hogs, the feller aa what the blankety b! do you call batted hoge over the been wi ft the men hollers at him ra hogs, are you dea thinking the coy dident hear wel bing went the club & mr hoge settled down to rest again, while he cop calls the waggon j shat the feller's name w at the station, copper o'reilly finally got it thru his nut ura boge & he dident meen to sass him of kore REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE'S call to progressives to attend the June meeting at Chicago sounds like what the whale said upon opening his mouth for Jonah. And, if Teddy attends, there'll be some sounds like what the whale said upon opening his mouth REPORTED THAT the kaiser will have an artificial palate. It is to be hoped that his taste for war will be vitiated thereby. time to the experime: TRIPPED to the waist, room, his huge torso stream- ing with sweat, a work- man swings the heavy iron core to an iron table, and wrenches off a tire which has just come steaming over smiles, his head, and he good name. The two are intertwined. jlant guardian? to keep a name clean. His thoughts are—as they should be—chiefly of him- self, of his little home, and of his family, clean in the process. Tt hangs on he walls of all the Their good name, his good name, our good name his good work will stand guard over them all. make a god out of b ness. Let the slur stand. Whether it be true or it is true that busines: our very life, exprension of t spirit in whieh thelr business is conducted, ‘Two thousand miles away in Seattle, we will say— the same thought in the same simple words. We Ling hg thet An irritating moment has Protect our good name Li In a twinkling it smoothes the wrinkles out of his Joy American millic President point of vie: aod you millions in aera old world, He is himself again—a man with a responsibility which he could not escape ff he would; and would not, if he could. us——by what we are, what we do, by what make. We think of tens of th sands of homes in wh our nam) An alluring chance to save —to make more profit by skimping, by substitution. No one will ever know. Sus aa ae, But— the silent monitor repeats its impressive ad- His eye falis on the legend — monition. Protect our good name. Our good name is also his *What chance to compro- mise with conscience in the presence of that vig- as Protect the one ee Bot at least it gives tousa 1 In oom 4 while he subserves the motive that is bi wore diastase ee Thousands of men striving m Sererend = fi And keeping their own We Americans, it fs said, Shall it be a reproach to us that we try to make We are thinking of you, always, when we say it We think of you judging can be made to Back two thousand miles stand for that which is again tothe factories—this worthy and worth while. Als IAA AAAI ARAARAALI PAGE LAST COLUMN KNUTT ) ) ) } { H H 3 BY THE OFFICE SAGSIETY NEWS (Printed Exclusively by the Knutt) Among thone present at the ike party at the Ramfer club nday after was Billy, the Hecause he's detained in Was ngton, D. C., Will BE. Humphre n't join the #katiog plenie on Uncle's P.O. site He'll be back » for the swimming sea jiiram ¢ is gonnt Irad the rand 1 at @ prohibition ball if there's yonna bs one purty #0: Dr. Matthews tent gonna cut huiy for t r three months * IT MAY HAVE BEEN RUDE FOR MRS. HUGH R. NOT TO TAKE LO CAL SOCIETY INTO HER CO? FIDENCE ANENT THE RUMOR OF HER MARKPIAGE TO DOC PONTIUS, BUT IF 8HE IS MAR RIED, SHE'LL BE ROOD NO MORE. A successful blind pig should keep at least ons eye open. Se 8 ADVE vere rem “U'Malone,” said Trothful Seott. “Good!” came the response. “We expecting you, but were afrat \ close to his badg: “Never min: the preside: who tipped Bob off thing.” When they reached the Moen closet le lines closet, Bee it's the boose now.” THEODORE FISHER DEAD | Theodore Fisher, 71, pioneer fur- | rier of Seattle, is dead at Los An- |geles Wednesday. Mrs. W. H. | Halo. his daughter, lives at 1013 16th ave, N mtal We must not Jose your food will—we must not tarnish our good name. You can call that anything you like, You can call it business, or sentiment, or idealism, or nonsense. Tt may be all of these. It may even be that which our national critics call making a god of business, broader and deeper than money. Tt makes thousands of men happier in their work and more faithful to it, It has made of this busi- asi- } ness a democracy of united thought — a democracy of _ || common endeavor—ade- || | not ™oeracy of purpose and — |] Pot principle, eee | And here is the oddest thing of all arrived—the temptation tg business as good as it can singe but strte speak sharply to a cus, bemade? Zhe more we live up to ing sentiment tomer, to fling @ slur at aa this “impractical” ideal, which (s pub wewanie santeiuice: the greater the business Nehed herewith F ; Think of this business, grows, ; The salesman, ortheman- please, in the light of its H The Goodyear ager, or whosoever it may great animating thought The more we labor for | Tire & R ber Co, be, looks up, and the quiet the future, the more we ! Akron, Ohio admonition meets his eye, Protect our good name, Profit in the present | The more we strive for character, the greater the reward in money, ons, the The more we put into our product, the more we take out in sales, by wo Perhaps, after all, there is more than one sense in which it is good to make a He god out of business, hich We think so, And we think you think so.

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