The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 2, 1917, Page 4

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Important, let us have a law prohib- | Justice Thy x iting the gigantic tion of food which God has give am abundance, and which m Breed care so litt eomes to hungry tome as they can fill their pockets per cent of our peo With gold. But their time is short,/of their own for Yery soon their yoke is to be ure destitute, What of the legious broken from off our backs, even as of American children who have the God of righteousness has prom: served in sweat & deed ua that he will destroy those filth, untrained fo Proper contempt for those who wilfully dump foods rather [say when the Hand of Judgment} than permit a lowering of ‘points to our legions of unfortunate! A Good Appointment © federal trade commissioner to succeed the late Will H. Parry 4 ident Wilson v ant board. What with the indorsements not “attorney for the federal trade comm ) mecessary to keep up an automobile in which she ca _ market and buy for the family. ‘Making Things Grow New York city’s committee on food gardens is flat on| ofits back, knocked out by astonishment over the results of - its own labors. Organization for the work of putting seeds and plants into the untilled ground in the metropolis ‘April 23. It now appears that 800 acres within the city ) limits, acres formerly idle, are under cultivation, with pros- pects of produce worth approximately $250,000. going to be glorious « ing of people to ‘ v Out in his intery i Mitely know what the ing to mean to the worle laid out by astonishment, too matter how hard you hit. just where his line is. much regard for what looks ike the line. DUMPING see IN BAY | prices. ke if the RY Biitor The Star: You have given| can be produced, publicity MiMOh space to urging war again would “run” such ghouls out of Most poor men's Wives are) this city, at least. We agree Members of Jong standing in that, with the writer that some rigid army, and don't need to be taught) punishment should be in economics | out to such “commission” men. Thave had about twenty-two years) And it will be, They are trait Of practice along that Hine, a Know how to save every bit of food) cur eyes open and see that the That comes into t chance there Bre unfit to be returne table, we have six he that are Editor The Sta 1 differ w eted d| ore to the country. Let us keep » house. If by) pref against them is at hand me seraps that 1 to the JUSTICE MUST RULE res Blad to get them, an hicken feed t € will ¢ ne 1 pot Posts as much as our food does t t Civilization apid Present. 1 believe the average r n t win 1 Working man's wife wast meats of her eco vice Na tle, for they have very tions, © multicelly oreanisn Waste, but you have said n disintegrate from tt cause the carloads of spuds le| Crises are determined by wealth commission men threw entralization Modern wars ar Tast fall, or of the ¢ fought chiefly by tenant gone the same wa ns form and disintegrate mers since I have »| Cree € and go. Christians 4 urder for “honor.” But the equa Tf this war against waste is so tion of eternity is unchanging bor as thyself of war @ ide than the and producers of war are h whether it ever) prec mouths or not, so that destroy the earth created by the r ng cen} A READER, tralited and enabling individuals to | Editor's Note—There are no = contro! food and thing at will?] words adequate to describe the women have been ont: | HE SEATTLE STAR “THE GOLD B BY EDGAR ALLAN POE 1207 Sevesth Ave. Near Union » OF SCRIFPS NORTHWEST LEAGU or Newsrarnns Telegraph News Service of the United Press Asseoctation Entered at Seattle, Wash. Postoffice as Becona- Class Matter. Mail, out of city, 35 per month up to 6 moa; 6 mos $1.90; year $2.60 By carrier city 36¢ @ month. Daily by The Star Publishing C eoucha: a! Should Ole Hanson of Seattle get the appointment have add substantial strength to th citizens but of the national de chairman, tt and many ot ly prominent citizens, Ha n's chances for the t seem excellent ke It Fashionable Woma on the nose 'This, according to James W. Gerard, former ambas ito Germany. In that country Mr. Gerard had full of to study human want and how it can be com full and careful consideration, he testifies: ted “We should make it fashionable for women to go to t and buy for the family. The telephone and the| joy it system are responsible for the ever-increasing cost of ” Wisdom, James! the wisdom of a Solomon and the per sity of a Daniel! Only we'd like to add that it’s not t under way Ti New York City, a city in which the folks live €@an and wil! do such things, what must be the home garden rops in a city like Seattle? And we s: both as observer and prophet, that there’ ipensation in this war in the teach day. Could MATTHEWS AND GILL to be opponents in the mayoralty race next | year? That's the long and the short of it—thus far WHAT WAS it Teddy said? You can’t drive a nail with a sponge, And you can’t scare a live Seattle bank Glerk with an empty bottle, no matter what it's labeled MR. HINDENBURG would diepel a good deal of doubt by telling Some of those allies don’t seem to be paying EW PANTAGES MATS., 2:20 NIGHTS, 7 AND9 BEGINNING MONDAY AFTERNOON One More Joyful Week of the Marvelous Singer Midgets Engagement Extended by Popular Request See these 30 perfectly formed little men and womer and their twenty ponies and elephants—a comple show in itsel And a New and Snappy Bill of Pantages Vaudeville 10c and 20c economic wrongs will be that riy oper rating oth prenatally immediately? unbellevable u whited wall! First cast out the beam WASTING ROAD MONEY Aw an example outh wide of the ¥ good road except und Vandals co has been neces ower with the of flent c tragedies which are the Yakima river ich as Would have road on the in first clans condit handle all possible traffic Transcending eless, What] nelg je have homes Igian children Editor's Note—The writer is missed by the older one and, so far Yet we do not about a mole on the back of our whole body suffers from an at ived in| wealth UNIONS MONOPOLIES pain absorbs the smaller Paralyred Patri¢ too, today. Let us rid the world of autocratic government first That done, our fight to reduce hea What shall we One other point to b (Continued From Our Last Issue) should tas If by preconcert, and much time so confused were I felt no longer any great ed the box by aversion to the Iabor imponed ited among th or of deliberatie wsembled ex { representative e Worn as we uman nature te 1 when we had been It is reported from Washington, however, that because| perhaps an hour and a ha BE @ personal feud, Senator Miles Poindexter of Wash . iS epposing Hanson. The Star, however, believes Senator! exter is too big a man, and too broad in his views to} ba mere personal difference stand in the way of a good|of playf ointment. ngton howlings of the do« n the prem before 4 we arrived at t ¢ remainder of the booty as might be, among us, jeral v j worn t ter and serious again set out for the hut, {n.|for the second time, we deposited | found more difficult in estimating. mould | our golden burdens, just as the first | faint streaks of the dawn gleamed from over the tree tope in the east. tempting to muszle furious resistance, frantically with his claws Thou didst, as thy first act of few seconds he had uncovered a} mage of human bones, forming two intermingled | down; , take man by the nose and gorge him-with nee _excitement| insidious apple, and today thou relinquisheth not thy |r seveal subions OF santal ce th ilet stamber of « oF two strokes . saree ‘Spanish ‘knit e, h we pl | places ot fold and silver coin came jwhih we § YOUR COUNTRY WIN! Subscribe for a U. 8. Gov. ernment Bond TODAY! subscriptions » no charge for our At tight of these gold pleces the scarcely be , but the countenance of his master wore an air of extreme disappointment ) continue our exertions, and the words were hardly uttered DEPARTMENT Guardian Trust & Savings Bank din the loose earth. We now worked In earnes' intense excitement Cor. First Ave. Thoroughness Characterizen i an oblong chest of wood at Columbia St perfect preserva hardness, had perhaps that yers, sistent with sound -ust- ness Judgment Savings Acco! Gov. Lister pointed] upon the Peoples Savings Bank AND PIKE ST. ALASKA EXCURSIONS BY The “Princess” Line Steamers Canadian Pacific Railway GWAY LIGHTFUL SCENERY sted with excite Iw ERVATIONS NOW ulings and other information, PENN, General Agent Passenger Department, 3 Second Avenue, Seattle, STAR—SATURDAY, JUNE 2, 1917. PAGE 4 eral of the so-c# kind, but are labor monopolies) jhave control of the various ship ude to such a degree that they ¢eannot even hire their own men if a mechanic wante must apply thra the monopoly’s ecretary, pay bim from $10 to $30, then go thru some fictitious exam: | ination, and if they can find some excuse (such as there are some other mem! not workin, me cause or other), he, the 4 appli cant, is rejected, and must starve with his family Should the said monopoly accept him he must pay or $40 before } can go after a is given a ecard and t of get job, then h Kon & Chanc ting the job, Should he get the job, he has to hold it by his ability, The point | wish to make ts this That the examination and the $25 do not make hin efficiency greater \lno T have never seen any law elving any body of men the right to say that another man equally as efficient must pay from $10 to ror the right to work, I belleve in union for protection, but tt goes beyond that when carried to the extent machinist association, for instance, is, I believe, a just or vanization, but the steam fitters and the ship carpenters are an out rage on society, making many men nabl it up the money or pas the bluff called examination, tho efficient, walk the streets or take a job as helper I think $6 to $10 plenty, and if $10, TL think it should be $5 down d $5 from first month's work, dd the necessary monthly dues to “JANE EYRE” BY CHARLOTTE BRONTE World's Greatest Love Stor: to make exam. ination of our treasure The chest had been full to the im, and we spent the whole day, and the greater part of the next night, in a serutiny of its contents There had been nothing lik arrangement, Everythin been heaped in promiscuous assorted all with care. found our vaster wealth than we had at first wupposed In coin there was rather more than four bundred and fifty thou 1 dollare—estimating the of tt could, by the tables of the period re Was not a particle of silver All was gold of antique date and reat ermany money, with a few suing and some coun which we had never seen specimens before, There were sev- of thelr inscriptions. There was no American money. The value of the jewels we | There were diamonds—some of them exceedingly large and fine— a hundred and ten tn all, and not one of them small; eighteen rubies of remarkable brilllancy — three hundred and ten emeralds, all very | bes atiful and twenty-one «ap-| with an opal. These stones | ad all been broken from their set tings and thrown loo in the chest. The settings themselves, the other gold, appeared to have | been beaten up with hammers, as if to prevent identification, Besides all this, there was a vast quantity of solid’ gold ornaments nearly two hundred massive finger and earrings; rich chaine—thirty of those, if I remember: elghty three very large and heavy cruct fixes; five gold censers of great | value; a prodigious golden pnneh-| bowl, ornamented with richly/ j chased vine-leaves and Bacchana Nan figures; with two sword-han-| dies exquisitely embossed, and/| }many other smaller articles which I cannot recollect. The weight of these valuables exceeded three hundred and fifty pounds ‘oirdupois; and in this estimate I have not included on hundred and ninety-seven superb gold watches; three of the number |being worth each five hundred dollars, if one. Many of them were very old, and as timekeepers valueless; the works having suf- ed more or less from corrosion but all were richly jeweled and| in cases of great worth We esti vated the entire con Hliion and a half of dollar and disposal of ls (a few be- the trink Jing retained for our own use), it was found that we had greatly un- dervalued the treasure (Continued in Our Next Issue) reurn 900 IN COMFORT No Seasickne D SERVICI ummit of White Pass by a 30; July 7, 11, 14, 18, led labor |cover | $600,000 or $1,000,000 of the Lib unions (which are nothing of the| job he proven to be LIBERTY LOAN The total stoc than $21,000,000,000 ene corporations adopts | proportional! National Surety government to distribute ubseribed twic 4 corporation, will subscribe 000 outright Loan bonds in monthly financing of le now being arranged by the Friends and relatives of the londs outright thra the The company's employes ers and pamphlets office to push Lib their;once inaugurate the system of, middie localities ag actively this way the pany expects to place an additional | ple’ she Escapes Twice From Kidnapers | Rete ciobat that they won't have to build any Ives ponseased of even! jue pieces, as accurately as we man ona for a ariety—Frencb, Spanish the car at the time LOUISVILLE, Catherine Seay, ite niece of two wealthy ry large and heavy coins, so at we could make nothing they're beginning to bag the sub- arold tavor-|marines. Maybe they adopted some} Do the farmers’ wives rock the Louis- | Of the excellent suggestions sent to [babies in the corn ¢ crib?—Theresa L, ville women, ts in fear of being | ©. D. K. by many of its readers, |fact that Spencer Bull {s the pub-|there I wonder if the entrance At the first attempt to kidnap | licity manager of the Liberty loan|called a stare way aie. the girl, a strange man forced her ad to ride with him to a lonely where he met two oth- Yes, but wer They Going in the ‘During a quarrel, | ampeiee in Akron. the same man snatched her up in the street, 7 ged her aod was about ked out from among]), but yesterday I saw two Fauntleroy cars running within sight of each to abduct | other. D.G. was frightened and s of the chest that night at al Our boys in the Navy enjoy their Bevo. The Navy De- partment has put its official seal of endorsement on this triumph in soft drinks, by allowing it to be sold and served on all Naval Vessels. Ashore or afloat, you will find Bevo a palate-pleasing, refreshing and nutritious beverage. Just the thing to take along for sail or cruise—auto trip or camp and for the ice-box at home, Bevo—the all-year-'round soft drink Bevo is sold in bottles only, and is bottled exclusively by eeccccees| ie Jand endure the necessary @t erty Loan bonds [oe war for the freedom of the WILLIAM B, JOYCE | the aptital at ould be willing to President, National Surety Co. | furnish the money to pay the finan |elal cost “PAY AB YOU GO" | EK. C. MeDOWELL, Editor The Star: 1 am still of] Hanford, Wash. |the opinion that the great war now Editor's Note—"Pay as you devastating Europe will end before} go” le the right principle for the coming winter Hefore the the payment of war debts, the Teutonle alilance—the devil's| We all can help in thie regarg alliance—will | up, and the| by writing our senators and democratic allies can dictate terme representatives to that effect, of peace to the peoples, who, by r despotte rulers, were yut into] NEEDS PUBLIC COMPETITION autocratic alliance. Editor The Star I have read It in to be haped that the demo-|#0 much about the high cost of cratic allies, having been chastened | living, its cause, etc. Now there and made wise by their own wuffer-|is just one thing, and only one, ings, will make such just and|that driv prices up—simply mo. | righteous terms of peace to the|Vopoly—caused by speculation and people of the autocratic alliance as | combination There ix only one will give the people freedom from |thing that will drive prices down— despotic autocracy, and such liberal) that is competition-—municipal op termes ax will not burden and en-|national competition. This is the slave the peoples, Thus thejonly competition that would last, peace of Europe may be secured because any human or Individual | for generations competition would soon be frozen If this is reached, the cost of{out or bought out, or bribed, or lives and suffering will not have ¢riven to the wall some way been in vain let us hope t better things” treaty of peace must not\sre in store of Seattle. If impose such burdens of debt on the | Rob ridges will go into the peoples of the autocratic allies as|commission business, as port com will make the productive laborers | mission president, then we will see the slaves of capital what will happen. A READER The slavery to capital ix as dis- Editor's Note—it isto be astrous to the people as the slavery| hoped that Food Controller to autocracy Hoover will be able to eradi- And to the end that the people of cate some of the evils in food the United States of America shall distribution and prices, espe. not be slaves to capital, we must at cially the elimination of the Perhaps, too, this “Pay as you go." war measure will serve an in- Certainly, if the “common peo-| deseribably great benefit for * are willing to give their lives | peace times as well. UG” NextNover {| © STAR BEAMS ... By E. D.K. Dear E. D. K.: I see where Dr.|the sidewhiskers, says the bureau of | Matthews and Hi Gill may be op-| fisheries is experimenting in tan- | posing candidates for mayor, Would|ning fish skin, and that if it sue- Jit be right for Hiram to keep the ceeds, the price of leather will drop, meerschaum pipe the doctor € eee | him as @ present 4 few years ago?) Another Mathematical Mystery ETTA KET. Dear Mitta: We don't know. But it seems that the doctor is so tall There were exactly five gallons of gasoline used in 100 miles, making jan average of 204-11 miles per ot | 1on.—Chicago, Ill, Herald. platforms for him to stand on when ¢ 66 he makes his speeches. The money | he thus saves should make up for}. The health officer of Hoboken that pipe. has started a crusade against the ee |mustache. There is not much This is June 2. Greetings, folks!|#ense in the crusade. The mus- Did you wear your overcoat this tache, in many cases, serves a val morning? So did we. | uable purpose. It keeps a lot of . pgs gir nervous men from biting their IF THE COMPANY FOUND our,| “MEC™ANS , HE'D LOSE HIS PENNY RAISE A New York man sa} ys he has Being too kind-hearted, we shall! found a substitute for gasoline and not tel! the aumber of the motor-| that it can be, sold for 10 cents a ler way car this morn-| gation. If he means that it can be ing who failed to stop at loth ave.) used as a substitute in running an ther passenger. There were auto, we don't believe it. But if 4 of us (or was it 642%) In] tes for cleaning kid gloves, mebby 80. ee ee Most good things have a lock and| QUESTIONS E. D, K. CANNOT chain on ‘em, ANSWER Which will hurt me more, to dro Reports from Great Britain show | or to fall asleep?—Bernice ne bail wie Every time I pass one of the ar Just calling your attention to the| cades and see the mashers HOUSEHOLD. HINTS Never throw away a pair of old ime Direction? kid gloves. Cut the fingers off and Don't tell Kempster,| put them on the pickles to protect them from red ants. It is always better to take a rug out of doors to beat it, rather than O08, @ beat it while it is on the floor. You Secretary Redfield, the one with' may spoil the floor. BDK Sti Tar Gown Bears Tustoa ANHEUSER-BUSCH—ST. LOUIS hwabacher Bros. Co., Inc. Dealers SEATTL ——

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