The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 26, 1918, Page 9

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HTT eee ; = WILL JAPAN FIGHT UNITED us believe, & This is wrong. 1 ts dangerous, It THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1918 PAGE 9 STATES? Knisely Turns X-Ray on “Yellow Peril”; Makes Frank and Clear be righ rece | | CLEARANCE and By Burton Knisely | maniam--wou A have spyright, 1918, Newspaper Enter- prise Association) bs TOKYO, July 26-—WHT Japan world domi “grab” the Philippines’ In a wo — — Wit Japan raid) what are ti the Pacific coast? | jations of t what y to United greatest military! any of th terror the world) if Americ has ever known = tently w and lose this her EVE horrible ava never be any dange lanche upon west The mass of Amer ern civillgation, understood Japan, an ANTS£ELY — inundating #2 jananess have ne » Japan, as some American alarm: | America CONCRETE SH Mr. Workingman Here is a little advice that it will be well to heer pow making the largest wage you ever made. It living expenses are higher than they were, and con costs you a good deal more to ti RUT, you CAN EASILY put RAINY DAY" al OLD AGE later. Make it a rule to Save Something Every Day in the Y No matter how little, but let it be SOMETHING way to EVER GET HOLD OF ANYTHING Put ror and that is SAVINGS in LIBERTY BONDS and THIUPT and WAR SAVINGS STAMPS, and if you have a surplus, which you ECONOMICALLY, look around and see if th ts not some GOOD INVESTMENT that will return you 4 fair interest on one and where your money will be SAFE. In looking up h IN VESTMENTS, first agk yourself, “In it a business th: cor tinue In business because of the neceaaity of the publi ng ite wares And goods?” If it is, then ask yourself, “What ef a fair profit, and for how long?’ If you find that goods will grow and the demand INCREASE, then will be to look into the men who comp the © what they have accomplished. and w ha ful in business, and WHETHER THEY UNDELST ete. If you find they have been successful mon, and capitalists and the “TRUSTS,” which they have #uce gating to the rear only by demonstrating that the we they manufacture are far superior to like articles « terials, and BY HONEST AND FAIR DEALING, and their employes as “partners in the business,” and not paying them MORE than the UNION SCALE, and | share in WHAT THEY PRODUCE, and firmly be LABOR, NOT MONEY, PRODUCES PROFITS, then can join an organisation that has lived up to all the a! now enlarging its rapidly increasing products are being more and more DUCE. L. ¥. STAYTON, President 422-425 NEW YORK BLOCK PHONE EL SHIPYARD AT BRYN MAWR (fon Lake Was! CONCRETE PLANTS NOS. 1 and 2 at Tacoma and OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9% o the future re away for that pro law of supply and demand have on the sale of its wares and whether it will be able to manufacture them and se! BUSINESS THEY ARE NOW IN, how long they have been in it risen to the top by the hardest kind of knocks, principally from eded in rele Call or write THIS Company, and we will tel! you HOW y siness, and whose wares an pught after by the BUYING public because they are THE BEST SKILLED LABOR CAN PRO American Concrete Pipe & Shipbuilding Co. © Murepe and Ameri should be remedied. TF TT IS NOT, ves In an TROUBLE MAY COME tten Te 3 Amer shoul! be and And | a ne WILL BE A YBL States and the Will Japan “F y Kingdom”? In clearing up close China's | Let me say at the outset that <. Am - door"? Weeks of patient and searching | way, because the Man of the Amert Will Japan or and open-minded investigation in An people are more advanced and gkanize Asia's) Japan h: convinced me that politically millions into the, there is 1 or of Japanese peo tion removed © of western and need T of them nd the mans of P You ar membership in ations; but a na sive, whieh, it is just to expect, will, by honest de , rtia the nc a BIG, BIG The shoe repau/ nan ‘i Patriotic Duty Bo of thore It is, to save your worn shoe Phone us—we'll call for them. te AND THE have slow! and food by treating a4 SLAVES jetting them lieving th COR, FIRST AVE. AND PIKE ST. Phene Main 4965 “IF | HURT YOU, DON’T PAY ME.” ‘Thin in my mensago of deliverance to you from the fear that accom- panies Dental operat 1 EXTRACT, FILL, CROWN and TREAT Teeth absolutely withow anes but acute abscens bove, and LIOTT 2212 ton) Bryn Mawr priees in your city for high-class, guarast STERLING DENTISTRY Office Hours: 9 = m. to 6 p.m SEVEN-CENT FARES FIXED FOR BOSTON ELEVATED LINES! Trustees of Street Railways, Under State Operation, Find They Can’t Meet I> pe ises With Less The Boston Elevated Street Railway Lines, covering all sur- face, subway and elevated street rai operated by the State of Massachuse nounce that on August | the system sis, and will make no discount for tic A STRAIGHT SEVEN-CENT C Early in the present year the attention of the Massachusetts state authorities was called to the financial and physical condition of the Boston Elevated. The re- port of the Public Service Com- mission of that state on the prop- erty went before the Massachu- setts legislature and was refer- red to the Committee on Street } Railways. As the result of nu- i merous conferences, a bill was drawn and passed, placing the system under state operation, management and control, with a state guarantee of a return of 5 per cent on the common stock and 7 per cent on preferred. The legislature determined upon’ a “SERVICE AT COST” plan, limiting the rate of return, as stated above, as a fair return on the actual invest- ment. The plan provided for CON- TROL AND MANAGE- MENT under a board of five STATE TRUSTEES, appoint- ed by the Governor, and remov- able by him, SUBJECT TO THE APPROVAL OF THE GOVERNOR'S COUNCIL. Iways in the City of Boston, arc tts. The trustees in charge an- will go on a seven-cent fare ba- kets purchased. It WILL BI "-HARGE FOR ALL RIDES. These trustees have been in control of the property for some months. They have seen the re- turns, made their estimates on costs of operation, and SAY UNANIMOUSLY THAT FARES MUST BE _ IN- CREASED—not from five to six cents, but from five cents to SEVEN CENTS. ONLY SOURCE OF REVENUE The following paragraphs, taken verbatim from the report of the Massachusetts State Trus- tees of the Boston Elevated, in- dicate the gravity of the situa- tion street railways have been called upon to face: “Summing up, therefore, the trust- ees are confronted with the necessity of securing gross revenue of at least 560,270 to continue present facilities, which compared with the earnings of last year of $19,407,000 leaves, without regard to increased cost of material, taxes, fuel, ete., or possible increase in wages in excess of that granted in other cities, approximately $6,200,000 to be secured. “The only source of revenue that the trustees have is from car riders, and therefore they are compelled by law to charge such fares as will carn a suffi- cient amount to meet all of the above additional charges.” PUGET SOUND TRACTION, LIGHT & POWER CO. membership, spiritually and po- litieally, in that family inte an active membership . e 1 may at once express my be- Hef that, with America’s help, Japan will do this Must Learn Respect e Americans must learn respect for Japanese merits and apprebension of |dapanese shortcomings—and they must learn both securately, They a ydon pe Nightshirts 95c Fiber Silk So¢ks superior Broken lines of 1.25, 1.3/ Pure thread, bhaek “have tea | and 1.50 Nightshirt white onl izes) 9% 15 to 19. 14 in the main be ' In some respects it wo an regards American | And Japanese life. But in 2 Nightshirts 1.35 Good Socks tialitie a Of outing flannel, extra 6 Pairs 140 good in material and tailor- g; all sizes; 117 garments reduced Blac Cotton hy 12.00 Sweater Coats 8.95 Handkerchiefs 6 for 1.75 ment, not the individual, that t# lo fer ‘There is masa inferiority than Indiv nferiority . Latement Sweater Coats with sleeves, of view. |f! military collar, with three Pure Irish liner from the Occidental pe oy diets grate pean bon bes . buttons. initialed hese Fine Shirts 1.25 3.95 Shirts 2.95 Silk-Mixed Inferiorities in organt and i ? for 8.50 Shirts 3.50 sutudons And time ia t « Reduced from our ool lof the problem. America eh o sale price If Americans will treat Japanese up. Soft cuffs in size t replies oes on the plane T have outlined, and if " tiff ff e \ 7 i Heavy Silk dapanese as a whole will adjudge Shi 95 ee omen, et re Silk Shirts 5.95 lig of 1.46 and from k Shirts in sizes Khaki color Shirts w sttached. « fine sil Sizes 14% 1.50 Blue 15 r there will be no Americandapanese 4 Southwick Broken lines sg Won't Make War ane 18 6:18 : Of ex blue cham soft Collars of Japan will not make wa r ; oat eget . flat cotter madras, in sjgen 1 to America to force unrestricted im Bath Robes or Beach f . woken om : gration and naturalization in t R t 4 85 1 75 to 2 50 Union M e Staten, because Japan kno Fine, weil of blanket do Bath Robe Suits 1.45 ¥ at 45¢ 3 for 4.00 pend hire prev American navy approaching twice the # the Japanese navy. It | etle Shirts, sizes 34 to Drawers, in broken sizes, of Athletic Union Suits of fine everyday wear; plain @ enough, with « 1.50 Union Suits 1.15 ronae-bar nainsook: the gar materials; all «izes of, one stripes. ae premacy, to tra White linle 6 styles ment € kind or another Vie ting color miles from England to France sizen 34 to 46 —MacDougall-Southwich Men's Shop, Just Inside the Door pF onderpriced e United States will not make on Japan to en the open hina for three reasons: the |gume would not be worth the can 2. die; other nations, such as Britain, Take in the will take up that quarrel! first. if it Carnival Again ever should artee; and it will not arise «because the Lansing-Ishii ff) Sunday —The Convenient Core? agreement mottled the question fairly 4 y and matisfactorily to both nations ner—Second and Pikey | | Be one of the thousand. i] Philippine Angie 4 will net try to grab the who will buy something | Philippines because: | new and summery to ‘The islands are at peace and ‘ a y ae 4 o wear, something to shou tons of American efforts and dot this is an occasion—Se- lars. attle's greatest summer } They are Catholic, antagonistic to the Japanese, and Japan event. would have to repacify them at Uke expense. ——— But—they are today, without | _ me expense to Japan, all Jopan ageurn neaene awe cial cde . wants: an open market. That is, | war with the United States be racial prejudice is *! nti) crisis. . * |pertor, you can in Uncle Sam has done all the | cause we are her best customer. then America most always be pre an the long run America will have| tion only as lone as work, and is giving Japan an | Must Admit Equality | pared, must always Femain too to admit the equality of the dapan-| can whip me even chance to reap all the profit, | But, until Japan is liberalized po-| strong in a militagy sense for Japan ene or fight dapan—IF Japan ever) That is the ultim if dapan can do It. Mtleally and organized spiritually, so to attack her. Far antil those becomes strong enough to think she American crisis § BUY Japan will not try to militar that her light is equal to her happy days arrivé evil elements in can win. iNoT COME ID * ib. either nation (@ad there sre evil) For if I am serf and you master TION. tae Asia's millions because all the 2 st elements in poth) may pree'pitate a' if I am held inferior and you su I think it should western world would nip any wach program tn the bod. Finally, bat almost first in tm portance, Japan does not want CHEVRONS WILL MARK WOUNDS BY HARRY B, HUNT WASHINGTC July 26.—Unele exceptional ingulshed ne « er Thoughts of a Patriotic Shopper: cron of the Legion of Monon th “_what a real pleasure it is to do my shopping in the morning! Militaire. Already citations have been re. cetved from General Perehing rec ommending the bestowing of crosse “__it is so delightfully cool, and I can get around twite as to some score of our boys abroad. Cac deco ion will be for deeds c . * of CREST Unk eatin be Hours fast and ever so much more comfortably than in the after- outstanding as to mark its Individ- > Pets < " . are c ‘de ” an SL Ser Aca ae noon, when streets and stores, too, are crowded. of Any officer or enlisted man who Se a Tes cca. rales in the morning, it seems to me that the salesmen and sales§ covren ba Ds ef err ee Fe women are more obliging and painstaking, too; not that tional six months’ service abroad they are purposely abrupt and impatient in the afternoon, | fl che . wor pn the + . . . . e . 4 Nght deave, t0 allowed for cach || but the crowds make it impossible for them to give me | heitensitihnuhhea eee individual attention. and think of the time that I save! 1 am often through and ready to take up my household duties by eleven o'clock in the forenoon. a See vou THE best of all, the Government is asking me, through the best dentistry obtain- State Council of Defense, to shop early and save man able at reasonable | and woman power for war service. I am happy to add pl lg to ‘my bit’ by doing so!” rivaled for beauty and permanence. Our perfected Rubber and Metal Plates stand in | a class by themselves Hi, for fit, comfort and Hi) satisfaction. Consul- Peaecane tise Al Seattle Chamber of Commerce and Commercial Club permAnan, work is | Co-operating with Commercial Economy Committee of State Council of guaranteed. eH pd NATIONAL DENTISTS ard and Pike St Kntrance 1504 drd Ave OPEN EVENINGS Not Open Sundays

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