The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 9, 1919, Page 6

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nee ALI RO Oe OT LITE OC I EN LIE ee come ee ns WE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, JANUARY | it A A CHU! or The Star: We are no longer] ah ahi ne KIBOSH ON NOSE EXPLOSION that phase of the contest has pa The fighting “COMING ‘HOME WITH THE YANKS! | STAR 1207 Seventh Ava Near U esis "scrapes NORTHWEST LEAGUR OF NEWSFAPHRS fered as Second-Ciass Matter May & Seattle, Wash, under the Act of Cons Se per month; § months, $1.50; 6 months, $2.75; tory has been won t been for the assistance and the Mh — 3 a Wall, ont of cit id which were given by the U. #8. A ing 2 4 oar, in the State of Washington, Outside the state The per = “4 SNEEZING | If Glady neezen at ho c ter, city, Lie the contest weuld not have ended | Hadye # at home, Rertie Ronin. 44.0" ror 6 mouths, oF 49.00 ber year, Hy carr y in the way in which it did || Don't do this if you want to yeln, | Creat "seat. have you ea ‘1 = . ca. Phone Main | be pe the ‘flu'?’ He then prese 0. Private Because of that, there is no na | ‘ Satbigt scansstnn th Srgartocots tion'en earth to whone voice greater| | A Kood snewse used to be the baths, bed and brandy, while Masai MS Yoteme. attention should be given in tho| | Cream of partor jewta, but now | and Mother-in-law wit and discus: making of @ just and a permanent| | !#’s as likely to be the signal for | casualties and Gladyn herself dartgl + than the land An as lynching party | for the atomizer a q ny one, no or w t ma porte say © Oe ae The humor of the sneeze has “4 ore te) e 2 She one, ne matter, ho it may! | Sading pha pe ro The humor eo nneeze han “Phas ¢ A generation back, the learned man was one with he alf t followed the daily camualty| germs from an infected person, | Renae a E the knowledge needed to rank the same today. » iw no country on earth which| J, a Daily life demanded no such equipment then as now. has such claima upon America as ness relations were simpler, legal entangleme nts fewer ireland and ine tang looks tar off in| ° 4 ne distance to America t¢ ure | eve y “ Transit facilities w rought a change. Cities complicated pot 2 gyre ee geen aco inane map te "matters. Their convenience and size attracted. Doing — on a larger scale was naturally next. Machines fol ; inventive genius flourished. To keep pace, man sped up his brain, He dusted out the corners and polished up unused parts of it. The oil added information loosed the stiffened memory joints commenced to file facts carefully for future reference He extended his commercial activities. He traveled far frequently. The means to acquire education increased of jaugh-pre ip would begin to and Hertie and little Mabel LOOK out ted to t which justice requires England is about to enter the! Giadye ace conference, and England is no] wrink party, but how id yell in unison face the public! As the spasm proce infon of the world and talk with-|ment of dramatic au out blushing of liberty for the small| longs to all proper #n nations, while Ireland is held down] would receive various adv only by force with an army in eceu-| your breath! “Press your upper | pation; with armored cars, with ma-| lip! Don't try to stop it!" | chine guns; with hundreds of thou-| when the exy ' novies at a pe will whe thin tir sions came, the | jeands of soldiers; with second | audience would nt ’ ale " - » WAS larmy made up of constabulary; wit! rw nat'a the j standards of culture crept up. More was @ military. poversor ord. Fre ee aoa an - his open countenance behind his A harried leach? — Ack for ’ |who flzaled things up on the west-|'The lucky number! Good work, | ~ — Saree ea Borden's Malted Milk—e ‘ jalization has been indulged by man since creation em front) and last but not least] kidde fess. All flavors ’ tt three men specialized—they were a gardener, a the chonen leaders of the people de-| If the sneeze proved a “dud,” that zs ; an and a oe é | ported from their country without| was the cream of jeate—the best par Ineist om Borden's—-elmays. ‘ Business th“ viel has made specialization more A charge against them and held in/lor Joke one could imagine. Every It's the improved Malted Milk. ‘ H SS © sio} ide spec: 4 | Rnglish jails and towers? What a] body in the p would go off into r Man has divided and subdivided what formerly | drama! aroxyame merry mirth a normal field to be covered by a single individual. | Here in something interesting! How different is today from those TAILORING Co. ‘ jtaken from the Hritish census of! old happy times! And they weren't 1 In this super-specialization is a menace. At a point of . t 7 land in 1911: Census of 1841, the} more than three months ago, either. ' progress when bey mind is revealing new powers, its IY ion of Ireland was 8,176,124;| Nowadays, when an individual Meadquarters for s ii is threatened. 3 leensug of 1911 the population of |*Meezes in the street car, the passen * Why Elmer changed back to a khaki shirt— | tretand was 4,390,219. ‘These figurea| gers to greet the event with the Suits, Coats and ii Regardless that the brain of today must be better equip- “That's right, by gosh; If I put on a white collar 1 gotta keep my | "000 hae tN ls than when our immediate forebears were public fac- neck washed.” Rete. nearly 60 per] cautious One-Piece Dresses its further general development is restricted. = 3 reget . cont 4 country in the| We graduate of the late German scien | ivi 4 The Largest Audience in the Exervise of all its parts is hindered by specialization. world has such a sorry bistory and |*P¥ college 42S Union Street Northwest Reads Star Want Ag of us reach our thought capacity and memory limit. it ta @ living sermon on the advisa-|__Should the anecser fail to shelter z»— ! bility of Brition le In Ireland. He In the 16th century there were minds superior to | strugien wie age omen "leee one intellects of this, the 20th epoch. | strewn ie ages Thane far mae James Crichton, at 12, held the degree of Bachelor of | Prompted real men everywhere to ws. When 14, he was Master of Arts. At 17, he agreed) yj iiseron. Jan ts Sh as RR I ERE pro whether they now are at an ‘answer in verse or prose, any question on any science ...), of the mighty ener Stee! | company defies it to any one of 12 languages. He met all comers and ined in popu-| Old stormy Rather, they edge as tho the sneener nforee its or | I firmly believe that the day that ning to be given two chances ders is not known, | England faces her full duty to Ire hed. to tell representatives of Uncle Sam | But another step is about to be tak-/land and fulfills it faithfully, God : - . why they are not keeping up their/en, which probably will be even! will bless her, as she has not known the pace progress has set since then, such in-| ry ota bargain made between labor |mote far-reaching, Not long ago [ills biessings for many centuries. should no longer be remarkable. They are, none- They will continue so until we recognize the need ization is the keynote of evolution—to specialize @dvancing MENTALLY step for step with commercial |\)i0) oMiievos show tex Saat. ment, but production was ital the tium of the nyon, of lowa, intro A SUBSCRIBER t war la b 4 summer the Bethlehem Steel gation into all problems dealing w th sata REGRETS LABOR ATTITUDE vetio He ta very | nome peace | plant, at Bethlehem, Pa, was aj labor and rec govern | much In favo: >t up to| time body, similar to Editor The Star: It in to be re fretted to note that among the trib war labor | utes paid to the memory of the late © employes were dis board, but clothed with power grant:|Colonel Roosevelt, aa published in satisfied. The war labor board made |ed by congress, instead of mere fiat! The Star, the only discordant notes F nd a ruling. It de-| by the president in the case with|etruck came from the representa rmit-|the war labor board. In other words. | tives of organized labor, and thin, in he wants a board which will have! the face of the fact that the laborin cterientiincishesiatiiedinn the mark, been: for Service The war went far in creating an industry for service | ted to have a xyxtem The January Sale of Furniture ee than for profit. It went so far that we will not go — under supervision ih bagi tonr force ite rulings man, the real, Bimon-pure, American | § tho profiteers rage and tug at political wires. munt wage rate scale, and = revieed beta ser oa ayees Laprer wane & dence feinee than cat hings were once made only when profit promised. The) piece work rate. The men were das ceteccdin ck ceeieané et cue any | Thesdere Muekenelt:: : came. Every unit of industrial energy was needed for) sted. continued work with a vin, | Me intention of summoning the fol)” ye ecially was this noticeable in @ national defense. We called upon all our resources in produced huge quantities Of War | mittee. des M. Sohwab, Bi o remarks <f the representative of Off D ft J ft S cl iS) po rial atten Cinaiinn ME. Rewan: TRONS]: Clonal et Labery bat in tab crs VOZEDS Ot WUS name of service. srace, Basil Manly, Richard Gress. | Breaks Bare Ught of the record of that body dur _ Soldiers did not charge “what the traffic would bear.”| |. Ureks Bar _ AI from hetterad ely Saezsxsprragcaypicucd | A ORE Mey peta odagar yh ie. Alpes Red Cross did not buy its bandages in the cheapest and | jaresin 11 tas not allowed the ere |intor board's suaminee in chacwe at | sFain, the Wells incident, the Strong them in the dearest market. The navy did not wait upon tom of collective bargaining devised Rethiehem, and it ix his finding that {peldent, and many varygest omen 4 before hunting submarines. |by the war labor board and haa not |the company has ignored. Grace is|aually to be deplored and deprocss “Profit became incidental. At spots, it became an ob-|sdopted the revised wage rates for | president of | the company and) 1. waa to. be. expected,’ Me thie ction, a source of friction to be removed. Its removal |{)" Achinints which, bce —— ela pee gay of the board and| cconection, however, of the colonel ane of the expensive losses of the war. Price restric~| stood on its ennouncement that the| It begina to look a If the show.| it c8" be stated as of another great ‘taxation, direct prosecution, were some of the weapons arimisti democrat, and I use this term ad did and Unusual Specials as These: —$32.00 Oak Dressers for ....... —$25.00 Oak Dressers for ...... —$30.00 Oak Dressers for ....... « of November 11 ended the down the workmen sediy: “We e him for the ene upon the profiteer, and there was no closed season for né also ended the war-time will be ha ag oh —$29.50 Princess Dressers for ... wee $22.50 To be sure, the dark jungles of society concealed ecltae hots iat aoceas Le nk cue In conclusion, it is to be remarked —S$42.50 Walnut Princess Dressers for....... $35.00 that no matter how much the cc onel's attitude along some lines ma mt such beasts to make them a threat to succéssful|.q some of tix officiais of the com-|nermost secrets of his business. And —$21.50 Ivory Princess Dresser for... tin Pany to come to Washington on Jan-| they function just as powerfully aft: | n° * MIUIG® & Cie Rone = oe —$32 4-inc ini 45 $42.50 But no man will boast in his autobiography of millions|uary 17 for » showdown. The board er an armistice has been signed ax |" OPED to criticlam. whe | fact re |g $52.00 54 neh Dining I able for. gs Ts dein this war. The tales he will tell to his grandchildren | ¥*"%* to have @ yes or no answer, they do in wartimes. | There is NO/,nq one of the grpatest Americans —$33.00 45-inch Oak Dining Table for..... - $25.50 be of service given, not gains gathered. He will record] (oiicy ot ire company is to be. Suet. protes and compel witnaseen to tat | {tit country has ever produced, and —$42.50 48-inch Oak Dining Table for......$32.50 nul A I mpany Is to be. Just probes and compel witnesses to talk.| 11.04 ‘in the days to come, when the * the glory of his descendants the amount invested in SEs | ane ot thin day and generation —$34.50 Quartered Oak Buffet for. ++. -$24.50 ety loans and Red Cross funds, not the profits made in shall have been written, dispassion ——tA7. “4 Quartered Oak Buffet for. ... -$36.50 ately, ithout bil or prejudice, the oe War made industry serve society. If a factory operated,|} JUST ABOUT FOLKS— place he will occupy. will be second —$5.00 Leather-seated Dining Chairs for. .... .$4.00 CHAS. 0. PIERSON, —$3.50 Solid Oak Dining Chairs for .........$2.85 because its product was needed. Whe to none needed than automobiles and ships were ieee cuatial i CROWDS—SOLDIERS— MET es pkyscrspers, profits were not allowed to force the pro-| * ‘Letters From of the less-needed goods. | BY THE REV. CHARLES STELZ! Have you noticed how men naturally fall into line thene days? 1} “One thing industry had to serve—the defense of the} “We will carry some of this spirit into peace times. We They no longer crowd about the ticket window in the railroad station, Soldiers I a sh. of the spirit of service. We n 1 it to} even when there isn't any one to tell them that “the a and disease. y Guttae’ Gs ar he ag ke thet b EPARTMEN utaide he movie show, ey take cir turn y wili think more and more about producing to serve! quietly forming @ lies dees Gavn the teat tne | Ce eee Oo NT : beds, rather than to increase profits. | rag ole gy A 81 oer of creating a mob, clamoring for the ticket flipped s 60 agra yp carom n . the letter from a Camp Lewis sol Ho bl Defi ; | tates patent contrivance handled by the lady in| 4.) and 1 know that he is telling the truth My husband is in the 1 a and pan’ ‘et ow ag hl chuckles the opponent of government control, | po baa and he can’t get out, e Sam is going to close the year of his control of the, pads with a deficit of $200,000,000!” oy Dirt cheap! | —Our regular prices are known to be lower than most stores ask—the Special Prices are, therefore, unusually attractive Easy Terms of Payment Arranged. Theve have been a number of influences at work to “organize” crowds of men into orderly group and this has been going on for some time, but ther no doubt that men have unconsciously been disciplined by the soldiers who helped form these lines, for about ev ery other man buying railroad and movie tickets has Twice he putgin a discharge ap- plication, and twice it was rejected lfor “lack of evidence.” Lack of evidence, Indeed! They "Pass up all the great things that Uncle Sam has done ee . know he 1 fed man, and a The soldiers, trained to do things | erty | know be % & mares man, * —— _élimination of waste, in consolidation of salary lists of fashion, bave been exerting a whoeome tafivance| Job in the shipyard FFERING exceptional opportunities for savings on n dependable, practical, reg- therups and of offices, in stoppage of ruinous competi- over all other men—and this is another dirtinct gain|!* waiting for him, and that mad | ular stock merchandise. n and in instituting real accommodation for travelers. from the war aE s,% "yle former employ 4 \ I ers. . is former employer has written ee a a ase . " a up every consideration save these: THE REVITEIZUE. 4 thi matter of organisatien and discipline ia|*bout four letters, which were ves $6.50 Blankets $5.45 ‘ Fine Quality Nainsooks He has established the 8-hour day and equal pay for| making itself felt clean down the line, in every department of life, ax| With the applications for discharg —Dependable, soft, warm, wool-fin- Special by the Piece work for women and raised the wages of the railway | democracy 1 em and advances phic ge Ao fb rep aparai od ished Blankets, 66x80 inches in size— —Specially priced in the January Sales, ers by nearly half a billion dollars. Pig oye ‘0 the Decco Ae icaonea” Seactar eta ced cen ee a ‘peveraiabnt: ta: euppousl splendid wearing blankets in soft fine quality Nainsooks in 12- and 10- A two hundred million deficit? It is not enough! odes " suites 7 restraint and less! 15 be demolixing the men? colors. ; : yard pieces. “I am for men!” said Henry George. “I am for men| We imafine sometimes, that a democratic form of government is the|, The men of the 13th division are Broken plaid patterns. Extra value 12-yard pieces, special $3. 00, $3. as, rer women!” says Uncle Sam. For men and women, first,|s™plest—it Isn't—it's the mont complex and most difficult to admininter. |! they are going to Tussin. Friday at ...cceeeeer eee eeees NM lope . F e n 5 * whe cheat torte 6 erhinant’is taunt ter @hich tat bb aed y husband is wasting his 6 O-yard pieces, 38-inch width, 1.82.50 for pallet A This ++ adler wes in ony - weet sas on the titoerat. ; . de . at Camp Lewis, while Iam here 506 Neinscoh 880 Yard 10-yard pieces, 39-1nch width special. ‘Hike Pp Jus ot look upon} But ntr re every man th he's as good as any ott me Kas Gane all ha Quid acne Fine quality Nainsook, 36 inches O-yard pie 42inch width, special..$4.45 1 do absolute 1 "own people, or any other people, and size up our gov-|man—if not a ttle better—no one man dares stand out 1 A out and » back to ork is je y »* very i i erie. mat - me mccens by what can be got out of them.» We! %# he picases—we've all got to stand in line and take our chances with Re nd ts pooaraieiot waste wide: vaid ceeirent aoe nine ion Boe $2.25 Bed Sheets for $1.65 aa tio longer keep our eyes glued in terror to that profit|perore his turn hell begin nt the foot of the line ned work, hie wee lan hour when released. [am stil A splen "Matta apauial for her pea [Soot durable Sheets, #1299 inches: aparyal id loss statement and withhold our hand from doing what! up as the rest of us had to do jwalting for my allotments, like & yard, Stra st ney Gale ee . Same quality rasove ealy in ddadela h ai | right and just lest there be no money profit. ~ — oe - | thousands of others in the eee January Sales, a yard. reat Fale ent ! ee i k God fe $200,000,000 y — = Why are these men kept at camp,|@ ....ccpeeecseeeees ‘ . B5¢ POCIAL o ose ssessseessenecs $1. n ‘or any 10,000,000 deficit which means expecially those with dependent $3.95 Bedspreads for $8.15 things as the 8-hour day, equal wages for poor women with homes as near as Seattle, ar $5.9. Sp Is for $8.15 jobs waiting d girls who must do railroad work and living wages for L I the toilers of our greatest industry! Such a deficit is ] ASH’S&3] [TERS ms Are Getting Gewperate, sad tt Pall of honor, wisdom, progress and patriotism, and the SPER Von he We » intends to leave. Just “Finest Quality Woolen Crochet Tedspreads, a splendid wearing qua ity; large double-bed size; attractive Marseilles designs. A od 5 ° Blankets ary dle Pee Ct eee ee _ people who put up the > Money can can stand it. LAXATIVE \ i php ani Le aimatearaie G Mir em Bey en: nea “8 mes: $5.00 Satin Bedspreads $8.95 ae 28 | | © boys, and you will see the YHLY dependable / 00) Snowy white Bedspreads; splendid wearing Marsh on Mediation A. COMFORTABLE [f!"",05,7zi2us to get out and back and wool and cotton mixed Blan- gut: pretty designs in double-bed a Will Washington's legislators, who get down to busi- ness at Olympia next week, emulate the well known Ostrich and bury their heads in the sand in the face of needed labor legislation? If they do it will cost. employers in this state a lot of kets in both white and plaids. All blankets are from our regular stocks and represent maximum values at laxative —Lash’s ing. wasted there A WIFE never causes dis- comfort or nausea $5.95 Satin Senne $4.9. A splendid Spread, shown in pretty Marseilles : designs; a quality that will give splendid service, their regular prices. ROOM a eb 5 sc eee iesavabinacsscsied $4.95 { ; | : ; 9? pe. a | —has a tonic effect $27.50 All Wool White Blankets, pair $6.95 Satin Bedspreads $5.45 At least this is the opinion of Ernest Marsh, former $25.00 All Wool Plaid Blankets, pair. .681.60 Hn ‘ * ih . bs ohscper tient —Heavy, durable and attractive Spreads, shown i President of the State Federation of Labor, and a member | J} pen stomach and of 5 ay Rohit 1 sees “inet beds in a wide range of pleasing pT ais extra size, ; of President Wilson’s labor mediation commission, | bowels. | a rates fis.go 88x98 inches; regularly $6.95—Special.... 85.45 3 Experience during the war has shown that. strikes|{! ; | $17.50 Plaid Blankets : A , ; : ; 1 ti kK 50 Scallop 5. 9¢ 4 ean often be averted “before both sides start making faces % Sir 00 sty Gre MS oiiataie vba a satin if bal lebih fet, ‘j at each other’—as Marsh puts i PUTO. VERO ANG SIS BANS TOIE, ut corners, ial Janu les price ' a ers will ask for legislation to , | $2.15 Bed Sheets $1.5 qeeseovnnes te $5.95 la * da »i ‘ gislation to perfect mediation | For more than thirty-five years Lash’s has helped $2.16 Bed Sheete for $1.69 500 Bati f mac! . : t srve the Nat health. Good weight Bed Sheets, 72x99 inches in size 50c Batiste 35c a Yard Employers ought not to object. And the legislators, if lo preserve she Nation's health extra length; a quality that will give splendid Fine, Sheer Batiste, 43inches wide—a beautiful if they sense the spirit of the times, will be eager to tune |?“ service, Extra value in the J aI “3 mercerized finish which it retains after launder 5 . ing—Special a yard . . B5¢ their ears to any measure that may straighten out the Fraser-Pateraon Co, Second Floot. 8 by ROY Second Floor. oad ahead—which, at best, is full of reconstruction bumps. \ST AR WAI T ADS BRI} a eRe he = bs Seo aE a

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