The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 10, 1919, Page 6

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I90T Seventh Ave, Near Union #1 OF SCHIrYS NORTHWEST Leacur oF Pelearaph News Service Bintered as Second-Clase Mattcr May 8 1899, atthe Postofti Beattie, Wasa. under the Act of Congress Mareh 3. 187% y month; 3 montha $1.50; @ montha $2.76; ag Washington, Outside ‘the state, The tis NO, €sve..s,! NEVER SAW . Nour KricweN the Unt { IL ont of city, 5 t ha, oF $5.00 per year, By carrier, ity, » 400, Private : ee mH RG ( : cicachuadihocl ll anted: A Big Man for a Big Job Ke | Cabinet members come and go. First to announce an Iq and aN) tion of going was McAdoo, Last is Attorney General | ‘3 ory. Now if Burleson would only take the tip ~but | 8 too much to hope for. 7 To get back to the big job. It's Gregory's resignation) s it open. One of Wilson’s most important tasks when ®ets back will be selecting a new head for, his Justice ment. He must serve during two years, the last two| of Wilson's incumbency. And they will be big years in more ways than one War over, the United States It as any winning the war presented. There is re ction, so called—really remaking of America into r land, for all of us. The old battle between capital Jabor looms up, too. This time it’s complicated by mis stood, misapplied new foreign doctrine—Bolshevism in administration of hasty wartime justice it is said wrongs have been committed that demand redress. And these are only a few angles. The last two of these problems can be summed up one head: “Discontent, widespread enough to be ‘rous— prevention and cure.” In their solving the ent of Justice has a tremendous part to pi Our new attorney general must be not only a lawyer, adviser to and prosecutor for the government; he Must have great grasp of industrial problems, and command fespect and confidence of both sides of the labor question it is the prime requisite. Any possible suspicion that hi fice can be used against, or will not have proper sympathy | - -- - i s still up against problems » legitimate labor aims would be dangerous—damnably Mgerous. The wrong man—another like Burleson, to cite LETTERS TO ‘extreme case—could only with every act, by every move bring fuel to the fire of the unscrupulous hevik dist. 5 : inking along this line, some names suggest them-| pay, Loong ose pp ago itis aii Why couldn't Louis Brandeis be induced to forsake | your afternoon paper and heard of Supreme bench? Brandeis is biggest of big guns. His the umstances under which it hess is unquestioned. He has always fought the people's 1, and I want to congratu ate 4 on the stand you are tak ng and the “stick-toit” spirit that ung firn opinion that The a the sentiment of a NS in Seattle, issue 4, being an tizen, | hope you will be Then there is Frank Walsh. He is fearless. He is a ple’s man, well known to labor. He would not run it & © rom phrases. He would not be jailing every fellow who } d in free speech and practiced it just because he rreed with him, or big interests did. Anyway you look at it, it’s a big man for a big job ' Miat’s wanted. And something more than a lawyer—much The Hun will be fortunate if the sentence doesn't monclude with the words “and costs.” Persona I ~ commendation of many—many ne $s ther plutocrate nor Bolshevista. tice Not Wholly for Export fy eae Millions of Russians starving in an agricultural country |4pprove your Americanism, whieh, 14 months of Bolshevism is clinching condemnation of ™ one, 5 have aqumetimes douse ernment that pretends to represent the poor. — Some of your utterances in the A nation that fails to feed its citizens in the midst of past have seemed partisan—prola ous resources and willing workers writes its own oF to the degree of servility. As a corollary, your voice is clarion in ith warrant. : ; ; this er We organized production, preached, practiced and com-| one in reminded of the retort of plied economy, and collected billions in taxes and gifts to the late He George—"I am not Pht starvation in Europe and Asia. We watched and | ‘°F the !sboring man! IT am for all 1 against famine in far places. Serbia, Armenia, "y.. c1, chen vce that even nd and Belgium were fed even at the expense of our this you are not labor's frien tables. We learned that famine and suffering any-| counselor? we weakens the ole line that battles for humanity| Surely. the “courage of your own justice. h you have printed, wit the circumsta ' Even before the signing of peacé we are preparing to or, but § fed our former enemies. We do this because the war ance ae tacitaeat Gamat ight that misery anywhere spreads physical, political and \\,."," J. CHESTER FOX. disease everywhere. 1631 33d Ave |) We Jearned this lesson in war. It applies in peace. We February 6, 1919 Ned it internationally. We must apply it within our nation. r The The gover » Famine and suffering in Armenia, Serbia, Poland or jor the United States ts urgir rium is no worse, nor more dangerous, than in the slums !esi#!ature now in session thruout industrial districts of our own country. pened gi ha Me Pggd gear ay con FOR HEALTH BILI ures for the protection of the boys = We are justly proud of our response to the ery of the wno ve made America safe for E therless Children of France.” We rightly congratulate democrac Among these me Ourselves upon saving the lives of multitudes of Belgian '* a gee quent women inter Children. We cannot forever remain blind and indifferent to i“ °° the terrible infant death rate caused by poverty in America. women wt i Distance may lend enchantment. It does not lessen sent and cure | Fesponsibility. Eyjnadcrinagrsentes bs © It is Phar cal to point the finger of scorn at the Bol- 4. vie : Bheviki for failure to feed Russians while the streets of ‘American cities are filling with unemployed men passing ‘idle factories and untilled fields. vranalggy toser's ot ; We are justly proud of the organizing ability that so o- as tao wits kly assembled and drilled two million men and sent m safely across the submarine infested s« We have @ right to boast of the order and speed with which we built great terminals in France, and conducted unprece- @ented systems of feeding and caring for these millions of Soldiers and other millions of civilia In war and in industry we h women diseased may be and there y to nideat provides boys who have gone n union rs will soon re ome communities disease do not « 1 work whic done for the rom a1 commu an on may be seri WeELL,COME RIGHT gi OUT ADELAID - IT Y/ Is" IN VERY Good I Ls » | the admiration of every patr TUM SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1919. E SEATTLE STAR| The Great American Home! | WEALTH, LAND, HELD BY FEW, ORDER BUT - I Wy THE EDITOR} [marked copy to each of the mem bers o diatrict We a raesking you to do this in the name of the United States gov ment, and feel that it would be & patriotic ty for you to comp with our request. Reapecttu’ W. M. VAN PATT { the legislature from your DS STAR tar: The policy rf must necessarily or imen of Seattle, and pert I think I am of @ large portion of our mn saying that when the « over, The Star will have played a big part in bringing it to an end. | With heartiest good wishes for the continuance of your success, I/ an, yours very truly, E.H. SMITH. | AS TO THE Y. M. | Editor The Star: It really pains me to think any man would persist in playing a lowing game. I strong y believe that O. L. Erickson either more confidence in the Y than Mr. George W. Perk! ne finan mm sho R. Mott, head of doon or eine he loves publicity jease, Erickwon I ask the name of the organization | h represent, cease your « about the ¥. M. ©. A rk. Don't you suppos g00d w the people of America know th joughboys didn’t go to France for the purpose of attending prayer meetings? They went to get the Hun, and they relied on the Y. C. A, for smokes, etc. I admit got SOME smokes for or money The doughboys’ an well as sailors’ slogan when they Y. M A. sign was Across Erickson been somewhere ou need a friend like the Red ¢ #, please do not write much tating nonsense. We knov M. C. A. does some wh under the public eye t'a different in France MALL, DIFFICULTIES Editor The Star: I a f The Star and perhaps it would terest 1 to know how I get th ‘ v » good our claim ‘ " opardy, if not en-/paper. My po ldre to be the greatest organizers and the Ithiest nation ‘ 1 7 Royal, and there where we got an the world. We can see no limit to our natura! resources. the heaith of our boys and / our mail ur July, 1 But be Our workers excel all others in skil the girls of the land ahould cause the government Jost a fe PS What does all this profit us if we cannot so manage) hanas > > Yond ya ate or have decentinded having’ h tes Our nation as to provide work and comfort for our citizens?|can hAndio this proposit » carrier, altho the postoffice still re by Justice is not olly for export. eee 4 in a much more/mains. Now when we want t rd ba fin t cnanner than the cities | few letters papers, we have to ge If the state falis down , then there will be That commission to study the ambitions of the Pole ; ig should include Peary. no communities to assume thi hich should Why Not Deport Them? state. pclae eageevs EY Action taken by the United States court in § er can | A thr the application of Naturalization Ex =) Speed Smith, to bar 25 aliens from eve » of this country because of their “slacke the war, is well merited. sattle, tor us to ask you to indorse thin bill miner John in your paper in such a manner as coming citizen joe fit? do thin, we he d appre much. If attitude during Janie were telat io sien. “7 REMARKABLE PHOSPHATE They are men who had taken out their first papers = Thereby they had dec = their native But when the acid test came, when America was at mething over 60 years ago Pelous, war, they claimed alien citizenship in order to escape the|*! io which, when draft. take the human sys They are in a different s than the alien who had quickly converted into nervy a its discovery Dr i | 7 «) » ar rica amy of Medicine aris) never intended to become an American citiz esny oF Medicine cere, The latter, at least, could conscientiously claim he the use of this organic phosphate was an alien. The former, however, having renounced to 272. Me, (ftect, upon, the human, ay tem, with resulta that amazed the @ moral certainty their alien allegiance, took advantage of |**!¢?t!!« @ legal technicality to escape the duties devolving upon te ake 4 y Americans. , directly oF indirectly due to depleted @ nervous vitality, auch as neurn They are not fit to live in America. We can very nis, nervous weaknass, prema *\old' age, insomnia, Ifek of enermy well spare them for a trip back to Europe. fatigu nervou debility thinness “White Russia joins sovicts.’ Making it all red. (More How Neeranian Te Hien to do? th Germany's greatest loss in the war was her future. jas ‘ rdinary « to learn that t 11 | who does not 30 miles to them When the new dr w came into ffect and all t the « of 18 and 45 had to register they did not hesitate to tell us that failure to do #0 would result in a year's imprisonment or immediate induction Into milit ervice, How | should we know whe register, who have to go 20 miles for our mail? n if we did not ap pear for physical examination at a or where to jtainable from druggists everywhere in the form © bitro an to grain tablets of vate, at @ te thin the there tabl ach meal, 9 many instances are little short of marvelour, Dull eyes become bright "pin rentored to the sleepless, the | 4 regain thelr st ¢ put on féesh m beomen char, strength, vitality and energy whi makes life so truly worth while 6 are a great variety of so- hosphatos, p should be ex re he genuine . whieh original Iding substance as discov. | taken w relleving nervousnens, | d by any © put on flesh, The ice BUSTED Ano "4 Jus DRAIN” EM - ) ae | SOUTH AMERICA’S PROBLEM (Special to The Star by N. HA.) Jment. Uruguay has checked, but trouble iv most readily fomented. WUENOW AIRES, Feb. 10.—-Argen | probably not stifled the Bolshevik! Mnvious of the full-blooded whites tine, Peru, Uruguay movement and working for small wages, they These are first in South Amertea Story of Peru are easily #tirred to revolt, The po to feel the touch of Bolaheviae. Ucal graft which permeates the In Peru tt O1 old with vari Why? n Peru the story is told with vari: | country strengthens the hatred for ations *revious N. I. A. dispatches have he rul cla em. Previous N, B. A, dispatches hay nh upper class which conaiders| {2° Tullng Classes, ‘The Indians are told the story of Argentin ne , gricultu Id the story Argentine, of her! co usreath it lives at the expense| y agricultural, are content land system, which centers most of with the homes provided them by the wealth of the country in the |°f ® Proletariat which is just being | 104, whose acres they work and co tery J wwakened to the inequalities of lite on Porites hands of the few, of her unjust taxa tion, which lets these wealthy es would have to be dragged into a rev In Lima, where trouble started, it cape, while the poor taxed to the | (12, eee ae and my y i saad limit, of her industrial exploitation | "D001 ho) ttle more than « half. ASKS FOR TRIAL by foreigners million whites, nearly a million and| PORTLAND, Feb. 10, — Fred Uruguay's story ta a bit different Hut there ia the same unfair din tribution of the land and the same concentration of wealth asin Argen: |” ne a Wane ee PmeneS Une Nearly 80 per cent of the land in owned b lean than 5,000 of the is oerea by tow oan te? «Best Treatment for Catarrh half of these landowners are foreign ers. Moreover, the invested capital cinemas: seu ite «Se Se Se Removes the Cause hands of a hundred persons of na tive birth and a group of foreign in sty and tried, in obtainable at any drug Weetare write tancteut ef the country | BY Purifying the Blood | s0n i ‘.o sroven is wee ae money which should be turned back Ones you get your blood free from thousands of cases. It will do so in to develop its resources urities—cleansed of the catarrhal Your case, Get 8. 8. 8. at once and begin treatment. If yours is a long ‘Taues Are Heavy standing case, be sure to write for To aggravate this condition, the ause of its unhealthy state—then | tree expert medical advice, We will country, while containing great ag ou will be relieved of Catarrt the tel you how this purely vegetable ricultural opportunities, is subject dripping in the throat, hawking and blood tonic cleanses the impurities to heavy taxation and has a public raw sores in the nostrils, from the blood by literally washing debt of 0,000,000, It haw little livagreeable bad breath. It it clean. We will prove to you that manufacturing and necessities used, in the first place, be- thousands of sufferers from Catarrh, which nnot be produced in the ed blood was after consistent treatment with & 8, country come high, for the puret easily Possibly a slight|S., have been freed from the trouble price must cover the cost of @ lon | cold or contact with some one who and all its disagreeable features and haul and the expense of do bust had a cold. But the point is—don’t restored to perfect health and vigor, hems in a country where taxes are | suffer with Catarrh—Iit is not neces: | Don't delay the treatment, Address high sary. ‘The remedy 8. 8. 8., discov-| Medical Director, 439 Swift Labora Uruguay has spent $25,000,000 for ered over fifty years ugo, tested, true | tory, Atiantfa, government docks; she has laws |- sieccominamasia pint which make eight hours a day, ex a week, the maximum whi ne may work oe hua echoc ry a half of mixed races from intermar er, former Washington State rlages, and 2,000,000 Indians 6 catcher, has asked for a trial It in among these mixed races that | with the Portland Coast league team. ons, which it is now @ prey to n carry the pupil at govern 4 thru the best technical training, ain time and place we would be even to music or art TAILORING CO, ct to the same punishment as! But there do not save her from le those who How radical a ke Geouks wee be able 1h ek baad in| Hae eaivaiion Vics tn the Givilitg || ° Werte an8. poidanteedl taee Headquarters for time to be at the place at the ap-|of her great estates among the peo || who will want to atay in town . pointed time, when we linve 20 miles | ple, the creating of equal opporunt- |] during the strike should call now Suits, Coats and ( to go for our mail? ty, opportunity which will Bring to|] and select their rooms Pi, ? dollars each year people, with the soil to maintain 10,-|] Males, $850 Per Week ont . q No wouder, T ain too 000, immigration which whl help |} Seventh and Pike = Main 2567 425 Union Street |} A AMN FOOL “to bear the expense of its govern + x * fiber-silk should be manufactured herelf Fiber silk, because of its many favorable qualities, is a product that is winning wide sale in this country and abroad. Fiber silk (viscose) is in reality a by-product of the lumber industry, and the best material for it exists in Wash- ington in unlimited quantities. Spruce wood pulp, when ground with caustic soda and treated with carbon disulphide, becomes a vis- cous fluid, which may be forced under pressure through capillary tubes, coming out as fine filaments resembling those produced by the silk worm. These filaments, after being hardened by the action of ammonium sulphate, are united and twisted into yarns. This man- ufactured product is more lustrous, dyes beautifully, and costs, under normal conditions, from one-fourth to one-half as much as worm silk. Its greatest use is for knitted fab- rics, and if manufactured in this state the product could be utilized in local and Middle Western knit- ting mills. As it is also much used for designs and stripes in cloth, its manufacture here would provide an additional material for future textile mills on this Coast. UIE, My CT = HN \ (a a \ Our facilities are at your service Member Bank, U.S. Federal Reserve IONAL BAN = e Union’ Savings & Trust Co. + JAMES D. HOGE F. CLARK LF. EYMAN J.D. LOWMAN A.B. STEWART lent resident ee | t FORREST 1..GULL EJ. WHITT AMES 1). FARMER CHAS. A. SCRUBY " Ban Go Cust t oge ‘Bldg. Second Ave. at Cherry St

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